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•

www.mydailysentioel.com

· Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

School
OllloState
Peon Slate
MiChigan Slate

Minnesota
Norttw.estem·
Iowa

lllinoi'
Michigan
Wisconsin
Purdue

BIITen

W

L

5 1

8
9
8

2
1
2

5 1
5 1
3 3

7 3

3 3
7
3 3 6
3 3 ·5
2

4

2

5

1 5

Indiana

Ovnll

W L

1 5

3
4

5
7
5
7
7

3
5
3
3

SAIIIIWIW 'S GAMES
Ohio State at IUinols, noon

Purdue' at Iowa, noon
Northwestern at Michigan, noon
Indiana at Penn State, noon
Minnesota at Wisconsin, 3:30p.m.

lliG TEN STAT$
RUSHING OFFENSE
Wisconsin ......................224.4
Penn State ......................221. 7
Iowa ........ ......................180.2
Ohio State ...... ................ 176.2
: Indiana .......... ................175.8
. PASSING OFFENSE
Illinois ............................277.9
· Minnesota ......................226.8
j'urdue ...........................226.5
Penn State .......................221.0
· Northwestern ..................208.5
.
TOTAL OFFENSE
: Illinois ............................44 7:6
Penn State ...:.. ................ 442.7
Wisconsin .........,............ 407.0
Indiana ......................... ,378.4
Northwestern ..................368.8
TOTAL DEFENSE
Penn State ...................... 266.5
' Ohio State ...................... 269.8
Iowa .............................. 300.3
Wiscoosin ............. ,...... ,.319.6
Michigan State ................339.8

BIG TEN LEADERS

.,

RUSHING YARDS
Javon R1nger, MSU ............ 1548
Shonn Greene, Iowa .......... 1374
Evan Royster, Penn St.. ...... 1060
Kory Sheets, Purdue .......... 1017
P.J. Hill, Wisconsin .............. 845
PASSING YARDS
Juice Williams, Illinois ........ 2769
Adam Weber, Minn. .. ........2256
Blian Hoyer, MSU .............. 2029
. Curtis Painter, Purdue ........ 1762
C.J. Bacher, N'Westem ...... 1700
RECEMNG YARDS
Arrelious Benn, Illinois .... .... 947
Eric Decker. Minnesota .... .. .892
·Desmond Tardy, Purdue...... 631
•Greg Orton, Purdue ............ 612
. Marl\ Dell, MSU .:.......... ;... 568

OSU LEADERS
: PASSING YARDS
, Terrelle Pryor .................... 1076
RUSHING YARDS
Chris Wells ..........................814
RECEMNG YAROS
Brian Hartline ...................... 392
. TOUCHDOWNS
Brian Robiskie ........................ 7
· TACKLES
James laurinaitis ................ 101
SACKS
Thaddeus Gibson ....................4
TACKLE$ ~R LOSSES

· Thaddeus Gibson .................... 6
INTERCEPTIONS
MaiCQim Jenkins ...................... 3
Kurt Coleman .......................... 3

.. Aug. 3D

. Sept. 6
Sept.l3
. Sept. 20
Sept. 27
Oct. 4
; Oct.ll
Oct.l8
Oct. 25
• Nov. S .
Nov.15
Nov. 22

. I~ .

Life's work: Jesslng's legacy
as a true Waisenfreund, Cl

.
•

•

11 .. 7~

~

•• 11

'

,

"

'!t&gt;.Jngstown State W, ~

usc

Troy
Minnesota
WISCOn~n

Purdue
MSU .
Penn State
Nonhwestem
@ Illinois
Michigan

w, 26-14
~ 35-3

W, 28-10
w, 34-21
W, 20.17
W, 16-3
W, 45-7
~ 13·6
45-10

w.

NoGn
Noc:il

Content compik&lt;l by Jim Naveau and
~by Ross BMoff • The Uma News

• eop.,;!tlt © 2008 The Uma News. Repro• ducfun of all or any portD1 of this material
O; p!001b&lt;ted l'i\I10U( express COilSeflt.

tm

.R . . _

·lb&lt;Umo-phocoo

•

An inside look at this week's·game
.

.

'

Illinois' football team · has
been the sulliect of a behindthe-scenes look called "The
Journey" all season on the Big
Ten Network.
When Ohio State coach Jim
Tressel was asked earlier this
week if he would ever permit
television cameras inside his
meeting rooms and locket
room to do such a show, the answer was no surprise.
"No," Tressel said. "Any·

thing that would distract from
what we're trying to do, I don't
think helps. I probably

Jim
Naveau

.

The Uma News

jnaveau@limanews.com
. 419-993-2087

wouldn't, but I'm old:fash·
ioned. Everybody knows that."
When some of OSU's players were asked if they could
ever envision Tressel permit·
ting cameras in the locker
room, their answers came in a
tone of voice that sounded like

they would expect to see him
coachinl: on the sidelines wearing a giant sombrero with an
oversized "We're No. 1" foam
finger on his right hand before
they'd see that
Cornerback Malcolm Jenkins laughed, then said, "tnili,
no. We like to keep tllings inhouse. It would be a distraction."
Linebacker James Laurinaitis said, "I don't think that
would ever happen. I always·
thought it would be a distraction with the cameras in there."

But La.urinaitis admitted h~
watches when teams like Illinois, or the Dalli!B Cowboys,
allow cameras to go behind the
scenes.
Curiosity is the reason he
watches. "You wonder how
people are doing things around
the country," he said.
Tight end Rory Nicol said,
"You can't really talk freely
when the cameras are always
around. When the cameras are.
rolling, I guess things have to
be a little more clean-cut."
Tressel's answer is in line

•••

101
Alook atsome.ofthe key matchups in the yards in his other nine games.
game between No. 10 Ohio State (8·2, 5· Advantage: Ohio State .
1 Big Ten) and Illinois (5-5, 3·3 Big Ten) on Wide receivers
Saturday in Champaign, Ill.:
Througll 10 gaines, Brian Robiskie (33
Quarterbacks
catches, 356 yards) and Blian Hartline (18
Illinois junior quarterback Juice Williams, · catches, 392 yards) have combined for 34
a much-Improved passer this season, has fewer catches than they had at the same
throvm for 2, 769 yards and 20 tou9hdov.ms time a year ago. In recent games, Robis~e
· and runfor577 yards. OSU fans haven't for· has become the go-to guy, much as he was
gotten him from last year when he threw four early last season forTodd Boeckman. He is
touchdo\\11 passes and made a key fourth- . tied for the Big Ten lead for recerlers with
quarter run when the lllini stunned the Buck- seven touchdown catches.
eyes 28-21. Williams' double-threat ability · Illinois' Arrelious Benn (60 catches, 947
is illustrated by the fact that he has run for yards, 3 TDs) is one of the best deep-threat
more yards than quarterbacks Colt.McCoy receWers in the Big Ten. Nine lllini players
(Texas), Sam Bradford (Oklahoma) and Gra- have caught touchdovm passes, compared
ham 'Harrell (Texas Tech) combined.
to 011~ four for OSU. Illinois wide receiver Jeff
lfTerrelle Pryor can continue to throw the Cumberland (12 catches) has not been susdeep pass as well as he did in a 45-10 win pended desp~e breaking teammate Mike
CJII!)r Northwestern last week, he will give leShoure'sjawinanoff-the·tieldaltercation.
Ohio State a true double-threat quarterback Advantage: Even
al$0. Pryor had three touchdowr passes, \V.I:J 011ea11ye line .
completions of more than 40 yards, and
-·
eluded three taclijers on a scramble on one &lt;l1io State ProdUced 441 yard!; of offense
of the m throm.
and allowed only one quarterback sack at
Williams, like PI)IOr, has started since his Northwestern. The Buckeyes have scored 45
freshman season. As a first-ye'ar starter, points in each of their last \V.I:J road games,
Williams completed only 39 percent of his but rt might still be a little early to declare the
passes and had as many interceptions (nine) line's problems cuned. · · .
as he d.id toucll&lt;bM'I passes. Pryor has com- Illinois has three starting offensive linemen
pleted 65 percent of his passes and has nine battling inJuries- tackles Ryan Palmer and
m passes with on~ three interceptions. Xavier Allen and ~nter Ryan McDonald.
Advaritage: Illinois
Freshmen Jeff Allen and Corey lewis have
....
had to play a lot because of those injuries.
n.nnlng backs
In their last three games, the lllini have avlmagine the numbers Chlis Wells migllt eraged 87 yards a game rushing and
have ~he hadn't lost three games to·a foot Williams has thrown seven interceptions.
inJury and Ohio State's offensive line had Advantage: Ohio State
·
played better. As rt is, the junior tailback is Defensive Ina
closing in .on a second consecutive 1,000·
yard season with 814 yards after gaining- Illinois 'leads the Big Ten in quarterback
sacks with 32. Ohio State has·19 after get·
140 against Northwestern.
·
ting
four against Northwestern. Defensive
Illinois has struggled to find a running
end
Derek Walker has six sacks and David
threat other than Williams. Daniel Dufrene
Undquist
has four tOr Illinois. WUI Davis, the
(575 yards) has been the starting tailback
other
defensrle
end, has 3.5 sacks.
most of the season. There are only two Big
The
good
nem
on the defensive line for
Ten schools (Michigan and Indiana) whose
Ohio
State
last
week
was that true freshman
top running back has gained feweryards.llli·
Nathan
Williams
got
two sacks. The bad
nois' running backs produced only 37 yards
rushing in a 23·171oss to Western Michigan news was that he got the opportunity to
last week. Fresl:iman Jason Ford, who got play much of the second half because the
into coach Ron look's doghouse by report- Buckeyes' most effective pass rusher, end
ing 15 pounds oveJWeight, rushed for 172 Thaddeus Gibson, was on the sideline with
·
·
·yards and three touchdovms in a win CNer In- a sore ankle:
diana earlier this season, but has only 67 Advantage: Illinois

NAME: nm Spencer
HOMETOWN: St Clairsville
OHIO STATE YEARS: 1979-.82
CAREER HIGHUGHTS: Led Ohio

State in rushi~g with 1,538 yaids in
1982 and with 1,217 yards in 1981
as a tailback after playing fullback his
S&lt;iphbmore season. Was the team
MVPin 1982.
AnER OHIO STATE: Played for two years in the
USFL before playing six seasons with the San Diego
Chargers. Currently the running backs coach for the
Chicago Bears, he was an assistant coach at Ohio
State for 10 yeal'l; after his playing career ended .

Unebacllen
James laurinaitis' interception against
Northwestern was the eighth of his career
and his seCOnd this season. Ross Homan
stayed on the field instead of Marcus Free·
man severn! times when OSU was in its
nickel package with only two linebackers
against Northwestern.
Illinois linebacker Brit Miller. a four-year
starter, leads the Big Ten with 1'1.0 tackles
and has six sacks. Martez Wilson, a 6-foot,
4-inch. 246-pound sophomore. has 69
tackles and three sacks.

'

• Magnolia ~rallies past
: PointP~t.

SeePage HI

-

Defensive backs

National Community

'~ducation
'
.
_Day.

SeePageA2
• UAW leader says no
more concessions.
SeePageA2
• Fantasies getting in
way of reality.
SeePageA3
• Space shuttle
·Endeavour races toward
space station.
SeePage AS
• Federal funding going
to OU research.
SeePageA6

~~the

g;.-en 1"' nnr.t . •

eig)lt """':in"

Illinois has allowed 15 passing TDs.
Illinois has 39 pass
plays of 20 yards or
more. Ohio ~·s defense has allowed only
16 pass plays of 20
yards or more.
Adventaga: Ohio
State

Special teams

WEATHER

We've had a couple of conversations. I'll
probably talk to him before the game but
it won't be anything friendly.''

impact local
AMP project
BY BETH

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

-Ohio State camelback Malcolm jenkins, about whether there is
a rivalry between him and Illinois corneroack Vo!'lae Davis:

Buckeye Brain Busters
2: How many years was
Illinois' Juice Williams throw llinois coach Ron Zook

against OSU last season?

an assistant at OSU?

loeru

Ruling may

11

m passes did

GALLIPOLIS - State
Sen. John Carey met with
community members·. and
officials during an open door
session held at the Gallia
County Courthouse Friday
afternoon and the topic overwhelmingly turned to the
economy time and again.
Ranging from local job and
family service cuts and DfiL.
CQIIJle!:ted job loss to infra.
structure and manufacturing
t~es.
citizens· aie'.'ery
con&lt;:emed with the state of
·the economy and and the
effect it will have on the
future .
·
Carey, a Republican from
Wellston, represents a rium·
her of Ohio counties, seven
of which fall within the
boundaries of Appalachia,
such as Gallia County. He
said that practically all of
them are experiencing problems similar to those here in
Gallia.
· Carey noted that there are
some bright spot~ in the district in regard to the housing
crisis, though the shutdown
of domestic DHL services in
Wilmington will negatively
impact a large portion of it.
He added that the decreasing
. price of gasolinemay help

PluH see Ecomomy, .Al

. AJ. Trapasso
is averaging
41.9 yards a
punt But the

Say what?

:1; How many

BY EUZABETH RtGEL
ERIGELOMYDAILYTRIBUfl!E.COM

INSIDE
.
,,,~~18aalm~ ·• ·

.

Big Ten in pass defense (164.4
yards a game)
and have

3: IMlo are the only two Illinois football playets to have
their numbers retired?

Anile~~: 1. Four, 2. Three (1988-90); 3. DiCk BUtkus (50) and Red Gran!~~&gt; (77)

• .~

•

Dlllldi• on· ~ Ai

.
Around ToWn

A3

Celebrations

C4

'

Comics
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

_.

· ·· yu

-" JNoV. 30th

'~
'

its preliminary ruling in
Phillips' favor.
At the hearing , Phillips
can subpoena and question .
witnesses, and present and ·
review evidence to back up
her claims about the
allegedly false statements
made against her.
Specifically,
Phillips
asserts that statements in the
ad that she opposes the
American
'Municipal
Power-Ohio plant proposed
for Meigs County, and that
she aligned with an opposition group against the .con-

struction of U.S. 33 several
years ago. are false.
In a letter· dated Nov: 7.
the OEC said the matter will
go to a hearine before the
full commission. bu1 no date
has yet been set. according
10 Phill ips' campaign manager. Rob Dorans. who is
now a full -time staffer for
Phillips.
Dorans said speculation
lhat the matter would quietly disappear with the res ults ·
of the election is false, and

Pleue see Phillips Al

SERGENT

POINT PLEASANT The holiday sea8on will get
off to a glowing start next
week with the Christmas
Fantasy Light Show at Point
Pleasant's Krodel Parle
Christmas light displays
will come to life Friday, Nov.
21 following Point Pleasant's
Holiday Parade. The light
show is slated to run through
Dec. 31 from 5:30-9:30 p.m.
each day.
According to Main Street
Director Charles Humphreys,
this year's show will be the
biggest one yet.
"It is not only a better show,
but a ·bigger ·and brighter
show.'' he said:·:"(Thoo-ligM. show) is an exciting thing for
kids and people of ages."
· He added that there also are
several LED lights this year,
which were used to decol1)te
the
fort.
Humphreys
described the lights as being
brighter · and more energy-·
efficient. He also said he
hoped residents would make
the light show part of their
Christmas rituals.
"We are trying to make this
a tradition for (area) residents," he added. ·
.
Popular light displays
include dancing . gingerbread
men, bugle boys, snowmen
and a giant reindeer fishing in
the lake. Even Point
Pleasant's famous Mothman
makes his presence known at.
the show.
VolunteerS usually begin
working at least a month in
advance to repair displays and
check lights - more than 2
million. .in all on the nearly
200 lighted and animated displays - for the show. Nearly
40,000 people . visited the
show last year, and those
returning surely will not be
disappointed with the addition of several new displays. ·

au

Arr1vet volunteers Garfblilipman:and
put the final touches on one of the· shel·
ters at Krodel Park. When the Christmas
Light Show officially opens next week,
the entire park will be turned into a glowing winter wonderland.

City employees Jesse Shull
and Seth Sargeant set up a .
nutcracker display, which
will be one of the light
attractions that greets. visilors as they enter Krodel
Park. The Christmas
Fantasy Light Show will run
Nov. 21 through Dec. 31 .
Hope Roushlphotoa

.

.

While admission is free, back into the community . "Donations make the show·
Humphreys emphasized · through various community . better and help the coinmuni-'
that all donations collected services and the Main ty at the same time," he said.
·
at the light show go directly Street organization. •

·oDOT braces for winter road conditions

I ,

· 4 SBCnONS - 114 PAGES

PRE·ORDER
Gift Baskets
10% Discount

-t:J

BSERGENI'OMY!WLYSENTlNELCOM

INDEX
days until kickoff

'\o .

Economy Lights, displays in place for annual show
top•s area
·c oncerns

Page AS
• William Richard Call
• Richard M. Seagraves
• Melvin C. Murphy
• Matilda A. Northup
• Thomas Siders

Classifieds

'·

Bv·BRIAN J. REED
remain unsettled until 2,000 members determined there
BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM · provisional ballots cast in was reasonable cause to
Athens County are counted believe ·an advertisement
POMEROY - Aihens in · the official count later !he local Republican Party,
City Councilwoman Pebble this month .
authorized and purchased in
Phillips expects the Ohio
However,
. Phillips The Daily Sentinel conElections Commission to claimed victory on Nov. 5, tained fal se information.
rule on he r complaint because, she said , she Phillips filed her complaint
against the Meigs County e~pects her margin of victo- with the OEC on Oct. 30.
Republican Party and party ry in the unofficial count to against the Meigs County
officials before the end of widen as provisional ballots GOP, its chairman, David
the year.
cast mainly by Ohio Warner, and its treasurer,
Phillips is leading in the University students are Marjorie Fetty.
race for the 92nd House counted.
The ad ran for several
District seat against Athens · On Nov. 3; the day before days, but was removed by
County
Auditor
Jill Election Day, .a panel of newspaper
management
Thompson, but lhe race will Election$
Commission after 'the OEC panel made

OBITUARIES

Advantage: Ohio State

&lt;l1io State's 13 in·
terceptions is tied
for second in the
Big Ten. The

-1-:.!.

BY HOPE RousH
HAOUSHOMYDAILYREGISTER.COM

.Ohio State

tried.

:-; 1. .) 0 • \ ol.

.Phillips: Complaint will go to full hearing

SPORTS
.
.

•'

former higll school running baCk, who gained
nearly 4,000 yards in high school, might
have been more exc~ed· about successfully
running a fake punt against Northwestern
than about his yards per punt average. IIIi·
nois' Anthony.Santella averages 39.6 yards
a punt.
OSU ~ckers Ryan Pretorius (14 of 18) and
Aaron Pettrey (5 of 5) have combined for .
seven more field goals than Illinois' Matt
Eller (12 of 17).
Advantage;

Illinois cornerback Vontee Davis (64 tackles, ·
one interception) ;, one of
the Big Ten's best..But the
lllini have strugglea to fill '
other positions and have '
a Big Ten-worst fille in, ,'•.
terceptions. Donsay
Hardeman is the third
strong safety they have

Po n H' I'U~ • \liddh· p 111'l• (, a lli p11 li..., • ' " \ t'll lht ·•· 111 . :.! CH)X

Cthin\ .d lt'\ Pu hli . . h ing ( o ,

with his approach of doing
everything he can to get his
players to focus on the things
he wants them to focus on, to
the exclusion of everything else.
Truth be told~ Zookprobably
could do without the cameras.
But unlike Ohio State, he
needs help in raising the profile
oflllinois football.
Zook said recently that when ·
it comes to the television cameras, he "doesn't even notice
them."
But he certainly hopes other
people notice.

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: ILLINOIS {5-5, 3-3)

~

Printed 011 IOO'f
Recycltd Nt&gt;wspriot ~~

Hometown News for Gallia ~Meigs counties

Don't expect to go behind the scenes ~t OSU

Where are they now?
OhKl

Fun things to do ·
ThanksgMng weekend, Dl

••

3~
";

LMNG

ALONG THE RivER

,,

•

•

Friday. November 14. 2008

•

Sports
W~tber

D Section
insert

' !\.4
C6

'As
B Section

A6

e aooe Oh"' v111er rub!Uhln&amp; eo.

LETART FALLS - On
Thursday,
the · U.S.
Environmental Proteotion
STAFF REPDRl:
Agency appeals panel aske!J
NEWSOI,IYOAILVTRIBUNE.OOM
the EPA's Denver regional
office to consider imposing · MARIETIA - As the
·carbon dioxide emission Ohio
Department
of
limits on a proposed coal- Transportation gears up for
fired power plant in Utah.
·Supporters of the decision !he 2008-® winter season by
are claiming this may set a readying its snow-clearing
legal precedent (or nation- equipment, ODOT crews are
Wide emission controls on fine tuning a "Smart Salt
carbon dioxide. The Ohio Strategy" for keeping road·
EPA currently does not limit ways safe by using the right
· emis~ion controls of carbon amounts of salt and manpow,
dioxide, a w.eenhouse gas er at the right times and loca·
which contributes tq global · lions.
·And OOOT is reminding
warmin~.
.
motorists
that in "'Ice and
"The miplications of this
Snow
...
Take
it Slow." .
ruli!lg · for Ohio are huge,"
Throughout October and
said Nachy Kanfer with the
.
November,
ODOT's mainteSierra Club's National Coal
nance
forces
will hold a series
Campaign . in Ohio. '"This
federal 1'!11 ing · underscores of operationa1 readiness
the necessity to invest in events in each of the stati: 's 88
green jobs m Ohio, rather counties, to ensure every
than building more coal plow, ttuck, and spreader is
plants that create aii: pollu- road ready.
tion and increase global . OD01's District 10 will
hold their annual dry run
warming.
"People in Ohio want . inspection during the week of
Nov. 17. Gallia County's is
· PI••- A!IIP, Al
Monday at 8:30 a.m., and

•

Meigs County's will also be
Monday, at noon.
Across the state, . OOOT
. will have more than 1,700
plow trucks and 3,000 drivers
reaey to clear ice and snow
when the first storms arrive .
OOOT mainLains nearly
39,()00)anemilesofhighway,
which carries approximately .
two-thinls of the state's average daily traffic.
. "When winter weather
blankets the state, Ohio's residents and businesses depend
on our integrated transporta·
lion networlc to connect goods
to markets, worlcers with jobs,
people to health care and education·, ·and families with
loved ones and home,'' said
ODOT Director James
Beasley. "With this year's
increased cost of salt, the
department has devised a
Smart Salt Strategy to ensure
that crews are as efficient as
possible with the salt on
hand."
Like most Midwest states,
Ohio has seen a dramatic

iricrease in the price of rock so salt is applied only where
salt. On average, salt will cost needed: and mixing of sand or
about $62 per ton, compared · grit materials with the salt, to
to last yearls price of $42 a provide be~ter traction in
ton. OOOT uses an average snow on less travelled roadof 700,000 tons of salt each ways .
.
Throughout severe winter
winter.
According
to
Larry events, crews constantly
Woodford, OOOTs District monitor pavemenl conditions.
10 Deputy Director. 42,900 It's hoped this Smart Salt
tons of salt was used last year Strategy will help OOOT to
for snow and ice control. • be 30 percent !)lOre efficient
"As a district, our goal is with salt use and ens.ure crnreduce our sail usage by 30 tinued safety.
Beyond the plows and :;all
percent from last year. We
feel we can use other control this winter season, OOOT
materials, such as salt brine. will encourage drivel'S to be
calcium, and abrasives (grits prepared . The first snow
and sand), along with salt and . storm usually seems to be the
because
m"ny
get close to the same results,'' worst
motorists forget the winter
Woodford said.
Some of OOOT's Smru1 driving skills they developed
Salt Strategy includes the use last year.
Up-lo-the-minute road conof calibrated salt spreaders.
ditii:ms
are always available
found on every OOOT snow
logging
onto
plow, to allow crews to adjust by
Last
the applicatioh of ice-melting BuckeyeTraftic .org.
OOOT's
premiere
winter.
materials; infrared temperature sensors which allow website received more than
crews to see the exact surface 117 million hit~ during the
·
temperature of the roadways,. winter driving season.

' .

•

�.•

REGIONAL ·

·.6anbap li•·ientinel
..

··PageA2
Sunday, November 16, 2008

6unbap utimtf -&amp;enttntl

Economy fi.om Page At

tum things around, if it lasts.
"We've already lost a Jot of
jobs and we're going to lose
more, but we have to work t&lt;l
salvage as many of those jobs
as we can," he said.
• Carey talked about a stimu.lus package and noted that
:Gov. Ted Strickland is ·lobbying for aid to Ohio.
''This is a heavy manufac. turing state and it makes
sense that Ted Strickland is

pushing for Ohio to get help
through the stimulus package." Carey said.
He maintained that he has
not yet resigned himself to
believe that the economy wiU
get worse.. though he added
that he is an optimist. He
advised that revenues are
only down one totwo percent
in Ohio, but With an estimated $53 billion slate budget
that figure can be misleading.

.AROUND TOWN

· ANNIE'S Mt\tLBOX "

Fpntasies getting in way_
of
reality
.
~

.

•.

'

'

~

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Republican Party and its officials, may be re-filed against
different respondents. It ·was
dismissed on Nov. 3 because
radio advertisements in question were purchased by the ·
Ohio House Republican
-Caucus rather than the
Athens County GOP. :
'Elizabeth RlgeVpholo
Phillips ultimately lost
Pictured
from
left,
(back
row)
Gallia
County
Commissioners
David
Smith,
Justin
Fallon
,
and
Joe
Foster
proclaim Nov. Hj,
her mce against Thompson
in three counties in the dis- 2008 as National Community Education Day along with (front row) Gallia·Vinton Educational Service Center (GVESC)
trict - Meigs, Morgan and Superintendent Dr. Denise A. Shockley, GVESC Educational Consultant Fannie Metcalf. GVESC Administrative .Assistilnt
Washington - but she said Emily Dailey, and GVESC Educational Consultant Larry Marr during Thursday's regulilr county commission meeting. Thill
the 2.000 provisional bal- year's theme for National Community Education Day is "Connecting Commun.ity Education to You:"
lots yet to be counted in
'
'
.
Athens will likely widen her
victory margin. because
they were cast in large part
"Connecting Community services.
communities · identify their
$TAFF REPORT
by Ohio University stuNEW SCI MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM
Education to You ."
It goes onto state .that the own needs and resources
dents. Phillips carried the
According
•to
the
proclafull
use of existing public and public agencies work
university precincts by large
GALLIPOLIS - Oallia mation , there is an increas- facilities, programs, and cooperatively, community
margins.
County Commissioners met ing public insistence that all services is a desirable com- b'etternient will result and
with representatives from levels of gov.ernment . munity goal and COiJlmunity agem;y ,oordination and
the
, Galli a-Vinton become more responsive to education philosophy advo- cooperation improve public
from PageAl
Educational· Service Center citizen needs and desires cates full use of public facil- service and maximize the
during • their· . reg'ular and there is a limited ities, programs, and services use of lax money. In addigreen Jobs and this is a pow- previously insisted that car- Thursday meeting to pro- amount of tax money and by every age group · in the tion , the involvement of
•
•
I•
erful mcentive to invest in bon dioxide should remain claim Nov. !8, 2008 as other resources, both human commumty.
..
local communities is essen·the green industries that can unregulated - an argument N'atimlal
and
·
physical
,
available
to
: Community
Furthermore, community tial to the development of
·revitalize our manufactur- rejected in today's ruling meet
public
demand
for
education
philosophy , ommunity education proEduc11tion
Day.
.
.
.
--ing base ," Kanfer added.
and had resisted attempts to
.
facilities
,
programs
,
and
This year's . theme
. .is
assumes that when local grams.
- · Environmental groups esll\blish carbon limits in
'• .
·such as the Sierra Club and their air perrii.its."
Carson took exception with
Natural Resources Defense
Council have been a vocal that statement, saying: "We
'Opponent to American never insisted that ... · we
·Municipal Power-Ohio's never said that. What we said
bailout' plan for the auto
Bv MARK WtLUAMS
:planned coal-fired power was, it (carbon dioxide) is not
loJ'
9USlNESS
WRITER
industry, saying action is necplant in Letart Falls. They, a regulated pollutant · at this
essary before President-elect
along with other inter- point in time. When it is.
COLUMBUS - Even as Barack Obarna takes office ill"
venors, are appealing the we'll deal with it based on
Detroit's
Big Three teeter on January.
plant's air permit-to-install whatever the retjUirements of
Auto
He said if one automaker
approved earlier this year law are, and we ve said time collapse , United
and time again, one principal Workers President Rqn· were to file for bankruptcy,
by IAe Ohio EPA.
. d&gt;'YieJ~ revi~l th~ ~ ·&lt;we · ohqse: PQVveyspan Gettelfinger_, saiQ Saturdlly the others may follow. He
Bt!'ctsion," Kent Carson , technology as part of the that workers . will bot make said the automakers would
communications · director plant's emission control tech- any more concessions and find it difficult to restructure
for AMP-Ohio said about nology was it shows.promise that getting the automakers under. bankruptcy laws and
the Utah case . "We review to be able to control or cap- back on their feet means ftg- instead could end up out of
!Ill ~ecisions for all permits ture carbon emissions."
uring out a way to turn around business. "Would you buy a
nationally that affect our
One thing both sides of the slumping economy. ·
car from a bankrupt automak- .
industry ... we recognize it the issu·e agree on is this
''The focus has to be on the er?" he asked .
could have widespread decision's potential to affect . economy as a whole as
The Center for Automotive
jmpact and are looking at it a national policy/standard opposed to a UAW contract," Research, which receives
very carefully."
on carbon dmxide emission Gettelfinger told reporters on funding from the auto indus· Carson also pointed out, controls.
a conference call, noting the try, has warned that the colthe decision was not in
"Again, Ohio is a unique, labor costs now make up 8 lapse of the Big Three could In this Oct. 7-flle photo, United Auto Workers
Ron
Ohio, which has a fully fully delegated pro~rarn, an percent to 10 pen.~nt of the . set off a catastrophic chain Gettelfinger talks to reporters in Detroit. Even as Detroit's
approved state permitting approved program · m terms cost of a vehicle. .
reaction in the economy, Big Three automake~ teeter on collapse, Gettelfinger says
program , and that AMP- of issuing an air permit, it's
"We have made dramatic, eliminating up to 3 million . workers will not make 11ny more concessions and that get·
Ohio has work~for over a a process that stays in dramatic changes and the jobs and more than $j50 bil- ting the automakers back on their feet means figuring out a
year in cooperation with Ohm," Carson said. "That's UAW was · applauded · for lion in tax revenue over the way to turn around the economy.
Ohio EPA in meeting all doesn't m,ean it couldn't be that," he said,
next three years.
requirements of Ohio law in impacted from tlte decision . Instead,
Gettelfinger
Gettelfinger called on through. the economic crisis duck Congress are pressing
regards to getting the plant bui no one knows for sure." blamed the problems the auto Congress to .act quickly to and 1fie worst sales sllll11P In for a bailout of Detroit's Big
online . Carson also pomted
The Associated Press · industry is suffering from on provide loans to help the more than 25 years . GM three with money from the · .
:out the permit for the Utah reports the panel's recom- things beyond its control automakers until the econo- appears to be in the worst
;plant was not denied but mendation was sent back to the housing slump, the CTC\Iit my improves and the shape, warning .that it can!t $700 billion Wall Street res:sent back to a regional the Denver office which crunch that has ~de financ· automakers c!l)l move ahead . borrow from normal sources. cue. package. But President
George W. Bush and many
··office for reevaluation. ·
"must better explain why it ing a vei1icle to\lgh .rind the with their plans to become
The
nation's
largest Republicans have come out
~: In a press release, the Sierra failed to order limits on-car- 1.2 million jobs that' h11ve more competitive.
automaker said it had $16.2
Club stated: "Two of the bon dioxide."
been lost in the past year.
"We cannot afford to allow billion in cash at the end of against the idea, arguing that
largest new coal proposals for
The AP also reports the
"We're here not because of to see this industry collapse. Septembcir, raising the possi- the financial rescue package
:ohio, the AMP-Ohio power following statement by the what the auto industry has There is a real concern that bility that GM will fall below was not intended for such
:plant in Meigs County. and panel on its ruling as "an done," he said. "We're here could happen."
. the minimum of $11 billion to uses, and that a bailout would
:the Baard liquid coal plant in rssue of national scope that because of what has hapGeneral Motors Corp., Ford $14 billion needed for day-to- reward Jlll&lt;lr management and
:Columbiana County, are like- has implications far beyond pened to the economy." ·
Motor Co . and Chrysler LLC day operations by the end of lead other industries to
·ly to face setbacks from the this individual permitting
Gettelfinger also called on are seeking $25 billion from the year.
:
demand government hand'
ruling. Both companies had process."
Congress to act quic\dy on a the government to get them
Democrats in the lame- outs.
that .Phillips plans to pursue ·
the matter to full conclu·sion. Ultimately, Phillips
·said before the election, the ·
OEC could order an apolo.gy from the GOP and its
officials. or levy civil fines
against those responsible
'for any intentional false
'statements.
·: "We fully intend to follow
·through with the complaint
·and be a part of the full
hearing, whenever it is set,"
Dorans said. "We would
:expect a resolution before
the eno of the year, but the
-OEC has a backlog of cases
'because of the recent election."
Dorans said a second com.plaint, originally filed against
the
Athens
County

Nov. 18 proclaimed National Community Education Day

AMP

·UAW leader says no more .concessions

L

Diles Hearing
moving office
GALLIPOLIS - Diles Hearing Center ·
will be moving its Gallipolis office to
Jackson.
·
The Gallipolis office will close on
~ednesday , Nov. 19 and will reopen at
232 Huron St., Jackson , on Monday, Dec .
I. The new telephone number will be
(740) 288-3571 . The Athens bu sines s
office can be reached at (800) 237-7716.
PresideJ• t and audiologist Diane McVey
said it was with great difficulty that the
decision was made to relocate the office .
She has appreciated the opportunity to
serve the residents of the Gallipoli s
region for the last 6-1/2 years and hopes
they will continue to work with Dile s in
theu Jackson or Athens offices.
All patient records will be taken to the
·Jackson office .
The staff in the Jackson location will
. be Diane McVey , MA , CCC-A; Margaret·
White , office assistant; and Jess ica
Ziegler, HIS Trainee.
.

CHESHIRE - River . Valley Hi gh
School 's Beta Club will be sponsoring
~ lrttergenerational Programming" on
Tuesday, Nov. 18 from 3 to 5 p.m. at the
high school.
. This will be the first of four nights for
'diffe~ent generations to spend some time
learmng from each other. The Beta Club
is asking that families with three or more
· generations participate. · · ·
. The time will be-spent playing "parlor
games ," such as hearts, checke r~. chess,
dominoes, etc . Al so, students can teach

Community
events

TtcMioll....,

Meeting change
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District will hold 'its
monthly board meeting on Friday; Nov.
21 at 2 p.m. in the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center.
The meeting has been rescheduled.
from Nov. 14.

Without It!

.

t.:~(J- 1.~.

\.;/~~

Employment
approved
RIO GRANDE - Employment of
Steve C. Youn g as Building Trades
instructor for the remainder of the current . school year was approved by the
Gallia-Jackson- Vinton Joint Vocational
Board of Education .at its Nov. 12 regular
monthly meeting .
Additionally, the board awarded part·
time , hourl y contracts for Carl Detty_ and
Ronald Malone , and employed certtftqted and non-certificated substitute personnel for the remainder of the 2008'-09
school year.
The board also gave its permiss ion to
enter into agreements with the firm of
Four Seasons Environmental as the
school disirict 's OSFC Maintenance Plan
advisor.

Commission
·to meet

Rei!istration
Now OPen
For mrJf"t' informotiM conrac1;

ftrtlll l'nUm&lt;Jft
.(14ll) '»2-/lllll!or
-R.b&lt;WIU..g

(800) ~2·1201. t .tl. 7425 .
Email:
.
.mtpli'ril&gt;.tdo "'rlt'"-'erio.edu

oio""' RwJ."" ;........miWIJldllriulmu

RIO GRANDE MEIGS CENTER
Spring Sem~ster 2009

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipoli s City
Commission will meet in special session
at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the City Building ,
City Manager Joe Woodall announced .

Dear.

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PRlNl't!U.S OF ~('COIJNTIN&lt;J ll
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January 12, 2009- May 7, 2009

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RIO II-IJ4l. (!(}
8M !l&lt;O.l .0
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..,.,. ___ .

Card shower

• , . M'J'
• lnitn: Mnlligilg . keep your buddy lilt!
• 10 t-fl1lil ~ M:h w.tlmlilf
• Cullom Start Page · IIIWt, v.ul'lll' &amp; lft!Yt!

A('\' I!.Ml1
810 11404

;

Support groups

the older generations how to play games
of their generation, such as video games.

nwast: .

....

.

McKenzie
Agricultural at St. Peter 's Episcop&lt;d
Center. The meetmg was Church.
rescheduled from Nov. 14.
GALLIPOLIS
Sunday, Nov. 23
Narcotics
Anonymous
. KANAUGA - Veterans Miracles in Recovery meets
Thanksgiving dinner, 2 to 4 ·every
Monday
and
p.m .. at DAV/AMVETS. Saturday. 7:30 p.m., at St.
Gallia County veterans, Peter's Episcopal Church.
widows, and family memPOINT
I'LEASANT,
bers are welcome. Please W.Va..
Narcotics
call 446-3642, no later than Anonymous l,.iving Free
3 p.m. on Nov. 13, to make Group
meets
every
reservations .
Wednesday and Friday at 7
1\Jesday, Nov. 25
p.m. at 305Main St.
EWINGTON
VINTON - Celebrate
· American Legion Post 161 Recovery at Vinton Baptist
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Chllrch. Small groups lookEwington Academy. All ing for freedom from addicmembers are urged to tions , hurts, habits and
attend .
hangups every Wednesday
·Tuesday, Dec. 2
at 7 p.m. For information.
GALLIPOUS - Holzer call 388-8454.
,
Clinic Retirees will meet for
POINT
PLEASANT,
. lunch at noon at the W.Va. - "Let Go and Let
Courtside Bar &amp; Grill , 308 God" Nar-Anon · Family
Second Ave .
Group meeting , every
Monday at 7 p.m .. Krodel
Park recreational building .
The group helps families
and friends of dn1g addict,s
GALLIPOLIS
Grieving Parents Support or ·users to attain serenitY..
Group meets 7 p.m. second regardless of whether
Monday of each month at he/she has stopped using.
Holzer Medical Center. The group respects all
People attending should members' anonymity.
meet in the general lobb;v.
For information , call Jackte
Keatley at 446-2700 or
Na!JCY CIJilds at 446-5446.
GALLIPOLIS - Eloise
ATHENS - Survival of Ross will celebrate her 82nd
Suicide support group birthday on Nov. 20 . Cards
meets 7 p.m.. fourth can be sent to her at 16
Thursday of each month at Vinton Ave ., Gallipolis.
Athens Church of Christ, Ohio 45631.
785 W. Union St., Athens.
GALLIPOLIS - A card
For information , call 593- shower is being held for
7414.
Roger. McGuire. Cards can
GALLIPOLIS - Look be sent to him at Arbors of
Good Feel Better cancer Gallipolis, 170 Pinecrest
program , third Monday of Drive , Gallipolis. Ohio
the month at 6 p.m., Holzer 45631.
Cente~ for Cancer Care.
E-mail community calenGALLIPOLIS
dar ilems to kkeUy@mydai·
Alcoholics
Anonymous lytribune.com.
· Fax
Wednesday book. study at 7 announcements to 446p.m . and Thursday open 3008. Mail items to 82$
meeting at noon at St. Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
Pe(er's Episcopal Church, 45631. Announcements
541 Second Ave . Tuesday may lllso be dropped off at
closed meeting is at 8 p .m. the Tribune office.

Local
Briefs
.

Intergenerational
.
·programmmg

-'" ---~

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Gallia County calendar
Monday, Nov. 17
GALLIPOLIS - Knights
·of Columbus will meet at
6:30 p.m. at the Holiday
Inn. All members are urged
to attend ..
· GALLIPOLIS - Ohio
State University Extension
will .host an information
session on livestoc k risk
protection , 7 p.m., Gallia
County Extension Office .
Thesday, Nov. 18
GALLIPOLIS -- PlR I
will meet at the First Baptist
Church, 1100 Fourth Ave ., 2
p.m .. for election of officers. Dues of $4 per member for 2009 may be paid .
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Homemakers Club
will meet, 10:30 a.m., in the
meeting room of the C.H.
McKenzie
Agricultural
Center. A potluck dinner
will follow at noon .
GALLIPOLIS - NAMl
Southeast Ohio Inc. will
conduct a special meeting, 5
p.m., al the Gallia County
Senior Resource Center.
Light refreshments will be
served . A regular. board
meeting will be held directly afterward. The.meeting is
open to the public and more
information is available
from Jill Simpkins at (740)
339-0603.
CHESHIRE
lnterngenerational games ,
including parlor games, at
River Valley High School. 3
to 5 p.m. For information,
contact the high school at
367-7377.
RIO GRANDE
Open
Gate Garden Club will meet
at 7:30p.m. at the home of
Jackie Davis . Program :
"Colors of a Winter
Garden" by Clara Day. ·
Thursday, Nov. 20
VINTON
'
Huntington/Morgan Crime
Watch will meet at 6 p.m. at
Vinton Village Hall .
Friday, Nov. 21
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District Board
of Supervisors monthly
meeting , 2 p.m ., C.H.

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�.•

REGIONAL ·

·.6anbap li•·ientinel
..

··PageA2
Sunday, November 16, 2008

6unbap utimtf -&amp;enttntl

Economy fi.om Page At

tum things around, if it lasts.
"We've already lost a Jot of
jobs and we're going to lose
more, but we have to work t&lt;l
salvage as many of those jobs
as we can," he said.
• Carey talked about a stimu.lus package and noted that
:Gov. Ted Strickland is ·lobbying for aid to Ohio.
''This is a heavy manufac. turing state and it makes
sense that Ted Strickland is

pushing for Ohio to get help
through the stimulus package." Carey said.
He maintained that he has
not yet resigned himself to
believe that the economy wiU
get worse.. though he added
that he is an optimist. He
advised that revenues are
only down one totwo percent
in Ohio, but With an estimated $53 billion slate budget
that figure can be misleading.

.AROUND TOWN

· ANNIE'S Mt\tLBOX "

Fpntasies getting in way_
of
reality
.
~

.

•.

'

'

~

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Republican Party and its officials, may be re-filed against
different respondents. It ·was
dismissed on Nov. 3 because
radio advertisements in question were purchased by the ·
Ohio House Republican
-Caucus rather than the
Athens County GOP. :
'Elizabeth RlgeVpholo
Phillips ultimately lost
Pictured
from
left,
(back
row)
Gallia
County
Commissioners
David
Smith,
Justin
Fallon
,
and
Joe
Foster
proclaim Nov. Hj,
her mce against Thompson
in three counties in the dis- 2008 as National Community Education Day along with (front row) Gallia·Vinton Educational Service Center (GVESC)
trict - Meigs, Morgan and Superintendent Dr. Denise A. Shockley, GVESC Educational Consultant Fannie Metcalf. GVESC Administrative .Assistilnt
Washington - but she said Emily Dailey, and GVESC Educational Consultant Larry Marr during Thursday's regulilr county commission meeting. Thill
the 2.000 provisional bal- year's theme for National Community Education Day is "Connecting Commun.ity Education to You:"
lots yet to be counted in
'
'
.
Athens will likely widen her
victory margin. because
they were cast in large part
"Connecting Community services.
communities · identify their
$TAFF REPORT
by Ohio University stuNEW SCI MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM
Education to You ."
It goes onto state .that the own needs and resources
dents. Phillips carried the
According
•to
the
proclafull
use of existing public and public agencies work
university precincts by large
GALLIPOLIS - Oallia mation , there is an increas- facilities, programs, and cooperatively, community
margins.
County Commissioners met ing public insistence that all services is a desirable com- b'etternient will result and
with representatives from levels of gov.ernment . munity goal and COiJlmunity agem;y ,oordination and
the
, Galli a-Vinton become more responsive to education philosophy advo- cooperation improve public
from PageAl
Educational· Service Center citizen needs and desires cates full use of public facil- service and maximize the
during • their· . reg'ular and there is a limited ities, programs, and services use of lax money. In addigreen Jobs and this is a pow- previously insisted that car- Thursday meeting to pro- amount of tax money and by every age group · in the tion , the involvement of
•
•
I•
erful mcentive to invest in bon dioxide should remain claim Nov. !8, 2008 as other resources, both human commumty.
..
local communities is essen·the green industries that can unregulated - an argument N'atimlal
and
·
physical
,
available
to
: Community
Furthermore, community tial to the development of
·revitalize our manufactur- rejected in today's ruling meet
public
demand
for
education
philosophy , ommunity education proEduc11tion
Day.
.
.
.
--ing base ," Kanfer added.
and had resisted attempts to
.
facilities
,
programs
,
and
This year's . theme
. .is
assumes that when local grams.
- · Environmental groups esll\blish carbon limits in
'• .
·such as the Sierra Club and their air perrii.its."
Carson took exception with
Natural Resources Defense
Council have been a vocal that statement, saying: "We
'Opponent to American never insisted that ... · we
·Municipal Power-Ohio's never said that. What we said
bailout' plan for the auto
Bv MARK WtLUAMS
:planned coal-fired power was, it (carbon dioxide) is not
loJ'
9USlNESS
WRITER
industry, saying action is necplant in Letart Falls. They, a regulated pollutant · at this
essary before President-elect
along with other inter- point in time. When it is.
COLUMBUS - Even as Barack Obarna takes office ill"
venors, are appealing the we'll deal with it based on
Detroit's
Big Three teeter on January.
plant's air permit-to-install whatever the retjUirements of
Auto
He said if one automaker
approved earlier this year law are, and we ve said time collapse , United
and time again, one principal Workers President Rqn· were to file for bankruptcy,
by IAe Ohio EPA.
. d&gt;'YieJ~ revi~l th~ ~ ·&lt;we · ohqse: PQVveyspan Gettelfinger_, saiQ Saturdlly the others may follow. He
Bt!'ctsion," Kent Carson , technology as part of the that workers . will bot make said the automakers would
communications · director plant's emission control tech- any more concessions and find it difficult to restructure
for AMP-Ohio said about nology was it shows.promise that getting the automakers under. bankruptcy laws and
the Utah case . "We review to be able to control or cap- back on their feet means ftg- instead could end up out of
!Ill ~ecisions for all permits ture carbon emissions."
uring out a way to turn around business. "Would you buy a
nationally that affect our
One thing both sides of the slumping economy. ·
car from a bankrupt automak- .
industry ... we recognize it the issu·e agree on is this
''The focus has to be on the er?" he asked .
could have widespread decision's potential to affect . economy as a whole as
The Center for Automotive
jmpact and are looking at it a national policy/standard opposed to a UAW contract," Research, which receives
very carefully."
on carbon dmxide emission Gettelfinger told reporters on funding from the auto indus· Carson also pointed out, controls.
a conference call, noting the try, has warned that the colthe decision was not in
"Again, Ohio is a unique, labor costs now make up 8 lapse of the Big Three could In this Oct. 7-flle photo, United Auto Workers
Ron
Ohio, which has a fully fully delegated pro~rarn, an percent to 10 pen.~nt of the . set off a catastrophic chain Gettelfinger talks to reporters in Detroit. Even as Detroit's
approved state permitting approved program · m terms cost of a vehicle. .
reaction in the economy, Big Three automake~ teeter on collapse, Gettelfinger says
program , and that AMP- of issuing an air permit, it's
"We have made dramatic, eliminating up to 3 million . workers will not make 11ny more concessions and that get·
Ohio has work~for over a a process that stays in dramatic changes and the jobs and more than $j50 bil- ting the automakers back on their feet means figuring out a
year in cooperation with Ohm," Carson said. "That's UAW was · applauded · for lion in tax revenue over the way to turn around the economy.
Ohio EPA in meeting all doesn't m,ean it couldn't be that," he said,
next three years.
requirements of Ohio law in impacted from tlte decision . Instead,
Gettelfinger
Gettelfinger called on through. the economic crisis duck Congress are pressing
regards to getting the plant bui no one knows for sure." blamed the problems the auto Congress to .act quickly to and 1fie worst sales sllll11P In for a bailout of Detroit's Big
online . Carson also pomted
The Associated Press · industry is suffering from on provide loans to help the more than 25 years . GM three with money from the · .
:out the permit for the Utah reports the panel's recom- things beyond its control automakers until the econo- appears to be in the worst
;plant was not denied but mendation was sent back to the housing slump, the CTC\Iit my improves and the shape, warning .that it can!t $700 billion Wall Street res:sent back to a regional the Denver office which crunch that has ~de financ· automakers c!l)l move ahead . borrow from normal sources. cue. package. But President
George W. Bush and many
··office for reevaluation. ·
"must better explain why it ing a vei1icle to\lgh .rind the with their plans to become
The
nation's
largest Republicans have come out
~: In a press release, the Sierra failed to order limits on-car- 1.2 million jobs that' h11ve more competitive.
automaker said it had $16.2
Club stated: "Two of the bon dioxide."
been lost in the past year.
"We cannot afford to allow billion in cash at the end of against the idea, arguing that
largest new coal proposals for
The AP also reports the
"We're here not because of to see this industry collapse. Septembcir, raising the possi- the financial rescue package
:ohio, the AMP-Ohio power following statement by the what the auto industry has There is a real concern that bility that GM will fall below was not intended for such
:plant in Meigs County. and panel on its ruling as "an done," he said. "We're here could happen."
. the minimum of $11 billion to uses, and that a bailout would
:the Baard liquid coal plant in rssue of national scope that because of what has hapGeneral Motors Corp., Ford $14 billion needed for day-to- reward Jlll&lt;lr management and
:Columbiana County, are like- has implications far beyond pened to the economy." ·
Motor Co . and Chrysler LLC day operations by the end of lead other industries to
·ly to face setbacks from the this individual permitting
Gettelfinger also called on are seeking $25 billion from the year.
:
demand government hand'
ruling. Both companies had process."
Congress to act quic\dy on a the government to get them
Democrats in the lame- outs.
that .Phillips plans to pursue ·
the matter to full conclu·sion. Ultimately, Phillips
·said before the election, the ·
OEC could order an apolo.gy from the GOP and its
officials. or levy civil fines
against those responsible
'for any intentional false
'statements.
·: "We fully intend to follow
·through with the complaint
·and be a part of the full
hearing, whenever it is set,"
Dorans said. "We would
:expect a resolution before
the eno of the year, but the
-OEC has a backlog of cases
'because of the recent election."
Dorans said a second com.plaint, originally filed against
the
Athens
County

Nov. 18 proclaimed National Community Education Day

AMP

·UAW leader says no more .concessions

L

Diles Hearing
moving office
GALLIPOLIS - Diles Hearing Center ·
will be moving its Gallipolis office to
Jackson.
·
The Gallipolis office will close on
~ednesday , Nov. 19 and will reopen at
232 Huron St., Jackson , on Monday, Dec .
I. The new telephone number will be
(740) 288-3571 . The Athens bu sines s
office can be reached at (800) 237-7716.
PresideJ• t and audiologist Diane McVey
said it was with great difficulty that the
decision was made to relocate the office .
She has appreciated the opportunity to
serve the residents of the Gallipoli s
region for the last 6-1/2 years and hopes
they will continue to work with Dile s in
theu Jackson or Athens offices.
All patient records will be taken to the
·Jackson office .
The staff in the Jackson location will
. be Diane McVey , MA , CCC-A; Margaret·
White , office assistant; and Jess ica
Ziegler, HIS Trainee.
.

CHESHIRE - River . Valley Hi gh
School 's Beta Club will be sponsoring
~ lrttergenerational Programming" on
Tuesday, Nov. 18 from 3 to 5 p.m. at the
high school.
. This will be the first of four nights for
'diffe~ent generations to spend some time
learmng from each other. The Beta Club
is asking that families with three or more
· generations participate. · · ·
. The time will be-spent playing "parlor
games ," such as hearts, checke r~. chess,
dominoes, etc . Al so, students can teach

Community
events

TtcMioll....,

Meeting change
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District will hold 'its
monthly board meeting on Friday; Nov.
21 at 2 p.m. in the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center.
The meeting has been rescheduled.
from Nov. 14.

Without It!

.

t.:~(J- 1.~.

\.;/~~

Employment
approved
RIO GRANDE - Employment of
Steve C. Youn g as Building Trades
instructor for the remainder of the current . school year was approved by the
Gallia-Jackson- Vinton Joint Vocational
Board of Education .at its Nov. 12 regular
monthly meeting .
Additionally, the board awarded part·
time , hourl y contracts for Carl Detty_ and
Ronald Malone , and employed certtftqted and non-certificated substitute personnel for the remainder of the 2008'-09
school year.
The board also gave its permiss ion to
enter into agreements with the firm of
Four Seasons Environmental as the
school disirict 's OSFC Maintenance Plan
advisor.

Commission
·to meet

Rei!istration
Now OPen
For mrJf"t' informotiM conrac1;

ftrtlll l'nUm&lt;Jft
.(14ll) '»2-/lllll!or
-R.b&lt;WIU..g

(800) ~2·1201. t .tl. 7425 .
Email:
.
.mtpli'ril&gt;.tdo "'rlt'"-'erio.edu

oio""' RwJ."" ;........miWIJldllriulmu

RIO GRANDE MEIGS CENTER
Spring Sem~ster 2009

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipoli s City
Commission will meet in special session
at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the City Building ,
City Manager Joe Woodall announced .

Dear.

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Card shower

• , . M'J'
• lnitn: Mnlligilg . keep your buddy lilt!
• 10 t-fl1lil ~ M:h w.tlmlilf
• Cullom Start Page · IIIWt, v.ul'lll' &amp; lft!Yt!

A('\' I!.Ml1
810 11404

;

Support groups

the older generations how to play games
of their generation, such as video games.

nwast: .

....

.

McKenzie
Agricultural at St. Peter 's Episcop&lt;d
Center. The meetmg was Church.
rescheduled from Nov. 14.
GALLIPOLIS
Sunday, Nov. 23
Narcotics
Anonymous
. KANAUGA - Veterans Miracles in Recovery meets
Thanksgiving dinner, 2 to 4 ·every
Monday
and
p.m .. at DAV/AMVETS. Saturday. 7:30 p.m., at St.
Gallia County veterans, Peter's Episcopal Church.
widows, and family memPOINT
I'LEASANT,
bers are welcome. Please W.Va..
Narcotics
call 446-3642, no later than Anonymous l,.iving Free
3 p.m. on Nov. 13, to make Group
meets
every
reservations .
Wednesday and Friday at 7
1\Jesday, Nov. 25
p.m. at 305Main St.
EWINGTON
VINTON - Celebrate
· American Legion Post 161 Recovery at Vinton Baptist
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Chllrch. Small groups lookEwington Academy. All ing for freedom from addicmembers are urged to tions , hurts, habits and
attend .
hangups every Wednesday
·Tuesday, Dec. 2
at 7 p.m. For information.
GALLIPOUS - Holzer call 388-8454.
,
Clinic Retirees will meet for
POINT
PLEASANT,
. lunch at noon at the W.Va. - "Let Go and Let
Courtside Bar &amp; Grill , 308 God" Nar-Anon · Family
Second Ave .
Group meeting , every
Monday at 7 p.m .. Krodel
Park recreational building .
The group helps families
and friends of dn1g addict,s
GALLIPOLIS
Grieving Parents Support or ·users to attain serenitY..
Group meets 7 p.m. second regardless of whether
Monday of each month at he/she has stopped using.
Holzer Medical Center. The group respects all
People attending should members' anonymity.
meet in the general lobb;v.
For information , call Jackte
Keatley at 446-2700 or
Na!JCY CIJilds at 446-5446.
GALLIPOLIS - Eloise
ATHENS - Survival of Ross will celebrate her 82nd
Suicide support group birthday on Nov. 20 . Cards
meets 7 p.m.. fourth can be sent to her at 16
Thursday of each month at Vinton Ave ., Gallipolis.
Athens Church of Christ, Ohio 45631.
785 W. Union St., Athens.
GALLIPOLIS - A card
For information , call 593- shower is being held for
7414.
Roger. McGuire. Cards can
GALLIPOLIS - Look be sent to him at Arbors of
Good Feel Better cancer Gallipolis, 170 Pinecrest
program , third Monday of Drive , Gallipolis. Ohio
the month at 6 p.m., Holzer 45631.
Cente~ for Cancer Care.
E-mail community calenGALLIPOLIS
dar ilems to kkeUy@mydai·
Alcoholics
Anonymous lytribune.com.
· Fax
Wednesday book. study at 7 announcements to 446p.m . and Thursday open 3008. Mail items to 82$
meeting at noon at St. Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
Pe(er's Episcopal Church, 45631. Announcements
541 Second Ave . Tuesday may lllso be dropped off at
closed meeting is at 8 p .m. the Tribune office.

Local
Briefs
.

Intergenerational
.
·programmmg

-'" ---~

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Gallia County calendar
Monday, Nov. 17
GALLIPOLIS - Knights
·of Columbus will meet at
6:30 p.m. at the Holiday
Inn. All members are urged
to attend ..
· GALLIPOLIS - Ohio
State University Extension
will .host an information
session on livestoc k risk
protection , 7 p.m., Gallia
County Extension Office .
Thesday, Nov. 18
GALLIPOLIS -- PlR I
will meet at the First Baptist
Church, 1100 Fourth Ave ., 2
p.m .. for election of officers. Dues of $4 per member for 2009 may be paid .
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Homemakers Club
will meet, 10:30 a.m., in the
meeting room of the C.H.
McKenzie
Agricultural
Center. A potluck dinner
will follow at noon .
GALLIPOLIS - NAMl
Southeast Ohio Inc. will
conduct a special meeting, 5
p.m., al the Gallia County
Senior Resource Center.
Light refreshments will be
served . A regular. board
meeting will be held directly afterward. The.meeting is
open to the public and more
information is available
from Jill Simpkins at (740)
339-0603.
CHESHIRE
lnterngenerational games ,
including parlor games, at
River Valley High School. 3
to 5 p.m. For information,
contact the high school at
367-7377.
RIO GRANDE
Open
Gate Garden Club will meet
at 7:30p.m. at the home of
Jackie Davis . Program :
"Colors of a Winter
Garden" by Clara Day. ·
Thursday, Nov. 20
VINTON
'
Huntington/Morgan Crime
Watch will meet at 6 p.m. at
Vinton Village Hall .
Friday, Nov. 21
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District Board
of Supervisors monthly
meeting , 2 p.m ., C.H.

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Sunday, November.l6, 2008

..

OPINION .

6u11bap lim~ -imtintl

825 Third Avenue • Gelll~lls, Ohio

Coming soon to a coll]puler or cell phone near
you! The Wired White
House!
·
Cokie
Barack Obama will fol·
and ·
low the same strategy thilt
Steven
.won the election to gov·
Roberts
ern country: Use the
Internet to conduct an
interactive conversation
with voters and make
them feel they own a Internet." More than 3
stake in his success. A million donors gave
quick glance at his new money online. and those
Web site, change.gov, funds
helped
the
reveals how this works . Democrat
overwhelm
The word "your" appears ·Republican John McCain
a dozen times on ' the with over-the-air adver·
home page, as in this. tising and on-the-ground
headline: "It's Your organizing.
America: Share . Your
More importantly. those
· Ideas." The word "my" contribu19rs chaoged the
doesn't appear at all.
w.ay they thought about
This is partly a PR elections - and themstunt. Obama's Treasury selves, They turned froin
secretary won't spend pass ive recipients of
mu.ch time sifting through information to active par·
e-mails, looking for solu· ticipants in politics . Each
lions to the fiscal crisis. one became a potential
broadcaster
But if Obama can harness organizer,
the energy and excitement and fundraiser.
The impact of this stralthat supported his candiegy
is prelty clear: .in bat·
dacy to strengthen his
presidency, he might tleground states, .the
actually change the way Obama camp contacted
that Washington does half of all voters; 1-in-10
voters in those states were
business.
"Once you have people first-timers; young people
connected through a net- voted two to one for
work, you can't discon· Obama.
nect," Peter Daou, an · His team understood
Internet strategist for that intensity matters.
Hillary Clinton, told the Election eve polls showed
Washington Post. "It's that 7-of-10 Obama sup·
like unbreaking an egg. porters were enthusiastic
People· all across the about th eir choice, but
. country have . formed onty · 4 ~ in-IO McCain
groups to support Obama. backers felt that way. The
They've worked together Web helped expand that
for a successful purpose. devolion , and exploit it at
You don 't let go of that the polls .
So how will Obama
easily."
·
AI Gore was undoubt- shift from campaigning to
. edly right when he said governing? One obvious
recently that Obama's way is using the Internet
se nd
information
to
viCtory "couldn 'I have directly
to
his
supporters ,
happened without the ·

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
W'f!W.mydellytrlbune.com

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Kevin Kelly

Controller

Managing Editor

Letters to the editor are welcome . They should be less
tlum 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing and must
be signed and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned /elfers will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues. not personalities.
·

TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today is Sunday, Nov. 16, the 32Ist day of2008. There
~re 45 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
· On Nov. 16, 1908, conductor Arturo Toscanini made his
debut with the New York Metropolitan Opera as he led a
performance of Verdi's "Aida."
On this date :
· In 1776. British troops captured Fort Washington in New
'York during the American Revolution. . .
· .
• In 1885. Canadian rebel leader Louis Riel was executed
for high treason.
.
.
·· In 1907, Oklahoma became toe 46th state of the union.
In 1917, Georges Clemenceau again became prime min·
ister of France.
· In 1933, the United States and the Soviet I,Jnion estab·
lished diplomatic relations.
· In 1959, the Rodgers alid Hammerstein musical "The
Sound of Music" opened on Broadway.
In 1961, House Speaker Samuel T. Rayburn died in
Bonham, Texas, having served as speaker since 1940
except for two terms.
In 1966, Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard was acquitted in his
second trial of murdering his pregnant wife, Marilyn, in
1954.
.. In 1973, Skylab 4, cariying a crew of three astronauts,
was launched, from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on an 84-day
.l)lission.
In 1982, an agreement was announced in the 57th day of
a strike by National Football League players.
.. Ten years ago: The Supreme Court ruled ihat union mem·
bers can file discrimination lawsuits against employers
.e.ven when labor contracts require arbitration. House
.Democrats re-elected Dick Gephardt as their leader.
Five years ago: Serbs failed for the third time in a year to
' elect a president because of lo&gt;v voter turnout. Bettina
.Goislard, a French United Nations worker, was shot and
killed in Afghanistan.
, ~:year~: , ~ ~epublicansblocked a •$50 billion
bill by Democrats thai would have paid for several months
of combat but also would have ordered troop withdrawals
from Iraq to begin within 30 days. Marchers surrounded the
Justice Department headquarters to demand federal inter·
vention in the Jena Six case in Louisiana and stepped-up
enforcement of hate crimes. Poland's new prime minister,
Donald Tusk, formally took office along with a team of for·
·mer anti-communist dissidents.
· Today's Birthdays: Actor Clu Gulager is 80. Blues musi:cian Hubert Sumlin is 77. Journalist Elizabeth Drew is 73.
·Blues musician W.C. Clark is 69. Actor Steve Railsback is 63.
Actor David Leisure is 58. Actress Marg Helgenberger is 50.
Rock musician Mani is 46. Country singer-musician Keith
Bums (Trick Pony) is 45. Former tennis player Zina Garrison
·is 45. Fonner baseball player Dwight Gooden is 44. Jazz
singer Diana Krall is 44. Actor Harry Lennix is 44. Rock
musician Dave Kushner (Velvet Revolver) is 42. Actress Lisa
Bonet is 41 . Actress Tammy Lauren is 40. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Bryan Abrams (Color Me Badd) is 39. Actress Martha
Plimpton is 38. Actress Missi Pyle is 36. Olympic gold medal
figure skater Oksana Baiul is 31. Actress Maggie Gyllenhaal
is 3 I. Pop singer Trevor Penick is 29. Actress Kimberly J.
Brown is 24. Actor Noah Gray-Cabey ("Heroes") is 13.
Thought for Today: "History is a combination of reality
and lies. The reality of History becomes a tie. The unreali. ty of the fab le becomes the truth." - Jean Cocteau, French
author, director, poet (1889·1963).

·•

EDITOR
: Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be
less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing,
must be signed, and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and indi·
viduals will not be qccepted for publication.

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Sunday, November 16, 2008

• i,

avoiding the filter of jour· will be political. Obama
nalists. commentators and will start his re-election
critics. Already his Web . campaign immediately.
site provides links to key and as he employs tech·.
videos, such as his press nology to inform and
conference on th~. econo· energize supporters, he
my, bill that 's only the will continue to expand
beginning .
Since the .Obama cam- hi s · database . The more
paign produced more 1han you use the Internet. the
1.800 videos - that were more powerful a tool II
.
watched for 14.5 million ·becomes .
There
is
a
downside
hours on You Tube expect a daily dose of here . Campaigning focus·
10 es on one clear, unifying
updates.
framed
enhance the White House goal
elec1ion.
viewpoint. Visitors 10 Gove(ning is a lot
change .gov are urged to messier, and when Obama
use. it as "your source"' for
information about . the starts. making compromis·
Admini stration .
1\nd es to gee legislation
BTW. goes the implica- through -:- on taxes. say.
tion. don 't bother with all or -lra4 funding - some
those olher sources that disenchantment will. be
don ' t share our "vis ion ."
inevitable. And his sup. A second critical use of porter~ will have a readythe Internet will be pro- made online channel to
moting Obama 's legisla- voice ·rheir dismay.
tive agend~ He '"'-' 10 mi l- . Obama does not own
lion e-mail addresses and
countle&amp;s cell phone num: the lnlernet. Interest
bers in the bank and ready gfoups of all kinds to go. Ju st imagine the lirst · from environmentalists to
fight over a Supreme Court riglll -to -l.ifers - can use'
nominee that Republican the same i\etworks to trigsenators arc tryi ng to ger pressure and dissent.
block . Think what pressure And as Obama learned
could be brought 10 bear. during the campaign,
almost inswnrl y, on law- damaging rumors can
makers from states that swirl through cyberspace
Obama won - say George
Voinovich of Ohio , or Judd at warp speed.
Obama re-wrote the
Gregg of New Hampshire.
Grassroots ·-organizing . rules of campaigning. Reis hardly new. smart lob· writing the rul~s of gov·
byists have been using the erning will be much hard· ·
tactic for .years, but tech· er. But we're about to see
nology ca n vastly expand him try.
its impact. "If a congress(Cokie Roberts · latest
man goes home and sees a book iJ .. Ladies oj
town hall meeting with Liherty: Tile Womeri Who
I ,000 people in their distri cts. that malters," Slwped Our Nation"
Thomas Gen.semer of (William Mormw, 2008).
Blue State Digital told Steve aud Cokie Roberts
Slate.
· call be reached at steveA third use of the Web cokie 0' gmai/.com .)

•

,.

"The past is the past,"
aside from the die-hard
Gov. Sarah Palin declared
conservatives who gob·
at her first and only offi·
bled up the p&lt;irtisan red
cia! press conference of
nu.at she fed them at
the 2008 presidential
every campaign whistle
Donna
stop. voters never ret1lly
campaign season, which,
oddly enough, was held
warmed ll]l to Palin. And.
after the election. "It's
Brazile
if the polls are right ,
behind us."
many believe she doomed
Is it?
.
the ticket. With Sarah the
Palin is in ·front of ttie
Barracuda the only per·
media more now that the
sona thai made headlines ,
campaign has ended than . easy. Her fellow GOP Palin will have to come
governors who appeared
'
·
She ever Was as a Candi.. on
other RGA panels _ up Wit 11 a new narrat1ve
date. Palin, who it seems Barbotir, Pawlenty and going forward.
criticizes the media for Jindal _ as welt as
While Sen. Hillary
her woes every time she Florida's Charlie Crist Clinton was known for
moves her lips, i"s now and South Carolina's be"iog tough, she looked
providing as much fodder Mark Sanford , att ·cons.id- · like Little Bo Peep com·
as possible to the Mc~ain er themselves poised for pared to Palin's lipslitk·
campaign staff she claims higher office. And, 1 smeared pit bull. Even
· treated her badly,
would imagine. they hold now, with the .campaign
While'
Republican at least a slight resent- over. Palin st ill insi sts
Govs. Haley Barbour of menl that Palin was the that
President -elect
Mississippi, Bobby Jindal governor tapped for a Barack Obmna is palling
of Louisiana ·and Tim position she neither . around with unrepentant
Pawlenty of Minnesota deserved nor understood. terrori sts. But. she told
Palin, while brilliant in . CNN 's Wolf Blitzer in an
sat do.wn last Wednesday
at
the
Republican . her role as campaign interview last Wednesday,
Governors' Association attack dog, is far fro.m she would be honored to
(RGA) annual meeting to being the only up-and- help oul Obama in hi s
evaluate what went wrong . corning GOP governor new administralion , even
in 2008, Palin ·was on a with a defined constituen- if he did hang around
different mission: how to cy and interesting future with an "unrepe ntant
set things right for herself prospects. She will face domestic terrorist."
in 2012.
· stiff competition not only
Palin , having returned
Before headlining an from fellow governors, her $150.000 wardrobe to
RGA panel discussion but also from the likes of the Republican National
titled "Looking Toward former New .York City Commillee. now stands
the Future ," Palin held a Mayor Rudy Giuliani, naked in her ambition.the
much-touted press con' former Massachusetts's scope of which is breathference in which she Gov. Mitt Romney and takmg and sure to keep
answered a grand total of Arkan sas' ·
Mike her nega1i ve approval rat ·
three questions . The. Huckabee in her pursuit ings hi g~er than expect·
Alaskan governor is cer- of national office. Who ed . Even ambilious attack
tainly looking toward the knows? Maybe even dogs should know when
future - hers.
Newt Gingrich . .
to stop . Vier President·
Palin is hoping to create
Starting this early, it 's elect Joe Bitlen showed
a bright future that clear where Palin has set impressive restrai nt on
includes an even more her sights, and it's clear the
can\paign
trail ,
prestigious title than vice she has no intention of whereas Palin relished in
president. She · started looking back at Team being
downright
paving her way to the. McCain . Indeed , when Machiavellian.
Oval Office before her she went "rogue" during
Blind ambition and a
running mate had even the campaign, Palin taste for blood should not
ended his concession seemed rather desperate necessari ly knock her out
speech. Having been not to drown.on McCain's of contention for higher
denied the chance to sinking ship . Palin knew office in lhe future . But it
deliver her own conces- she alone would be held · will force her 11ew makesion speech/20 12 declara· responsible for McCain 's up artists to come up with
tion announcement at that loss if she didn't go on something classier and
event, she had to wait a her own offensive, so she more substantive than
day or two to make' her threw awa&gt;' .the campaign negative attack sou nd
ambitions
abundantly talking pomts and started bites. Granted , campaigns
clear.
to set sai l in her ow·n one- sometimes bring out the
But the future race to w~an lifeboat.
worst in people. Btil once
the White House won't be
The problem is tha•, they're over, they tend to

also bring out humility
and grace, qualities needed to be on di splay for
any future wannabes for
political offiGe.
If this elect ion communicated anything, it i~ that
voters are tired of the old
divisive polilics of the
past. The country wanted
change. They chose
someone who in spi red
hope and invited ·a new
generation n( Americans
to tak e their seals at the
table.
There is so much for tbc
Reptiblican Pmty to learn
from the la~t two elec tions . In both election
cycles, noted a clear-eyed
Jindal,
voters
fired
Republican s "for cause:·
The country has matured
beyond electing . I ~ade rs
who represent only a tiny
fraction of the people segmented by artificial barri ers.
Palin belongs to the old
era in which candidates
could appeal to only a
· narrow segment of voters
and still win the majority
&lt;)f lh e electorate. More
people are voting now.
And many of them wilt
decide to run for office
th emse lve s, perhaps as
Reptlblicuns wi ll ing to
campaign in places where
moderates breed. in cities
where minoriti es reside or
college campus where the
"youug and restless" call
home for four years or
more .
·
Palin . mc;u1while, wili
never beco me the face of
a part y in wilderness
when she stl!l cannot see
the forest for the trees . .
(Donna Brazile is a
polirical commentator on
CNN. ABC and NPR; con rrihuting columnist to
Roll Call, the newspaper
of Capitol Hill ; and /Qr·
mer campaign marwger
for AI Gore .) , .

iilunba!'

~imrs -&amp;entinrl

• Page As

Deaths

William Richard 1111r call
William Richard "Bill"
Call, 42, of Long Bottom,
.. went to be With the Lord on
Saturday, Nov. 15, 2008, ·
after an extended illness.
Bill was born Dec. 17
1965, in Pomeroy, son of
the late William ''Hapfy"
Call Jr., and Selma Cal of
Long Bottom.
Bill was a member of the
Forest
Run
United
Methodist Church. He was
also a member of the
Forked Run Gun Club. He
.'.
was a former emrloyee of
Veterans Memoria Hospital
and WIS International.
William R. 'Bill' Call
He is survived by: his
,
mother, Selma Call; one half-brother, John E. Call Sr. of
Summerfield, Fla.; two lialf-sisteys, Margaret E. Miller of
Long Bottom, andLinda L. Rollins and her husband, Dale, of
New Orlean_s, ~.; one uncle, Fuad Yahy.a and his wife,
Nancy, of Wichtta~ Kan.; one aunt, Je~n Yahya of Hie;h Point,
· N.C.; spectal cousm, Cmdy Co!hns.Rice of Jacksonville, Fla.;
·and man~ ~ther nieces, nephews and cousins.
·
In addition to his father, he was pteceded in death by a
half-brother, Jackie Call, and a half-sister, Karen Call.
Services wilf be I p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2008, at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with
Pastor Bob Robinson officiating. Burial will follow at
Riverview Cemetery. Visiting hours will be Monday, Nov.
17, 2008. from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
. In lieu of flowers, donations rna&gt;' be made to J.iolzer
Hospice, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
A re~istry is available online by visiting www .andersonmcdamel.com.
·
·

son, Eddie Willis II of Racine; and three brothers and one
sister, Bryan (Christine) Seagraves of Vinton, Tim (Angie)
Seagraves of Rio Grande. Jeff (Sherry) Seagraves of Oak
Hill, and Rita (Ricky) Elkins of Pikeville. Ky. ·
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 19,2008. in the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home at Vinton, with Pastor
Charles Seagraves officiating. Burial will follow in the
Centerpoint Cemetery, near Oak Hill. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 5 to 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2008.
In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be given to the
Richard M. Seagraves Memorial Fund, P.O. Box 148,
Vinton, Ohio 45686.

· 'thomas Siders
Thomas Siders, 87. Gallipali s. died Friday, Nov. 14,
2008, at his residence.
Arrangements wilt be announced by the .Cremeens
Funeral Chapel.

Correction

GALLIPOLIS - It was added to the French Art
incorrectly reported in Colony's Holiday Home
M~1phy
Thursday's edition of tbe Tour and that Tope's has
Gallipolis
Daily Tribune agreed to furnish the home
Melvin C. Murphy, 96, of Reedsville. passed . away
Thursday, Nov. 13 , 2008, .at Rocksprings Rehabilitation that the recently-renovat· for tour.
ed former Aleshire House
In fact, no such agreement
.
Center in Pomeroy.
He was born Nov. 12, 1912, in New Straitsville, son of m Gallipolis had been has been made.
the late George C. and Emma Schutz Murphy.
He was· an Army veteran of World War II, and retired
from Ohio Fuel and Columbia Gas.
..
He is survived by two sisters, Louise Keith ofTbe Plains ,
and Judy Phillips of Pickerington; a brother, David Murphy
of Columbus; and several nie.:es and nephews.
.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his
Bv JAY LINDsAY ·
wife, Lillie Murphy; and three brothers, Marvin, Mavin and
However, representatives
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
George Murphy.
·
.
of Join the Impact. which
Graveside services will be held at I p.m. Monday, Nov ..
organized Saturday's demonBOSTON - Gay rights . strations. asked supporters lp
17,_ 2008, at Athens Memory Gardens in Athens, with
Pastor Kathryn Riley officiating. Friends· may c·all at supporters in the state where be respectful and refrain from
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville from It a.m. same-sex couples first attacking other groups during
exchanged wedding vows the rallies.
until noon Monday.
, You · can sign the online guestbook at www.white· gathered Saturday to protest
The mood in Boston was
the California vote that generally upbeat, with attenschwarzelfuneralhome.com.
·
banned gay marriage there dees dancing and signing to
and to urge supporters not to the song "Respect .'' Signs
quit the {ight for the right to cast
the tight for gay marriage
wed.
·
.
as
the
new civil rights moveMatilda A. "Tillie" Northup, 59 , of Vinton, passed away
Crowds gathered near pubin her home on Friday, Nov. 14, 2008, surrounded by her lic buildings in small commu· ment, il)cluding one that read
family and loved ones.
· .
nities .and major cities includ- . "Gay is the new black.".
But anger ov~r the ban aQd
. She was a homemaker and a loving molher who was born · ing New York, San Frnncisco
Richard M. Seagraves,
May 4, 1949. in Galli a County, daughter of the late Charles and Chicago to vent their its backers was evident at the
52, of Oak Hill (Centerpoint . ,----.--,.-----. Hill and Virgie Casey Hill.
.
frustrations, celebrate gay protests.
Community); passed away
One sign in Chicago read:
She married James Lowell Northup in 1966 in Gallia relationships and renew calls
at his residence on Friday,
. County, and he survives with three sons and three daugh· forchange.
"Catholic Fascists Stay Out af
.
Nov. 14, 2008.
ters, James Lee "Jim" Northup of Patriot, To11y Northup of
"Civil marriages are a civil Politics."
He was born June 6, 1956,
Oak Hill, Terry (Stacy) Northup of Gallipolis, Patricia right, and we're going to keep
"I just found out that my
in" Oak Hill, son of
(Don) Parcel of Beavercreek, Tammy Gilbert of Thurman, fighting until we get the rights ~tate doesn't'realty think I'm a
Annabelle Terry Seagraves
and Sherri Noithup of Gallipolis; 13 grandchildren and one we deserve as American citi· person," said Rose Aplustill.
of Oak Hill, and the late
great-grandchild; and one brother, Roger (Mary) Hill of zens," Karen Alnico said in 2l, a Boston University stu·
Flemon Seagraves Jr.
Grove City.
. · ·
· Philadelphia, holding up a dent from Los Osos , Calif.,
Richanl was a retired
She was preceded in death by two brothers and one sis- sign reading "Don't Spread who was one pf thousands at
truck driver, pro'moter of
ter, Lloyd and Cly&lt;le Hill, and Frances Hill.
HS".
,
the Boston rally.
·
Vinton Raceway, president
Anyone who knew her loved her because she was a
"We are the American famPlanning for the nationwide
of the French City Camping
beautiful person. Even t.hough our hearts are broken, we ily, we live next door to you, protests wa1 start.ed by a
Club, and a former member
know she is born again in Heaven looking Jesus face to we teach your children, we Seattle blogger, Amy Ballien,
.
·
face.
.
of Our Gang CB Club,
take care of your elderly," just days after the Califomia
Richard M. Seagraves
where he was known by his
Serliices will hi: noon Tuesday,' Nov. 18, 2008, in the said Heather Baker a special vote, which took away gay
handle "Buckeye Moose."
~cCpy-Moore Funeral Home at Vinton, with the Rev. education
teacher from
He is survived by his wife, Rose Gore Seagraves; three Heath Jenkins officiating. llurial will follow in the Vinton Boston who addressed the marriage right$ that had bee(l
children, Anna (Eddie) Willis, Richard Martin Seagraves Jr., Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funera! home from crowd at Boston's City Hall granted by the state's high
court.
and James Fle!llon Seagraves all of Oak Hill; a step-grand- 6 to 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 17,2008.
.
Plaza. "We need equal rigpt
The ide·a rapidly spread
across the country."
online and Join the Impact
Massachusetts
and predicted that ·Saturday's
Connecticut, which began protests would involve tens o.f
same sex weddings this past thousands of people in hun.·
week, are the only two states
B\' MARCiA DUNN
start on what's going io be station, most notably a rev- metal grit from grinding that allow ·gay marriage. All dreds of communities.
In North Dakota, where
APAEROSI?I\CE WRITER '
, an extremely e;l(citing, very
olutionary recyc,ling sys- parts. The spacewalking 30 slates that have voted on
voters
in 2004 ovetwhelmcomplex ' and challenging . tern to turn urine into astronauts will clean and gay ·marriage have enacted
ingly approved a constitutionCAPE CANAVERAL, : miss10n." .
·
. drinking water.
lubricate that joint, replace bans.
al
ban on same-sex marriage,
Fla.- . . Space
shuttle
NASA almost delayed
That, along with the new its bearings and apply extra
Protests following the vote
low-key
protests were · held
"kitcl)enene, grease to keep a twin joint on Proposition 8 in
Endeavour .raced toward the launch because .of a bathroom,
the international space sta· door frame left loose at the exerci~~e machi~~¢ and two working.
California, which defined Saturday in Grand Forks and
tion on Saturday for a home pad by a . '."orke~ w~o extra . bedroon:ts being , The sp~ce agency has marriage as between a man Fargo, where people linell a
makeover job after a bril· promptly admitted hts mts· delivered, should allow lust 10 shunle flights, 111\d a woman, have . some· bridge carrying signs and
·
liant moonlit launch that . take. Launch controllers NASA to double the size of mcluding .this one, before times been angry and even flags.
had NASA managers in determine~ the flapping the space station crew. The the fleet is retired in 2010 violent, and demonstrators
"It's been very peaceful,"
awe . · ,
frame would not htt the goal is to ·add .three more to make way for a new have targeted faiths that sup· said Josh Boschee, who
· The shuttle and its seven shuttle.
residents, for ~ total of six, ~ocketship . capable of ·rak- ported the ban, including the helped organize the Fargo
astronauts blasted into orbii
A nearly full . moon, by next \June. ·
mg astronauts to the space Mormon church:
protest
Friday night on a mission glowing orange at times,
By the time Endeavour station and, eventually, the
to redo the insides of the adorned the sky . .as leaves, the space station · moon. An additional shuttle
space slation, adding some Endeavour began tts JOUr· will have morphed into a flight or two could be in
KIRKLAND MEMORIAL UfiJ"-L
extra bedrooms and.a spat:e ney.
, .
fiye-bedroom, two-bath, NASA's ·future, however, to
bathroom and kitchenette·.
SD?n. -· aft~r .:: hftoff, tW\)·Jdtchen horile.
·
narrow the projected five"A Perpetual Care Cemetery"
" It'-s pur turn to take Mtsston Cortrol m~~~ed
"We're . abo,ut to get an year gap between the last
St. Rt. 62 North
home improv.ement to a the astronauts th~ a. qutck extreme home 'malf.eover," shuttle flight and the first
Point Pleasant, WV
new level after 10 years of look at the launct'! ptcl\lres the space ·station's eom- manned launch of the new
international space station reve~led .t)'Vo,·· pteces of rnijllder-, Mike l'incke; told spaceship.
construction," commander debns trathng Enileavour, Missjo~ Control. "It does"As you saw today, we
"Serving the Area for 50 years"
Christopher
Ferguson ~ne at 33 seconds after n't get better t¥n this, my arranged to have the moon
called out.
hftoff and_the other arou~d friends.''
. ·
out there ... that's the perFerguson . and his crew the two-mmute mark. It d~d
The shu.ttle astronauts feet analogy of transition,"
ATTENTION LOT OWNERS
will double as plumbers n~l appear . that the debns also will take on a lube job ·said Bill Gerstenmaier,
and installers once they htt the sh~ttle, but analyses at the space station.
head of NASA's space
Your cemetery is perpetual. We purchase your.
A ma&amp;sive joint that operations.
arrive at the 220-mile-high wtll contmue for several
memorial directly from the manufacturer, where
space station Sunday, more days to be certam the rotates half of the solar
·
•••
hooking up extra cooking spacecraft was not- dam· wings toward the sun has
On the Net:
the best materials are used as we are concerned
and sleeping equipment as aged.
, .
. been jammed for more than
NASA :
http://spacewith the appearance and upkeep of the cemetery.
well as a new water recy:rhe astronaut_s mam pn· a year; it's clogged with · flight.nasa .gov
The additional income from your memorial
' cling system so the sta· onty Saturday ts to survey
purchase' is used to continue ·the upkeep and
tion'screwcanexpandnext their ship's wings and nose
year.
with a laser-tipped boom
beautification or your "loved one's final resting
The work will keep the for .any signs of damage .
. place. We do not just place the memorial in the
day-after-launch ·
astronauts
up
'over The
· eemetery and forget it.
John H. Saunders
Thanksgiving; NASA inspection has been stanSaundero • Christy Jones • Amber Blackston
. expects to add a 16th day to dard procedure ever since
We urge you to purchase your loved one's
tho: mission, thanks to the .the . 2003 Columbia disas437 Second Avenue
. on-time launch,
ter.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
memorial from Kirkland. For information on lots
"Very few thiQgs that we
Besides
enough
and bronze memorials call:
Phone: (740) 446-0404
do beat a night launch like Thailksgiving turkey dinFax: 740-.446-4719
Lynn S. Durst @ 675-2465 or celr304-593-0265 or
you saw tonight," said ners, to go around
Cell: 740-709-9660
Durst @ 3\14·675·5415 or celt304-593·2544
LeRoy Cain, chairman of Endeavour is carrying
Toll Free: 800-689-5103
the mission management thousands of poungs of
E-mail: 'bsaundets@suddeollokmail.com
team. "We're off to a great equipment for the space·

· Melvin C.

Gay rights rallies
nationwide over Calif. ban

Matilda A. Tillie' Northup

· Richard M. Seagraves

~pace

•

_Looking past Palin·

LETTERS TO THE

Our main concern in aH stories is lo be
accurate. If you know of an error fl a

Obituaries

J#lcome to the wired White House

6unbap limd ·6tnthtd

Diane Hill

·.PageA4

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

shutde Endeavour races toward space station

SAUNDERS INSURANCE
AGENCY INC.

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VALLEY,

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for the free service by contacting Ohio Valley Bank~s Caii.Center a11-877·893·2265 or ema~ callcerlter(

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•

�(

Sunday, November.l6, 2008

..

OPINION .

6u11bap lim~ -imtintl

825 Third Avenue • Gelll~lls, Ohio

Coming soon to a coll]puler or cell phone near
you! The Wired White
House!
·
Cokie
Barack Obama will fol·
and ·
low the same strategy thilt
Steven
.won the election to gov·
Roberts
ern country: Use the
Internet to conduct an
interactive conversation
with voters and make
them feel they own a Internet." More than 3
stake in his success. A million donors gave
quick glance at his new money online. and those
Web site, change.gov, funds
helped
the
reveals how this works . Democrat
overwhelm
The word "your" appears ·Republican John McCain
a dozen times on ' the with over-the-air adver·
home page, as in this. tising and on-the-ground
headline: "It's Your organizing.
America: Share . Your
More importantly. those
· Ideas." The word "my" contribu19rs chaoged the
doesn't appear at all.
w.ay they thought about
This is partly a PR elections - and themstunt. Obama's Treasury selves, They turned froin
secretary won't spend pass ive recipients of
mu.ch time sifting through information to active par·
e-mails, looking for solu· ticipants in politics . Each
lions to the fiscal crisis. one became a potential
broadcaster
But if Obama can harness organizer,
the energy and excitement and fundraiser.
The impact of this stralthat supported his candiegy
is prelty clear: .in bat·
dacy to strengthen his
presidency, he might tleground states, .the
actually change the way Obama camp contacted
that Washington does half of all voters; 1-in-10
voters in those states were
business.
"Once you have people first-timers; young people
connected through a net- voted two to one for
work, you can't discon· Obama.
nect," Peter Daou, an · His team understood
Internet strategist for that intensity matters.
Hillary Clinton, told the Election eve polls showed
Washington Post. "It's that 7-of-10 Obama sup·
like unbreaking an egg. porters were enthusiastic
People· all across the about th eir choice, but
. country have . formed onty · 4 ~ in-IO McCain
groups to support Obama. backers felt that way. The
They've worked together Web helped expand that
for a successful purpose. devolion , and exploit it at
You don 't let go of that the polls .
So how will Obama
easily."
·
AI Gore was undoubt- shift from campaigning to
. edly right when he said governing? One obvious
recently that Obama's way is using the Internet
se nd
information
to
viCtory "couldn 'I have directly
to
his
supporters ,
happened without the ·

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

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Kevin Kelly

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Letters to the editor are welcome . They should be less
tlum 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing and must
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·

TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today is Sunday, Nov. 16, the 32Ist day of2008. There
~re 45 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
· On Nov. 16, 1908, conductor Arturo Toscanini made his
debut with the New York Metropolitan Opera as he led a
performance of Verdi's "Aida."
On this date :
· In 1776. British troops captured Fort Washington in New
'York during the American Revolution. . .
· .
• In 1885. Canadian rebel leader Louis Riel was executed
for high treason.
.
.
·· In 1907, Oklahoma became toe 46th state of the union.
In 1917, Georges Clemenceau again became prime min·
ister of France.
· In 1933, the United States and the Soviet I,Jnion estab·
lished diplomatic relations.
· In 1959, the Rodgers alid Hammerstein musical "The
Sound of Music" opened on Broadway.
In 1961, House Speaker Samuel T. Rayburn died in
Bonham, Texas, having served as speaker since 1940
except for two terms.
In 1966, Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard was acquitted in his
second trial of murdering his pregnant wife, Marilyn, in
1954.
.. In 1973, Skylab 4, cariying a crew of three astronauts,
was launched, from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on an 84-day
.l)lission.
In 1982, an agreement was announced in the 57th day of
a strike by National Football League players.
.. Ten years ago: The Supreme Court ruled ihat union mem·
bers can file discrimination lawsuits against employers
.e.ven when labor contracts require arbitration. House
.Democrats re-elected Dick Gephardt as their leader.
Five years ago: Serbs failed for the third time in a year to
' elect a president because of lo&gt;v voter turnout. Bettina
.Goislard, a French United Nations worker, was shot and
killed in Afghanistan.
, ~:year~: , ~ ~epublicansblocked a •$50 billion
bill by Democrats thai would have paid for several months
of combat but also would have ordered troop withdrawals
from Iraq to begin within 30 days. Marchers surrounded the
Justice Department headquarters to demand federal inter·
vention in the Jena Six case in Louisiana and stepped-up
enforcement of hate crimes. Poland's new prime minister,
Donald Tusk, formally took office along with a team of for·
·mer anti-communist dissidents.
· Today's Birthdays: Actor Clu Gulager is 80. Blues musi:cian Hubert Sumlin is 77. Journalist Elizabeth Drew is 73.
·Blues musician W.C. Clark is 69. Actor Steve Railsback is 63.
Actor David Leisure is 58. Actress Marg Helgenberger is 50.
Rock musician Mani is 46. Country singer-musician Keith
Bums (Trick Pony) is 45. Former tennis player Zina Garrison
·is 45. Fonner baseball player Dwight Gooden is 44. Jazz
singer Diana Krall is 44. Actor Harry Lennix is 44. Rock
musician Dave Kushner (Velvet Revolver) is 42. Actress Lisa
Bonet is 41 . Actress Tammy Lauren is 40. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Bryan Abrams (Color Me Badd) is 39. Actress Martha
Plimpton is 38. Actress Missi Pyle is 36. Olympic gold medal
figure skater Oksana Baiul is 31. Actress Maggie Gyllenhaal
is 3 I. Pop singer Trevor Penick is 29. Actress Kimberly J.
Brown is 24. Actor Noah Gray-Cabey ("Heroes") is 13.
Thought for Today: "History is a combination of reality
and lies. The reality of History becomes a tie. The unreali. ty of the fab le becomes the truth." - Jean Cocteau, French
author, director, poet (1889·1963).

·•

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Sunday, November 16, 2008

• i,

avoiding the filter of jour· will be political. Obama
nalists. commentators and will start his re-election
critics. Already his Web . campaign immediately.
site provides links to key and as he employs tech·.
videos, such as his press nology to inform and
conference on th~. econo· energize supporters, he
my, bill that 's only the will continue to expand
beginning .
Since the .Obama cam- hi s · database . The more
paign produced more 1han you use the Internet. the
1.800 videos - that were more powerful a tool II
.
watched for 14.5 million ·becomes .
There
is
a
downside
hours on You Tube expect a daily dose of here . Campaigning focus·
10 es on one clear, unifying
updates.
framed
enhance the White House goal
elec1ion.
viewpoint. Visitors 10 Gove(ning is a lot
change .gov are urged to messier, and when Obama
use. it as "your source"' for
information about . the starts. making compromis·
Admini stration .
1\nd es to gee legislation
BTW. goes the implica- through -:- on taxes. say.
tion. don 't bother with all or -lra4 funding - some
those olher sources that disenchantment will. be
don ' t share our "vis ion ."
inevitable. And his sup. A second critical use of porter~ will have a readythe Internet will be pro- made online channel to
moting Obama 's legisla- voice ·rheir dismay.
tive agend~ He '"'-' 10 mi l- . Obama does not own
lion e-mail addresses and
countle&amp;s cell phone num: the lnlernet. Interest
bers in the bank and ready gfoups of all kinds to go. Ju st imagine the lirst · from environmentalists to
fight over a Supreme Court riglll -to -l.ifers - can use'
nominee that Republican the same i\etworks to trigsenators arc tryi ng to ger pressure and dissent.
block . Think what pressure And as Obama learned
could be brought 10 bear. during the campaign,
almost inswnrl y, on law- damaging rumors can
makers from states that swirl through cyberspace
Obama won - say George
Voinovich of Ohio , or Judd at warp speed.
Obama re-wrote the
Gregg of New Hampshire.
Grassroots ·-organizing . rules of campaigning. Reis hardly new. smart lob· writing the rul~s of gov·
byists have been using the erning will be much hard· ·
tactic for .years, but tech· er. But we're about to see
nology ca n vastly expand him try.
its impact. "If a congress(Cokie Roberts · latest
man goes home and sees a book iJ .. Ladies oj
town hall meeting with Liherty: Tile Womeri Who
I ,000 people in their distri cts. that malters," Slwped Our Nation"
Thomas Gen.semer of (William Mormw, 2008).
Blue State Digital told Steve aud Cokie Roberts
Slate.
· call be reached at steveA third use of the Web cokie 0' gmai/.com .)

•

,.

"The past is the past,"
aside from the die-hard
Gov. Sarah Palin declared
conservatives who gob·
at her first and only offi·
bled up the p&lt;irtisan red
cia! press conference of
nu.at she fed them at
the 2008 presidential
every campaign whistle
Donna
stop. voters never ret1lly
campaign season, which,
oddly enough, was held
warmed ll]l to Palin. And.
after the election. "It's
Brazile
if the polls are right ,
behind us."
many believe she doomed
Is it?
.
the ticket. With Sarah the
Palin is in ·front of ttie
Barracuda the only per·
media more now that the
sona thai made headlines ,
campaign has ended than . easy. Her fellow GOP Palin will have to come
governors who appeared
'
·
She ever Was as a Candi.. on
other RGA panels _ up Wit 11 a new narrat1ve
date. Palin, who it seems Barbotir, Pawlenty and going forward.
criticizes the media for Jindal _ as welt as
While Sen. Hillary
her woes every time she Florida's Charlie Crist Clinton was known for
moves her lips, i"s now and South Carolina's be"iog tough, she looked
providing as much fodder Mark Sanford , att ·cons.id- · like Little Bo Peep com·
as possible to the Mc~ain er themselves poised for pared to Palin's lipslitk·
campaign staff she claims higher office. And, 1 smeared pit bull. Even
· treated her badly,
would imagine. they hold now, with the .campaign
While'
Republican at least a slight resent- over. Palin st ill insi sts
Govs. Haley Barbour of menl that Palin was the that
President -elect
Mississippi, Bobby Jindal governor tapped for a Barack Obmna is palling
of Louisiana ·and Tim position she neither . around with unrepentant
Pawlenty of Minnesota deserved nor understood. terrori sts. But. she told
Palin, while brilliant in . CNN 's Wolf Blitzer in an
sat do.wn last Wednesday
at
the
Republican . her role as campaign interview last Wednesday,
Governors' Association attack dog, is far fro.m she would be honored to
(RGA) annual meeting to being the only up-and- help oul Obama in hi s
evaluate what went wrong . corning GOP governor new administralion , even
in 2008, Palin ·was on a with a defined constituen- if he did hang around
different mission: how to cy and interesting future with an "unrepe ntant
set things right for herself prospects. She will face domestic terrorist."
in 2012.
· stiff competition not only
Palin , having returned
Before headlining an from fellow governors, her $150.000 wardrobe to
RGA panel discussion but also from the likes of the Republican National
titled "Looking Toward former New .York City Commillee. now stands
the Future ," Palin held a Mayor Rudy Giuliani, naked in her ambition.the
much-touted press con' former Massachusetts's scope of which is breathference in which she Gov. Mitt Romney and takmg and sure to keep
answered a grand total of Arkan sas' ·
Mike her nega1i ve approval rat ·
three questions . The. Huckabee in her pursuit ings hi g~er than expect·
Alaskan governor is cer- of national office. Who ed . Even ambilious attack
tainly looking toward the knows? Maybe even dogs should know when
future - hers.
Newt Gingrich . .
to stop . Vier President·
Palin is hoping to create
Starting this early, it 's elect Joe Bitlen showed
a bright future that clear where Palin has set impressive restrai nt on
includes an even more her sights, and it's clear the
can\paign
trail ,
prestigious title than vice she has no intention of whereas Palin relished in
president. She · started looking back at Team being
downright
paving her way to the. McCain . Indeed , when Machiavellian.
Oval Office before her she went "rogue" during
Blind ambition and a
running mate had even the campaign, Palin taste for blood should not
ended his concession seemed rather desperate necessari ly knock her out
speech. Having been not to drown.on McCain's of contention for higher
denied the chance to sinking ship . Palin knew office in lhe future . But it
deliver her own conces- she alone would be held · will force her 11ew makesion speech/20 12 declara· responsible for McCain 's up artists to come up with
tion announcement at that loss if she didn't go on something classier and
event, she had to wait a her own offensive, so she more substantive than
day or two to make' her threw awa&gt;' .the campaign negative attack sou nd
ambitions
abundantly talking pomts and started bites. Granted , campaigns
clear.
to set sai l in her ow·n one- sometimes bring out the
But the future race to w~an lifeboat.
worst in people. Btil once
the White House won't be
The problem is tha•, they're over, they tend to

also bring out humility
and grace, qualities needed to be on di splay for
any future wannabes for
political offiGe.
If this elect ion communicated anything, it i~ that
voters are tired of the old
divisive polilics of the
past. The country wanted
change. They chose
someone who in spi red
hope and invited ·a new
generation n( Americans
to tak e their seals at the
table.
There is so much for tbc
Reptiblican Pmty to learn
from the la~t two elec tions . In both election
cycles, noted a clear-eyed
Jindal,
voters
fired
Republican s "for cause:·
The country has matured
beyond electing . I ~ade rs
who represent only a tiny
fraction of the people segmented by artificial barri ers.
Palin belongs to the old
era in which candidates
could appeal to only a
· narrow segment of voters
and still win the majority
&lt;)f lh e electorate. More
people are voting now.
And many of them wilt
decide to run for office
th emse lve s, perhaps as
Reptlblicuns wi ll ing to
campaign in places where
moderates breed. in cities
where minoriti es reside or
college campus where the
"youug and restless" call
home for four years or
more .
·
Palin . mc;u1while, wili
never beco me the face of
a part y in wilderness
when she stl!l cannot see
the forest for the trees . .
(Donna Brazile is a
polirical commentator on
CNN. ABC and NPR; con rrihuting columnist to
Roll Call, the newspaper
of Capitol Hill ; and /Qr·
mer campaign marwger
for AI Gore .) , .

iilunba!'

~imrs -&amp;entinrl

• Page As

Deaths

William Richard 1111r call
William Richard "Bill"
Call, 42, of Long Bottom,
.. went to be With the Lord on
Saturday, Nov. 15, 2008, ·
after an extended illness.
Bill was born Dec. 17
1965, in Pomeroy, son of
the late William ''Hapfy"
Call Jr., and Selma Cal of
Long Bottom.
Bill was a member of the
Forest
Run
United
Methodist Church. He was
also a member of the
Forked Run Gun Club. He
.'.
was a former emrloyee of
Veterans Memoria Hospital
and WIS International.
William R. 'Bill' Call
He is survived by: his
,
mother, Selma Call; one half-brother, John E. Call Sr. of
Summerfield, Fla.; two lialf-sisteys, Margaret E. Miller of
Long Bottom, andLinda L. Rollins and her husband, Dale, of
New Orlean_s, ~.; one uncle, Fuad Yahy.a and his wife,
Nancy, of Wichtta~ Kan.; one aunt, Je~n Yahya of Hie;h Point,
· N.C.; spectal cousm, Cmdy Co!hns.Rice of Jacksonville, Fla.;
·and man~ ~ther nieces, nephews and cousins.
·
In addition to his father, he was pteceded in death by a
half-brother, Jackie Call, and a half-sister, Karen Call.
Services wilf be I p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2008, at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with
Pastor Bob Robinson officiating. Burial will follow at
Riverview Cemetery. Visiting hours will be Monday, Nov.
17, 2008. from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
. In lieu of flowers, donations rna&gt;' be made to J.iolzer
Hospice, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
A re~istry is available online by visiting www .andersonmcdamel.com.
·
·

son, Eddie Willis II of Racine; and three brothers and one
sister, Bryan (Christine) Seagraves of Vinton, Tim (Angie)
Seagraves of Rio Grande. Jeff (Sherry) Seagraves of Oak
Hill, and Rita (Ricky) Elkins of Pikeville. Ky. ·
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 19,2008. in the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home at Vinton, with Pastor
Charles Seagraves officiating. Burial will follow in the
Centerpoint Cemetery, near Oak Hill. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 5 to 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2008.
In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be given to the
Richard M. Seagraves Memorial Fund, P.O. Box 148,
Vinton, Ohio 45686.

· 'thomas Siders
Thomas Siders, 87. Gallipali s. died Friday, Nov. 14,
2008, at his residence.
Arrangements wilt be announced by the .Cremeens
Funeral Chapel.

Correction

GALLIPOLIS - It was added to the French Art
incorrectly reported in Colony's Holiday Home
M~1phy
Thursday's edition of tbe Tour and that Tope's has
Gallipolis
Daily Tribune agreed to furnish the home
Melvin C. Murphy, 96, of Reedsville. passed . away
Thursday, Nov. 13 , 2008, .at Rocksprings Rehabilitation that the recently-renovat· for tour.
ed former Aleshire House
In fact, no such agreement
.
Center in Pomeroy.
He was born Nov. 12, 1912, in New Straitsville, son of m Gallipolis had been has been made.
the late George C. and Emma Schutz Murphy.
He was· an Army veteran of World War II, and retired
from Ohio Fuel and Columbia Gas.
..
He is survived by two sisters, Louise Keith ofTbe Plains ,
and Judy Phillips of Pickerington; a brother, David Murphy
of Columbus; and several nie.:es and nephews.
.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his
Bv JAY LINDsAY ·
wife, Lillie Murphy; and three brothers, Marvin, Mavin and
However, representatives
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
George Murphy.
·
.
of Join the Impact. which
Graveside services will be held at I p.m. Monday, Nov ..
organized Saturday's demonBOSTON - Gay rights . strations. asked supporters lp
17,_ 2008, at Athens Memory Gardens in Athens, with
Pastor Kathryn Riley officiating. Friends· may c·all at supporters in the state where be respectful and refrain from
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville from It a.m. same-sex couples first attacking other groups during
exchanged wedding vows the rallies.
until noon Monday.
, You · can sign the online guestbook at www.white· gathered Saturday to protest
The mood in Boston was
the California vote that generally upbeat, with attenschwarzelfuneralhome.com.
·
banned gay marriage there dees dancing and signing to
and to urge supporters not to the song "Respect .'' Signs
quit the {ight for the right to cast
the tight for gay marriage
wed.
·
.
as
the
new civil rights moveMatilda A. "Tillie" Northup, 59 , of Vinton, passed away
Crowds gathered near pubin her home on Friday, Nov. 14, 2008, surrounded by her lic buildings in small commu· ment, il)cluding one that read
family and loved ones.
· .
nities .and major cities includ- . "Gay is the new black.".
But anger ov~r the ban aQd
. She was a homemaker and a loving molher who was born · ing New York, San Frnncisco
Richard M. Seagraves,
May 4, 1949. in Galli a County, daughter of the late Charles and Chicago to vent their its backers was evident at the
52, of Oak Hill (Centerpoint . ,----.--,.-----. Hill and Virgie Casey Hill.
.
frustrations, celebrate gay protests.
Community); passed away
One sign in Chicago read:
She married James Lowell Northup in 1966 in Gallia relationships and renew calls
at his residence on Friday,
. County, and he survives with three sons and three daugh· forchange.
"Catholic Fascists Stay Out af
.
Nov. 14, 2008.
ters, James Lee "Jim" Northup of Patriot, To11y Northup of
"Civil marriages are a civil Politics."
He was born June 6, 1956,
Oak Hill, Terry (Stacy) Northup of Gallipolis, Patricia right, and we're going to keep
"I just found out that my
in" Oak Hill, son of
(Don) Parcel of Beavercreek, Tammy Gilbert of Thurman, fighting until we get the rights ~tate doesn't'realty think I'm a
Annabelle Terry Seagraves
and Sherri Noithup of Gallipolis; 13 grandchildren and one we deserve as American citi· person," said Rose Aplustill.
of Oak Hill, and the late
great-grandchild; and one brother, Roger (Mary) Hill of zens," Karen Alnico said in 2l, a Boston University stu·
Flemon Seagraves Jr.
Grove City.
. · ·
· Philadelphia, holding up a dent from Los Osos , Calif.,
Richanl was a retired
She was preceded in death by two brothers and one sis- sign reading "Don't Spread who was one pf thousands at
truck driver, pro'moter of
ter, Lloyd and Cly&lt;le Hill, and Frances Hill.
HS".
,
the Boston rally.
·
Vinton Raceway, president
Anyone who knew her loved her because she was a
"We are the American famPlanning for the nationwide
of the French City Camping
beautiful person. Even t.hough our hearts are broken, we ily, we live next door to you, protests wa1 start.ed by a
Club, and a former member
know she is born again in Heaven looking Jesus face to we teach your children, we Seattle blogger, Amy Ballien,
.
·
face.
.
of Our Gang CB Club,
take care of your elderly," just days after the Califomia
Richard M. Seagraves
where he was known by his
Serliices will hi: noon Tuesday,' Nov. 18, 2008, in the said Heather Baker a special vote, which took away gay
handle "Buckeye Moose."
~cCpy-Moore Funeral Home at Vinton, with the Rev. education
teacher from
He is survived by his wife, Rose Gore Seagraves; three Heath Jenkins officiating. llurial will follow in the Vinton Boston who addressed the marriage right$ that had bee(l
children, Anna (Eddie) Willis, Richard Martin Seagraves Jr., Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funera! home from crowd at Boston's City Hall granted by the state's high
court.
and James Fle!llon Seagraves all of Oak Hill; a step-grand- 6 to 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 17,2008.
.
Plaza. "We need equal rigpt
The ide·a rapidly spread
across the country."
online and Join the Impact
Massachusetts
and predicted that ·Saturday's
Connecticut, which began protests would involve tens o.f
same sex weddings this past thousands of people in hun.·
week, are the only two states
B\' MARCiA DUNN
start on what's going io be station, most notably a rev- metal grit from grinding that allow ·gay marriage. All dreds of communities.
In North Dakota, where
APAEROSI?I\CE WRITER '
, an extremely e;l(citing, very
olutionary recyc,ling sys- parts. The spacewalking 30 slates that have voted on
voters
in 2004 ovetwhelmcomplex ' and challenging . tern to turn urine into astronauts will clean and gay ·marriage have enacted
ingly approved a constitutionCAPE CANAVERAL, : miss10n." .
·
. drinking water.
lubricate that joint, replace bans.
al
ban on same-sex marriage,
Fla.- . . Space
shuttle
NASA almost delayed
That, along with the new its bearings and apply extra
Protests following the vote
low-key
protests were · held
"kitcl)enene, grease to keep a twin joint on Proposition 8 in
Endeavour .raced toward the launch because .of a bathroom,
the international space sta· door frame left loose at the exerci~~e machi~~¢ and two working.
California, which defined Saturday in Grand Forks and
tion on Saturday for a home pad by a . '."orke~ w~o extra . bedroon:ts being , The sp~ce agency has marriage as between a man Fargo, where people linell a
makeover job after a bril· promptly admitted hts mts· delivered, should allow lust 10 shunle flights, 111\d a woman, have . some· bridge carrying signs and
·
liant moonlit launch that . take. Launch controllers NASA to double the size of mcluding .this one, before times been angry and even flags.
had NASA managers in determine~ the flapping the space station crew. The the fleet is retired in 2010 violent, and demonstrators
"It's been very peaceful,"
awe . · ,
frame would not htt the goal is to ·add .three more to make way for a new have targeted faiths that sup· said Josh Boschee, who
· The shuttle and its seven shuttle.
residents, for ~ total of six, ~ocketship . capable of ·rak- ported the ban, including the helped organize the Fargo
astronauts blasted into orbii
A nearly full . moon, by next \June. ·
mg astronauts to the space Mormon church:
protest
Friday night on a mission glowing orange at times,
By the time Endeavour station and, eventually, the
to redo the insides of the adorned the sky . .as leaves, the space station · moon. An additional shuttle
space slation, adding some Endeavour began tts JOUr· will have morphed into a flight or two could be in
KIRKLAND MEMORIAL UfiJ"-L
extra bedrooms and.a spat:e ney.
, .
fiye-bedroom, two-bath, NASA's ·future, however, to
bathroom and kitchenette·.
SD?n. -· aft~r .:: hftoff, tW\)·Jdtchen horile.
·
narrow the projected five"A Perpetual Care Cemetery"
" It'-s pur turn to take Mtsston Cortrol m~~~ed
"We're . abo,ut to get an year gap between the last
St. Rt. 62 North
home improv.ement to a the astronauts th~ a. qutck extreme home 'malf.eover," shuttle flight and the first
Point Pleasant, WV
new level after 10 years of look at the launct'! ptcl\lres the space ·station's eom- manned launch of the new
international space station reve~led .t)'Vo,·· pteces of rnijllder-, Mike l'incke; told spaceship.
construction," commander debns trathng Enileavour, Missjo~ Control. "It does"As you saw today, we
"Serving the Area for 50 years"
Christopher
Ferguson ~ne at 33 seconds after n't get better t¥n this, my arranged to have the moon
called out.
hftoff and_the other arou~d friends.''
. ·
out there ... that's the perFerguson . and his crew the two-mmute mark. It d~d
The shu.ttle astronauts feet analogy of transition,"
ATTENTION LOT OWNERS
will double as plumbers n~l appear . that the debns also will take on a lube job ·said Bill Gerstenmaier,
and installers once they htt the sh~ttle, but analyses at the space station.
head of NASA's space
Your cemetery is perpetual. We purchase your.
A ma&amp;sive joint that operations.
arrive at the 220-mile-high wtll contmue for several
memorial directly from the manufacturer, where
space station Sunday, more days to be certam the rotates half of the solar
·
•••
hooking up extra cooking spacecraft was not- dam· wings toward the sun has
On the Net:
the best materials are used as we are concerned
and sleeping equipment as aged.
, .
. been jammed for more than
NASA :
http://spacewith the appearance and upkeep of the cemetery.
well as a new water recy:rhe astronaut_s mam pn· a year; it's clogged with · flight.nasa .gov
The additional income from your memorial
' cling system so the sta· onty Saturday ts to survey
purchase' is used to continue ·the upkeep and
tion'screwcanexpandnext their ship's wings and nose
year.
with a laser-tipped boom
beautification or your "loved one's final resting
The work will keep the for .any signs of damage .
. place. We do not just place the memorial in the
day-after-launch ·
astronauts
up
'over The
· eemetery and forget it.
John H. Saunders
Thanksgiving; NASA inspection has been stanSaundero • Christy Jones • Amber Blackston
. expects to add a 16th day to dard procedure ever since
We urge you to purchase your loved one's
tho: mission, thanks to the .the . 2003 Columbia disas437 Second Avenue
. on-time launch,
ter.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
memorial from Kirkland. For information on lots
"Very few thiQgs that we
Besides
enough
and bronze memorials call:
Phone: (740) 446-0404
do beat a night launch like Thailksgiving turkey dinFax: 740-.446-4719
Lynn S. Durst @ 675-2465 or celr304-593-0265 or
you saw tonight," said ners, to go around
Cell: 740-709-9660
Durst @ 3\14·675·5415 or celt304-593·2544
LeRoy Cain, chairman of Endeavour is carrying
Toll Free: 800-689-5103
the mission management thousands of poungs of
E-mail: 'bsaundets@suddeollokmail.com
team. "We're off to a great equipment for the space·

· Melvin C.

Gay rights rallies
nationwide over Calif. ban

Matilda A. Tillie' Northup

· Richard M. Seagraves

~pace

•

_Looking past Palin·

LETTERS TO THE

Our main concern in aH stories is lo be
accurate. If you know of an error fl a

Obituaries

J#lcome to the wired White House

6unbap limd ·6tnthtd

Diane Hill

·.PageA4

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

shutde Endeavour races toward space station

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OHIO

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Sunday1 November 16, 2008

Federal funding going to OU research Suspected Ohio plane crash may have been meteor
tion of our energy needs and
realize our dream of 'pee to

STAFF REPORT
NEWSCIMYDAilYTAIBUNE.COM

power.'" ·

ATHENS
Ohio
Wilson said he was proud
University
announced to have worked with U.S.
Friday that two energy- Rep Zack Space to secure
related research projects funding for a project that
Will receive almost $4 mil- will help meet the military's
linn in federal funding.
needs.
University researchers
"This technology prowill partner with the U.S. yides quiet, clean and low. Department of Defense to impact electricity - and
further develop an alterna- can be used by the military
tive to diesel and continue to improve ·stealth opera"
work with several aerospace lions, make military base
ilidustry leaders on the next camps more self-sufficient
generation of heat exchang- and protect the lives of our
ers for airplanes and space- U.S. soldiers," he said.
craft.
Space agreed, saying the
The !rojects
were project is good for the miliannounce today . by U.S. tary and Ohio University as
Rep. Charlie Wilson and well.
university officials.
"This cutting-edge tech."1 am so proud to have nology will enable our sol, played a role in securing diers to operate more effec- ·
two maJor federal
lively and better protect
appropriations that will be them fro111 oqr enemies, he
spent . right here at Ohio said. ·"Once again, Ohio
l;Jniversity," Wilson said.
University is providing cut·
,. ·The
university's ling-edge techiwlogy and
Electrochemical Engineering applications' that are making·
Research Laboratory will our country a better.
receive $2.24 million · to s[ronger place."
work with the U.S. Army
In the second appropriaEngineer Research
&amp; , lion, researchers in the Russ
E&gt;evelopment
Center- College's
Center
for
Construction . Engineering Advanced
Materials
~esearch
Laboratory Processing,
GrafTech
(ERDC-CERL) to provide International. the Ohio
qui11ter back-up power for Aerospace Institute and Air ·
training facilities ·and soldier Force
Research
qunps.
Laboratories will . receive
Under the "Silent Camp $1.6 million on top of an
Initiative ," power is sup- identical amount mitially
plied via low-noise. low- awarded in November 2007
impact methods instead of to launch the project.
noi sy. inefficient diesel genThe heat exchangers will
erators.
increase efficiency and
Researchers in the univer• decrease emissions in milisity's Russ College of tary planes because they will
Engineering
and be made from graphite foam
Technology already have that weighs 40 percent less
developed two patent-pend- than the metallic ones now
ing technologies that can · in use . This meaiiS signifiprocess wastewater into ·cant fuel savings, additional
hydrogen , nitrogen and payload space and better
clean water using renewable heat transfer efficiency.
energy. low-energy con·
According to Moss
sumption ammonia and urea Professor of Mechanical
wastewater electrolyzers.
Engineering Khairul Alam,
The hydrogen produced the researcher in charge of
through these processes can the university's contributicm
be combined with a fuel cell to the project, the technoloto provide power, thus offer- gy eventually could be
ing a safe, convenient alter- ~dapt~? for commercial use
iativ~ to diesel generators. m jetliners and even home
The urea electrolysis tech- heating systems and refrignology will allow the direct erators.
conversion of urine/wasteAlam said the endeavor is
water to hydrogen.
a unique opportunity for the
"Our patent-pending tech- Russ College graduate stunology is the only process dents working with him.
that allows direct conver·
'The
graphite
heat
sion of urine to hydrogen exchanger trains students
and ammonia ," Associate for employment in an
Professor of Chemical and advancing
field,
and
Biomolecular Engineering because . the foam is made
Gerardine Bolte said. "From from graphite, the project
a defense standpoint, urine has potential for utilization
is a 'fuel' that is carried by of coal - which is imporsoldiers everywhere. This tant for southeastern Ohio.'' ·
funding will enable .us to.
Wilson is encouraged by
implement processes that additional money-saving
will contribute to the solu- aspects of the research. ·

NORTH MADISON (AP)
"I'm not a scientist, but I
Authorities who spent
know why this is imporfour
hours searching for a
tant," he said. "Because carbon foam can withstand plane crash in northeast
harsh environments , this Ohio now think what people
change could double the life saw and he,ard may have
cycle of our military air- been a meteor.
Reports. Thursday aftercraft, and that means lower .
noon
a bright light and
overall maintenance costs. trail ofofsmoke
in the sky and
If you ask me. that's money a separate call
about a
well-invested."
Qhio University President
Roderick J. McDavis. said
the two projects are examples of the important teclt,
CHILLICOTHE (AP) nologies
university Two men convicted of
researchers are developing poaching white-tailed deer
that will have a major · have been ordered to pay
impact on the state , nation nearly $13,000 in the first
and world.
case prosecuted under a
"This
' collaboration tougher Ohio poaching law.
speaks to the belief that
The March law . allows
public universities should •the Ohio Division of
be engines of innovation," Wildlife to seek an
he said. "The groundbreak- increased recovery value
ing work our researchers are on all poached wildlife.
undertaking has the potenThe state Department of
tial to make an important Natural Resources says a
difference in our world."
19-year;old South Salem

crashing sound in Lake
County
northeast
of
Cleveland sparked a search
that involved three helicopters , several police and
fire departments and the
State Highway Patrol.
,Madison Township police
Sgt. Rick Barson says based
on what the · witnesseo
reported,
investigators

believed an ultralight plane
had gone down. But Barson
says no. wreckage was
found.
He says a meteor would
be "highly unusual,"though
he says even a small one has
an expl_osion on impa~t.
By mghrfall, no evidence
· of a meteor had turned up.
either.

Chance of snow 50 percent.
Tuesday night •.•Mostly
cloudy in the evening .. .Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Scattered snow showers.
'Lows in the mid 20s.
Chance of snow 40 percent.
Wednesday ••• Mostly
sunny. Highs in the upper
30s.
Wednesday night .••Partly
. cloudy in the evening ...Then
becoming mostly cloudy. A
30 percent chance of snow
showers. Lows in the upper
20s.
Thursday and Thursday
night ••• Mostly cloudy. A
chance of snow and rain
showers. Highs in the mid
40s. Lows around 30.
Chance of precipitation 30
perc(;!nL
Friday .•.Part! y sunny.
Highs around 40.

man and a 20-year-old up the deer they cpoached
Washington Court House and the guns and equip111an pleaded guilty to sev- ment they used.
era! poaching charges.
Each man must each pay
$100 in fines, along with
court costs and $6,494 in
restitution.
They must also serve
200 hours of community
service and five years of
community control. Their ·.
hunting privileges
be
suspended
for five Ylill
years.
The men also had to give

~~~E~!=~=~

•'

••

GABS faD sports banquet, P!Jge 84

J)RG ~etball previews, Pag~ BS

Sunday, November 16, 2008

W.Va; Football -Class AA Playoffs

.Magnolia rallies past
·Point Pleas~t, 21-20

RegloMI Finals - , . , .

Bv

those changes once the second half began·. Our boys
came out a little complacent,
· REGIONS
NEW MARTINSVILLE , We didn't come out fired up
. ~ 17, Tslmldgo 14
· AEGION6
W.Va. - The Point Pleasant to play football in the secSoutflYiew 28, Medina
Big Blacks dominated the ond half," added Darst.
ilhwl&lt;l zt REGION 1
first half of last night's Class
Point's defense set, the
AA playoff game with tone early, forcing Magnolia
0.~38. Loulsv•a2t '
Magnolia and raced to a 20- punts on their first three pos8
. ,.
rF~.~n,.Ant_KIRE24G.ION
Cln. Winton 'tl(o00o
7 halftime ·lead . But, .bot!\ sessions of the game. The
teams did the old one-eighty . Big Blacks, meanwhile,
DIVISION IV
and by the time the dust had took advantage of good field
- settled, the host Blue ·Eagles position and marched 49
r'llo..,..IV!IiOREGION 13
had pulled off an improba- yards on II plays on their
r•
35, Parry 11
ble 21-20 win over the Big second offensive series of
REGION 14
Blacks.
the contest. A 15-yard BJ.
~a.'"""- 40, Ottawa.Qiendort 21
RE(&gt;ION t5 '
The locals ran for 85 yards Lloyd to Allen Wasonga
tNewt.Aoit'IIIO&lt; 21, Martino Felly 14, or in the first two quarters and screen pass capr:d the drive
REGION t6
threw for another 46 in pi!- and Justin "Opie" Weaver's
[l&lt;llllflng ~ 31, Cold- 21
ing up 131 yards of total extra point made it 7-0.
D1vt8J9N VI
offense: The Blue Eagles,
That drive ate up the final
on the other hand, found the five m.inutes off the clock, as
going rather rough. They the Blacks' touchdown came
managed just .30 yards on on the final play of the first
the ground and another 14 quarter.
through the aidor a measly
The Big Blacks made it
44
yards
of
offense
through
14-0
on their next posses:
14
the first 24 minutes of play. sion when they put together
But boy did things turn a 10-play, 67 yard drive that
around in the second half.
chewed up another four
The Blue Eagles found minutes off . the clock.
.
their
rhythm and rushed for Wasonga's three yard run
W&amp;~ VmoiNIA
nearly 100 yards and passed capped the drive , but Nathan ·
for another 60, while limit- Roberts saved the drive for
ing the Big Blacks to 46 the locals.
passing yards a!ld an unbeRoberts ran for 15 yards
lievable I 0 yards rushing in on two carries during the
those final two quarters of drive, but the big play came
play. Point did not even when he dove on the ground
manage a first down until to recover a Point Pleasant
the final minute and thirty fumble to keep the drive
seconds of the fo11rth quarter alive. Roberts appeared to
when they picked up two of have no chance at the ball ,
them before stalling our at with blue-shirted Eagles
their own 45 yard line.
surrounding the pigskin, but
"I have to give Magnolia he hit the (Jirt and wrestled
all the credit," said PPHS the ball away from no less
Head Coach Dave Darst than three Magnolia defendafter the game. "They did a ers.
better job of making adjust- . That recovery gave the ·
meilts than we did. They · Big· Blacks a first down at
~-,..~ --w~mt ipto the halftime lock- the Blue .Eagle 25 and four
er · room and made some
Please see Point;. 81 '
changes and then eJtecuted

DriiSION II

RICK SIMPKINS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

.

The effect would be devastating in .ways of which you never have thought:
• Nearly '3 million jobs would be lost in the first year aJone- with another 2:5
million to follow over the next two 'years
• Personal income in the United States would drop by more than $150.7 billion in
the first year
•
• The cost tb local, state, and federal governments could reach $156.4 billion over
three years in lost taxes, and unemployment and health care assistance
·
• Domestic automobile production would more than likely fall to zero - even by
international producerS, due to supplier bankruptcies
.

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~d~edsof 1miUions of doUal'8

•

Point Pleasant head football coach Dave Darst looks on late in the first half during Friday
night's Class AA state playoff game against Magnolia at Alumni Field in New Martinsville,
W.Va. The Big ijlacks, despite leading 20-7 at halftime, lost to Magnolia by a 21·20 count
lo end .their season with a 7-4 overall record.
·

.Let us Light the Way
to a Better Holiday...

•

·'

•

• 75
. . /0 "-,
0/'·.

Interest Rate

9.:98~/o

'

A. P.R.

The credit crisis that is affecting us all is wounding the U.S. auto industry .in many
different ways. Car makers can't get loans to restructure and to produce new .
'
advanced technology vehicles. Suppliers and dealers can't get loans for routine
business, and customers can't get loans for routine business. and customers can't' get
.loans for new
• What happens to the U.S. Auto industry matters on Main Street. There are some
14,000 U.S. brand dealers in cities 8nd towns across the country, employing
approximately 740.000 people, with a total payroll o( some $35 billion.
• Motor vehicles and parts are the single largest export from the U.S., topping
aerospace, medical equipment and communications, ·
• The collapse of the U.S.-based auto indtl&amp;try would account for a direct , indirect and
spin-off employmeJ)t drop of 2.95 million people, and a personal income drop of
50.7 billion.
·

t.IUll~

Larry Crumlpholo

' : ;\i·"

From plants to parks. From dealerships to drivew~ys . From ,gas stations to grocery
stores. What happens in the automot~ve industry aft'ects each and everyone of us. In
fact , the collapse of the U.S.-based auto industry wouldn't just impact the nearly
.
355,000 Americans directly employed by the Big Three. One out of every 10 people
in America is 'employed in a service that is related'' t/l the U.S. auto industry. If a
plant closes, so does its suppliers, the local stores, i~e hoi dog vendors. and the local
restaurants.

+Pcll:ton

51.98

'.

/
/

.

Local Stocks
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 19.35
BBT (NYSE) - 28.05
.
'Peoplea (NASDAQ) - 17.22
Papaleo (NYSE) - 53.52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8. 75
Rockwell (NYSE) - 26.08
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 3.43
Royal Dutch Shell - 49.84
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 38.27
Wai·Man (NYSE) - 52.7t
Wendy's (NYSE) - 3.62
WoaBanco (NYSE) - 23
Worthington (NYSE) 7 tt.30
Dally stock reports are tho 4 p .m.
ET closing quotes of transactions lor Nov. 14, 2008, provided
by Edward Jonoa financial advl"l'r• Isaac Milia In Ga!Upolla at
(740) 441 -944t and Lealoy
Marrero In . Point Ploaaant at
(304) 674-0t74. Member SIPC •

[n the Open, Page 83

Myth; The demise of the American.a,uto
industry won't really affect the' American
.
way of life.
~:l
Fact: What happens to the U.S. auto
industry matters on Main Street.

+*GIIIipolil 21 (5 ~~~m1' Avc., t7MlJ 44&amp;-240? .

AEP (NYSE) - 30.95
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 38
.
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 11.2 8
Big Lots (NYSE)- 15.41
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)_ 16.9S
BorgWarnor (NYSE) - 17.42
Gontury Aluminum (NASDAQ) _
f.!.12
.
.
C~amplon (NASDAQ) _ 2 ~
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) _
.97
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 37.08
Collins (NYSE) - 33.07
DuPont (NYSE) - 29.29
US Bank (NYSE) - 27.43
CJannott (NYSE) - 8. t s
General Electric (NYSE)- 16.02
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- t5.35
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 34.37
Kroger (NYSE) - 28.02
Limited Branda (NYSE) - 9.0t
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) _

AIJ.TVC lists; Page 82

Men convicted in Ohio poaching fmed under new law

Local Weather
Sunday...Cioudy with a
chance of rain and snow
showers. Cooler with highs
in the lower 40s. West
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of precipitation 40 percent.
Sunday night •.. Mostly
. cloudy .with a 20 percent
chance of snow showers.
Lows in the mid 30s.
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph .
Monday ... Mostly cloudy
with scattered rain and
snow showers. Highs in the
lower 40s. Chance of precipi tat ion 40 percent.
Monday night. ..Cioudy
wi th scattered snow and
rain showers. Lows in the
upper 20s. Chance of precipitation 50 percent.
Tuesday ...Mostly cloudy
With scattered snow showers. Highs in the mid 30s.

Bl

InSide

Maidmum tann of36 months and minimum new loan amount of $5,000.00 available with cred~ approval .
(EKampte: Amount ftMnced $5,000.00 at 7.75% . 38 montllly paymeniS of $161 .05 . Loan processing fee
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~OHIO VALLEY BANK.
446-2631
1-800-468-6682
Apply for the Holiday Loan Special
at an office or online at www.ovbc.com

�PageA6

OHIO

6unba~ limt~·itntintl

Sunday1 November 16, 2008

Federal funding going to OU research Suspected Ohio plane crash may have been meteor
tion of our energy needs and
realize our dream of 'pee to

STAFF REPORT
NEWSCIMYDAilYTAIBUNE.COM

power.'" ·

ATHENS
Ohio
Wilson said he was proud
University
announced to have worked with U.S.
Friday that two energy- Rep Zack Space to secure
related research projects funding for a project that
Will receive almost $4 mil- will help meet the military's
linn in federal funding.
needs.
University researchers
"This technology prowill partner with the U.S. yides quiet, clean and low. Department of Defense to impact electricity - and
further develop an alterna- can be used by the military
tive to diesel and continue to improve ·stealth opera"
work with several aerospace lions, make military base
ilidustry leaders on the next camps more self-sufficient
generation of heat exchang- and protect the lives of our
ers for airplanes and space- U.S. soldiers," he said.
craft.
Space agreed, saying the
The !rojects
were project is good for the miliannounce today . by U.S. tary and Ohio University as
Rep. Charlie Wilson and well.
university officials.
"This cutting-edge tech."1 am so proud to have nology will enable our sol, played a role in securing diers to operate more effec- ·
two maJor federal
lively and better protect
appropriations that will be them fro111 oqr enemies, he
spent . right here at Ohio said. ·"Once again, Ohio
l;Jniversity," Wilson said.
University is providing cut·
,. ·The
university's ling-edge techiwlogy and
Electrochemical Engineering applications' that are making·
Research Laboratory will our country a better.
receive $2.24 million · to s[ronger place."
work with the U.S. Army
In the second appropriaEngineer Research
&amp; , lion, researchers in the Russ
E&gt;evelopment
Center- College's
Center
for
Construction . Engineering Advanced
Materials
~esearch
Laboratory Processing,
GrafTech
(ERDC-CERL) to provide International. the Ohio
qui11ter back-up power for Aerospace Institute and Air ·
training facilities ·and soldier Force
Research
qunps.
Laboratories will . receive
Under the "Silent Camp $1.6 million on top of an
Initiative ," power is sup- identical amount mitially
plied via low-noise. low- awarded in November 2007
impact methods instead of to launch the project.
noi sy. inefficient diesel genThe heat exchangers will
erators.
increase efficiency and
Researchers in the univer• decrease emissions in milisity's Russ College of tary planes because they will
Engineering
and be made from graphite foam
Technology already have that weighs 40 percent less
developed two patent-pend- than the metallic ones now
ing technologies that can · in use . This meaiiS signifiprocess wastewater into ·cant fuel savings, additional
hydrogen , nitrogen and payload space and better
clean water using renewable heat transfer efficiency.
energy. low-energy con·
According to Moss
sumption ammonia and urea Professor of Mechanical
wastewater electrolyzers.
Engineering Khairul Alam,
The hydrogen produced the researcher in charge of
through these processes can the university's contributicm
be combined with a fuel cell to the project, the technoloto provide power, thus offer- gy eventually could be
ing a safe, convenient alter- ~dapt~? for commercial use
iativ~ to diesel generators. m jetliners and even home
The urea electrolysis tech- heating systems and refrignology will allow the direct erators.
conversion of urine/wasteAlam said the endeavor is
water to hydrogen.
a unique opportunity for the
"Our patent-pending tech- Russ College graduate stunology is the only process dents working with him.
that allows direct conver·
'The
graphite
heat
sion of urine to hydrogen exchanger trains students
and ammonia ," Associate for employment in an
Professor of Chemical and advancing
field,
and
Biomolecular Engineering because . the foam is made
Gerardine Bolte said. "From from graphite, the project
a defense standpoint, urine has potential for utilization
is a 'fuel' that is carried by of coal - which is imporsoldiers everywhere. This tant for southeastern Ohio.'' ·
funding will enable .us to.
Wilson is encouraged by
implement processes that additional money-saving
will contribute to the solu- aspects of the research. ·

NORTH MADISON (AP)
"I'm not a scientist, but I
Authorities who spent
know why this is imporfour
hours searching for a
tant," he said. "Because carbon foam can withstand plane crash in northeast
harsh environments , this Ohio now think what people
change could double the life saw and he,ard may have
cycle of our military air- been a meteor.
Reports. Thursday aftercraft, and that means lower .
noon
a bright light and
overall maintenance costs. trail ofofsmoke
in the sky and
If you ask me. that's money a separate call
about a
well-invested."
Qhio University President
Roderick J. McDavis. said
the two projects are examples of the important teclt,
CHILLICOTHE (AP) nologies
university Two men convicted of
researchers are developing poaching white-tailed deer
that will have a major · have been ordered to pay
impact on the state , nation nearly $13,000 in the first
and world.
case prosecuted under a
"This
' collaboration tougher Ohio poaching law.
speaks to the belief that
The March law . allows
public universities should •the Ohio Division of
be engines of innovation," Wildlife to seek an
he said. "The groundbreak- increased recovery value
ing work our researchers are on all poached wildlife.
undertaking has the potenThe state Department of
tial to make an important Natural Resources says a
difference in our world."
19-year;old South Salem

crashing sound in Lake
County
northeast
of
Cleveland sparked a search
that involved three helicopters , several police and
fire departments and the
State Highway Patrol.
,Madison Township police
Sgt. Rick Barson says based
on what the · witnesseo
reported,
investigators

believed an ultralight plane
had gone down. But Barson
says no. wreckage was
found.
He says a meteor would
be "highly unusual,"though
he says even a small one has
an expl_osion on impa~t.
By mghrfall, no evidence
· of a meteor had turned up.
either.

Chance of snow 50 percent.
Tuesday night •.•Mostly
cloudy in the evening .. .Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Scattered snow showers.
'Lows in the mid 20s.
Chance of snow 40 percent.
Wednesday ••• Mostly
sunny. Highs in the upper
30s.
Wednesday night .••Partly
. cloudy in the evening ...Then
becoming mostly cloudy. A
30 percent chance of snow
showers. Lows in the upper
20s.
Thursday and Thursday
night ••• Mostly cloudy. A
chance of snow and rain
showers. Highs in the mid
40s. Lows around 30.
Chance of precipitation 30
perc(;!nL
Friday .•.Part! y sunny.
Highs around 40.

man and a 20-year-old up the deer they cpoached
Washington Court House and the guns and equip111an pleaded guilty to sev- ment they used.
era! poaching charges.
Each man must each pay
$100 in fines, along with
court costs and $6,494 in
restitution.
They must also serve
200 hours of community
service and five years of
community control. Their ·.
hunting privileges
be
suspended
for five Ylill
years.
The men also had to give

~~~E~!=~=~

•'

••

GABS faD sports banquet, P!Jge 84

J)RG ~etball previews, Pag~ BS

Sunday, November 16, 2008

W.Va; Football -Class AA Playoffs

.Magnolia rallies past
·Point Pleas~t, 21-20

RegloMI Finals - , . , .

Bv

those changes once the second half began·. Our boys
came out a little complacent,
· REGIONS
NEW MARTINSVILLE , We didn't come out fired up
. ~ 17, Tslmldgo 14
· AEGION6
W.Va. - The Point Pleasant to play football in the secSoutflYiew 28, Medina
Big Blacks dominated the ond half," added Darst.
ilhwl&lt;l zt REGION 1
first half of last night's Class
Point's defense set, the
AA playoff game with tone early, forcing Magnolia
0.~38. Loulsv•a2t '
Magnolia and raced to a 20- punts on their first three pos8
. ,.
rF~.~n,.Ant_KIRE24G.ION
Cln. Winton 'tl(o00o
7 halftime ·lead . But, .bot!\ sessions of the game. The
teams did the old one-eighty . Big Blacks, meanwhile,
DIVISION IV
and by the time the dust had took advantage of good field
- settled, the host Blue ·Eagles position and marched 49
r'llo..,..IV!IiOREGION 13
had pulled off an improba- yards on II plays on their
r•
35, Parry 11
ble 21-20 win over the Big second offensive series of
REGION 14
Blacks.
the contest. A 15-yard BJ.
~a.'"""- 40, Ottawa.Qiendort 21
RE(&gt;ION t5 '
The locals ran for 85 yards Lloyd to Allen Wasonga
tNewt.Aoit'IIIO&lt; 21, Martino Felly 14, or in the first two quarters and screen pass capr:d the drive
REGION t6
threw for another 46 in pi!- and Justin "Opie" Weaver's
[l&lt;llllflng ~ 31, Cold- 21
ing up 131 yards of total extra point made it 7-0.
D1vt8J9N VI
offense: The Blue Eagles,
That drive ate up the final
on the other hand, found the five m.inutes off the clock, as
going rather rough. They the Blacks' touchdown came
managed just .30 yards on on the final play of the first
the ground and another 14 quarter.
through the aidor a measly
The Big Blacks made it
44
yards
of
offense
through
14-0
on their next posses:
14
the first 24 minutes of play. sion when they put together
But boy did things turn a 10-play, 67 yard drive that
around in the second half.
chewed up another four
The Blue Eagles found minutes off . the clock.
.
their
rhythm and rushed for Wasonga's three yard run
W&amp;~ VmoiNIA
nearly 100 yards and passed capped the drive , but Nathan ·
for another 60, while limit- Roberts saved the drive for
ing the Big Blacks to 46 the locals.
passing yards a!ld an unbeRoberts ran for 15 yards
lievable I 0 yards rushing in on two carries during the
those final two quarters of drive, but the big play came
play. Point did not even when he dove on the ground
manage a first down until to recover a Point Pleasant
the final minute and thirty fumble to keep the drive
seconds of the fo11rth quarter alive. Roberts appeared to
when they picked up two of have no chance at the ball ,
them before stalling our at with blue-shirted Eagles
their own 45 yard line.
surrounding the pigskin, but
"I have to give Magnolia he hit the (Jirt and wrestled
all the credit," said PPHS the ball away from no less
Head Coach Dave Darst than three Magnolia defendafter the game. "They did a ers.
better job of making adjust- . That recovery gave the ·
meilts than we did. They · Big· Blacks a first down at
~-,..~ --w~mt ipto the halftime lock- the Blue .Eagle 25 and four
er · room and made some
Please see Point;. 81 '
changes and then eJtecuted

DriiSION II

RICK SIMPKINS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

.

The effect would be devastating in .ways of which you never have thought:
• Nearly '3 million jobs would be lost in the first year aJone- with another 2:5
million to follow over the next two 'years
• Personal income in the United States would drop by more than $150.7 billion in
the first year
•
• The cost tb local, state, and federal governments could reach $156.4 billion over
three years in lost taxes, and unemployment and health care assistance
·
• Domestic automobile production would more than likely fall to zero - even by
international producerS, due to supplier bankruptcies
.

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:~~:;~~~~W:rl!wr
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An!lj,jll ~ ot f'IIW·~ICSI ~~ .
...,..,,. .,1'1\Jil ptyfOII P't' -·v.thl::le ~

~d~edsof 1miUions of doUal'8

•

Point Pleasant head football coach Dave Darst looks on late in the first half during Friday
night's Class AA state playoff game against Magnolia at Alumni Field in New Martinsville,
W.Va. The Big ijlacks, despite leading 20-7 at halftime, lost to Magnolia by a 21·20 count
lo end .their season with a 7-4 overall record.
·

.Let us Light the Way
to a Better Holiday...

•

·'

•

• 75
. . /0 "-,
0/'·.

Interest Rate

9.:98~/o

'

A. P.R.

The credit crisis that is affecting us all is wounding the U.S. auto industry .in many
different ways. Car makers can't get loans to restructure and to produce new .
'
advanced technology vehicles. Suppliers and dealers can't get loans for routine
business, and customers can't get loans for routine business. and customers can't' get
.loans for new
• What happens to the U.S. Auto industry matters on Main Street. There are some
14,000 U.S. brand dealers in cities 8nd towns across the country, employing
approximately 740.000 people, with a total payroll o( some $35 billion.
• Motor vehicles and parts are the single largest export from the U.S., topping
aerospace, medical equipment and communications, ·
• The collapse of the U.S.-based auto indtl&amp;try would account for a direct , indirect and
spin-off employmeJ)t drop of 2.95 million people, and a personal income drop of
50.7 billion.
·

t.IUll~

Larry Crumlpholo

' : ;\i·"

From plants to parks. From dealerships to drivew~ys . From ,gas stations to grocery
stores. What happens in the automot~ve industry aft'ects each and everyone of us. In
fact , the collapse of the U.S.-based auto industry wouldn't just impact the nearly
.
355,000 Americans directly employed by the Big Three. One out of every 10 people
in America is 'employed in a service that is related'' t/l the U.S. auto industry. If a
plant closes, so does its suppliers, the local stores, i~e hoi dog vendors. and the local
restaurants.

+Pcll:ton

51.98

'.

/
/

.

Local Stocks
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 19.35
BBT (NYSE) - 28.05
.
'Peoplea (NASDAQ) - 17.22
Papaleo (NYSE) - 53.52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8. 75
Rockwell (NYSE) - 26.08
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 3.43
Royal Dutch Shell - 49.84
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 38.27
Wai·Man (NYSE) - 52.7t
Wendy's (NYSE) - 3.62
WoaBanco (NYSE) - 23
Worthington (NYSE) 7 tt.30
Dally stock reports are tho 4 p .m.
ET closing quotes of transactions lor Nov. 14, 2008, provided
by Edward Jonoa financial advl"l'r• Isaac Milia In Ga!Upolla at
(740) 441 -944t and Lealoy
Marrero In . Point Ploaaant at
(304) 674-0t74. Member SIPC •

[n the Open, Page 83

Myth; The demise of the American.a,uto
industry won't really affect the' American
.
way of life.
~:l
Fact: What happens to the U.S. auto
industry matters on Main Street.

+*GIIIipolil 21 (5 ~~~m1' Avc., t7MlJ 44&amp;-240? .

AEP (NYSE) - 30.95
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 38
.
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 11.2 8
Big Lots (NYSE)- 15.41
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)_ 16.9S
BorgWarnor (NYSE) - 17.42
Gontury Aluminum (NASDAQ) _
f.!.12
.
.
C~amplon (NASDAQ) _ 2 ~
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) _
.97
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 37.08
Collins (NYSE) - 33.07
DuPont (NYSE) - 29.29
US Bank (NYSE) - 27.43
CJannott (NYSE) - 8. t s
General Electric (NYSE)- 16.02
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- t5.35
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 34.37
Kroger (NYSE) - 28.02
Limited Branda (NYSE) - 9.0t
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) _

AIJ.TVC lists; Page 82

Men convicted in Ohio poaching fmed under new law

Local Weather
Sunday...Cioudy with a
chance of rain and snow
showers. Cooler with highs
in the lower 40s. West
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of precipitation 40 percent.
Sunday night •.. Mostly
. cloudy .with a 20 percent
chance of snow showers.
Lows in the mid 30s.
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph .
Monday ... Mostly cloudy
with scattered rain and
snow showers. Highs in the
lower 40s. Chance of precipi tat ion 40 percent.
Monday night. ..Cioudy
wi th scattered snow and
rain showers. Lows in the
upper 20s. Chance of precipitation 50 percent.
Tuesday ...Mostly cloudy
With scattered snow showers. Highs in the mid 30s.

Bl

InSide

Maidmum tann of36 months and minimum new loan amount of $5,000.00 available with cred~ approval .
(EKampte: Amount ftMnced $5,000.00 at 7.75% . 38 montllly paymeniS of $161 .05 . Loan processing fee
of $t59.00. 9.98'11 A.P.R.) A.P.R. =Annual Pl!rol!ntage Rate. RATE IS SUBJECTTO CHANGE.

~OHIO VALLEY BANK.
446-2631
1-800-468-6682
Apply for the Holiday Loan Special
at an office or online at www.ovbc.com

�Sunday, November 16, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

-Meigs County lands 24 onAII-TVC squads
STAFF REPORT
SPORTSOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

.

. Sunday, November 16, 2008

1008 so...,_st.Ohlo- ··
dlsbtd vollejball ti!aml, ·
Sonoh

DIVISION I AND It
FIBS]! TEAM

-

~thono

CalfOWolfe

Molga

Kayles-ts

'Logan

Ka&lt;:l Shoemaker

Gallla
Marietta
WaN'In

Tillorly Sfloub
~ t,4&lt;MI&lt;hael
.

Erin Delong
,..han HoHman

~raAI!mll

FICI·Hock

L;otNC..Hf

Ironton

Jonlt Mon1o ,

lf0111on

Golia

Morgan Mullins

Jack&amp;bn

Sharlssa CooPer

AI Summers

Jackson
Marietta

Aly..o Sturm

Marietta

.Shellle Bailey .

Maigs
Meigs
warren
WJtrren

•

SIJIIth Poillt

Huron

11-imblt
Ttlmlllt

wolteton
Woll~

.-· ''
J

FlRSTTfAM
,
"'Q ' .,,

:~I .

l\ ' '..

~~n; ·. _ -·~

Tresa Swalzel .
BrlltBny CasiO
Stoimy Humphroy

E-rn- -" '
l..111er
·'

Emma Huntet
$ou1hern
Natasha Adkins
S. Galtla +. :~
Taylor Duncan
S. Gallia
,Ashly G.rannon
· Ironton St. Joe
Kim Bar'lwr
WatertorO ~ ...
Jess! DraYer
"
waterford

FIRST TEAM

HONORABLE MENTION
Morgan Bart

-M~~,II. Sialon
Karle HOoker
~rooke Humphrey
AbbyToth

-BaS11ell Boso

'·

·

·

Submitted photo

·Pictured above aFe members of·the 2008 Gallipolis Midget League Champions. Members of the team include Nathan
Stanlen, Blake Straight, Garrett Caldwell, Austin Whitt, Dylan Greenlee, Matthew Bailey, Scott Mash, Dalton Carter,
.Blake Wilson , Dustin Dickers, Brian Knotts, Tanner Few, Justin Reynolds, Jordan Gilliland, Jacob Pollock, Aaron
Fairchild, Aaron Schoolcraft, Logan Few, Wes Jarrell and Alex White and cheerleaders Jacey Walter, Kayle Muncy,
Jordan Walker and Paige Kiser.

GA 8th grade volleyball team completes season

Eastern ,
lronlpn S1&lt;Jbe ·
'lrOhfon'St. Jot\~
,t,
n~ ·

Mnier.
' . '&gt;
,.,.j, :,.

· Miller' ·

,... Sout~n · '
'· ~th8rn
S. Galllli

.

•

_ Submitted photo

Pictured above are members of the Gallia Academy 8th grade volleyball team that finished up a successful season with
an overall record of 9·5 and finished as co--champions of the SEOAL South with Chillicothe. In front from left are Maggie
Bostic, Katherine Simpson, Halley Barnes, Abby Wiseman, Karissa Ferrell and Madison · Daniels. In back are Morgan
Foster, Claudia Skinner, Charlotte Lively, Riley Nibert, Grace Rodgers, Meghan Thacker and Megan Cochran. ·

'

,

OVCS ·honors athletes at 2008 Fall Sports Banqu~t

_,

'

VOLI:-£Yl'ALL

STAFF REPORT
SPOATSCIMYDAILVTRIBUNE .CO~

Kyle Allen

_

The Scoreboard

SlovieWontz

Joey Aodg4ro
BladMIIIer
Taylor-!
Jtiel Barrett
Jcseph Ounlop
Bryan Hsrri&lt;

PREP FOOTBALL

Alox-Hawtsy ' ·
Craig Jones •

Chrislisn Amilba!Y
Tyl~n Thompson ·
. Matt Weiner

Friday's Box:scores

Rushes-yards
Passing yards

Magnolia 21,

Total yards
Comp-att·inl
Fumbles lost
Penalties-yards

Pol nfPieas~~nt 20
Pt. Pleasant
Magnolia

FOOTBALL
.Nellonvill&amp;-Yodc
Nellonville-York

I.waterloril

2T.Soutlltirn
2T.Trlmllle

Sr
Sr

.-.eastern

S.Soulllem-

6.Miller

~

2-11
1-9

7 13
0 7

o o 7 7 -

20
21

pp
9

M

174
8·26-0

12
40-129
74
203 .
8·15-\

0

0

4-27

3·15

32-95

79

ljcorlng IUmmary
lndlyldual Statlatlca
Firat Quarter
Bushing: PP-AII~n Wasonga t9·.
PP-AIIan Wasonga 15,pass from
77, Nathan Rob&lt;!ns 6·26, Derek
B.J. Lloyd (Juslin Weaver kick) '05
Mitchell4-4, 8 J Lloyd 3·(·12).
Second Quarter
.
M-Stingray Bales 22·83, Dillon
PP-Wasonga 3 run (Weaver k1ck) · Jackson 10-33, Juslin Fox 8· 13.
5:10 _
.
Passing : PP-B.J. Lloyd 8·26·0 79.
M~D•IIon Jackson 2 run (Juslln
M --Justin Fox 8·15·1 74
Fox kick) 2:46
'
.
·
PP-Cody Greathouse 27 pass
Bcelvlng. PP-AIIan Wasonga 3·
from Lloyd (kick failed)
40, Cody Greathouse 1·27, Derek
Mitchell 2·16, Nathan Rollerts 1·(·
Third Quarter _
_M;..:Fox 15 run (Fox kick) :44
4) _
· Fourth Quarter
M--Jason UU 4·57, Stingray Bat~
M-Jason Utt25 pass trom Fox
1-14, Jared B_laU 1·6, Cody EllloU 1·
(Fox kick) 6:46.
3; Darren Sprouse 1-(·2). -

";.'"&lt; ..••

••

First Downs

·--

Point
from PageBI

Landowners have it a lot
easier, which I wil _lexplain a
little later, but for everyone
else first things first, you
need a hunting license ($19) to harvest six deer in Ohio
and a rej:ular deer permit
.
($24). This is the bare mini- will spend $136 on permits
mum licensing requirements (hunting license, three regufor deer hunting in Ohio.
tar deer permits and three
With those two items in antlerless deer permits) , prohand, you can purchase up viding he or she is not eligi'to three antlerless deer per- ble for reduced cost senior
mits at $15 apiece, or two perinits.
additional regular deer per_Youth deer gun season
mits, or any combination of will be held the weekend of
the two for a grand total of . Nov.22-23.
six deer permits.
Young hunters_ 17 and
The $24 deer permit is younger (at the time they
good for antlered or antler- purchase their youth deet
less deer and is valid permit) and who are accomstatewide during any of the panied by a non -hunting
deer hunting seasons_. adult can take. one ~eer of
Hunters are limited to only either sex dunng this seaantlered deer per license son. This deer Will count
year.
toward their zone bag limit:
The $15 antlerless deer-· Permits can be purchased
permits can be purchased 'from Ohio huntin,g license
mdividually up to Nov. 30 agents or over the mternet. ·
and can be used in Zone C
Landowners huntmg on
into · deer gun season until their own -property, as usual,
Dec. 7. If you intend on don't _have to buy any of the
'limiting out" on dee_r this permits, b~t must make t_heu:
year, notice you have to buy own permit and ~ttach •t to
the
antlerless permits the deer where It fell. Of
BEFORE deer gun season course all other hunting regopens.
ulations and limits apply.
You can· harvest more than
More information about
one d~r per day, as long as Ohio deer . permits can be
each deer -has been tagged found in the 2008-2009
· with a temporary tag before Ohio Hunting and Trapping
hunting for the next deer.
Regulations or online al
What remains to be seen is Qhiodnr.com
if Ohio hunters will take
Jim Freeman is wildlife
advantage of this opportunity to harvest more deer. If specialist with the Meigs
they do, and if the weather Soil
and
Water
cooperates, we may be on Conservation District. He
track to break the record of can be contacted weekdayl
23 7,316 deer harvested in at 740-992-4282 or dl
2006-2007.
jim -freeman @oh .nacd:An adult hunter wanting net.net ·

Jim Freeman

&amp;oull&gt; fi'ojnl
·

In the.
Open ·

1it.

"'"I

Aoqll Hill
ROC!!

DIVISION IV

DIVISION-Ill

;

Aoai&lt;HI!

Schuyler Shaner
Brit811y McCarter
Tlffanv. Wires

Co-

Ohio deer hunters in Zone
C (that's us) can legally harvest up to six deer using a
combination of deer permits
and antlerless deer permits,
but sometimes the system
may seem a little confusing,
so I will attempt to simplify

-1 :

~·'··­

Courtney Kookal

Lauren DowOs

deer permits

N.it·'lbrk

Janel OeAutrwtnOnl
Kaaslt l.8l'Ot
'
Brtt14ny Carmon

Athens

VInton

K.,nQn Clor~to~~

Folrlood
Folrlond

Hanna~

!4ollie Bllika

Brenna GOethe!
'Sarah Nl&lt;lhols

~.. ­

, Otii'HIII
Rlbe098 Pualclll
Mact&lt;enzlo CluOton Alwt VliltY
Kaylo Smllh
lli.J, ~allo~

~U!ens

Ganla

Emalee Glass
Emily Foy,

on.~a

MarloM&amp;ij~

Logan
LOgM

Allison 5ohoeppner
EmilY Folc .
A-Gelgar

•..,

eo..o""'
Coola,...

l&lt;immf Klint

HOt{QRABLE MENTION

.Saunders Insurance Browns Midget Champions Making sense of Ohio's

011-k·

.c~

Ooiong
Brianna Day

\linton Co.

illlisonG,....

Can11!WIIIs .
Kalaoy Martin

cra-.n•

Amand&amp;RuffMr

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

GALLIPOLIS
The
Ohio Valley Christian School
held its annual Fall · Sports
Banquet on November 7th.
The varsity soccer team finished a very successful season, earning a runner-up-spot
in the ACSI regional tournament.
. Several players were
awarded for their performance on and off the field
this season .
. The Defenders had three

representatives
rewarded
wtth All-SEQ district awards .
• Earning first team honors
_for OVCS is Michael Wright,
with Henry Patrick on the
second ·team. Jon VanMeter
and Joe Beaver received honorable mention in the SEQ
district.
Team awards were present·
ed to Jared Bartley (Servant
Award),
Laurah - Bush
(Consistency Award), Alex
Trent (Intensity Award), Kyle
Scouten (Obedience Award),
Henry Patrick (Leadership
Award) , Jasmine .Owens

(Determination Award). Jon
VanMeter (Mpst Improved),
Jon Beaver (Defensive
MVP) and Michael Wright
(Offensive MVP).
The Lady Defenders volleyball team followed their
successful regular season
with a third place finish in the
ACSI state tournament.
Statistical awards were
presented
to
Andrea
Vanmeter for passing (71
digs), Lindsey Miller for
serving (~08 points),l.indsey
Miller for setting/assisting (
337 assists), Hali Burlson for

hitting/spiking (150 kills)
and Hali Burleson. for block- ·
ing (19 blocks).
The 200 point awards went
to Hali Burlsoii (248 points),
Annee Carmen (269 points),
Lindsey Miller (308 points),
Andrea VanMeter (230
points)
and Samantha
Westfall (209 points).
The Intensity Award went
to Lindsey Miller, while the
Determination Award was
given to Jennifer Blevins.
No pictures were available
at release time.

RedStonn fall in semis
of AMC soccer tourney.
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEl

MOUNT VERNON
The University-of Rio Grande
RedStorm men's soccer team,
ranked No. 5 in the latest
NAIA Top 25 rating and the
No. 3 seed in the American
Mideast Conference are faced
with playing the waiting
j:ame on a benh and seeding
m the NAIA National
Tournament after a !.{) loss at
NAIA No. 22 Mount Vernon
Nazarene, the No. 2 seed in
the
tournament,
on
Wednesday afternoon.
Mount Vernon Nazarene
(15-2-2) scored a goal early in
the game and made it stand up
in · knocking off the
RedStorm. 'Chris Allen
scored in the 16th minute and
his goal ltlrned out to be lone

score of the game. Ad~
Worrall beat the Rio defense·
and slipped the_ball to Allen ,
who dla the rest. _
i
Rio Grande (15-3-1) hall
plenty of chances, but coulil
not tin.&lt;i the back of the ne(.
Rioout-shotMVNU 13-6and
held a 7-5 edge in shots on
goal, but the Cougars led
where it counted, on the
scoreboard at the end of the
game.
.
Rio's senior goalkeeper
Nate Walzer registered four
saves while the Cougars' Alei
Stout had six saves with one
save being credited as a team
save.
.
With Rio's ranking an4
very stron~ LONGO rating aa
at-large b1d to the national
tournament appears likel)l,
when the 30-team playoff
begins, November 22.

'

"

•!

GRANT

KARR

CONTRACTING

......,.... Cftllll Clllca

-Now open-

The Rusty Plow Primitives
cathy Clark'
Hrs • Thes· Sat. 10·5

lBeth Deaver •

Corner of Bashan (CR2ll) and Tackerville
Racine, Ohio
From Tornru/o Rd ·turn onio CR 28 go ,/
mUe- &lt;orningfrom New Road SR 33 get
off at Racine exir turn right go 2 miles.

216 Upper River Rd.

""----

204 w. 2nd Street

O.lllpollt, Ohio
'I• Mll9 south of

Pomeroy, Olllo

tiHt lllvtr lrldge

446-2404
. . _ CCI'GCI077410 .... DOf

''

OHIO VALLEY
CHECK CASHING
&amp;LOAN

-I

992-0481

I

u.- cc711110n-OOI
U... CI75004HOI

Fot Initial evaluations oi follow-up visits for total
joint replacemimtc we offer ofllee hours at:
3554 U.S. Route 60 East,
Barboursville, VN

Next clinic date is Friday, Nov. 21
Call (614) 461~8174 or 1-800·371-4790
for an appointment. '

-Specializing in total joint replacement
&gt;I '

,·

740-985-3444
34740 St. Rt. 7

Be amazed with modular.
The better, stronger, fo$ter way to build.

Pomeroy
(Between Five Points and Chester)

www.karrcontractlng.com
www.allamericanhomea.~om

• Featuring Ranch, Cape Cod, Two Story, and Multi-Family Homes.

• Choounm hulldnds atftMI'IIIIRL

'

Design Center Hours
Mon·Frl 8:(}() lo 5:(}() and By A.flllol ' C

Sat: By appointment
Sun: By appoinlrnenl
- . """"' . . •I -

•

�Sunday, November 16, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

-Meigs County lands 24 onAII-TVC squads
STAFF REPORT
SPORTSOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

.

. Sunday, November 16, 2008

1008 so...,_st.Ohlo- ··
dlsbtd vollejball ti!aml, ·
Sonoh

DIVISION I AND It
FIBS]! TEAM

-

~thono

CalfOWolfe

Molga

Kayles-ts

'Logan

Ka&lt;:l Shoemaker

Gallla
Marietta
WaN'In

Tillorly Sfloub
~ t,4&lt;MI&lt;hael
.

Erin Delong
,..han HoHman

~raAI!mll

FICI·Hock

L;otNC..Hf

Ironton

Jonlt Mon1o ,

lf0111on

Golia

Morgan Mullins

Jack&amp;bn

Sharlssa CooPer

AI Summers

Jackson
Marietta

Aly..o Sturm

Marietta

.Shellle Bailey .

Maigs
Meigs
warren
WJtrren

•

SIJIIth Poillt

Huron

11-imblt
Ttlmlllt

wolteton
Woll~

.-· ''
J

FlRSTTfAM
,
"'Q ' .,,

:~I .

l\ ' '..

~~n; ·. _ -·~

Tresa Swalzel .
BrlltBny CasiO
Stoimy Humphroy

E-rn- -" '
l..111er
·'

Emma Huntet
$ou1hern
Natasha Adkins
S. Galtla +. :~
Taylor Duncan
S. Gallia
,Ashly G.rannon
· Ironton St. Joe
Kim Bar'lwr
WatertorO ~ ...
Jess! DraYer
"
waterford

FIRST TEAM

HONORABLE MENTION
Morgan Bart

-M~~,II. Sialon
Karle HOoker
~rooke Humphrey
AbbyToth

-BaS11ell Boso

'·

·

·

Submitted photo

·Pictured above aFe members of·the 2008 Gallipolis Midget League Champions. Members of the team include Nathan
Stanlen, Blake Straight, Garrett Caldwell, Austin Whitt, Dylan Greenlee, Matthew Bailey, Scott Mash, Dalton Carter,
.Blake Wilson , Dustin Dickers, Brian Knotts, Tanner Few, Justin Reynolds, Jordan Gilliland, Jacob Pollock, Aaron
Fairchild, Aaron Schoolcraft, Logan Few, Wes Jarrell and Alex White and cheerleaders Jacey Walter, Kayle Muncy,
Jordan Walker and Paige Kiser.

GA 8th grade volleyball team completes season

Eastern ,
lronlpn S1&lt;Jbe ·
'lrOhfon'St. Jot\~
,t,
n~ ·

Mnier.
' . '&gt;
,.,.j, :,.

· Miller' ·

,... Sout~n · '
'· ~th8rn
S. Galllli

.

•

_ Submitted photo

Pictured above are members of the Gallia Academy 8th grade volleyball team that finished up a successful season with
an overall record of 9·5 and finished as co--champions of the SEOAL South with Chillicothe. In front from left are Maggie
Bostic, Katherine Simpson, Halley Barnes, Abby Wiseman, Karissa Ferrell and Madison · Daniels. In back are Morgan
Foster, Claudia Skinner, Charlotte Lively, Riley Nibert, Grace Rodgers, Meghan Thacker and Megan Cochran. ·

'

,

OVCS ·honors athletes at 2008 Fall Sports Banqu~t

_,

'

VOLI:-£Yl'ALL

STAFF REPORT
SPOATSCIMYDAILVTRIBUNE .CO~

Kyle Allen

_

The Scoreboard

SlovieWontz

Joey Aodg4ro
BladMIIIer
Taylor-!
Jtiel Barrett
Jcseph Ounlop
Bryan Hsrri&lt;

PREP FOOTBALL

Alox-Hawtsy ' ·
Craig Jones •

Chrislisn Amilba!Y
Tyl~n Thompson ·
. Matt Weiner

Friday's Box:scores

Rushes-yards
Passing yards

Magnolia 21,

Total yards
Comp-att·inl
Fumbles lost
Penalties-yards

Pol nfPieas~~nt 20
Pt. Pleasant
Magnolia

FOOTBALL
.Nellonvill&amp;-Yodc
Nellonville-York

I.waterloril

2T.Soutlltirn
2T.Trlmllle

Sr
Sr

.-.eastern

S.Soulllem-

6.Miller

~

2-11
1-9

7 13
0 7

o o 7 7 -

20
21

pp
9

M

174
8·26-0

12
40-129
74
203 .
8·15-\

0

0

4-27

3·15

32-95

79

ljcorlng IUmmary
lndlyldual Statlatlca
Firat Quarter
Bushing: PP-AII~n Wasonga t9·.
PP-AIIan Wasonga 15,pass from
77, Nathan Rob&lt;!ns 6·26, Derek
B.J. Lloyd (Juslin Weaver kick) '05
Mitchell4-4, 8 J Lloyd 3·(·12).
Second Quarter
.
M-Stingray Bales 22·83, Dillon
PP-Wasonga 3 run (Weaver k1ck) · Jackson 10-33, Juslin Fox 8· 13.
5:10 _
.
Passing : PP-B.J. Lloyd 8·26·0 79.
M~D•IIon Jackson 2 run (Juslln
M --Justin Fox 8·15·1 74
Fox kick) 2:46
'
.
·
PP-Cody Greathouse 27 pass
Bcelvlng. PP-AIIan Wasonga 3·
from Lloyd (kick failed)
40, Cody Greathouse 1·27, Derek
Mitchell 2·16, Nathan Rollerts 1·(·
Third Quarter _
_M;..:Fox 15 run (Fox kick) :44
4) _
· Fourth Quarter
M--Jason UU 4·57, Stingray Bat~
M-Jason Utt25 pass trom Fox
1-14, Jared B_laU 1·6, Cody EllloU 1·
(Fox kick) 6:46.
3; Darren Sprouse 1-(·2). -

";.'"&lt; ..••

••

First Downs

·--

Point
from PageBI

Landowners have it a lot
easier, which I wil _lexplain a
little later, but for everyone
else first things first, you
need a hunting license ($19) to harvest six deer in Ohio
and a rej:ular deer permit
.
($24). This is the bare mini- will spend $136 on permits
mum licensing requirements (hunting license, three regufor deer hunting in Ohio.
tar deer permits and three
With those two items in antlerless deer permits) , prohand, you can purchase up viding he or she is not eligi'to three antlerless deer per- ble for reduced cost senior
mits at $15 apiece, or two perinits.
additional regular deer per_Youth deer gun season
mits, or any combination of will be held the weekend of
the two for a grand total of . Nov.22-23.
six deer permits.
Young hunters_ 17 and
The $24 deer permit is younger (at the time they
good for antlered or antler- purchase their youth deet
less deer and is valid permit) and who are accomstatewide during any of the panied by a non -hunting
deer hunting seasons_. adult can take. one ~eer of
Hunters are limited to only either sex dunng this seaantlered deer per license son. This deer Will count
year.
toward their zone bag limit:
The $15 antlerless deer-· Permits can be purchased
permits can be purchased 'from Ohio huntin,g license
mdividually up to Nov. 30 agents or over the mternet. ·
and can be used in Zone C
Landowners huntmg on
into · deer gun season until their own -property, as usual,
Dec. 7. If you intend on don't _have to buy any of the
'limiting out" on dee_r this permits, b~t must make t_heu:
year, notice you have to buy own permit and ~ttach •t to
the
antlerless permits the deer where It fell. Of
BEFORE deer gun season course all other hunting regopens.
ulations and limits apply.
You can· harvest more than
More information about
one d~r per day, as long as Ohio deer . permits can be
each deer -has been tagged found in the 2008-2009
· with a temporary tag before Ohio Hunting and Trapping
hunting for the next deer.
Regulations or online al
What remains to be seen is Qhiodnr.com
if Ohio hunters will take
Jim Freeman is wildlife
advantage of this opportunity to harvest more deer. If specialist with the Meigs
they do, and if the weather Soil
and
Water
cooperates, we may be on Conservation District. He
track to break the record of can be contacted weekdayl
23 7,316 deer harvested in at 740-992-4282 or dl
2006-2007.
jim -freeman @oh .nacd:An adult hunter wanting net.net ·

Jim Freeman

&amp;oull&gt; fi'ojnl
·

In the.
Open ·

1it.

"'"I

Aoqll Hill
ROC!!

DIVISION IV

DIVISION-Ill

;

Aoai&lt;HI!

Schuyler Shaner
Brit811y McCarter
Tlffanv. Wires

Co-

Ohio deer hunters in Zone
C (that's us) can legally harvest up to six deer using a
combination of deer permits
and antlerless deer permits,
but sometimes the system
may seem a little confusing,
so I will attempt to simplify

-1 :

~·'··­

Courtney Kookal

Lauren DowOs

deer permits

N.it·'lbrk

Janel OeAutrwtnOnl
Kaaslt l.8l'Ot
'
Brtt14ny Carmon

Athens

VInton

K.,nQn Clor~to~~

Folrlood
Folrlond

Hanna~

!4ollie Bllika

Brenna GOethe!
'Sarah Nl&lt;lhols

~.. ­

, Otii'HIII
Rlbe098 Pualclll
Mact&lt;enzlo CluOton Alwt VliltY
Kaylo Smllh
lli.J, ~allo~

~U!ens

Ganla

Emalee Glass
Emily Foy,

on.~a

MarloM&amp;ij~

Logan
LOgM

Allison 5ohoeppner
EmilY Folc .
A-Gelgar

•..,

eo..o""'
Coola,...

l&lt;immf Klint

HOt{QRABLE MENTION

.Saunders Insurance Browns Midget Champions Making sense of Ohio's

011-k·

.c~

Ooiong
Brianna Day

\linton Co.

illlisonG,....

Can11!WIIIs .
Kalaoy Martin

cra-.n•

Amand&amp;RuffMr

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

GALLIPOLIS
The
Ohio Valley Christian School
held its annual Fall · Sports
Banquet on November 7th.
The varsity soccer team finished a very successful season, earning a runner-up-spot
in the ACSI regional tournament.
. Several players were
awarded for their performance on and off the field
this season .
. The Defenders had three

representatives
rewarded
wtth All-SEQ district awards .
• Earning first team honors
_for OVCS is Michael Wright,
with Henry Patrick on the
second ·team. Jon VanMeter
and Joe Beaver received honorable mention in the SEQ
district.
Team awards were present·
ed to Jared Bartley (Servant
Award),
Laurah - Bush
(Consistency Award), Alex
Trent (Intensity Award), Kyle
Scouten (Obedience Award),
Henry Patrick (Leadership
Award) , Jasmine .Owens

(Determination Award). Jon
VanMeter (Mpst Improved),
Jon Beaver (Defensive
MVP) and Michael Wright
(Offensive MVP).
The Lady Defenders volleyball team followed their
successful regular season
with a third place finish in the
ACSI state tournament.
Statistical awards were
presented
to
Andrea
Vanmeter for passing (71
digs), Lindsey Miller for
serving (~08 points),l.indsey
Miller for setting/assisting (
337 assists), Hali Burlson for

hitting/spiking (150 kills)
and Hali Burleson. for block- ·
ing (19 blocks).
The 200 point awards went
to Hali Burlsoii (248 points),
Annee Carmen (269 points),
Lindsey Miller (308 points),
Andrea VanMeter (230
points)
and Samantha
Westfall (209 points).
The Intensity Award went
to Lindsey Miller, while the
Determination Award was
given to Jennifer Blevins.
No pictures were available
at release time.

RedStonn fall in semis
of AMC soccer tourney.
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEl

MOUNT VERNON
The University-of Rio Grande
RedStorm men's soccer team,
ranked No. 5 in the latest
NAIA Top 25 rating and the
No. 3 seed in the American
Mideast Conference are faced
with playing the waiting
j:ame on a benh and seeding
m the NAIA National
Tournament after a !.{) loss at
NAIA No. 22 Mount Vernon
Nazarene, the No. 2 seed in
the
tournament,
on
Wednesday afternoon.
Mount Vernon Nazarene
(15-2-2) scored a goal early in
the game and made it stand up
in · knocking off the
RedStorm. 'Chris Allen
scored in the 16th minute and
his goal ltlrned out to be lone

score of the game. Ad~
Worrall beat the Rio defense·
and slipped the_ball to Allen ,
who dla the rest. _
i
Rio Grande (15-3-1) hall
plenty of chances, but coulil
not tin.&lt;i the back of the ne(.
Rioout-shotMVNU 13-6and
held a 7-5 edge in shots on
goal, but the Cougars led
where it counted, on the
scoreboard at the end of the
game.
.
Rio's senior goalkeeper
Nate Walzer registered four
saves while the Cougars' Alei
Stout had six saves with one
save being credited as a team
save.
.
With Rio's ranking an4
very stron~ LONGO rating aa
at-large b1d to the national
tournament appears likel)l,
when the 30-team playoff
begins, November 22.

'

"

•!

GRANT

KARR

CONTRACTING

......,.... Cftllll Clllca

-Now open-

The Rusty Plow Primitives
cathy Clark'
Hrs • Thes· Sat. 10·5

lBeth Deaver •

Corner of Bashan (CR2ll) and Tackerville
Racine, Ohio
From Tornru/o Rd ·turn onio CR 28 go ,/
mUe- &lt;orningfrom New Road SR 33 get
off at Racine exir turn right go 2 miles.

216 Upper River Rd.

""----

204 w. 2nd Street

O.lllpollt, Ohio
'I• Mll9 south of

Pomeroy, Olllo

tiHt lllvtr lrldge

446-2404
. . _ CCI'GCI077410 .... DOf

''

OHIO VALLEY
CHECK CASHING
&amp;LOAN

-I

992-0481

I

u.- cc711110n-OOI
U... CI75004HOI

Fot Initial evaluations oi follow-up visits for total
joint replacemimtc we offer ofllee hours at:
3554 U.S. Route 60 East,
Barboursville, VN

Next clinic date is Friday, Nov. 21
Call (614) 461~8174 or 1-800·371-4790
for an appointment. '

-Specializing in total joint replacement
&gt;I '

,·

740-985-3444
34740 St. Rt. 7

Be amazed with modular.
The better, stronger, fo$ter way to build.

Pomeroy
(Between Five Points and Chester)

www.karrcontractlng.com
www.allamericanhomea.~om

• Featuring Ranch, Cape Cod, Two Story, and Multi-Family Homes.

• Choounm hulldnds atftMI'IIIIRL

'

Design Center Hours
Mon·Frl 8:(}() lo 5:(}() and By A.flllol ' C

Sat: By appointment
Sun: By appoinlrnenl
- . """"' . . •I -

•

�•

Sunday, November 16,2008
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

. Sunday, November 16,

2008

BY MARK WILLIAMS

Eberhard.
Adkins, Katie Dunlap, Kayla
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL
Coach Dyer then intro- Harrison, Allison Nolan,
duced Vars1ty team mem- Genna
Baker, Lauren
RIO
GRANDE
bers: David Stout, Lawrence Adkins, Lee Ann
nsend,
Numerous awards were pre- Wed~meyer, Cody robinson, David Faro, Daniel Rees,
sented at the Gallia Academy Tyler
Hannon ,
Casey Warren
Patrick,
John
}figh School 2008 Fall Denbow, Zach Northup, Troester, Boeing Smith,
Sports Awards Ceremony Jonathan Caldwell, Terry David Elkins, Kyle Rhodes,
r.ecently held at Gallia Smith, Hubbel Smith, Matt Jordan Cornwell and Kamal ' ·
· Academy High School and Watts , Chris Kyger, Allie Dayal .
.
Maher, Most Valuable Volleyball
sponsored by tl)e GAHS • Troester, Zeke
Athletic Boosters. In all, 177 Jeremy
Ward, · Corey Player - Kaci Shoemaker,
student-athletes were recog- Eberhard, Josh Jackson and Most
Valuable
Cross
pized for their efforts athleti- Mike Hackeit.
Country Runner (Girls) cally and academically durVarsity Cross Country Peyton
Adkins,
Most
ing the fall season .
Coach Todd May introduced Valuable · Cross Country
GAHS Principal Bruce and thanked Junior High Runner (Boys) - Morgan
'Wilson,MasterofCeremony, Cross Country Coach Cheryl McKinniss, Girl's Fall
introduced each of the fol- Greenlee and then introduced Sports Scholastic Award lowing coaches who gave Varsity Girls Cross Country Lee Ann Townsend, Boy's
season comments and intra- team members: Peyton Fall Sports Scholastic Award
duced their' team members Adkins, Mariah Green, _ Kamal Dayal, Golf· Most
and assistant coaches.
McKenna Warner, Katie Valuable Player - Kamal
Freshman
Cheerleader Dunlap, Kayla Harrison, ·Dayal, Soccer Most Valuable
Advisor Rhonda Neal intro- Allison Nolan, Genna Baker, Player _ · Zeke- Maher,
duced squad members: Nikki Lauren Adkins and Lee Ann Golden Helmet Scholarship
Garrett, Victoria Howell. T&lt;lwnsend.
Award _ Evan Wood and
Kayla Jackson, Sarah Lear, Coach May then intro- Most Valuable Football
Kenzie Newberry, Kelsey duced Varsity Boys Cross Player_ Beau Whaley.
Pl!S&lt;J.uale , Sarah Sydnor and Country team members:
Trophy awards were preOlivia Trout.
David
Faro,
Morgan sented by Bruce Wilson for
Varsity
Cheerleader McKinniss, Cody Pullins and GAHS Principal's Fund,
Advisor Christy Randles Jacob Wheeler.
Assistant Principal Brent
introduced Junior Varsity
Golf Coach Corey Luce Saunders for GAHS Athletic
~quad members:
Haley introduced team members:
G s c
AnFtel, Stephanie Edelmann . Corey Arthur, Daniel Rees, Department, AH
ross
'
ff
Cmmtry
Coach
Todd
May
H a ey Johnson , T1 any Warren
Patrick,
John for Wiseman Real Estate and
Lewis, Mary Deal, Kayla Troester, Nick Saunders, Wiseman Insurance, GAHS
Sanders, Caytlyn Tackett and Boeing Smith, David Elkins,- Principal Bruce Wilson for
Mariah Garren.
. · Zack Miller, Kyle Rhodes,
. Advisof Caldwell then Jordan Cornwell, Corey Gallipolis City Schools
introduced Varsity squad .Hamilton and Kamal Dayal. Academic Boosters Club,
members: Alex Clark,
All SEOAL went to Kaci Mike Hackett for GAHS
Allison Diehl, McKenzie Shoemaker, Alexis Geiger, National Honor Society,
Hood, Brooke Howell, Zeke Maher, Peyton Adkms, Brittany Hively for GAHS
Amanda Jarvis, Alyssa McKenna Warner, Genna Senior
High
Student
Kessel and Lindsey Mink.
Baker, Lauren Adkins, Lee Council, ·
Gallipolis
Varsity Volleyball Coach Ann
Townsend,
Nick InfoCision Call Center
Amy Shriver introduced Saunders. Nate Allison, Manager Dan 'Nettinger for
Freshman Volleyball Coach Quinton
Nibert, Jared InfoCision
Management
Cindy Simpson and team Gravely, Jon Kyger and Beau Corporation
and . Joe
members: Allie Clonch, Whaley.
• .
·
Drummond · for Pine Street
Natalie
Close,
Jessica
All SEOAL Academic Storage of Gallipolis.
Dotson; Shaina Fillinger, Awards wer~ presented . to:
Acknowledgements were
Lauren · Fisher,
C1ara Mollie Blake, Megan Foster, ·given
on
behalf of
Jackson , . Haley · Kyle, Amanda-McGhee, Samantha Custodians, Maintenance,
band
Director
Brittany Lloyd, Jessica Barnes,
Hannah GAHS
· .McGhee, Maddie Moritz, Cunn'ingham, Amy . Noe, Michael Huebner, Football
:Brooklyn Plantz. Molly Kaci Shoemaker, Alexis Team Doctors Glenn Fisher
Smith, Kanessa Snyder and Geiger, Cole Simpson, Nate and
Michael
Canady,
~mily ThomaS.
Allison, Jared Golden, Cory Athletic
Director Bill •
Coach Shriver next intra- Mason, Ethan Moore, Codie Wamsley, Principal Bruce
duced
Junior
Varsity Ward, Austin Wilson, Jon · Wilson and Superintendent
Volleyball · Coach Vicky Kyger, Quinton Nibert, Evan Jack W. Payton and the
Shaffer and introduced team Wood, Clint Saunders, Gallipolis City School
members: Caroline Baxter, Robert
Daniels,
Beau Distnct Board of Education
Lindsay Brown, Mandy Whaley, Casey Denbow, for their efforts to make the
Foster, Taylor Foster, Melissa. Zach . Northup, . Jonathan athletic and academic proLong, Tori Tackett, Mary Caldwell, Hubbel Smith, grams at Gallia Academy
· Townsend, Morgan Leslie, Matt Watts, Chris Kyger, High School the fin~t in
Rachel Morris, Haley Rosier Allie Troester, Jeremy Ward, Southeastern Ohio.
.
and Heather Ward.
Mike Hackett, Katie Dunlap,
In addition thanks were
·. Coach Shriver then intro- Allison Nolan, Lauren given to Buckeye Hills
duced
Eighth
Grade Adkins, Lee Ann Townsend, Career Center and the
¥olleyball Coach Garry David Faro, Boeing Smith, GAHS Athletic Boosters
Adkins, Seventh Grade David Elkins and Kamal Club for their efforts to
Volleyball Coach Tiffany Dayal.
rnake the evening a success .
Bostic and Varsity Volleyball
GAHS Scholar Athlete · for the student athletes and
team members: Mollie A~ards were rresented to: their families.
Blake, Morgan Daniels, . V1ctona Howe! , Sarah Lear, .
.
.
Megan. Foster, Brittany Kenzie Newberry, Sarah
Hively, Amanda McGhee, Sydnor,
Haley
Angel,
Samantha Barnes, Brea Stephanie Edelmann, Tiffany
Close, Hannah Cunningham, Lewis. Mary Neal, Caytlyn
Amy Noe, Kaci Shoemaker. Tackett, Mariah Garrett, Alex
Courtney Shriver and Alexis Clark, Allison Diehl, Brooke
Geiger.
Howell, Amanda Jarvis,
Freshman
Football Alyssa Kessel, Lindsey
Coaches Brent Simms and Mmk, Mollie Blake, Morgan
Adam Clark introduced Daniels, Megan· Foster,
Freshman ·team members: Brittany Hively, Amanda
Stephen Atkins, Bransen . McGhee, Samantha Barnes,
Barr, Bryant Bokovitz, Chase Hannah Cunningham, Amy
Caldwell , Tyler Campbell, Noe, Kaci Shoemaker,Alexis
Chadd Carpenter, Caleb Geiger, Caroline Baxter,
Craft, · Joe Jarvis, Joel Lindsay Brown, Mandy
Johnston, Dallas Moss, Kyle Foster, Taylor Foster, Melissa
Saunders, Sidney Saunders, Long, Tori Tackett, Mary
Zach Tackett , Brandon Townsend, Morgan Leslie,
'['aylor, Kyle Taylor, Zach Rachel Morris, Haley Rosier,
Thomas and Drew Young.
Heather Ward, Lauren Fisher,
Varsity Football · Coach Ciara Jackson, Brittany
t-1an Bokovitz introduced Lloyd, Maddie Moritz,
)/arsitr Assistant Coaches Brooklyn Plantz, Kanessa
Jim N1day, Brack Houchens, Snyder, Emily Thomas,
Steve Patterson and Junior Stephen Atkins , Bryant
Varsity team members: Cody Bokovitz, Chase Caldwell,
15illings, Josh Cu!!)', Tyler Chadd Carpenter, Joel
Eastman, Joseph Fmnicum, Johnston, Dallas Moss, Kyle
Palton Jarrell, Dakota Long, Saunders, Sidney Saunders,
Joseph Jenkins; Codie Lloyd, Zach Tackett, Brandon
thns McDermitt, David Taylor, Kyle Taylor, Drew
Saunders, Corey Sfraight, Young, Cody Billings, Josh
Kyle Bays, Tyler Davis, Curry, Tyler Eastman, Dalton
Russell Denmson, Kyle Jarrell, Joseph Jenkins,
Qingess, Nathan Mathews, David Saunders, Corey
· !len Robison and Ben Straight, Kyle Bays, Tyler
Saunders.
Davis, Russell Dennison,
: Coach Bokovitz then intro- Ben Robison, Ben Saunders,
auced Varsity team mem- Will Morris, Cole Simpson,
bers: Paolo Asluquipan , Will Jarrod Wray, Nate Allison,
rtforris, Cole Simpson, Jared Golden, CJ. Harrison,
~ustin Smith, Nick Wilson, Cory Mason, Ethan Moore,
Wray, Nate All!son. Codie Ward, Austin . Wilson,
Golden , C.J. Hamson. Jared Gravely, Jon Kyger,
ory Mason, Ethan Moore, Quinton Nibert, Tyler Wachs,
Justin Northup, Shawn Kruize Wandling, Evan
f,ethtel, Codir Ward , Austin w~ od, Clint Saunders, ·
Wilson, Jared Gravely, Jon Robert
Daniels,
Beau
ltvger, Quinton Nibert, :!)ler Whaley, Jared Lester, Alex
Wachs, Kruize Wandhng , Lyles, Kelle Craft, Michael
iiVan Wood, Clint Saunders, Fahmy,
Rachel
Lyles ,
khbert Daniels and Beau Heather Caldwell, Sarah
WhalerEberhard , David Stout,
I Varstty Soccer Coach Mike Lawrence Wedemeyer, Cody
r · introduced Junior robinson, Tyler Hannon,
ity Coach Josh Simmons Casey
Denbow,
Zach ·
.
)ul)ior Varsity team Northup, Jonathan Caldwell,
ilembers: Jared, l,oster, Alex Terry Smith, Hubbel Smith,
f.VIes Kelle Clift., Michael Matt Watts, Chris Kyger,
P"ahmf, ,Ray R~aer, Lane Allie Troester, Ze)(e Maher.
R,_oberts, Rachel Lyles, Jeremy Ward, Josh Jac!&lt;.son ,
Heather Caldwell and S~ Mike Hackett, Peyton

RIO GRANDE - In the
year of 2008 the word
change has been chanted ad
nauseam and the University
of Rio Grande RedStorm
111en 's basketball team is
aiming for change as well.
Change, as in a re-emergence once again as a force
·m the Americaq. Mideast
Conference and the NAIA . ·
Third year head coach Ken
'French has ·his· most experienced and deepest team
since ascending · to the top
spot on the bench . .The team
has the most talent since the
2003 team that won the
AMC Tournament and made
an appearance at the NAlA
DivisiOn
II
National
Tournament, the school's
last.
·
French discussed the four
keys he believes has to occur
for the RedStorm to have a
successful .campaign in
2008-09.
.
"Fi.rst and forenJ(ist we
must stay healthy," he said.
"In addition to staying injury
free I think we need to be
successful early in the season for our confidence."
"Thirdly, we have to have
guys understand and fill

their role within · the program ," French added. "We
must hate to lose 'more than
we love to win."
Even with a veteran club
that features five seniors,
who have played a tremen·
dous amount of minutes, · in the league," French said.
French knows that there are "He could have an Allsome 1ssues that need to be American type year if he is
w?.rked t_hrough ...
.
focused and brings a blue
ConSIStency, he sa1d. collar work ethic to all that
"We must be consistent with , he does."
our effort arid our mental
!f Ivery avoids the i~ury
~p_proach _every day, whether bug he will .eclipse the
11 ~.s practice or a game.
!,000-point plateau fairly
We must g1ve · our _best early in the season.
effort mentally and ~hys1calSenior guard Brett Beucler
ly to all ~.hat we do,' French is back. He went over 1.000
aflded. We must push our" career points late last season
selves beyond o~; comfort and will aim to be among the
zone to get better.
all-time leaders in Rio
. To wha,t level _of success G~ande history with a banthis year s version of R~o ner senior campaign. "Brett
qrande ?ask~tball h~ Will is a ~enior who had, probahmge _pnmarily on s1x key bly, the best off-season since
retummg players from last being in our program,"
year.
French said. "He is solid
Senior
guar~/forward and has a lot of confidence
Brandon Ivery has had an to start the year."
Olltstanding flfSt two seasons
Senior
guard
Aaron
in the Rio Red and White Drakeford returns to once
and will be_ counted on to, at again man the pc)int for Rio
least, duplicate, if not sur- Grande. "Aaron is not going
pass, wh~t he has done on to be a stat line guy an~ a lot
the floor m the past two sea- of what he provides goes
sons.
. unnoticed," French said.
"Brandon is very talented , "But he is a senior and has to
and is one of the top players be solid, night in and night

out for us to be successful."
Senior - center
Will
Norwell also returns to man
the post position for the
RedStorrn .. Norwell
has
been a formidable player
down low for Rio Grande,
since he arrived on campus
as a freshman and co d
All-Freshman team htriors
th t a .
~Sse ~on. d I'd . h
tea Y an SOl IS _t ~
best way to d:~cnbe Will,
French said. He led the
league or was at the top of
the league m _field go~l percentage. He 1s also m the
be~! shape he has ever been
m.
Norwell, with an injuryfree campaign. will also
eclipse the I ,000-c!treer
point mark this season.
Senior Kory Valentine is
the glue and his approach to
tl)e game car be infectious
and inspiring.
·
"Tough, hard-nosed and a
leader," French said. "Kory
represents everything about
our program. He will pro-

vide great leadership and be the back-up to senior goal:one of the top perimeter keeper Nate Walzer. Lower
defenders."
has tremendous leaping llbitJunior PJ . Rase is ready ity and is a high-energy
for his second season with player that can provide a
Rio Grande. Rase provides spark off the bench.
a long-distance threat and The RedStorrn are blessep
will also take on a key lead- with depth this SellcSOIJ,
ership role as well .
• which has been a big pro[).
"A junior, but definitely a lem in Coach French 's first
leader within our program," two years. The newcomels
French said. "P.J . had a provide tre'!lendous dfeth 'at
good sophomore year and all the positiOns and a ew Of
has committed to getting them should contribute rig~t
~tronger _and workmg to away.
.
1mprove his game .
Bud Teer. a 6-6 forwartJ,
. "He should be one of the has been . slowed by a prt&lt;- ·
better three-pomt shooters m season lDJUry. but the coacpthe AMC," French added.
ing staff i_s extremely high
Also returning this season on him . Freshman Bra,d
for the RedStorm are players Cubbie will be one of thos~
whohadspotduty a year ago players who gives ~io
and should see more time on Grande added depth and atllthe floor.
leticism at the guard spots-. ,
Sophomore guard Doug
Sophomore Wendell Bate.s
Campbell should see more has transferred in this seasrn
time this season, after show- and w1ll be an addlt)onal b1g
ing flashes lasi year. Fellow body to help Norwell ; Ivery
sophomore Drew Copas is and Teer 10 the low post. _.'
another \vlio fits that mold: Two other freshmen also
Copas has the ability to give Rio Grande depth down
knock down the long-range low and on the wing in 6-"J
jumper as well.
center Chris Davis arid
Sophomore Jordat;J Lower Floris Chaumat at 6-5.
is a tremendous athlete, but
French has set a very basic
may be a little slowed, goal for the season. ·
·
because of his commitment
''J'o have the seniors leave
to the Rio Grande soccer the program on a winning .
team this fall, where he was nnte."

Women's Basketball Preview: RedStorm looking to .take large step forward in 2008-09
.
BY MliRK WILLIAMS'

'

.

2008 GAllS FALL SPORTS AIL-SEOAL

2008 GAHS FAiL SPORTS MosT VALUABLE PLAYERS .

Do you suffer· from severe
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e

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If you ore interested in receiving further information, please C(dl
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or fax 740.441.3963
Email: Lwayland@holzerclinic.com

.'

(senior) Sarah · Drabinski,
Saunders, a sophomore, ity freshman campaign.
this season, but Smillley did
"We got a little taste of the
(sophomore) Ashley Saunders · will also factor prominently in
"Jaz is one of the most ver- not rule out shiftin~ her over National Tournament scene
and · (sophomore) Katelyn the post as well.
satile and athletic kids that to the off-guard pos1tion also. last year in Sioux City, lA amt
RIO GRANDE - The Kalinoski - and on given set
"What an improvement we've had," Smalley said.
"She is goil)g to be one of I've been here a long time and
University of Rio Grande of circumstances, with from last year to this year," "She kinds of reminds of our captains this year. She that was the first time that we
RedStorrn women's basket- injuries, illness, foul trouble, ~malley said. :·Th
_ e big, excit- Angel Allen, who we had a will be back at the point, but had been to the Di~ision II
ball iearn is ready. to take the we could hit there at any ihg about' her . is that her few years ago. In some the good thing about this, I National Tournament ," he
next step heading intQ the time," Smalley continued.
defense has elevated. She can respects I can compare to her feel excited for AJix, we're said. "Our goal ultimately i's
2008-09 season.
Smalley commented that bang and go against bigger- Britney Walker as well."
going to be able to move her to not only get there, but get
After a young team sur- Saunders has improved her sized post-players when she
Sophomore Candace Black over and play some two-guard there and win games and win
passed expectations .in 2007- game greatly between that · needs to and that's going to is expectecl to take a much with the improvement of the national tournament." ·
larger role than she did in her Jenna Smith at the one and . "In order to get there, one
08 and made a first ever freshman and sophomore sea- help us out in the post."
1
11ppearance at' the NAJA son.
Fellow .
sophomore rookie season.
Bre Davis coming in to give way to make sure that you get
Diyision
II
National · Smalley spoke highly of his .Kalinoski is another who
"Very few minutes her her a spell," Smalley said. to the national tournament iS, .
Tournament last March, los- seniors · in
the
post. experienced limited minutes freshman year, but she has "Alix is going to be a versatile plain and simple , win yotir
ing in the flfSt round ,e3-6lto "Drabinski _and. Kume are last year and is ready, willing learned _the system, I thipk . player."
.
conference ," he added. ':I
Brack Hills State. Rio Grande . proven wamors m that pos1- and able to step up and chal- worked hard over the sumDavis, als&lt;l a sophomore, don't think we were giveJl
is ready to go back and this lion," he said.
lenge for more playing time. mer, she's handles the . ball returns to challenge for time much resvect from our owp
time the plan is · stay a little
Another . concern . for ' 'Undersized, playing in the well, goes to the boards better with Smith and Pulley at the conference (picked 5th). from
longer.
.
Smalley? "It has nothing to · post, but can shoot the three, than any player we've ever point. "Bre was up and down the national rankings (receivRio Grande he11d ·coach do with the players, but it has has great, explosive post . had, just has that al&gt;ility and 'a little bit as a freshman, but ing votes). Our goal is to get
David Smalley, in his 17th to do with the goofball that · moves, she can pull the post knack to go to the boards, · she is really coming in with a to the n~tional tournament ,
season ·as mentor of the Rio did the scheduling (referring away from the basket and has, she's very athletic, can shoot lot of hunger this year," but in ofder for that to happeri,
Grande woll)en's program, to himself),'' he ' said. "Our ability to get it to the glass, the three 'and a ~ood individ' Smal.ley _said. "She's very ath- our goal is to win the coilfe~­
..gives- what ..lie feels !!@· the ~hedule is pi{Jbabl~ going to which makes her hard to ual," Smalley satd.
letic, quick,' is a transitional · ence."
·
.
lhiee .keys to returning Sioux maybe hinder us a httle bit, as guard," Smalley said.
Another sophomore, Jenna style of player, she can get up
"The way the league is th~
City, IA and making a state- far as those people out there
On the. wings, junior Smith is expected to have an and down the floor and can year, it's about as a roller
looking at wins and losses,"
Courtney Congrove is consid- expanded. role this season. "D" up the opponent's guard." · coaster of a league siruation ns
.ment.
"I think for this years team,
"I guarantee you this season. ered one of the leaders on the She will split time at hoth ,the
Rio has two newcomers, you can get," he added. "We
I think No. 1 is;· chemistry," we're $Oing to be challenged teall.l·
two-guard and point guard freshman guard Mara Howell want to win the league. if that
said Smalley. "With what we night m and night . out:' he
·~·s the only juni9f we . spots. "She'll play. the !wo- and freshman forward Clarisa is not an option for us . thau
wellt throii!!~Jiast year. we had added. "I only think we have have m the program, ·she's guard, but WJII be moong 1t up Jones.
we h11ve to be in the tinal two
tremendous chenustry With so one or two patsy games out of long, she can play the three at the point also," Smalley
"Mara's really being put to in the league tournament, so
many freshmen that we tire 30, if you want to look at spot, another true, internal said. "She can shoot the three, the test, she's playing a lot of our goal is obviously, win the
. brought in.
it that waaky." S al
.
,
leader," Smalley ,said. "A maybe one of the best three- JV and mixing up varsity," league, win the (AMCal) tourd11o· spe to m 1ey s con- great individual to have and point shooters that we've ever Smalley said. "Mara's a great nament, get to nation s an
. "It's going vital and key
again this year,''. he added. cern, Rio has 12-13 games gives a -lot of guidance to the had. She. another one that 'off-guard, Mara is the type of then win thai first elusive
"Most people would think with foes who are either young kids coming in."
plays with a lot of energy and the player, she's going to game."
that, weU you had it last year ranked or receiving votes in . Sophomore Leah Kendra heart and goes to the boards make you a better team, just
Rio has been to the national·
y0u ·should have it this ~ear: · th.e pre-season ratin!ls.
. .;auld be the . "X" Factor .for weU." . ·. · . , . . · because she's on the floor. tournament five times (four at ·
with every new season, d1fferSn:talley also porn~ to a the' 2008-09 RedStorrn. She
Sopho01ore Kaylee Helton She's very unselfish and we're the NAIA Division I level'i
ent sets of circumstances consistency 10 rel1p~d,ing )he was at times reluctant on the. . is another returning off-guard. excited about what she's and is 0-5 on the big stage. ·
:arise. Those llifle.l'layers that basketl&gt;~l as .a pOsSible con- offensive e'nd,IIS-a freshman, i( \Helton was Pl-edominantly the going to bring to the program Smalley also mention~d
·~e bi'O\Ight .. in last year as ce~. .I think defensl:J. · she ~· herself; she can-be sixth man last yellr and brings in the future."
some team goals, holding the
freshmen are sophomores and we,re gomg to be ~tty g • a effective weapon. . ·
loaqs of offensive firepower
"Jones has a big body, ·a opposition to 60 points or les~;
_they're hungry." '
. we ve got good kids _tha~
''She may be the best over- to' the floor, "She C&lt;Ul shoot good body, strong body, ahout commit 17 or less tumevei'S
· "That's going to create, I hard, maybe an Achilles : , I all athlete in the program," th_e lhr\Je from downtown," 5-10 and when this young per game and out-rebounding
think, more competition inter- for us IS rehoun~mg, :weve. Smalley said. "She just does Smalley said. "She can do the lady realizes has good she their opponents.
~
nally," Smalley said. "We got ~ do a better J~b of con- everything, she can go to .the little things, set the . screens, really is, I think she's going to
"Our internal goals wlll
have IWI:i Seniors lhlu have trollmg the hoards if 'Ye :WIII\t boards, she. can shoot the. . get rebQunds, get deflections, be a force to be reckoned help us win .the AMC
beeil here ail four years and to be the style of_t~ that w_e thre'i!, she can get it to the ruris . the plays the way they with," Smalley said. "She's Championship or the AMC
.they give us -~ Jot _of stabllicy. ~an~. to IJ&lt;:. ~hi.;h ·JS" tranSJ.- ,glaSS, she's 'a -great defender, should lle run. Sh~'s a great getting tons of juriior varsity Tournament which will als9
,TI)e good thmg 1s, that we tro~ • .he said. In o~rto siarl we've just ,got to that kid to• p¢11leter pel-son."
. · experience, because that's just help us achieve the goal ~f
, •have good, quality people in ·your. fastbre~ you ve got to shoot more."
Sophomore Alix Pulley what these girls need nght getting to the national tournathe classroom ~d on ltte l)lbou~d, !hats where 11 all
At the off · guard spot, wrestled . the starting point now, they need to get repeti- ment, which ' al·so helps .
coort,soourchemistcyisstill,. s~. :
.
.
sophomore
Jasmine guardspotfromtherestofthe tionsonthecourt."
achieve the goal of winnin!;
:to me, a key for us to having'
I think rebounding IS ~ RicnprdSQil is back and will .pack r;as~ ¥eaT and will see
SmalJey has some lofty the national tournament,"
-successful season."
.
CQncern that we could have, be Counted on to build a qual- most of her time at that spot goals set for this season.
Smalley said.
·
lk
d
h'
Smalley
added.
· S n;-a 11eY._ a1so ta e
IS
Rio lost only one player
J~~ s ab1hty to play the tran- from last year's squad in
·si~on game ~ another key. · . Britney Walker, but he has
Our tr-.lllslbon style of pl.ay, plenty of firepower returning,
we have preached at getting starting with Drabinski. She
the ball out of the net or out of enters the season needing only
;bounds qu1ckly an~ gelli!"g six points to eclipse 1,000 for
Available to anyone with a physician order at
-~e ball up the floor, _he srud. her career (lifter scoring two
: If we can S!JStam !hat ..points against Daemeo m the·,_
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's convenient radiology service
-throughout 40 nunutes of ~he season opener). 'She by fat
·game with every team, I think has been one of the most
in the Meigs Medical Center.
that's going to be a huge ~ey pleasant
that we've
for us.•
~
·
had " S)llalley said. "She's
No -~ppoihtment is needed ·for our imaging service . .
Smalle}':ilho ~es ~s club's
here four years, she's just
•
ovefl!l! depth. In order to a good kid, a finesse player,
'transition the way we wan~ to has been all-conference, IS a
run, we've got to play iil~t of captain and has given a lot_of ·
The X-ray service Is also utilized by physidan specialists who see patients in the Center: ,
people," Smalley saJd. We stability
and
rnatunty
have lieen bles~d with depth throughout."
.
• Cardiology. Mitchell Silver, DO. FACC
• lntemal Medicine
righi now."
·
Kume, . aloog
wi!h
I
"If we hit those thl'ee things Drabinski, are the solid as a
'• • G.ttrCMintei'Oiogy • Steven Carin, DO
• · Podl•try • Earl Driggs, DO
then we'll have a s\ICCe&amp;sfut. rock seniors. Kwnc is consls;
·setiSOn." Smalley added.
. tent on the glass as she estahObltetrlc• 1nd Gynecology -,Jane Broecker, MD.
Despite all the positives that lished as one of the "'st
come with this team, Stnalley n:boundcrs in the conference.
still has some cxmcems ~- Rio Grande willlilcely look to ··
ing into the SC8S011- "The . Klime fOI' increased scorill,ll
main concern right now ill, this year as. well. "She's a trtdepth in our post position," he captain (with Drabinski and
stUd. "We have good people Alix Pulley), Erin's just a
1 and I don't want this to be mis- tremendous
young lady,"
construed, but the depth ·in Smalley said. "Does a rucc
that position, we're ·reall:pe~&gt;L,_ Job~~ post, ~ves us stabilsatile at the guards and two- 1ty rught m and rught out, your
guard And the forward spot, going to get ~~unding, y~
but in the fifth spot we are gmng to get sconng. Look 10r
down to four ~layers.'
·
her t~ be· cl0$C to a dou"le"That's (seruor) Erin Kume, doul&gt;le every game."
·
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

r---..--------------------....,.-----------------,

e

&amp;unllap i!Umt9 -•ntintl • Page Bs

-Men's Basketball Preview:.Rio Grande looking for change.in 2008-09:
.
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

BY JIM CRAFT

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

I,

�•

Sunday, November 16,2008
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

. Sunday, November 16,

2008

BY MARK WILLIAMS

Eberhard.
Adkins, Katie Dunlap, Kayla
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL
Coach Dyer then intro- Harrison, Allison Nolan,
duced Vars1ty team mem- Genna
Baker, Lauren
RIO
GRANDE
bers: David Stout, Lawrence Adkins, Lee Ann
nsend,
Numerous awards were pre- Wed~meyer, Cody robinson, David Faro, Daniel Rees,
sented at the Gallia Academy Tyler
Hannon ,
Casey Warren
Patrick,
John
}figh School 2008 Fall Denbow, Zach Northup, Troester, Boeing Smith,
Sports Awards Ceremony Jonathan Caldwell, Terry David Elkins, Kyle Rhodes,
r.ecently held at Gallia Smith, Hubbel Smith, Matt Jordan Cornwell and Kamal ' ·
· Academy High School and Watts , Chris Kyger, Allie Dayal .
.
Maher, Most Valuable Volleyball
sponsored by tl)e GAHS • Troester, Zeke
Athletic Boosters. In all, 177 Jeremy
Ward, · Corey Player - Kaci Shoemaker,
student-athletes were recog- Eberhard, Josh Jackson and Most
Valuable
Cross
pized for their efforts athleti- Mike Hackeit.
Country Runner (Girls) cally and academically durVarsity Cross Country Peyton
Adkins,
Most
ing the fall season .
Coach Todd May introduced Valuable · Cross Country
GAHS Principal Bruce and thanked Junior High Runner (Boys) - Morgan
'Wilson,MasterofCeremony, Cross Country Coach Cheryl McKinniss, Girl's Fall
introduced each of the fol- Greenlee and then introduced Sports Scholastic Award lowing coaches who gave Varsity Girls Cross Country Lee Ann Townsend, Boy's
season comments and intra- team members: Peyton Fall Sports Scholastic Award
duced their' team members Adkins, Mariah Green, _ Kamal Dayal, Golf· Most
and assistant coaches.
McKenna Warner, Katie Valuable Player - Kamal
Freshman
Cheerleader Dunlap, Kayla Harrison, ·Dayal, Soccer Most Valuable
Advisor Rhonda Neal intro- Allison Nolan, Genna Baker, Player _ · Zeke- Maher,
duced squad members: Nikki Lauren Adkins and Lee Ann Golden Helmet Scholarship
Garrett, Victoria Howell. T&lt;lwnsend.
Award _ Evan Wood and
Kayla Jackson, Sarah Lear, Coach May then intro- Most Valuable Football
Kenzie Newberry, Kelsey duced Varsity Boys Cross Player_ Beau Whaley.
Pl!S&lt;J.uale , Sarah Sydnor and Country team members:
Trophy awards were preOlivia Trout.
David
Faro,
Morgan sented by Bruce Wilson for
Varsity
Cheerleader McKinniss, Cody Pullins and GAHS Principal's Fund,
Advisor Christy Randles Jacob Wheeler.
Assistant Principal Brent
introduced Junior Varsity
Golf Coach Corey Luce Saunders for GAHS Athletic
~quad members:
Haley introduced team members:
G s c
AnFtel, Stephanie Edelmann . Corey Arthur, Daniel Rees, Department, AH
ross
'
ff
Cmmtry
Coach
Todd
May
H a ey Johnson , T1 any Warren
Patrick,
John for Wiseman Real Estate and
Lewis, Mary Deal, Kayla Troester, Nick Saunders, Wiseman Insurance, GAHS
Sanders, Caytlyn Tackett and Boeing Smith, David Elkins,- Principal Bruce Wilson for
Mariah Garren.
. · Zack Miller, Kyle Rhodes,
. Advisof Caldwell then Jordan Cornwell, Corey Gallipolis City Schools
introduced Varsity squad .Hamilton and Kamal Dayal. Academic Boosters Club,
members: Alex Clark,
All SEOAL went to Kaci Mike Hackett for GAHS
Allison Diehl, McKenzie Shoemaker, Alexis Geiger, National Honor Society,
Hood, Brooke Howell, Zeke Maher, Peyton Adkms, Brittany Hively for GAHS
Amanda Jarvis, Alyssa McKenna Warner, Genna Senior
High
Student
Kessel and Lindsey Mink.
Baker, Lauren Adkins, Lee Council, ·
Gallipolis
Varsity Volleyball Coach Ann
Townsend,
Nick InfoCision Call Center
Amy Shriver introduced Saunders. Nate Allison, Manager Dan 'Nettinger for
Freshman Volleyball Coach Quinton
Nibert, Jared InfoCision
Management
Cindy Simpson and team Gravely, Jon Kyger and Beau Corporation
and . Joe
members: Allie Clonch, Whaley.
• .
·
Drummond · for Pine Street
Natalie
Close,
Jessica
All SEOAL Academic Storage of Gallipolis.
Dotson; Shaina Fillinger, Awards wer~ presented . to:
Acknowledgements were
Lauren · Fisher,
C1ara Mollie Blake, Megan Foster, ·given
on
behalf of
Jackson , . Haley · Kyle, Amanda-McGhee, Samantha Custodians, Maintenance,
band
Director
Brittany Lloyd, Jessica Barnes,
Hannah GAHS
· .McGhee, Maddie Moritz, Cunn'ingham, Amy . Noe, Michael Huebner, Football
:Brooklyn Plantz. Molly Kaci Shoemaker, Alexis Team Doctors Glenn Fisher
Smith, Kanessa Snyder and Geiger, Cole Simpson, Nate and
Michael
Canady,
~mily ThomaS.
Allison, Jared Golden, Cory Athletic
Director Bill •
Coach Shriver next intra- Mason, Ethan Moore, Codie Wamsley, Principal Bruce
duced
Junior
Varsity Ward, Austin Wilson, Jon · Wilson and Superintendent
Volleyball · Coach Vicky Kyger, Quinton Nibert, Evan Jack W. Payton and the
Shaffer and introduced team Wood, Clint Saunders, Gallipolis City School
members: Caroline Baxter, Robert
Daniels,
Beau Distnct Board of Education
Lindsay Brown, Mandy Whaley, Casey Denbow, for their efforts to make the
Foster, Taylor Foster, Melissa. Zach . Northup, . Jonathan athletic and academic proLong, Tori Tackett, Mary Caldwell, Hubbel Smith, grams at Gallia Academy
· Townsend, Morgan Leslie, Matt Watts, Chris Kyger, High School the fin~t in
Rachel Morris, Haley Rosier Allie Troester, Jeremy Ward, Southeastern Ohio.
.
and Heather Ward.
Mike Hackett, Katie Dunlap,
In addition thanks were
·. Coach Shriver then intro- Allison Nolan, Lauren given to Buckeye Hills
duced
Eighth
Grade Adkins, Lee Ann Townsend, Career Center and the
¥olleyball Coach Garry David Faro, Boeing Smith, GAHS Athletic Boosters
Adkins, Seventh Grade David Elkins and Kamal Club for their efforts to
Volleyball Coach Tiffany Dayal.
rnake the evening a success .
Bostic and Varsity Volleyball
GAHS Scholar Athlete · for the student athletes and
team members: Mollie A~ards were rresented to: their families.
Blake, Morgan Daniels, . V1ctona Howe! , Sarah Lear, .
.
.
Megan. Foster, Brittany Kenzie Newberry, Sarah
Hively, Amanda McGhee, Sydnor,
Haley
Angel,
Samantha Barnes, Brea Stephanie Edelmann, Tiffany
Close, Hannah Cunningham, Lewis. Mary Neal, Caytlyn
Amy Noe, Kaci Shoemaker. Tackett, Mariah Garrett, Alex
Courtney Shriver and Alexis Clark, Allison Diehl, Brooke
Geiger.
Howell, Amanda Jarvis,
Freshman
Football Alyssa Kessel, Lindsey
Coaches Brent Simms and Mmk, Mollie Blake, Morgan
Adam Clark introduced Daniels, Megan· Foster,
Freshman ·team members: Brittany Hively, Amanda
Stephen Atkins, Bransen . McGhee, Samantha Barnes,
Barr, Bryant Bokovitz, Chase Hannah Cunningham, Amy
Caldwell , Tyler Campbell, Noe, Kaci Shoemaker,Alexis
Chadd Carpenter, Caleb Geiger, Caroline Baxter,
Craft, · Joe Jarvis, Joel Lindsay Brown, Mandy
Johnston, Dallas Moss, Kyle Foster, Taylor Foster, Melissa
Saunders, Sidney Saunders, Long, Tori Tackett, Mary
Zach Tackett , Brandon Townsend, Morgan Leslie,
'['aylor, Kyle Taylor, Zach Rachel Morris, Haley Rosier,
Thomas and Drew Young.
Heather Ward, Lauren Fisher,
Varsity Football · Coach Ciara Jackson, Brittany
t-1an Bokovitz introduced Lloyd, Maddie Moritz,
)/arsitr Assistant Coaches Brooklyn Plantz, Kanessa
Jim N1day, Brack Houchens, Snyder, Emily Thomas,
Steve Patterson and Junior Stephen Atkins , Bryant
Varsity team members: Cody Bokovitz, Chase Caldwell,
15illings, Josh Cu!!)', Tyler Chadd Carpenter, Joel
Eastman, Joseph Fmnicum, Johnston, Dallas Moss, Kyle
Palton Jarrell, Dakota Long, Saunders, Sidney Saunders,
Joseph Jenkins; Codie Lloyd, Zach Tackett, Brandon
thns McDermitt, David Taylor, Kyle Taylor, Drew
Saunders, Corey Sfraight, Young, Cody Billings, Josh
Kyle Bays, Tyler Davis, Curry, Tyler Eastman, Dalton
Russell Denmson, Kyle Jarrell, Joseph Jenkins,
Qingess, Nathan Mathews, David Saunders, Corey
· !len Robison and Ben Straight, Kyle Bays, Tyler
Saunders.
Davis, Russell Dennison,
: Coach Bokovitz then intro- Ben Robison, Ben Saunders,
auced Varsity team mem- Will Morris, Cole Simpson,
bers: Paolo Asluquipan , Will Jarrod Wray, Nate Allison,
rtforris, Cole Simpson, Jared Golden, CJ. Harrison,
~ustin Smith, Nick Wilson, Cory Mason, Ethan Moore,
Wray, Nate All!son. Codie Ward, Austin . Wilson,
Golden , C.J. Hamson. Jared Gravely, Jon Kyger,
ory Mason, Ethan Moore, Quinton Nibert, Tyler Wachs,
Justin Northup, Shawn Kruize Wandling, Evan
f,ethtel, Codir Ward , Austin w~ od, Clint Saunders, ·
Wilson, Jared Gravely, Jon Robert
Daniels,
Beau
ltvger, Quinton Nibert, :!)ler Whaley, Jared Lester, Alex
Wachs, Kruize Wandhng , Lyles, Kelle Craft, Michael
iiVan Wood, Clint Saunders, Fahmy,
Rachel
Lyles ,
khbert Daniels and Beau Heather Caldwell, Sarah
WhalerEberhard , David Stout,
I Varstty Soccer Coach Mike Lawrence Wedemeyer, Cody
r · introduced Junior robinson, Tyler Hannon,
ity Coach Josh Simmons Casey
Denbow,
Zach ·
.
)ul)ior Varsity team Northup, Jonathan Caldwell,
ilembers: Jared, l,oster, Alex Terry Smith, Hubbel Smith,
f.VIes Kelle Clift., Michael Matt Watts, Chris Kyger,
P"ahmf, ,Ray R~aer, Lane Allie Troester, Ze)(e Maher.
R,_oberts, Rachel Lyles, Jeremy Ward, Josh Jac!&lt;.son ,
Heather Caldwell and S~ Mike Hackett, Peyton

RIO GRANDE - In the
year of 2008 the word
change has been chanted ad
nauseam and the University
of Rio Grande RedStorm
111en 's basketball team is
aiming for change as well.
Change, as in a re-emergence once again as a force
·m the Americaq. Mideast
Conference and the NAIA . ·
Third year head coach Ken
'French has ·his· most experienced and deepest team
since ascending · to the top
spot on the bench . .The team
has the most talent since the
2003 team that won the
AMC Tournament and made
an appearance at the NAlA
DivisiOn
II
National
Tournament, the school's
last.
·
French discussed the four
keys he believes has to occur
for the RedStorm to have a
successful .campaign in
2008-09.
.
"Fi.rst and forenJ(ist we
must stay healthy," he said.
"In addition to staying injury
free I think we need to be
successful early in the season for our confidence."
"Thirdly, we have to have
guys understand and fill

their role within · the program ," French added. "We
must hate to lose 'more than
we love to win."
Even with a veteran club
that features five seniors,
who have played a tremen·
dous amount of minutes, · in the league," French said.
French knows that there are "He could have an Allsome 1ssues that need to be American type year if he is
w?.rked t_hrough ...
.
focused and brings a blue
ConSIStency, he sa1d. collar work ethic to all that
"We must be consistent with , he does."
our effort arid our mental
!f Ivery avoids the i~ury
~p_proach _every day, whether bug he will .eclipse the
11 ~.s practice or a game.
!,000-point plateau fairly
We must g1ve · our _best early in the season.
effort mentally and ~hys1calSenior guard Brett Beucler
ly to all ~.hat we do,' French is back. He went over 1.000
aflded. We must push our" career points late last season
selves beyond o~; comfort and will aim to be among the
zone to get better.
all-time leaders in Rio
. To wha,t level _of success G~ande history with a banthis year s version of R~o ner senior campaign. "Brett
qrande ?ask~tball h~ Will is a ~enior who had, probahmge _pnmarily on s1x key bly, the best off-season since
retummg players from last being in our program,"
year.
French said. "He is solid
Senior
guar~/forward and has a lot of confidence
Brandon Ivery has had an to start the year."
Olltstanding flfSt two seasons
Senior
guard
Aaron
in the Rio Red and White Drakeford returns to once
and will be_ counted on to, at again man the pc)int for Rio
least, duplicate, if not sur- Grande. "Aaron is not going
pass, wh~t he has done on to be a stat line guy an~ a lot
the floor m the past two sea- of what he provides goes
sons.
. unnoticed," French said.
"Brandon is very talented , "But he is a senior and has to
and is one of the top players be solid, night in and night

out for us to be successful."
Senior - center
Will
Norwell also returns to man
the post position for the
RedStorrn .. Norwell
has
been a formidable player
down low for Rio Grande,
since he arrived on campus
as a freshman and co d
All-Freshman team htriors
th t a .
~Sse ~on. d I'd . h
tea Y an SOl IS _t ~
best way to d:~cnbe Will,
French said. He led the
league or was at the top of
the league m _field go~l percentage. He 1s also m the
be~! shape he has ever been
m.
Norwell, with an injuryfree campaign. will also
eclipse the I ,000-c!treer
point mark this season.
Senior Kory Valentine is
the glue and his approach to
tl)e game car be infectious
and inspiring.
·
"Tough, hard-nosed and a
leader," French said. "Kory
represents everything about
our program. He will pro-

vide great leadership and be the back-up to senior goal:one of the top perimeter keeper Nate Walzer. Lower
defenders."
has tremendous leaping llbitJunior PJ . Rase is ready ity and is a high-energy
for his second season with player that can provide a
Rio Grande. Rase provides spark off the bench.
a long-distance threat and The RedStorrn are blessep
will also take on a key lead- with depth this SellcSOIJ,
ership role as well .
• which has been a big pro[).
"A junior, but definitely a lem in Coach French 's first
leader within our program," two years. The newcomels
French said. "P.J . had a provide tre'!lendous dfeth 'at
good sophomore year and all the positiOns and a ew Of
has committed to getting them should contribute rig~t
~tronger _and workmg to away.
.
1mprove his game .
Bud Teer. a 6-6 forwartJ,
. "He should be one of the has been . slowed by a prt&lt;- ·
better three-pomt shooters m season lDJUry. but the coacpthe AMC," French added.
ing staff i_s extremely high
Also returning this season on him . Freshman Bra,d
for the RedStorm are players Cubbie will be one of thos~
whohadspotduty a year ago players who gives ~io
and should see more time on Grande added depth and atllthe floor.
leticism at the guard spots-. ,
Sophomore guard Doug
Sophomore Wendell Bate.s
Campbell should see more has transferred in this seasrn
time this season, after show- and w1ll be an addlt)onal b1g
ing flashes lasi year. Fellow body to help Norwell ; Ivery
sophomore Drew Copas is and Teer 10 the low post. _.'
another \vlio fits that mold: Two other freshmen also
Copas has the ability to give Rio Grande depth down
knock down the long-range low and on the wing in 6-"J
jumper as well.
center Chris Davis arid
Sophomore Jordat;J Lower Floris Chaumat at 6-5.
is a tremendous athlete, but
French has set a very basic
may be a little slowed, goal for the season. ·
·
because of his commitment
''J'o have the seniors leave
to the Rio Grande soccer the program on a winning .
team this fall, where he was nnte."

Women's Basketball Preview: RedStorm looking to .take large step forward in 2008-09
.
BY MliRK WILLIAMS'

'

.

2008 GAllS FALL SPORTS AIL-SEOAL

2008 GAHS FAiL SPORTS MosT VALUABLE PLAYERS .

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e

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returnees

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If you ore interested in receiving further information, please C(dl
Lourie Wayland at Holzer Clinic Gallipolis, QH 740.441.3990
or fax 740.441.3963
Email: Lwayland@holzerclinic.com

.'

(senior) Sarah · Drabinski,
Saunders, a sophomore, ity freshman campaign.
this season, but Smillley did
"We got a little taste of the
(sophomore) Ashley Saunders · will also factor prominently in
"Jaz is one of the most ver- not rule out shiftin~ her over National Tournament scene
and · (sophomore) Katelyn the post as well.
satile and athletic kids that to the off-guard pos1tion also. last year in Sioux City, lA amt
RIO GRANDE - The Kalinoski - and on given set
"What an improvement we've had," Smalley said.
"She is goil)g to be one of I've been here a long time and
University of Rio Grande of circumstances, with from last year to this year," "She kinds of reminds of our captains this year. She that was the first time that we
RedStorrn women's basket- injuries, illness, foul trouble, ~malley said. :·Th
_ e big, excit- Angel Allen, who we had a will be back at the point, but had been to the Di~ision II
ball iearn is ready. to take the we could hit there at any ihg about' her . is that her few years ago. In some the good thing about this, I National Tournament ," he
next step heading intQ the time," Smalley continued.
defense has elevated. She can respects I can compare to her feel excited for AJix, we're said. "Our goal ultimately i's
2008-09 season.
Smalley commented that bang and go against bigger- Britney Walker as well."
going to be able to move her to not only get there, but get
After a young team sur- Saunders has improved her sized post-players when she
Sophomore Candace Black over and play some two-guard there and win games and win
passed expectations .in 2007- game greatly between that · needs to and that's going to is expectecl to take a much with the improvement of the national tournament." ·
larger role than she did in her Jenna Smith at the one and . "In order to get there, one
08 and made a first ever freshman and sophomore sea- help us out in the post."
1
11ppearance at' the NAJA son.
Fellow .
sophomore rookie season.
Bre Davis coming in to give way to make sure that you get
Diyision
II
National · Smalley spoke highly of his .Kalinoski is another who
"Very few minutes her her a spell," Smalley said. to the national tournament iS, .
Tournament last March, los- seniors · in
the
post. experienced limited minutes freshman year, but she has "Alix is going to be a versatile plain and simple , win yotir
ing in the flfSt round ,e3-6lto "Drabinski _and. Kume are last year and is ready, willing learned _the system, I thipk . player."
.
conference ," he added. ':I
Brack Hills State. Rio Grande . proven wamors m that pos1- and able to step up and chal- worked hard over the sumDavis, als&lt;l a sophomore, don't think we were giveJl
is ready to go back and this lion," he said.
lenge for more playing time. mer, she's handles the . ball returns to challenge for time much resvect from our owp
time the plan is · stay a little
Another . concern . for ' 'Undersized, playing in the well, goes to the boards better with Smith and Pulley at the conference (picked 5th). from
longer.
.
Smalley? "It has nothing to · post, but can shoot the three, than any player we've ever point. "Bre was up and down the national rankings (receivRio Grande he11d ·coach do with the players, but it has has great, explosive post . had, just has that al&gt;ility and 'a little bit as a freshman, but ing votes). Our goal is to get
David Smalley, in his 17th to do with the goofball that · moves, she can pull the post knack to go to the boards, · she is really coming in with a to the n~tional tournament ,
season ·as mentor of the Rio did the scheduling (referring away from the basket and has, she's very athletic, can shoot lot of hunger this year," but in ofder for that to happeri,
Grande woll)en's program, to himself),'' he ' said. "Our ability to get it to the glass, the three 'and a ~ood individ' Smal.ley _said. "She's very ath- our goal is to win the coilfe~­
..gives- what ..lie feels !!@· the ~hedule is pi{Jbabl~ going to which makes her hard to ual," Smalley satd.
letic, quick,' is a transitional · ence."
·
.
lhiee .keys to returning Sioux maybe hinder us a httle bit, as guard," Smalley said.
Another sophomore, Jenna style of player, she can get up
"The way the league is th~
City, IA and making a state- far as those people out there
On the. wings, junior Smith is expected to have an and down the floor and can year, it's about as a roller
looking at wins and losses,"
Courtney Congrove is consid- expanded. role this season. "D" up the opponent's guard." · coaster of a league siruation ns
.ment.
"I think for this years team,
"I guarantee you this season. ered one of the leaders on the She will split time at hoth ,the
Rio has two newcomers, you can get," he added. "We
I think No. 1 is;· chemistry," we're $Oing to be challenged teall.l·
two-guard and point guard freshman guard Mara Howell want to win the league. if that
said Smalley. "With what we night m and night . out:' he
·~·s the only juni9f we . spots. "She'll play. the !wo- and freshman forward Clarisa is not an option for us . thau
wellt throii!!~Jiast year. we had added. "I only think we have have m the program, ·she's guard, but WJII be moong 1t up Jones.
we h11ve to be in the tinal two
tremendous chenustry With so one or two patsy games out of long, she can play the three at the point also," Smalley
"Mara's really being put to in the league tournament, so
many freshmen that we tire 30, if you want to look at spot, another true, internal said. "She can shoot the three, the test, she's playing a lot of our goal is obviously, win the
. brought in.
it that waaky." S al
.
,
leader," Smalley ,said. "A maybe one of the best three- JV and mixing up varsity," league, win the (AMCal) tourd11o· spe to m 1ey s con- great individual to have and point shooters that we've ever Smalley said. "Mara's a great nament, get to nation s an
. "It's going vital and key
again this year,''. he added. cern, Rio has 12-13 games gives a -lot of guidance to the had. She. another one that 'off-guard, Mara is the type of then win thai first elusive
"Most people would think with foes who are either young kids coming in."
plays with a lot of energy and the player, she's going to game."
that, weU you had it last year ranked or receiving votes in . Sophomore Leah Kendra heart and goes to the boards make you a better team, just
Rio has been to the national·
y0u ·should have it this ~ear: · th.e pre-season ratin!ls.
. .;auld be the . "X" Factor .for weU." . ·. · . , . . · because she's on the floor. tournament five times (four at ·
with every new season, d1fferSn:talley also porn~ to a the' 2008-09 RedStorrn. She
Sopho01ore Kaylee Helton She's very unselfish and we're the NAIA Division I level'i
ent sets of circumstances consistency 10 rel1p~d,ing )he was at times reluctant on the. . is another returning off-guard. excited about what she's and is 0-5 on the big stage. ·
:arise. Those llifle.l'layers that basketl&gt;~l as .a pOsSible con- offensive e'nd,IIS-a freshman, i( \Helton was Pl-edominantly the going to bring to the program Smalley also mention~d
·~e bi'O\Ight .. in last year as ce~. .I think defensl:J. · she ~· herself; she can-be sixth man last yellr and brings in the future."
some team goals, holding the
freshmen are sophomores and we,re gomg to be ~tty g • a effective weapon. . ·
loaqs of offensive firepower
"Jones has a big body, ·a opposition to 60 points or les~;
_they're hungry." '
. we ve got good kids _tha~
''She may be the best over- to' the floor, "She C&lt;Ul shoot good body, strong body, ahout commit 17 or less tumevei'S
· "That's going to create, I hard, maybe an Achilles : , I all athlete in the program," th_e lhr\Je from downtown," 5-10 and when this young per game and out-rebounding
think, more competition inter- for us IS rehoun~mg, :weve. Smalley said. "She just does Smalley said. "She can do the lady realizes has good she their opponents.
~
nally," Smalley said. "We got ~ do a better J~b of con- everything, she can go to .the little things, set the . screens, really is, I think she's going to
"Our internal goals wlll
have IWI:i Seniors lhlu have trollmg the hoards if 'Ye :WIII\t boards, she. can shoot the. . get rebQunds, get deflections, be a force to be reckoned help us win .the AMC
beeil here ail four years and to be the style of_t~ that w_e thre'i!, she can get it to the ruris . the plays the way they with," Smalley said. "She's Championship or the AMC
.they give us -~ Jot _of stabllicy. ~an~. to IJ&lt;:. ~hi.;h ·JS" tranSJ.- ,glaSS, she's 'a -great defender, should lle run. Sh~'s a great getting tons of juriior varsity Tournament which will als9
,TI)e good thmg 1s, that we tro~ • .he said. In o~rto siarl we've just ,got to that kid to• p¢11leter pel-son."
. · experience, because that's just help us achieve the goal ~f
, •have good, quality people in ·your. fastbre~ you ve got to shoot more."
Sophomore Alix Pulley what these girls need nght getting to the national tournathe classroom ~d on ltte l)lbou~d, !hats where 11 all
At the off · guard spot, wrestled . the starting point now, they need to get repeti- ment, which ' al·so helps .
coort,soourchemistcyisstill,. s~. :
.
.
sophomore
Jasmine guardspotfromtherestofthe tionsonthecourt."
achieve the goal of winnin!;
:to me, a key for us to having'
I think rebounding IS ~ RicnprdSQil is back and will .pack r;as~ ¥eaT and will see
SmalJey has some lofty the national tournament,"
-successful season."
.
CQncern that we could have, be Counted on to build a qual- most of her time at that spot goals set for this season.
Smalley said.
·
lk
d
h'
Smalley
added.
· S n;-a 11eY._ a1so ta e
IS
Rio lost only one player
J~~ s ab1hty to play the tran- from last year's squad in
·si~on game ~ another key. · . Britney Walker, but he has
Our tr-.lllslbon style of pl.ay, plenty of firepower returning,
we have preached at getting starting with Drabinski. She
the ball out of the net or out of enters the season needing only
;bounds qu1ckly an~ gelli!"g six points to eclipse 1,000 for
Available to anyone with a physician order at
-~e ball up the floor, _he srud. her career (lifter scoring two
: If we can S!JStam !hat ..points against Daemeo m the·,_
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's convenient radiology service
-throughout 40 nunutes of ~he season opener). 'She by fat
·game with every team, I think has been one of the most
in the Meigs Medical Center.
that's going to be a huge ~ey pleasant
that we've
for us.•
~
·
had " S)llalley said. "She's
No -~ppoihtment is needed ·for our imaging service . .
Smalle}':ilho ~es ~s club's
here four years, she's just
•
ovefl!l! depth. In order to a good kid, a finesse player,
'transition the way we wan~ to has been all-conference, IS a
run, we've got to play iil~t of captain and has given a lot_of ·
The X-ray service Is also utilized by physidan specialists who see patients in the Center: ,
people," Smalley saJd. We stability
and
rnatunty
have lieen bles~d with depth throughout."
.
• Cardiology. Mitchell Silver, DO. FACC
• lntemal Medicine
righi now."
·
Kume, . aloog
wi!h
I
"If we hit those thl'ee things Drabinski, are the solid as a
'• • G.ttrCMintei'Oiogy • Steven Carin, DO
• · Podl•try • Earl Driggs, DO
then we'll have a s\ICCe&amp;sfut. rock seniors. Kwnc is consls;
·setiSOn." Smalley added.
. tent on the glass as she estahObltetrlc• 1nd Gynecology -,Jane Broecker, MD.
Despite all the positives that lished as one of the "'st
come with this team, Stnalley n:boundcrs in the conference.
still has some cxmcems ~- Rio Grande willlilcely look to ··
ing into the SC8S011- "The . Klime fOI' increased scorill,ll
main concern right now ill, this year as. well. "She's a trtdepth in our post position," he captain (with Drabinski and
stUd. "We have good people Alix Pulley), Erin's just a
1 and I don't want this to be mis- tremendous
young lady,"
construed, but the depth ·in Smalley said. "Does a rucc
that position, we're ·reall:pe~&gt;L,_ Job~~ post, ~ves us stabilsatile at the guards and two- 1ty rught m and rught out, your
guard And the forward spot, going to get ~~unding, y~
but in the fifth spot we are gmng to get sconng. Look 10r
down to four ~layers.'
·
her t~ be· cl0$C to a dou"le"That's (seruor) Erin Kume, doul&gt;le every game."
·
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

r---..--------------------....,.-----------------,

e

&amp;unllap i!Umt9 -•ntintl • Page Bs

-Men's Basketball Preview:.Rio Grande looking for change.in 2008-09:
.
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

BY JIM CRAFT

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

I,

�: Page B6 • 6unll!lp «tmt..-6mtind .

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

DEI and Ganassi will combine-teams next seaso~
Both organizations have
sttuggled to secure sponsorship this season, forcing the
teams to pool resources.
Although neilher team was
in imminent danger of col·
lapse, both were searching
for additional funds to shore
up competition and stability.
Ganassi shuttered his No.
40 team in July when he
couldn't find sponsorship for
former Indy Racing Lea~ue
champion Daria Franchitti, •
wM has since returned to
that series.
'
That move foreed Ganassi
to lay off 71 people, and he
was hopeful he could avoid
more cutbacks after joining
forces with Earnhardt. DEI,
however, was expected to
reduce its staff with the new
venture.
. Both teams said details of
the new organization will be
announced later.

MIAMI (AP) - Teresa
Earnhardt and Chip Qanassi
will combine their sponsorship-strapped race teams
next season, an effort to sta·
bilize their organizations in a
tough economic time.
The combined team will
be called Earnhardt Ganassi
Racin~ with FeTix Sabates
and w11l field cars for Martin
Truex, Aric Almirola, Juan
Pablo Montoya and a driver
yet to be named .
"In this ultra-competitive
era of NASCAR, it is necessary to build and sustain the
strongest team possible, and
our combining with the people 'and equipment at Dale
Earnhardt Inc. will help create a strong four-car program
for years to come," Ganassi
said Wednesday in a state·
ment. "This is a win-win for
both organizations as well as
all of our partners."
.

Among the remaining
issues is what manufacturer
the team will use. DEI has a
contract
with General
Motors, and Ganassi uses
Dodges. The new team is
expected to use Chevrolets.
If that happens, engine
supply details must be ironed
out. Ganassi has his own
engine shop, but DEI bas an
engine • partpership with
Richard Chil~ss Racing.
FIIUnded by the late Dale
Earnhardt, DEl has been
reeling since Dale Earnhardt
Jr.'s departure"at the end of
last season('DEI swallowed
cash-strai)ped Ginn Racing
in July 2007 to acquire shop
space and owner points that
would push Paul Menard's
car into the toi? 35.
It started th1s season as a
solid four-car operation only rookie Regan Smith's
car lacked full sponsorship

'

Cl

.

- but has quickly c.rumbled.
Mark Martm is moving to
Hendrick Motorsports next
season, and the U.S. Army is
moving its sponsorship to
Tony Stewart's new team.
Then Menard said he wa.S
leaving and taki~ng
s nsorship from his fa
s hard·
ware store wjth im to Yates
Racingv_......
It left DEI with sponsor-ship next year only for
True~~, whtl recently..signe!l a
one-y'ear extension throusJ!
2009; DEI has been comrrutted to Almirola, but there's
no indication Smith is part of
long-term plans.
Ganassi has half of next
season
sponsored
by
Wrigley's for Montoya, and
full sponsorship from Targe~
on his No. 41 car..That's the
only car inside the top 35
with full funding that has an
open seat.

Sunday, ~ovember 16, 2008

The original Sacred Heart
Church, pictured left , the
· rectory, center, and St.
Joseph Orphanage, are
pictured from Butternut
Avenue· in this undated
photo from the late 19th
century.
Ohio Historical Society/photo

AP Photo

Cincinnati quarterback Demetrius Jones (2) avoids a tack·
le-attempt by Louisville defender Brandon Heath, right, '
while rushing the ball during the first ha,lf of their NCAA col·
lege football game in Louisville, Ky. Friday.

Cincinnati wins, sets up
showdown with Pittsburgh
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) me," said Louisville coach
· - Seconds after the gun Steve Kragthorpe . . ·
sounded to end No. 22
Hunter Cantwell threw for
Cincinnati's soggy 28-20 · 204 yards and a touchdown
win over Louisville on but also was stuffed .ori a
Eriday, several Bearcats fourth-down sneak at the
sprinted to the end zope and Louisville 35 with less than
grabbed the Keg of Nails, 4 minutes to go. The
the trophy that had torment· Bearcats couldn 't extend the
ed them for years.
lead as Jake Rogers missed
This was one keg party his third field goal of the
coach Brian KeHy had no game.
plans
of interrupting. · No matter, as the Bearcats
Besides, for the surging · forced CantweU into four
Bearcats the good times straight incompletions to
might just be Starting. ·
beat their rivals for just the
"l think we can all say the second time in II tries. ·
rivalry is back," Kelly said.
"Coming in I told our
"There was a lot of emotion team we had to beat
out on the field in this Louisville · to be Big. East
game."
champs," Kelly said. "We
Cincinnati dominated the had to draw the line some·
reeling Cardinals in the sec- · where."
Louisville, hoping to erase
and half to win the keg for
the first time in six years arid a nightmarish loss to
take another major step Pittsburgh last week, took a
toward its first Big East title. 17-14lead into the half and
· The
v\ctory
gives had a perfect opportunity to
Cincinnati (8-2, 4-1) a half· take command after hoegame lead over idle West backer Jon Dempsey recovVirginia and No. 21 ered a fumble at the
Pittsburgh in the conference Cincinnati 9.
title race. Cincinnati beat the
But three plays netted just
Mountaineers last week and 3 yards and Louisville set·
tiost the Panthers on Nov. tied for a field goal to go up
22.
20- 14.
"The next game is the
It wasn't nearly enough.
game,"
said
Goodman
gave
the
biggest
Cincinnati cornerback Mike Bearcats a 21-20 lead with
Mickens, who added to his 6:38 to· play in the third
school record with the 14th quarter 9n a beautiful · 23interception of his career. yard touchdown grab,laying
''.Beating Pitt is the next out parallel to the ground
task."
and holding onto the ball as
·Dominick
Goodman he slid across the wet turf in
caught nine passes for 134 the end zone.
yards and a touchdown for
The score was the 21st
Cincinnati and 'John Goebel receiving touchdown of
ran for 77 yards and a score Goodman's career, tying the
as the Bearcats won the Keg school record held by Jim
of Nails for the first time O'Brien.
since 2002.
Louisville freshman run" lt means a lot fof this ning back Victor Anderson
pr?gram to come in here.an~ ran for 60 yards and a touchwm the Keg ~f ~a1ls, down before leaving the
Goodman smd. We d hke game in the third quarter
to ke,7P 1t for a long, long after sustaining a helmet-to·
lime·
,
. helmet hit from Cincinnati
· The way the Bearcats are defensive lineman Adam
pbytng these days, they JUSt Hoppel Goebel.
might.
Th e Card'mas
l had the1r
·
Quarterback Tony p·k
1
h
. e, chances, but kept self·
0
j~b e~fi~r o~;i~ th~a:t~h~~ destructin!;! behind penalties
,enior Dustin G~utza went and quest1~nable playcallmg. Lomsv1lle was flagged
·
dl)wn W''th a bro ken 1eg
' . .
f 46
d all .
yar s, m
completed 19 of 33 passes in SIX times or
soggy conditions before get· the second half. Ev~n worse,
ting knocked out in the mo.st o~ those w1ped out
fourth quarter with an undis- sohd gams '!r rummg scarclosed injury.
mg opportumlles . .
Enter Grutza, who hadn't
The most dama.gmg came
played since breaking his after the Car?m.als .had
right leg during a 52-26loss moved to t.he Cmcmnat1 15
to Oklahoma on Sept. 6
With 10 mmutes to play: A
If Grutza felt rusty, he ·did- holdmg call on first down
n't show it.
pushed them back 10 yards .
: Walking onto the field in Two runs and a delay. of
steady rain, Grutza quickly game ended up pushmg
led the Bearcats on a five- them back anoth7r 3 yards
play, 72-yard -touchdown a.nd Ryan Pay}le s 45-yard
drive that gave the Bearcats f1eld-goal attempt to take the
·a 28-20 lead with 6.29
lead was woefully short.
:play.
· to
"We can't ,t,nake those
; The key play was a 24 _ types..of errors, Kragtho~e
)!lin~ pass to Goodman on srud . When ~ou do that, 11 ~
tllird-and-5 that moved the tough~.r to wm the football
.bell to the Louisville 43. game.
. .
.,
~bel did the rest, zip(ling . Grutza and ·Cmcmnatl s
37 yards up the left side on defense to?k over from
tile next play before going in there, allo~mg the Bearcats
from the 6 for the score.
to keep the1r hopes of a con: It was more than enough f~rence title and the school's
tli hold off th~ mistake- f1rst Bowl Championship
RfQne ,Cardinals (5-5 , 1-4), Series berth alive.
vrho. have lost.three straight "We haven't beaten •
for the first time since 1997 . (Pitt)," Goodman said. "So
~"We're not. wiJ)iling., foot- we'll be hungry for that one ·
ball games, and tljat s on too."

THE PRICE ON THE TAl II

ltock tN8171

Stock IN8072

2001 Pontiac Gl

·2008 Pontltlc G8 GT

MSRP $18,655

MSRP $25,910

,20,860

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

Stock tN8116

Stock IN8246 ,
Iuick ~.~crout·cx

•

-ChiVY
lllllbu u
MSRP
. Stock #N8212

lOOt ,..............

c........

MSRP $25,850

MSRP $25,040
"

;

*****ALL USED IIVEitORY REDUCED FOR YEAR BID CLIARIIIICI*****

.-

*'I

lulclllaNIII

2008
Mlllbu
Cl•slcldln
STARTING @$11,~90

Bilek, CXL, Loaded wiAII Pow Options
Only 361&lt; Miles, Wit S15,tl5

NOWI $13,700

2007 Pontile
-~~Pdx
40R, Air, AulD, CD
NOWI $11,900

Only 48KM!Iea,

LT1 Blue -&amp;iidOr, AulO~ Air
P. Wlndo.. !1o Lock11, W. $12,9110

FWD,- $13,tll

NOWI $10,900

NOWI $10,500

·

·

Ohio Hlatortcat Society/photo

Joseph Jesslng.
Ohio HlatoriCIIt Society/photo

'
IDOII'ertllollmnfllll ldu
Ve, Air, Auto, Only U K New Chnrotet Trucll
Muet e. Soon To ApproclofO/

.$10,900
Jessing is
.memorialized
at the
Pontifical
College
Josephinum in
Columbus by
this statue, an
Ohio Historical ·
Society mark·
er, and a conference center
on the college
campus.

2008~HHR
Fully EquipPed

STARTING@ $1

2001 Chew l•lnox

Iuick lllrtdlaout
Co- F.,.fliOIIIHic

welcomes Board Certified Orthopedic Surgeon
The Rev. John Joseph Jesslng is pictured with two orphan boys in his charge. The photo ·_ Dr. Bruce Haupt, formerly of Mountain Pride Ot1hopedics
is believed to date to 1880.
·
in Clwl.eJtoa, West VlrJioia. Dr. Haupt apedlnzes in
all upecb of Ortho,ecllc Surpry, indudina bone
ftutwa uul total joint replacement. He 11
I«&lt;OIlfll•)led in Spom Medlclae, Computer Navipted
Totll l'oint leplacanrnt Sarpry and Limb
.
lecoutractbe SaqerJ fnc1vcJtoa the Dlzarov Bolle
Ttlla biretta, niJW In the col· : J.b!~ftl. ~t;h.!''.P.• . R~J! -.. ~qniq all .
-1~Ion!~:lhe~!IIP ·
·· ~c:·~·flt. .Ui~mGilllpoU. ,,
~:n~~~:,~;,~~hn
and Bolla: c;:tmte·senath c...,te.uia: ·
.·

LT

Tr111•4M

Only10K ....

ON SALE NOW $17,900

.
2004lulck lalnw

Life's Work

1001 CIMWy t•TOII .

Clolrz.:'tlrOWMd
....
ON SALE NOW $15,910

AWO llodll, LOidad. Lldler, l4mlol
Only Sill ..... W.$11,111

tiP-. YIJ!r
-Pnmtum ....

S~E NOW $13,400

'

.

-·

-

'].'.

·Jessing's ·legacy as a true
Waisenfreu.:nd
·av BRtAN J. Rl!iD

EIREEOIJMYDAILYSEtinNEL.COM

IIOT C.IIIJ t•'TIII Cnlw 0111
Dully, U.... 011111, LT llodll

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NOW$27,000

1

' .
1

1r

t

,

·. · . l J
"

'"

J. ~--l

J,

I

!~

'
: ~· orphallage he would start here ~ and thC German-ian·
guage newspaper he published ~ support that WOik - !!feW·

I

j ..

4tBUICK

•'

tmnligrants.

I

I .

i
_Jl_

· ' --

~vins .iirPomeroy

in 1870 J!S a newly·
ordained priest, the Rev. John Joseph Jessing bad little idea the
work he would bepn here would continue more lhan I00 years
later, at an inStitutiOn training priests from around the world.
Father Jessing lll'rived at Sacred Heart Church'on Mulbeny
Avenue in Pomeroy for his first assignment after his otdination
at· St. Patrick Pro Cathedral in Q&gt;himbus. He was to pastQI' a
Ollholic congregation made up mosdy of German and Irish

OnlytiK .... IMiaUI.IOO

PONTIAC'

' .

·•

.

'Jessing's legacy sumves 'today m the form of The Pontifical
College Josephinum in Qllumbus, the only pontifical seminjlry
in the world outside ofltllly.
·
Jessing was born in Germany, aJ)d served in the Prussian
Anny before coming to America. He was called to the priesthood ljlld attended seminary in Cincinnati.
The Catholic parish in Pomeroy had .been founded in 1849
by Geol1an inunigrants. Whe~ Father Jes~g arrived here for

PleaH ~ ATR. cs

"'

, Now Ac.c UNewPatients

740• . •5401 .
iJ.~ur Cliltu • JO.f•a• Pih, c.m,.Iu, Obill

�: Page B6 • 6unll!lp «tmt..-6mtind .

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

DEI and Ganassi will combine-teams next seaso~
Both organizations have
sttuggled to secure sponsorship this season, forcing the
teams to pool resources.
Although neilher team was
in imminent danger of col·
lapse, both were searching
for additional funds to shore
up competition and stability.
Ganassi shuttered his No.
40 team in July when he
couldn't find sponsorship for
former Indy Racing Lea~ue
champion Daria Franchitti, •
wM has since returned to
that series.
'
That move foreed Ganassi
to lay off 71 people, and he
was hopeful he could avoid
more cutbacks after joining
forces with Earnhardt. DEI,
however, was expected to
reduce its staff with the new
venture.
. Both teams said details of
the new organization will be
announced later.

MIAMI (AP) - Teresa
Earnhardt and Chip Qanassi
will combine their sponsorship-strapped race teams
next season, an effort to sta·
bilize their organizations in a
tough economic time.
The combined team will
be called Earnhardt Ganassi
Racin~ with FeTix Sabates
and w11l field cars for Martin
Truex, Aric Almirola, Juan
Pablo Montoya and a driver
yet to be named .
"In this ultra-competitive
era of NASCAR, it is necessary to build and sustain the
strongest team possible, and
our combining with the people 'and equipment at Dale
Earnhardt Inc. will help create a strong four-car program
for years to come," Ganassi
said Wednesday in a state·
ment. "This is a win-win for
both organizations as well as
all of our partners."
.

Among the remaining
issues is what manufacturer
the team will use. DEI has a
contract
with General
Motors, and Ganassi uses
Dodges. The new team is
expected to use Chevrolets.
If that happens, engine
supply details must be ironed
out. Ganassi has his own
engine shop, but DEI bas an
engine • partpership with
Richard Chil~ss Racing.
FIIUnded by the late Dale
Earnhardt, DEl has been
reeling since Dale Earnhardt
Jr.'s departure"at the end of
last season('DEI swallowed
cash-strai)ped Ginn Racing
in July 2007 to acquire shop
space and owner points that
would push Paul Menard's
car into the toi? 35.
It started th1s season as a
solid four-car operation only rookie Regan Smith's
car lacked full sponsorship

'

Cl

.

- but has quickly c.rumbled.
Mark Martm is moving to
Hendrick Motorsports next
season, and the U.S. Army is
moving its sponsorship to
Tony Stewart's new team.
Then Menard said he wa.S
leaving and taki~ng
s nsorship from his fa
s hard·
ware store wjth im to Yates
Racingv_......
It left DEI with sponsor-ship next year only for
True~~, whtl recently..signe!l a
one-y'ear extension throusJ!
2009; DEI has been comrrutted to Almirola, but there's
no indication Smith is part of
long-term plans.
Ganassi has half of next
season
sponsored
by
Wrigley's for Montoya, and
full sponsorship from Targe~
on his No. 41 car..That's the
only car inside the top 35
with full funding that has an
open seat.

Sunday, ~ovember 16, 2008

The original Sacred Heart
Church, pictured left , the
· rectory, center, and St.
Joseph Orphanage, are
pictured from Butternut
Avenue· in this undated
photo from the late 19th
century.
Ohio Historical Society/photo

AP Photo

Cincinnati quarterback Demetrius Jones (2) avoids a tack·
le-attempt by Louisville defender Brandon Heath, right, '
while rushing the ball during the first ha,lf of their NCAA col·
lege football game in Louisville, Ky. Friday.

Cincinnati wins, sets up
showdown with Pittsburgh
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) me," said Louisville coach
· - Seconds after the gun Steve Kragthorpe . . ·
sounded to end No. 22
Hunter Cantwell threw for
Cincinnati's soggy 28-20 · 204 yards and a touchdown
win over Louisville on but also was stuffed .ori a
Eriday, several Bearcats fourth-down sneak at the
sprinted to the end zope and Louisville 35 with less than
grabbed the Keg of Nails, 4 minutes to go. The
the trophy that had torment· Bearcats couldn 't extend the
ed them for years.
lead as Jake Rogers missed
This was one keg party his third field goal of the
coach Brian KeHy had no game.
plans
of interrupting. · No matter, as the Bearcats
Besides, for the surging · forced CantweU into four
Bearcats the good times straight incompletions to
might just be Starting. ·
beat their rivals for just the
"l think we can all say the second time in II tries. ·
rivalry is back," Kelly said.
"Coming in I told our
"There was a lot of emotion team we had to beat
out on the field in this Louisville · to be Big. East
game."
champs," Kelly said. "We
Cincinnati dominated the had to draw the line some·
reeling Cardinals in the sec- · where."
Louisville, hoping to erase
and half to win the keg for
the first time in six years arid a nightmarish loss to
take another major step Pittsburgh last week, took a
toward its first Big East title. 17-14lead into the half and
· The
v\ctory
gives had a perfect opportunity to
Cincinnati (8-2, 4-1) a half· take command after hoegame lead over idle West backer Jon Dempsey recovVirginia and No. 21 ered a fumble at the
Pittsburgh in the conference Cincinnati 9.
title race. Cincinnati beat the
But three plays netted just
Mountaineers last week and 3 yards and Louisville set·
tiost the Panthers on Nov. tied for a field goal to go up
22.
20- 14.
"The next game is the
It wasn't nearly enough.
game,"
said
Goodman
gave
the
biggest
Cincinnati cornerback Mike Bearcats a 21-20 lead with
Mickens, who added to his 6:38 to· play in the third
school record with the 14th quarter 9n a beautiful · 23interception of his career. yard touchdown grab,laying
''.Beating Pitt is the next out parallel to the ground
task."
and holding onto the ball as
·Dominick
Goodman he slid across the wet turf in
caught nine passes for 134 the end zone.
yards and a touchdown for
The score was the 21st
Cincinnati and 'John Goebel receiving touchdown of
ran for 77 yards and a score Goodman's career, tying the
as the Bearcats won the Keg school record held by Jim
of Nails for the first time O'Brien.
since 2002.
Louisville freshman run" lt means a lot fof this ning back Victor Anderson
pr?gram to come in here.an~ ran for 60 yards and a touchwm the Keg ~f ~a1ls, down before leaving the
Goodman smd. We d hke game in the third quarter
to ke,7P 1t for a long, long after sustaining a helmet-to·
lime·
,
. helmet hit from Cincinnati
· The way the Bearcats are defensive lineman Adam
pbytng these days, they JUSt Hoppel Goebel.
might.
Th e Card'mas
l had the1r
·
Quarterback Tony p·k
1
h
. e, chances, but kept self·
0
j~b e~fi~r o~;i~ th~a:t~h~~ destructin!;! behind penalties
,enior Dustin G~utza went and quest1~nable playcallmg. Lomsv1lle was flagged
·
dl)wn W''th a bro ken 1eg
' . .
f 46
d all .
yar s, m
completed 19 of 33 passes in SIX times or
soggy conditions before get· the second half. Ev~n worse,
ting knocked out in the mo.st o~ those w1ped out
fourth quarter with an undis- sohd gams '!r rummg scarclosed injury.
mg opportumlles . .
Enter Grutza, who hadn't
The most dama.gmg came
played since breaking his after the Car?m.als .had
right leg during a 52-26loss moved to t.he Cmcmnat1 15
to Oklahoma on Sept. 6
With 10 mmutes to play: A
If Grutza felt rusty, he ·did- holdmg call on first down
n't show it.
pushed them back 10 yards .
: Walking onto the field in Two runs and a delay. of
steady rain, Grutza quickly game ended up pushmg
led the Bearcats on a five- them back anoth7r 3 yards
play, 72-yard -touchdown a.nd Ryan Pay}le s 45-yard
drive that gave the Bearcats f1eld-goal attempt to take the
·a 28-20 lead with 6.29
lead was woefully short.
:play.
· to
"We can't ,t,nake those
; The key play was a 24 _ types..of errors, Kragtho~e
)!lin~ pass to Goodman on srud . When ~ou do that, 11 ~
tllird-and-5 that moved the tough~.r to wm the football
.bell to the Louisville 43. game.
. .
.,
~bel did the rest, zip(ling . Grutza and ·Cmcmnatl s
37 yards up the left side on defense to?k over from
tile next play before going in there, allo~mg the Bearcats
from the 6 for the score.
to keep the1r hopes of a con: It was more than enough f~rence title and the school's
tli hold off th~ mistake- f1rst Bowl Championship
RfQne ,Cardinals (5-5 , 1-4), Series berth alive.
vrho. have lost.three straight "We haven't beaten •
for the first time since 1997 . (Pitt)," Goodman said. "So
~"We're not. wiJ)iling., foot- we'll be hungry for that one ·
ball games, and tljat s on too."

THE PRICE ON THE TAl II

ltock tN8171

Stock IN8072

2001 Pontiac Gl

·2008 Pontltlc G8 GT

MSRP $18,655

MSRP $25,910

,20,860

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

Stock tN8116

Stock IN8246 ,
Iuick ~.~crout·cx

•

-ChiVY
lllllbu u
MSRP
. Stock #N8212

lOOt ,..............

c........

MSRP $25,850

MSRP $25,040
"

;

*****ALL USED IIVEitORY REDUCED FOR YEAR BID CLIARIIIICI*****

.-

*'I

lulclllaNIII

2008
Mlllbu
Cl•slcldln
STARTING @$11,~90

Bilek, CXL, Loaded wiAII Pow Options
Only 361&lt; Miles, Wit S15,tl5

NOWI $13,700

2007 Pontile
-~~Pdx
40R, Air, AulD, CD
NOWI $11,900

Only 48KM!Iea,

LT1 Blue -&amp;iidOr, AulO~ Air
P. Wlndo.. !1o Lock11, W. $12,9110

FWD,- $13,tll

NOWI $10,900

NOWI $10,500

·

·

Ohio Hlatortcat Society/photo

Joseph Jesslng.
Ohio HlatoriCIIt Society/photo

'
IDOII'ertllollmnfllll ldu
Ve, Air, Auto, Only U K New Chnrotet Trucll
Muet e. Soon To ApproclofO/

.$10,900
Jessing is
.memorialized
at the
Pontifical
College
Josephinum in
Columbus by
this statue, an
Ohio Historical ·
Society mark·
er, and a conference center
on the college
campus.

2008~HHR
Fully EquipPed

STARTING@ $1

2001 Chew l•lnox

Iuick lllrtdlaout
Co- F.,.fliOIIIHic

welcomes Board Certified Orthopedic Surgeon
The Rev. John Joseph Jesslng is pictured with two orphan boys in his charge. The photo ·_ Dr. Bruce Haupt, formerly of Mountain Pride Ot1hopedics
is believed to date to 1880.
·
in Clwl.eJtoa, West VlrJioia. Dr. Haupt apedlnzes in
all upecb of Ortho,ecllc Surpry, indudina bone
ftutwa uul total joint replacement. He 11
I«&lt;OIlfll•)led in Spom Medlclae, Computer Navipted
Totll l'oint leplacanrnt Sarpry and Limb
.
lecoutractbe SaqerJ fnc1vcJtoa the Dlzarov Bolle
Ttlla biretta, niJW In the col· : J.b!~ftl. ~t;h.!''.P.• . R~J! -.. ~qniq all .
-1~Ion!~:lhe~!IIP ·
·· ~c:·~·flt. .Ui~mGilllpoU. ,,
~:n~~~:,~;,~~hn
and Bolla: c;:tmte·senath c...,te.uia: ·
.·

LT

Tr111•4M

Only10K ....

ON SALE NOW $17,900

.
2004lulck lalnw

Life's Work

1001 CIMWy t•TOII .

Clolrz.:'tlrOWMd
....
ON SALE NOW $15,910

AWO llodll, LOidad. Lldler, l4mlol
Only Sill ..... W.$11,111

tiP-. YIJ!r
-Pnmtum ....

S~E NOW $13,400

'

.

-·

-

'].'.

·Jessing's ·legacy as a true
Waisenfreu.:nd
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: ~· orphallage he would start here ~ and thC German-ian·
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~vins .iirPomeroy

in 1870 J!S a newly·
ordained priest, the Rev. John Joseph Jessing bad little idea the
work he would bepn here would continue more lhan I00 years
later, at an inStitutiOn training priests from around the world.
Father Jessing lll'rived at Sacred Heart Church'on Mulbeny
Avenue in Pomeroy for his first assignment after his otdination
at· St. Patrick Pro Cathedral in Q&gt;himbus. He was to pastQI' a
Ollholic congregation made up mosdy of German and Irish

OnlytiK .... IMiaUI.IOO

PONTIAC'

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'Jessing's legacy sumves 'today m the form of The Pontifical
College Josephinum in Qllumbus, the only pontifical seminjlry
in the world outside ofltllly.
·
Jessing was born in Germany, aJ)d served in the Prussian
Anny before coming to America. He was called to the priesthood ljlld attended seminary in Cincinnati.
The Catholic parish in Pomeroy had .been founded in 1849
by Geol1an inunigrants. Whe~ Father Jes~g arrived here for

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If you are one of li)ose peo·
sure to fit into _your schedule.
pie who visited the Bradford
The first one will be II am. to.
Tree Farm to select just the
I p.m. on ~ursday, Dec. 4, at
right Christmas tree over the
the Extenston office, the secyears, you will feel the same
ond on Monday, Dec. 8 from
sorrow I do to hear the busi·.
· 6:30 to 8:30pm. at the J\1etg~·
ness has closed.
·
Charlene Museum.
John and Carolyn Ketchka
Hoeflich
Now l have been attending
made the announcement of
these ''happenings'' for years
closing this week to alert
and always come away with
those who for years had a
new ideas for holiday pretties,
family tradition ofmaking the
and a full stomach from samtrek to Cherry Rjdge to select Robert E. Lee" _ yoil'll iove piing what this year is called.
just the right tree to adorn for the Riverbend.An$ Council's "Gifts from the Kitchen."
the holidays.
annual talent n!vue to be preThere will also be tips on
Wallace. and
Muriel
F 'da
decoratingwith live greenery,
~"' rd tarted th tree •
B ,.....,o
s
e
.arm sented
N 287:30 p.m. on n y, . and everyone there •WI.11. go
about a half-century ago, and
7'~ent~IJimSundquistand . creative in a make and take
some years back ~med tt Dixie Sa are directi · tlie ornament craft. As for the:
over to John and thetr daugh- h
w~· while hi:hfight- door prizes to be awarded,ter Carolyn. ·
..
.
~;'tl;e sh~wboat theme.with well that all depe'nds your ·
For . many famthes, _!Ike . the wonderfhl music of that luck in the draw. .
mme, 11 was great fun to climb era Will also include some
on the wagon and travel christmas songs, a bit of : Again this year, RSVP
through rows of ~s until comedy, and a patriotic seg- Director Diana Coates_ is Jook~ally _spo~~ one JUSt, the ment.
ing for people who knit or cron$ht s•;ze anq_ sl)ape. ~en
Singers, dancers, instru- chet. For several years now·
:-v•th a little ~ststance cuttmg mentalists, and humorists in . · each child in Head Start has
It .down_, tymg ~e ~ches the large cast are sure to been given a scarf for
wtth _IWI~~· hanling It m and delight.
'
Christmas. This year, 220 are
shovmg It mto the trunk of the
.
eeded b early· Oeceinher to
car. '
·
·
·
n
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· VIllage decorations are deliver toY
the cu~"''i'"
But bef(Jre leaving there going up, 'Store windows are . The Senior Center has plenwas always a visit to thlltlittlf,l. gettitl~ Chri~tinasy, church . cy, of yarn on hand, but need
rustic qabin .at the edge of the t01!fS ll!ld hQii4ay p~s are volunteers with the time and
farrh for a hot beverage· to bemg planned,.along wtth the skill to tum skeins into
warm · a cold body. · .The . tradi · na1 bolida h
·
·
Bradford Tree Farm was a
bo
. Y a~rung_ scarves. The children love the
place where memories were . of ~e Me.tgs
ounty scarves and look forward
ad
Extension Sem~;
. . , every year for the gift from·
in e.
_
. ~me o~ t~;e happemng grownups who care.
If you like showboat music this_ Yell!, IS 'Taste 0~ the
(Ciuulene Hoeflich is gen- songs like "Old Man Holid~ys. and there will be eraJ manoger of The Daily
River" and ''Waitin' for the two sesstons, one of which IS Sentilll!l in Pomeroy.)

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Submitted phoW

Ohio Valley Symphony member tan Jessee, standing, is shown lea!:ling th'e first class of
string instruction at Southwestern Elementary School. Jesseewi!l'meel with students once
a week for the school year in a pilot program for fourth and fifth grade students wantmg to
learn violin, viola, cello or string bass.

Ohio Valley Symphony .
launches ·string program
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PATRIOT - The hills goal setting, self-expresare alive with music, or sian, memory &amp;kills, conrather the halls of centration,
poise,
Southwestern Elementary enhanced physical coordiSchool as fourth and fifth nation, hi!1h self-esteem,
grade · students begin_ a and the Importance of
pilot program of stnng teamwork - sktlls m
mstruction provided by ' great. demand . in almost
The
Ohio
Valley every aspect of life. Like
Symphony.
all · the arts . music has a
Instructor Ian Jessee, a profound effect on the
long time OVS member academic success of stuand a 10-year teaching dents as well. Music
veteran of the Kanawha instruction affects math
County Schools string and reading scores with
program, will be on hand string · students .. havmg
once a week for classes at higher scores on standardSouthwestern.
ized tests ami they also
· "I'm excited about being have significantly higher
able to start up a new pro- GPAs. .
gram," said Jessee. "Their . The st~ing jnstruction
~nthusiasm
was very program ts bem~ funded
.inspiring to me!' . ·
through The Ohto Valley
The classes are available Symphony's Endowmll'nt
to
any
interested that was set up some years
Southwestern student at ago by Ann Carson Dater.
no charge. In addition to
"Mrs. Dater feels that
music, students learn self- the world would be a bet-.
discipline, group coopera- . ter place if more people
tion, · problem solving, listened to classical sym-

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phonic music," remarks
Lora Lynn .Snow, OYS
manager and ·a former
teacher at Southwestern.
"Mrs: Dater took violin
lessons herself as a child
and she is very excited'
about the new classe~ we
are offering.''
In addition to the classes , each ·string stw;lent will
be given free admission to
ahy
Ohio · Valley
Symphony concert when
accompanied by a parent .
.
or guardi'an.
"My teaching experience
at Southwestern was very
instrumental in my found·ing the orchestra," said
.Snow. "I saw . how hungry
the students were for quality musi,c and I felt there was
a real need for a professional orchestra in o\jr area so
students would have a high
level to aspire to.".

.

Jailbreak caused stir around
him into the river at Point
BY JAMES SANDS
Plea$ant.
The Gallia Times later
The ·Gallia County . Jail
"According to
wrote,
that was built in the 1880s
and located near the court- inforn'lation received· after
house (serving as jail well the bi,rds have flown, sawinto the middle of the 20th ing at the bars had ·been
century) was believed to going on four or five
be escape-proof because nights. The saw marks
of its use of steeL But in were covered up during
late October 19ZI,the first the day by coating the bars
escape from that jail took . with a mixture of soap and
·
place. '
sweepings, and this was
The Gallipolis Daily done so effei:tively that no
Tribune of Oct. 21, 1921 notice was taken of them.
reported: "When Sheriff The job was very neatly
Swanson arose · Friday dc:me, and was planned in
morning, he found that such a manner that the
four of thc: six prisoners minimQm of sawing was
had flown,. AI some hour necessary as the bars were
during the night · they · broken off by pressure
escaped through the north- from within."
east window on the
The news of the jailground floor. Bars of steel break spread around town
were sawed in two at the early that morning al)d
bottom of the window. It hundreds
of curious
evidently had taken some onlookers came to examtime, as . soap had been ine the bars that had been
placed in the cuts . .The severed. People living in
· upper end of the bars had the neighborhood of the
been sawed about a quar- jail had rem_arked how
ter of an inch and forced happy the pnsoners had
apart. The cross pieces · seemed for the past few
were sawed apart."
d_ays_ on account o_f all the
Four men had escaped: smgmg. and _dancmg that
Homer Theviuer (forgery), had been gomg on there.
Ben Reilly (assault) , and N~ one suspected that the
two young men, W.N. Van n01s_e was to col!ceal the
Ham and Wes Campbell, sawtng sounds.
Van Ham and Campbell
who had robbed the store
went
down the river and
-9f George Waugh at
· spent' the first
a
arently
Patriot. There were two
other prisoners in that cell , nf[ht after the "breako~t"
George Armstrong . (con- in a field. The followmg
cealed weapon) and Albert morning, they appeared at
'Burnett (rape) . While the home of Stanley
Armstrong stayed put all Plymale, who l.ived a few
)light, Burnett did crawl · miles south of Galljpelis.
·throu~h. the hole in the Plymale pleaded with the
window, walked around pair to . tum themselves in
town and then "snuck" to the authorities . But they
· back into jail via the same returned to Clipper Mill
-hole.
and induced a boatman to
Burnett had, just a few take them across the Ohio
.months 'prior to his _arrest, River. Ironically, the pair
'served· 12 years m the had been caught a few
West
Virginia · State weeks prior to · that at
Penitentiary ·
at Clipper Mill after they had
Moundsville for tying a robbed the Waugh store at
yoy's hands and ' thr~wing Patnot.

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Gallipoli~

Van Ham and .c;ampbell
hopped · a freight ·train
headed for Hunfington,
and there to meet the trtin
at Guyandotte Wl!re pohce
officers of · that ·. West
Virginia .town. Two days .
af.ter breaking ·out Van ,
Ham and Camp(jell Were
returned to the Gallia
County Jail but this time
placed in the ' cells on ·the
second floor.
It took over a month ·
befor~ Theviner was cap: ,
tured. He was overtaken at
his home, which was near
the Tabit Broom Factory
on State Street (later the
Ohio Valley Laundry).
When it was suspecte.d
that Theviner might be
there, three officers surrounded the house. It
seems .that Theviner, for
over the month since ·his
escape, had been .working
on the C&amp;O train with
headquarters .
m
Charleston. ·
The Gallipolis Daily
Tribune reported: "Cbief ·
· Belcher spied Thevine~ at
the back door. He ran into. ·
the house and attempte.d to
run upstairs, but the
chief's gun caused him to
throw up his hands and
·
h'
· d
qutc~ly change IS mm .
Tbevmer begge? Belcher .
not to shoot, . that he
' would · . su:r~nder and go
back.to Jail.
. Tilts was the second
lime that B~lcher · had
arrested Th~m~er, as. he
~as the arrestmg ,pfftcer
when the latter ti'Ied to .
cash a check under the
·name of W.N . Smeltzer.
So far as we . can tell,
Retlly was free for some,
time .

SUN.·DAV PUZZLER
I Score in bov.1ing

6 Wound mali&lt;s
11 Ang&lt;y

16 Welfands area

21 Pertaining to heanng
22 Hunter of myth
23 Sulked
24 The upper crust
25 Twinkle .

126Red--127 Isle or exile
126 Break in r~ations
129 Maplegeru~
131 Game played
on horseback
133 Black cuckoo

26 - 9Um laud~,

27 ·~or - oake1
26 Sola
29 Compaso pt
30 Organlzallon (abbr.)
31 lrefand
33 ~Noflaro
35 Go wrong
38 Strive a1almt
:19 Apart from othe11
43 ~ Ang••
&lt;14 T•l •
45 ConiiCIIon wlfh nUll
~7 Thick IOUP
~&amp; P•nt pouch
51 Maktam... ol

1~

137 l.nchanging
'
139 Dull. aswhnegoodo ·
141 Subotanllll
143 Rllgret
1~ Sound reaoonlng
147 Of tho uni'IIIM
148 Circle part
152 Sawbuck
154 Lnnnocl In 1\idth

157 Energy type
181 Brcokl or Gibson

112 Burdon
···
11M Mendon
57 Comfort
'· · ,11111 ·Ptrcol of land
!e WO!IIofwoe
,. ' · jtl Cigar 1111klue
113&lt;lreak•
,!IIi Alrehlp
114 Bum thllm~, 170 ,Decoralive transfer
1111 Ve&lt;ilfter ·
• ...
: 1?;1 Plgllke mammal
88 Long llory
1.~ See eyo~o-eyo
·1111 You~ male horea
· r fn Porch
1'0 SMIIWO!d .
178 Jolly fruit
'12M
' Jill Call forth
7~Polnled~
. ' 180 Dens
76 El'llllre&amp;n.treft
-. ' 181 Supplemental
76 Muslcll group
1
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182 Oedined
79 PsychoiOQically
painful
.
183 RepuiM
• 184 Fendng swordS
82 Foray .
84' Chalr of a kind .
•
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66 E)(jlression o! grootlng
87 Gumbo·

· 114ChooM

89lilear meuure

91 Buck's mate
.9:1 E&gt;'lry· .

/

2 Throb

3 S~n of tilt zodiac

~~ed

6 Middling (hyph.)

7 Oftxlleme

.

· . I!Jl~no&amp;.

, 8 POlrit •

'II,T..gie lover
10 SloW-moving one
11 On~ng force

13 Ukely "
1~ Abound

&lt;IOPaco

~!l.o&gt;'l, pe.rsonmoc1
42 Pit olf .
~ lllliln Ice cream

: ~:.n plinil

51 Thin oou,e
112 Chicago ulrport ·
53-Con\pllllo
55 J.tait iWan
~ Sally drop
~

104 Naval-. for shor1

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Cried lll&lt;e a crow

60 ·- Doone'
61 Foreign · ~ ·
62 Yarn
..
66 Lelin or O...lrMn
67 SalVer
71 Ablndoned cild ship
73 Tyaon or rvtteri •

...

1'12 !llellhe'sll"ll\ , , •. .. ,

113 ~reparecl-'
.
115 Stage direction
116 Not~pread
· 118Trud!le
I 20 FlomTng lhe 'M'Ittr
123 W\'omlng range
126 'Mlnneyor Wallactl
130 Clplltl of Latvia .
I 32 Formoriy ·

13:4 Falol (abbr.)
137 Percolvod

.138 Trevolod around
1&lt;10 Divine
142 Enwonment (prefix)
1&lt;14 Pllfld placo
1~ Demler148 Gym pad
14' Goal alolauroly paoe
1!50 l.nlltnd
151 Wllkar or EaiiiWOOd

"153 Gonlltpuoh
155 Aquatic mammal .
. 156 lJoe a lOom
156 Clllal or Monlisaorl
159 FrenCh department
160 Game of lOOkS
and)llon
·

163 Eastarn European
1IJ6 City II) ~uss~ .
159 Impair
171 Taxi
172 Simian creature
174 EXIlloslvo sound
175 Pub drlt1k .
176 Operjng

·

60 A bit we!
81 S1uft
.
ll3 0e1Mt ulttr~
85 l,lemo!lze
IIB ·Uk. . 110 Sonilv.ich st01e;•:.·
fOIShM
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9ll Kkld of dancing
101 Therud-

.

" Ford lhllfaild
18 Snakt-halltd Gorgon
17-81111 .
18 MQI pil ..•
1&amp; Rlnao 1M drummer
· 20 - W&amp;di'IOOI!h .
l.ordt!IOW
ao R-1,..connection
32 Knock
34 Probolcll
37 .llibr.ln buol,_
38 London dlltrlct

75Pe
n H ndllr

93 Child
95 .Man of rank
rn Hard fat

106 Bealing
.108 l,ow in spiritS ·
110 Hearoay

1 Caval&lt;y sword

12F~heggs

Offer

138 pumadeJ-

. 96 P~nt 1&gt;1 tilt lily rami~
98 Bluelin
1oo Purploh·red
101 Inflames
102 •- Godunov"
103 Skill
.105 Beoome swollen
107 -lkle
109 Compos~ions
' 111 Kind 0! toast

DOWN

114 Prophesy
117 Profound
119 Dishonesl
121 Where Tehran ~
122 Llrban di~
12~ Cabbage

ACROSS

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(James Sands. is a spe-

cial cotrespondlllljor the
Sunday Times.,Strttiflel.
He can .be conlllctll. by .

writing to Box · ·9 2,
Norwich, Ohio 43767.)
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Sec Sunday Puzzle Answer on 20

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. COMMUNI1'Y

Sunday, November 16, 2oo8 ·

-COMMUNITY CORNERA place where memories were made

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Sunday, November 16, 2008
•

. Gallia Gen~alogical
Society celebrates 25th year at banquet
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Genealogical Society,
OGS Chapter President ·
Henny Evans welcomed those
attending the 19th annual
Lineage Banquet on Oct. ll at
the Holiday Inn and thanked
them for helping to celebrate
their 25th year as a chapter of
~- ~hto Geneafogical
ICtety

his life. A woman is also eligible if she provided such service as a-nurse. Gallia County
put the first woman in the
state, Civil War Families of
Ohio, a few years ago when
Evans was· able' to document
the serviee of Hannah Maxon
as a Civil War nurse at the
~.n.:~spital.. Cam. p
;;&lt;_..

First Families of Gallia
:
County recognized at the :
Gallia County Genealogical;
Society's recent annual
;;
banquet were, from left, :•
front, Judith Chambers, · ::
. Teresa Huseman, Scott .;;
Thivener, Elaine Shearer, ;:
Jennifer Harrison, Jenny -~
Evans, Charlynn Waughtel :•
and Frances Hewitt; back, ;;
Kenneth Kent Jr., Kenneth -:
Kent Sr.. George Walker ·
and John Walker. ·

Elvick of California and
Evans stressed the enonnous
amount of work. and time he
puts into this site.
Also announced was a new
book, Year by Year. The
Writings of P.T. Wall, 1889"
1909, which will.be! available
as soon as possible. Final
touches are being placed on a
7,500 name index.
Wall was a newspaperman
for several papers, an insurance salesman and involved in

' Paul Morehouse, president
Gallta County now has
of the Ohio Genealogical three women documented
Society in Mansfield, came to including S3rah Safford
the podium and offeted his Smith, ancestor of Linda
congratulations to the group, a Criner, and Mary Ewing, many aspects of Gallia
very active chapter of OGS. ancestorofEmalyn&amp;ljlberry. COlUity.Hemtendedtowntea
. He said it had been his honor
This year,' Gallia County ,; book about Gallia Co_unty but
to award several such certifi~ had another first by adding never did. _The society has .
cates to chapters at the April four soldiers who served in the been working from manuconference· but was happy to . Confederacy, three from scripts written in pencil. :nus
be able to re-enact the event at . Virginia and one from Texas, has been a ~-year PfO)CCI
such a special occasion in 'as all four s61diers lived in and volume 2 1s planned. Thts
Gallia County.
Gallia County either before of · manuscript project was done
Evans introduced Charlynn itfter the war.
'
with the cooperation of
Waughtel of Sheboygan, WIS.,
The third lineage society Bossard Memorial Library. '
as the keynote speaker. Char is . recognized was that ofSettlers
Door prizes were awarded
the fourth great-granddaugh- and Builders which requireS and Alvera Robinson and
ter of Dr. Antoine Saugrain, an ancestor to have lived here Marian Schoonover were
the little French 500 doctor between 1821 and 1860. thanked for. donating· several
who made a mighty impact on Accepting these awards pre- of them.
the area.
sented by Evans and Marian
All were thanked for comHe had been to America Sch&lt;J?nover :-vere Frances ing, reminded to· stop by and
before he came with the 500 Hewitt, Jenmfer Hamson, visit and to know that the
~d. had. been wounde4 by Larae Schraeder, Kala Sue group Is a non-protit all volunIndians m a narrow escape Bush. Lemce Waugh and t~r organization which keeps
while one of his fellow travel- Jenny Evans as named above it$ doors open to help any
ers was killed. Returning with as well as Jqhn Lloyd of researcher looking for Gallia
· the 500, he married one of the Hou~ton.. Martha Lear of County connections. The sociFrench, Rosalie Michau. They Galhpohs, and Barbara . ety relies on dues. sales and
remained in Gallipolis several Keatmg of Naples, Fla. d
.
·
·
years and he was known for Unable to · attend were
onatlons to contmue Its
his willingness to ~ve people MacMillan, Mary Jean Hall, work. Hours by appomtment
the smallpox vaccmation and Richard Wickert,. Jacob are always avatlable for those
for his makin~1 of thermo me- Wickert, Jacquelyn Woolley, who can not come dunng regters and a Special phosphorous Hull, Young, Sue Jones, ular hours.
match that intrigued the Hollingsworth and Julie Law.
Indians.
Each applicant works hard
Later, he moved to to document his line to his
Kentucky and fmally io St. ancestor and once accomLouis, where he became 'plished his records and docufriends with Merriwether ments.remain on file and may
Lewis and William Clark. He help another. Anyone may
prepared specimens for theil: visll the society at 57 Court
siUdies and also helped pack St., and view the work.
their medical bag for the next Twenty-one members added
leg of their trip.
additional names to their
Saugrain died in St. Louis in ancestors this year. As long as
1820. Char. has a large coUec- one stays a member of the
lion of books and papers about sociery, additional ancestors
Saugrain and she . used a can be added with no applicapower point presentation to lion fee.
highlight her talk. An artist · Evans also reported the loss
friend of hers, Laura Grella of board member Pat
from Denver, sketched both Compton, a 28-year employee
the doctor and his wife, and oftheprobatecourtwhoknew
Char presented the society the records like the back ofher
with copies of these sketches. hand. Evans called her, "a
Char was also one of the . faithful, hard-working board
recipientS of a First Families member. For years she typed
pin and certificate for the the certificates for us ... beFore ·
evemng.
we had computers. She volli!IEvans highlighted the soci- leered every Wednesday afterely's events to celebrate its noon in our office and helped
HEALTH SYSTEM
25th year and reminded those many re$Carchers ihroughout
present that they will continue the years."
. tb have 25 ttems , mostly
Dorothy Frazier was wet,
books, at 25 percent off for the · corned back to the board after
•·
rest of the year. She also men-. several months' absence.
tioned the IJelp event for
Evans thanked her board
Scouts and 4-Hers, the preser- members, office volunteers
'iation grant awarded to them and other helpers for all of the
this past summer and the plans . hard work they do as well as
(or at least one book signmg at the many others who have
the office later in the fall.
donated money and items to
Presenllition of First the society. :&gt;he reminded
Families certifica~es and pins everyone to stop in and visit
wlls made by Evans, Ann the office on Wednesdays
Brown and Linda Criner to - through Fridays between lO
Frances Ann Hewitt of am. and 4 p.m,. at 57 Court
Gallip(Jlis, Char Waughtel, St., otherwise known as the
John Walker of Ashburn,Va., old Oscar's. .
Kenneth Kent of Rutland,
The society maintains a
Judith Chambers of Granville, website
at
OeolJle Walker of Houston, galliagenealogy.org. Ev~ns
1enmfer
Harrison
of encouraged everyone to vtstt .
Gallipolis, Scott Thivener of it and see its many features.
f;:olumbus, Jenny Evans of She said they constantly
Gallipolis, Elaine Shearer of update what IS there. and add
!hxton lll., Kenneth Kent Jr. · new items as well. Anyone ·
of Br~dywine, Md., and may contribute old obituaries
Thresa Huseman of Waldorf, or articles and the newest proMd. Unable to attend were ject is to add photographs of
Marcia Larson·, · Rebecca tombstones. ·The site has over
· Towery, John Walker II, John 38,000 tombstone names and
Denney, William Phillips, dates an.d recently pictures of
Allen Phillips, Rochelle the actiial s(ones have been
Randolph, .Robert Hull, added as donated k:l the soctRonald
Young,
Betty ety. Or a li!tk rna~ be made to ,
Hollingswonh and Candace another stte which already
Kent. These individuals had features the·stone.
. _.
ancestors who lived in Gallia
When a person clicks 011 a
· County by 1820. There are hi~ted name, a picture , .
now 761 documented ances- featm10g the actiial stone will
tors in First Families.
ripen for viewing. Evayone is
The Civil War Families of encouraged lo add therr phoGallia County certificates and . tos to the site. This project is in
pins were _eresented by Evans, its very early stages. Many
Carolyn ~ar and Brown. pe&lt;iple have tombstone photos
'Those attending were Frances and they may check the wel&gt;Hewitt, GeOrge Walker, !ohn site or stop at the office to find
Walker, Jennifer . Harnson, out how they may conh1bute
fenny Evans, who ~so these.
•
.
received First Fanuhes
Recently added to the Site
awards and Paul Morehouse was Clay Chapel Church
of AJ®n Larae Schraeder, · records, which actually
Kala sue' Bush and Lenice included a whole circuit 6f
Waugh all of Columbus. churches. Mary James providUnable' to attend were Julia ed the information for this
. Woods, Ellen Wef!J. Thomas , project iind t1Jere are hWidreds
MacMillan, Hollingsworth of names to _be f~. Also,
and Hull.
there are tax lists, busmess hisFor this socil(ty one must tories, biographical sketches,
Jlave an ancestor, either a photos of several floods, the
direct or collateral line, who cowthouse fire, Civil War solServed in or lived in Gallia diers and much more.
County at some time during Webmaster for the site is Neil

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Subinltled photoe

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Settlers and Builders of ;;
Gallia County recognized af
the Galli a County
·:
Genealogical Society's
•
recent annual banquet
:
were, from left, Jennifer ::
Harrison, Barbara Cadot :· ·
Keating, Martha Lear, Kala :.
Sue Bush, Lenice Waugh, ;
Larae Schraeder. John
:
Lloyd, Frances Hewitt and
Jenny Evans.

Civil War descendants recognized at the Gallia
County Genealogical
Society's recent annual
banquet were, from left,
John Walker, George·
Walker, Jennifer Harrison,
Jenny Evans, Frances
Hewitt, Kala Sue Bush,
Lenice Waugh , Larae
Schraeder and Paul
Morehouse.

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If you are one of li)ose peo·
sure to fit into _your schedule.
pie who visited the Bradford
The first one will be II am. to.
Tree Farm to select just the
I p.m. on ~ursday, Dec. 4, at
right Christmas tree over the
the Extenston office, the secyears, you will feel the same
ond on Monday, Dec. 8 from
sorrow I do to hear the busi·.
· 6:30 to 8:30pm. at the J\1etg~·
ness has closed.
·
Charlene Museum.
John and Carolyn Ketchka
Hoeflich
Now l have been attending
made the announcement of
these ''happenings'' for years
closing this week to alert
and always come away with
those who for years had a
new ideas for holiday pretties,
family tradition ofmaking the
and a full stomach from samtrek to Cherry Rjdge to select Robert E. Lee" _ yoil'll iove piing what this year is called.
just the right tree to adorn for the Riverbend.An$ Council's "Gifts from the Kitchen."
the holidays.
annual talent n!vue to be preThere will also be tips on
Wallace. and
Muriel
F 'da
decoratingwith live greenery,
~"' rd tarted th tree •
B ,.....,o
s
e
.arm sented
N 287:30 p.m. on n y, . and everyone there •WI.11. go
about a half-century ago, and
7'~ent~IJimSundquistand . creative in a make and take
some years back ~med tt Dixie Sa are directi · tlie ornament craft. As for the:
over to John and thetr daugh- h
w~· while hi:hfight- door prizes to be awarded,ter Carolyn. ·
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.
~;'tl;e sh~wboat theme.with well that all depe'nds your ·
For . many famthes, _!Ike . the wonderfhl music of that luck in the draw. .
mme, 11 was great fun to climb era Will also include some
on the wagon and travel christmas songs, a bit of : Again this year, RSVP
through rows of ~s until comedy, and a patriotic seg- Director Diana Coates_ is Jook~ally _spo~~ one JUSt, the ment.
ing for people who knit or cron$ht s•;ze anq_ sl)ape. ~en
Singers, dancers, instru- chet. For several years now·
:-v•th a little ~ststance cuttmg mentalists, and humorists in . · each child in Head Start has
It .down_, tymg ~e ~ches the large cast are sure to been given a scarf for
wtth _IWI~~· hanling It m and delight.
'
Christmas. This year, 220 are
shovmg It mto the trunk of the
.
eeded b early· Oeceinher to
car. '
·
·
·
n
"",L..... · .
· VIllage decorations are deliver toY
the cu~"''i'"
But bef(Jre leaving there going up, 'Store windows are . The Senior Center has plenwas always a visit to thlltlittlf,l. gettitl~ Chri~tinasy, church . cy, of yarn on hand, but need
rustic qabin .at the edge of the t01!fS ll!ld hQii4ay p~s are volunteers with the time and
farrh for a hot beverage· to bemg planned,.along wtth the skill to tum skeins into
warm · a cold body. · .The . tradi · na1 bolida h
·
·
Bradford Tree Farm was a
bo
. Y a~rung_ scarves. The children love the
place where memories were . of ~e Me.tgs
ounty scarves and look forward
ad
Extension Sem~;
. . , every year for the gift from·
in e.
_
. ~me o~ t~;e happemng grownups who care.
If you like showboat music this_ Yell!, IS 'Taste 0~ the
(Ciuulene Hoeflich is gen- songs like "Old Man Holid~ys. and there will be eraJ manoger of The Daily
River" and ''Waitin' for the two sesstons, one of which IS Sentilll!l in Pomeroy.)

on

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•

Submitted phoW

Ohio Valley Symphony member tan Jessee, standing, is shown lea!:ling th'e first class of
string instruction at Southwestern Elementary School. Jesseewi!l'meel with students once
a week for the school year in a pilot program for fourth and fifth grade students wantmg to
learn violin, viola, cello or string bass.

Ohio Valley Symphony .
launches ·string program
'

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PATRIOT - The hills goal setting, self-expresare alive with music, or sian, memory &amp;kills, conrather the halls of centration,
poise,
Southwestern Elementary enhanced physical coordiSchool as fourth and fifth nation, hi!1h self-esteem,
grade · students begin_ a and the Importance of
pilot program of stnng teamwork - sktlls m
mstruction provided by ' great. demand . in almost
The
Ohio
Valley every aspect of life. Like
Symphony.
all · the arts . music has a
Instructor Ian Jessee, a profound effect on the
long time OVS member academic success of stuand a 10-year teaching dents as well. Music
veteran of the Kanawha instruction affects math
County Schools string and reading scores with
program, will be on hand string · students .. havmg
once a week for classes at higher scores on standardSouthwestern.
ized tests ami they also
· "I'm excited about being have significantly higher
able to start up a new pro- GPAs. .
gram," said Jessee. "Their . The st~ing jnstruction
~nthusiasm
was very program ts bem~ funded
.inspiring to me!' . ·
through The Ohto Valley
The classes are available Symphony's Endowmll'nt
to
any
interested that was set up some years
Southwestern student at ago by Ann Carson Dater.
no charge. In addition to
"Mrs. Dater feels that
music, students learn self- the world would be a bet-.
discipline, group coopera- . ter place if more people
tion, · problem solving, listened to classical sym-

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phonic music," remarks
Lora Lynn .Snow, OYS
manager and ·a former
teacher at Southwestern.
"Mrs: Dater took violin
lessons herself as a child
and she is very excited'
about the new classe~ we
are offering.''
In addition to the classes , each ·string stw;lent will
be given free admission to
ahy
Ohio · Valley
Symphony concert when
accompanied by a parent .
.
or guardi'an.
"My teaching experience
at Southwestern was very
instrumental in my found·ing the orchestra," said
.Snow. "I saw . how hungry
the students were for quality musi,c and I felt there was
a real need for a professional orchestra in o\jr area so
students would have a high
level to aspire to.".

.

Jailbreak caused stir around
him into the river at Point
BY JAMES SANDS
Plea$ant.
The Gallia Times later
The ·Gallia County . Jail
"According to
wrote,
that was built in the 1880s
and located near the court- inforn'lation received· after
house (serving as jail well the bi,rds have flown, sawinto the middle of the 20th ing at the bars had ·been
century) was believed to going on four or five
be escape-proof because nights. The saw marks
of its use of steeL But in were covered up during
late October 19ZI,the first the day by coating the bars
escape from that jail took . with a mixture of soap and
·
place. '
sweepings, and this was
The Gallipolis Daily done so effei:tively that no
Tribune of Oct. 21, 1921 notice was taken of them.
reported: "When Sheriff The job was very neatly
Swanson arose · Friday dc:me, and was planned in
morning, he found that such a manner that the
four of thc: six prisoners minimQm of sawing was
had flown,. AI some hour necessary as the bars were
during the night · they · broken off by pressure
escaped through the north- from within."
east window on the
The news of the jailground floor. Bars of steel break spread around town
were sawed in two at the early that morning al)d
bottom of the window. It hundreds
of curious
evidently had taken some onlookers came to examtime, as . soap had been ine the bars that had been
placed in the cuts . .The severed. People living in
· upper end of the bars had the neighborhood of the
been sawed about a quar- jail had rem_arked how
ter of an inch and forced happy the pnsoners had
apart. The cross pieces · seemed for the past few
were sawed apart."
d_ays_ on account o_f all the
Four men had escaped: smgmg. and _dancmg that
Homer Theviuer (forgery), had been gomg on there.
Ben Reilly (assault) , and N~ one suspected that the
two young men, W.N. Van n01s_e was to col!ceal the
Ham and Wes Campbell, sawtng sounds.
Van Ham and Campbell
who had robbed the store
went
down the river and
-9f George Waugh at
· spent' the first
a
arently
Patriot. There were two
other prisoners in that cell , nf[ht after the "breako~t"
George Armstrong . (con- in a field. The followmg
cealed weapon) and Albert morning, they appeared at
'Burnett (rape) . While the home of Stanley
Armstrong stayed put all Plymale, who l.ived a few
)light, Burnett did crawl · miles south of Galljpelis.
·throu~h. the hole in the Plymale pleaded with the
window, walked around pair to . tum themselves in
town and then "snuck" to the authorities . But they
· back into jail via the same returned to Clipper Mill
-hole.
and induced a boatman to
Burnett had, just a few take them across the Ohio
.months 'prior to his _arrest, River. Ironically, the pair
'served· 12 years m the had been caught a few
West
Virginia · State weeks prior to · that at
Penitentiary ·
at Clipper Mill after they had
Moundsville for tying a robbed the Waugh store at
yoy's hands and ' thr~wing Patnot.

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Gallipoli~

Van Ham and .c;ampbell
hopped · a freight ·train
headed for Hunfington,
and there to meet the trtin
at Guyandotte Wl!re pohce
officers of · that ·. West
Virginia .town. Two days .
af.ter breaking ·out Van ,
Ham and Camp(jell Were
returned to the Gallia
County Jail but this time
placed in the ' cells on ·the
second floor.
It took over a month ·
befor~ Theviner was cap: ,
tured. He was overtaken at
his home, which was near
the Tabit Broom Factory
on State Street (later the
Ohio Valley Laundry).
When it was suspecte.d
that Theviner might be
there, three officers surrounded the house. It
seems .that Theviner, for
over the month since ·his
escape, had been .working
on the C&amp;O train with
headquarters .
m
Charleston. ·
The Gallipolis Daily
Tribune reported: "Cbief ·
· Belcher spied Thevine~ at
the back door. He ran into. ·
the house and attempte.d to
run upstairs, but the
chief's gun caused him to
throw up his hands and
·
h'
· d
qutc~ly change IS mm .
Tbevmer begge? Belcher .
not to shoot, . that he
' would · . su:r~nder and go
back.to Jail.
. Tilts was the second
lime that B~lcher · had
arrested Th~m~er, as. he
~as the arrestmg ,pfftcer
when the latter ti'Ied to .
cash a check under the
·name of W.N . Smeltzer.
So far as we . can tell,
Retlly was free for some,
time .

SUN.·DAV PUZZLER
I Score in bov.1ing

6 Wound mali&lt;s
11 Ang&lt;y

16 Welfands area

21 Pertaining to heanng
22 Hunter of myth
23 Sulked
24 The upper crust
25 Twinkle .

126Red--127 Isle or exile
126 Break in r~ations
129 Maplegeru~
131 Game played
on horseback
133 Black cuckoo

26 - 9Um laud~,

27 ·~or - oake1
26 Sola
29 Compaso pt
30 Organlzallon (abbr.)
31 lrefand
33 ~Noflaro
35 Go wrong
38 Strive a1almt
:19 Apart from othe11
43 ~ Ang••
&lt;14 T•l •
45 ConiiCIIon wlfh nUll
~7 Thick IOUP
~&amp; P•nt pouch
51 Maktam... ol

1~

137 l.nchanging
'
139 Dull. aswhnegoodo ·
141 Subotanllll
143 Rllgret
1~ Sound reaoonlng
147 Of tho uni'IIIM
148 Circle part
152 Sawbuck
154 Lnnnocl In 1\idth

157 Energy type
181 Brcokl or Gibson

112 Burdon
···
11M Mendon
57 Comfort
'· · ,11111 ·Ptrcol of land
!e WO!IIofwoe
,. ' · jtl Cigar 1111klue
113&lt;lreak•
,!IIi Alrehlp
114 Bum thllm~, 170 ,Decoralive transfer
1111 Ve&lt;ilfter ·
• ...
: 1?;1 Plgllke mammal
88 Long llory
1.~ See eyo~o-eyo
·1111 You~ male horea
· r fn Porch
1'0 SMIIWO!d .
178 Jolly fruit
'12M
' Jill Call forth
7~Polnled~
. ' 180 Dens
76 El'llllre&amp;n.treft
-. ' 181 Supplemental
76 Muslcll group
1
.' '
182 Oedined
79 PsychoiOQically
painful
.
183 RepuiM
• 184 Fendng swordS
82 Foray .
84' Chalr of a kind .
•
!..: •
66 E)(jlression o! grootlng
87 Gumbo·

· 114ChooM

89lilear meuure

91 Buck's mate
.9:1 E&gt;'lry· .

/

2 Throb

3 S~n of tilt zodiac

~~ed

6 Middling (hyph.)

7 Oftxlleme

.

· . I!Jl~no&amp;.

, 8 POlrit •

'II,T..gie lover
10 SloW-moving one
11 On~ng force

13 Ukely "
1~ Abound

&lt;IOPaco

~!l.o&gt;'l, pe.rsonmoc1
42 Pit olf .
~ lllliln Ice cream

: ~:.n plinil

51 Thin oou,e
112 Chicago ulrport ·
53-Con\pllllo
55 J.tait iWan
~ Sally drop
~

104 Naval-. for shor1

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Cried lll&lt;e a crow

60 ·- Doone'
61 Foreign · ~ ·
62 Yarn
..
66 Lelin or O...lrMn
67 SalVer
71 Ablndoned cild ship
73 Tyaon or rvtteri •

...

1'12 !llellhe'sll"ll\ , , •. .. ,

113 ~reparecl-'
.
115 Stage direction
116 Not~pread
· 118Trud!le
I 20 FlomTng lhe 'M'Ittr
123 W\'omlng range
126 'Mlnneyor Wallactl
130 Clplltl of Latvia .
I 32 Formoriy ·

13:4 Falol (abbr.)
137 Percolvod

.138 Trevolod around
1&lt;10 Divine
142 Enwonment (prefix)
1&lt;14 Pllfld placo
1~ Demler148 Gym pad
14' Goal alolauroly paoe
1!50 l.nlltnd
151 Wllkar or EaiiiWOOd

"153 Gonlltpuoh
155 Aquatic mammal .
. 156 lJoe a lOom
156 Clllal or Monlisaorl
159 FrenCh department
160 Game of lOOkS
and)llon
·

163 Eastarn European
1IJ6 City II) ~uss~ .
159 Impair
171 Taxi
172 Simian creature
174 EXIlloslvo sound
175 Pub drlt1k .
176 Operjng

·

60 A bit we!
81 S1uft
.
ll3 0e1Mt ulttr~
85 l,lemo!lze
IIB ·Uk. . 110 Sonilv.ich st01e;•:.·
fOIShM
'

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9ll Kkld of dancing
101 Therud-

.

" Ford lhllfaild
18 Snakt-halltd Gorgon
17-81111 .
18 MQI pil ..•
1&amp; Rlnao 1M drummer
· 20 - W&amp;di'IOOI!h .
l.ordt!IOW
ao R-1,..connection
32 Knock
34 Probolcll
37 .llibr.ln buol,_
38 London dlltrlct

75Pe
n H ndllr

93 Child
95 .Man of rank
rn Hard fat

106 Bealing
.108 l,ow in spiritS ·
110 Hearoay

1 Caval&lt;y sword

12F~heggs

Offer

138 pumadeJ-

. 96 P~nt 1&gt;1 tilt lily rami~
98 Bluelin
1oo Purploh·red
101 Inflames
102 •- Godunov"
103 Skill
.105 Beoome swollen
107 -lkle
109 Compos~ions
' 111 Kind 0! toast

DOWN

114 Prophesy
117 Profound
119 Dishonesl
121 Where Tehran ~
122 Llrban di~
12~ Cabbage

ACROSS

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~ Club atwge

(James Sands. is a spe-

cial cotrespondlllljor the
Sunday Times.,Strttiflel.
He can .be conlllctll. by .

writing to Box · ·9 2,
Norwich, Ohio 43767.)
'

Sec Sunday Puzzle Answer on 20

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PageC3

. COMMUNI1'Y

Sunday, November 16, 2oo8 ·

-COMMUNITY CORNERA place where memories were made

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Sunday, November 16, 2008
•

. Gallia Gen~alogical
Society celebrates 25th year at banquet
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Genealogical Society,
OGS Chapter President ·
Henny Evans welcomed those
attending the 19th annual
Lineage Banquet on Oct. ll at
the Holiday Inn and thanked
them for helping to celebrate
their 25th year as a chapter of
~- ~hto Geneafogical
ICtety

his life. A woman is also eligible if she provided such service as a-nurse. Gallia County
put the first woman in the
state, Civil War Families of
Ohio, a few years ago when
Evans was· able' to document
the serviee of Hannah Maxon
as a Civil War nurse at the
~.n.:~spital.. Cam. p
;;&lt;_..

First Families of Gallia
:
County recognized at the :
Gallia County Genealogical;
Society's recent annual
;;
banquet were, from left, :•
front, Judith Chambers, · ::
. Teresa Huseman, Scott .;;
Thivener, Elaine Shearer, ;:
Jennifer Harrison, Jenny -~
Evans, Charlynn Waughtel :•
and Frances Hewitt; back, ;;
Kenneth Kent Jr., Kenneth -:
Kent Sr.. George Walker ·
and John Walker. ·

Elvick of California and
Evans stressed the enonnous
amount of work. and time he
puts into this site.
Also announced was a new
book, Year by Year. The
Writings of P.T. Wall, 1889"
1909, which will.be! available
as soon as possible. Final
touches are being placed on a
7,500 name index.
Wall was a newspaperman
for several papers, an insurance salesman and involved in

' Paul Morehouse, president
Gallta County now has
of the Ohio Genealogical three women documented
Society in Mansfield, came to including S3rah Safford
the podium and offeted his Smith, ancestor of Linda
congratulations to the group, a Criner, and Mary Ewing, many aspects of Gallia
very active chapter of OGS. ancestorofEmalyn&amp;ljlberry. COlUity.Hemtendedtowntea
. He said it had been his honor
This year,' Gallia County ,; book about Gallia Co_unty but
to award several such certifi~ had another first by adding never did. _The society has .
cates to chapters at the April four soldiers who served in the been working from manuconference· but was happy to . Confederacy, three from scripts written in pencil. :nus
be able to re-enact the event at . Virginia and one from Texas, has been a ~-year PfO)CCI
such a special occasion in 'as all four s61diers lived in and volume 2 1s planned. Thts
Gallia County.
Gallia County either before of · manuscript project was done
Evans introduced Charlynn itfter the war.
'
with the cooperation of
Waughtel of Sheboygan, WIS.,
The third lineage society Bossard Memorial Library. '
as the keynote speaker. Char is . recognized was that ofSettlers
Door prizes were awarded
the fourth great-granddaugh- and Builders which requireS and Alvera Robinson and
ter of Dr. Antoine Saugrain, an ancestor to have lived here Marian Schoonover were
the little French 500 doctor between 1821 and 1860. thanked for. donating· several
who made a mighty impact on Accepting these awards pre- of them.
the area.
sented by Evans and Marian
All were thanked for comHe had been to America Sch&lt;J?nover :-vere Frances ing, reminded to· stop by and
before he came with the 500 Hewitt, Jenmfer Hamson, visit and to know that the
~d. had. been wounde4 by Larae Schraeder, Kala Sue group Is a non-protit all volunIndians m a narrow escape Bush. Lemce Waugh and t~r organization which keeps
while one of his fellow travel- Jenny Evans as named above it$ doors open to help any
ers was killed. Returning with as well as Jqhn Lloyd of researcher looking for Gallia
· the 500, he married one of the Hou~ton.. Martha Lear of County connections. The sociFrench, Rosalie Michau. They Galhpohs, and Barbara . ety relies on dues. sales and
remained in Gallipolis several Keatmg of Naples, Fla. d
.
·
·
years and he was known for Unable to · attend were
onatlons to contmue Its
his willingness to ~ve people MacMillan, Mary Jean Hall, work. Hours by appomtment
the smallpox vaccmation and Richard Wickert,. Jacob are always avatlable for those
for his makin~1 of thermo me- Wickert, Jacquelyn Woolley, who can not come dunng regters and a Special phosphorous Hull, Young, Sue Jones, ular hours.
match that intrigued the Hollingsworth and Julie Law.
Indians.
Each applicant works hard
Later, he moved to to document his line to his
Kentucky and fmally io St. ancestor and once accomLouis, where he became 'plished his records and docufriends with Merriwether ments.remain on file and may
Lewis and William Clark. He help another. Anyone may
prepared specimens for theil: visll the society at 57 Court
siUdies and also helped pack St., and view the work.
their medical bag for the next Twenty-one members added
leg of their trip.
additional names to their
Saugrain died in St. Louis in ancestors this year. As long as
1820. Char. has a large coUec- one stays a member of the
lion of books and papers about sociery, additional ancestors
Saugrain and she . used a can be added with no applicapower point presentation to lion fee.
highlight her talk. An artist · Evans also reported the loss
friend of hers, Laura Grella of board member Pat
from Denver, sketched both Compton, a 28-year employee
the doctor and his wife, and oftheprobatecourtwhoknew
Char presented the society the records like the back ofher
with copies of these sketches. hand. Evans called her, "a
Char was also one of the . faithful, hard-working board
recipientS of a First Families member. For years she typed
pin and certificate for the the certificates for us ... beFore ·
evemng.
we had computers. She volli!IEvans highlighted the soci- leered every Wednesday afterely's events to celebrate its noon in our office and helped
HEALTH SYSTEM
25th year and reminded those many re$Carchers ihroughout
present that they will continue the years."
. tb have 25 ttems , mostly
Dorothy Frazier was wet,
books, at 25 percent off for the · corned back to the board after
•·
rest of the year. She also men-. several months' absence.
tioned the IJelp event for
Evans thanked her board
Scouts and 4-Hers, the preser- members, office volunteers
'iation grant awarded to them and other helpers for all of the
this past summer and the plans . hard work they do as well as
(or at least one book signmg at the many others who have
the office later in the fall.
donated money and items to
Presenllition of First the society. :&gt;he reminded
Families certifica~es and pins everyone to stop in and visit
wlls made by Evans, Ann the office on Wednesdays
Brown and Linda Criner to - through Fridays between lO
Frances Ann Hewitt of am. and 4 p.m,. at 57 Court
Gallip(Jlis, Char Waughtel, St., otherwise known as the
John Walker of Ashburn,Va., old Oscar's. .
Kenneth Kent of Rutland,
The society maintains a
Judith Chambers of Granville, website
at
OeolJle Walker of Houston, galliagenealogy.org. Ev~ns
1enmfer
Harrison
of encouraged everyone to vtstt .
Gallipolis, Scott Thivener of it and see its many features.
f;:olumbus, Jenny Evans of She said they constantly
Gallipolis, Elaine Shearer of update what IS there. and add
!hxton lll., Kenneth Kent Jr. · new items as well. Anyone ·
of Br~dywine, Md., and may contribute old obituaries
Thresa Huseman of Waldorf, or articles and the newest proMd. Unable to attend were ject is to add photographs of
Marcia Larson·, · Rebecca tombstones. ·The site has over
· Towery, John Walker II, John 38,000 tombstone names and
Denney, William Phillips, dates an.d recently pictures of
Allen Phillips, Rochelle the actiial s(ones have been
Randolph, .Robert Hull, added as donated k:l the soctRonald
Young,
Betty ety. Or a li!tk rna~ be made to ,
Hollingswonh and Candace another stte which already
Kent. These individuals had features the·stone.
. _.
ancestors who lived in Gallia
When a person clicks 011 a
· County by 1820. There are hi~ted name, a picture , .
now 761 documented ances- featm10g the actiial stone will
tors in First Families.
ripen for viewing. Evayone is
The Civil War Families of encouraged lo add therr phoGallia County certificates and . tos to the site. This project is in
pins were _eresented by Evans, its very early stages. Many
Carolyn ~ar and Brown. pe&lt;iple have tombstone photos
'Those attending were Frances and they may check the wel&gt;Hewitt, GeOrge Walker, !ohn site or stop at the office to find
Walker, Jennifer . Harnson, out how they may conh1bute
fenny Evans, who ~so these.
•
.
received First Fanuhes
Recently added to the Site
awards and Paul Morehouse was Clay Chapel Church
of AJ®n Larae Schraeder, · records, which actually
Kala sue' Bush and Lenice included a whole circuit 6f
Waugh all of Columbus. churches. Mary James providUnable' to attend were Julia ed the information for this
. Woods, Ellen Wef!J. Thomas , project iind t1Jere are hWidreds
MacMillan, Hollingsworth of names to _be f~. Also,
and Hull.
there are tax lists, busmess hisFor this socil(ty one must tories, biographical sketches,
Jlave an ancestor, either a photos of several floods, the
direct or collateral line, who cowthouse fire, Civil War solServed in or lived in Gallia diers and much more.
County at some time during Webmaster for the site is Neil

..

Subinltled photoe

'

'

•••
.,--

Settlers and Builders of ;;
Gallia County recognized af
the Galli a County
·:
Genealogical Society's
•
recent annual banquet
:
were, from left, Jennifer ::
Harrison, Barbara Cadot :· ·
Keating, Martha Lear, Kala :.
Sue Bush, Lenice Waugh, ;
Larae Schraeder. John
:
Lloyd, Frances Hewitt and
Jenny Evans.

Civil War descendants recognized at the Gallia
County Genealogical
Society's recent annual
banquet were, from left,
John Walker, George·
Walker, Jennifer Harrison,
Jenny Evans, Frances
Hewitt, Kala Sue Bush,
Lenice Waugh , Larae
Schraeder and Paul
Morehouse.

•

dtl

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PageC4

CELEBRATIONS

COMMUNI1'Y

ltmH ·ientind

Sunday, November.t6, 2008

Mr. and Mra. Adam Cumings

.

Dalton-Cumings wedding
POMEROY - Elizabeth Diane Dalton and AdaiiJ Victor
Cumings were united in marriage at the United Methodist
~burch in Wintersville, Ohio, on Saturday, June 14, 2008,
W1.th the Rev. Jeff Greco officiating.
· The bride, escorted to the altar by her father, wore an Aline dress and carried a bouquet of red roses. Amy Tanner
served as matron of honor. Other bridesmaids included
Amber Roderus, Kristen Roe·, Terri Beadling, Angela
Russeii.Ashlee Raber and CarlieTanner.
Rex Cumings served as his son's best man. Joe Roderus,
Tyson Evans, Kyle Norris, Dan Dalton, Jao Karg, Gabriel
Riffle and Jacob Riffle were groomsmen.
..
.
· Junior bride and groom Lyla Dalton and Brice Tanner
were escorted to the altar by Caden Oalton, Cassidy
Roderus was flower girl and Colson Dalton was the ring·
. bearer.
· ' ·
· .
·
Following a reception at St. Florian Hall .and a wedding
tnp to Aruba.the couple is making their home in Hopedale,
Ohio.
: pau_ghter of Leroy and Sharon Dalton of Hopedale, the
bnde IS a 1998 graduate of Cad1z High School and il 2000
J;raduate of Trinity Health Systems School of Nursing. She
1s employed as. a critical care nurse at·Trinity West.
. The groom 1s the son of Rex and Kathy Cumings of
Syracuse. He attended Ohio University after graduating
from Southern Local High School in 2000. He is a lineman
for AEP in Steubenville.

HMC employee nominated .
· .for OONE Award

Kuhn anniversary

~~~-

.

POMEROY - Heather Petersen and Donald Mohler
were married on Saturday. July 19, 2008. at World
Outreach Minislries in Wellston, with family. and friends
altcnding . The Rev. Chris Wallis officiated.
The bride is the daughter of Bob and Nyla Petersen of
Wellston . Heather is a 2003 homeschool graduate and is
employed ar DEB'S in Cleveland, Tenn. ·
The groom is the son of Donald and Deborah Mohler of
Pomeroy. He is a 2003 graduate of American School and is
now majoring in pastoral ministry at Lee University in
Cleveland. Tenn:
Following the ceremony, a reception was held at Christ
United Melhodisl Church in Jackson to honor the newlyweds.
· The couple now resides in Cleveland, Tenn.

Book. signing set locally for 'Wonders' book
.

.

'

.

GALLIPOLIS - Dick over-hande.:l, underhanded, they won and how many and their coach, Magellan
Burdette·, wqo first· placed bowling style, sitting down, fans they atl,racted tel.l ·Only Hairstqn - were inviteu
the story of The Waterloo · lying dow11, without look- pa11 of the story. The1r real • buck. for the first time since
Wonders in book fonn neat- ing - the Wonders passed 1mpaot w~ts much_ more per- their playing days, to the
ly 50 years ago, will be nt · with such lightning speed. sonal. Every time they slate
tournament
in
the Bossard Memorial such radar accuracy, fans ~lepped onto the court, t~eir Columbus. They receiyed a
Library, 7 Spruce St., for a . and opponents alike often ~mr~omplll. fre_ewhee~mg prolonged,
emotional.
book signing event on did not know wh~re the ball ant~cs. 1f only lor. a httle standing ovation.
Saturday, Nov. 22 from 1r was.
wh1le .. brought excitement,
In ·the months that fola.m. to I p.m;
. And yet, the defining sig- awe, JOY and hope to the
Burdette, who authored nificance of their story lies lives of the tens of thou- lo~ed , they agreed t~ tell
The· Fabulous Waterloo not in what they did, or how sands whtl saw them play. ~he1r story. It was published
Wonders, has , written a they did il, but when . No And vet, lor ull the attention m 1961 under the IItle, The
revise&lt;) and expanded work, no money, 110 hope of they 'received , all the head- Fabulous ·
Waterloo
account of the story of the any, drnughl , lowering Dust lines they in~pired, t!le Wonders ..What f?llows, on
ri10s~ unfurg11ttable tel!l)l in Bowl sronns that turned day Wonders never alloWed th1s, the 75th anmversary,of
the history of Ohio high into night, farm foredo- their heads to be turned by their fi~st championship
school basketball.
surcs. evictions. record heat , theJr newfound fume or the season, IS a rev1sed and
Seventy-five · years ago. punishing cuhl. siUnted gl:tring spollight · under e~panded version of that
the Waterloo Wonders came crops v.ilting in lhe fields which they performed. book, long out of print. In
frolicking out of the - by 1933. Amcrit'a, the Showmen
but
never addition : to making · availLawrence County hills to Umd.of Plenly, had become showoffs. possessed of a·. able once again their perbecome the most colorful. lhe Lund of Nowhere Near sly, ·dis;mning. sometimes sonal recollections of their
most exciting, most unfor- Enough .
self-deprecating sense of legendary careers, this edigettable team in the history
And lhen, amid all the humor, they. reveled in the tion attempts to show' that
of Ohio high school baskel - doom and gloom. nlong nd1culous Without attempt- the significance of their
ball.
came
I he
Wonders. mg to make the1r opponents ~ureers and lives can be
What they did was noth- Attendance . records dociJ- .look that way:
understood only when
ing less than remarkable. ment the scope of their sudTh1·ough
11
all
tl1ey
· d wit hin the frame. .
• ·
v1ewe
Over two seasons, they won den and startling impacl. In remamed
themsel~es, no work of the times and place
back-to-hack state champi- I 932 ,. I he three-day state d1ffe1ent than !hey had .been in which they occurred.
onships and in the process, tournamem in Columbus before all the fuss. no d1fferLibrary Direct D bb'
perhaps as many as I 00 attracted. an all ' time high ent .than they would be the S
. ~r e le
games, only a handful of 13.801 fans. In 1933, the rest of their lives, after their
aunders noted, For many
them on their own court.
year. before the Wonders glory days were over. The years, we have been asked
How they did it was even appeared on the scene, Wonders on a basketball b_Y ~atrons to as_SISithem in
more amazing. In an era attend;mce plummeled near- court were a sight to see, the fmdmg ~lore mformation
when a virtually unknown ly in half to 7,103.
· likes of which Ohi9 had about !h1s fabulous team
team called the Harlem
Two years la1er, when never seen before. Or ever and the1r place 111 sports hiSGlobetrotters was still play- they won their second state would-or will - see again.
lory. The story. ~f the
ing one-night stands · in title . il soared lo 24.100 ~
In 1959, to commemorate Waterloo Wonders ts mdeed
small-town high school and that didn 't include hun- the 25th anniversary of their timeless. I would like to
gyms and dance.halls across dreds more who knocked . first slate championship, the invite the community to
the Middle West, · the down the Fairgrounds Wonders - Orlyn Roberts, visit the library on Nov. 22
Wonders, )mitating no one, Coliseum doors just 10 see· Wyman Roberts, Curtis to hear the story of this·
astonished overflow crowds lhe Wonders play.
M~Mahon,
Stewart unforgettable team from
in the state's largest arenas
But how many · games W1seman , Beryl Drummond southeastern Ohio."
with their whirlwind passing, deadeye shooting, lock- .
down defense and whimsic
cal showmanship.
Left-handed, right-handed, two-handed, behind the
back : · between the legs.

GALLIPOLIS
Glenda Skinner. MS. ~N,
CPHQ,
director
of
P.erformance Improvement .
a:nd Patient Safety at
ijolzer Medical Center,
was recently ·nominated
for lhe Ohio .Organization
of Nurse Executives
(OONE)
Nursing
Leadership Award for
2008.
Skinner has served in
numerous roles in her
twenty year history at
HMC including staff nurse
~nd nurse manager for tlie
Intensive Care Unit. She
has been involved in the
hospital's customer service
Glenda Skinner
initiative, chairing the
. Patient Education Team of Nurse Executives is an
and currently serving as a affiliated society of the
Hospital
ihember on the Standards Ohiq
team. She chairs the Association, and is also
Nursing
Performance affiliated
with
the
Improvement Team and American Organization of
serves on the Medical Nurse Executives. OONE
Quality
Management is invol~ed in shaping the
!earn and Pharmacy and future of health care in the
Therapeutics Committee.
state of Ohio through
As quoted from her innovative
leadership.
nomination letter, she "is OONE is the voice of
ap exceptional nurse: She nursing leadership in
exhibits leadership and health care. OONE memo;Iedication to everyone she . bers serve as· catalysts for
touches. She demonstrates innovation · in health care
attention to detail, diplo- agencies. OONE promotes
macy, and a cheerful dise~cellence
position. Glenda has been leadership
professional
mfluential in promoting through
development.
OONE supand attaining an excellent.
ports
research
and proworking relationship with
IJiedical staff, hospital vides leadership and advoadministration, and sluff cacy to advance patient
members through her care and nursing practice.I
pleasant demeanor and
professionalism."
As
director
of
Performance Improvement
and
Patient
Safety,
3kinner concentrates her
~us to insure the safety
~f our patients. She has
initiated
a
Falls
Prevention Program with
well-defined guidelines
access
. and tools for the employees to use, which are easia pap test
ly obtainable. Monthly, a
f?alls Prevention Team,
which she chairs, meets to
djscuss progress or necessary chan~es, as well as
help idimllfy existing risk
f-actors.
: Skinner is a published.
I(Uthor. Her last article that
~he
co-authored,
"fulmonary
Artery
C-atheters: State of the
.Controversy," is in the
Serviag women.in: Adams, Browa, Gallia,
Journal of Cardiovascular
Higblaad, J~~:ksoo, LawreJce, Pike, Ross,
Nursing, 23(2): ll3-121,
Scioto and Vinton couaties · ·
!larch/April 2008. She is
l(:lso a member of the
... eoun.,
Sourhem Ohio W"'lten's Cancer 'Project
Sigina. Theta Tau Nursing
47~ Western Ave., Suile A
Honor Society, OONE,
and has formed ' a local
Chillicothe, Ohio 4560 I
.
chapter of the OONE.
740-775-7332
DISTRICT
The Ohio Organization

~

•'

Peterson-Mohler wedding

GALLIPOLIS -,. Francis E. and Norma Jean (Holston)
Kuhn will celebrate their 501h wt·dding anniversary on
Nov. 22, 2008 ..
They were married by the Rev. Leslie M . Ro.gers at the
Methodist Church in Catlettsburg. Ky .. on Nov. 22 , 1958 .
Francis retired from ·Ravenswood Aluminum and is a
retired faf)ller. Nonna is a homemaker.
They.are the parents of two daughlers. Karla Kuhn and
Janel Campbell of Gallipolis. They also have four grandchildren, Courtney. Caleb. Colton and Carter Campbell of
Callipolis . ·
·
·
They will be celebrating wilh family, ami fur those who
wish to send cards, they can send I hem lo Francis E. and
Nonna Kuhn, 6650 Duncan Road S.W .. Lancasler, Ohio

·Need a

•

Mr. and Mi's. Donald Mohler

.Arbors at Gallipolis
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
Prov-iding
.

Rehabilitation Back To Homer
Hi, I'm Fred Taylor of Wilkesville, Ohio
Following back surgeiy, I came to Arbors at
Gallipolis for Rehabilitation. I am
so impressed with the efficiency of the staff.
When I first arrived at Arbors atGallipojis

. I diu not think I would ever walk on my
own again. Now, thanks to the wonderful '
therapy and nursing staff, I have ~etumed home.
'

I 1\U\1 Ul I&lt; I \\Ill} 10 l 01 I&lt;\

.Ar~ors

at .{ja{{tpoas

· Skilled Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center.
170 Pinecrest Dri.ve • Gallipolis, OH 45631

740-446-7112

Carol Bush
promqted to . laundry
supervisor with the understanding that she would
attend the American

Laundry Linen College . .
In February 200 I, she
successfully completed
the ALLC as a registered
launury linen director, and
returned in March 2002 to
complete the registered
environmental · service
director course.
Mrs. Bush chaired a seat
on the Educational Affairs
Committee for ALM and
has written two articles for
the ALM Journal. She was
. HMC's employee· of the
month for April 2007.
Mrs. Bush also. is an
active member of the
Safety
Committee, .
Products Committee and
Measurement Team at
HMC.
.

Southern Ohio artist hits top
9f Christian Country Charts
CINCINNATI
- ·George Jones and other top
Fraternity
Records names. Free is also feaannounces that southern tured on the cover of the
Ohio-based singer/song- . October/November issue of
in
writer
and Fraternity GTE
Magazine
artist Stev.e ·Free has hit Nashville, which has a full .
the
top · of
The story on Free and. his music.
International
Christian
Free has also . received
Country
Cliarts
for one of the music indusOctober/November 2008. try's tqp honors with the
Free's
touching announcement that he
"Everybody's Friend" is at will be presented with a
No. I on the charts ahead Popular Music ASCAP
of such notables as Randy Award in New York at the
Travis, Rhonda Vincent, ASCAP meetings.

This is the ninth ASCAP
award in Free's long and
successful career and carries with it a Cllsh prize of
$1,300. He is one of the
top Fraternity artists and
one of the most popular.
American singer/songwriters on European alid
Americana Radio.
For ·more information.
Fraternity
contact
Records at (513) 5740610,
or
www.stevefree .com

Food safety during ·p·ower.outage
BY BARBARA S.
BRADLEY, R.S.

Fruit Pies - Safe.
. crystals, refreeze; thawed,
Cream or Custard Pies discard. ·
DIRECTOR OF ENVIRONMENTAL
and Pastries -Discard.
Fruit juices - Contains
·HEALTH
Fresh Vegetables (uncut) ice crystals, refreeze;
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH
ihawed, discard.
- Safe.
DEPARTMENT ,
Fresh Vegetables (cut) Fruits - Contains ice
. If the ))9Wer is out for Discard.
crystals; refreeze; thawed,
less than two hours, then
Cooked Vegetables
discard.
the food in you~. refrige1.... Discard.
Vegetable juices
tor and freezer will be safe . Frozen Foods:
Cqntains ice crystals ,
to consuf!'le.
.
· Food - Contains ice refreeze; thawed, discard.
·While the power •is out, crystals and feels as cold as
Vegetables- Contains
keep ' ihe refrig~ral'or and if. tefrigerated, refree·ze; · ice crystals, refreeze;
freezer doo·r~ · Closed as thawed and held above 40 . thawed, discard.
muchr as ·.possible ,to keep_ Degrees Fahrenheit for
Breads, rolls, muffins or
food cold longer: · · · over two hours, discard.
citkes (without fillings) If the .po"':er is out for · Meat,
. Poultry, Contaice ice . crystals,
longer than two liours, fol- Seafood:... Contains ke .. refreeze; thawed;tefreeze.
low the following guidelines: crystals, refreeze; 'thawed,
Cakes; pies, ·. pastries
• For freezer section: A discard.
(with custard fillings) freezer that is half full will
Milk - Contains ice Contains ice crystals,
hold. food safely for up to· crystals, refreeze; thawed, refreeze; thawed, discard.
24 ihours .' A full freezer discaid.Eggs (out of ·Shell) . . Cassel'!&gt;les (Pasta and
will hold food safely'for 48 - Coniains ice 'crysta1s, : Rice based)- Contains ice.
hours. Do not open freezer refreeze; thaw11d, discard.
c~stals, refreeze; ·thawed,
door if you can avoid it.
· Egg
PrQ.ducts
. d1scard. .
·
.
. • For the refri~rator sec- Contains ice . : crystals,
Flour, nuts, corn meal lion: Pack milk, Other.dairy refr~ze; ~iwed, discard.
Contains ice . . crystals,·
products, meat, fish, eggs,
Ice Cream and Yogurts refreeze; thawed.; refreeze.
gtayy . and .~poilable left· - · C~mtains ·ice crystals,
Waffles:
Pancakes,
9vers into a cQOler sll!'lllupd- refre.eze~ thawed,. discard. · Bagels, TV dinners, -pizza,
elf by ice. l!iexpensive
Soft · Cheeses
.
pot pies - Contains ice
. Scyrofoana coolers are fine Contains ice cystals, cry.stals, .refreeze; thawed,
for this purpose.
·,
refreeze; th'awed, discard. . refreeze.
. • Use a food thermomeHard Cheese - C::ontains
Cconyenience foods -'ter to check the ,tempera- 1ce . crystals, . refree~e; Contains. ice . crystals,
.lure of your food right thawed, refreeze. .
refreeze; thawe\1, di~card.
before you cook or eat it.
Shredded Cheese
Remember: ''When in
'J'Prow away any food· 'that Contains ice crystals, doubt, throw it out."
has a temperature of more refreeze; thawed, discard.
·Source:
Ohio
than
40
deg~jles
~asseroles containing . De(lartment. of Health and
Fahrenheit.
:t
·
milk, cream, eggs or soft Oh1o
Department
of
· For guidelines on when ch~ese - Cont,ains ice Agriculture. to save, and when to throw
out food during a powe~
'
Gtltllge·the US Department ·
6f Agriculture has provid¢1! the following infonnat;on:
• When to save and when
to throw il out: ' ·
"
~ WeU·W0111811 eWIIS
Refrigerator FOOds:
Held above 40 •F
• Birth CoutroUnc:luding
forFood Ovet 2 hours. .
• lmplanol) (First &amp; Only
' Meat, . Poultry, Sea(oo~of ·
3-y~ implotal)le
::....Discard ,
.
·.Soft Cheeses '.;.... Discardl
· blftit coutnil ·
(;;heeses ::-Safe.
•GantaSD·Viliine
Products
, Dairy
•STD dtkdioa &amp;~tment
Clisi:ard.
' Butter, Margarine
• Mlnilllllly·ilitlllive
safe.
.
K)llt\XIIogk Slrgicai care
Eggs - Discard. .
• Pngnaocy CIR
Casseroles, Soups, Stews
-Discard.
.
• Essure (Sarlas Permanent
. Fresh Fruits (uncut) Jane D. Broecker, MD Birth Control Sterilization)
Safe.
•
· Fresh Fruits . (cut)
113
Memorial Drive
Discard.
Canned Fruits and fuices ·
, Pomeroy. OH • 992-9158
(unopened) -., Safe.
Canned Fruits and Juices
Castr.op Center 75 HospiU.l Qr
(opeded) - Discard.
~
' .,
~ 'Suite 260 •·
· Mayo, Tartar. Sauce,
Athens, OH • 594-8819,
. Horseradish · (opened) Discard if above ·50 °F for
8 hours.
' Breads, cakes, niuffitis,
rolls ·~ Safe.
~,
Refrigerator rolls, cookie ~·
O'BLENESS
dough, biscuits - .Discarq . .• ·
HfAUH SYSTIJol
.
Pasta, Rice, Potatoes
(~ooked) - Discard .
,
www.rivertoseobgy
com
'BagelsWaffles,Safe. Pancakes, ,,· .....,_ _
_ _ _ _ _ _....;;;.....
_
_ _ _....,

Gynecology Services.
Available In Meigs County

, Haro

East

Ao_ol..:

...

J

,f#'

November

ATR from Page Cl

HMC manager asked to facilitate
GALLIPOLIS - Carol
RLLD, RESD, launand linen manager at
rtolzer Medical Center,
recently asked to
,.,..,.m.,te the fall 2008
for the
class
An1erican Laundry Linen
Environmental
·
· College at Eastern
Kentucky University in
Richmond, Ky., which is
~verseen
by
the
Association for Linen
Management.
Mrs. Bush was hired at
HMC as a part time prod u c I ion I dis tri but ion .
employee in the hospital's
Laundry Department in
December
1998. · In
October 1999, she was

PageCs

his very lmt assignment as a
priest, the parish had I.SOO

members from families
whose livelihoods came
mostly from the boollling salt
and coal industries.
Soon ·after, Jessing began
woi.icing · with a Franciscan
brotherhood to provide shelter, food and education. tO
'orphan boys in Pomeroy.'I'hC
Saint Joseph Orphan Asylum
waS soon. built, on the site
where the 'current church
would be dedicaied nearly 30
years later.
.
Father Je55i,t)g - later
Monsignor Jessing ·_ financed the orphanage ministry. throuldl publlcation of
the · Ohio Wrusenfreund, or
"Ohio's Orphan Frienei,''' a
German-language newspaper
which grew to become
America's most popular.
Just a year later, Father
Jessing resigned as pastor of
the Pomeroy parish so he
could devoie his 'full attention
to·the orphanage. In 1877, the
bishop who ordained Jessing
seven years earlier, Sylvester
Rosecrans, granted him permission to move, both the
newspaper and the orphanage
to Columbus, where easy
access to railroad transportation would allow him to more
effectively circulate his newsP"P.f{;e publis~er ~iU then be
·able to devote all his time and
energy to the Waisenfreund,
and the poor orphan boys,"
Jessing wrote to his subscribers.
Jessing's lifetime of work

for those "poor orphan boys"
had only just begun when he
left Pomeroy for the state capital.
•
, "On Aug . 20, 1877, the
evening of the Feast of St.
Bernard, Father Jessing put
his printing press upon a
packet boat at Pomeroy and
went down the Ohio River to
Cincinnati, there transferring
to the railroad for the rest of
the trip .to Columbus," a
church history records ~
·
A new orphans' hOme; an
industrial scliool for the boys,
'and I~ a seminaiy where
they ·could be .trained ' as
priests, were eventually built
at 18th Street and Main
Avenue , ColWl)bus. A furniture factory helped train 'other
charges in a trade.
· The seminary was named
the College Josephinum - in
hocor ·of Jessing's first
orphanage in Pomeroy.
Jessing offered students s1x
y~ars of primary education.
four years of high school, two
years of college. and finally
si~ years of theological training.
In 1892, Pope Leo XII
accepted it as a pontifical college, placing the new seminary under the protection of
the Vatican.
As a reflection of Father
JeSsing's first assignment in
Gennan Catholic Pomeroy,
and his own native German
roots, the Josephinum first
concentrated on educating
priests to work with the large
population of Gennan immigrants in the United States.

•

•

•
•

La.ler, the empha&gt; is ~witche¢
to trainillg priests for diocese;~
that lack their own seminary
or candidates who could not
afford seminary !raining else!
where.
•
Jessillg died on All So~Is!
Day, 1899, just a few mon~
~fter the first six seminariani
from the Josephinum were
ordained.to the priesthood. ::
Ohio Waisenfreund was
published weekly, in Genmut
only, through 1953. For tw&lt;t
years after, it was publisheq
every two weeks in botlt
Gennan and English. It co~
tained advice, informatioq
and religious instruction tq
German immigranls and their
conununities in the United
States.
St. Joseph Orphan Asylum
in Pomeroy closed when
Jessing left lhe Sacred Heru1
parish, according to a churdi
history. In 18\17. the parish:
under the leadership of Re v~
John J. Schneider. broke
ground a1 the orphanage site
for the church which slill
stands there.
Still operaling in Columbu's
today. at 7625 N. High St..lhe
Pontifical
College
Josephinum remains the onlj
pontifical seminarv outside
Italy. Jessing is men1orialize~ .
there with a statue. an. Ohio
Historical Society marker,
and a · .conference center
named in his honor.
··
The Josephinum's officiaf
mono was Jessing's personal
motto. as well: "If God is for
us. who can be against \IS''" ·•

~tiC~~

.

2008

'Av~2i
~ ·-=- 1:

~~o~ ·

P!IFOUG AlTSCJmE
~R.l!il.JKNIOR. nteATR.!i
PR.5.S6NT".S

Aesop's
(OH SO SLIGHlLY UPDA'TEII)

FMLES
NOV. 21 &amp; 22 er 7PNI
NOV 23 .r 3PM .

4181114 Al't,llatllpolia. OR

7-ARTS
...............

Rockspf1ngs
REHABILITATION CENTER

We would like to recogni~
Powell's Foodfair
Life Ambulance
Bob's Market
For their generous ·
contributions to our
2008 Annual Community
·Halloween·Celebration
THANK YOU!!!
From the Staff &amp; Residents
of
Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center
36759 Rockspring~ Rd. • Pomeroy, OH
740-992-7872 •

�'

..

PageC4

CELEBRATIONS

COMMUNI1'Y

ltmH ·ientind

Sunday, November.t6, 2008

Mr. and Mra. Adam Cumings

.

Dalton-Cumings wedding
POMEROY - Elizabeth Diane Dalton and AdaiiJ Victor
Cumings were united in marriage at the United Methodist
~burch in Wintersville, Ohio, on Saturday, June 14, 2008,
W1.th the Rev. Jeff Greco officiating.
· The bride, escorted to the altar by her father, wore an Aline dress and carried a bouquet of red roses. Amy Tanner
served as matron of honor. Other bridesmaids included
Amber Roderus, Kristen Roe·, Terri Beadling, Angela
Russeii.Ashlee Raber and CarlieTanner.
Rex Cumings served as his son's best man. Joe Roderus,
Tyson Evans, Kyle Norris, Dan Dalton, Jao Karg, Gabriel
Riffle and Jacob Riffle were groomsmen.
..
.
· Junior bride and groom Lyla Dalton and Brice Tanner
were escorted to the altar by Caden Oalton, Cassidy
Roderus was flower girl and Colson Dalton was the ring·
. bearer.
· ' ·
· .
·
Following a reception at St. Florian Hall .and a wedding
tnp to Aruba.the couple is making their home in Hopedale,
Ohio.
: pau_ghter of Leroy and Sharon Dalton of Hopedale, the
bnde IS a 1998 graduate of Cad1z High School and il 2000
J;raduate of Trinity Health Systems School of Nursing. She
1s employed as. a critical care nurse at·Trinity West.
. The groom 1s the son of Rex and Kathy Cumings of
Syracuse. He attended Ohio University after graduating
from Southern Local High School in 2000. He is a lineman
for AEP in Steubenville.

HMC employee nominated .
· .for OONE Award

Kuhn anniversary

~~~-

.

POMEROY - Heather Petersen and Donald Mohler
were married on Saturday. July 19, 2008. at World
Outreach Minislries in Wellston, with family. and friends
altcnding . The Rev. Chris Wallis officiated.
The bride is the daughter of Bob and Nyla Petersen of
Wellston . Heather is a 2003 homeschool graduate and is
employed ar DEB'S in Cleveland, Tenn. ·
The groom is the son of Donald and Deborah Mohler of
Pomeroy. He is a 2003 graduate of American School and is
now majoring in pastoral ministry at Lee University in
Cleveland. Tenn:
Following the ceremony, a reception was held at Christ
United Melhodisl Church in Jackson to honor the newlyweds.
· The couple now resides in Cleveland, Tenn.

Book. signing set locally for 'Wonders' book
.

.

'

.

GALLIPOLIS - Dick over-hande.:l, underhanded, they won and how many and their coach, Magellan
Burdette·, wqo first· placed bowling style, sitting down, fans they atl,racted tel.l ·Only Hairstqn - were inviteu
the story of The Waterloo · lying dow11, without look- pa11 of the story. The1r real • buck. for the first time since
Wonders in book fonn neat- ing - the Wonders passed 1mpaot w~ts much_ more per- their playing days, to the
ly 50 years ago, will be nt · with such lightning speed. sonal. Every time they slate
tournament
in
the Bossard Memorial such radar accuracy, fans ~lepped onto the court, t~eir Columbus. They receiyed a
Library, 7 Spruce St., for a . and opponents alike often ~mr~omplll. fre_ewhee~mg prolonged,
emotional.
book signing event on did not know wh~re the ball ant~cs. 1f only lor. a httle standing ovation.
Saturday, Nov. 22 from 1r was.
wh1le .. brought excitement,
In ·the months that fola.m. to I p.m;
. And yet, the defining sig- awe, JOY and hope to the
Burdette, who authored nificance of their story lies lives of the tens of thou- lo~ed , they agreed t~ tell
The· Fabulous Waterloo not in what they did, or how sands whtl saw them play. ~he1r story. It was published
Wonders, has , written a they did il, but when . No And vet, lor ull the attention m 1961 under the IItle, The
revise&lt;) and expanded work, no money, 110 hope of they 'received , all the head- Fabulous ·
Waterloo
account of the story of the any, drnughl , lowering Dust lines they in~pired, t!le Wonders ..What f?llows, on
ri10s~ unfurg11ttable tel!l)l in Bowl sronns that turned day Wonders never alloWed th1s, the 75th anmversary,of
the history of Ohio high into night, farm foredo- their heads to be turned by their fi~st championship
school basketball.
surcs. evictions. record heat , theJr newfound fume or the season, IS a rev1sed and
Seventy-five · years ago. punishing cuhl. siUnted gl:tring spollight · under e~panded version of that
the Waterloo Wonders came crops v.ilting in lhe fields which they performed. book, long out of print. In
frolicking out of the - by 1933. Amcrit'a, the Showmen
but
never addition : to making · availLawrence County hills to Umd.of Plenly, had become showoffs. possessed of a·. able once again their perbecome the most colorful. lhe Lund of Nowhere Near sly, ·dis;mning. sometimes sonal recollections of their
most exciting, most unfor- Enough .
self-deprecating sense of legendary careers, this edigettable team in the history
And lhen, amid all the humor, they. reveled in the tion attempts to show' that
of Ohio high school baskel - doom and gloom. nlong nd1culous Without attempt- the significance of their
ball.
came
I he
Wonders. mg to make the1r opponents ~ureers and lives can be
What they did was noth- Attendance . records dociJ- .look that way:
understood only when
ing less than remarkable. ment the scope of their sudTh1·ough
11
all
tl1ey
· d wit hin the frame. .
• ·
v1ewe
Over two seasons, they won den and startling impacl. In remamed
themsel~es, no work of the times and place
back-to-hack state champi- I 932 ,. I he three-day state d1ffe1ent than !hey had .been in which they occurred.
onships and in the process, tournamem in Columbus before all the fuss. no d1fferLibrary Direct D bb'
perhaps as many as I 00 attracted. an all ' time high ent .than they would be the S
. ~r e le
games, only a handful of 13.801 fans. In 1933, the rest of their lives, after their
aunders noted, For many
them on their own court.
year. before the Wonders glory days were over. The years, we have been asked
How they did it was even appeared on the scene, Wonders on a basketball b_Y ~atrons to as_SISithem in
more amazing. In an era attend;mce plummeled near- court were a sight to see, the fmdmg ~lore mformation
when a virtually unknown ly in half to 7,103.
· likes of which Ohi9 had about !h1s fabulous team
team called the Harlem
Two years la1er, when never seen before. Or ever and the1r place 111 sports hiSGlobetrotters was still play- they won their second state would-or will - see again.
lory. The story. ~f the
ing one-night stands · in title . il soared lo 24.100 ~
In 1959, to commemorate Waterloo Wonders ts mdeed
small-town high school and that didn 't include hun- the 25th anniversary of their timeless. I would like to
gyms and dance.halls across dreds more who knocked . first slate championship, the invite the community to
the Middle West, · the down the Fairgrounds Wonders - Orlyn Roberts, visit the library on Nov. 22
Wonders, )mitating no one, Coliseum doors just 10 see· Wyman Roberts, Curtis to hear the story of this·
astonished overflow crowds lhe Wonders play.
M~Mahon,
Stewart unforgettable team from
in the state's largest arenas
But how many · games W1seman , Beryl Drummond southeastern Ohio."
with their whirlwind passing, deadeye shooting, lock- .
down defense and whimsic
cal showmanship.
Left-handed, right-handed, two-handed, behind the
back : · between the legs.

GALLIPOLIS
Glenda Skinner. MS. ~N,
CPHQ,
director
of
P.erformance Improvement .
a:nd Patient Safety at
ijolzer Medical Center,
was recently ·nominated
for lhe Ohio .Organization
of Nurse Executives
(OONE)
Nursing
Leadership Award for
2008.
Skinner has served in
numerous roles in her
twenty year history at
HMC including staff nurse
~nd nurse manager for tlie
Intensive Care Unit. She
has been involved in the
hospital's customer service
Glenda Skinner
initiative, chairing the
. Patient Education Team of Nurse Executives is an
and currently serving as a affiliated society of the
Hospital
ihember on the Standards Ohiq
team. She chairs the Association, and is also
Nursing
Performance affiliated
with
the
Improvement Team and American Organization of
serves on the Medical Nurse Executives. OONE
Quality
Management is invol~ed in shaping the
!earn and Pharmacy and future of health care in the
Therapeutics Committee.
state of Ohio through
As quoted from her innovative
leadership.
nomination letter, she "is OONE is the voice of
ap exceptional nurse: She nursing leadership in
exhibits leadership and health care. OONE memo;Iedication to everyone she . bers serve as· catalysts for
touches. She demonstrates innovation · in health care
attention to detail, diplo- agencies. OONE promotes
macy, and a cheerful dise~cellence
position. Glenda has been leadership
professional
mfluential in promoting through
development.
OONE supand attaining an excellent.
ports
research
and proworking relationship with
IJiedical staff, hospital vides leadership and advoadministration, and sluff cacy to advance patient
members through her care and nursing practice.I
pleasant demeanor and
professionalism."
As
director
of
Performance Improvement
and
Patient
Safety,
3kinner concentrates her
~us to insure the safety
~f our patients. She has
initiated
a
Falls
Prevention Program with
well-defined guidelines
access
. and tools for the employees to use, which are easia pap test
ly obtainable. Monthly, a
f?alls Prevention Team,
which she chairs, meets to
djscuss progress or necessary chan~es, as well as
help idimllfy existing risk
f-actors.
: Skinner is a published.
I(Uthor. Her last article that
~he
co-authored,
"fulmonary
Artery
C-atheters: State of the
.Controversy," is in the
Serviag women.in: Adams, Browa, Gallia,
Journal of Cardiovascular
Higblaad, J~~:ksoo, LawreJce, Pike, Ross,
Nursing, 23(2): ll3-121,
Scioto and Vinton couaties · ·
!larch/April 2008. She is
l(:lso a member of the
... eoun.,
Sourhem Ohio W"'lten's Cancer 'Project
Sigina. Theta Tau Nursing
47~ Western Ave., Suile A
Honor Society, OONE,
and has formed ' a local
Chillicothe, Ohio 4560 I
.
chapter of the OONE.
740-775-7332
DISTRICT
The Ohio Organization

~

•'

Peterson-Mohler wedding

GALLIPOLIS -,. Francis E. and Norma Jean (Holston)
Kuhn will celebrate their 501h wt·dding anniversary on
Nov. 22, 2008 ..
They were married by the Rev. Leslie M . Ro.gers at the
Methodist Church in Catlettsburg. Ky .. on Nov. 22 , 1958 .
Francis retired from ·Ravenswood Aluminum and is a
retired faf)ller. Nonna is a homemaker.
They.are the parents of two daughlers. Karla Kuhn and
Janel Campbell of Gallipolis. They also have four grandchildren, Courtney. Caleb. Colton and Carter Campbell of
Callipolis . ·
·
·
They will be celebrating wilh family, ami fur those who
wish to send cards, they can send I hem lo Francis E. and
Nonna Kuhn, 6650 Duncan Road S.W .. Lancasler, Ohio

·Need a

•

Mr. and Mi's. Donald Mohler

.Arbors at Gallipolis
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
Prov-iding
.

Rehabilitation Back To Homer
Hi, I'm Fred Taylor of Wilkesville, Ohio
Following back surgeiy, I came to Arbors at
Gallipolis for Rehabilitation. I am
so impressed with the efficiency of the staff.
When I first arrived at Arbors atGallipojis

. I diu not think I would ever walk on my
own again. Now, thanks to the wonderful '
therapy and nursing staff, I have ~etumed home.
'

I 1\U\1 Ul I&lt; I \\Ill} 10 l 01 I&lt;\

.Ar~ors

at .{ja{{tpoas

· Skilled Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center.
170 Pinecrest Dri.ve • Gallipolis, OH 45631

740-446-7112

Carol Bush
promqted to . laundry
supervisor with the understanding that she would
attend the American

Laundry Linen College . .
In February 200 I, she
successfully completed
the ALLC as a registered
launury linen director, and
returned in March 2002 to
complete the registered
environmental · service
director course.
Mrs. Bush chaired a seat
on the Educational Affairs
Committee for ALM and
has written two articles for
the ALM Journal. She was
. HMC's employee· of the
month for April 2007.
Mrs. Bush also. is an
active member of the
Safety
Committee, .
Products Committee and
Measurement Team at
HMC.
.

Southern Ohio artist hits top
9f Christian Country Charts
CINCINNATI
- ·George Jones and other top
Fraternity
Records names. Free is also feaannounces that southern tured on the cover of the
Ohio-based singer/song- . October/November issue of
in
writer
and Fraternity GTE
Magazine
artist Stev.e ·Free has hit Nashville, which has a full .
the
top · of
The story on Free and. his music.
International
Christian
Free has also . received
Country
Cliarts
for one of the music indusOctober/November 2008. try's tqp honors with the
Free's
touching announcement that he
"Everybody's Friend" is at will be presented with a
No. I on the charts ahead Popular Music ASCAP
of such notables as Randy Award in New York at the
Travis, Rhonda Vincent, ASCAP meetings.

This is the ninth ASCAP
award in Free's long and
successful career and carries with it a Cllsh prize of
$1,300. He is one of the
top Fraternity artists and
one of the most popular.
American singer/songwriters on European alid
Americana Radio.
For ·more information.
Fraternity
contact
Records at (513) 5740610,
or
www.stevefree .com

Food safety during ·p·ower.outage
BY BARBARA S.
BRADLEY, R.S.

Fruit Pies - Safe.
. crystals, refreeze; thawed,
Cream or Custard Pies discard. ·
DIRECTOR OF ENVIRONMENTAL
and Pastries -Discard.
Fruit juices - Contains
·HEALTH
Fresh Vegetables (uncut) ice crystals, refreeze;
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH
ihawed, discard.
- Safe.
DEPARTMENT ,
Fresh Vegetables (cut) Fruits - Contains ice
. If the ))9Wer is out for Discard.
crystals; refreeze; thawed,
less than two hours, then
Cooked Vegetables
discard.
the food in you~. refrige1.... Discard.
Vegetable juices
tor and freezer will be safe . Frozen Foods:
Cqntains ice crystals ,
to consuf!'le.
.
· Food - Contains ice refreeze; thawed, discard.
·While the power •is out, crystals and feels as cold as
Vegetables- Contains
keep ' ihe refrig~ral'or and if. tefrigerated, refree·ze; · ice crystals, refreeze;
freezer doo·r~ · Closed as thawed and held above 40 . thawed, discard.
muchr as ·.possible ,to keep_ Degrees Fahrenheit for
Breads, rolls, muffins or
food cold longer: · · · over two hours, discard.
citkes (without fillings) If the .po"':er is out for · Meat,
. Poultry, Contaice ice . crystals,
longer than two liours, fol- Seafood:... Contains ke .. refreeze; thawed;tefreeze.
low the following guidelines: crystals, refreeze; 'thawed,
Cakes; pies, ·. pastries
• For freezer section: A discard.
(with custard fillings) freezer that is half full will
Milk - Contains ice Contains ice crystals,
hold. food safely for up to· crystals, refreeze; thawed, refreeze; thawed, discard.
24 ihours .' A full freezer discaid.Eggs (out of ·Shell) . . Cassel'!&gt;les (Pasta and
will hold food safely'for 48 - Coniains ice 'crysta1s, : Rice based)- Contains ice.
hours. Do not open freezer refreeze; thaw11d, discard.
c~stals, refreeze; ·thawed,
door if you can avoid it.
· Egg
PrQ.ducts
. d1scard. .
·
.
. • For the refri~rator sec- Contains ice . : crystals,
Flour, nuts, corn meal lion: Pack milk, Other.dairy refr~ze; ~iwed, discard.
Contains ice . . crystals,·
products, meat, fish, eggs,
Ice Cream and Yogurts refreeze; thawed.; refreeze.
gtayy . and .~poilable left· - · C~mtains ·ice crystals,
Waffles:
Pancakes,
9vers into a cQOler sll!'lllupd- refre.eze~ thawed,. discard. · Bagels, TV dinners, -pizza,
elf by ice. l!iexpensive
Soft · Cheeses
.
pot pies - Contains ice
. Scyrofoana coolers are fine Contains ice cystals, cry.stals, .refreeze; thawed,
for this purpose.
·,
refreeze; th'awed, discard. . refreeze.
. • Use a food thermomeHard Cheese - C::ontains
Cconyenience foods -'ter to check the ,tempera- 1ce . crystals, . refree~e; Contains. ice . crystals,
.lure of your food right thawed, refreeze. .
refreeze; thawe\1, di~card.
before you cook or eat it.
Shredded Cheese
Remember: ''When in
'J'Prow away any food· 'that Contains ice crystals, doubt, throw it out."
has a temperature of more refreeze; thawed, discard.
·Source:
Ohio
than
40
deg~jles
~asseroles containing . De(lartment. of Health and
Fahrenheit.
:t
·
milk, cream, eggs or soft Oh1o
Department
of
· For guidelines on when ch~ese - Cont,ains ice Agriculture. to save, and when to throw
out food during a powe~
'
Gtltllge·the US Department ·
6f Agriculture has provid¢1! the following infonnat;on:
• When to save and when
to throw il out: ' ·
"
~ WeU·W0111811 eWIIS
Refrigerator FOOds:
Held above 40 •F
• Birth CoutroUnc:luding
forFood Ovet 2 hours. .
• lmplanol) (First &amp; Only
' Meat, . Poultry, Sea(oo~of ·
3-y~ implotal)le
::....Discard ,
.
·.Soft Cheeses '.;.... Discardl
· blftit coutnil ·
(;;heeses ::-Safe.
•GantaSD·Viliine
Products
, Dairy
•STD dtkdioa &amp;~tment
Clisi:ard.
' Butter, Margarine
• Mlnilllllly·ilitlllive
safe.
.
K)llt\XIIogk Slrgicai care
Eggs - Discard. .
• Pngnaocy CIR
Casseroles, Soups, Stews
-Discard.
.
• Essure (Sarlas Permanent
. Fresh Fruits (uncut) Jane D. Broecker, MD Birth Control Sterilization)
Safe.
•
· Fresh Fruits . (cut)
113
Memorial Drive
Discard.
Canned Fruits and fuices ·
, Pomeroy. OH • 992-9158
(unopened) -., Safe.
Canned Fruits and Juices
Castr.op Center 75 HospiU.l Qr
(opeded) - Discard.
~
' .,
~ 'Suite 260 •·
· Mayo, Tartar. Sauce,
Athens, OH • 594-8819,
. Horseradish · (opened) Discard if above ·50 °F for
8 hours.
' Breads, cakes, niuffitis,
rolls ·~ Safe.
~,
Refrigerator rolls, cookie ~·
O'BLENESS
dough, biscuits - .Discarq . .• ·
HfAUH SYSTIJol
.
Pasta, Rice, Potatoes
(~ooked) - Discard .
,
www.rivertoseobgy
com
'BagelsWaffles,Safe. Pancakes, ,,· .....,_ _
_ _ _ _ _ _....;;;.....
_
_ _ _....,

Gynecology Services.
Available In Meigs County

, Haro

East

Ao_ol..:

...

J

,f#'

November

ATR from Page Cl

HMC manager asked to facilitate
GALLIPOLIS - Carol
RLLD, RESD, launand linen manager at
rtolzer Medical Center,
recently asked to
,.,..,.m.,te the fall 2008
for the
class
An1erican Laundry Linen
Environmental
·
· College at Eastern
Kentucky University in
Richmond, Ky., which is
~verseen
by
the
Association for Linen
Management.
Mrs. Bush was hired at
HMC as a part time prod u c I ion I dis tri but ion .
employee in the hospital's
Laundry Department in
December
1998. · In
October 1999, she was

PageCs

his very lmt assignment as a
priest, the parish had I.SOO

members from families
whose livelihoods came
mostly from the boollling salt
and coal industries.
Soon ·after, Jessing began
woi.icing · with a Franciscan
brotherhood to provide shelter, food and education. tO
'orphan boys in Pomeroy.'I'hC
Saint Joseph Orphan Asylum
waS soon. built, on the site
where the 'current church
would be dedicaied nearly 30
years later.
.
Father Je55i,t)g - later
Monsignor Jessing ·_ financed the orphanage ministry. throuldl publlcation of
the · Ohio Wrusenfreund, or
"Ohio's Orphan Frienei,''' a
German-language newspaper
which grew to become
America's most popular.
Just a year later, Father
Jessing resigned as pastor of
the Pomeroy parish so he
could devoie his 'full attention
to·the orphanage. In 1877, the
bishop who ordained Jessing
seven years earlier, Sylvester
Rosecrans, granted him permission to move, both the
newspaper and the orphanage
to Columbus, where easy
access to railroad transportation would allow him to more
effectively circulate his newsP"P.f{;e publis~er ~iU then be
·able to devote all his time and
energy to the Waisenfreund,
and the poor orphan boys,"
Jessing wrote to his subscribers.
Jessing's lifetime of work

for those "poor orphan boys"
had only just begun when he
left Pomeroy for the state capital.
•
, "On Aug . 20, 1877, the
evening of the Feast of St.
Bernard, Father Jessing put
his printing press upon a
packet boat at Pomeroy and
went down the Ohio River to
Cincinnati, there transferring
to the railroad for the rest of
the trip .to Columbus," a
church history records ~
·
A new orphans' hOme; an
industrial scliool for the boys,
'and I~ a seminaiy where
they ·could be .trained ' as
priests, were eventually built
at 18th Street and Main
Avenue , ColWl)bus. A furniture factory helped train 'other
charges in a trade.
· The seminary was named
the College Josephinum - in
hocor ·of Jessing's first
orphanage in Pomeroy.
Jessing offered students s1x
y~ars of primary education.
four years of high school, two
years of college. and finally
si~ years of theological training.
In 1892, Pope Leo XII
accepted it as a pontifical college, placing the new seminary under the protection of
the Vatican.
As a reflection of Father
JeSsing's first assignment in
Gennan Catholic Pomeroy,
and his own native German
roots, the Josephinum first
concentrated on educating
priests to work with the large
population of Gennan immigrants in the United States.

•

•

•
•

La.ler, the empha&gt; is ~witche¢
to trainillg priests for diocese;~
that lack their own seminary
or candidates who could not
afford seminary !raining else!
where.
•
Jessillg died on All So~Is!
Day, 1899, just a few mon~
~fter the first six seminariani
from the Josephinum were
ordained.to the priesthood. ::
Ohio Waisenfreund was
published weekly, in Genmut
only, through 1953. For tw&lt;t
years after, it was publisheq
every two weeks in botlt
Gennan and English. It co~
tained advice, informatioq
and religious instruction tq
German immigranls and their
conununities in the United
States.
St. Joseph Orphan Asylum
in Pomeroy closed when
Jessing left lhe Sacred Heru1
parish, according to a churdi
history. In 18\17. the parish:
under the leadership of Re v~
John J. Schneider. broke
ground a1 the orphanage site
for the church which slill
stands there.
Still operaling in Columbu's
today. at 7625 N. High St..lhe
Pontifical
College
Josephinum remains the onlj
pontifical seminarv outside
Italy. Jessing is men1orialize~ .
there with a statue. an. Ohio
Historical Society marker,
and a · .conference center
named in his honor.
··
The Josephinum's officiaf
mono was Jessing's personal
motto. as well: "If God is for
us. who can be against \IS''" ·•

~tiC~~

.

2008

'Av~2i
~ ·-=- 1:

~~o~ ·

P!IFOUG AlTSCJmE
~R.l!il.JKNIOR. nteATR.!i
PR.5.S6NT".S

Aesop's
(OH SO SLIGHlLY UPDA'TEII)

FMLES
NOV. 21 &amp; 22 er 7PNI
NOV 23 .r 3PM .

4181114 Al't,llatllpolia. OR

7-ARTS
...............

Rockspf1ngs
REHABILITATION CENTER

We would like to recogni~
Powell's Foodfair
Life Ambulance
Bob's Market
For their generous ·
contributions to our
2008 Annual Community
·Halloween·Celebration
THANK YOU!!!
From the Staff &amp; Residents
of
Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center
36759 Rockspring~ Rd. • Pomeroy, OH
740-992-7872 •

�•
•

tlunba~ limn-6tnttntl

PageC6

ENTERTAINMENT
.Broadway wor~hop students
to present theatre evenings

· Swulay, November 16, 2008

exptmence; which is
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. tunities.
Department of Music niae,"
senior
- It's not every day that a
student can take a class chair Dr. Jeffrey Pappas Acting/Directing major
from a Broadway star, but note s that having McVey Emily Chapman said , "and
Marshall University stu- as a visiting faculty mem- she comes right fn .n what
dents int~rested in music ' ber is an exceptional we're all trying to
achieve:"
and theatre · have .been opportunity for students.
As for the perfotmances,
"Anytime we ca9 supattending workshop sessions taught by ac.tress and plement our current cur- Chapman, of Winfield,
former Miss West Virginia riculum with another out- said. "Expect a good time,
Beth Me Vey this semester. . standing faculty mt;mber, in a fun ,. relaxed atmos''I'm thrilled to get to be who not only has experi- · phere with a variety of
·a part of the beginning of ence in the fiel d but is able songs, monologues, duets
to translate that experi- and group performances
something at Marshall .to students in an aca- that will be interesting."
ence
to use rhe years of ex perience I have and work with de-mic setting, everyone at
students sharing my love Marshall wins," Pappas
of musical theatre - with said .
Submitted photo
Cast members of "Aesop's (Oh So Slightly) Fables" rehearse fo r the Ariel Jr. Theatre pro; inquiring young minds . Acconjing to Dr. Julie ·
who want to experience · Jackson , chair of the
duction set at the Ariei-Dat!lr Performing Arts Centre Nov. 21, 22 and 23..
the same thi 0 g," McVey Department of Theatre,
said. "It's very fulfilling McVey' s presence on camfor me. I'm very honored pu s will allow
the
,.
to be so welcomed into the Department -of Theatre the
Marshall community."
long -sought opportunity to
Thi s week, the work- develop a musical theatre
s a.n independent
·shop concludes with two emphasis within the pro-performances:
one fessional training proagenc)'. we can railor
Tuesday, Nov . . 18 at the gram.
Cultural
Center
in
"The fact that a person "the bdE in~tur~n« procection at
· GALLIPOLIS - The mance. including: 'The as select future productions, Charleston .at 7 p.m., the with Beth's Broadway crecompetitive prices. Wr: repret.enr
tortoise and the Hare are Tortoise and the .Hare." by visiting the Ariel website · other Thursday, Nov. 20 at dentials and extensive
Fe&lt;)dy to race·, as the youth ''The Lion and .the Mouse," and sending an ema.il the Renaissance Center in professional exp~rience · only thdintst 1.11-:-,
has chosen to make
actors of . The Ariel Jr. "The Fox and the Grapes" requesting the . "Family Huntington at 8 p.m.
Bringing
McVey
to
Huntington her home base
Theatre plan to present a am! othe rs. Colorful cos· . Discount Card ." The card
oompanie.~,
collection of fantastic tales tumes . humorous dialogue must be presented at the teach at Marshall is· part of is truly remarkable ,"
l'ncluding
with, "Aesop's (Oh So and creative staging are all Ariel Box Office, with tick- the Joan C. Edwards Jackson said.
echo
The
students
Slightly) Updated Fables."
elements sci to entertain ets purchased in-person, to Distingui shed Professors
Auto·Owncrs
of the Arts initiative, Jackson 's
sentiment
Aesop's beloved fables audiences young and old receive the discount.
Insuranct
The Ariel box offiee is which brings accom- regarding studying und.er
will be brought into modern alike.
ComJ"'ny.
light on the Morri s and
"Aesop's (Oh So Slightly) located at 428 Second Ave .. plished artists to campus McVey.
Gallipolis.
Box
office
to enhance learning oppor·"She's got such great
Dorothy Haskins Ariel Updated Fables," by Kim
which has truly t:arntd rht
Theatre stage, in the Ariel- Esop Wylie, is the first Ariel hours are 10. a.m . until 5
reputation "The "No Problem"
Dater Hall , Friday and · Jr. Theatre production in the p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday
and
Friday,
and
10
a.
m.
Saturday, Nov. 21 and 22 at 2008-09 season. Other
Pwplc". A.k us about th e
7 p.m. , and Sunday, Nov. 23 planned productions.include until 6 p.m. Thursday, as
many other advantages of doing
at 3 p.m.
"Anne of Green Gables," well as 90 minutes prior to
business wirh an independent
Local directors Christina "Pinocchio" and the upcom- curtain.
Regular
priced
tickets
Cogar and Lori' Sanders ing holiday production ,
insuranct agtn'y.
have been . in rehearsals for "Jingle Bell Follies '08." may be purchased online at
weeks preparing the young Information
regarding www.etix .com, or via phone
performers
for
their future performances and by calling (740) 446-ARTS.
moments in the stage auditions can be obtained
lights. The Ariel's youth from the Ariel's new all·
actors have been stretching new website, www.arielthetheir imaginations to the atre.org.
limits while learning to ere·
Reserved seating for
ate an array of colorful Aesop's Fables is available
characters, a trademark Of for $8 for adults and $6 for
the Ariel Jr. Theatre'~ sue- st~dents
. and
. cess.
· · ·
seniors. Audience members
Six of Aesop's Fables will can save $1 off each ticket
be higlighted in the perfor· for this production, as well

Ariel Jr. Theatre updates
'Aesop's Fables' Nov. 21-23

We offer the
best prices
and protection
for you.

Dl

INSIDE
Down on tbe Fum, Page Dl

•
Sunday, November 16, 2008

Travel &amp; Destinations
· Fun things to -do
ThanksgiviJJg weekend
Bv BElli J. HAAPAZ

senias and two million lights.
The event draws nearly a million people each year.
NEW YORK - Stuck at
"AChristmasCarol"haunts
horne Thanksgiving week- theaters around the country .
end? You don't have to travel this time of year, like The
to New York's Rockefeller Stage Theatre iii Denver,
Center to enjoy ice skating or starting Nov. 28; the Alley
see the Rockenes . Holiday Theatre-HubJ:!ard Stage in
'
' .l-."'f .{"~1~-·
train rides, Chrisbnas shows, Houston, beginning Nov. 21 ;
lighting disr.Iays and outdoor the Indiana Repertory Theatre
winter fun like ice skating and in Indianapolis, beginning
skiing all begin in . late Nov. 15; and the Shubert
,
AP photo
:November in many localities. Perfonning Arts Center, New In this Nov. 19, 2006 file photo, skiers take a lift up as
Here are some details.
Haven , Conn., Nov. 28-30 .
.
another skier takes the slope down at Alta Ski Resort in
TRAINS: Some 30 train
Don't forget J!IOVies. Alta, Utah.
·
rides themed on "The Polar. Openings Thanksgiving week
· Express," .the popular chi!- include "Australia" starring
dren's book by Chris Van Nicole Kidman: "Four
.Allsburg, are offered in more Christmases" with Reese
· than 20 states. Venues include Witherspoon and Vince
the California State Railroad V11ughn; and "Milk" with
Museum in Sacramepto, the Sean Penn.
Great Smoky Mountains
LIGHTS: Some holida~
Railroad in Bryson City, displays don't start unttl
N.C., the Grand Canyon December, but a rew light up
Railway, in Williams, Ariz., in
]ate
November.
and the Durango &amp; Silverton Springfield, Mass., turns on
Narrow Gauge Railroad in the drive-through Bright
Durango, Colo. New to the Ughts display in Forest Park
program this year is a rail line Nov. 26. Arkansas offers a
m
Squamish,
British trail of holiday lights around
Columbia, near Vancouver. the state in 64 communities,
Schedules
at' http://www.arkansas.com/thi
http://www .polarexpress· ngNo-do/lrilil-of-lights/. In
ride.com.
.
Salt Lake City, the Church of
About 300.000 people took Jesus Christ of Latter-day
"Polar Expre.ss" rides la~t Saints lights up Temple
year. The movte so~n?track ~s Square Nov. 28.
played over the .trams pub~c
In Des Moines, Iowa, ·the
address system, the story ts city hosts a nighttime drive~ aloud, and hot ch~late . through lighting dispiar,
!~ served en ~te to a lit-up called "Jolly Holiday Li!lhts'
North Pole where Santa at Water Works Park, beginawaits.
ning Nov. 25. The Oglebay
.The trains start running ReSort &amp; Conference Center
mid-November. Most sell out
·
.A·
"""
• th
in Wheeling, W.Va., hosts the
m;~Y~- n&lt;:l~ 15 e Winter Festival ·· of Lights',
ume
"to 'tiooli} smd 1on
Sthlegel, vice presi!lent and Nov. 5-Jan. 4. In Houston, the
general manager of Rail Uptown Holiday Lighting
Events, which licenses the begins N6v. 27 along Ppst
.
OakBoulevard ..
program.
A 100-foot fir 'tree at The
Many other · excursion G
· Lo A 1 ·
trains and tourist-oriented rail
rove m . s nge es IS
lines offer "Santa trains," scheduled to be lit Nov. 2}.
such as the Hocking Valley decomted with 10.000 lights
and 15,000 ornaments.
Scenic Railway in Ohio, and
Many historic homes and
the NorthWest Railway
Museum in Snoqualmie; hotels also arrange stupenWash
dou~
holiday . display_s.
Hoiida -themed
model Christt_nas at the Btltmore, 10
train exhibits are also popular, · Asheville, N.C .•, runs Nov. 7Some take place in botanic Dec. 4. You don t have to stay
gardens, like the l?th annual at the hotel to _s.lrPII the
Rolida Train Show at The grou~ds and, enJOY The
New ~rk Botanical Garden 1\.Jts~IOn Inn s :renowned
in the Bronx, Nov. 23 through Festtv~ of . Ltghts, m
Jan. 11, and The Golden Gate Riverside, Cahf.. Nov. 28Express, new this year at the Jan,4.
.
.
Conservatory of Rowers in . OlJ'J;DOORS. ~ce _skatmg
San Francisco's Golden Gate rinks o~~ open m lime for
Park, Nov. 20-April 19. :rrnmng•vmg weekend. Even
Others take place in real .train m San Otego, w~ere .
stations, like one · in November temperatures may
Washington's Union Station . exceed 60 degrees, the out·
beginning Nov. 25, part of a door Ice Arena plans to open
"Norwegian
Christmas" Nqv. 20. .
exhibit.
. A fe~ ski resorts open earSHOWS: Can't make it to her, like If&gt;':eland and
New York to 5ee the annual Arapahoe Basm m Col'!rado,
Radio
City
Christmas , w~ch ppened Oct. 15 With an
Spectacular at Rockefeller 18-mch base of ~u~actured
Finn, Plush
Pillowtop
Center? No w.orries. The snow. But Thanks,gtvmg repRockettes will be in .Buffalo, ~nts the ftrst btg wa":e. of
w/Memory foam s.tsa.
SALE
N.Y., 'at Shea.'s Perfonning s)der and snowboarder vtsttati.in ... 'lS'l'J.... '799
Arts Center, Nov. 13-30; in . non for most -~ where
Full ..... '1959 ... ; '979
Chicago at the Rosemont weather condlllO!JS permtt.
·Theatre, Nov. ~Dec. 7; and Last _season, _nearly 8 percent
King .... '27CJ'J .... '1 3'19
Queen ... • Res. PriC1! ••'1999
'" in Nashville at the Grand Ole of VISits nalloflll:lly ace~
()pry, Nov. 14-Dec. 2,8. Later before the C~nstmas holtin- the season the Rockettes days,, accordm¥ to the
elay Cl!lvelMd's Playhouse Natio~al.
Skt
Areas
square Dec 4-28 and the Assoctatton.
with any Tempur-Pedic set
Fox~tre~St.~is,Dec.
~ta in D_tah, beloved_ by
~
11-28.
skiers for 1ts l9?0s vtbe,
f&gt;i' TRAVEL EDilOA

,. _,,. \

•''' I

(

o~h

-'~ 9 9 9

R..

AP photo

This Sept. 23, 2005 photo released by the Great Smoky
Mountains Railroad , shows Curtis Cooper, dressed as
Santa Claus, and Melissa Swofford in Bryson City, North
Carolina preparing to greet visitors who will be riding the
"Polar Express." ·

~·

f@iii!il .Firm

$1. 39m

or Plush or both together ·

t'
one9se.

"'~_,.'-''.::::·'_:~_-'
. . ,2""'~"-~-...-".~.:.:~.~!==.-,
full ..... '275 ~ .... 'H79

.

.Quten I"'

.

,

• Res- Pnce... 27'1'1

king. ... '3399 ... . &gt;1(,99
.

2-FREE MEMORY FOAM PILLOWS!

New this year, an arena expects to ~n this year l?n
touring version of the Radio Nov. 21. Killington Resort m
City show has been created Vermont aims to open Nov.
fori~ venues and will play 14. Aspen and Snowmass,
18 cines, Sfll!1ing. Nov. 7 in Colo., expect to open Nov. 27.
Minneapolis,·and concluding · . But you do~ 't ~ve to vacaJan. 4 in Houston. This show tt~ at a desttnall&lt;!~ resort to
will not be in any one city for en.J!&gt;Y a day of skimg. Some
more than a few days. ~tdents o( northern. sta~
Thanksgiving week it hits · live ~lose e11011gh to small ski
Dayton, Ohio's Nutter Cellter resorts ~t they can get up
Nov. 25-26, and Cincinnati's early a(ld JUSt go for ~ da_y.
O.S. Bank Arena Nov. 28-30. Belleayre Mountmn m
Details at httj&gt;://www.radioci- HiJ!)unount, N.Y., about two
tychristfnas.com.
and a half hours from New
The Rockettes also kick the York City, !!llms to open Nov.
season off (literally) ,at ~ 28. U: ~ dip tx:Iow
0pry in Nashville by taking freezing, northeni Michigan
part in a holiday lightin~ cer- ski resorts such as Boyne
emony Nov. 13 laimching a Mountain will also fire up
"Cbuntry Christmas" with their snow guns, offering a
ll¥llll than a dOzen shows and (long) day trip fir DelroitatDactions including outdoor III'Cll residents willing to spend .
Nlllivity ~. 30,1XX) pain- a few ~on.lnterslate-,S,

'

•

purchase.'

attress
Toll Free: 1-800-766-4163
www.mattresswa rehou se.com

Gallipolis 740-441-9730
Silver Bridge Plaza, Next to Big Lots.

�•
•

tlunba~ limn-6tnttntl

PageC6

ENTERTAINMENT
.Broadway wor~hop students
to present theatre evenings

· Swulay, November 16, 2008

exptmence; which is
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. tunities.
Department of Music niae,"
senior
- It's not every day that a
student can take a class chair Dr. Jeffrey Pappas Acting/Directing major
from a Broadway star, but note s that having McVey Emily Chapman said , "and
Marshall University stu- as a visiting faculty mem- she comes right fn .n what
dents int~rested in music ' ber is an exceptional we're all trying to
achieve:"
and theatre · have .been opportunity for students.
As for the perfotmances,
"Anytime we ca9 supattending workshop sessions taught by ac.tress and plement our current cur- Chapman, of Winfield,
former Miss West Virginia riculum with another out- said. "Expect a good time,
Beth Me Vey this semester. . standing faculty mt;mber, in a fun ,. relaxed atmos''I'm thrilled to get to be who not only has experi- · phere with a variety of
·a part of the beginning of ence in the fiel d but is able songs, monologues, duets
to translate that experi- and group performances
something at Marshall .to students in an aca- that will be interesting."
ence
to use rhe years of ex perience I have and work with de-mic setting, everyone at
students sharing my love Marshall wins," Pappas
of musical theatre - with said .
Submitted photo
Cast members of "Aesop's (Oh So Slightly) Fables" rehearse fo r the Ariel Jr. Theatre pro; inquiring young minds . Acconjing to Dr. Julie ·
who want to experience · Jackson , chair of the
duction set at the Ariei-Dat!lr Performing Arts Centre Nov. 21, 22 and 23..
the same thi 0 g," McVey Department of Theatre,
said. "It's very fulfilling McVey' s presence on camfor me. I'm very honored pu s will allow
the
,.
to be so welcomed into the Department -of Theatre the
Marshall community."
long -sought opportunity to
Thi s week, the work- develop a musical theatre
s a.n independent
·shop concludes with two emphasis within the pro-performances:
one fessional training proagenc)'. we can railor
Tuesday, Nov . . 18 at the gram.
Cultural
Center
in
"The fact that a person "the bdE in~tur~n« procection at
· GALLIPOLIS - The mance. including: 'The as select future productions, Charleston .at 7 p.m., the with Beth's Broadway crecompetitive prices. Wr: repret.enr
tortoise and the Hare are Tortoise and the .Hare." by visiting the Ariel website · other Thursday, Nov. 20 at dentials and extensive
Fe&lt;)dy to race·, as the youth ''The Lion and .the Mouse," and sending an ema.il the Renaissance Center in professional exp~rience · only thdintst 1.11-:-,
has chosen to make
actors of . The Ariel Jr. "The Fox and the Grapes" requesting the . "Family Huntington at 8 p.m.
Bringing
McVey
to
Huntington her home base
Theatre plan to present a am! othe rs. Colorful cos· . Discount Card ." The card
oompanie.~,
collection of fantastic tales tumes . humorous dialogue must be presented at the teach at Marshall is· part of is truly remarkable ,"
l'ncluding
with, "Aesop's (Oh So and creative staging are all Ariel Box Office, with tick- the Joan C. Edwards Jackson said.
echo
The
students
Slightly) Updated Fables."
elements sci to entertain ets purchased in-person, to Distingui shed Professors
Auto·Owncrs
of the Arts initiative, Jackson 's
sentiment
Aesop's beloved fables audiences young and old receive the discount.
Insuranct
The Ariel box offiee is which brings accom- regarding studying und.er
will be brought into modern alike.
ComJ"'ny.
light on the Morri s and
"Aesop's (Oh So Slightly) located at 428 Second Ave .. plished artists to campus McVey.
Gallipolis.
Box
office
to enhance learning oppor·"She's got such great
Dorothy Haskins Ariel Updated Fables," by Kim
which has truly t:arntd rht
Theatre stage, in the Ariel- Esop Wylie, is the first Ariel hours are 10. a.m . until 5
reputation "The "No Problem"
Dater Hall , Friday and · Jr. Theatre production in the p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday
and
Friday,
and
10
a.
m.
Saturday, Nov. 21 and 22 at 2008-09 season. Other
Pwplc". A.k us about th e
7 p.m. , and Sunday, Nov. 23 planned productions.include until 6 p.m. Thursday, as
many other advantages of doing
at 3 p.m.
"Anne of Green Gables," well as 90 minutes prior to
business wirh an independent
Local directors Christina "Pinocchio" and the upcom- curtain.
Regular
priced
tickets
Cogar and Lori' Sanders ing holiday production ,
insuranct agtn'y.
have been . in rehearsals for "Jingle Bell Follies '08." may be purchased online at
weeks preparing the young Information
regarding www.etix .com, or via phone
performers
for
their future performances and by calling (740) 446-ARTS.
moments in the stage auditions can be obtained
lights. The Ariel's youth from the Ariel's new all·
actors have been stretching new website, www.arielthetheir imaginations to the atre.org.
limits while learning to ere·
Reserved seating for
ate an array of colorful Aesop's Fables is available
characters, a trademark Of for $8 for adults and $6 for
the Ariel Jr. Theatre'~ sue- st~dents
. and
. cess.
· · ·
seniors. Audience members
Six of Aesop's Fables will can save $1 off each ticket
be higlighted in the perfor· for this production, as well

Ariel Jr. Theatre updates
'Aesop's Fables' Nov. 21-23

We offer the
best prices
and protection
for you.

Dl

INSIDE
Down on tbe Fum, Page Dl

•
Sunday, November 16, 2008

Travel &amp; Destinations
· Fun things to -do
ThanksgiviJJg weekend
Bv BElli J. HAAPAZ

senias and two million lights.
The event draws nearly a million people each year.
NEW YORK - Stuck at
"AChristmasCarol"haunts
horne Thanksgiving week- theaters around the country .
end? You don't have to travel this time of year, like The
to New York's Rockefeller Stage Theatre iii Denver,
Center to enjoy ice skating or starting Nov. 28; the Alley
see the Rockenes . Holiday Theatre-HubJ:!ard Stage in
'
' .l-."'f .{"~1~-·
train rides, Chrisbnas shows, Houston, beginning Nov. 21 ;
lighting disr.Iays and outdoor the Indiana Repertory Theatre
winter fun like ice skating and in Indianapolis, beginning
skiing all begin in . late Nov. 15; and the Shubert
,
AP photo
:November in many localities. Perfonning Arts Center, New In this Nov. 19, 2006 file photo, skiers take a lift up as
Here are some details.
Haven , Conn., Nov. 28-30 .
.
another skier takes the slope down at Alta Ski Resort in
TRAINS: Some 30 train
Don't forget J!IOVies. Alta, Utah.
·
rides themed on "The Polar. Openings Thanksgiving week
· Express," .the popular chi!- include "Australia" starring
dren's book by Chris Van Nicole Kidman: "Four
.Allsburg, are offered in more Christmases" with Reese
· than 20 states. Venues include Witherspoon and Vince
the California State Railroad V11ughn; and "Milk" with
Museum in Sacramepto, the Sean Penn.
Great Smoky Mountains
LIGHTS: Some holida~
Railroad in Bryson City, displays don't start unttl
N.C., the Grand Canyon December, but a rew light up
Railway, in Williams, Ariz., in
]ate
November.
and the Durango &amp; Silverton Springfield, Mass., turns on
Narrow Gauge Railroad in the drive-through Bright
Durango, Colo. New to the Ughts display in Forest Park
program this year is a rail line Nov. 26. Arkansas offers a
m
Squamish,
British trail of holiday lights around
Columbia, near Vancouver. the state in 64 communities,
Schedules
at' http://www.arkansas.com/thi
http://www .polarexpress· ngNo-do/lrilil-of-lights/. In
ride.com.
.
Salt Lake City, the Church of
About 300.000 people took Jesus Christ of Latter-day
"Polar Expre.ss" rides la~t Saints lights up Temple
year. The movte so~n?track ~s Square Nov. 28.
played over the .trams pub~c
In Des Moines, Iowa, ·the
address system, the story ts city hosts a nighttime drive~ aloud, and hot ch~late . through lighting dispiar,
!~ served en ~te to a lit-up called "Jolly Holiday Li!lhts'
North Pole where Santa at Water Works Park, beginawaits.
ning Nov. 25. The Oglebay
.The trains start running ReSort &amp; Conference Center
mid-November. Most sell out
·
.A·
"""
• th
in Wheeling, W.Va., hosts the
m;~Y~- n&lt;:l~ 15 e Winter Festival ·· of Lights',
ume
"to 'tiooli} smd 1on
Sthlegel, vice presi!lent and Nov. 5-Jan. 4. In Houston, the
general manager of Rail Uptown Holiday Lighting
Events, which licenses the begins N6v. 27 along Ppst
.
OakBoulevard ..
program.
A 100-foot fir 'tree at The
Many other · excursion G
· Lo A 1 ·
trains and tourist-oriented rail
rove m . s nge es IS
lines offer "Santa trains," scheduled to be lit Nov. 2}.
such as the Hocking Valley decomted with 10.000 lights
and 15,000 ornaments.
Scenic Railway in Ohio, and
Many historic homes and
the NorthWest Railway
Museum in Snoqualmie; hotels also arrange stupenWash
dou~
holiday . display_s.
Hoiida -themed
model Christt_nas at the Btltmore, 10
train exhibits are also popular, · Asheville, N.C .•, runs Nov. 7Some take place in botanic Dec. 4. You don t have to stay
gardens, like the l?th annual at the hotel to _s.lrPII the
Rolida Train Show at The grou~ds and, enJOY The
New ~rk Botanical Garden 1\.Jts~IOn Inn s :renowned
in the Bronx, Nov. 23 through Festtv~ of . Ltghts, m
Jan. 11, and The Golden Gate Riverside, Cahf.. Nov. 28Express, new this year at the Jan,4.
.
.
Conservatory of Rowers in . OlJ'J;DOORS. ~ce _skatmg
San Francisco's Golden Gate rinks o~~ open m lime for
Park, Nov. 20-April 19. :rrnmng•vmg weekend. Even
Others take place in real .train m San Otego, w~ere .
stations, like one · in November temperatures may
Washington's Union Station . exceed 60 degrees, the out·
beginning Nov. 25, part of a door Ice Arena plans to open
"Norwegian
Christmas" Nqv. 20. .
exhibit.
. A fe~ ski resorts open earSHOWS: Can't make it to her, like If&gt;':eland and
New York to 5ee the annual Arapahoe Basm m Col'!rado,
Radio
City
Christmas , w~ch ppened Oct. 15 With an
Spectacular at Rockefeller 18-mch base of ~u~actured
Finn, Plush
Pillowtop
Center? No w.orries. The snow. But Thanks,gtvmg repRockettes will be in .Buffalo, ~nts the ftrst btg wa":e. of
w/Memory foam s.tsa.
SALE
N.Y., 'at Shea.'s Perfonning s)der and snowboarder vtsttati.in ... 'lS'l'J.... '799
Arts Center, Nov. 13-30; in . non for most -~ where
Full ..... '1959 ... ; '979
Chicago at the Rosemont weather condlllO!JS permtt.
·Theatre, Nov. ~Dec. 7; and Last _season, _nearly 8 percent
King .... '27CJ'J .... '1 3'19
Queen ... • Res. PriC1! ••'1999
'" in Nashville at the Grand Ole of VISits nalloflll:lly ace~
()pry, Nov. 14-Dec. 2,8. Later before the C~nstmas holtin- the season the Rockettes days,, accordm¥ to the
elay Cl!lvelMd's Playhouse Natio~al.
Skt
Areas
square Dec 4-28 and the Assoctatton.
with any Tempur-Pedic set
Fox~tre~St.~is,Dec.
~ta in D_tah, beloved_ by
~
11-28.
skiers for 1ts l9?0s vtbe,
f&gt;i' TRAVEL EDilOA

,. _,,. \

•''' I

(

o~h

-'~ 9 9 9

R..

AP photo

This Sept. 23, 2005 photo released by the Great Smoky
Mountains Railroad , shows Curtis Cooper, dressed as
Santa Claus, and Melissa Swofford in Bryson City, North
Carolina preparing to greet visitors who will be riding the
"Polar Express." ·

~·

f@iii!il .Firm

$1. 39m

or Plush or both together ·

t'
one9se.

"'~_,.'-''.::::·'_:~_-'
. . ,2""'~"-~-...-".~.:.:~.~!==.-,
full ..... '275 ~ .... 'H79

.

.Quten I"'

.

,

• Res- Pnce... 27'1'1

king. ... '3399 ... . &gt;1(,99
.

2-FREE MEMORY FOAM PILLOWS!

New this year, an arena expects to ~n this year l?n
touring version of the Radio Nov. 21. Killington Resort m
City show has been created Vermont aims to open Nov.
fori~ venues and will play 14. Aspen and Snowmass,
18 cines, Sfll!1ing. Nov. 7 in Colo., expect to open Nov. 27.
Minneapolis,·and concluding · . But you do~ 't ~ve to vacaJan. 4 in Houston. This show tt~ at a desttnall&lt;!~ resort to
will not be in any one city for en.J!&gt;Y a day of skimg. Some
more than a few days. ~tdents o( northern. sta~
Thanksgiving week it hits · live ~lose e11011gh to small ski
Dayton, Ohio's Nutter Cellter resorts ~t they can get up
Nov. 25-26, and Cincinnati's early a(ld JUSt go for ~ da_y.
O.S. Bank Arena Nov. 28-30. Belleayre Mountmn m
Details at httj&gt;://www.radioci- HiJ!)unount, N.Y., about two
tychristfnas.com.
and a half hours from New
The Rockettes also kick the York City, !!llms to open Nov.
season off (literally) ,at ~ 28. U: ~ dip tx:Iow
0pry in Nashville by taking freezing, northeni Michigan
part in a holiday lightin~ cer- ski resorts such as Boyne
emony Nov. 13 laimching a Mountain will also fire up
"Cbuntry Christmas" with their snow guns, offering a
ll¥llll than a dOzen shows and (long) day trip fir DelroitatDactions including outdoor III'Cll residents willing to spend .
Nlllivity ~. 30,1XX) pain- a few ~on.lnterslate-,S,

'

•

purchase.'

attress
Toll Free: 1-800-766-4163
www.mattresswa rehou se.com

Gallipolis 740-441-9730
Silver Bridge Plaza, Next to Big Lots.

�'

.

•

•'

.iunba, limH·itntintl
,.

DOWN ON THE FARM

EXTENSION CORNER

~Yard

work is far
from being done

PageD2

: Are you interested in holiday season ideas for the home?
Plan to attend two events to make your holidays a little
more festive and easier on the wallet.
The annual Meigs County Garden Clubs wili be holding
their Holiday flower Show, "A Caroling We Will Go," on
Nov. 22 from I to 5 p.m. and from noon to 4 p.m. on Nov.
23.
.
Look at what you could do for the holidays in flower
arrangements, decorating doors, or wrapping packa~es.
'Thinking of purchasing a live plant for a loved one? V1ew
the exhibits of popular indoor plants on display for _ideas.
Meigs County Master Gardeners will have an exhibit, "Joy
To The World." Learn to identify and . use plant material
from the yard and forest that can be used in decorating for
!he holiday season.
· No adnuttance charge for this event.

•••

.

.

C L A S S I F I E D.

Vickie Powell, Gallia
County Farm Bureau president, presents Eleri Jones
from St. Asaph, Wales,
United Kingdom, with a
Cal's Meow of the Bob
Evans barn, the' first barn
on the Gallia County Quilt
Trail, on a recent trip to
Wales. One of the quilt
squares Is an antique
Welsh square, the other is
the Quilt Trail design in the
shape of Gallla County.
Profits from the sale of the
barns go to youth scholarships and youth camps. If
Interested in purchasing a
· barn, contact the Farm
· Bureau office at (BOO) 7779226, 231 Broadway St.,
Jackson ; or Powell at 2455271.

BY HAL KNEEN

...

l\egt~ter

Farm Bureau present~tion

•

· : Before winter arrives there are a .few outside household
!ilsks that need to be accomplished. Don't put the rake or
lawnmower away yet.
; The grass is still growing and blowing leaves need to be
temoved from your lawn before winter arrives. Matted
!'eaves can kill your grass overwinter by suffocating them
dnd reducing .the photosynthesis process within the grass
~lades. So remove .the leaves and compost them for next
year's garden.
.
.: ·Clean the gutters and downspouts to allow roof "runoff.
water a free flow to the yard. Clogged gutters may freeie
itp and l'ush up the shingles of your house allowing water
tO back mto the 'roof area. Consider moving the downsp(Jut
water further from the house by installing or adding extra
4rainage pipe. It may save you basement drainage probl):ms next winter and spring.
·
.
. .
,. If you re-landscaped or built a new home, make .sure the
!andkape drains away from the house foundation.
· Caulk around your windows and doors. Install felt and
sweeps around drafty doors. Check the bottom of the
$arage door to make sure it is properly sealed. Stack up
your firewood supply closer to the home and keep it under
a tarp to keep it dry.
: Clean up the garden areas by removing all old plant
'material, remove stakes and store them where it is dry. If
possible. apply a new .layer of organic matter onto your
vegetable and flower beds. Don't worry if it isn't done this
year, it will be waiting for you next spring.
.

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

Sunday,·November t6, 2008

Galli a
County
OH
Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
Vlww.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

m:rtbune

To Place

e:~:;~::;... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
·

.

Or Fax To {740) 446-.3008

Submitted photo

GALLIPOLIS - Farm will be awarded based on acaCredit Services of Mid- demic record, leadership
America, a $16 billion ag qualities, and community
·
lending cooperative serving involvement.
"We started this scholan;hip
farmers and rural America
in Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana program a few years .ago,
and Tennessee, reaffirmed awardinl! 18 scholan;hips,':
its commitment to educa- ·said Chris Smalley, financial
tional success by making services · officer with Farm
$45,000 in scholarshiP.s Credit Services in Gallipolis.
available in 2009 to chil- "Because we received so
dren of members who are many quality applications last
studying agriculture or year, we decided to double-tire
business at four-year uni- nuniber of scholan;hips
versities.
awarded 2009.
Thirty six schollii'Ships with . "As agriculture continues
values of $1,500 and $1.000 to grow and evolv.e, we want

ative, t~e deadline to apply
is
Feb.
27,
2009.
Scholarships will be awarded in May. To apply, go
online to www.e-farmcred. it.com and click · on
Community ' Support · to
download the application.
You may also call (740.)
441-9312 to talk the local
office about obtaining an
application .
For more information
about Farm Credit, call (800)
444-3276 or visit them on the
web at www.efarmcredit.co~

,Washington st~te wineries seek status for grapes
Bv S.HANNON O..INNY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER ·

pie lip here are going that '11lis area is special because
direction. We're hoping that it's all one type of dirt. It's all
by leading, we can all go that · volcanic - andesite lava
way in the future."
rather than basalt - and that
"It's.probably an ambitious makes it fairly unique."
goal, but I think it's a worthy
Andesite lava, when it
one," he said.
cools, forms crystals in· a
Harlequi!J Cellars, NHV roun(l, soft pattern, whereas
Winery and WJ!ridge Winery, basalt forms lava with straight
which all own vineyard land crystals, he said. There's no
in the· ~aches Heights area, evi~nce the former ~ nec~spetitioned the federall!ovem- : sarily better for growmg wme
. ment for AVA recogmtion in grapes; it's just different.
August. The federal governAt 13.254 acres , the proment initially rejeded that posed appellation would run
request, seeking more infor- from the confluence of the
mation, and the group is cor- Naches River and Cowiche
recting' their proposal to sub- Creek to the confluence of
the. Naches and Tieton
mit for a second ~·
Cline says they re hopeful rivers, all northwest of
the Naches Heights area will Yakima
in
central
become the state's lOth appel- Washington. The elevation
lation sometime next yeat.
ranges 'from 1,182 feet on
. "Most of the areas in the the eastern border to 2,1 ()()
state have. multiple .layers of feet on the western tip, makdiffere!lt soil types," he said. ing it one of the highest

~hru

Monday

8:00 a.m.

675-5234

~o

• Stlrt Your Adt With A Keyword • Include Complete
Ducliptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• lndude Phone Nuinbtr And. AddNn When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 1. D•y~

1Ucces4: ds

•POLICIES*

nd

the

TrlbU

.....Rotlllllr Wll
mponolble tor n
'ort then the coot

POUCIES: Ohio V•lley Pubtlthlng reHrYII lhl right to edit, reject, or car.cel any ld at any time. ErrMI mu.t be reported on the n,.t day ot
Ttibun.S«rtlntl·Rtgltltr will be relponlible for no mOfe than the coet ot lha llfJKI occupted by the '"or and only thl ftrll lnHrtiOn. WI
any 1011 or ••pen.. that retulte from the publlcttion or oml11ion ot tn ad'lertiMmtnt. Corrtctlon wHI b. mMh In tht tlr~t 1111ll1b• edition. • ~~:~"~=~":.:.:::I
lrt etw•y• confldentltl. · CUHent rete card appllea. ·All •••I 11tahl advtftlttmenll 111 tubjtcllo tht Fldtral Ftlr Houtlng Act ot tMa. •1
accepta only hllp wanted ada maattng EOE ahlndlrdl. We will not knowingly ecceplany advertlltrtg In vlolatton ·of tnt taw. Will not be rt:sponllblt lor
errors In an ad taken over Uta phone.

Homo tmpr....onls

Ohio Vlltoy

rtjtct or Clncelony
tdotony timt.
E""'" Mutt
ported on the
IY of publlcafl

Child 1 Elderly ea..

Loot&amp; Found
Lost 2 mala Jack Russel
Around Prospect

Dogs

Chl.lrch Rd.

Oct

~,,

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
.1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

5:00 p.m.

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response... ·

Publlohlng....,...
1111 right to edit,

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Friday

HOW I0 WJiff. 6fj 6Q

area since
to Odie

answers

Reliable
childcare
needed in my home
(Gallipolis) mostly evening hours. 446·2908

Ba11men1
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local reterences furnished. Es1ab·
lished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

,...

EdliC~Ium

500

t

Miscollanoou•

Aingneck Doves tree to a
Males and
Females. 624-257 ·9650

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar

good home.
600

Anntli1IS

livostock

::======
700

Aqtoeu

'L,rP

tor

Angle,

Channel, Flat Bar, Steef
CrissY's Odds &amp; Ends, Gra1ing for Drains. Drivelarge selection of salt &amp; ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
pepper

shakers,

King
8:00·4:00

&amp; Beau. Reward for safe
return.
Call
Kelly .

Concrete

~~~':':'~~~

446-70t9 or 645-3282 .

Fire Scrap Metals . Open Mon'.
&amp;
Frl,

glassware, Tue, . Wed
Mon-Fn, 606 8am·4:30pm.
Thurp, · Sat
740·446·7300

Cloaed
Sun.

&amp;

~~-

Chocolate Lab on
on
Flatwoods
Pomeroy,
contact(740)508-0431

1118108
Road,

appellations in Washington
state.
·
The lava at those high elevations acts as a heat sink,
warming the vineyards during the day and continuing to
radiate heat in the cool
· evenings and helping to regulate the temperature, Cline
said.
·
. "Don't get me wrong, this
1sn't the banana belt up here,''
he sail;i. ''But it is as Wann,llll
some places in the 'Yakima
Valley !Qat you would think
would be a lot wanner."
Appellation status can be
sigmficant to wineries · that
may be looking to change
!herr labels to refll;let where
they get the grapes that go
into· their wine. At least one
other region in the state haS
been seeking appellation Silltns: the Chelan area in nortlicentral Washington.
.

: The OSU Extension office. is prese~ting a "Taste of the
YAKIMA, Wash.
Holidays" on Thursday, Dec. 4 from II a.m. to I p.m. at the
Several
wineries and vineyard
ExtensiOn office located 117 E. Memorial Drive, next to
owners.
in
Eastern
Holzer Clinic Meigs branch, and again on Dec. 8 at 6:30 to
8 p.m. at the Meigs County Mu~eum, 144 Butternut Ave., Washington are banding
together to lobby for a specifPomeroy.
· Program includes: "Gifts from the Kitchen," "Holiday ic wine-grape growing region
Traditions," "Make &amp; Take Ornaments," "Entertaining northwest of Yakima.
. Washington state already
Ideas" and ''Decorating with Live Greenery." . .
Cost is $10 per person, preregister by calling (740) 992- has nine such American
. 6696. Visit our website at www.meigs@osu.edu for further . Viticultural Areas - or
. appelhitions ~ that are federinformation.
(Hal Knetm is the Meigs County Agric~lture and ally reco~ized on the basis.of
Nalural ResQurces/Community Development Educator, their distmct climates and soil
features.
Ohio State University Extension.)
The difference ·this time
around: All of the vineyards
in Naches Heights are going
I~o
organic.
· "I do~ 't think there's any
· · POCATELLO, Idaho released Monday, that will way we could force anybody
(AP) - Idaho 's ·potatd result in the lowest pro- to be organic," said Phil Cline
production will decrease duction of potatoes in of NHV Winery in Naches.
about 12 percent this year Idaho in 19 years. Idaho is "It's kind of fun that the peo'
compared to last year, the · · the nat'ion's top potato
.
.
_U.S.
Department
of producing state, growing
Agriculture predicts.
about one-thi,rd of the
. State officials said the country's spuds.
.
'
•
!
The USDA estimates
decrease is due mainly to
projected at 34 bushels per in at 48 bushels an acre, he · Hardy said farmers were
some farmers switching
Bv BRucE ScHRaNER
over to wheat.
305,000 acres of potatoes
A§SOCIATEO PRESS WAJlEll
acre, up 6 112 .bushels from sliid, slightly better than the · able to scoop up most of the
·While Idaho farmers were planted . in loaho in
the drought -stressed 2007 flve-yearaverage.
downed com, though it
produced more potatoes 2008. and that the state
LOUISVILLE, Ky.
crop but below the five-year
"We've been on the other slowed harve,sting.
per acre than ever before, will produce about 11.5 Roller-coaster weather that , average.
. .
side of that coin l'&gt;efore, too,
Despite an the adversity,
the report said, the num- billion pounds, compared ~luded a soggy s(lring, hurKentncky's com harvest is where we had the hiilf-crop average com and soybean
ber of acres in production with . 13 billion pounds in ncane-mduced wmds and all but wrapped up, and.ooy- and the rest of the county was yields in Daviess County
was · the lowest since 2007. Final numbers on. drought had Kentncky grain bean hl\fVesting is neliring · good," Mike Ellis said.
. exceeded the statewide marks
'
1980.
this year's output won't farmers expecting the worst ~ completion.
That 2 112 inches of late and were comparable to past
for this year's harvest.
For livestock producers, tlje August.rain was importlmt .::.. yearly averages, Hardy said,
According to the report be available until 2009 .
But when combines started summer drought stunted pas- the Ellis brothers got only adding that lower summer ·
roUmg, some corn produCers tures an&lt;l .reduced ~falfa pro- about 27 bushels an acre from temperatures helped keep
managed better-than-expect- duction, forcing many to dip another soybean field, where soybeans alive.
·
ed}'elds.
.
ihto hay supplies.early.
only a quarter-inch of rain
Besides unfavorable.wel!lh· E~ery~y was pleasantly
Hay supPlies may be l!(le- feU.
er, farmers also faced escalatsurpnsed
by
Graves quate without the need to . Heavy spring rains delayed •ing costs for essentials like
County's harvest, said Kenny bring in additional stockpiles, planting in several areas and fuel and · fertilizer. Grain
Perry, ·agricultnral extension said Bourbon County ag
forced other · farmers to · prices soared during the sumagent in the grain-belt county. extension agent Glenn replant, which also cut yields . mer but have since fallen .
GALLIPOLIS
The county's farmers aver- Mackie. Bl¢ they could be in
,,
"We should come out OK,"
Then came a. prolonged.
United Producers Inc,
aged about I45 bushels an a tough position depending on
Well-Muscled/Fleshed ,
market report from
swrimer
dry
spell,
followed
Mike
Ellis said. "It's not
acre for com and about 33 how severe win~r is. •
$40-$50.
Gallipolis for sales con·
bushels for soybeans, he said. . Area farmers had a bounti- by lashing . winds from going to be a windfall by any
Medium/Lean, $35-$40.
ducted on Wednesday,
That was below typical yields ful spring 11rass hay LTOp Hurricane Ike's remnants that stretch. It'll be more of a norThin/Light, $10-$35.
Nov. 12,2008.
but welcomed .after a growing because of ram, whic~ helped battered many com fields in mal (year) after the higher ferBulls, $40-~69.50 .
tilizer .prices."
season dmt turned so dry the boost hay supplies for winter, September.
federal government approved Mackie said. But widl ·becef
assistance for Kentncky farm- cattle prices down 20 fleicen!
ers whose crops wilted.
to 25 percent liom a·~ear ~.
Statewide, com yields were many producer!; w1ll likely
27 5-41 S lbs., Steers,
averagin~ 133 bushels an cull herds rather than pay to
Cow/Calf Pairs, $410$70-$110, Heifers , $65acre, slightly below the previ- ship in ,extra bay if winter
$91; 425-525 lbs., Steers, $900; Bred Cows, $350ous five-year average, accord- turns hflrsh',·he said. .
$70-$100 , Heifers . $65- $710; Baby Cal ves, $10Mike Ellis, w.ho farms in
ing to figures from the
$87 .50; · 550-625 lbs ., $180; Goats, $12-$100;
National
Agricultural Shelby and Henry counties in
Steers, $70-$92, Heifers, Lambs , $87.50-$88; Hogs,
Statistics Service's Kentucky northcentral Kentucky, said a
$65-$84; 650-725 lbs ., $50-$57.
field office.
timely · late-sununer .downSteers, $70-$85 , Heifers,
Production of com for grain pour made all the difference
$60-$80; 750-850 Ibs .,
in
Kentucky was forecast at for many of his corn and soySteers, $70"$78 , Heifers
147
.6 milfion bushels bean fields .
·
$60-$75.
'
making the 2008 crop the
"lt made the difference
smallest in six years, the ciop- between an avetage yield and
Ohio approved feeder
reporting service said.
an above-average yield,'' he ·
(Second Wednesday of sale.• Wednesday, Nov. 19,
That output is down 16 per-. said. "On soybeans, it probaIOa.m.
the month)
cent from Ja,t year's crop, bly wuuld have been lessNo sale on Nov. 26
which was massive in tenns than-average if we hadn'thad
Choice - Steers, $85- (Thanksgiving).
of acreage, but saw a lower that rain."
For more information,
$87 .25; Heifers, $80-$85.
average yield because of a
Ellis, who farms more than
call
DeWayne at (740)
Select - Steers, $75.
severe drought.
5,600 acres of com and soy339-0241 or Stacy at
$82; Heifers, $72-$80.
Meanwhile,
this
year's
soybeans
with his brothers Bob
(304) 634-0224. Visit the
Holsteins - $55-$71.
bean
production
in
Kentncky'
and
Jim,
said their com averwebsite at www.uproducwas ferecast at 47.3 million aged 144 bushels per acre,
ers.com .
bushels, up 56 percent from easily beatin,g their five-year .
the small 2007 crop. Yield is avCnlge. Therr soybeans came

potato
production down
.

Or Fax To (740)

·OearliflrU'

Farm Credit Services doubles scholarship money for 2009
students to be at the forefront
of the industry, and grow with
it," he added.
The scholan;hips will be
awarded to students choosing
to pursue careers in agricul:
tore; financing or ag business,
and are p;trt of the cooperative's stewardship program
which involves returning
greater value to rural America
by increasin~ the association's
investment m education and
youth activities.
Available to members,
their dependents and spouses of the aglending cooper-

l\egtster

Sentinel

FOUND:
on

Brown . Puppy
Chancll8r

Dr.

304-675-5929

Lool: Ott SR 233. female retriever mht Re·
cently spayed. $1 00 Reward.

Please

call

(740!379-2737

Reward : Lost 3 mon. olcl
male tlrindte Boxer, lltlls
gk'l heartbroken, please
call304-593-264 t.

fi~&gt;rrr

ill

l[J

il•o'1.ll

, 1..' ~,

r

I('&lt;;

-~~---

c:a..p.n I RV• &amp;
Trailon

2 QQI

1\11

J

-Ill()!\"

~----

Ky. fanners manage s.olid yields despite weather
~

t

'

Part-Time Administrative
Assistant

. Card of Thanks

OUR SINCERE THANKS
We would like to thimk our Family &amp;
Friends, our Pastor Ste\'e &amp; Rita Little,
for.the wonderful service l1e performed.·
Tlwnk you to Cheshire Baptist Church
for the llleal tl~ey provided for
family &amp; jrie11ds.
Tha"k you Anderson Fu11eral Home, rhe
ptJ/Ibearers &amp; Lot:al #650.for

livESTOCK REPORT
Cows-Lower

Feeder CattleSteady/Lower

•

·their kinlfness.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

Farm:

IPCODER ·
Holzer Medical CenCer, Galllpolis, OH is
seeking a full time tP Coder. Thi &gt;position
abstracts and codes IP imd ASU charts.
Must work wi1h Physicians to properly
assign codes.

Upcoming
specials:

Required Qualifications are : RHIT
(Registered Health lnfomtallon
Technician) or CCS (Cef) ifled Coding
Specialist) is preferred. Previous Medical
Records experience reqllired . Previous
coding experience preferred .

Fed Cattle

•

SmithGM
Superstore
1911 Eastern Ave Gallipolis. Ohio

=======-:======
Help Wantid

1996

;:::~::::::::...:::====~
Long T.... Canol Homo Can!
Division

Oldsmobile

Achle\la,

120,000

miles',

Contact

Askrng · $500
740-441-5460

94 ChfY.sler Lebaron ·4drSedan_. Approx 112.~
mi. $1800. For into call,

245·5494 after 6pm
96 Neon 4 door, s·
speed. $1500 obo cai
256-1652or256·t233

Sports Utility

Help Wantwd

The Steve Hood Family
Mother, Father, Daughter &amp; Son

·Back To The

I

Card of Thanks

Basic computer skills
• Thlephone Skills
Approximately 20 Hrs. per week
Good Work environment

2006
Chevrolet,..
HHR-LT, 26k miles, ga-·
rage
kept,
loadeci
304-882-2356

02 Eddie Bauer-Ford Ex;
plorer, 102K miles, 4WD,
loaded, seats up to 7.
great shape, · great price,.
great winter 'Or aU season·
travel
74Q-44 t-7233

vehicle.:

Do ·you want to make a difference? If you
Trvcb
are compassionate and committed to
2001" Blue Dodge [)aproviding Quality Care ~orne and be a pan kota. snap on bedcover,
of our Long Term Care/Home Care team. . 62K. miles, clear litie, 6
We have the following positions available : cyl. engine, $7500.00
JOH\75-3151 .

Want To lluy

He'zer Segjgr Cars Cepter;

• RN- Evening Nursing Manqer·
IT Exempt

* LPN- PT Night Shift
• STN A - H Night Shift
* Dietary Aid- PT
Nul'!'!e Aide Class applicants

Holzer t\Misfal Uying. Galliwll§;

Wan1 to buy Junk Cars;
call 740-388.()864

.

.

.-~

WANTED: 69 Camaros
projects or restored cars •

- any condition · finders :
tee paid. Call Doug·
cell
or:
61•·203-1272

I.
'

• Resident assistant- (Can 'Iraln) 1-PT
. Holzer Assjstnll.iyjng- Jad®Qi

•Resident Assistant- PT
If inlerested , please contact:

HUMAN RESOURCES
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 4563 I
Phone: (740) 446-5105
Fax: (740) 446-5t06
EOFJADA Employer

'

For details please gi\'e Barb Pe1erson, Direc1or Cornmerciallretail space..
High traffic'
of Human Re ~urces for our Long Term Carel for rent.
count,
good
visibility .;
Home Care division a call at 740-441-340 1 or
ma1n road JocaliOO . heat
email me at oetcrson @holzcr.org or visit us on &amp; water· included ·in rent.:
the web at ww.w.holzccr.org . '
Respond lo box CLA 1~-

Equal Opportunily Employer

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

200
wv

"'ain Street, Pt. PI,·~
25550
.

I

�'

.

•

•'

.iunba, limH·itntintl
,.

DOWN ON THE FARM

EXTENSION CORNER

~Yard

work is far
from being done

PageD2

: Are you interested in holiday season ideas for the home?
Plan to attend two events to make your holidays a little
more festive and easier on the wallet.
The annual Meigs County Garden Clubs wili be holding
their Holiday flower Show, "A Caroling We Will Go," on
Nov. 22 from I to 5 p.m. and from noon to 4 p.m. on Nov.
23.
.
Look at what you could do for the holidays in flower
arrangements, decorating doors, or wrapping packa~es.
'Thinking of purchasing a live plant for a loved one? V1ew
the exhibits of popular indoor plants on display for _ideas.
Meigs County Master Gardeners will have an exhibit, "Joy
To The World." Learn to identify and . use plant material
from the yard and forest that can be used in decorating for
!he holiday season.
· No adnuttance charge for this event.

•••

.

.

C L A S S I F I E D.

Vickie Powell, Gallia
County Farm Bureau president, presents Eleri Jones
from St. Asaph, Wales,
United Kingdom, with a
Cal's Meow of the Bob
Evans barn, the' first barn
on the Gallia County Quilt
Trail, on a recent trip to
Wales. One of the quilt
squares Is an antique
Welsh square, the other is
the Quilt Trail design in the
shape of Gallla County.
Profits from the sale of the
barns go to youth scholarships and youth camps. If
Interested in purchasing a
· barn, contact the Farm
· Bureau office at (BOO) 7779226, 231 Broadway St.,
Jackson ; or Powell at 2455271.

BY HAL KNEEN

...

l\egt~ter

Farm Bureau present~tion

•

· : Before winter arrives there are a .few outside household
!ilsks that need to be accomplished. Don't put the rake or
lawnmower away yet.
; The grass is still growing and blowing leaves need to be
temoved from your lawn before winter arrives. Matted
!'eaves can kill your grass overwinter by suffocating them
dnd reducing .the photosynthesis process within the grass
~lades. So remove .the leaves and compost them for next
year's garden.
.
.: ·Clean the gutters and downspouts to allow roof "runoff.
water a free flow to the yard. Clogged gutters may freeie
itp and l'ush up the shingles of your house allowing water
tO back mto the 'roof area. Consider moving the downsp(Jut
water further from the house by installing or adding extra
4rainage pipe. It may save you basement drainage probl):ms next winter and spring.
·
.
. .
,. If you re-landscaped or built a new home, make .sure the
!andkape drains away from the house foundation.
· Caulk around your windows and doors. Install felt and
sweeps around drafty doors. Check the bottom of the
$arage door to make sure it is properly sealed. Stack up
your firewood supply closer to the home and keep it under
a tarp to keep it dry.
: Clean up the garden areas by removing all old plant
'material, remove stakes and store them where it is dry. If
possible. apply a new .layer of organic matter onto your
vegetable and flower beds. Don't worry if it isn't done this
year, it will be waiting for you next spring.
.

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

Sunday,·November t6, 2008

Galli a
County
OH
Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
Vlww.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

m:rtbune

To Place

e:~:;~::;... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
·

.

Or Fax To {740) 446-.3008

Submitted photo

GALLIPOLIS - Farm will be awarded based on acaCredit Services of Mid- demic record, leadership
America, a $16 billion ag qualities, and community
·
lending cooperative serving involvement.
"We started this scholan;hip
farmers and rural America
in Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana program a few years .ago,
and Tennessee, reaffirmed awardinl! 18 scholan;hips,':
its commitment to educa- ·said Chris Smalley, financial
tional success by making services · officer with Farm
$45,000 in scholarshiP.s Credit Services in Gallipolis.
available in 2009 to chil- "Because we received so
dren of members who are many quality applications last
studying agriculture or year, we decided to double-tire
business at four-year uni- nuniber of scholan;hips
versities.
awarded 2009.
Thirty six schollii'Ships with . "As agriculture continues
values of $1,500 and $1.000 to grow and evolv.e, we want

ative, t~e deadline to apply
is
Feb.
27,
2009.
Scholarships will be awarded in May. To apply, go
online to www.e-farmcred. it.com and click · on
Community ' Support · to
download the application.
You may also call (740.)
441-9312 to talk the local
office about obtaining an
application .
For more information
about Farm Credit, call (800)
444-3276 or visit them on the
web at www.efarmcredit.co~

,Washington st~te wineries seek status for grapes
Bv S.HANNON O..INNY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER ·

pie lip here are going that '11lis area is special because
direction. We're hoping that it's all one type of dirt. It's all
by leading, we can all go that · volcanic - andesite lava
way in the future."
rather than basalt - and that
"It's.probably an ambitious makes it fairly unique."
goal, but I think it's a worthy
Andesite lava, when it
one," he said.
cools, forms crystals in· a
Harlequi!J Cellars, NHV roun(l, soft pattern, whereas
Winery and WJ!ridge Winery, basalt forms lava with straight
which all own vineyard land crystals, he said. There's no
in the· ~aches Heights area, evi~nce the former ~ nec~spetitioned the federall!ovem- : sarily better for growmg wme
. ment for AVA recogmtion in grapes; it's just different.
August. The federal governAt 13.254 acres , the proment initially rejeded that posed appellation would run
request, seeking more infor- from the confluence of the
mation, and the group is cor- Naches River and Cowiche
recting' their proposal to sub- Creek to the confluence of
the. Naches and Tieton
mit for a second ~·
Cline says they re hopeful rivers, all northwest of
the Naches Heights area will Yakima
in
central
become the state's lOth appel- Washington. The elevation
lation sometime next yeat.
ranges 'from 1,182 feet on
. "Most of the areas in the the eastern border to 2,1 ()()
state have. multiple .layers of feet on the western tip, makdiffere!lt soil types," he said. ing it one of the highest

~hru

Monday

8:00 a.m.

675-5234

~o

• Stlrt Your Adt With A Keyword • Include Complete
Ducliptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• lndude Phone Nuinbtr And. AddNn When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 1. D•y~

1Ucces4: ds

•POLICIES*

nd

the

TrlbU

.....Rotlllllr Wll
mponolble tor n
'ort then the coot

POUCIES: Ohio V•lley Pubtlthlng reHrYII lhl right to edit, reject, or car.cel any ld at any time. ErrMI mu.t be reported on the n,.t day ot
Ttibun.S«rtlntl·Rtgltltr will be relponlible for no mOfe than the coet ot lha llfJKI occupted by the '"or and only thl ftrll lnHrtiOn. WI
any 1011 or ••pen.. that retulte from the publlcttion or oml11ion ot tn ad'lertiMmtnt. Corrtctlon wHI b. mMh In tht tlr~t 1111ll1b• edition. • ~~:~"~=~":.:.:::I
lrt etw•y• confldentltl. · CUHent rete card appllea. ·All •••I 11tahl advtftlttmenll 111 tubjtcllo tht Fldtral Ftlr Houtlng Act ot tMa. •1
accepta only hllp wanted ada maattng EOE ahlndlrdl. We will not knowingly ecceplany advertlltrtg In vlolatton ·of tnt taw. Will not be rt:sponllblt lor
errors In an ad taken over Uta phone.

Homo tmpr....onls

Ohio Vlltoy

rtjtct or Clncelony
tdotony timt.
E""'" Mutt
ported on the
IY of publlcafl

Child 1 Elderly ea..

Loot&amp; Found
Lost 2 mala Jack Russel
Around Prospect

Dogs

Chl.lrch Rd.

Oct

~,,

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
.1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

5:00 p.m.

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response... ·

Publlohlng....,...
1111 right to edit,

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Friday

HOW I0 WJiff. 6fj 6Q

area since
to Odie

answers

Reliable
childcare
needed in my home
(Gallipolis) mostly evening hours. 446·2908

Ba11men1
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local reterences furnished. Es1ab·
lished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

,...

EdliC~Ium

500

t

Miscollanoou•

Aingneck Doves tree to a
Males and
Females. 624-257 ·9650

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar

good home.
600

Anntli1IS

livostock

::======
700

Aqtoeu

'L,rP

tor

Angle,

Channel, Flat Bar, Steef
CrissY's Odds &amp; Ends, Gra1ing for Drains. Drivelarge selection of salt &amp; ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
pepper

shakers,

King
8:00·4:00

&amp; Beau. Reward for safe
return.
Call
Kelly .

Concrete

~~~':':'~~~

446-70t9 or 645-3282 .

Fire Scrap Metals . Open Mon'.
&amp;
Frl,

glassware, Tue, . Wed
Mon-Fn, 606 8am·4:30pm.
Thurp, · Sat
740·446·7300

Cloaed
Sun.

&amp;

~~-

Chocolate Lab on
on
Flatwoods
Pomeroy,
contact(740)508-0431

1118108
Road,

appellations in Washington
state.
·
The lava at those high elevations acts as a heat sink,
warming the vineyards during the day and continuing to
radiate heat in the cool
· evenings and helping to regulate the temperature, Cline
said.
·
. "Don't get me wrong, this
1sn't the banana belt up here,''
he sail;i. ''But it is as Wann,llll
some places in the 'Yakima
Valley !Qat you would think
would be a lot wanner."
Appellation status can be
sigmficant to wineries · that
may be looking to change
!herr labels to refll;let where
they get the grapes that go
into· their wine. At least one
other region in the state haS
been seeking appellation Silltns: the Chelan area in nortlicentral Washington.
.

: The OSU Extension office. is prese~ting a "Taste of the
YAKIMA, Wash.
Holidays" on Thursday, Dec. 4 from II a.m. to I p.m. at the
Several
wineries and vineyard
ExtensiOn office located 117 E. Memorial Drive, next to
owners.
in
Eastern
Holzer Clinic Meigs branch, and again on Dec. 8 at 6:30 to
8 p.m. at the Meigs County Mu~eum, 144 Butternut Ave., Washington are banding
together to lobby for a specifPomeroy.
· Program includes: "Gifts from the Kitchen," "Holiday ic wine-grape growing region
Traditions," "Make &amp; Take Ornaments," "Entertaining northwest of Yakima.
. Washington state already
Ideas" and ''Decorating with Live Greenery." . .
Cost is $10 per person, preregister by calling (740) 992- has nine such American
. 6696. Visit our website at www.meigs@osu.edu for further . Viticultural Areas - or
. appelhitions ~ that are federinformation.
(Hal Knetm is the Meigs County Agric~lture and ally reco~ized on the basis.of
Nalural ResQurces/Community Development Educator, their distmct climates and soil
features.
Ohio State University Extension.)
The difference ·this time
around: All of the vineyards
in Naches Heights are going
I~o
organic.
· "I do~ 't think there's any
· · POCATELLO, Idaho released Monday, that will way we could force anybody
(AP) - Idaho 's ·potatd result in the lowest pro- to be organic," said Phil Cline
production will decrease duction of potatoes in of NHV Winery in Naches.
about 12 percent this year Idaho in 19 years. Idaho is "It's kind of fun that the peo'
compared to last year, the · · the nat'ion's top potato
.
.
_U.S.
Department
of producing state, growing
Agriculture predicts.
about one-thi,rd of the
. State officials said the country's spuds.
.
'
•
!
The USDA estimates
decrease is due mainly to
projected at 34 bushels per in at 48 bushels an acre, he · Hardy said farmers were
some farmers switching
Bv BRucE ScHRaNER
over to wheat.
305,000 acres of potatoes
A§SOCIATEO PRESS WAJlEll
acre, up 6 112 .bushels from sliid, slightly better than the · able to scoop up most of the
·While Idaho farmers were planted . in loaho in
the drought -stressed 2007 flve-yearaverage.
downed com, though it
produced more potatoes 2008. and that the state
LOUISVILLE, Ky.
crop but below the five-year
"We've been on the other slowed harve,sting.
per acre than ever before, will produce about 11.5 Roller-coaster weather that , average.
. .
side of that coin l'&gt;efore, too,
Despite an the adversity,
the report said, the num- billion pounds, compared ~luded a soggy s(lring, hurKentncky's com harvest is where we had the hiilf-crop average com and soybean
ber of acres in production with . 13 billion pounds in ncane-mduced wmds and all but wrapped up, and.ooy- and the rest of the county was yields in Daviess County
was · the lowest since 2007. Final numbers on. drought had Kentncky grain bean hl\fVesting is neliring · good," Mike Ellis said.
. exceeded the statewide marks
'
1980.
this year's output won't farmers expecting the worst ~ completion.
That 2 112 inches of late and were comparable to past
for this year's harvest.
For livestock producers, tlje August.rain was importlmt .::.. yearly averages, Hardy said,
According to the report be available until 2009 .
But when combines started summer drought stunted pas- the Ellis brothers got only adding that lower summer ·
roUmg, some corn produCers tures an&lt;l .reduced ~falfa pro- about 27 bushels an acre from temperatures helped keep
managed better-than-expect- duction, forcing many to dip another soybean field, where soybeans alive.
·
ed}'elds.
.
ihto hay supplies.early.
only a quarter-inch of rain
Besides unfavorable.wel!lh· E~ery~y was pleasantly
Hay supPlies may be l!(le- feU.
er, farmers also faced escalatsurpnsed
by
Graves quate without the need to . Heavy spring rains delayed •ing costs for essentials like
County's harvest, said Kenny bring in additional stockpiles, planting in several areas and fuel and · fertilizer. Grain
Perry, ·agricultnral extension said Bourbon County ag
forced other · farmers to · prices soared during the sumagent in the grain-belt county. extension agent Glenn replant, which also cut yields . mer but have since fallen .
GALLIPOLIS
The county's farmers aver- Mackie. Bl¢ they could be in
,,
"We should come out OK,"
Then came a. prolonged.
United Producers Inc,
aged about I45 bushels an a tough position depending on
Well-Muscled/Fleshed ,
market report from
swrimer
dry
spell,
followed
Mike
Ellis said. "It's not
acre for com and about 33 how severe win~r is. •
$40-$50.
Gallipolis for sales con·
bushels for soybeans, he said. . Area farmers had a bounti- by lashing . winds from going to be a windfall by any
Medium/Lean, $35-$40.
ducted on Wednesday,
That was below typical yields ful spring 11rass hay LTOp Hurricane Ike's remnants that stretch. It'll be more of a norThin/Light, $10-$35.
Nov. 12,2008.
but welcomed .after a growing because of ram, whic~ helped battered many com fields in mal (year) after the higher ferBulls, $40-~69.50 .
tilizer .prices."
season dmt turned so dry the boost hay supplies for winter, September.
federal government approved Mackie said. But widl ·becef
assistance for Kentncky farm- cattle prices down 20 fleicen!
ers whose crops wilted.
to 25 percent liom a·~ear ~.
Statewide, com yields were many producer!; w1ll likely
27 5-41 S lbs., Steers,
averagin~ 133 bushels an cull herds rather than pay to
Cow/Calf Pairs, $410$70-$110, Heifers , $65acre, slightly below the previ- ship in ,extra bay if winter
$91; 425-525 lbs., Steers, $900; Bred Cows, $350ous five-year average, accord- turns hflrsh',·he said. .
$70-$100 , Heifers . $65- $710; Baby Cal ves, $10Mike Ellis, w.ho farms in
ing to figures from the
$87 .50; · 550-625 lbs ., $180; Goats, $12-$100;
National
Agricultural Shelby and Henry counties in
Steers, $70-$92, Heifers, Lambs , $87.50-$88; Hogs,
Statistics Service's Kentucky northcentral Kentucky, said a
$65-$84; 650-725 lbs ., $50-$57.
field office.
timely · late-sununer .downSteers, $70-$85 , Heifers,
Production of com for grain pour made all the difference
$60-$80; 750-850 Ibs .,
in
Kentucky was forecast at for many of his corn and soySteers, $70"$78 , Heifers
147
.6 milfion bushels bean fields .
·
$60-$75.
'
making the 2008 crop the
"lt made the difference
smallest in six years, the ciop- between an avetage yield and
Ohio approved feeder
reporting service said.
an above-average yield,'' he ·
(Second Wednesday of sale.• Wednesday, Nov. 19,
That output is down 16 per-. said. "On soybeans, it probaIOa.m.
the month)
cent from Ja,t year's crop, bly wuuld have been lessNo sale on Nov. 26
which was massive in tenns than-average if we hadn'thad
Choice - Steers, $85- (Thanksgiving).
of acreage, but saw a lower that rain."
For more information,
$87 .25; Heifers, $80-$85.
average yield because of a
Ellis, who farms more than
call
DeWayne at (740)
Select - Steers, $75.
severe drought.
5,600 acres of com and soy339-0241 or Stacy at
$82; Heifers, $72-$80.
Meanwhile,
this
year's
soybeans
with his brothers Bob
(304) 634-0224. Visit the
Holsteins - $55-$71.
bean
production
in
Kentncky'
and
Jim,
said their com averwebsite at www.uproducwas ferecast at 47.3 million aged 144 bushels per acre,
ers.com .
bushels, up 56 percent from easily beatin,g their five-year .
the small 2007 crop. Yield is avCnlge. Therr soybeans came

potato
production down
.

Or Fax To (740)

·OearliflrU'

Farm Credit Services doubles scholarship money for 2009
students to be at the forefront
of the industry, and grow with
it," he added.
The scholan;hips will be
awarded to students choosing
to pursue careers in agricul:
tore; financing or ag business,
and are p;trt of the cooperative's stewardship program
which involves returning
greater value to rural America
by increasin~ the association's
investment m education and
youth activities.
Available to members,
their dependents and spouses of the aglending cooper-

l\egtster

Sentinel

FOUND:
on

Brown . Puppy
Chancll8r

Dr.

304-675-5929

Lool: Ott SR 233. female retriever mht Re·
cently spayed. $1 00 Reward.

Please

call

(740!379-2737

Reward : Lost 3 mon. olcl
male tlrindte Boxer, lltlls
gk'l heartbroken, please
call304-593-264 t.

fi~&gt;rrr

ill

l[J

il•o'1.ll

, 1..' ~,

r

I('&lt;;

-~~---

c:a..p.n I RV• &amp;
Trailon

2 QQI

1\11

J

-Ill()!\"

~----

Ky. fanners manage s.olid yields despite weather
~

t

'

Part-Time Administrative
Assistant

. Card of Thanks

OUR SINCERE THANKS
We would like to thimk our Family &amp;
Friends, our Pastor Ste\'e &amp; Rita Little,
for.the wonderful service l1e performed.·
Tlwnk you to Cheshire Baptist Church
for the llleal tl~ey provided for
family &amp; jrie11ds.
Tha"k you Anderson Fu11eral Home, rhe
ptJ/Ibearers &amp; Lot:al #650.for

livESTOCK REPORT
Cows-Lower

Feeder CattleSteady/Lower

•

·their kinlfness.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

Farm:

IPCODER ·
Holzer Medical CenCer, Galllpolis, OH is
seeking a full time tP Coder. Thi &gt;position
abstracts and codes IP imd ASU charts.
Must work wi1h Physicians to properly
assign codes.

Upcoming
specials:

Required Qualifications are : RHIT
(Registered Health lnfomtallon
Technician) or CCS (Cef) ifled Coding
Specialist) is preferred. Previous Medical
Records experience reqllired . Previous
coding experience preferred .

Fed Cattle

•

SmithGM
Superstore
1911 Eastern Ave Gallipolis. Ohio

=======-:======
Help Wantid

1996

;:::~::::::::...:::====~
Long T.... Canol Homo Can!
Division

Oldsmobile

Achle\la,

120,000

miles',

Contact

Askrng · $500
740-441-5460

94 ChfY.sler Lebaron ·4drSedan_. Approx 112.~
mi. $1800. For into call,

245·5494 after 6pm
96 Neon 4 door, s·
speed. $1500 obo cai
256-1652or256·t233

Sports Utility

Help Wantwd

The Steve Hood Family
Mother, Father, Daughter &amp; Son

·Back To The

I

Card of Thanks

Basic computer skills
• Thlephone Skills
Approximately 20 Hrs. per week
Good Work environment

2006
Chevrolet,..
HHR-LT, 26k miles, ga-·
rage
kept,
loadeci
304-882-2356

02 Eddie Bauer-Ford Ex;
plorer, 102K miles, 4WD,
loaded, seats up to 7.
great shape, · great price,.
great winter 'Or aU season·
travel
74Q-44 t-7233

vehicle.:

Do ·you want to make a difference? If you
Trvcb
are compassionate and committed to
2001" Blue Dodge [)aproviding Quality Care ~orne and be a pan kota. snap on bedcover,
of our Long Term Care/Home Care team. . 62K. miles, clear litie, 6
We have the following positions available : cyl. engine, $7500.00
JOH\75-3151 .

Want To lluy

He'zer Segjgr Cars Cepter;

• RN- Evening Nursing Manqer·
IT Exempt

* LPN- PT Night Shift
• STN A - H Night Shift
* Dietary Aid- PT
Nul'!'!e Aide Class applicants

Holzer t\Misfal Uying. Galliwll§;

Wan1 to buy Junk Cars;
call 740-388.()864

.

.

.-~

WANTED: 69 Camaros
projects or restored cars •

- any condition · finders :
tee paid. Call Doug·
cell
or:
61•·203-1272

I.
'

• Resident assistant- (Can 'Iraln) 1-PT
. Holzer Assjstnll.iyjng- Jad®Qi

•Resident Assistant- PT
If inlerested , please contact:

HUMAN RESOURCES
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 4563 I
Phone: (740) 446-5105
Fax: (740) 446-5t06
EOFJADA Employer

'

For details please gi\'e Barb Pe1erson, Direc1or Cornmerciallretail space..
High traffic'
of Human Re ~urces for our Long Term Carel for rent.
count,
good
visibility .;
Home Care division a call at 740-441-340 1 or
ma1n road JocaliOO . heat
email me at oetcrson @holzcr.org or visit us on &amp; water· included ·in rent.:
the web at ww.w.holzccr.org . '
Respond lo box CLA 1~-

Equal Opportunily Employer

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

200
wv

"'ain Street, Pt. PI,·~
25550
.

I

�I

'

.

OH • Pt.

• Gall

.Sunday, November 16' 2008

wv

-;~c~a;•~•;•;~==::~~~~~~~S~~~~~~~~;..~;~~S~al;l::~~~~~~~~~~~•a~•l~~==~Apm~~~~~~*~n~~==~==~A~f~h•~.m~~~==~==~R~••~•I•~====~:;Am~n;,;~:;a~;.,,;,;::

~!
·eat:llb6ished
:aoc.tlon lor

Townhouse•
acre ~~~~~~~;;;;

. Townhou...
~--;;;0~~;;;;~--

14 Extr80Fdlnary · Property : Exceptlooal
200
Federal Funds just rt·
Spectacular view of the cattle !arm In Gallla Co. tBR Apl, WID hoo~ups. Spacious 3BR apt lo· leased tor Ln•1d Owners.
Ohio Rlv.r
·
OH.
60+
~cres satellite TV !net w/rent, cated In Gallipolis. $650 No closlflg cost and
Privale drive · off Lincoln well·dralned
bottomland close to hospital. Call month
includes water. Zf:f.'lO DOWN! Will do
Hitl,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, along Raccoon . Creek, 740-339..0362
1 dsh. sewage. No pets land
improvements.
etA 17, 200 Main St Pt with FuH Bsmt, 2 car, woods on three .sides 60+ acres pasture, bat14.0 591-5174
or Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
Pl. WV 25550
2FP on
0.6ac : in (4+)acres, to a. historical ance wooded. Stock wa- 2 br apts 6 ml hom Hal. 44H)t10
OK. 2, 3. 4 and 5 bedSpring
Valley
Est. home. Circa 1900. 5 tar pond, 2 springs, well. zer. Some utilities pd Of.
rooms
· available .
move in ready. Ap- bedrooms, 2 fir~places, 2 Farm has carried 40.45 appliances
&lt;tVt~il Tara
Townhouse 740-446·3384
For Sale ly Owner
pointment
Of'lly full . baths, 2 staircases, cows wlcal~Jes . Modem .$400/mo
..
dep. Apartments - 2BR 1.5
t• , •·
Houle on SA 588 for 740·286-5280
beautiful original wood- brick ranch s~le house 740.416-5288
or ba,·
veoC k P81·10. poot, 3BA 2 bath on !turn $750
more information and
won.., many picture win- wt finished
walk-out 388-8039
playground , (trash, sew- mltl.
utlhties included
540 ·729- 1331
pictures go to orvb.com 2-3 bedrooms, 1 bath, dews, mostly new win- basement. 937-596-6774
R
APT
·ctA. (NO) age ,
water
'pd.)
28
floors.
an-.
--:"~~-~------ 441-0194
!i42~'rent.
$425/sec. TraMr tor rertt in MercerLd . number is browning. hardwOOd
,. dows, largE! kitchen and ':':
"140-446- 7204
pro11ed septic, new roof, breakfast room. beauti- Melg• co. 5. acres 00 .,...---...,.~-- dep . Call740-367-0547
viHe $450 rent $500 de~~~~~~~~ deck,
goldfish
·pond, tully landscaped with in Landaker or Cook Ads. Apartment available now
posit No Pets No SmokNEW
CONSTRUCTION fenced in vard, 1 acre, grol.lfld pool. Sit .on tne $19,9oo. Salem ctr. nic- Rivetbend
Apts. New •=;iiCO;om;O;m;;;•r;;aa;;';.'= • ing. Call 446-2458
:.. 2 new homes . 1200 Rocksprings
Ad., wr?p a~d porch and est 18 acre field, pond Haven wv Now acceptbay ~e!VIce station
For Rent
1 $49,900. Danville
.eq. ft. 2 bf home, 2 bath, Pomeroy,
Ohio, enJOY u•e
spectacuar
t8 rng
applications
fot Jxlo;son
Pike
Lease Mobile homes &amp; lots ,
..1st n laundry, oak 6 740-992~2355
or 11iew of the Ohio River. 2 acres, co. water $46,900. HUD-subsldized,
one reQuired Call 446 _36_44 (f\O pets) in Ashton WV
J*l8l flterior doors, trim Ufr+''-9323 sza SOC'
car detached garage and Reedsville
10
acres. Bedroom Apts. Utilities lor mOre Info
304-576·2942.
"&amp;
kit pabinets, fully 3 BR 2 bath attached gEl- 2- out buildings. Would $,8,500! Gallla Co. 8 or included .• Based on 30%
equlp. . kit, 1 car gar., rage w/1 acre on Mom- make a wonderful family 10 acres $12,500! we fl- of adjusted income. Call Oflioo building located in --=="'Sa~le~s==baSement
wl · ground ingslar Road, new fur- home or bed &amp; breakfast nancel
Call 304-882-3121 , · a11ailabte Gallipol1s OH 28 · Cedar •
~ entry in rear (per- nace &amp; heat pump · Pri11ale and Picturesque
740-441 -1492 for maps for · Senior and Disabled S!. Rent· ,$450 mth. + de- Brand new 3bed 2bath
feet for finishing as a FR $125,000·740-949~2009
SPECTACULAR vtEW
or
visit "people. .
posit. 740·256·6661
on + -half acre In Pt.
or extra BR's) In Galltpo. or 740-367-7731
Serious 1nqUtres. onty, www.brunerlancf.com
.
~;;,;,;~~~;;,....., Pleasant. OWNER Fl·tis and d6es quality . fOf ~..;o,,;,;;;~,;;.;.-Ce~nl-ra•l please call 740-992-3678
Hou111 for R.nt
NANCE
AVAILABtE .
•111t 10 year 75"~ tax 3blo!H
,
2ba ,
~~~~~-~~ -~~~..;.;...;;;;;= (7 40)446·3570
CONVENIENTLY
LO· \lll!J•mu ! .~ bell. 2 h;nh . ;_,..;.,~---~~
Ar eat, newly remodabatement on dwelling. l eled
bathrooms, new
Land ~l
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD- B .m~ R ~p.. ~ tV'I d t\l\ n . ~ ~ 'AA" Government Funcls
Js ready for occupancy hardwood &amp; tile floors ,
•
_
ABLEI Townhouse apart- _\r an. w: AP H. r fnr \i-; 1 ; 11 g ~ Available for 1st lime
nowl
$145,000.
Call $155,000 304-675-4880
.345 Acres located on
&amp;....-entl/
ments,
anctror
small lll lll·ll20 - 41J46 "~ R027
home buyers who own
740-503-6734
496 Paxton Rd. Gallipo'"""'r""""
houses lor renl Call
land or have land or
lis.
Is
adequate
lor
a
mo•=T;;ownhou;;;;;;;;;;""'-1=740-44
1-11
11
for
appli-·
tbr.house
lg
kitchen,
fu
ll
ha\le
ramll~ land . zero
on
Rent/Sale wllg. Garage,
bile htlme. Has all hoOk· ~
cation &amp; 1ntormallon.
bth, laundry rm . &amp; stor- Down Easy FinanCing.
SAVINGS
$500/depos~. Or Sale by
'" " 441 - 5129
and 2 bedroom apts., - - - - - - - - - a9e. 0 ep &amp; re1· no peIS. Call to be Pre-Ouahlied.
ups 7"tV
furnished
and
unfurELLM VIEW APTS
N
.Owner 304·755·8744 oo
ew
· Haven 740-423-9728
·304-675·6113
nlslled. and houses in ·2&amp;JBR and up, Central 30 4_593_5076 .
or
Pomeroy and Middleport, Air, WID hookup. tenant 304 _882 •3900 .
Clayton, 3 br, 1990,
security deposit required, pays electric. EHO Elm ;:::;::::~=~--- 14K70
wlappiiances,
no pets. 740-992-2218
View
Ante.. 2 br.in country, .out back must
be
movecl,
a Bed, 2 Btilht Only
~ ... in New ~a~en WV Hur.l
~~~!---(304)882-301 7
$15,500
for
listings·
1 and 2 BR apatrtments . .,...--,..,..,--~- accepted 304-8B2-3177.
1100-BW-4946 ex R01 9
for rent near dOYvTltown Spring
Va lle~ ·Green 2br, 1ba, Quite Neigh· .Home, 2Bedroom, 2ba.th,
Point Pleasant. All utili- Apartments 1BA for rent bOrhood, No Smoking, vinyl siding. shingle root,
3BR 2 Balh $299 monlh.
Shop
ties paid.
No pets. $375
month. No Pets $450 month plus lllermapayne
window,
ol4tio3ae4
Closalfledsl .
Please
call 74()..446·1599
Depsolt &amp; Reference, ZOft.porch 740 _664 _4356
"l63.
..
WaterfTrashiSewer paid.
or 740-797-4356 lo·
304 ,oon
-oruv-v
Twin Ai11ers Tower is ftC740-446-6939
cated
at . Darwin
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
cepting applications for
. waiting list lor HUD sub- 4 BA house large barn, "'$2;:6~,0~00~.~---~~·
Auction
Auction
~
====;;;~:::::::::====~ sidized, 1-BA apartment large garage . county 97 Redman 16x72 2BA,
lor the elderlyJdisabled. schools 2 AC AT 775 2ba, all appliances, heat
NEW ITEMS SA!JE
call 675-6679
$550 month sec. deposit pump, $19000. Must be
OLD GLORY AUCTION
~N~o~w!"
· "'L~E~A~S~tN~G~J"'ord"'
a"n required
&amp; reference. mo11ed. 740.245·5962
LlaNSED PRACI'ICAL NURSE
65~ Pearl St . Middleport , OH
Landing 2BA &amp; 3BA 740 ' 709-9503
Governmenl lunds evaii·
AND/OR MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Monday, Nov. 17th at 6:00p.m.
Available No . Pets. Ten- 3 bedroom house lo- able tor home bu~ers
Pleasant ' Valley Hospital · is currently
.It's that time of )'ear again for our Annual
ant Responsible fm Rent r:ated ·at 1678 lincoln who a...,.n land. $0 down.
&amp; Elechic 304 ·674-0023 Heights. Pomeroy. $400 Call
toll
free
accepting applications for a lull · time
Sales to stan up for Christmas shopping :
Of
_610_0776
a month, $400 dePosit. 87?-310-2577 lor . pre-ap·
304
Licensed Practical · Nurse and/or Medical
Come oul and enjoy the fun fi lled evening.
!-;.;...;.,;.....;...,.....,...~ ,17~4::;:01~7::42;_;·1:,;9~03!...;·-~- P
e;:;:ro.:;v•:;'_ _ _;__ _
Asst. LPN's must have current West
'ood
Good
F
o
m h
·
2
br.
upslairs
wtbath.
II\/·
~
..
1
Good •·
un . n e ave our re gu ar
ingroom .
dlningroom, Very nice 2 br. in Syra- New s Bedroom homes
.Virginia license. Previous medical office
consignment auclion every Thursday.
kitchen, washroom , half cuse, 2 &amp; 3 be. in "from $214.36 per moolh.
experience or hospital related experience
JirnTaylor- Auctioneer#OO I4
bath, a"ailable Dec. 3rd, Pomeroy,
call includes many upgrades.
preferred.
. I
(740)992·2012
. !7401992-3702
delivery
&amp;
sel·up.
B
Licensed &amp; onded m avor of Slate of OH &amp; WV.
740-365-2434
Send resumes to:
d
f
Announcements ay o sale takes precedence
BeautHui Apte. at Jack·
Ohlo't 8881 Suyl
Pleasant VIUey HospitAl!
over aU rinted material.
son Estatea. 52 West- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; mymlctweathome.com
c/o Human Resources
wood Dr .. trom $365 to
74o-828~2750
$560.
740-446-2568.
2520 Valley Drive .
Rintala
Prices
Reduced 2 2006
Auction
Auction
Equal Housing Opportu - -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;='=!"""
Point Pleasant WV 25550
nity. This institution is .an ~
16x80 2 bed 2 bath, 1
Or fax: 304-675-6975 or apply on-line
Equal Opportunity Pro - 2 and 3 bedrooms. Ex1ra 2000 16x70 2 bed 1
nice! All electric, Call bath. t 1999 16x60 2
wnnw.puUes.o~~o
vider and Employeo.
740-446-4234
or bed 2 bath gas, ~ 1997
EOE
7861
Gracloue Living 1 and 2 7'"208
-ry14 x70 2 bed . 2 bath gas,
Bedroom Apts. at Village
1 2002 16xBO 3 bed 2
Ma"nor .and
Riverside Double wide for rent bath. Priced delivered
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Apts. in Middleport, from 3BA.· 2 bath, Porter are~ block~&gt;d , leveled and an·
$600 rent + deposit
.,
$327
to
$592. Lease
Day
Ph.
1
year. chored.
740-992-5064.
Equal 740367 _0654
or 740-388·0000
&amp;
Housing Opponunity.
740·388-8513
&amp;
740 _645 .3413
740-245·9215
Evenings
&amp;
weekends
Ph.
Real Estate
Real Estate
at
The
Center
Rt.
n.
740·388·8017
&amp;
Progressive ' company with · a great
740-245-9215
&amp;
w.u.
outer
ClndnnaU,
OH.
work atmosphere is currently accept·
740-794-0460
wllll other partial
;,;,;:..;,;;.;,;..;;;;;..._ _ _
ing resumes for a Graphics Designer to
Sunday, November 16th
5000
Resort Fropr•IJ
prepare ads tor a newspaper and the
IPoosler BR Suite , Mah . tables , childs table &amp;
2:00pm
newspaper web sites. The following
·~:~~~~;.matching ,refrigcrator and stove. dough
II
glassware , baskets. plales. oil lamps,
skills are highly desirable:
jar~. toy tractor, tinker toys , pewter, pots
600 0
Emplovn1e1
• QuarkXPress
pans , pool chairs:, ladder. lawn furniture.
•Photoshop
listing for a &gt;ery large auction.
website for full listing and
• Multi-Ad Creator
~~;;~.;...;~;;;.;..
•
• Adobe Acrobat
Woodland Centers, lnr..,
BV:
&lt;I
community
mental
• and be familiar with Macs.
health
agency
servicing
11956 SR 7 S
Should also han knowledge · or four·
Gc:~ llra.
Jackson.
and
(Directions: SR 7 S . turn ri ght j u ~l after nld
rolor and spot-(:olor separation. Full·
Me1gs Counties In SouthCltty Elementary)
eastem Ohio for over 30
lime position with benents. Paid .aca·
304-l13·544l OR 1·304-173-5185
years is accepting appllOWNERS WANT SOLIJ NOW!
lion, heallhcare/denlall&gt;isioo; paid
WWW.AUCTIONZIP.COM
ca ti ons for the position of
Ruumy J bcdruum , l"b&lt;1ths, li ving room ,
TERMS: Cash or check WI ID. Mu sl have
Account Clerk . ·This _ptl·
holidays, 40lk.
famil y room, dining mnrn . kitchen , laumlry.
Sition will be responsible
bank l etter of credit unless kn ow n to
Lar~~ stomge building : &lt;·overed from porch,
lor Self Pay Billing. Post·
Auction company.
Send resumes to:
1 acre und "plenty more to sec!
1ng and Reconciliatiorl ol
Matt Rodgers
Redured Price $79,900
. #2578 ' 1st and 3rd Party Cash
Receipts, PreparatiOn ol
Advertising Director at
Cash
Deposits. and purAuc:tlon
Auc:tlon
chasing. Woodland Cenlers, Inc., offers compellP.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
tl\le salaries and a com·
Antiques &amp; Collectibles Auction
prehensive
benefits
ore-mail
Friday, Noy. 21,6:00 pm Amvets
pcickege. Interested apmrodgers@mydailytribune.com
plicants shoukt apply by
Bldg: , Burnette Rd. (kanauga)
&amp;·mailing
Jesu,nes to
Gallipolis, Ohio
kmocklwoodlandcen!ers.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
org, or mailing resumes
20 Thennomcters To Include Dr. Scholls Foot
l9 t:.:'hris t..ane
to Kevan Mock, Manager
A w
comfort Headquartel'li , Kentucky Club WJpit:ture
(Direction~· SR :«iRR fn)lll Gallipol is thl!n fi rst ~~rs.H inc o=d St:~~
Of Pipe , Pockel Tin &amp;Ashlray, Dr. Pepper Hot Or
Cold, Sun Cresl Wlpicture of Bottle. 1950's
roaU to the lefl pas t BUb McConnk.k Road)
Route
1so, Gallipolis,
Royal
Crown
Cola
Red
Wlyellow
Arrow.
Dads
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
OH
45631.
w oodland
PT. PLEASANT
'
Root Beer W/picture Of ~ottle ; Smull Curdboard
e enters, Inc. Is an
Bi-leve! h~lme with _\ bedmoths. 1..5
One With Various Gallipolis, OH Businesses And
AAIEEO
living room. diniilg_ room , kitdlr ll , "'"'"h•••tl =~:::;·_____
Old Phone #S, Small Wood Sohio, Plus Others
City National l!ank, one of We st
1950's Metal Budweiser King Of Beers Sign
garage.
A ll ju,t a short ~i ,l ance to 1own .,
Real Estate
Virginia's largest community banks . is
W/picture Of Bonlc,l 2 Oz. Pepsi Bottle Red ,
new city !oic hoob!
looking for a highly motivated i ndividual
While &amp; Blue DoiS. Mccoy Black Mama Cooki e
#2598
Jar. Reading Apple Peeler (complele), Large
for our Pt. Pleasant office .
beauty shop .A.voldlng

foreclosure

rent. Clean, payments left make one
•recentty
re~led. move in. 446-3093
~Heat &amp; water Included in
'9flt.
Respond to Box 3Br 2.5 SA 1721sq. tt.

2

til
.•,

;

®

at

·LARGE

AUCTION

GRAPHICS DESIGNER

Ruction
on
Partlll estate
estates.

62 or

OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND
1:00 •

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
co. #66

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune

c

BANK TELLER ,

Spinning Wheel , Pennsylvania Lines R.R.. Tall

Lantern(no Globe), R.F. And PRR . Co. Lantern
This position

requires

cash . handling

experience (large amounts). 12 monlhs
customer service and sales ski lls, basic
desktop computer skill s and excellent
communication

skills.

Previous

teller

experience is preferred . Sales experience
a plus.
We offer a competitive rate, benefits and
incentive plan . If yoo wish to join the

bank
'

thiit's· going places, send

your

m.u~to:

(Richmond Fredrick burg And Potomac}.
Frederick Town . Ohio Dinner Bell , Cast Iron
Kenle. 1'1 . Pl .. W.Va. Flour Sacks. Cast I ron
Kenle, Green Drop Leaf Tuble .. Broad Axes,
Hatchet W/names , Com Kni ves. Old Wrenchc~
(Fordson And Olhers). 2 Old Ledgers (early
1900's Martin Ebersbach , Pomeroy). 4 Old Chairs
W/crackled Painl, Graniteware (solid White
Wi red Trim , Blue And White Swlrt), 6 Old Dolls.
Loghlning Rod Wlball , Nice Wood Adv. box,
Manitou Table Water. Manitou. Colorado.
Gallipolis Ice Co. lee Pick l'bonc #003 ,
Stoneware. Misc. Dishes, Old Picture Frames,
Glass Washboard, Medicine Cab. (doors Are 2
Washboards, Not Old Bul Cule). Small Grinding
Slone In Frame, Buggy Jack, Rocking Chair
Wlsplil Seal, Much More.

City National Bank

Check www.auctlonzip.&lt;Om For Full Listing

Human Resources

Auctioneer: L&lt;slle A. Lemley
740-J88.811S Or 740441-7766
Cooshlcheck Approved By Auc~onHr Only!!!!

Attn: Tellers- Pt. Pleasant
..p.o, Box 1527
Asblaod, KY 41105-1527
Equol Oppollllnity Employer MIFIDI V
Memlier FDIC

Nut Auction, Friday

Dec. 5

Mtlle~

Help Wartled • Gontral

~:"."'!:;Po~ol;;l~li~an;oal~~

accepting kltters 9f Interesl and resumes from
persons interested In the
poshion of Park Admlnls·
trator. The Park. Administrator is respon~ible lor
·
administration,
planning,
management and operalions of the countywide
Park District. """
t.. ...pllcants
should posses a minimum of a Bachelors Degree, experience In communtty leadership, com,
municalions, public relations, lund raising, grant
wr~ing,
administrative,
management and tlm~cial skills. Please submit
.Information to: 00 Mclntyre ·Park District. Gallia .
County Courthouse, 18
Locus t
Street, Room
!262, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631
"'"""'""'""'""'""'""'~

o.t Paid Whit You're
Wortlll ·
Olll' btat_pertorlners
make up to $12.25 after
1lx months!

You choose the type of
calls you want 10 take;
Recruit volunteers for
hon-profit organizations
Ot
Raise funds and renew
memberships toJ the
NRAI
No experience required!
No Credi1 Card Sales!
No Colleclfonst
Full and Part-lime
Positions'!
_, All Major Holidays OFF
WITHPAY I
rl Weekly Pay + Bonus
tncenti11est
./ Medical, Dental, EAP.
.
401KI
rl

Driven &amp; Delivery

~=====;;;;i;;;Drivers needed:
COL
Drivers willing to drive for
local
ready-mix com-

Call NOW to 1tart .. rn-fng your potenllall
1-881-IMC-PAYU
Ext 24~7
Apply onllno:
http;/l)oklntodtlon.com

pany. Experience is pre!erred but not necessary.
Driver must be wHNng to
do pre-m.aintenance on
trucks arJd equipment ,
ya rd/plant and other misce llaneoUs chores.
Experience
operating
equipment
and
extra·
skills such as welding a
plus. Starting pay based ·
.on experience and driV·
·ing record. Benefits in·
eluding health insurance,
allaitable after meeting
employment
requirements. Call Valley Brook
Concrete corporate office
at
to
304-773 _5519
schedule an interview

Gallipolis Career College
.
,.
1
ts accep tng resumes or
a
mathematics
tnstructor.A minimum of

Last Chance
Toeam

a

$250.00
Hiring Bonuall
Tuesday·
Wednesday
Nov. 18th· 19th
9am·3pm

&gt; $8.8(1' hr FT
~

)} Weekly Pay + Bonu1&gt;
~ Benefits

If unable to attend
, please call:
1-888~MC-PAVU

ma~emat·
111

h11p_................
""New hires must begin
. training by November
- 24th to recei~ Hiring
.____Bon_u;;;•_ __,
Sa . M
&amp; Sel'\'
rvtee anager
·ice Techntclan positions
available. Health care &amp;
Retirement plans. avaltable. Please send re-aume
to
L.LCOCAAEO.COM
or

I

BIG BEND REALTY, INC
Russe l! D . Wood, Broker
5111 Second Avenue , Gallipoli s, Ofl 4563 1

Be Su..;,And ·come Out For1bose Unique

(7411) 446-7 Jt)l

Christmls Glftol!!!

ll O~E YUU CAN MAKE IT!

New 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
SlnSfe Section Homes
stai.tlng at $1st per mo.

~

lnteOJectfon of 33 664
L"flln · M·F 9-6
Sat 1().6; Cloof!&lt;l Sunday

' www.genesiscareeis.job
s. EOE.

14~~J~3~1~4

L.__;___________..J 1..;:":·.:.::~~:!!~==:..-..:.~:..;:::J

En)Oy caring for lhe Eld·
erty1
Home Health
Aides needeci in Pt.
Pleasant and Mason
$7.50
to
$10.00/ht,
1·850·766-983.2
·· -304-766-9830

1,1 .·. . fJ·•\
,·~ ~v,;~ O~:t~et.·. · .
,·~· ~

"'

-l

Trainer Posnions
Are you Interested In a
rewartfing pos~lon.? PAIS
is
currently
seeking
full/pail lima staff lor
Pt:Mnt Pleasant, WV pro·
vkllng
residential/com·
mt.W'Iity skill training with
individuals with MRIDO.
' High schoot d"toma or
GED required. No tKperience neoeBS11ry. Cnlnf·
nal back_ground check re•
qui red. Must- ha\re ~ reliable transportation and
valid
auto
insurance.
Patd training. Hourly rate
slarllng at $7·$8,00/hour.
Please
cat!
1
304-373-1011 oo 1011 free
at 1-&amp;n-373-1011.

'•'
~..

•

''·

•

·t·

,,

•.

Salam
· Township,
Meigs County will
. sell the following two
trucks by sealed bid,
In at 11 condition.
Tile
Townohip
rHtrvH tile ~ghl to
accept or reject any
or all .lllda. Both
trucks are In good
running
condition
and have been wall
maintained.
Both
trucko can · be oeen
by appoln1menl by
calling 74tJ.669-3091 .
Bids ant to be In by
6:00
pm
on
November 21, 2008
and will be opened
6:30
. pm
on
November 24, 2008 at
the Township Fire ·

•'

1

Senior Discount*.
when you pay for a 6 or 12.
month subscription on you:t:
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do .. :
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off o} mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

Rock!Metal Band Looking for singer, range from
Skynard to Pantera, Serious Inquiries· Only, conlac! OJ (740)992-9904,
Mark 740-416·1090

4§allipolif J)ailp otribu"e
Joint Jlealant 1\.tliltn

.The Daily Sentinel·

6unbap tltimel -6ei1tinel
.

.

:

'

.

•..•.•...• ..•.•.............
S~bscriber's

Now Htnng Experienced,
waltslaff, oooks, dishwashers &amp; delivery drivers appl~ · In person
Harry's
Famous
'Hot
Dog.s NeW Haven

~

....

Name ______

Address _______...:_..:.,__
City/State/Zip _ _____:c.__:__ __
Phone,_· _ _ _ _ _ _ __..:,.._

HoahhCant

Home Health Care aides
needed
immediatefy
must be certified or haVe.
1 year experience bo- ·
nuses available conUfct
or.
Shetley.
1-866-388-11 00.

Kay

J
I

.,
I

I

1

Mail

I

or drop Clff thla coupon along

I

wllh 1 copy of your photo-10 to

1

: Ohio ~lley Pul!llshlng

P.O. Box 469,

Galll~lla,

1

OH 45631

Trenaportatlon,
Non-Collutlon
Single-wide
mobile Olive
Dlitrlct ' Ton Office, Allldavtt
Form homo (approo.
. ·Meigs County, Long
Tueoday, November referred to In the . 840 sq. 11.) ,
BoHom, OH 45743
251h, 2008 at 1 :00 Notice to Bidders ..
611.90 Stele Route PERFORMANCE
· p.m. Tho otructureo Open House wtll be
124, Olive Townshlp1 GUARANTEE :
are located on the held
Tuesday, Meigs County. Long
$500.00
right-Of-way required November 20, 2008 Bottom . OH 45743 ·Item No. 15 Parcel
lor
the !ram 8:00 · a.m. • 2:00
PERFORMANCE
No . 16· One (I ) Story
tmprovamon11re1acatl
p.m. for the Items GUARANTEE:
Wood Frame Home
an · of Stale Route listed below.
$500.00
with block basement
124;
The
struclures ·Item No.8 Parcel No. 61606 S1a1e Route
MEG·I24-56.02
located
on
the 30- On&lt;! (I) story 124, Olive Township ,
Bids are to
be parcels Indicated are wood home ·
Meigs County, Long
oubmltled only on a described as follows:
62102 Slate Roota Bottom, OH 45743
-Item No.1 Parcel
Bid · Proposal farm
124, Olive Township,
PERFORMANCE
(REForm 79, Revised No. 12- One·l story Meigs County, Long
GUARANTEE :
1012006) prescribed wood tramed, vinyl Bottom. OH 45743 $2,000.00
by thl Dlractor of aiding house 61512 PERFORMANCE
·Item No. 16 Pa rcel
Tranoportatron .
S.R.
124,
Olive, GUARANTEE:
No. 11· 1998 Broad
Melga $1000.00
Copies of lhe Bid Township,
more Ellie mobile
Proposal Form and County,
Long -ltam No.9 Parcel No. home &amp; deck 61644
jlertlnent Notice to Bottom, OH 45743 33· 1968 Fleetwood State Route
124.
Bidders
containing PERFORMANCE
single-wide
mobile Olive
Township,
House
on
State Information
GUARANTEE:
home (approx. 774 Meigs County, Long
regarding
each $2500.00 ,
Route
124
near
aq. ft.) . wl1h wood
BoHom, OH 45743
Salem Centar. · All
blddar'a
·Item No.2 Parcel No. deck . and covered
PERFORMANCE
bids ant to be mailed
responalbi!Hy may be 12· Block Garage
entry porch
GUARANTEE :
to
the
following
obtained at the below 61512 S.R. 124, Olive 61240 Slate Route . $1,000.00
address.
lls1ed address:
Township,
Meigs
1240 Otlve Township, -Item No. 17 P~ rcel
· Salem
Towne hlp Ohio Department of County,
Long
Meigs County, Long No. 17· Wood Frame
26310 Tranoportatlan
Bottom , OH 45743 Shed &amp; Shelter 61644
Bottom, OH 45743
Trustee•
Legion
Road
338 Muaklngum Drive PERFORMANCE
PERFORMANCE
S1a1e Route
124,
Langsville,
Ohio
Marietta, OR 45750 •, GUARANTEE:
GUARANTEE:
Dillie
Township,
. 45741
(740) 373-0212
$500.00
•
$1000.00
Meigs County, Long
11!118 Chevrolol gao
. II you have questions •Item No. 3 Parcel No. ·Item No. I 0 Parcel BoHom, OH 457 4;1
1600 gat Watar tank
conblct:
14· 2003 Fleetwood . No. 34- One (1) story
PERFORMANCE
12,980 mllos
Ohio Deplirtment of 14' X 46' Slngle-wlda waad home with,
GUARANTEE:
VB 366 cubic Inch
mobile
home attached garage
$200.00
· Tranoportatlon
5 speed transmission
Dlsl~cl Ten
(approx. 736 sq. ft.)
-lteril No. 18 Parcel
61256 'Slate Route
61 ·amps. All.
Office of Real Es1ato
61550 S.R, 124, Olive
124, Olive Township, No. 17· Log . Cabin
2 apeed rear aole
Connie Gillum· Rul Township,
Melgo
Meigs County, Long
with block basement
Rear springs 23,000
Eolole Admlnlttrator
County,
Long
61644 Stale Route
Bottom, OH 45743
(740)568.3959
Bottom, OH 45743
lb.
with
IUKIIIary
PERFORMANCE
124, Olive Township;
or Sent Popper (740) PERFORMANCE
GUARANTEE:
Meigs County, Long
springe
Front and' real tow
Bottom, OH 45743
568·3931
GUARANTEE:
$1500.00
hooks.
1
Certified
checka, · $1000.00
·Item No. 11 Parcel
PERFORMANCE
1979 Chevrolet gao
official bank checkt, • Item No. 4 ·Parcel
No. 13 One (1) Story GUARANTEE:
or money orders ··No. 14· Deck (approx. Wood Frame Hause $2,000.00
'750 gal. Water tank
7,383 mllaa
with block basement (11)16
·(persOnal checks and 260 sq. II.)
5 tpeed tr-namlsslon cash
are 81550 S.R .. 124, Olive 61522 Slate Route
366 gaa/4 bl carb
. unacceptable),
T""nshi'p.
Melga
124, Olive Township,
9(100 lb lronllllle
. _payable
. to County,
Lang
Meigs County, Long
12000 lb. !rant spring
TREASURER, STATE Bottom, OH 45743 Bottom, OH 45743
18500'1b. rear axle
OF OHIO In the exact PERFORMANCE
PERFORMANCE
23000 rear ap~lig
amount of the bid lor GUARANTEE:
GUARANTEE:
(11) 14, 16,19
$2,500.00
Hch ""'· covering $250.00
·Item No. 12 Parcel
all s11Uc1ureo listed In ·hem No. 5 parcel No.
No. 13 One (I) Metal
Public Notice
uld Item mutt be 15- One 1 story
flied with a signed haute with metal Storage Unit
INVITATION
TO Bid PrOpotal lor each aiding ·
61522 Stale Route
BIDDERS .
· Hem. In lhe evont 61584 S.R. 124, Olive 124, Olive Township,
are
not Townohlp,
Meigs Meigs County, Long
Sealed bids will be bids
received · by
the accepted, tho checka County,
Lang
Bottom· OH 45743
Director
of will be returned to Bottom. OH 45743 PERFORMANCE
. Tranoportallon, State the bidders. The Bid PERFORMAI'ICE ·
GUARANTEE :
$1118.00
of Ohio, unlll 1 :00 Propoeal ·and tho .GUARANTEE:
·Item No. 13 Parcel
p.m.,
Tuesday, • Notice to Blddaro $2500.00
November 25th• 2008 . ahall be lncorportlled· Item No. 6 Parcel No. No .. 13 One (1) Story
et
the
Ohio
In .and plllde pllfl of ·· 15·' One wOod two (2) Garage 61522 Slate
Department
of the 1111111 contrac1 car garege
.
flou1e
124, Olive
Meigs .
Tranaporta!lon,
- - the state· 61584 S.R. 124, Olive Township,
Long
Dlatrlct Ton Qlllco,
and tile oucceaalul Township, .
Melgo · County,
Bottom, OH 45743
338
Musklngum
bidder.. Tile Director County,
Long
Drive,
Ohio ol
Transportation Bottom. OH 45743 PERFORMANCE
GUARANTEE:
lor lht p~~rchue ond raerves the ~ght to PERFORMANCE
removal
of
the rojict any or all bldt GUARANTEE:
$200.00
·!tom No. 14 Parcel
alruc1unts deacrlbed and
to
waive $250.00
·
In the Invitation. Bkla technicalities.
• lte'lf No. 7 Parcel No. 13 One (1 ) Fence
6f522
will be opened at 1ho Each bidder must No,
29
1992 ond Dock,
Ohio Deptlrlment of properly execute the Fleming· 14' X 60' State Route · 124,

Ma-,

1

·

Public Notices in Newsj~ar&gt;&lt;r,s. l
Your !light to Kno w , Delivered Right to Your ur•or·.;

NOTICE.S

If so, you qualify for a

, Mullaal

GOODTIMES BAR IS
NEEDING ENERGETIC, .
PROFESSIONAL,BARTENOER'S
~AITRESES,
BIKINI
BAR,
DANCERS AND A SE·
CURITY/OOOR
MAN,
MUST HAVE
GREAT
PERSONALITY,
AND
DRIVE
TO
MAKE
· GREAT
MONEY.APPLY
AT 122 B HUNTINGTON
R0 (RT2,) NEXT TO
THE LOCKS AND· DAM.
,IN GALLIPOLIS · FERRY
wV.~· 578-2220 ASK
FOR JOHN G, GOOD
. PAY, AND FUN .WORK.

BLIC

.. .A~·'.

.

siShcc.com.

Wv

ia'

(Dire&lt;l iuns: SR 160 N of Holzer tum righl
SR 554 then right on Bulaville hou&gt;e on leli
past Prospect Rd)l
rloor .plan ranch with altac:hcd garage
storage orferet.l in detached garaagc.
Bedrnums. living · mom open to kitchen i
dini11g. Over 12.8 acre... induded
R1:dured Price $ 149,9!HI
U5RI
#2598

Mel&lt;a FT &amp; PT CNAs for
evontng &amp; nlghl shifts. 11
intereat,ct, please con.tact Misty S1r~er at
I (866)728·5687·
or
misty.straderOgene-

Ext: •25&amp;
Apply On11no:

master's .degree in
s ·s ~ · ed
rc 1 r... '1uu ·
Please email a CO\"er jet.
ter and resume to jdanickl@gai!lJJoliscareercol"'R~JJj'Ql,;Z~'IIP~'III"iri•i.lJ~rw'---·
lege.edu or fax jt to
80 Hr. Anprentlce
740 446 4124
.,....
~;,
,.,,;
·
.;;;;!.
·
!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Miner
Class MSHA - 24
....
Go••mm•nt &amp; Fed•al Hr. Class WV Mine ForJob
man Claes Sale1y Con·
==:;;~::o:O'=::a:::"' sulating Service Whit·
- POSTAL. JOBS
Co Toalning Company
(304)·372-8340
$17.89-$28.27/HA., now ~~~~-~-hiring. For application Youth case
Manager
and free go11emment job .needed for worldorce ~
info, call American As- vei9flment program ln.
soc.
-of
Labor West VIrginia. Duties in·
1-913-599-8226, 24/llrs. etude gooup presenla&lt;;~rn p. serv.
tlons,
devl\'loping
resources,
racilltatl.,g
POST OFFI CE . NOW meetln"s and worltshops •
HIRING avg. Pay $2&lt;1/hr assessmen1s, data entry,
or
$571&lt;/yr,
Includes ft1o
mtnaljOiilanl and
Fed.Ben, OT. Place by progressive case manadSource, not affiliated
with USPS who hires. agement.
Must enjoy
. 403_2562
•
worldng
with.
the youth
1 866
...,;,;,;;,;,;;,;;;;;;,,..,..,,.. population!
Tra11el reHelp Wanted~ General qu!recf. Position requires
~~--~,..;;;;;~;;;;;; a BAIBS anti at least 1
Ohio
vatley
Home years expelience in iden·
Health , Inc. hiring Home ti~lng , developing and
Health
Aides.. STNA, securing resources for
C N~, ~H HA, PCA may diverse population .
Exapply at 1480 Jackson cellent full-time opportuPike,. Gallipolis, Ohio or nity
with
befiefits.
phone 74()..441-1393 for Please Forward Cover
more info . Competitive .Letter and Resume 10
wages,
mileage reim· wmoriterossoOrosspmv.
burserilent and benefits com Equal Opponunity
including health lnsur- Employer/Program
ance &amp; much more.
· Auxiliary Aids and Serv~-::""~~---.----- ices ar&amp; available upon
An EK~eUe nt way to earn request
money. The New AVon.
Call
Marilyn
Modic:al
304-882·2645
AVON! AU Areas! To B~:~y
or Sell Shirley Spears Certified ' Nursing Assis304 _67 •v- 1429
tant lull tJme and tempoQpmino's r=~ow hiring safe rary (90-day) work in 114
drivers ar all locations. bed long term care State
must be 18yos. old. Apply laclttty.
Full-time ernpto\iment offers an ex1n pe
rson
'
tenslve benefit package,
- - - -- - - -,, including State Civil
Real Estate
Seovice Retlremenl, eam
up to 15 days IIBC8tion
per year, 18 days sick
·Purcba.w No"' and leave and 12 plus paid
holidays: healtMife mReceive Up to
surarw::e ' is
available.
$7500
Salary
commensurate
with experience.
Must
credit
have a wv CNA cenlllcation to wof"l{ in West
Virginia, and must pos-sess either a GEO or
high &gt;choo t diploma. Ap·
pllcations rna~ be plct&lt;ed
up ·. at Lakin Ho&amp;pi1at,
Lakin
WV,
Monday·
through Friday, 8:00 a.m.
- 4:00 p.m. Lak&lt;l Hosp;.
tat Is an EEO/AA em- ·
ployer.
lakin Hospl,.l
conductS
pre-employment drug/alcohol IBst·
W&gt;g, Employes may be
exposed to streamline or
secondhand smoke.
a

Are ·~eu··Ga,

~.,.

INTERVIEWS

~:::""::"-::'"""":~;;;;;;

Galllpplls. Career CO\iege
is accepting resumes tor
an acOOt!nting inslouctor.'
A minimum of a Bachelor's degree in accounting is required. Please
ernail a co11er letter and
resume to jdanickiCgaiiipoljscareercollege .edu or
fax it to 740 _ 446 ~ 4 124

a...

~YIItog. .

The Board of Pal'tl; Commissioners of lhe qo
Mcintyre Pa111. District Is

Education

Poil\eroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

!

·----------·····-··········-----·

BULLETIN BOARD
.

·
· Stic;ks &amp;Stones Logging
.. &amp; Firewood ·
W~ accept CAA .&amp; HEAP

446-6783 - 446-4112
645·2480
O'Dell :True, Vaiue l:.umber
Ceiling Fans bring warm air down
from ·lh.~ ceiling_inexpe~ively.
Hunter Ufetime WarrantY Ceiling
Fans Siarting itt $89.95
·
81 Vine St , M-F 7-6, Sal8-5, Sun, 10:4

BASKET BINGO
Mondy, Nov. 17
5:30pm
3399 St. Rt. 141
Gallipolis, OH'
Sponsored by the
Gallipolis Wrestling Team

Holiday Friends &amp; Family
VIP E\renl
Extra 11l'ro off almost everything
Including Sale and Clearance
prices.
· Exaludtl Eleetrontes, Great Prlctt ltemt and
Kenmore Pro ~ . Additional •xclusiooa flP91Y.
IMUIN .. NOVEMBER 17, 2008

'Iii

a pm onlyl

20% off All KenMore
APpliances
Excludu Ktnmort Pro"". countenop
m!CfOWal/tt, Grett Pr1ct ltemlam:t clouovtl.
,
orter good thru 11!17108 .
PLUS No Pl)'rTltllW No 'nttf"HI for 12 months

On ony
"""~ """' $389
with yoor...,.. oerd
Fret Slllndard cklllvery Atttr onNnt or flllfJ.In
rtball on any appllan&lt;:a over $398
Sears of Gallipolis

446·1546

.

.

~

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
.,
K&amp;l Catering
Wiih Thanksgiving drawing near
and cleaning left to do.
Let. us prepare the dinner and
deliver i.t to you.
10·12 ~ervings $99 .60
20·24$ervings $199.20
Call us at 740·446·9319 to order
your Thanksgiving Dinner no .later
than Monday, November 24th .
Your dinner will be deWvered on
Wednesday, November 26th
before 5 :00pm

FLU CLINIC
Office of Ed Ayers, MD
Pleasant Valley HOspital
Medical Office Building
Suite 118

November 20
9 am- Noon
1 pm to 4 pm
Bring insuranc;e information
For more information
pleasfl call,

(304) 675-6015
..
Serenity ·House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1·800·942-9577

''Basket Games
Carleton School
Thursday, Nov. 20

6 pm

Proceeds to Benefit
Meigs HS Baseball Team

BRISTOL NASCAR
PACKAGE
M!lrCh 21, 2009
to March 23, 2009
Includes motorcoach
lransportation, tickets to lhe race,
parking and two nights hotel
· accommodations
$469/person (double occupancy)
$439/parson (triple occupancy)
$419/person (quad occupancy)
$599/person (single occupancy)
Staying at the Hampton Inn In
Princeton , WV
PERFECT CHRISTMAS GIFTI
. We can provide a certificate for
presentation during holidays
LIMITED SEATS!
No refunds unless lrip 'is cancelled
We accepl cash, credil cards ,
checks and money orders
To make a reservation please call
PVH Community Relations,
(304) 675~4340, Elct. 1326

·Gallia County Knife Club meeting
Sunday, November 16th. 2:00pm
Everyone Welcome
For more Information call: . •
446-6952 or 339·2206
after 5:00pm

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT
Great Rates
Personal Service
Call for a quote

.ThEil Lynch Agency
322 .second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-8235
800:447-8235

Slug Shoot
Sunday, November 16th
Gallia

C0 unly Gun Club'
12 pm

·?

Any Ohio Legal Deer Gun

Gallia County Democrats

Thank You
Dinner
EVERYbNE WELCOME
Monday, November 17th
6pm
Ariel Theatre
2nd Ave. Gallipolis
For More Information call

CALLING ALL MILITARY
FAMILIES &amp; FRIENDS :
HELP !!
River Cities Miilary Family
Support· Group needs names and
addresses ol deployed lroops in
order to send care packages and
Chrislmas Cards to those troops
who will be away from home this
holiday season. Troop Names and
Addresses are needed by Fnday,
November 21 1If you /lave loved
ones in the U.S . Military or know
someone who is serving our
country overseas, please call or
e-maillhe names and addresses
to the following :
Karen at 388-9851
Peg at 446-7194 (after 6 :00pm)
mcw2947@yahoo.com
ALWAYS REMEMBER TO
II

�I

'

.

OH • Pt.

• Gall

.Sunday, November 16' 2008

wv

-;~c~a;•~•;•;~==::~~~~~~~S~~~~~~~~;..~;~~S~al;l::~~~~~~~~~~~•a~•l~~==~Apm~~~~~~*~n~~==~==~A~f~h•~.m~~~==~==~R~••~•I•~====~:;Am~n;,;~:;a~;.,,;,;::

~!
·eat:llb6ished
:aoc.tlon lor

Townhouse•
acre ~~~~~~~;;;;

. Townhou...
~--;;;0~~;;;;~--

14 Extr80Fdlnary · Property : Exceptlooal
200
Federal Funds just rt·
Spectacular view of the cattle !arm In Gallla Co. tBR Apl, WID hoo~ups. Spacious 3BR apt lo· leased tor Ln•1d Owners.
Ohio Rlv.r
·
OH.
60+
~cres satellite TV !net w/rent, cated In Gallipolis. $650 No closlflg cost and
Privale drive · off Lincoln well·dralned
bottomland close to hospital. Call month
includes water. Zf:f.'lO DOWN! Will do
Hitl,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, along Raccoon . Creek, 740-339..0362
1 dsh. sewage. No pets land
improvements.
etA 17, 200 Main St Pt with FuH Bsmt, 2 car, woods on three .sides 60+ acres pasture, bat14.0 591-5174
or Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
Pl. WV 25550
2FP on
0.6ac : in (4+)acres, to a. historical ance wooded. Stock wa- 2 br apts 6 ml hom Hal. 44H)t10
OK. 2, 3. 4 and 5 bedSpring
Valley
Est. home. Circa 1900. 5 tar pond, 2 springs, well. zer. Some utilities pd Of.
rooms
· available .
move in ready. Ap- bedrooms, 2 fir~places, 2 Farm has carried 40.45 appliances
&lt;tVt~il Tara
Townhouse 740-446·3384
For Sale ly Owner
pointment
Of'lly full . baths, 2 staircases, cows wlcal~Jes . Modem .$400/mo
..
dep. Apartments - 2BR 1.5
t• , •·
Houle on SA 588 for 740·286-5280
beautiful original wood- brick ranch s~le house 740.416-5288
or ba,·
veoC k P81·10. poot, 3BA 2 bath on !turn $750
more information and
won.., many picture win- wt finished
walk-out 388-8039
playground , (trash, sew- mltl.
utlhties included
540 ·729- 1331
pictures go to orvb.com 2-3 bedrooms, 1 bath, dews, mostly new win- basement. 937-596-6774
R
APT
·ctA. (NO) age ,
water
'pd.)
28
floors.
an-.
--:"~~-~------ 441-0194
!i42~'rent.
$425/sec. TraMr tor rertt in MercerLd . number is browning. hardwOOd
,. dows, largE! kitchen and ':':
"140-446- 7204
pro11ed septic, new roof, breakfast room. beauti- Melg• co. 5. acres 00 .,...---...,.~-- dep . Call740-367-0547
viHe $450 rent $500 de~~~~~~~~ deck,
goldfish
·pond, tully landscaped with in Landaker or Cook Ads. Apartment available now
posit No Pets No SmokNEW
CONSTRUCTION fenced in vard, 1 acre, grol.lfld pool. Sit .on tne $19,9oo. Salem ctr. nic- Rivetbend
Apts. New •=;iiCO;om;O;m;;;•r;;aa;;';.'= • ing. Call 446-2458
:.. 2 new homes . 1200 Rocksprings
Ad., wr?p a~d porch and est 18 acre field, pond Haven wv Now acceptbay ~e!VIce station
For Rent
1 $49,900. Danville
.eq. ft. 2 bf home, 2 bath, Pomeroy,
Ohio, enJOY u•e
spectacuar
t8 rng
applications
fot Jxlo;son
Pike
Lease Mobile homes &amp; lots ,
..1st n laundry, oak 6 740-992~2355
or 11iew of the Ohio River. 2 acres, co. water $46,900. HUD-subsldized,
one reQuired Call 446 _36_44 (f\O pets) in Ashton WV
J*l8l flterior doors, trim Ufr+''-9323 sza SOC'
car detached garage and Reedsville
10
acres. Bedroom Apts. Utilities lor mOre Info
304-576·2942.
"&amp;
kit pabinets, fully 3 BR 2 bath attached gEl- 2- out buildings. Would $,8,500! Gallla Co. 8 or included .• Based on 30%
equlp. . kit, 1 car gar., rage w/1 acre on Mom- make a wonderful family 10 acres $12,500! we fl- of adjusted income. Call Oflioo building located in --=="'Sa~le~s==baSement
wl · ground ingslar Road, new fur- home or bed &amp; breakfast nancel
Call 304-882-3121 , · a11ailabte Gallipol1s OH 28 · Cedar •
~ entry in rear (per- nace &amp; heat pump · Pri11ale and Picturesque
740-441 -1492 for maps for · Senior and Disabled S!. Rent· ,$450 mth. + de- Brand new 3bed 2bath
feet for finishing as a FR $125,000·740-949~2009
SPECTACULAR vtEW
or
visit "people. .
posit. 740·256·6661
on + -half acre In Pt.
or extra BR's) In Galltpo. or 740-367-7731
Serious 1nqUtres. onty, www.brunerlancf.com
.
~;;,;,;~~~;;,....., Pleasant. OWNER Fl·tis and d6es quality . fOf ~..;o,,;,;;;~,;;.;.-Ce~nl-ra•l please call 740-992-3678
Hou111 for R.nt
NANCE
AVAILABtE .
•111t 10 year 75"~ tax 3blo!H
,
2ba ,
~~~~~-~~ -~~~..;.;...;;;;;= (7 40)446·3570
CONVENIENTLY
LO· \lll!J•mu ! .~ bell. 2 h;nh . ;_,..;.,~---~~
Ar eat, newly remodabatement on dwelling. l eled
bathrooms, new
Land ~l
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD- B .m~ R ~p.. ~ tV'I d t\l\ n . ~ ~ 'AA" Government Funcls
Js ready for occupancy hardwood &amp; tile floors ,
•
_
ABLEI Townhouse apart- _\r an. w: AP H. r fnr \i-; 1 ; 11 g ~ Available for 1st lime
nowl
$145,000.
Call $155,000 304-675-4880
.345 Acres located on
&amp;....-entl/
ments,
anctror
small lll lll·ll20 - 41J46 "~ R027
home buyers who own
740-503-6734
496 Paxton Rd. Gallipo'"""'r""""
houses lor renl Call
land or have land or
lis.
Is
adequate
lor
a
mo•=T;;ownhou;;;;;;;;;;""'-1=740-44
1-11
11
for
appli-·
tbr.house
lg
kitchen,
fu
ll
ha\le
ramll~ land . zero
on
Rent/Sale wllg. Garage,
bile htlme. Has all hoOk· ~
cation &amp; 1ntormallon.
bth, laundry rm . &amp; stor- Down Easy FinanCing.
SAVINGS
$500/depos~. Or Sale by
'" " 441 - 5129
and 2 bedroom apts., - - - - - - - - - a9e. 0 ep &amp; re1· no peIS. Call to be Pre-Ouahlied.
ups 7"tV
furnished
and
unfurELLM VIEW APTS
N
.Owner 304·755·8744 oo
ew
· Haven 740-423-9728
·304-675·6113
nlslled. and houses in ·2&amp;JBR and up, Central 30 4_593_5076 .
or
Pomeroy and Middleport, Air, WID hookup. tenant 304 _882 •3900 .
Clayton, 3 br, 1990,
security deposit required, pays electric. EHO Elm ;:::;::::~=~--- 14K70
wlappiiances,
no pets. 740-992-2218
View
Ante.. 2 br.in country, .out back must
be
movecl,
a Bed, 2 Btilht Only
~ ... in New ~a~en WV Hur.l
~~~!---(304)882-301 7
$15,500
for
listings·
1 and 2 BR apatrtments . .,...--,..,..,--~- accepted 304-8B2-3177.
1100-BW-4946 ex R01 9
for rent near dOYvTltown Spring
Va lle~ ·Green 2br, 1ba, Quite Neigh· .Home, 2Bedroom, 2ba.th,
Point Pleasant. All utili- Apartments 1BA for rent bOrhood, No Smoking, vinyl siding. shingle root,
3BR 2 Balh $299 monlh.
Shop
ties paid.
No pets. $375
month. No Pets $450 month plus lllermapayne
window,
ol4tio3ae4
Closalfledsl .
Please
call 74()..446·1599
Depsolt &amp; Reference, ZOft.porch 740 _664 _4356
"l63.
..
WaterfTrashiSewer paid.
or 740-797-4356 lo·
304 ,oon
-oruv-v
Twin Ai11ers Tower is ftC740-446-6939
cated
at . Darwin
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
cepting applications for
. waiting list lor HUD sub- 4 BA house large barn, "'$2;:6~,0~00~.~---~~·
Auction
Auction
~
====;;;~:::::::::====~ sidized, 1-BA apartment large garage . county 97 Redman 16x72 2BA,
lor the elderlyJdisabled. schools 2 AC AT 775 2ba, all appliances, heat
NEW ITEMS SA!JE
call 675-6679
$550 month sec. deposit pump, $19000. Must be
OLD GLORY AUCTION
~N~o~w!"
· "'L~E~A~S~tN~G~J"'ord"'
a"n required
&amp; reference. mo11ed. 740.245·5962
LlaNSED PRACI'ICAL NURSE
65~ Pearl St . Middleport , OH
Landing 2BA &amp; 3BA 740 ' 709-9503
Governmenl lunds evaii·
AND/OR MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Monday, Nov. 17th at 6:00p.m.
Available No . Pets. Ten- 3 bedroom house lo- able tor home bu~ers
Pleasant ' Valley Hospital · is currently
.It's that time of )'ear again for our Annual
ant Responsible fm Rent r:ated ·at 1678 lincoln who a...,.n land. $0 down.
&amp; Elechic 304 ·674-0023 Heights. Pomeroy. $400 Call
toll
free
accepting applications for a lull · time
Sales to stan up for Christmas shopping :
Of
_610_0776
a month, $400 dePosit. 87?-310-2577 lor . pre-ap·
304
Licensed Practical · Nurse and/or Medical
Come oul and enjoy the fun fi lled evening.
!-;.;...;.,;.....;...,.....,...~ ,17~4::;:01~7::42;_;·1:,;9~03!...;·-~- P
e;:;:ro.:;v•:;'_ _ _;__ _
Asst. LPN's must have current West
'ood
Good
F
o
m h
·
2
br.
upslairs
wtbath.
II\/·
~
..
1
Good •·
un . n e ave our re gu ar
ingroom .
dlningroom, Very nice 2 br. in Syra- New s Bedroom homes
.Virginia license. Previous medical office
consignment auclion every Thursday.
kitchen, washroom , half cuse, 2 &amp; 3 be. in "from $214.36 per moolh.
experience or hospital related experience
JirnTaylor- Auctioneer#OO I4
bath, a"ailable Dec. 3rd, Pomeroy,
call includes many upgrades.
preferred.
. I
(740)992·2012
. !7401992-3702
delivery
&amp;
sel·up.
B
Licensed &amp; onded m avor of Slate of OH &amp; WV.
740-365-2434
Send resumes to:
d
f
Announcements ay o sale takes precedence
BeautHui Apte. at Jack·
Ohlo't 8881 Suyl
Pleasant VIUey HospitAl!
over aU rinted material.
son Estatea. 52 West- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; mymlctweathome.com
c/o Human Resources
wood Dr .. trom $365 to
74o-828~2750
$560.
740-446-2568.
2520 Valley Drive .
Rintala
Prices
Reduced 2 2006
Auction
Auction
Equal Housing Opportu - -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;='=!"""
Point Pleasant WV 25550
nity. This institution is .an ~
16x80 2 bed 2 bath, 1
Or fax: 304-675-6975 or apply on-line
Equal Opportunity Pro - 2 and 3 bedrooms. Ex1ra 2000 16x70 2 bed 1
nice! All electric, Call bath. t 1999 16x60 2
wnnw.puUes.o~~o
vider and Employeo.
740-446-4234
or bed 2 bath gas, ~ 1997
EOE
7861
Gracloue Living 1 and 2 7'"208
-ry14 x70 2 bed . 2 bath gas,
Bedroom Apts. at Village
1 2002 16xBO 3 bed 2
Ma"nor .and
Riverside Double wide for rent bath. Priced delivered
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Apts. in Middleport, from 3BA.· 2 bath, Porter are~ block~&gt;d , leveled and an·
$600 rent + deposit
.,
$327
to
$592. Lease
Day
Ph.
1
year. chored.
740-992-5064.
Equal 740367 _0654
or 740-388·0000
&amp;
Housing Opponunity.
740·388-8513
&amp;
740 _645 .3413
740-245·9215
Evenings
&amp;
weekends
Ph.
Real Estate
Real Estate
at
The
Center
Rt.
n.
740·388·8017
&amp;
Progressive ' company with · a great
740-245-9215
&amp;
w.u.
outer
ClndnnaU,
OH.
work atmosphere is currently accept·
740-794-0460
wllll other partial
;,;,;:..;,;;.;,;..;;;;;..._ _ _
ing resumes for a Graphics Designer to
Sunday, November 16th
5000
Resort Fropr•IJ
prepare ads tor a newspaper and the
IPoosler BR Suite , Mah . tables , childs table &amp;
2:00pm
newspaper web sites. The following
·~:~~~~;.matching ,refrigcrator and stove. dough
II
glassware , baskets. plales. oil lamps,
skills are highly desirable:
jar~. toy tractor, tinker toys , pewter, pots
600 0
Emplovn1e1
• QuarkXPress
pans , pool chairs:, ladder. lawn furniture.
•Photoshop
listing for a &gt;ery large auction.
website for full listing and
• Multi-Ad Creator
~~;;~.;...;~;;;.;..
•
• Adobe Acrobat
Woodland Centers, lnr..,
BV:
&lt;I
community
mental
• and be familiar with Macs.
health
agency
servicing
11956 SR 7 S
Should also han knowledge · or four·
Gc:~ llra.
Jackson.
and
(Directions: SR 7 S . turn ri ght j u ~l after nld
rolor and spot-(:olor separation. Full·
Me1gs Counties In SouthCltty Elementary)
eastem Ohio for over 30
lime position with benents. Paid .aca·
304-l13·544l OR 1·304-173-5185
years is accepting appllOWNERS WANT SOLIJ NOW!
lion, heallhcare/denlall&gt;isioo; paid
WWW.AUCTIONZIP.COM
ca ti ons for the position of
Ruumy J bcdruum , l"b&lt;1ths, li ving room ,
TERMS: Cash or check WI ID. Mu sl have
Account Clerk . ·This _ptl·
holidays, 40lk.
famil y room, dining mnrn . kitchen , laumlry.
Sition will be responsible
bank l etter of credit unless kn ow n to
Lar~~ stomge building : &lt;·overed from porch,
lor Self Pay Billing. Post·
Auction company.
Send resumes to:
1 acre und "plenty more to sec!
1ng and Reconciliatiorl ol
Matt Rodgers
Redured Price $79,900
. #2578 ' 1st and 3rd Party Cash
Receipts, PreparatiOn ol
Advertising Director at
Cash
Deposits. and purAuc:tlon
Auc:tlon
chasing. Woodland Cenlers, Inc., offers compellP.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
tl\le salaries and a com·
Antiques &amp; Collectibles Auction
prehensive
benefits
ore-mail
Friday, Noy. 21,6:00 pm Amvets
pcickege. Interested apmrodgers@mydailytribune.com
plicants shoukt apply by
Bldg: , Burnette Rd. (kanauga)
&amp;·mailing
Jesu,nes to
Gallipolis, Ohio
kmocklwoodlandcen!ers.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
org, or mailing resumes
20 Thennomcters To Include Dr. Scholls Foot
l9 t:.:'hris t..ane
to Kevan Mock, Manager
A w
comfort Headquartel'li , Kentucky Club WJpit:ture
(Direction~· SR :«iRR fn)lll Gallipol is thl!n fi rst ~~rs.H inc o=d St:~~
Of Pipe , Pockel Tin &amp;Ashlray, Dr. Pepper Hot Or
Cold, Sun Cresl Wlpicture of Bottle. 1950's
roaU to the lefl pas t BUb McConnk.k Road)
Route
1so, Gallipolis,
Royal
Crown
Cola
Red
Wlyellow
Arrow.
Dads
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
OH
45631.
w oodland
PT. PLEASANT
'
Root Beer W/picture Of ~ottle ; Smull Curdboard
e enters, Inc. Is an
Bi-leve! h~lme with _\ bedmoths. 1..5
One With Various Gallipolis, OH Businesses And
AAIEEO
living room. diniilg_ room , kitdlr ll , "'"'"h•••tl =~:::;·_____
Old Phone #S, Small Wood Sohio, Plus Others
City National l!ank, one of We st
1950's Metal Budweiser King Of Beers Sign
garage.
A ll ju,t a short ~i ,l ance to 1own .,
Real Estate
Virginia's largest community banks . is
W/picture Of Bonlc,l 2 Oz. Pepsi Bottle Red ,
new city !oic hoob!
looking for a highly motivated i ndividual
While &amp; Blue DoiS. Mccoy Black Mama Cooki e
#2598
Jar. Reading Apple Peeler (complele), Large
for our Pt. Pleasant office .
beauty shop .A.voldlng

foreclosure

rent. Clean, payments left make one
•recentty
re~led. move in. 446-3093
~Heat &amp; water Included in
'9flt.
Respond to Box 3Br 2.5 SA 1721sq. tt.

2

til
.•,

;

®

at

·LARGE

AUCTION

GRAPHICS DESIGNER

Ruction
on
Partlll estate
estates.

62 or

OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND
1:00 •

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
co. #66

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune

c

BANK TELLER ,

Spinning Wheel , Pennsylvania Lines R.R.. Tall

Lantern(no Globe), R.F. And PRR . Co. Lantern
This position

requires

cash . handling

experience (large amounts). 12 monlhs
customer service and sales ski lls, basic
desktop computer skill s and excellent
communication

skills.

Previous

teller

experience is preferred . Sales experience
a plus.
We offer a competitive rate, benefits and
incentive plan . If yoo wish to join the

bank
'

thiit's· going places, send

your

m.u~to:

(Richmond Fredrick burg And Potomac}.
Frederick Town . Ohio Dinner Bell , Cast Iron
Kenle. 1'1 . Pl .. W.Va. Flour Sacks. Cast I ron
Kenle, Green Drop Leaf Tuble .. Broad Axes,
Hatchet W/names , Com Kni ves. Old Wrenchc~
(Fordson And Olhers). 2 Old Ledgers (early
1900's Martin Ebersbach , Pomeroy). 4 Old Chairs
W/crackled Painl, Graniteware (solid White
Wi red Trim , Blue And White Swlrt), 6 Old Dolls.
Loghlning Rod Wlball , Nice Wood Adv. box,
Manitou Table Water. Manitou. Colorado.
Gallipolis Ice Co. lee Pick l'bonc #003 ,
Stoneware. Misc. Dishes, Old Picture Frames,
Glass Washboard, Medicine Cab. (doors Are 2
Washboards, Not Old Bul Cule). Small Grinding
Slone In Frame, Buggy Jack, Rocking Chair
Wlsplil Seal, Much More.

City National Bank

Check www.auctlonzip.&lt;Om For Full Listing

Human Resources

Auctioneer: L&lt;slle A. Lemley
740-J88.811S Or 740441-7766
Cooshlcheck Approved By Auc~onHr Only!!!!

Attn: Tellers- Pt. Pleasant
..p.o, Box 1527
Asblaod, KY 41105-1527
Equol Oppollllnity Employer MIFIDI V
Memlier FDIC

Nut Auction, Friday

Dec. 5

Mtlle~

Help Wartled • Gontral

~:"."'!:;Po~ol;;l~li~an;oal~~

accepting kltters 9f Interesl and resumes from
persons interested In the
poshion of Park Admlnls·
trator. The Park. Administrator is respon~ible lor
·
administration,
planning,
management and operalions of the countywide
Park District. """
t.. ...pllcants
should posses a minimum of a Bachelors Degree, experience In communtty leadership, com,
municalions, public relations, lund raising, grant
wr~ing,
administrative,
management and tlm~cial skills. Please submit
.Information to: 00 Mclntyre ·Park District. Gallia .
County Courthouse, 18
Locus t
Street, Room
!262, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631
"'"""'""'""'""'""'""'~

o.t Paid Whit You're
Wortlll ·
Olll' btat_pertorlners
make up to $12.25 after
1lx months!

You choose the type of
calls you want 10 take;
Recruit volunteers for
hon-profit organizations
Ot
Raise funds and renew
memberships toJ the
NRAI
No experience required!
No Credi1 Card Sales!
No Colleclfonst
Full and Part-lime
Positions'!
_, All Major Holidays OFF
WITHPAY I
rl Weekly Pay + Bonus
tncenti11est
./ Medical, Dental, EAP.
.
401KI
rl

Driven &amp; Delivery

~=====;;;;i;;;Drivers needed:
COL
Drivers willing to drive for
local
ready-mix com-

Call NOW to 1tart .. rn-fng your potenllall
1-881-IMC-PAYU
Ext 24~7
Apply onllno:
http;/l)oklntodtlon.com

pany. Experience is pre!erred but not necessary.
Driver must be wHNng to
do pre-m.aintenance on
trucks arJd equipment ,
ya rd/plant and other misce llaneoUs chores.
Experience
operating
equipment
and
extra·
skills such as welding a
plus. Starting pay based ·
.on experience and driV·
·ing record. Benefits in·
eluding health insurance,
allaitable after meeting
employment
requirements. Call Valley Brook
Concrete corporate office
at
to
304-773 _5519
schedule an interview

Gallipolis Career College
.
,.
1
ts accep tng resumes or
a
mathematics
tnstructor.A minimum of

Last Chance
Toeam

a

$250.00
Hiring Bonuall
Tuesday·
Wednesday
Nov. 18th· 19th
9am·3pm

&gt; $8.8(1' hr FT
~

)} Weekly Pay + Bonu1&gt;
~ Benefits

If unable to attend
, please call:
1-888~MC-PAVU

ma~emat·
111

h11p_................
""New hires must begin
. training by November
- 24th to recei~ Hiring
.____Bon_u;;;•_ __,
Sa . M
&amp; Sel'\'
rvtee anager
·ice Techntclan positions
available. Health care &amp;
Retirement plans. avaltable. Please send re-aume
to
L.LCOCAAEO.COM
or

I

BIG BEND REALTY, INC
Russe l! D . Wood, Broker
5111 Second Avenue , Gallipoli s, Ofl 4563 1

Be Su..;,And ·come Out For1bose Unique

(7411) 446-7 Jt)l

Christmls Glftol!!!

ll O~E YUU CAN MAKE IT!

New 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
SlnSfe Section Homes
stai.tlng at $1st per mo.

~

lnteOJectfon of 33 664
L"flln · M·F 9-6
Sat 1().6; Cloof!&lt;l Sunday

' www.genesiscareeis.job
s. EOE.

14~~J~3~1~4

L.__;___________..J 1..;:":·.:.::~~:!!~==:..-..:.~:..;:::J

En)Oy caring for lhe Eld·
erty1
Home Health
Aides needeci in Pt.
Pleasant and Mason
$7.50
to
$10.00/ht,
1·850·766-983.2
·· -304-766-9830

1,1 .·. . fJ·•\
,·~ ~v,;~ O~:t~et.·. · .
,·~· ~

"'

-l

Trainer Posnions
Are you Interested In a
rewartfing pos~lon.? PAIS
is
currently
seeking
full/pail lima staff lor
Pt:Mnt Pleasant, WV pro·
vkllng
residential/com·
mt.W'Iity skill training with
individuals with MRIDO.
' High schoot d"toma or
GED required. No tKperience neoeBS11ry. Cnlnf·
nal back_ground check re•
qui red. Must- ha\re ~ reliable transportation and
valid
auto
insurance.
Patd training. Hourly rate
slarllng at $7·$8,00/hour.
Please
cat!
1
304-373-1011 oo 1011 free
at 1-&amp;n-373-1011.

'•'
~..

•

''·

•

·t·

,,

•.

Salam
· Township,
Meigs County will
. sell the following two
trucks by sealed bid,
In at 11 condition.
Tile
Townohip
rHtrvH tile ~ghl to
accept or reject any
or all .lllda. Both
trucks are In good
running
condition
and have been wall
maintained.
Both
trucko can · be oeen
by appoln1menl by
calling 74tJ.669-3091 .
Bids ant to be In by
6:00
pm
on
November 21, 2008
and will be opened
6:30
. pm
on
November 24, 2008 at
the Township Fire ·

•'

1

Senior Discount*.
when you pay for a 6 or 12.
month subscription on you:t:
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do .. :
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off o} mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

Rock!Metal Band Looking for singer, range from
Skynard to Pantera, Serious Inquiries· Only, conlac! OJ (740)992-9904,
Mark 740-416·1090

4§allipolif J)ailp otribu"e
Joint Jlealant 1\.tliltn

.The Daily Sentinel·

6unbap tltimel -6ei1tinel
.

.

:

'

.

•..•.•...• ..•.•.............
S~bscriber's

Now Htnng Experienced,
waltslaff, oooks, dishwashers &amp; delivery drivers appl~ · In person
Harry's
Famous
'Hot
Dog.s NeW Haven

~

....

Name ______

Address _______...:_..:.,__
City/State/Zip _ _____:c.__:__ __
Phone,_· _ _ _ _ _ _ __..:,.._

HoahhCant

Home Health Care aides
needed
immediatefy
must be certified or haVe.
1 year experience bo- ·
nuses available conUfct
or.
Shetley.
1-866-388-11 00.

Kay

J
I

.,
I

I

1

Mail

I

or drop Clff thla coupon along

I

wllh 1 copy of your photo-10 to

1

: Ohio ~lley Pul!llshlng

P.O. Box 469,

Galll~lla,

1

OH 45631

Trenaportatlon,
Non-Collutlon
Single-wide
mobile Olive
Dlitrlct ' Ton Office, Allldavtt
Form homo (approo.
. ·Meigs County, Long
Tueoday, November referred to In the . 840 sq. 11.) ,
BoHom, OH 45743
251h, 2008 at 1 :00 Notice to Bidders ..
611.90 Stele Route PERFORMANCE
· p.m. Tho otructureo Open House wtll be
124, Olive Townshlp1 GUARANTEE :
are located on the held
Tuesday, Meigs County. Long
$500.00
right-Of-way required November 20, 2008 Bottom . OH 45743 ·Item No. 15 Parcel
lor
the !ram 8:00 · a.m. • 2:00
PERFORMANCE
No . 16· One (I ) Story
tmprovamon11re1acatl
p.m. for the Items GUARANTEE:
Wood Frame Home
an · of Stale Route listed below.
$500.00
with block basement
124;
The
struclures ·Item No.8 Parcel No. 61606 S1a1e Route
MEG·I24-56.02
located
on
the 30- On&lt;! (I) story 124, Olive Township ,
Bids are to
be parcels Indicated are wood home ·
Meigs County, Long
oubmltled only on a described as follows:
62102 Slate Roota Bottom, OH 45743
-Item No.1 Parcel
Bid · Proposal farm
124, Olive Township,
PERFORMANCE
(REForm 79, Revised No. 12- One·l story Meigs County, Long
GUARANTEE :
1012006) prescribed wood tramed, vinyl Bottom. OH 45743 $2,000.00
by thl Dlractor of aiding house 61512 PERFORMANCE
·Item No. 16 Pa rcel
Tranoportatron .
S.R.
124,
Olive, GUARANTEE:
No. 11· 1998 Broad
Melga $1000.00
Copies of lhe Bid Township,
more Ellie mobile
Proposal Form and County,
Long -ltam No.9 Parcel No. home &amp; deck 61644
jlertlnent Notice to Bottom, OH 45743 33· 1968 Fleetwood State Route
124.
Bidders
containing PERFORMANCE
single-wide
mobile Olive
Township,
House
on
State Information
GUARANTEE:
home (approx. 774 Meigs County, Long
regarding
each $2500.00 ,
Route
124
near
aq. ft.) . wl1h wood
BoHom, OH 45743
Salem Centar. · All
blddar'a
·Item No.2 Parcel No. deck . and covered
PERFORMANCE
bids ant to be mailed
responalbi!Hy may be 12· Block Garage
entry porch
GUARANTEE :
to
the
following
obtained at the below 61512 S.R. 124, Olive 61240 Slate Route . $1,000.00
address.
lls1ed address:
Township,
Meigs
1240 Otlve Township, -Item No. 17 P~ rcel
· Salem
Towne hlp Ohio Department of County,
Long
Meigs County, Long No. 17· Wood Frame
26310 Tranoportatlan
Bottom , OH 45743 Shed &amp; Shelter 61644
Bottom, OH 45743
Trustee•
Legion
Road
338 Muaklngum Drive PERFORMANCE
PERFORMANCE
S1a1e Route
124,
Langsville,
Ohio
Marietta, OR 45750 •, GUARANTEE:
GUARANTEE:
Dillie
Township,
. 45741
(740) 373-0212
$500.00
•
$1000.00
Meigs County, Long
11!118 Chevrolol gao
. II you have questions •Item No. 3 Parcel No. ·Item No. I 0 Parcel BoHom, OH 457 4;1
1600 gat Watar tank
conblct:
14· 2003 Fleetwood . No. 34- One (1) story
PERFORMANCE
12,980 mllos
Ohio Deplirtment of 14' X 46' Slngle-wlda waad home with,
GUARANTEE:
VB 366 cubic Inch
mobile
home attached garage
$200.00
· Tranoportatlon
5 speed transmission
Dlsl~cl Ten
(approx. 736 sq. ft.)
-lteril No. 18 Parcel
61256 'Slate Route
61 ·amps. All.
Office of Real Es1ato
61550 S.R, 124, Olive
124, Olive Township, No. 17· Log . Cabin
2 apeed rear aole
Connie Gillum· Rul Township,
Melgo
Meigs County, Long
with block basement
Rear springs 23,000
Eolole Admlnlttrator
County,
Long
61644 Stale Route
Bottom, OH 45743
(740)568.3959
Bottom, OH 45743
lb.
with
IUKIIIary
PERFORMANCE
124, Olive Township;
or Sent Popper (740) PERFORMANCE
GUARANTEE:
Meigs County, Long
springe
Front and' real tow
Bottom, OH 45743
568·3931
GUARANTEE:
$1500.00
hooks.
1
Certified
checka, · $1000.00
·Item No. 11 Parcel
PERFORMANCE
1979 Chevrolet gao
official bank checkt, • Item No. 4 ·Parcel
No. 13 One (1) Story GUARANTEE:
or money orders ··No. 14· Deck (approx. Wood Frame Hause $2,000.00
'750 gal. Water tank
7,383 mllaa
with block basement (11)16
·(persOnal checks and 260 sq. II.)
5 tpeed tr-namlsslon cash
are 81550 S.R .. 124, Olive 61522 Slate Route
366 gaa/4 bl carb
. unacceptable),
T""nshi'p.
Melga
124, Olive Township,
9(100 lb lronllllle
. _payable
. to County,
Lang
Meigs County, Long
12000 lb. !rant spring
TREASURER, STATE Bottom, OH 45743 Bottom, OH 45743
18500'1b. rear axle
OF OHIO In the exact PERFORMANCE
PERFORMANCE
23000 rear ap~lig
amount of the bid lor GUARANTEE:
GUARANTEE:
(11) 14, 16,19
$2,500.00
Hch ""'· covering $250.00
·Item No. 12 Parcel
all s11Uc1ureo listed In ·hem No. 5 parcel No.
No. 13 One (I) Metal
Public Notice
uld Item mutt be 15- One 1 story
flied with a signed haute with metal Storage Unit
INVITATION
TO Bid PrOpotal lor each aiding ·
61522 Stale Route
BIDDERS .
· Hem. In lhe evont 61584 S.R. 124, Olive 124, Olive Township,
are
not Townohlp,
Meigs Meigs County, Long
Sealed bids will be bids
received · by
the accepted, tho checka County,
Lang
Bottom· OH 45743
Director
of will be returned to Bottom. OH 45743 PERFORMANCE
. Tranoportallon, State the bidders. The Bid PERFORMAI'ICE ·
GUARANTEE :
$1118.00
of Ohio, unlll 1 :00 Propoeal ·and tho .GUARANTEE:
·Item No. 13 Parcel
p.m.,
Tuesday, • Notice to Blddaro $2500.00
November 25th• 2008 . ahall be lncorportlled· Item No. 6 Parcel No. No .. 13 One (1) Story
et
the
Ohio
In .and plllde pllfl of ·· 15·' One wOod two (2) Garage 61522 Slate
Department
of the 1111111 contrac1 car garege
.
flou1e
124, Olive
Meigs .
Tranaporta!lon,
- - the state· 61584 S.R. 124, Olive Township,
Long
Dlatrlct Ton Qlllco,
and tile oucceaalul Township, .
Melgo · County,
Bottom, OH 45743
338
Musklngum
bidder.. Tile Director County,
Long
Drive,
Ohio ol
Transportation Bottom. OH 45743 PERFORMANCE
GUARANTEE:
lor lht p~~rchue ond raerves the ~ght to PERFORMANCE
removal
of
the rojict any or all bldt GUARANTEE:
$200.00
·!tom No. 14 Parcel
alruc1unts deacrlbed and
to
waive $250.00
·
In the Invitation. Bkla technicalities.
• lte'lf No. 7 Parcel No. 13 One (1 ) Fence
6f522
will be opened at 1ho Each bidder must No,
29
1992 ond Dock,
Ohio Deptlrlment of properly execute the Fleming· 14' X 60' State Route · 124,

Ma-,

1

·

Public Notices in Newsj~ar&gt;&lt;r,s. l
Your !light to Kno w , Delivered Right to Your ur•or·.;

NOTICE.S

If so, you qualify for a

, Mullaal

GOODTIMES BAR IS
NEEDING ENERGETIC, .
PROFESSIONAL,BARTENOER'S
~AITRESES,
BIKINI
BAR,
DANCERS AND A SE·
CURITY/OOOR
MAN,
MUST HAVE
GREAT
PERSONALITY,
AND
DRIVE
TO
MAKE
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MONEY.APPLY
AT 122 B HUNTINGTON
R0 (RT2,) NEXT TO
THE LOCKS AND· DAM.
,IN GALLIPOLIS · FERRY
wV.~· 578-2220 ASK
FOR JOHN G, GOOD
. PAY, AND FUN .WORK.

BLIC

.. .A~·'.

.

siShcc.com.

Wv

ia'

(Dire&lt;l iuns: SR 160 N of Holzer tum righl
SR 554 then right on Bulaville hou&gt;e on leli
past Prospect Rd)l
rloor .plan ranch with altac:hcd garage
storage orferet.l in detached garaagc.
Bedrnums. living · mom open to kitchen i
dini11g. Over 12.8 acre... induded
R1:dured Price $ 149,9!HI
U5RI
#2598

Mel&lt;a FT &amp; PT CNAs for
evontng &amp; nlghl shifts. 11
intereat,ct, please con.tact Misty S1r~er at
I (866)728·5687·
or
misty.straderOgene-

Ext: •25&amp;
Apply On11no:

master's .degree in
s ·s ~ · ed
rc 1 r... '1uu ·
Please email a CO\"er jet.
ter and resume to jdanickl@gai!lJJoliscareercol"'R~JJj'Ql,;Z~'IIP~'III"iri•i.lJ~rw'---·
lege.edu or fax jt to
80 Hr. Anprentlce
740 446 4124
.,....
~;,
,.,,;
·
.;;;;!.
·
!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Miner
Class MSHA - 24
....
Go••mm•nt &amp; Fed•al Hr. Class WV Mine ForJob
man Claes Sale1y Con·
==:;;~::o:O'=::a:::"' sulating Service Whit·
- POSTAL. JOBS
Co Toalning Company
(304)·372-8340
$17.89-$28.27/HA., now ~~~~-~-hiring. For application Youth case
Manager
and free go11emment job .needed for worldorce ~
info, call American As- vei9flment program ln.
soc.
-of
Labor West VIrginia. Duties in·
1-913-599-8226, 24/llrs. etude gooup presenla&lt;;~rn p. serv.
tlons,
devl\'loping
resources,
racilltatl.,g
POST OFFI CE . NOW meetln"s and worltshops •
HIRING avg. Pay $2&lt;1/hr assessmen1s, data entry,
or
$571&lt;/yr,
Includes ft1o
mtnaljOiilanl and
Fed.Ben, OT. Place by progressive case manadSource, not affiliated
with USPS who hires. agement.
Must enjoy
. 403_2562
•
worldng
with.
the youth
1 866
...,;,;,;;,;,;;,;;;;;;,,..,..,,.. population!
Tra11el reHelp Wanted~ General qu!recf. Position requires
~~--~,..;;;;;~;;;;;; a BAIBS anti at least 1
Ohio
vatley
Home years expelience in iden·
Health , Inc. hiring Home ti~lng , developing and
Health
Aides.. STNA, securing resources for
C N~, ~H HA, PCA may diverse population .
Exapply at 1480 Jackson cellent full-time opportuPike,. Gallipolis, Ohio or nity
with
befiefits.
phone 74()..441-1393 for Please Forward Cover
more info . Competitive .Letter and Resume 10
wages,
mileage reim· wmoriterossoOrosspmv.
burserilent and benefits com Equal Opponunity
including health lnsur- Employer/Program
ance &amp; much more.
· Auxiliary Aids and Serv~-::""~~---.----- ices ar&amp; available upon
An EK~eUe nt way to earn request
money. The New AVon.
Call
Marilyn
Modic:al
304-882·2645
AVON! AU Areas! To B~:~y
or Sell Shirley Spears Certified ' Nursing Assis304 _67 •v- 1429
tant lull tJme and tempoQpmino's r=~ow hiring safe rary (90-day) work in 114
drivers ar all locations. bed long term care State
must be 18yos. old. Apply laclttty.
Full-time ernpto\iment offers an ex1n pe
rson
'
tenslve benefit package,
- - - -- - - -,, including State Civil
Real Estate
Seovice Retlremenl, eam
up to 15 days IIBC8tion
per year, 18 days sick
·Purcba.w No"' and leave and 12 plus paid
holidays: healtMife mReceive Up to
surarw::e ' is
available.
$7500
Salary
commensurate
with experience.
Must
credit
have a wv CNA cenlllcation to wof"l{ in West
Virginia, and must pos-sess either a GEO or
high &gt;choo t diploma. Ap·
pllcations rna~ be plct&lt;ed
up ·. at Lakin Ho&amp;pi1at,
Lakin
WV,
Monday·
through Friday, 8:00 a.m.
- 4:00 p.m. Lak&lt;l Hosp;.
tat Is an EEO/AA em- ·
ployer.
lakin Hospl,.l
conductS
pre-employment drug/alcohol IBst·
W&gt;g, Employes may be
exposed to streamline or
secondhand smoke.
a

Are ·~eu··Ga,

~.,.

INTERVIEWS

~:::""::"-::'"""":~;;;;;;

Galllpplls. Career CO\iege
is accepting resumes tor
an acOOt!nting inslouctor.'
A minimum of a Bachelor's degree in accounting is required. Please
ernail a co11er letter and
resume to jdanickiCgaiiipoljscareercollege .edu or
fax it to 740 _ 446 ~ 4 124

a...

~YIItog. .

The Board of Pal'tl; Commissioners of lhe qo
Mcintyre Pa111. District Is

Education

Poil\eroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

!

·----------·····-··········-----·

BULLETIN BOARD
.

·
· Stic;ks &amp;Stones Logging
.. &amp; Firewood ·
W~ accept CAA .&amp; HEAP

446-6783 - 446-4112
645·2480
O'Dell :True, Vaiue l:.umber
Ceiling Fans bring warm air down
from ·lh.~ ceiling_inexpe~ively.
Hunter Ufetime WarrantY Ceiling
Fans Siarting itt $89.95
·
81 Vine St , M-F 7-6, Sal8-5, Sun, 10:4

BASKET BINGO
Mondy, Nov. 17
5:30pm
3399 St. Rt. 141
Gallipolis, OH'
Sponsored by the
Gallipolis Wrestling Team

Holiday Friends &amp; Family
VIP E\renl
Extra 11l'ro off almost everything
Including Sale and Clearance
prices.
· Exaludtl Eleetrontes, Great Prlctt ltemt and
Kenmore Pro ~ . Additional •xclusiooa flP91Y.
IMUIN .. NOVEMBER 17, 2008

'Iii

a pm onlyl

20% off All KenMore
APpliances
Excludu Ktnmort Pro"". countenop
m!CfOWal/tt, Grett Pr1ct ltemlam:t clouovtl.
,
orter good thru 11!17108 .
PLUS No Pl)'rTltllW No 'nttf"HI for 12 months

On ony
"""~ """' $389
with yoor...,.. oerd
Fret Slllndard cklllvery Atttr onNnt or flllfJ.In
rtball on any appllan&lt;:a over $398
Sears of Gallipolis

446·1546

.

.

~

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
.,
K&amp;l Catering
Wiih Thanksgiving drawing near
and cleaning left to do.
Let. us prepare the dinner and
deliver i.t to you.
10·12 ~ervings $99 .60
20·24$ervings $199.20
Call us at 740·446·9319 to order
your Thanksgiving Dinner no .later
than Monday, November 24th .
Your dinner will be deWvered on
Wednesday, November 26th
before 5 :00pm

FLU CLINIC
Office of Ed Ayers, MD
Pleasant Valley HOspital
Medical Office Building
Suite 118

November 20
9 am- Noon
1 pm to 4 pm
Bring insuranc;e information
For more information
pleasfl call,

(304) 675-6015
..
Serenity ·House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1·800·942-9577

''Basket Games
Carleton School
Thursday, Nov. 20

6 pm

Proceeds to Benefit
Meigs HS Baseball Team

BRISTOL NASCAR
PACKAGE
M!lrCh 21, 2009
to March 23, 2009
Includes motorcoach
lransportation, tickets to lhe race,
parking and two nights hotel
· accommodations
$469/person (double occupancy)
$439/parson (triple occupancy)
$419/person (quad occupancy)
$599/person (single occupancy)
Staying at the Hampton Inn In
Princeton , WV
PERFECT CHRISTMAS GIFTI
. We can provide a certificate for
presentation during holidays
LIMITED SEATS!
No refunds unless lrip 'is cancelled
We accepl cash, credil cards ,
checks and money orders
To make a reservation please call
PVH Community Relations,
(304) 675~4340, Elct. 1326

·Gallia County Knife Club meeting
Sunday, November 16th. 2:00pm
Everyone Welcome
For more Information call: . •
446-6952 or 339·2206
after 5:00pm

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT
Great Rates
Personal Service
Call for a quote

.ThEil Lynch Agency
322 .second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-8235
800:447-8235

Slug Shoot
Sunday, November 16th
Gallia

C0 unly Gun Club'
12 pm

·?

Any Ohio Legal Deer Gun

Gallia County Democrats

Thank You
Dinner
EVERYbNE WELCOME
Monday, November 17th
6pm
Ariel Theatre
2nd Ave. Gallipolis
For More Information call

CALLING ALL MILITARY
FAMILIES &amp; FRIENDS :
HELP !!
River Cities Miilary Family
Support· Group needs names and
addresses ol deployed lroops in
order to send care packages and
Chrislmas Cards to those troops
who will be away from home this
holiday season. Troop Names and
Addresses are needed by Fnday,
November 21 1If you /lave loved
ones in the U.S . Military or know
someone who is serving our
country overseas, please call or
e-maillhe names and addresses
to the following :
Karen at 388-9851
Peg at 446-7194 (after 6 :00pm)
mcw2947@yahoo.com
ALWAYS REMEMBER TO
II

�Sunday. November 16, 2008

Even as winds calm,
more Californians
flee fires, A2

· Holzer names
employee of month, A3

~ .

. Printed on 100%
_Ht"_cyciE'd. Newsprint t]'~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:; o 1'1·. '\ I'S • \'ul. ;; X. No. 'I'

·• Eagles, Bengals play
. .to 13-all tie. See Page Bl

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTIN~L.COM

Fusion

POMEROY - Last week
Holzer Meigs Clinic saw its
first' documented case of
influenza indicating the flu
season has officially.arrived
in the county.
When some patients complain of ''flu-.like" symptoms, health care professionals often test for the H I
or H2 flu virus with a blood
culture or nasal swab to
track the virus, according to
Diana Jeffers, manager of
Holzer Meigs Clinic. This
helps a physician not only
understand exact! y how to
treat the patient but it also
tracks flu cases in the county. A positive diagnosis is
sent to the Meigs County

MSRP $19,610

-·
,.

, AIIIII'JIOOII'l,a
llCIOIY IDAII•
1126 DW llltCOIIII

Financing

0% APR lor up 1o 35 monilia inJI'egd rJ $500
Torofa Fol.ioly Rebg~• w/oppro.rtd crtdlt JfS

DonWoodFordLM.com
E. STATE ST., ATHENS, OHIO

Sales Hotline 888·286·8325

'

d·:i

.

"'"'" ·"'Ytl" il) "'"tim•l.t·om

Influenza atrives.in Meigs County

SPORTS .

2008

!\10"111&gt;.\\ , :\0\' F!\IBFR •-. 2 oo H

Wilh Approved Credil .

DoriWoodHyundai.com

. .0 E~ STATEST., ATHENS, OHIO .

Sales Hotline 888·286·9451

Health Department and the
Centers for Disease Control.
Sherry Wilcox, director of
· nursing ar the MCHD said
the flu diagnosis at . Holzer
Meigs Clinic was the first
official case she'd heard of
in the count~.
Jeffers srud the clinic is
seeing . more people complaining of "flu-like" symptoms and she anticipates
with . the cold weather
approaching that will likely
. increase. Although pediatrics ·at the clinic has not
seen•any official flu cases,
Jeffers said parel)tS might
want to .Consider vaccinating their children because
one iri 1,000 kids under the
age of five find themselves
admitted to the hospi!al
from flu complications.

As far as vaccinations , are 65 or older or have vent getting the flu is washsaid those request- chronic health conditions. ing their hands.
·
ing . them are picking up Wilcox said the department
According to the Centers
and the clinic has also vis- · has around 50 doses left and for Disea~ Control: Cover
ited the Eastern, Southern they are available during your nose or mouth with a
an~ Meigs Local School regular office hours. The tissue when you sneeze.
Districts to vaccinate staff; vaccine is free to those with Throw the tissue in the trash
The clinic also makes vis- Medicaid or Medicare Part after you use it. Wash your
its to businesses to vacci- B who present their, cards. hands often with soap and
nate staff. Wilcox said in or $15 a dose. The MCHD water. especially after you
addition to its fall flu shol ordered the vaccines from a cough or sneeze. Alcoholclinics, the department also private company this year based hand cleaners are also
set up mobile vaccination as opposed to the Ohio effective. Try to avoid close
contact with sick people. Jf
clinics in Scipio and Department of Health.
Orange Townships on
Now that . a case of you get the flu, CDC recom'
. Election Day as part of an influenza has been docu- · mends that you stay home
outreach project and hope mented in Meigs County. from work or school and
to next year possibly · residents are reminded of a limit contact with others to
expand even further oui· few .simple tips to 'keep ill- . · keep from infecting them.
ness at bay. Jeffers sa1d in Avoid touching your eyes,
into the county.
·Since OcJob~r. Wilcox addition to receiving the flu nose or mouth. Germs
said the · MCHO has given vaccine one of the· most .
d h'
750 influenza vaccinations effective preventative mea- sprea t 15 way.
to residents, most of whom sures people can take to prePlease see Fl·u, AS
Jeffer~

Middleport
refuse fees to
.hold steady
OBITUARIES

Bv SRIAN
.

Page AS
• William Call, 42
·• Roger Welch, Sr., 65

INSIDE
•

...· .

..;:..~

•

•i• ,'

' ·.

''

REED
.

.

MIDDLEPORT - There
.will be no increase in refuse
'fees . in Middleport under a
proposed extension of the
village's cohtract with .
Rumpke Waste .
At last week's regular
meeting, Mayor Michael
Gerlach said the company,
which collects all residential refuse under its contract
with the village, has agreed
to extend this year's rates
into 2009. Gerlach said the
necessary contract addendum will be mailed for
council approval.
· The refuse service is paid
as part of the monthly'
' •
S!lbmltted photo public· works billing . The
Applebutter cooks in many kettles over opE!n fires to produce t110r!l than a thousand jars to be sold for the project work of village adds a billing fee to
the United Methodist Men.
.
·
the Rumpke per-customer

.;
'

J.

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

'

•.•, ·ObalTJa'trfe!i to savor
'

near-normalcy before .
Jan. 20. See Page A2
• HMC employee
nominated for OONE
leadership award.
SeePageAJ
.• Push to toughen
·Qhio suspended license
·laws. See Page A3
· • W. Virginia town
shrugs at poorest
heaHh ranking.
See Page AS
_~ Eastern grad
;.QOmpletes military
training. See Page AS
~ Promotion announced
atplant. See Page AS

H_
p·. plebutter ·.makin' time

teers who help don't seem to mind a
bit. They'll do · about anything to
make money for their various comRACiNE - Take 108. bushel of munity projects.
.
a~ples, peel and core them, cut into
Dale Hart and . Vernon Harrison
pteces, add some sugar and cinnamon, headed up the applebutter-making
and cook them in huge kettles over an crew this year.The money made from
open fire all day and w)')at do you get the sale of applebutter goes to pur- 1,135 jars of applebu.t!er!
' . chase Christmas gifts for needy chilIt's a .lot of work bullhe men ofthe dren, with some going Jo schools and
Southern Charge of , the . United community youth projects and some to
Methodist Men's Group., and volun- individuals in need.
Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH

HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL,COM

'WEATIIER

Chflstmas ·. ~ade, festivities
planned for Pomeroy
that vehicle is going to be in
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM
the parade. .
'
This year's parade theme is
POMEROY -'- Christmas once again "Christmas Along
officially arrives in .down- the River.'~The parade is one
t.own Pomeroy when the vif' of the largest in the county
!age's annual. Christmas and has had up to 60 entrants.
The parade will of course
parade makes its way down
Main Street on Sunday, feature an appearance by Santa
Nov. 30 .
,
·
Claus who will arrive at ·
The parade begins at 2 p.m :~ Peoples Bank in Pomeroy ·
Lineup for the parade is at I immediately following . the
p.m. at the football field on' parade. Santa will be at the
East Main Street in Pomeroy. bank listening to the Christmas
The parade will feature a wide lists of good little boys and
variety of entrees, ·including girls while bank employees
walking units, floats, march- take a free picture of the
ing bands, pets, etc.
moment to give !0 the children.
Parade organizer Toney
Also during Santa's visit,
Dingess said there is no pre- there will be a reception with
registration required · and . cake and punch in one of the
those wishing to participate bank's conference rooms for
can show up . the day of'i:he those wishing to stop in and
parade. For those wisbing to wish bank employee Marilyn
preregister their entry, call Wolfe a happy retirement.
992-7141, which is the Meigs
After the parade, several
High Schqol Bandroom, or local downtown businesses
992-2056, which is Clark's ' will have special holiday
Jewelry Store:
open houses and extended
In order to avoid a traffic shopping hours.
Prior to the parade the
jam, those dropping off participants in the parade' are • Community Band will be
asked Jo not pull their vehicle pertonning holiday tunes ori
into the lineup area unless Front Street;

The annual project takes plenty of
effort from lois of people but as Kathy
McDaniel, one of the workers, commented "It's a wonderful way to give
and have fun at the same time. After all
it's not just about the apple butter and
making money. It's the comirtg together of a .group of people ·for a common
cause who just happen to enjoy it."
. .Applebuttercan be purchaJed by call-

ing Hart, 949·2656. Tom theiss, 9492072 or Vernon Harrison, 992-2945. .

::~~i~~~~~d bi~~~dtotal:~% .

mayor's
report
of
$17.633.70.
• Hired Ross Holter as a
part-time patrolman for the
police department.
• Approved a new policy
to purchase 50 to 70 new '
water meters 'for the public
works department each
year. based on a recom.· mendation by Village
Administrator
Faymon
Roberts .

Aworkin

BY BETH SERGENT

D8tall1 on Page A5

. a SECrioNs -

12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
•
Calendars

.

,'
Classifi~s

A3
A3

'

B3-4

Editorials

Bs
A4

qbituaries

As

Comics

Sports
Weather

B Section

As

~ 2008 Ohio V.Uey J'Ublilhlng Co.

4

t

..

,

I

•

•

•

••

Workmen
with A's
Remodeling
of Pomeroy
had a bird'seye view of
residential
Middleport
last week.
TheY were
making
repairs to the
steeple at the .
First Baptist
Church.
Brian J.
Reed/photo

I

I
•

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