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First in flight, 78th in women’s health

For the women of Dayton, the good news is that you’re living in the second healthiest city in Ohio for your gender. The bad news that it’s 78th in the country. Those are the findings of Self magazine (self.com), which rated the 100 largest metro areas on a variety of factors affecting the health of women. Bethesda, Md., was cited as the healthiest, while Toledo, Akron, Columbus and Cincinnati all finished in the bottom 20. The only Ohio city rated healthier for women than Dayton was (go figure) Cleveland. Dayton got good marks for air quality, getting colonoscopies and violent crimes against women (other than rape), but not so great for migraines, unemployment and percentage of rapes reported. — D.L. Stewart, Staff Writer

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CNN latest to write Dayton’s obituary

Maybe we should all just go into the funeral business. Joining the media rush to write Dayton’s obituary is CNN, which filed a story today, Nov. 19, giving us last rites. Again. “The folks working at Jamestown Industries’ Moraine Plant 2 near Dayton, Ohio, have the weary, haunted look of terminally ill patients, only it’s their livelihoods that are about to die,” the story reports. It goes on to quote Tony Murphy, a foreman at Jamestown Moraine, concerning the closing of the General Motors Assembly truck plant. “It’s going to be a big ripple effect on everyone,” he said, “because when they first closed the first two shifts down, it was devastating then, but this, right here, will seal the nail on the coffin.” Jamestown Moraine warehouses prepare and deliver parts to the General Motors Moraine Assembly truck plant. When the GM plant closes for good on December 23, so will Jamestown Moraine. Sixty-four people will lose their jobs at the supplier, the last of a workforce that once numbered 200.

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Big “deal” in Dayton

DATV became part of a Hollywood sound stage as it hosted a live feed for NBC’s game show “Deal or No Deal.” The segment was taped in DATV’s studio on Aug. 1 and is scheduled to air on WDTN (Channel 2) today, November 2, at 8 p.m. Dayton resident Devon Clark was chosen as a contestant and he selected his grandmother, Margaret Rice, as one of his friends to help him on the show. Rice was unable to fly to Los Angeles for the taping, so the production company that produces “Deal or No Deal” contacted DATV to host a live segment. She was set-up in the studio with a two-way live feed to Los Angeles. During the taping she was able to watch the production on a monitor and interact with the program when the time was right. — Contributed item

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Just do it … religiously

Pastor Ed Young, the founder of the non-denominational Fellowship Church in Dallas, plans to issue a challenge to his parishioners not often heard from a religious leader. This morning he’ll urge his married congregants to have sex for seven consecutive days, presumably with their spouses. Young, 47, said he also plans to “give it a try.” The idea is not to produce more Fellowship Church members, but merely, he says, to combat promiscuous sex. — D.L. Stewart, Staff Writer

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Local duo on Early Show

Local Internet security consultant Mary Leal will appear on the CBS Early Show on Tuesday, Nov. 18, as part of the program’s three-day series on identity theft. Appearing with Leal will be Beavercreek resident Robert Frost, a race car driver whose photo was stolen from a Web site and used thousands of times by Internet romance scammers in Nigeria. Leal, a former Dayton police officer who now has her own consulting firm, has spent several years researching and exposing scammers who use false identities on the Internet to woo victims and con them out of money. — Jim DeBrosse, Staff Writer

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Many try, few are chosen

Tom Bradrick of Centerville, Nancy Fisher and George Hageman of Dayton, and Shirley Harbaugh of Troy are struttin’ their art stuff down in Cincinnati this month. The Cincinnati Art Club’s;Viewpoint 2008 - 40th Annual National Juried Art Competition” features their artwork. Over 400 works were submitted from 24 states; 68 artists’ works were accepted. Show location is Wessel Gallery, 1021 Parkside Place, Cincinnati. Awards totaling $4,300 and one prize with Eisele Gallery representation were announced at the November 7 Reception. Fourteen states are represented in the show, with 37 artists from Ohio. Gallery hours are 2 to 5 p.m. weekends only, Nov. 8-23. Call (513) 574-3180 for details or e-mail info@cincinnatiartclub.com, or Jim Effler at jeffler1@cinci.rr.com. —Pamela Dillon, Contributing Writer securedownload.jpeg

Tom Bradrick’s “Grandma’s Garden”

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POST-POST ELECTION NEWS

From Kenya, the ancestral home of Barack Obama’s father, comes proof that not even the most favored son can please every voter. A mock election was in Kisimu,” a relatively big city along the muggy, green, hippo-infested shores of Lake Victoria,” according to The New York Times. Obama won, but got only 98 percent of the vote. Maybe some of those hippos were Republicans. And if you’re thinking about going to Washington for Obama’s inauguration, you might want to take along a sleeping bag. In anticipation of the historic event, a television executive from Harlem started looking for a hotel room in the D.C. area three weeks before the election. After encountering nothing but no vacancy signs at a dozen hotels, she finally found a room at a Motel 6 … for $465 a night. She’s still looking. — D.L. Stewart, Staff Writer

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