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                  <text>On this
day in
history …

Sunny.
High of 90,
low of 67

Southern
holds off
Notre Dame

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 139, Volume 69

Tuesday, September 1, 2015 s 50¢

LST makes its way upriver

Kasich
urged to
end funds
By Ann Sanner
Associated Press

Photos courtesy of Jordan Pickens

Passing through the Racine Locks and Dam at night with the moon as a backdrop.

Many caught sight of
the Landing Ship-Tank
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY —As LST-325 navigated up the
Ohio River from its port in Evansville, Ind., many
along the river caught a glimpse of WWII history.
LST stands for Landing Ship-Tank, and was considered crucial to the war effort by General Dwight
D. Eisenhower and British Prime Minister Winston
Churchill.
Many LSTs were built by the DRAVO Corporation
and American Bridge Company in Pittsburgh, PA.
in the early 1940s and piloted down the Ohio River.
Residents recall lining the river banks and cheering as
the vessels passed, similar to what occurred when the
LST passed by on Sunday.
Early British plans named it the Tank Landing
Craft. American designers, refusing to call something
that could deposit 1,900 tons of equipment directly
into an amphibious combat zone a ‘craft,’ re-titled it
the Landing Ship-Tank.
Americans G.I.’s ‘hitting the beaches’ in plucky and
small Higgins boats has worked its way into the public
consciousness through ﬁlms like Saving Private Ryan.
The LST served a similar purpose for tanks.
Beach landings in World War II were intensely
logistical affairs and in 1942 there existed no good
way to get overwhelming amount of weaponry produced in American factories into battle. Enter the
LST, the ﬁrst cargo ship in history designed from
scratch to ofﬂoad onto unprepared beaches. Still less
of a boat than an aquatic tractor, the LST needed no
harbor, dock, pier, or favorable tide to get the might of
American industry onto enemy territory.
Though tanks ﬁgured prominently in its role and
name, the ship was designed with all vehicles and
equipment in mind.

The LST 325 went upriver yesterday; photos taken from Mason, WVa. looking across the Ohio

See LST | 3 River to Pomeroy.

See FUNDS | 5

VFW Post 9053 awards scholarships

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

Staff Report

— SPORTS
Football: 6
Schedule: 6
— FEATURES
Classified: 7-8
Television: 8
Comics: 9

COLUMBUS — Antiabortion groups in Ohio
have called on Gov. John
Kasich to block Medicaid
payments to Planned
Parenthood, though federal health ofﬁcials have
warned other states that
such a move could violate
the law.
Ohio Right to Life and
a coalition of other antiabortion groups want
Kasich, a Republican
presidential contender, to
stop taxpayer money from
going to Planned Parenthood.
The groups cite the
release of secretly recorded videos by anti-abortion
activists showing Planned
Parenthood employees
describing how they
provide fetal tissue from
abortions for medical
research. Planned Parenthood has said the videos
are heavily edited and
misleading.
Such tissue donations
are illegal in Ohio, and a
Planned Parenthood state
leader says no donation
program exists here.
Still, the state’s attorney
general is investigating
the organization to see
whether it may have violated its nonproﬁt status
and made money from
the sale of organs from
aborted fetuses.
The coalition of antiabortion groups wants
Kasich to direct state
agencies to eliminate all
allocations of government
money, including any
Medicaid dollars, to the
organization.
“We believe that in
order to ensure that
Ohio leads the nation in
both protecting human
lives and taxpayer dollars, your action to stop
the distribution of these
funds is needed now,” the
coalition, which includes
Ohio ProLife Action and
Citizens for Community
Values Action, wrote in an
Aug. 24 letter.
Ohio Right to Life’s
president, Mike Gonidakis, has asked Kasich
to terminate Planned
Parenthood’s Medicaid
provider agreements with
the state. He said in a

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share your thoughts.

TUPPERS PLAINS — VFW Post 9053 recently
presented four 2015 high school graduates with scholarships totaling $1,000. The scholarship fund was
established by the Post for members who have relatives going onto a program in higher education.
To be eligible for the scholarship, students who
have family members of the Post must submit applications and provide an acceptance letter from their college. The scholarship is divided equally between the
qualifying recipients for that year.
Breanna Bailey and Sheyla Kibble, from Eastern
Local High School, Gage Smith, from Southern Local
High School, and Holly Walcutt, from Parkersburg
South, were presented with the scholarship by Charles
Mugrage, commander of Post 9053.
Courtesy photo
“The purpose of the scholarship is to give back to
Post 9053 Commander Charles Mugrage with scholarship
the community,” Mugrage said, “and to our veterans.” recipients Breanna Bailey, Sheyla Kibble and Gage Smith.

�LOCAL/NATION

2 Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
BARTON
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Bill M Barton, 86,
of Point Pleasant, passed away Aug. 30, 2015. A full
obituary will appear in the Wednesday edition of the
Point Pleasant Register. Deal Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant is serving the family.
BLANKENSHIP
LEON, W.Va. — George Blankenship Sr., 81, passed
away Saturday, Aug. 29, 2015, at his home. Crow Hussell Funeral Home is assisting the family.

Proctorville, passed away Sunday, Aug. 30, 2015,
at King’s Daughters’ Medical Center, Ashland, Ky.
Funeral service will be 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 3,
2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens,
Miller, Ohio. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Wednesday at
the funeral home.

MORGAN
LEON, W.Va. — Charles Robert “Bob” Morgan,
75, of Leon, died Sunday, Aug. 30, 2015. Funeral
service will be 7 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2015, at
HAWKINS
CLIFTON, W.Va. — Tony Dale Hawkins, 47, of Clif- Raynes Funeral Home, Buffalo, W.Va., with visitation
one hour prior to the service. Raynes Funeral Home,
ton, passed away Aug. 27, 2015.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 2, 20072 Charleston Road, Buffalo, W.Va. is in charge of
2015, at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. Burial arrangements.
will follow in Kanawha Valley Memory Gardens in
ROACH
Glasgow, W.Va. Friends may visit the family at the
LETART, W.Va. — Robert Dale Roach, 81, of
funeral home from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesday.
Letart, died Aug. 30, 2015, at Pleasant Valley HosLEWIS
pital. Funeral arrangements will be announced by
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Carol Lewis, 65, of
Anderson Funeral Home in New Haven.

SIMPSON
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va., — David Kelson “Cheyenne” Simpson Sr., 79, of Point Pleasant, died Saturday, Aug. 29, 2015. A funeral service will be 1 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2015, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant. Burial will follow at Austin-HopeMcLeod Cemetery in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. Visitation
will be two hours prior to the service Wednesday at
the funeral home.
SPEARS
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Shirley Ann Spears,
76, of Point Pleasant, passed away Sunday, Aug. 30,
2015, at her home. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2015. Funeral serivices will be 1 p.m.
Thursday at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.
STEWART
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Mildred Stewart, 86,
of Proctorville, died Sunday, Aug. 30, 2015, at home.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is in
charge of arrangements.

Flood control plan
upsets farmers
FINDLAY (AP) — A
federal agency’s plan for
reducing repeated river
ﬂooding that has caused
millions of dollars of
damage over the years in
northwestern Ohio has
upset some area farmers.
The U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers has proposed spending more
than $60 million to
reduce ﬂooding along
the Blanchard River. The
current plan calls for
building a nearly 10-mile
channel to divert water
away from downtown
Findlay. Controlling
ﬂooding along the river
is a priority in Findlay,
where ﬁve major ﬂoods
have caused millions of
dollars in damage since
2007.
But farmers at a
recent public meeting
told agency ofﬁcials
that the plan would
transfer the problem to
landowners along the

Eagle Creek diversion
channel.
“You want me to pay
to drain Findlay,” said
Matt Hartman, an Eagle
Township farmer, who
wants the river cleaned
of trees and other obstacles he believes contribute to the ﬂooding.
The federal agency
dropped an earlier plan
for a 1.5-mile levee near
the city’s reservoir,
saying it would have
increased ﬂooding on
about 1,500 acres of
farmland.
Lt. Col. Karl Jansen, commander of
the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers’ Buffalo
District, said enlarging
the Blanchard River
through Findlay is not a
viable alternative.
Corps ofﬁcials did
take a second look at
dredging and clearing
the river, but Jansen
said it’s been ruled out.

Seth Perlman | AP

Lucille Drone and her grandson, Riley Alley, 9, from Seattle, talk about the giant American Mastodon, right, and Ground Sloth, left, while
visiting the Illinois State Museum on Aug. 24 in Springfield, Ill. The 138-year-old museum could be the next casualty in an ugly state
budget battle that has dragged on for months. Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner is targeting the museum and four satellite sites for closure,
the latest in a series of cuts the former businessman says are needed to manage Illinois’ finances as he battles with Democrats who
run the Legislature.

History museum is latest target in fight
By Sara Burnett
Associated Press

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. —
The skeleton of a massive
mastodon, t housands of
Native American artifacts
and a giant shark could
be the next casualties in
an increasingly ugly ﬁght
over Illinois’ state budget
that has dragged on for

Civitas Media, LLC

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months with no sign of
ending.
The pieces are among
millions held by the Illinois State Museum, a
favorite stop for school
groups and scientists
looking to learn the history of a state that, millions of years before it
went broke, was literally
underwater.

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Now Republican Gov.
Bruce Rauner is targeting
the 138-year-old museum
and four satellite sites
for closure, the latest in a
series of cuts the former
businessman says are
needed to manage Illinois’ ﬁnances as he battles with Democrats who
run the Legislature. The
move is also designed to
put pressure on lawmakers by ensuring more
voters feel the impact of
having no state budget.
Among the ﬁrst items
to get the governor’s ax
were the state airplanes
that lawmakers often used
to make the 200-mile
trip between Chicago
and Springﬁeld. Then
low-income parents and
seniors took a hit through
cuts to subsidized child
care and in-home care.
Now the museum is on
the chopping block, in a
highly visible step that
could either force law-

makers to the table or
backﬁre on the rookie
governor.
Rauner’s decision
comes even as other
states spend millions
to expand museums to
lure more visitors. The
locations that could be
closed by the end of
September include an
archaeological site where
Native American remains
were unearthed and later
reburied.
“We are so sad,” said
Twila Cline, whose 7-yearold granddaughter chose
to spend her last free day
before starting second
grade visiting the Springﬁeld museum, where kids
can get their hands dirty
in a faux archaeological
dig or come eye-to-eye
with a short-faced bear.
Cline takes her two
grandkids to the museum,
where admission is free,
every month. “It’s what
we do.”

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“Careers Close To Home”

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�LOCAL/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 1, 2015 3

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Rock Springs
UMC special guest
POMEROY — Rick Ash will be providing the message at the Rock Springs United Methodist Church
Sunday, Sept. 6 at their 10 a.m. worship service.
Everyone is welcome.

RACO Yard Sale Sept. 1-3
RACINE —The RACO Fall Scholarship Yard Sale,
beneﬁting the Southern High School Class of 2016
Scholarship Fund, will be held at Star Mill Park in
Racine on Sept. 1, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sept. 2 from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sept. 3 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Contact Kathryn Hart at 740-949-2656 for informa-

tion or to donate items for the sale.

Mason Solid Waste
Authority meeting
MASON, W.Va. — The Mason County Solid Waste
Authority will have their monthly meeting Tuesday,
Sept. 8 at 9 a.m. at 1927 Fairground Road.

Meigs Cleanup Day

AP Diplomatic Writer

WASHINGTON — The State
Department will release roughly
7,000 pages of Hillary Rodham
Clinton’s emails Monday, including about 150 emails that have
been censored because they
contain information that is now
deemed classified.
Department officials said
the redacted information was
classified in preparation for
the public release of the emails
and not identified as classified at the time Clinton sent or
received the messages. All the
censored material in the latest
group of emails is classified at
the “confidential” level, not at
higher “top secret” or compart-

RUTLAND — The Dill Farm in Rutland will be
the site of the St. Jude Ride on Sept. 19. Ride time
begins at noon, but other activities will be taking
place before the ride. After the ride, there will be a
hog roast and drawings for door prizes and rafﬂe
items. Last year’s event raised $29,776 for St. Judes
Children’s Research Hospital. For more information,
contact 740-742-2849.

POMEROY — Meigs Cleanup Day will be 9 a.m.
to 1 p.m. Sept. 12 at the Meigs County Fairgrounds,
1850 Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy. This event is open
to Meigs County residents only and proof is required,
RACINE — Southern High School in Racine will
such as a drivers license or utility bill. Industrial or
be having a Craft Show Oct. 24 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
commercial customers are not eligible. For more
information on what items can be recycled, visit www. They are looking for crafters and vendors. If interested, call Alan at 740-444-3309 to get an application.
gjmvrecycle.com or call 1-800-544-1853.

Crafters, Vendor applications

Dept. to release 7,000 pages of emails
By Matthew Lee

20th annual St. Jude
saddle up trail ride

mentalized levels, they said.
“It’s somewhere around 150
that have been subsequently
upgraded” in classification, State
Department spokesman Mark
Toner told reporters.
Still, the increasing amounts
of blacked-out information from
Clinton’s email history as secretary of state will surely prompt
additional questions about her
handling of government secrets
while in office and that of her
most trusted advisers. The Democratic presidential front-runner
now says her use of a home
email server for government
business was a mistake, and government inspectors have pointed
to exchanges that never should
have been sent via unsecured
channels.

Toner insisted that nothing
encountered in the agency’s
review of Clinton’s documents
“was marked classified.”
Government employees are
instructed not to paraphrase
or repeat in any form classified
material in unsecured email.
Monday evening’s release will
amount to more pages of email
than released in the previous
three months combined. Once
public, it will mean roughly a
quarter of all of the correspondence Clinton qualified as “work
emails” has been published.
Clinton provided the State
Department some 30,000 pages
of documents late last year, while
deleting a similar amount from
her server because she said they
were personal in nature.

FOR THE RECORD
Domestic
An action of dissolution of marriage was ﬁled by
Cassie Peck and William G. Peck II.
An action of divorce was ﬁled by Christine Martin and Bryan Martin.
An action of divorce was ﬁled by William Hayes
and Billie Joe Hayes (Long).
An action of dissolution ﬁled by Bradley S. Ritterbeck and Melissa A. Ritterbeck.
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60599338

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Local Briefs will only list
event information that is free and open to the public.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155

Photo courtesy of Jordan Pickens

LST-325 (left) and USS LST-388 unloading at low tide at Omaha Beach during the invasion of
Normandy in June 1944.

From Page 1

The hull turned out
to be an extraordinarily
adaptable platform,
which the Allies easily
reconﬁgured into medical
ships, radar controllers
and ﬂoating repair facilities. After the war clever
entrepreneurs revolutionized the ferry industry
with decommissioned
vessels.
LST-325 was launched
on Oct. 27, 1942, from
Philadelphia, PA. The
vessel saw action in the
invasions at Gela, Sicily
and Salerno, Italy before
becoming part of the
armada that landed on
Omaha Beach on 6 June
1944.
Navy records show
LST-325 made over 40
trips shuttling men and
equipment across the
English Channel in the
following nine months.
The vessel continued
runs between England
and France, returning
to the United States in
March 1945 and decommissioned July 2, 1946.
When a need arose for
support vessels for “Operation SUNSAC” (Support
of North Atlantic Construction), LST-325 was
recommissioned to assist
in the building of radar
outposts along the eastern shore of Canada and

western Greenland.
LST-325 was transferred to the Maritime Administration
(MARAD) in the National Defense Reserve Fleet
on Sept. 1 ,1961.
Reactivated in 1963,
the ship was transferred
to Greece in May of 1964
and renamed Syros, or
L-144. The vessel served
in the Greek Navy until
Dec. 1999 when it was
again decommissioned.
When her fate was uncertain, she was eventually
acquired by the USS Ship
Memorial, Inc. in 2000.
After making a ﬁnal voyage
across the Atlantic, the ship
docked in Evansville, Ind.
and is now a museum and
memorial named the LST325 Memorial. Evansville
also serves as its permanent
home.
As one of only two
remaining LSTs in the
U.S., snd ummers are usually spent traveling the

waterways agiving people
a chance to experience the
ship in many locations.
This summer, LST-325
Memorial left port on
Aug. 27 and is traveling upriver to Pittsburg,
where it will be open for
tours Sept. 2-8 at North
Shore Riverfront Park
adjacent Heinz Field.
Departing from Pittsburgh September 9, the
vessel will make a trip
down the river and arrive
on the riverfront adjacent
to the Great American
Ball Park in Cincinnati Sept. 11and again
be open for tours Sept.
12-16.
To follow LST-325 on
the river, visit http://
www.lstmemorial.org/
pages/progress.html.
For more information
and history, visit their web
site at lstmemorial.org.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 EXT. 2551.

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LST

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Ensuring taxpayer
dollars are spent
towards education
As the summer comes to a close, students
across Ohio are crisscrossing the state, heading
back to campuses and settling into dorms.
Set foot on any college quad and the excitement is palpable — young people excited for their
futures, which they hope will be even brighter
thanks to higher education.
We know that education is one of
the surest paths to economic success. It’s one of the strongest antipoverty tools we have, and the best
leg up into the middle class. It’s why
we invest in universities and community colleges and federal student aid,
like Pell Grants and Stafford Loans.
Sherrod
But increasingly, for-proﬁt colleges
Brown
Contributing are taking advantage of these ﬁnancial aid programs designed to help
Columnist
students, and instead are using them
to pad their proﬁts.
In 2009, 15 of the largest for-proﬁt education
companies received 86 percent of their revenues
from federal student aid programs. And they spent
almost $4 billion – nearly one-quarter of their budgets – on advertising, marketing and recruitment.
In many cases, that self-promotion was aggressive
and deceptive. Because of these misleading marketing campaigns, students looking for a quality
college education can ﬁnd themselves at for-proﬁt
institutions that are more concerned with proﬁt
margins than career readiness.
This spending on self-promotion by for-proﬁt
colleges and universities is gargantuan compared
with non-proﬁt colleges, and even compared to
other for-proﬁt companies, where marketing budgets typically only represent between 4 percent
and 12 percent of sales. This practice is a waste of
taxpayer money that should be going toward real
educational opportunities, not corporate proﬁts,
and it needs to end.
That’s why I introduced legislation, the Protecting Financial Aid for Students and Taxpayers Act,
to crack down on these predatory practices, and
ensure that federal student aid is used for education, not corporate marketing campaigns.
My bill would prohibit all colleges — public,
private and for-proﬁt — from using Pell Grants,
federal student loans, and other federal education
funds for advertising, marketing and recruitment.
It builds on an existing, bipartisan law that already
prohibits schools from using taxpayer funds for
lobbying efforts.
This law would particularly help our student
veterans and service members, who are often the
targets of aggressive and misleading promotion
by schools. It would prevent schools from using
revenue from the G.I. Bill and other service member tuition beneﬁts to fund marketing. Right now,
seven of the eight for-proﬁt education companies
that receive the most G.I. Bill funds are under federal investigation for their deceptive recruitment
tactics. It is despicable enough that these companies are preying on our servicemembers and veterans—and it’s beyond the pale that they’re doing it
with taxpayer funds. It needs to end.
Congress needs to act to ensure that federal
student aid and taxpayer dollars are used to educate students, not fund corporate marketing campaigns. This legislation would help ensure that all
colleges make learning and instruction a priority.

THEIR VIEW

Make your judicial vote count
JudicialVotesCount.org feaAs the voting patterns
tures information about what
were analyzed after the
judges do, descriptions about
Nov. 6, 2012, general electhe duties of different courts,
tion, one thing became
and brief videos of former
clear: a lot of Cuyahoga
judges explaining how the
County voters who cast a
court system works.
ballot for president didn’t
With 2015 being an oddvote for judge. In fact, the Maureen
O’Connor numbered year, there are
Cuyahoga County judicial
Contributing 84 candidates seeking 55
voter drop-off that year
municipal court judgeships in
was as high as 40 percent. Columnist
28 counties across the state.
That fact and others led
Next year, JudicialVotesme to propose a threeCount.org will include information
point plan to reform judicial elecon candidates for the Supreme
tions in Ohio. Two aspects of the
Court, appeals courts, common
plan include moving all judicial
pleas courts, and county courts as
races to odd-numbered years and
to the top of the ballot and increas- judges for those courts are elected
in even-numbered years. All judges
ing the qualiﬁcations to serve as
in Ohio are elected to six-year
judge.
terms.
The third part of my plan
Another impetus for creating
became a reality Sept. 1 with the
the website came from a recent
launch of the ﬁrst statewide judisurvey of 1,067 registered Ohio
cial voter education website: Judivoters who said the biggest reason
cialVotesCount.org. For the ﬁrst
they don’t vote for judge is because
time, Ohioans will have access to
they don’t know enough about the
quality information about all candidates for judge in the 2015 races. candidates. The survey, which was
conducted in October 2014 by the
I have partnered with several
Bliss Institute, focused on the droporganizations to better educate
off in votes cast in judicial races.
Ohioans about judges to increase
In speaking out on the issue
meaningful voter participation,
over the last three years, I continincluding: the Bliss Institute of
ue to be concerned about judicial
Applied Politics at the University
voter drop-off. In some elections,
of Akron, which houses the weba quarter of the electorate — or
site; the Ohio State Bar Associamore — skips voting for judges,
tion; the League of Women Voters
who, by law, are listed near the
of Ohio; the Ohio Newspaper
Association; and the Ohio Associa- bottom of the ballot. A separate
ﬁnding in the 2014 survey also
tion of Broadcasters.
In addition to candidate proﬁles, conﬁrmed the existence of the

drop-off phenomenon, as about
half of the respondents admitted
they seldom vote in judicial elections.
I believe it’s unreasonable to
expect voters to be knowledgeable
about judicial candidates when
that information either doesn’t
exist or it’s difﬁcult to ﬁnd. JudicialVotesCount.org strives to
give voters easy access to quality
information. It is my hope that
by raising awareness about the
availability of this type of information, voter participation in judicial
races will increase. Better still, I
hope that more Ohioans become
better educated about their judges
and vote in a more informed way
rather than relying on a good ballot name.
In the coming days, weeks, and
months, you will hear more about
the Judicial Votes Count project.
In addition to the website, we have
a Twitter account, a Facebook
page, and a YouTube channel to
spread the word. Please follow,
like, and watch.
Judges make important decisions affecting the lives of Ohioans
every day. Go to JudicialVotesCount.org and take the time to
learn who’s on the ballot for your
local court, their legal background,
and why they are running for
judge. Take that knowledge, step
into the ballot box on Nov. 3, and
make your judicial vote count.
Maureen O’Connor is chief justice of the
Supreme Court of Ohio.

Sherrod Brown is a Democratics U.S. senator from Ohio.

TODAY IN HISTORY...

The Daily Sentinel
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor
should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject
to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be
in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities.
“Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

Today is Tuesday, September 1, the 244th day
of 2015. There are 121
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On September 1, 1715,
following a reign of 72
years, King Louis XIV
of France died four days
before his 77th birthday.
On this date:
In 1807, former Vice
President Aaron Burr
was found not guilty of
treason. (Burr was then
tried on a misdemeanor
charge, but was again
acquitted.)
In 1905, Alberta and
Saskatchewan entered
Confederation as the
eighth and ninth provinces of Canada.
In 1914, the last passenger pigeon in captivity, “Martha,” died at the
Cincinnati Zoo.
In 1923, the Japanese
cities of Tokyo and Yokohama were devastated by
an earthquake that claimed
some 140,000 lives.
In 1939, World War II

began as Nazi Germany
invaded Poland.
In 1945, Americans
received word of Japan’s
formal surrender that
ended World War II.
(Because of the time difference, it was September
2 in Tokyo Bay, where the
ceremony took place.)
In 1951, the United
States, Australia and
New Zealand signed a
mutual defense pact, the
ANZUS treaty.
In 1969, a coup in
Libya brought Moammar
Gadhaﬁ to power.
In 1976, U.S. Rep.
Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio,
resigned in the wake of
a scandal in which he
admitted having an affair
with “secretary” Elizabeth Ray.
In 1983, 269 people
were killed when a
Korean Air Lines Boeing 747 was shot down
by a Soviet jet ﬁghter
after the airliner entered
Soviet airspace.
In 1985, a U.S.-French
expedition located the

wreckage of the Titanic
on the ﬂoor of the Atlantic Ocean roughly 400
miles off Newfoundland.
In 1995, a ribboncutting ceremony was
held for the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum in Cleveland.
(The hall opened to the
public the next day.)
Ten years ago: New
Orleans Mayor Ray
Nagin issued a “desperate SOS” as his city
descended into anarchy
amid the ﬂooding left
by Hurricane Katrina.
Al-Qaida’s number-two
made the terror group’s
ﬁrst direct claim of
responsibility for the July
7 bombings in London in
a videotape.
Today’s Birthdays:
Former Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird is
93. Actor George Maharis is 87. Conductor Seiji
Ozawa is 80. Attorney
and law professor Alan
Dershowitz is 77. Comedian-actress Lily Tomlin
is 76. Actor Don Stroud

is 72. Conductor Leonard Slatkin is 71. Singer
Archie Bell is 71. Singer
Barry Gibb is 69. Rock
musician Greg Errico
is 67. Talk show host
Dr. Phil McGraw is 65.
Singer Gloria Estefan is
58. Former White House
Press Secretary Dee Dee
Myers is 54. Jazz musician Boney James is 54.
Singer-musician Grant
Lee Phillips (Grant Lee
Buffalo) is 52. Country
singer-songwriter Charlie
Robison is 51. Retired
NBA All-Star Tim Hardaway is 49. Rap DJ Spigg
Nice (Lost Boyz) is 45.
Actor Ricardo Antonio
Chavira is 44. Actor
Maury Sterling is 44.
Rock singer JD Fortune
is 42. Actor Scott Speedman is 40. Country
singer Angaleena Presley
(Pistol Annies) is 39.
Actor Boyd Holbrook is
34. Actress Zoe ListerJones is 33. Rock musician Joe Trohman is 31.
Actress Aisling (ASH’ling) Loftus is 25.

�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 1, 2015 5

Project aimed
at making
safer drones

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

TUESDAY, SEPT. 1

MIDDLEPORT —Middleport Lodge
363 will have their regularly scheduled
meeting at 7:30 p.m. with fellowship
beginning at 6:30 p.m. All Masonic
Brethren are encouraged to attend.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct an
immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial Dr., Pomeroy. Bring child(ren)’s shot records.
Children must be accompanied by a
parent/legal guardian. A $10 donation
is appreciated for immunization administration, however no one will be denied
services due to an inability to pay.
Bring medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax
(shingles) vaccine is also available. Call
(740) 992-6626 for eligibility determination. Visit www.meigs-health.com for
more information about commercial
insurances accepted at the clinic.

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2

WEATHER

2 PM

85°

79°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

88°
63°
84°
62°
102° in 1953
48° in 1946

Precipitation

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
1.20
3.74
34.80
30.25

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:57 a.m.
8:00 p.m.
9:58 p.m.
10:15 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

Last

Sep 5

First

Sep 13 Sep 21 Sep 27

SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for ﬁsh and game.

Major
Today 2:20a
Wed. 3:22a
Thu. 4:24a
Fri.
5:23a
Sat.
6:18a
Sun. 7:11a
Mon. 7:59a

Minor
8:34a
9:36a
10:37a
11:36a
12:04a
12:57a
1:46a

Major
2:48p
3:50p
4:51p
5:50p
6:45p
7:37p
8:24p

Chillicothe
87/66

0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Lucasville
89/69

Primary: ragweed/grass/other
Mold: 1797
Moderate

High

Very High

Portsmouth
89/68

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Minor
9:02p
10:04p
11:05p
---12:32p
1:24p
2:12p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Sept. 1, 1950, Yuma, Ariz., had its
hottest day ever, with a high of 123
degrees. On the same day, the mercury in Mecca, Calif., soared to 126
degrees -- the highest U.S. reading
ever in September.

300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
12.83
16.05
21.77
13.20
13.37
25.43
13.42
25.92
34.97
13.56
16.10
34.40
13.90

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.51
-0.21
+0.88
+0.81
-0.18
+0.13
+0.28
+0.62
+0.54
+0.59
+1.00
+0.30
+0.80

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Partly sunny and
warm

Logan
87/65

SATURDAY

89°
66°

87°
65°

Warm with abundant
sunshine

MONDAY

83°
63°

Mostly sunny and
warm

Mostly sunny and
seasonably warm

Marietta
88/65

Murray City
87/65
Belpre
89/67

Athens
88/65

89°
67°
Sunny and remaining
warm

Today

St. Marys
89/66

Parkersburg
88/65

Coolville
88/67

Elizabeth
89/66

Spencer
89/66

Buffalo
89/68
Milton
89/68

Clendenin
89/65

St. Albans
90/67

Huntington
88/66

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
68/53
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
72/62
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
81/66
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SUNDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
89/68

Ashland
88/67
Grayson
89/69

there is no fetal tissue
donation program.
“He launched this
investigation for a program that doesn’t exist,”
she said.

BBT (NYSE) —36.92
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.97
Pepsico (NYSE) — 92.93
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.50
Rockwell (NYSE) — 111.83
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 18.25
Royal Dutch Shell — 52.92
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 26.69
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 64.73
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.13
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.74
Worthington (NYSE) — 25.59
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Aug. 31, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Wilkesville
87/64
POMEROY
Jackson
89/67
88/67
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
90/68
89/67
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
86/68
GALLIPOLIS
90/67
90/69
89/68

South Shore Greenup
89/69
88/68

52

FRIDAY

88°
67°

McArthur
87/65

Waverly
87/67

Pollen: 85

0 50 100 150 200

Full

THURSDAY

Adelphi
88/65

1

Low

MOON PHASES

Partly sunny, hot and
humid

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Primary: cladosporium

Wed.
6:58 a.m.
7:58 p.m.
10:40 p.m.
11:25 a.m.

AEP (NYSE) — 54.29
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.48
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 104.97
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.99
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 45.20
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 43.64
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 5.63
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.271
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 47.62
Collins (NYSE) —81.85
DuPont (NYSE) — 51.50
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.35
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.83
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 56.05
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 64.12
Kroger (NYSE) — 34.50
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 83.90
Norfolk So (NYSE) —77.91
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.25

WEDNESDAY

Warm and humid today with a t-storm around.
Mainly clear tonight. High 90° / Low 67°

ple in the state of Ohio.”
Kight said Attorney
General Mike DeWine’s
ofﬁce does annual inspections of the organization’s
contracts and knows

LOCAL STOCKS

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

care,” Kight said in an
interview. “It’s clear to us
that this is just political
theater and over dramatizing on the part of these
anti-women’s health peo-

90°
66°
67°

BEAVERCREEK (AP) — A new
smartphone app and website being
developed by a university research
institute in southwestern Ohio could
make ﬂying drones safer, institute
ofﬁcials say.
Drone operators would be able to
upload ﬂight routes or areas to the
website or app, said Bruce Preiss,
a lead research engineer at Wright
State University Research Institute.
Other users would then be alerted
to potential conﬂicts with restricted
ﬂight areas or with those who have
ﬁled ﬂight plans within the same
system.
“The power of this app is the
more people we get using it, the
better it’s going to be,” Preiss
told the Dayton Daily News. “If
everyone’s not using it, it’s going
to be weak.”

MONDAY, SEPT. 7

money Planned Parenthood receives through
federal grants administered by the Ohio Department of Health.
The organization got
more than $1 million in
such grants last budget
year, according to the
state’s health department.
The money supports initiatives for HIV testing,
breast and cervical cancer
screenings, along with
diagnosis and treatment
of sexually transmitted
diseases. An Ohio bill
introduced this summer
seeks to block state health
ofﬁcials from distributing that grant money to
Planned Parenthood and
its afﬁliates.
Kight defends Planned
Parenthood clinics, saying they provide a critical
safety net of services for
women and their families.
“These constant threats
and constant attacks are
bad for women’s health

ings, preventative care,
sexually transmitted disease treatment and other
From Page 1
services. Three locations
provide abortions.
letter dated Aug. 7 that
Planned Parenthood
the organization “must be clinics in Ohio were paid
held accountable.”
about $5.8 million for
Kasich spokesman Joe
providing health services
Andrews said the admin- to Medicaid patients
istration was reviewing
in the budget year that
its options. He declined
ended June 30, according
to comment further.
to Stephanie Kight, CEO
Arkansas, Alabama
of Planned Parenthood of
and Louisiana ofﬁcials
Greater Ohio and head of
have said they would
its advocacy arm.
end Medicaid payments
That combination of
to Planned Parenthood,
state and federal dollars
prompting a warning
can help pay for a variety
from federal health
of health services, includofﬁcials who cited laws
ing abortions in limited
requiring Medicaid bencircumstances of rape,
eﬁciaries to get covered
incest or when the life of
services from any qualithe woman would be in
ﬁed provider.
danger.
Planned Parenthood
Few such abortions
is among the more than
were covered by Medicaid
80,000 Medicaid providin the last budget year,
ers across Ohio. It has 27 Kight said.
afﬁliated health centers,
Some Ohio lawmakers also are targeting the
offering cancer screen-

8 AM

OLIVE TOWNSHIP — The Olive
Township Trustees will meet at 5 p.m.
at the township Garage on Joppa Road.
MASON, W.Va. — WV Heaven’s
Saints Motorcycle Ministry will have
their annual yard sale from 8 a.m. to
2 p.m. at Mason United Methodist
Church. Donations only.

SUTTON TOWNSHIP — Sutton
Township Trustees Meeting at 7 p.m. at
THURSDAY, SEPT. 3
Syracuse Municipal Building.
CHESTER — The Chester Shade
LETART TOWNSHIP — The regular
Historical Association will meet at 7
meeting of Letart Township will be held
p.m. at the Academy.
at the Letart Township Building at 5
POMEROY — The 1975 graduating p.m.
class of Meigs High School will be celCHESTER —Chester Fire Departebrating their 40th reunion at 2 p.m.
ment will have a Labor Day BBQ startat the Gavin Recreational Building on ing at 11 a.m. There will be chicken,
St. Rt. 554 in Cheshire. For questions ribs and homemade ice cream. Anyone
about the reunion, contact Cynthia
can donate cakes or pies.
Manley Hartenbach at 740-992-2775
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP — The Bedor email chartenbach57@gmail.com
ford Township Trustees will hold their
or Scherry Lane Spears at 740-645regular monthly meeting at the Town
2244.
Hall at 7 p.m.

Funds

TODAY

SATURDAY, SEPT. 5

CHESTER — Chester Garden Club
will be having its annual open meeting
at 7:30 p.m. at the Chester Academy.
All garden clubs and the public are
invited. The speaker will be Rodney
Wallbrown, Mason County Extension
agent.
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP — The Scipio
Township Trustees’ regular monthly
meeting will be held at the Harrisonville
Fire House at 7 p.m.

Charleston
89/67

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
82/62

Montreal
83/66

Billings
88/62

Denver
89/59

Minneapolis
87/71
Chicago
89/70

Toronto
88/65
Detroit
87/69

Kansas City
91/70

New York
92/75
Washington
94/75

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
89/72

High
Low

El Paso
97/71

105° in Needles, CA
26° in Boca Reservoir, CA

Global
Houston
87/71

Chihuahua
93/57

Wed.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
87/64/t 87/64/pc
Anchorage
63/43/s 64/48/s
Atlanta
89/72/pc 89/72/pc
Atlantic City
86/72/s 87/73/s
Baltimore
92/68/s 92/70/pc
Billings
88/62/s 89/55/pc
Boise
89/59/s 81/52/pc
Boston
81/67/s 90/70/s
Charleston, WV
89/67/s 89/67/pc
Charlotte
92/71/pc 93/70/pc
Cheyenne
84/56/t 85/55/pc
Chicago
89/70/s 90/69/pc
Cincinnati
88/66/pc 88/68/pc
Cleveland
85/67/s 86/67/pc
Columbus
88/69/t 88/70/pc
Dallas
94/75/s 94/74/s
Denver
89/59/t 90/59/pc
Des Moines
90/71/s 88/72/pc
Detroit
87/69/s 88/70/pc
Honolulu
91/78/sh
90/78/t
Houston
87/71/t 91/72/pc
Indianapolis
88/69/t 90/70/pc
Kansas City
91/70/s 89/71/s
Las Vegas
100/75/pc 99/72/s
Little Rock
94/72/pc 94/71/pc
Los Angeles
81/66/pc 80/65/pc
Louisville
91/72/pc 92/73/pc
Miami
91/79/pc
90/77/t
Minneapolis
87/71/pc 88/72/pc
Nashville
90/70/pc 91/72/pc
New Orleans
93/76/pc
91/77/t
New York City
92/75/s 92/76/s
Oklahoma City
92/69/s 92/71/s
Orlando
91/75/t
91/75/t
Philadelphia
93/73/s 94/76/s
Phoenix
104/82/s 101/80/pc
Pittsburgh
88/68/s 87/68/pc
Portland, ME
79/60/s 86/66/s
Raleigh
90/71/pc 91/70/pc
Richmond
92/71/pc 92/71/pc
St. Louis
93/74/s 94/74/pc
Salt Lake City
91/69/pc 91/68/s
San Francisco
72/62/pc 72/60/pc
Seattle
68/53/r
65/51/r
Washington, DC
94/75/s 93/75/pc

Monterrey
91/69

ERIKA

GOALS

Miami
91/79

High
121° in Mitribah, Kuwait
Low 16° in Summit Station, Greenland
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Community
Calendar will only list event information that is open to the public.

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 1, 2015 s Page 6

Wildcats fall to Montcalm, 50-12
By Donald Lambert

elambert@civitasmedia.com

ASHTON, W.Va. — A young Wildcat team
struggled.
The Hannan football team took a loss in
its season opener against visiting Montcalm
50-12 on Friday in Mason County. This was
Hannan’s 11th straight regular season loss.
The host Wildcats (0-1) accumulated a
total of 136 yards offensively, but the defecit
was too much to overcome. The Blue and
White offense managed to get points on the
board in the second half after the Generals
(1-0) defense gave them a lot of trouble in
the ﬁrst half of the contest.
Turnovers played a big part in the game.
Donald Lambert | OVP Sports
After
recovering a Montcalm fumble early
Hannan senior Chad Withers breaking away from Montcalm defenders during the game
against the Generals on Friday night at Hannan High School. The Wildcats lost the in the game, Hannan quarterback Logan
Williams threw an interception deep in the
contest 50-12.

Generals territory and Marcus Mitchell ran
it back for a 6-0 Moncalm lead. The Wildcats
didn’t get out of their own territory for the
rest of the ﬁrst half.
The Generals continued to pour on the
offense in the ﬁrst quarter with a 34 yard
touchdown run from Trevor Pointer for a
14-0 advantage. After a Hannan fumble, the
Generals marched down the ﬁeld for another
touchdown off a Marcus Mitchell run to
make it 20-0. After tacking on another touchdown run from Pointer in the second quarter,
Montcalm led 28-0 at the half.
The home team wasn’t ready to throw in
the towel yet going into the second half. During the ﬁrst possession of the third quarter,
the Wildcats clawed their way down the ﬁeld
with its running game. Freshman Stephen
See WILDCATS | 8

Marauders win CC
meet at Wellston
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

WELLSTON, Ohio — The Meigs boys cross
country team came away with top honors Saturday
at the 2015 Golden Rocket Invitational held on
the campus of Wellston High School in Jackson
County.
The Marauders had ﬁve runners ﬁnish in the top
20, which led to a winning team tally of 57 points.
Athens was the overall runner-up out of 14 teams
with 59 points, while Alexander (118), Southern
(141) and Vinton County (151) rounded out the
top ﬁve spots.
Evan Leist of Pike Eastern beat out 132 other
competitors to win the boys race with a time of
17:49.1. Peter Buckley of Athens was the overall
runner-up with a mark of 18:10.6.
Jacob Swindell paced MHS with a seventh
place effort of 18:58.4, followed by James Parsons
(19:24.3) and Dillon Mahr (19:31.7) with respective placements of 10th and 12th. Nate Hoover
(20:06.4) was 18th overall, while Jared Kennedy
(20:07.8) rounded out the winning tally by ﬁnishing 20th.
Cole Betzing (20:34.3) and Tyler Fields
(21:35.0) also had respective efforts of 26th and
48th for the victors.
Conner Wolfe led the Tornadoes by ﬁnishing
fourth overall with a time of 18:37.9, followed by
Larry Dunn (18:44.0) in ﬁfth place and Dimitrius
Lamm (21:34.0) in 47th. Lucas Hunter (21:41.0)
was 50th overall and Tylar Blevins (22:10.6)
rounded out the team tally by placing 54th.
Ryan McCabe was also 114th for SHS with a
time of 26:35.9. Joseph Ehman was the lone South
Gallia entrant, plcaing 91st overall with a time of
24:24.8.
Athens came away with the girls title with a
winning score of 22. Alexander was second out of
seven teams with a 78, while Vinton County (92),
Meigs (96) and Jackson (108) rounded out the top
ﬁve team ﬁnishes.
Emily Cass of Athens beat out 92 other competitors to win the girls race with a time of 20:37.1.
Payton Remy of Alexander was the overall runnerup with a mark of 20:56.8.
Gracie Hoffman led MHS with a 13th place
effort of 23:29.3, followed by Lara Perrin (23:49.4)
and Caitlyn Rest (24:53.3) with respective ﬁnishes
of 15th and 20th. Taylor Swartz was 22nd overall
with a time of 25:13.2, while Sadie Fox rounded
out the team score with a 46th place effort of
27:59.6.
See MARAUDERS | 8

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Sept. 1
Volleyball
Nelsonville-York at River Valley,
7:15
Chesapeake at Gallia
Academy, 6:45
Ironton St. Joe at Ohio Valley
Christian, 5:30
Meigs at Wellston, 7:15
Boys Soccer
Ironton St. Joe at Ohio Valley
Christian, 5:30
Gallia Academy at Athens,
6:30
Point Pleasant at Belpre, 6
p.m.
Golf
Southern/Waterford at
Wahama, 4 p.m.
Gallia Academy at SEOAL
(Ohio University), 3 p.m.
Meigs Girls at Logan Girls, 3:15
Wednesday, Sept. 2
Volleyball
Southern at Meigs, 7:15

Gallia Academy at Coal
Grove, 6:45
Golf
River Valley/Ripley at
Southern, 4 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 3
Volleyball
Southern at South Gallia,
7:15
Wahama at Point Pleasant,
5 p.m.
Alexander at Meigs, 7:15
Federal Hocking at
Eastern, 7:15
River Valley at Vinton
County, 7:15
Hannan at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Golf
Warren/Piketon at Gallia
Academy, 4 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford, 4
p.m.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Southern junior Kody Greene leads Joe Beegle (50) and Dalton Patterson (60) to stop Notre Dame’s Michael Collins on a 4th-and-goal
from the one yard line, with under 10 seconds to play Saturday night at Spartan Stadium, in Portsmouth. The Tornadoes claimed the
21-18 victory following the defensive stand.

Southern holds off Notre Dame, 21-18
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio — It all
came down to one play, Saturday
night at historic Spartan Municipal
Stadium.
The Portsmouth Notre Dame
football team – which turned an
18-point third quarter deﬁcit to
just three points late in fourth quarter – had a chance to steal a win
with a fourth-and-goal on the Tornadoes 1-yard line with nine seconds remaining in regulation. The
Purple and Gold defensive front
broke through the Titans’ offensive
line to tackle the NDHS runner in
the backﬁeld, forcing a turnover on
downs and sealing the 21-18 SHS
victory to open the season.
“It was a great stop,” seventh
year SHS head coach Kyle Wickline
said. “Our d-line and linebackers
got up in there, we kind of had a
feeling of what they were going to
do, but I called a timeout because
I wasn’t 100 percent sure if they
were going to fake it or something
like that. The whole way through
it I thought I had really messed up,
but those guys backed me up, made
a great effort up front and made a
play.”
The timeout call proved to be the
right decision, as Notre Dame —
which ran out of timeouts earlier
in the fourth — was lining up for
a potential game tying ﬁeld goal.
Titans’ kicker Drew Cassidy was
1-for-1 on ﬁeld goal attempts in the
game, having made one early in the
second quarter to cut the deﬁcit to
7-3.
The Tornadoes — who were

forced to punt on their ﬁrst drive
of the game — had better luck on
their second drive, as junior quarterback Blake Johnson found junior
tight end Crenson Rogers for six
points from seven yards out. SHS
senior Tommy Ramthun added the
point after kick to give SHS the 7-0
lead with three minutes to play in
the ﬁrst.
After the Titans’ 31-yard ﬁeld
goal cut the lead to four, Southern
took over at their own 43 yard
line. The Purple and Gold posted
ﬁve ﬁrst downs and took over
eight minutes of the clock, before
Johnson connected with Rogers for
the duo’s second touchdown of the
evening. This time the scoring toss
was from 23 yards out and, after
Ramthun added the extra point,
gave the Tornadoes a 14-3 with
1:59 remaining in the ﬁrst half.
The Tornado defense forced a
turnover on downs on the next
Notre Dame possession, and the
Purple and Gold went into halftime
with a 14-3 advantage.
Both teams punted on their ﬁrst
possessions after halftime, but
Southern was setup in excellent
ﬁeld position at the NDHS 33-yard
line to start their second drive of
the third quarter. Tornadoes halfback Kody Greene kept the drive
alive with a 6-yard run on thirdand-short, but the Purple and Gold
faced another third down after a
mishandled snap on second-andsix.
Johnson went to the air on third
down and found Ramthun for a
18-yard touchdown, with 4:12
remaining in the third. Ramthun
added the point after kick and SHS

extended its lead to 21-3.
The Titan offense found its
rhythm for the ﬁrst time late in
the third quarter and the Blue and
Gold converted three ﬁrst downs
on their way to six points. The
60-yard drive, which was capped
off by a 30 yard touchdown run by
halfback Sam Kayser, and a point
after kick by Cassidy, trimmed
the SHS lead to 21-10 with 1:46
remaining in the third.
The Tornado offense was forced
into three-and-outs on their next
two possessions, but pinned the
Titans deep in their own territory
with excellent punts.
Notre Dame, which started three
second half drives inside its own
25-yardline, got on the Tornadoes
side of the ﬁeld with seven minutes
to play, thanks to a 41-yard run by
senior Michael Collins.
Four plays after Collins’ long
run, NDHS found itself back in the
endzone on a six yard scoring run
by Kayser. Kayser also ran in the
two-point conversion and Southern’s lead was cut to 21-18 with
5:47 left in regulation.
Back-to-back costly penalties set
the Tornado offense back to its
own nine-yard line, facing a ﬁrstand-30 to start the ensuing drive.
SHS never managed to make it
back to the original line of scrimmage and was forced to punt with
3:24 left in the game.
The Titans began their drive
on the SHS 46-yardline and six
plays later the hosts were facing
ﬁrst-and-goal from the 10-yardline
with 1:21 remaining in regulation.
See SOUTHERN | 10

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 1, 2015 7

Miscellaneous

Professional Services

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Arbors at Pomeroy
is NOW HIRING
Full Time &amp; Part Time
Cook/Dietary Aid Apply Within.
Call 740-992-6606

TASC of Southeast Ohio
(TSO) is a private not-for-profit
outpatient program providing
outpatient services for adult
and adolescent populations in
need of non-residential substance abuse treatment services, has the
following positions open:

To apply send resume and
cover letter addressed to Bill
Meek, Clinical Supervisor and
emailed to: meek.william@yahoo.com

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute
OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

$$$$$$$$$

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Serving Gallia,
Meigs Co.
and
Mason Wv.
Ron Evans
Jackson,Oh
1-800-537-9528
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Arbors at Pomeroy
NOW HIRING
Full Time &amp; Part Time STNAs
or CNAs, Part Time &amp; PRN
LPNs. Apply Within.
Call 740-992-6606
Diesel Mechanic needed
at local business.
Salary negotiable depending
on experience.
Mon-Fri, 7:30am- 4:00pm.
Send resumes to:
Blind Box 15
825 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Manager needed at Meigs
Industries, Inc. to oversee
operations of janitorial and
mowing services staffed by
persons with developmental
disabilities. Supervisory,
budgeting, maintenance
janitorial experience and
degree in Business
Management/MaintenanceTechnical or related field
preferred. Valid driverҋs
license with good driving
record required. Please send
resume to Meigs Industries,
Inc. at 1310 Carleton Street,
P.O. Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio
45779 by September 9th.

LEGALS

TUPPERS PLAINS REGIONAL SEWER DISTRICT
WWTP LAGOON IMPROVEMENTS
LEGAL NOTICE- INVITATION TO BID

Counselors, Vinton and Meigs
Offices: Successful candidates must have demonstrated
extensive experience in the
treatment and care of consumers who have substance
abuse issues. Bachelorҋs degree in social work, addiction
studies, and/or other human
service field preferred. Minimum of CDCA required. Must be
licensed by appropriate credentialing board, which may be
under supervision for licensure.
All candidates must have a valid driverҋs license and maintain automobile insurance, and
be able to pass a drug screen.

Melissa Zoller
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District
(Physical Address for Delivery:) 1400 Pike St. Marietta
(Mailing Address:) P.O. Box 520
Reno, Ohio 45773
740-374-9436

Employment Wanted
A 108 unit apartment complex
is looking to hire an individual
part time to perform maintenance duties. Please send resume or call 304-675-6679
LEGALS

Southern Local Board of Education will be
accepting bids for the following surplus items;
2002 27 passenger Freightliner Bus (bus#3)
2002 72 passenger International Bus (bus#8)
2- Blodgett Stackable convection ovens (natural gas)
1998 Office Trailer 12x 44 Air and heat unit.
Bids will be accepted until 1 p.m. on Friday,September 4, 2015.
Southern Local Board of Education reserves the right to accept
or reject any bids. All items sold as is. Mail or deliver to the
Southern Local Board of Education, 106 Broadway Street, P.O.
Box 147, Racine, Ohio 45771.
8/30/15-9/1/15-9/2/15

Miscellaneous

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Call Now! 800-341-2398

Bids received after 4:00 PM on September 16, 2015 will not be
considered and will be returned to sender.

Ravenswood Care Center
Virginia Manor is taking
Applications for LPN's, &amp;
Nursing Assistants. Apply
At 1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood, WV 26164

TSO is an equal opportunity
employer.

Are You Still Paying Too Much
For Your Medications?

Sealed Bids will be received for furnishing all labor, materials and
equipment necessary to complete a project known as Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer District – WWTP Lagoon Improvements at the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District until
4:00 PM local time on September 16, 2015. Bid envelopes shall be
in a second sealed envelope marked “Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
District WWTP Lagoon Improvements”, and sent to:

Medical / Health

Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid prescription is
required for all prescription medication orders.
Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.

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DR_16461_3x3.5

Bids will be publicly opened and read aloud on September 17, 2015
at the Meigs County Commissioners’ Ofﬁce at 100 E. 2nd St. #301,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 at 11:05 AM.
Bid Documents including the Bid Requirements and Contract
Documents (that include all bid sheets, plans, speciﬁcations, and
addenda) can be obtained from IBI Group, 635 Brooksedge
Boulevard, Westerville, Ohio 43081 with a non-refundable payment
of $100 per set. Checks should be made payable to IBI Group, Inc.

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Yard Sale
5 Family Garage Sale
Sept. 3rd &amp; 4th at
4466 State Route 554
women's, juniors, girls,
men's &amp; boys, nursing scrubs,
comforter set, rugs, household
items, tv stands, toys &amp; lots of
misc.
Huge yard sale
old Chester School
Sept. 4-5
9am-1pm
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call
24HRS 740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

Each proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties
submitting the Bidding Documents and all persons interested therein.
Each bidder must submit evidence of its experiences on projects of
similar size and complexity. The Owner intends that this Project be
completed no later than the time period as set forth in Article 4 of the
Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Contractor on the
Basis of a Stipulated Price.
Each Bidder must insure that all employees and applicants for
employment are not discriminated against because of race, color,
religion, sex, national origin, handicap, ancestry, or age.
Contractors shall comply with the equal employment opportunity
requirements of Ohio Administrative Code Chapter 123, the
Governor’s Executive Order of 1972, and Governor’s Executive Order
84-9.
Bidders will be required to conform to all provisions of the Federal
Davis-Bacon and Related Acts which requires that all laborers and
mechanics employed by contractors and subcontractors performing
on Federal contracts (and contractors and subcontractors performing
on Federally assisted contracts under the Related Acts) in excess of
$2000, pay their laborers and mechanics not less than the prevailing
wage rates and fringe beneﬁts, as determined by the Secretary of Labor,
for corresponding classes of laborers and mechanics employed on
similar projects in the area.
This procurement is subject to the EPA policy of encouraging the
participation of small business in rural areas (SBRAs).
The Engineer’s estimate for the project is $405,000.

60606001

60583312

Notices

Each Bidder is required to furnish with its submission of the fully
completed Bid Documents, a Bid Security in accordance with Section
153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security furnished in Bond form
(Bid Guarantee and Contract and Performance Bond as provided in
Section 153.57.1 of the Ohio Revised Code), must be issued by a Surety
Company or Corporation licensed in the State of Ohio to provide said
surety. Bidders may elect to submit a bid guaranty in the form of a
certiﬁed check, cashier’s check or letter of credit pursuant to Chapter
1305 of the Ohio Revised Code and in accordance with Section 153.54
(C) of the Ohio Revised Code. Any such letter of credit shall be
revocable only at the option of the beneﬁciary Owner. The amount of
the certiﬁed check, cashier’s check or letter of credit shall be equal to
ten (10) percent of the Bid and the Successful Bidder will be required
to submit a bond in the form provided in 153.57 of the Ohio Revised
Code in conjunction with the execution of the Contract.

The Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer District reserve the right to
waive any informalities or irregularities. The Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District reserve the right to reject any or all bids or to increase
or decrease or omit any item or times and/or award the bid to the
lowest, responsive and responsible bidder.
09/01/15 -09/08/15

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�SPORTS

8 Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Daily Sentinel

RedStorm women’s soccer slips past Milligan
By Randy Payton

dropped their season opener.
Young, a senior from Okena,
Ohio, scored the game-winner
MILLIGAN COLLEGE,
off a through ball from senior
Tenn. — Courtney Young’s
Melissa Dickerson (Little
goal with 2:43 left to play
Hocking, OH), ﬁring the shot
snapped a 1-1 tie and lifted
past Milligan goal keeper
the University of Rio Grande
Charlotte Stephens.
to a 2-1 win over Milligan ColDickerson scored the
lege, Saturday afternoon, in
game’s opening goal from
women’s college soccer action 20 yards out in the top corat Anglin Field.
ner - off an assist by senior
Rio Grande evened its
Rachel Hoffman (Franklin,
record at 1-1 with the vicOH) - to give the RedStorm
tory, while the host Buffaloes
a 1-0 lead just under 12 minURG Sports Information

utes into the contest.
Milligan scored the tying
marker with 2:51 left before
the intermission when Madison Thomas found the net off
of a feed from Caroline Gill
and that’s how things stayed
until Young’s eventual gamewinner.
“We got off to a good start,
but then we took our foot
off the accelerator,” said Rio
Grande head coach Callum
Morris. “Both teams had some
chances in the second half,

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Business &amp; Trade School

Apartments/Townhouses

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

Available Sept. 1, 2015
1 Bedroom apartment
dishwashers and
washer / dryer
no smoking- no pets
$500 month- $500 deposit
references needed on
State Route 588
740-446-2034 before 8pm
or 419-359-1768

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Apartments/Townhouses
1 and 2 bedroom apartments
near downtown Pt. Pleasant.
All utilities paid. HUD accepted. 304-360-0163
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
3 Bdrm Apt. $425 plus utilities
&amp; Dep. 3rd Street Racine, Ohio
740-247-4292
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the loss for Milligan, which
outshot the RedStorm, 16-12.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Monday afternoon
when it opens Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
action against West Virginia
University-Tech.
Kickoff is set for 3 p.m.
at Milligan College’s Anglin
Field. There will be no live
video or statistics of the game.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director for the University of Rio Grande.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1
7 PM

10 PM

10:30

Game Night "Everything's
Coming Up Jonas" (N)
Game Night "Everything's
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Extreme Weight Loss
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Frontline "Putin's Way"
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Eyewitness News at 10
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'Putin's Way', reveals how
it's led to autocratic rule.
NCIS: New Orleans "How
Much Pain Can You Take?"

10 PM

10:30

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Elementary
Elementary
The Dan Patrick Show (N) Pirates Ball Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Milwaukee Brewers Site: Miller Park (L)
(1:00) ITF Tennis U.S. Open ITF Tennis U.S. Open First Round Site: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center -- Flushing Meadows, N.Y. (L)
SportsCenter
30 for 30 "The Best That Never Was"
30 for 30 "Rand University" Baseball Tonight
All About Steve A crossword puzzle writer falls for a
What Happens in Vegas A couple sets out to make
The Switch Jason
cameraman and follows him around the country. TV14
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Bride Wars After scheduling their weddings on the
Monica the Medium "Spirit Next Step Realty: NYC
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same day, two friends become bitter rivals. TVPG
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the Flame"
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Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam House (N)
Modern Fam
Seinf. 1/2
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CNN Special Report
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Rizzoli &amp; Isles "Love Taps" Rizzoli "Sister Sister"
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Bad Girls Club Seven 'bad'
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Ho-Down"
With Kat-tastrophe" (N)
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girls live under one roof.
Law &amp; Order "Hubris"
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Divas "It's a Beautiful Life?" Total Divas (N)
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(:25) Gilligan's Island
Gilligan
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Run" (N)
and the Bees" (N)
Dirty "Hog Wild" (N)
Pro FB Talk Football
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Count. "The Count. "Pimp Counting
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(:05) Outlaw Chronicles
Cars
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Below Deck
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Days of N... war with mutants while investigating a settlement on Mars. TV14
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400 (HBO)

6:30

but we were ﬁnally able to
get the score from Courtney
there at the end. We showed
a lot of composure, a lot of
ﬁght - much more than the
opening game on Wednesday
(a 3-1 loss at home to Marian
University). Hopefully, we
can build on this and move
forward.”
Rio sophomore goal keeper
Kristin Garn (Morrow, OH)
stopped nine shots for her
ﬁrst collegiate victory.
Stephens had four saves in

FIRST MONTH FREE
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Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

10:30

Tree Service
Jones Tree Service:
Complete Tree Care,
Stump Grinding
740-367-0266
740-339-3366
Insured

had seven penalties for 43
yards.
Berry led the Wildcat
From Page 6
offense with 13 carries
for 89 yards, followed
Berry scored Hannan’s
by Withers with 11 carﬁrst points of the contest ries for 35 yards and a
with a 55-yard dash to the touchdown. The Generend zone with 7:21 left in als offense was led by
the third quarter.
Mitchell’s eight carries
Later in the period,
for 123 yards and four
Montcalm quarterback
touchdowns, followed by
Hunter Hodge was picked Pointer with eight caroff by Chad Withers, who ries for 44 yards and two
ran it back for another
touchdowns.
Wildcat touchdown. The
Hannan head coach
home team was down
Brian Scott saw signs of
28-12 by the end of the
his young team’s improvement, but some small funthird quarter.
damentals got in the way
The Generals came
back strong in the fourth of the Wildcats’ effort.
“We moved the football
quarter with a pair of
tonight and the defense
touchdown runs from
Mitchell to seal the game had some big stops, but
unfortunately a lot of
for Montcalm.
The Wildcats ended the small errors really held us
game with six turnovers, back,” Scott said.
The Wildcats will
while the Generals only
continue
its home stand
had three turnovers.
against
Jenkins
IndepenMontcalm had the ﬁrst
dent
on
Sept.
4
at HHS.
down advantage with
Game
time
is
scheduled
nine and Hannan manfor 7:30 p.m.
aged to get six. Hannan
had eight penalties for 35 Donald Lambert can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106
yards, while the visitors

Marauders
From Page 6

Carmen Doherty (32:15.4) and Madelyn Hill
(32:24.3) also had respective ﬁnishes of 69th and
70th for the Lady Marauders.
Mallory Johnson paced Southern — which had only
three runners in the girls race — with a 48th place
time of 28:26.3. Sailor Warden (32:54.9) and Kathryn
Matson (32:55.4) also ﬁnished 73rd and 74th, respectively.
South Gallia had one participant at the event, as
Kelsey Corbin ﬁnished 31st overall with a time of
26:11.0.
Complete results of the 2015 Golden Rocket Invitational are available on the web at baumspage.com
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Tree Service
Jones Tree Service:
Complete Tree Care,
Stump Grinding
740-367-0266
740-339-3366
Insured

Help Wanted General

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
AUGUST 25, 2015

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Want To Buy

10 PM

Hard Knocks '15 "Training
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Texans" (SP) (N)
Final Destination 3
('06, Hor) Mary Elizabeth
Winstead. TV14
The Affair Noah represents
the family at an award
ceremony.

Wildcats

Call

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Help Wanted General

The Children's Center of Ohio is accepting applications for a
Special Education Teacher at our Patriot, OH location. Must be
certified in Ohio. Interested applicants should send a resume
and full list of references to Lisa Conley at
patriotapplications@gmail.com.

Help Wanted General

WANTED: Full-time Program Supervisor position available in
Gallia and Meigs Counties. Bachelorҋs degree in a human
services field required; one year experience working with
individuals with developmental disabilities and previous
personnel supervision preferred. Must have a valid driverҋs
license, three years good driving experience and adequate
automobile insurance. Local Travel Required. Salary:
Negotiable. Send resume to: Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640; or email:
beyecserv@yahoo.com . Deadline for applicants: 9/4/15.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

CUSTODIAL/MAINTENANCE WORKER
The Rio Meigs Center invites applications for the position of
Custodial/Maintenance Worker to be responsible for general custodial
and maintenance duties at the Bernard V. Fultz Meigs Center in
Pomeroy, Ohio. This part-time (20 hours/week), twelve-month hourly
position is available immediately.
The Custodian/Maintenance Worker will be responsible for general
repair, exterior lawn &amp; parking lot care, and interior janitorial duties.
Principal duties include, but are not limited to: maintaining grounds
by cutting grass, trimming trees and shrubs, applying fertilizer or
weed control; collect refuse from grounds and buildings; operate
mowers and other yard equipment; plant shrubs and other plants as
needed; performs basic maintenance tasks in all areas of the facility;
operate snow removal equipment; perform duties of custodian
including cleaning, sweeping, mopping, bufﬁng and waxing ﬂoors,
cleaning restrooms, etc., painting, maintaining lawn equipment, and
performing general on-site maintenance duties.
Position Qualiﬁcations:
High school diploma or GED; three (3) to ﬁve (5) years related
experience, must possess a valid driver’s license and have a good
driving record; must be available to work overtime and work
ﬂexible hours (especially for weather related and emergency need),
must be able lift at least 80 pounds, and work outside in inclement
weather; must have strong attention to detail and be able to work
independently.

PASS TIME
IN LINE.
READ THE
NEWSPAPER.

Application Instructions:
All applicants must submit a letter of interest which highlights their
skills, a resume and the names of three references to the following:

Rebecca Long
Vice-President of Administration
Rio Grande Community College
42377 Charles Chauncey Dr
Pomeroy, OH 45769
E-mail: rlong@rio.edu
Fax Number: 740-992-1898
Review of applications will begin immediately. Position is
open until ﬁlled. Background check required prior to hire. For
additional information, please visit: www.rio.edu.
60605986

In Print. Online. In Touch.

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, September 1, 2015 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Dave Green

By Hilary Price

9/01

Difficulty Level

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9/01

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DENNIS THE MENACE

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Eastern tops Lady Marauders in four
By Alex Hawley

Little added one point.
Devyn Oliver led the
MHS service attack with
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
14 points and 10 aces,
— One hiccup, but othwhile Morgan Lodwick
erwise a grand night for
added 10 points and
the Lady Eagles.
three aces. Paige Denny
The Eastern volleymarked ﬁve points and
ball team continued its’
an ace, Devin Humphreys
perfect start to 2015
ﬁnished with two points,
Thursday night at Larry
while Maddie Hendricks
R. Morrison Gymnasium,
added one point in the
topping non-conference
setback.
host Meigs 25-12, 13-25,
Johnson led Eastern
25-12 and 25-14.
at the net with 13 kills,
The Lady Marauders
followed by Mackenzie
(0-3) scored the ﬁrst ﬁve
Brooks with ﬁve. Boano
points of the the opening
and Barringer each had
game, but Eastern (2-0)
four kills, while Baer,
rallied back to take the
Bissell, Barber and Emily
lead at 8-7. The Lady
Sinclair each contribEagles continued their
uted one. Little posted a
roll on to a 25-12 vicgame-high 26 assists for
tory, highlighted by ﬁve
the Green and Gold.
straight service points by
Humphreys marked
both Katlyn Barber and
nine kills and a block
Annalisa Boano.
to pace the Maroon
“We came out tonight,
and Gold at the net,
really excited with high
while Kassidy Betzing
energy,” Eastern head
posted eight kills and four
coach Katie Williams
blocks. Alliyah Pullins
said. “You could really
marked four kills, Oliver
tell in game one that we
added three kills and a
were ready to play and
block, Lodwick marked
our serving was on. In
two kills and a block,
game two Meigs made
while Jordan Roush ﬁnappropriate adjustments,
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports ished with one kill. Oliver
came out playing hard
Eastern juniors Hannah Barringer (21) and Katlyn Barber (2) team up to block a spike attempt by Meigs sophomore Devin Humphreys marked a team-best 13
and ready to battle back.”
assists for Meigs, while
(10) during the Lady Eagles’ 3-1 victory, Thursday at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
The Maroon and Gold
Roush anchored the
rolled to an 8-0 lead in to
defense with three digs.
victory
with
a
25-14
tri“The
girls
talked
to
each
talking;
they
started
jelling
together.”
start the second game,
The Lady Eagles,
umph.
ing together and playing other and ﬁgured out
The Lady Eagles’ seron eight consecutive
who
took part in Satwhat they needed to do,
defense.”
“Even though we lost vice attack was paced
service points by Devyn
urday’s
Athens Invitawe made some adjustEastern rallied back
this evening, I am very by Elayna Bissell with
Oliver. EHS pulled withtional
return
to action
in the third game, allow- ments and they worked
proud of the girls’ effort 17 points, including six
in four points of Meigs,
on
Thursday
when
pretty well. We talked
aces, while Morgan Baer
and the never give up
but nine straight service ing Meigs to record just
two service points. Lady about communicating
attitude that they have,” and Annalisa Boano both Federal Hocking visits
points by Morgan Lod‘The Nest’, while Meigs’
Eagles’ libero Elayna Bis- where you’re going, com- Meigs head coach Lori
had 10 points with three
wick allowed the Lady
will return to the court
municating where the
sell recorded nine conand two aces respecCarter said. “We’re a
Marauders to take the
setter’s at and communi- very young team and
secutive service points
tively. Hannah Barringer on Tuesday at Wellston.
second game 25-13 and
The Lady Marauders and
cation in general.”
in the third to help the
and Katlyn Barber both
we’re still learning the
even the match at 1-1.
Lady Eagles will clash
Eastern never trailed
Green and Gold to a
marked six points, with
basics of playing with
“We hit a great streak
in the fourth game,
Barringer recording three again on September 12,
hitters. We don’t have
right there,” Meigs head 25-12 win.
in Tuppers Plains.
which had just one tie at height, so we have to
“In game three we
aces. Kelsey Johnson
coach Lori Carter said of
1-1, and the Lady Eagles learn the defensive part marked four points and
just kind of cleared our
the second game surge
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740secured the 3-1 match
heads,” Williams said.
by MHS. “They started
and we’re just now com- two aces, while Morgain
446-2342, ext. 2100.

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

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Southern

Kayser paced the NDHS offense with
161 yards on 20 carries, with 14 yards
receiving. Collins marked 64 yards on
From Page 6
12 carries for the hosts, while Cassidy
completed 3-of-8 passes for 34 yards.
The Titans kept the ball on the ground
The SHS win was not without a loss
with three straight runs, gaining nine
however, as Tornado junior Jaylen
yards with their hurry-up offense.
Blanks was injured on Notre Dame’s
NDHS attempted a sweep to the left
ﬁrst punt.
side on fourth down from the one and
“It affected us a bunch,” Wickline said
a host of Tornadoes brought down the
of losing Blanks. “He’s the main key
ball carrier on the 2-yardline with four
to our offense, he’s our speed guy and
seconds remaining. Southern executed probably our best athlete. Everyone else
its offensive play without a hiccup, seal- really picked up the pieces and all the
ing the 21-18 victory.
pieces got picked up. Everyone just kind
“A win is a win in the ﬁrst week,”
of jumped in, helped out and did what
Wickline said. “There are a lot teams in they had to do to win.”
the state of Ohio would love to be 1-0
Southern has now defeated Notre
right now and we are. We have some
Dame in four consecutive meetings,
things we need to work on and clear up. dating back to 2005. This marks the
We’ll do that and get better.”
third straight season the Purple and
Johnson led the Tornado offense with
Gold have opened the season with a
95 yards and three touchdowns, on 8-ofwin. This marks the ﬁrst road win for
10 passing. Rogers caught four passes
the Tornadoes since October 13, 2013
for 58 yards and two scores, Ramthun
when SHS claimed a 60-0 win at Miller.
had one reception for 18 yards and a
The Purple and Gold return to the
score, while Dylan Smith added three
gridiron on Friday when they host
grabs for 19 yards and nine rushes for
Frontier at Roger Lee Adams Memorial
22 yards. Greene led all Tornado rushFootball Field. Notre Dame will look
ers with 12 carries for 30 yards.
to move to 1-1 on the year when the
The Purple and Gold defense was led
Titans visit Manchester on Friday.
by Brody Richards with eight tackles,
followed by Greene and Ramthun with
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
seven apiece.
2100.

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