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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

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INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

For The Record....
Page 2

Sunny. High near
76. Low around
53......... Page 2

Local cross
country
action.... Page 6

Betty Brumfield, 68
John Cooper, 93
David Lee Henry, 64
Charles (Dick) Ord

Virginia Sisson, 93
Jerry VanInwagen, 65
Madeline Wiseman, 98
Kevin Wood, 35
50 cents daily

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 149

Additional charges filed in meth lab, rape case
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Additional
charges have been filed against
two people in connection with
the methamphetamine lab and
alleged rape that occurred in
Middleport last month.
The grand jury returned fourcount indictments against Joseph and Brenda Stewart in connection with the crimes.
Joseph Stewart, 39, of Middle-

port, is charged with one count
each illegal manufacture of methamphetamine, a felony of the
second degree; illegal assembly
or possession of chemicals for
the manufacture of methamphetamine; rape, a felony of the first
degree; and sexual battery, a felony of the third degree.
He will be arraigned at 10 a.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 17.
According to the indictment,
the
methamphetamine-related
charges occurred on or about

Joseph Stewart

Brenda Stewart

Aug. 21, while the rape charge occurred from June 30 to Aug. 18.
The indictment alleges that

from June 30, 2013, to Aug. 18,
2013, Stewart did engage in sexual conduct with another when
he purposely compelled the other person to submit by force or
threat of force.
The charge of sexual battery
in the indictment states that no
person shall engage in sexual
conduct with another, not the
spouse of the offender, when he
is either the other person’s natural or adoptive parent.
Joseph Stewart has been in jail

on a $500,000 bond out of Meigs
County Court.
Brenda Stewart, 43, of Middleport, is charged with one count
each illegal manufacture of methamphetamine, a felony of the
first degree; illegal assembly or
possession of chemicals for the
manufacture of methamphetamine; rape, a felony of the first
degree; and endangering children, a felony of the third degree.
See CHARGES | 5

Submitted photo

John Morris, USAFR (retired), seated right, receives congratulations from another officer. Maj Gen Mark Kyle, Commander, Fourth
Air Force, seated left, officiated at the retirement ceremony.

Morris retires
from the Air Force
Charlene Hoeflich
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Lacey Hupp, far left, was crowned the 2013 Racine Party in the Park Queen on Saturday. Jamie O’Brien, far right, was
named first runner up. Pictured with the 2013 royalty is 2012 Queen Jennifer McCoy.

Fifth Party in the Park a success
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Thousands of people
flocked to Racine over the weekend
to take part in the fifth annual Party
in the Park.
Those in attendance enjoyed a free
concert from country chart topper
Randy Houser on Saturday evening.
Prior to Houser, the group After Midnight performed.
Also on Saturday was the 5k race,
parade, queen crowning, kiddie
tractor pull and many other activities and vendors for those in attendance to visit.
Lacey Hupp was crowned the 2013
Party in the Park Queen and Jamie
O’Brien was named first runner up.
Hupp was crowned by 2012 Queen
Jennifer McCoy.
The 2013 Racine Party in the Park
kiddie tractor pull was sponsored by
Hupp Landscaping.
Winners in the super light weight
class were McKenzie Sellers, first;
Kyrstin Fackler, second; and Liddia
Smith, third.
In the 35-55 pound class, Trace
Erwin was first; Dallas Krawsczyn,
second; Jaylynn Hupp, third.
In the 56-75 pound weight class,
Kianna Rose was first; Andrew Roush,
second; and Hannah Erwin, third.
The sixth annual Party in the Park
will be held the second weekend in
September, with the headliner (to be
announced in early 2014) to perform
on Saturday, Sept. 13, along with the
Crusin’ Saturday Night Car Show.

Winners of the 2013 kiddie tractor pull were, from left, Liddia Smith,
McKenzie Sellers, Jaylynn Hupp, Dallas Krawsczyn, Trace Erwin, Hannah
Erwin, Andrew Roush and Kianna Rose. Also pictured are, back from left,
First Runner Up Jamie O’Brien, Queen Lacey Hupp, sponsors Sharon
Hupp, Jeremy Hupp and Kendall Hupp of Hupp Landscaping.

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — After serving 28 years and three months
in the United States Air Force, Colonel John M. Morris
has retired.
An Air Force retirement ceremony was conducted on
Sept. 8 at March Air Force Base in California. Officiating at the ceremony was Major General Mark Kyle, commander, Fourth Air Force. Col. Morris’ wife, Josie, and
their two daughters Michelle and Sarah, were among
those attending.
Morris is the son of Janet and Carl Morris of Rutland.
and is planning a leave later this month for a visit here
with his family. He graduated from Meigs High School
in 1981 and Ohio University in 1985 before entering the
Air Force.
Morris’ military career has taken him into combat zones
at Sather Air Base, Baghdad International Airport, Iraq
from May-September 2006 where for his service he was
awarded the Bronze Star for combat leadership and meritorious service; South Korea, Okinawa, Japan; the Republic
of the Philippines, and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He currently serves as the Special Security Officer for the 452nd
Air Mobility Wing at March Air Reserve Base, California.
Col. Morris USAFR (retired) currently serves as chief,
Special Security Office, at the 452nd Air Mobility Wing.

Meigs Victim Services
Director attends training
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

Parade Marshalls Kenny Theiss, Delbert Smith and Charles Bush ride in
the parade on Saturday morning. The three men are World War II veterans.

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Prosecutor’s
Office has been awarded a
grant to attend a national
conference.
Meigs County Prosecutor Colleen Williams announced recently that the
Crime Victim Services office has been awarded an
Incorporated Grant from
the Ohio Attorney General’s Office to attend the
NOVA (National Organization of Victim Assistance)

Conference being held this
week in Columbus, Ohio.
Theda Petrasko, Director of Crime Victim Services, is attending the training
and is also a National Crisis Responder for NOVA.
The NOVA conference is
nationally and internationally recognized for providing
quality training in victim assistance and crisis response
since 1975. This annual training resource involves four
days of over 100 skill-based
workshops, plenary events,
See TRAINING | 5

St. Jude Trail Ride set for Saturday
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

RUTLAND — The 18th annual St.
Jude Trail Ride at the Dill Farm will
be held on Saturday, with the ride beginning at noon.
Michael and Isabel Dill, along with
their daughter Paige, and many family
Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel members, friends and neighbors orgaVolunteers work each year to organize the St. Jude Trail Ride at nize the event year. The ride is held on
the Dill Farm near Rutland. Pictured are, front, from left, Holly the Dill’s farm located at 34843 Beech
McGrath, Becky McGrath, Bradley McGrath, Isabel Dill, Darlene Grove Road just outside of Rutland.
Hoschar, Kathy See, back, Paige Dill riding Sugar, and Triton.
The ride travels for 10 miles

through scenic Rutland Township.
Halfway through the ride organizers
provide an intermission and refreshments. There is no charge to participate in the 10-mile ride though donations to St. Jude are welcome.
All the proceeds from the event go
to benefit St. Jude Research Hospital.
Last year, $23,129.76 was raised for
St. Jude with 353 riders registered.
This was an increase of more than
100 from 2011, when 222 riders took
part, with 286 people either riding or
making donations.

To date, the annual trail ride has
collected $168,871.01 for St. Jude.
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital is internationally recognized for
its pioneering work in finding cures
and saving children with cancer and
other catastrophic diseases. St. Jude
is the first and only pediatric cancer
center to be designated as a Comprehensive Cancer Center by the National Cancer Institute. Founded by
late entertainer Danny Thomas and
See RIDE | 5

�Page 2 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 17. 2013

Meigs County Community Calendar
Tuesday, Sept. 17
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Board of Health meeting,
which was scheduled for Sept.
10, will be held at 5 p.m. in the
conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department.
MIDDLEPORT — BrooksGrant Camp No. 7 Sons of the
Union Veterans of the Civil War
will meet at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. The meeting
begins at 7:15 p.m. Election of
officers is set and the public is
invited.
Thursday, Sept. 19
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Retired Teachers will
meet at noon at the Pomeroy
Library meeting room for lunch
catered by the Senior Citizens
Center. Speaker will be Don Ull-

man, ORTA vice president, who
will give updates on retiree education issues. Member asked to
take school supplies.
POMEROY — Due to a
scheduling problem, Leading
Creek Conservancy District’s
regular September board meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. The
date has been changed from the
regular date.
Saturday, Sept. 21
POMEROY — The Veterans
Memorial Hospital employees
will have their annual reunion
from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Meigs
Community Center. Joyce Redman and Barbara Fry are in
charge of this year’s reunion.
POMEROY — Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the DAR
will hold a Constitution Week

Meigs Local Briefs
Antique Machinery Show
ALBANY — The Athens County Antique Machinery
Show will be held Sept. 28 and 29 at the Lake Snowden
Park at 4900 U.S. Highway 50, Albany. The show will
feature antique and classic tractor old farm and oil field
engines. There will be crafts and flea markets, working
steam engines, antique trucks and cars, stone ground
corn meal, a saw mill, and tractor brands starting with
the letters, J. K. and L. Camping is available. For more information call Mike Hartley 59405665; Dave Arnold 5912947 or Steve Sewell 707-6675. Site www.athenscountyantiquemachineryclub.com.

meeting at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. Meigs County Commissioner Randy Smith will be
speaking about how the commissioners/county work in relation
to the constitution.
SALEM CENTER — Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 will hold their Annual Hayride and Wiener Roast
with the hayride beginning
promptly at 6:30 p.m. followed
by a wiener roast. Buns and
drinks will be provided. Everyone is asked to bring hot dogs,
chips or dessert (finger foods
please). Also, final plans for the
Chicken BBQ to be held on Sunday, October 6 will be made. Everyone is invited to attend.
Monday, Sept. 23
HARRISONVILLE — The

Harrisonville Senior Citizens
will meet at 11 a.m. at the Harrisonville Presbyterian Church.
Blood pressure checks will be at
11 a.m., followed by a pot luck.
RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education will meet
in regular session at 6:30 p.m. in
the high school media center.
Friday, Sept. 27
MIDDLEPORT — Health Recovery Services will be hosting an
open house in honor of National
Recovery Month. The open house
will take place from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. with door prizes, food and
fun. Health Recovery Services is
located at 138 North Second Avenue in Middleport.
MARIETTA — The Regional
Advisory Council for the Area
Agency on Aging will meet at

10 a.m. in the Buckeye HillsHVRDD Area Agency on Aging
office in Marietta.
Wednesday, Oct. 9
MARIETTA — There will
be a meeting of the Natural Resources Assistance Council at
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District,
1400 Pike Street, Marietta,
Ohio, on Wednesday, October 9,
2013, at 10:00 a.m. The purpose
of the meeting is to review the
scoring methodology for Round
8 of the Clean Ohio Conservation Fund for District 18. Questions regarding this meeting
should be directed to Michelle
Hyer mhyer@buckeyehills.org
at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District
or call (740) 376-1025.

Meigs County Church Calendar

Coat and
clothing give-away
MASON, W.Va. — A
winter coat and clothing
give-a-way will be held at
the Mason United Methodist Church, Main Street,
Mason, Tuesday, Sept.
17, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
A free breakfast will be
served. All sizes of coats
and clothes are available.
The coat give-a-way will
Tournament Set
RUTLAND — The Rutland Youth co-ed softball tourna- be held at the church, and
ment will be held on Sept. 28 at the Rutland ballfield. Call the clothing will be given
away at Zerkle House
Rodney Butcher for more information 740—742-2525.
across the street from the
church in Mason.
Riverbend Art Show
MIDDLEPORT —The Riverbend Arts Council is sponCommunity Dinner
soring its 7th annual “Art in the Village” on Oct. 5th. ApMIDDLEPORT — A
plications for those wanting to exhibit art work can be
picked up at Farmers Bank in Pomeroy or King Ace Hard- free community dinner of
beans and cornbread will
ware in Middleport. Deadline is Sept. 22.

be served at 5 p.m. on
Wednesday, Sept. 18, at
the Middleport Church of
the Nazarene. Pastor Daniel Fulton invites everyone
to come for food and fellowship.
Fall Harvest Gospel
Sing fundraiser
MIDDLEPORT — A fundraiser for the Fall Harvest
Gospel Sing will be held
from 4-9 p.m. on Saturday,
Sept. 21, in the Middleport
Village Hall gymnasium.
Singers will include, Kay
Lambert, Gloryland Believers, The Dollys, Henry
and Hester Eblin, Randall
St. Johns, Jerry and Diana
Frederick, Angela Gibson,
Danny LeMasters, Annette

Scholarship fund raiser
RACINE — Racine Area Community Organization
(RACO) will be holding their fall yard sale to benefit the
scholarship fund for Southern High School seniors on
September 17, from 9 to 6; September 18, from 9 to 4 and
Fire Runs
September 19, from 9 to 2 at Star Mill park in Racine. All
RUTLAND — The Rutland Volunteer Fire Departthree shelter houses will be used for this event. For informent responded to two motor vehicle accidents, one
mation, contact Kathryn Hart at 949-2656.
landing zone for air medical, and was cancelled en route
six times to mutual aid calls in August. The department
Genealogy Fair
also responded to 53 squad runs, totalling 62 runs for the
CHESTER — Plans have been announced for a gene- month of August.
alogy Fair inner and experienced researchers to be held
911
Sept. 20 and 21 in the Genealogy Research Library in the
Sept. 7
Chester Academy, Chester. The event will be held from
11:21 a.m., East Memorial Drive, abdominal pain;
noon to 5 p.m. on Friday, and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Satur- 2:10 p.m., Laurel Cliff Road, motor vehicle collision;
day. Vendors tables are $10. There is no charge to attend. 4:12 p.m., Laurel Cliff Road, motor vehicle collision
The event is co-sponsored by the Chester-Shade Histori- with entrapment; 4:19 p.m., McKenzie Ridge Road, fall;
cal Association and the Bedford -Lodi Genealogy Group. 6:21 p.m., Hooker Street, fractured body part; 7:18 p.m.,
Food will be available at the Saturday session.
South Second Avenue, fall; 7:54 p.m., Ohio 143, seizure/
convulsions; 7:59 p.m., Ohio 684, numbness; 10:42 p.m.,
Gold Ridge Road, cardiac arrest.
Immunization Clinic
Sept. 8
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department
6:14 a.m., Rocksprings Road, unconscious/unknown
will conduct as childhood and adolescent immunization
clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays, at the reason; 7:27 a.m., East Memorial Drive, fall; 11:03 a.m.,
Meigs County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial Bashan Road, cardiac arrest; 2:29 p.m., East Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring children’s shot records. Drive, difficulty breathing; 4:24 p.m., Sandridge Road,
Children must be accompanied by a parent or legal guard- ATV accident; 4:41 p.m., Pageville Road, chest pain; 9:05
ian. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial insur- p.m., Ohio 681, difficulty breathing; 9:18 p.m., Seventh
ance cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but Street, unknown.
Sept. 9
not required.
8:09 a.m., Jacks Road, motor vehicle collision; 10:54
a.m., Ohio 124, diabetic emergency; 6:47 p.m., Pearl
Street, chest pain; 8:18 p.m., Ohio 248, altered mental
status.
Sept. 10
12:04 a.m., Forest Run Road, difficulty breathing;
1:52 a.m., East Memorial Drive, fall; 9:01 a.m., Ohio
Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 76. East wind 3 to 681, high blood pressure; 9:14 a.m., West Main Street,
7 mph.
chest pain; 10:29 a.m., Rutland Street, difficulty
Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 53. breathing; 12:25 p.m., Mitchell Road, high temperaEast wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening. ture; 1:19 p.m., Page Street, diabetic emergency; 1:44
Wednesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 79. South p.m., East Memorial Drive, unknown; 3:23 p.m., South
wind 3 to 7 mph.
Third Avenue, chest pain; 4:52 p.m., Ohio 124, nauWednesday Night: A slight chance of showers. Mostly sea/vomiting; 5:06 p.m., Red Hill Road, seizure/concloudy, with a low around 61. Chance of precipitation is vulsions; 7:25 p.m., Tornado Road, nose bleed; 7:35
p.m., Devenney Road, fractured body part; 10:39 p.m.,
20 percent.
Thursday: A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a Red Hill Road, difficulty breathing.
Sept. 11
high near 82. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
3:22 a.m., Sellers Ridge Road, unconscious/unknown
Thursday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Chance of reason; 8:16 a.m., East Memorial Drive, lifting assistance; 11:19 a.m., East Memorial Drive, pain general;
precipitation is 30 percent.
Friday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Most- 5:56 p.m., Page Street, chest pain; 8:12 p.m., East Locust
ly cloudy, with a high near 82. Chance of precipitation is Avenue, difficulty breathing; 9:38 p.m., Greenwood Cemetery Road, head injury.
50 percent.
Sept. 12
Friday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
1:31 a.m., Chester Road, chest pain; 2:33 a.m., Union
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Chance of precipita- Avenue, rapid heart rate; 5:10 a.m., Martin Avenue, diffition is 40 percent.
culty breathing; 12:40 p.m., Pearl Street, seizure/convulSaturday: A chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a sions; 3:45 p.m., Oliver Street, hemorrhage; 4:53 p.m.,
high near 78. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Powell Street, diabetic emergency; 5:44 p.m., East MeSaturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 56. morial Drive, chest pain; 7:29 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 75.
difficulty breathing.
Sept. 13
9:55 a.m., Hartinger Road, diabetic emergency; 9:59
a.m., Kingsbury Road, diabetic emergency; 10:16 a.m.,
Charles Chancey Drive, fractured body part; 11:36 a.m.,
East Memorial Drive, head injury; 1:01 p.m., Forest Run
Road, unconscious/unknown reason; 2:12 p.m., Ohio
124, chest pain; 2:15 p.m., Bashan Road, rapid heart rate;
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.98
AEP (NYSE) — 42.82
4:10 p.m., Main Street, chest pain; 7:15 p.m., unknown,
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.05
Pepsico (NYSE) — 81.02
motor vehicle collision; 7:33 p.m., Ohio 124, pain gener-

Holliday and Brian and the
Family Connections. Bring
lawn chairs. Concessions
available.
Homecoming
EAGLE RIDGE — Eagle
Ridge Community Church,
on County Road 32, will
host Homecoming on
Sept. 29. A carry-in lunch
will be at noon. Preaching by Chester Osborne
of Alburn, W.Va., singing
by Charlie and Ellen Rife,
Everett Grant and Charles
Dailey and others.
Meigs Co-operative
Parish events/service
projects
POMEROY — The
Meigs Co-operative Parish
hosts a variety of events

and service projects available throughout the week
at the Mulberry Community Center. Some of those
are as follows,
Meals at the Mulberry
Community Center —
11:30 a.m.-1 p.m., Tuesday
and Thursday.
Parish Shop — 9 a.m.-3
p.m., Monday-Friday and 9
a.m.-1 p.m., Saturday.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.noon, Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11
a.m., Tuesday-Friday.
Celebrate Recovery —
7-9 p.m., Monday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m.
and 5-7 p.m., Tuesday and
Thursday.
Zumba — 6:30 p.m.,
Tuesday.

For the Record

Ohio Valley Forecast

Local stocks
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 91.74
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.01
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 53.99
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 100.46
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.22
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.23
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 41.81
Collins (NYSE) — 73.67
DuPont (NYSE) — 59.70
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.51
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.14
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 63.38
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 53.14
Kroger (NYSE) — 39.68
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 58.95
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 76.44
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 19.58
BBT (NYSE) — 34.48

Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.57
Rockwell (NYSE) — 106.97
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 16.99
Royal Dutch Shell — 65.25
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 61.35
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 74.78
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.47
WesBanco (NYSE) — 28.89
Worthington (NYSE) — 33.69
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for September 16, 2013, 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.

al; 8:42 p.m., Ohio 7, pain general; 9:16 p.m., Elm Street,
head injury.
Sept. 14
1:30 a.m., New Lima Road, chest pain; 5:59 a.m., Art
Lewis Street, lifting assistance; 12:35 p.m., Ohio 7 and
124, motor vehicle collision; 1:17 p.m., Beech Street,
chest pain; 2:47 p.m., Yellowbush Road, difficulty breathing; 4:51 p.m., unknown, chest pain; 6:50 p.m., Ohio 124,
fall; 8:00 p.m., Baker Road, altered mental status; 8:04
p.m., Childrens Home Road, pain general; 11:53 p.m.,
Dudding Lane, chest pain.
Sept. 15
11:52 a.m., Ohio 143, pain general; 12:05 p.m., Harris
Road, chest pain.
Sept. 16
1:11 a.m., unknown, motor vehicle collision.
Probate Court
POMEROY — Marriage licenses were recently issued to
the following couples in Meigs County Probate Court, Brent
Morgan Buckley of Pomeroy and Renee Denise Bailey of
Pomeroy; Philip Brandon Werry of Chester and Janet Leigh
Ridenour of Chester; Bryan Scott Harris of Racine and Ashley Marie Roush of Racine; Mark Andrew Brown and Kattie
Marie Gibbs, both of Syracuse; Jordan Douglas Pickens of
Syracuse and Calee Marie Reeves of Pomeroy; Everett Theodore Coy and Vicki Jean Wildermuth, both of Pomeroy;
Robert Norman Skinner and Karen Sue Bontrager,
both of Pomeroy; Bryan Thomas Proffitt and Lisa Marie
Blankenship, both of Pomeroy; James Tyler Stewart and
Denessa Sue Jones, both of Middleport; Charles Brian
Williamson Jr. and Aubrey Katelyn Williamson, both of
Rutland; Daniel Ray Folmer and Maryanne M. Scallan,
both of Pomeroy; and Jake Allen Lynch and Adrian Kayleen Stover, both of Middleport.
Common Pleas Court
Domestic
An action of dissolution has been filed by Harold Cremeans and Crystal Cremeans.
An action of dissolution has been filed by Byron Virgil
Collins and Melissa Stygler Collins.
An action of divorce has been filed by Brandi Lyons
against Lamar L. Lyons II.
An action of divorce has been filed by Tiffany Hudnall
against Richard Hudnall.
An action of divorce has been filed by Katrinka A.
Broderick against James P. Broderick.
An action of divorce has been filed by Charles Eugene
Fink against Joyce Alice Fink.
An action of divorce has been filed by Tiffany Long
against Garret Long.
Civil
An action of foreclosure has been filed by The Bank of
New York Mellon against Dale Riffle, Pam S. Lutz.
An action of foreclosure has been filed by Peoples Bank
National Association against Jason B. Ridenour, Natasha
M. Ridenour.
An action of foreclosure has been filed by Home National Bank against Lisa J. Russell.
An action of foreclosure has been filed by D. Lee Richards Jr. against Frederick A. Nero, Jennifer L. Shortridge.
A tort action has been filed by James E. Welsh against
Mary M. Francis.
A civil action has been filed by Pekin Insurance Company against Brian Heldreth.

Sen. Brown announces new federal resources
WASHINGTON, D.C. — An organization which supports Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Noble, Perry, and Washington counties has been awarded new federal resources to create local jobs and spur
economic development. U.S. Sen.
Sherrod Brown (D-OH) announced
recently that the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development

District was awarded $174,495 from
the U.S. Economic Development Administration (EDA).
“When we bring together the public and private sectors, it helps to
diversify and strengthen our local
economies,” Brown said. “These federal resources will develop a comprehensive economic development strategy so we can create new local jobs

in Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry, and Washington counties.”
According to EDA, this grant will
bring together public and private sectors in the creation of a comprehensive economic development strategy
(CEDS) in order to diversify and
strengthen the regional economies
of the eight Southeast Ohio counties.

�Tuesday, September 17, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

12 killed in Washington Navy Yard shooting
WASHINGTON (AP) — As
many as two gunmen launched
an attack Monday morning inside the Washington Navy Yard,
spraying gunfire on office workers in the cafeteria and in the
hallways at the heavily secured
military installation in the heart
of the nation’s capital, authorities said. At least 12 people
were killed.
One gunman was dead after
he fired on a police officer, and
police hunted for a second possible attacker who may have been
disguised in a military-style uniform, authorities said. It wasn’t
clear how the gunman died.
Investigators said they had
not established a motive for the
shooting rampage, which unfolded less than four miles from the
White House. As for whether it
may have been a terrorist attack,
Mayor Vincent Gray said: “We
don’t have any reason to think
that at this stage.”
The FBI took charge of the
investigation. The dead gunman
was identified as Aaron Alexis
by two federal law enforcement
officials who spoke on condition
of anonymity because they were
not authorized to speak publicly.
One of those officials said
Alexis, 34, was from Texas and
is believed to have gotten into
the Navy Yard by using someone
else’s identification card. It is not
yet clear if that person was an accomplice or if the ID was stolen.
President Barack Obama
mourned yet another mass shooting in the U.S. that he said took
the lives of American patriots.
Obama promised to make sure
“whoever carried out this cowardly act is held responsible.”
In addition to the dead, at least
three people were wounded.
The area where the rampage
took place, known as Building
197, was part of the headquar-

“It was three gunshots straight in a row
— pop, pop, pop. Three seconds later, it
was pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, so it was like
about a total of seven gunshots, and we just
started running.”
—Patricia Ward
ters for Naval Sea Systems Command, which buys, builds and
maintains ships, submarines and
combat systems. The yard is a
labyrinth of buildings protected
by armed guards at gates and
metal detectors, and employees
have to show their IDs to come
and go.
About 3,000 people work at
the headquarters, many of them
civilians.
Witnesses described a gunman
opening fire from a fourth-floor
overlook, aiming down on people in the cafeteria on the main
floor. Others said a gunman fired
at them in a third-floor hallway.
It was not clear whether the witnesses on different floors were
describing the same gunman.
Around midday, police said
they were searching for two
men who may have taken part
in the attack — one carrying
a handgun and wearing a tan
Navy-style uniform and a beret,
the other armed with a long
gun and wearing an olive-green
uniform. Washington Police
Chief Cathy Lanier said it was
unclear if the men were members of the military.
But later in the day, police said
in a tweet that the man in the tan
uniform had been identified and
was not involved in the shooting.
It was not immediately clear
whether the number of dead

included a gunman.
As emergency vehicles and
law enforcement officers flooded
streets around the complex, a helicopter hovered overhead, nearby schools were locked down
and airplanes at nearby Reagan
National Airport were grounded
so they would not interfere with
law-enforcement choppers.
A short distance away, security was beefed up at the Capitol and other federal buildings,
but officials said there was no
known threat.
Todd Brundidge, an executive
assistant with Navy Sea Systems
Command, said he and other coworkers encountered a gunman
in a long hallway on the third
floor. The gunman was wearing
all blue, he said.
“He just turned and started firing,” Brundidge said.
Terrie Durham, an executive
assistant with the same agency,
said she also saw the gunman firing toward her and Brundidge.
“He aimed high and missed,”
she said. “He said nothing. As
soon as I realized he was shooting, we just said, ‘Get out of the
building.’”
Rick Mason, a civilian programmanagement analyst for the Navy
who works on the fourth floor of
the building, said a gunman was
firing from the overlook in the
hallway outside his office.

Shortly after the gunfire, Mason said, someone on an overhead speaker told workers to
seek shelter and later to head for
the gates at the complex.
Patricia Ward, a logistics-management specialist, said she was
in the cafeteria getting breakfast.
“It was three gunshots straight
in a row — pop, pop, pop. Three
seconds later, it was pop, pop,
pop, pop, pop, so it was like
about a total of seven gunshots,
and we just started running,”
Ward said.
Ward said security officers
started directing people out of
the building with guns drawn.
One person died at George
Washington University Hospital
of a single gunshot wound to the
left temple, said Dr. Babak Sarani, director of trauma and acute
care surgery. A police officer
and two civilian women were in
critical condition at Washington
Hospital Center, said Janis Orlowski, the hospital’s chief operating officer.
Orlowski said the police officer was in the operating room
with gunshot wounds to the legs.
The police chief said the officer
was wounded when he engaged
the shooter who later died.
One woman at the hospital had
a gunshot wound to the shoulder.
The other had gunshot wounds
to the head and hand.
Adm. Jonathan Greenert, chief
of naval operations, was at the
base at the time the shooting began but was moved unharmed to
a nearby military installation
Anxious relatives and friends
of those who work at the complex waited to hear from loved
ones.
Tech Sgt. David Reyes, who
works at Andrews Air Force
Base, said he was waiting to pick
up his wife, Dina, who was under lockdown in a building next

to where the shooting happened.
She sent him a text message
about being on lockdown.
“They are under lockdown
because they just don’t know,”
Reyes said. “They have to check
every building in there, and they
have to check every room and
just, of course, a lot of rooms and
a lot of buildings.”
Naval Sea Systems Command
is the largest of the Navy’s five
system commands and accounts
for a quarter of the Navy’s entire
budget. Only security personnel
were allowed to be armed on the
grounds, but that can include
uniformed security officers, civilian contractors and members
of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service.
Cmdr. Timothy Jirus said he
has a clearance that would allow
him to carry a gun on the campus. He has a secure access card
that he swipes to get into the
headquarters office.
“I think the security is really
good, up until today,” Jirus said.
Everyone must show an ID
to get through a main gate, and
at the building entrance, everyone must swipe a badge to pass
through either a door or gate, depending on the entrance.
That “makes me think it might
have been someone who works
here,” Mason said.
The Navy Yard has three
gates, according to its website.
One is open around the clock
and must be used by visitors. A
second gate is only for military
and civilian Defense Department employees. The third gate
is for bus traffic.
The Navy Yard is part of a fastgrowing neighborhood on the
banks of the Anacostia River in
southeast Washington, blocks
from the Nationals Park baseball
stadium.

Flooded Colo.
Student performance
Shipwrecked
towns clean up as
Concordia wrested rescues continue tied to poverty
off Italian reef
GIGLIO ISLAND, Italy (AP) — Using a vast
system of steel cables and pulleys, maritime engineers on Monday gingerly winched the massive hull of the Costa Concordia off the Italian
reef the cruise ship had struck in January 2012.
But progress in pulling the heavily listing
luxury liner to an upright position was going
much slower than expected. Delays meant the
delicate operation — originally scheduled from
dawn to dusk Monday — was not expected to
be completed before Tuesday morning.
“Things are going like they should, but on a
timetable that is dragging out,” Franco Gabrielli, head of Italy’s Civil Protection Agency, said
Monday evening.
Never before has such an enormous cruise
ship been righted. Salvage workers struggled to
overcome obstacle after obstacle as they slowly
inched toward their goal of raising the crippled
ship 65 degrees to the upright position.
An early morning storm delayed the salvage
command barge from getting into place for several hours. Later, some of the cables dragging
the ship’s hull upright went slack, forcing engineers to climb the hull to fix them.
The Concordia itself didn’t budge for the first
three hours after the operation began, engineer
Sergio Girotto told reporters.
The initial operation to lift the ship moved it
just 3 degrees toward vertical. After 10 hours,
the crippled ship had edged upward by just
under 13 degrees, a fraction of what had been
expected.
Still, the top engineers were staying positive.
“Even if it’s 15 to 18 hours, we’re OK with
that. We are happy with the way things are going,” Girotto said.
After some 6,000 tons of force were applied
— using a complex system of pulleys and counterweights — Girotto said “we saw the detachment” of the ship’s hull from the reef thanks to
undersea cameras.
At the waterline, a few feet of slime-covered
ship that had been underwater slowly became
visible.
Thirty-two people died on Jan. 13, 2012,
when the Concordia slammed into a reef and
toppled half-submerged on its side after coming too close to Giglio Island. The reef sliced a
70-meter-long (230-foot) gash into what is now
the exposed side off the hull, letting seawater
rush in.
The resulting tilt was so drastic that many
lifeboats couldn’t be launched. Dozens of the
4,200 passengers and crew were plucked to
safety by helicopters or jumped into the sea and
swam to shore. The bodies of many of the dead
were retrieved inside the ship.
Girotto said the cameras on Monday did not
immediately reveal any sign of the two bodies
that were never recovered.
Engineers have dismissed as “remote” the
possibility that the Concordia might break
apart during the salvage operation but set out
absorbent barriers to catch any leaks of toxic
materials from the ship.
Images transmitted Monday by robotic diving vehicles indicated the submerged side of the
cruise ship’s hull had suffered “great deformation” from all its time on the granite seabed,
battered by waves and compressed under the
weight of the ship’s 115,000 tons, Girotto said.

ESTES PARK, Colo.
(AP) — Colorado mountain towns cut off for days
by massive flooding slowly
reopened to reveal cabins
toppled, homes ripped
from their foundations and
everything covered in a
thick layer of muck. Anxious home and business
owners cleaned and cleared
out what they could salvage as the weather cleared
Monday to resume airlifting those still stranded.
Crews plowed up to a
foot of mud left standing along Estes Park’s
main street after the river
coursed through the heart
of town late last week.
“I hope I have enough
flood insurance,” said Amy
Hamrick, whose friends
helped her pull up flooring
and clear water and mud
from the crawl space at her
coffee shop. Her inventory
was safely stashed at her
home on higher grounds,
she said.
Emergency
officials
offered a first glimpse
at the scope of the damage. Counties reported
some 1,500 homes have
been destroyed and about
17,500 damaged, according to an initial estimate
released Sunday by the
Colorado Office of Emergency Management.
The number of people
still unaccounted for was
dropping Monday as Larimer County officials said
they had made contact
with hundreds of people
previously not heard from
in flooded areas.
With rescuers reaching
more pockets of stranded
residents and phone service being restored in some
areas, officials expect those
numbers to continue to decrease.
“You’re got to remember, a lot of these folks
lost cellphones, landlines,
the Internet four to five
days ago,” Gov. John Hickenlooper said on NBC’s
“Today” show. “I am very
hopeful that the vast majority of these people are safe
and sound.”
The death toll remained
at four confirmed fatalities
and two missing and presumed dead.
Helicopter searches and
airlifts resumed Monday as
the sun broke through the

clouds over the mountains.
Rainy weather had kept the
helicopters grounded most
of the day Sunday and early Monday.
On Sunday, military helicopters rescued 12 people
before the rain, and 80
more people were evacuated by ground, Colorado
National Guard Lt. James
Goff said.
In Estes Park, comparisons were drawn to two historic and disastrous flash
floods: the Big Thompson
Canyon Flood of 1976 that
killed 145 people, and the
Lawn Lake flood of 1982
that killed three.
“Take those times 10.
That’s what it looks like
in the canyon,” said Deyn
Johnson, owner of the
Whispering Pines cottages,
three of which floated down
the river after massive
amounts of water were released from the town’s dam.
Estes Park town administrator Frank Lancaster
said this flood is worse
than the previous ones because of the sustained rains
and widespread damage to
infrastructure across the
Rocky Mountain Foothills.
Major road were washed
away, small towns like Glen
Haven were reduced to debris, and key infrastructure
like gas lines and sewers systems were destroyed. That
means hundreds of homes
in Estes Park alone could be
unreachable and uninhabitable for up to a year.
But there appears to be
no loss of life in this gateway community to Rocky
Mountain National Park,
Lancaster said.
“We know there are a
lot of people trapped, but
they are trapped alive,” he
told people gathered at a
Red Cross evacuation shelter Sunday.
The Office of Emergency
Management is urging
people who are stranded by
floodwaters but are unable
to communicate by phone
or other means to signal
helicopters passing overhead with sheets, mirrors,
flares or signal fires.
Lyons was almost completely abandoned. Emergency crews gave the few
remaining residents, mostly
wandering Main Street looking for status updates, a final
warning to leave Sunday.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Student performance in the classroom is linked to poverty,
an analysis of data collected under Ohio’s new
school assessment system and released Monday confirms, according to groups representing Ohio school boards, administrators and
treasurers.
The review found that Ohio’s 123 suburban
school districts scored the highest on the performance index calculated as part of Ohio’s
new A-F grading system while also recording
the highest average income, the lowest poverty
rate and the highest concentration of college
degrees.
The analysis was conducted jointly by the
Ohio School Boards Association, the Ohio Association of School Business Officials and the
Buckeye Association of School Administrators.
The groups “are absolutely not saying that
students who are economically disadvantaged
could not do well,” said Barbara Shaner, representing the business officials’ association.
“What we’re saying is that there are things
that affect whether or not a student performs
well other than just what happens in the classroom,” Shaner said. “We just want to make sure
that everyone is aware of this correlation so that
going forward as we determine public policy
and as we choose where to spend our resources
we have this information in front of us.”
Race was a less consistent factor than income
in performance, the analysis found.
The suburban districts that scored highest
on the new performance index had the thirdhighest concentration of minorities among the
eight classes of school districts recognized by
the Ohio Department of Education.

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Tuesday, September 17. 2013

Scenes from Racine’s Party in the Park

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Jaylynn Hupp peddles in the kiddie tractor pull on Saturday at Racine’s Party in the Park.

The Southern High School band marches in the Party in the Park parade.

The Southern High School flag unit participates in the Party Several tractors took part in the parade, before tractor games
were held at the park in the afternoon.
in the Park parade.

The Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department takes part in the parade.

Vehicles of all shapes and sizes, including this tiny tow car took part in the parade.

The Racine Police Department leads the parade through the village.

The Racine Fire Department participates in the parade.

Even Scooby-Doo took part in the parade, passing out Scooby snacks.

The RACO officers ride in the parade.

The Party in the Park Queen candidates and 2012 Queen Jennifer McCoy ride on the Queen’s float.

�Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Obituary

Death Notices

Jerry VanInwagen

Jerry VanInwagen, 65,
of Pomeroy, Ohio, passed
away on Saturday, September 14, 2013, at the Ohio
State Medical Center in
Columbus. He was born on
October 8, 1947, in Middleport, Ohio, to the late
Ernest and Freda (Beach)
VanInwagen. Jerry was active in the Cub Scouts in
the Chester area while his
boys were young, he also
helped coach various baseball and basketball teams in
the area. He attended the First Southern Baptist Church
in Pomeroy.
He is survived by his wife of 41 years, Linda VanInwagen; sons, Jerrod (Melissa) VanInwagen, and David
VanInwagen; grandchildren, Tyler, Major, and Weston;
brother, Keith (Debbie) VanInwagen; nieces and nephews, Aaron and Dustin (Andrea) VanInwagen, Cara,
Tabbitha and Ryan Grindsaff; and brothers-in-law: Dave
(Bert) Grindstaff and Brian (Gale) Grindsaff. He also survived by several aunts and uncles.
He is preceded in death by his parents, mother and
father-in-law, Rose and David Grindsaff; and nephews,
Todd Grindstaff and Dave Grindstaff, Jr.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m., on Wednesday,
September 18, 2013, at the First Southern Baptist Church
in Pomeroy, Ohio with the Rev. David Brainard officiating. Burial will follow at the Meigs Memorial Gardens.
Visitation for family and friends will be held from 5-8
p.m., on Tuesday, September 17, 2013, at the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Report: Log of Ohio
inmate suicide falsified
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— An Ohio prison report
released Monday says that
one and possibly two prison guards apparently falsified an electronic log documenting checks on a death
row inmate who committed suicide just days before
his execution was to go forward despite a rare plea for
mercy from a prosecutor.
One of the officers also
did not conduct the rounds
as required by orders for
that unit, the report said.
Also, it said, lighting in
death row cells at night is
inadequate and inmates continue to block the windows
with paper and other materials despite ongoing efforts
to deter that behavior.
The report comes at a time
of heightened awareness of
prison suicides in Ohio. An
inmate at Lebanon Correctional Facility in southwest
Ohio committed suicide last
week, just days after convicted Cleveland kidnapper and
rapist Ariel Castro hanged
himself in his cell with a bedsheet on Sept. 3.
The nine-page report
does not say whether the
guards, if they had followed the rules, could
have prevented the Aug. 4
death row suicide of condemned killer Billy Slagle.
Slagle was just minutes
away from being placed on
close observation that is
mandatory in the 72 hours

The Daily Sentinel s Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

before an execution.
His Aug. 7 execution
appeared on track despite
the plea for mercy from the
prosecutor in Cuyahoga
County, home to Cleveland, who argued that
Slagle should never have
received a death sentence.
Prosecutor Tim McGinty cited Slagle’s age —
he was just 18 when he fatally stabbed his neighbor
Mari Anne Pope — and a
long history of drug and alcohol addiction. McGinty
said under his office’s current policy he would not
have pursued a death penalty charge.
Slagle, 44, also died not
knowing that his attorneys
planned a last-minute appeal, based on evidence
provided by McGinty that
Slagle had been offered a
plea deal before his 1988
trial but his original attorneys never informed him.
The two corrections officers named in the review
have been placed on paid
administrative leave as
the prisons agency investigates. Someone “did falsify
the electronic log book for
rounds,” the report said.
A message was left with
the union representing
prison guards about the
allegations. Slagle’s attorneys said they were aware
of the report, but they did
not immediately offer a
response.

Brumfield

Betty Brumfield, 68, of
Ashton, W.Va., died Sunday, September 15, 2013,
at St. Mary’s Medical
Center.
Funeral services will
be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday, September 18, 2013,
at Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, W.Va., with
Rev. Ronnie Long officiating. Burial will follow in
the Ball’s Chapel Cemetery
in Ashton, W.Va. Friends
may visit the family from
6-8 p.m. on Tuesday evening at the funeral home.

Cooper

John Cooper, 93, of
Point Pleasant, died September 14, 2013, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleasant.
A funeral service will be
held at 1 p.m., Wednesday,
September 18, 2013, at the
Trinity United Methodist
Church in Point Pleasant

with Rev. James F. Kelly,
III officiating. Visitation
will be at Trinity United
Methodist Church from
11:30 a.m. until 1 p.m.,
Wednesday.

Sunrise Memorial Gardens
in New Haven, W.Va. Officiating will be Pastor John
Willbur and Pastor Shannan Meyer.

Henry

Virginia Charlotte Sisson, 93, of Englewood,
Ohio, formerly of Gallipolis, died on Saturday,
September 14, 2013, at
Good Samaritan Hospital,
Dayton.
Funeral services will
be held at 1:30 p.m. on
Wednesday, September 18,
2013, at the Hale-Sarver
Funeral Home, 284 N. Miami Street, West Milton,
Ohio, with Pastor Steve
Sisco officiating. Burial
will follow at Fairview
Cemetery. Friends may call
from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at
the funeral home.

David Lee Henry, 64,
of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.,
passed away at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Arrangements will be
announced by the Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Ord

Charles Richard (Dick)
Ord of Mason County,
W.Va., died Saturday, Sept.
14, 2013, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Visitation will be Tuesday, Sept. 17 from 6 to 8
p.m., and service will be 11
a.m., Wednesday, Sept. 18,
at Foglesong Roush Funeral Home. Following to the

Sisson

Wiseman

Madeline Wiseman, 98,
formerly of Wilkesville,

Ohio, died Sunday, September 15, 2013. Funeral
service will be held at 1
p.m. Wednesday, September 18, 2013, at the McCoy-Moore Chapel in Vinton, Ohio, with visitation
from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Burial
will be at the Salem Center
Cemetery.

Wood

Kevin Lloyd Wood, age
35, of Gallipolis, died Saturday evening, September
14, 2013, at his residence.
Funeral services will be
conducted at 1 p.m. Thursday, September 19, 2013,
at the Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home in Gallipolis. Burial will follow in
Concord Cemetery in Henderson W.Va. Friends may
call at the funeral home on
Wednesday from 5-8 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the
family to help with Kevin’s
funeral expenses.

Fed faces many uncertainties
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Federal Reserve is being engulfed
by the one thing it tries to prevent: uncertainty.
Will the Fed take its first step
Wednesday toward reducing the
extraordinary stimulus it’s given
the U.S. economy?
Will its eventual pullback jolt
the financial markets?
Who will fill several expected
vacancies on the Fed’s policy
board next year?
And, with Lawrence Summers’
withdrawal from consideration,
who will lead the Fed once Ben
Bernanke’s term expires in January, ending one of the most tumultuous chapters in the Fed’s 100year history?
Uncertainty tends to rattle investors. Starting this week, the
Fed may begin to supply the answers the financial markets are
looking for.
Here’s a look at the various uncertainties the central bank faces:
To taper or not
Though hiring and economic
growth in the United States remain soft, the Fed is widely expected this week to slow the pace
of its bond purchases. Its purchases of Treasury and mortgage
bonds have been designed to keep
long-term loan rates low to get
people to borrow and spend and
invest in the stock market.
Most economists expect the
Fed’s initial move to be small —
a reduction in monthly purchases
from $85 billion to $75 billion.
One reason: The Fed for
months has been preparing markets for such a move. Fed officials wouldn’t likely want to raise
further uncertainty by failing to
meet the very expectations they
had raised.
Another factor: Some Fed offi-

cials don’t think the bond purchases are doing much good anymore.
And they feel that by continuing
to flood the financial system with
cash, the Fed might be raising the
risks of high inflation or dangerous bubbles in assets like stocks
or real estate.
Some had once expected a
sharper first reduction in the Fed’s
purchases of around $20 billion a
month. But that was before the
government said that job growth
was only modest in August and
that employers added many fewer
jobs in June and July than previously thought.
Market reaction
Investors’ response to a pullback in purchases is expected to
be mild if the Fed announces a reduction of only around $10 billion
a month. That’s especially true if
it balances its action by underscoring its commitment to keep
short-term interest rates low well
into the future.
The Fed has kept its benchmark
for short-term rates at a record
low near zero since December
2008. And it has said it expects
to keep it there at least until the
unemployment rate falls to 6.5
percent — as long as the inflation
outlook remains mild.
The unemployment rate is now
7.3 percent. Many economists do
not expect it to reach 6.5 percent
until late 2014 or early 2015.
Even then, Bernanke has said
the Fed might decide to keep its
short-term rate at a record low,
especially if unemployment has
dropped because more people
have stopped looking for work.
The government doesn’t count
people as unemployed once they
stop looking for a job.
To stress its commitment to
keep short-term rates low as long

as necessary, the Fed may tweak
the language in the statement it
will issue Wednesday. It might
say that a decline in inflation
would cause its benchmark rate to
remain near zero longer than expected. One Fed official has also
suggested lowering the unemployment threshold for any short-term
rate increase to 5.5 percent from
6.5 percent.
Any such changes would give
investors more assurance that
short-term rates will remain low
for many more months. All things
considered, many economists
don’t expect the first Fed rate hike
to occur before 2015.
Fed committee vacancies
Bernanke’s chair is one of several that will need to be filled in
coming months. In fact, the Fed’s
policy panel will have only 10 voting members at this week’s meeting instead of the normal 12. One
board member, Elizabeth Duke,
left in August. Another, Sarah
Bloom Raskin, has been nominated by Obama for the No. 2 job
at Treasury and won’t take part in
the meeting.
In addition, the term of a third
board member, Jerome Powell, expires in January. And a fourth, Jeremy Stein, must decide whether to
remain at the Fed or return to his
teaching post at Harvard by May.
Also, among the 12 regional
Fed presidents, Sandra Pianalto,
head of the Cleveland Fed, has announced that she will step down
early next year.
Obama hasn’t said publicly
whom he might choose to fill
those vacancies. Some published
reports have suggested that Lael
Brainard, Treasury’s undersecretary for international affairs, is
under consideration for one of the
open board seats.

Training
From Page 1
and networking opportunities.
In addition, this year, each attending county from around the

state of Ohio has been asked to
bring a basket of items representing their own county for a
silent auction.
The theme of this year’s confer-

ence is “Implementing the Tools
of Our Trade to Build a Comforting Justice.” Ohio Attorney
General Mike DeWine will speak
about his focus on protecting

Ohio’s families and ensuring that
crime victims are not forgotten by
the criminal justice system.
Petrasko said businesses donating to the basket for Meigs

County were Clark’s Jewelry, The
Fabric Shop, Front Paige Outfitters, Weaving Stitches, Hartwell
House, Seasons Gifts, Anderson
Furniture and Powell’s Foodfair.

Ride
From Page 1
based in Memphis, Tenn,
St. Jude freely shares its
discoveries with scientific
and medical communities
around the world. St. Jude
is the only pediatric cancer research center where
families never pay for
treatment not covered by
insurance. No child is ever
denied treatment because
of the family’s inability to
pay. St. Jude is financially
supported by ALSAC, its
fundraising organization.

After the trail ride, organizers offer a free hog
roast and bean dinner as
well as serve hot dogs.
Hogs for the event were
purchased at the Meigs
County Fair and donated
by Farmers Bank and
Home National Bank.
Also following the ride,
winners of prize drawings
are announced. Those who
wish to buy prize tickets
should do so before the ride.
Prizes up for grabs include a
saddle, a saddle stands and

much more. There is also a
50/50 drawing.
When the Dills decided
to start the trail ride 18
years ago, that first ride
raised a little over $2,000
and has continued to
steadily grow without any
official help from any formal group or sponsor.
The Dill’s neighbors also
open up their property to
allow the trail ride to crisscross the hillsides of Rutland Township. The event
takes a lot of planning and

hard work but Isabel says
it’s worth it, adding that
her husband always says if
it helps just one kid that’s
all that matters.
Participants can sign in
beginning at 9 a.m. on Saturday, with camping available for the weekend.
New this year will be a
DJ on Friday evening sponsored by the Ohio Horse
Council Meigs Chapter.
Once again, ribbons and
prizes will be presented to
the top three money collec-

tors for St. Jude Children’s
Research Hospital which
has a mission to find cures
for children with cancer
and other catastrophic diseases through research and
treatment. St. Jude has
treated children from all 50
states and from around the
world. St. Jude is the only
pediatric cancer research
center where families never pay for treatment not
covered by insurance. No
child is ever denied treatment because of the fam-

ily’s inability to pay.
Donations are accepted
any one that would like
to donate money, door
prizes, drinks, or snacks.
For more information contact Michael or Isabel Dill
at (740) 742-2849, or my
mail at 34843 Twp.Rd.447
Rutland,Ohio 45775, or
email at isabeldill@hotmail.com.
For more information
on Saddle Up for St. Jude,
visit mysaddleupforstjude.
org or stjude.org.

Charges
From Page 1
She was arraigned on Monday
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. Attorney David Baer was
appointed as counsel. Bond was
set at $500,000 with 10 percent
permitted.
A pretrial hearing is scheduled
for Oct. 7 and a trial for Nov. 7.
The Stewarts were arrested
Aug. 21 following the discovery of

a large methamphetamine lab at
60 1/2 Cole Street in Middleport.
At that time, deputies, along
with Department of Jobs and
Family Services Children Services workers interviewed a minor
female who alleged forced sexual
abuse by her step-father, Joseph
G. Stewart. After interviewing
the minor child’s mother, Brenda
A. Stewart, along with the step-

father, it was determined sexual
abuse had occurred, according to
law enforcement.
Middleport Police Chief
Bruce Swift and Sheriff Wood
have said officers with both departments responded to 60 1/2
Cole Street following up on a tip
received through Meigs County
Children Services regarding a
methamphetamine lab and pos-

sible sexual abuse of a minor at
the residence.
The Stewarts live in an apartment at that address, according
to Swift.
While searching the residence,
deputies located a one-pot reactionary vessel and white powder
which tested positive for methamphetamine, along with chemicals used in the production of

methamphetamine.
The apartment building with
around 25 residents — including some children according to
the sheriff — had to be evacuated due to the dangers from the
methamphetamine lab.
Once the lab was neutralized
and the building cleared of the
chemicals, residents were allowed to return to their homes.

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 17, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Angels 5th, Devils 10th at invitational
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

LONDONDERRY,
Ohio
— The Gallia Academy cross
country teams traveled to Southeastern High School, Saturday
to compete in the Aaron Reed
Invitational. The Blue Angels
finished fifth in the girls competition, while the Blue Devils were
10th in the boys race.
The girls team competition
was won by Zane Trace with
a score of 41, while Logan was
second with a 72 and Hillsboro
was third with a 95. Unioto posted a 103 for fourth place, while
GAHS was fifth with a 126. Alexander was sixth, Westfall was
seventh, Waverly came in eighth,
Adena was ninth, Chillicothe

was 10th, Paint Valley finished
11th, Miami Trace was 12th,
while Piketon rounded out the
13 team field.
Allyson Malone of Alexander
was first in the girls race with
a time of 19:22.25, while Emma
Hoellrich of Logan ran a 19:32.87
for second place. There were 132
participants in the girls event.
The Blue Angels were led by senior Hannah Watts, who finished
13th with a time of 21:10.92. Fellow GAHS senior Madison Holley
was 25th on the day with a mark
of 22:04.39, while Mary Watts
was 28th with a time of 22:41.15.
Madison Holley with a time of
23:43.49 finished 47th and Aliza
Warner with a time of 24:11.58
finished 52nd and rounded out
the Gallia Academy total.

Also running for Gallia Academy were 71st place Brittany Angel (25:42.9), 79th place Akeisha
Saunders (26:05.36), 83rd place
Jenna Bays (26:24.29), 89th place
Kendra Barnes (26:52.31), 91st
place Sydney Rose (26:54.27),
92nd place Hayley Petrie
(26:54.63), 97th place Taylor
Queen (27:29.26) and 131st place
Rachel Rote (35:23.49).
The boys team competition
was won by Unioto with a total
of 65, followed by Zane Trace
with a score of 92, Piketon with
a score of 109, Fairfield with a
130 and Hillsboro with a score of
131. Chillictoe was sixth, Westfall came in seventh, Logan was
eighth, Waverly finished ninth,
while GAHS rounded out the top
10. Washington Courthouse took

home 11th, followed by Western,
Alexander, Southeastern, Nelsonville-York, Paint Valley and
Portsmouth Clay. Pike Eastern
rounded out the 18 team field.
The boys individual champion
was Fairfield senior Michael
Mangus with a time of 16:21.88,
followed by Ethan Richter of
Unioto with a time of 16:37.23.
There were 168 competitors in
the boys race.
The Blue Devils were led by
junior Michael Edelmann with a
time of 17:49.28, good enough
for 13th and Cole Twaney with
a 20:07.21, which placed 59th.
Devon Barnes was 64th with
a time of 20:16.01, Cade Mason was 74th with a time of
20:48.06, while Kaleb Crisenberry rounded out the GAHS to-

tal with a time of 21:12.75, good
enough for 81st.
Also running for the Blue
Devils were 86th place Quenton McKinniss (21:26.98),
95th place Mitchell Bolin
(21:42.64), 107th Griffin Stanley (22:13.49), 108th place Griffon McKinniss (22:13.6), 127th
place Ryan Vallee (23:25.97),
132nd place Kirkland Saunders
(23:39.4), 142nd place Jordan
Johnson (24:41.95), 147th place
Jared Stevens (25:07.84), 157th
place Mark Brown (26:09.73),
162nd place Michael Vallee
(27:51.51) and 164th place
Scott Mash (28:54.9).
Complete results of the Aaron Reed Invitational can be found on the web at www.
baumspage.com.

Submitted Photo

Eastern junior Asia Michael runs in the Meadowbrook Colt
Carnival Saturday. Michael finished sixth at the event.

Lady Eagles 3rd
at Colt Carnival
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

BYESVILLE, Ohio — For a small school, the Lady Eagles left quite an impression.
The Eastern girls cross country team came away with
third place Saturday at the 2013 Colt Carnival held on
the campus of Meadowbrook High School in Guernsey
County.
The Lady Eagles — a Division III program — beat out
some bigger programs this weekend, as EHS finished the
day with five top-40 efforts and a team tally of 82 points.
Only Carrollton (57) and Caldwell (70) finished ahead of
Eastern in the team standings, while Indian Valley (85)
and St. John Central (113) rounded out the top-five.
Martins Ferry (165), Marietta (172), Bellaire (208),
Cambridge (229), River (287), Philo (302) and Barnesville (306) rounded out the 12-team field.
Fallon Doyle of St. John Central held off 125 other runners to win the individual title with a mark of 18:22.18.
Paige Saho of Indian Valley was the overall runner-up
with a time of 18:42.93.
Taylor Palmer (19:26.21) and Asia Michael (19:27.83)
provided a solid one-two punch for Eastern with respective finishes of fifth and sixth. Laura Pullins was also 14th
overall with a mark of 20:20.85.
Keri Lawrence placed 34th overall with a time of
22:01.14, while Kourtney Lawrence rounded out the team
score with a 36th place finish of 22:06.33.
Eastern had only one competitor in the 156-participant
boys division, as Brock Smith finished 66th overall with a
time of 19:28.48.
Luke Myers of Strasburg Franklin won the individual
title with a mark of 16:04.97. Tanner Harding of Caldwell
was the overall runner-up with a time of 16:05.39.
Caldwell held off 17 other squads to win the boys team
crown with 47 points. Indian Valley was the runner-up
with 61 points.
Complete results of the 2013 Colt Carnival at Meadowbrook can be found on the web at baumspage.com.

OVP Sports Schedule
Tuesday, Sept. 17
Volleyball
Southern at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Trimble at South Gallia, 5:30
River Valley at South Point, 5:30
Wahama at Belpre, 5:30
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Valley Fayette, 6 p.m.
Golf
River Valley, Southern at Gallia Academy, 4 p.m.
Wahama at Belpre, 4 p.m.
Eastern, Federal Hocking at Waterford 4:30
Boys Soccer
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Lincoln County, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 18
Golf
Meigs at Athens, 4:30
Point Pleasant, River Valley at Wahama, 4 p.m.
Southern/Miller at Waterford, 4:30
College Soccer
Georgetown at URG women, 5 p.m.
Georgetown at URG men, 7 p.m.
College Volleyball
U of Cumberlands at URG, 5 p.m.

Submitted Photo

Rio Grande’s Orlando Zapata tries to get past the outstretched leg of Bryan College’s Christoph Krekeler to gain
control of the ball during first half action in Saturday night’s meeting between the two schools at Evan E. Davis
Field. The No. 8-ranked RedStorm handed the Lions a 3-2 loss.

Late goal lifts No. 8 Rio past Lions
Randy Payton
Special to OVP

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Heitor
de Melo scored his second goal
of the night with 6:31 remaining to lift the University of Rio
Grande past previously-unbeaten
Bryan (Tenn.) College, 3-2, Saturday night, in non-conference
men’s soccer action at Evan E.
Davis Field.
The RedStorm, ranked No. 8 in
the latest NAIA poll, improved to
4-1 with the win and rebounded
from a loss to then-No. 1 Belhaven University last weekend.
The Lions suffered their first
setback in five outings.
“We’re fortunate that we got the
game-winner with a few minutes
left and got the result that we
wanted, but we’re not managing
the game very well right now and
we need to do a better job of finishing when we have opportunities,” said Rio Grande head coach
Scott Morrissey. “If we can put
those two things together, I think
we’ll be O.K.”
The game-winning goal by de

Melo - a header past Bryan netminder Josh Oldroyd off of a pass
from teammate Craig Davies - finally gave Rio a lead it would not
relinquish.
The RedStorm enjoyed leads of
1-0 and 2-1, but failed to hang on
to either advantage.
“We got the lead and had opportunities to put them away, but
then we give up a goal off a deadball set piece,” Morrissey said.
“We got the lead back and had
more chances to put them away,
but we gave up another goal off
a deadball set piece. We cannot
keep doing that. That’s an area we
have to work on.”
de Melo, a freshman defender
from Sao Paulo, Brazil, gave Rio a
1-0 lead just 3:42 into the contest
thanks to an assist from fellow
freshman Callum Cobb (Aldershot, England).
Bryan rebounded, though, and
tied the game on an unassisted
marker by Zach McCown at the
29:24 mark of the first half.
The RedStorm regained the
lead just over five minutes into
the second stanza when freshman

Pau Rodriguez (Barcelona, Spain)
booted in a ball that ricocheted off
of Oldroyd, but the Lions rallied
again and knotted the score at 2-2
with just under 10 minutes left
to play when Khankhalifa Kanne
found the back of the net via an
assist from Josh Smotherman.
A little more than three minutes later, de Melo delivered the
go-ahead marker from Davies
(Wolverhampton, England).
Rio Grande enjoyed a 16-8 edge
in shots, including a 7-5 advantage in shots on goal.
Junior keeper Jon Dodson (Tiffin, OH) had three saves en route
to the win for the RedStorm,
while Oldroyd stopped four shots
in a losing cause for the Lions.
The physical affair also included 42 fouls - 23 against Rio and 19
whistled on Bryan - as well as four
yellow card cautions (three of
which were administered against
the RedStorm).
Rio Grande returns to action
on Wednesday night, hosting
Georgetown College in its MidSouth Conference opener. Kickoff
is set for 7 p.m.

Raiders 4th at Ironton CC Palooza
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

IRONTON, Ohio — River Valley
earned respective finishes of fourth and
sixth place in the boys and girls divisions Saturday at the 2013 Tiger Town
Cross Country Palooza held at Ironton
High School in Lawrence County.
The Raiders finished the day with a
team tally of 92 points, which trailed
only South Point (65), Huntington
(83) and Minford (87) in the final
boys standings. Rock Hill rounded
out the top-five of the 11-team field
with a score of 117.
Tyler Mathes of South Point held
off 89 other runners to win the individual title with a mark of 17:11.
Seth Miller of Rock Hill was the over-

all runner-up with a time of 17:20.
Jacob Kemper led the Raiders with
a sixth place effort of 18:07, while
Kyle Randolph finished 13th overall
with a time of 19:10. Austin Hamilton (19:46) and Ethan Hersman
(19:59) also placed 20th and 28th,
respectively, for RVHS.
James Jackson rounded out the
team tally with a 33rd place effort
of 20:18. Garrett Young (21:26) and
John Oehler (22:04) also had respective finishes of 53rd and 60th overall.
The Lady Raiders finished the contest with 138 team points, which put
them just outside the top-five of the
nine-team field. South Webster (46)
won the girls team title, with East
Carter (60), Wheelersburg (106),

Rock Hill (124) and Huntington (124)
rounding out the top-five finishes.
Sydney McCoy of South Webster
held off 65 other competitors to win
the inidividual crown with a mark
of 21:42. Macy Dyer of East Carter
was the overall runner-up with a
time of 21:44.
Leanne Hively led the Lady Raiders with a sixth place effort of 22:47,
followed by Kasey Eblin (25:59) and
Ramsey Warren (26:07) with respective finishes of 33rd and 36th.
Kayla Browning (29:13) and Morgan
Greenlee (29:31) were also 51st and
52nd to round out the team tally.
Complete results of the 2013 Tiger
Town CC Palooza can be found on
the web at baumspage.com.

�Tuesday, September 17, 2013

LEGALS

LEGALS

The Village of Middleport will
be flushing hydrants from
September 23rd through
September 27th. This may
cause your water to be cloudy
due to stirred sediments and
air in the lines. The water is
completely safe to drink but
may stain laundry.
9/13, 9/17, 9/1, 9/20

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that on
August 26, 2013, an application was filed with the Federal
Communications Commission,
Washington, D.C., by Positive
Alternative Radio, Inc. for a
Construction Permit for a new
Noncommercial FM Translator
Station on Channel 273 (102.5
MHz) at Middleport, Ohio. Positive Alternative Radio, Inc.
seeks authority to rebroadcast
the signal of Radio Station
WPJY-FM at Blennerhassett,
West Virginia on the new FM
Translator Station.
The application proposes FM
translator operations with an
effective radiated power .013
kilowatts horizontal and .013
kilowatts vertical. The proposed transmitting site is located at geographical coordinates of North Latitude 39 – 3 –
29.7, West Longitude 82 – 2 –
31.5.
A copy of the FCC Application
is available for public inspection during regular business
hours at the following location:
39540 Bradbury Rd, Middleport, OH
9/17

Medical / Health

Full-time/Part-time
LPN’s &amp; CNA’s

ANNOUNCEMENTS
60443267

Experienced Preferred
But Training Available.
Interested Candidates can
Call 304-273-9482 or
come in and fill out an
application.
Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood, WV 26164

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The Daily Sentinel s Page 7

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NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
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Applicants must have a high
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EDUCATION

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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
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Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
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EMPLOYMENT

The Ohio Valley Newspapers
of Civitas Media is seeking an
Advertising Manager to lead
our sales team. The Advertising Manager would lead the
staff at our three daily newspapers The Gallipolis (OH) Daily
Tribune, The Daily Sentinel in
Pomeroy, OH and The Point
Pleasant (WV) Register. The
Advertising Manager will be responsible for the increasing
revenue for our daily newspapers and related internet, mobile and other products we
publish. Ideal candidates are
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and enjoy meeting people.
The job has a base salary and
bonus based on sales performance. We also offer a comprehensive benefits package including medical, dental, life insurance and a company
matched 401K retirement plan.
Interested applicants should
email resume, and a letter of
interest to slopez@civitasmedia.com Sammy M. Lopez publisher. Or Apply online @
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Notice is hereby given that on
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Communications Commission,
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Construction Permit for a new
Noncommercial FM Translator
Station on Channel 273 (102.5
MHz) at Middleport, Ohio. Positive Alternative Radio, Inc.
seeks authority to rebroadcast
the signal ofLEGALS
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WPJY-FM at Blennerhassett,
West Virginia on the new FM
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The application proposes FM
translator operations with an
effective radiated power .013
kilowatts horizontal and .013
kilowatts vertical. The proposed transmitting site is located at geographical coordinates of North Latitude 39 – 3 –
29.7, West Longitude 82 – 2 –
31.5.
A copy of the FCC Application
is available for public inspection during regular business
hours at the following location:
39540 Bradbury Rd, Middleport, OH
9/17

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�Page 8 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 17. 2013

Wildcats top Wahama at Lakeside
Staff Report

BEVERLY, Ohio — It could
have been many things or a combination thereof. Perhaps it was the
cool and breezy weather encountered at the Lakeside Golf Course,
or maybe it was playing on an unusual day, a Friday afternoon.
The Wahama White Falcon
varsity golf team stumbled big

time in their TVC Hocking
nine-hole golf match against
their counterparts from Waterford High School. The format
was scheduled to be a play six,
count four, but because one of
Wahama’s usual starters was not
available because of his participation in the high school band,
the White Falcons only had five
scores from which to choose

their four counting scores.
The final totals had Waterford
shooting a very good score of
164 while the young men from
Wahama shot their second worst
score of the year, a 194. Federal
Hocking was suppose to make
this a three-team match, but
could not muster enough players
which caused them to forfeit to
both Wahama and Waterford.

only three could shoot better
than 50. Michael MacKnight
led his team with a 45. Nathan
Redman added a 47 with Nolan
Pierce scoring a 50.
Both Benjamin Foreman and
Mason Hicks posted a score of 52
with only one of those counting
in the final score. Wahama’s TVC
record now stands at 7-6 while the
overall record is 29-14.

Waterford’s Brent Ginther was
the medalist for the match shooting a very good 37. Cameron
Bosner also played well posting a
39. Jordan Welch added a 43 and
Randee Seevers posted a 45 to
account for Waterford’s winning
total. Isaac Trader and Josh Steward also played with their scores
not counting in the final tally.
Of the five Wahama players,

Racers throttle Rio Grande women’s soccer
Randy Payton
Special to OVP

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Sarah Huchet had four goals and
a pair of assists, while Taryn
Pardoe added three goals and
five assists of her own to lead
the University of Northwestern Ohio in a 12-0 thrashing of
the University of Rio Grande,
Saturday evening, in non-conference women’s soccer action
at Evan E. Davis Field.
Frida Bremer contributed
two goals and an assist in the
winning effort, while Laura
Stone also scored twice and
Anja Koempel had a goal and
an assist for the Racers, whose
first-year program is off to an
impressive 5-2 start.
Rio Grande, which was coming off of a record-setting 16-0
win over Kentucky Christian
University on Wednesday, was
outshot 31-3.

Pardoe scored all of her
goals in the first half and
Huchet netted two of her four
markers before the break, as
UNOH rolled to a 7-0 lead at
the intermission.
Bremer’s second goal of
the contest at the 52:52 mark
made it 8-0, before consecutive goals by Huchet and both
of Stone’s goals rounded out
the scoring.
Rachel Head, Anja Antholzner and Jade Widdows added
one assist each for the Racers, while Nadine Stonjek was
credited with one save in goal.
Junior net-minder Allison
Keeney (Cincinnati, OH) had
eight stops in a losing cause
for Rio Grande, which dropped
to 3-3 overall.
The RedStorm returns to
action on Wednesday night,
hosting Georgetown College
in its Mid-South Conference
opener. Kickoff is set for 5 p.m.

Northwestern Ohio’s Sarah
Huchet pushes one of her
four goals past Rio Grande
goal keeper Allison Keeney
during the first half of Saturday’s meeting between the
two schools at Evan E. Davis
Field. The Racers posted a
12-0 win over the RedStorm.

Submitted Photo

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The Million Second Quiz (N) America's Got Talent Six acts perform in the final round of
TVPG
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Entertain! !!! Iron Man 2 (2010, Action) Don Cheadle, Gwyneth Paltrow, Robert Downey Jr.. An
ment Tonight inventor is pressured by the government to share his technology with the military. TVPG
Two and a
The Big Bang Dads "Pilot"
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Project (N)
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TV14
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The Million Second Quiz (N) America's Got Talent Six acts perform in the final round of
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Latino Americans "Foreigners Latino Americans "Empire of Frontline "Egypt in Crisis" (N)
in Their Own Land" (N) TV14
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Wheel of
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Judge Judy

Want To Buy

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

WSAZ News
(:35) Tonight
Tonight
Show (N)
Eyewitness
(:35) Jimmy
News 11
Kimmel (N)
The Simpsons The Arsenio
Hall Show (N)
13 News
(:35) David
Letterman
WTAP News at (:35) Tonight
Eleven
Show (N)
Tavis Smiley
Inside E
(N)
Street

11 PM

11:30

Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Barter Kings
Barter "The Gloves Come Off"
(6:00) ! !! Starsky and
! !! Meet the Parents (Com) Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller. A male nurse
! !! Meet the Parents (Com) Ben Stiller.
Hutch ('04, Com) TV14
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River Monsters Goes Tribal
Madagascar Madagascar had the most unique creatures.
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a Blog
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! !! Legally Blonde ('01, Com) Reese Witherspoon. A
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7 PM

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8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

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! Parental Guidance ('12, Com) TVPG
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(N)

�Tuesday, September 17, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
Sept. 17, 2013:
This year you often go back and
forth when trying to make a decision,
as you clearly see both sides of an
issue. You want to be helpful, but you
might want to be more discriminating as to whom you choose to lend
a hand. If you are single, you might
not want to commit this year, even
though you could meet someone quite
spectacular. Do not settle. If you are
attached, the two of you often debate
who does what, as far as household
chores go. Respect your differences
rather than harp on them, and you’ll
be much happier. PISCES challenges
you.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You could be unusually verbal, but you also will choose to hold
back more of your feelings. You might
express some of your stronger emotions to a close confidant; otherwise,
mum’s the word. Start working on a
project that has been on your mind.
Tonight: Take time for yourself.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You finally will focus on what
you want. A meeting could be provocative — mainly because of the mix of
people involved. You could be overserious and withdrawn, as you have a lot
to think about. Worry less; the odds are
in your favor! Tonight: Catch up on a
pal’s news.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You like to demonstrate your
ability to make waves. Right now, all
eyes are on you. You’ll take the lead
in a project, and others will observe.
How much of your dramatic personality
do you want involved? Only you can
decide what is appropriate. Tonight: Till
the wee hours.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You often defer to others and then get angry because you
feel as if they walk all over you. Who
do you have to blame but yourself?
Establish boundaries. Take some of
the edge off your energy, for everyone’s sake. Tonight: Let your mind
wander to your favorite type of music.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
You’ll feel the downward spiral
of working very hard and not getting
your way with a key matter. This realization will happen at the last minute
and force you to regroup. A family
member’s unpleasant mood won’t help.
Tonight: Take your cues from someone
else.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Your popularity soars, and
with this status comes opportunity.
Some of you might act like a kid in a
candy store. Take advantage of the
moment. It’s not often that you have
prospects like this. To others, you
might seem a bit withdrawn. Tonight: In
the flurry of the moment.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
You’ll be determined to handle
a personal matter directly and efficiently. Put what is happening between
you and someone else on hold. You
have other priorities that you need to
attend to. Do not worry so much about
your finances. Tonight: A project awaits
you at home.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Many people might view
you as being distant or stern right
now, but you simply are trying not to
fall off course. You can’t always be
serious, so try not to crush your inner
child’s spirit. Schedule some free time.
Tonight: Indulge in some lighthearted
fun. You need a change of pace.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
You might want to retreat,
which will surprise even you. Whether
you’re not feeling well or you’re quietly
reviewing a changing situation, you
will benefit from some time away from
all the action. Consider working from
home and/or staying close to home.
Tonight: Treat yourself.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Study different alternatives,
and feel free to ask questions that
relate to the situation at hand. Your
decision will be solid, and you will have
gone through the necessary process.
An associate or friend could have difficulty opening up. Give this person
space. Tonight: Out late.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Your ability to see the light at
the end of the tunnel might be necessary when dealing with a money matter. Others will feel invigorated by your
vision. You might be overtired and worried about a personal matter. Tonight:
Treat a friend or loved one to dinner at
a favorite restaurant.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
You express so much enthusiasm through your body language that
others will see you in a positive light.
Once a conversation begins, others
might respond much more positively
than you thought possible. News from
afar could surprise you. Tonight:
Whatever knocks your socks off.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 17. 2013

Browns QB Weeden nursing sprained thumb
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Browns
quarterback Brandon Weeden
thumb is only sprained.
Cleveland’s offense is broken.
Weeden injured his thumb in
the fourth quarter of Sunday’s
14-6 loss at Baltimore and may
not play this week when the
Browns play at Minnesota. Coach
Rob Chudzinski said the team
will wait and see how Weeden’s
injury responds over the next
few days, but he seemed to be
leaning toward having to play
either backup Jason Campbell or
third-stringer Brian Hoyer.
Campbell filled in for one series
— he went 1 of 4 for six yards —
after Weeden went down against
the Ravens, but Chudzinski said

he will consider starting Hoyer
against the Vikings.
“I’m going to keep all of our
options open,” said Chudzinski.
“We have two options — Jason
and Brian. I’m confident in all of
our guys.”
Campbell, who has made 71
career starts for Washington,
Oakland and Chicago, said he’s
comfortable with whatever his
role might be.
“We’re all on the same team.
Whatever the situation is you
have to be a pro and that’s how
I approach it,” he said. “I’ll just
continue to keep pushing forward and striving to help guys
around me to become better,

and at the same time just worry
about trying to do my job.”
Weeden was not available
in the locker room during the
period it was open to reporters on Monday. The secondyear QB hurt his thumb when
he banged it on a helmet after
throwing a pass. Following the
game, Weeden underwent Xrays and said he had trouble
gripping the ball. He left the
stadium with a large brace on
his hand.
Weeden has been sacked 11
times in Cleveland’s first two games
as the Browns offensive line has
had protection issues. Cleveland
has scored just one touchdown in

losses to Miami and Baltimore.
Chudzinski believes Cleveland’s offensive problems are
fixable, and the Browns should
get a huge lift this week with the
return of top wide receiver Josh
Gordon, who was suspended for
the first two games after failing
the NFL’s drug policy.
Gordon was punished for a
positive codeine test he said was
in his cough syrup prescription.
He confirmed that if he fails
another test, he will be facing a
one-year banishment.
“I feel like it’s a last chance opportunity for the league,” said Gordon, who caught 50 passes for 805
yards and five scores as a rookie.

“Nobody wants a problematic type
of person in their program or organization because of how it’s perceived to be. I definitely want to
stay away from any controversy as
long as I can forever.
“That’s definitely my No. 1 priority.”
Gordon said the suspension,
along with a recent speeding
ticket, have helped him understand that he’s risking too much
to get in trouble.
“It’s a humbling experience,”
he said. “You find an appreciation for the game. The absence
of it makes the heart grow fonder
in a sense. That’s really what it’s
about for me right now.”

Manning Bowl belongs to Peyton — again
Barry Wilner

The Associated Press

Peyton Manning is relieved.
Not just because his
Denver Broncos are 2-0
and have been an offensive
juggernaut. The fact that
Manning Bowl III likely
is the last one in the regular season has him — and
younger brother Eli —
breathing easier.
Peyton again beat Eli,
throwing two touchdown
passes in leading the Broncos past the New York Giants 41-23 on Sunday.
The older Manning is
3-0 in the NFL against his
sibling, with the other two
victories coming when
Peyton was with the Colts.
He got this win with a
huge boost from Knowshon Moreno, who rushed
for two touchdowns and 93
yards. Denver, which has
won 13 straight regularseason games, rushed for
just 109 yards altogether.
“It’s a strange situation,
strange
circumstances,”
Peyton said. “It’s a good
team win, but it’s a unique
situation. You can’t ask too
many people for advice on it.
“I think both of us are
glad that it’s over with.
Postseason is one thing,
but I don’t think I’ll make it

to the next regular season
(meeting in four years). I
think this’ll be the end of it.
So I’ll be happy about that.
And the family will. For Eli
and I, it’ll be just as easy.”
Peyton didn’t need to
match his record-tying
seven touchdown passes
from the Broncos’ seasonopening victory. Not with
the Giants (0-2) being
charitable again with four
more turnovers after they
had six in last’s week loss.
They also allowed Trindon Holliday’s spectacular
81-yard punt return for a
touchdown, the first such
score in the league this
season.
“We’ll see what kind of
team we have and what
kind of fight we have,”
Giants guard Chris Snee
said.
Week 2 concludes on
Monday night when Cincinnati hosts Pittsburgh. It
began with New England
beating the New York Jets
13-10 last Thursday night.
———
Seahawks 29, 49ers 3
Marshawn Lynch ran for
two scores and added a
seven-yard TD catch in the
second half, and host Seattle flustered Colin Kaepernick into his worst passing
game as a starter.
The game was delayed
60 minutes by thunder-

storms late in the first quarter. The highly-anticipated
NFC West showdown was
sloppy as opposed to sensational, but Lynch more
than did his part.
Lynch finished with 135
total yards, including 98
yards rushing, to make up
for quarterback Russell
Wilson hitting on just two
of his first 10 throws with
Seattle’s receivers struggling to get open. His scoring run on the first drive
of the second half gave the
Seahawks a 12-0 lead and
his TD catch pushed the
advantage to 19-3 early in
the fourth quarter.
Kaepernick was 13 of 28
for 127 yards with three
interceptions for the 49ers.
———
Saints 16, Buccaneers 14
At Tampa, in another
game delayed by lightning
(69 minutes), Garrett
Hartley kicked a 27-yard
field goal as time expired.
The Buccaneers have lost
both games on last-second
kicks.
“This team is a resilient
team,” Tampa Bay coach
Greg Schiano said. “Their
head coach is a resilient
guy. We’re going to fight
our way right off it.”
Linebacker Mason Foster scored on an 85-yard
interception return for a
14-13 lead. But after Rian
Lindell missed a 46-yard

field goal, Drew Brees
led the Saints back with
completions of 15 yards
to Jimmy Graham, 8 yards
to Darren Sproles and 31
yards to Marques Colston.
Brees also was sacked
four times and intercepted
twice.
———
Packers 38, Redskins 30
At Green Bay, Aaron
Rodgers threw for a careerhigh 480 yards and four
touchdowns. James Jones
had a career-high 11 catches for 178 yards. James
Starks ran for 132 yards
and a touchdown after
rookie starter Eddie Lacy
left with a concussion.
“We were able to catch
the ball well, had yards after the catch and we were
able to run the ball better
than we have in a long
time,” Rodgers said.
Green Bay (1-1) built a
24-0 lead by halftime and
never looked back.
Robert Griffin III threw
for 320 yards and three
second-half touchdowns.
Pierre Garcon had 143
yards receiving and a
touchdown for Washington (0-2).
———
Bears 31, Vikings 30
At Chicago, the Bears
went 2 for 2 in home-field
rallies for victories. Jay
Cutler threw a 16-yard
touchdown pass to Martel-

lus Bennett with 10 seconds left.
Minnesota’s Blair Walsh
kicked a 22-yard field goal
with 3:15 remaining when
Chicago took over at its 34.
Cutler, who led the Bears
back from an 11-point deficit in a season-opening win
over Cincinnati, struck
again.
Chicago moved to 2-0 under new coach Marc Trestman despite committing
four turnovers. Minnesota
(0-2) got 100 yards rushing
from Adrian Peterson.
———
Chargers 33, Eagles 30
At Philadelphia, the
Chargers (1-1) had just as
potent an offense as the
Eagles’ quick-hitting attack. The teams combined
for 1,150 total yards, 539
for San Diego.
San Diego’s unstoppable
combination was Philip
Rivers to Eddie Royal
(three touchdowns). Nick
Novak kicked a 46-yard
field goal with 7 seconds
left, his fourth successful
kick of the game, spoiling
Chip Kelly’s home debut.
The Chargers punted
only once, but fumbled
twice inside Philadelphia’s
10 in the first half.
Michael Vick threw for
a career-best 428 yards
and two touchdowns, and
ran for a score for Philadelphia (1-1).

———
Texans 30, Titans 24,
OT
At Houston, with star
receiver Andre Johnson
shaken up, rookie DeAndre
Hopkins was the star, catching a 3-yard touchdown
pass from Matt Schaub in
overtime. Hopkins reached
above Jason McCourty and
pulled in the pass for the
Texans (2-0), who needed
a franchise-record 21-point
comeback to win their
opener at San Diego.
On Sunday, they charged
back from an eight-point,
fourth-quarter
deficit
against the Titans (11). Arian Foster’s 1-yard
touchdown and 2-point
conversion tied it at 24.
“We survived today
because of some great heroics and plays by him,”
Texans coach Gary Kubiak
said of Hopkins.
———
Chiefs 17, Cowboys 16
At Kansas City, Andy
Reid won his home coaching debut as the Chiefs
moved to 2-0. They won
two games all of last season.
Jamaal Charles ran
for 55 yards and caught
a touchdown pass, and
Dwayne Bowe also caught
one from Alex Smith.
The Cowboys (1-1) got
Dan Bailey’s 53 and 30-yard
field goals and Dez Bryant’s
2-yard TD reception.

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