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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

Trick or Treat
times.... Page 2

Cloudy. High of
59. Low of 44........
Page 2

Local sports coverage....
Page 5

Janet Geraldine Sayre, 68
Eva A. Walker, 96

50 cents daily

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 167

Paving under way in Pomeroy
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Smoother roads are in the works
for
drivers
traveling
through Pomeroy.
Village Administrator
Paul Hellman noted at
Monday’s council meeting
that paving had begun earlier that day on the areas
where the sewer project
had taken place.
Work began Monday on

the Fisher Street/Spring
Avenue area of town and
continued Tuesday on
Condor Street.
While black top is going down in some areas of
town, work is continuing
on Mulberry Avenue to finish the last portion of the
project.
The tentative 2014 budget was approved, with
changes to be discussed at
the next finance committee meeting prior to the

Oct. 28 council meeting.
Clerk Sonya Wolfe noted
that the village may lose a
portion of the income taxes received last year due to
the conclusion of construction projects and the placement of the 911 center and
new Holzer ER outside of
village limits. Figures on
the impact of this are to
also be presented at the finance committee meeting.
Parks committee chairman Phil Ohlinger gave

council an update of Treat
Street as well as the concert scheduled for Oct. 19
on the parking lot.
Tri County Christian
Concerts will host Big
Daddy Weave, Chris August and Unspoken beginning at 6 p.m.
Council approved closing Main Street during the
day of the concert if event
organizers feel it is need-

Sarah Hawley | Civitas Media

New black top is now covering some of the roads impacted by
See PAVING | 2 the sewer project, including Fisher Street.

Deal reached
to avoid default,
reopen gov’t

Recognized for longtime membership and service to the Meigs County Farm Bureau were left to right, front, Maxine
Dyer, Sharon Michael, Jane Beegle, Sharon Jewell, Delbert Smith, Bean Barnitz, Pat Holter; and back, Opal Dyer, Gary
Michael, Bob Beegle, Scott Powell, Gage Smith, Helen Swartz, and Roy Holter.

Sen. Gentile speaks at Farm Bureau dinner
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — State Senator Lou Gentile was the speaker
at the annual meeting of the
Meigs County Farm Bureau held
Monday night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
Gentile who is the ranking
member on the Agriculture Committee talked about
his involvement in
seeing that farmers
in Ohio are given
every
opportunity they need to
Senator Lou
achieve success.
Gentile
His emphasis was
on protecting and
promoting farmers in Ohio, a
resolution of concern passed at
the banquet by the Farm Bureau
members.
He also spoke about another
Farm Bureau resolution which
deals with the necessity for equal
education funding across the state
and assured the members he is
working to see it happens. The
resolution passed at the meeting
calls on legislators to “search for
a more equitable solution to adequately fund our schools.”
The resolutions passed by the
Farm Bureau at the meeting pertained to county, state and national issues. On the county level,
resolutions call for preserving and
protecting farmland in the county,
for improving the condition of
county and township roads, for
forceful action to alleviate the
drug problems by taking whatever steps are necessary, and for

Also receiving recognition for years of service were left to right, front, Susan Sheppard, Janet Morris, C.E. Humphrey, Barbara Mora, Wilma Davidson,
Mary Davidson; and back, Kevin Sheppard, Russen Beegle, Rhett Beegle,
Carl Morris, Karen Walker, Robin Testerman, Don Mora, Barb and Carson
Crow, and Rex Shenefield.

dealing with underage purchase
and consumption of alcohol and
tobacco products.
On the state level the resolutions dealt with encouraging lawmakers to find federal solutions
concerning undocumented immigrant workers, to come up with an
affordable resolution to the health
care cost crisis, to work toward a
more equitable billing structure
and accessibility of a countywide
phone system, and to encourage
and support the use of drug testing for illegal drugs in order to
qualify for public assistance.
On national issues, the Farm
Bureau supported legislation that
enables the Corps of Engineers
to stabilize and secure critically
eroding areas along the Ohio River which causes river bank erosion threatening highways, and
to extend the current estate tax
exemption of $5 million because
“anything less strikes a blow to
farmers and ranchers who are try-

ing to transition from one generation to the next.”
Three of the resolutions passed
at the Farm Bureau meeting pertained to special privileges given
to Congress. They are as follows:
One called for an amendment
to the Constitution of the United
States that makes it mandatory
for all members of Congress pay
into the Social Security system.
Another resolution states that
those serving in Congress collect
a salary while in office but should
receive no pay when they are no
longer in office.
The third resolution passed by
the Farm Bureau pertaining to
those in Congress is that members of Congress lose their current health care system and participate in the same health care
system as the American people.
During the meeting there was
special recognition given to longtime members of the Meigs County Farm Bureau.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate has voted to
avoid a financial default and reopen the government after
a 16-day partial shutdown.
The vote was 81-18 Wednesday night. The measure
now heads to the House, which is expected to back the
bill before day’s end.
Senate passage came several hours after Majority
Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell announced the bipartisan compromise.
The bill would reopen the government through Jan.
15 and permit the Treasury to borrow normally through
Feb. 7 or perhaps a month longer.
Congress faced a deadline of 11:59 p.m. on Thursday.
That’s when Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew had said the
government would reach the current $16.7 trillion debt
limit and could no longer borrow to meet its obligations.
A frantic day of legislative maneuvering ended in futility for Speaker John A. Boehner today, as the most
conservative members of the House refused to back his
proposed compromise to end the standoff over the federal budget.
The failure leaves a bipartisan Senate plan negotiated
by Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Minority
Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., as the sole way out of
a stalemate that risks a U.S. default on its bills and huge
economic disruptions.
A bill that passed the Senate would receive Democratic support in the House, guaranteeing a majority, if
Boehner were willing to bring it to the floor even without
the backing of a majority of Republicans. He is widely
expected to do so, however, having run out of time for
other options.
Earlier in the day, Boehner reiterated that he opposed
allowing the government to risk default.
“I have made clear for months and months that the idea
of default is wrong, and we shouldn’t get anywhere close
to it,” he said.
Shortly after House leaders officially called off a vote
on their most recent plan, spokesmen for both Reid and
McConnell said Senate talks were resuming. They had
paused for the day to allow Boehner, R-Ohio, a chance to
get a bill through the House.
The two leaders are “very close,” a top Senate aide
said.
Senate aides said the agreement would extend the
Treasury’s authority to borrow money through Feb. 7
and end the government shutdown, providing federal
agencies with funds through Jan. 15. In the meantime,
congressional negotiators would try to work out a longerterm budget solution.
The plan would make no significant changes in President Barack Obama’s health care law. Democrats were
expected to drop a proposal to repeal a new tax on insurance plans that is opposed by some unions. The agreement also would direct officials to confirm that people
receiving insurance subsidies under the law were eligible
for them — something Democrats say the law already
requires.
Earlier in the day, Fitch Ratings put the government’s
AAA credit rating on watch for a potential downgrade because of the standoff. The company said that it believed
the federal debt limit would be raised soon but that “political brinkmanship” was risking a default.
Treasury officials have said they cannot guarantee
having enough money to pay all the government’s bills
after Thursday. If the debt limit is not lifted, “the Treasury would still have limited capacity to make payments,”
Fitch said, but “it would be exposed to volatile revenue
and expenditure flows.”
See DEAL | 2

Tea Party hears positives in local meth situation
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Middleport Police Detective Rick Smith shared
the bad, but also the good, news
about the methamphetamine
situation in Meigs County and
beyond at the recent Meigs Tea
Party meeting.
Smith quoted statistics about
the multiplying numbers of meth

lab seizures, and showed beforeand-after pictures of addicts. He
warned about suspicious bottles
and meth producing labs, which,
if disturbed, could billow fumes
or burst into flames.
As for some good news, he said
the county is saving thousands of
dollars per lab discovery by having local experts neutralize the
bombs, instead of paying outside

contractors as in the past.
Detective Smith and his brother, Meigs County Commissioner
Randy Smith, shared how local
business owners and managers
are educating themselves, spotting suspects, and removing
certain items from store shelves.
The two took questions from the
members in an extended discussion to further the understand-

ing of the problem as requested
by President Craig Wehrung.
Following the discussion, the
group turned to its standard
open forum in which current issues were discussed.
One member suggested that
churches, Tea Parties and concerned citizens be ready to
help those who are in need and
unable to receive government
benefits. It was suggested that

through the help the recipients
would feel cared for and perhaps
more receptive to turning to the
Lord rather than depending on
bureaucrats. John Fellure closed
in prayer.
The Meigs Tea Party meets
at 7:30 p.m. on the second and
fourth Tuesday of each month
at the Senior Citizens Center.
There is a voluntary time of
prayer beginning at 7 p.m.

�Page 2 s The Daily Sentinel

Death Notices
SAYRE
Janet Geraldine Sayre,
68, of Ripley, W.Va., died
October 14, 2013, in West
Virginia University Hospital, Morgantown, W.Va.,
following an extended illness.
In keeping with her request, there will be no public services. Casto Funeral

Home, Evans, W.Va., is providing arrangements.
WALKER
Eva A. Walker, 96, of
Gallipolis, died on Wednesday, October 16, 2013, at
her residence.
Arrangements will be announced later by the Willis
Funeral Home.

For the record
911
Oct. 10
8:43 a.m., Hysell Street, chest pain; 10:53 a.m., Vine
Street, medical alarm; 12:04 p.m., Cole Street, abdominal
pain; 12:20 p.m., Harris Road, seizure/convulsions; 2:06
p.m., East Memorial Drive, rapid heart rate; 4:54 p.m.,
Powell Street, weakness; 5:43 p.m., East Main Street,
nausea/vomiting; 5:45 p.m., Ohio 7, unconscious/unknown reason; 7:04 p.m., Carsey Road, seizure/convulsions; 7:14 p.m., Loop Road, difficulty breathing; 7:17
p.m., Bradbury Road, difficulty breathing; 11:41 p.m.,
Third Street, nausea/vomiting.
Oct. 11
10:55 a.m., Pomeroy Pike Road, chest pain; 4:06 p.m.,
Beech Street, chest pain.
Oct. 12
7:13 a.m., Sixth Street, seizure/convulsions; 8:54 a.m.,
Powell Street, fall; 1:35 p.m., Liberty Lane, high temperature; 2:22 p.m., Gibson Road, meth lab; 2:29 p.m., Third
Street, nausea/vomiting; 2:52 p.m., Ohio 681, difficulty
breathing; 5:29 p.m., McCumber Road, fall; 6:22 p.m.,
Ohio 684, motor vehicle collision; 9:19 p.m., Ohio 124,
stroke/CVA; 10:09 p.m., Ohio 681, chest pain; 11:42 p.m.,
Powell Street, fall.
Oct. 13
9:57 a.m., Laurel Cliff Road, fall; 12:08 p.m., West
Main Street, meth lab; 1:08 p.m., Rutland Street, difficulty breathing; 2:23 p.m., Ohio 124, laceration; 4:31
p.m., Union Avenue, choking; 5:33 p.m., Wolfe Pen
Road, numbness; 6:53 p.m., Pearl Street, seizure/convulsions; 7:25 p.m., East Main Street, syncope/passing out;
9:06 p.m., Pearl Street, chest pain; 10:18 p.m., Lincoln
Heights, head injury; 11:06 p.m., Forest Run Road, chest
pain.
Oct. 14
3:30 a.m., Tackerville Road, chest pain; 7:27 a.m., Holley Road, rapid heart rate; 7:37 a.m., unknown, unknown;
11:30 a.m., Beech Street, chest pain; 12:05 p.m., East
Memorial Drive, fall; 12:46 p.m., Charles Chancey Drive,
seizure/convulsions; 5:01 p.m., Oak Hill Road, chest pain;
5:14 p.m., Oak Hill Road, chest pain; 7:26 p.m., East Memorial Drive, lifting assistance; 9:45 p.m., East Memorial
Drive, fall; 10:53 p.m., Painter Ridge Road, structure fire.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Local Trick or Treat schedule set
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

CHESTER — Chester Trick or
Treat will be held from 6-7 p.m. on
Thursday, Oct. 31.
RACINE — Racine Trick or Treat
will be held from 6-7 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 31. There will be an event
to follow at the Racine Fire Department. A siren will sound to begin and
end Trick or Treat.
SYRACUSE — Syracuse Trick or
Treat will be held from 6-7 p.m. on
Thursday, Oct. 31.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Treat
Street will be held from 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 31 along

ATHENS — O’Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens will offer cholesterol
and glucose screening on
Wednesday, Nov. 6.
The cholesterol and glucose screening will be open
to the public from 9 a.m.
until noon in the hospital’s
Cornwell Center Entrance
lobby. The screening will
be offered for a $5 fee, and
can be made available by
appointment only from 9
a.m. until noon. To make
an appointment, call (740)
592-9401. Call as soon as
possible to reserve an appointment.

Cholesterol levels typically do not change dramatically in one month so individuals may want to wait
two to three months before being screened again.
Also, screenings do not
take the place of testing.
A screening will indicate
whether an individual’s
level is below, at or above
normal ranges; however,
for specific readings, an
individual may be directed
to see a physician for further testing. The cholesterol and glucose screening
measures total cholesterol,
HDL and glucose levels.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Thursday: Showers likely, mainly between 2 p.m.
and 3 p.m. Cloudy, with a
high near 59. Calm wind
becoming northwest 5 to
7 mph in the afternoon.
Chance of precipitation is
60 percent. New precipitation amounts of less than
a tenth of an inch possible.
Thursday Night: A
chance of showers, mainly before 7 p.m. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
44. Southwest wind 3 to 5

mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Friday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 65. Calm
wind becoming southwest
5 to 8 mph in the afternoon.
Friday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
43.
Saturday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 62.
Saturday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
42.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 43.77
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.01
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 89.41
Big Lots (NYSE) — 36.24
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 58.05
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 104.10
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.43
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.27
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 45.12
Collins (NYSE) — 69.00
DuPont (NYSE) — 59.06
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.24
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.36
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 66.52
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 54.00
Kroger (NYSE) — 41.87
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 57.16
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 79.91
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 21.30

BBT (NYSE) — 34.22
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.85
Pepsico (NYSE) — 82.27
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.95
Rockwell (NYSE) — 106.37
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 18.85
Royal Dutch Shell — 65.71
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 54.18
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.60
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.50
WesBanco (NYSE) — 31.06
Worthington (NYSE) — 39.23
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions October
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.

Main Street. The event will include
several activities for kids of all ages.
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport
Trick or Treat will be held from 6-7
p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 31.
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Feeney-Bennett Post 128 American Legion will host its annual Halloween event Thursday, October 31
at the Stewart-Bennett Park next
to the Middleport Post Office. The
event is scheduled to start at the
end of Middleport’s trick or treat
(7 p.m.). Thanks to the generosity
of local merchants, individuals and
the legion the event will offer free
hot dogs, ice tea, hot chocolate, and
pop free to those attending. In case of

rain the event will be held inside the
legion post across from the park. The
Middleport Fire Department will furnish lighting and pop corn during the
evening.
TUPPERS PLAINS — Tuppers
Plains Trick or Treat will be held
from 6-7 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 31.
REEDSVILLE — Reedsville Trick
or Treat will be held from 6-7 p.m. on
Thursday, Oct. 31.
RUTLAND — Rutland Trick of
Treat will be held from 6-7 p.m. on
Thursday, Oct. 31.
NOTE: Villages or communities
may submit Trick or Treat times and
information to tdsnews@civitasmedia.com.

Meigs County Community Calendar
Thursday, Oct. 17
POMEROY — Meigs
County Retired Teachers
will meet at noon at the
Wild Horse Cafe for lunch.
Speaker will be the Office
of the Ohio Consumer
Counsel speaking on New
Energy Choice and Energy
Efficiency. Guests are welcome.
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Board of
Supervisors will hold its

regular monthly meeting
at 11:30 a.m. at the district
office at 113 E. Memorial
Drive, Suite D.
Friday, Oct. 18
POMEROY — The
Pomeroy High School
Class of 1959 will be having their third Friday lunch
at noon at Fox’s Pizza.
Saturday, Oct. 19
POMEROY — Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter

of the Daughters of the
American Revolution will
meet at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. Dr. Frank Porter of Porterbrook Nursery
will be the guest speaker.
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878
will hold their fun night
and potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. followed by fun night
activities.
Monday, Oct. 21
LETART — Letart

Township Trustees will
meet at 5 p.m. in the Letart
Township Building.
Wednesday, Oct. 23
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Republican
Party Bean Dinner will be
held at 6:30 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community Center. Representatives are expected to be in attendance
to represent several state
officials.

Meigs County Local Briefs
Meigs Historical
Society
annual meeting
POMEROY — The annual meeting of the Meigs
County Historical Society
will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Meigs County
Museum Annex. The program for the meeting will
be a video “Meigs County
Memories,”
produced
Heritage Sunday, 1998,
at the museum by Charlie
Mankin. There are 17 people sharing their memories
with only six surviving.
The public is invited.

Benefit basket games
POMEROY — Basket
Oct. 15
games will be held at the
1:32 a.m., Pearl Street, rapid heart rate; 1:35 a.m., Senior Citizen Center on
Rocksprings Road, seizure/convulsions; 1:51 a.m., East Thursday, Oct. 17. Early
Memorial Drive, fall.
bird tickets will be for sale.
The door will open at 5
p.m. and bingo games will
begin at 6 p.m.

O’Bleness offering glucose
and cholesterol screenings

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Chester family life
program
CHESTER
—
Birmingham Chapter 7230

of the Modern Woodmen
of America will co-host
with the Chester Shade
Historical Association, a
family life program at the
Courthouse Oct. 20, 2 to
4 p.m. Refreshments will
be provided by the Modern Woodmen . Staff will
share history of displays in
the museum and provide
guided tours of the Court
House and Academy.
Overbrook fall festival
MIDDLEPORT — “Fest
O’ Fall will be observed at
the Overbrook Rehabilitation Center from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Oct.
19. Food for the annual
festival will be served from
11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. There
will be crafters and vendors on hand, games will
be held and inflatables will
in place (weather permitting). The 25th anniversary of Overbrook will be
observed.
Halloween movie
MIDDLEPORT — The

Middleport Community
Association will show a
Halloween movie at 7 p.m.
on Oct. 25 in the Middleport Village Hall auditorium. The movie is free and
there will be free snacks
and drinks at the show.
Intergenerational
Dance coming
RIO GRANDE — The
13th annual intergenerational dance will be held
from 7 to 9 p.m. on Friday,
Oct. 25 at the Lyne Center
Lower Gym, University of
Rio Grande/Community
College. Families, kids and
grandparents are invited
and there will be a prize for
the family with the most
generations in attendance.
Costumes are optional for
the contest. There will be
free food, games, prizes,
and fun for all ages.
Grazing School
POMEROY — Meigs
SWCD will be hosting a

Grazing School from 6-9
p.m., Tuesday, October 29
and Thursday, October 31,
and 9 a.m. to noon, Saturday November 2. The
Tuesday and Thursday
sessions will be held at
the Kountry Resort Campground meeting hall. The
Saturday session will be
an outside pasture walk at
a local farm. Must attend
all three days to receive
certificate of completion
and EQIP points. Cost of
$40 per person (one per
farm) includes the course
materials a “Pastures for
Profit” 3 ring notebook,
pasture stick and refreshments each session. Additional registrants from the
same farm are $10 each
and includes refreshments
each session. Send RSVP
to Meigs SWCD, 113
East Memorial Dr. Suite
D, Pomeroy, OH 45769
or call (740) 992-4282
or email steve.jenkins@
oh.nacdnet.net.
Please
RSVP by October 23, 2013.

Meigs County Church Calendar
Revival
MIDDLEPORT — A revival at
Ash Street Church will be held Oct.
18-20. Friday and Saturday Evenings
at 6:30 p.m.; Sunday morning at
10:30 a.m., featuring Pastor James
A. Wright. Join us to be refreshed, restored, refueled, and re-fired. Wright
is a former Pastor of Maranatha Fellowship Church in St. Albans, West
Virginia, where one of the greatest revivals broke out and lasted about 30
weeks with over 300 people saved.
POINT ROCK — Revival services
will begin Tuesday, Oct.22 and continue through Sunday, Oct. 27 at the
Point Rock Church of the Nazarene.
Services will be held at 7 p.m. except
on Sunday when they will be held at
11 a.m. and 6 p.m . The Rev. Randy
Peters will be the evangelist and
Mary Brown the song evangelist.
The church is located on SR 689 between U. S. 32 and Wilkesville. The

public is invited to attend.

holiday food projects.

Homecoming
MIDDLEPORT — Homecoming
will be held at Ash Street Church at
10:30 a.m. on Oct. 20, with pot luck
at noon and special singing in the afternoon.
RACINE — Homecoming at Morning Star United Methodist Church
will be held on Sunday, Oct. 20, with
dinner at 12:30 p.m. and singing/
program beginning at 1:45 p.m. The
church is located at the intersection
of US 33 and Morning Star Road.

Community Dinner
ALFRED —Alfred United Methodist Church will hold its annual wiener roast at 5 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 20
at the church. Pastor Gene Goodwin
invites the public.
RACINE — A community wiener
roast will be held at 6:30 p.m. on
Saturday, Oct. 26 at Morning Star
United Methodist Church located at
the intersection of US 33 and Morning Star Road. Food will be provided.
Public is welcome.
POMEROY — There will be a
community dinner from 4:30 to
6 p.m. at New Beginnings United
Methodist Church on Second Street
in Pomeroy. The menu will be homemade noodles and chicken, mashed
potatoes, green beans and dessert.
The public is invited.

Soup Supper/Fall Festival
POMEROY —A soup super and
fall festival will be held at the Eden
Fellowship Hall at 5 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 19. There will be games
for the children and an auction to
fellow. Proceeds will be used for

Deal
From Page 1
“The U.S. risks being
forced to incur widespread
delays of payments to suppliers and employees, as
well as Social Security pay-

ments to citizens — all of
which would damage the
perception of U.S. sovereign creditworthiness and
the economy,” the agency
added.
Whether Congress can

pass a bill quickly will depend on whether tea party
conservatives led by Sen.
Ted Cruz, R-Texas, mount
a filibuster in the Senate to
slow the process.
Reid and White House

officials sharply criticized
Boehner’s tactics during the course of the day.
But despite the rhetoric,
Boehner already had accepted much of the framework of the Senate deal.

Paving
From Page 1
ed. Those in attendance for the free
event are encouraged to bring lawn
chairs.
Council discussed the street lights
which were not working throughout
the village. The police department
is to get the pole numbers and call
them into AEP to be repaired.
Hellman also discussed with council a water pressure study conducted
on areas of Rose Hill, Ohio 833, and
Pomeroy Pike. The study shows decreased pressure in some of the ar-

eas, which could be helped by either
a booster station or elevated tank.
Hellman is to check into the cost/
benefit of both options and report
back to council.
Council member Vic Young asked
if the village had been receiving money from the billboards placed within
the village as was the original agreement. The matter will be looked into
to determine the owner of the billboards and if the fees are being payed
properly.
The matter of political signs within

the village was also discussed. Council reminded all candidates for office
who place signs in the village that
a $25 fee must be paid prior to the
placing of signs. The fee is returned
following the removal and clean up
of all signs placed by the individual.
Also, signs are not to be placed along
the walking path in the village.
No bids were received on the truck
recently advertised by the village.
Hellman will check on the best option for the village to get rid of the
vehicle.

�Thursday, October 17, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Civitas Media

PRO FOOTBALL REVIEW
Five lessons from Patriots come-from-behind win
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — Thousands of fans had given up on Tom Brady
and the Patriots.
His rookie receiver never did.
“Until that clock said all zeros on it,
we were going to fight until the finish,”
Kenbrell Thompkins said. “And that’s
what we did.”
And that’s why New England stunned
the previously unbeaten New Orleans
Saints 30-27 on Brady’s 17-yard touchdown pass to Thompkins with 5 seconds left Sunday.
Gillette Stadium was nearly half empty when the Patriots began marching
down the field. While they were beating the Saints, the fans were beating the
traffic. A big roar went up from those
who remained — and about 30 miles
away at Fenway Park from fans waiting
for the start of Game 2 of the AL championship series between the Detroit Tigers and Boston Red Sox.
The Patriots (5-1) had taken a 23-17
lead on Stephen Gostkowski’s 23-yard
field goal midway through the fourth quarter. Then the Saints (5-1) went ahead 2423 on Drew Brees’ 34-yard pass to Kenny
Stills and 27-24 on Garrett Hartley’s 39-

yard field goal with 2:29 remaining.
Brady began the winning drive at his
30-yard line with 1:13 left and no timeouts remaining. He ended it with the
pass that Thompkins caught on the left
side of the end zone.
On his previous possession, Brady threw
an interception.
“We were saying on the sideline the
whole time that we were going to get
another chance,” Thompkins said. “And
when we get that chance, we have to take
full advantage of it.”
They certainly did.
Five things to know from the Patriots’
wild win over the Saints:
PATRIOTS RECEIVERS ARE IMPROVING: Add Austin Collie to the
group of new Patriots receivers. In his
first game with the team, he made his
first two catches on the winning drive.
After losing their top five pass catchers
from last year, the Patriots have shown
progress with the newcomers who include rookies Thompkins and Aaron
Dobson and free agent pickups Danny
Amendola and Collie. Those four combined for 13 of Brady’s 25 completions.
SOLID DEFENSE: No matter how

Passing

Daniel Wallace | Tampa Bay Times/MCT

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady
(12), seen here in action earlier this season,
showed on Sunday he still has some of the
magic that has made him one of the top quarterbacks in the league over the past decade
with a last-second come-from-behind victory.

many players they lose, the Patriots’
defense still does enough to win. Starting defensive tackles Vince Wilfork and
Tommy Kelly were out with injuries, top
defensive back Aqib Talib didn’t return
after hurting his hip in the third quarter.
And their best linebacker, Jerod Mayo,
left with a shoulder injury one play before
the Saints took their 24-23 lead.

A look at some of the biggest upsets
Much was made of how lopsided everyone expected Sunday’s
game to be between Peyton Manning’s Denver Broncos and the
visiting Jacksonville Jaguars.
One team, after all, went into
the contest at 5-0 and scored 51
points last weekend. The other
was 0-5 and scored a grand total of 51 points all season. One
team has Manning and his TDinterception ratio of 20-1 going into the game. The other
has backup quarterback Chad
Henne and his 2-2 ratio.
The Broncos did win the
game, 35-19, but not before
some anxious moments among
the Denver faithful — the
Broncos never trailed in the
game, but held a slim 21-19
margin before beginning to
pull away with about 4 minutes
to go in the third period.
So how big a deal would it
have been if the Jaguars had
actually beated the Broncos?
The stakes weren’t particularly
high — it’s simply Week 6 in a
16-game regular season — but it
sure would have been unexpected. That sort of thing does happen occasionally. It’s called an
“upset,” and the chance of one is
a big reason we watch even the
supposedly unfair matchups.
Here’s a Pick 6 of memorable, major upsets around the
world of sports:
NEW YORK JETS BEAT
BALTIMORE COLTS, 1969
SUPER BOWL: Let’s start with
an example from professional
football, and a step on the way
to the NFL’s stratospheric popularity. Joe Namath, the quarterback of the Jets, famously issues a “guarantee” that his AFL
upstarts will beat the NFL’s
Colts despite being more than
two-touchdown underdogs —
and he’s right. New York’s 16-7
victory shows the AFL is ready
for a merger and helps make
“Broadway Joe” an icon.

U.S. BEATS THE U.S.S.R.
IN ICE HOCKEY, 1980 OLYMPICS: The Miracle on Ice. Jim
Craig, Mike Eruzione and the
rest of coach Herb Brooks’
squad of amateurs stuns the
feared Soviets 4-3 en route to
— although not for — the gold
medal. The game’s significance
stretches beyond a rink in Lake
Placid because of the Cold War,
the hostages in Iran, the Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan, the energy crisis, and a general malaise
hanging over the United States.
CHAMINADE
BEATS
RALPH SAMPSON AND
VIRGINIA, 1982. Chaminade
boasts all of 800 students, plays
at the NAIA — not NCAA —
level at the time, and does
not even have its own gymnasium (it rents one from a high
school). And yet the Silverswords, coming off a loss to
Wayland Baptist, manage to
shock No. 1-ranked Virginia and
the 7-foot-4 Sampson, a threetime national college basketball
player of the year, 77-72.
JAMES ‘BUSTER’ DOUGLAS BEATS MIKE TYSON,
1990: Douglas knocks out Tyson in the 10th round of their
scheduled 12-round fight in
Tokyo. Tyson, the youngest
heavyweight champion in boxing history, comes into the
bout 37-0 with 33 knockouts,
while the unknown Douglas is
29-4-1 with 19 KOs.
RULON GARDNER BEATS
ALEXANDER KARELIN, 2000
OLYMPICS: Gardner, an American heavyweight in GrecoRoman wrestling, wins a gold
medal at the Sydney Games
by stopping Russian Alexander Karelin’s 13-year unbeaten
streak. Karelin enters with
three Olympic titles already and
is considered a lock for a fourth.
NEW YORK GIANTS BEAT
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS,

Top performers
Week 6
506, Romo, DAL vs. DEN 10/06 (25-36, 5 TD)
480, A. Rodgers, GBY vs. WAS 09/15 (34-42, 4 TD)
462, P. Manning, DEN vs. BAL 09/05 (27-42, 7 TD)
450, E. Manning, NYG at DAL 09/08 (27-42, 4 TD)
428, Vick, PHL vs. SND 09/15 (23-36, 2 TD)
421, M. Ryan, ATL vs. NWE 09/29 (34-54, 2 TD)
419, P. Rivers, SND at PHL 09/15 (36-47, 3 TD)
414, P. Manning, DEN at DAL 10/06 (33-42, 4 TD)
413, Brees, NOR vs. MIA 09/30 (30-39, 4 TD)
412, Kaepernick, SNF vs. GBY 09/08 (27-39, 3 TD)
411, P. Rivers, SND at OAK 10/06 (35-48, 2 TD)
406, Roethlisberger, PIT vs. CHI 09/22 (26-41, 2 TD)
401, P. Rivers, SND vs. DAL 09/29 (35-42, 3 TD)
385, M. Stafford, DET at WAS 09/22 (25-42, 2 TD)
383, Roethlisberger, PIT at MIN 09/29 (36-51, 1 TD)
374, P. Manning, DEN vs. OAK 09/23 (32-37, 3 TD)
374, M. Ryan, ATL vs. STL 09/15 (33-43, 2 TD)
362, Flacco, BAL at DEN 09/05 (34-62, 2 TD)
362, E. Manning, NYG vs. DEN 09/15 (28-49, 1 TD)
358, Cutler, CHI vs. NOR 10/06 (24-33, 2 TD)
357, M. Stafford, DET vs. MIN 09/08 (28-43, 2 TD)
357, Brees, NOR vs. ATL 09/08 (26-35, 2 TD)
355, Schaub, HOU vs. SEA 09/29 (ot) (31-49, 2 TD)
352, S. Bradford, STL at ATL 09/15 (32-55, 3 TD)
347, Flacco, BAL at BUF 09/29 (25-50, 2 TD)
346, Schaub, HOU at SND 09/09 (34-45, 3 TD)

Rushing

184, L. McCoy, PHL at WAS 09/09 (31 att., 1 TD)
175, D. Murray, DAL vs. STL 09/22 (26 att., 1 TD)
158, L. McCoy, PHL vs. KAN 09/19 (20 att., 1 TD)
153, Gore, SNF at STL 09/26 (20 att., 1 TD)
149, B. Powell, NYJ vs. BUF 09/22 (27 att., 0 TD)
144, D. Martin, TAM vs. NOR 09/15 (29 att., 0 TD)
141, A. Foster, HOU vs. STL 10/13 (20 att., 0 TD)
140, A. Peterson, MIN vs. PIT 09/29 (23 att., 2 TD)
139, Re. Bush, DET vs. CHI 09/29 (18 att., 1 TD)
132, J. Starks, GBY vs. WAS 09/15 (20 att., 1 TD)
129, D. McFadden, OAK vs. JAX 09/15 (19 att., 0 TD)
120, Lacy, GBY at BAL 10/13 (23 att., 0 TD)
120, De. Williams, CAR vs. NYG 09/22 (23 att., 0 TD)
116, L. McCoy, PHL at TAM 10/13 (25 att., 0 TD)
112, Pryor, OAK at IND 09/08 (13 att., 0 TD)
108, J. Charles, KAN at TEN 10/06 (22 att., 1 TD)
107, A. Morris, WAS at GBY 09/15 (13 att., 0 TD)
106, Jacobs, NYG at CHI 10/10 (22 att., 2 TD)
103, Spiller, BUF vs. CAR 09/15 (16 att., 0 TD)
103, J. Franklin, GBY at CIN 09/22 (13 att., 1 TD)
102, A. Foster, HOU vs. SEA 09/29 (ot) (27 att., 0 TD)
102, R. Wilson, SEA at IND 10/06 (13 att., 0 TD)
102, Lynch, SEA at IND 10/06 (17 att., 0 TD)
101, Gore, SNF vs. ARI 10/13 (25 att., 0 TD)
101, Vereen, NWE at BUF 09/08 (14 att., 0 TD)
100, A. Peterson, MIN at CHI 09/15 (26 att., 0 TD)

Receiving

Russ Reed | Oakland Tribune/MC

New York Jets quarterback Joe Namath (12) takes a hard shot from
Oakland Raiders defensive end Ben Davidson during this game in
1967 won by the Raiders. Two years later Nameth guaranteed a win
over the heavily favored Baltimore Colts in the Super Bowl and then
delivered one of the biggest NFL upsets.

2008 SUPER BOWL: Only
seems right to finish this list
with an NFL game. The Patriots,
quarterbacked by Tom Brady and
coached by Bill Belichick, boast
an unprecedented 18-0 record
heading in and are 12-point favorites. But thanks in part to
David Tyree’s helmet-catch of a
desperation pass from MVP Eli
Manning, the Giants pull off the
17-14 surprise.
BONUS: A half-dozen is a
small sampling, so here’s an
extra six: BOISE STATE of
the Western Athletic Conference beats Big 12 stalwart
Oklahoma 43-42 in overtime

at the 2007 Fiesta Bowl,
a BCS-buster if there ever
was one; the game features a
bevy of trick plays and even
a marriage proposal. FRANCIS OUIMET, a 20-year-old
local amateur, beats two of
golf’s dominant figures, Harry Vardon and Ted Ray, in a
playoff at the 1913 U.S. Open;
the stunning victory puts the
sport on the front pages of
American newspapers for the
first time. In a more recent example, JOHN DALY wins the
1991 PGA Championship as a
PGA Tour rookie after getting
into the field as an alternate.

218, Jeffery, CHI vs. NOR 10/06 (10 rec., 1 TD)
208, Boldin, SNF vs. GBY 09/08 (13 rec., 1 TD)
196, An. Brown, PIT vs. CHI 09/22 (9 rec., 2 TD)
193, De. Jackson, PHL vs. SND 09/15 (9 rec., 1 TD)
190, J. Blackmon, JAX at DEN 10/13 (14 rec., 0 TD)
182, Ju. Jones, ATL vs. STL 09/15 (11 rec., 1 TD)
180, Ve. Davis, SNF vs. ARI 10/13 (8 rec., 2 TD)
179, J. Graham, NOR at TAM 09/15 (10 rec., 1 TD)
178, Jam. Jones, GBY vs. WAS 09/15 (11 rec., 0 TD)
166, To. Smith, BAL at BUF 09/29 (5 rec., 1 TD)
164, Cruz, NYG at KAN 09/29 (10 rec., 1 TD)
162, A.. Green, CIN at CHI 09/08 (9 rec., 2 TD)
161, De. Thomas, DEN vs. BAL 09/05 (5 rec., 2 TD)
154, S. Holmes, NYJ vs. BUF 09/22 (5 rec., 1 TD)
154, V. Jackson, TAM at NYJ 09/08 (7 rec., 0 TD)
151, Te. Williams, DAL vs. DEN 10/06 (4 rec., 1 TD)
149, Gonzalez, ATL vs. NWE 09/29 (12 rec., 2 TD)
146, Gordon, CLE at MIN 09/22 (10 rec., 1 TD)
146, And. Johnson, HOU at SND 09/09 (12 rec., 0 TD)
143, Shorts, JAX at SEA 09/22 (8 rec., 0 TD)
143, Garcon, WAS at GBY 09/15 (8 rec., 1 TD)
142, H. Nicks, NYG vs. PHL 10/06 (9 rec., 0 TD)
141, Avery, KAN at PHL 09/19 (7 rec., 0 TD)
141, D. Bryant, DAL vs. DEN 10/06 (6 rec., 2 TD)
141, J. Cook, STL vs. ARI 09/08 (7 rec., 2 TD)
141, D. Bryant, DAL at KAN 09/15 (9 rec., 1 TD)

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�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

The honorable vs. the anarchists
either
pubFareed
Zalic- or charterkaria is an atschool success
large editor of
because they
Time magazine
cannot see any
and a CNN corvirtue in those
respondent on
they consider
world
affairs.
enemies.
He is a conBut
ignortemplative man
ing these facts
and a successful
weakens
our
one, an immiability to teach
grant from Inall our childia who can see
dren, no matter
the big picture,
present excuses
like public education and its Stanley Crouch and supposed
barriers. Our
value to AmeriSyndicated
country always
can democracy,
Columnist
gains from dowithout losing
ing something
sight of the innew that works
dividual people
rather than something stuwho make it up.
Listening to him give pid that fails because of
the keynote address for the poor planning, selling out
gala dinner given by the to unbridled special interHarlem Educational Activi- ests, or pure stubbornness
ties Fund, where he raised being mistaken for intega challenge to the city of rity.
Hearing Zakaria defend
New York and the federal government, that was those actual innovations in
rousing. HEAF, the non- public education is impresprofit that provides superb sive. They are so real and
supplemental education to so consistent that their
students in Harlem public opponents seem to be sayschools — and is now pre- ing, “No matter how long
paring itself to expand into and consistent our failures
Brooklyn — has proven in education have been,
results, just like Eva Mos- we are not going to surkowitz’s Success Academy render to the proposition
charter schools. Students that more money is not the
graduate, they go to college single or simple solution.”
Obviously, inspiring the
and they can hold thoughts
and conversations. They students is the only solugo into the world ready to tion, not magic or throwmore than hold their own. ing good money after bad.
More than mere statistics, The clinical explanation of
they are living symbols of mental illness is doing the
vitality flaming forth from same thing that has always
inspired individuals. That failed and being shocked
they continue to appear in that another try will not resupposedly impossible ar- sult in a different outcome.
While mulling over this,
eas to get up to even competence among students I kept thinking about Chris
tells us more than many Matthews’ new book, “Tip
and the Gipper,” a superb
want to know.
Both programs’ numbers tribute to the rejected art
are beyond challenge. Both of compromise subtitled
draw out of students great- “When Politics Worked.”
er engagement and learn- Hmmm.
President Ronald Reaing facility in language,
math and science than the gan and House Speaker
national - that’s what I said, Tip O’Neill fought furiousN-A-T-I-O-N-A-L — averag- ly over many things, but rees. Those are ice-cold facts mained friends - dedicated
that cannot be puffed away. to their shared sense of
None of this, Zakaria principled opposition, as
stressed, is magic. It is the well as to the need to come
result of creating a vision together to move Ameriof the future in which the can democracy along.
The power of Matthews’
student will go to college,
book, with its many details
no question about it.
Those opposed to HEAF from behind closed doors,
or the Success Academies is that it feels as though he
cannot face the facts of is “talking out of school” in

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the service of fact. He uses
Reagan’s diary responses
to national and world problems and the moments
Matthews, this thinking
man on O’Neill’s team, witnessed or contemplated.
His thoughts went beyond
what any ideologue on the
contemporary right or left
would allow in.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren
nailed it a week before last
Friday, calling the rejection
of compromise an anarchic
failure masquerading as a
courageous stand:
“Behind all the slogans
of the tea party and all the
thinly veiled calls for anarchy in Washington is a reality: The American people
don’t want a future without
government. When was
the last time the anarchy
gang called for regulators
to go easier on companies
that put lead in children’s
toys? Or for inspectors to
stop checking whether the
meat in our grocery stores
is crawling with deadly
bacteria?”
She then ticked off some
of the essential and uncontroversial things big
government provides. Doing right by a citizenry of
hundreds of millions, after
all, demands sensible and
dependable
governing.
The integrity of both sides
has always protected our
democratic system from irrational excess.
Sounding rightly patriotic, she concludes:
“We are not a country of
anarchists. We are not a
country of pessimists and
ideologues whose motto
is, ‘I’ve got mine, the rest
of you are on your own.’
We are not a country that
tolerates dangerous drugs,
unsafe meat, dirty air or
toxic mortgages.
“We are not that nation.
We have never been that
nation. And we never will
be that nation.”
The nation we are will
more completely embrace
its identity when embracing the truth laid before
us by Warren, Zakaria and
Matthews. We can work together whenever we have
the will. Our country has
always had plenty.
Stanley Crouch can be reached by
email at: crouch.stanley@gmail.
com.
(c) 2013 Stanley Crouch
Distributed by King Features Syndicate Inc.

Page 4
Thursday, October 17, 2013

Profiting from
the welfare state
From one point of view,
successful claims from the
Eric C. Conn is an American
back-pay benefits. Conn got
success story. He opened his
$3.9 million in fees in 2010
business in a trailer in tiny
alone, when he was the thirdStanville, Ky. With a keen eye
highest-paid disability lawyer
on the main chance, he grew
in the country. Not bad for
it into a juggernaut. It became
a little ol’ country lawyer in
one of the leaders in its field,
Stanville.
employing dozens of people
As the Senate report notes,
and even opening a satellite ofthough, Conn had friends in
fice in Beverly Hills.
high places. An administraAll this would be very intive law judge in the Social
spiring if Eric Conn’s business
Security
Administration’s
didn’t exist as a barnacle on
Huntington, W.Va., office,
the Social Security AdminisJudge David Daugherty, hantration. His law practice speRich Lowry
dled as many of Conn’s cases
cializes in extracting (often
Syndicated
as he could. The report found
dubious) disability benefits
Columnist
that Daugherty gave Conn’s
for his clients from the United
office a list every month of
States government, and enclaimants he planned
riching himself and people
to bless. Conn’s office
around him in the process. An administrative
reportedly filled out the
In his book on the excesses
medical forms that were
law
judge
told
“60
of the American welfare
signed by doctors paid
state, Nicholas Eberstadt Minutes,” “If the
by Conn, to the tune of
remarks that loose govern$2 million over the past
ment rules and generous American public
several years.
benefits tend to make us
Then, Daugherty ap“a nation of chiselers.” If knew what was
proved
them — every
an exhaustive new Senate
time. He never turned
report on Conn’s operation going on in our
is to be believed, he is truly system, half would down anyone represented by Conn, and,
a lawyer for our age.
as a general matter, was
Conn spread the word of be outraged and
an approval machine. In
his services through that
the
other
half
2009, according to the reindispensable
marketing
port, he approved 1,410
tool of the American bar would apply for
claims out of 1,415 total,
— the highway billboard,
and in 2010, 1,371 out of
supplemented by TV ad- benefits.”
1,375. The norm for such
vertisements and “Conn
judges was to hear only
Girls” who attended events
about 600 cases a year
wearing shirts emblazoned with his firm’s
logo. He marketed himself as Mr. Social and approve 60 percent of them. The last
few years of Daugherty’s career — he has
Security.
In 1960, fewer than 500,000 people re- since retired — he awarded $2.5 billion in
ceived disability payments. Now, the So- lifetime benefits, the report estimates.
Oddly enough, the judge and his
cial Security Administration disability program pays benefits to 12 million people. daughter received nearly $100,000 in
Many of these recipients are worthy and unexplained cash deposits in their bank
deserve help, and the aging of the popula- accounts from 2003 to 2011. When The
tion has been a factor in this growth. But Wall Street Journal wrote about the relaan increasing number of claims involve tionship between Conn and Daugherty a
subjective, difficult-to-disprove ailments, few years ago, the lawyer’s office got mullike mood disorders and back pain, obvi- tiple disposable cellphones so the lawyer
ously creating potential for abuse.
and judge could keep talking and took a
An administrative law judge told “60 shredder to a warehouse of documents.
Minutes,” “If the American public knew
Eric Conn’s legal fate is unknown. He
what was going on in our system, half is being sued for fraud, and he refused to
would be outraged and the other half testify at a recent Senate hearing. In the
would apply for benefits.”
spirit of George Plunkitt, he seen his opCounselor Conn would be happy to portunities and he took them. Those optake their cases. He is to disability pay- portunities came courtesy of the heedlessments what Perry Mason was to criminal ness of the contemporary welfare state.
defense. He has had an amazing knack
for getting his claimants approved, and Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail: comments.lowmaking millions from it. The Social Se- ry@nationalreview.com.
curity Administration pays lawyers for (c) 2013 by King Features Syndicate

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respecting an establishment of
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�s Page 5

The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 17, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Ohio Valley Christian rallies for win
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
Its not always how you
start but rather how you
finish that counts.
The Ohio Valley Christian volleyball team lost
the opening game to Grace
but rallied back to take the
next three games Tuesday
night in the Old French
City.
The Lady Soldiers won
25-15 in the night’s opening game 25-15 but the
Lady Defenders answered
back with a 26-24 victory
in game two. OVCS took
the third and fourth games
25-21 each to seal the victory.
Sarah Schoonover led

Alex Hawley | Civitas Media

Ohio Valley Christian junior Emily Carman (33) bumps the ball
in front of teammates Cassandra Hutchinson (11), Bekah Sargent (24), and Katelyn Beaver (22), during the Lady Defenders four set victory over Grace Christian in Gallipolis.

the Lady Defenders with
19 points followed by Emily Carman with 16 and

Teah Elliott with eight.
Katelyn Beaver had three
points, Rachel Sargent

marked two, while Cassandra Hutchinson had one
for the Blue and Gold.
Jill Salyers and Abigale
Wagoner led Grace with
nine points apiece, while
Miriam Stepp had eight,
Shelby Cicenas had seven
and Marisa Thompson
rounded out the GCS total
with five.
Bekah Sargent led the
net attack for OVCS with
21 kills, followed by Carman with five. Schoonover
and Hutchinson each had
three kills, while Elliot
marked two in the win.
Bekah Sargent led the defense with one block, while
Carman had five digs and
Rachel Sargent had four
digs.

Bryan Walters | Civitas Media

Wahama’s Olivia Roach, right, hits a spike attempt over Hannan’s Heather Ellis (4) during the third game of Tuesday
night’s volleyball contest in Ashton, W.Va.

Lady Falcons
sweep Hannan
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

ASHTON, W.Va. —
The Hannan volleyball
team made progressions
throughout the contest, but
the hosts never did manage
to catch up with Wahama
following a 25-4, 25-12,
25-19 decision Tuesday
night in a non-conference
Volley for the Cure match
between Mason County
programs.
The Lady Wildcats (016) stormed out to early
leads of 1-0 and 2-1 in the
first game, but the visiting
Lady Falcons countered
with 24 of the next 26
points to claim a 21-point
decision and a 1-0 match
lead.
Wahama (5-12) never
trailed again the rest of
the night, as the guests led
by as many as 13 points
in Game 2 en route to a
13-point decision and a 2-0

match lead. WHS claimed
its biggest lead of Game 3
at 11-3, but Hannan countered with a 14-9 run to
close to within 20-17.
The Lady Falcons scored
five of the last seven points
to secure the six-point win
and a 3-0 match decision.
Cynthia Hendrick led
the Wahama service attack
with 14 points, followed by
Emily Casto with 13 points
and Sierra Carmichael
with 12 points. Bunni Peters added five points to
the winning cause, while
Kylie Oliver and Olivia Hill
rounded things out with
respective tallies of four
points and one point.
Jesica Cornell paced the
HHS service attack with
five points, followed by
Latosha Stover with four
points. Jazi Casto and
Heather Ellis also added
two service points apiece
in the setback.

OVP Sports Schedule
Thursday, Oct. 17
Volleyball
Southern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Spring Valley, 5:30
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at Nitro, 5 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Poca, 6:30
College Volleyball
URG at Bluefield, 6 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 18
Football
Wahama at South Gallia, 7:30
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 7:30
Warren at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Waterford at Southern, 7:30
Doddridge County at Eastern, 7:30
Meigs at Wellston, 7:30
River Valley at Rock Hill, 7:30
Hannan at Gilmer County, 7:30
College Cross-country
URG at Wilmington, TBA
Saturday, Oct. 19
Volleyball
Meigs at River Valley, 4 p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Cross Country
Division II District at Rio Grande
Girls Soccer
Spring Valley at Point Pleasant, 11 a.m.
College Volleyball
Lindsey Wilson at URG, 6 p.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley | Civitas Media

Ohio Valley Christian senior Danny Reed (9) battles Grace’s A.J. Childers (19) for possession during the Defenders
7-0 victory, Thursday night in Gallipolis.

Defenders dash past Grace
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — At the
end of the night there was no
doubt the Defenders were the better team for 80 minutes.
The Ohio Valley Christian soccer team defeated visiting Grace
Christian 7-0 Tuesday night in
Gallia County, out shooting the
Soldiers 32-9 in the game.
The Defenders got things going in the fifth minute when Evan
Bowman put Ohio Valley Christian’s opening shot of the game in
the back of the net. Justin Beaver
followed it up in the 11th minute
to push the OVCS lead to 2-0. Just
four minutes had past when T.G.
Miller got on the board for OVCS
off of Bowman’s assists. The Defenders held the 3-0 halftime edge.
The second half was much
of the same for the Light Blue
and Gold, as senior Danny Reed
scored in the 51st minute. In
the 63rd minute Micah Sanders
scored on Miller’s assist and just
two minutes later Reed got his
second goal of the game on the
assist from Colton Cox. Miller
capped off the scoring with a goal
in the 67th minute, sealing the 7-0
victory.
Marshall Hood recorded the
shutout victory in goal for the Defenders, saving all nine shots that
headed his way. GCS goalkeeper
Chris Harmony had 14 saves for
the Soldiers.
Not only did OVCS hold a 32to-9 advantage in shots but also a
4-to-1 advantage in corner kicks.
The Defenders also shutout
Grace by a count of 5-0 on August
23, in Barboursville.
Ohio Valley Christian is now
6-8-1 on the season.

OVCS senior Scotty Wood (11) heads the ball over Grace’s Noah Steep (13)
during the Defenders 7-0 win Thursday evening in Gallipolis.

The Defenders honored seniors
T.G. Miller, Danny Reed and Scotty Wood prior to the game.
Ohio Valley Christian fell to
Calvary Baptist Academy 3-1 on
Monday night in Hurricane.
Calvary got a goal from Casey
James in the 36th minute, while
teammate Julian Fleshman scored
in the 45th and 50th minute.Evan
Bowman scored the lone goal for

Ohio Valley Christian in the 55th
minute.
OVCS had 13 shots, 10 on goal,
while CBA had 16 shots and 15 on
goal. Ohio Valley Christian held a
5-to-3 advantage in corner kicks.
Marshall Hood had nine saves
in goal for OVCS, while teammate
Micah Sanders had three. Griffin
Holstein marked nine saves for
Calvary.

Rio Grande volleyball makes trek to Bluefield
Randy Payton
Special to OVP

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande volleyball team
will conclude a seven-game
road trip when they travel
to face Bluefield College

on Thursday evening.
First serve is set for 6
p.m.
In their most recent
outing, the RedStorm (913 overall, 3-9 Mid-South
Conference) swept the
University of Pikeville on
the road Monday night

in a decisive conference
matchup.
Junior outside hitter
Betsy Schramm (Marietta,
OH) notched nine kills
against the Bears to bring
her team-leading total to
210 on the season.
Freshman Kayla Briley

(Marion, OH) continues
to pace the passing attack
for the RedStorm with 632
assists, while senior defensive specialist Nicole Ogg
(Albany, OH) has dug out
279 opponent attacks during the 2013 campaign.
The Rams (5-16, 0-11)

enter the contest after
snapping a three-match
losing skid with a 3-1 win
over Hollins University.
Leading the way for
the Rams this season is
sophomore outside hitter Jasmine Morrow, who
has 295 kills and 250 digs

thus far during the season,
while freshman setter Sydney Spencer has recorded
a team-leading 487 assists.
Rio Grande rolled to
a 3-0 win over the Rams
during the first meeting
between the two squads on
October 2 in Rio Grande.

�Page 6 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Meyer loves to run yet no tailback has 1,000 yards
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — It’s an aggravation that Ohio State coach Urban
Meyer has learned to accept — and quickly counter.
He encounters the question, he says, as
much as 200 times a year from recruits,
fans and reporters: Why haven’t you ever
had a running back rush for 1,000 yards?
“I’m tired of hearing that, man,” he said
earlier this week when asked about it.
It’s a sore spot for the 12th-year head
coach, yet is undeniable. Meyer had quarterback Braxton Miller go for 1,271 yards
rushing a year ago, but no running back
has ever turned the trick — not at Bowling Green, Utah, Florida or Ohio State.
No matter where he goes, someone

brings it up — particularly other schools
who tell offensive players that they will
never flourish in Meyer’s version of the
spread offense.
“Oh, all the time. It’s gone everywhere
from offensive linemen don’t get developed and then we have all these first-round
draft picks. I remember at one point, they
were saying that our offense doesn’t develop receivers and then the last seven
receivers we coached aren’t only playing
but they’re starting in the National Football League,” he said. “You hear it, but
you just have to be armed and ready to
go. Then (players) see the yards per carry,
they see the opportunities you get.
“It really helps.”

Meyer presents a variety of reasons
why he’s never had a running back top
that nice, round figure that is the goal of
all rushers.
He points out that Jeff Demps, a sprinter/back who played at Florida from 200811, was situated to break that mold until
he was injured.
“He gets hurt and it’s nuts,” Meyer said,
disgusted.
Just a year ago, his first Ohio State team
was 10th in the nation in rushing and tailback Carlos Hyde racked up 970 yards in
addition to Miller’s big year.
That’s right, just 30 yards away from
ending the drought.
This season, the Buckeyes (6-0, 2-0 Big

Ten) are 11th in the nation in rushing at
281 yards a game. Hyde has 294 yards in
just three games — he was suspended for
the first three for a legal problem — while
fellow tailback Jordan Hall, nursing an injured knee that caused him to set out the
last game, has 427 yards rushing with six
regular-season games remaining.
In other words, either needs a big finish
to do it.
“If someone wants to question whether
we run the ball effectively, I think we —
over the last 12 years — have run the ball
really well,” Meyer said. “Just in recruiting and all that other nonsense, we can’t
anticipate guys missing games for whatever reason.”

AP Sports Briefs

Neal C. Lauron | Columbus Dispatch | MCT

Ohio State Buckeyes wide receiver Devin Smith (15) scores the go-ahead touchdown reception over Michigan State
Spartans cornerback Johnny Adams (5) in the thrid quarter at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, Mich., Saturday, Sept.
29, 2012. Ohio State defeated MSU, 17-16.

Short on highlights
Big Ten lacking
luster but better
games lie ahead
Dave Campbell

The Associated Press

At the halfway point of the season, the Big Ten hasn’t produced
many highlights.
OK, Michigan beat Notre Dame
and Wisconsin’s running game is,
again, about as good as it gets. Oh,
and Ohio State’s perfect start and
No. 4 ranking has given the conference a stake in the national championship chase.
But the Big Ten had only four
teams win all four nonconference
games. Indiana’s convincing victory
over Penn State has been the only
upset, a mild one at that. Against
Notre Dame and the five other major leagues, the Big Ten went 9-8.
Six of those wins were over California (1-5), Iowa State (1-4), South

Florida (2-4) and Syracuse (3-3),
non-contenders in their respective
conferences.
The second half ought to be better, however.
Rivalry games are on deck and
the September fluff of FCS and
mid-major opponents has passed.
Here are five things to know about
Big Ten football, reflecting on the
first half and looking ahead to the
rest of the season:
BEST GAME: Penn State’s
fourth-quarter comeback for a 4340 victory in four overtimes last
Saturday against Michigan, all the
missed field goals aside, will be
tough to top. Penn State’s biggest
win in two years with coach Bill
O’Brien bumped Michigan out of
the Top 25 following its first defeat.
Rivalry games on Nov. 2 (Michigan at Michigan State) and Nov. 30
(Ohio State at Michigan) will be
closely watched, but here are three
strong contenders for a second-half
winner, all involving the same three
teams: Northwestern at Nebraska
on Nov. 2, Michigan State at Nebraska on Nov. 16, and Michigan
State at Northwestern on Nov. 23.

The Legends Division race is
tight, and the Spartans, Huskers
and Wildcats will be trying to put
themselves in position for better
bowl games. Nebraska’s offense
and Michigan State’s defense are
an intriguing contrast. Northwestern needs to make up for humbling
losses to Ohio State and Wisconsin
with a win or two over teams in the
Big Ten’s top tier.
WORST WEEKEND: The conference looked weak on Sept. 14,
when Michigan barely beat Akron,
Minnesota struggled early against
Western Illinois and Penn State
lost at home to Central Florida.
The Big Ten went 1-3 against the
Pac-12, with Ohio State’s win over
California not enough to counteract Wisconsin’s bizarre loss at
Arizona State, a defeat for Illinois
against Washington and a 20-point
loss by Nebraska at home to UCLA.
This Saturday, with Iowa, Indiana, Minnesota and Purdue on the
road and heavyweights Ohio State,
Michigan, Northwestern and Michigan State hosting, the slate doesn’t
look strong, either.

Big Ten moves into
new $20M headquarters
ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP)
— The Big Ten Conference has a new $20 million headquarters in the
Chicago suburbs that will
eventually include an interactive museum.
The previous Big Ten
headquarters were in a
small building in Park
Ridge.
The Daily Herald reports
that about 40 employees
moved into the new headquarters last month in
Rosemont. Construction is
continuing on a “Big Ten
Experience” museum. It
is expected to open to the
public early next year.
The conference’s offices
were in Park Ridge for
more than 20 years.
Big Ten deputy commissioner Brad Traviolia says
the conference is “putting
out a welcome mat” for
visitors.
NASCAR looks
for more passing
in aero test
CONCORD, N.C. (AP)
— A six-car NASCAR test
at Charlotte Motor Speedway focused on the aerodynamic package for 1.5-mile
tracks.
NASCAR had three different configurations that
covered seven significant
changes at Monday’s test.
The goal was to help drivers pass easier through
more rear downforce or the
creation of more turbulent
air.
The
manufacturers
brought two cars each.
Ford had Brad Keselowski
and Trevor Bayne, Jeff Burton and Jamie McMurray
were there from Chevrolet
and Toyota brought Denny
Hamlin and Brett Moffitt.
No big changes
in 2014 Sprint Cup
Series schedule
CHARLOTTE,
N.C.
(AP) — There were no
surprises Tuesday when
NASCAR revealed the
2014 Sprint Cup Series
schedule because a date
swap between Darlington
and Kansas had already
been announced by the respective tracks.
NASCAR did confirm

that its track drying system Air Titan will be at
all Sprint Cup events next
season.
If any major changes are
coming, it won’t happen
until 2015. That’s when
NBC takes over the final 20
races of the Cup schedule
and NASCAR could have
some flexibility with race
dates.
The 2014 schedule has
only two changes: Darlington and Kansas swapped
spring dates, and Texas’
spring race went from a
Saturday night event to
Sunday to avoid a conflict
with the NCAA men’s basketball Final Four in Dallas
that weekend.
Tennessee to
dedicate Summitt
plaza on Nov. 22
KNOXVILLE,
Tenn.
(AP) — Tennessee will
hold a Nov. 22 public
dedication ceremony for a
bronze statue and plaza to
honor former women’s basketball coach Pat Summitt.
Construction is continuing on the plaza, located on
the corner of Lake Loudon
Boulevard and Phillip
Fulmer Way. The plaza
is across the street from
Thompson-Boling Arena
and the basketball team’s
Pratt Pavilion practice facility.
Brickyard 400
to be held final
weekend of July
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
— Next year’s Brickyard
400 will be run July 27.
There were no surprises
Tuesday when NASCAR
revealed the 2014 Sprint
Cup Series schedule. The
Brickyard is one of NASCAR’s biggest races each
year. It has been held in
late July since moving from
its early August calendar
slot in 2007.
The last two years, Sunday’s NASCAR race has
been preceded by sports
car races and a Nationwide
Series race, which is billed
as the Super Weekend.
Race organizers have not
yet said when the Nationwide race will be held. It
has traditionally been run
on Saturday of race weekend.

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“TO BECKY GILLAND AND
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REGARDING THE ADOPTION OF JAMES MICHAEL
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MEIGS COUNTY PROBATE
COURT
Please be advised a Petition
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13 CV 034, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF, VS. AMY MARKWORTH, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO.
By virtue of an Order of Sale
issued out of said Court in the
above action, Keith O. Wood,
the Sheriff of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to sell at public action on the front steps of
the Meigs County Courthouse
in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio, on Friday, November 1,
2013, at 10:00 a.m., the following lands and tenements:
PARCEL 1:
The following real estate situated in the County of Meigs, in
the State of Ohio and in the
Township of Chester: Being a
part of Section 3, Town 3,

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North, Range 12 West of the
being described as follows: Beginning at a point 132 feet East
of the Northeast corner of the
Southwest quarter of said Section 3, said point of beginning
being on the centerline of
County Road C-32 and being
marked by a “PK” nail; thence
West 250 feet along the
centerline of said County Road
C-32; thence North 181.5 feet
to an iron pipe, crossing an
iron pipe at 17 feet for reference; thence East 250 feet to
an iron pipe; thence South
181.5 feet to the point of beginning, crossing an iron pipe at
161.5 feet for reference, containing 1.042 acres, more or
less.
EXCEPTING all legal rights of
way.
There is to be a 40 foot access right of way easement
along the East side of the
above described lot.
The bearings in the above description are based on the

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13 CV 034, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF, VS. AMY MARKWORTH, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO.
By virtue of an Order of Sale
issued out of said Court in the
above action, Keith O. Wood,
the Sheriff of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to sell at public action onLEGALS
the front steps of
the Meigs County Courthouse
in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio, on Friday, November 1,
2013, at 10:00 a.m., the following lands and tenements:
PARCEL 1:
The following real estate situated in the County of Meigs, in
the State of Ohio and in the
Township of Chester: Being a
part of Section 3, Town 3,
Purchase, and beginning at a
stake 8 rods East of the Northeast corner of the Southwest
quarter of said Section No. 3;
thence West 250 feet to the
property owned by Harold
Hager; thence North following
the Hager East line 140 feet;
thence West 90 feet; thence
North 200 feet to the center
line of the Bashan-Keno Road;
thence Northeasterly following
the center line of said road 230
feet to the Southwest corner of
the property owned by Holley
Mitchell; thence East following
the South line of said Mitchell
property 208 feet to the property of Virgil Walker; thence
South following the line of Virgil Walker property 440 feet to
the place of beginning, containing 3 acres, more or less.
EXCEPTING 1.042 acres previously sold to Glen Bissell and
Naomi Bissell; and
EXCEPTING 1.587 acres previously sold to Clyde Smith
and Stella Smith.
It is further conveyed by this instrument a right of way reserved in the previous deed to
Glen Bissell and Naomi Bissell
to be the property of the grantors herein.
Reference Deed: Volume 275,
Page 571, Meigs County Deed
Records.
00106.000
PARCEL 2:
The following described
premises, situated to the
Township of Chester, County
of Meigs and State of Ohio.
Being in Section 3, Town 3
North, Range 12 West of the
being described as follows: Beginning at a point 132 feet East
of the Northeast corner of the
Southwest quarter of said Section 3, said point of beginning
being on the centerline of
County Road C-32 and being
marked by a “PK” nail; thence
West 250 feet along the
centerline of said County Road
C-32; thence North 181.5 feet
to an iron pipe, crossing an
iron pipe at 17 feet for reference; thence East 250 feet to
an iron pipe; thence South
181.5 feet to the point of beginning, crossing an iron pipe at
161.5 feet for reference, containing 1.042 acres, more or
less.
EXCEPTING all legal rights of
way.
There is to be a 40 foot access right of way easement
along the East side of the
above described lot.
The bearings in the above description are based on the
survey.
The real estate above described is subject to all leases,
easements and rights of way of
record.
Reference Deed: Volume 258,
Page 493, Meigs County Deed
Records.
00105.000
The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
49630 Eagle Ridge Road,
Long Bottom, OH 45743.
CURRENT OWNER: Amy
Markworth.
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
AT: $50,000.00. The real estate cannot be sold for less
than 2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal does not
include an interior examination
of any structures, if any, on the
real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (certified check only) down on day
of sale, balance (certified
check only) due on confirmation of sale. ORC 2327.02(C)
requires successful bidders to
pay recording fees and associated costs to the Sheriff.
ERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
Douglas W. Little, LITTLE,
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211213 E. Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
10/10, 10/17, 10/24
Public Notice
Meigs Local School District
Board of Education plans to
sell the Pomeroy Football stadium property, totaling 12.86
acres, as per survey. Mark E.
Rhonemus, Meigs Local
Treasurer/CFO will accept
sealed bids up to and including the close of business at
4:00 p.m. on Friday, November 8, 2013.
The parcel, at E. Main St,
Pomeroy, Ohio, will be sold “at

Public Notice
Meigs Local School District The Daily Sentinel s Page
Board of Education plans to
sell the Pomeroy Football stadium property, totaling 12.86
acres, as per survey. Mark E.
Rhonemus, Meigs Local
Treasurer/CFO
will accept
LEGALS
Medical / Health
sealed bids up to and includCNA or Nurse for in home
ing the close of business at
Quadriplegic care 8am - 6pm
4:00 p.m. on Friday, NovemM-F Resume to
ber 8, 2013.
jg1618jg1618@gmail.com or
The parcel, at E. Main St,
Pomeroy, Ohio, will be sold “at fax 740-441-0733. Immediate
Need
a minimum acceptable purchase price” of $300,000.00.
Prospective bidders are enEDUCATION
couraged to attend a pre-bid
tour of the property between
10:00 and 11:00 a.m. on Wednesday, November 6, 2013.
Business &amp; Trade School
Bidders are asked to turn in
their bids by 4:00 p.m. on
Gallipolis Career
College
November 8, 2013 at the
(Careers Close To Home)
Meigs Local Administrative OfCall Today! 740-446-4367
fices at 41765 Pomeroy Pike,
1-800-214-0452
Pomeroy, Ohio.
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
The County Assessor census
for Independent Colleges and Schools
tract is 9644 and map refer1274B
ence is 14-029-0316.
Rusty Bookman, Meigs Local
REAL ESTATE SALES
Superintendent, will present
the bid proposals to the Board
of Education at its regularly
scheduled meeting at 7:00
For Sale By Owner
p.m. on November 13, 2013,
which will be held in Board
Ranch Style 3 Bdrm / 2 bath
Room at the Meigs Local Adhome on 1.95 acres ( In Counministrative Offices at 41765
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, Ohio. try) located at 953 Corn Rd
The Meigs Local Board of Edu- (Vinton) Full basement &amp; Sm.
cation may accept “the highest Barn 740-332-1900 or 740412-7383
bid, or, if deemed to be in the
best interest of the district, reject any and all written bids
Houses For Sale
and withdraw the property from
sale.”
2-Homes 2-acres Nice - HarrisFor information, contact Rusty
onville area asking $60,000
Bookman, Superintendent, at
call 1-740-742-7010
the administrative offices,
4 Bdrm &amp; 2 bath Home - 1 acre
41765 Pomeroy Pike,
asking $68,500 located on BuPomeroy, Ohio or call (740)
laville Rd, Gallipolis,Oh 740992-2153.
367-0641
10/13, 10/17, 10/23,
10/29,11/3
Land (Acreage)
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR SALE: 24.5 Acres in Putnam Co. Doublewide, barn, out
bldg. 61 Acres Mason, hunting
cabin, fenced. 304-937-2497
Notices
GUN SHOW
Marietta Comfort Inn
OCT 19 &amp; 20
I-77 Exit 1
Adm $5
6' Tbls $35
740-667-0412
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.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

Yard Sale
Rodney Community Center
Yard Sale (between 588 &amp; 35)
baby things, toys, clothes of all
sizes, tools, nicknacks, Xmas,
Halloween &amp; Fall decorations,
something for everyone. New
Stock arriving daily. 17th, 18th
&amp; 19th. 9-4
SERVICES

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

FINANCIAL SERVICES

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)

EMPLOYMENT

Want To Buy
WANT TO BUY ripe Pawpaw's
- $1.00 lb -Black walnuts starting Oct 1st. 740-698-6060
REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
One Bedroom Apartment
downtown $400 plus deposit
Call 740-446-4383 or 740-2566637
Recently updated - 2 Bdrm &amp; 1
1/2 bath Townhouse located at
Tara Apt. $480/mo and $480
deposit, 1 year lease, background check &amp; $40 application fee. Water, Garbage, sewer pd. 304-419-7368
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.
Houses For Rent
Small 2 Bdrm house near Rio
Grande - nice area - 2 other
larger 3 Bdrm homes very
nice available Nov 1st. 1 is
near Holzer Hospital call 740)
441-5150 or 740-379-2923
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
2BR Mobile Home in Middleport. $325/mo+$325 dep. 1 yr
lease. No Pets. No calls after
9PM. 740-992-5097.
3-Bdrm Mobile Home - Addiville School Dist. Deposit &amp;
References $575.00 call 740367-0632
Sales

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Need Extra
Cash???

Early Morning
Newspaper Delivery Routes Available in
Gallia County, OH,
MUST HAVE RELIABLE
TRANSPORTATION
Call Us
Today
740446-2342
For More Information contact
JESSICA
CHASEN EXT 12
Food Services
Taking Applications at all McClure Restaurant locations,
Middleport, Pomeroy, Gallipolis &amp; McArthur. Full &amp; Part time
Help Wanted General
Dock Watch - Circulation Department is looking for a reliable Night Dock Watch person
with good communication
skills. Position will oversee paper pick ups plus various other
tasks. Schedule Mon - Thurs.
11pm to 5am &amp; Sat. 11am to
5pm. Pay $7.75, NO PHONE
CALLS, STOP by Gallipolis
Daily Tribune for an application.

Repo's
Available
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Call

RESORT PROPERTY

ANIMALS

AGRICULTURE

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

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7

�Page 8 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Stewart says 3rd surgery was for infection
CHARLOTTE,
N.C.
(AP) — The third surgery
on Tony Stewart’s broken
right leg was for an infection that “popped up” after
the three-time NASCAR
champion had begun walking a bit again.
Stewart underwent his
third operation on Oct. 7,
and said during a video
chat Tuesday night on
NASCAR.com that the risk
of infection was something
doctors had warned him

about after his injury in an
August sprint car crash.
“I was more worried
about bones healing and
skin healing,” he said.
“The doctor was more
worried about infection
and really said the first two
months were kind of the
critical time. We were at
the end of that two months
for the most part and, all of
a sudden, a spot popped up
that was infected and that
caused the surgery last

week. I went from starting
to walk again, not great,
not just walking around
the house like normal,
but I could take eight or
10 steps at a time, to having to spend the majority of the day again laying
down.”
Stewart is still on track
to be back in the car for the
season-opening Daytona
500.
During the chat, Stewart fielded questions from

fans who submitted them
through social media. He
was asked what his biggest
concern was before NASCAR’s inaugural Truck
Series race this year at
the Stewart-owned Eldora
Speedway dirt track.
“Weather. That was
the one thing we couldn’t
control was the weather,”
Stewart said. “It’s not like
a pavement track where
you can bring a jet dryer
out and two hours later

have the track back in
shape. You are blowing
mud around. If it rains at
the right time, it puts you
out for the whole night.”
Asked if NASCAR would
ever race Nationwide or
the Sprint Cup Series on
dirt, or at Eldora, Stewart
said he didn’t know.
“I never thought I would
see the Truck Series there,
the Truck Series proves
that anything can happen,”
he said.

Stewart also said participation in the Coca-Cola’s
promotional Racing Family has helped mend relationships between drivers.
He feuded with Joey Logano earlier this year, and
Logano and Denny Hamlin
are still not on speaking
terms following a series of
early-season incidents that
culminated in a last-lap accident between the two at
California in which Hamlin
suffered a fractured vertebra.

College Football Playoff Browns QB Weeden blocking out critics
selection panel unveiled
Ralph D. Russo

The Associated Press

Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, former Nebraska coach Tom Osborne and Hall of Fame
quarterback Archie Manning are among the 13 people
who will be part of the College Football Playoff selection committee in 2014.
The selection committee was officially unveiled
Wednesday, though the names of the members were
reported last week by The Associated Press and other
media outlets. Earlier this week, Arkansas Athletic
Director Jeff Long was announced as the chairman
of the first committee for the new playoff system that
replaces the Bowl Championship Series next year.
The committee will choose four teams to play in
the national semifinals and seed them. The winners
of those games will play a week later for the national
championship.
Long and BCS Executive Director Bill Hancock announced the members at news conference at the College Football Playoff offices in Irving, Texas. The committee is made up of current athletic directors, former
players and coaches and college administrators.
“Our work will be difficult, but rewarding at the
same time,” Long said. “We have important judgments to make during that process. We realize we
represent all of college football.”

BEREA, Ohio (AP) — These days,
Brandon Weeden’s critics come in all
shapes and sizes — and from every
direction.
One foolish pass, if it can even be
called a pass, has made the Browns
quarterback Cleveland’s most maligned athlete. While others harp on
his costly mistake, an interception
that has been lampooned locally and
nationally, Weeden is doing his best
to move on from an embarrassing
moment that may trail him long after
his NFL career is over.
He’s cut himself off from all contact with negativity. No sports talk
radio. No Twitter. Nothing to remind
him of the gaffe.
“The easy ones are obviously social media, which has turned into a
joke,” Weeden said. “Watch movies
with the wife or whatever, but just
don’t listen to it. I’ve been through
ups and downs enough, and I’d like
to say that I’m mature enough to not
listen to what a 7-year old kid has to
tell me about how to play quarterback or whatever it may be. I’m not
concerned with it.
“I’m concerned with helping this
team win games.”

Weeden was upbeat as he met with
reporters for the first time since Sunday, when his ill-advised flip toward
fullback Chris Ogbonnaya in the
fourth quarter was intercepted and
essentially wrapped up the Lions’
31-17 win. The pick, which drew
comparisons to Miami kicker Garo
Yepremian’s infamous pass in the Super Bowl 40 years ago, continues to
enrage many Browns fans.
One angry Cleveland fan went as
far as taking out an ad on Craig’s List
to find a new quarterback.
“We’ve got problems under center … well one problem. Brandon
Weeden,” the fan posted. “If you’re
sick of seeing desperation heaves to
the sidelines, countless sacks after
superb coverage, and underhanded
lightly tossed interceptions in the
4th quarter then please come apply!”
Weeden understands the criticism
and that it comes with the territory.
He’s heard boos before and expects
they’ll continue unless he plays more
consistently. In the meantime, he’s
staying positive and keeping his
sense of humor.
“It’s no different for me any week,”

he said. “It’s part of playing the position. I have very good earmuffs
on, went out and got about the best
ones I could. You can’t listen to it. All
I care about is what goes on inside
this building. If the guys in this building have my back and I have theirs,
and we’re all on the same page, it really doesn’t matter what else is being
said.
“We’re a football team here and I
love coming to work with these guys
every single day.”
Browns coach Rob Chudzinski
believes Weeden’s teammates are behind him, and that they’re rallying to
his side as they prepare for Sunday’s
game at Green Bay. Weeden may
have had some mistakes in critical
spots, but he’s not the only reason
the Browns (3-3) had their threegame winning streak stopped.
Pro Bowl tackle Joe Thomas said
Weeden hasn’t lost any support in
Cleveland’s locker room.
“I think everybody in here has got
a lot of confidence and trust in what
Brandon does,” he said. “We definitely think he’s the guy that can lead us
this year to the playoffs.”

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Want To Buy
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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

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

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BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
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9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother
Met Mother
Met Mother
Met Mother
WGN News at Nine
Bearcats (N)
Slap Shots
B.Jacket Pre
NHL Hockey Columbus Blue Jackets vs. Montréal Canadiens (L)
Post-game
Bearcats
SportsCenter
C. Football
NCAA Football Miami vs. North Carolina (L)
SportsCenter
Around Horn Interruption
SportsCenter Baseball T.
NCAA Volleyball Michigan State vs. Minnesota (L)
Fitness
Fitness
Project Runway "Next
Project Runway "Butterfly
Project Runway "Finale" Pt. Project Runway "Finale" The judges
Million
Generation"
Effect"
1 of 2
determine the winner. Pt. 2 of 2
Dollar Shopp
The Middle
The Middle
!! Scooby Doo Scooby Doo and the gang are brought to Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed The gang
"The Play"
an island resort to investigate strange events. TVPG
investigates a masked villain who plans to take control o...
(3:25) Man
!! Remember the Titans Denzel Washington. An African American
Impact Wrestling Watch high-risk athletic entertainment
on Fire TV...
coach is hired to unify an integrated high school football team. TVPG
featuring the most recognizable stars of wrestling. (N)
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
Sam &amp; Cat
Drake &amp; Josh Deadtime (N) Deadtime (N) Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Delinquent"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Smoked"
SVU "Undercover Blue"
White Collar (N)
Covert Affairs "Dead" (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy
Family Guy
Family Guy
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
(5:00) The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
AC360 Later
Castle "Pretty Dead"
Castle "Knockout"
NBA Basketball Pre-season Miami Heat vs. Brooklyn Nets (L)
Hawaii 5-0
(5:00) !! Thirteen Ghosts
Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday Jason's spirit
! Jason X Jason returns to wreak havoc when he is
Tony Shalhoub. TVM
controls a man's body, causing a series of murders that p... awakened on a spaceship in the 25th century. TVM
Toddlers &amp; Tiaras
Real Life "Written in Blood" Dateline: Real Myst.
Dateline: Real Myst.
RealLife "The Plot Thickens"
The First 48 "Stolen Lives/
The First 48 "Night Shift/
The First 48 "Blood Red/
The First 48 "Brother's
Scared "Oklahoma County,
Family Bonds"
Mobbed"
Deadly Moves"
Keeper/ Fighting Words" (N) OK: Insane and Chaos" (N)
River Monsters: The Giants Wild West Alaska
Alaska Gold Diggers
WoodsLaw "Moose Mania" Woods Law "Off Roadin'"
Love Don't Cost a Thing A high school outcast pays a
Austin Powers in Goldmember Dr. Evil &amp; Goldmember
Preachers of L.A.
"Acceptance"
cheerleader to pose as his girlfriend in order to look cool...
plot to take over the world by kidnapping Austin Powers...
Will &amp; Grace Will &amp; Grace Will &amp; Grace Will &amp; Grace Tamar and Vince
Tamar and Vince (N)
Tamar and Vince
The Kardashians
E! News
!! Bring It On: All or Nothing Hayden Panettiere. TVPG Eric &amp; Jessie
Eric &amp; Jessie
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Friends
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Drugs, Inc. "Marijuana"
Yukon Gold "Run for the
Drugs, Inc. "Wasted in
Big Bad Wood "Boston Tree Drugs, Inc. "Cocaine"
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(5:30) FB Talk Football
Prem.World
Match Pack
IndyCar Preview
Auctions America
Auctions
Fox Football Daily (L)
Being: Tyson Being: Tyson UFC 165 "Jones vs. Gustafsson"
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
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(5:30) WivesNJ Housewives/NewJersey

Listing "This Means War!"
!! The Fast and the Furious ('01, Act) Vin Diesel. TV14
106 &amp; Park "October 17, 2013"
The Game
SoulMan
SoulMan
BET Hip Hop Awards "2013 BET Hip Hop Awards"
Love It or List It
Cousins Undercover
Cousins Undercover
Income Property
HouseH (N)
House (N)
(5:00) ! Anacondas: Trail
Piranhaconda A half piranha/ half anaconda hybrid
Arachnoquake Tracey Gold. An earthquake releases fire
of Blood TVMA
creature attacks a movie crew when her egg is stolen.
breathing spiders that go on a killing spree. TV14

6

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400

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"The Date"

Daniel Radcliffe. Harry Potter returns to Hogwarts only to
Rudd. A married couple from the 2007 movie 'Knocked Up' "Ender's
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find the school plagued by mysterious attacks. TVPG
face middle age together in many ways. TV14
(5:00) !! Ted ('12, Com)
!! Mr. and Mrs. Smith ('05, Act) Angelina Jolie, Vince
Strike Back Two soldiers'
!! American Reunion
Mila Kunis, Seth MacFarlane, Vaughn, Brad Pitt. A husband and wife, leading double
('12, Com) Alyson Hannigan,
paths cross in the Middle
Mark Wahlberg. TV14
lives as assassins, become each other's target. TVPG
Jason Biggs. TV14
East.
(:15) Brake ('12, Thril) Stephen Dorff. Held
(:50) The Cold Light of Day (2012, Action) Veronica
(:25) Jay-Z: Made in America Hip-hop artist
captive in a car's trunk, a Secret Service
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Jay-Z organizes the 'Budweiser Made In
Agent endures torture from terrorists. TVMA on a trip and he is confronted by those responsible. TVPG
America' music festival.

�Thursday, October 17, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 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 Thursday,
Oct. 17, 2013:
This year you will be heard, and
others will respond to your messages.
Come summer 2014, you will start
noticing that your life works in a most
unprecedented way. If you are single,
you could have difficulty separating
one admirer from the next. Make no
commitments yet. If you are attached,
your sweetie is likely to be unusually
dominant. Know that this need to be a
strong force in the relationship might
die down once you give him or her
some space. You certainly realize that
you can’t control anyone but yourself.
ARIES is full of surprises!
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 push someone
into doing what you want, but it would
be even better if the choice came from
this person him- or herself. Even if
the first reaction is not what you want,
give it time to be processed. You
might be surprised by what happens.
Tonight: Expect the unexpected.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You will want to rethink a
personal matter and work on visualizing a positive change. Understand
that you might not get immediate
results, but you will gain an insight
that will help fulfill your desires. Let
more romance in. Tonight: Not to be
found.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Emphasize what is possible, as opposed to what you believe
you can do, especially if there is a
schism between the two. Be ready to
change plans at the very last minute.
Always visualize the end result, and
you will discover that your path is
easier. Tonight: Join friends.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You could be in a leadership position and not want it. Think
carefully before you throw away your
crown and free yourself of those
responsibilities. A change could
occur that you might think you’ll like.
Tonight: Start the weekend early.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
A call from a friend who is
often full of mischief will make you
smile. Call this person if he or she
does not call you first. Being with this
individual gives you a new perspective on life. The two of you have a
grand old time, no matter what you
do. Tonight: Togetherness is the
theme.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

A partner or an associate knows what he or she wants or
needs, and won’t hesitate to let you
know what that is. You could feel
pressured and/or cornered. Your
reaction might be very different from
your normal response, which will
shock this person. Tonight: Just be
yourself.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Approach an important person in your life without using manipulation. Even if he or she is difficult,
the results could be excellent in the
long run. Touch base with your inner
feelings. Anger could be closer to the
surface than you think. Tonight: Sort
through invitations.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Listen to news openly. You
might make some radical changes
to your schedule or health program
that will have long-term implications.
Be sure that you are ready for this
transformation. Check in with a doctor before doing anything drastic.
Tonight: Run errands on the way
home.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
No one can stop your creativity from flowing. It’s as if it is a part
of your body. Your ingenuity peaks,
and your imagination goes wild. Keep
a notebook beside you to jot down
some of your better ideas. Tonight:
Go for something naughty.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You could be in a position
of giving the OK on a major change.
Once you give the go-ahead, it won’t
be possible to revert back to this
point in time. Of course, you need to
take risks in order to make your life
dynamic. Weigh the pros and cons
carefully. Tonight: Order in.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
You are likely to say what
you think, regardless of the outcome.
You’ll get a surprise when someone
decides to react. You could be more
set on your preference not to change
course than you realize. You might
not have a choice right now. Tonight:
Hop on the Ferris wheel of life.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Be aware of the cost of
continuing on your present path. You
might be very uncomfortable with
a decision, but you won’t want to
change courses. Count on the unexpected wreaking havoc and the situation rectifying itself. Tonight: Treat a
loved one to munchies and a drink.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Four Turns

Tracks on Tap

DIGITS Brad Keselowski’s
1 DOUBLE
win in Charlotte was his 10th career

SPRINT CUP SERIES

Race: Camping World RV Sales 500
Track: Talladega Superspeedway
Location: Talladega, Ala.
When: Sunday, Oct. 20
TV: ESPN (1:00 p.m. EST)
Layout: 2.66-mile tri-oval
Banking/Turns: 33 degrees
Banking/Tri-Oval: 18 degrees
Banking/Straightaways: 2 degrees
2012 Winner: Matt Kenseth
Crew Chief’s Take: “Talladega is classic
restrictor plate racing. I really don’t care
for the place that much, but the fans love
it because of the crashes and all that. I
liked it when we were unrestricted and
when guys could race a little and get away
from one another and use the slingshot
move. But that’s gone out the window, and
you just ride around there and wait on the
Big One to happen, which makes the drivers and crew feel sort of helpless. It’s all
about being at the right place at the right
time with the right push at the end.”

Cup Series victory. Keselowski has
garnered the wins in only 156 starts.
The win was the defending champion’s first at Charlotte Motor Speedway. He has multiple wins at two
tracks: Bristol (2) and Talladega (2).

IN DEBUT Kyle Larson
2 POTENTIAL
made his Cup Series debut in the
Bank of America 500 on Saturday.
Driving a Phoenix Racing Chevy
prepared by Earnhardt-Ganassi
Racing, the 21-year-old qualified
21st and was running 16th when
the engine in the car failed on lap
247. He finished 37th. Larson will
make his second Cup start in two
weeks in Martinsville.

2014 PLANS UNVEILED
3 MORE
Germain Racing announced on Oct.
11 that it would enter into a technical alliance with Richard Childress
Racing for the 2014 Sprint Cup
season. The team, which has campaigned the No. 13 Ford for the last
two years, will switch to Chevrolet
and receive technology sharing,
engineering as well as research
and development from RCR. Casey
Mears has piloted Germain’s Cup
cars since Aug. 2010. He also
drove RCR’s No. 07 Chevy in 2009.

NATIONWIDE SERIES

Brad Keselowski performing post-race burnouts following his win in Saturday’s Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Slump-Buster

AT THE TOP Austin Dillon
4 TIGHT
and Sam Hornish Jr. continued

their Nationwide Series championship battle in Charlotte. Dillon
finished second to Kyle Busch in
Friday’s Dollar General 300, while
Hornish was third. The gap between the two sits at eight points
with three races remaining.

Sprint Cup Standings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.

DRIVER (WINS)
POINTS BEHIND
Matt Kenseth (7)
2225
—
Jimmie Johnson (5) 2221
-4
Kevin Harvick (3)
2196
-29
Jeff Gordon
2189
-36
Kyle Busch (4)
2188
-37
Greg Biffle (1)
2167
-58
Kurt Busch
2166
-59
Clint Bowyer
2162
-63
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
2159
-66
Carl Edwards (2)
2158
-67
Joey Logano (1)
2150
-75
Ryan Newman (1)
2147
-78
Kasey Kahne (2)
2144
-81

14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.

Brad Keselowski (1)
Jamie McMurray
Martin Truex Jr. (1)
Paul Menard
Aric Almirola
Marcos Ambrose
Jeff Burton

^ CHASE FOR THE SPRINT CUP ^

874
872
828
825
796
783
780

-1351
-1353
-1397
-1400
-1429
-1442
-1445

Nationwide Standings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

DRIVER (WINS)
Austin Dillon
Sam Hornish Jr. (1)
Regan Smith (2)
Justin Allgaier
Elliott Sadler
Trevor Bayne (1)
Brian Scott
Brian Vickers
Kyle Larson
Parker Kligerman

POINTS BEHIND
1067
—
1059
-8
1015
-52
997
-70
989
-78
976
-91
974
-93
970
-97
910
-157
893
-174

Truck Standings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

DRIVER (WINS)
POINTS BEHIND
Matt Crafton (1)
644
—
James Buescher (2)
603
-41
Ty Dillon (1)
591
-53
Jeb Burton (1)
571
-73
Miguel Paludo
567
-77
Timothy Peters (2)
559
-85
Ryan Blaney (1)
552
-92
Johnny Sauter (2)
541
-103
Darrell Wallace Jr.
538
-106
Brendan Gaughan
520
-124

Throttle Up/Throttle Down

JIMMIE JOHNSON Johnson and Team
Lowe’s have come to life in the Chase once
again, with five runs of sixth or better
in the playoff’s first five races for an
average finish of 4.0.
MARK MARTIN Since taking
over for Tony Stewart in a relief
role in the No. 14 Chevy, Martin
has only one top-10 finish (Richmond), while averaging a 22.1place showing in eight races. Martin
blew an engine in Charlotte and was relegated to a 42nd-place finish.
Compiled and written by Matt Taliaferro.
Follow Matt on Twitter: @MattTaliaferro.

Race: O’Reilly Auto Parts 300
Track: Texas Motor Speedway
Location: Fort Worth, Texas
When: Saturday, Nov. 2
TV: ESPN2 (3:30 p.m. EST)
2012 Winner: Kevin Harvick

(ASP, Inc.)

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES

Race: Fred’s 250 powered by Coca-Cola
Track: Talladega Superspeedway
Location: Talladega, Ala.
Date: Saturday, Oct. 19
TV: FOX SPORTS 1 (4:00 p.m. EST)
2012 Winner: Parker Kligerman

Keselowski ends skid, wins Bank of America 500 in Charlotte
By MATT TALIAFERRO
Athlon Sports Racing Editor

Brad Keselowski has endured
his fair share of frustration in the
2013 season.
While the defending NASCAR
Sprint Cup champion looked the
part through the spring, a rocky
summer stretch found him and his
No. 2 Penske Racing team outside
of NASCAR’s Chase looking in
— the result of engine failures,
crashes and general performance
issues the bunch has been unable
to shake.
So to say it’s not been the encore performance the team and
its charismatic driver anticipated
following a five-win, breakout
campaign in 2012 would be an
understatement.
However, for at least one night
in 2013, the group found its previously-missing opportunistic ways.
Keselowski took advantage of a
late caution flag at Charlotte
Motor Speedway on Saturday and
held off a dominant Kasey Kahne
over the final nine laps to record
his first victory of the season in the
Bank of America 500.
“All season long we’ve had the
speed,” Keselowski said. “We’ve
had what we need to be a championship team. We just haven’t put
them all together. All the pieces
haven’t come together on the
nights that count, and they for the
most part did tonight.”
Keselowski overcame trouble on
pit road to snag the win, his 10th

career triumph on the Sprint Cup
circuit. On lap 87 of 334, the jack
on the No. 2 car hung as the team
changed tires. Keselowski sped
away with it wedged under his car,
forcing him to venture back onto
pit road and, ultimately, to 22nd on
the scoring pilon.
“I thought, when I saw the jack
under the car, I thought, ‘Here we
go again, not a good night,’” team
owner Roger Penske said.
And who could blame him?
While Keselowski fought through
traffic over the next 230 laps, Hendrick Motorsports’ four-car team
of Kahne, Jimmie Johnson, Jeff
Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. ran
roughshod, leading all but 21 laps.
While Kahne paced the field for
a race-high 138 laps, it was his
teammate and championship-contending teammate Johnson who
looked poised for victory.
Having led 51 laps already,
Johnson took a commanding lead
late, sitting on point for 79 uninterrupted circuits.
That changed on lap 312, when
a caution waved for debris on the
backstretch — a development
that changed the complexion of
the event.
On the ensuing restart, Johnson
slipped to seventh while Kahne
assumed the lead. Keselowski,
who restarted sixth, made his run,
which was benefitted by four
fresh tires.
The duo slugged it out for the
top spot until Keselowski made
his final, race-winning pass with
nine laps remaining.

■ Michael Waltrip Racing’s Brian Vickers
will miss the remainder of the season after
a small blood clot was found in his right
calf region.
Vickers missed the majority of the 2010
season with the same issue.
Vickers says his physicians are confident he’ll return for the 2014 season,
when he’ll campaign MWR’s No. 55 Toyota full-time.
“If there’s anything to be positive about
with (Monday’s) news it’s that this is
only a temporary setback,” said Vickers.
“The timing for this is never good, but
I’m glad we’ll get it out of the way now
and be ready to run for a championship
with the Aaron’s Dream Machine in
2014.”
Since taking over the No. 55 full-time
from Mark Martin in late June, Vickers Brian Vickers
has one win (New Hampshire) and two
additional top-10 finishes.
Michael Waltrip will drive the No. 55 in this weekend’s
race at Talladega. A replacement driver will be named at
a later date.

“You know the guys that already
have the track position, they’re not
going to want to give it up, so you
know they’re going to most likely
do the two-tire stop,” said Keselowski’s crew chief, Paul Wolfe.
“So for us to beat them or to have
a better shot at beating them, you
need to do something a little different, and with not many cars on
the lead lap, for me it was — I
thought it was a pretty easy call to
take four tires at that point.”
Kahne finished second, followed
by points-leader Matt Kenseth,
Johnson and Kyle Busch.
“Tonight was a good battle,”
Kahne said. “(Keselowski) had
four tires and I had two, and I did
all I could, and he just got by me
and cleared me.
“I don’t know, I always race him
pretty good, and we raced hard. I
don’t really know what else to say
about it.”
Kenseth takes a slim four-point
advantage in the championship
standings over Johnson into the
Chase’s ultimate wild card stop:
Talladega Superspeedway.
“You can sit and be nervous and
think about crashing and think
about losing points or you can
look at it as an opportunity and
look forward to going there,”
Kenseth said of racing with restrictor plates at Talladega. “Anything can happen, but go there and
try to work hard and try to keep
your car positioned up front somewhere and lead some laps and go
try to win the thing. That’s kind of
the attitude I go with.”

Classic Moments
Talladega Superspeedway
No one knew at the time that they were
witnessing what would be Dale Earnhardt’s
last Cup Series win. But everyone knew
they were witnessing something special.
Earnhardt, in vintage “Intimidator” fashion, used a strong draft from Kenny Wallace
to rocket from 18th to first in four laps and
win the 2000 Winston 500 at Talladega Superspeedway as 170,000 paying witnesses
howled their approval.
Earnhardt, who would lose his life in a
crash on the final lap of the following year’s
Daytona 500, won for the 10th time at Talladega — a track where he was worshipped like no other — and claimed the $1
million Winston No Bull 5 bonus money in
addition to his race earnings.
The win, his 76th, only added to the famous folklore that Earnhardt could “see the
air” at Talladega and Daytona International
Speedway, NASCAR’s two restrictor-plate
tracks where drafting is the key to winning.
Air vision or no air vision, Earnhardt had
a knack for navigating Talladega like few
others, and his victory that day served as
the quintessential reminder.

Athlon Fantasy Stall

Associated Press reported that Michael Waltrip Racing will
scale back to a two-car team
in 2014, with its No. 56 car
running a limited schedule.
In addition, FOXSports.com
reported that the Cornelius,
N.C.-based organization will
realign with a 15 percent reduction of its workforce.
The No. 56 team, with driver
Martin Truex Jr., will lose its
primary sponsor, NAPA Auto
Parts, at season’s end following race manipulation
penalties incurred at Richmond International Raceway
in September.
Team co-owners Michael
Waltrip and Rob Kauffman
have given Truex permission
to look for options elsewhere.
Along with the aformentioned Vickers in the No. 55 car,
Clint Bowyer will return to the No. 15 MWR Toyota in
2014, as will sponsor 5-Hour Energy.
■ On Monday, the

Looking at Checkers: Brad Keselowski
leads all drivers with a 12.6-place average
finish at Talladega, but good luck predicting which side of that he’ll be on this trip.
Pretty Solid Pick: It’s hard to not mention
Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s five wins in 27 ’Dega
starts. That’s second among active drivers
to Jeff Gordon’s six.
Good Sleeper Pick: Remember David
Ragan’s May Talladega win? Yeah, these
things happen here.
Runs on Seven Cylinders: Kyle Busch
owns one Talladega win, but averages a
22.9-place finish in 17 starts.
Insider Tip: The ultimate wild card
track, it’s all about getting the right
push at the right time in Alabama.

60401591

Photos by ASP, Inc.

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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>October 17, 2013</text>
            </elementText>
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        </element>
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    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="91">
      <name>walker</name>
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</item>
