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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 3

Mostly sunny. High
near 63. Low around
49......... Page 2

Local sports
action.... Page 6

Gevetta Boles, 82
Louise Daniels, 96
Arthur I. Duty, 81
Virginia L. Hedrick, 91
Mary K. (Waugh) Long, 88
George F. Nichols, 72

Paul W. Perry, 66
Wanda M. Potts, 59
Millie F. Scarberry, 60
John (Jack) E. Tracy
Russell J. Tucker, 62
Terry Lee Watson, 58
Viola J. (Swisher) Watson, 77
Brian David Wise, 56

50 cents daily

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 173

Council, mayor, school board seats to be decided
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

MEIGS COUNTY — One
week from today residents of
Meigs County will take to the
polls to determine who will serve
as members of council, mayor,
school board members and township trustees.
Some of the most heated races
involve the village of Pomeroy
and Middleport.

In Pomeroy, the mayor seat
which was left vacant by the resignation of Mary McAngus earlier
this year will be decided between
candidates Jackie Welker and
Donnie A. May. Welker has been
serving as village mayor since the
resignation of McAngus.
Four council seats are also up
for grabs in Pomeroy, with seven
candidates seeking those spots.
Incumbent candidates are Philip
M. Ohlinger, Luke James Ort-

man, Robert Dru Reed, and Victor C. Young III. Kenneth Klein,
Nancy Schartiger and write-in
candidate Donald Allen May are
opposing the incumbents.
In Middleport eight candidates,
including one write-in, are seeking
the four available council seats.
Incumbent candidates are Sandra
Fultz Brown, Emerson Heighton,
Rae Moore, and H. Craig Wehrung. Challengers are Douglas
Reed Dixon, Sharon Older, Rich-

ard W. Vaughan and write-in candidates David A. Acree.
In the Village of Syracuse, six
candidates are competing for the
four seats. Incumbent candidate
is Roy W. Johnson Jr. Challengers are Lola Hubbard, Eber O.
Pickens Jr., Katelyn C. Roberts,
Cassandra D. Smith and Stephanie Wiechmann.
The race for Racine council is
unopposed with four candidates
filed for the four open seats. Can-

Going pink for a cause

didates are incumbents Ronald
L. Clark, George E. Cummins
and Tim Hill. The fourth candidate is Robert E. Beegle.
In Rutland, only one candidate, Tyler Barnes, filed for the
four open seats.
Also in Syracuse, Floyd A. Graham and Gordon Winebrenner
are candidates for the Syracuse
Board of Public Affairs.
See SEATS | 5

Meigs qualifies for EPA
sewage system funding
Staff Report
tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Meigs County is one of six counties in
southeastern Ohio to qualify for help from the Ohio EPA
with repair or replacement of household sewage treatment
systems from the Ohio Water Pollution Control Loan Fund.
The other counties are Hocking, Morgan, Morrow,
Muskingum and Perry. The Ohio EPA can issue loans to
individuals of up to $56,000 to help pay for household
sewage treatment system repair and replacement. The
loans are being issued from the Ohio Water Pollution
Control Loan Fund (WPCLF) and will help each county
save an estimated $87,736-$90,288 over the 20-year lives
of the loans when compared to the market rate.
Through their respective counties, homeowners are
then eligible to receive this WPCLF funding with either
85 percent or 100 percent in principal forgiveness (which
does not need to be repaid) for the cost to repair or replace their failing on-site systems. The percentage is dependent on the number of people living in the home and
the household income, it was reported.
It was noted that the projects will benefit low-income
residents by eliminating their failing on-site systems at an
affordable cost. In addition to correcting potential health
concerns associated with the failing systems, local water
quality and aquatic life will benefit from the improvements.
Since 1989, Ohio’s Water Pollution Control Loan Fund has
awarded more than $6 billion in below-market financing for
sewage treatment plant upgrades and other water quality improvement projects. The program has saved borrowers more
than $1.1 billion in interest. Low-interest loans also have been
provided to municipalities and individuals for agricultural
best management practices; home sewage system improvements; contaminated site cleanup; and landfill closures. Additionally, the WPCLF can provide technical assistance to public wastewater systems in a variety of areas from the planning,
design and construction of improvements to enhancing the
technical, managerial and financial capacity of these systems.
The loan program is managed by Ohio EPA’s Division of
Environmental and Financial Assistance, with assistance
from the Ohio Water Development Authority. Ohio EPA is
responsible for program development and implementation,
individual project coordination, and environmental reviews
of projects seeking funds. The Ohio Water Development
Authority provides financial management of the fund.

Submitted photos

The Eastern Eagles are typically associated with green
and white, but earlier this month it was pink that became
a noticeable color for the Big Bend Youth Football League
Eastern Eagles. Both the third and fourth grade team
and the fifth and sixth grade team took part in a balloon
launch between the teams games on Oct. 12. One banner
signed by team members read, “Eagles are supporting
the fighters, admiring the survivors, honoring the taken,
and never ever giving up hope.” This is the second year
the football players and cheerleaders from the Eastern
BBYFL teams have taken part in the balloon launch in
recognition of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. The
team will continue to show support and awareness for
breast cancer by wearing pink ribbons on their helmets,
pink socks and pink shoestrings.

Meigs Board receives
mini-grant, fills positions
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

County donates cruiser to Meigs High School
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Commissioners and Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office recently
donated one of the department’s older cruisers to
Meigs High School.
The cruiser will be used
for multiple purposes at
the school, including use
by the criminal justice
class, automotive and electronics classes.
Criminal Justice instructor Detective Rick Smith
stated that the program
will use the cruiser for instruction in several areas.
Smith stated that the
criminal justice program
is in its early stages, and
is formed around the adult
police academy.
Students participating in
the program are learning

Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

On Friday morning, the Meigs County Commissioners and Meigs County Sheriff donated one of
the department’s old cruisers to the Meigs Criminal Justice class. Pictured are (front row, from
left) Drew Grover, Raymond Johnson Jr., Jordan Holman, Cheyenne Gorselene, Kelsey Hudson,
Orville Hill, Sariah Brinker, Matt Folmer, (second row, from left) Commissioner Tim Ihle, Criminal Justice class instructor Detective Rick Smith, Brad Harless, Devon Cundiff, Jason Robinson,
David Nail, David Davis, Tanner Vanaman, Sheriff Keith Wood, (back row, behind cruiser) Superintendent Rusty Bookman, Principal Steve Ohlinger, Commissioner Randy Smith, and Assistant
Principal Rick Blaettnar. Criminal Justice student Austin Paugh is not pictured.

defensive tactics, physical
training, prisoner handling

and booking, and traffic
stops. Students will also

do work on forensics and
crime scene processing.

POMEROY — A Team
Nutrition Smarter Lunchroom Mini-Grant of $7,500
was accepted and coaching vacancies were filled at
Wednesday night’s meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education held at
the elementary school.
It was noted that the grant
funds will be divided among
the schools, $2,500 for each
one to be used to enhance
the nutrition program.
Coaches hired included
Lester Parker, Meigs High
wrestling coach; Daniel
Thomas, Meigs archery
coordinator, intermediate
archery coach; and Cassady
Willford, assistant wrestling coach at Meigs High.
Also hired was David Kight
as head softball coach in the
meeting following an executive session by a vote of 4
to 1 with Board member
Larry Tucker voting no.
Also hired was Tamera
Zirkle as a substitute secretary to be used on an
as-needed basis for the remainder of the school year.
The Board approved an
overnight field trip to Columbus for Skills USA on
Nov. 14.
Action on an employee
grievance heard in an earlier executive session was
acted on during the meeting with members voting
to deny the grievance. It
was noted that OAPSE Local 017 will be informed in

writing in compliance with
the negotiated agreement
about notification.
A brief discussion was
held on the lockdown which
occurred on Wednesday
and how the situation was
handled, along with some
suggested changes to create a more secure building.
School buses were being
loaded when the lockdown
order was issued.
At the Board meeting
a school staff member
brought up the fact that
the building couldn’t be
vacated because there was
no room on the buses to
transport them to their
homes. These were children involved in the afterschool program. They were
all taken to a secure place
in the building, the staff
member said.
Michael Barnett reported on staff and parent
training including the parent partnering program
which will continue for
several weeks. Twenty-five
parents have enrolled for
that program he said.
A special board meeting was set for 7 p.m. on
Wednesday, Oct. 30, at the
Central Office building for
the purpose of reviewing
and approving the Fiscal
Year 2014 five-year forecast as required by Oct. 31.
Attending the meeting
were Superintendent Rusty
Bookman, Board members, Roger Abbott, Larry
Tucker, Ryan Mahr, Todd
Snowden, and Ron Logan.

�Page 2 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Community Calendar Meigs Local Briefs
Friday, Nov. 1
MARIETTA — The Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District Executive Committee will
meet at 11:30 a.m. at 1400 Pike Street in Marietta. For
more information or questions contact Jenny Myers at
(740) 376-1026.
RACINE — Meigs County Pomona Grange will meet
with officers conference beginning at 6:30 p.m. and meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the Racine Grange Hall. All members
are urged to attend.
LEBANON TWP. — Lebanon Township will be holding
their monthly meeting at 6 p.m. at the township building.

School Board Candidate Forum
MIDDLEPORT — A question and
answer forum for all Meigs County
School Board candidates will be held
at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, October
30, 2013, at the Middleport Village
Hall auditorium, 659 Pearl Street in
Middleport. The non-partisan Meigs
Tea Party is sponsoring the moderated Question and Answer session
among Meigs County School Board
candidates representing each of the
three school districts – Eastern,
Saturday, Nov. 2
Meigs, and Southern. The general
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange #778 and Star Junior public is welcome and encouraged to
Grange #878 will meet with potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. participate.
followed by meeting at 7:30 p.m. All members are urged
to attend.
Delinquent Tax list
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs CounSunday, Nov. 3
ty Treasurer Peggy Yost advises that
SYRACUSE — A spaghetti dinner will be held from 11 the delinquent list for mobile homes
a.m. to 2 p.m. at Carleton School and Meigs Industries. and real estate will be published in
The dinner is being held by the Carleton School and Meigs The Daily Sentinel on Nov. 15 and
Industries fundraising group. Dinner will include spaghetti, garlic bread, side salad, and drinks. Baked goods will
also be available along with a split the pot drawing. For
more information contact Amy Smith at (740) 508-9300
or the school at (740) 992-6681.

Nov. 22. The last day to make a payment to avoid publication on this list
is 2 p.m. on Nov. 8. For more information contact the treasurer’s office
at (740) 992-2004.
Food Drive
RACINE — Racine Area Community Organization (RACO) will hold
their fall food drive on November 2,
at the Dollar General Parking lot in
Racine from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. We will
be collecting canned food, non perishable food items, paper products,
personal hygiene products, and monetary donations. All items collected
will be donated to Meigs Cooperative
Food Pantry and will be distributed
at Christmas time. For information,
contact Kathryn Hart at 949-2656.
Immunization/Flu Shot Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County

Health Department will conduct a
childhood/adolescent immunization
clinic and flu shot clinic from 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday at the
health department. High dose flu
vaccines are also available for those
age 65 and older. Please bring children’s shot records. Also, bring medical cards/insurance for flu and pneumonia vaccines otherwise there will
be a fee associated.
Christmas Craft Show
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — A Christmas Craft Show will be held from
1- a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Nov.
2 at the New Haven Fire Station.
The craft show is hosted by the New
Haven Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary. Santa Clause will be at the fire
station at 1 p.m. that day. For more
information contact Shelby Duncan
at (304) 882-2814.

Meigs County Church Calendar

Monday, Nov. 4
RUTLAND — The Rutland Township Trustees will
meet at 7:30 a.m. at the Township Garage.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Cancer Initiative
Inc. (MCCI) will meet at noon in the conference room
of the Meigs County Health Department. New members
welcome. For more information contact Courtney Midkiff
at (740) 992-6626.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Village Council will meet at
7 p.m. in a meeting rescheduled from Oct. 28, with a finance committee meeting to begin at 6 p.m.

Spaghetti Dinner
RUTLAND — Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church ladies group will host
a spaghetti dinner from 4-6 p.m. on
Saturday, Nov. 2 in the church fellowship hall. Complete dinners will be
available along with carry out. For
more information call 742-2999 or
742-2790.

Thanksgiving Community and
Tuesday, Nov. 5
Youth Outreach
POMEROY — The Meigs County Veterans Service OfHEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock
fice, 117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 3, will be closing at Grove Christian Church will host a
noon for Election Day.
free Thanskgiving dinner following
the morning service on Sunday, Nov.
Tuesday, Nov. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District will have their regular meeting at 5 p.m.
at the TPRSD office.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 63. Calm
wind becoming east around 5 mph in the afternoon.
Tuesday Night: A chance of showers, mainly after 1
a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 49. Calm wind.
Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Wednesday: A chance of showers, mainly before 7 a.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 70. Southwest wind 3 to
7 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Wednesday Night: A slight chance of showers. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around 54. Southwest wind 6 to 9 mph.
Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Thursday: A chance of showers, mainly after 4 p.m.
Cloudy, with a high near 72. Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Thursday Night: Showers, mainly before 4 a.m. Low
around 50. Chance of precipitation is 80 percent.
Friday: A chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a high
near 64. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Friday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 42.
Saturday: Partly sunny, with a high near 57.
Saturday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 36.
Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near 54.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 33.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 47.30
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.75
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 91.86
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.05
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 58.19
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 106.13
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.39
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.33
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.70
Collins (NYSE) — 70.12
DuPont (NYSE) — 61.56
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.76
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.09
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 64.54
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 52.68
Kroger (NYSE) — 43.16
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 61.26
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 88.11
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 20.99
BBT (NYSE) — 34.78

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 22.78
Pepsico (NYSE) — 84.61
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.05
Rockwell (NYSE) — 109.69
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 19.30
Royal Dutch Shell — 68.79
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 55.56
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.14
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.69
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.42
Worthington (NYSE) — 40.10
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
October 28, 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.

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17. Church service will start at 10
a.m. and will be lead by the youth.
The service will include a puppet
show, singing, and special speaker
Andrya McDonald, Christian Education Director at Ripley Marantha
Church.
Meigs Co-operative Parish
events/service projects
POMEROY — The Meigs Cooperative Parish hosts a variety of
events and service projects available
throughout the week at the Mulberry
Community Center. Some of those
are as follows,

Meals at the Mulberry Community
Center — 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m., Tuesday
and Thursday.
Parish Shop — 9 a.m.-3 p.m.,
Monday-Friday and 9 a.m.-1 p.m.,
Saturday.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.-noon,
Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11 a.m., Tuesday-Friday.
Celebrate Recovery — 7-9 p.m.,
Monday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m. and 5-7
p.m., Tuesday and Thursday.
Zumba — 6:30 p.m., Tuesday.

Salvation Army needs
volunteer bell-ringers

POMEROY — The Salvation Army of Athens and
Meigs Counties is seeking
volunteers to assist in the
annual Red Kettle fundraiser campaign.
Volunteer “bell ringers”
will be stationed in both
counties for the campaign
which begins on “Black
Friday” and continues
daily, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
through Christmas Eve.
Proceeds of the Red Kettle campaign are directly
used by the local Salvation

Army of Athens and Meigs
Counties. These funds
make up the majority of the
Salvation Army’s annual
budget, and determine the
degree of services which
can be provided to the community. The local Salvation
Army service unit provides
a food pantry, basic needs
assistance (including assistance with utilities, rent,
and other key services),
and seasonal assistance
programs including backto-school supplies, holiday

toys, and food baskets.
Individuals or groups
may volunteer. Volunteers
may opt to assist for a
single day or throughout
the season. Shift lengths
range from as little as two
hours to all day based on
the volunteer preference.
For the safety of our volunteers, two volunteers will
be assigned to each kettle.
Individuals 14 and up may
volunteers (certain restrictions apply to volunteers
under 18.). Volunteers

should be able to provide
their own transportation
to their collection site and
be able to stand for the duration of their shift.
Individuals interested in
volunteering may contact
Unit Manager Justin Gray
at 740-593-7082 or by
email at jgray@rrohio.com
The mission of the Athens service unit of the
Salvation Army is to meet
human needs without discrimination in Athens and
Meigs Counties.

Hurricane-force gusts batter UK, Europe; 13 dead
LONDON (AP) — A savage coastal storm powered by hurricane-force
gusts slashed its way through Britain and western Europe on Monday,
felling trees, flooding lowlands and
snarling traffic in the air, at sea and
on land. At least 13 people were reported killed.
It was one of the worst storms to
hit the region in years. The deadly
tempest had no formal name — and
wasn’t officially classified as a hurricane due to a meteorological standard — but it was dubbed the St.
Jude storm (after the patron saint of
lost causes) and stormageddon on
social networks.
Gusts of 99 miles per hour (160
kph) were reported on the Isle of
Wight in southern England, while
gusts up to 80 mph hit the British
mainland. Later in the day, the Danish capital of Copenhagen saw record
gusts up of to 120 mph (194 kph)
and an autobahn in central Germany
was shut down by gusts up to 62 mph
(100 kph).
All across the region, people were
warned to stay indoors. Hundreds of
trees were uprooted or split, blocking
roads and crushing cars. The Dutch
were told to leave their beloved bicycles at home for safety’s sake.
At least thirteen storm-related
deaths were reported, most victims
crushed by falling trees. Germany
had six deaths, Britain had five and
the Netherlands and Denmark had
one each. One woman was also missing after being swept into the surf in
France.
Two people were killed in London
by a gas explosion and a British teen
who played in the storm-driven surf
was swept out to sea. A man in Denmark was killed when a brick flew off
and hit him in the head.
Despite the strength of its gusts,
the storm was not considered a hurricane because it didn’t form over
warm expanses of open ocean like
the hurricanes that batter the Caribbean and the United States. Britain’s
national weather service, the Met
Office, said Britain does not get hurricanes because those are “warm lati-

tude” storms that draw their energy
from seas far warmer than the North
Atlantic. Monday’s storm also did
not have an “eye” at its center like
most hurricanes.
London’s Heathrow Airport, Europe’s busiest, cancelled at least 130
flights and giant waves prompted the
major English port of Dover to close,
cutting off ferry services to France.
Nearly 1,100 passengers had to
ride out the storm on a heaving ferry from Newcastle in Britain to the
Dutch port of Ijmuiden after strong
winds and heavy seas blocked it from
docking in the morning. The ship returned to the North Sea to wait for
the wind to die down rather than risk
being smashed against the harbor’s
walls, Teun-Wim Leene of DFDS Seaways told national broadcaster NOS.
In central London, a huge building
crane near the prime minister’s office crumpled in the gusts. The city’s
overburdened transit system faced
major delays and cancellations and
did not recover even once the weather swept to the east.
A nuclear power station in Kent,
southern England, automatically
shut its two reactors after storm
debris reduced its incoming power
supply. Officials at the Dungeness
B plant said the reactors had shut
down safely and would be brought
back once power was restored.
The storm left Britain in the early
afternoon and roared across the English Channel, leaving up to 270,000
U.K. homes without power.
Trains were canceled in southern
Sweden and Denmark. Winds blew
off roofs, with debris reportedly
breaking the legs of one man. Near
the Danish capital of Copenhagen,
the storm ripped down the scaffolding from a five-story apartment
building.
Copenhagen’s Kastrup Airport saw
delays as strong gusts prevented passengers from using boarding bridges
to disembark from planes to the terminals.
In Germany, the death toll hit
six, with four people killed in three
separate accidents Monday involv-

ing trees falling on cars, the dpa
news agency reported. A sailor near
Cologne was killed Sunday when
his boat capsized and a fisherman
drowned northeast of the city.
In addition to widespread rail
disruptions, both Duesseldorf and
Hamburg airports saw many flights
cancelled, stranding more than 1,000
passengers.
Thousands of homes in northwestern France also lost electricity, while
in the Netherlands several rail lines
shut down and airports faced delays.
Amsterdam’s central railway station
was closed due to storm damage.
In France, maritime officials were
searching for a woman who was
swept into the turbulent Atlantic by
a big wave Monday as she walked on
Belle Isle, a small island off the coast
of Brittany.
“We are focused on the search,”
Yann Bouvart, of the Atlantic Maritime Prefecture told BFM-TV. He
said a helicopter, a boat and an inflatable Zodiac were looking for the
woman.
Amsterdam was one of the hardest-hit cities as the storm surged up
the Dutch coast. Powerful wind gusts
toppled trees into canals in the capital’s historic center and sent branches tumbling onto rail and tram lines,
halting almost all public transport.
Commuters faced long struggles to
get home.
Ferries in the Baltic Sea, including
between Denmark and Sweden, were
canceled after the Swedish Meteorological Institute upgraded its storm
warning to the highest possible level,
class 3, which indicates “very extreme weather that could pose great
danger.”
Trains were canceled in southern
Sweden, and many bridges were
closed between the islands in Denmark.
London Mayor Boris Johnson
praised emergency workers for doing
an “amazing job” trying to keep London moving. He said his thoughts,
along with those of all Londoners,
were with the victims and their loved
ones.

�Tuesday, October 29, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 3

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.
Racine Area Community Organi-

zation will be having a Halloween
costume judging on October 31, at
Racine Fire Department, at 7:30
p.m., during the party. Monetary
awards will be given in three age
groups, birth to 6 years, 7 years to
12 years, and 13 years and older
for first, second and third place.
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 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.

Business, GOP establishment: Tea party is over
WASHINGTON (AP)
— A slice of corporate
America thinks tea partyers have overstayed their
welcome in Washington
and should be shown the
door in next year’s congressional elections.
In what could be a sign
of challenges to come
across the country, two
U.S. House races in Michigan mark a turnabout from
several years of widely
heralded contests in which
right-flank candidates have
tried — sometimes successfully — to unseat Republican incumbents they
perceive as not being conservative enough.
In the Michigan races,
longtime Republican businessmen are taking on
two House incumbents
— hardline conservative
Reps. Justin Amash and
Kerry Bentivolio — in
GOP primaries. The 16day partial government
shutdown and the threatened national default are
bringing to a head a lot of
pent-up frustration over
GOP insurgents roughing
up the business community’s agenda.
Democrats hope to use
this rift within the GOP
to their advantage. Rep.
Steve Israel, D-N.Y., chairman of the House committee to elect Democrats, insists there’s been “buyer’s
remorse with House Republicans who have been
willing to put the economy
at risk,” and that it is opening the political map for
Democrats in 2014.
That’s what the Democrats would be expected
to say. But there’s also
Defending Main Street, a
new GOP-leaning group
that’s halfway to its goal of
raising $8 million. It plans
to spend that money on

Docs: Limit
kids’ texts,
tweets, online
CHICAGO (AP) — Doctors 2 parents: Limit kids’
tweeting, texting &amp; keep
smartphones, laptops out
of bedrooms. #goodluckwiththat.
The
recommendations
are bound to prompt eyerolling and LOLs from
many teens but an influential pediatricians group says
parents need to know that
unrestricted media use can
have serious consequences.
It’s been linked with violence, cyberbullying, school
woes, obesity, lack of sleep
and a host of other problems. It’s not a major cause
of these troubles, but “many
parents are clueless” about
the profound impact media
exposure can have on their
children, said Dr. Victor
Strasburger, lead author of
the new American Academy
of Pediatrics policy
“This is the 21st century
and they need to get with
it,” said Strasburger, a University of New Mexico adolescent medicine specialist.
The policy is aimed at all
kids, including those who
use smartphones, computers and other Internet-connected devices. It expands
the academy’s longstanding
recommendations on banning televisions from children’s and teens’ bedrooms
and limiting entertainment
screen time to no more
than two hours daily.
Under the new policy,
those two hours include
using the Internet for entertainment,
including
Facebook, Twitter, TV and
movies; online homework
is an exception.

center-right Republicans
who face a triumvirate of
deep-pocketed conservative groups — Heritage
Action, Club for Growth
and Freedom Works —
and their preferred, typically tea party candidates.
In one race, the group
plans to help Idaho eightterm Rep. Mike Simpson, who faces a Club for
Growth-backed challenger
in a GOP primary.
“These
conservative
groups have had it all their
own way,” said former
Republican Rep. Steve
LaTourette of Ohio, head
of the new group. “They
basically come in with millions of dollars and big-foot
a Republican primary and
you wind up with these
Manchurian
candidates
who are not interested in
governing.”
LaTourette said that for
the past three years, some
“40, 42 House members
have effectively denied
the Republican Party the
power of the majority” that
it won in the 2010 election by blocking the GOP
agenda.
Defending Main Street
is meeting Nov. 5 in New
York with wealthy potential donors.
Call it the wrath of establishment Republicans and
corporate America, always
considered the best of
friends. Since the Republican takeover of the House
in 2010, they’ve watched
the GOP insurgents slow

a transportation bill and
reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank, block a
treaty governing the high
seas and stand in the way
of comprehensive immigration legislation.
The final straw was the
bitter budget standoff that
partly shuttered the government, precipitated by
Republicans like Amash
and Bentivolio who enlisted early in the campaign
demanding that President
Barack Obama dismantle
his health care law in exchange for keeping the
government operating.
Even after 16 days of
a shutdown, falling poll
numbers for the GOP and
a threatened economyjarring default, the two
broke with their House Republican leaders and voted
against the final deal to reopen the government.
Long before the shutdown, the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce, which has
spent tens of millions
boosting mainly Republicans in congressional races, urged the GOP to fund
the government and prevent a default, then double
back and try and work out
changes to the health care
law later.
A significant number of
House Republicans have
given a cold-shoulder to
the Chamber’s agenda.
Rob Engstrom, the group’s
political director, said the
Chamber will see how races develop before deciding

on its involvement next
year.
The latest political dynamic promises to affect
the midterm elections —
but how? Republicans hope
the widespread animosity
generated by the shutdown
dissipates by next November and they can hold their
House majority. Currently,
Republicans control 231
seats and Democrats 200.
Democrats are widely expected to win the special
House election in Massachusetts for the seat of
Sen. Ed Markey and would
need to gain 17 seats next
year to seize control.
“As long as we stay focused on the priorities
of the American people,
I think we’re going to be
fine,” House Speaker John
Boehner, R-Ohio, said last
week when asked about
whether the GOP can hold
onto the House.
What about the Michigan races?
In the state’s 11th Congressional District, just
northwest of Detroit, David Trott, a businessman
involved in real estate
finance and a member of
the Michigan Chamber of
Commerce Board of Trustees, is challenging Bentivolio.
In the 3rd Congressional
District in the southwest
part of the state, Brian Ellis is a 53-year-old Grand
Rapids businessman who
owns an investment advisory firm and serves on the

school board. He describes
himself as the true conservative Republican in the
race, criticizing Amash’s
votes against Rep. Paul Ryan’s budget that cut nearly
$5 trillion and a measure
reducing taxes for small
businesses.
Ellis makes it clear that
he would have sided with
Boehner on the House
GOP’s last-ditch plan to
avoid default. He says it
never would have reached
that point if Republicans
hadn’t embraced the tactic of linking the health
care law to government
funding.
“I certainly agree that
Obamacare is an ‘Obamaonation,’” Ellis said in an
interview. “But I think the
tactic, especially threatening to default on our
debt, that is very reckless
and not a good way to run
our country. I’m in the financial world and I know
that would have some farreaching
consequences
that would not be good.”
In seizing on the rift,
Israel and Rep. Jim
Himes of Connecticut,
the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee’s national finance
chairman, sent a letter to
more than 1,000 business
leaders reminding them
that Democrats voted
unanimously to end the
shutdown and avoid default while House Republicans “turned their backs
on business in favor of

the radical demands of
the tea party.”
Republicans dismiss this
Democratic outreach to
the business community as
wishful thinking.
“I don’t think Democrats
will be successful because
the biggest headwinds we
face in the economy right
now are of their making,
from regulation to the Affordable Care Act to this
obsession with higher taxes,” said Rep. Kevin Brady,
R-Texas. “Certainly the uncertainty of the last month
has not been helpful, but
that’s on top of a heap of
other uncertainty.”
Even if the business
community isn’t ready
to embrace Democrats,
Israel insists that the recent budget stalemate has
helped his candidate recruitment while boosting
the campaign committee’s
fundraising. At the end of
September, the committee
had $21.6 million on hand
to $15.7 million for the
National Republican Campaign Committee.
Potential recruits who
Israel jokingly said had
put his number on the
“do-not-call-list” have suddenly been announcing
their candidacies, including Democrat Pete Festersen, the president of
the Omaha City Council,
who is running against
eight-term Rep. Lee Terry,
and attorney Bill Hughes
Jr., who is looking to unseat 10-term Rep. Frank
LoBiondo, R-N.J.

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
Tuesday, October 29, 2013

After Sandy, only a lucky GOP hopes ‘Obamacare’
woes have staying power
few getting buyouts
Julie Pace
Nancy Benac

Meghan Barr

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — The
forces of nature had been
threatening the Staten
Island’s Oakwood Beach
neighborhood for years,
flooding the streets every time it rained, sending crabs skittering into
bungalows and swamping
basements so regularly
that it was just accepted as
part of life.
But after Superstorm
Sandy swept in with 20foot waves that crashed
over roofs and killed three
people, those who have
lived here for generations
decided it was time to go.
Soon, the state will buy
some 400 homes, bulldoze
them and never again allow
anything to be built here.
Oakwood Beach will finally surrender to the sea.
“The heartache of losing
my home, the heartache of
losing my memories, the
blood and sweat and tears
that I put into this home, is
going to be healed by seeing trees and nature come
back to that spot right
there,” said Joe Monte, a
construction worker who
had built his dream house
overlooking the ocean.
“And that’s going to make
me feel better.”
The neighborhood is the
first — and so far only —
New York City community
to be totally bought out
under a state program that
promises to turn wrecked
neighborhoods into perpetual green space.
“The chances of us being
able to sell this house at a
later date and move on really were slim,” said Danielle Mancuso, who is being
bought out of the attached
duplex she lives in with her
husband and three young
children. “Who could afford to pay the flood insurance premium? Because
we’re all attached, we could
not elevate. We would really just be sitting ducks.”
The state of New York
plans to spend up to $400

million buying out and
knocking down homes in
Sandy-affected
communities in the city and on
Long Island, offering residents the pre-storm value
of their houses. In New
Jersey, the state is planning to spend about $300
million to buy about 1,000
damaged homes.
Most homeowners in
Oakwood Beach have already applied and are proceeding toward the state’s
offer to purchase. The first
house was demolished last
week, and the state has
already bought about a
dozen homes. New Jersey
officials purchased their
first two homes last week.
Getting a buyout is the
equivalent of winning the
lottery for homeowners
who lost everything during the storm, although
not all residents want to be
bought out. On New York
City’s Rockaway peninsula,
for example, homeowners
are determined to stay put
and rebuild.
Much of the clamor for
buyouts is coming from
Staten Island, where waves
slammed against thirdfloor windows and 23 people drowned, most of them
trapped inside their own
homes.
Although
Oakwood
Beach’s buyout push has
been a success, the future
is far less certain for hundreds of people who have
signed petitions demanding the same deal in nearly
every other devastated
shorefront community on
Staten Island: New Dorp
Beach, Midland Beach,
Ocean Breeze and Tottenville, among others.
Right now, those areas
are only eligible for a city
program that buys individual properties for redevelopment — a program that so
far has purchased only one
home. But because many
have yet to receive a dime
from the city’s Sandy aid
programs, they’re skeptical.
In Ocean Breeze, a
neighborhood that remains

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mostly deserted since the
storm, about half of the
120 homeowners have
signed a petition requesting a buyout from the governor’s office.
“We’re below sea level,”
said Frank Moszczynski,
who lives on a creekfront
block where one house
floated across the street
and several others were demolished. “We’re in a bowl
that was created at the end
of the ice age.”
State officials say they
chose to buy out Oakwood
Beach after analyzing historical flooding data and
the Federal Emergency
Management
Agency’s
scientific flood maps. The
other crucial factor was
quick mobilization: residents began marshaling
resources for a buyout the
day after Sandy hit.
Among them was Patti
Snyder, who grew up on
the block and never left.
Her brother, Leonard
Montalto, lived down the
street. Two days after the
storm, when his body was
found amid the ruins of
his home, Snyder knew it
was over.
“That’s when we knew
we weren’t going to rebuild at that point,” she
said. “It just took everything out of us.”
Monte was standing in
the middle of his flooded
home the day after Sandy,
ankle-deep in toxic sludge,
when he realized his house
was beyond saving. He
walked out and hasn’t gone
back in since.
He still can’t bring himself to approach the side of
the house where his good
friend, John Filipowicz,
used to show up with a sixpack of beers and burgers
to grill after work. Filipowicz died, along with his
son, in the basement of
their home.
“I am not the person
that I was because of what
happened,” Monte said.
“I have trouble with everything. … I have trouble
with just being a person.”

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — For nearly five
years, Republicans have struggled to
make a scandal stick to President Barack
Obama’s White House. One by one, the
controversies — with shorthand names
such as Solyndra, Benghazi, and Fast
and Furious — hit a fever pitch, then
faded away.
But some Republicans see the disastrous rollout of Obama’s health law as a
problem with the kind of staying power
they have sought.
The health care failures are tangible for
millions of Americans and can be experienced by anyone with Internet access.
The law itself is more closely associated
with Obama personally and long has been
unpopular with the majority of the American people.
The longer the technical problems persist, the more likely they are to affect the
delicate balance of enrollees needed in the
insurance marketplace in order to keep
costs down.
“There’s no question the issue has legs,
in part because it affects so many Americans very directly and in part because the
glitches with the website are simply one
of many fundamental problems with this
law,” GOP pollster Whit Ayres said.
The cascade of computer problems began Oct. 1, when sign-ups opened for the
marketplaces at the center of the law. Administration officials blamed the problems
on high volume, but have since acknowledged more systemic issues with HealthCare.gov.
White House officials contend the website is just one piece of the broader law
offering an array of benefits. They say
that when the online issues are fixed —
the latest estimate is the site will be working normally for most users by the end of
November — few people will remember
the problems that have marred the opening weeks of the six-month enrollment
window.
“It says a lot about Republicans that
their focus here is not on helping Americans get insured, but on making political hay of this mess,” said Dan Pfeiffer,
Obama’s senior adviser.
There’s another mess the White House
is dealing with that could have long-lasting
implications, too: U.S. government spying
on foreign leaders. The scope of the surveillance programs was first made public
in June and the revelations keep coming.
The latest concern the alleged monitoring
of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s
cellphone communications.
But unlike with the health law, many Republicans support the government surveillance policies, making it more difficult for

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respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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the party to create a political furor over
the revelations.
For GOP lawmakers, the White House’s
stumbles on the Affordable Care Act have
come at an optimal time, just one week
after their strategy to shut down the government in exchange for concessions on
health care imploded.
The health care debacle has overshadowed some of the Republican missteps
and the GOP appears more than happy to
keep the spotlight where it is.
Republicans have scheduled a series
of congressional hearings on the program’s shortcomings, and have called for
officials, including Health and Human
Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, to
be fired. She is set to testify this coming
week before a House committee.
Kevin Madden, a GOP strategist, said
Republicans should be wary of overreach,
and he urged the party to “focus on the
basics” in the hearings. If they do, he said,
“they can really align themselves with a
lot of public anxiety about what’s wrong
with Washington.”
Anxiety about the website’s problems
also appears to be on the rise among members of the president’s own party, a worrisome sign for the White House.
Ten Democratic senators urged Sebelius
in a letter to extend the insurance enrollment window beyond the March 31 deadline; White House officials say they don’t
believe that will be necessary. Also, Democratic leaders have been critical about the
seeming lack of preparedness for the signup rollout.
“As far as I’m concerned there is no
excuse for that,” Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid, D-Nev., told Las Vegas radio
station KNPR. “I think the administration
should have known how difficult it was going to be to have 35 million or 40 million
people to suddenly hook up to a place to
go on the Internet.”
The health care law has been unpopular
with large swaths of the American public ever since Obama signed it into law
in 2010. A CBS News survey taken last
week found that 43 percent of Americans
approve of the law, compared with 35 percent in May.
Crisis management expert Eric Dezenhall said that if the White House wants to
prevent the current troubles from being a
long-term problem, it will have to do some
basic damage control.
“There has to be a component of handholding, clarity and bedside manner with
the early stages of Obamacare,” he said.
The White House appeared to start taking
a page from that playbook this past week.
On Thursday, the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services began holding daily
briefings to address technical problems with
the website, though the many of the issues
still remain shrouded from the public.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
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Phone (740) 992-2156
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Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Obituaries

www.mydailysentinel.com

Death Notices

The Daily Sentinel s Page 5

Food stamps,
milk prices on
table in farm talks

at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
RACINE — Russell Racine, four sisters, Anna
A funeral service will be
held at 11 a.m., Tuesday,
“Rusty” Junior Tucker, 62, (Phillip) Wolfe of Racine,
October 29, 2013, at WilChristina (Gary) Hickof Racine,
coxen Funeral Home in
man of Lucasville, Ohio,
left
this
Point Pleasant, W.Va., with
Rebekah Hall of Silver
world
of
Cathy Searls officiating.
City, North Carolina, and
pain and
Burial will follow in the
Cynthia (Mike) Capehart
suffering
Potts Family Cemetery at
of Racine, sisters-in-law,
at
2:30
Gallipolis Ferry. Visitation
WASHINGTON (AP) — The fight over renewing the
Darla Tucker, of Racine,
p.m.
on
was held Monday from 6-8 nation’s farm bill has centered on cuts to the $80 billion-aand Elfredia Tucker, of
S at u rd a y,
p.m., at the funeral home. year food stamp program. But there could be unintended
Evanston, Wyoming, and
October
consequences if no agreement is reached: higher milk
26, 2013, in the Holzer numerous nieces and nephSCARBERRY
prices.
Medical Center, Gallipolis. ews also survive.
POINT
PLEASANT,
Members of the House and Senate are scheduled to
In addition to his parBorn December 23, 1950,
W.Va. — Millie F. Scarberbegin
long-awaited negotiations on the five-year, roughly
in Robertsburg, West Vir- ents, Rusty is preceded in
ry, 60, of Point Pleasant,
$500
billion
bill this week. If they don’t finish it, dairy
ginia, he was the son of death by his father-in-law,
died Friday morning, Octothe late Clyde and Icie M. Pastor Lawrence Bush, five DANIELS
ber 25, 2013, at her home. supports could expire at the end of the year and send the
brothers, James, Robert,
Birchfield Tucker.
Louise Memphis “GranMillie’s life will be cele- price of a gallon of milk skyward.
There could be political ramifications, too. The House
After thirty three years Gary, Thomas, and Terry ny” Daniels, age 96, died at brated at 11:00 a.m., Tuesof service he retired from Tucker, and one sister, her residence on Saturday, day, October 29, 2013, at and Senate are far apart on the sensitive issue of how
the Meigs County High- Bonnie Walker.
October 26, 2013.
Trinity United Methodist much money to cut from food stamps, and lawmakers are
Funeral services, with
way Department where
Funeral services will be 1 Church, with Rev. James hoping to resolve that debate before election-year politics
was a road foreman and full firefighter honors, p.m. Thursday, October 31, Kelly, III and Rev. Mark set in.
Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a Democrat who is
bridge inspector. He was a will be held at noon, on 2013, at the Waugh-Halley- Conner officiating. Burial
member of the Racine Vol- Wednesday, October 30, Wood Funeral Home with will follow at Suncrest one of the negotiators on the bill, says the legislation
unteer Fire Department, 2013, in the Cremeens Fu- Pastor Ralph Workman Cemetery. Visitation will could also be a rare opportunity for the two chambers to
and he loved working with neral Home, Racine. Rev. officiating. Burial will fol- be held at the Crow-Hussell show they can get along.
“In the middle of the chaos of the last month comes opwood and being outside. Jim Corbit and Rev. James low in the Swan Creek Funeral Home on Monday,
The family would like to Satterfield will officiate. Cemetery. Friends may October 28, 2013, from portunity,” Klobuchar says of the farm legislation. “This
will really be a test of the House of whether they are willthank the staff of the Hol- Active casketebearers will call at the funeral home on 5:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m.
Millie’s care has been ing to work with us.”
zer fourth floor for the care be the members of the Wednesday from 6-9 p.m.
entrusted to Crow-Hussell
The farm bill, which sets policy for farm subsidies, the
they received during this Racine Fire Department.
Funeral Home.
food stamps and other rural development projects, has
Interment will follow in DUTY
trying time.
moved slowly through Congress in the last two years as
PATRIOT — Arthur I. TRACY
Rusty is survived by his the Letart Falls Cemetery.
loving wife Connie Mae Friends may call from 6-8 Duty, 81, of Patriot, Ohio,
GRANTS PASS, Oregon lawmakers have focused on higher-profile priorities, like
Bush Tucker and they p.m. on Tuesday at the fu- died Sunday, October 27, — John (Jack) E. Tracy, budget negotiations, health care and immigration legislahave one son, Cody Aaron neral home. A firefighters 2013, at the Holzer Medi- formerly of Pt. Pleasant, tion.
But farm-state lawmakers are appealing to their colTrucker, an E.M.T. and memorial service will be cal Center.
died October 1, 2013 in
Funeral services will be Grants Pass, Oregon. Jack leagues to harken back to more bipartisan times and do
also a member of the Ra- held at 8 p.m. on Tuesday.
Expressions of sympathy conducted at 11 a.m. Thurs- is survived by his wife, something Congress hasn’t done very much lately — pass
cine Volunteer Fire Department. His mother-in-law, may be sent to the family day, October 31, 2013, at Beatrice Whalen Tracy, a major piece of legislation.
Even President Barack Obama, who has been largely
Violet Bush, of Racine, a by visiting www.cremeens- the Rio Grande Church of their five children and five
silent on the farm bill as it has wound through Congress,
Christ with Tim Gainer offi- grandchildren.
brother, Glenn Tucker of funeralhomes.com.
said as the government reopened earlier this month that
ciating. Burial will follow in
the farm bill “would make a huge difference in our econthe Duty Family Cemetery WATSON
PAUL W. PERRY
HENDERSON, W.Va. — omy right now.”
on Houck Road. Friends
“What are we waiting for?” Obama said. “Let’s get this
may call at Willis Funeral Viola J. (Swisher) Watson,
RACINE — Paul W.
Paul is survived by his
Home on Wednesday from 77, of Henderson, W.Va., done.”
Perry, 66, Racine, passed wife, Angela; two sons,
died Saturday morning, OcThe main challenge in getting the bill done will be the
6-8 p.m.
away unexpectedly at 1:32 Kevin and Paul, their chiltober 27, 2013, at her home. differences on food stamps, officially called the Supplea.m. Friday, October 25, dren, and nine brothers
Visitation will be held at mental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. The
LONG
2013, in the Emergency and sisters.
GALLIPOLIS — Mary the Crow-Hussell Funeral House has passed legislation to cut around $4 billion anDepartment at the Jackson
Paul was an avid fisherKatherine (Waugh) Long, Home on Monday, October nually, or around 5 percent, including changes in eligibiliGeneral Hospital, Ripley, man and loved to work on
88, of Gallipolis, died Sun- 28, 2013, from 5- 7 p.m., ty and work requirements. The Senate has proposed a cut
West Virginia. He was born his farm. He will be fondly
with a memorial service
day, October 27, 2013, at following at 7 p.m., with of around a tenth of that amount, and Senate Democrats
June 30, 1947, in Kanawha missed by his family and
the home of her daughter.
Tony Cox officiating. In and President Obama have strongly opposed any major
County, West Virginia, many close friends.
Funeral services will be lieu of flowers, the fam- changes to the program.
the son of the late Arnold
A gathering of family and
The cost of SNAP has more than doubled over the last
Wayne and Edna Mae Mc- friends will commence at 1 7 p.m. Thursday, Octo- ily asks that donations be
ber
31,
2013,
at
the
Willis
five
years as the economy struggled, and Republicans say
made
to
the
funeral
home
Neeley Perry.
p.m. Thursday, October
He retired in 2005 as Di- 31, 2013, in the Cremeens Funeral Home with Pas- to contribute toward funer- it should be more focused on the neediest people. Demtor Paul Voss and Pastor al expenses.
ocrats say it is working as it should, providing food to
rector of Disbursing from Funeral Home, Racine.
Alfred
Holley
officiating.
those in need when times are tough.
Viola’s
care
has
been
the U.S. Department of DeExpressions of sympathy
Friends
may
call
at
the
“I think there are very different world views clashing
entrusted
to
Crow-Hussell
fense. He was a U.S. Army may be sent to the family
funeral
home
from
5:30-7
on
food stamps and those are always more difficult to
Funeral
Home.
veteran serving two tours by visiting www.cremeensp.m. Entombment will be
resolve,” says Roger Johnson, president of the National
in Vietnam.
funeralhomes.com.
at 10 a.m. Friday, Novem- WATSON
Farmers Union.
BIDWELL — Terry Lee
ber 1, 2013, at Ohio Valley
Johnson says coming together on the farm issues, while
VIRGINIA LAURINE HEDRICK
Memorial Gardens, Chapel Watson, 58, Bidwell, died at there are differences, will be easier because the mostly
2:50 p.m. Sunday, October farm-state lawmakers negotiating the bill have common
of Hope Mausoleum.
27, 2013, at his residence.
SYRACUSE — Virginia friend, Norman; and several
goals.
Arrangements will be anLaurine Hedrick, 91, of nieces and nephews.
NICHOLS
Passing a farm bill could help farm-state lawmakers in
In addition to her parSyracuse, Ohio, passed
MASON — George F. nounced by the Cremeens both parties in next year’s elections, though some Repubaway on October 27, 2013. ents, she was preceded in Nichols, 72, of Mason, Funeral Chapel.
licans are wary of debating domestic food aid in campaign
She was born on June 29, death by her husband, Ed- W.Va., husband of Gewanseason. Republican House leaders put the bill on hold dur1922, in Chester, Ohio, ward H. Hedrick and her na, died October 26, 2013, WISE
ing the 2012 election year.
GALLIPOLIS — David
daughter of the late Forest brothers, Otis, Elmer and at his home. Funeral SerOne way to pass the bill quickly could be to wrap it
Brian Wise, 56, of GallipoCharles.
and Margaret Bailey.
vice will be held at 1 p.m., lis, Ohio, died on Friday into budget negotiations that will be going on at the same
Graveside funeral ser- on Wednesday, October 30,
She is survived by her
morning, October 25, 2013, time. The farm bill is expected to save tens of billions
son, William and Bonnie vices will be held at 11 a.m. 2013, at the Deal Funeral at Holzer Medical Center.
of dollars through food stamp cuts and eliminating some
Hedrick; daughter, Donna on Wednesday, October Home. Friends may call
A memorial service will subsidy programs, and “that savings has become more
Marie and David Keller; 30, 2013 at Mount Herman two hours prior to service be held at 1 p.m., Thurs- key as we go into budget negotiations,” Klobuchar said.
five grandchildren; several Cemetery. Visiting hours at the funeral home.
If that doesn’t work, lawmakers could extend current
day, October 31, 2013, at
great-grandchildren
and are from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesthe Willis Funeral Home. law, as they did at the end of last year when the dairy
great-great-grandchildren; day at Anderson McDaniel POTTS
Final resting place will threat loomed. But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid,
sisters, Marjorie Smith, Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY — be Gravel Hill Cemetery, D-Nev., has said he wants to finish the bill and won’t supA registry is available at Wanda M. Potts, 59, of Gal- Cheshire, Ohio. Arrange- port another extension.
Eva Teaford and Eunice
Matheney; half sisters, Mar- www.andersonmcdaniel. lipolis Ferry, W.Va., died ments are under the care
One of the reasons the bill’s progress has moved slowly
lene and Darlene; special com.
Friday, October 25, 2013, of the Willis Funeral Home. is that most of farm country is enjoying a good agricultural economy, and farmers have not clamored for changes in
policy. But with deadlines looming, many say they need
more government certainty to make planting decisions.
Most of the current law expired in September, though effects largely won’t be felt until next year when the dairy
supports expire.
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) — A south- the head with a heavy pipe on Oct. then I’d have just ended it.”
If Congress allows those supports to expire, 1930s and
“I’m a monster,” he said. “I’m hor- 1940s-era farm law would kick in, as much as quadrupling
eastern Ohio man who said he killed 4 after 63-year-old Paul E. Roberts
the price that the government pays to purchase dairy
his father and dumped the body un- stepped toward him with a knife. rible. I loved my father.”
Police found Roberts’ body during a products. If the government paid that high a price, many
der a porch was indicted Monday on He said he dumped the body in a
nine felony charges, including aggra- cistern beneath his father’s porch in search on Oct. 21. An autopsy deter- processors would sell to the government instead of commined he died from blunt force trauma. mercial markets, decreasing commercial supply and thus
Glouster.
vated murder.
The younger Roberts has been in also raising prices for shoppers at grocery stores.
Roberts tearfully expressed reA grand jury also charged
custody
on a vandalism charge. No
Some farmers are feeling the effects of the expired bill
41-year-old Paul J. Roberts with morse during the interview.
attorney was listed for him in court already. An early blizzard in South Dakota earlier this
murder, gross abuse of a corpse,
“When I heard my father hit
records.
month killed thousands of cattle, and a federal disaster
evidence tampering, vandalism, the water in that well, and I knew
The indictment alleges he stole his program that could have helped cover losses has expired.
several theft-related counts and in- what I had just done. That sound,” father’s credit or debit card, his Jeep
Rep. Kristi Noem, R-S.D., also a negotiator on the contimidation of an attorney, victim or he said. “I hear that sound of him and a riding lawn mower and dam- ference committee, says her constituents aren’t concerned
witness.
hitting that water. It was so final. aged the man’s property.
with the differences between the House and Senate verDuring an earlier jailhouse in- And I knew what had happened.
A message seeking comment was sions of the bill, but they just want to see a bill pass.
terview, Roberts told WBNS-TV in I can’t get that out of my head. I left for the Athens County prosecu“Maybe the biggest question is can we put together a
bill that can pass on the House and Senate floor,” she said.
Columbus that he hit his father in swear I think if I’d had a gun right tor.
RUSSELL ‘RUSTY’ JUNIOR TUCKER

BOLES
POINT PLEASANT —
Gevetta Boles, 82, of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday, October 27, 2013.
Funeral services will be
held on Thursday, October 31, 2013, at 1 p.m., at
the Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, with Bill
Smith officiating. Burial
will follow in the Forest
Hills Cemetery in Flatrock,
W.Va. Friends may visit the
family at the funeral home
on Wednesday, October 30,
2013, from 6-8 p.m.

Man who confessed to killing dad is indicted

Seats
From Page 1
Each of the three school
districts in the country will
have a contested race on
the ballot.
Two seats are open on
the Meigs Local Board of
Education, with incumbents Ron Logan and
Ryan B. Mahr running to
reatin there seats. Logan
and Mahr are challenged
by James R. Acree Sr.,
Heather Hawley, and David Hoover.
For
Eastern
Local
School District candidates
for the two vacant seats
are incumbent Mark W.

Hall and challengers E. David Averion and Thomas P.
Morrissey.
There are three seats
open on the Southern Local Board of Education.
Candidates are incumbents
Peggy S. Gibbs and Paul
Harris along with challengers Brenda S. Johnson and
Dennis D. Teaford.
Jeffrey Vogt is the lone
candidate from the AthensMeigs-Perry Educational
Service Center.
Candidates for township
trustee are as follows,
Bedford: Timothy M.
Hall, Shawn M. Hawley, Roger A. Ziegler and

write-in candidate Evan
Eastman.
Chester: Alan Holter,
Rodney L. Keller and Blair
Windon.
Columbia: Don Cheadle
and Marco Jeffers.
Lebanon: Gary Cooper
Jr., Donald R. Dailey and
Gregory Weddle.
Letart: Dave Graham,
Dean V. Hill, Michael
Roush, and Wayne Wilson.
Olive: William R. Osborne
and write-in candidates
Joshua G. Hayman, Corey
Hill and Jackie Westfall.
Orange: Jerry Burke, Michael E. Guess and Roger
A. Ritchie.

Rutland: David E. Davis
and Steve Lambert.
Salem: Jack L. Ervin,
Delmas Goff and H. Dannie Lambert.
Salisbury: Manning K.
Roush and Bill Spaun.
Scipio: Tammy Andrus,
Robert Butcher and Roger
Cotterill.
Sutton: Jerry Hayman,
Larry C. Smith and Tom
Theiss.
In Letart and Olive
townships the unexpired
Fiscal Officer term will
also be elected. Joan Manuel is the candidate in Letart and Kaleen S. Hayman
is the candidate in Olive.

Ohio: Child killer to get
untried 2-drug injection
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio will use a dose of
two drugs never tried before in a U.S. execution to put
to death a condemned inmate who raped and killed his
girlfriend’s 3-year-old daughter, the state prisons agency
said Monday.
Lawyers for death row inmate Ronald Phillips immediately sued to put off his Nov. 14 execution, saying Ohio
delayed the announcement so long it didn’t leave enough
time to fully investigate the new method.
The agency made the decision because it couldn’t obtain a supply of its former execution drug, pentobarbital,
from a specialty pharmacy that mixes individual doses for
patients, prisons spokeswoman JoEllen Smith said. The
agency had considered using a compounding pharmacy
after its supply of federally regulated pentobarbital expired last month.

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

TUESDAY,
OCTOBER 29, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

GAHS runners end season at Regionals
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

PICKERINGTON, Ohio —
The cross country season has
come to a close for GAHS.
Eight Gallia Academy cross
country runners seasons came to
an end at the Division II Regional
tournament held on Saturday at
Pickerington High School North.

The girls team competition
was won by Claymont, while Dover, Athens and Carrollton also
advanced to the state tournament. The Blue Angels finished
15th out of 16 teams.
Individually Allyson Malone,
a junior from Alexander, led
the field of 122 with a time of
19:14.61, beating out Dover
sophomore Olivia Warther by

less than a second.
The Blue Angels were led by
senior Madison Holley with a
40th place finish and a time of
21:01.25. Hannah Watts finished
65th with a time of 21:54.59,
Mary Watts was 84th with a
time of 22:38.93, Elizabeth Holley finished 102nd with a time
of 23:28.53, and Jenna Bays was
114th with a time of 24:35.04.

Also running for GAHS was
119th place finisher Taylor
Queen with a time of 25:28.57
and 122nd place finisher Hayley
Petrie with a time of 28:53.82.
The boys team competition
was won by Sheridan, followed
by West Holmes, Indian Valley and Unioto. The individual
champion was Sheridan senior
Matt Bromley with a time of

16:01.99, while teammate Joey
Pulumbo was runner-up with a
time of 16:31.86.
Michael Edelmann was the
lone Blue Devil and he finished
38th with a time of 17:42.61. 128
runners competed in the boys regional race.
Complete results of the Divison II Regional
cross country meet can be found on the
web at www.baumspage.com

Photos by Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Eastern senior Maddie Rigsby leaps in the air for a spike attempt during Game 1 of of Saturday’s Division IV volleyball
district final against Pike Eastern at Jackson High School.

Submitted photo

Eastern freshman Laura Pullins rounds the corner during the
Division III regional tournament at Pickerington High School
North on Saturday.

Eastern, Southern
compete at Regional
cross country meet
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

PICKERINGTON, Ohio — A school with a rich athletic
history gets a little richer.
Eastern junior Asia Michael became the first Lady
Eagle to advance to the state cross country meet, as she
finished 11th Saturday at the Division III Regional meet
at Pickerington High School North.
The Lady Eagles finished seventh overall with Garaway
coming away with the top spot. Columbus Academy was
second, Mount Gilead was third, while Columbus School
for Girls finished fourth on the day.
The girls individual champion was Rachel Wentworth
of Garaway with a time of 19:06.66, while runner-up was
Fallon Doyle of St. John Central.
Asia Michael was 11th overall with a time of 19:56.65,
while Taylor Palmer missed advancing by one spot, finishing 17th with a time of 20:07.32. Laura Pullins finished
24th with a time of 20:43.15, Keri Lawrence was 60th
with a time of 24:14.92, while Kourtney Lawrence rounded out the EHS score with a 96th place finish and a time
of 22:58.02.
The Lady Tornadoes were represented at regionals by
Joyce Weddle, who finished 76th with a time of 22:58.02.
The boys team competition was won by Garaway, followed by Fort Frye, Leesburg Fairfield and Caldwell. Luke
Evans of Grandview Heights was the individual champion
with a time of 16:21.64, followed by Jon Anderson on Fort
Frye.
Southern’s Bradley McCoy was 83rd overall with a time
of 19:11.39, while Eastern’s Tyson Long was 88th with a
time of 19:29.26.
Complete results of the Division III Regional tournament can be found on
the web at www.baumspage.com

OVP Sports Schedule

Pike Eastern outlasts Lady Eagles
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio — All good
things must come to an end.
The Eastern volleyball team
battled through 24 ties and 28 lead
changes over the course of four
games, but top-seeded Pike Eastern proved to be a bit too much
Saturday night following a 25-19,
25-23, 24-26, 25-20 decision in a
Division IV district championship
match at Jackson High School.
The third-seeded Lady Eagles
(21-4) failed to win a district title
for the first time in three years, as
Pike Eastern (24-1) also duplicated that feat back in 2010 — when
this year’s senior class were freshmen in the program. The fourgame victory also allowed Pike
Eastern to secure its 16th district
title and sixth straight trip to the
regional tournament.
It was the final volleyball game
for EHS seniors Jordan Parker,
Maddie Rigsby, Erin Swatzel, Katie Keller, Paige Cline and Lindsay Wolfe — a group that has
been a large part of a 92-10 overall
record, two TVC Hocking championships and a state tournament
berth during their four years with
the program.
Afterwards, EHS coach Katie
Williams spoke about how hard it
will be to replace these half-dozen
girls next year.
“These seniors are probably
one of the most successful group
of girls to ever come through
Eastern High School, which is
saying something for a program
that has been in 12 straight district finals in volleyball,” Williams
said. “I know the school and the
community is proud of them, and

Wednesday, Oct. 30
College Soccer
UNOH at URG men, 7 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 1
Football
Alexander at Meigs, 7:30
Miller at Wahama
Van at South Gallia, 7:30
Montcalm at Hannan, 7:30
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 7:30
River Valley at Fairland, 7:30
Saturday, Nov. 2
Football
Southern at Eastern, 7:30
Oak Glen at Point Pleasant, 1:30
Cross Country
OHSAA state meet at Hebron, Ohio, 11 a.m.

I’m proud of them for what they
have achieved.
“They have nothing to be disappointed about, especially when
you reflect on what they have accomplished over their four years
with the program. They are true
leaders and they have set the bar

very high for the future classes,
and that’s not a bad legacy to leave
behind.”
Eastern led 1-0 in Game 1, but
Pike Eastern rallied with three
consecutive points for a 3-1 edge.
See PIKE | 8

Rio runners participate in Great Lakes Challenge
Randy Payton
Special to OVP

Tuesday, Oct. 29
Volleyball
Nitro at Point Pleasant, 5:30

Eastern senior Jordan Parker (12) has a spike attempt blocked by a pair of
Pike Eastern defenders during Game 3 of Saturday’s Division IV volleyball
district final at Jackson High School.

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — The
University of Rio Grande men’s cross
country team placed 15th, while the
RedStrom women finished 26th as a
team at Saturday’s NAIA Great Lakes
Challenge Cross Country Invitiational hosted by Aquinas College.
Senior Joe Taranto (Pickerington,
OH) had the best finish among Rio’s
men’s runners, taking 57th place
after completing the 8k course in a
time of 26:28. A total of 387 runners
participated in the men’s division.
Fellow senior Brittany Piccone
(Crooksville, OH) had the top time
among the RedStorm women, completing the 5k course in 19:41 for
90th place in the 363-runner field.
Among the other athletes running
for Rio Grande in the men’s division
were junior Dustin Moritz (Ironton,
OH), who crossed the line in 86th

place with a time of 26:51; freshman Kameron Carpenter (Newark,
OH), who was 93rd with a time of
26:54; freshman Dallas Guy (Buffalo,
OH), who placed 95th with a time of
26:55; sophomore Kyle Sanborn (Dover, OH), who was 121st with a time
of 27:17; sophomore Matt Engstrom
(Dover, OH), who placed 136th with
a time of 27:27; freshman Blake
Freed (Uhrichsville, OH), who was
149th with a time of 27:33; freshman
Lane Hagar (Hilliard, OH), who was
166th with an effort of 27:42; freshman Nate Goodhart (Kent, OH),
who was 184th in a time of 28:02;
and freshman Aaron Evancho (Mt.
Perry, OH), who finished 325th with
a time of 30:58.
Mizael Carrera of Robert Morris
(IL) University captured the men’s
individual title with a time of 24:46.
St. Francis (IL), Olivet Nazarene and
host Aquinas grabbed the top three
spots in the men’s team standings,

while Rio Grande rival Shawnee
State finished fourth.
Also representing Rio in the women’s competition were freshman Katie Glover (Ashville, OH), who was
197th after crossing the finish line in
a time of 20:49; freshman Alex Ellis
(Ona, WV), who finished 225th in
a time of 21:15; freshman Lindsay
Golden (Milford, OH), who was
336th in a time of 24:29; freshman
Nicole Worsham (Beavercreek, OH),
who was 346th with a time of 25:16;
and freshman Andrea Edelmann
(Gallipolis, OH), who was 352nd after crossing the finish line in 25:50.
Kristen Garwood of Hannibal-LaGrange took the women’s individual
crown with a time of 17:54. Taylor
University, Olivet Nazarene and St.
Francis (IL) registered the top three
team scores.
Rio Grande won’t run again until
it hosts the Mid-South Conference
championship meet on November 9.

�Tuesday, October 29, 2013

LEGALS

Notice of Election on Tax Levy
in Excess
Of the Ten Mill Limitation
(R. C. 3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25
Notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Board of Township Trustees of the Township of Chester
of Meigs County,
Ohio passed
LEGALS
on the 14th day of May, 2013,
there will be submitted to a
vote of the people at the General Election, to be held at the
regular places of voting on
Tuesday the 5th day of
November, 2013, the question
of levying a tax, in excess of
the ten mill limitation, for the
benefit of the Township of
Chester for the purpose of Fire
Protection .
Tax being a replacement of a
tax of 2.0 mills at a rate not exceeding 2.0 mills for each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to $0.20 for each one
hundred dollars of valuation,
for 5 years. The polls for the
election will open at 6:30 a.m.
and remain open until 7:30
p.m. on Election Day.
By Order of the Board of Elections,
Meigs County, Ohio
Edward W. Durst, Chairman
Rebecca J. Johnston, Director
Dated September 30, 2013
10/25/, 10/29

LEGALS

The Bedford Township trustNotice of Election on Tax Levy
ees agreed to amend the
in Excess
December 13, 2010 resolution
Of the Ten Mill Limitation
as following:
(R. C. 3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
“Any resident or nonresident of
5705.25
Bedford Township who avail
Notice is hereby given that in
themselves for fire protection
pursuance of a Resolution of
services (fire or auto
the Board of Township Trustincidents), the cost for these
ees of the Township of
services will be passed on to
Columbia of Meigs County,
that person or persons, OAG
Ohio passed on the 1st day of
2008-001; Pursuat to ORC
July, 2013, there will be sub505.84. Bedford Township will
mitted to a vote of the people
pursue all legal means to colat the General Election, to be
lect any nonpayment for the
held at the regular places of
services rendered.”
voting on Tuesday the 5th day
of November, 2013, the ques10/22, 10/29, 11/5
tion of levying a tax, in excess
Notice of Election on Tax Levy
of the ten mill limitation, for the
in Excess
benefit of the Township of
Of the Ten Mill Limitation
Columbia for the purpose of
(R. C. 3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
Road Maintenance.
5705.25
Tax being an additional of a
Notice is hereby given that in
tax of 1.2 mills at a rate not expursuance of a Resolution of
ceeding 1.2 mills for each one
the Board of Township Trustdollar of valuation, which
ees of the Township of Chester
amounts to $0.12 for each one
of Meigs County, Ohio passed
hundred dollars of valuation,
on the 14th day of May, 2013,
for 5 years.
there will be submitted to a
The polls for the election will
Miscellaneous
vote of the people at the Genopen at 6:30 a.m. and remain
eral Election, to be held at the
open until 7:30 p.m. on Elecregular places of voting on
tion Day.
Tuesday the 5th day of
By Order of the Board of ElecNovember, 2013, the question
tions, Meigs County, Ohio
of levying a tax, in excess of
Edward W. Durst, Chairman
the ten mill limitation, for the
Rebecca J. Johnston, Director
benefit of the Township of
Dated September 30, 2013
Chester for the purpose of Fire
10/25, 10/29
Protection .
Tax being a replacement of a
tax of 2.0 mills at a rate not exceeding 2.0 mills for each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to $0.20 for each one
hundred dollars
of valuation,
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Mention Code: MB

Notice of Election on Tax Levy
in Excess
Of the Ten Mill Limitation
(R. C. 3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25
Notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Board of Township Trustees of the Township of
Columbia of Meigs County,
Ohio passed on the 1st day of
July, 2013, there will be submitted to a vote of the people
at the General Election, to be
held at the regular places of
voting on Tuesday the 5th day
of November, 2013, the question of levying a tax, in excess
of the ten mill limitation, for the
benefit of the Township of
Columbia for the purpose of
Road Maintenance.
Tax being an additional of a
tax of 1.2 mills at a rate not exceeding 1.2 mills for each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts toLEGALS
$0.12 for each one
hundred dollars of valuation,
for 5 years.
The polls for the election will
open at 6:30 a.m. and remain
open until 7:30 p.m. on Election Day.
By Order of the Board of Elections, Meigs County, Ohio
Edward W. Durst, Chairman
Rebecca J. Johnston, Director
Dated September 30, 2013
10/25, 10/29
Notice of Election on Tax Levy
in Excess
Of the Ten Mill Limitation
(R. C. 3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25
Notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Board of Township Trustees of the Township of Lebanon of Meigs County, Ohio
passed on the 29th day of
June, 2013, there will be submitted to a vote of the people
at the General Election, to be
held at the regular places of
voting on Tuesday the 5th day
of November, 2013, the question of levying a tax, in excess
of the ten mill limitation, for the
benefit of the Township of Lebanon for the purpose of Fire
Protection.
Tax being a renewal of a tax of
1.0 mill at a rate not exceeding 1.0 mill for each one dollar
of valuation, which amounts to
$0.10 for each one hundred
dollars of valuation, for 5
years.
The polls for the election will
open at 6:30 a.m. and remain
open until 7:30 p.m. on Election Day.
By Order of the Board of Elections,
Meigs County, Ohio
Edward W. Durst, Chairman
Rebecca J. Johnston, Director
Dated September 30, 2013
10/25/, 10/29

Notice of Election on Tax Levy
in Excess
Of the Ten Mill Limitation
(R. C. 3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25
Notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Board of Township Trustees of the Township of Letart
of Meigs County, Ohio passed
on the 3rd day of June, 2013,
there will be submitted to a
vote of the people at the General Election, to be held at the
regular places of voting on
Tuesday the 5th day of
November, 2013, the question
of levying a tax, in excess of
the ten mill limitation, for the
benefit of the Township of
Letart for the purpose of Fire
Protection.
Tax being a renewal of a tax of
1.0 mill at a rate not exceeding 1.0 mill for each one dollar
of valuation, which amounts to
$0.10 for each one hundred
dollars of valuation, for 5
years.
The polls for the election will
open at 6:30 a.m. and remain
open until 7:30 p.m. on Election Day.
By Order ofLEGALS
the Board of Elections,
Meigs County, Ohio
Edward W. Durst, Chairman
Rebecca J. Johnston, Director
Dated September 30, 2013
10/25/, 10/29
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
a minimum acceptable purchase price” of $300,000.00.
Prospective bidders are encouraged to attend a pre-bid
tour of the property between
10:00 and 11:00 a.m. on Wednesday, November 6, 2013.
Bidders are asked to turn in
their bids by 4:00 p.m. on
November 8, 2013 at the
Meigs Local Administrative Offices at 41765 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
The County Assessor census
tract is 9644 and map reference is 14-029-0316.
Rusty Bookman, Meigs Local
Superintendent, will present
the bid proposals to the Board
of Education at its regularly
scheduled meeting at 7:00
p.m. on November 13, 2013,
which will be held in Board
Room at the Meigs Local Administrative Offices at 41765
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Meigs Local Board of Education may accept “the highest
bid, or, if deemed to be in the
best interest of the district, reject any and all written bids
and withdraw the property from
sale.”
For information, contact Rusty
Bookman, Superintendent, at
the administrative offices,
41765 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, Ohio or call (740)
992-2153.
10/13, 10/17, 10/23,
10/29,11/3

Notice of Election on Tax Levy
in Excess
Of the Ten Mill Limitation
(R. C. 3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25
Notice is hereby given that in
ANNOUNCEMENTS
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Board of Township Trustees of the Township of Letart
of Meigs County, Ohio passed
Notices
on the 3rd day of June, 2013,
there will be submitted to a
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
vote of the people at the GenPUBLISHING CO.
eral Election, to be held at the
Recommends that you do
regular places of voting on
Business with People you
Tuesday the 5th day of
know, and NOT to send Money
November, 2013, the question
through the Mail until you have
of levying a tax, in excess of
Investigated the Offering.
the ten mill limitation, for the
Pictures
that have been
benefit of the Township of
placed in ads at the
Letart for the purpose of Fire
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Protection.
Tax being a renewal of a tax of
must be picked within
1.0 mill at a rate not exceed30 days. Any pictures
ing 1.0 mill for each one dollar
that are not picked up
of valuation, which amounts to
will be
discarded.
$0.10 for each one hundred
dollars of valuation, for 5
years.
Wanted
The polls for the election will
Domino's Pizza is now hiring
open at 6:30 a.m. and remain
safe drivers. Apply in person at
open until 7:30 p.m. on Electhese locations: Gallipolis,
tion Day.
Pomeroy, OH. Pt. Pleasant,
By Order of the Board of ElecWV. Or nearest you.
tions,
Meigs County, Ohio
Auctions
Edward W. Durst, Chairman
Rebecca J. Johnston, Director
Dated September 30, 2013
10/25/, 10/29

VACANT LAND AUCTION

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AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Auctions
Auction @ Pine Street Storage Units Nov 2, 2013 @
10am Call for more details
740-388-8633 after 6pm or
Josh Bodimer Auctioneer at
645-6665 or go to
auctionzip.com
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

Clerical
Secretary Needed Call 4463110 - Must have Ohio Notary.
Food Services
Sodexo at The University of
Rio Grande is seekng a experince cook. Start rate $10.00
Also looking for Food Service
Worker with experiecnce.
Please apply in person at the
Cafeteria
Taking Applications at all McClure Restaurant locations,
Middleport, Pomeroy, Gallipolis &amp; McArthur. Full &amp; Part time
Medical / Health
Nephrologist to work in Pt.
Pleasant and Huntington WV.
Must be BC in internal medicine, and BC/BE in Nephrology $180.K/yr. Full time.
Send CV via e-mail: Kumarmd@gmail.com, fax
866-625-0070
Employment Wanted
In Home Care Giver seeking
employment - 16 yrs exp.
Great references. Gallipolis
Area Call 740-256-6360 or
606-371-4165
EDUCATION

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

Location: Hannan Trace Rd., Gallia County, OH.
From Gallipolis, Ohio, take SR 7 South to Hanna Trace Rd. North.
Acreage is at the corner of Hannan Trace Rd. and King Chapel Rd.
GPS Address: 2-594 King Chapel Rd., Crown City, OH. Signs Posted

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

Wednesday, November 6, 2013 • 5:00 p.m.

REAL ESTATE SALES

35 Acres * Gallia County * Ohio Township *
Gallia County LSD * Mostly Wooded *
All Surface &amp; Sub Surface Rights Transfer*
Looking for an investment opportunity, or an
extra piece of hunting ground? Don’t miss
your opportunity at this sale. Land is mostly
wooded with younger trees, with some
open flats as well. All surface and gas and
oil rights will transfer at time of closing.
Immediate hunting permission granted
with down payment.
Terms: 10% Buyer’s Premium. 10% non-refundable
down payment day of sale, balance due at closing.
No contingencies. Sells subject to all articles of record.
Sells AS-IS with no warranties. Will be sold lump sum.
Announcements day of sale will take precedence. Walk
the property any time at your own risk.
Legal: Parcel# 02000153500 located in Ohio Township,
Gallia County.

888.852.4111 • www.kaufmanrealty.com
Derrick Kandel, Realtor/Auctioneer
330-231-4524 or derrick@kaufmanrealty.com
Auction by order of: David Ball

60457077

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1BR, furnished Apt. very clean,
W/D. Private, w/off street parking, NON-Smoker. NO PETS
304-675-1386
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

�Page 8 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Top-ranked RedStorm
pounds Patriots
Randy Payton
Special to OVP

WILLIAMSBURG, Ky. — Pau Rodriguez scored one goal and assisted
on two others to lead the top-ranked
University of Rio Grande to a 5-1 victory over the University of the Cumberlands, Saturday afternoon, in MidSouth Conference men’s soccer action
at the UC Soccer Complex.
The RedStorm, who are also ranked
No. 1 in the NAIA Modified Ratings
Percentage Index (MRPI), improved
to 12-1-2 overall with the victory and
finished their MSC regular season
schedule with a 7-0-2 mark against
conference foes.
Cumberlands dropped to 7-6-1
overall and 6-2 inside the league with
the loss.
Rodriguez, a freshman forward from
Barcelona, Spain, helped Rio score the
game’s opening goal, assisting on a
marker by freshman forward William
Paulino (Sao Paulo, Brazil) just 14:46
into the contest.
Senior defender Craig Davies
(Wolverhampton, England) made it
2-0 when he scored on a penalty kick
at the 32:35 mark of the first half and

Apartments/Townhouses
CALL About our RENTAL
SPECIAL
Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2,
3BR, units avail. You pay
electric. We Pay water sewage
and trash. Minorities encouraged to apply. No pets Ph: 304674-0023 or 304-444-4268

freshman defender Patricio Arce (Santiago, Chile) upped the lead to 3-0
with an unassisted marker just 2:52
into the second stanza.
Rodriguez netted his goal - also
unassisted - at 56:42 before the host
Patriots avoided a shutout when Pedro Antonelli pushed a shot past Rio
junior goal keeper Jon Dodson (Tiffin,
OH) just over four minutes later.
Rio Grande set the final score with
14:22 left in the match when sophomore forward Luiz Filho (Sao Paulo,
Brazil) scored off of a crossing pass
from the right wing by Rodriguez. It
was the 21st goal of the season for Filho, who ranks second in the country
in that category.
The RedStorm outshot UC, 19-5,
including a 12-4 edge in shots on goal.
Rio also had a 6-0 cushion in corner
kicks.
Dodson had three saves in a routegoing performance for Rio.
Joao Souza had six saves in the loss
for the Patriots.
Rio Grande will close out its regular
season schedule on Wednesday night
when the University of Northwestern
Ohio visits Evan E. Davis Field. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m.

MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY

ANIMALS

CALL About our RENTAL
SPECIAL
Jordan Landing Apts 1, 2, 3BR
avail. Water, Sewage &amp; Trash
included. You pay electric.
No pets
Ph: 304-674-0023, 304-444-4268

Livestock
Black Angus Bulls for Sale ages 1yr to 18mths, Call after
5pm 740-288-1460

Trucks/SUVs/Vans
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
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
2 - Nice 3-Bdrm homes, one is
near Holzer Hospital Call 740441-5150 or 379-2923
3-Bdrm - 2 Full baths - Close
to Hospital - NO PETS-Central
AC must have references
$1,000 deposit &amp; $1,000 rent
call 446-3481
5 Bdrm - 3 1/2 bath Ranch Close to Hospital - Central AC,
Pool, Large Garage, $1,000
sec. deposit $1,000 Rent - NO
PETS - Must have references
Call 740-446-3481

Pike
From Page 6
The Green and White answered with consecutive
points to knot things up at
three, but Pike Eastern reeled
off 11 of the next 15 points to
secure its biggest lead of the
opening game at 14-7.
The Lady Eagles closed
the deficit down to within a
point on three separate occasions — the last of which
came at 19-18 — but Pike
Eastern won six of the last
seven points to secure a sixpoint victory and an early 1-0
match lead.
There were seven ties and
eight lead changes in Game 2,
all of which occurred as Pike
Eastern established a slim
11-10 advantage. The Lady
Eagles were never closer, as
Pike Eastern took its biggest
lead at 18-13 before escaping
with a 25-23 win and a 2-0
match cushion.
Game 3 was the fiercest
of the four contest, as both
teams battled through 14 ties
and 15 lead changes. Pike
Eastern never led by more
than one point in the third
game, while the Lady Eagles
claimed their biggest lead of

98 Chevy Tahoe, 4 Wheel
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AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET
MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

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

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the entire match at 20-16.
Pike Eastern rallied back to
knot the game up at 22, 23 and
again at 24-all, but the Green
and White came up with consecutive points to close the
match deficit down to 2-1.
Eastern stormed out to a
3-0 edge in Game 4, but Pike
Eastern countered with five
consecutive points and eight
of the next nine scores to establish an 8-4 cushion. Pike
Eastern followed with a small
11-9 run to take its biggest
lead of the game at 19-13.
The Lady Eagles rallied
back to within two points
at 20-18, but Pike Eastern
scored five of the final seven
points to wrap up the fivepoint decision and a 3-1
match triumph.
Pike Eastern will face Shekinah Christian in the second of
two regional semifinal matches at Lancaster High School
on Thursday, Oct. 31. Newark
Catholic and Waterford will
face off in the first regional
semifinal match at 6 p.m.
Parker led the EHS service
attack with eight points, followed by Cline and Wolfe
with seven points apiece.
Swatzel and Keller were next

with six points apiece, while
Rigsby rounded things out
with five service points.
Parker and Cline each had
two service aces, while Swatzel contributed one ace to the
setback.
Parker led the net attack
with 19 kills, followed by
Swatzel with 13 kills and
Rigsby with five kills. Keller
added three kills, while
Kelsey Johnson and Wolfe
respectively chipped in two
kills and one kill.
Swatzel had a team-high
five blocks, while Parker and
Rigsby added four and three
blocks. Wolfe had two blocks
for the Lady Eagles, with
Johnson and Keller each chipping in one block. Wolfe also
had a team-best 39 assists.
Rigsby led the defense
with 44 digs, followed by
Cline with 34 digs and Parker
with 32 digs.
Jenny Keppler and Haley
Stanley paced Pike Eastern
with nine service points
apiece, followed by Maddie
Knapp and Carson Roney
with eight points each. Casey
Howard and Abby Overly
also chipped in seven and six
points, respectively, to the
winning cause.

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

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AGRICULTURE

AUTOMOTIVE

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

CANADA DRUG:
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choice for safe and affordable
medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy
will provide you with savings of
up to 75 percent on all your
medication needs. Call
1-800-341-2398 for $10.00 off
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choice for safe and affordable
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medication needs. Call
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choice for safe and affordable
medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy
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MY COMPUTER WORKS:
My Computer Works
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections - FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians.
$25 off service. Call for
immediate help.
1-888-781-3386
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Computer problems? Viruses,
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Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
Tree Service
Jones Tree Service: Complete
Tree Care, Insured 740-3670266 or 740-339-3366

Entertainment

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

NBC

!"#$%

(3.1)

7 PM
Wheel of
Fortune
Judge Judy

7:30
Jeopardy!

Entertainment Tonight
Modern Fam
The Big Bang
!(#'% (11.1) "Unplugged"
Theory
13 News at
Inside Edition
CBS
!)!*% (13.1) 7:00 p.m.
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
NBC
!+#,% (15.1) Fortune
PBS NewsHour TVG
PBS
ABC

!&amp;'"%

(8.1)

FOX

!)-.% (20.1)
CABLE

A&amp;E
AMC
APL
BET
BRAVO
CMT
CNN
COMC
DISC
DISN
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ESPN
ESPN2
FAM
FOOD
FX
HGTV
HIST
LIFE
MTV
NICK
SPIKE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TOON
TRAV
TVL
USA
VH1
WGN
PREMIUM

HBO
MAX
SHOW

7 PM

7:30

OCTOBER 29, 2013
8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The Biggest Loser (N) TVPG

The Voice "The Knockouts, Part 2" The knockout rounds
continue. (N) TVPG
Marvel's Agents of
The
Trophy Wife
Shark Tank TVPG
S.H.I.E.L.D. "Pilot" TVPG
Goldbergs (N) (N)
The X Factor The Top 16 acts that will perform. (N) TVPG
(:05) Eyewitness News TVG

NCIS "Oil and Water" (N)
TV14
The Biggest Loser (N) TVPG

NCIS: Los Angeles "Big
Person of Interest "Mors
Brother" (N) TV14
Preamatura" (N) TV14
The Voice "The Knockouts, Part 2" The knockout rounds
continue. (N) TVPG
African American "The Age of American Experience "War of Frontline "The Retirement
Slavery (1800 - 1860)"
the Worlds" (N) TVPG
Gamble" TVPG

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

WSAZ News
Tonight
Eyewitness
News 11
Modern
Family
13 News

(:35) Tonight
Show (N)
(:35) Jimmy
Kimmel (N)
The Arsenio
Hall Show
(:35) David
Letterman (N)
WTAP News at (:35) Tonight
Eleven
Show (N)
Tavis Smiley
My
Generation

11 PM

11:30

Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage (N)
Storage (N)
Hoggers (N)
Hoggers (N)
Amer. Hogger Amer. Hogger
5:45 ! Friday the 13th, Part
! ! Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday ('93, Hor) Billy
! ! Jason X ('01, Horror) Lexa Doig, Chuck Campbell, Kane
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"Atomic Assassin" TVPG
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Nightmares" TVPG
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! !! Daddy's Little Girls ('07, Rom) Gabrielle Union. TVPG
RealHusband Husbands (N) RealHusband The Game
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Shahs of Sunset "Happy New Shahs of Sunset "Hard for
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"Protest It Up" "Study Buddy"
E! News
Tori Spelling
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E! News
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30 for 30 (N)
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
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Olbermann (L)
Ravenswood "Pilot"
Ravenswood "Death and the ! !! I Know What You Did Last Summer ('97, Hor)
The 700 Club TVPG
Maiden" (N)
Jennifer Love Hewitt. TVMA
Chopped "A Cornish Mess"
Chopped "Ladies First!" TVG
Chopped "Circus
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Cutthroat Kitchen "Chicken
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Spectacular" TVG
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! !!! Iron Man (2008, Action) Gwyneth Paltrow, Jeff Bridges, Robert Downey Jr.. Tony
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Stark creates a suit of high tech armor to fix his mistakes and defend the innocent. TVPG
Fantasmas" (N) TVMA
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House
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Income Property "Blended
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House Hunters Renovation
Hunters Int'l
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Pawn Stars
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Top Gear "Can Cars Float?"
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! !! Badlands ('73, Dra) Martin Sheen. A (:45) ! !!!! Cabaret ('72, Mus) Michael York, Liza Minnelli. A British
('66, Spy) TVPG
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writer befriends an American girl singing in pre-war Berlin nightclubs. TVPG
Little People, Big World
Little People, Big World
People "Playing With Fire" (N) Treehouse "Love Is in the Air" Little Peo. "Playing With Fire"
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NBA Basketball Chicago Bulls vs. Miami Heat (L) TVG
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�Tuesday, October 29, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
Oct. 29, 2013:
This year you often come up with
unusual ideas that seem creative
and workable to others. Realize that
you are more solemn than you might
think you are. Be aware that this attitude could be why others often react
strangely to you. If you are single,
there is no question that you will attract
many people. Look to the person who
is interested in getting to know the real
you. If you are attached, your sweetie
will try his or her best to help you get
through life’s bumps and keep you
smiling. You sometimes act like newlyweds, which delights those around you.
VIRGO verbalizes a lot of what you are
thinking.
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 will want to meld with
others in order to accomplish a particular task. Sometimes this type of interpersonal cooperation can be difficult,
as you are a very independent sign.
You still manage to project a leadership profile, even when being docile.
Tonight: Work off some tension.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++++ Open up to a more
dynamic approach to a situation in
your life. You might like the idea of this
change, but to manifest it will prove to
be more difficult. Thinking is important,
but you will get nowhere unless you
act. You have little to lose. Tonight: So
what if it is only Tuesday?
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
++++ You have a desire not to
be the town crier. You might be up
for playing the role of recluse for a
few days. Excuse yourself from commitments, and know where you are
heading. Be smart, and refrain from
speaking until you are sure of yourself.
Tonight: All smiles.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
++++ Make the first move. You
will get far more done than you thought
was even possible, once you feel
unburdened and free from a personal
issue. A call could make all the difference in the outcome of your day.
Tonight: Accept an invitation to join
someone for munchies.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
+++ Be aware of the problems
around you, and be direct in how you
approach a situation, especially if it
involves your finances. You can’t be
too careful in how you approach this
matter. Recognize that someone could
be angry. Work this through with him or

her. Tonight: Your treat.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
++++ Assess whether it is a good
idea to proceed as you have been.
Listen to someone’s opinion, but know
that you might need some more time
to reflect on the main issue. Postpone
signing off on agreements, at least for
today. Tonight: Act as if you do not
have a care in your world.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
+++ Your words make more of
an impression than you might realize.
At the same time, withholding your
thoughts will have a similar effect.
Others question themselves, especially
when you become quiet. Use caution with any money arrangements.
Tonight: Not to be found.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
++++ Meetings take high priority, whether you like it or not. They
also might help you initiate a new or
different plan of action. Recognize
where someone else’s anger is coming
from, even if he or she can’t. Say very
little about your perceptions for now.
Tonight: Where your friends are.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
+++ You respond positively to
pressure, especially if you feel as if
you will be acknowledged for your
efforts. An intense conflict exists within
you between work and a domestic
matter. You will need to channel your
high energy and use it more positively.
Tonight: Happy at home.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
++++ Allow greater give-and-take
between you and others. A friend could
have difficulty opening up. Know that
his or her attitude could have little to
do with you. Your willingness to adapt
to various situations points you to the
winners’ circle. Tonight: Tap into your
imagination.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
++++ Deal with a specific family member directly. You could feel
pushed to your limit by a loved one
whom you care a lot about. How you
view situations could change radically
as a result of an experience surrounding today’s events. Tonight: Chat and
visit with a close friend.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
+++ You could be inspired by one
other person to tackle a new goal or
to move to a new level of accomplishment. You sometimes get confused
by this person, yet at other times his
or her influence gives you more confidence. Tonight: Whatever you do, just
don’t be alone.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

URG women suffer
disappointing loss
Randy Payton
Special to OVP

WILLIAMSBURG, Ky.
— Kim Robinson and Victoria Paynter scored two
goals each to lead the University of the Cumberlands
to a 4-1 Senior Day victory, Saturday afternoon,
in Mid-South Conference
women’s soccer action at
the UC Soccer Complex.
Cumberlands won for
just the second time in 16
outings overall and the second time in eight league
games, snapping a sevenmatch losing streak in the
process.
The RedStorm finished
their regular season sched-

ule at 9-8 overall and 4-5 in
the MSC.
Head coach Callum Morris’s squad, which was looking to nail down a No. 4
seed and a first round home
game in the upcoming MSC
Tournament, have now lost
three of their last four outings - all conference games
- and will have to settle for
the No. 5 seed and a first
round road trip to either St.
Catharine College or Campbellsville University.
“To be honest, there’s really not a lot to say. We just
didn’t show up,” Morris
said. “We were just awful.
I’d like to apologize to the
15 or 16 parents who traveled here to watch the kids

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play, because it was an absolute disgrace. We never
got going - at all.”
The Patriots dominated
the contest from the outset, outshooting the RedStorm 18-6, including 15-2
in shots on goal.
Robinson scored the first
of her two goals just 9:39
into the match and Paynter managed her first score
just over a minute later to
make it 2-0.
Rio Grande cut the lead
in half with 3:19 remaining before the intermission
when freshman defender
Hannah Brindle (Bolton,
England) scored her first
collegiate goal off an assist
by sophomore forward Kasey Crow (Chillicothe, OH).
The assist allowed Crow
to move into first place on
the school’s all-time points
list, snapping a tie with
Beth Hoffman, who tallied
44 points during her career
from 2005-07.
The Patriots snatched
the momentum back,
though, when Robinson
scored her second marker
just over 20 minutes into
the second stanza and
Paynter finished off the
scoring when she found
the back of the net off of a
feed from Amerah Dixon
with 6:55 left to play.
“We didn’t turn up and
all the best to Cumberlands because, obviously,
they did,” Morris said.
“They got two quick goals
that put us under pressure.
We had chances to score,
we just had no conviction there was nothing about us
that wanted to go and win
the game today.”
Carissa
Harriman
stopped one shot in the
winning effort for Cumberlands.
Junior net-minder Allison Keeney (Cincinnati,
OH) had 11 saves in a losing cause for Rio.
The RedStorm must wait
until next week before learning the identity of their first
round tournament foe. The
contest will be played on
Saturday, Nov. 9.

Christopher Weddle | Centre Daily Times | MCT

Penn State head coach Bill O’Brien and Ohio State head coach Urban Meyer meet before the
game at Beaver Stadium in State College, Pennsylvania, Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. Ohio State
defeated Penn State, 35-23.

Buckeyes win big, but
stay the same in polls
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Like a lot
of coaches, Ohio State’s Urban Meyer tries
to get his team to ignore the polls.
But then he took an extraordinary step.
When the team met a week ago, he addressed the initial BCS rankings, what the
Buckeyes’ No. 4 ranking meant and what
it could mean in the future. He told his
team everything would turn out right if it
just kept winning.
Then the Buckeyes (8-0, 4-0 Big Ten)
went out and rolled over Penn State for a
63-14 victory, acknowledging they wanted
to win big in order to impress the voters.
“You could say it’s a statement in a way,”
said safety Corey Brown, whose interception in the end zone on the Nittany Lions’
first possession helped turn the tide.
But with the teams in front of them
— Alabama, Oregon and Florida State
— also winning big, the landslide verdict
may not have had the desired effect. Ohio
State remained No. 4 in not only The Associated Press and USA Today polls, but
also in the second weekly BCS rankings.
In the latest BCS rankings, Alabama remains No. 1, with Oregon passing Florida
State to get to No. 2.
While No. 5 Missouri lost for the first
time and is no longer right behind the
Buckeyes in the two major polls, Baylor
moved to 7-0 with an equally impressive
59-14 win over Kansas to take Mizzou’s
place breathing down Ohio State’s collective neck.
In the BCS, after the Seminoles and

Buckeyes comes Stanford at No. 5, then
Baylor.
Ohio State’s victory over Penn State
(4-3, 1-2) was historic, beyond extending
the nation’s longest winning streak to 20
games. It was the Nittany Lions’ worst
loss and their most points allowed since a
64-5 setback to Duquesne Athletic Club in
‘99 — 1899, that is.
Some of the numbers were jaw-dropping: The Buckeyes averaged 8 yards per
rush and 14 yards per completion, totaling
686 yards while scoring on four plays of at
least 25 yards in length.
“We needed a type of game like this,”
said wide-out Devin Smith, who had five
catches for 90 yards. “We work hard every single week. Everything we did today
from the time we woke up to kickoff was
perfect. We wanted to make a statement.
That gives us confidence.”
Meyer said he and his team didn’t set
out to turn any heads with a lopsided
score.
“That was certainly not our mindset,”
he said. “Our mindset is to find a way
to win this game against a very talented
team.”
Some may have questioned why Meyer
elected to kick onside after the Buckeyes
took a 42-7 lead on Braxton Miller’s second of three TD passes with 3 seconds
left in the half. But the prevailing logic
dictated that Ohio State was merely trying to prevent a long kickoff return with
so little time left.

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