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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 cloudy.
High of 71. Low
of 54........ Page 3

Local sports
action....
Page 5

Herman F. Buttrick, 61
Elza Leonard Powell, 79

50 cents daily

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 175

Polling places open Nov. 5, 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Residents are reminded that
Tuesday, Nov. 5, is election
day and that polling places
will be open from 6:30 a.m.
to 7:30 p.m.
As has been the case
for several years proper
identification is required
before ballots are issued
to voters. Becky Johnston,
Meigs County Board of
Elections director, advises
that the deadline for early
voting is Saturday at noon.
The office will open at 9
a.m. for the convenience
of voters. Only those who
are registered can vote in
Tuesday’s election.

As for absentee ballots
they must be returned to
the Board of Elections office Tuesday before the
close of the polls at 7:30
p.m.
The Meigs County polling locations are as follows:
Bedford — Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly Campgrounds, 39560 Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy.
East Chester — Shade
River Lodge Masonic
Building, 46416 SR 248,
Chester.
West Chester — Pomeroy Gun Club, 42560
Pomeroy Pike Road, Pomeroy.
Columbia- — Columbia
Township Fire Depart-

ment, 29466 SR 143~ Albany.
Lebanon — Portland
Community Center, 56896
SR 124, Portland.
Letart — East Letart
United Methodist Church
Building, 49018 East Letart Road, Racine.
North Olive — Tuppers
Plains St. Paul United
Methodist Church, 42216
SR 7, Tuppers Plains.
South Olive — Long
Bottom Community Building, 36709 TR 275, Long
Bottom.
Orange — Tuppers
Plains St, Paul United
Methodist Church, 42216
SR 7, Tuppers Plains.
Rutland Village — Rutland Civic Center, 337

Main Street, Rutland.
East Rutland — Rutland
Civic Center, 337 Main
Street, Rutland.
West Rutland — Rutland Civic Center, 337
Main Street, Rutland.
Salem — Salem Center
Fire Department, 28854
SR 124, Langsville.
Middleport 2nd —
Church of Christ, Life
Center, 437 Main Street,
Middleport.
Middleport 3rd —
Church of Christ Life
Center, 437 Main Street,
Middleport.
Middleport 4th —
Church of Christ Life
Center, 437 Main Street,
Middleport.

Pomeroy lst — Mulberry Community Center, 260
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy 2nd — Mulberry Community Center,
260 Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy.
Pomeroy 3rd — Mulberry Community Center,
260 Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy.
Bradbury — Bradford
Church of Christ Activity
Building, 39105 Bradbury
Road, Pomeroy.
Laurel Cliff — Meigs
Local Administrative Office (former Salisbury Elementary School) 41765,
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy.
Rocksprings — Meigs

Local Administrative Office (former Salisbury Elementary School) 41764,
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy.
Scipio — Scipio Township Fire Department,
35575 Firehouse Road,
Pomeroy.
Racine Village — Racine Baptist Church Christian Outreach Center, 5th
Street, Racine.
Syracuse Village — Syracuse Village Community
Building, 7th Street, Syracuse.
Minersville — Syracuse
Community Building, 7th
Street, Syracuse.
Racine Precinct — Racine Baptist Church Christian Outreach Center, 5th
Street, Racine.

Appalachian Region
awarded $1.7M
challenge grant
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

Submitted photos

The best pink costume and best pink hair winners were (front, from left) Sharon Gantt, best pink hair — staff;
Brielle Newland and Dillon Howard, best pink costume — elementary students, Wade Howard and Haven Calhoun.
best pink hair — elementary students; and Jody Howard, best pink costume — staff; (back, from left) Cole Nelson
and Avary Mugrage, best pink costume — middle school students; and Harley Clark and Austin Coleman, best pink
hair — middle school students.

Dressed for awareness
TUPPERS PLAINS — Students
at Eastern Elementary and Eastern
Middle School celebrated “Go Pink
for Breast Cancer Awareness Day” on
Tuesday with a variety of costumes,
wigs and other pink items.
Certificates were awarded to the students and staff for the best pink costume and wildest pink hair.
Students have also been asked to
bring a quarter which will be donated
to the Meigs County Cancer Initiative’s
“Think Pink” program.
First grade students (from left) Adyson
Fields, Wyatt McCune and Katie Ryan
participate in “Go Pink for Breast Cancer
Awareness Day” on Tuesday at Eastern
Elementary.

POMEROY — The 28 counties of Appalachia Ohio has
been awarded a $1.7 million Make it in America Challenge Grant, a part of a national $20.5 million challenge
grant program.
Announcement of the funding was made this week by
one of the recipients, Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District, that fosters cooperative efforts across an area which includes Meigs, Athens, Hocking, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry, and Washington
counties.
The other two recipients of challenge grant funding
are The Appalachian Partnership for Economic Growth
(APEG) and the Ohio Valley Employment Resource
Workforce Investment Area 15.
According to a release from Buckeye Hills-HVRD, the
target industries for use of the funds are ”metal fabrication, polymers and chemicals, and other manufacturing
– all of which are strong in the region, growing in the
state, and among the sectors in which the U.S. is best
positioned for re-shoring.”
Buckeye Hills Executive Director Misty Casto said
“The grant program is designed to help distressed regions build on existing assets and create a competitive
environment for foreign-owned and domestic firms to establish and grow their U.S. operations, and create jobs.”
It was indicated by APEG that its grant program will
build upon the region’s key re-shoring assets including
See GRANT | 2

Farm Bill conservation
programs issue report
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Information on the effects of the expiration of the Farm Bill and the recently passed continuing
resolution has been relayed to Carrie A. Crislip, district
conservationist for Meigs and Jackson counties, to be
passed along to those currently involved in conservation
programs.
According to a release from the Ohio’s Assistant State
Conservationist for Programs, the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS ) is offering some
Farm Bill conservation programs, but not all.
In addition, it was reported that the federal government
shutdown suspended NRCS work on existing conservation program contracts, delaying certification of practices
installed during that time frame. Conservation program
contract holders that installed practices during the government shutdown should notify their local NRCS field office (Pomeroy Service Center, 113 East Memorial Drive,
Suite D, Pomeroy, OH 45769; Phone: 740-992-6646; Fax:
740-992-4248) so NRCS can certify the practices as completed and process payments for those practices.
The Continuing Resolution provides funding for the
Environmental Quality Incentives Program ( EQIP.) In
Ohio, NRCS will review and rank eligible EQIP applications submitted by Nov. 15, for funding. If additional
EQIP funding is available, NRCS may offer additional application periods. Eligible agricultural producers can apply for EQIP anytime.
The Continuing Resolution also provides funding for
the Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP). Like
EQIP, any eligible agricultural producer can apply for
CSP anytime. In Ohio, NRCS has not yet announced an
application selection date this year.
The Continuing Resolution also provides funding for
the Farm and Ranch Lands Protection Program ((FRPP.)
In Ohio, NRCS will announce the deadline for cooperatPeoples Bank is in the process of collecting coats for kids to ing entities to submit applications this year.
be distributed through the schools in November. Here Tina
It was also reported that several conservation pro-

Annual project gives coats to kids
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — For many
of us when the weather
turns cold we can just
reach into our closets and
pull out a heavy coat to
keep us warm.
But not all people have
that luxury, especially children.
For nearly three decades
many area school children
have been able to keep
warm in winter because of
the efforts of employees of
the bank located at the corner of Court and Second in
Pomeroy.
The program started
out in 1984. Teachers be-

gan to notice that some of
the children were coming
to school either not wearing a coat or one that was
too small or too big. That
inspired the bank employees, then Bank One, to
begin the Coats for Kids
annual project aimed at
seeing that every child has
a warm coat to wear to
school. When Bank One
sold to Peoples Bank, the
project continued.
Every year fund raisers
are staged by the employees and local organizations give to the project.
Residents donate coats
still in good condition but

Rees, branch manager, and Jeffery Brickles, a teller, sort

See COATS | 2 through some of the coats which have already come in.

See PROGRAMS | 2

�Page 2 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 31, 2013

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 Organization
will be having a Halloween costume judging on October 31, at Racine Fire De-

partment, 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 StewartBennett 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.

Death Notices

Meigs County Community Calendar

BUTTRICK
GALLIPOLIS — Herman F. Buttrick, 61, of Gallipolis Ferry, died Monday,
October 28, 2013, at home.
A funeral service will
be held at 11 a.m., Friday,
November 1, 2013, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant with Pastor
Arnold “Dee” Keith officiating. Burial will follow in
the Raike Family Cemetery
at Gallipolis Ferry. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m.,
Thursday, at the funeral
home.
In lieu of flowers, the
family request memorial
contributions be made to:
Mason County Commission, Memo: 4H Dining
Hall/H. Buttrick, 200 6th
Street, Point Pleasant.

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

POWELL
GLENWOOD — Elza
Leonard Powell, 79, of
Glenwood, W.Va., died on
October 29, 2013, at the
Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House in Huntington,
W.Va.
A graveside service with
full military honors conducted by the Army National Guard Honor Guard,
American Legion Post #23
of Point Pleasant, and Rev.
Ronnie Long, will be held
at the Pete Meadows Cemetery in Glenwood, W.Va.,
on Saturday, November
2, 2013, at 1 p.m. Friends
may visit the family at
the Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, W.Va., on
Friday evening, November
1, 2013, from 6-8 p.m.

Programs
gram authorities lapsed
when the Farm Bill expired. These include the
Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP), Grasslands
Reserve Program (GRP),
Healthy Forest Reserve
Program (HFRP), and
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP). According to
the release NRCS cannot
accept new applications
for these programs at this

Sunday, Nov. 3
SYRACUSE — A spaghetti dinner will be held
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
Carleton School and Meigs
Industries. The dinner is
being held by the Carleton

time, but will continue to
assist with agreements
from prior years to complete easement closings
and restoration activities
and to ensure conservation
practice implementation.
Agricultural producers
interested in applying for
Thanksgiving Community
EQIP and conservation
and Youth Outreach
planning assistance in
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock
Meigs County are encour- Grove Christian Church will host a
aged to contact their local free Thanksgiving dinner following
NRCS office at 740-992- the morning service on Sunday, Nov.
6646.

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.
Tuesday, Nov. 5
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Veterans
Service Office, 117 East
Memorial Drive, Suite 3,
will be closing at noon for
Election Day.

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.

Meigs County Local Briefs

BBT (NYSE) — 34.43
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.00
Pepsico (NYSE) — 84.72
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.94
Rockwell (NYSE) — 110.06
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 19.60
Royal Dutch Shell — 69.75
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 58.67
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 76.91
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.72
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.08
Worthington (NYSE) — 39.97
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions October
30, 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.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Thursday: A chance of showers, mainly after 4 p.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 71. South wind 8 to 16
mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Thursday Night: Showers, with thunderstorms also
possible after 1 a.m. Low around 54. South wind around
18 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100 percent. New rainfall amounts between a
quarter and half of an inch possible.
Friday: A chance of showers, mainly before 8 a.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 65. West wind 11 to 14 mph.
Chance of precipitation is 30 percent. New precipitation
amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
Friday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 43.
Saturday: A chance of showers after 10am. Mostly
cloudy, with a high near 54. Chance of precipitation is
40 percent.
Saturday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 37.
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 51.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 33.
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 57.
Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 39.
Tuesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 63.
Tuesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 46.
Wednesday: A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 68.

FRENCH 500 FLEA MARKET
Gallia Co Jr Fairgrounds US 160
and Old US 35 (Jackson Pike)

Election Day Dinners
LETART — The East
Letart United Methodist
Church will serve election
day dinners of soup and
sandwiches at the church
Tuesday beginning at 11
a.m.
RACINE — The Racine
United Methodist Church
will hold its annual Election Day dinner Tuesday,
with serving from 11 a.m
to 4 p.m. Menu will include soup, sandwiches,
desserts and drinks. Take
containers for carry-out.
Delinquent Tax list
MEIGS COUNTY —
Meigs County Treasurer
Peggy Yost advises that the

delinquent list for mobile
homes and real estate will
be published in The Daily
Sentinel on Nov. 15 and
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

From Page 1
outgrown by their own children and
many new coats in a variety of sizes
are purchased by those concerned
about children staying warm in winter.
The whole process begins when
the bank sends out letters and forms
to the schools in October to be filled

out by the teachers who observe
a need. The forms with numbers
and sizes needed are returned and
then bank personnel begins matching coats to kids . They are tagged,
bagged and delivered to the elementary schools in the three districts and
to Carleton School for distribution to
the children.
This year several nice donations

From Page 1
access to markets, world
class highway, rail, and
river infrastructure, access
to locally sourced fuel and
feed stocks, and manufacturing strength in the
target industries, and will
include development site
inventory and economic
development asset mapping of at least 1,000 prop-

erties in the region. It will
also include supply chain
development for the wood
furniture manufacturing
sector as well as incumbent worker and on-thejob training in all targeted
areas.
“We are pleased that
the region’s business climate will be bolstered by
the Challenge Grant and
its renewed focus on our

1st Annual Lion’s Roar 5K Run/Walk
Saturday, November 2 at 9:30 am.
60461119

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 11 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.

have already come in from concerned
citizens, churches and organizations.
Friday the Peoples Bank employees will begin their fundraisers. Taco
bags will be prepared and served
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. from a table in
the lobby where the centerpiece will
be a large glass jar for donations to
the Coats for Kids.

Grant

presents their

Christmas Bazaar Dec. 6, 7, 8

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

Coats

Mid-Valley Christian School

November 1, 2, 3

Phone (740)446-4120
Hours: 8am - 5pm
Inside or Outside Dealer Spaces

School and Meigs 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.

Meigs County Church Calendar
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.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 47.10
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 24.34
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 92.72
Big Lots (NYSE) — 36.83
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 57.29
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 100.79
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.97
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.330
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.59
Collins (NYSE) — 70.03
DuPont (NYSE) — 61.02
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.76
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.37
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 64.19
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 52.60
Kroger (NYSE) — 42.89
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 62.14
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 86.52
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 21.05

Saturday, Nov. 2
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 will
meet with potluck supper
at 6:30 p.m. followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.

Starting at the middle gazebo in the Pomeroy Parking Lot.
You may register at tristateracer.com
or call (740) 992-6249
for more information.
Runners and walkers will be rewarded separately.
Top male and female in each age group will receive a trophy.

60460984

From Page 1

be holding their monthly
meeting at 6 p.m. at the
township building.

highly-skilled and productive workforce and our
strong natural resources,”
said Ohio Valley Employment Resource’s Executive
Director Rebecca Safko
(WIA – Region 15).
According to the release
the $1,700,844 Challenge
grant includes $400,888
from the U.S. Dept. of
Commerce’s
Economic
Development Administration and $1,299,956 from
the U.S. Dept. of Labor’s
Employment and Training
Administration.
Commenting on the
grant to Appalachia, Congressman Bill Johnson said
that the award will help
Eastern and Southeastern
Ohio local officials and
business leaders add local
jobs by bringing in new
business or expand operations into the counties he
represents. He said he

was proud to have offered
his support for the award,
adding that “along with
the new job opportunities
we’re already seeing with
domestic energy production in the Marcellus and
Utica Shale, this will be
another useful tool for the
region. I know the good
folks at Buckeye Hills will
put this award to good use
for the benefit of Eastern
and Southeastern Ohio
residents.”
The investment will allow Buckeye Hills and the
Ohio Appalachian Business Council to identify
up to 1,000 development
sites in the area, complete
with maps and characteristics, and make the findings
available online to bring
the sites to the attention of
developers and site selectors, Johnson concluded.

�Thursday, October 31, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel s Page 3

Civitas Media

PRO FOOTBALL REVIEW
Chiefs defense getting notice around the league Top performers
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
— The defensive coordinator of the Kansas City Chiefs
barely speaks above a whisper.
Glasses tend to slide down
the bridge of his nose. He has
a habit of staring into space
whenever he’s answering a
question, and can drone on
for an interminable amount of
time.
He gives off a librarian’s
vibe, or perhaps that of an algebra teacher — certainly not of
a mad scientist orchestrating
one of the most feared defenses in the NFL.
“Whoever is coaching that
thing, I don’t even know,” former Chiefs coach and current
Lions assistant Gunther Cunningham said, “but he’s doing
a hell of a job.”
His name is Bob Sutton. And
yes, he is.
Under his dazzling wizardry, the Chiefs have yet to allow more than 17 points in a
game during an 8-0 start, tied
for the best in franchise history. They’re on pace to set the
NFL record for sacks in a season. They’re tops in the league
when it comes to stopping opponents on third down, and in
the red zone. They are also the
best when it comes to taking
away the ball.
Strange to think that when
new Chiefs coach Andy Reid

David Eulitt/Kansas City Star/MCT

Kansas City Chiefs defensive coordinator Bob Sutton, hear talking
with his starting defensive unit earlier this season, has the defensive
leading the league in sacks and allowing an NFL-low in points.

hired Sutton away from the
New York Jets in the offseason,
hardly any players on the team
had even heard of him.
“I read a little about him,”
Pro Bowl linebacker Tamba
Hali said. “He’s just a real humble guy. He didn’t seem like
he was coming in to change
people’s position. He installed
his system and asked you to
buy into it. And we probably
wouldn’t be here if we didn’t.”
Hali quickly learned that beneath Sutton’s placid demeanor
was a guy who burned to win.
He relishes finding the smallest weakness in an offense and
then exploiting it. He takes

glee in the idea of terrorizing a
quarterback or making life miserable for a running back.
“You could tell he loves his
job,” Chiefs safety Eric Berry
said. “Just talking to him,
you see how much he loves
the game. He has passion for
it. We just had a meeting for
two hours, and he was excited
about the game plan the whole
two hours, so that gets us fired
up.”
Sutton started his career a
graduate assistant under Bo
Schembechler at Michigan, and
spent his first three decades in
coaching in the college ranks.
He bounced through Syracuse,

Illinois and North Carolina
State, among other places, before finally landing at Army.
That was his first and only
head coaching job, and it was
mostly a success. He went
10-2 in 1996 and had the Black
Knights in the Top 25. To put
that into context, the program
has had just one winning record — a 7-6 finish in 2010 —
since that season.
“There’s no question that
he’s a brilliant man,” said Purdue coach Darrell Hazell, who
was an assistant under Sutton
at West Point. “So many people see things from one angle,
but Bob always had that special quality to see things from
so many different angles.”
Sutton transitioned to the
NFL in 2000 as the linebacker
coach of the Jets, and rose
through the ranks to become
defensive coordinator on Eric
Mangini’s staff. When Mangini
was fired and Rex Ryan took
over, Ryan persuaded Sutton
to stay on as a defensive assistant.
“It was one of those things
where he said, ‘OK, I’ll give it a
shot and stay,’” Ryan said. “He
was the assistant head coach
and it was awesome. I really
leaned on him.”
His players embraced him,
too, and were devastated to
see him go.

Chiefs are undefeated but are they the best?
Tim Dahlberg

AP Sports Columnist

The first half was the easy part, though
nothing comes that easy for the only undefeated team in the NFL.
The Kansas City Chiefs are 8-0, remarkable by itself in a league where parity rules
and only hapless Jacksonville counts as a
sure win. It borders on amazing when you
consider the Chiefs were 2-14 a year ago
and so anemic offensively that some fans
actually cheered when quarterback Matt
Cassel left with a concussion in a home
loss to Baltimore.
The Chiefs went out and got a new
quarterback, a new coach and a new general manager after that. A lot of the team
is new, too, with some 30 different names
on this season’s roster than last.
They’re good, yes, because you have to
be good to win eight straight games in the
NFL. Defensively, they’re top-notch, and
Alex Smith does a commendable job managing an offense that takes few risks but
makes even fewer mistakes.
Still, no one outside Missouri and Kansas talks about the Chiefs in the same
breath as the Broncos, Seahawks or 49ers,
all teams that have lost. They’re not Super
Bowl favorites in the sports books in Las
Vegas, where the wise guys still aren’t convinced they belong among the NFL elite.
The Chiefs have their doubters, and win
No. 8 Sunday at home against Cleveland
likely did nothing to persuade them to
jump on the bandwagon. A mediocre team
at best, the Browns were in the game until
the final minutes before finally falling 2317.
It told no one anything about the Chiefs

they didn’t already know. And it remains
anyone’s guess how deep the team can
possibly go in the playoffs.
But the players are starting to believe.
And it may not be long before these Chiefs
finally get some believers, too.
“The best you can be right now is 8-0
and that’s where we’re at,” Chiefs linebacker Derrick Johnson said. “Everybody’s going to give us their best. We know that. If
we can take that punch and keep rolling,
that’s what we did today. It wasn’t pretty,
but a ‘W’ sure does look good.”
It does, though those “W’s” weren’t exactly piled up at the expense of the better
teams in the league. None of the teams the
Chiefs have beaten have winning records
at the midpoint of the season, and the
weak schedule makes it tough to evaluate
just where Kansas City should be ranked.
Not to worry, because that’s about to
change. The second half of the schedule
isn’t filled with the cupcakes the Chiefs
have been fortunate to meet so far. It includes not just one, but two, meetings
with the high-powered Broncos, and two
more with a San Diego team that seems to
be rapidly improving.
Throw in games against Indianapolis
and Washington, and the second half of
the schedule is about as tough as the first
half was easy.
“The goal is to go farther and farther,”
running back Jamaal Charles said. “We’re
going to take this one game at a time and
look at the next opponent, but it’s a blessing to be 8-0.”
While the Chiefs retooled a big chunk of
their roster under new coach Andy Reid
and new GM John Dorsey, the real key to

the turnaround may lie with the steady
play of Smith, who never seems terribly
impressive but always seems to win. Cast
off by San Francisco after a concussion
gave Colin Kaepernick a chance to shine,
Smith has won 27 of his last 33 starts over
2½ seasons with two teams.
Smith was his usual efficient self against
the Browns, throwing for 225 yards and
two touchdowns. The Chiefs play it close
to the vest, but Smith has thrown only
four interceptions all year and is the second leading rusher on the team.
The only stat that really matters, though,
is that Smith is undefeated as quarterback
of the Chiefs.
“This is the NFL and there’s not going
to be blowouts week in and week out,”
Smith said. “But it’s fun being around this
team. We enjoy coming to work, we enjoy
preparing.”
A lot of people in Kansas City are enjoying coming to the stadium on Sundays,
too. As good as this season has gone so
far, last season was so miserable that fans
raised money to fly a banner over the stadium calling for Cassel to be benched and
GM Scott Pioli to be fired.
If the fans have moved on, so have the
players.
“Last year is last year,” receiver Dexter
McCluster said. “I’m done talking about it.
8-0 speaks for itself.”
It does, though it doesn’t speak loudly.
There are a lot of games still to be played,
and a lot of questions still to be answered.
The Kansas City Chiefs may not be the
best team in the NFL, or even the best
team in their division.
But right now their record says they are.

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Week 7
Passing

506, Romo, DAL vs. DEN 10/06 (25-36, 5 TD)
488, M. Stafford, DET vs. DAL 10/27 (33-48, 1 TD)
480, A. Rodgers, GBY vs. WAS 09/15 (34-42, 4 TD)
462, P. Manning, DEN vs. BAL 09/05 (27-42, 7 TD)
450, E. Manning, NYG at DAL 09/08 (27-42, 4 TD)
428, Vick, PHL vs. SND 09/15 (23-36, 2 TD)
421, M. Ryan, ATL vs. NWE 09/29 (34-54, 2 TD)
419, P. Rivers, SND at PHL 09/15 (36-47, 3 TD)
414, P. Manning, DEN at DAL 10/06 (33-42, 4 TD)
413, Brees, NOR vs. MIA 09/30 (30-39, 4 TD)
412, Kaepernick, SNF vs. GBY 09/08 (27-39, 3 TD)
411, P. Rivers, SND at OAK 10/06 (35-48, 2 TD)
406, Roethlisberger, PIT vs. CHI 09/22 (26-41, 2 TD)
401, P. Rivers, SND vs. DAL 09/29 (35-42, 3 TD)
386, P. Manning, DEN at IND 10/20 (29-49, 3 TD)
385, M. Stafford, DET at WAS 09/22 (25-42, 2 TD)
383, Roethlisberger, PIT at MIN 09/29 (36-51, 1 TD)
374, M. Ryan, ATL vs. STL 09/15 (33-43, 2 TD)
374, P. Manning, DEN vs. OAK 09/23 (32-37, 3 TD)
372, Dalton, CIN at DET 10/20 (24-34, 3 TD)
362, E. Manning, NYG vs. DEN 09/15 (28-49, 1 TD)
362, Flacco, BAL at DEN 09/05 (34-62, 2 TD)
358, Cutler, CHI vs. NOR 10/06 (24-33, 2 TD)
357, M. Stafford, DET vs. MIN 09/08 (28-43, 2 TD)
357, Brees, NOR vs. ATL 09/08 (26-35, 2 TD)
357, M. Stafford, DET vs. CIN 10/20 (28-51, 3 TD)
355, Schaub, HOU vs. SEA 09/29 (ot) (31-49, 2 TD)
354, P. Manning, DEN vs. WAS 10/27 (30-44, 4 TD)
352, S. Bradford, STL at ATL 09/15 (32-55, 3 TD)
347, Flacco, BAL at BUF 09/29 (25-50, 2 TD)
346, Schaub, HOU at SND 09/09 (34-45, 3 TD)
342, Flacco, BAL vs. GBY 10/13 (20-34, 2 TD)

Rushing

184, L. McCoy, PHL at WAS 09/09 (31 att., 1 TD)
175, D. Murray, DAL vs. STL 09/22 (26 att., 1 TD)
158, L. McCoy, PHL vs. KAN 09/19 (20 att., 1 TD)
154, Ellington, ARI vs. ATL 10/27 (15 att., 1 TD)
153, Gore, SNF at STL 09/26 (20 att., 1 TD)
149, B. Powell, NYJ vs. BUF 09/22 (27 att., 0 TD)
144, D. Martin, TAM vs. NOR 09/15 (29 att., 0 TD)
141, A. Foster, HOU vs. STL 10/13 (20 att., 0 TD)
140, A. Peterson, MIN vs. PIT 09/29 (23 att., 2 TD)
139, Re. Bush, DET vs. CHI 09/29 (18 att., 1 TD)
132, J. Starks, GBY vs. WAS 09/15 (20 att., 1 TD)
129, D. McFadden, OAK vs. JAX 09/15 (19 att., 0 TD)
120, Lacy, GBY at BAL 10/13 (23 att., 0 TD)
120, De. Williams, CAR vs. NYG 09/22 (23 att., 0 TD)
116, L. McCoy, PHL at TAM 10/13 (25 att., 0 TD)
112, Pryor, OAK at IND 09/08 (13 att., 0 TD)
110, Ry. Mathews, SND at JAX 10/20 (21 att., 1 TD)
108, J. Charles, KAN at TEN 10/06 (22 att., 1 TD)
107, A. Morris, WAS at GBY 09/15 (13 att., 0 TD)
106, Pryor, OAK vs. PIT 10/27 (9 att., 1 TD)
106, Jacobs, NYG at CHI 10/10 (22 att., 2 TD)
104, Ivory, NYJ vs. NWE 10/20 (ot) (34 att., 0 TD)
103, Spiller, BUF vs. CAR 09/15 (16 att., 0 TD)
103, Jo. Franklin, GBY at CIN 09/22 (13 att., 1 TD)
102, A. Foster, HOU vs. SEA 09/29 (ot) (27 att., 0 TD)
102, R. Wilson, SEA at IND 10/06 (13 att., 0 TD)
102, Ry. Mathews, SND vs. IND 10/14 (22 att., 0 TD)
102, Lynch, SEA at IND 10/06 (17 att., 0 TD)
101, Vereen, NWE at BUF 09/08 (14 att., 0 TD)
101, Gore, SNF vs. ARI 10/13 (25 att., 0 TD)
100, A. Peterson, MIN at CHI 09/15 (26 att., 0 TD)

Receiving

329, Cal. Johnson, DET vs. DAL 10/27 (14 rec., 1 TD)
218, Jeffery, CHI vs. NOR 10/06 (10 rec., 1 TD)
208, Boldin, SNF vs. GBY 09/08 (13 rec., 1 TD)
196, An. Brown, PIT vs. CHI 09/22 (9 rec., 2 TD)
193, De. Jackson, PHL vs. SND 09/15 (9 rec., 1 TD)
190, J. Blackmon, JAX at DEN 10/13 (14 rec., 0 TD)
182, Ju. Jones, ATL vs. STL 09/15 (11 rec., 1 TD)
180, Ve. Davis, SNF vs. ARI 10/13 (8 rec., 2 TD)
179, J. Graham, NOR at TAM 09/15 (10 rec., 1 TD)
178, Jam. Jones, GBY vs. WAS 09/15 (11 rec., 0 TD)
166, To. Smith, BAL at BUF 09/29 (5 rec., 1 TD)
164, Cruz, NYG at KAN 09/29 (10 rec., 1 TD)
162, A.. Green, CIN at CHI 09/08 (9 rec., 2 TD)
161, De. Thomas, DEN vs. BAL 09/05 (5 rec., 2 TD)
155, A.. Green, CIN at DET 10/20 (6 rec., 1 TD)
155, Cal. Johnson, DET vs. CIN 10/20 (9 rec., 2 TD)
154, S. Holmes, NYJ vs. BUF 09/22 (5 rec., 1 TD)
154, V. Jackson, TAM at NYJ 09/08 (7 rec., 0 TD)
151, Ter. Williams, DAL vs. DEN 10/06 (4 rec., 1 TD)
150, Decker, DEN at IND 10/20 (8 rec., 1 TD)
149, Gonzalez, ATL vs. NWE 09/29 (12 rec., 2 TD)
149, Douglas, ATL vs. TAM 10/20 (7 rec., 1 TD)
146, J. Gordon, CLE at MIN 09/22 (10 rec., 1 TD)
146, And. Johnson, HOU at SND 09/09 (12 rec., 0 TD)
143, Shorts III, JAX at SEA 09/22 (8 rec., 0 TD)
143, Garcon, WAS at GBY 09/15 (8 rec., 1 TD)
142, H. Nicks, NYG vs. PHL 10/06 (9 rec., 0 TD)

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Israel plans more than 1,500
new settlement homes
Josef Federman
The Associated Press

JERUSALEM — Israel
announced plans Wednesday to build more than
1,500 homes in Jewish
settlements in east Jerusalem and the West Bank,
dealing a setback to newly
relaunched peace efforts
hours after it had freed a
group of long-serving Palestinian prisoners.
The construction plans
drew angry condemnations from Palestinian officials, who accused Israel of
undermining the U.S.-led
talks by expanding settlements on the lands where
they hope to establish an
independent state. U.N.
chief Ban Ki-moon also
condemned the Israeli decision, and Washington
said it would not create a
“positive environment” for
the negotiations.
Israel had freed the 26
Palestinian prisoners as
part of a U.S.-brokered
agreement to restart the
talks. The construction
was meant to blunt anger
over the release of the
prisoners, all of whom had
been convicted of murder
in the deaths of Israelis.
Israel’s Interior Ministry said 1,500 apartments
would be built in Ramat
Shlomo, a large settlement in east Jerusalem,
the section of the holy city
claimed by the Palestinians
as their capital. It also announced plans for archaeology and tourism projects
near the Old City, home to
Jerusalem’s most sensitive
holy sites.
Israel first announced
the Ramat Shlomo plan in
2010 during a visit to Israel
by U.S. Vice President Joe
Biden, sparking a diplomatic rift with Washington
that took months to mend.
Wednesday’s decision is
the final approval needed,
and construction can begin
immediately, officials said.
Ofir Akunis, a lawmaker
from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud
Party, said construction
also had been approved for
several West Bank settlements.

“The building in Judea
and Samaria will continue
and be intensified,” said
Akunis, using the biblical
term for the West Bank.
In addition, he told parliament that Netanyahu
had given orders to “advance plans” for more than
2,000 homes in a longer
list of settlements across
the West Bank.
While these projects still
need additional bureaucratic approvals, they are
especially provocative because several of the settlements are deep inside the
West Bank and almost certainly would have to be dismantled as part of a peace
deal.
Israel captured east Jerusalem, along with the West
Bank and Gaza Strip, in
the 1967 Mideast war. The
Palestinians seek all three
areas for a future state.
The Palestinians, along
with virtually all of the
international community,
consider the settlements to
be illegal or illegitimate.
Nabil Abu Rdeneh, a
spokesman for Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas, condemned the settlement plans, saying they
were “destructive to the
peace efforts and will only
lead to more tensions.”
“It’s a message to the
international community
that Israel is a state that
doesn’t abide by international law and continues to
put obstacles in the way of
peace,” he said.
In Washington, State
Department spokeswoman
Jen Psaki said, “We do not
consider continued settlement activity or East Jerusalem construction to be
steps that create a positive
environment for the negotiations.”
U.N. spokesman Martin
Nesirky said the secretarygeneral “deplores” the Israeli announcement.
“Settlement activity is
contrary to international
law and constitutes an obstacle to peace,” Nesirky
said.
“Any measures that prejudge final status issues
will not be recognized by

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the international community.”
The previous round of
peace talks broke down in
late 2008 and remained frozen for nearly five years, in
large part because of Palestinian objections to settlement construction.
The Palestinians say
continued expansion of
settlements, now home to
more than 500,000 Israelis, makes it increasingly
difficult to divide the land
between Israel and a Palestinian state.
Under heavy U.S. pressure, the Palestinians
dropped a longstanding
demand for a settlement
freeze over the summer
and agreed to resume negotiations with the understanding that Israel would
slow construction.
As part of that arrangement, Israel agreed to
release 104 of the longestserving Palestinian prisoners, most of whom had
committed their crimes
before a landmark interim
peace deal was reached
in 1993. Wednesday’s release was the second of
four groups in the coming
months.
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators have been
meeting secretly since late
July. Under orders from
U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry to keep quiet,
they have said little about
the discussions, although
Palestinian officials say all
core issues are being discussed.
The officials, speaking
on condition of anonymity
because of Kerry’s orders,
said the talks are currently
focusing on Israeli security
demands and the contours
of future borders.
The future of the settlements would fit heavily
into those discussions. It
remains difficult to see
how the U.S. can bridge
the wide gaps between the
sides.
Netanyahu opposes a full
withdrawal from the West
Bank, saying Israel would
need to keep significant
portions of the territory
for security needs.

Page 4
Thursday, October 31, 2013

EU spying backlash threatens
billions in US trade
Juergen Baetz

The Associated Press

BRUSSELS — The backlash in Europe
over U.S. spying is threatening an agreement that generates tens of billions of
dollars in trans-Atlantic business every
year — and negotiations on another pact
worth many times more.
A growing number of European officials
are calling for the suspension of the “Safe
Harbor” agreement that lets U.S. companies process commercial and personal
data — sales, emails, photos — from customers in Europe. This little-known but
vital deal allows more than 4,200 American companies to do business in Europe,
including Internet giants like Apple,
Google, Facebook and Amazon.
Revelations of the extent of U.S. spying
on its European allies is also threatening
to undermine one of President Barack
Obama’s top trans-Atlantic goals: a sweeping free-trade agreement that would add
an estimated $138 billion (100 billion
euros) a year to each economy’s gross domestic product.
Top EU officials say the trust needed for
the negotiations has been shattered.
“For ambitious and complex negotiations to succeed, there needs to be trust
among the negotiating partners,” EU Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding said
Wednesday in a speech at Yale University.
At the very least, the Europeans are
expected to demand that the U.S. significantly strengthen its privacy laws to give
consumers much more control over how
companies use their personal data — and
extend those rights to European citizens,
maybe even giving them the right to sue
American companies in U.S. courts.
The Europeans had long been pressing these issues with the Americans. But
since former National Security Agency
contractor Edward Snowden began to
leak surprising details on the extent of
U.S. surveillance in Europe, the European
demands have grown teeth.
“I don’t think the U.S. government can
be convinced by arguments or outrage
alone, but by making it clear that American interests will suffer if this global surveillance is simply continued,” said Peter
Schaar, the head of Germany’s data protection watchdog.
One sanction the European Union could
slap on the U.S. would be to suspend the
Safe Harbor deal, which allows American
businesses to store and process their data
where they want. It aims to ensure that
European customers’ data are just as safe
as in Europe when handled in the U.S.
“But if you look at the U.S. legal environment, there is no adequate legal protection for EU citizens,” said the European Parliament’s leading data protection
lawmaker Jan Philipp Albrecht after talks
with U.S. officials in Washington.
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scheme supervised by the U.S. Federal
Trade Commission, U.S. companies gain
the right to move data about their business and consumers back and forth between the EU and the U.S. as needed.
Without it, U.S. firms would face either
a lengthy and complicated case-by-case
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He estimates that U.S. companies would
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Facebook declined to comment on what
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be reached.
Of course, any suspension would hurt
Europe as well, just as the 28-nation bloc
is emerging from a recession. Consumers and businesses would find themselves
without U.S.-based services from flightbooking websites to email providers.
Options available to the EU include
suspending or ending the agreement, or
demanding that the United States enact
more powerful data protection laws that
include substantial fines for companies
that don’t keep data safe.
Germany, Europe’s biggest economy,
said Wednesday that it also wants to see
changes in Safe Harbor.
“We share the opinion that the Safe Harbor agreement needs significant improvements,” Interior Ministry spokesman
Philipp Spauschus said.
U.S. Federal Trade Commission chief
Edith Ramirez said Safe Harbor has nothing to do with the surveillance scandal,
and urged Europeans not to damage what
she called a commercial agreement that
works well.
“It cannot be right … to conflate the distinct issues raised by the use of personal
data to advance private commercial interests and to protect national security,” she
said Monday in Brussels.
But the EU’s Reding made clear that the
status quo is not an option.
“The existing scheme has been criticized by European industry and questioned by European citizens: They say it
is little more than a patch providing a veil
of legitimacy for the U.S. firms using it,”
she said Tuesday in Washington.

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�Page 5

The Daily Sentinel

THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 31, 2013

SPORTS

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

As luck would have it
Sometimes, high school
games hinge on good fortune
Rusty Miller

The Associated Press

Sometimes a game hinges on, well,
luck.
Leipsic quarterback Zach Kuhlman
scored on a 1-yard dive with just over
a minute left as the Vikings upended
Division VII No. 8 McComb, 44-40.

The game-winning drive was kept
alive when Kuhlman lofted a pass to
receiver Garet Bardall. The ball went
through Bardall’s hands, bounced off
his facemask, popped into the air
and, with Bardall flat on his back,
fell directly into the receiver’s hands
for a 32-yard completion and a first
down at the 7. Kuhlman scored two
plays later.
“I’m running down the field and
I’m thinking it’s mine, and I don’t
know, I started thinking about drop-

ping it,” Bardall said. “I thought, ‘I
can’t drop this ball.’ So, it bounces off
my facemask and I fell on my back.
“It fell right in my hands. I’m happy I got it. Praise the Lord for that
one.”
Kuhlman had his own theory.
“It seems like in practice every
time I throw to him, he falls down,”
he said with a laugh. “At first, I saw
him wide open. It looked like maybe
See FORTUNE | 8

Alex Hawley | Civitas Media

Wahama’s Demetrius Serevicz (16) runs for yardage during
the White Falcons victory over Eastern at East Shade River
Stadium.

Point Pleasant,
Wahama, Hannan host
week 10 matchups
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Miller Falcons (2-7,
0-7) at Wahama White
Falcons (7-1, 6-1)
Last game: Wahama defeated South Gallia 46-28,
in Mercerville; Miller lost
to Belpre 39-0 in Hemlock.
Last meeting between
the teams: October 26,
2012 in Hemlock, Wahama
won 71-19.
Current
head-to-head
streak: Wahama has won
three straight over the Falcons.
MHS offense last week:
125 rushing yards, 51 passing yards
WHS offense last game:
409 rushing yards, 61 passing yards.
MHS offensive leaders
last week: QB Garrett Sinift 5-of-13, 51 yards, INT;
RB Lane Mulford 12 carries, 81 yards; WR Garrett
Bartley 2 receptions, 24
yards.
WHS offense leaders last
game: QB Hunter Bradley 2-of-7, 61 yards, TD;
RB Kane Roush 20 carries, 258 yards, 3TDs; WR
Kane Roush 1 reception,
59 yards, TD.
MHS defense last week:
350 rushing yards, 30 passing yards.
WHS defense last game:
271 rushing yards, 55 passing yards.
Notes: Following their
bye week the Wahama
White Falcons will look to
continue its roll when it
hosts Miller Friday night
at Bachtel Stadium. The
White Falcons have out-

gained opponents 3,361to-1,760 in eight games
this season. Senior runningback Kane Roush
surpassed the 1,000 yard
mark in last week’s game
and now sets at 1,136 rushing yards on 97 attempts
with 17 scores. Roush also
became the Wahama’s alltime leading rusher in last
week’s game. Colton Neal
has 742 rushing yards this
season on 94 carries with
12 touchdowns. Signal
caller Hunter Bradley has
thrown for 636 yards this
season on 27-of-57 passing with nine touchdowns
and three interceptions.
Bradley has also rushed for
223 yards and three scores
on 49 attempts. The White
Falcons have posted over
70 points in two straight
seasons against MHS.
Miller has lost three consecutive games and been
shut out three times this
season. The Falcons are led
by senior signal caller Garrett Sinift with 1,130 yards
passing and 561 yards
rushing this year. Sinift has
been picked off 11 times
this season, while throwing for six touchdowns and
running for six. The Purple
and Black will look for their
third win this season; they
haven’t won three games
in a season since 2003.
Miller’s two wins this
season is the most since
2010. Miller’s last trip to
Bachtel Stadium resulted
in a 74-8 Wahama victory.
This is Miller’s second trip
to Mason County this seaSee W.VA. | 6

OVP Sports Schedule
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
College Volleyball
U-Cumberlands at URG,
7 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 2
Football
Southern at Eastern,
7:30
Oak Glen at Point Pleasant, 1:30
Cross-country
OHSAA state meet at
Hebron, 11 a.m.
College Volleyball
Cumberland at URG, 11
a.m.
College CC
MSC Championships at
URG

Photos by Alex Hawley | Civitas Media

Southern senior Tyler Barton (11) dives into the end zone between South Gallia’s Landon Hutchinson (5) and Ethan
Spurlock (10) during the Tornadoes 34-6 victory in Mercerville.

Marauders, Eagles, Rebels at home
Blue Devils, Tornadoes,
Raiders hit the road
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Eastern Eagles (2-7, 2-5) at
Southern Tornadoes (7-2, 5-2)
Last Week: Eastern lost to Federal Hocking 20-14, in Tuppers
Plains; Southern lost to Trimble
42-14, in Glouster.
Last meeting between the
teams: October 27, 2012 Southern won 21-14 in Tuppers Plains.
Current head-to-head streak:
Southern has won one straight.
EHS offense last week: 109
rushing yards, 138 passing yards.
SHS offense last week: 54 rushing yards, 91 passing yards.
EHS offensive leaders last
week: QB Chase Cook 8-of-15,
138 yards, TD, 2INTs; RB Zack
Scowden 16 carries, 58 yards,
TD; WR Zack Scowden 2 receptions, 75 yards, TD.
SHS offensive leaders last week:
QB Tristen Wolfe 7-of-18, 91
yards, TD, INT; RB Tyler Barton
12 carries, 48 yards; WR Hunter
Johnson 4 receptions, 63 yards,
TD.
EHS defense last week: 177
rushing yards, 41 passing yards.
SHS defense last week: 203
rushing yards, 207 passing yards.
Notes: For the first time in
school history the Southern football team is headed to the postseason, but before the Tornadoes
embark on their playoff journey
they will have to face archrival
Eastern. The Eagles, which has
lost five straight games, will be
looking to end its season in style.
The Tornadoes were held to a
season-low 54 rushing yards last
week, the only time Southern
had been held under 150 rushing yards this season. Southern

GAHS senior Reid Eastman returns a kickoff during the Blue Devils season
opener against Athens at Memorial Field.

was held to 14 points for the third
time this season; matching a season-low. Southern’s defense has
shutout five teams this season,
and held opponents to an average
of 10.4 points per game. Over the
last five games the Eagles have
been outscored 140-to-51 and
have been outgained 1,366-to926. Last week SHS runningback
Tyler Barton was held out of the
endzone for the first time all season. Barton has rushed for 1,194
yards this season, just 97 yards
less than the entire EHS team.
Eastern holds a 9-3 record and
a 345-to-145 scoring advantage
over Southern since 2001. Southern snapped a three game losing
streak to the Eagles last year with
a 21-14 win at East Shade River
Stadium. That game ties the 2009
21-14 EHS victory as the closest game over the last 10 times
these teams have met. Eastern’s
27-0 victory over SHS in the 2004
season remains the lowest scoring game between these rivals in

the last 10 years. The last time
Eastern traveled to Southern was
2011, where Eastern took a 27-8
triumph. This is the first time
Eastern has played in November
since facing Trimble in the 2001
postseason. If SHS were to win
and Federal Hocking could upset Trimble then the Torndaoes,
White Falcons and Tomcats would
tie for the TVC Hocking title.
Gallia Academy
Blue Devils (5-4, 1-2) at Jackson Ironmen (5-4, 2-1)
Last Week: Gallia Academy
lost to Logan 35-21, in Gallipolis;
Jackson defeated McClain 27-0, in
Jackson.
Last meeting between the
teams: October 26, 2012 Gallia
Academy won 30-27 in Gallipolis.
Current head-to-head streak:
Gallia Academy has won one
straight.
GAHS offense last week: 102
See OHIO | 6

Cleveland Browns’ Sandusky pleads in DUI case
FARGO, N.D. (AP)
— Cleveland Browns executive Jon Sandusky has
pleaded guilty to refusing a
chemical test when he was
pulled over last month for
suspicion of drunken driving in Fargo.
Sandusky, 36, received a
suspended sentence Tuesday in Fargo Municipal
Court and was placed on
unsupervised
probation
that requires him to complete a chemical depen-

dency evaluation, defense
attorney Mark Friese said
Wednesday.
Sandusky will not have
to serve jail time if he complies with conditions of
probation, which includes
no further violations of the
law. The DUI charge was
dismissed.
“Jon is genuinely sorry
for the incident,” Friese
told The Associated Press.
“He takes full responsibility for his actions and he’s

glad to put this matter behind him.”
Court documents in the
case were not available
Wednesday.
Police say Sandusky, the
director of player personnel for the Browns, was
pulled over for making
an illegal turn in the early
morning hours of Oct. 8
near the city’s downtown.
Police say he crossed over
three lanes of traffic to

make the turn.
Officers
determined
Sandusky was driving under the influence after administering field sobriety
tests. Fargo Police Lt. Joel
Vettel said Sandusky told
officers he was coming
from “just down the road,”
but officers did not ask for
further details.
A Cleveland Browns
spokesman said Sandusky
has been disciplined by the

team, but offered no further details or comment.
Sandusky is the son of
former Penn State assistant coach Jerry Sandusky,
who is serving 30 to 60
years in prison for sexually
abusing 10 boys over 15
years.
Jon Sandusky is in his
fourth season as Cleveland’s director of player
personnel after spending
nine seasons with Phila-

delphia’s personnel department. He’s responsible for
the evaluation of college
prospects and NFL free
agents. He played safety
for Penn State from 199699.
The football team for
North Dakota State University, located in Fargo,
has a couple of players
touted as pro prospects.
The NDSU athletic department has declined to comment about Sandusky.

�Page 6 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Ohio
From Page 5
rushing yards, 136 passing yards.
JHS offense last week: 357
rushing yards, 90 passing yards.
GAHS offensive leaders last
week: QB Wade Jarrell 13-of-22,
136 yards, 2TDs; RB Wade Jarrell 14 carries, 40 yards, TD; WR
Logan Allison 6 receptions, 45
yards.
JHS offensive leaders last
week: QB Hunter Sexton 5-of-11,
90 yards, TD; RB Gabe Griffiths
10 carries, 89 yards, TD; WR
Johnny Farley 1 reception, 49
yards, TD.
GAHS defense last week: 265
rushing yards, 81 passing yards.
JHS defense last week: 94 rushing yards, 14 passing yards.
Notes: GAHS will look to rebound from its disappointing
past two games and defeat arch
rival Jackson. The Blue Devil defense has given up 27 points per
game this season, while scoring
39.1 points per game. The Last
time GAHS lost three games in
a row and three SEOAL games
in a row was 2009. Jackson committed 10 penalties in last week’s
shutout win. JHS senior Alan
Parana recorded the longest
touchdown in Ironmen history
last week with a 99-yard run. The
Blue Devils are on pace to give up
the most points per game since
2009. Jackson’s three-game winning streak over the Blue Devils
was snapped last season with
a 30-27 GAHS win at Memorial Field. GAHS is led by quarterback Wade Jarrell with 799
rushing yards and 1,841 passing
yards with 15 rushing touchdowns and 22 passing scores.
The Blue Devils are 42-37-5
against Jackson all-time, but the
Ironmen have a 1209-1170 scoring advantage. Last season JHS
lost back-to-back SEOAL games
for the first time since 2008. The
Blue Devils haven’t won in the
Apple City since 2004. That remains the lone win for the Blue
Devils at Alumni Stadium. This
is Gallia Academy’s first road
game since traveling to Portsmouth on October 11. This is
the third straight home game for
Jackson to finish the regular season. Both GAHS and Jackson are
mathematically eliminated from
playoff contention, marking the
first year since 2008 neither the
Ironmen or Blue Devils will not
play in Week 11. Jackson, which
is missing the postseason for the
second straight year, has secured
its 11th consecutive non-losing

season. Gallia Academy will be
playing for its’ third consecutive winning season. If Warren
were to defeat Logan and Jackson were to defeat Gallia Academy the Ironmen and Chiefs
would share the SEOAL crown.
Only two SEOAL teams are still
eligible for the postseason, Portsmouth and Warren, and both are
long shots. The 1997 season was
the last time the SEOAL wasn’t
represented in postseason play.
This will be the first time since
2005 the SEOAL champion
won’t be in the postseason.
Van Bulldogs (3-5) at South
Gallia Rebels (5-4, 4-4)
Last Week: South Gallia defeated Waterford 33-12, in Waterford; Van lost to Clay-Battelle
50-22, in Blacksville.
Last meeting between the
teams: First Meeting.
Current head-to-head streak:
N/A
VHS offense last week: 63
rushing yards, 232 passing yards.
SGHS offense last week: 227
rushing yards, 119 passing yards.
VHS offensive leaders last
week: QB Brandon Elswick 8-of13, 190 yards, 2TDs, INT; RB
Brandon Elswick 8 carries, 39
yards; WR Justin Lambert 5 receptions, 78 yards, 2TDs.
SGHS offensive leaders last
week: QB Ethan Spurlock 6-of11, 119 yards, 2TDs, INT; RB Jacob White 17 carries, 164 yards,
TD; WR Kane Hutchinson 1 reception, 46 yards.
VHS defense last week: N/A.
SGHS defense last week: 126
rushing yards, 100 yards.
Notes: With the playoff window still open the Rebels will
host their final regular season
game and hope for more. South
Gallia will need a win Friday
night over Van and a loss by
Fairfield Christian Academy on
Saturday in order to advance
into the post season for the second time in three seasons. South
Gallia’s win over Waterford last
week marked the first SGHS win
since defeating Federal Hocking
in week 6. SGHS runningback
Jacob White has now rushed for
over 100 yards in five consecutive games. In that span White
has seven rushing touchdowns
and 711 yards on 86 carries. The
Rebels have been outscored 229to-204 this season. Since defeating Hannan 40-6 on August 24,
2007 South Gallia is 0-9 against
teams from West Virginia. The
Bulldogs finished with a losing

record last season for the first
time since 2009. This is Van’s
first trip to Ohio since winning
back to back games in the Buckeye state in 2007. Van defeated
Eastern 21-14 in Tuppers Plains
in week four and St. John Central
58-12 in Week five that season.
The Bulldogs last game against
an Ohio school was September
26, 2008 when they defeated
visiting St. John Central 29-28.
This is Van’s second of three
consecutive road games to end
the season. A total of 105 miles
separate the two schools, making this Van’s longest road trip
of the season. Last week was the
longest road game of the year for
the Bulldogs, as they traveled
217 miles one way to face ClayBattelle. Since joining the TVC
Hocking in 2010 South Gallia is
3-5 in non conference games including the 2011 postseason loss
to Buckeye Central. The Bulldogs
are led by Brandon Elswick with
1,102 yards on 52-of-92 passing
with 15 touchdowns and four
interceptions to go along with
1,130 yards and 13 scores on 140
carries. The Bulldogs receiving
core is led by Justin Lambert
with 474 yards and 10 touchdowns on 31 receptions and Logan Crouse with 439 yards and
three touchdowns on 20 receptions. The Rebels haven’t won
both regular season non-conference games as a member of
the TVC Hocking. Last season’s
34-14 victory over Manchester
is the first time since 2003 that
SGHS ended the year on a victory. The Rebels won their final
regular season game in 2005 but
lost in the postseason.
Alexander Spartans
(1-8, 0-4) at Meigs
Marauders (6-3, 3-1)
Last Week: Meigs lost to Athens 61-13, in The Plains; Alexander lost to Wellston 20-0, in
Albany.
Last meeting between the
teams: October 26, 2012 Meigs
won 26-14 in Albany.
Current head-to-head streak:
Meigs has won one straight.
AHS offense last week: -20
rushing yards, 132 passing yards.
MHS offense last week: 130
rushing yards, 161 passing yards
AHS offensive leaders last
week: QB Brody McGrath 15of-36 132 yards, 3INTs; RB Joe
Barnes 3 carries, 5 yards; WR
Lukas Thompson 4 receptions,
45 yards.
MHS offensive leaders last

week: QB Cody Bartrum 8-of24, 104 yards, TD; RB Michael
Davis 18 carries, 64 yards; WR
Devon Cundiff 3 receptions, 62
yards.
AHS defense last week: 211
rushing yards, 103 passing yards.
MHS defense last week: 314
rushing yards, 218 passing yards.
Notes: The Marauders’ fourgame winning streak was
snapped last week when they
ran into Athens but the Maroon
and Gold will look to end the
regular season on a high note
with a win over Alexander. The
Spartans have lost eight consecutive games, following their
season opening win over Federal Hocking. AHS did not allow
a play longer than 30 yards in
last week’s loss to Wellston. The
Spartans were shutout last week
for the first time since October
21, 2011 when NYHS blanked
the Alexander 53-0. Meigs was
held to just 13 points last week,
the lowest the Maroon and Gold
have scored in a TVC Ohio contest since last season’s 54-8 loss
to NYHS. Since being inserted
into the lineup Cody Bartrum
has thrown for at least 100 yards
in every game. Michael Davis has
been the Marauders main offensive weapon this season gaining
1,071 total yards (663 rushing,
408 receiving). Davis is averaging 5.6 yards per carry and 14.6
yards per catch. Kaileb Sheets
has done it all for the Marauders this season, rushing for 399
yards on 79 attempts with three
scores, passing for 841 yards and
11 touchdowns, and catching
for 280 yards and three scores
on 15 receptions. The Marauders snapped a two season losing streak to the Spartans last
season. Meigs’ win last season
is the 30th all-time for the Maroon and Gold over Alexander.
The Spartans last trip to Meigs
resulted in a 14-0 victory in the
final game at Bob Roberts Field.
Alexander is 4-4 in Meigs County over the past 10 seasons. This
is the first home game for Meigs
since October 11. The Spartans
have been home three of the past
four weeks. Meigs is looking for
its best record and league record
since 2008.
River Valley
Raiders (1-8, 0-4) at
Fairland Dragons (6-3, 4-0)
Last Week: River Valley lost
to South Point 47-28, in South
Point; Fairland defeated Rock
Hill 27-0 in Proctorville.
Last meeting between the

teams: October 26, 2012 Fairland won 47-19 in Bidwell.
Current head-to-head streak:
Fairland has won 10 straight.
RVHS offense last week: -36
rushing yards, 297 passing yards.
FHS offense last week: 127
rushing yards, 235 passing yards.
RVHS offensive leaders last
week: QB Dayton Hardway 17-of35, 297 yards, 2TDs, 2INTs; RB
Justin Arrowood four carries, 12
yards; WR Austin Bradley eight
receptions, 123 yards.
FHS offensive leaders last
week: QB Chance Short 14-of-27,
127 yards, TD; RB Evan Maddox
13 carries, 99 yards, TD; WR
Derrick Willis 4 receptions, 36
yards.
RVHS defense last week: 236
rushing yards, 265 passing yards.
FHS defense last week: N/A.
Notes: The River Valley football team will attempt to pull off
the upset Friday night when the
Raiders travel to Proctorville to
take on Fairland. The Dragons
have already clinched a share of
the Ohio Valley Conference title
and a playoff spot. This is the
first playoff appearance for Fairland since 2003 when the Dragons lost to Martins Ferry 56-6 in
the opening round. The shutout
by the FHS defense last week
marks the only time the Dragons
have given up less than 20 points
this season. RVHS gave up 501
total yards last week, the most
since surrendering 567 yards to
Meigs in Week 3. RVHS senior
Austin Bradley surpassed 1,000
total yards for the season in last
week’s game and he now sets
at 1,055. Raiders quarterback
Dayton Hardway has thrown for
1,470 yards this season in five
games. The Raiders are 2-8 in
season finales over the last 10
seasons but 0-10 against Fairland. The Dragons have only
finished with a winning record
two of the last 10 seasons, 2009
and 2003. The Raiders last trip
to Proctorville resulted in a 31-7
Dragon victory. River Valley’s
last win over Fairland came on
October 15, 2002 by a count of
19-0 in Cheshire. Since then the
Dragons have outscored River
Valley by an average of 30.2
points per game. The 69 points
the Dragons posted in 2008 and
the 66 points they scored remain
the most points RVHS have given up in a game in the last 10
years. RVHS finishes its season
and its three game road trip with
this game, while this is the second of back-to-back home games
for Fairland.

W.Va.
From Page 5
son; the Falcons defeated
Hannan 26-20 in their first
trip. Wahama is currently
the eighth ranked team in
Class A. The White Falcons have outscored opponents 362-to-106 this
season.
Oak Glen
Golden Bears (0-8)
at Point Pleasant
Big Blacks (8-0)
Last game: Point Pleasant traveled to Shady
Spring; Oak Glen lost to
East Liverpool 27-0, in
New Manchester
Last meeting between

the teams: October 27,
2012: Point Pleasant won
50-6 at New Manchester.
Current head-to-head
streak: Point Pleasant has
won two straight.
OGHS offense last game:
85 rushing yards, 85 passing yards.
PPHS offense last week:
372 rushing yards, 61 passing yards.
OGHS offensive leaders
last game: QB Zac Porter
3-of-12, 85 yards, 3INTS;
RB David Campbell 17 carries, 68 yards; WR Nathan
Bebout 2 receptions, 69
yards.
PPHS offensive leaders
last week: QB Aden Yates

5-of-6, 61 yards, TD; RB
Chase Walton 12 carries,
209 yards, 4TDs; WR Levi
Russell 1 reception, 20
yards, TD.
OGHS defense last
game: 371 rushing yards,
81 passing yards.
PPHS defense last week:
106 rushing yards, 31 passing yards.
Notes: The Big Blacks
roll continues and as
they head into the final
two games of the regular season still unbeaten.
Last week was the fourth
time this season PPHS
surpassed 400 yards in
a game. Through eight
games Point Pleasant run-

THE DAILY TRIBUNE

ning duo Cody Mitchell
and Chase Walton each
have compiled over 1,000
total yards this season,
Mitchell with 951 rushing
yards and 183 receiving
yards, and Walton with 741
rushing yards and 342 receiving yards. Walton has
17 total touchdowns this
season and a Point Pleasant school record 39 career
scores, while Mitchell has
12 on the year. Aden Yates
has completed nearly 78
percent of his passes this
season. Following their bye
week the Golden Bears are
still looking for their first
win of the season. OGHS
hasn’t held a team to less

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than 27 points in any game
this season. Oak Glen has
been outscored 291-to-90
in eight games this season.
The Golden Bears have
played its last two games
under interm head coach
Jason Kekseo. The Golden
Bears threatened to score
just one time in the East
Liverpool game, but the
Golden Bears fumbled
one yard away from the
endzone. That game was
the third time Oak Glen
was shutout this season.
Prior to last week’s bye
week Oak Glen had three
consecutive home games.
PPHS is outscoring opponents 355-to-100 on the
season, while Oak Glen is
being outscored 291-to90. Oak Glen was 4-6 a
season ago and the teams
have no similar opponents
this season. Point Pleasant begins its season ending two-game home stand
with this contest. This is
the Big Blacks first Saturday game of the season; it
is Oak Glen’s second. Point
Pleasant is ranked second
and joins the Huntington
Highlanders as the lone
unbeaten teams in Class
AAA this season. PPHS
is currently rated third in
Class AAA behind Huntington and Martinsburg.
The Golden Bears are
ranked last in class AA this
season.
Montcalm Generals
(2-7) at Hannan
Wildcats (1-7)
Last Week: Hannan lost
to Midland Trail 45-12, in
Ashton; Montcalm defeated Tygarts Valley 33-6 in
Mill Creek.
Last meeting between
the teams: September 7,
2012: Montcalm won 6914 at Hannan
Current head-to-head
streak: Montcalm has won
5 straight.
MHS offense last week:
302 rushing yards, 29 passing yards.

HHS offense last week:
66 rushing yards, 46 passing yards.
MHS offensive leaders last week: QB Dakota
Lanter 2 completions, 29
yards; RB Jason Grose 16
carries, 160 yards, 3TDs.
HHS offensive leaders
last week: QB Adam Wilson 4-of-8, 46 yards, TD,
INT; RB Matthew Wallace
8 carries, 38 yards; WR
Matthew Wallace 3 receptions 38 yards, TD.
MHS defense last week:
N/A.
HHS defense last week:
372 rushing yards, 50 passing yards.
Notes: The Wildcats
will look to snap their sixgame losing skid in their
final Friday night game
of the year. Hannan will
host Hundred on Saturday afternoon next week
in its season finale. This
is Montcalm’s second of
two straight road games
and the final game of its
season. Last week MHS
snapped its seven-game
losing skid with a 33-6
win over Tygarts Valley.
That win was the first for
the Generals since week 1
when they shutout Hundred 48-0. Matthew Wallace accounted for 74 if the
Wildcats 112 total yards
last week but seven different players carried the
ball in the setback. The
Wildcat defense forced five
fumbles last week but was
only able to recover one.
Hannan’s offense fumbled
the ball five times in last
week’s game but recovered
all five. The last time the
Wildcats defeated the Generals was October 26, 2007
by a count of 12-6 in Ashton. Montcalm and Hannan have both defeated
Hundred this season, while
losing to both Twin Valley,
and Midland Trail. Montcalm is the 34th ranked
team in Class A, while
Hannan is 35th.

�Thursday, October 31, 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 County Commissioners of the County of Meigs
of Meigs County, Ohio passed
on the 25th 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 County of Meigs
for the purpose of Maintaining
and increasing Senior Citizens
Services.
Tax being a renewal of a tax of
1.1 mills at LEGALS
a rate not exceeding 1.1 mills for each one dollar of valuation, which amounts
to $0.11 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, 10/31

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 County Commissioners of the County of Meigs
of Meigs County, Ohio passed
on the 25th day of July, 2013,
there will beLEGALS
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 County of Meigs
for the purpose of Maintaining
and increasing Senior Citizens
Services.
Tax being a renewal of a tax of
1.1 mills at a rate not exceeding 1.1 mills for each one dollar of valuation, which amounts
to $0.11Miscellaneous
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, 10/31

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 County Commissioners of the County of Meigs
of Meigs County, Ohio passed
on the 25th 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 County of Meigs
for the purpose of Maintaining
and increasing Senior Citizens
Services.
Tax being a renewal of a tax of
1.1 mills at a rate not exceeding 1.1 mills for each one dollar of valuation, which amounts
to $0.11 for each one hundred
dollars of valuation, for 5
years.
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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 County Commissioners of the County of Meigs
of Meigs County, Ohio passed
on the 25th 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 County of Meigs
for the purpose of Maintaining
and increasing Senior Citizens
Services.
Tax being a renewal of a tax of
1.1 mills at a rate not exceeding 1.1 mills for each one dollar of valuation, which amounts
to $0.11 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, 10/31
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 the Southern Local School District of the Southern Local School District of Racine, Ohio passed on the 22nd
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 Southern
Local School District for the
purpose of Current Expenses.
Tax being a renewal of a tax of
4.0 mills at a rate not exceeding 4.0 mills for each one dollar of valuation, which amounts
to $0.40 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, 10/31
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 Village Council of the Village of Middleport of Middleport, Ohio passed on the 13th
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 Village of
Middleport for the purpose of
Fire Protection.
Tax being an additional of a
tax of 3.0 mills at a rate not exceeding 3.0 mills for each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to $0.30 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, 10/31
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 Village Council of the Village of Racine of Racine, Ohio
passed on the 11th 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 Village of Racine
for the purpose of Fire Protection.
Tax being a replacement of a
tax of 0.7 mill at a rate not exceeding 0.7 mill for each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to $0.07 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, 10/31

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 Village Council of the Village of Racine of Racine, Ohio
passed on the 11th 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 Village of Racine
for the purpose of Fire Protection.
Tax being a replacement of a
tax of 0.7 mill at a rate not exceeding 0.7 mill for each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to $0.07 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, 10/31
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 Village Council of the Village of Syracuse of Syracuse,
Ohio passed on the 11th 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 Village of Syracuse for the purpose of Police
Protection.
Tax being a renewal 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, 10/31
Legal Notices / Notices To Creditors
PUBLIC NOTICE:
Pursuant to WVC31 B-8-808,
notice is hereby given of the
voluntary dissolution of River
Cities Insurance, LLC in Point
Pleasant, West Virginia. Articles of Termination will be filed
with the WV Secretary of the
State, on or before 10/29/13.
Any questions or claims should
be directed to 921 Ridgewood
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV
25550. A claim against the
LLC will be barred, unless a
proceeding to enforce the
claim is commenced within five
years after publication of this
notice.10/31/13
Notices

Yard Sale
Garage Sale @ 3919 Addison
Pike (Gallipolis) Nov 1st - 8am
to 5pm Nov 2 - 8am to 12pm Sofa , coffee, end tables, 2
lamps, ball gloves,bats, skate
boards, bicycle and tools
Garage Sale Nov 1 &amp; 2 at the
Rodney Comm. Bldg. on State
Rt 850, 9-5 Lots of misc. tools,
Xmas gifts, Longaberger Baskets, Fenton Glass &amp; Collectibles, Guns &amp; Knives
Nov 1st,2nd,3rd and the 4th,
@ 2362 Neighborhood Rd.
9am - ?, Huge variety of items,
Name brand clothes, Carhartt
coats, Baby &amp; Kids toys, some
antiques, old dolls, Tires and
Aluminum rims, Pool table, Air
Hockey table, Refrigerator, To
much to list priced right.
RUMMAGE SALE: 2222 Jackson Ave, beside City National
Bank. Oct 31, Nov 1,2 8a-3p
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

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

Sodexo at The University of
Rio Grande is seekng a experince cook. Start rate $10.00
Also looking for Food Service
Worker with experiecnce.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

Taking Applications at all McClure Restaurant locations,
Middleport, Pomeroy, Gallipolis &amp; McArthur. Full &amp; Part time

Wanted
Domino's Pizza is now hiring
safe drivers. Apply in person at
these locations: Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, OH. Pt. Pleasant,
WV. Or nearest you.

Please apply in person at the
Cafeteria

Employment Wanted
In Home Care Giver seeking
employment - 16 yrs exp.
Great references. Gallipolis
Area Call 740-256-6360 or
606-371-4165
EDUCATION

Special Notices
REWARD - $200 for information on the return of a 550 Artic Cat 4-wheeler (Green) has
a wench on front, Was stolen
from the Racine Area by the
old Locks and Dam Friday
10/25/13.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

REAL ESTATE SALES

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
Yard Sale
INDOOR ESTATE SALE:
2300 Jefferson Ave, Point.
9am Nov 2,3. 6 Rooms of
Treasures!

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1 - 2 Bdrm apartments in the
Middleport area. some with
utilities paid, NO PETS - Deposit and References 740)9920165

�Page 8 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Fortune
From Page 5
a defensive back had fallen down.
And, of course, he fell down. I
thought for sure he dropped it
this time. But, he’s a senior and
he made a big play for us. He really came through for us.”
AIR RAID: Columbia’s Jay
Banyasz set a Lorain County record with seven TD passes in a
53-13 win over Brooklyn — he
was 24 for 36 for 390 yards with
no interceptions; and PandoraGilboa’s Alex Osborne caught
just five passes but four went for
TDs covering 12, 45, 23 and 26
yards in a 60-0 win over Arcadia.
LAND ROVERS: Sullivan
Black River’s Andrew Vaughn
ran for 344 yards and three TDs
on 18 carries and also caught a
57-yard scoring pass in a 51-20
win over Brookside; Sandusky
Perkins’ Dale Irby rushed for 276
yards and three TDs on 18 carries in 48-28 win at Oak Harbor;
in his last two games, Chillicothe
Southeastern’s Dezmond Perkins has 60 carries for 616 yards
Apartments/Townhouses
1 Bdrm Apartment for Rent in
the New Haven Area, NO
PETS, deposit &amp; references
call 740)992-0165
1BR, $375 month Downtown,
clean, renovated, newer appl,
lam floor, water sewer &amp; trash
incl. No pets. Application req.
727-237-6942
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2BR, downstairs Apt., in Pt Pl,
w/heat/AC/Kitchen Appliances,
W/D hook up. $350 Mo, $250
Dep. 804-677-8621
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
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

and five TDs; Kenton, one of the
more prolific passing teams in
the state, scored all four times
via the run in a 28-14 win over
Celina; and Minerva’s Dalton
Hartshorn ran for 266 yards and
two TDs on 27 carries in leading
the Lions past West Branch, 2114.
VERSATILE:
Sandusky’s
Mike Delk returned an interception a school-record 103 yards,
brought back a punt 80 yards for
a TD and caught a 40-yard TD
pass in a 27-13 win at Mansfield
Ontario.
NOTEWORTHY:
Huron
QB Cody Thompson, a Toledo
recruit, finished with 369 allpurpose yards and four TDs
in a 35-7 win at Milan Edison;
Chillicothe beat East Clinton
28-0 — and did not allow a point
at home this season — giving
coach Ron Hinton his 300th career victory; Mansfield Senior is
9-0 for the first time in 114 years
of playing high school football;
St. Marys Memorial and Van
Wert are both 0-9 as they face

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

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

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

DISH:
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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
READY FOR MY QUOTE
CABLE:
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Computer problems? Viruses,
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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
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
Beautiful Country Setting Very
Spacious 1 Bdrm cottage surrounded by 30 acres of woods
newly built, new
appliances,Hard wood
floors,Central Heat &amp; air,
Double shower for two, Must
see to appreciate $500/mo.
Call 740-645-5953 or 614-5957773
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY

ANIMALS

Pets
LOST Smoky Gray Himalayan Cat on Holcomb Hill (Off St
Rt 141) Please Call 446-8222
REWARD
AGRICULTURE

AUTOMOTIVE

AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

Houses For Rent
2 - Nice 3-Bdrm homes, one is
near Holzer Hospital Call 740441-5150 or 379-2923

Schmidt — met Friday.
Schmidt, an exchange student,
made all four of his extra points
in the Blue Devils’ 28-7 win.
FINALLY: West Salem Northwestern’s Matt Kohler made
a drop-kick extra point in the
fourth quarter to complete the
Huskies’ scoring in a 57-0 win at
Rittman on Friday.
“Kohler had tried a drop-kick
and missed it in a scrimmage
when we didn’t have a kicker,”
said Huskies assistant coach
Brian Sampsel, whose team improved to 8-1 and clinched a playoff spot. “We wanted to give him
another chance so we had a little
fun with it. So we called for our
‘Kohler Kick’ formation. The refs
weren’t sure what we were doing
when he lined up in punt formation — one of them asked if we
were going to punt.”
The Ohio High School Athletic Association website listed
the last drop-kick extra point by
Jeromesville Hillsdale’s Brian
Mollenshott in 1999.

Miscellaneous

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

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

hand, backup Dustin Rethman
left the game with a shoulder injury and third-string backup Cole
Griesdorn was injured in the JV
game earlier that week.
WR Troy Homan, who took
snaps as the emergency backup
in practice, threw a 31-yard TD
pass to Hunter Wilker with 8:43
left. Wilker later scored on a 45yard run to keep the Flyers unbeaten with a 14-3 win.
LONG WAIT: Columbus St.
Charles captured its first Central Catholic League title since
1962, the first year the league
crowned a champion, with a win
over Columbus Watterson. The
win marked the first time that
the Cardinals defeated old nemeses Watterson and Columbus
DeSales in the same season. St.
Charles snapped a 36-game losing streak to DeSales earlier in
the season.
TALL ORDER: The teams of
two of the tallest players in the
state — Salineville Southern’s
6-foot-8 Caleb Gotschall and Lisbon David Anderson’s 6-7 Jannik

Houses For Rent

Livestock

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

off this weekend; Sylvania Southview LB Myles Magnus — the
grandson of Green Bay Packers
great Jerry Kramer — recorded
14 tackles in the Cougars win
over Napoleon 32-0; and Cincinnati Christian, which has never
won more than three games in a
season and is coached by former
Cincinnati Bengal David Fulcher,
is 5-4 and still alive in the Division VII playoff race heading into
its game against St. Bernard.
LONG GAINERS: Johnny
Giesige had 66, 58 and 54-yard
TD runs, along with a 58-yard
TD pass to Noah Karcason, and
Kaleb Johns had a 55-yard rushing touchdown and a 55-yard
interception return for a score in
Hicksville’s 47-20 win over Holgate.
RELIEF PITCHER: Maria
Stein Marion Local, ranked No.
1 in Division VII, was forced to
use its emergency backup QB
when trailing Anna 3-0 going to
the fourth quarter. With starter
Adam Bertke out the last several
weeks with a broken bone in his

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

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7:30

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OCTOBER 31, 2013
8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Saturday Night Live
Sean Saves
Michael J Fox Parenthood "The M Word"
"Halloween Special" TV14
the World (N) "Golf" (N)
(N) TVPG
EntertainIt's the Great Pumpkin,
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PBS NewsHour TVG
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Amer. Masters "Woody Allen" Documents the life and times
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Wheel of
Fortune
Judge Judy

7 PM

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7:30

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(N)
"Go Extreme"

11 PM

11:30

The First 48
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Beyond Scared Straight (N)
Beyond Scared Straight
(6:00) ! Halloween 4: The
! ! Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers ('89,
! ! Halloween VI: The Curse of Michael Myers ('95, Hor)
Return of Michael Myers
Hor) Danielle Harris. TVM
Donald Pleasence. TV14
Super Squid The legendary
Man-Eating Super Croc TVPG Man-Eating Super Snake
World's Scariest Animal
Man-Eating Super Croc TVPG
kraken lurks in the dark.
TV14
Attacks TV14
(6:) 106&amp;Park The Game
The Soul Man The Soul Man ! ! The Family That Preys ('08, Com) Alfre Woodard. TV14
The Real Housewives of
Housewives Atlanta "He's
The Real Housewives of
Housewives Atlanta "Divas
Watch What
! The School
of Rock
Atlanta "Strip Is a Trip" TV14 Stalking, I'm Walking" TV14
Atlanta "Donktabulous" TV14 Into Icons" TV14
Happens (N)
Reba "For Sale, Cheap"
! !! Gremlins (1984, Comedy) Phoebe Cates, Hoyt Axton, Zach Galligan. An unusual pet spawns monsters. TVPG
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
AC360 Later
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The Colbert
The Daily
At Midnight
! !!! Ghostbusters ('84, Com) Sigourney Weaver, Bill Murray. Three
The Daily
The Colbert
parapsychologists open a ghost removal business in New York. TVPG
Report
Show
Show (N)
Report (N)
48 Hours.. "A Killer Defense" 48 Hours: Hard Evidence
48 Hours: Hard Evidence
48 Hours "Everything to Lose" 48 Hours: Hard Evidence
Liv and
A.N.T. Farm
Wander Over
Shake It Up
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Phineas and
Jessie
Good Luck
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Shake It Up
Maddie
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Ferb
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Eric &amp; Jessie Eric &amp; Jessie The Kardashians
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! !!! The Addams Family ('91, Com) Anjelica Huston. A ! !! Addams Family Values ('93, Com) Anjelica Huston.
The 700 Club TVPG
greedy lawyer tries to plunder the family's fortune. TVPG
The family must save Uncle Fester from a gold digger. TVPG
Chopped "Keep On Cook'n
Chopped "Fry, Fry Again" TVG Chopped "Yuzu Never Know"
Restaurant Divided "Gyros
Chopped "Mix and Mache"
On" TVG
TVG
and Goodies" (N) TVG
TVG
5:30 !
! ! Paranormal Activity 2 ('10, Hor) Micah Sloat. A family Anger
! !!!! Paranormal Activity ('09, Hor) Katie Featherston.
Paranormal ... sets up cameras to record attempted break-ins. TV14
Management A couple's new home is taken over by a demon. TV14
Reno. "Bad
Reno. "Bad to Cousins Undercover "The
Rehab "Front
Rehab Addict House
House
House
House
News Balcony" the Basement" Heart of the Neighborhood"
Porch Frenzy"
Hunters (N)
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Pawn Stars
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AmerDer "Up American
"Stuff It"
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(N)
(N)
in Flames"
Daredevils
Million Dollar Shoppers "Bye Project Runway: All Stars
Project Runway: All Stars
Million Dollar Shoppers "Be Million Dollar Shoppers "Bye
Bye Birkin"
"You Got Punked!"
"Bitten By the Fashion Bug"
Wary of Clients With Whips"
Bye Birkin"
Girl Code
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Sam &amp; Cat
Haunted Hath Deadtime St. Deadtime St. Full House
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Old Christine (:35) Christine
(6:30) ! !! Halloween 2 ('81, Hor) Jamie Lee Curtis. A
Impact Wrestling High-risk athletic entertainment from the
Chandler vs.
Countdown
doctor tries to locate Michael Myers before he kills. TVM
ring. TV14
Alvarez
! !! A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child
! !! Freddy vs. Jason ('03, Hor) Ken Kirzinger, Robert
! !! Halloween H2O:
('89, Hor) Robert Englund. TVM
Englund. Two killers return to terrorize local teenagers. TVM
Twenty Years Later TV14
Seinfeld "The Family Guy
Family Guy
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The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan TV14
Burning"
"Boys Do Cry" Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
(:15) Now Playing:
! !! Pit And The Pendulum ('61, Hor)
! !!! Haunted Palace ('63, Hor) Lon
(:15) ! !! Masque of the
"November"
Vincent Price. TVPG
Chaney Jr.. TVPG
Red Death ('89, Hor) TVMA
48 Hours.. "A Killer Defense" 48 Hours: Hard Evidence
48 Hours: Hard Evidence
48 Hours "Everything to Lose" 48 Hours: Hard Evidence
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! !!!! Scooby Doo and the Goblin King King of Hill
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('08, Child) Frank Welker. TVG
Time
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Show
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Ghost Adv. "Black Swan Inn" Ghost Adv. "Exorcist House"
Ghost Adventures "Transylvania Special" (N) TVPG
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The Andy
A. Griffith
The Andy
Griffith "Back Everybody
Ray "Cruising
Friends
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30 Rock
(:35) Queens
Griffith Show "The Rumor"
Griffith Show to Nature"
Loves Ray
With Marie"
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Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
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White Collar "One Last
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Stakeout" (N) TV14
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7 PM
(6:45) !

7:30

8 PM

8:30

Seduced and Abandoned ('13,
! Mama ('13,
Doc/Dra) Ryan Gosling. TVMA
(4:30) !
! !! Child's Play ('88, Hor) Catherine
Casino
Hicks. TVMA
(:20) ! !!! Mean Girls ('04, Com/Dra) Rachel McAdams,
Lindsay Lohan. A new student falls for the wrong guy. TV14

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

(:15) HBO First Hello Ladies
Look
"Pool Party"
Strike Back Origins TVMA
! Hunting Season ('13, Thril)
Beverly. TVMA
! !! The Perks of Being a Wallflower ('12, Dra) Logan
Lerman. TVPG

Hor) Jessica Chastain. TV14

11 PM

11:30

Cathouse: Ménage a Trois
TVMA
Carleigh
(:35) ! Wild
Women
Gigolos
Masters/ Sex
"Catherine"

�Thursday, October 31, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2013

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday,
Oct. 31, 2013:
This year you seem to be more
low-key than you have been in many
years. You will become much more of
an observer in the next 12 months, and
you’ll gain more fascinating information
about others and yourself as a result.
Some of you will become involved in
healing work of some kind, while others
might enjoy some extra solitude. If you
are single, you could meet someone
who could be emotionally unavailable.
Back out, before you become more
attached. If you are attached, the two
of you benefit from taking getaways
together — just the two of you. You fan
the flames of love. LIBRA reads you
cold.
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)
Defer to others. They will
do an even better job because of
this expression of confidence. Guide
an important matter that surrounds
a superior. You know what you are
doing, and it is obvious to others.
Tonight: A must appearance, though
you are likely to enjoy yourself.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You prefer to be rather
docile, unless a situation develops that
you feel demands a different response.
Your creativity comes forward in dealing with a long-term plan. Detach from
a critical issue that could trigger you.
Tonight: Go home and put out the
candy. You know the rest.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your imagination adds that
extra zest to your work and to whatever you touch. You could be irritated
beyond your normal limits. How you
express those feelings could create
more pain than is necessary. Walk in
someone else’s shoes. Tonight: Time
for Halloween fun.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Whether you’re putting out
some final Halloween decorations or
you’re just happy to get extra R and
R, it makes no difference; others could
be touchy at the last minute. If you
decide not to participate in an aspect
of Halloween, make it OK. Tonight:
Whatever knocks your socks off.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
You don’t need to go overboard in order to be noticed. You will
do that naturally — just be yourself.
Pressure or a desire for change might
cause a profound dissatisfaction or
a need for change. The unexpected
could throw your plans into chaos.

Tonight: Celebrate in your own way.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Try a different approach to
a heartfelt matter. You will be more
willing than you have been in the past
to let go and see where the chips may
fall. You can be controlling at times,
and you might be starting to see the
uselessness of that behavior. Tonight:
Treat yourself well.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Try to come to an understanding with someone who has
been difficult at best. You could feel
challenged by a personal or domestic
matter, though you might not be in
the mood to discuss the issue. Your
nerves could be fried. Indulge yourself.
Tonight: Everyone looks to you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
You might not be in sync with
those around you. Even if you wish
you were more playful, you can’t seem
to get past your tension and stress.
A loved one or a child might surprise
you, though your first reaction could
be shock. Tonight: If you want to avoid
everyone, do.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Look to your friends, and
make a decision about what would
be the best solution for a project. Just
because your friends feel OK with
something, it does not mean you have
to feel comfortable with it. Say “no” if
you can’t go along. Tonight: Get into
tricking or treating.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Keep reaching out to
someone at a distance. It doesn’t
matter what your reasoning might be
regarding an issue, you are ready to
move forward with a major change. It
might be health-related, or it might be
taking a different approach to your life.
Tonight: Look at the big picture.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
You will have your mind
on other matters — not on ghosts and
goblins. Still, you will go through all the
motions, and to many people, you will
seem present in the moment. An exciting matter could shake up the status
quo. Tonight: Get into the spirit of the
holiday.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Defer to others, and you
might learn a lot about someone else’s
thoughts. You will get much more
input, and you’ll gain each other’s
respect. It would not be surprising to
see both of you get into a brainstorming session in the near future. Tonight:
Try to make time for a talk.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Four Turns

Tracks on Tap

BALLOT Jeff Gordon’s win at
1 FIRST
Martinsville marked his 88th career

SPRINT CUP SERIES

triumph in the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series. Gordon sits third all-time in
races won, third in top 5s (306) and
fourth in top 10s (431) in 722 starts.

BOWTIE BRIGADE Jeff Gor2 THE
don’s Martinsville win captured the

2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Manufacturers’ Cup Championship
for Chevrolet. It marks the 11th
consecutive year and the 37th time
overall that Chevy has captured the
prestigious title in NASCAR’s premier series. In the 33 Cup Series
races run in 2013, Chevy drivers
have captured 14 victories.

MAN, SCHRADER Short3 GOOD
track legend and NASCAR veteran

Ken Schrader will retire from Cup
racing at season’s end. In 762 Cup
starts, Schrader has four victories,
all coming in his tenure at Hendrick
Motorsports.

NOT GONNA END WELL
4 IT’S
Kevin Harvick and Richard Chil-

dress Racing driver Ty Dillon engaged in some in-race aggression
during Saturday’s Truck Series race
in Martinsville. It prompted a member of Dillon’s crew to toss a
sledgehammer at Harvick’s truck
on pit road and some pointed comments from the longtime RCR employee who will leave the team at
season’s end. “Exactly the reason
why I’m leaving RCR,” Harvick
said. “Because you’ve got those
kids coming up, and they’ve got no
respect for what they do in this
sport and they’ve had everything
fed to them with a spoon.” He later
apologized for the comment.

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

DRIVER (WINS)
POINTS BEHIND
Matt Kenseth (7)
2294
—
Jimmie Johnson (5) 2294
—
Jeff Gordon (1)
2267
-27
Kevin Harvick (3)
2266
-28
Kyle Busch (4)
2258
-36
Clint Bowyer
2239
-55
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
2238
-56
Greg Biffle (1)
2236
-58
Kurt Busch
2219
-75
Carl Edwards (2)
2218
-76
Joey Logano (1)
2209
-85
Ryan Newman (1)
2188
-106
Kasey Kahne (2)
2170
-124

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

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

^ CHASE FOR THE SPRINT CUP ^

953
929
892
887
843
838
827

-1341
-1365
-1402
-1407
-1451
-1456
-1467

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

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

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

Jeff Gordon celebrates in Victory Lane following his win in the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 at Martinsville Speedway.

(ASP, Inc.)

Back in the
Martinsville Groove

NATIONWIDE SERIES

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

Gordon grabs win; Johnson, Kenseth tied atop standings

By MATT TALIAFERRO
Athlon Sports Racing Editor

The focus entering the
Goody’s Headache Relief Shot
500 on Sunday was on one
eight-time Martinsville winner.
That driver, Jimmie Johnson —
with a gaudy 5.3-place average
finish at the half-mile track entering the event — also happened to find himself in the
thick of a championship fight.
Adding to the title implications,
Johnson’s chief rival, Matt
Kenseth, had never claimed Martinsville as one of his favorite
stops. A decidedly mundane
15.8-place finish in 27 starts —
with zero wins — pretty much
told the tale.
But it’s funny how the motivation of a championship can render
past truths meaningless.
As the sun set over the small Virginia town on Sunday and fans
filed out of the historic facility, it
was another driver, Jeff Gordon,
who scored his eighth win in Martinsville and the 88th of his Hallof-Fame-career.
“Sometimes guys make (winning) look easy, and it’s not,” said
Gordon, who has one win in
2013. “I think what’s even
tougher is when you’re not getting the wins and just over time it
just starts to accumulate, and it’s
hard to keep the confidence in
what you’re doing — each individual on the team as well as to-

gether as a team.”
He also broke a 32-race winless
skid and moved to within 27
points of the championship leaders
— a deficit that still makes the
four-time champ an extreme longshot to win title No. 5.
“We’re all alive, but there are
two that are in it,” he said. “Our
job is to make it three. We have to
put pressure on those guys. We’ve
got to fight hard and see if we
can’t do something extraordinary.”
Meanwhile, Kenseth turned the
tables on Johnson, leading the
most laps (202) and running second to Johnson’s fifth, tying the
duo atop the standings in
NASCAR’s Chase for the Sprint
Cup with three races remaining.
“I felt like today was an opportunity,” said Kenseth, who lost the
lead to Gordon with 21 laps remaining. “I felt like today was an
opportunity to get a points lead
back — I honestly did.
“I couldn’t be much happier, but
I am disappointed I got beat there
at the end. I wish I could have
done something a little better. I
feel good about the weekend. I feel
like we can go do some racing
here in the next three weeks.”
Johnson, who entered the race
with a four-point lead in the standings, took the lead two laps into
the race and led for a total of 123
circuits. Aided by 17 caution periods, pit strategies shuffled the field
throughout the day. At times, each
championship leader found him-

self mired in the field, although
both battled back into the top 5.
“It’s been a great battle with the
20 (Kenseth),” Johnson said. “And
the 24 (Gordon) has clearly shown
he wants to be a part of this deal,
as well.
“It’s going to be a dogfight at the
end — the way I would want to go
racing for a championship, and I
know exactly what the fans want
to see.”
After assuming the points lead at
Talladega, this stop was billed as
the one where Johnson would put
the clamps on his sixth championship. Instead, Kenseth took the
fight to the No. 48 team. In a performance that mirrored his run at
New Hampshire Motor Speedway
early in the Chase — Kenseth
scored the win at a track that he’d
never won on before — the firstyear Joe Gibbs Racing driver
proved that this playoff chase will
not be settled prematurely.
“I really felt like if we came out
of here in the lead or tied or close
to it, I really felt like we got what
it takes to race in the last three
races,” Kenseth stated. “I feel like
when my team is at its best and we
do everything right, I feel like we
can race anybody at these next
three tracks (Texas, Phoenix,
Homestead).
“Anything can happen, but man,
we’re in it and we’re going to three
really good tracks, so hopefully we
can perform here the next three
weeks and have a race.”

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

DRIVER (WINS)
POINTS BEHIND
Matt Crafton (1)
707
—
James Buescher (2)
656
-51
Ty Dillon (1)
646
-61
Jeb Burton (1)
639
-68
Johnny Sauter (3)
625
-82
Ryan Blaney (1)
615
-92
Miguel Paludo
615
-92
Darrell Wallace Jr. (1) 614
-93
Brendan Gaughan
595
-112
Timothy Peters (2)
592
-115

Throttle Up/Throttle Down

MATT KENSETH The championship contender has a win and a runner-up finish at
what have historically been his two
weakest tracks in the Chase — New
Hampshire Motor Speedway and
Martinsville Speedway.
KASEY KAHNE Kahne’s Chase
continues to spiral downward.
The Hendrick driver has an average finish of 20.3 in the seven playoff races. His two most recent
showings are a 36th at Talladega and a
27th at Martinsville.
Compiled and written by Matt Taliaferro.
Follow Matt on Twitter: @MattTaliaferro.

Wallace earns historic NASCAR win
By MATT TALIAFERRO
Athlon Sports Racing Editor

Darrell Wallace Jr. is going to accomplish big things in his NASCAR
career but first things first, right?
The 20-year-old Wallace cleared
that first hurdle on Saturday, scoring his first NASCAR touring series
win in the Camping World Truck
Series at Martinsville Speedway. It
marked the second time in
NASCAR history and first since
1963 that an African-American
driver had won on the sport’s national level. Wendell Scott was victorious in Jacksonville, Fla.
“This means everything,” Wallace
said. “This is an emotional win for
me, especially doing it in Wendell
Scott’s backyard. I love coming
here to Martinsville — it’s always
good to me. It finally paid off. I
think it’s my third trip here. I love
coming here.”

Darrell Wallace Jr.

Scott, a native of Danville, Va.,
made 495 starts at what is now
NASCAR’s Cup level from 19611973. He is a NASCAR Hall of
Fame nominee.
Wallace is one of a very few drivers to come out of NASCAR’s
Driver for Diversity program who
seems on the verge of big things.
The other, Kyle Larson, will run a
full season at the Sprint Cup level

Race: AAA Texas 500
Track: Texas Motor Speedway
Location: Fort Worth, Texas
When: Sunday, Nov. 3
TV: ESPN (3:00 p.m. EST)
Layout: 1.5-mile quad-oval
Banking/Turns: 24 degrees
Banking/Straightaways: 5 degrees
2012 Winner: Jimmie Johnson
Crew Chief’s Take: “Although it’s another
cookie cutter track, Texas has a distinct
corner that is off camber as you come off
of Turn 2. The wall sneaks up on you very
quickly. The track itself is extremely fast,
and night racing there is a lot of fun. It has
some good racing, but it seems like Texas
is one of those tracks that is the most
sensitive of all the tracks we go to.
Whether it is the way the stands are built
or the way the wind comes across, it is
just a really aero-sensitive track. It has
grooves from the top to the bottom that
produce some great racing.”

next year.
Wallace scored six wins in
NASCAR’s K&amp;N Pro Series East
— akin to Major League Baseball’s
Single-A level — from 2010-12. In
his first season at the Truck Series
level, Wallace has driven his Kyle
Busch Motorsports truck to five top5 and 11 top-10 finishes in 19 races.
Wallace led a race-high 96 laps
en route to his victory but had to
survive a final restart with five
laps remaining.
Team owner Kyle Busch placed
three trucks in the top 15.
“This is certainly a monumental
day and hopefully one that he’ll remember for a long time and can
cherish,” Busch said. “The first
(win) is always the most important
one and it seems like they can just
come right after that pretty easily.”
Wallace currently sits eighth in the
Truck Series standings.

Race: WinStar World Casino 350
Track: Texas Motor Speedway
Date: Friday, Nov. 1
TV: FOX SPORTS 1 (8:30 p.m. EST)
2012 Winner: Johnny Sauter

Classic Moments
Texas Motor Speedway
Denny Hamlin was in the championship
fight of his life with Jimmie Johnson when
the Cup Series roared into Texas Motor
Speedway for the AAA Texas 500 in November 2010.
While Johnson ultimately prevailed in the
war, securing the fifth of five consecutive titles in NASCAR’s top series, Hamlin won a
decisive battle on an unforgettable Sunday
afternoon in the Lone Star State.
Looking to prove that he and his No. 11
Joe Gibbs Racing team would give Johnson’s No. 48 team all they could handle to
the bitter end, Hamlin did just that.
On a day when Johnson’s team struggled
so badly on pit road that crew chief Chad
Knaus took the extreme measure of replacing the entire crew mid-race with Jeff Gordon’s, Hamlin stormed to an impressive
victory and took over the points lead from
Johnson with just two races remaining.
While the points lead ultimately didn’t
last, Hamlin’s Texas triumph, paired with the
48 team’s woes, was enough to prompt
Hamlin’s crew chief, Mike Ford, to brag afterwards that the No. 11 team was better
than the No. 48 bunch.

Athlon Fantasy Stall
Looking at Checkers: Matt Kenseth
owns the best average finish of anyone on
the circuit at TMS (8.5) and has two wins.
Pretty Solid Pick: Surprise, surprise: Jimmie Johnson’s 9.1-place average (two
wins) is second to Kenseth.
Good Sleeper Pick: He hasn’t made much
noise in the Chase, but Carl Edwards’ three
Texas victories is best on tour.
Runs on Seven Cylinders: Brad Keselowski has only two top 10s in 10 starts
in Fort Worth.
Insider Tip: You’ll find that drivers are
giving Kenseth and Johnson more
room to operate as the Chase winds
down. Expect the two to be top 5 at
each event from here on out.

Photos by ASP, Inc.

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