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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Read advice
from Dr. Joyce
Brothers .... Page 5

Mostly sunny.
High near 79. Low
around 56...Page 2

Meigs CC
invitational
....Page 6

Effie O. McManus, 85
Willa J. Petrie, 86
50 cents daily

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2012

Vol. 62, No. 167

Southern board approves agenda items
Sarah Hawley

shawley@heartlandpublications.com

RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education approved
several agenda items during the
recent meeting.
Teachers approved for the after
school program at Southern Elementary were, first grade, Patti
Struble and Misty Rogers; second grade, Ashli Thompson and
Kaylin Spradling; third grade,
Beth Bay and Carolyn Robinson;
fourth grade, Kaylin Spradling
and Lori Sharp; fifth grade, Patty

Cook; sixth grade, Jenny Manuel;
seventh/eighth grade, Megan Edwards, Joe Cornell and Kevin Vernon; intervention, Evelyn Stanley.
Teachers approved for the after
school program at the high school
were, social studies, Ryan Lemley; English, Don Dudding; math,
Alicia Ngo; math, Ryan Davis; science, Ann Ohlinger; science, Koste
ElDabaja; intervention, Marsha
Weaver.
After school program enrichment activity leaders approved
for the high school were, fitness,
Daniel Otto; video/gaming, Kevin

Vernon; film making, Don Dudding; board gaming, Ryan Davis;
scrapbooking, Ashli Thompson;
knitting, Ann Ohlinger; cooking,
Diane Dunfee and Marsha Weaver.
Bus drivers approved for the
after school program were Kathy
Miller, Melissa Reedy, Shari Cogar
and Cheryl Smith.
Substitute teachers approved
for the 2012-13 school year, pending completion of all requirements,
are, Greg Bailey, Peggy Bailey,
Luke Bentley, Thomas Brady,
Ellyn Burns, Ladona Stephens,
Christopher Carroll, Jeff Dolan,

Cheryl Facemyer, Natalie Greene,
Roberta Harbour, Amanda Tope,
Rachel Kilbarger, Warren Lukens,
Lester Manuel, David Maxson, Joseph McCall, Jason Williams, Jarod Moore, Tiffay Qualls, Edward
Safranek, Samantha Smetana, and
Sarah Smith.
Classified substitutes approved
were Ellyn Burns, William Cooperrider, Sharon Gantt, Claudia
Guffey, Debra Hill, and Amanda
Schwarzel.
Dolly Wolfe, Sharon Birch, and
Pam Foreman were hired as day
tutors for 90 days at a rate of $70

per day.
Lisa Schenkelberg was hired as
a tutor for a home bound student
at a rate of $23 per hours for five
hours per week during the 2012-13
school year.
Sara Gilbride was hired as a personal care aide for a student at Carleton Schools as needed at a rate of
$9 per hour.
Supplemental contracts were
approved with Chris Kamerer, reserve girls basketball; Mindy Patterson, freshman class advisor; Joe
See AGENDA ‌| 3

Police shooting case
headed to grand jury
Amber Gillenwater

mdtnews@mydailytribune.com

GALLIPOLIS — Charges against a man accused of shooting and severely wounding a Gallipolis Police Officer last
week have been bound over to the Common Pleas Court of
Gallia County and will be heard by a grand jury.
During a hearing on Tuesday in the Gallipolis Municipal
Court, Judge Margaret Evans bound over the case against
Cole C. Miller, 28, Gallipolis, after determining that there
was probable cause to believe that the defendant committed
the charges against him — attempted aggravated murder
and felonious assault.
A charge of aggravated burglary was dismissed by the
State of Ohio prior to the hearing.
Miller was arrested during the early morning hours of
September 24 after he allegedly opened fire on several police officers that had arrived at his residence on McCormick
Road.
During the incident, the defendant reportedly shot GalSee CASE ‌| 3

Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Liz King and Robyn Porter select a variety of plants to take home from the annual fall exchange of Meigs County Master
Gardeners

Plant exchange always popular
Charlene Hoeflich

Sarah Hawley

shawley@heartlandpublications.com

MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport
Community
Association will be hosting
two events in the coming
weeks.
Upcoming events include
the annual fall bear and basket games and the Pumpkinport Fall Festival.
The fall bear and basket
games will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 9 at Middleport
Village Hall. Prizes include
Vera Bradley purses, Longaberger baskets and Ohio
River Bears.
Food will be served by the
community association.
In addition to the games,

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

MIDDLEPORT — Well-filled tables of all
sorts of flowers, grasses and bulbs, free for
the taking greeted those attending the annual
fall plant exchange held at the shelter house
in Diles Park Wednesday afternoon.
Plant exchanges here are held one in the
spring and the other in the fall by the Meigs
County Master Gardeners assisted by Hal
Kneen, Athens-Meigs Extension educator.
The exchanges are where you bring plants
from home and exchange them for something
different. Or if you have no plants to bring
you are still welcome to take some away.
Through the practice of sharing plants and
listening to educational tips from Kneen and
the master gardeners, many have come to enjoy the hobby of gardening.
At Wednesday’s session, Kneen answered
questions about flowers — the best locations
for planting them, when to do it, the space
involved and whether they can be grown in
a pot instead of being planted in the ground.

Community Association
plans upcoming events

Hal Kneen, Athens-Meigs Extension Educator, gives information on
planting fall and winter flowers, like these yellow violas.

Queen of the Mississippi stops by
Nathan Jeffers

njeffers@heartlandpublications.com

Nathan Jeffers | Daily Sentinel

Pictured it the Queen of the Mississippi docked at Point Pleasant Riverfront Park.

POINT PLEASANT — Point Pleasant’s Riverfront Park was the site of
another rendezvous with royalty on
the Ohio River Tuesday, with a visit
from the Queen of the Mississippi.
Described as a modern paddlewheeler, it was reported this was the
Queen of Mississippi’s first stop here
in Point Pleasant and she will be back
for another visit on Tuesday, Oct. 9.
While docked on Tuesday, her passengers were also able to visit various
tourism spots around Point Pleasant.
Owned by American Cruise Lines,
the Queen of the Mississippi is the newest addition to their line of riverboats,
being built in 2012 with a passenger
capacity of 150. It was also stated the
boat has the most spacious staterooms
and more space per passenger than
See QUEEN |‌ 3

an early bird drawing, special games, door prizes and
raffles will take place.
Tickets are available at
the door or by calling 9925877 or 992-1121. Doors
open at 5 p.m. and games
begin at 6 p.m.
The annual Pumpkinport
Family Fall Festival will take
place on Saturday, Oct. 20
at the Family Life Center in
Middleport.The event will
take place from 1-4 p.m. and
is free to the public.
Face painting, games,
large and small bounce
houses, an inflatable slide,
activities, food and drawings will take place.
Trix the Clown will perform at 1:30 p.m. and 3 p.m.

World Communion
Service set for Sunday
Staff Report

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY — A world communion service
will be held at 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 7, for all
Christians in the area who want to join together in
Communion.
Pastor Brian Dunham of the Ministerial Association, announced the service where Christians
gather together to remember Jesus’ death and the
forgiveness of sins by accepting Him.
“We believe this is a great opportunity to declare to the world that ‘all of them may be one,’”
said Dunham, referring to John 17:21.
Plans call for Christians to meet together at the
Pomeroy amphitheater on the river. In the event
of inclement weather the service will be moved
to the St. Paul Lutheran Church at the corner of
Sycamore and East Second Street in Pomeroy.
The service will include special music, congregational singing, preaching by Father Tom Fehr of
Grace Episcopal Church, Pomeroy, and partaking
of communion with the option of grape juice or
wine.
The churches in Pomeroy will provide a light
dinner following the service at St. Paul’s Lutheran
Church.

�Thursday, October 4, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Community Calendar
Thursday, Oct. 4
CHESTER — The Chester Shade
Historical Association will meet at 7
p.m. at the Academy.
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will meet at 7 p.m., with a potluck
at 6 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 5
POMEROY — Meigs County PERI
Chapter 74 will meet at 1 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community Center. Guest
Speaker will be Cathy Ash from Buckeye Hills Area Agency on Aging.
Saturday, Oct. 6
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange
#778 and Star Junior Grange #878 will
meet in regular session with potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting at 7:30 p.m. Final plans for Chicken BBQ and meet the Candidates on
October 7 will be made.
Sunday, Oct. 7
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange
#778 will host a Chicken BBQ and
Meet the Candidates with serving
from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. Meet the

Candidates will begin at 12:45 p.m.
The public is invited and urged to attend.
MASON — 680/Slug Match, noon,
at the Broad Run Gun Club. Meeting
before the match.
Monday, Oct. 8
POMEROY — The Big Bend Farm
Antiques Club will hold their regular
meeting at 7:30 p.m. The meeting will
be held at a NEW location, the Meigs
Senior Center.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Republican Executive Committee will
hold their regular meeting at 7:30
p.m. at the Republican Headquarter
on Second Street. The upcoming bean
dinner will be discussed.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will be closed in
observance of Columbus Day. Normal
hours of operation will resume at 8
a.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 9
POMEROY — The Meigs County
TB Clinic will be closed for Columbus
Day.
Tuesday, Oct. 9
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford

For the Record

Township Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at
the town hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer Board will
meet at 5 p.m. at the TPRSD office.
CHESTER — The Chester Township Trustees will hold their regular
meeting at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
Thursday, Oct. 11
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society invites
members and friends to attend its
137th annual meeting on Thursday
evening, October 11, beginning at
6 p.m. with a potluck dinner in the
Howard and Geneva Nolan Museum
Annex. Meat will be furnished by the
society. Bob Graham will share a video
of Meigs County photographs. A business meeting and election of trustees
will be held.
Birthdays
POMEROY — Betty Roberts Butcher of 35698 Long Hollow Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 will celebrate her
87th birthday on Oct. 9. Cards may be
sent to her at that address.

Meigs County Briefs
Overbrook fall festival
MIDDLEPORT — The
annual October Festival
of the Overbrook Rehab
Center will be held from
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday.
There will be crafts, entertainment and games and
food will be served free to
the public from 11 a.m. to
3 p.m. In conjunction with
the festival, the 107th birthday of resident Kathleen
Scott will be observed.
Park Dedication
SYRACUSE — A dedication program for the Syracuse roadside park will be
held at 10 a.m. on Saturday,
Oct. 13. Refreshments will
be served following the
brief ceremony.
Meigs County
Life Chain
POMEROY — Beginning
at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 7,
there will be formed a Meigs
County Life Chain at the
old Meigs High School football field on Main Street.
Signs reading “Adoption,
the Loving Option,” “Jesus Forgives and Heals”,
“Lord, Forgive Us and Our
Nation,” and “Pray to End

Abortion,” will be available to participants. That
event will end at 4 p.m. All
churches and people of the
area are invited to take part.

bers of the Society who are
residents of Meigs County
at least seven days before
the annual election of directors is held.

Fair Board Election
POMEROY —Election
of residents to serve on the
Meigs County Fair Board
will be held from 5 to 9
p.m. on Monday, Nov. 5, in
the Coonhunters’ building
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Incumbents running for
another three year term are
Buddy Ervin, Ron Hensley,
Danny Davis, Jane Fitch,
Brian Windon and Ed Holter. Only residents of Meigs
County holding membership tickets for at least 15
days before the date of election may vote. Tickets are
on sale at the Meigs County Extension Office from
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 Monday
through Friday.
Members of the Meigs
County Agricultural Society
must declare their candidacy for the office of Director of the Society by filing
with the Society’s Secretary
Debbie Watson, a petition
signed by 10 or more mem-

Octoberfest
MIDDLEPORT — The
annual October Festival of
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center will be held from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday,
Oct. 6. As usual there will
be crafts, entertainment
and games throughout the
day, several vendors will
be hand, and food will be
served free to the public
from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. In
conjunction with the festival, a reception will be held
honoring Kathleen Scott, a
longtime Overbrook resident, who that day will be
observing her 107th birthday. Mrs. Scott, a retired
school teacher, is a member
of the Forest Run Church
where she was pianist and
active with the church quilters for many years.
Childhood
immunization clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct a

Childhood and Adolescent
Immunization Clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.
on Tuesday at the Meigs
County Health Department. Please bring shot
record and medical card
or commercial insurance if
applicable. Children must
be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. A
donation is appreciated,
but not required.
Flu Shots
now available
POMEROY — Flue
shots will be available
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3
p.m. on Tuesdays at the
Meigs County Health Department. Shots are available for ages six months
and up. Some insurances
are accepted. For more
information contact the
Meigs County Health Department at 992-6626.
Zumba Classes
POMEROY — Zumba
classes will be held at 6:30
p.m. on Thursdays at the
Kountry Resort Campground. For more information contact Devin Soulsby
at 992-6728 or 591-4407.

Meigs County Church Events
Homecoming
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock
Grove Christian Church will host its
Homecoming on Sunday, Oct. 7. Sunday School classes will be held at 9:30
a.m., followed by worship services at 10
a.m. with Pastor Diana Carsey Kinder.
A potluck lunch will be held at 12:30
p.m., and an afternoon worship service
at 2 p.m. Music will be provided by The
Sunderman Family and the Hemlock
Grove Praise and Worship Team.

from Nebo, W.Va., and Truly Saved
from Racine, Ohio.

Gospel Sing
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse
Community Church, Second Street,
in Syracuse, will host a gospel sing
at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 6. Singers will include The Tanner Boys

Yard Sale
TUPPERS PLAINS — Tuppers
Plains St. Paul U.M. Church will have a
huge yard sale on Friday, Oct. 12 from
9 a.m.-7 p.m. and Sat. Oct. 13, from 9
a.m.-2 p.m.

Benefit Sale
RUTLAND — A benefit yard sale
for the Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
Ladies Group will be held from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m., Oct. 4-6 at the home of Bea
Wood, 35707 Loop Road, Rutland. Proceeds will help to purchase a handicap
van for the church. For information call
(740) 742-2743.

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Benefit Sing
MIDDLEPORT — A benefit sing
for Fall Harvest Old Bethel Church
will be held at 6 p.m. on Saturday,
Oct. 6 at the church located one mile
south of Middleport on Ohio 7. Singers will include Sandra Wise, Everett
Grant, Jerry and Diana Frederick,
Brian and Family Connections, and
Angela Gibson.
Revival
POMEROY — Hysell Run Community Church on Hysell Run Road will
host a revival Oct. 15-17. The revival
will be held at 7 p.m. nightly. Ministering will be Michael Pangio of Abundant
Life Ministries. Special singing will be
featured each night.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 79.
Southwest wind 5 to 11 mph.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low
around 56. Southwest wind 5 to 7 mph becoming
calm after midnight.
Friday: A slight chance of showers after 2 p.m.
Partly sunny, with a high near 73. Southwest wind
3 to 6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Friday Night: A chance of showers. Cloudy,
with a low around 48. Chance of precipitation is
40 percent. New precipitation amounts of less
than a tenth of an inch possible.
Saturday: A chance of showers. Cloudy, with
a high near 55. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Saturday Night: Rain likely. Cloudy, with a low
around 39. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
Sunday: Rain likely. Mostly cloudy, with a high
near 54. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around
36.
Columbus Day: Sunny, with a high near 58.
Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around
37.
Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 63.

Land Transfers
POMEROY — The Meigs County Recorder’s Office recently
recorded the following land transfers: Richard A. Hagerty, Dorothy Hagerty to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia;
Russell J. Seymour, Cynthia K. Seymour to Russell J. Seymour,
deed, Meigs/Langsville; Lea M. Gow, Lea M. Hoback, Aaron
Hoback to Cynthia Seymour, deed, Sutton; Anthony W. Eblin,
Patricia A. Eblin to Bernard G. Sheets, Jennifer Jean Sheets,
deed, Rutland; Jane Ann Hill, Donna Rae Wolfe to Troy T. manuel, Shelley B. Manuel, deed, Racine Village; Charles F. Chancey,
Karah Chancey to Charles Sauters, Diana Sauters, deed, Salisbury; Charles E. Clark, Margaret E. Clark to Crystal Atkinson,
deed, Orange; Dale L. McCain, Amy J. McCain to Ronald L.
Clonch, Debra J. Clonch, deed, Chester;
Garold Brett Evans, deceased, Gary B. Evans, deceased, to
Debra K. Evans, affidavit, Letart; Mary Jane Wise, Roscoe C.
Wise, Kathleen C. Scott to Eldridge Lee Gross, deed, Sutton;
Charles R. Kinney, Glenda R. Kinney to Timothy Bissell, sheriff
deed, Meigs; Ramona B. MacGregor, Clark A. MacGregor to
Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; Sherry Gail Davis,
deceased, to Harold Davis, affidavit, Rutland; Harold Davis to
Emily Smith, deed, Rutland; Home National Bank to Amanda
Bizub Franzmann, deed, Chester; Gary B. Evans, deceased,
to Debra K. Evans, certificate of transfer, Sutton; McDonalds
Corporation to Village of Pomeroy, easement, Pomeroy Village;
Kimberly K. Eads, Kent E. Eads to Kent E. Eads, Kimberly K.
Eads, deed, Salem;
Rebecca Tate Zurcher, John Zurcher to Joseph J. Howard,
deed, Salisbury; David Neigler, Tina D. Neigler to Brian K. Harris, Paula J. Harris, deed, Racine Village/Sutton; Wilcox Land
Finance Company to Allen R. Casto II, deed, Bedford; Manning
K. Roush, Yvonne K. Richardson, Rachel Gorman Stout, Mary
Kathryn Roush to Penny M. Cochran, Sutton; Charles Weber,
Judith A Weber, Keith R. Weber, Marcella F. Weber to Timothy
A. Bissell, deed, Orange; Opal Carol Conger, David W. Hudson
to Paul D. Anthony, deed, Pomeroy Village; Jesse P. and Eva M.
Blount, Eva M. Blount to James M. Hill, Michelle L. Hill, deed,
Sutton;
Charles Otis Noland Jr., Charles O. Noland, Lisa K. Noland to Carolyn A. Bissell, Douglas M. Bissell, sheriff deed,
Bedford; Carol Walton Manley, deceased, to Carol W. Manley, affidavit, Middleport Village; Mary K. Yost to Nancy
K. Circle, deed, Pomeroy/Salisbury/Sutton; Mary K. Yost
to Martha Bartrug, deed, Sutton; Mary K. Yost to Nancy
Circle, Susan A. Sheppard, deed, Lebanon; Mary K. Yost to
Nancy Circle, Martha Bartrug, deed, Syracuse; Della Carolyn
Smith, deceased, Grace Episcopal Church to Vestry of the
Grace Episcopal, certificate of transfer, Pomeroy Village; Jeffwin Properties to Gary D. Thomas II, deed, Chester; Jelm
Enterprises LLC to Marilyn Sue Rice, deed, Sutton;
Gregory Osburn, Shannon Osburn, Jeffery Stevenson, Tonnie
Stevenson to Jeffery Stevenson, Tonnie Stevenson, deed, Olive;
Gregory Osburn, Shannon Osburn, Jeffery Stevenson, Tonnie
Stevenson to Jeffery Stevenson, Tonnie Stevenson, deed, Olive;
Mary F. Roush, deceased, to Arthur Dillon Roush, Pamala May
Wise, Pamela May Wise, Michael Oris Roush, affidavit, Sutton;
Ted L. Dexter to Three C Properties, deed, Middleport Village;
Lloyd D. and Cathy J. Moore to Lloyd D. Moore, Cathy J. Moore,
deed, Syracuse Village; Lloyd D. Moore, Cathy J. Moore to Gary
R. Moore, Peggy Moore, deed, Syracuse Village; Charles Bailey to Lena Bailey, deed, Orange; Fannie Mae, Federal National
Mortgage to Jimmie L. Young, deed, Salisbury/Pomeroy; Donald Rife, Mary C. Rife to Michael T. Evans, Alvin Troy Rogers,
deed, Salem; Michael T. Evans, Alvin Troy Rogers, Courtney
Rogers, to Donald Rife, Mary C. Rife, deed, Salem;
Pullins Excavating Incorporated to Windstream KDL Inc.,
easement, Salisbury; Pullins Excavating Incorporated to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Salisbury; Wanda Williams to
Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Salisbury; Pullins Excavating
Incorporated to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Salisbury;
Pullins Excavating Incorporated to Windstream KDL Inc.,
easement, Salisbury; John David Gillogly, Jacqueline Gillogy to
Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; John David Gillogly, Jacqueline Gillogy to Windstream KDL Inc., easement,
Columbia; Thomas W. Parfitt to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; Douglas Lee Whitlach to Windstream KDL
Inc., easement, Columbia; Ronnie G. Reeve to Windstream
KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; Ronnie G. Reeve to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; Ronnie G. Reeve to
Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; Harold R. Jordan
to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia;
Mary M. Wingo, Dennis R. Wingo to Windstream KDL Inc.,
easement, Columbia; WIlliam H. Smith, Darlene L. Smith to
Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; Dianna S. Fisher
to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; Jessica L. Fox
to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; Kimberly Perry
to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; John David Gillogy, Jacqualine Gillogy to Windstream KDL Inc., easement,
Columbia; Kimberly Perry to Windstream KDL Inc., easement,
Columbia; Donald Keith McLead, Sharon S. McLead to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Bedford; Mary A. Kelley to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Salisbury;Earl H. Gilkey, Nancy E.
Gilkey to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Salisbury; Emory
L. O’Bryant, Joyce L. O’Bryant to Windstream KDL Inc., easement, Salisbury; Valerie L. McClintock to Windstream KDL
Inc., easement, Salisbury; Valerie L. McClintock to Windstream
KDL Inc., easement, Salisbury; Cheryl C. Wright to Windstream
KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; Rosalie Story to Windstream
KDL Inc., easement, Bedford;
Alta Cottrell, deceased, to Michael J. Cottrell, Michael Cottrell, Donna Pugh, Mark Pugh, Terry Pugh, Scott Pugh, Charlene Cottrell, affidavit, Meigs; Nora Simmons, deceased, to
Michael J. Cottrell, Addie Lemix, Lucy Nuckles, Clela Powell,
Alta Cottrell, June Evans, Agatha Morgan, affidavit, Meigs;
Evelyn G. Queen, deceased, to Carol Queen Foster, David L.
Foster, David William Foster, Fay Ellen Foster Roebuck, Fay
Ellen Steelnack, affidavit, Meigs; Michael W. Naylor, deceased,
Jimmie L. Naylor, Sarah Naylor, Jim L. Naylor, Gary Naylor,
Betty Blackstone, Janet Ryland, affidavit, Meigs; George Lee
Queen, deceased, to Carol Queen Foster, G.L. Queen, William
S. Queen, Evelyn G. Queen, David L. Foster, affidavit, Meigs;
Clara A. Queen, deceased, to Carol Queen Foster, William S.
Queen, Evelyn G. Queen, George Lee Queen, affidavit, Meigs;
William S. Queen, deceased, to Carol Queen Foster, David L.
Foster, Evelyn G. Queen, affidavit, Meigs;
Marilyn Sayre, T. Dwain Sayre to Roscoe Mills, deed, Lebanon; Kenneth Young to Kenneth Adam Young, deed, Olive;
Kenneth Young, Kenneth B. Young to Kenneth S. Young, deed,
Olive; Kenneth Young to Bruce Allen Young, deed, Middleport
Village; Denise A. Jewell, Denise Anne Jewell, Denise Ann Jewell to Cassandra N. Kane, deed, Bedford; Melinda Chancey, J.
Michael Bradford to Roland E. Goodwin, Sherry S. Goodwin,
deed, Middleport Village; Patty L. Harmon to Buckeye Rural
Electric Corporation, right of way, Rutland; Alvin E. Oney, Jean
M. Oney to Buckeye Rural Electric Corporation, right of way,
Rutland; Edward E. Sigler to Buckeye Rural Electric Corporation, right of way, Salem; Brandon Pack, Mary Spratlin to Buckeye Rural Electric Corporation, right of way, Meigs; Constance
C. Smith to Buckeye Rural Electric Corporation, right of way,
Bedford;
Federal Home Loan Mortgage to Miles Clark, Tracey
Clark, deed, Chester; Thomas Arthur Schoonover, Thomas A.
Schoonover, deceased, to Lois Jean Schoonover, affidavit, Rutland; Lois Jean Schoonover to Thomas A. Schoonover Jr., deed,
Rutland Village; Shawn A. Taylor to Shawn A. Taylor, Amanda
Taylor, deed, Salisbury/Middleport Village; Tony C. Crouch
Sr., Tony C. Crouch, Tony Crouch, Angela R. Crouch, Angela
Crouch to Home National Bank, sheriff deed, Sutton/Racine
Village; Richard S. Wolfe, Caryle Wolfe, Ronald K. Wolfe, Ann
Crocker, Susan J. Smith, Robert Smith to Patricia A. Tarr, deed,
Lebanon; Kim D. Meadows to Home National Bank, sheriff
deed, Letart; Amos E. Lowe, Patricia A. Lowe to Windstream
KDL Inc., easement, Columbia; Dawn Miller to Lavinia Carper
Revocable Trust, memorandum of trust, Meigs;

�Thursday, October 4, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Baby bust continues: US births down for fourth year
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. births
fell for the fourth year in a row, the
government reported Wednesday,
with experts calling it more proof
that the weak economy has continued to dampen enthusiasm for having children.
But there may be a silver lining:
The decline in 2011 was just 1 percent — not as sharp a fall-off as the 2
to 3 percent drop seen in other recent
years.
“It may be that the effect of the recession is slowly coming to an end,”
said Carl Haub, a senior demographer with the Population Reference
Bureau, a Washington, D.C.-based
research organization.
Most striking in the new report
were steep declines in Hispanic birth
rates and a new low in teen births.
Hispanics have been disproportionately affected by the flagging economy, experts say, and teen birth rates
have been falling for 20 years.
Falling births is a relatively new
phenomenon in this country. Births
had been on the rise since the late
1990s and hit an all-time high of more
than 4.3 million in 2007.
But fewer than 4 million births
were counted last year — the lowest
number since 1998.
Among the people who study this
sort of thing, the flagging economy
has been seen as the primary explanation. The theory is that many
women or couples who are out of
work, underemployed or have other
money problems feel they can’t afford
to start a family or add to it.
The economy officially was in a
recession from December 2007 until
June 2009. But well into 2011, polls
show most Americans remained
gloomy, citing anemic hiring, a depressed housing market and other
factors.
The report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is a first

glimpse at 2011 birth certificate data
from state health departments. More
analysis comes later but officials don’t
expect the numbers to change much.
Early data for 2012 is not yet available, and it’s too soon to guess whether the birth decline will change, said
the CDC’s Stephanie Ventura, one of
the study’s authors.
Highlights of the report include:
—The birth rate for single women
fell for the third straight year, dropping by 3 percent from 2010 to 2011.
The birth rate for married women,
however, rose 1 percent. In most
cases, married women are older and
more financially secure.
—The birth rate for Hispanic
women dropped a whopping 6 percent. But it declined only 2 percent
for black women, stayed the same
for whites and actually rose a bit for
Asian-American and Pacific Islanders.
—Birth rates fell again for women
in their early 20s, down 5 percent
from 2010 — the lowest mark for
women in that age group since 1940,
when comprehensive national birth
records were first compiled. For
women in their late 20s, birth rates
fell 1 percent.
—But birth rates held steady for
women in their early 30s, and rose for
moms ages 35 and older. Experts say
that’s not surprising: Older women
generally have better jobs or financial security, and are more sensitive
to the ticking away of their biological
clocks.
—Birth rates for teen moms have
been falling since 1991 and hit another historic low. The number of
teen births last year — about 330,000
— was the fewest in one year since
1946. The teen birth rate fell 8 percent, and at 31 per 1,000 girls ages 15
through 19 was the lowest recorded
in more than seven decades.
“The continued decline in the

teen birth rates is astounding,” said
John Santelli, a Columbia University
professor of population and family
health.
Did the economy have anything to
do with a drop in teen births?
Yes, indirectly, Santelli said. Teenagers watch the struggles and decisions that older sisters and older
girlfriends are making, and what they
see influences their thinking about
sex and birth control, he said.
“Teens tend to emulate young
adults,” Santelli said. “They are less
influenced directly by the economy
than by people.”
Studies show that since 2007, larger percentages of sexually active teenage girls are using the pill and other
effective birth control. Studies also
show a small decline in the proportion of girls ages 15 through 17 who
say they’ve had sex, Santelli noted.
The new birth report also noted
a fourth straight decline in a calculation of how many children women
have over their lifetimes, based on
the birth rates of a given year.
A rate of a little more than 2 children per woman means each couple
is helping keep the population stable.
The U.S. rate last year was slightly
below 1.9.
Countries with rates close to 1 —
such as Japan and Italy — face future
labor shortages and eroding tax bases as they fail to reproduce enough to
take care of their aging elders.
Officials here aren’t as worried.
The U.S. replacement rate is still
close to 2. And it has dropped in the
past and then bounced back up again,
said Ventura, an official at the CDC’s
National Center for Health Statistics.
“And we haven’t seen any studies
that show couples want to have fewer
children or no children,” she added.

Death Notices
Effie Ola (Martin) McManus

Effie Ola (Martin) McManus, 85, of Xenia, Ohio, companion of Lonnie Hood, died Tuesday, October 2, 2012, at
Liberty Nursing Center of Xenia.
Services will be held at 10 a.m., Saturday, October 6,
2012, at Neeld Funeral Home, 1276 N. Detroit St., Xenia,
with Rev. Wesley Miller officiating. Visitation will be held
from 9 a.m. Saturday, until service time. Burial will be in
Woodland Cemetery, Xenia.
Contributions may be made to Hospice of Dayton, 324
Wilmington Ave., Dayton, OH, 45420.

Willa Juanita Petrie

Willa Juanita Petrie, 86, of South Bloomfield, Ohio, formerly of Rio Grande, Ohio, died Tuesday, October 2, 2012,
at Mt. Carmel West Hospital, Columbus, Ohio.
Services will be conducted at 11 a.m., Friday, October 5,
2012, at the Willis Funeral Home in Gallipolis, Ohio, with
Rev. Cleo Watson officiating. Interment will follow in Calvary Baptist Church Cemetery, Rio Grande, Ohio. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 5-8 p.m. on Thursday,
October 4, 2012.

Agenda
From Page 1
Wolfe, volunteer cross country; and Zane Beegle, volunteer
high school girls basketball.
The board approved amending motion 195-2012 to remove Kelly Pape as a member of LPDC and add Shelly Barr
as a member of LPDC.
In other business, the purchase of a rebuilt engine for bus
12 was approved as presented. The cost is $12,208.32.
Temporary revised appropriations were approved in the
amount of $15,562,486 as presented by the treasurer.
Board policies and forms were approved as presented
by the superintendent. This includes bullying and other
forms of aggressive behavior, student abuse and neglect,
promotion, academic acceleration, placement and retention
policies, third grade guarantee, student assessment and academic intervention services, pediculosis treatment form, and
steps for treating head lice.
The board approved a resolution to align with AthensMeigs Educational Service Center.
Present at the meeting were board members Denny Evans,
Peggy Gibbs, Paul Harris, Dennie Hill and John Hoback.
The next meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Oct. 22 in
the high school media center.

Queen
From Page 1
any other riverboat. Each room
has an interior entrance, which in
turn means each room also has a
private view and some also have a
private deck with a floor to ceiling
sliding glass door.
Other amenities featured on
the Queen of the Mississippi in-

clude: satellite TV and a DVD
player in each room, as well
as wi-fi in each room, a grand
dining room, which can seat all
passengers at once, a top deck
café, lounges, the Mark Twain
Library and chart room, as well
as elevators to every deck, a calliope, an exercise area and putting green, and the latest navi-

gation and safety equipment.
Other riverboats on the American Cruise Lines include the
Queen of the West, the Independence, the American Star, the
American Spirit and the American Glory.
As previously reported, the
Queen of the Mississippi is
not the first visit of riverboat

royalty for the Point Pleasant
Riverfront Park, as the American Queen docked several times
earlier this summer as part of
its’ cruises on the Ohio River.
Locals not only had the opportunity to view the American
Queen and listen to a performance from her Dixieland band,
her passengers also were able to

visit tourism hot spots around
Point Pleasant including TuEndie-Wei State Park, the Point
Pleasant River Museum, and
Fort Randolph.
For more information on the
Queen of the Mississippi and
American Cruise Lines, visit
www.americancruiselines.com.

Case
From Page 1
lipolis Police Department
Patrolman Jamie Bartels in
the upper arm after he and
other officers had responded to the residence in reference to a domestic violence
situation.
Bartels was rushed to
Holzer Medical Center by a
fellow officer and was later
flown to Cabell Huntington
Hospital where he remains.
During the preliminary
hearing, in his effort to produce substantial credible
evidence that a crime was
committed and the defendant committed it, Gallia
County Prosecutor Jeff Adkins called two witnesses to
testify before the court on
their observations that evening — Special Agent Mike
Trout of the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification and
Investigation (BCI) and
Deputy Fred Workman of
the Gallia County Sheriff’s
Office.
Trout was the first to
speak on the events of that
evening.
The special agent, who is
the lead investigator on the
case, reported that he was
dispatched to the scene in
Gallia County after 1 a.m.
on September 24.
Upon his arrival, Trout
reported that he spoke to
the officers on scene and
later traveled to the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office
where the suspect, Cole
Miller, was being held.
He subsequently made
contact with Miller, mirandized him and proceeded to
interview him at approximately 7 a.m. that morning.
“He said were probably
going to be certain questions he didn’t want to
answer and that he wasn’t
going to answer those questions, but he did want to
speak with us,” Trout stated and began to relay to the
court information he had
gleaned from Miller that
evening.
“Mr. Miller said that he
had had a bad day — had
had a bad couple of weeks
— was not feeling all that

well mentally, that he had
went to the hospital several
times and gotten medication,” Trout stated. “He, I
believe, had argued with his
mother earlier in the day
and then he took a bunch of
the medication that he was
prescribed and was going
to just go to sleep and not
wake up.”
The investigator further
stated that Miller reported
to him that due to a disturbance in the apartment
next to his — his uncle’s
residence — he could not
sleep. So, he took his shotgun next door, told them
to be quiet and fired off a
few shotgun rounds before
returning to his own residence.
Gallipolis Police Officers
Bartels and Shallon Shuldt
later arrived on scene and
were followed by Deputy
Workman who arrived
quickly thereafter.
“He said that he saw police officers moving around
outside of his residence,”
Trout stated. “He said he
could have killed the female
officer several times, but
eventually he saw a male
officer — he described him
as a big, male officer — and
he said he shot in his direction to make sure that the
police knew that he meant
business.”
During his interview,
Miller then told the investigator that after he realized
he had struck an officer, he
began to panic, put his gun
down and put his hands
outside and slowly exited
the residence. He complied
with the officers’ orders and
was arrested.
Attorney for the defense, Bill Eachus, later
questioned Trout about his
knowledge of Miller’s alleged medical condition,
the part drugs may have
played that night and his
demeanor prior to and during the interview.
Trout stated that he was
aware that Miller had been
transported to the hospital
that evening for the medication he had ingested prior
to the incident and, after

speaking with him, he felt who were taking cover be- to get behind cover, while es coming from the door,”
he could proceed with the hind a vehicle parked at the hearing an additional two he said. “Another thing
apartments.
interviewing process.
shots being fired. After a that really put me on edge
Workman stated that he third shot was fired, he re- was, when Officer Bartels
“When I asked him
whether he wanted to talk first observed the suspect alized that Bartels had been was shot, he told me, ‘I
with us or not, his facul- at the door of his apartment hit.
think the shot came from
ties seemed to be with him. aiming his weapon in the
“I heard another shot and over there.’ It was that
He knew that there would direction of Officer Shuldt.
Officer Bartels said, ‘I’m hit. point that I really became
“Observed a door come I’m hit,’” Workman said.
be questions that he didn’t
concerned because I felt
o p e n ,
want to anWorkman stated that he like I wasn’t sure if there
and I ob- radioed dispatch and then
swer,” Trout
served a observed Bartels making was ‘A’ another shooter
said. “I felt “It was a really
or ‘B’ he had came out of
male sub- his way toward him.
that he was
ject with
okay to in- chaotic, scary and
“At that time, I observed the back of the apartment
a
shot- Officer Bartels come back and flanked us. So, I was
terview.”
gun come toward me to his right. Of- severely concerned beWorkman, horrifying scene.
o u t s i d e ficer Bartels, for a lack of cause, at that point, there
who was the
the apart- better term, was kind of was just myself and Officer
third officer There is no other
I dragging himself toward Shuldt with Bartels down.
on scene and way to describe it.” ment.
c o u l d n ’ t me. And, I observed, at That was it.
a witness to
get a full,
the shoot“It was a really chaotic,
— Deputy Fred Workman clear pic- the back of the SUV, being, was the
hind cover, he dropped to scary and horrifying scene.
ture
of his knees and dropped his There is no other way to denext to address the court on Tuesday the male subject. From my shotgun,” Workman said. scribe it,” he said.
vantage point, all I could “At that time, I thought,
morning.
Workman stated that, afThe deputy reported see was his arms, half of ‘Wow! What in the world ter he and Shuldt took the
that he was contacted by his torso and his head. I ob- is going on here? This has
suspect into custody, he
dispatch that evening in re- served him fire a shot in the gone bad.’”
realized that Bartels had
gard to a domestic violence direction of Officer Shuldt,”
Following this, Workman already been transported
situation on McCormick Workman stated and report- stated that he continued to
Road — a situation involv- ed that Officer Shuldt, who give commands to Miller from the scene by his fellow
ing an individual kicking was standing near the front who surrendered soon officer, Chris Withee.
“All I can tell you about
in his neighbor’s door and of the residence next to a thereafter and was cuffed
that is, I remember feeling
shooting a vehicle near the pickup truck, rolled away by Shuldt.
a sense of relief. I heard a
residence.
just prior to the shot being
The deputy reported that
The deputy reported fired.
he did not directly see the cruiser come up the hill and
that, at the time of the call,
“At that time, I thought suspect fire any rounds and, then, almost as quickly as I
he was in the southern end
she’d been shot. At that at the time of the incident, heard it get there, I heard it
of the county near Bladen
time, I thought she was wasn’t immediately sure if leave,” he said.
Road.
The case against Miller
there was only one individuhit,” Workman said.
“I was the only road patrol
The suspect then report- al involved in the shooting. will be heard during an updeputy assigned to the road edly disappeared in the
“I never really laid eyes coming grand jury session
that night. I requested the dark apartment.
on the suspect again once in the common pleas court.
dispatch center to contact
His bond remains at $1
Workman stated that he went back from the inithe city police, especially he yelled at Officer Shuldt tial shot. I could see flash- million, 10 percent.
since it was barely outside
of the city limits, and they
advised me that they would
SAVE THE DATE
respond,” Workman said.
OVERBROOK
REHABILITATION CENTER
At the time of the iniAnnual October Festival
tial contact from dispatch,
October
6th, 2012 • 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Workman stated that had
We are also hosting a 107th Birthday
been en route to a meth lab
Reception for long time Meigs Resident
call and, as one of only two
meth lab technicians in the
Kathleen Scott
county, was responding to
Food will be served Free to the Public
assist with that situation.
11 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Workman quickly turned
and made his way back
Menu: Smoked pork, soft pretzels, hash brown cakes,
toward McCormick Road
fried apples, soup beans, cole slaw, and corn mufﬁns.
to assist the city unit that
had been dispatched to the
scene.
A few of the vendors are 31 Gifts, Avon, Scentsy, Celebrating Home,
Upon his arrival, WorkOrigami Owls and Pampered Chef.
man stated that he made
60359091
note of the location of Of60356065
ficers Bartels and Shuldt,

All are welcome!

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Analysis: Presidential
debate to set tone for race
Jim Kuhnhenn,

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — As millions of Americans watch, President Barack Obama and
challenger Mitt Romney will be chasing opposite goals in their first debate. The key for
Obama is to sit on his narrow lead without
mishap, while Romney’s challenge is to shake
up the race and connect with voters.
And while debates are seldom determinative, they can alter the direction or pause the
momentum of a presidential contest. Five
weeks before the election, the public’s attention is becoming more focused, opinions are
gelling and in some states votes are already
being cast.
First debates have not been kind to incumbent presidents seeking re-election. So to the
extent that history holds lessons, they can
only be cautionary for Obama and encouraging for Romney when they meet Wednesday
night in Denver.
Obama is vulnerable and Romney will seek
to wound him. Joblessness stands above 8
percent, the economy is growing at a snail’s
pace and Obama’s health care law remains a
contentious topic with voters.
Romney’s message: The country can’t afford another four years of an Obama administration.
Obama’s message: The country would be
worse off without his policies and he needs
four more years to finish the job.
But there is also urgency for Romney.
“We may have five weeks left to the election, but this thing is going to be over in three
weeks. Maybe in two,” said Michael Dennehy,
a top adviser to John McCain’s 2000 and 2008
presidential campaigns. “So the window is
closing. Romney needs to take every single
opportunity that he has.”
A divided electorate, a president with a tailwind despite unpopular policies and a challenger struggling to gain traction as the first
debate of the general election looms. It’s not
the first time Americans have watched this
scenario.
In 2004, President George W. Bush was
riding a post-convention bounce of 7 to 8
percentage points. Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts wasn’t breaking out with his message of foreign policy ineptitude by the Bush
administration. But by the end of their first
debate, Kerry was declared the winner and
within days he was back in the hunt, tied with
Bush in national polls.
The uncanny parallels are not lost on
Obama and Romney.
What can Romney do?
To gain attention Romney must methodically define the current weak economy as a
failure of Obama’s policies. If the Republican
convention and Romney’s public comments
are a guide, he will blame spending, regulatory overload and uncertainty over Obama’s
health care overhaul as factors that dragged
down economic growth.
He will challenge Obama’s plan to raise
taxes, saying that even if they target wealthy
taxpayers they will hurt small businesses and

place yet another obstacle in front of economic growth.
Expect him to confront Obama’s assertions
about the Republican economic plan and challenge the accuracy of Obama’s claims.
The debate is divided into six distinct
15-minute segments. The first three are devoted exclusively to the economy and the
fourth is about health care. With 50 million
or more viewers expected, Romney’s greatest leverage comes in those first 45 minutes
when the audience is most engaged and when
the issue — the economy — is most favorable
to him.
Tad Devine has a unique perch to assess
this fall’s presidential debates. The veteran
Democratic operative was a senior campaign
aide to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy in 1994
when Kennedy fended off a challenge from
Romney for the U.S. Senate. He also was a
top aide to Kerry in 2004.
“Demeanor is very important,” Devine
said. “Kerry was aggressive, but he didn’t go
outside the frame.”
Dennehy conceded that Romney will have
difficulty connecting with his audience.
“Facts are facts: Obama looks more real
than Romney does,” he said. “Romney has to
illustrate — to independent voters, particularly — that he can help get us out of this mess.”
But even after the debate, and even if he’s
declared a winner, Romney faces a long challenge — one that Kerry did not overcome in
his eventual loss to Bush.
Terry Holt, who was Bush’s campaign
press secretary in 2004, said the 2004 electorate was far more volatile than it is today and
predicted that even if Romney were to win,
polls would not show a big swing in his favor. “Whatever change is going to happen in
Romney’s favor is going to happen in a more
steady, harder to discern way,” he said.
What can Obama do?
First, be ready. Kerry, who is playing Romney in debate practice rounds with Obama,
was not the only challenger to rattle an incumbent in their first debate. Ronald Reagan got
the best of President Jimmy Carter in 1980,
but then Walter Mondale was perceived as
the winner over Reagan in 1984.
Holt said Bush simply didn’t prepare well
enough for his debate with Kerry.
While Obama needs to exude confidence
in his policies, he also has to avoid the trap
of smugness. He barely knows Romney and
could find that it’s easy, with unfamiliarity, to
display disdain for his challenger.
He must hit his marks. Eager to lower
expectations, Obama aides have cast him as
long-winded in his responses. The fact they’ve
drawn attention to that potential weakness
means he will be precise in his points and
concise in his answers.
Don’t look for Obama to lead an attack
against Romney, but be prepared for a fierce
counter. He will challenge the math of Romney’s tax plans and will probably allude to
Romney’s claim that the 47 percent of Americans who support Obama believe they are victims, entitled to government support.

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Page 4
Thursday, October 4, 2012

Bond movies have beat
do-or-die odds for 50 years
Ryan Nakashima,
AP Business Writer

LOS ANGELES — Over
the last 50 years, the owners of the James Bond movie
franchise have had heartstopping crises as thrilling
as the ones that face their
fictional secret agent.
They’ve nearly gone bust
more than once and have
come close to losing all of
their rights in court.
But the franchise has survived and thrived under the
family of late producer Albert R. “Cubby” Broccoli,
whose name has graced every official Bond intro since
“Dr. No” in 1962.
The son of Italian immigrants was a risk-taker, and
his earlier ventures included
farming the vegetable bearing the Broccoli name that
his uncle brought to America. After years of hustling his
way into Hollywood, Broccoli fought for the movie
rights to the Ian Fleming
novels and passed his faith
in the British spy tales to his
children.
“Cubby used to say, ‘This
is the goose that laid the
golden egg, keep it safe,’
” said Broccoli’s youngest
daughter, Barbara, now the
series’ co-producer, in a
phone interview from London. “One of the things he
said was we’re temporary
people making permanent
decisions. When you have
a franchise, and you’re invested in it as emotionally as
we are, you make decisions
based on the health of the
franchise going forward.”
For five decades, the Broccoli family has held on to its
50 percent stake in the “007”
movies, while studio partner
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc.
owns the other half. The
series is one of the longest
running in history, having
made $4.9 billion in ticket
sales over 22 films. The 23rd
Bond movie, “Skyfall,” is set
to premiere Oct. 23 in London.
It’s not like the formula
for action, sex and intrigue
has always worked perfectly.
Some films fell flat, like “On
Her Majesty’s Secret Service,” George Lazenby’s infa-

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

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Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All
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mous one-Bond wonder.
The franchise has occasionally needed new blood to
keep it fresh, and there have
been six Bonds so far.
For “Skyfall,” the family is
making another noticeable
change: it cast 31-year-old
Ben Whishaw as Bond’s
gadget guru, Q. The last two
movies did without the longtime sidekick, who had been
played by the late Desmond
Llewelyn in an epic 16 Bond
films.
“The decision was made
to make him a younger man,
as would be the case these
days,” said Michael G. Wilson, Albert Broccoli’s stepson who is also co-producer
of the series, by phone. “Let’s
hope he goes on as long as
Desmond Llewelyn did.”
It may seem a minor casting decision, but nothing is
taken lightly by the family
that has stuck with Bond this
long. Their tribulations are
brought to life in the documentary, “Everything Or
Nothing,” which debuts Friday on EPIX.
In one incident from the
1970s, the film explains,
Broccoli’s Canadian co-producer, Harry Saltzman, had
squandered his Bond fortune on outside investments.
Instead of turning to his
partner for help, Saltzman
pledged their production
partnership Danjaq as collateral on nearly $20 million
in personal loans from Swiss
bank UBS.
Broccoli enlisted Wilson, a
practicing lawyer, to prevent
the production company
from being foreclosed on
by the bank. Wilson argued
Saltzman couldn’t pledge
100 percent of the production entity without consulting his partner. In the end,
the Saltzman-Broccoli partnership broke up. Saltzman
bitterly sold his stake to
United Artists, now a subsidiary of MGM, and was left
penniless. Bond narrowly escaped unscathed.
In another segment, the
family faces off against reallife nemesis Kevin McClory,
an Irishman whose early
script work with Fleming allowed him to win the movie
rights to “Thunderball.”

The rights form the basis
for “Never Say Never Again,”
a 1983 remake. The film
brought leading man Sean
Connery back as Bond after
a 12-year hiatus, and was a
way for Connery to snub the
producers that he felt had
shortchanged him.
That year, Connery’s Bond
and Roger Moore’s Bond
in “Octopussy” hit theaters
just months apart, though
“Octopussy” won the box
office battle. Due to the bitter rivalry, “Never Say Never
Again” isn’t included in Danjaq’s count of 23 Bond flicks.
The documentary also explains why “Casino Royale,”
Fleming’s first Bond book,
was made twice. The first
version debuted in 1967
and was a ridiculous mashup featuring multiple Bonds
played by the likes of David
Niven, Peter Sellers and even
Woody Allen. The spoof was
possible because Fleming
had sold that book’s rights
to Columbia Pictures, now
owned by Sony Corp., for a
measly $6,000.
Sony gave the rights back
to the Broccolis in a legal settlement in 1999. Sony later
became the distributor of the
last two films and “Skyfall.”
That’s why a Sony Vaio laptop is among Bond’s arsenal
of gadgets these days, despite Sony’s former archenemy status. (Heineken, not
a shaken martini, is also a
new favorite Bond libation,
thanks to the brewer’s corporate sponsorship.)
Both Sony and MGM declined to comment about
their business dealings
ahead of the 50th anniversary on Friday.
But the curtain has yet to
fall on the financial drama
surrounding Bond.
In July, MGM made a
preliminary filing with the
Securities and Exchange
Commission to prepare for
an initial public offering of
stock. The move would help
pay off MGM’s owners, including Highland Capital
Management and Anchorage
Advisors, who lent the studio $5 billion but booked a
big loss in a bankruptcy that
left them with a less valuable
stake.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Thursday, October 4, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Mother is worried the new baby sister is everyone’s favorite
Dear Dr. Brothers:
while they are fussOur family has a new
ing over the baby. In
baby girl, and we are
fact, I wonder what
all thrilled. I am worhas kept you from
ried about my son, who
doing so already.
is 5. He seems to be igIt’s absolutely part
nored by everyone who
of your job to make
comes to see the baby,
sure your son finds
and he has gotten pretbeing a big brother
ty whiney, has started
a pleasant and posisucking his thumb
tive experience, and
again, and sometimes
I’m sure all the peoI catch him giving his
ple who love him
baby sister some nasty
will be glad to pitch
looks. We have a large
in. It’s very natural
extended family and Dr. Joyce Brothers to focus on the new
lots of friends, and I
baby, but there is
Syndicated
think if I could get peonothing wrong with
Columnist
ple to pay attention to
reminding people
my son, it might help.
that you have anDoes this sound like a
other child and askgood strategy to you? — C.M.
ing them to pitch in at this crucial
Dear C.M.: You’re certainly time. Regression is a common rewithin your rights to ask your action to a new baby, so don’t be
family and friends to give a little too alarmed if your son seems to
extra attention to your little boy have taken a few steps back. He

should respond to some extra attention from you and others.
Your son probably is feeling
more than left out. If he is jealous of the baby and angry that
she’s going to be around forever,
it would be helpful for both of you
if he can vent his feelings and you
can tell him that you understand.
It’s a good time, too, to emphasize the idea that he should treat
the baby gently and never hurt
her. Give him some things to do
to help with his sister so he can
start feeling proud of being the
big brother, and don’t forget to set
aside plenty of time for just you
and him. Sharing Mommy is hard
work. Give it a little time.
***
Dear Dr. Brothers: My young
daughter has always been a handful, but now that she’s 10, she
seems to have figured out a new
way to get what she wants. I always thought it was better to re-

ward good behavior than punish
the bad; I’ve always bought her
toys or other things when she
behaves well. Now her wants are
getting expensive, and I wonder
if this is the right approach. It’s
almost as though she acts bad so
I will buy her something if she
stops! — K.F.
Dear K.F.: Many parents make
it through childhood and early
adolescence with a combination
of bribes and rewards instead of
threats and punishment. That’s
fine, if you have a basically compliant child who doesn’t try to take
advantage of you, but that’s asking
a lot of a kid. There’s always more
stuff to be had, and behaving well
really isn’t so difficult most of the
time. As you can tell, once you’ve
established that pattern, it is hard
to break, and kids don’t get any
less demanding as they get older.
So you do have your work cut out
for you.

If your clever daughter has figured out how to use misbehavior
to get things, you really have created a little “monster” by using
bribes. It would be in everyone’s
best interests to nip this in the
bud and let your tween settle into
a new kind of routine in which she
learns to be responsible for her actions. Now is the time to appeal to
her better side; ask for her cooperation in forming some new guidelines about how to earn the extra
things she wants. She will need to
find out that contributing to the
family or setting aside allowance
and gift money will help her buy
things, and misbehavior will meet
with consequences instead of rewards. Tapping into her sense of
maturity can help jump-start this
reversal of fortune. Work together
on some new rules.
(c) 2012 by King Features Syndicate

Retired teachers meet

Alan Goldsbury of Ewings Chapter, SAR, right, presents Morehouse with a certificate of appreciation.

Submitted photo

SAR speaker talks on War of 1812
CHESTER — Paul Morehouse,
a past president of the Ohio Society of the War of 1812, was the
speaker at a recent meeting of Ewings Chapter, Sons of the American
Revolution, held at the Chester
Courthouse.

Morehouse talked about the importance of the war to the settlement of Ohio and our relations to
the Native Americans living in this
area. Following his talk he Chapter’s vice president, Alan Goldsberry, presented Morehouse with a

certificate of appreciation.
Membership in the Sons of the
American Revolution is open to all
males who can provide documentation/lineage to an ancestor who
was instrumental in American”s
independence.

Candidates nights to be observed
POMEROY — With election day just a few weeks
away, the Meigs County
Tea Party is planning to
sponsor moderated discussions among Meigs County
candidates for each of five

contested offices.
Candidates for treasurer,
sheriff and county prosecutor will meet at 7:30 p.m.,
Tuesday, Oct. 9. Candidates
for Clerk of Courts and
Commissioner will meet at

7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 23.
The forums will take
place at the Meigs Senior
Center on Memorial Drive
in Pomeroy. There is adequate parking there for
public use.

Each session will last 30
to 40 minutes, with moderator Adam Will asking
prepared questions. The audience may ask questions if
time permits. Refreshments
will be provided.

Kin ready for last trial in NJ schoolyard killings
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — In a Newark courtroom this week, jurors and
a packed gallery will hear how four
college-bound friends gathered at a
schoolyard one summer night five
years ago to drink sodas and listen to
music, their young lives full of promise and potential.
Then they’ll hear about the aftermath, the carnage — three of the four
friends slumped against a wall where
they’d been forced to kneel before being shot, pools of blood surrounding
their bodies, deep slash marks from
a machete crisscrossing one victim’s
head and face.
Now, in the sixth year of proceedings in the case, the victims’ families
will be back in court to hear every
painful detail recounted yet again, fulfilling a vow to “bear witness for their
loved ones,” as a prosecutor put it, no
matter how much it hurt.
Opening statements are expected
Thursday in the murder trial of the
sixth and final defendant, Gerardo Gomez, who turned 15 on the night of the
killings but is being tried as an adult,
as were two other juveniles. Three defendants were convicted at trial with
the help of testimony from the survivor, who has earned a college degree
since the attacks. Two others pleaded
guilty, one to reduced charges.
In the years since Shalga Hightower
lost her daughter, Iofemi, in murders that shocked even this violencescarred city, she and the other victims’
families have doggedly sat through

three lengthy trials as well as hearings, guilty pleas and sentencings almost too numerous to count.
United by unspeakable tragedy, they
promised early on to see the process
all the way through.
“It’s without a doubt something
we talked about from the beginning,”
Hightower said Tuesday. “We stuck it
out this long because we had to as parents; those were our children. And because we needed to see for ourselves
how the justice system works and that
justice would be served.”
At the time of her death, 20-yearold Iofemi Hightower was working
two jobs and considering attending
at Delaware State University, where
the other three were already enrolled.
Dashon Harvey, also 20, was a social
work major who fancied himself a
fashion maven; 18-year-old Terrance
“T.J.” Aeriel was already an ordained
minister.
A fourth victim who survived being
shot and stabbed is not being named
by The Associated Press because of
sexual assault charges against two of
the defendants.
They were the type of kids any parent could be proud of, but particularly
in a city where so many have been lost
to the lure of the streets. That fact
jolted the city, which had reached a 10year high in murders the year before.
If earlier trials are an indication,
there will be graphic descriptions of
wounds suffered by all four victims
in the robbery murders and photos of

each. Hightower has left the court in
tears as the slashing wounds to her
daughter have been described, but she
has always returned.
The families’ resolve has made a
deep impression on the prosecutors
who have worked on the case since
2007.
“It’s been a long and complicated
case, and over a period of five years,
over every step, those families were
there to bear witness for their loved
ones,” First Assistant Prosecutor
Thomas McTigue said. “It’s very unusual and very touching to see that.
If there’s ever any doubt about why
you’re doing this job, all you need to
do is look out in the gallery.”
The emotional toll hasn’t been the
only cost borne by Shalga Hightower.
She said she lost her job in 2008 because of frequent absences to attend
court hearings and later was evicted
from her home in nearby Irvington.
She said she has a new job and a new
home in Newark, and said although
she wouldn’t change what she’s done
the last five years, it will be a relief
when the last trial is over and she can
get her life back.
“People ask, ‘You’re still going
through this?’” she said. “I’ve actually had people say to me, ‘You have
to let it go.’ I tell them it’s not that
I haven’t tried to or don’t want to; I
can’t move on because this is 2012 and
I’m still stuck in ‘07, and I’m still going
through this.”

POMEROY — The September meeting of the Meigs County Retired Teachers Association was opened with the pledge to
the flag. Gay Perrin read “You want heroes?” for devotions and
had prayer before a luncheon at the Wild Horse Cafe.
The secretary and treasurer gave their reports. Dues are to
be paid to William Downie Jr. before December. Cards were
signed by the group for Kathleen Scott, Martha Vennari, and
Sabra Ash. It was reported that Eileen Buck has passed away.
Joan Corder, scholarship chairperson, reported that the
group had given away scholarships since 200, totaling $3,650.
To apply a student must live in Meigs County; be a junior or
senior in the teacher training education program; have a 2.5
grade average; send a resume of activities and a transcript of
grades; have three references; send a photo; and give the name
and address of the college attending to the scholarship chairperson.
The president said the cookbooks will be coming the first of
October for ORTA to be sold by the group. She also reminded
the group to continue to keep track of volunteer hours. She
also thanked the group for the school supplies to be given to
the cooperative parish.
Nancy Boomhower of Seville, Ohio, was the speaker for the
group. She is the Eastern Area Vice President of the Ohio Retired Teacher Association. She spoke about the current issues
affecting retirees, telling that the COLA will mot be coming for
the year because it is based on the fiscal year of STRS. It will
be two percent rather than three percent when it is available.
The pension bill has passed both the House and Senate and is
waiting for the Governor’s signature.
Boomhower told of two programs. First, qualified STRS annuitants who need financial assistance paying their monthly
premium for STRS Ohio health care coverage can apply to
the Health Care Program Assistance Program for help. Second, The Virginia Gay Funds is proactively involved with less
fortunate retirees in providing monthly stipends or lump sum
grants for unusual one-time purposes.
These programs must be applied for by contacting STRS.
She also told of the 2012 Educator Appreciation Day held
in August at the Ohio History Center and the Ohio Village in
Columbus, Ohio.
Door prizes were given to John Riebel Sr., Linda Lear, and
Janice Weber.
The next meeting will be Oct. 18 at the Meigs County Library in Pomeroy.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 44.44
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 19.08
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 71.79
Big Lots (NYSE) — 29.80
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 39.32
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 70.93
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 7.11
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.35
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 36.00
Collins (NYSE) — 53.55
DuPont (NYSE) — 49.44
US Bank (NYSE) — 34.38
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 22.91
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 40.79
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 40.86
Kroger (NYSE) — 23.79
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 50.24
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 65.60
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.40
BBT (NYSE) — 33.17
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.21
Pepsico (NYSE) — 70.70
Premier (NASDAQ) — 9.39
Rockwell (NYSE) — 69.22
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.09
Royal Dutch Shell — 69.51
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 56.46
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 74.20
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.27
WesBanco (NYSE) — 20.87
Worthington (NYSE) — 21.14
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for October 3, 2012, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

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Sports

THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 4, 2012

mdssports@heartlandpublications.com

Lady Eagles sweep Wahama
Alex Hawley

ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

MASON, W.Va. — As the
season nears its end the
Lady Eagles remain unbeaten in league play, again.
The Eastern volleyball
team defeated Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division host Wahama Tuesday
night in three games to push
it’s unbeaten streak to 14
matches. The Lady Eagles
have now won 32 consecutive league matches.
Eastern (17-1, 12-0 TVC

Hocking) took the first
game 25-8, the second game
25-10 and the third game
25-7 over Wahama (4-11,
2-11).
Maddie Rigsby led the
Lady Eagles service attack with 21 points in the
triumph, followed by Ally
Hendrix with 14 points,
and Gabby Hendrix with
13. Kiki Osborne had three
points, Erin Swatzel finished with two and Jordan
Parker recorded one point
to close out the EHS scoring.

Alex Hawley| Daily Sentinel

South Gallia senior Meghan Caldwell (21) attempts a spike during Tuesday night’s Volley For The Cure game against Belpre. The
Lady Rebels took the victory in three games in Gallia County.

The Eastern net attack
was led by Rigsby with 11
kills, followed by Swatzel
with nine and Parker with
eight kills. Kiki Osborne
recorded four kills, Katie
Keller notched three and
Ally Hendrix had two kills
to close out the EHS total.
Ally Hendrix led EHS with
34 assists, while Gabby
Hendrix led with 15 digs.
Swatzel tallied three blocks
to lead the net defense, followed by Parker and Ally
Hendrix with one apiece.
Wahama was led by Brit-

tany Stewart with three
service points on the night,
followed by Mackenzie Gabritsch with two. Olivia Hill
and Kelsey Zuspan rounded
out the WHS total with one
point apiece. The Lady Falcons have now lost five consecutive matches, following
their three match winning
streak.
With the win Eastern
completes sweep of Wahama, as the Lady Eagles
also defeated WHS in three
games on September 11th
in Tuppers Plains.

Photos by Dave Harris | Daily Sentinel

Southern senior Jennifer McCoy, right, keeps pace with Nelsonville-York’s Lilly Parsons during Saturday’s second annual
Meigs Cross Country Invitational in Rocksprings, Ohio.

Lady Rebels sweep Belpre Tomcats, Lady Spartans win Meigs CC Invite
Alex Hawley

ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio —
The South Gallia volleyball
team has won three of its
last four games and is now
above .500 in the league.
Tuesday night the Lady
Rebels defeated Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division foe Belpre (5-13, 2-10
TVC Hocking) in three
games by a count of 25-10,
25-10 and 25-12 in Gallia
County.
Shelby Sanders led the
service attack for SGHS (106, 6-4) with 19 points, followed by Meghan Caldwell
with 10 and Sara Bailey
with nine service points. Ellie Bostic finished with six
points, Brynn Adams had
four, while Alicia Hornsby
and Bailie Corbin each had
one point to round out the
South Gallia scoring.
The net attack was led by
Caldwell, who had 12 kills
on the night. Adams had
eight kills, while Bostic had
seven and Courtney Haner

finished with two. Corbin
closed out the net attack
with one kill in the triumph.
Bostic paced the net defense
with five blocks, followed by
Caldwell with one. Sanders
finished with one dig on the
night.
The Lady Golden Eagles
Were led by Taryn Carr and
Loren Elliott, who each recorded five service points.
Katelyn Hughes added
one point to the BHS total. Kristen Hannah led
the Belpre net attack with
three kills, followed by Carr
and Hughes with two kills
apiece. Elliott and Brianna
Owen each had one kill for
Belpre, while own led the
team with five assists.
This marks South Gallia’s second victory over
Belpre this season, the first
came on September 11th in
straight games at Belpre.
The Lady Rebels wore
pink uniforms during the
game as part of the Volley For The Cure program
to help raise breast cancer
awareness.

OVP Sports Schedule
Thursday, Oct. 4
Volleyball
Chillicothe at Gallia Academy, 5:15
South Gallia at Trimble, 6 p.m.
South Point at RVHS, 5:30
Fed Hock at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 6:30
Boys Soccer
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Huntington SJ at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 5
Football
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Oak Hill (WV), 7:30
Meigs at Vinton County, 7:30
Wahama at Fed Hock, 7:30
RVHS at Coal Grove, 7:30
Belpre at South Gallia, 7:30
Trimble at Eastern, 7:30
Miller at Southern, 7:30
Hannan at Manchester, 7:30
Volleyball
OVCS, Calvary at Teays Valley Chr., 5:30

Dave Harris
Special to OVP

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio —
Meigs held its second annual
Cross Country Invitational
this past Saturday at Meigs
High School. In the girls high
school event Alexander won
with a score of 26, while Trimble finished second with a
team total of 29. Ally Malone
led the Lady Spartans with a
time of 22:17.38, Kate Spencer of Nelsonville-York followed with a time of 23:07.37.
Rounding out the top five
were Lilly Parsons of Nelsonville-York 23:13.42, Jennifer
McCoy of Southern 23:27.99,
and Haley Kennedy of Meigs
23:57.39. Joyce Weddle of
Southern finished in ninth
place with a time of 25:41.9.
In the boys race Trimble
won the team title with a score
of 19, followed by NelsonvilleYork with a 38. Josh Smathers
of Trimble won the individual
with a time of 19:40.23.
Rounding out the top five
were Nick Spoutz of Nelsonville York 20:34.11 followed
by Brandon Mahr of Meigs
20:55.07, Mitchell Howard of
Meigs 21:27.90 and Brandon
Brown of Trimble 21:33.24.
Other
locals
taking
part were Bradley McCoy
of Southern in seventh
(21:59.70) in ninth Forrest
Nagy of Meigs (22:50.19),
in 12th Demitri Lamm of
Southern (23:26.62) and in
14th Joe Morris of Southern (23:55.06).

Meigs sophomore Mitchell Howard runs up a hill during Saturday’s second annual
Meigs Cross Country Invitational in Rocksprings, Ohio.

Lady Raiders avenge Coal Grove
Bryan Walters

bwalters@heartlandpublications.com

BIDWELL, Ohio — The
River Valley volleyball team
moved into a first-place
tie in the league standings
Tuesday night following a
25-12, 25-17, 25-17 victory
over visiting Coal Grove in
an Ohio Valley Conference
matchup in Gallia County.
The host Lady Raiders

(7-9, 7-2 OVC) avenged
a 25-11, 25-21, 30-28 setback at CGHS earlier in
the year and also moved
into a tie with the Lady
Hornets (7-2 OVC) in the
league standings. Both
teams have one OVC
match remaining, which
will determine the final
outcome of the league
standings.
Cady Gilmore led the
RVHS service attack with

25 points, followed by Rylie Hollingsworth with 20
points and Janelle McClelland with eight points.
Justyce Stout added seven
points to the winning
cause, while Noel Mershon
rounded things out with six
points.
Tracy Roberts led the
net attack with 12 kills, followed by Leia Moore and
Kaci Bryant with four kills
apiece. Stout and Alicia Fer-

rell both had two kills each,
while Gilmore, Mershon
and Rachael Smith rounded things out with one kill
each.
Moore had a team-high
three blocks for the hosts,
while Roberts and Mershon
added two blocks each. Ferrell and Bryant also had a
block each in the triumph.
Shae Willis led the Lady
Hornets with 21 service
points in the setback.

�Thursday, October 4, 2012

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Legals

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Legals

Public Sale
The Personal property and
contents of the following storage units will be auctioned for
sale to satisfy the lien of Hill’s
Self Storage.
The sale will be held at the,
Hill’s Self Storage, 29625
Bashan Road, Racine OH
45771 on October 6, 2012 @
10:00 am. Auction will be cash
or certified funds only; units will
be opened for viewing only 5
min prior to start of auction;
each unit will be sold for one
money and must be emptied
by 4pm on the day of auction.
Auction will go on no matter
what the weather.
#22
Jerry Lewis
Lovett Road
Portland, OH 45770
10/2 10/3 10/4

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that
on Saturday, October 6, 2012
at 10:00 a.m., a public sale will
be held at 211 W. Second St.
Pomeroy OH. The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company is
selling for cash in hand or certified check the following collateral:
2000 Pontiac Grand Am Vin #:
1G2NF52E3YC536093
1990 Chevy 1500 Vin #:
2GCEC19KXL1183276
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral prior to
sale. Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”,
with no expressed or implied
warranty given.
For further information, or for
an appointment to inspect collateral, prior to sale date contract Cyndie or Nickie at 740992-2136.
10/4 10/5

NOTICE AND EXPLANATION
OF A
PROPOSED ACTION IN A
100-YEAR FLOODPLAIN
October 4, 2012
To: All Interested Agencies,
Groups, and Individuals:
The Meigs County Commissioners has conducted an evaluation as required by Executive Order 11988 in accordance with HUD regulations at
24 CFR 55.20 to determine the
potential affect that its activity
in the floodplain will have on
THE HOME NATIONAL BANK the environment. The projects
WILL AUCTION THE FOLbeing considered are:
LOWING ITEM, a 1998 Honda 2012 CDBG Formula
Civic, Vin #
Parks and Recreation Jim Ven2HGEJ672WH617532, ON
nari Park, Rutland, OH InstallaSATURDAY OCTOBER 6th,
tion of basketball court
2012, AT 10:00 A.M. THE
Parks and Recreation Around
SALE WILL BE HELD IN THE
park and along SR 124, SyraBANK'S PARKING LOT .
cuse, OH Installation of walkTHE HOME NATIONAL BANK way/bicycle path
WILL AUCTION THE FOL2012 CDBG Neighborhood ReLOWING ITEM, a 1994 Nisvitalization
san Sentra Vin #
Street Improvements Larkin,
1N4EB32A7RC842004 ON
Civic Center Dr., Nelson, BrySATURDAY OCTOBER 6th,
ant, Weber, Rutland,OH Re2012, AT 10:00 A.M. THE
surfacing of existing streets
SALE WILL BE HELD IN THE
Clearance Activities Salem,
BANK'S PARKING LOT.
Mulberry, Brick, SR 124,
THE HOME NATIONAL BANK N.Main/Bryant, Rutland, OH
WILL AUCTION THE FOLDemolition of Unsightly strucLOWING ITEM a 1997 Dodge
tures
Caravan Vin #
Meigs County has determined
2B4GP44R2VR343168 ON
that approval of the project will
SATURDAY OCTOBER 6th,
have no significant impact on
2012, AT 10:00 A.M. THE
the environment for the followSALE WILL BE HELD IN THE
ing reasons:
BANK'S PARKING LOT.
1. There is no alternative as to
THE HOME NATIONAL BANK location of the project
RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
2. Meigs County Soil and WaREJECT ANY AND ALL BIDS. ter Conservation has determALL VEHICLES ARE SOLD,
ined the projects will have no
AS IS WHERE IS, WITH NO
impact.
WARRANTIES EXPRESSED
Any interested person, agency,
OR IMPLIED. FOR AN APor group wishing to comment
POINTMENT TO SEE, CALL
on the project may submit writ949-2210, ASK FOR Barbara.
ten comments for considera10/3 10/4 10/5
tion to the Meigs County
Grants Office at the following
Help WantedGeneral
address
by 4:00 p. m. on October 11, 2012 which is at least 7
days after the publication of
this notice.
Jean Trussell, Grants Administrator
Meigs County Grants Office
117 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Physical Therapist
740-992-7908
Other agencies involved with
this evaluation include:
The Meigs
County
Soil and
Pleasant Valley Home Health
Services
currently
Water Conservation Office
has an opening for a full-time
Physical
Therapist.
The Ohio Historical Preservation experience
Office
One year of Physical Therapy
preferred.
10/4

Graduate from an approved Physical Therapy
Program. Must have WV and Ohio license. Must
have reliable transportation and valid driver’s
license.

Please send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Attn: Human Resources,
2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, fax to
(304) 675-6975 or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org

EOE: M/F/D/V
60359138

NOTICE AND EXPLANATION
OF A
PROPOSED ACTION IN A
100-YEAR FLOODPLAIN
October 4, 2012
To: All Interested Agencies,
Groups, and Individuals:
The Meigs County Commissioners has conducted an evaluation as required by Executive Order 11988 in accordance with HUD regulations at
24 CFR 55.20 to determine the
potential affect that its activity
in the floodplain will have on
the environment. The projects
being considered are:
2012 CDBG Formula
Parks and Recreation Jim Vennari Park, Rutland, OH Installation of basketball court
Parks and Recreation Around
park and along SR 124, Syracuse, OH Installation of walkway/bicycle path
2012 CDBG Neighborhood Revitalization
Street Improvements Larkin,
Civic Center Dr., Nelson, Bryant, Weber, Rutland,OH Resurfacing of existing streets
Clearance Activities Salem,
Mulberry, Brick, SR 124,
N.Main/Bryant, Rutland, OH
Demolition of Unsightly structures
Meigs County has determined
that approval of the project will
have no significant impact on
the environment for the following reasons:
1. There is no alternative as to
location of the project
2. Meigs County Soil and Water Conservation has determined the projects will have no
impact.
Any interested person, agency,
or group wishing to comment
on the project may submit written comments
for consideraLegals
tion to the Meigs County
Grants Office at the following
address by 4:00 p. m. on October 11, 2012 which is at least 7
days after the publication of
this notice.
Jean Trussell, Grants Administrator
Meigs County Grants Office
117 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-7908
Other agencies involved with
this evaluation include:
The Meigs County Soil and
Water Conservation Office
The Ohio Historical Preservation Office
10/4
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Notices
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 investigating the offering.

Giveaway Wooden Pallets.
825 3rd Ave @ the Gallipolis
Tribune.

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.
SERVICES
Child / Elderly Care
Babysitting in home. Rutland
area. Reasonably priced. CPR
&amp; First Aid certified. For info,
call 740-742-2500
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

J &amp; C TREE SERVICE
30 yrs experience, insured
No job too big or small.
304-675-2213
304-377-8547
Repairs

Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
FINANCIAL
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)

300

SERVICES

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

ANIMALS
Pets
1 female kitten, black w/white
boots, bob-tailed. 1 solid white
male. 304-675-7585.

AKC German Shepherd puppies. Top blood lines. Both parents on premises. $350.00 For
information call Heritage
Farms, 304-675-5724.
FREE KITTENS: 2 yellow, 1
black, just weaned. 740-9493408

To: Giveaway 2 Female white
calico Kittens Approx. 12
weeks old They are already
spade. Prefer to be placed in
the same home. Call 740-2455599
AGRICULTURE

Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain
Square hay bales. Alfalfa &amp;
orchard grass. Call Heritage
Farm, 304-675-5724
MERCHANDISE
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

AAG
Ever Consider a Reverse Mortgage? At least 62 years old?
Stay in your home &amp; increase
cash flow! Safe &amp; Effective!
Call Now for your FREE DVD!
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cash flow! Safe &amp; Effective!
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Call Now 866-935-7730
ACCELLER CLASSIFIED
SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-Digital Phone. Packages start at
$89.99/mo (for 12 months.)
Options from ALL major service providers. Call Acceller
today to learn more!
CALL 1-866-636-5984
ACCELLER CLASSIFIED
SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-Digital Phone. Packages start at
$89.99/mo (for 12 months.)
Options from ALL major service providers. Call Acceller
today to learn more!
CALL 1-866-636-5984
ACCELLER CLASSIFIED
SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-Digital Phone. Packages start at
$89.99/mo (for 12 months.)
Options from ALL major service providers. Call Acceller
today to learn more!
CALL 1-866-636-5984
Carpet inventory Clearance
SALE - Remnants 5.95 yd
while supplies last - Free Estimates - Mollohan Carpets St
RT 7 N Gallipolis, Ohio 740446-7444
CREDIT CARD DEBT
Buried in Credit Card Debt?
Over $10,000? We can get you
out of debt quickly and save
you thousands of dollars! Call
CREDIT CARD RELIEF for
your free consultation
1-888-838-6679
CREDIT CARD DEBT
Buried in Credit Card Debt?
Over $10,000? We can get you
out of debt quickly and save
you thousands of dollars! Call
CREDIT CARD RELIEF for
your free consultation
1-888-838-6679
CREDIT CARD DEBT
Buried in Credit Card Debt?
Over $10,000? We can get you
out of debt quickly and save
you thousands of dollars! Call
CREDIT CARD RELIEF for
your free consultation
1-888-838-6679
HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK
OR BOAT TO HERITAGE
FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day
Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free
Towing, All Paperwork Taken
Care Of. 888-740-6292
HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK
OR BOAT TO HERITAGE
FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day
Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free
Towing, All Paperwork Taken
Care Of. 888-740-6292
HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK
OR BOAT TO HERITAGE
FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day
Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free
Towing, All Paperwork Taken
Care Of. 888-740-6292

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

HIGH SPEED INTERNET
Highspeed Internet EVERYWHERE By Satellite!
Speeds up to 12mbps! (200x
faster than dial-up.)
Starting at $49.95/mo. CALL
NOW &amp; GO FAST!
1-877-358-7040

MyION DIABETICS
ATTENTION DIABETICS with
Medicare. Get a FREE talking
meter and diabetic testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE
home delivery! Best of all, this
meter eliminates painful finger
pricking! Call 877-310-5568

HIGH SPEED INTERNET
Highspeed Internet EVERYWHERE By Satellite!
Speeds up to 12mbps! (200x
faster than dial-up.)
Starting at $49.95/mo. CALL
NOW &amp; GO FAST!
1-877-358-7040
HIGH SPEED INTERNET
Highspeed Internet EVERYWHERE By Satellite!
Speeds up to 12mbps! (200x
faster than dial-up.)
Starting at $49.95/mo. CALL
NOW &amp; GO FAST!
1-877-358-7040
HYDRAFLEXIN
Attention Joint &amp; Muscle Pain
Sufferers: Clinically proven allnatural supplement helps reduce pain and enhance mobility. Call 888-602-7109
to try Hydraflexin
RISK-FREE for 90 days.
HYDRAFLEXIN
Attention Joint &amp; Muscle Pain
Sufferers: Clinically proven allnatural supplement helps reduce pain and enhance mobility. Call 888-602-7109
to try Hydraflexin
RISK-FREE for 90 days.
HYDRAFLEXIN
Attention Joint &amp; Muscle Pain
Sufferers: Clinically proven allnatural supplement helps reduce pain and enhance mobility. Call 888-602-7109
to try Hydraflexin
RISK-FREE for 90 days.
MEDICAL GUARDIAN
Medical Alert for Seniors-24/7
monitoring. FREE Equipment.
FREE Shipping. Nationwide
Service $29.95/Month CALL
Medical Guardian Today
877-356-1913
MEDICAL GUARDIAN
Medical Alert for Seniors-24/7
monitoring. FREE Equipment.
FREE Shipping. Nationwide
Service $29.95/Month CALL
Medical Guardian Today
877-356-1913
MEDICAL GUARDIAN
Medical Alert for Seniors-24/7
monitoring. FREE Equipment.
FREE Shipping. Nationwide
Service $29.95/Month CALL
Medical Guardian Today
877-356-1913
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.
1-877-617-7822
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.
1-877-617-7822
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.
1-877-617-7822
MyION DIABETICS
ATTENTION DIABETICS with
Medicare. Get a FREE talking
meter and diabetic testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE
home delivery! Best of all, this
meter eliminates painful finger
pricking! Call 877-310-5568
MyION DIABETICS
ATTENTION DIABETICS with
Medicare. Get a FREE talking
meter and diabetic testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE
home delivery! Best of all, this
meter eliminates painful finger
pricking! Call 877-310-5568

PARK AVENUE
Buy Gold &amp; Silver Coins - 1
percent over dealer cost For a
limited time, Park Avenue Numismatics is selling Silver and
Gold American Eagle Coins at
1 percent over dealer cost.
1-888-284-9780
PARK AVENUE
Buy Gold &amp; Silver Coins - 1
percent over dealer cost For a
limited time, Park Avenue Numismatics is selling Silver and
Gold American Eagle Coins at
1 percent over dealer cost.
1-888-284-9780
PARK AVENUE
Buy Gold &amp; Silver Coins - 1
percent over dealer cost For a
limited time, Park Avenue Numismatics is selling Silver and
Gold American Eagle Coins at
1 percent over dealer cost.
1-888-284-9780
Want To Buy

Absolute Top dollar- silver/gold
coins, pre 1935 US currency.
proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue, Gallipolis. 446-2842
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Yard Sale
123 S Park Dr,Pt Pl. Central
Air Unit,Plus Sz clothes,Jewelry,Home decor,Books,Exercise equip., Furniture. Fri/Sat.
3 Family Garage Sale FRIDAY ONLY @ 1111 Ohio Ave
8am - ?

5 FAMILY , Main St, Rutland,
10/5 &amp; 10/6, 9am-5pm. Household items, some antiques,
kids &amp; baby clothes, misc.
BIG Yard Sale Oct 5th 9am to
? @ 62 Hubbard Ave, Gallipolis,Oh. Home Interior,3 wheel
bike,glassware,women's clothing &amp; much more
BIG yard sale. 10/5 &amp; 6 9am-?
409 Lucas Lane, Point Pleasant. Tools clothing, glassware,
stone jars &amp; lots more.
Estate Sale by Junque ladies,
@ 1074 Bear Run Rd.off State
Rt 7 S Approx. 1 mile out Bear
Run. Oct 5th &amp; 6th - 9am to
4pm - Oct 7th 9am - 2pm, Lifetime Collection, House &amp;
outbuildings full- Contents
"Virginia House , Oak Dining
Room, Rattan Furniture,
Johnson Brothers China, Depression Glass, Pottery, Gun
Cabinet, California King and
Twin Bed sets,Mantle
Clocks, Table Saws,Tools,
Air Compressors, Costume
Jewerly, Much More
Garage Sale Oct 4,5,6, @ 2
1/2 miles east of Porter on
554. Winter coats, clothes of
all sizes
Large Garage Sale : Oct 5th &amp;
6th, @ the Rodney Community Building on St Rt #850.
9am to 5pm
LG SALE, Fri 10/5 &amp; Sat 10/6,
8am-3pm on Eastman Ridge
Rd off Rocksprings Rd near
Pomeroy. LOTS of GOODIES.
Moving Sale Sat 6th, Stone
Harbor, 543 Pineview Dr., Gallipolis. Pool Table, Lots of Furniture, GO Kart, Weight Bench
MOVING SALE!! Fri 10/5-Sun
10/7, 9a-5p. Furniture, Clothing, Household items.
Everything must go!! 154 S.
Park Drive, Pt Pleasant.
Oct 6&amp;7, Fri &amp; Sat 9-3. 4038 &amp;
4118 Cora Mill Rd. Home Interior, Mikasa Crystal new, TV
Stand, Kitchen items &amp; Misc.

�Thursday, October 4, 2012

Lady Falcons fall
to South Gallia
Alex Hawley

ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

MASON, W.Va. — The South Gallia volleyball
team completed its season sweep of Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division host Wahama Monday
night in four games.
The Lady Falcons (4-10, 2-10 TVC Hocking) edged
SGHS (9-6, 6-4) in the opening game 27-25, before
falling in the second game 25-9. The Lady Rebels
took the third game 26-24, and the fourth game 2517 to secure the road win.
Meghan Caldwell led the service attack for South
Gallia with 20 points, followed by Brynn Adams with
12. Ellie Bostic had 11 points, Sara Bailey had nine,
Shelby Sanders finished with seven and Bailie Corbin
rounded out the SGHS scoring with three points.
Ellie Bostic and Caldwell had 14 kills apiece to
pace the Lady Rebels at the net, followed by Brynn
Adams. Bailie Corbin finished with two kills and
Sara Bailey had one kill to close out the South Gallia
net attack. Bostic and Caldwell each had two blocks,
while Adams finished with one. Bailey and Corbin
each had two digs to lead the Lady Rebels, while
Caldwell, Ellie Bostic and Katie Bostic each had one.
This marks the second time SGHS has defeated
the Lady Falcons this season. The first came on September 10th in Mercerville where SGHS won three
straight games to claim victory after dropping the
first game of the match. Seniors Meghan Caldwell
and Ellie Bostic have stood out in both games against
the Lady Falcons this year. In two matches against
Wahama this year Caldwell had 35 total service
points and 26 total kills, while Ellie Bostic had 24
total points and 30 total kills.
No statistical information from Wahama was available at presstime.

Yard Sale
Thur/Fri/Sat (9am), 1914 ST
RT 141, Gallipolis. Antiques,
sweet potatoes, gourds, name
brand clothes, baby items,
many more items. Rain or
Shine
Yard Sale @ 116 Dogwood
drive Fri. Oct 5th 10am to 5pm
Sat. Oct 6th 10am to 2pm
Yard Saler's Paradise- 27 plus
sales over 50 families participating, Oct. 6th, 9-5, Oct 7th, 10
-4, South Cannaan Rd.-Athens
County Rd 24 (6 1/2 miles
long) located off Rt. 50, 2 miles
East of Athens. Most sales are
Saturday &amp; Sunday Rain or
Shine. Food, Drinks, Restrooms available.
Yard/Moving Sale Rain/Shine
Fri &amp; Sat Oct 5th &amp; 6th, 9-?
1206 Orchard Hill Rd. Rt 7
South to Clipper Mills, turn on
Orchard Hill, 1 mile. NASCAR,
furniture, toys, carpet, Adult &amp;
children's clothing Lots of Nice
Items
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
AUTOMOTIVE
Want To Buy
Oiler's Towing now buying
Junk Cars Paying $1.00 to
$700.00
388-0011
or
441-7870
REAL ESTATE SALES
For Sale By Owner
1997 Clayton 16x80 3BR, 2BA,
porches &amp; underpinning included. Asking $12,500. 740367-7791

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

www.mydailysentinel.com

Houses For Sale

Meigs can’t slow Lady Buckeyes
Alex Hawley

ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

NELSONVILLE, Ohio
— Momentum is a powerful tool.
Meigs faced Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division
foe Nelsonville-York Tuesday night in Athens County. The Lady Buckeyes (133, 5-2 TVC Ohio) had six

Chad Waller
Special to OVP

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — After
knocking off then-No. 1 Lindsey Wilson (Ky.) in the NAIA Game of the
Week on Saturday night, Rio Grande
(Ohio) is the new top-ranked team
in the NAIA Men’s Soccer Coaches’
Top 25 Poll, the national office announced Tuesday.
The RedStorm dethrones a Lindsey Wilson club that was No.1 for
10-straight polls. Rio Grande, who
prevailed over the Blue Raiders by
a 3-2 overtime score on Sept. 29,
gathered 16 first-place votes and 557
total points in the fifth edition of the
Top 25.
The top of the poll was split
amongst voters. Lindsey Wilson
fell one spot and posted 532 points.
No. 3 Auburn Montgomery (Ala.)
and No. 4 Belhaven (Miss.) both
received first-place votes, with the
Warhawks earning three and Belhaven grabbing the other one. No. 5
Science &amp; Arts (Okla.) locked down
Apartments/Townhouses

2 &amp; 3 BR apts, $385 &amp; up, sec
dep $300 &amp; up AC, W/D hookup tenant pays elec, EHO
Ellm View Apts 304-882-3017
2 bedroom apartment
$600+elec available immediately 740-446-9595
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$450 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-794-1173 or 740-9886130
Beautiful 1BR apartment in the
country freshly painted very
clean W/D hook up nice country setting only 10 mins. from
town. Must see to appreciate.
Water/Trash pd. $375/mo 740645-5953 or 614-595-7773
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5
BA, back patio, pool, playground. $475 month 740-4463481
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
304-675-6679

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425+2 BR at
$475 Month. 446-1599.

its position for the fourth-consecutive time with 483 points.
The RedStorm are on top for the
first time since the final Top 25 Poll
on Nov. 14, 2010. They pad their
all-time total since 2000 to 36 mentions in the top position. Rio Grande
stands 9-1-0 overall and has a 10-day
layover with its next competition
on Oct. 9 against Shawnee State
(Ohio).
No. 15 (tie) Benedictine enjoyed
the best jump within the poll. On
their current eight-match unbeaten
streak, the Ravens have owned a
22-1 scoring advantage. Benedictine
improved six spots and garnered
277 points.
Falling the farthest among ranked
teams was Mobile (Ala.), who tumbled nine spots to 23rd. Since Sept.
21, the Rams have gone 2-2.
For the first time all year, No. 17
Southern Wesleyan (S.C.), No. 20
SCAD Savannah (Ga.) and No. 25
Lyon (Ark.) enjoy a national ranking. Since poll archives date back to
2000, this recognition is a first for
Rentals

2- 3 Bedroom Trailers for Rent
one is $525mo. &amp; $525 Dep.
and the other one is $475mo.
&amp; $475 dep
Call 740-367-0641.

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218

one point on the night. Patterson led Meigs with 10
assists in the game.
The MHS net attack
was led by Emily Kinnan with six kills in the
match, followed by Andrus with five. Olivia Cremeans had three kills and
George had one to round
out the Lady Marauders
total. Hannah Cremeans

had two blocks for Meigs.
Meigs has just completed one of the tougher parts
of its schedule, as the Lady
Marauders last three opponents hold a combined
record of 44-7.
Nelsonville-York
also
defeated Meigs on September 11th in Rocksprings by a count of 256, 25-14 and 25-6.

URG men’s soccer assumes top spot in coaches poll

Mobile Home Repos Single
Wides, Double Wides, Financing Available 740-446-3570

Apartments/Townhouses

of their last seven matches
coming into play and defeated the Lady Marauders
(2-14, 0-7) 25-5, 25-15 and
25-11 in three games.
Lindsay Patterson, Olivia Cremeans, and Brooke
Reynolds led the Lady
Marauders with two service points apiece. Brook
Andrus, and Mercadies
George each finished with

RENT
SPECIALS
Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2, 3 &amp;
4BR units avail. 1 month Free
rent. You pay electric. Minorities encouraged to apply. No
pets
304-674-0023
304-444-4268
Houses For Rent
2 Bedroom house for rent Gallipolis city limits $550mo. 740853-1101- NO PETS
2 BR mobile home in Middleport, OH, $275 mo, $275 dep,
1 yr lease, no pets, $75 non refundable water dep. 740-9925097 No calls after 9 pm.
2 BR, Middleport, $350 mo,
$350 dep, 1 yr lease, NO
PETS, no calls after 9 pm.
740-992-5097

2BR home, Jackson Pike near
Hosp., Must sign 1yr lease,
Ref, No Smoking, poss.1
small animal, $575/$575, leave
message 1-304-657-6378
3 BR, Pomeroy, HUD approved. 304-773-5767

4-5 BR, 1 1/2 BA. $625 Month,
$400 Deposit + Utilities. 86
Garfield. Nov !st. HUD OK 740
-645-1646
In country, 3BR, 2 BA, full
basement. Located in Mercerville area between Gallipolis &amp; Huntington. $620 mo. includes water &amp; trash plus $600
dep. No PETS inside 740-2566128 or 740-645-2007
MANUFACTURED HOUSING

2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331
Smaller 2 BR Trailer for individual or couple, $350 dep.
$350 mo. NO PETS. 740-2455087. No Appliances
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT
Drivers &amp; Delivery
Town of New Haven will be accepting applications for a CDL
driver. This is a 40-hour a
week job &amp; applications will be
accepted through Oct. 12.
Help Wanted- General
JOB FAIR-Meigs County 1
Stop Jobs, Oct 11th, 10am2pm, Family Life Center,
Middleport, OH. 740-992-2117
ext 161
Looking for exp carpenters in
roofing timbers &amp; framing.
Send responses to: P.O. Box
1124, Gallipolis, OH 45631
Manufacturing Assistants in
Bidwell. Ability to read/use
tape measure and work safely
as team member required.
Temp, f/t (M-Th, 6a-4:30p +
occasionally overtime),
$10/hour. For details on this
position and more, or to apply,
visit
www.careerconnections.info.
No fees. EOE.

Miscellaneous

Southern Wesleyan and Lyon. SCAD
Savannah was last ranked on Aug.
16, 2011 (No. 18).
Hannibal-LaGrange (Mo.) (No.
19), Bethel (Ind.) (No. 20) and
Northwood (Fla.) (No. 24) all fell
out this week.
The Southern States Athletic
Conference leads all conferences/
independents/unaffiliated
groups
with five teams in the Top 25: Auburn Montgomery, Belhaven, No.
9 Southern Poly (Ga.), Southern
Wesleyan and Mobile. The Heart of
America Athletic Conference placed
three teams in the rankings: No. 7
MidAmerica Nazarene (Kan.), No.
13 Missouri Valley and Benedictine.
Four other conferences landed a
pair of teams in the Top 25.
The We
pollare
was
voted upon
by a pana progressive
orthodontic
practicerepresenting
with an immediel of head
coaches
each
need for a Treatment Coof the ate
conference/independents/unordinator and Records Techniaffiliated
ciangroups.
in our Gallipolis location.

The successful candidate must
possess
a positive
attitude,
a
Chad Waller
is the NAIA
Director
of Communicawillingness to learn new skills,
tions andand
Sports
Information.to consista dedication
ently delivering outstanding patient care in a team environment. Duties
will include takHelp Wanted- General
Medical
ing photo, x-rays, impressions
OFFICE CLEANER: PT posiand communicating treatment
tion starts at $8.00 hr, perform
needs to patients and referring
general housecleaning of busi- dentists. Please call 304-941ness in Pomeroy, OH, hrs are
2322 between the hours of
evenings, 3-6 hrs wk. More hrs 8:30am-5:00pm if you are inmay become available in time
terested this position.
if desired. Valid drivers license,
reliable transportation &amp; phone
are required. Must have a
Part-Time/Temporaries
clean background &amp; pass a
Accepting resumes for partdrug test. Call ServiceMaster
time position. Job includes fine
at 740-592-2826 M-F, 9 amjewelry sales and buying of
5 pm for an interview appt.
scrap gold and silver. No
Management / Supervisory Phone Calls please. Acquistions 151 Second Ave.
Golden Corrall now Hiring ExGallipolis
perienced Kitchen &amp; Service
Managers, for our Gallipolis
OH, location. 35k-45k dependSERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY
ing on experience. 5 day week,
Paid PTO every Quarter,
Health/Life/Vision/Dental,
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accepting applications for
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16x70, 3BR, 2BA, very good
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ate need for a Treatment CoMH Park! Call 740-446-3160.
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The successful candidate must
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BASEMENT WATERPROOFand a dedication to consistING. Unconditional Lifetime
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�Thursday, October 4, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, OcTOber 4, 2012

Comics
ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

MUTTS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker

THE LOCKHORNS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s
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. 4, 2012:
This year others can count on you
for feedback, as you tend to be quite
verbose. Your ability to detach from
yourself and your life will prove to be
essential to your year and overall happiness. Distant elements, educational
opportunities, travel and issues involving the law might not move as fast as
you’d like, but you will arrive where
you want to be in due time. If you are
single, you could meet several people.
The person who is quite different will
be the right one for you. If attached,
a trip will invigorate your relationship.
Keeping communication open will be a
snap. GEMINI always has a different
perspective.
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)
HHHH Remedy any confusion,
at least on your side. With your busy
pace, you might regret nixing an event
or an offer to take a break. Be aware
that in the next several months, you
might very well have a similar opportunity again; just don’t let it slip by.
Tonight: Express what you have been
holding back.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH Note an emerging possessive
streak. What is going on with you?
You might need to take a timeout for a
personal assessment and for working
on your self-image. Consider making a
much-needed change that you have in
mind. It will only serve to benefit you.
Tonight: Take care of errands first.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHHH You are comfortable with
having a plethora of options. You might
regret a recent decision you have
made, but you will have an opportunity
to remedy that remorse soon enough.
Hang in there. A boss or higher-up
acts in the most unexpected manner.
Tonight: Out and about.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHH You have several days before
you have to make a decision. Think
carefully about what you will choose.
Make appointments to see your doctor
and dentist — not that you will have a
problem, but it could prevent a problem
from happening. Surprises lie ahead.
Tonight: Get some R and R while you
can.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHHH You could regroup and
become upbeat about a difficult situation. Use this skill more often to avoid
being upset or for trying to understand
a different perspective. You might be
hoping for some positive news. It could

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goes
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ushere
at

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Horoscope

be delayed, but it will happen. Tonight:
Find fun with a friend.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH Be willing to take a stand, no
matter what is occurring. Key people
might act erratically. Someone dotes
on you adoringly; let this person know
what you want. You feel upbeat,
despite your many responsibilities.
Tonight: Out and about.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Reach out for someone at a
distance. A cohort could be distorting a
situation more than you realize. You will
gain more information and insight about
this person if you speak to him or her
about opening up lines of communication. Tonight: Times are changing.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH You have a lot to say and
do. A close associate steps in, as he
or she needs attention and wants to
express some creativity. Be careful —
the unexpected could occur with this
person. An offer or invitation will reappear. This time, be sure to make a fast
decision. Tonight: Try out a suggestion.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH You might be overwhelmed
by requests. In some cases, you will
need to say “no.” Some of the key people in your life could be more unstable
than usual. Give them space if a difficult
conversation occurs. Tonight: Consider
starting the weekend early.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH Focus on errands and your
own well-being. If you are working, you
might experience a need to be very
attentive. Take nothing for granted
today — not your pet, health, favorite
plant or group of friends. Make sure to
give enough attention to each of these.
Tonight: Put your feet up. Relax.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHHH Your creativity and ingenuity could take an interesting turn. You
might wonder exactly what works and
what will remain experimental, until
you find the answers. Remember that
with you, everything changes quickly.
A child or loved one needs to open up,
yet he or she might pull back at the
slightest lack of interest. Tonight: Let
the fun begin.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHH Anchor in and enjoy yourself.
You could have a lot of questions about
a real-estate matter and/or a domestic
issue. You cannot push right now in
these areas, but you can remain open
to conversations when others are
ready. You might feel differently in a
few days. Tonight: Order in.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Thursday, October 4, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 10

www.mydailysentinel.com

Isberner named offensive player of the week
Randy Payton

nounced Tuesday.
Isberner and Breckan were
selected based on their performances from Sept. 24 - 30 and
were chosen out of a pool of conference/independent/unaffiliated
groupings.
Isberner, a 6-1 senior forward
from Sao Paulo, Brazil, tallied six
goals and one assist (13 points) in
two Rio Grande wins last week.
The two-time reigning Mid-

Special to OVP

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Richard
Isberner of the University of Rio
Grande (Ohio) has been tabbed
National Men’s Soccer Offensive Player of the Week and Kyle
Breckan of Cornerstone (Mich.)
has been named the NAIA National Men’s Soccer Defensive Player
of the Week, the national office an-

South Conference Offensive
Player of the Week put home
four goals in the 5-0 victory over
St. Catharine (Ky.) on Sept. 26.
In the NAIA Game of the Week
against top-ranked Lindsey Wilson (Ky.) on Sept. 29, Isberner
notched the game-winner in overtime to send Lindsey Wilson to its
first loss since 2010. He finished
his day with two goals and an assist in the 3-2 win.

In NAIA statistical rankings,
Isberner is second in goals per
game (1.5), second in points per
game (3.4), sixth in goals (12)
and 10th in points (27).
Breckan, a 6-foot senior goalkeeper from Barrington, Ill.,
posted two shutouts last week
for the Golden Eagles. On Sept.
26, Breckan stood strong with
a 1-0 overtime shutout over
Aquinas (Mich.), the only Wol-

verine-Hoosier Athletic Conference team “receiving votes”
in the latest Coaches’ Poll. He
compiled six saves in 104 minutes. He followed that with another 1-0 blanking, this time
against Northwestern Ohio on
Sept. 29.
Breckan, who ranks 34th in the
NAIA in goals against average
(0.94), is 6-1-1 on the year with
41 saves in 861:28 minutes.

Just call Philly Brown Ohio State’s top target
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— Whether his coaches
call him Corey or call him
Philly, all that matters to
Ohio State’s Corey Brown
is that they just keep calling
his number.
Brown, dubbed “Philly”
because of his hometown to
differentiate him from defensive back Corey “Pittsburgh” Brown, has suddenly become the long-awaited
go-to guy at wide-receiver
for the Buckeyes.
“I just like the position
I’m in right now, basically
doing a little bit of everything,” he said. “It’s obviously a perfect position, being able to get some carries,
being able to do the screen
passes and also getting
some downfield throws.”
His name might not be
distinctive but his numbers
are.
The junior had 12 catches
in the 12th-ranked Buck-

eyes’ 17-16 win on Saturday
at Michigan State. To put
that into perspective, the
leading receivers for the
Buckeyes during the 2011
season had 14 catches.
“He’s really improved. It
couldn’t happen to a guy
that’s more committed
to excellence,” said head
coach Urban Meyer, who
had verbally savaged his receivers for several months.
“The good thing is he’s not
near what he can be.”
Brown has 32 catches for
317 yards and a touchdown
so far for the Buckeyes (5-0,
1-0 Big Ten), who host No.
21 Nebraska (4-1, 1-0) on
Saturday night in a major
showdown.
He’s tied for 30th in the
nation — something almost
unheard of in recent years
for an Ohio State wide-out
— in receptions per game
(6.40).
Much of his success

stems from his volatility
on short screen passes. But
he’s also helping the Buckeyes out by simply attracting extra defenders wary of
the threat he poses.
“Philly Brown has come
along and really drawn a lot
of attention in coverage,”
receivers coach Zach Smith
said.
This is all a world away
from what Meyer and his
staff thought last spring
about Brown and his fellow wideouts. Meyer was
grumpy about a lot of areas, but none more than the
supposed pass-catchers. He
said they were “not functional” and “probably the
most unprepared group I’ve
ever dealt with as far as
practice.”
Ohio State threw for just
127 yards a game last season — near the bottom in
all of major-college football
— with a freshman quarter-

back (Braxton Miller) and
a group of targets who frequently dropped the passes
that did get through to
them. Brown, Devin Smith
and Jake Stoneburner
shared the team lead with a
whopping 14 receptions —
in 13 games.
The Ohio State leader in
catches hadn’t had fewer
since tight end Fred Pagac
hauled in a grand total of
nine in 1973, back when
coach Woody Hayes favored “three yards and
a cloud of dust” and disdained the forward pass.
In Year One of Meyer’s
no-huddle, spread attack
that is heavy on passing,
the Buckeyes are still a
shadow of what he hopes
they will become when
it comes to throwing the
ball. But it’s still a step in
the right direction — even
though Ohio State still
needs to break more short

passes for long touchdowns.
“He’s allowed to make a
guy miss once in a while
and get more than eight
yards,” Meyer said of
Brown, only half kidding.
“Our spread is going to
attack you vertically and
horizontally. And our horizontal guy has to be able to
shake loose from a couple
of those (tackles).”
Brown was pleased with
the catches that kept moving the chains at Spartan
Stadium. But that was before Meyer got a chance
to badger him all week in
practice.
“The blocking was perfect, so we did a real good
job on the perimeter,”
Brown said of the screen
passes. “I’ve just got to get
better using my vision and
speed, and break some tackles.”
Meyer openly says that

if the Buckeyes don’t have
the speed and shiftiness
to break long runs after a
short pass, then he’ll find
someone who can.
“We’ve got to recruit,
get some more (fast receivers),” he said. “I need three
or four guys that can do
that.”
That doesn’t mean Meyer
doesn’t recognize how far
Brown and the others have
come.
“I’m so very proud of
him,” he said. “He’s our guy
to go to right now in certain
situations.”
Still flush from his hometown Philadelphia Eagles
big 19-17 win over the New
York Giants on Sunday
night — and with his own
team unbeaten — Brown
said he didn’t care what
anyone called him.
“You can call me ‘Eagles’
right now,” he said with a
laugh.

Bengals knocking down QBs, dancing over sacks
gals had six sacks in each of the
games, the first time they’ve
done that since 2001.
Peko got it started during a
27-10 win in Jacksonville on
Sunday, coming up the middle
and dropping Blaine Gabbert on
the first play from scrimmage.
The 322-pound tackle popped
up quickly, crossed his wrists
and started bobbing and hopping sideways.
After a few shuffles, he raised
his right arm and twirled it,
his rendition of the “Gangnam
Style” dance.
“My kids just really love that
song ‘Gangnam Style,’ so I did
it for them,” Peko said. “I told
them that if I get a sack or make
a big play I would do the dance
for them. Hopefully I’ll keep
making big plays and you’ll see
some more ‘Gangnam Style.’ I
was just having fun.”
So is everyone around him.
Twelve of the 17 sacks have
come from four linemen. Tackle
Geno Atkins had two against the
Jaguars and leads all NFL inte-

CINCINNATI (AP) — Domata
Peko promised his children that
he’d have something special for
them if he made a big play in the
Cincinnati Bengals’ next game.
One play in, the defensive
tackle was dancing — just the
latest member of the NFL’s most
sack-bent defense to do a little
high-stepping.
The Bengals (3-1) lead the
league with 17 sacks heading
into their home game Sunday
against the Miami Dolphins (13). Their young-and-improving
line has provided most of the
sacks and the team’s best dance
since receiver Chad Ochocinco
did the tango on “Dancing with
the Stars” in 2010.
“Oh man, those guys are animals,” cornerback Terence Newman said. “Don’t leave small
children around them. It’s fun
watching those guys with the
passion they play with, wanting
to get the quarterback and stopping the run.”
The line has been a highlight
the last two games. The Ben-

rior linemen with five sacks. End
Michael Johnson has four sacks,
end Carlos Dunlap has two in
two games, and Peko got his first
on Sunday.
The front four has been able
to get to the quarterback without a lot of help from blitzing
linebackers or defensive backs.
Dunlap was the missing element, having to sit out the first
two games with a sprained knee.
“Having the complete rotation
— that’s the big contributor to
us getting to Gabbert as a defensive line and as a whole defense,” Dunlap said. “Everyone
being healthy and having the
whole line rotation does wonders for everybody. It’s not just
one person making the plays.
They don’t know who to cover
because at any given time, any
one of us can get it.”
Johnson had the first big game
by a lineman this season, getting
a career-high three sacks during a 38-31 win in Washington.
He took advantage of left tackle
Trent Williams’ knee injury.

Atkins, a fourth-round pick in
2010, led NFL interior linemen
with 7 sacks last season, and is
already well ahead of that pace.
“Geno — I’m telling you, the
dude is like a little pit bull,” Newman said. “He’s stocky, compact,
and his first step is amazing. I
worked out with him in the offseason. His first step is unbelievable, and he’s smart. I couldn’t
believe this is only his third year
in the league. The guy’s going to
be one of the best at that position for sure.”
The Bengals have one of the
league’s tallest lines with the
6-foot-7 Johnson, 6-foot-6 Dunlap and 6-foot-3 Peko. Atkins
is the smallest at 6-foot-1, but
he does most of the pushing
around.
“He’s unreal,” Peko said. “He’s
one of those guys when you look
at his stature you’re like ‘Oh,
man. He’s a smaller tackle.’ But
when he’s out there on the field,
he plays like he’s 6-foot-7.”
And when they surround the quarterback, it makes it tough to see the

receivers and get the ball to them.
“In the quarterback’s mind,
his clock is sped up and he really has to get rid of the ball,
he can’t hold onto it,” safety
Chris Crocker said. “Our defensive linemen are very tall guys.
Just them getting their arms
up, getting around him — it’s
uncomfortable. As long as they
continue to get the pressure like
they’re getting, then we’ll make
a lot of plays.”
NOTES: Cornerbacks Leon
Hall (hamstring) and Nate Clements (calf) returned to practice
Wednesday on a limited basis,
an indication they could play
against the Dolphins. Hall has
missed the last two games, and
Clements was sidelined against
the Jaguars. … Top draft pick CB
Dre Kirkpatrick also returned to
practice on a limited basis. He
hurt his left knee over the summer and missed all of training
camp. He returned to practice
before the final preseason game,
but developed tendinitis that
sidelined him again.

Ohio State has revised compliance department
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — What’s brewing
with the 2012 Ohio State
Buckeyes
Buckeyes Buzz: The
(Toledo) Blade’s David
Briggs analyzed an 805page report that Ohio

State sent to the NCAA
in August, which details
for the first time the full
depths of the compliance
measures instituted in the
wake of violations that led
to the school’s sanctions.
Among the more interesting revelations:

—There are now 12
compliance workers, up
from five at the time of
the violations, including
Jason Singleton, a former
Buckeyes basketball player
who works exclusively
with elite athletes in major
sports. Former Tennessee

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compliance director Brad
Bertani travels with the
football team and is always
available to handle questions or problems.
—Random audits ensure players have not sold
or exchanged memorabilia
or awards, plus there is
license-plate software that
allows school officials to
determine who owns cars
driven by players.
—Ohio State donated
the $338,811 to charity
that it earned from the vacated 2011 Sugar Bowl
— including a check for
$20,000 sent to the Little
Sisters of the Poor Sacred
Heart Home in Oregon.
—Football players used
to attend five compliance
education sessions a year.
Now they must go to 13 to
15.
—The school retains all
uniforms, helmets and ap-

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advertise?
Call

The Daily
Sentinel

740.992.2155

parel and gives them to
the players only after their
careers are over.
For the full story: http://
bit.ly/PP5vLz
Speaking Of Which:
Remember how OSU
President Gordon Gee famously maligned schools
like Boise State and TCU
of being worthy of playing
in the BCS national championship game? How he
said the Buckeyes “do not
play the Little Sisters of
the Poor?”
The
Buckeyes
announced on Tuesday that
they’ll now play TCU in a
home-and-home series in
2018-19.
TCU said Tuesday that
Ohio State will make its
first trip to Fort Worth,
Texas, on Sept. 15, 2018,
with the two-game set
shifting to Columbus,
Ohio, on Sept. 21, 2019.
The teams have played
six times in Columbus,
most recently in 1973
when the Buckeyes won
37-3. Ohio State has a
4-1-1 lead in a series that
began in 1937, a year before the Horned Frogs won
their last national championship.
Despite the time that
will have passed, you think
TCU will remember Gee’s
putdown in six years?
Here’s a guess: Yes.
In Case You Missed
It: Ohio State is upset at
Michigan State after a video that purports to show a

Spartans OL trying to get
his hands inside the facemask to gouge the eyes of
DL Johnathan Hankins.
And Michigan State is hot
at Ohio State for providing
“incomplete” game tape
prior to their meeting last
Saturday.
Spartans D coordinator
Pat Narduzzi told the Detroit Free Press that Ohio
State had deleted pre-snap
motions and shifts before
plays on video of its first
four games. Narduzzi indicated that the Spartans
complained to the league,
though Michigan State
athletic director Mark
Hollis said he and Gene
Smith, his counterpart in
Columbus, had settled the
issue.
Meyer wasn’t in the
mood to revisit the matter
during the league’s weekly
coach’s teleconference.
“I’ve moved on,” Meyer
said.
MSU head coach Mark
Dantonio didn’t want to
talk about it, either.
The Spartans, a preseason favorite to represent the Leaders division
in the Big Ten title game
for the second straight
season, lost their second
home game in three tries
when the Buckeyes slipped
past them 17-16.
“What happened on the
game field on Saturday
translated into winning
or losing, and that’s where
I’m going to leave that,”
Dantonio said.

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