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                  <text>ALONG THE RIVER

SPORTS

Operation
Soldier Care, A5

High school
football action, B1

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

148th Annual
Emancipation
Celebration
GALLIPOLIS — The
148th Annual
Emancipation Celebration
will be held Saturday and
Sunday, Sept. 17-18 at the
Gallia County Fairgrounds.
The event will feature Civil
War Era reenactors, music
and a presentation by the
Columbus Zoo beginning
at 12 p.m. on Sunday.
Saturday’s keynote address
will be delivered by local
teacher Christian Scott.
Sunday’s speaker will be
Timothy F. Johnson,
Chairman of the Frederick
Douglass Foundation,
Washington, D.C. For
more information, visit
www.emancipationday.com.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

$1.50 • Vol. 45, No. 38

Accident injures two, including child
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE — A traffic accident occurring
late Thursday night
injured two, including a
child who was flown by
air medical helicopter
from the scene for treatment of injuries.
The accident occurred
around 9 p.m., Thursday
night on Ohio 124

between Syracuse and
Minersville, near a location known locally as
“the S turn.”
Trooper
Adam
Williams with the Ohio
State Highway Patrol
Gallia-Meigs Post is
investigating the accident
and said a Dodge Ram
1500 pickup truck driven
by Jason Wells, 40,
Reedsville, appears to
have been traveling west

toward Pomeroy when
the accident occurred.
Williams said at this
point it appears Wells
went off the right side of
the road but then turned
left to get back on to the
roadway
when
he
allegedly lost control of
the vehicle which then
went further left over an
embankment and into a
ravine. The pickup landed on its side.

Williams said when
he arrived Wells, along
with passenger Heather
Blackwell,
22,
Reedsville, and a twoyear old juvenile were
out of the vehicle.
Williams said Wells
apparently helped both
passengers get out of
the overturned truck.
Wells as well as the
juvenile
reported
injuries with Wells

Festival fun

Addresses fraud,
identity theft

GALLIPOLIS — Look
Good, Feel Better, sponsored by the American
Cancer Society, will meet
at 1 p.m. Monday, Sept.
19, at the Cancer Resource
Center, in the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care,
170 Jackson Pike.
The group teaches
female cancer patients
beauty techniques to help
restore their appearence
and self-image during
radiation and chemotherapy treatments. There is no
charge for attending.
Please call for an appointment at (740) 441-3909.

BIDWELL —
Candidates who are seeking office in November
and/or other organizations
are invited to participate
in the River Valley High
School Homecoming
Parade on Thursday, Sept.
22. Line up at the new
high school by 6:30 p.m.
Parade begins at 7 p.m.
in Bidwell. Call (740)
446-2926 for more
information.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

fere with the equipment
currently in place on the
towers. Moreover, provisions are in place within
the contract in the case if
interference does occur.
“We sat down, and we
went through the contract
and went through the part
about
interference,”
Gallia
County
911
Director Sherry Daines
said. “[JB-Nets] made
sure wording was in there
that, if there is a problem,
they have the opportunity
to correct the problem
and, if they can’t, then

POMEROY — A
workshop to recruit volunteers in Meigs County
to assist seniors in understanding how to deal with
the growing problems of
Medicare fraud and identify theft will be held at
the
Meigs
Senior
Citizens
Center
in
Pomeroy Monday, 9 a.m.
to 3:30 p.m.
The emphasis of the
non-profit Pro Seniors’
Ohio Senior Medicare
Patrol program, funded
through
the
U.S.
Administration on Aging,
will be to educate volunteers who want to help
enlighten seniors on how
to deal with the problems
evolving from fraud and
identity theft, as well as
give them tips on how to
stay safe from those
crimes.
The training is free of
charge and includes
lunch. For more information or to make a reservation contact Jane Winkler
at 1-800-488-6070 or call
the Meigs Senior Center.
“Ultimately, the nonprofit Pro Seniors would
like to have people in
every county of Ohio
who would like to help
seniors understand this
growing threat,” said
Winkler, “and Ideally,
the organization is seeking recently-retired people as volunteers.”
At the one-day ProSeniors training session volunteers learn
the basics of Medicare
and some of the
Medicare
fraud
schemes — what they
are, how to detect them
and what is being done
about them. Once they

See Broadband, A3

See Medicare, A2

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich and Brian Reed
Sternwheelers and pleasure boats filled the docking
area near the riverfront amphitheater where music
was ongoing during the annual weekend Sternwheel
Riverfest with its call to “Rally by the River.”
The Blennerhassett excursion boat came and went
on trips up and down the Ohio, there were contests
for adults and children alike, and festival goers
enjoyed a wide variety of food.
Lining the midway were vendors galore selling everything from handcrafted birdhouses — like the one
being displayed here by Sheila Proffitt of Racine — to
beautiful jewelry, from colorful blankets to old-fashioned bonnets, and sunglasses to sweatshirts.
There were carnival rides, too, like the merry-goround which Area Hashman, 2, of Pomeroy enjoyed
on his visit to Riverfest.

Gallia Commissioners sign lease agreement for broadband towers

OBITUARIES

BY AMBER
GILLENWATER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Page A2
• Roger Lee Bush
• Marvin W. Dewitt
• Thomas Dewhurst
• T. Anne (Brown) West
• Rozita C. Miller
• Henry B. Thorne
• Catherine SmithChaney

WEATHER

See Accident, A2

Senior
Medicare
Patrol training
offered

Look Good, Feel
Better scheduled

Public office
candidates invited
to participate in
parade

being transported to
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital by emergency
personnel with Meigs
EMS and the juvenile
being transported to
Cabell
Huntington
Hospital by air medical
helicopter. Blackwell
refused treatment.
On Friday afternoon, a
spokesperson with PVH

GALLIPOLIS — In an
effort to expand residential high-speed Internet
service throughout the
rural areas of Gallia
County,
the
Gallia
County
Board
of
Commissioners and local
Internet service provider
JB-Nets signed a lease
agreement for countyowned communications
tower sites during a regular meeting on Thursday.
The lease agreement
allows JB-Nets to place

the appropriate equipment at three tower sites
located near Boggs Road
in Harrison Township,
near Hamilton Road in
Ohio Township and on
Mound Hill in Gallipolis
Township at a monthly
rate of $100 at the Boggs
Road and Mound Hill
sites (towers approximately 120 feet in height)
and $60 per month at the
Hamilton Road site (an
100-foot tower).
The agreement was
approved
contingent
upon the provision of JBNets’ property insurance
information to the coun-

ty.
“At this point I’m not
too concerned about
being involved in a lawsuit, et cetera,” JB-Nets’
General
Manager
Stephen Kline said. “I
guess our comfort level
[with the agreement] is
there it’s just that you
guys need to confirm that
that yours is there as
well.”
The sites are currently
being utilized for emergency communications
and, according to the JBNets officials, the equipment that will be attached
by JB-Nets will not inter-

Local composer achieves international exposure
BY ANNA MARIE
HARTENBACH
AHARTENBACH@HEARTLANDPUBLICATIONS.COM

High: 74
Low: 53

INDEX
2 SECTIONS — 16 PAGES

Classifieds
B4-5
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
Sports
B Section
© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

GALLIPOLIS — The
son of a piano teacher,
Scott Michal started begging his mother for
lessons before he’d made
it to kindergarten. He was
so passionate about music
that he recalls listening to
everything he could get
his hands on, Michal said.
“From the time I was a
teenager, every single
penny I made was spent
on records. That was back
in the day before CDs,”
Michal said with a laugh.
Michal, an independent

I’d much rather
composer and an
make things up
adjunct professor
than play the
of music at the
music that she
University of Rio
assigned me.”
Grande, went on to
Michal played
master the cello
in the Columbus
and joined a youth
Symphony for 13
orchestra — which
years, where he
eventually toured
said he got to
to New York City,
play some of the
among
other
Michal
best music ever
places. He went to
written.
But,
Ohio
State
University, where he composing was still his
received his bachelor dream, so he quit the symdegree, followed by a mas- phony and began composing full time.
ter’s degree.
Now, as Parma Recordings
“I’ve just always wanted
to compose,” Michal said. and Navona Records set out
“Even when I was 5 or 6, to release Michal’s CD,
my mom would get really Divergence, it seems his decifrustrated with me because sions have paid off.

A few years ago, Reed
Smith, who teaches violin
at Marshall University,
approached Michal about
composing a violin concerto for her and the
Huntington Symphony.
Following the performance, he received a call
from a representative at
Parma Records who
wanted to record his violin concerto on a CD.
“They had come up
with an idea for a CD featuring three violin superstars from different parts
of the world,” he said. “I
feel pretty lucky to have
gotten included in this.”
He said roughly a year
ago, the CD was record-

ed in a day and since then
final edits and artwork
have been made.
Divergence, a modern
concerti for strings, not
only showcases Michal’s
composing, but also the
work of William Thomas
McKinley and Nicholas
Sackman. It was performed
by
Glenn
Dictero, violin, the New
York
Philharmonic
Concertmaster; Karen
Dreyfus, viola; Ondre
Leber, violin; and Vit
Muzik, violin.
Michal, who began writing the piece in 2008 and finished it in 2009, said he

See Composer, A3

�Sunday, September 18,2011

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Obituaries

Accident
From Page A1

Roger Lee
Bush
Roger Lee Bush, Sr., 62,
of Gallipolis, Ohio, passed
away
on
Friday,
September 16, 2011, at the
home of his daughter,
Crystal, in Patriot. Roger
was born on November 18,
1948, in Gallipolis son of
the late William and Lecta
Criner Bush. Roger was a
former insurance agent, 1967 GAHS graduate and
enjoyed deer hunting and fishing.
He is survived by nine children, Roger Bush, Jr., of
Gallipolis, Toni (Rob) Wright of Grand Island, Fla.,
Billie (Charlie) Fitchpatrick of Middleport, Ohio,
Crystal (Chris) Waugh of Patriot, Herbie (Mary)
Bush, Mt. Verde, Fla., Daniel Bush of Gallipolis,
Angie Johnson of Rio Grande, Crystal (Mike)
Vanscoy of Amanda, Ohio, and Misty Blackburn of
Gallipolis; 18 grandchildren and three great grandchildren; two sisters, Linda (Roger) Kemper and
Pattie (Jeff) Watson both of Gallipolis; two brothers,
Bob Bush and Herb (Pauline) Bush both of
Gallipolis. He was preceded in death by a sister,
Karen McCoy, and by a brother, Jim Bush.
Graveside services will be at 11 a.m., Tuesday,
September 20, 2011, at Mound Hill Cemetery with
Larry Drummond officiating. Friends may call from
6-8 p.m., Monday, September 19, 2011, at Willis
Funeral Home. Pallbearers will be Jamie Bush,
Daniel Bush, Chris Waugh, Charlie Fitchpatrick, Brad
Kemper, Mike Vanscoy, Gary Reynolds and Jake
Facemire.
Please send e-mail condolences to www.willisfuneralhome.com.

Marvin W. Dewitt
Marvin W. Dewitt, 79, of Frankfort, died on
Thursday, September 15, 2011, at the Adena Regional
Medical Center. He was born on September 13, 1932,
in Ross County, the son of the late Harry J. and
Bernice McCoy Dewitt. On July 19, 1952, he married
the former Bonnie Kinnamon and she survives.
Surviving is his son, Scott Dewitt of Frankfort. He
was preceded in death by sisters, Wanda Brinkman
and Mary Silcott, and brother, Jimmy Dewitt.
Marvin was a 1950 graduate of Frankfort High
School. He was a U.S. Army veteran and was a retired
truck driver and a member of the Teamster Union for
more than forty years.
Funeral service will be held at 10 a.m., Tuesday,
Sept. 20, 2011, at Ebright Funeral Home, Frankfort.
Burial will follow in Greenlawn Cemetery, Frankfort,
where military honors will be accord by the Frankfort
American Legion Post 483. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Monday, from 5 to 8 p.m. In lieu of
flowers, memorial contributions are suggested to the
Concord Twp EMS, P.O. Box 616, Frankfort, Ohio
45628 or the Ross County Humane Society, 2308A
Lick Run Road, Chillicothe, 45601. Those wishing to
sign his online Book of Memories may do so at
www.ebrightfuneralhome.com.

Thomas Arthur
Dewhurst
Thomas
Arthur
Dewhurst,
80,
of
McArthur passed away
Sept. 14, 2011 in Grant
Medical
Center
in
Columbus, as a result of an
auto accident.
He was born Aug. 19,
1931 in Rutland, a son of
the late Clifford E. and
Geneieve
Cheatham
Dewhurst. Tom was married to Wanda June Bobo
Dewhurst, who survives. He retired after 41 years
from Mead Paper Co. in Chillicothe; was an Army
Veteran of the Korean Conflict, where he received
five Bronze Stars; was a member of the VFW and
American Legion in Wellston; DAV in Jackson; the
Eagles in McArthur; and the VFW in Chillicothe.
Tom is survived by sons, Tom D. (Cindy Elliott)
Dewhurst, Bryan T. (Teresa) Dewhurst, Dennis (Vicki
Routte) Jackson, and Kevin (Jean) Jackson; a daughter, Patty (Chuck) Ritchhart; 12 grandchildren; 13
great grandchildren; brothers, Charles Withee, Bill
and Buck Dewhurst,; and a sister, Bernice Kaufman.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death
by a daughter-in-law, Bridgette Dewhurst; and 13
brothers and sisters.
Funeral Services will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday in
the Garrett-Cardaras Funeral Home, located at 201
W. High St. McArthur, with Pastor Brian Bailey officiating. Interment will be in Temple Cemetery in
Meigs Co. Friends may call at the funeral home on
Monday from 4-8 p.m. Military graveside services
will be held at the cemetery.
Please sign his online guestbook at
www.cardaras.com.

Anne is survived by her husband of 45 years, Billy
West; her children, son, Michael (Katherine) West, of
Wheeling, W.Va., and her twins, Gerald and Judith
(Shawn Reaser), of Reedsville; her sister/best friend,
Sandra (Thomas) Purcell, of Long Bottom; granddaughters, Denise (Stephen) Gerlach, of New Haven,
W.Va., and Hannah West, of Hurricane, W.Va.; one
grandson, Carl Salser, of Reedsville; and one greatgrandson, Trevor Gerlach. She had 10 nieces and
nephews and numerous great-nieces and greatnephews.
She is preceded in death by her parents; her sisters,
Phyllis Boston and Judith Jarvis; her brother, Richard,
Jr; her brother-in-law, James K. Boston; and her
mother and father-in-law, David and Hazel West.
Annie was beloved by all who knew her and would
want them all to know that she loved them too.
Per Anne’s request, there will be no funeral services. A party in her honor will be held at a later date.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.

Medicare

Deaths

From Page A1

Rozita C. Miller
Rozita C. Miller, 68, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died
Sept. 15, 2011, at Saint Mary’s Medical Center.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m., Sunday,
Sept. 18, 2011, at Lifeline Apostolic Church. Burial
will be held in Wyoma Cemetery. Visitation will be
held from 12-1 p.m., Sunday, at the church.
Arrangements are under the direction of Wilcoxen
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant.

Henry B. Thorne
Henry B. Thorne, Jr., 69, of Pomeroy, passed away
at his residence on Friday, Sept. 16, 2011.
Arrangements are being handled by the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Catherine Smith-Chaney
Catherine Smith-Chaney, 76, of Gallipolis, passed
away Saturday, Sept. 17, 2011 at Abbeyshire Place in
Bidwell.
Funeral services will be conducted 1 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 21 at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with Pastor
Herb Smith officiating. Burial will follow in Pine
Street Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home
on Wednesday, one hour prior to services.
Margaret ‘Marge’ Miller
Margaret “Marge” Miller, 64, of the Chester community, died at 8 p.m. on Sept. 16, 2011, at her residence. In keeping with Marge’s wishes, there will be
no calling hours or funeral services. Interment will be
in Graham Station Cemetery, New Haven, W.Va., at
the convience of the family.
Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, is entrusted with
Marge’s arrangements. Expressions of symphathy
may bes sent to the family by visiting www.cremeeansfuneralhomes.com.

have the information they can then do as much as
they want or as little as they want to spread the
word.
Winkler explained that volunteers can do group
presentations, one on one counseling or just
staffing a table at events such as senior health
fairs distributing information. The emphasis, she
said, is on educating seniors about the dangers of
Medicare fraud and identity theft and how to recognize and address the problems of each.
“The benefit for volunteers is that they get a
better understanding of the Medicare program
through Medicare training at no cost to them,”
said Winkler, and “In addition, they get ongoing
support and education on how to help others.”
A second training session has been scheduled
in Athens on Thursday, Sept. 22, in the community room of the State Highway Patrol at 13600
Della Dr.
The Ohio Department of Insurance is offering
the program to give seniors a basic understanding of Medicare, an overview of healthcare fraud
and identity theft, along with tips on how to stay
safe from these crimes, and then to share the
information with other senior citizens.
“Medicare fraud is a huge crime in this country,” said Winkler, who gave the cost of fraud as
much as $60 billion annually.

Come Wish Gene Jeffers
A Happy 80th Birthday!
Sunday September, 25th
2 pm - 4 pm
Columbia Township Firehouse
SHH! - Surprise!

Gallia &amp;
Meigs
Forecast
Sunday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 74.
Sunday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low
around 53.
Monday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 74.
Monday Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 57.
Tuesday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 77.
Tuesday Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 58.
Wednesday: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Mostly
cloudy, with a high
near 78. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Wednesday Night:
A chance of showers
and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 57. Chance
of precipitation is 30
percent.
Thursday: Mostly
sunny, with a high
near 76.

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T. Anne (Brown) West
Anne West passed away on Sept. 14, 2011, at her
home in Reedsville.
She was born the daughter of Richard B. and Clara
(Hall) Brown, on June 16, 1948, in Mt. Clemens,
Mich. Her family moved to Parkersburg, W.Va. in
1953. She graduated from Parkersburg High School in
1966. She was a member of the Girls’ Athletic
Association and was proud to have served as a Team
Captain. Her love of sports continued her entire life.
She coached the Riverview Elementary basketball
team in the late 1970’s, and she and her boys won the
Northeastern League Championship in 1979. She
played softball at the Dugout in Parkersburg throughout the 1980’s and early 1990’s. She was an avid supporter of women in sports and was a faithful watcher
of the College Championship Softball World Series
every year.
Anne was also an avid fan of music. Her knowledge
of rock and roll cannot be surpassed. She loved her
albums and played them frequently. Pink Floyd, Dio,
Journey, Motorhead and Ozzy Osbourne were a few
of her favorites. She never discriminated when it
came to music. She understood the emotion of music
and passed the love onto her children and grandchildren, nieces and nephews.

said Wells had been released on Thursday night
from the emergency room and Cabell Huntington
Hospital does not comment on the status of juvenile
patients without the consent of parents.
Williams said there were no other vehicles
involved in the accident, and it appears either
drugs or alcohol were allegedly involved to cause
impairment on the driver’s part, resulting in pending charges. Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle
said Blackwell was also taken into custody of the
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office in relation to an
outstanding arrest warrant. The pickup was towed
from the scene and though Ohio 124 wasn’t completely closed, traffic was rerouted around the
scene for a time.
On the scene were emergency personnel from the
Syracuse Fire Department, Squad 33 and Medic 3
as well as OSP and the Meigs County Sheriff’s
Office.

Keeping
Meigs &amp; Gallia
informed

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Sunday
TimesSentinel
Meigs • 992-2155
Gallia • 446-2342

Adam Ritchie, MD

�Sunday, September 18,2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Gallia County Community Calendar

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page A3

Broadband
From Page A1

Card Shower
CHESHIRE — Miles L.
Trout celebrated his 89th
birthday on Sept. 17,
2011. Cards may be
sent to: 874 Roush
Lane, Cheshire, Ohio
45620.
GALLIPOLIS —
Marlene Belville will be
celebrating her 85th
birthday on September
20, 2011. Cards may be
sent to her at: 300
Briarwood Dr., Apt. 140,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
PATRIOT — Flora
Dailey, retired
Southwestern High
School school teacher,
will be celebrating her
90th birthday on Sept.
23, 2011. Cards may be
sent to her at: 97
Dundee St., Patriot, Ohio
45658.
GALLIPOLIS —
Marlene Belville will be

celebrating her birthday
this month. Cards can
be sent to: Marlene
Belville, Assisted Living,
Briarwood Drive,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Fairgrounds.
Presentation by
Columbus Zoo, 12 p.m.
Monday, Sept. 19
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Board of
DD will hold its regular
monthly meeting at 4
p.m. at 77 Mill Creek
Road, Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS — Look
Good, Feel Better,
sponsored by the
American Cancer
Society, 1 p.m., Sept.
19, Cancer Resource
Center in the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care,
170 Jackson Pike.
Please call for an
appointment (740) 4413909.
Tuesday, Sept. 27
GALLIPOLIS — The
National Alliance on
Mental Illness (NAMI)
Southeast Ohio Open
House, 6:30 p.m., Senior
Resource Center, 1167

Events
Sunday, Sept. 18
GALLIPOLIS — The
Montgomery Family
Reunion will be held at
the O.O. McIntyre Park,
Wild Turkey Shelter, with
lunch served at 1 p.m.
Bring a covered dish.
GALLIPOLIS —
Family and friends of
the late Pete and
Margie Parsons wll hold
their annual reunion at
O.O. McIntyre Park
Shelterhouse #4 (Bob
White) from 10 a.m. to
dark.
GALLIPOLIS — 148th
Annual Emancipation
Celebration, Gallia
County Junior

Ohio 160. The event is
free and open to the public. Door prizes, inflatables for kids and food will
be available. For more
info: (740) 339-0603.
Thursday, Sept. 29
GALLIPOLIS —
French 500 Free Clinic,
1-4 p.m., 258 Pinecrest
Drive off of Jackson
Pike. The clinic was
organized for the uninsured residents of Gallia
County.
Sunday, Oct. 2
CADMUS — Cadmus
High School reunion, 12
p.m.-?, old Cadmus High
School building (community center). Graduates
and former students welcome.
Monday, Oct. 3
GALLIPOLIS —
Gallipolis Neighborhood
Watch meets at 6:30
p.m. at Bossard
Memorial Library.

Gallia County Church Calendar
Homecoming
RODNEY
—
Homecoming, 10 a.m.,
Sept. 18, Rodney United
Methodist Church, 6611
State Route 588 in
Rodney. Music will be provided by the Guyan Valley
Trio. Guest speaker is Rev.
Pat King from St. Paul
United Methodist Church
and Faith United Methodist
Church in Oak Hill, Ohio. A
potluck dinner will follow
the service at 1 p.m. in the
Fellowship Hall. Rodney
United Methodist Church is
located at 6611 State
Route 588 in Rodney.
GALLIPOLIS
—
Homecoming, 10 a.m.,
Sept. 18, Debbie Drive
Chapel,
located
576
Debbie Drive. Evangelist
Jason Eblin of Cincinnati
will be preaching and
singing will be Karen Eblin
of Cincinnati and Gospel
Tide of Ashland, Ky.
Potluck dinner will be
served at the fellowship hall
after the service. Please
bring a covered dish. For
more info: (740) 388-8732

or (740) 441-1470.
PATRIOT
—
St.
Martinʼs
Lutheran
Church, German Ridge
Road, Patriot, will hold its
annual
homecoming
Sept. 18 at noon with a
potluck dinner.
GALLIPOLIS
—
Bulaville Christian Church
Homecoming, 10:30 a.m.,
Sept. 25, at Don Mink
Farm on Bulaville Road.
Lunch will be served at
noon. Bring a covered
dish. For more information, call (740) 367-5023.

Heaven Sent, Chrissy
Yagel, Rhonda Childers,
Calvin
Minnis,
Dale
Norman, Vickie Caldwell,
Amanda Clark, Gale and
Larry Chapman, Jodi
Hellman and others.
Pastor
Charles
T.Glassburn invites all to
attend.
GALLIPOLIS — First
Baptist Church, 1100
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis,
Revival, Oct. 2 at 10 a.m.
and 6 p.m. and Oct. 3-4
at 7 p.m., nightly. Pastor
Jim Franklin, speaker.
Nursery and transportation provided.

Revival
BIDWELL — Revival,
Sept. 17-25, 6 p.m.,
Garden of My Heart Holy
Tabernacle, 4950 S.R. 850
Bidwell. Featuring: Sept.
17 — Larry Chapman;
Sept. 18 — Jerry Coburn;
Sept. 19 — Don Swick;
Sept. 20 — Bill Green;
Sept. 21 — Rod Walker;
Sept. 22 — Rhonda
Childers; Sept. 23 — Rob
Clark; Sept. 24 — Calvin
Minnis;
(Homecoming,
Sept. 25 — Dorsel
Messick).
Singers:

Events
Sunday, Sept. 18
ADDISON — Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening
service, 6 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Pastor Rick Barcus
preaching.
CROWN CITY — “Old
Timerʼs Gospel Service,”
10-4 p.m., Crown City
Community
Church.
Food, games and live
Bluegrass gospel music.

GALLIPOLIS — The
Sons of Liberty will sing
at the First Church of
God beginning at 6 p.m.
Call (740) 446-4404 for
more information.

they will move their equipment out of our facility.”
JB-Nets, a Bidwell-based company, currently provides Internet service to mainly the northern portion
of the county and the addition of the three sites will
allow JB-Nets to expand service throughout the central and southern portions of the county.
JB-Nets owner Jacob Kline reported in a previous
county commission meeting that his company is set to
begin placing their equipment on the three countyowned tower sites and begin service to those residents
within “line-of-sight” of the towers immediately.
Additionally, over a three year period, the company
will expand service by placing approximately 30
smaller, secondary towers on property owned by
interested individuals throughout the lower portion of
the county. These smaller towers will help to provide
service to harder to reach areas.
“We currently have approximately 30 percent covered
with our current system,” Kline said. “The addition of the
three towers, which would definitely give us some coverage in the southern part of the county, probably would
expand an additional 20 to 25 percent coverage immediately — within probably 30 to 45 days. As we add these
secondary towers — which we don’t have a real good
idea of exactly where they are going to go because we
definitely have to negotiate with land owners and things
— we have proposed thirty of those … in areas that currently don’t have the coverage. These smaller towers
would help to procure coverage in that area.”
Kline also reported that while 80 percent coverage
is a goal he believes his company can achieve, he is
hopeful to be able to provide service to a larger percentage of the county.
“Geographically we can cover 80-plus percent. We’re
hoping that as we find places to put these smaller secondary sights, we might be able to bump that number up
some,” Kline said. “Eighty percent is a good number.
We probably can do better than that, but it’s one of those
things where you under sale and overachieve.”

Composer
From Page A1
looks at composing like putting together a puzzle — trying to find the right piece to plug into
the next piece.
“It’s fun, exhilarating and a little scary sometimes because you wonder if that
was the right place to put [it] in. You’ll go on, and maybe a day or two later you’ll
realize it wasn’t the right place, so you’ll put a different piece in, but just like a big
jigsaw puzzle, you always have to keep in mind the overall picture,” Michal said.
With his violin concerto at nearly 30 minutes long, three movements and nearly 70 to 100 musicians in to keep in mind, not including the violinists, Michal
composes larger-than-life jigsaw puzzles.
“Each part that each person is playing, I have to write and make sure that they’re getting
the right part too,” Michal said. “It’s a really fun balancing act. You just have to hear it in your
head and know every instrument enough to know what it will sound like when you write it.”
Though Michal said he mostly writes for specific people or groups, in this case
he had three ideas based on the same motif, which reminded him of the composers
Hindemith, Bach and Prokofiev. He decided to call it “Encomium,” which is a
Greek word that roughly translates as homage, or to give honor.
“I hope everybody will buy it. It’s a really cool project... I’m hoping to get to do more
recordings. They’re already talking about recording another piece of mine, but I also hope
to get more performances,” Michal said. “I hope that this will give me some exposure. I’ve
had quite a bit of exposure in Ohio and West Virginia and have done a lot of performances
around here, but this is the first time I’ve had this kind of international exposure.”
Divergence will be available on September 27 through various sites, including iTunes
and Amazon. For more information on Michal or Divergence, visit www.scottmichal.com.

The Sunday
Times Sentinel
The Sunday Times Sentinel Shopper's Delight program is a community-wide sales event bringing you great deals from the best stores
in town. Whether its big ticket items or your daily staples, each of our partners has made a commitment to give you bargains during
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SHOP LOCAL
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When you shop local you
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�
Silver Bridge Plaza • Gallipolis, OH • 740.446.3484 • M-F 10-6 • Sat 10-2

�

Amy Hendrix, MD
LABOR DAY • COLUMBUS DAY • BLACK FRIDAY • HOLIDAYS • NEW YEAR SAVINGS
60243637

�OPINION

Page A4
Sunday, September 18, 2011

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydailytribune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

Inflation squeezing consumers in weak economy
Congress shall make no law 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

YO U R O P I N I O N
Just Say No!
Dear Editor,
Paying taxes is akin to donating blood.
Both are life sustaining, physically and
politically, and yet, we would not consider
wasting blood.
Can the same be said for the expenditure
of our tax dollars?
All “taxes” are regressive by nature,
meaning that taxes weigh more heavily on
certain groups than others. Income taxes
hinder wage earners from investing and creating more wealth to which they are entitled
by their labors. Business and Occupation
taxes burden merchants and tradesmen
which prevents them from expanding inventory and growing their businesses.
The Sales tax increases the per item cost
to the consumer and restricts purchases to a
level bordering on “restraint of trade”. And
finally, the egregious Property tax which in
itself is a form of “class legislation” weighing only on the land owners and is not based
upon any concept of the “ability to pay.”
All forms of taxation are “regressive” and
suck the life’s blood from the economy and
taxpayers much like a political vampire. It
is time to drive a stake into the heart of governmental taxation.
No more taxes!
Make a stand against those who would
want you to support “them” with your tax
dollars. Don’t be a “sheeple” (sheep people)
willing to swallow the old, “we’ll have to
lay off police, turn off the street lights, cut
services, etc.” — scare tactics that the government pulls out every time they want
more of your tax dollars.
Defunding irresponsible government!
Does that sound like a good idea?
If it does, then just say “no” and vote “no”
on “all” tax issues.
Eric Chambers
Middleport, Ohio

L E T T E R S TO T H E E D I TO R
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing, must be signed and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters will not be accepted for publication.

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
in a story, please call one of our
newsrooms.

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BY CHRISTOPHER S.
RUGABER
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

WASHINGTON
—
Consumers are spending
more to fill their tanks,
feed their families and
pay the rent. At the same
time, the number of people applying for unemployment benefits has
reached the highest level
in three months.
The latest government
data show that inflationary pressures and a
depressed job market are
hurting an economy that
barely grew in the first
half of the year.
Higher prices could
also keep the Federal
Reserve from taking
major steps to stimulate
the growth next week
when policymakers meet.
When prices rise, consumers cut back on big
purchases, such as appliances, furniture and vacations. Mixed reports on
manufacturing Thursday
and flat retail sales in
August suggest that may
already be happening.
A decline in demand
forces businesses to put
off hiring and even lay off
workers. In August, the
economy added zero net
jobs. Unemployment benefit applications have
increased in three of the
past four weeks.
"Unless spirits improve
soon, businesses will
ramp up layoffs, consumers will pull back, and
the economy will fall
back into recession," said
Mark Zandi, chief economist
at
Moody's
Analytics.
Consumer prices rose
0.4 percent in August,
according to the Labor
Department's Consumer

Price Index. Prices for
food, energy, rent, and
clothing all increased.
Excluding volatile food
and energy costs, core
prices increased 0.2 percent.
Some inflation can be
healthy for the economy
because it encourages
people to spend and invest
rather than sitting on their
cash. More spending drives corporate growth,
which makes businesses
more likely to hire people.
For the 12 months that
ended in August, core
prices surged 2 percent.
That's the biggest yearover-year increase in
nearly three years, and it's
at the high end of the
Federal Reserve's informal inflation target.
Rising inflation is a key
reason Macroeconomic
Advisors lowered its
growth estimate for the
July-September quarter
from 1.9 percent to 1.6
percent. The economic
consulting firm said higher prices will reduce consumer spending.
Economists
don't
expect prices to rise much
further, mostly because
employers aren't hiring
much or handing out big
raises. Still, the spike in
prices over the past year
has cut into consumers'
pay and limited their purchasing power.
"In an environment
where you're now looking
at zero job growth, it will
be difficult to have much
success passing on any
additional costs," said
Tom Porcelli, chief U.S.
economist at RBC Capital
Markets.
Unemployment benefit
applications rose to
428,000 last week, the
Labor Department said in

a separate report. And the
four-week average, a less
volatile measure, rose for
the fourth straight week to
419,500, the highest level
in eight weeks.
Applications need to
fall below 375,000 to
indicate that hiring is
increasing enough to
lower the unemployment
rate. They haven't been
that low since February.
The unemployment rate
stayed at 9.1 percent for
the second straight month
in August. It has been
above 9 percent for all but
two months since May
2009 — one month
before the recession officially ended.
U.S. factories have
helped drive growth over
the past two years. But
manufacturing began to
falter this spring, slowed
by supply chain disruptions caused by the Japan
crisis and diminished consumer demand.
Overall factory output
rose in August for the second straight month,
according to a report from
the Federal Reserve. The
gain was driven by strong
auto
production.
Carmakers have rebounded over the past two
months, mostly because
supply chains are flowing
more freely.
Many economists took
that as a positive sign in
the otherwise gloomy
data.
Still, two regional surveys
from
Federal
Reserve banks showed
manufacturing contracted
in the Northeast and MidAtlantic this month.
"The common thread
among all of today's data
is one of weakness,"
Porcelli said.
The Fed will discuss

additional stimulus measures at its two-day meeting next week. Most
economists expect it will
announce a plan to shift
money out of short-term
securities and into longerterm Treasury bonds. The
move could lower rates on
mortgages, auto loans and
other consumer and business loans.
But some Fed officials
are worried the Fed's policies could push inflation
higher. Last month, three
board members opposed
the Fed's decision to keep
interest rates near zero for
the next two years, unless
economic
conditions
changed dramatically. It
was the first time as many
members dissented from a
decision in almost 20
years.
Fed Chairman Ben
Bernanke acknowledged
last week that rising commodity prices had pushed
up inflation this year. But
he said it was likely to
moderate in coming
months.
There are some signs
that core inflation, which
the Fed pays close attention to, could level off
soon. Cotton prices have
come down from the
spring, and clothing costs
are expected to follow.
New-car prices were
unchanged for the second
straight month in August,
after rising earlier this
year.
"The combination of
disappointing growth but
rising core inflation puts
the Fed in a difficult situation," said Michelle
Meyer, an economist at
Bank of America Merrill
Lynch.
AP Business Writer
Daniel Wagner contributed to this report.

Detroit 3, UAW extend contracts, keep talking
BY DEE-ANN DURBIN
&amp; TOM KRISHER
AP AUTO WRITERS

DETROIT
—
Negotiations
between
General Motors, Chrysler
and the United Auto
Workers union carried on
Thursday even though bargainers missed a deadline
for agreeing on a new contract.
The union, which represents 111,000 workers at
Detroit's
carmakers,
agreed to keep working
under the old GM and
Chrysler contracts, which
expired Wednesday at
11:59 p.m. While missing
a deadline could have
brought a strike in past
years, GM and Chrysler
workers have limited ability to strike under the terms
of their government bailout
agreements.
Talks also continued
with Ford Motor Co., but
little progress has been
made. On Tuesday, the
UAW extended its contract
with Ford indefinitely.
General Motors Co.
appeared close to a deal. Its
talks with the union ran all
day before ending at 9 p.m.
EDT. Negotiations were
expected to resume Friday
at 9 a.m. EDT. The
automaker has taken the
lead on the negotiations
and its agreement may be
used as a model for the
other two companies. Each
company negotiates separately.
"We are hopeful that an
agreement can be reached
soon," UAW leaders bargaining with GM said in a
statement early Thursday.
"While we have made sig-

nificant progress, we have
not been able to secure a
new agreement."
Chrysler Group LLC's
negotiations were strained,
however. Just before
Wednesday's
contract
expiration, CEO Sergio
Marchionne wrote an
angry letter to the UAW
president saying that he
failed to show up to finalize a deal. Chrysler would
say only that both sides are
still
talking.
But
Marchionne said in his letter that he was leaving the
U.S. and wouldn't return
until next week, so it's
unlikely a deal will be
finalized before then.
Negotiations with all
three companies, which
began earlier this summer,
will determine wages and
benefits for workers. They
will also set the bar for
wages at auto parts companies, U.S. factories run by
foreign automakers, and
other
manufacturers,
which employ hundreds of
thousands of people. The
talks are the first since GM
and Chrysler needed government aid to make it
through bankruptcy protection in 2009.
The union wants bigger
profit-sharing
checks
instead of pay raises, higher pay for entry-level
workers and guarantees of
new jobs. Ford and GM
want to cut labor costs,
while Chrysler wants to
hold its costs steady.
Health care costs are also
an issue.
Once agreements are
reached, workers will vote
on them.
The fact that bargainers
at GM are breaking for the

night and returning in the
morning is a sign that GM
and the UAW are close to a
deal, perhaps by the weekend, said Gary Chaison, a
professor of labor relations
at Clark University in
Worcester, Mass.
In past talks, both sides
would have stayed up all
night trying to pound out
an agreement, Chaison
said. But this time, bargainers appear more
thoughtful and are taking
time to digest what they
have done, he said.
Until
Wednesday's
deadline, the negotiations
seemed free of the acrimony marking past talks.
That's partly because GM
and Chrysler workers
agreed not to strike over
wages under the 2009
bailout agreements. In the
past, workers might have
gone on strike.
But the mood of the
talks turned tense for
Chrysler.
Marchionne
complained Wednesday
that he had been snubbed
by UAW President Bob
King. That caused the two
sides to miss the deadline
for the new agreement, he
wrote.
"I know we are the
smallest of the three
automakers
here
in
Detroit, but that does not
make us less relevant,"
Marchionne said in the letter, which was obtained by
The Associated Press.
King would not comment on the letter when
reached by telephone early
Thursday.
King spent much of the
day Wednesday negotiating with GM, but it was
unclear why he didn't

appear at Chrysler's
Auburn Hills, Mich., headquarters.
Marchionne said a few
mainly economic issues
separate the two sides. He
said he would agree to a
weeklong extension of
Chrysler's current contract.
"We did not accomplish
what leaders who have
been tasked with the turning of a new page for this
industry should have
done," he wrote.
Chaison said Marchionne
made the mistake of injecting personalities into the
talks at a critical late stage.
That could delay a contract
agreement.
Marchionne, he said,
clearly is miffed that GM
is getting more attention
from the union than
Chrysler.
"He also has to understand that these are not
typical
negotiations,"
Chaison said, noting that
the talks are being
watched by the White
House, the public and the
labor movement. The U.S.
government still owns
26.5 percent of GM, the
remainder of a big stake it
got in exchange for bailing
out the company.
It's likely, though, that
any setback in the negotiations at Chrysler is temporary. The UAW has an
interest in reaching a deal
because a union-run trust
that pays retiree health
care bills owns more than
40 percent of Chrysler.
Chrysler has turned a
small profit in the first half
of the year, excluding a
one-time
accounting
charge for refinancing
government bailout debts.

�ALONG THE RIVER
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

A5

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Operation Soldier Care declared a success
BY HOPE ROUSH
HROUSH@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — When members of
the 1092nd Engineer Battalion left for Afghanistan in
Feb. 2010, the local community came together to create the Operation Soldier Care program.
The program, which is spearheaded through ERA
Town &amp; Country, was designed to send care packages
to the troops while they were away. According to
Beckie Stein-Lambert, of ERA Town &amp; Country,
Operation Soldier care was a total community effort.
“The community was very supportive. We had 4-H
clubs, schools, churches and local businesses help —
it was a total support,” Lambert said. “We really had
excellent response (to Operation Soldier Care).
According to Lambert, while the 1092nd was stationed in Afghanistan, approximately 3,500 pounds of
care package items were shipped. Although, the program has since stopped following the 1092nd’s arrival
home a few months ago, Lambert said that Operation
Soldier Care is still open to helping the battalion with
whatever they need.
“If they want us to do anything else for them, we
will help,” she added.
As a special honor to the 1092nd, the 2011 Mason
County Fair was dedicated to the battalion. The
1092nd marched in the fair’s parade and were honored during the fair’s dedication ceremony. During
the ceremony, First Sgt. Ryan C. Powers was on hand
to accept a plaque and recognition from the fair board.
While he accepted the plaque, Powers also was joined
by SSG Ryan Russell, SPC William Friese, SPC
Justin Gibbs and SFC Donald Slone, who presented
eight flags to the businesses and individuals who supported the purchasing and shipping of donated goods
within the Operation Soldier Care program.
Powers recognized Lambert as well for her work in
starting Operation Soldier Care.

Submitted photo

Pictured, above, are the
Mason County Fair
Board members with
Powers and soldiers
from the 1092nd. They
were on hand to distribute eight American flags
which flew over their
camp in Afghanistan to
businesses and individuals who helped ship the
donated goods through
Operation Soldier Care.
These flags will fly at the
fair this week.

Right, Members of
the 1092nd presented these individuals with flags
during the Mason
County Fair dedication ceremony.
Submitted photo

Submitted photo

This special logo, featuring
the Mothmen, was created
specifically for members of
the 1092nd.

Members of the
1092nd march
down Main St. during their send off
parade, which took
place in Feb. 2010.
File photo

Submitted photo

First Sgt. Ryan C. Powers accepts a plaque from Benny Hoffman, Mason County Fair President, during the
recent Mason County Fair. This yearʼs fair was dedicated to the members of the 1092nd Engineer Battalion,
who recently returned from Afghanistan.

�Sunday, September 18,2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page A6

Maruaders honor 911 victims

The morning kicked off with a pancake breakfast,
while the clowns Sparkles and Benny provided balloon animals and entertainment for the kids. Holzer
Medical Centerʼs health fair proved popular with those
attending the annual meeting. Hundreds of people
received health screenings and wellness advice.

BREC members gather
for 2011 Annual Meeting
RIO GRANDE — Pancakes and free health checkups, clowns and balloon animals for kids and plenty
of prizes highlighted the Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative (BREC) 2011 Annual Meeting of
Members on Saturday, Aug. 13, at the University of
Rio Grande.
A crowd estimated at more than 1,000 attended the
morning’s events, which included a business session
that reviewed the past year’s achievements on behalf
of the co-op’s 19,200 members. No BREC trustee
seats were up for election this year.
BREC’s service territory spans parts of nine counties in southeast Ohio, including Gallia, Lawrence,
Jackson, Meigs, Athens, Ross, Scioto, Pike and
Vinton.
Executive Vice President and General Manager
Tonda Meadows in her report to the membership
praised BREC’s employees for their hard work and
commitment. She said co-op workers have risen to
the challenge of maintaining the highest level of service during these difficult economic times and furthering the goal of providing “safe, reliable and
affordable electricity.”
BREC, in fact, was able to reduce its overall operating costs by $420,000 last year. This was possible
without sacrificing important system maintenance
and improvement programs that keep the lights on,
even during severe storms.
“We trimmed trees and other vegetation away
from more than 290 miles of lines last year,”
Meadows reported.
The co-op also continued removal of old copper
wire, erecting in its place stronger modern conductors and adding protective devices to reduce the
number and length of power outages. BREC members sustained the fewest average minutes of service
interruption in 2010 than at any time in the last five
years.
“Our power cost increased by $1.8 million last
year due to increased sales and higher wholesale
rates,” said Meadows, pointing out that over half of
every dollar paid to the co-op on electric bills is
related to the cost of electricity generation and transmission.
The cost of wholesale power continued to rise last
year because Buckeye Power, Inc., the generationand-transmission cooperative serving Ohio’s electric
co-ops, was completing the installation of scrubbers
and other environmental controls to meet new power
plant emission standards.
This investment, when combined with the purchase of additional capacity, has cost almost $1 billion, but it will make Buckeye Power’s coal-fired
plants among the cleanest operating units in the
world and ensure adequate power supplies into the
next decade. Meadows said other utilities will be
forced to close older, less efficient power plants or
convert to alternate fuel sources by 2015. This will
mean higher rates for their consumers.
Ohio electric cooperative members can look forward to a period of wholesale rate stability,
Meadows noted, because environmental compliance
investment has already been added to the cost of
generation.
BREC also returned money to its membership in
the form of patronage capital. Last year, capital
credit checks totaling more than $877,000 were
issued. Meadows said this is one of the things that
set nonprofit electric co-ops apart: cost-based rates
and the reimbursement of margins to the members
who provided the funds.
BREC Board of Trustees President Dave Lester
thanked members for their attendance. The business
session was adjourned and prize drawings began.
Co-op suppliers and vendors donated gift certificates
and merchandise.
The grand prizes included a 40-inch flat screen
TV, two chest-type deep freezes and two processed
half hogs from the Jackson County junior fair. Six
gift certificates for $50 off electric bills were presented, and each member who registered received $5
off their electric bill and a thermal food container.
Children of members received book bags full of
school supplies.
COED SOFTBALL
TOURNAMENT
Saturday, October 1 and
Sunday, October 2

Tournament on Sunday

(Depends on final number of teams)
Guarantee 4 games
Entry fee: $125.00
For more information please call:
Bill Harmon 740.416.9106
Jan Harmon 740.416.6556
Home: 740.949.3114
Games played at Racine, Ohio
Proceeds go to teams of the Racine Summer
Youth League

Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992-2155
Gallia • 446-2342

Cadot-Blessing Camp #126 presents Iraq Medal
GALLIPOLIS — The Cadot-Blessing Camp #126 of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War recently
presented one of its members with the Iraq Service Bar. Eric Voiers spent 2003-2004 serving during the
Operation Iraqi Freedom 2nd Wave. Voiers is entitled to wear this service bar on the Camp Membership Medal.
The Camp also has two members with Vietnam Service Bars.
The Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War is a Congressionally chartered veterans organization dedicated
to perpetuating the memory of the Union soldiers and sailors that helped preserve the Union of the United
States of America. Cadot-Blessing Camp #126 honors Veterans of all wars.

The Cadot-Blessing Camp #126 of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War recently presented member
Eric Voiers with the Iraq Service Bar. Pictured, from left, are: Ron McClintock, Dean Brownell, Matt
Cunningham, Jim Clark, Eric Voiers and Henry Myers.

Gold cross of Ohio soldier killed in Iraq stolen
STOW, Ohio (AP) — The father of an Ohio soldier killed in Iraq said his son's gold cross chain was
stolen from a display of mementos at the family's home.
Larry Large of Stow, near Akron, tells WJW-TV the cross was the only item taken during a break-in
Wednesday. It was taken from a display of items including his son's medals and coffin flag.
Thirty-one-year-old
Sgt. Bryan Large was
killed in 2005 with
two fellow paratroopers when a bomb
exploded near their
Humvee.
Gold prices have
surged this year as a
relatively stable
investment amid the
uncertain economy.

THANK YOU!

Round robin (or mini tournament) on Saturday

Keeping Meigs &amp;
Gallia informed

(Submitted photos)

Recently, students and staff of Meigs
Middle School held an assembly to
honor those lost during the terrorist
attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Replicas of
the Twin Towers were constructed and
displayed with the names and pictures
of the more than 3,000 Americans that
were lost that day. Several students
also shared memorable statements
from that day, as well as other quotes
dealing with patriotism, citizenship, and
freedom. A moment of silence was
observed at 8:46 a.m., the approximate
time the first tower was struck by a
plane. To conclude the assembly, Taps
was played and students placed flowers
at the base of the tower replicas.

Classes Start
October 3rd

“Having been laid–off from a local company,
I found the job market challenging and the
competition tremendous. I decided to return to
college to get an edge on the competition. After
extensive research, I chose Gallipolis Career College.
The faculty and staff are dedicated to helping
students achieve their full potential academically.
The small class sizes allowed for personal involvement and evening classes afforded the opportunity
to work and attend classes.
After graduation I was offered the position of
Project Assistant with Beaver Excavating Co.,
Canton, Ohio, contracting with a power plant in
southern Ohio.
My previous experience and the training that I
received from GCC gave me the advantage that I
needed to obtain a quality job.
Thanks GCC!”
Joella Roberts
Project Assistant
Beaver Excavating Co.

Gallipolis Career College
“Careers Close to Home”

CALL TODAY!
740-446-4367 • 1-800-214-0452
Spring Valley Plaza • Gallipolis

www.gallipoliscareercollege.edu • gcc@gallipoliscareercollege.edu

�Sunday, September 18,2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Extension educator
transferred

Extension News

POMEROY — Ohio State University Extension
announces the promotion of Cassie Turner 4-H
Educator to a Level 3 Educator and her new assignment as the 4-H Educator for Hancock County in
Northwest Ohio.
She will be leaving her position in Meigs County on
Sept. 30.
Turner began her career with OSU Extension in
January of 2006 in Meigs County. The program at
that time had been without a 4-H Educator for several years. During her tenure the number of clubs and
advisors has increased by 30% for the county.
Under her leadership the Teen Leaders Club,
Cloverbud Graduation, and School Enrichment programs are just a few programs that were started.
Close to 1000 youth in Meigs County are served yearly through 4-H and OSU Extension programming.
Community Volunteers and OSU Extension staff are
already making plans to work towards maintaining
the high level of 4-H opportunities that the county
currently enjoys.
“The youth, volunteers, and community have made
my time in Meigs County an exciting and rewarding
time, with their support in the county we have been
able to make great things happen. I appreciate all of
the time, skills, and money that have been contributed
during my time here and I’m sure the program will
continue to help youth succeed” said Turner.

Want to improve your
grazing pasture and hay
fields?
Rory Lewandowsky,
Athens County Educator
suggests the following
to improve your fields.
Perennial cool season
pasture plants need to
store sufficient carbohydrate reserves to provide the energy for the
plant to survive the
winter.
Although the top
growth of the plant will
die back, the crown and
root system of the plant
remain alive, continue
to respire, and require
“food” in the form of
carbohydrates to survive. There must be
enough carbohydrates
stored up to allow the
plant to survive through
the winter and to send
out new top growth in
the spring.
The carbohydrates are
manufactured in the
plant
through
the
process of photosynthesis using carbon dioxide, oxygen and soil
supplied nutrients to
produce and store up
these necessary carbohydrate reserves. The
plant must have green
living leaf tissue to produce these carbohydrates. Make sure that
pasture paddocks are
not over grazed and that
adequate plant leaf area
is maintained.
The final hay cutting
should be completed in
the next week or so.
What is adequate plant
leaf area? Lewandowsky
suggests leaving plant
residue a minimum of
plant height of 4 to 5
inches in the fall of the
year. If you want to
stockpile grass for winter grazing remember to
apply additional nitrogen (approximately 50
pounds per acre).
Some graziers use the
fall period to rotate
livestock through hay
fields and give their
pasture paddocks some

If it’s not .gov, it’s not
Social Security
BY MARCUS GEIGER
SOCIAL SECURITY DISTRICT MANAGER, GALLIPOLIS

OHIO VALLEY — When you go on a road trip,
you need to follow the signs to arrive at the right
place. Going online can be very much the same.
Look for the “.gov” at the end of the web address —
if it isn’t .gov, it isn’t the real Social Security website — www.socialsecurity.gov.
Countless consumers nationwide are victimized
each year by misleading advertisers who use
“Social Security” or “Medicare” to entice the public
to use their services. In many cases, these companies offer Social Security services for a fee, even
though the same services are available directly from
Social Security, free of charge. These services
include:
• updating a Social Security card to show a
bride’s married name;
• replacing a Social Security card; and
• getting a Social Security number for a child.
These for-profit businesses may cleverly design
their websites, so when people use Internet search
engines, their advertisement pops up. They may
even make their advertisement look similar to the
real Social Security website. And some of these
sites, at first glance, appear to be affiliated with
Social Security. But upon closer examination, these
are for-profit companies charging individuals for a
service that is provided free by Social Security.
For instance, a quick Google search on “replacing
a Social Security card” brings up paid advertisements for websites that charge a fee just to get an
application for a new card. That service is absolutely free from Social Security.
The law that deals specifically with misleading
Social Security and Medicare advertising prohibits
people or non-government organizations, like forprofit businesses, from using words or emblems that
mislead others. Their advertising cannot lead people
to believe that they represent or are somehow affiliated with or endorsed or approved by Social
Security or the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (Medicare). But that doesn’t stop advertisers from trying.
For more information, you can read our publication What You Need to Know about Misleading
Advertising
at
www.socialsecurity.gov/pubs/10005.html.
When you go to www.socialsecurity.gov, make
sure you look for the “.gov” sign along the way.
Don’t be tricked into paying a fee for a service
that’s free. And remember: if it isn’t .gov, it isn’t
Social Security.

Postal Service could close
10 Ohio mail centers
AKRON, Ohio (AP) — The struggling U.S. Postal
Service says it's considering whether to close more
than 250 mail processing
centers across the country, including 10 in Ohio.
The list released by the
agency on Thursday
includes facilities in
Akron, Athens, Canton,
Chillicothe, Cincinnati,
Dayton, Ironton,
Steubenville, Toledo and
Youngstown.
Ohio Postal Workers
Union Vice President
Julie Truss tells the
Akron Beacon Journal
the only Ohio mail processing offices that are
safe are in Cleveland and
Columbus.
Postal officials say all
the facilities on the list
will be reviewed over the
next three months. Postal
Service spokesman
Victor Dubina in
Cleveland says the
agency could start
announcing in March
which locations will
close.
The money-losing
Postal Service also is
reviewing about 3,700
local post offices nationwide for possible closure.

BY HAL KNEEN

Hal Kneen
extra rest. Remember
the basic grazing principle: take half and leave
half. Another option
that should be given
some serious consideration is to feed some hay
during this period to
avoid overgrazing and
provide some paddocks
with a rest period heading into late fall. In
many instances this
may prove to be the best
use of low quality hay.
Young animals are
being weaned at this
time and once lactation
is over, the nutrient
needs of the mother are
greatly reduced.
Don’t relax grazing
management in the fall.
The management decisions made now will
impact pasture production next spring.
***
Now is the time to
take soil samples and
prepare your land for
next year’s crops. Fall
is a good time to apply
lime to fields and pastures with low soil pH.
The purpose of a lime
application is to increase
soil pH, supply calcium
and magnesium, increase
the soil availability of
essential plant nutrients
such as phosphorus,
potassium, magnesium
and molybdenum while
reducing
potentially
harmful concentrations
of aluminum, manganese
and iron.
Liming
and
the
increase it brings about
in soil pH is also credited with helping to

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page A7

increase
favorable
microbial activity that
can result in a release of
organically
bound
nutrients. Factors that
determine the effectiveness of a lime application include the liming
material used, particle
size, and whether the
application is incorporated into the soil profile or surface applied.
Particle size of a lim-

Don’t relax grazing
management in the
fall. The management
decisions made now
will impact pasture
production next spring.
ing material is a primary factor in determining
how quickly soil pH is
changed. A 100-mesh
particle will reach its
maximum neutralizing
effect in about 2 weeks.
A 60-mesh particle will
need 12 to 18 months to
neutralize the same
amount of acidity as
that 100-mesh particle.
Coarse particles, those
of 20 mesh and lower
may need 3 or more
years to react and neutralize soil acidity.
Pennsylvania studies
have demonstrated that
lime particles only neutralize the soil acidity
of the soil immediately
around the lime particle. This is not a large
area and it may amount
to no more than about 2
times the size of the
lime particle. In order
to neutralize more soil
acidity, the lime particle
must be physically
moved to come into
contact with more
acidic soil. This is fine
and good for conventional tillage row crops
and market gardens, but
what about no-till crop
systems, pastures and
hay fields?
If you are dealing
with a very acidic soil,
for example, something
below 5.7, strongly
consider tillage to

incorporate limestone
throughout the rooting
zone before starting a
no-till cropping system,
a new hayfield or new
pasture
seeding.
Afterwards soil pH can
be maintained by regular surface application
of limestone.
For
already
established
fields where tillage is
not an option, surface
application of limestone
will still produce beneficial effects but mainly
in changing the first
two inches of the soil.
***
Homeowners, as the
gardens wind down
remember to capture
the nutrients left in the
soil by planting a cover
crop of rye, perennial
ryegrass, winter barley,
or wheat (after October
3rd) at the rate of two
pounds per thousand
square feet. As the
cover crop grows, it
captures the nitrogen
and other nutrients in its
root system and leaf
area. When the cover
crop is disked or
plowed next spring, the
crop rots and the nutrients are released back
into the soil by
microbes and earthworms.
Remember that planting areas for early crops
(potatoes, peas and lettuce) will need to be
turned in the late fall
especially on heavier
clay ground. Gardens
with
overwintered
cover crops take longer
to warm up in the
spring.
Remember to attend
Ohio State University
Extension 49th Annual
Farm Science Review
September 20-22 in
London Ohio.
(Hal Kneen is the
Agriculture and
Natural Resources
Educator for Meigs
and Scioto Counties,
Ohio State University
Extension)

Stroke
Survivors to
celebrate
National
Caregivers’
Month
GALLIPOLIS —
The Stroke
Survivors Support
Group will host a
potluck dinner and
meeting in celebration of National
Caregivers’ Month
from 5-7 p.m. at the
Bossard Memorial
Library on
November 17. The
guest speaker will
be Neurologist Dr.
Lewis, who will
speak about strokes
and the recovery
process. Call (740)
925-3788 for more
information.

60244104

�Sunday, September 18,2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page A8

Elks #107 donates
to area leagues

Fruth Pharmacy presents
donation to URG/RGCC

In conjunction with the Elks National Foundation, the
Gallipolis Elks #107 presented donations of $1,000 each to
the Gallipolis Midget Football League and the Point
Pleasant Youth Football League. The money, in form of
grants from the Elks National Foundation, is to be used to
support youth activities in the local area. Accepting the
donations, from left, are: Jamie Halfhill, President, Point
Pleasant Youth Football; Chris Payne, Treasurer, Point
Pleasant Youth Football; ER Georgio Alderigi, President,
Gallipolis Midget Football; Michael Clendenin, Vice
President, Point Pleasant Youth Football; and Davie Allison,
Gallipolis Midget Football League.

Lynne Fruth, President of Fruth Pharmacy recently presented a check for $4,000 to Annette Ward, Director of Alumni
Relations for University of Rio Grande. The donation to Rio
Grande was part of over $40,000 distributed from the Fruth
Pharmacy Scholarship Golf Event held in August. These
funds will be applied to the Henry and Marjorie Fruth
Scholarship, for local students attending University of Rio
Grande, and the Jack and Frances Fruth Scholarship, for
employees and children of Fruth Pharmacy attending Rio
Grande. For more information on the Fruth Scholarship
Program, visit the Fruth website at www.fruthpharmacy.com.

Bethany Keyes and Jeremy Ferguson

K EY E S - F E R G U SO N
E N G AG E M E N T
LETART, W.Va. — Bethany Lynn Keyes and
Jeremy Allen Ferguson, along with their families,
announce their engagement and upcoming marriage.
The bride-elect is a 2006 graduate of Wahama High
School. She attended Hocking College and is now
working as a licensed physical theraipist assistant at
Camden Clark Medical Center in Parkersburg, W. Va.
Her fiance is a 2005 graduate of Wahama High
School and is currently employed by AEP River
Operatons at Lakin, W. Va.
The wedding will take place at the Maranatha
Cornerstone Church in Letart, W. Va., on Oct. 25 at
3:30 p.m. The open church ceremony will be followed
by a reception t at the Bend Area Community Center
in New Haven, W. Va.

Obstetrics nurses
recognized for high
marks at HMC

Holzer Health Systems recently recognized the
Obstetrics nurses for scoring the highest among 575
hospitals nationwide in a Press Ganey database
review. Shown pictured are a few of the staff members displaying the banner posted on their unit.

GALLIPOLIS — Holzer Medical Center’s
Obstetrics nursing staff was recently recognized as
the highest scoring Obstetrics nursing group among
575 hospitals in the nationwide Press Ganey database for April through June of 2011. The nurses
scored particularly high in “attention to special or
personal needs”, “keeping the patients informed”,
and “skill of nurses”.
Press Ganey is a recognized leader in healthcare
performance improvement, working with more than
10,000 health care organizations nationwide, including 50 percent of all U.S hospitals, to improve clinical and business outcomes. Based in South Bend,
Ind., Press Ganey is comprised of professionals who
are well-versed in all facets of health care and are
committed to your organization's success.

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�SPORTS
LOCAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS — A schedule of upcoming
college and high school varsity sporting
events involving teams from Gallia and
Meigs counties.

Monday, September 19
Volleyball
Chillicothe at Gallia Academy, 5:15
p.m.
Belpre at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Federal Hocking, 6
p.m.
Hannan at Ohio Valley Christian, 6
p.m.
Soccer
Ohio Valley Christian at Belpre, 6
p.m.
Golf
Waterford at South Gallia, 4:30
p.m.
Eastern, Point Pleasant, Buffalo at
Wahama, 4:30 p.m.
Tuesday, September 20
Volleyball
South Gallia at Waterford, 6 p.m.
River Valley at South Point, 5:30
p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Chillicothe, 6:30
p.m.
Point
Pleasant
(boys)
at
Williamstown, 5 p.m.
Huntington St. Joe at Point
Pleasant (girls), 6:30 p.m.
Golf
South Gallia at Belpre, Federal
Hocking, 4 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 4:30 p.m.

Rebels crush
Miller, 52-6

B1
Sunday, September 18,2011

Gallia Academy tames Tigers, 31-8
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— The Gallia Academy
football team posted a
season-high in points
while limiting visiting
Marietta to just 105 yards
of total offense Friday
night during a 31-8 victory at Memorial Field in a
Week 4 non-conference
matchup in the Old
French City.
The host Blue Devils
(3-1) picked up their
third consecutive win and
also claimed their first
home triumph of the
2011 season, racking up
299 yards of total offense
in the decision. The
Tigers (1-3), on the other
hand, mustered only 19
plays
for
positive
yardage out of 41 offensive snaps from scrimmage.
Gallia Academy forced
three turnovers in the triumph and finished plustwo in turnover differential, as the hosts churned
out a season-best 136

passing yards to go along stepped it up on both
with 163 rushing yards sides of the ball this
on 48 attempts. MHS, evening, and that’s deficonversely,
managed nitely a plus headed into
only 40 rushing yards in next week.”
the game to go along
The Blue Devils were a
with 65 yards in the air.
perfect 4-for-4 on fourth
Given the one-sided- down conversions and
ness of Friday’s outcome, also churned out 15 first
third-year GAHS coach downs in the contest —
Mike Eddy was satisfied eight of which came in
— for the most part — the opening quarter. By
with how the evening comparison, Marietta had
went.
only six first downs in
“The points we put up the game — three in each
tonight are pleasing. It’s half.
a nice turnaround for us,”
Gallia Academy wastEddy said. “We still had ed little time in getting on
some opportunities in the the scoreboard, as the
red zone that we should hosts took the opening
have scored some points kickoff and marched 79
on, so I’m still a little yards in 13 plays for an
upset in that regard with early 7-0 advantage.
are offense. We aren’t Nick Clagg gave GAHS
going to beat the best a 7-0 advantage with
teams in our league set- 6:21 remaining in the
tling for field goals or opening period after
committing turnovers scoring on a 5-yard run,
down there, so we still ending a drive that saw
have some things to work the Devils throw seven
on.
passes and rush six times
“However, these kids over a 5:39 span.
played
really
hard
The Blue Devils forced
tonight and I have to give
them credit for that. We Please see GALLIA, B8

Mike Brace/photo
Gallia Academy junior Nick Clagg takes a handoff and
follows the lead block of teammate Brandon Taylor
during this season quarter carry Friday night against
Marietta in a Week 4 non-conference football game at
Memorial Field in Gallipolis, Ohio.

BY SARAH HAWLEY

Tornadoes fall
to Federal
Hocking, 18-12

SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

HEMLOCK, Ohio —
A 22-0 first quarter
advantage was all the
South Gallia football
team needed on Friday
evening as they picked up
their third win of the season.
The Rebels (3-1, 2-1
TVC Hocking) put up 52
first half points as they
defeated Miller 52-6 on
Friday evening in Perry
County, Ohio.
South Gallia racked up
439 rushing yards and
seven rushing touchdowns in the win. The
Rebels also converted on
five two-point conversions. Miller’s lone score
came in the fourth quarter of play.
Cory Haner scored two
rushing touchdowns — a
52 yard score and a 35
yard
score.
Ethan
Spurlock added a 31 yard
touchdown, Jacob White
had a 25 yard touchdown
run, Josh Cooper added a
19 yard touchdown run,
John Johnson had a 15
yard touchdown and Troy
Zinn had a one yard
touchdown run.
South Gallia two-point
conversions were a run
by Haner, two pass completions from Haner to
Cooper, a Spurlock run
and a White run.
Austin Phillips led the
Rebels with eight carries
for 122 yards, followed
by Haner with six carries
for 120 yards, Spurlock
with six carries for 97
yards, White with three
carries for 32 yards,
Johnson with three carries for 30 yards, Cooper
with three carries for 20
yards and Zinn with one
carry for one yard.
South Gallia also
added 50 yards passing
for a total of 489 yards of
offense. Haner was 2-3
passing for 39 yards and
zero interceptions, while
Danny Matney was 2-3
passing for 11 yards and
zero interceptions.
Danny Matney led the
South Gallia receivers
with on catch for 37 yard,
with Spurlock adding
one catch for eight yards,
Zinn pulling in one catch
for three yards and
Cooper grabbing one
catch for two yards.
Defensively, Dakota
Wroten, Haner and Levi
Ellis each had an interception for the visitors.
Seth Carpenter led the
team in tackles with 12
and White added nine.
Brandon Campbell had
one sack for the Rebels.
South Gallia will return
home on Friday as they
host TVC Hocking opponent Eastern.

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

STEWART, Ohio —
After getting their first
win of 2011 last week
against Belpre, the
Southern football team
looked to repeat what it
did during the 2010 season.
Last season Southern
picked up win number
one against Belpre and
then defeated Federal
Hocking the following
week.
This time around it was
the Lancers who earned
their first win of the year.
Southern took the 6-0
first half lead on a one
yard run by quarterback
Tristen Wolfe with just
over
three
minutes
remaining in the half.
Please see HOCKING, B8

Dave Harris/photo
Meigsʼ head football coach Mike Chancey talks with players and coaches during Fridayʼs game against
Minford. The 35-7 victory for the Marauders was the 100th of Chanceyʼs career.

Chancey get win No. 100 as Meigs beats Minford
BY DAVE HARRIS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POMEROY, Ohio —
Meigs spotted visiting
Minford a 7-0 lead and
exploded for 35 unanswered points en route to
a stunning 35-7 win over
the Falcons on Friday
evening at Bob Roberts
Field.
The win was an historic one for Marauder

coach Mike Chancey, as
it was the 100th win in
his coaching career.
Nineteen seasons ago
Chancey left his position
as linebacker coach at
Ohio University as
returned to his alma
mater. Overall, Chancey
is 100-84 in his career.
Minford looked in the
first half like they were
going to run away with
the game, taking the

opening kickoff and
putting together a nine
play, 54 yard drive for
the score. Tyler Gaines
scored from 10 yards out
with 8:31 left in the first
period. Baylee Moore
made it a 7-0 Minford
lead with the extra
points.
After a four and out,
the Dragons drove to the
Marauder 45, but Blake
Crow came up with the

first of several defensive
plays for Meigs as he
picked off an Evan
Howard pass returning it
five yards to the
Marauder 42. Eight
plays later, Charlie
Barrett scored from a
yard out, Barrett added
the kick and Meigs had
tied the game at 7-all
with two seconds left in
Please see MEIGS, B4

Eagles come up short against Waterford
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — Then there were
two.
After a touchdown on
their opening drive, the
Waterford Wildcats went
on to the 20-12 victory
over Eastern on Friday
evening at East Shade
River Stadium.
The win leaves the
Wildcats (3-1, 3-0 TVC
Hocking) as one of only
two teams with perfect
marks in league play.
The other unbeaten
being the Wahama
White Falcons (3-0, 3-0
TVC Hocking).
The loss drops the
Eagles to 1-3 for the season with a 1-2 league

mark as they approach
the half way point of the
season.
Waterford took eight
plays and nearly four
minutes off the clock on
their opening drive —
including a fourth down
conversion to extend the
series. Waterford senior
quarterback Trevor Lang
ran in from six yards out
for the first score of the
game at the 8:06 mark of
the first quarter. Cody
Paxton added the extra
point kick to give
Waterford the 7-0 advantage before the Eagles
first possession.
Eastern began its first
drive at its own 28 yard
line, converting a third
and five for a first down.
On the resulting first

Alex Hawley/photo
Eastern runningback Ethan Nottingham carries the
ball during the first quarter of the Eagles game
against Waterford on Friday evening. Nottingham
scored both Eastern touchdowns in the game.

down play the Eagles Schlotterbeck at the
fumbled the ball, which Eastern 44 yard line.
was
recovered
by
Waterford’s
Hunter Please see EAGLES, B4

Fort Frye fends
off Raiders, 13-12
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BEVERLY, Ohio — It
was a tale of two halves
Friday night for the River
Valley football program.
Unfortunately, there
wasn’t a story book ending for the Raiders following a heartbreaking
13-12 setback to host
Fort Frye during a Week
4
non-conference
matchup in Washington
County.
The visiting Raiders
(1-3) trailed 13-0 at the
intermission, but rallied
for 12 unanswered points
in the second half to pull
within one point of the
Cadets (3-1) with 2:07
left in regulation. RVHS,
however, missed both of
its extra-point kicks after
halftime — which could
have tied or possibly put
the Silver and Black
ahead down the stretch.
Those key misses
caused River Valley to
drop its third consecutive
decision of the season,
and also allowed FFHS
to pick up its third consecutive win of 2011.
Fort Frye also won its
second straight head-tohead matchup against
RVHS after posting a 430 victory in last year’s
game in Cheshire.
Fort Frye outgained the
guests by a 220-192 margin in total yards of
Please see
FORT FRYE, B4

�Page B2 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 18,2011

Blue Angels beat Logan in 4
BY CRAIG DUNN
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

LOGAN — After letting the first game of
Thursday
night’s
Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic League volleyball match against visiting Gallia Academy get
away from them, the
Logan Lady Chiefs rallied to win game two and
appeared to be playing on
the same level as the
Blue Angels.
But then came games
three and four, which the
Blue Angels dominated
for a 3-1 victory over the
Purple &amp; White in Jim
Myers
Gymnasium.
Volleyball is a game of
streaks, and the Blue
Angels certainly had
their fair share in a 2624, 19-25, 25-12, 25-12
success over the Lady
Chiefs.
Gallipolis (5-6, 2-1
SEOAL) rallied from an
early 10-4 hole and a late
24-23 deficit to win game

one before the Lady
Chiefs (2-6, 1-2) rode a
streak of their own, an
eight-point service streak
by Tori Eveland, to victory in game two.
However, games three
and four were too much
Maggie Westfall, Kassie
Shriver and Heather
Ward from the service
line and too much Haley
Rosier, Rachel Morris
and Westfall at the net for
the Purple &amp; White to
overcome.
The Lady Chiefs started out on a roll, with
Abbie Hughes scoring
five service points during
a 6-0 run that put the
Purple &amp; White ahead 61. Logan extended that
lead to 10-4 before
Morris got the Blue
Angels back in the game
with four-straight service
points of her own, aided
by kills from Morris,
Westfall and Molly
Smith.
Gallipolis went ahead
19-15 before the Purple

&amp; White scored nine of
the next 13 to points to
reach the precipice of
winning the match, taking a 24-23 lead on a
solid spike kill by Ashley
McCort.
But the Blue Angels
got a sweet cross-court
spike kill from Smith to
knot the game, then a
spike kill by Riley Nibert
and a block kill by Rosier
finished off the GAHS
victory.
And when Shriver
served the first seven
points of game two,
momentum was clearly
on the side of the Blue
Angels.
Gallipolis extended its
game-two lead to 11-3
before Devon Shaw
served three points (two
aces) to begin righting
the Logan ship. Logan
pulled within 15-9 before
a Mackenzie Mays kill
regained serve for the
Lady Chiefs and Eveland
went on her service tear
to take Logan from a six-

point deficit to an 18-15
lead.
Gallipolis, which has
won two of the last four
SEOAL championships,
had some uncharacteristic problems receiving
Eveland’s serves. Six of
Eveland’s serves never
came back over the net,
including a pair of
Eveland aces.
Logan never trailed
again in game two. The
Lady Chiefs led 20-18
before regaining serve on
a Gallia unforced error
and got a spike kill from
McCort and a pair of
Shaw aces to pull within
game point at 24-18.
After a Nibert spike kill,
the Lady Chiefs finished
off the game with a
McCort spike kill of her
own.
The Lady Chiefs
couldn’t contain the
momentum,
however.
Gallipolis got off to a 7-2
start in game three and
never looked back, with
Westfall serving three-

straight points and making a couple kills as the
Blue Angels extended
their lead to 14-7.
Logan got back in the
game briefly, pulling
within 14-11 on three
Mays service points and
a McCort kill, but the
Blue Angels scored 11 of
the game’s last 12 points
to win going away.
Shriver served threestraight points, including an ace, then Ward
served out the game’s
final six points with an
ace, a Shriver kill, and a
spike kill and a gamefinishing block kill by
Westfall.
Game four was more
of the same. After Logan
grabbed a quick 4-2
lead, Gallipolis went on
a game-breaking 12-0
run, getting 11-straight
service points from the
sophomore
Westfall,
four kills at the net by
Rosier and a kill by
Morris. Logan never got
any closer than nine

points the rest of the
way.
Westfall finished with
13 service points (three
aces) and 12 kills for the
winners. Shriver, also a
sophomore, served a
game-high 19 points
(seven aces), with Ward
adding 11 points (two
aces), Morris seven
(three aces) and Rosier
four. Rosier added 11
kills, Morris and Smith
five apiece, and Brenna
West four.
Both Shaw (five aces)
and Eveland (four aces)
had 10 service points for
the Lady Chiefs, with
Hughes (four aces) contributing
eight,
Mackenzie Dicken five,
Mays three and Niki
Stimmel one. McCort
had 11 kills at the net,
with Mays chipping in
nine and Dicken six.
Craig Dunn is the
sports editor of the Logan
Daily News in Logan,
Ohio.

Meigs golfers win tri-match
STAFF REPORT
POMEROY, Ohio —
The Meigs golf team
defeated Vinton County
and River Valley during a
tri-match on Thursday
evening at Kountry Hills
Golf Course in Meigs
County, Ohio.
The Marauders had a
team total of 189, while
River Valley took second
with a score of 202 and
Vinton County shot a
208.
Treay
McKinney
earned medalist honors
with a round of 39.
McKinney was followed
by Dillan Andrews with a
48, David Davis with a
50 and Braden Spencer
with a 52. Chris Folmer
(56) and Paul Gibbs (56)
also played for the
Marauders.
Dan Goodrich paced
the Raiders with a round
of 42, followed by Jordan
Howell with a 49, Taylor

West Virginia
Friday’s Scores
Beallsville, Ohio 47, Cameron 7
Berkeley Springs 7, Frankfort 6
Bridgeport 28, Robert C. Byrd 14
Cabell Midland 27, South Charleston
21
Capital 55, Princeton 21
Chapmanville 37, Poca 13
Charlotte Country Day, N.C. 31,
Bluefield 14
Clay-Battelle 68, Hundred 0
East Hardy 30, Pocahontas County 14
Elkins 51, Preston 13
Fairmont Senior 42, Jefferson 20
George Washington 35, Hurricane 0
Grafton 44, Weir 13
Greenbrier West 31, Oak Hill 26
Hampshire 49, Oakland Southern, Md.
27
Hedgesville 17, James Wood, Va. 3
Herbert Hoover 39, Tolsia 8
Huntington 27, Parkersburg 17
James Monroe 61, PikeView 43
Johnson Central, Ky. 36, Logan 6
Keyser 30, Northern - G, Md. 19
Lewis County 37, East Fairmont 7
Liberty Harrison 20, Philip Barbour 3
Liberty Raleigh 48, Mount View 20
Lincoln 34, Petersburg 14
Magnolia 17, Hannibal River, Ohio 0
Martinsburg 33, Morgantown 0
Meadow Bridge 33, Fayetteville 31
Moorefield 35, Tucker County 0
Musselman 21, Parkersburg South 20
North Marion 49, Buckhannon-Upshur
21
Oak Glen 27, John Marshall 13
Paden City 47, Gilmer County 6
Parkersburg Catholic 40, Calhoun
County 0
Phelps, Ky. 42, Montcalm 28
Point Pleasant 49, S. Point, Ohio 6
Richwood 44, Midland Trail 8
Ripley 24, Lincoln County 20
Ritchie County 20, Braxton County 12
River View 26, Man 24
Riverside 31, Winfield 6
Roane County 23, Webster County 14
Scott 50, Sissonville 31
Shady Spring 48, Independence 8
St. Albans 46, Nitro 20
Steubenville, Ohio 40, Brooke 6
Summers County 19, Wyoming East
14
Tug Valley 40, Twin Valley, Va. 24
Valley Fayette 22, Clay County 16
Wahama 61, Belpre, Ohio 3
Wheeling Park 42, University 12
Wirt County 33, Doddridge County 6
Woodrow Wilson 29, Spring Valley 28

Ohio
Friday’s Scores
Ada 69, McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley
7
Akr. Buchtel 26, Akr. Garfield 0
Akr. Ellet 13, Akr. East 0
Akr. Manchester 43, Zoarville

Wooldridge with a 53 and
Zach Morris with a 58.
Ryan Slopko led the
Vikings with a 45, Dillon
Crist shot a 49, Garrett
Betts had a 55 and David
Allen shot a 59. Also plying for Vinton County
were Tanner Sawers (64)
and Alex Owings (75).
The Marauders return
to action on Wednesday
as they travel to Brass
Ring Golf Course to face
Nelsonville-York.

of 49, followed by
Jennifer Robinson with a
53, Natalie Michael with
a 55 and Kerri Moon
with a 65. Harley Fox
(70) also played for the
Lady Marauders.
For the Lady Eagles,
Samantha Cline shot a
55, Grace Edwards shot a
57, Hannah Hawley had a
66 and Cassidy Cleland
shot an 87.
The Lady Eagles and
the Lady Marauders will
meet again on Wednesday
as part of a tri-match with
Logan Elm at Kountry
Hill Golf Course.

POMEROY, Ohio —
For the sixth time in as
many matches, the Meigs
Lady Marauders defeated
Eastern.
The Lady Marauders
shot a team total of 222,
while the Lady Eagles
shot a team score of 265.
Alyssa Cremeans led
all golfers with a round

TRIMBLE, Ohio —
The Wahama White
Falcons Varsity Golf
Team beat their TVC
counterparts,
Miller
High School and Trimble
High School, at the
Forest Hills Golf Course

near Trimble. Ohio on
Thursday afternoon.
The golf course was
very wet and soggy from
the recent rains making
play difficult for all the
players. Whama's winning score in the play 6,
count 4, format was 173
edging the 177 from
Miller and 189 from the
Trimble team.
The White Falcons did
not have an outstanding
performance from any
single player, but their
first 4 scores were consistent. Kevin Back shot
a 42 to lead his team
while both Michael
MacKnight and Morgan
Nottingham added identical
43's.
Samuel
Gordon posted a 45 to
account for the 4th score
for the winners. Caroline
Thompson and Preston
Hudnall also played for
Wahama with their
scores not part of the
final tally. This was

Tuscarawas Valley 7
Akr. Springfield 35, Norton 20
Akr. SVSM 56, Euclid 14
Albany Alexander 80, New Matamoras
Frontier 14
Alliance 55, Beloit W. Branch 26
Amanda-Clearcreek 42, Circleville 13
Andover Pymatuning Valley 50,
Ashtabula Edgewood 28
Ansonia 69, New Paris National Trail 24
Apple Creek Waynedale 28, Rittman 0
Arcadia 21, Cory-Rawson 14
Arcanum 36, W. Alexandria Twin Valley
S. 20
Archbold 47, Metamora Evergreen 14
Arlington 36, Pandora-Gilboa 6
Ashland 56, Wooster 28
Ashland Blazer, Ky. 28, Ironton 6
Ashland Crestview 30, Monroeville 7
Athens 28, Chillicothe 14
Atwater Waterloo 21, E. Can. 13
Avon 35, N. Ridgeville 7
Avon Lake 45, N. Olmsted 23
Baltimore Liberty Union 52, Millersport
8
Barberton 33, Akr. North 6
Barnesville 40, Lore City Buckeye Trail
13
Beallsville 47, Cameron, W.Va. 7
Beavercreek 21, Xenia 14
Bedford 32, Shaker Hts. 14
Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 22,
Bellefontaine 20
Bellville Clear Fork 35, Mansfield Sr. 28
Berlin Center Western Reserve 48,
Leetonia 28
Beverly Ft. Frye 13, Bidwell River Valley
12
Blanchester 34, Bethel-Tate 24
Bloomdale Elmwood 31, Elmore
Woodmore 21
Brecksville-Broadview Hts. 13, Berea
12
Brookfield 26, Campbell Memorial 20,
OT
Brunswick 31, Hudson 28
Bucyrus Wynford 38, New Washington
Buckeye Cent. 6
Caledonia River Valley 42, Delaware
Buckeye Valley 14
Cambridge 28, New Philadelphia 27,
OT
Can. Cent. Cath. 24, Youngs. East 0
Can. Glenoak 34, Massillon Jackson 7
Can. McKinley 24, Austintown Fitch 16
Canal Fulton Northwest 42, Parma
Padua 17
Canal Winchester 44, Lancaster
Fairfield Union 22
Canfield S. Range 26, Hanoverton
United 7
Carey 55, Fremont St. Joseph 14
Casstown Miami E. 63, Union City
Mississinawa Valley 6
Chagrin Falls 17, Aurora 10, OT
Chagrin Falls Kenston 35, Wickliffe 12
Chardon NDCL 29, Bay Village Bay 0
Chesterland W. Geauga 40, Painesville
Harvey 14
Cin. Indian Hill 28, Cin. Wyoming 22
Cin. La Salle 66, Indpls Northwest, Ind.
0
Cin. Madeira 34, Cin. Mariemont 6
Cin. Moeller 27, Lou. St. Xavier, Ky. 10
Cin. N. College Hill 55, Hamilton New
Miami 6
Cin. Western Hills 27, Cin. Shroder 13
Cin. Withrow 23, Cin. Taft 8
Circleville Logan Elm 28, Cols.
Hamilton Twp. 0
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 72, Hillsboro

7
Cle. Benedictine 49, Parma Hts. Holy
Name 21
Cle. Glenville def. Cle. Rhodes, forfeit
Cle. Hay 14, Tol. Waite 11
Cle. Hts. 39, Lorain 21
Cle. JFK 39, Cle. Lincoln W. 14
Cle. John Marshall 42, Cle. Collinwood
6
Clyde 50, Huron 6
Coldwater 28, St. Henry 7
Collins
Western
Reserve
50,
Greenwich S. Cent. 24
Cols. Beechcroft 69, Cols. Centennial 0
Cols. Brookhaven 35, Cols. East 0
Cols. DeSales 42, Ryle, Ky. 7
Cols.
Eastmoor
28,
Cols.
Independence 0
Cols. Grandview Hts. 37, W. Jefferson
33
Cols. Hartley 45, Akr. Hoban 21
Cols. Marion-Franklin 38, Cols. Briggs
12
Cols. Mifflin 35, Cols. Whetstone 7
Cols. Northland 43, Cols. Linden
McKinley 14
Cols. St. Charles 24, Tol. Rogers 6
Cols. Upper Arlington 14, Thomas
Worthington 7
Cols. Walnut Ridge 63, Cols. Africentric
0
Cols. Watterson 31, Cin. Winton Woods
28
Cols. West 69, Cols. South 20
Columbiana 35, Lisbon David
Anderson 0
Columbiana Crestview 58, Mineral
Ridge 7
Convoy Crestview 27, Bluffton 20
Copley 33, Medina Highland 7
Coshocton 38, Zanesville Rosecrans 7
Covington 35, Bradford 16
Creston Norwayne 55, W. Salem NW 8
Crown City S. Gallia 52, Corning Miller
6
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 23, Massillon
Tuslaw 8
Cuyahoga Hts. 41, Newbury 21
Day. Chaminade-Julienne 30, St.
Bernard Roger Bacon 14
Day. Thurgood Marshall 51, Greenville
7
Delphos Jefferson 33, Lafayette Allen
E. 20
Delphos St. John's 29, Anna 21
Dover 14, Dresden Tri-Valley 10
Dublin Coffman 66, Grove City Cent.
Crossing 3
Dublin Jerome 49, Westerville N. 2
Dublin Scioto 35, Lewis Center
Olentangy 25
E. Cle. Shaw 14, Warren Harding 7
Eastlake N. 39, Chardon 21
Edgerton 63, Antwerp 12
Elida 43, Van Wert 6
Fairfield Christian 59, Franklin Furnace
Green 18
Fairport Harbor Harding 27, Middlefield
Cardinal 24, OT
Findlay 47, Lima Sr. 6
Findlay Liberty-Benton 61, Vanlue 13
Fostoria St. Wendelin 21, Troy Christian
20
Franklin 40, Monroe 0
Fredericktown
58,
Johnstown
Northridge 7
Ft. Loramie 62, Grove City Christian 0
Ft. Recovery 34, New Bremen 33
Gahanna Cols. Academy 43, Hebron
Lakewood 21
Galion 47, Upper Sandusky 14

Gallipolis Gallia 31, Marietta 8
Genoa Area 55, Fostoria 0
Girard 55, Newton Falls 24
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 31, Can.
Timken 25, OT
Grafton Midview 34, Elyria Cath. 7
Granville 49, Cols. Bexley 20
Green 23, Macedonia Nordonia 0
Hamilton Badin 14, Day. Carroll 7
Hamilton Ross 18, W. Carrollton 7
Haviland Wayne Trace 62, Holgate 14
Hicksville 34, Defiance Tinora 27
Hilliard Bradley 45, New Albany 20
Hilliard Darby 35, Worthington
Kilbourne 7
Hilliard Davidson 64, Galloway
Westland 0
Hubbard 44, E. Liverpool 7
Hudson WRA 33, Vienna Mathews 22
Independence 34, Burton Berkshire 7
Jackson 49, Logan 32
Jeromesville Hillsdale 48, Doylestown
Chippewa 13
Johnstown-Monroe 35, Centerburg 17
Kent Roosevelt 49, Akr. Coventry 3
Kenton 34, Lima Shawnee 7
Kirtland 42, Gates Mills Hawken 8
Lakeside Danbury 40, Oregon Stritch
27
Leavittsburg LaBrae 46, Warren
Champion 28
Lebanon 40, Piqua 33
Lees Creek E. Clinton 33, Williamsburg
7
Leipsic 41, Van Buren 7
Lewis Center Olentangy Orange 55,
Mt. Vernon 6
Lewisburg Tri-County N. 34, Tipp City
Bethel 7
Liberty Center 3, Hamler Patrick Henry
0
Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 17, Hamilton 8
Lima Perry 27, DeGraff Riverside 26
Lockland 20, Cin. Summit Country Day
17
London 49, Greenfield McClain 0
Lorain Clearview 35, LaGrange
Keystone 6
Lou. Trinity, Ky. 17, Cin. St. Xavier 7
Loudonville 31, Danville 13
Louisville Aquinas 49, Garfield Hts.
Trinity 12
Lowellville 22, Wellsville 21
Lucas 24, Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 22
Lucasville Valley 30, Chesapeake 22
Lyndhurst Brush 42, Parma Hts. Valley
Forge 12
Magnolia, W.Va. 17, Hannibal River 0
Magnolia
Sandy
Valley
39,
Newcomerstown 20
Malvern 26, Sugarcreek Garaway 22
Maple Hts. 51, Warrensville Hts. 7
Maria Stein Marion Local 26, Minster 17
Marion Pleasant 48, Sparta Highland 7
Martins Ferry 31, Cadiz Harrison Cent.
14
Marysville 25, Powell Olentangy Liberty
22
Massillon Washington 35, H.D.
Woodson, D.C. 14
McComb 59, Dola Hardin Northern 14
McDermott Scioto NW 23, Portsmouth
Notre Dame 20
Mechanicsburg
19,
Jamestown
Greeneview 6
Medina 47, Cuyahoga Falls 13
Medina Buckeye 35, Brooklyn 20
Mentor 52, Mayfield 14
Mentor Lake Cath. 27, Youngs. Mooney
22
Middletown Fenwick 35, Cin.

LADY MARAUDERS
GOLFERS REMAIN
UNBEATEN

WAHAMA WINS

TRI-

MATCH

Preston's first match of
the season because of a
serious thumb injury suffered back in July. He
started his season with a
birdie on his first hole of
the year, a feat he will
remember for some time.
Miller's runner up score
of 177 was also achieved
by consistent scoring.
Chris Gamble's score of
41 earned him medalist
honors for the contest.
Dakota McGill followed
with a 42. Shawn Hayes
and Brandon Davis completed Miller's scores that
counted with a score of
47 each. The scores shot
by Justin Hinkle and
Andy Jeffers were not
included in the final team
count.
Nick Smith led the
Trimble scoring with a
42. Colin Smith was
close behind with a total
of 44 while Brayton
Hazen added a 49 with
Kyle Russell's 54 com-

pleting the scores that
counted for Trimble. Jeff
Andrews and Christian
Sikorsk shot scores not
part of the team total.
Wahama will finish
their regular season
schedule on Monday
with a TVC match
against Eastern and a non
conference match against
Point Pleasant. Then, on
Saturday, September 24,
the White Falcons will
host the 18th annual
Riverside Golf Course
High School Invitational
Golf Tournament. A total
of 20 teams will field 5
man teams with the best
4 scores counting for the
total. There will be teams
from both Ohio and West
Virginia. Point Pleasant
is the defending champ,
but will face stiff competition
from
several
schools. The first tee off
time is at 9:30 a.m.. The
public is invited to view
the competition.

McNicholas 7
Middletown Madison 40, Day.
Northridge 0
Milford 42, Cin. Woodward 18
Millersburg W. Holmes 48, Mansfield
Madison 21
Milton-Union 17, Bellbrook 3
Minerva 48, Can. South 20
Mogadore Field 43, Streetsboro 34
N. Can. Hoover 38, Massillon Perry 20
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 56,
Crestline 0
Navarre Fairless 21, Wooster Triway 19
Nelsonville-York 47, Cols. Ready 13
New Carlisle Tecumseh 10, Urbana 9
New Concord John Glenn 28,
Zanesville W. Muskingum 20
New Lebanon Dixie 34, Camden
Preble Shawnee 14
New Middletown Spring. 17, E.
Palestine 14
New Richmond 20, Mt. Orab Western
Brown 0
Newark Cath. 15, Heath 13
Newark Licking Valley 48, WhitehallYearling 3
Niles McKinley 34, Lisbon Beaver 0
Norwalk 28, Bedford Chanel 0
Norwalk St. Paul 29, Ashland Mapleton
23
Oak Harbor 39, Castalia Margaretta 14
Oberlin Firelands 27, Fairview 10
Olmsted Falls 34, Middleburg Hts.
Midpark 32
Ontario 56, Bucyrus 7
Orange 9, Perry 6
Orrville 35, Lexington 12
Ottawa-Glandorf 42, Defiance 7
Painesville Riverside 14, Ashtabula
Lakeside 0
Parma 28, Lakewood 14
Peninsula Woodridge 36, Mogadore 28
Philo 28, McConnelsville Morgan 7
Pickerington N. 38, Groveport-Madison
21
Plymouth 20, New London 6
Point Pleasant, W.Va. 49, S. Point 6
Poland Seminary 38, Cortland
Lakeview 21
Pomeroy Meigs 35, Minford 7
Port Clinton 20, Milan Edison 6
Portsmouth Sciotoville 66, Raceland,
Ky. 44
Portsmouth W. 70, Ironton Rock Hill 14
Ravenna 56, Mantua Crestwood 3
Ravenna SE 24, Garrettsville Garfield 7
Rayland Buckeye 40, Bellaire 27
Richmond Edison 28, Belmont Union
Local 12
Richwood N. Union 60, Galion
Northmor 6
Rocky River 14, Vermilion 6
Rootstown 41, Windham 0
Salem 34, Carrollton 17
Salineville Southern 41, McDonald 7
Sandusky 45, Tol. Start 14
Sebring McKinley 28, N. Jackson
Jackson-Milton 18
Shadyside 47, Sarahsville Shenandoah
6
Sheffield Brookside 36, Oberlin 19
Sidney Lehman 56, Day. Jefferson 0
Smithville 56, Dalton 7
Solon 62, N. Royalton 20
Southeastern 18, Chillicothe Unioto 13
Spencerville 56, Paulding 0
Spring. Cath. Cent. 35, N. Lewisburg
Triad 28
Spring. Kenton Ridge 43, Spring.
Greenon 14
Spring. NE 63, Cedarville 36

Spring. Shawnee 56, Spring. NW 0
Springfield 26, Miamisburg 3
St. Clairsville 42, Wintersville Indian
Creek 20
St. Marys Memorial 36, Lima Bath 19
St. Paris Graham 38, Riverside
Stebbins 30
Steubenville 40, Brooke, W.Va. 6
Stewart Federal Hocking 19, Racine
Southern 12
Stow-Munroe Falls 24, Twinsburg 21,
2OT
Strasburg-Franklin 35, Bowerston
Conotton Valley 0
Struthers 20, Youngs. Liberty 18
Sugar Grove Berne Union 18,
Lancaster Fisher Cath. 9
Sullivan Black River 60, Rocky River
Lutheran W. 12
Sunbury Big Walnut 21, Pataskala
Watkins Memorial 14
Sycamore Mohawk 27, N. Baltimore 12
Tallmadge 50, Richfield Revere 25
Thompson Ledgemont 35, Conneaut 0
Thornville Sheridan 50, Crooksville 0
Tiffin Calvert 38, Attica Seneca E. 14
Tiffin Columbian 33, Marion Harding 10
Tipp City Tippecanoe 42, Lewistown
Indian Lake 6
Tol. Bowsher 30, Willard 24
Tol. Ottawa Hills 38, Gibsonburg 0
Tol. St. John's 35, Fremont Ross 28,
2OT
Uhrichsville Claymont 35, Warsaw
River View 7
Utica 14, Howard E. Knox 7
Vandalia Butler 32, Bellevue 28
Versailles 55, Rockford Parkway 26
Vincent Warren 51, Portsmouth 21
W. Liberty-Salem 28, S. Charleston SE
27
W. Unity Hilltop 46, Tol. Christian 35
Wadsworth 34, Lodi Cloverleaf 17
Wahama, W.Va. 61, Belpre 3
Wapakoneta 41, Celina 20
Warren Howland 30, Canfield 28
Washington C.H. 42, London Madison
Plains 12
Waterford 20, Reedsville Eastern 12
Wauseon 49, Delta 28
Waverly 33, McArthur Vinton County 0
Waynesfield-Goshen 12, Milford Center
Fairbanks 6
Wellington 56, Columbia Station
Columbia 35
Wellston 59, Oak Hill 18
Westerville S. 28, Westerville Cent. 22
Westlake 35, Amherst Steele 27
Wheelersburg 40, Proctorville Fairland
17
Williamsport Westfall 49, Piketon 38
Willoughby S. 49, Geneva 21
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 47,
Manchester 22
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 41, Caldwell
14
Youngs. Boardman 35, Uniontown
Lake 14
Youngs. Christian 53, Cle. Hts.
Lutheran E. 0
Youngs. Ursuline 13, Zanesville 9
Zanesville Maysville 20, New Lexington
12
POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS
Elyria vs. Strongsville, ppd.
Glouster Trimble vs. Coal Grove
Dawson-Bryant, ppd.

�Sunday, September 18,2011

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page B3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

White Falcons soar past Belpre, 61-3
BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

BELPRE, Ohio — For
the second week in a row
the Wahama White
Falcons scored early and
often in handing the
Belpre Eagles a 61-3 TriValley Conference setback Friday evening at
Ralph Holder Stadium in
Belpre.
Anthony Grimm and
Isaac Lee tallied two first
half touchdowns each
with Zack Wamsley, Clay
VanMeter, Kane Roush,
Trenton Gibbs and
Crandale Neal adding a
six-pointer apiece for the
high powered Bend Area
offense. Wamsley also
booted seven point after
kicks as the White
Falcons reached the 60
point mark for the second
consecutive game while
improving to 3-0 overall
and 3-0 inside league
play.
Belpre dropped its

fourth straight contest
and fell to 0-2 in the TVC
Hocking Division race.
Wahama totaled 391
yards on the ground in
addition to 77 yards
through the airways to
conclude the evening
with 468 yards of total
offense. Wamsley paced
the Falcons on the
ground with 120 yards in
four carries with J.R.
Jewell adding 81 yards in
three tries and Anthony
Grimm another 62 yards
in seven attempts. Junior
quarterback
Trenton
Gibbs completed eight of
nine passes on the night
for 77 yards and two
touchdowns with Kane
Roush hauling in one
pass for 32 yards and
Isaac Lee three catches
for 17 yards and two
scorer.
WHS jumped out to a
21-0 lead after one quarter with Grimm scoring
on runs of two and nine
yards with Isaac Lee

grabbing a Gibbs aerial
for a two yard touchdown
reception.
The Bend Area team
added another three
touchdowns in the second period with Lee
hauling in another scoring toss from Gibbs from
seven
yards
out.
Wamsley added a 32
yard scoring jaunt midway through the canto
before Clay VanMeter
rambled in from 14 yards
away. Wamsley booted
four of six, point after
kicks in the opening half
to give Wahama a commanding 40-0 halftime
edge.
Kane Roush got things
rolling for the Mason
County team in the third
period with a 20 yard
scoring gallop followed
by a five yard run by
Gibbs and a 26 yard burst
through the middle by
Crandale Neal. Wamsley
was perfect with his point
after conversion kicks

following the three third
period scores to give
Wahama a 61-0 advantage.
Belpre avoided the
shutout in the games
final minute when the
Eagles drove from its
own five to the Falcon
four yard line where the
drive stalled. Faced with
a fourth and goal situation from the four the
Eagles elected to go for a
field goal with Adrienne
Blair booting a 21 yarder
with :25 remaining to
bring the final tally to
61-3.
The Eagles gained 105
yards on the ground with
Tyler Martin netting 101
yards in 22 carries and
Wes Hatfield notching 34
yards in 12 tries.
Quarterback
Todd
Packard connected on
three of seven aerials for
Belpre for 43 yards with
all three receptions going
to Phillip Bailey.
Defensively the White

Falcons received outstanding efforts from
Matthew Stewart with
eight individual tackles
on the evening and Zack
Wamsley with seven
stops. Junior Benny
Youkers also performed
admirably in a reserve
role for Wahama with
four second half individual tackles.
Wahama will return
home next week for an
important TVC Hocking
Division contest against
Waterford, while Belpre
travels
to
Federal
Hocking in search of its
first win of the 2011 grid
season.
Wahama 61, Belpre 3
W
B

21-19-21-0 — 61
0-0-0-3 — 3

Scoring Summary
First Quarter
W — Anthony Grimm 2 run (Zack
Wamsley kick), 10:49
W — Grimm 9 run (Wamsley kick),
10:29
W — Isaac Lee 2 pass from Trenton
Gibbs (Wamsley kick), 7:28

Second Quarter
W — Lee 7 pass from Gibbs
(Wamsley kick), 11:20
W — Wamsley 32 run (Wamsley
kick), 7:23
W — Clay VanMeter 14 run (pass
failed), 2:23
Third Quarter
W — Kane Roush 20 run (Wamsley
kick), 6:31
W — Gibbs 5 run (Wamsley kick),
4:50
W — Crandale Neal 26 run
(Wamsley kick), :06
Fourth Quarter
B — Adrienne Blair 21 yard field
goal, :25
First Downs — W: 16, B: 8;
Rushes-Yards — W: 34-391, B: 42105;
Passing Yards — W: 77, B: 43;
Total Yards — W: 468, B: 148;
Comp-Att-Int — W: 8-9-0, B: 3-7-0;
Fumbles-lost — W: 0-0, B: 3-2;
Penalties-yards — W: 12-125, B: 527
RUSHING — W: Zack Wamsley 4120, J.R. Jewell 3-81, Anthony
Grimm 7-62, Crandale Neal 3-47,
Kane Roush 2-45, Isaac Lee 3-31,
Trenton Gibbs 4-12, Zach Warth 18, Clay VanMeter 2-7, Wyatt Zuspan
5-(-22), B: Tyler Martin 22-101, Wes
Hatfield 12-34, Manney Tullius 3-1,
Todd Packard 3-(-2), Justin Smith 1(-29);
PASSING — W: Trenton Gibbs 8-90 77, B: Todd Packard 3-7-0 43;
RECEIVING — W: Kane Roush 132, Isaac Lee 3-17, Matthew
Stewart 2-15, Anthiny Grimm 1-8,
Tyler Roush 1-5, B: Phillip Bailey 343.

Big Blacks top South Point, 49-6
BY ANDY LAYTON
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

SOUTH POINT, Ohio
— It was a slow start for
Point Pleasant on Friday
night but when the Big
Blacks finally showed up,
everyone in attendance
knew.
Point used a late first
half surge to pull away
from Pointers from South
Point in a 49-6 win on the
road.
“It was a great night for
our defense” said head
coach Dave Darst. “Our
offense finally started to
click late in the half but it
was our defense that stood
strong all night.”
That defense — especially the front seven —
allowed just 178 total
yards and the bulk of that
came on just two plays.
“I thought Conner
Templeton played a fantastic game. He blocked a
field goal and an extra
point as well. All of our
defensive ends played
good as well.”
After a three and out
from the Big Blacks to start
the game, South Point had
the ball and got a big carry
from their leading rusher on
the night, Trey Campbell.
Their offense would stall
after the big carry and with
a fourth down coming up;
they decided to attempt a
field goal. Junior Conner
Templeton swatted the ball
down rather easily and kept
the game tied.
Both teams would trade
possessions on their next
trips on the field.

Defensive
exchanges
were the name of the first
tradeoff while both teams
fumbling the ball were the
feature of the second
exchange. The fumble on
the possession recovered
by Point was by Trey
Livingston.
Finally, with 1:22 left in
the first quarter, the Big
Blacks struck when senior
quarterback Eric Roberts
found senior split end
Brandon Toler on a 22
yard pass. The extra point
from junior Josh Parsons
was good and the score
was 7-0.
Both teams continued to
trade punts and turnovers
for the majority of the second quarter until South
Point connected on a 37
yard pass, one of their
only two completions on
the night. The extra point
was blocked by Conner
Templeton, leaving the
score at 7-6 with 2:11 left
in the half.
From there, it was all
Point Pleasant. A two
minute drill offense resulted in a quick score with
Roberts connecting with
Layne Thompson in the
end-zone. The Pointers
would receive the ensuing
kickoff, only to fumble it
away and give Point the
ball again inside the ten
yard line. Two plays later,
it was Anthony Darst busting through for the touchdown. An extra point later,
it was 21-6 heading into
the half.
In the second half, the
domination from the Big
Blacks continued. An

opening drive was capped
by a 19 yard run from
junior fullback Tylun
Campbell. Campbell later
added a 33 yard run in the
quarter as well. The third
quarter ended with one
more scoring drive, a 13
yard touchdown pass from
Roberts to Darst, his third
touchdown throw of the
night.
Junior Zach Canterbury
would add one more
touchdown in the final
minutes of the game to set
the final score at 49-6.
Junior Josh Parsons was a
perfect 7 for 7 on the night
kicking extra points as
well.
Junior fullback Tylun
Campbell was the leading
rusher on the night with
123 yards on 12 carries.
Eric Roberts was 7 for 9
passing on the night and
had three touchdown
throws.
The defense — led by
the starting front seven of
Hunter Bellamy, Trey
Livingston,
Conner
Templeton, Jerrod Long,
Andrew
Williamson,
Jason Stouffer, and Josh
Hereford — was fantastic
again and held a fast
South Point offense to just
6 points on the night.
Now, one more road
game before the Big
Blacks come home. Point
will travel to Vinton
County next Friday night.

First Quarter
PP — Brandon Toler 27 pass from
Eric Roberts (Josh Parsons kick) 1:22
Second Quarter
SP — R.J. McCarty 37 pass from
Austin Majher (kick failed) 2:11
PP — Layne Thompson 20 pass from
Roberts (Parsons kick) 1:02
PP — Anthony Darst 7 run (Parsons
kick) 0:41
Third Quarter
PP — Tylun Campbell 19 run
(Parsons kick) 8:06
PP — Campbell 33 run (Parsons kick)
3:19
PP — Anthony Darst 13 pass from
Roberts (Parsons kick) 0:49
Fourth Quarter
PP — Zach Canterbury 7 run
(Parsons kick) 3:20
First Downs — PP: 16; SP: 7;
Rushes-Yards — PP: 35-270; SP: 48123
Passing Yards — PP: 90; SP: 55
Total Yards — PP: 360; SP: 178
Comp-Att-Int — PP: 7-9-0; SP: 2-7-1
Fumbles lost — PP: 4; SP: 3
Penalties-yards — PP: 5-50; SP: 4-40
RUSHING — PP: Tylun Campbell 12123, Teran barnitz 3-39, Anthony
Darst 9-38, Marquez Griffin 1-21,
Jerrod Long 5-19, Eric Roberts 3-15,
Zach Canterbury 2-15; SP: Tre
Campbell 25-87, R.J. McCarty 10-16,
Austin Majher 6-11, James Leonard
3-9, Curtis Jackson 2-0, Trent Allen 20.
PASSING — PP: Eric Roberts 7-9-0
90; SP: Austin Majher 2-6-0 55, Trent
Allen 0-1-1 0.
RECEIVING — PP: Brandon Toler 2-

Jan Haddox/photo
Junior Hunter Bellamy makes a tackle with teammates Marquez Griffin and Conner Templeton looking
on during Friday nightʼs Week 4 contest against South
Point in Lawrence County.
33, Layne Thompson 2-32, Anthony
Darst 1-13, Tylun Campbell 2-11; SP:

R.J. McCarty 1-37, Adrock Harlow 118.

This round’s on Ben.

Point Pleasant 49, South Point 6
PP
SP

7-14-21-7 — 49
0-6-0-0 — 6

Scoring Summary

Lady Eagles roll past Fed Hock
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — The Eastern volleyball team kept its good
thing going Thursday
night following a convincing 25-5, 25-11, 25-7
victory over visiting
Miller in a Tri-Valley
Conference matchup in
Meigs County.
The Lady Eagles (10-0,
6-0 TVC Hocking) won
their sixth consecutive
match in straight games
and also improved to 271 overall in games played
this fall. Federal Hocking
fell to 1-8 overall and 1-5
in TVC Hocking play
with the setback.
Eastern used only three

servers in Game 1, as
Brenna Holter and Ally
Hendrix combined for 11
service points before
Brooke Johnson served
out the final 11 points for
a 25-5 win. Johnson
recorded eight points in
Game 2, and Holter led
the charge in Game 3
with 10 service points.
Johnson led the Lady
Eagles with 23 service
points, followed by
Holter with 17 and
Hendrix with eight
points. Jamie Swatzel
added seven points, while
Baylee Collins and
Jordan Parker rounded
things out with two
points and one point.
Swatzel led the net
attack with 16 kills, fol-

lowed by Erin Swatzel
with seven kills and
Jordan Parker with five
kills. Holter and Maddie
Rigsby both had four
kills, while Kelsey Myers
and Kiki Osborne added a
kill apiece. Parker led the
hosts with eight blocks.
Hendrix led the EHS
passing game with 38
assists. Riley McKibben
led Federal Hocking with
four points.
The Lady Lancers salvaged an evening split
with a 25-17, 16-25, 2523 victory in the junior
varsity contest.
Eastern returns to
action Monday when it
travels to Meigs for a
non-conference matchup
at 6 p.m.

Lady Rebels cruise past Wahama
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MASON, W.Va. —
The South Gallia Lady
Rebels (9-1, 5-1 TVC
Hocking) won their sixth
straight
match
on
Thursday
evening,
defeating Wahama in
three sets.
The Lady Rebels won
by scores of 25-12, 25-3
and 25-7.

Ellie Bostic led the
Lady Rebels with 29
points (14 aces), followed
by
Jasmyne
Johnson with 14 points
(four aces), Chandra
Canaday with nine points
(four aces), Lauren
Saunders with nine
points (two aces), and
Megan Caldwell with
one point (one ace).
Tori Duncan had 23
assists to lead the Lady

Rebels, while Sara
Bailey added four.
Johnson had eight kills,
Caldwell added seven
kills and one block,
Shelby Merry had six
kills, Canaday had four
kills and one block, and
Brynn Adams and Bostic
each added two kills and
one block.
Individual statistics for
Wahama were not available at press time.

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�Page B4 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 18,2011

Alexander outlasts
Lady Marauders in 5
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RO C K S P R I N G S ,
Ohio — So close, but
yet so far.
The Meigs volleyball team took visiting
Alexander to five
hard-fought
games
Thursday night, but
the Lady Spartans ultimately snuck away
from
Larry
R.
Morrison Gymnasium
with a 24-26, 25-20,
25-18, 22-25, 17-15
victory during a TriValley
Conference
Ohio
Division
matchup in Meigs
County.
The
host
Lady
Marauders (3-4, 0-3
TVC Ohio) kept pace
with perennial powers
from Athens County,
jumping out to an
early
one-game-tonone lead.
Alexander, however,
battled back to win the
next two games for a
2-1 match advantage,
only to see the hosts
rally back to force a
decisive fifth game.
The finale was anybody’s to win, as extra
points were needed to
win by two in the race
to 15. AHS, however,
managed to hold on
for a the minimal twopoint triumph.
Alexander (4-3, 3-0)
— winners of seven
straight TVC Ohio
titles — last lost to
Athens in 2009 and is

Sarah Hawley/photo
Gallia Academyʼs Kelle Craft, right, and Loganʼs Tyler Myers battle for a loose ball during Thursdayʼs SEOAL
soccer match in Centenary, Ohio. Logan defeated Gallia Academy by a score of 4-1.

Blue Devils fall to Logan, 4-1
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CENTENARY, Ohio
— Despite taking the 10 lead over visiting
Logan
during
the
Thursday
evening’s
SEOAL soccer contest,
Gallia Academy (0-2-0
SEOAL) was unable to
secure its first win of the
season.
Logan (1-2-1 SEOAL)

Fort Frye
from Page B1
offense and also finished
plus-two on the night in
turnover
differential.
RVHS had 174 rushing
yards on 30 attempts and
another 18 yards from
the passing game, while
the Cadets mustered 137
rushing yards on 39 tries
and 83 yards through the
air.
The hosts also posted a
12-4 edge in first downs
and were penalized seven
times for 54 yards. River
Valley was flagged six

Eagles
from Page B1
Just two plays later the
Wildcats fumbled the
ball. Eastern’s Tyler
Cline recovered the
Waterford fumble, giving
the Eagles the ball near
midfield. Eight plays and
49 yards later the Eagles
put their first points on
the board. The Eagles’
Ethan Nottingham ran
the ball in from 13 yards
out for the score. The
extra point attempt
failed,
leaving
the
Wildcats with the 7-6
advantage.
The Eagles were not
done yet, as Waterford
fumbled the kickoff
which was recovered by
the Eagles. A penalty and
sack pushed the Eagles in
the wrong direction, forc-

Meigs
from Page B1
the first period,
Meigs received a big
break in the second period when Minford punter
Kyle Canter had a high
snap and was tackled by
the
Marauders
at
Minford 35. Four plays
later on first, Dillon
Boyer hit Jeffrey Roush
who was wide open over
the middle for the score.
The extra points were no
good due to a bad snap
by Meigs was on top 137 at the 7:01 mark of the
first period.
A short Minford punt
gave the Marauders the

scored four unanswered
goals in the final 50 minutes of the game to earn
the 4-1 victory over
GAHS.
Gallia Academy scored
first on a goal by Thomas
Austin-Braxton in the
27th minute. AustinBraxton scored on an
assist
by
Sammy
Hemphill.
Logan tied the score at
1-1 in the 32nd minute on

a goal by Cooper
Redmond. Redmond was
assisted by Brandon
Kuhn.
Kuhn would add a goal
of his own in the 43rd
minute to give Logan the
lead.
Keith Tolliver (56th
minute) and Ben Starkey
(71st minute) each added
a goal for the visitors.
Gallia Academy had 17
shots in the game, while

Logan attempted 19
shots. Each team had
three corner kicks in the
game.
Logan goalkeeper Alex
Hubbard had 11 saves,
while Blue Devils goalkeeper Nathan Wiseman
had 12 saves.
Gallia Academy will
return to the field on
Tuesday as they travel to
Chillicothe
for
an
SEOAL match.

times for 50 yards.
Fort Frye opened the
scoring with 5:02 left in
the opening quarter, as
Chandler Lang scrambled in from six yards out
to give the hosts an early
6-0 advantage.
The Cadets extended
that lead to 12-0 in the
second canto after Lang
hit Tyser Shilling with a
7-yard scoring pass with
7:14 left before half. Max
Alsbach tacked on the
extra-point kick for a 130 cushion headed into the
half.
River Valley wasted little time in getting on the
scoreboard in the second

half, as Trey Noble
returned the opening
kickoff 83 yards to paydirt — pulling River
Valley to within 13-6
with 11:46 left in the
third period.
The score remained
that way until late in the
fourth quarter, as Austin
Whobrey scored on a
quarterback keeper from
11 yards out with 2:07
left in regulation — making it a 13-12 contest.
Fort Frye managed to
run the clock out on its
ensuing
possession,
allowing the hosts to
sneak away with the

hard-fought one-point
decision.
Patrick Williams led
the Raiders with a gamehigh 154 rushing yards
on 25 carries, while
Whobrey finished the
night 1-of-5 passing for
18 yards. Noble hauled in
the lone RVHS pass for
18 yards receiving.
Chandler Lang led the
Cadets with 68 rushing
yards on 14 attempts and
also went 8-of-15 passing for 83 yards. Justin
Massey hauled in two
catches for 30 yards.
Both
quarterbacks
threw one interception,

and River Valley also lost
two fumbles in the contest.
River Valley returns
home Friday when it
hosts Alexander in a
Week 5 non-conference
matchup at Raider Field
in Cheshire. Kickoff is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.

ing a punt on fourth
down and twenty-five in
the opening minute of the
second quarter.
Eastern
and
Waterford exchanged
punts on the next four
series, before Waterford
could piece together its
second scoring drive of
the night.
With just under two
minutes remaining in
the first half, Waterford
began its final drive of
the half at its own 32
yard line. The Wildcats
were forced to punt, but
retained
possession
after Eastern fumbled
on the punt to give
Waterford a first down.
Three plays later Lang
found Brian Moore for
the 33 yard touchdown
pass. The extra point
kick was blocked by the
Eagles,
leaving
Waterford with the 13-6
halftime lead.

Eastern pulled back to
within one point on the
opening drive of the third
quarter.
Nottingham
broke around the right
side of the line from
around midfield for the
49 yard touchdown run.
The two point conversion
attempt failed, allowing
Waterford to maintain the
13-12 lead.
The Wildcats added to
their lead on their first
drive of the second half,
with the eight play, 54
yard scoring drive.
Moore ran the ball in
from the eight yard line
for the touchdown at the
6:38 mark of the third
quarter, with Paxton
adding the extra point.
Eastern slowly moved
the ball down field on its
next drive, taking more
than seven minutes off
the clock. The Eagles
advanced
to
the
Waterford five yard line

in the opening minute of
the fourth quarter, but the
Wildcat defense stopped
the Eagles a yard short on
fourth down to end the
scoring opportunity.
Waterford came close
to adding six more points
in the final quarter, but
failed to convert on a
fourth down play at the
Eastern 25 yard line with
1:25 remaining in the
game.
The visiting Wildcats
held on for the 20-12 victory.
Eastern was led by
junior
runningback
Nottingham with 118
yards rushing on 13 carries and a pair of touchdowns. Max Carnahan
led the Eastern receivers
with four catches for 42
yards.
Eastern quarterback
Joey Scowden was 7-17
for 71 yards in the loss.
Waterford was led by

Lang with 143 yards
passing, completing 13
of his 16 pass attempts.
Lang was a perfect 10-10
in the second half for 92
yards. The quarterback
also added 18 yard on 11
carries, including a
touchdown.
Eastern and Waterford
each had 13 first downs
in the game and each
fumbled the ball four
times.
The Wildcats were
penalized six times for
34 yards, while Eastern
was penalized five times
for 30 yards.
Eastern hits the road
next Friday for TVC
Hocking game at South
Gallia High School in
Mercerville, Ohio, while
Waterford will be at
unbeaten Wahama.

ball on their own 33.
Roush picked up 13 on
first down, and then on
second down Boyer
once again found Roush
for a 40 yard pass play.
Three plays later Meigs
had a third and 12,
Boyer hit Zach Sayre at
the five yard line, and
Sayre drug a couple of
Falcons into the end
zone for the score.
Boyer then hit Alex
Morris for the two point
conversion and a 21-7
Meigs lead with 1:01
left in the half.
After a scoreless third
period, the Marauders
once again got a break on
another bad snap on a
Minford punt giving the
Marauders the ball at the
Falcon 10. The Marauders

drove to the one yard line
and had a fourth down.
After a beautiful fake into
the line to Barrett, Boyer
rolled around left end for
the score. As Boyer was
crossing the goal line a
whistle blew adding confusion to the play. After a
five minute discussion,
the officials ruled a
Marauder score. Barrett
added the extra points
with 9:37 left and a 28-7
Meigs lead.
Sayre set up the final
Marauder score with an
interception, three plays
later Boyer bobbled the
exchange from center,
picked up the ball and
raced 31 yards for the
score. Barrett closed out
the scoring with the extra
points with 4:27 remain-

ing.
“I’m so happy for
these kids,” Chancey
said after the win. “The
believed they could do it,
and then went out and
did it. There has been a
lot of memorable wins,
this one will rank right
up there with the rest.
But it’s back to work
tomorrow and get ready
for
an
improved
Southern team.’’
Roush
led
the
Marauder with 68 yards
in 15 carries; Boyer
added 54 in seven tries
and Barrett 51 in 13.
Boyer was four of 10 in
the air for 74 yards.
Roush caught three for
69 and Sayre one for 16.
Nate
Caudill
led
Minford with 62 yards in

11 carries; Tyler Gaines
added 32 in 13 tries.
Evan Howard was six of
19 passing for 74 yards
with two interceptions.
Kyle Snyder caught two
for 26 and Zach Farrar
one for 22.
Meigs is now 3-1 on the
season, they will host
Southern next Friday
evening for Homecoming.
Minford drops to 2-2.

Fort Frye 13, River Valley 12
RV
FF

0-0-6-6 — 12
6-7-0-0 — 13

Scoring Summary
First Quarter
FF — Chandler Lang 6 run (kick
failed) 5:02
Second Quarter
FF — Tyser Shilling 7 pass from
Chandler Lang (Max Alsbach kick)

Waterford 20, Eastern 12
W
E

7-6-7-0 — 20
6-0-6-0 — 12

Meigs 35, Minford 7
MIN
7-0-0-0—7
MEG
7-14-0-14—35
Scoring Summary
First Quarter
MIN — Tyler Gaines 10 run (Baylee
Moore kick), 8:37
MEG — Charlie Barrett 1 run
(Barrett kick), :02
Second Quarter
MEG — Jeffrey Roush 24 pass from
Dillon Boyer (kick failed), 7:01
MEG — Zach Sayre 16 pass from

now 66-1 in league
play since 2005.
The
Lady
Marauders were 96for-103 at the service
line for 93 percent and
also had team totals of
45 kills, 36 assists and
10 blocks.
Tanisha McKinney
led the hosts with 13
service points, followed by Emalee
Glass
with
eight
points.
Mercadies
George and Alison
Brown both added six
points apiece, while
Cheyenne Beaver and
Tori Wolfe respectively contributed five and
four points.
Chandra Mattox also
had one point, which
came on Meigs’ lone
ace of the evening.
Brown led the net
attack with 22 kills,
followed by Emily
Kinnan with eight and
George with five kills.
Marlee Hoffman and
Olivia
Cremeans
added four and three
kills,
respectively,
while Glass and Brook
Andrus contributed
two kills and one kill.
Kinnan led the
blockers with five
stuffs, followed by
Brown with three
blocks. Glass led the
passing game with 29
assists.
Meigs returns to
action Monday when
it hosts Eastern in a
non-conference match
at 6 p.m.
7:14
Third Quarter
RV — Trey Noble 83 kickoff return
(kick failed) 11:46
Fourth Quarter
RV — Austin Whobrey 11 run (kick
failed) 2:07
First Downs — RV: 4, FF: 12;
Rushes-Yards — RV: 30-174, FF:
39-137;
Passing Yards — RV: 18, FF: 83;
Total Yards — RV: 192, FF: 220;
Comp-Att-Int — RV: 1-5-1, FF: 8-151;
Fumbles-lost — RV: 2-3, FF: 0-0;
Penalties-yards — RV: 6-50, FF: 754.
RUSHING — RV: Patrick Williams
25-154; FF: Chandler Lang 14-68,
Spencer Lang 16-47.
PASSING — RV: Austin Whobrey 15-1 18; FF: Chandler Lang 8-15-1
83.
RECEIVING — RV: Trey Noble 118; FF: Justin Massey 2-30.

Scoring Summary
First Quarter
W — Trevor Lang 6 run (Cody
Paxton kick), 8:06
E — Ethan Nottingham 13 run (kick
failed), 1:18
Second Quarter
W — Brian Moore 33 pass from
Lang (kick blocked), :32
Third Quarter
E — Nottingham 49 run (run failed),
9:36
W — Moore 8 run (Paxton kick),
6:38
First Downs — W: 13, E: 13;
Rushes-Yards — W: 34-100, E: 36154;
Passing Yards — W: 143, E: 71;
Total Yards — W: 243, E: 225;
Comp-Att-Int — W: 13-16-0, E: 717-0;
Fumbles-lost — W: 4-2, E: 4-1;
Penalties-yards — W: 6-34, E: 5-30.
RUSHING — W: Brian Moore 1443, Hunter Munjas 4-21, Trevor
Lang 11-18, Jake Stewart 4-16,
Darek Brown 1-2, E: Ethan
Nottingham 13-118, Alex Amos 1048, Triston Goodnite 5-26, Joey
Scowden 8-(-38);
PASSING — W: Trevor Lang 13-160 143, E: Joey Scowden 7-17-0 71;
RECEIVING — W: Brian Moore 669, Hunter Schlotterbeck 4-39,
Wyatt Porter 1-14, Hunter Munjas 114, Darek Brown 1-7, E: Max
Carnahan 4-42, Ethan Nottingham
1-20, Chase Cook 2-9.

Boyer (Alex Morris pass from
Boyer), 1:01
Fourth Quarter
MEG — Boyer two run (Barrett kick),
9:37
MEG — Boyer 31 run (Barrett kick),
4:27
First Downs — MIN: 13, MEG: 10;
Rushes-Yards — MIN: 38-59, MEG:
37-172;
Passing Yards — MIN: 74, MEG: 85;
Total Yards — MIN: 133, MEG: 257;
Comp-Att-Int — MIN: 6-19-2, MEG:
4-10-1;
Fumbles-lost — MIN: 1-0, MEG: 10;
Penalties-yards — MIN: 2-15, MEG:
0-0.
RUSHING — MIN: Nate Caudill 1162, Tyler Gaines 13-32, Nathan
Compton 1-6, KYLE Snider 4-0,
Evan Howard 9-(-5), Kyle Canter 2(-36), MEG: Jeffrey Roush 15-68,
Dillon Boyer 7-54, Charlie Barrett
13-53, Zach Sayre 2-(-2);
PASSING — MIN: Evan Howard 619-2 74, MEG: Dillon Boyer 4-10-1
85;
RECEIVING — MIN: Kyle Snyder 226, Zach Farrar 2-22, Sean Berry 118, Tyler Gaines 1-8, MEG: Jeffrey
Roush 3-69, Zach Sayre 1-16.

�Sunday, September 18,2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page B5
Help Wanted- General
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60237854

Dear Becky,
God saw you getting tired
A cure was not to be,
So He put His arms
around you
And whispered,
“Come with Me.”

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DR. JILL NEFF
IS BACK!
504 McCarty Lane, Jackson
Between Walmart and Adena
CALL TODAY FOR AN APPT!
-most insurance accepted
740-286-JILL (5455)

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

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WOOD YARD
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60237633

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With tearful eyes we
watched you
And saw you fade away,
Although we loved
you dearly
We could not make you stay.
A golden heart stopped
beating
Your tender hands at rest,
God took you home to
prove to us
He only takes the best.

9/19/58 - 10/5/10

Happy Birthday
Becky!
Forever with the Angels
Always in our Hearts
Aunt Jeannie, Brenda,
Karla, Pam, &amp; Rita

�Page B6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Marcum Construction
Mike W. Marcum - Owner

� Commercial &amp; Residential � General Remodeling

$500.00 Sign On Bonus

12 months
same as cash!!!

Come work for a top employer, committed to
offering employment opportunities in our area!!

317 State Route 7 N
Gallipolis, OH

EARN $12.25
Just after 3 months

60244093

740-446-7444

Not Affliated with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Remodeling

Employees are needed to provide customer service over the phone for NonProfit and Conservative Political organizations.

Monday-Friday 9am-5pm
Saturday 9-3
Free Estimates

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Troyer
Rooﬁng, LLC
New Roofs - Reroofs

AL’S SAW SHOP
SHARPENING SERVICE

—WOOD WORKING TOOLS—
10” - 12” Carbide
Saw Blade
19cts. per tooth

InfoCision

Mollohan Carpet

and General Contracting

)��!!�� ���%�! $ )��!!�� �
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Fully Insured – Free Estimates
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Sunday, September 18,2011

Planer &amp; Jointer
Knives
39 cts. per inch
60239290

Chain Saw Chain up to 16” (off bar) $2.00
�� �� ����$���"! ���� "������ �
��� ������� �� ��! #������Limited time offer

Shingle - Metal - Rubber Rooﬁng
Drywall - Pole Barns - Siding
Gutters - Spouting &amp; More
References available
Insured - Bonded
Free estimates
740-887-3422

Apply Today!
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Amish Roofers &amp; Builders

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, Sept. 24, 2011
10:00 am

QUALIFIED CANDIDATES MUST MEET THE FOLLOWING:
? �=)%67�)&lt;4)6-)2')�-2�-2(9786-%0�1%-28)2%2')�36�)59-:�
alent education in a mechanical field related to industrial maintenance.
?�:%-0%&amp;0-0-8=�83�;36/� 2(�36� 6(�7,-*8��-2'09(-2+�3:)6�
time and weekends.
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(-4031%�36�����)59-:%0)28�
Apply online by searching “General Mills” at
https://ohiomeansjobs.com
General Mills is an EEO/AA Employer

60244449

Yes, we have apples!
Open 7 days a week 8-12 &amp; 1-4

Located at Former Veterans Memorial Hospital, 115
East Memorial Drive, Co. Rd 75 off Route 7 Bypass of
Pomeroy, Ohio. Watch for auction signs.
“Misc.”
Large computer system, lots &amp; lots of filing cabinets
&amp; desks, other office equipment, building material,
doors &amp; etc., track lighting, lamps, shelving, Hobart
mixer, stove, stainless steel Ref/Freezer, walk-in
cooler, lots of kitchen items, S.S. hand rails, towel
rack, 5.5 Server for food.
“Cars”
Sheriff cars. Some see!! Lots, Lots more.

Owners -Meigs Co. Commissioners
Dan Smith - Auctioneer Lic. #13449
John Smith - Auctioneer
Cash
Positive ID
Refreshments
“Not responsible for accidents or loss of property”

60244997

Come learn about the company, our
maintenance programs and our benefits at our
Maintenance Mechanic Information Session
Monday, September 26, 2011
11am-12pm
4pm-6pm
Red Roof Inn - 1000 Acy Ave, Jackson OH 45640
Stop by anytime to get information, meet your
potential managers, and learn how to apply!
Imeediate openings are availabe for Maintenance
Mechanics at our Wellston, Ohio Plant.

Fruth Pharmacy is seeking a highly skilled
receptionist to work in our fast-paced corporate
location in Point Pleasant, WV. The successful
candidate will possess outstanding phone skills,
place a high priority on customer service and
have basic typing and computer skills.
Knowledge of Microsoft Word, Excel, Microsoft
Publisher and Adobe Design preferred. Duties
include answering phones and triaging incoming
calls, performing data entry, copying, faxing,
filing, and various other clerical duties.
send resumes to zstone@fruthpharmacy.com
Fruth Pharmacy seeking Warehouse Personnel
Position may include (but not limited to)
Shipping and Receiving, Distribution, Loading/
Unloading items from trucks, Picking/Packing
items for shipment. Heavy lifting may be
required. Computer knowledge and previous
work experience in a Warehouse
setting preferred. Send resumes to
zstone@fruthpharmacy.com
60244820

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jellies, jams, cider, apple butter

Richards Brothers Fruit Farm
2054 Orpheus Rd (Co Rd 46)
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Ohio
University
UTILITY WORKER
Ohio University is accepting applications for
the position of part-time regular UTILITY
WORKER in Custodial Services. Applicants
must demonstrate a willingness to work with
diverse populations to be successful. Applicants must have an established pattern of
good work habits and performance as well as
meet Occupational Health Medical standards
for posted position/classification and complete a background check.
Starting hourly rate is $10.60.
View Posting Details and APPLY ON-LINE AT:
www.ohiouniversityjobs.com/postings/1308
APPLICATION DEADLINE IS OCTOBER 2, 2011

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Sunday’s TV Listings

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�Sunday, September 18,2011

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

MUTTS

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page B7

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

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 Monday,
Sept. 19, 2011:
This year, you feel pressured to
maintain a high profile at work and
within your community. You might
worry a lot about funds. Precautions
and self-discipline are great; however,
what might be a problem is a negative
feeling. Negative thinking feeds more
negative thinking. Change the pattern.
Choose to see the glass as half-full.
If you are single, you’ll meet people
through your work and commitments.
Around your birthday 2012, you could
meet someone significant. The friendship is equally as important as the love
relationship. If you are attached, work
and live as a team. Stoke the friendship. GEMINI admires your attitude.
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)
++++ Keep a dialogue going.
You could be overwhelmed by everything that is happening. A partner or
associate is quite clear about his or
her priorities. Take a cue from this person for the moment. Meanwhile, try to
center yourself through a talk. Tonight:
Avoid a snippy conversation. Listen
and understand.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++ Be sensitive to expenditures.
In the long run, even if your checkbook
isn’t the one paying, others could be
resentful of your sometimes extravagant style. What they don’t get is that
you would make the same choices for
yourself. Tonight: Become more aware
of another person’s limits.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
++++ Your perspective might
change radically if you could take in
another person’s view. At the moment,
you simply seem to be closed off.
Remember, you don’t have an exclusive on brilliant ideas; others can have
one or two! Show interest in their
thoughts. Tonight: Kick up your heels.
Forget what day of the week it is.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
+++ Take your time making decisions. You might not be as sure of
yourself as you’d like. Take some personal time to look at your present lack
of confidence and where it stems from.
Try to air out this negativity and rebuild
your security. Tonight: Do for you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
++++ Use today to focus on a
key goal. You find that you have the
backing and support of others. Reason
with someone rather than fight with

HOROSCOPE

him or her. Confusion could surround
your finances as well. Tonight: Where
people are.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
+++ You have no control over
others, but you have control over
yourself. Don’t push so hard with others, and zero in on what is important.
Accept extra responsibility, especially if
you could use some overtime or extra
funds. Tonight: Burning the candle at
both ends.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
+++++ If you follow your intuition
and detach from a triggering situation,
you’ll stay on top of what is happening.
Stay committed to your goals, but also
be willing to test and check the validity
of your ideas. Tonight: Let your mind
lead and your body follow.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
+++++ Be more willing to try
another approach or do something differently. A deep sense of uncertainty,
perhaps unrelated to the present
situation, could be undermining you
now. Accept another person’s advice.
Tonight: A discussion could be illuminating.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
+++++ Defer to others, which
will allow you to do more of what you
want. A meeting or friendship could
be difficult, encouraging you to turn
in a new direction. Why not? Confirm
any meetings, calls or statements that
might feel off. Tonight: Having fun,
even if it is Monday.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
+++ You could be more tired than
you realize. True to form, you meet
your responsibilities, though that usual
pizazz isn’t there. Be willing to take
care of yourself first, and don’t overextend yourself. Tonight: Easy works.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
++++ Your playfulness makes
a big difference and allows greater
give-and-take. Your intellectual gifts
come forward, though you might need
to slow down in order to explain your
ideas to the rest of the world! Tonight:
Aren’t you frisky?
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
+++ You need to center on what
is important and what is going on.
Listen to your sixth sense with a family member. You have a multifaceted
problem that might not be answered
easily. Remain authentic. Tonight: A
partner or friend gives you his or her
opinion (whether you want it or not).
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page B8 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Hocking
from Page B1
The extra point kick
attempt was blocked,
leaving Southern with the
6-0 lead.
Showing new energy
after the half, Federal
Hocking tied the score
on the opening drive of
the
third
quarter.
Delbert Crum ran in
from the 34 yard line
for the Lancers’ score.
The two-point conversion attempt failed,
leaving the score tied a
6-6.
With 9:41 remaining
in the game, Federal
Hocking quarterback
Kyle Jackson scored
the first of his two oneyard touchdown runs.
The extra point kick
was no good, giving
Federal Hocking the
12-6 lead.
A bad snap by the
Lancers setup the next
Southern scoring play.
The snap went past the
Federal
Hocking
defense into the endzone
where Southern’s Tyler

Gallia
from Page B1
a three-and-out on the
ensuing possession, then
Marietta punter Austin
Gaskins received a bad
snap that resulted in a
tackle for loss and a loss
of downs at the MHS 13yard line with 3:50 left in
the first period.
Two plays and 42 seconds
later,
Gallia
Academy took a 15-0
advantage after Brandon
Taylor rushed in from
four yards out with 3:08
left in the opening
canto.
The hosts increased
their lead to 18-0 with
5:23 remaining in the
half after Taylor nailed a
32-yard field goal — a
scoring drive that saw the
Devils get to the Tigers’
20-yard line facing a
2nd-and-9
situation.
GAHS managed only
five yards over the next
two plays before settling
for three points.
Marietta’s lone bright
spot of the evening came
on its ensuing possession, as Dustin Baker
rumbled 57 yards to paydirt on a 4th-and-2 situation — allowing the
guests to pull within 18-8
with 4:17 remaining in
the half.
Gallia Academy, however, countered with a
six-play, 59-yard scoring

Barton recovered it for
the score. The extra
point kick attempt was
once again blocked,
leaving the game tied at
12-12.
Jackson returned to the
endzone with 37.9 seconds remaining for his
second score of the night.
This time the touchdown
gave the Lancers the lead
for good.
Southern was held to
156 yards of total offense
in the game, while
Federal Hocking tallied
323 yards.
The Tornadoes were
led in rushing by Tyler
Barton with 59 yards on
15
carries.
Danny
Ramthun added 34 yards
on 12 carries.
Wolfe led Southern in
passing, with 7 completions for 68 yards.
The Tornadoes will
travel to Pomeroy, Ohio,
to face Meigs next
Friday in a non-league
game.
Federal Hocking 18, Southern 12
S
FH

0-6-0-6 — 12
0-0-6-12 — 18

Scoring Summary
Second Quarter

drive that resulted in a
24-8 lead headed into the
intermission.
Sidney
Saunders hauled in a
five-yard pass from Wes
Jarrell on a 4th-and-goal
play, capping a drive that
lasted 2:59.
Clagg added the final
score of the night — and
the only second half points
— on a two-yard run with
2:36 remaining in the
fourth for a 31-8 cushion.
Clagg’s second TD run
capped a 12-play, 61-yard
drive that lasted 6:03.
Justin Bailey had two of
three interceptions for the
hosts, while Bryant
Bokovitz had the first pick
of the night Marietta’s
opening drive of the second half. The Tigers did
recover the lone fumble of
the night, which was
picked up Nick Spurr on
the Devils’ opening drive
of the second half.
Gallia Academy was
whistled for six penalties
for 50 yards, while
Marietta was flagged
eight times for 53 yards.
Gallia Academy also
claimed a 15-6 edge in
first downs.
Brandon Taylor led the
hosts with 66 rushing
yards on 16 attempts,
followed
by
Ty
Warnimont with 35 yards
on six totes. Clagg added
26 yards on seven carries
and Cody Russell had
eight rushes for 25 yards.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 18,2011

Ryan M.L. Young photo/Courtesy of the Athens Messenger
Southernʼs Tristen Wolfe throws a pass during Friday eveningʼs game against Federal Hocking.
S — Tristen Wolfe 1 run (kick
blocked), 3:04
Third Quarter
FH — Delbert Crum 34 run (run
failed), 10:32
Fourth Quarter
FH — Kyle Jackson 1 run (kick
failed), 9:41
S — Tyler Barton recovered ball in

endzone (kick blocked), 5:36
FH — Jackson 1 run (pass failed),
:37.9

Quarterback
Wade
Jarrell went 8-of-15 passing for 136 yards, throwing one TD and zero
interceptions.
Sidney
Saunders led the Blue
and White with two
catches for 55 yards.
Dustin Baker paced the
Tigers with 82 rushing
yards on 12 carries, followed
by
Quinton
Coffield with two totes
for six yards. Justin
Futrell was 5-of-13 passing for 50 yards and an
interception,
while
Anthony
Kimbrough
went 2-of-5 passing for
15 yards with two picks.
Mitchel Gearhart led the
MHS wideouts with three
catches for 27 yards.
Gallia Academy, with
the win, is now 21-4 alltime against Marietta,
including wins in the last
three meetings.
The Blue Devils will
host Ironton next Friday
in a Week 5 contest at
Memorial Field, while
Marietta returns home to
Don Drumm Stadium
next weekend when welcomes River View. Both
contests will kickoff at
7:30 p.m.

GA — Brandon Taylor 32 FG 5:23
M — Dustin Baker 57 run (Baker
run) 4:17
GA — Sidney Saunders 5 pass from
Wade Jarrell (run failed) 1:10
Fourth Quarter
GA — Nick Clagg 2 run (Taylor kick)
2:36

Comp-Att-Int — S: 7-12-2, FH: 5-91;
Fumbles-lost — S: 1-1, FH: 3-2;
Penalties-yards — S: 5-40, FH: 754.

First Downs — S: 11, FH: 15;
Rushes-Yards — S: 31-88, FH: 44208;
Passing Yards — S: 68, FH: 115;
Total Yards — S: 156, FH: 323;

RUSHING — S: Tyler Barton 15-59,
Danny Ramthun 12-34, Trenton
Deem 1-11, Tristen Wolfe 3-(-16),

Total Yards — M: 105; GA: 299
Comp-Att-Int — M: 7-18-3; GA: 815-0
Fumbles-lost — M: 3-0; GA: 4-1
Penalties-yards — M: 8-53; GA: 650
RUSHING — M: Dustin Baker 1282, Quinton Coffield 2-6, Mitchel
Gearhart 3-1, Austin Gaskins 1-(16), Justin Futrell 5-(-33); GA:
Brandon
Taylor
16-66,
Ty
Warnimont 6-35, Nick Clagg 7-26,

First Downs — M: 6; GA: 15
Rushes-Yards — M: 23-40; GA: 48163
Passing Yards — M: 65; GA: 136

FH: Delbert Crum 29-151, Kyle
Jackson 7-28, Peyton Seel 4-28;
PASSING — S: Tristen Wolfe 7-122 68, FH: Kyle Jackson 5-9-1 115;
RECEIVING — S: Danny Ramthun
3-31, FH: Terrance Mayle 3-67,
Delbert Crum 2-37, Romey Casey
1-11.

Cody Russell 8-25, Shaylin Logan
1-4, Mark Allen 1-4, Zack Tackett 13, Seth Atkins 2-3, Wade Jarrell 6-(3).
PASSING — M: Justin Futrell 5-131 50, Anthony Kimbrough 2-5-2 15;
GA: Wade Jarrell 8-15-0 136.
RECEIVING — M: Mitchel Gearhart
3-27, Dustin Baker 3-20, Quinton
Coffield 1-18; GA: Sidney Saunders
2-55, Cody Russell 3-32, Nick Clagg
1-29, Justin Bailey 2-20.

The money to get things done.

Gallia Academy 31, Marietta 8
M
GA

0-8-0-0 — 8
15-9-0-7 — 31

Scoring Summary
First Quarter
GA — Nick Clagg 5 run (Brandon
Taylor kick) 6:21
GA — Brandon Taylor 4 run (run
failed) 3:08
Second Quarter

GET A LOWER HOME EQUITY LINE OF CREDIT
Intro

FOR

AS LOW AS

*

*

Defenders win seventh straight
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TEAYS
VALLEY,
W.Va. — After a season
opening tie, the Ohio
Valley Christian soccer
team has now won seven
straight games — including five by shutout.
The Defenders (7-0-1)
shutout host Calvary
Baptist Academy on
Thursday evening, winning by a score of 6-0.
Ohio Valley Christian
took a 5-0 lead in the first
half and scored its final
goal just 20 seconds into
the second half of the
game.
Paul Miller scored in the

first minute of the game
on an assist from Richard
Bowman to give OVCS
the 1-0 lead. In the second
minute of the game, Evan
Bowman scored with
Chance Burleson providing the assist.
Burleson scored a goal
of his own in the 10th
minute of play, with Josh
Blevins providing the
assist. Burleson assisted
on the T.G. Miller goal in
the 12th minute to give
the Defenders the 4-0
lead.
With just over three
minutes to play in the
first
half,
Richard
Bowman scored the
Defenders fifth goal of

the game with T.G.
Miller providing the
assist.
Just 20 seconds into the
second half of play, Ben
Tillis scored Ohio Valley
Christian’s final goal
with Burleson recording
his third assist of the
game.
Ohio Valley Christian
outshot Calvary 14-11 in
the game. The Defenders
had six corner kicks to
just two for Calvary.
Pete Carman had 11
saves in 11 chances for
his fifth shutout of the
year.
Ohio Valley Christian
travels to Belpre on
Monday at 6 p.m.

You have a hole in your house.

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Street Journal Prime Rate plus or minus a margin and may change monthly (currently the APR is as low as 3.00%). The margin is based on the home’s
loan-to-value (LTV) ratio, the loan amount and your credit score. The post introductory rate quoted is available as of 9/12/11, is based on current WSJ
Prime of 3.25% on loans exceeding $75,000 with LTV of 80% or less, a credit score of 720+, and includes a discount for optional automatic payment
from a WesBanco deposit account. Maximum APR: 18% in West Virginia and Pennsylvania; 25% APR in Ohio. Other fees that may apply - Origination
fee of $140; Annual participation Fee of $50.00; Late Fee &amp; Over the limit Fee: Maximum amount provided for by governing state law. If within the
previous 3 years WesBanco paid fees for an appraisal and title search related to a loan on your behalf, you are responsible for those charges related to the
new application - between $275.00 and $675.00. You may request more speciﬁc information regarding third party fees. Prepayment of all or a portion of
principal may be made at any time; however, if you prepay the loan within two (2) years of the date of the Agreement, the Bank shall charge a prepayment
penalty equal to the lesser of 1% of the original principal amount of the loan or $500.00. Prepayment penalty waived if reﬁnancing with WesBanco
and not applicable in Pennsylvania. Property insurance is required on the property securing a WesBanco Home Equity Product. Minimum amount
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