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                  <text>High school
volleyball,
A8

Mattox wins
single’s title,
A3

Printed on
100% recycled
newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011

50 CENTS • Vol. 119, No. 158

Swick Road
closing

Sheriff: BCI leading investigation
into shot fired at judge’s home

POMEROY — Construction on the bridge on
T-342, Swick Road, will
begin Wednesday and continue for approximately
By Brian J. Reed
two weeks. There will be
BReed@mydailysentinel.com
no traffic permitted on the
road during the construcPOMEROY — The Ohio Bution period, Engineer Eureau
of Criminal Identification
gene Triplett reported.
and Investigation has confirmed
it is investigating a gunshot fired
at the home of a county judge.
The BCI’s spokesman said

Church
homecoming

the agency processed the crime
scene at the Syracuse residence
of Common Pleas Court Judge
Fred W. Crow III last week, after Crow reported someone had
fired a shot through a window at
his home. The judge was not at
home at the time, but investigators say it may have been an attempt to harm him.

Correction

PERI meets
POMEROY — Meigs
County PERI Chapter 74
will meet at 1 p.m. on Friday at the Mulberry Community Center. Trooper
Chad Clingenpeel of the
Ohio State Highway Patrol
will speak and the nominating committee will report. A report will also be
given on the state PERI
meeting in Columbus.

Antique
club meets
POMEROY — Big
Bend Farm Antiques Club
will meet at 7:30 p.m. on
Monday at the Mulberry
Community Center.

Obituaries

Page A2
• Jeanette Pinkerton, 62

Weather

ing the investigation into the
matter. Often, investigation of
suspected crime is turned over
to the state’s lead investigative
agency because Beegle’s office
is not sufficiently staffed to do
so. Beegle said he had been given no specific information into
the findings of the investigation
so far.

By Charlene Hoeflich

hoeflich@mydailysentinel.com

RACINE — Soup, chili
and sandwiches will be
served at no cost when Mt.
Moriah Church of God,
Mill Hill Road, holds its
white elephant auction,
4:30 p.m. Saturday.

POMEROY — Meigs
County Republican Executive Committee will meet
at 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 10
at the county courthouse.
Members are reminded
of the bean dinner at 6:30
p.m., Oct. 22.

Sheriff Robert Beegle said
Tuesday the investigation into
the case is ongoing, but declined
to comment on whether any suspects had been identified. The
shooting allegedly took place on
Sept. 17, according to Beegle,
while Crow was attending a football game out of town.
Beegle said the BCI is lead-

Southern
completes
staffing, hires
personnel for
after-school
programs

POMEROY — Hemlock
Grove
Christian
Church will hold homecoming at 9:30 a.m. Sunday, with Sunday school
following. Dedication of
the new church will begin
at 2 p.m., with music by
Sheila Arnold and Roger
Hawk.

GOP meeting

www.mydailysentinel.com

More than
1,500 rally for
SB5 repeal

The Southeast Ohio Solidarity Rally
was held Saturday at the Gallia County
Jr. Fairgrounds, with nearly 1,500 in attendance. Organized by the Southeast
Ohio Solidarity Committee, a group of
concerned citizens and union members
from throughout the Southeast Ohio region, the rally’s mission was to unite
people across the state in a common
goal to repeal Senate Bill 5. Speakers at the weekend event included Ted
Strickland, Ohio Governor, 2007-2011;
Charlie Wilson, U.S. Representative,
6th District, 2007-2011; Jennifer Brunner, Ohio Secretary of State, 20072011; Debbie Phillips (D), Ohio Representative, 92nd District; Matt Szollosi
(D), Ohio Representative, 49th District,
and Assistant Minority Leader; and
Ohio Senator Joe Schiavoni (D), 33rd
District. More than 1.3 million Ohioans
signed a petition to put the measure on
the ballot, and it will come up for a vote
in November. A “no” vote on Issue 2 is
a vote to repeal S.B. 5.

(Stephanie Filson/photos)

Ohio’s turkey
season begins
in Meigs, 47
other counties,
Saturday
Staff report

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

COLUMBUS — Fall
wild turkey hunting opens in
Meigs and 47 Ohio counties
High: 70
on Saturday, October 8, acLow: 53
cording to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources
ndex
Division of Wildlife. The
season continues through
1 SECTION — 10 PAGES
Nov. 27. ODNR reports a
Editorials
A4 change in tagging requireComics
A5 ments, as well, for this
year’s season.
Classifieds
A6-7
“Record rainfall and reSports
A8 gional flooding during the
nesting season negatively
© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co. affected wild turkey production this year,” said Wildlife
Biologist Mike Reynolds.
“Some renesting may have

I

See Turkey, A2

RACINE — The hiring
of staff to handle the After
School Kids (ASK) Program
funded through the 21st
Century Grant was among
the numerous personnel actions taken by the Southern
Local Board of Education at
its recent meeting.
Teachers for the 92 -day
ASK tutoring program are
as follows: Monday and
Wednesday, Ashli Thompson, Patti Struble, Beth Bay,
Martie Rose, Dolly Wolfe,
Lisa Schenkelberg, Marcia
Weaver, and Kelli Bailey;
for Tuesday and Thursday, Misty Rogers, Patricia
Schwab, Patty Cook, Lori
Hill, Jenny Manuel, Jennifer
Seeling, Carolyn Robinson,
Marcia Weaver, Kelli Bailey, Rashel Yates, and Lisa
Schenkelberg.
Aides hired for the program were Belinda Adams,
Carmel Evans, Mindy Patterson, Launa Teaford, and
Pam Foreman. Beth Bay will
serve as a morning tutor one
hour per day, all four days,
and Evelyn Stanley will be
at the Carleton School as a
special teacher all five days.
For the high school ASK
program, hired were Marcia
Weaver, four days; Kelli
Bailey, three days; Rashel
Yates, one day, and Lisa
Schenkelberg, two days.
Craig Knight will be a morning tutor one hour per day,
all four days. Hired as bus
drivers for the ASK program
were Kathy Miller, Chery

See Programs, A2

Southern school nurse named Community Champion

RACINE
–
Molina
Healthcare of Ohio, Inc.
has named Racine resident
Junie Maynard as its Community Champions Award
winner in the Education category. Maynard was recognized, along with six other
individuals from across the
state, for being one of the
unsung heroes who works
behind the scenes to make
Ohio a better place. The
third annual Molina Healthcare of Ohio Community
Champions Awards Gala
took place recently in Columbus.
Maynard serves as the
school nurse for Southern
Local School District, but
she goes above and beyond
her job description. When
she saw the lack of health
care facilities in Meigs
County, she took matters
into her own hands; working
to get her nurse practitioner
Junie Maynard accepts a Molina Healthcare of Ohio Community Champions Award license and then starting a
for her work improving the health of students across Meigs County. Making the school based health clinic
presentation is Molina Healthcare of Ohio President Amy Schulz Clubbs, right, and at Southern Local. Maynard
See Nurse, A2
Molina’s Chief Medical Officer, Kevin Smith, MD.

�Wednesday, October 5, 2011, 2011

Death Notice
Jeanette Pinkerton
Jeanette M. Pinkerton,
62, of Coolville, died Monday, Oct. 3, 2011, at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Funeral services will be
held at 11 a.m. Thursday,
Oct. 6, 2011, at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home,
Coolville, with Rev. Charles
Martindale officiating. Burial will be in the Weatherby
Cemetery. Friends may call
6-8 p.m. at the funeral home.

For the
Record

(740) 992-2156

Story ideas?

Call The Daily Sentinel at

Oct. 3
8 a.m., Ohio 124, Langsville, difficulty breathing; 11:13 a.m., Ohio 124,
Reedsville, allergic reaction; 11:36 a.m., East Memorial Drive, respiratory
arrest; 4:58 p.m., Mason,
W.Va., cardiac arrest; 7:04
p.m., Sellers Ridge Road,
difficulty breathing.
Recorder
POMEROY — Recorder
Kay Hill reported the following transfers of real estate:
Christopher M. Roush
to Jessica J. Lukowski,
Charles R. Lukowski, deed,
Letart; Roy Keith Armes,
Mary Jane Armes, to Mark
D. Hudson, Mildred I. Hudson, deed, Sutton; Nicholas
Spurlock to Chris Haught,
Emily Haught, deed, Olive;
M. Scott Nisley, James B.
Hayes, Christy L. Nisley,
Cynthia L. Nisley, to Nisley and Hayes, LLC, deed,
Bedford; William T. English
to Rebecca L. English, certificate of transfer, Village of
Middleport.
Michele L. Laudermilt,
Aaron L. Laudermilt, to
John Meeks, Kathy Meeks,
deed, Scipio; Paul Spry,
Kathy Spry, to Bradley Ritterbeck, Melissa Ritterbeck,
deed, Salem; Linda K. Ryan,
Raymond Johnson, to Jamie L. Wolfe, Kimberly K.
Wolfe, deed, Sutton; Village
of Pomeroy to Mark E. Davis, Teresa A. Davis, Salisbury/Village of Pomeroy;
Ida Belle Warner, deceased,
to John H. Warner, affidavit,
Salem; Jack L. Williams,
Peggy L. Williams, to Bryan
K. Rodgers, deed, Salem;
Virgie Arbutus Fetty, deceased, to Terry Lee Fetty,
affidavit, Salem; Arminta
K. Hill, Michael J. Hill,
Michael J. Hill II, to Mindy
Hill, deed, Racine Village/
Sutton.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Aircraft repair company
to add about 250 Ohio jobs
WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) —
State lawmakers have joined an aircraft maintenance company in southwest Ohio to announce the addition of
more than 250 jobs.
A spokesman for Ohio Gov. John
Kasich (KAY’-sik) said Tuesday
that the additional maintenance jobs
at Airbourne Maintenance and Engineering Services were helped by
about $14.6 million in state money.
The funds were awarded to the Clinton County Port Authority, which
has invested roughly $15.7 million in
bringing the new employees to Airbourne Maintenance and keeping almost 400 workers from leaving Ohio.
Spokesman Rob Nichols said the
state was competing with Florida and
Kentucky over the jobs. He said the
jobs pay $22 per hour.
Operating out of Wilmington, Airbourne Maintenance and Engineering Services updates, services and
repairs airplanes.
***
Police probe death of
teen with cerebral palsy
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — A coroner has ruled that a 14-year-old Ohio
girl with cerebral palsy who weighed
only 28 pounds died of nutritional and
medical neglect complicated by her
chronic illness.
The Dayton Daily News reports
Tuesday that Montgomery County
coroner’s official Ken Betz says the
coroner ruled the girl’s March death a
homicide.
Dayton police Sgt. Dan Mauch

Nurse

From Page A1

has raised funds to offset
the cost of care for students
and other members of the
community who would not
otherwise be able to afford
important preventive health
care services.
“Molina Healthcare of
Ohio is proud to recognize
Community
Champions
like Junie Maynard,” said
Amy Schultz Clubbs, president of Molina Healthcare
of Ohio. “Junie works tire-

(MOWK) says police believe one or
more individuals were involved and
are working with prosecutors on appropriate charges.
The newspaper reports the teen
died minutes after medics rushed her
to a hospital March 1.
Ann Stevens of the Montgomery
County Department of Jobs &amp; Family
Services says Children’s Services has
opened a case on the girl’s death.
***
Man deported after Ohio
arrest in Mexican slaying
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — U.S. authorities say a man arrested in Ohio
has been deported to Mexico to face
accusations that he beat another man
to death over a bet on a professional
boxing match.
The office of U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement says 35-yearold Miguel Angel Ceja-Hernandez
was flown Tuesday from Toledo
to Laredo, Texas, escorted by U.S.
agents to Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, and
turned over to Mexican authorities.
U.S. authorities say a 2000 warrant
issued in in Michoacan, Mexico, says
Ceja-Hernandez struck the man in the
abdomen with a lead pipe during a bar
fight, causing internal injuries and
bleeding that led to his death.
Ceja-Hernandez was arrested
Sept. 21 at his home in Green in northeast Ohio.
A search of U.S. court records did
not show an attorney for Ceja-Hernandez.
***

lessly to improve the health
of students and families
across Meigs County and
she truly embodies the altruistic spirit of Community Champions.”
The seven award winners were recognized for
their extraordinary service
and civic contributions in
honor of Molina Healthcare’s physician founder,
Dr. C. David Molina.
Each honoree received

20 Ohio counties get funds
to help disabled vote
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Polling sites in 20 counties will get permanent upgrades to assist Ohio voters
with disabilities under newly released
federal grant money.
Secretary of State Jon Husted
said Tuesday that about $100,000
in grants will go to county boards of
elections to improve access for voters
with disabilities.
The funds were made available by
the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services through the Help
America Vote Act.
Individual grant amounts range
from $40 to $15,000 for improvements in 92 precincts.
Husted’s office says the permanent improvements can save local
government money by preventing officials from having to provide temporary solutions for every election.
***
Ex-judge in Ohio gets 5 years
in corruption probe
AKRON, Ohio (AP) — A former
judge caught in a county corruption
investigation in Ohio has been sentenced to five years and three months
in prison.
Former Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge Steven Terry was
sentenced Tuesday in Akron federal
court on his conviction for fixing a
foreclosure case and doing campaign
work with court employees on county
time.
According to The (Cleveland)

a grant to be given to an
organization of their choosing and a Molina Healthcare of Ohio Community
Champions “soul bowl,”
which was custom made
for each winner by local
youth as part of a program that supports the arts
for children in Columbus.
Maynard is donating her
grant to Southern Local
Athletic Boosters.
More than 150 people

Plain Dealer , Judge Sara Lioi said
secretly taped conversations prove
Terry was not truthful when he denied
wrongdoing.
Terry resigned from the bench in
Cleveland after a jury convicted him.
He was the second judge convicted in the three-year FBI investigation
of county corruption in Cleveland.
Former Judge Bridget McCafferty
was sentenced to 14 months in prison
for lying to the FBI.
***
Ohio gov had urged Christie
to run for White House
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio
Gov. John Kasich was among Republicans who had unsuccessfully urged
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie to enter the fray for the party’s 2012 presidential nomination.
Christie announced Tuesday he
would not run for president, refusing
to bow to pressure from GOP donors
and other fans. The first-term Republican governor was wooed for his
national star power and no-nonsense
public persona.
The Columbus Dispatch reports
in Tuesday’s editions that Kasich had
called Christie to encourage him to
run. Kasich spokesman Rob Nichols
tells the newspaper the Ohio governor
thought Christie would be a good candidate.
The Dispatch reports Kasich had
liked Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour as a presidential candidate, but Barbour also decided earlier this year not
to pursue the Republican nomination.

attended the awards dinner
and festivities, which included entertainment by the
Eastmoor Academy Choir.
Other recipients of a
Molina Healthcare Community Champions Award
were: Frances Carr – Advocacy and Civic Leaders
Award; Alex Lee – Student
and Youth Award; Bruce
Barcelo – Health Care
Professional Award; Debra
Hanby – Volunteer Award;

Melanie Rose-Billhardt –
Volunteer Award; and Maria Durant – Health Care
Media Award.
Molina Healthcare, Inc.
(NYSE: MOH) provides
quality and cost-effective
Medicaid-related solutions
to meet the health care
needs of low-income families and individuals and to
assist state agencies in their
administration of the Medicaid program.

Program
From Page A1

Smith, and Shari Cogar.
Club supervisors for the high
school ASK program were Kelli
Bailey, photographyand bowling;
Tracey Smith, fitness; Don Dudding, video; Rashel Yates, woodworking; Kent Wolfe, bigger/
faster; Lisa Schenkelberg, movie;
Marcia Weaver, cooking, and
Tracey Smith, fitness.
Teachers hired to work in the
day tutoring program were Patti
Struble, Donna Sayre, Evelyn Stanley, Sharon Birch, Craig Knight,
Dolly Wolfe, Donna Norris, and
Christy Lavender.
Supplemental contracts were
awarded to Donn Dudding, high
school student council, the Echo
Advisor, LPDC committee, and
district website; Meg Guinther,
lead mentor; Bill Beegle, work
study coordinator; Daniel Otto,
LPDC committee and RttT member; Barbara Lawrence, LPDC
committee and mentor teacher;
Missy VanMeter, LPDC Committee and Trrt member; Tricia McNickle, mentor teacher and RttR
member; Chad Dodson, assistance
band director, pep band; Sam Barr,

reserve volleyball; Nick Dettwiller,
7th and 8th grade volleyball; Alan
Crisp, freshmen boys basketball
and varsity softball; Jen Holt, VLa
coordinator and guidance; Amy
Roush, district newsletter; Kathy
Miller, transportation coordinator;
Dianne Dunfee, home economics; Kent Wolfe, safety coordinator, preschool coordinator, RttT
member; Jeff Beaver, head custodian; Rashel Yates, vocational agriculture; Chad Hubbard, 8th grad
girls basketball; Jeff Caldwell,
Title IX, Kim McClain, elementary
yearbook; Tim Thoren pre-school
EMIS/DATA.
Tony Dugan was hired as an intervention worker for the Elementary Guidance Grant. Shari Cogan,
Cheryl Smith, Jerry Smith, and
Shannon Riffle were approved for
bus driver training and placement
on the sub list once completed.
The Board approved hiring Nancy Scarbrough as an intervention
worker for the elementary guidance grant with her employment
being contingent upon the continued receipt of grant funds. Mindy
Patterson was named to the junior

high student council, and Levi Santini as assistance coach to the high
school girls basketball.
An update was given on the
Race to the Top program, and Meg
Guinther reported on the developmental reading assessment and the
book room.
Certified subs approved for the
current school year were Jessica Allen, Peggy Bailey, Ann Barr, Luke
Bentley, Brenda Bills, Sally Boyer,
Thomas Brady, Corey Britton, Eric
Brown, Ilse Burris, Wendy Calaway, Terest Carr, Chris Carroll,
William Cooperrider, Janice Curry,
Kevin Davis, William Downie,
Leslie Dunfee, David Graff, Ashley
Halley, Suzanne Hanning, Bretta
Hanson, Roberta Harbour, Rebekah
Hawranick, Melinda Hayman, Erika Howard.
Aaron Hoy, Amy Jackson,
Jill Johnson, Craig Knight, John
Krawsczyn, Megan Lawhon, Christopher Lippert, Carol Ann Mahr,
Lester Manuel, Joseph McCall,
Leonard Powell, Michael Ramthun,
James Ritchie, Nathan Robinette,
Ed Safrranek, Deborah Sayre, Donna Sayre, Patrece Schwab, Amand

Schwarzel, Sandra Southern, Aryna Sowers, Selena Spence, Evelyn
Stanley, Ladona Stephens, Krysta
Stiff, Patricia Struble, Ashley Taylor, and Amanda Tope.
Jennifer Dunn, James Esick,
Cheryl Facemyer, Marjorie Fetty,
John Fleming, Brey Gheen, Emil
Tope, Daniel Morhardt, William
Mosier, Sarah Nelson, Donna Norris, Shannon Plummer, Keith Wilde, Jason Williams, Delores Wolfe,
and Cheslsie Wollett.
Classified subs for the school
year approved were Steiphanie Allen, Ann Barr, Carrie Carpenter,
Pamela Foreman, Debra Hill, Sunshine Russell, Amanda Schwarzel,
Connie Soulsby, Launa Teaford,
Robin Werry, Nichole Whobrrey,
and Brittany Hill.
In other business waiver days
and early dismissals approved
were for full days, Tuesay, Nov.
29, Tuesday, Feb. 21 and Monday,
April 2, and early dismissals, Oct.
20, Jan. 5 and March 29.
The Board approved medical
unpaid leave of absence for Carla
Teaford, for 24 months effective
Sept. 7.

Turkey
From Page A1

Visit us online at

www.mydailysentinel.com

helped to offset early nest failures, but hunters will likely
find fewer turkeys this fall. Brood production in two of the
last three years (2009 and 2011) has been the lowest on record.”
Hunters harvested 1,425 wild turkeys during last year’s
fall season. Reynolds added that Ohio’s current wild turkey population is approximately 180,000. He anticipates as
many as 15,000 people, not counting private landowners
hunting on their own property, will enjoy Ohio’s fall wild
turkey season.
Only one turkey of either sex may be taken during the
entire fall season. A Fall Turkey Hunting Permit is required.
Hours are one-half hour before sunrise to sunset. Shotguns
using shot, crossbows, and longbows are permitted. Hunting turkeys over bait is prohibited. Turkeys must be checked
by 11:30 p.m. on the day the bird is shot.
All hunters must still report their harvest of turkeys, but
they are no longer required to take their turkey to a check
station for physical inspection. Hunters will have three
options to complete the automated game check: online at
www.wildohio.com, by telephone at 877-TAGITOH, and at
license agents locally.
Game-check transactions will be available online and by
telephone seven days a week and during holidays. Landowner hunters who are not required to purchase a fall turkey
permit must use the Internet or any license agent to check
their turkey. Hunters who tag their turkey as a landowner
harvest cannot use the phone-in method. All authorized license sales agents will also check in your game
The ODNR Division of Wildlife advises turkey hunters
to wear hunter orange clothing when entering, leaving or
moving through hunting areas in order to remain visible to
others.

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Ask Dr. Brothers

She’s afraid to speak at new job

Dear Dr. Brothers: I’ve
recently started a new job
as secretary for the church
I have joined. I’m not shy
but am afraid to open my
mouth around my pastor,
whom I work with daily.
He and his wife are very
sweet and never say anything stronger than “darn”
or “heck,” while my vocabulary includes an occasional “damn” or “hell.” I
don’t want to jeopardize my
job or my parishioner status by offending them, but
they have been commenting
on how quiet I am. Any advice? — S.C.
Dear S.C.: You seem to
be completely intimidated
by the culture at your new
church, and I hope that you
will give the job some time
to see if you can get to know
everyone a little better before you decide that they are
impossibly holier than thou!
It seems that you have the
best of intentions in trying
to fit in and not offend anyone or do anything that will
cause people to reject you,
but you may need to lighten
up a little and realize that
all the people around you
in this new environment are
human too, and will err and
forgive, along with the rest
of us. On the other hand,
let’s examine the worstcase scenario: You slip and
come out with some mild
expletives and are soundly
put down by those around
you. That might be hurtful and mortifying, but at
the same time, it may give
you some needed insight
into what kind of place you
have found yourself worshiping and working at. It
just may be a poor fit, and
in that case it would be bet-

Dr. Joyce Brothers
ter to acknowledge it early
on and perhaps find another
job and another church in
which you find yourself less
likely to be judged for being
you.
So, I would suggest giving the new place and people a chance, letting them
get to know you and then
deciding if this is going to
be a comfortable workplace
and church for you. If your
language turns out to be a
problem, just realize that
many people are going to be
offended, but just as many
are not.
***
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
have been looking forward to
moving to a new city with my
family, but as the time draws
near, I am beginning to worry
about how my kids will adjust to leaving their friends
and the only home they have
ever known. They are 8- and
10-year-old boys, and while
they are excited about the
new house and school, they
have started whining and
fighting more than usual. I
am wondering how to make
this easier on them. My husband and I are fine, but we are
adults! — J.T.

Dear J.T.: I am sure you
are fine, but it would not
be unusual for everyone in
the family — including the
adults — to be a bit on edge
when a big move is coming
up. Perhaps you don’t realize it, but any tension you
feel — even with just the
day-to-day problems of getting organized for a move
— can be reflected in your
children’s attitudes and behavior. The kids will pick
up very easily on the emotions you are feeling, so try
your best to be optimistic
and upbeat in your dealings
with them at this stressful
time. Your husband also
can add to the positive atmosphere by talking with
the kids about what they
will all do together in the
new city. That should help
clear the air.
In the meantime, let
your kids explore their new
home in advance by sitting down with them and
searching for kid-friendly
activities on the Internet.
There probably are loads of
places to look online, and
by the time you move, they
will be able to have some
specific things in mind that
will make finding friends
and things to do a lot more
real to them. Remind them
that they will always have
each other as well as you
and Dad, and that this is
an adventure for the whole
family to enjoy. Don’t be
afraid to ask them if they
have any special concerns,
and take their fears and insecurities seriously. Luckily, the Internet will help
them stay in touch with
their old friends, too.
(c) 2011 by King
Features Syndicate

After 30 years of wrestling, Pomeroy’s Mark Mattox is still bringing home championship trophies. Most recently, Mattox competed in the U.S. Heavyweight
Wrestling competition in Newton, and retured home with this, his first single’s
title after eight as a tag-team competitor. He defeated his opponent in 11 minutes, and was one of 14 to compete. (Brian J. Reed/photo)

Welsh tale ‘Prince Madog’ written by URG professor Jack Hart, Ph.D.
ica in 1170, more than 300 years
before Christopher Columbus. The
legend states that Madog landed in
what is now Alabama and then returned to Wales to tell others about
his adventure. He then persuaded others to return to North America with
him, according to the legend.
The production tells the story of
Madog’s journey and what happened
ater his discovery.
Rio Grande Professor Jack Hart,
Ph.D., wrote the new play.
“It’s a charming story,” said Lucy
Hannah Thomas, who will be directing the play. Thomas, who is from
Wales, is currently serving as the Davis Intern for Rio Grande’s Madog
Center for Welsh Studies.
The Madog Center, which is
named after the legendary Welsh
prince, is assisting with the production.
Greg Miller, Ph.D., director of cultural advancement at Rio Grande, is
serving as the producer for the play.
Miller explained the play tells the

fascinating story of Prince Madog in
a simple and entertaining way.
“The characters in this story are
very interesting,” Miller said. “It is
going to be a very entertaining production.”
The characters include everything from Welsh royalty, to sailors,
to townspeople, to pig farmers and
even to an assassin. He added that the
play will be appropriate for audience
members of all ages.
“I think that area residents are
really going to enjoy this play,” he
said. Many people in the region have
Welsh heritage and will be interested
in learning more about the story of
Prince Madog. Area residents without
any Welsh background, though, will
also greatly enjoy the play and may
enjoy being a part of the production.
For more information on the
Wednesday, October 5 auditions for
“Prince Madog,” or for additional information on the play, call Thomas or
Miller at (740) 245-7145 or at 1-800282-7201.

New iPhone expected from Apple on Tuesday

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
— Apple Inc. is unveiling a
new, more powerful version
of its wildly popular smartphone — more than a year
after it launched the iPhone
4.
Last week, Apple Inc. emailed invitations to a media event at its headquarters
in Cupertino on Tuesday
morning. The invite says
“let’s talk iPhone,” implying the secretive company
intends to show off the latest
version of the device.
The first iPhone came
out in 2007, and the phone’s
signature slick looks, highresolution screen and intuitive software has gained
millions of fans over the
years. There were 39 million iPhones sold just between January and the end
of June.
Beyond the iPhone itself,
the Tuesday event is anticipated as Apple’s first major
product unveiling in years
that won’t be led by Steve
Jobs, who resigned from
the CEO post in August after being out on indefinite
medical leave since January. The Apple co-founder
is now its executive chair-

man. And though Jobs did
emerge from medical leave
twice this year to present
Apple’s innovations — most
recently in June to show off
its new mobile software and
iCloud content storage service — his successor, Tim
Cook, is expected to take
the lead this time.
Though not nearly as
recognizable as Jobs, Cook,
formerly Apple’s chief operating officer, has been
running Apple since January. For years, he has been
in charge of Apple’s dayto-day operations, and he
has long been seen as the
natural successor. He also
served as Apple’s leader for
two months in 2004 while
Jobs battled cancer and
again for five-and-a-half
months in 2009 when Jobs
received a liver transplant.
Perhaps more important
to Apple fans than who
is presenting is what the
company will reveal on
Tuesday. A new iPhone is
expected to have a number
of changes, the biggest of
which will likely be under
the hood: the inclusion of
Apple’s latest iOS mobile
software, iOS 5, which has

been slated for release this
fall.
IOS 5 will include things
such as wireless device setup and content syncing, and
beefed-up camera, email
and Web-browsing apps. A
new service called iMessage
will allow iOS 5 users to
send text messages to each
other over Wi-Fi or wireless carriers’ data networks,
while a folder called Newsstand will corral newspaper
and magazine app subscriptions in one place to make
it easier to find them. When
it comes out, the software
will also be available for
Apple’s iPad, iPhone 4 and
3GS and the two most recent generations of the iPod
Touch.
A new iPhone is also expected to include Apple’s
forthcoming iCloud service,
which will store content
such as music, documents,
apps and photos on Apple’s
servers and let you access
them wirelessly on numerous devices.
As for hardware, a new
iPhone isn’t expected to
look that much different
from the iPhone 4, though it
could be thinner and have a

Wednesday October 5, 2011

Mattox wins first
single’s wrestling title

Open auditions to be held tonight
for URG/RGCC original play
RIO GRANDE — The University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College is looking for area residents interested in playing a part in a
new play about the legend of a Welsh
explorer and his voyages to North
America.
The original play, “Prince Madog,”
will be presented at Rio Grande on
November 11 and 12.
Auditions for the play will be held
tonight, and area residents are encouraged to try out for the production.
Auditions will be held this evening
from 6-8 p.m. in the Berry Fine and
Performing Arts Center on the Rio
Grande campus. The cast will have
15-20 people in it, playing a wide
range of roles. The play is not a musical, and area residents do not have
to have acting experience if they wish
to audition. All they need to have is
an interest in the play and a desire to
be a part of the production.
The play will tell the story of
Prince Madog. According to Welsh
legend, Madog sailed to North Amer-

Page A3

bigger screen. The existing
iPhone is 0.37 inches thick
and has a display measuring
3.5 inches at the diagonal.
An improved rear camera
is anticipated, too. The existing iPhone has a 5-megapixel camera on its rear. A
number of recently released
smartphones have moved to
8-megapixel cameras.
One of the most notable
hardware changes many
industry watchers are predicting is the inclusion
of a more powerful chip:
Apple’s dual-core A5 processor, which is the same
chip it uses in its current
iPad. The iPhone 4 runs on
Apple’s older A4 chip, and
the move to a more capable
chip should improve things
such as multitasking, opening apps and gaming.
Analysts also believe
Apple could also use the
event to trot out new iPods
and updates to its iTunes
music software, which it
usually does in the fall
anyway. Last September,
Apple announced updates
to iTunes and a line of revamped iPods, which included a version of the iPod
Nano with a touch screen.

Support the troops
project under way

POMEROY — The River Cities Military Family Support Group is gearing up for its sixth annual “Support the
Troops at Christmas ” project.
The group is currently updating mailing lists for deployed troops who will not be home for Christmas and are
asking for help. Mailing addresses of deployed troops are
to be sent to RCMFSC, P. O. Box 1131 , Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.
Include name, rank, overseas adddress (FPO or APO)
and diployment dates if possible. Also include name, phone
and e-mail address of local contact pserson so that mailing
lists can be kept accurate and up to date.
The deadline for addresses to be submitted is Tuesday,
Oct. 11. The RCMFSC is a 501 organization that organized
in October, 2006. For more informaton call 740-441-7454
or 740-245-5589.

Painting classes offered
at French Art Colony

GALLIPOLIS — The French Art Colony, regional
multi-arts center will host painting on wood classes for
adults, seniors and teens with classes beginning today and
continuing through the first week of November.
Classes will be taught by Swiss artist and Gallia County
resident, Yllonka. The Art of Yllonka was featured in the
French Art Colony galleries during the month of September. Classes will be held from 2 to 3:30 p.m. or from 5:30
to 7 p.m. No prior artistic training is needed. Students will
complete a painting on wood with nature as the inspiration.
Advance registration is required.
Born in Geneva, Switzerland, Yllonka is a self-taught
artist. She looks to nature to inspire much of her work. Her
paintings have been featured in various galleries in Geneva,
Montreaux, and in the state of Vaud, Switzerland. In 2003
she was honored with a prestigious exhibition in the United
Nations building in Geneva.
Registration and cost information for the class can be
obtained by calling the French Art Colony at 740-4463834, or by visiting www.frenchartcolony.org.

Thrift store plans a give-away

CHESTER — Winter clothing is in stock at the Heart
and Hands Thrift Store located in the old Chester Elementary Building and give-away days are here to those needing
a warm coat and hat.
The give-away starts Thursday and will continue on
Thursdays and Fridays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. until further
notice.The store is well stocked with all kinds of merchandise, according to Jill Holter who operates it for the Bethel
Worship Center, and most prices are between 10 cents and
$1. The store hours are Tuesday, Thursday and Fridays between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Plans are now moving toward the annual Christmas project of providing toys and clothing for children in disadvantaged families.
Holter said half of the proceeds from the sale of donated
merchandise goes toward the Christmas project which she
explained this year will be something similar to the Angel
Tree program . Signup for this year’s participation will be
Oct. 24 to 28 and can be done at the store or by calling the
Bethel Worship Center at 667-6793 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Holter said the number of children to be served this year
will be limited, that all toys given will be new and ready for
pickup on Dec. 3, 9 a.m. to noon.
“Our goal, as always, is to help as many children as we
can have a wonderful Christmas,” she concluded.

Visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page A4

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Just ask yourself, what Wild market ride is driving
would Ruth Reichl buy? people out of stocks
By Michele Kayal

For the Associated Press

If Tom Colicchio was
your neighbor you’d ask
him which knife to buy,
right? And you’d definitely
ask your sister-in-law Dorie Greenspan about her favorite rolling pin.
And now you really can.
Online retailers with
products selected by experts and sometimes tailored — by you — to your
specific interests are the
new face of culinary marketing. Featuring celebrity
“curators” like Colicchio
and Greenspan and editorial superstars like Ruth
Reichl, the sites aim to
cut through the volume of
online items and pioneer
a new era of product endorsement and editorial
content.
“Think of it like Facebook,” says John Caplan,
founder of OpenSky, an
online retailer where members “follow” their favorite
celebrities to receive product recommendations and
discounts. “On OpenSky,
you choose the best people
that are relevant to your
passions and interests and
they share fantastic items
with you.”
Founded in April, OpenSky already claims 500,000
members, Caplan says, and
a 50 percent rate of returning buyers. Gilt Taste,
launched just a month
later, tows a less distinct
line, merging high-quality
editorial — led by Reichl,
former editor-in-chief of
the now-defunct Gourmet
magazine — with sales of
artisanal products.
Food magazines have
always carried advertisements for stoves and refrigerators and spaghetti
sauce. And celebrities have
always endorsed products
with a swoop on their shirt

or a watch on their wrist.
So what’s new?
“It’s not like just being photographed wearing
an item,” says Liz Lynch,
senior specialist at the
Burlington, Mass., digital
marketing consultancy eDialog. “It comes across
that this is something the
celebrities themselves have
discovered and now they’re
sharing it with you. You
identify more with that celebrity. It brings them even
closer.”
Caplan is quick to reject the idea that sites like
OpenSky are the next incarnation of celebrity endorsement. The curators at
OpenSky are paid on commission, he says, sharing
the profits from what they
sell with the site. None of
the celebrities are paid by
the manufacturers.
“We buy goods from
manufacturers and sell
them to consumers,” he
says. “There’s no other
revenue in our business
other than selling products
to consumers. And it’s 100
percent transparent.”
And Reichl dismisses
the notion that the cozy relationship between editorial and product at Gilt Taste
is a new version of “advertorial,” advertising content
presented as a story.
“You can’t pay us to sell
your product,” she says. “If
we sell it, we love it. And
if we love it we’re happy to
write about it.”
With some exceptions,
very little of the editorial in
Gilt Taste is directly related
to the products they sell. A
recipe will often be flanked
by links to merchants who
sell the ingredients. But
only twice since launching
have editors commissioned
a story about a product,
says features editor Francis
Lam.
“In both instances, they
were stories I would have

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156.

Our main number is
(304) 675-1333.

Department extensions are:

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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Advertising

Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
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Class./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

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Circulation Manager: Tracie
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District Manager: 304-675-1333

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been proud to run if I were
at Gourmet,” Lam says.
“And I see a benefit of our
business that we can help
these producers we believe
in, that we can help bring
their product to market.”
But some critics say the
structure of the website and
its self-description as “a
digital-magazine-catalog
hybrid” present an inherent
conflict.
“It’s almost a fig leaf,”
says Christopher Hanson, a
press critic and journalism
professor at the University
of Maryland. “It’s all quasi-advertisement, even the
stories. You might say ‘It’s
obvious, what’s the big
deal?’, but it’s a big deal
to the extent that anyone
relies on any of the stories.
There’s the chance that
they might not be getting
the full skinny on stuff.”
OpenSky, on the other
hand, offers “a twist on
the old testimonial ad,”
Hanson says. “That’s perfectly transparent. A person wouldn’t be misled by
that.”
Caplan insists that each
curator at OpenSky is a
“chief merchandizing officer,” hand-selecting the
items he or she will offer
to followers. Cookbook
author Greenspan says she
takes pride in the items she
features, and that the venture is a natural outgrowth
of communication with her
famously loyal fans.
“I have things that I really love, and people often
on my blog will write and
say, ‘What do you use for
baking pans?’, ‘Where can
I get’ whatever it is I show
in a picture,” she says.
“I would never have the
time to actually find these
products people are asking me for. I’m not about
to set up a little boutique in
my kitchen. So it’s a great
way to give readers what
they’ve been asking for.”

By Matthew Craft
AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) —
Just how turbulent is the
stock market? More than
half a trillion dollars in paper gains were made and
lost within just two weeks
in September. The S&amp;P
500 jumped 5 percent in
the week ending Sep. 16,
the second best week this
year. The next week it
plunged 6 percent, the second worst week this year.
The wild swings have
made many wary of putting money in the stock
market. “It’s like an elevator with only two
buttons,” said Jeffrey
Sica, president of Sica
Wealth Management. “If
you see one button says
‘surge’ and the other says
‘plunge,’ you’re not going
to get on the elevator.”
In market-speak, it’s
called volatility: Large
jumps followed by deep
dives, within the course
of a week or sometimes
the same day. The surge
in volatility since early
August has been blamed
for preventing companies from going public
and scaring people out of
stocks. Some think that
even if Europe resolves
its debt crisis, large price
swings are here to stay.
In August, many put
part of the blame for that
month’s volatility on the
summer vacation season.
Come September, they
said, more people will
be at their desks buying and selling, making
it harder for large orders
to rattle the market when
trading volumes are thin.
That turned out to be half
right: Trading volume has
picked up since Labor
Day, but the stock market
looks far from calm.
“What was wrong with
the vacation idea is that

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peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300
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Letters should be in good taste, addressing
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will not be accepted for publication.

Europe didn’t get any better when people got back
to work,” said Nick Colas, chief market strategist at BNY ConvergEx
Group. “People are still
focused on the same clear
and present dangers.”
To get an idea how
volatile the market has
been, consider:
— The Dow Jones
industrial average has
gained or lost more than
200 points in a trading
day 16 times since the
start of August. Six of
those days came in September. In the first seven
months of the year, that
happened just four times.
— The long-term trend
is toward more volatility.
Judging by the number of
times in a year the S&amp;P
500 swung 2 percent or
more in a single day,
markets are much more
likely to have large leaps
up or dives down, according to S&amp;P’s equity
research group. Swings
of 2 percent occurred an
average of five times a
year from 1950 to 1999.
It’s already happened 20
times this year, with three
months left to go.
The heavy turbulence
that started in August is
the main reason why no
company has managed to
pull off an initial public
offering since the Chinese
online video website Todou Holdings went public
Aug. 16. The backlog of
companies waiting to debut in an IPO has never
been larger.
“All the volatility has
made for an unfavorable IPO environment,”
said Claude Courbois,
managing economist at
Nasdaq OMX’s research
department. “An IPO is
your coming out party, a
chance to tell your story.
You don’t want an enormous amount of uncer-

tainty surrounding it.”
Analysts say it’s also
the chief reason Americans are fleeing the stock
market as if it’s 2008 all
over again. Retail investors pulled $36 billion
out of U.S. stock funds
in August, according to
preliminary data from the
Investment Company Institute. That’s second only
to the $47 billion withdrawn from U.S. stock
funds at the height of the
financial crisis in October
2008.
“The swings themselves have eroded the
confidence of investors,”
said Jeff Kleintop, chief
market strategist at LPL
Financial. “It’s the sign of
a market and an economy
not on sound footing.”
Sica, the wealth manager, told his clients to
leave no more than 10
percent of their savings in
stocks at the end of May
on the belief that markets
would slide as the Federal Reserve’s efforts to
help the economy came
to an end in June. The
stock market’s drop since
then has failed to lure
Sica and his clients back
in. In fact, he’s told his
clients to get the rest of
their money out.
In the past, a rally
like the 5 percent one in
the week ending Sep. 16
would be enough to cause
Sica’s phone to ring with
calls from clients wanting
to shift more money into
stocks. “They’d have the
sense their missing out on
something,” Sica said. In
recent weeks, stock market
surges are followed by clients calling to say “‘Please
keep me out,’” he said.
“This is the first time in
20 years that I’m totally
out of stocks, unfortunately. Just because something
declines, it doesn’t mean it
will ever come back.”

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.

111 Court Street
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Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
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Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

�Wednesday, October 5, 2011

W
,O
Comics
EDNESDAY

CTOBER

5, 2011

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT
Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

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
Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011:
This year, you juggle a relaxed,
let-it-be attitude with a need to break
free from the status quo. No one
really likes change, and you are no
exception. Once you get going, you
could be difficult to contain. You
will tend to go overboard. Knowing
when to call it quits could be more
important than you realize. If you are
single, the unexpected defines your
meeting with a very special person.
Excitement always will surround
this relationship. This person could
go in and out of your life, perhaps
because of his or her work. If you are
attached, the two of you might find
spontaneity playing a bigger role in
your life. You’ll revitalize your bond
with this energy. AQUARIUS always
is fun to be around.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
++++ You might feel as if you
are going to run into the same drudgery as you have in recent days. But
you get a delightful surprise! Others’
attitudes could change, and you
respond in kind. Let it all hang out.
Tonight: Get together with friends.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++ Use the a.m. for communicating. You might be surprised
by what comes up for you in the
middle of a conversation. Know how
important it is to focus on a project.
A surprise insight points to a better
method. Tonight: Burning the candle
at both ends.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
++++ Listen to what an informed
associate shares this morning.
Whether you agree or like what you
are hearing is irrelevant. You might
be inspired to do your own research
later in the day. Understand your limits. Tonight: Take off ASAP.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
+++++ Others continue to
dominate in a manner that might surprise you. If you know what you want,
you might want to make a suggestion in that direction. At a later point,
you can do exactly what you desire.
Tonight: Go for it!
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
+++++ Notice what is going on
around you this morning. Be willing
to forge ahead in a new direction.
You’ll feel much better on this new
course, though there is an element of

HOROSCOPE

insecurity and excitement. Trust your
instincts. Tonight: Defer to a loved
one.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
+++ Plug some of that good
spirit into your morning activities.
This afternoon, you become far more
somber and serious. You have the
capacity to get a lot done, and quickly
at that. Make extra time for yourself.
Tonight: You’re focused on the matter
at hand.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
++++ Focus on your personal
priorities in the morning. Once you
clear your head, you’ll be able to
concentrate with greater ease. Others
appreciate your lightness, wit and
ability to make them feel better, even
in the work arena. Tonight: Try something frisky.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
++++ Keep communicating the
bottom line this morning. Someone
will get it. Complete all your interpersonal dealings by noon, if possible.
You will need to pull back in the
afternoon, perhaps to do research or
just to handle an issue. Tonight: Your
home is your castle.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
+++ You might want to continue down a certain path, but it is
clear that you need to rethink your
finances. An extravagant tendency
emerges. Go with creativity and an
unusual idea. Tonight: A midweek
get-together.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
++++ Use the morning to the
max. Someone approaches you,
expressing his or her authentic feelings. You can hardly be anything but
flattered. In this mood, you decide to
let go of patterns, and indulge and
treat others. Tonight: Enjoy going out.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
++++ Move through the morning
with discretion. Your energy soars
as your charisma magnetizes others.
Decide to do only what you want and
what is important. You’ll find that others’ responses could be surprising.
Tonight: Go full speed ahead.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
+++++ Listen to news that
comes through a friend or a meeting.
Your first reaction might not be your
final one. You will be going through
many different perspectives as you
try to reframe what is happening.
Tonight: Play it low-key.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

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�Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Legals

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Lost &amp; Found
FOUND: beautiful, gentle, well
cared for pit bull dog near
Horselick Rd. Owner should
call to describe 304-212-2337
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that
you do business with people you
know, and NOT to send money
through the mail until you have investigating the offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
The Board of Trustees of
Greenfield Township will hold
their budget Hearing on Oct.
10th 2011 at 7:00 pm at Town
Hall. Regular meeting to follow.

SERVICES

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REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Help Wanted- General

Pets

Apartments/Townhouses

Happy Jack Mange Medicine:
promotes healing and hairgrowth to any mange, hotspot
or fungus on dogs and horses
without steroids. Dettwiller
Lumber
(740-992-5500)
(www.kennelvax.com)

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

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

Dalmation puppies for sale,
AKC
reg,
$350
304-675-6767

FREE KITTENS: indoor litter
trained, will provide starter
food, litter box and litter.
304-882-8278
Kittens to Give Away
13 Kittens plus Mother. Call
446-1374
AGRICULTURE
Farm Equipment
1948 Allis Chalmer B Tractor
with Belly Mower Good Shape
$1500 cash 740-379-2388
MERCHANDISE
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Oxygen + Acetylene tanks,
Hobart 120 welder, Argon
tank, Laser Transit. also 4
Cemetery lots at Mound Hill
and 2 @ Memorial Gardens.
614-440-6960
Want To Buy
Absolute Top dollar- silver/gold
coins any 10K/14K/18K gold
jewerly,
dental gold, pre
1935 US currency. proof/mint
sets, diamonds, MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis. 446-2842
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Yard Sale
Grate residence, St Rt 7 two
miles from caution light in Tuppers Plains, Thurs. 6th @ 9am
HUGE MULTI FAMILY

Oct 6,7, &amp; 8th - 5 1/2 mi. from
Gallipolis on Rt 141, Clothes,
Furn., Lots of Misc.
INSIDE SALE, THURS OCT
6TH, 9-3, 204 NINTH ST

YARD SALE

Oct 6th &amp; Oct 7th @ 830 1st
Ave (Gallipolis) 8am to 5pm

Heating &amp; Cooling

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

Pet
Cremations.
740-446-3745

Call

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

FINANCIAL
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Clerical

For Rent
Mobile Home Lot on St. Rt 775
also Camper Space on St Rt
141. Call 446-4053

Business &amp; Trade School

YARD SALE
Oct 6th,7th, 8th,-@ 271
Georges Creek Rd- 8am to ?

Other Services

ANIMALS

"Local church seeks P/T secretary. Knowledgable in Office
software and QuickBooks. Duties will include, but not limited
to, bookkeeping and publishing weekly and monthly newsletters and bulletins. Reumes
may be mailed to: Job Inquiry,
P.O. Box 453, Pomeroy, Oh
45769".

SERVICES

Ventless gas heater 3 plaque
manual LP or NG, SPECIAL
$129.99 (Limited to heaters in
stock only. PAINT PLUS
HARDWARE 304-675-4084

600

Want To Buy
Will pick up unwanted Appliances&amp; yard sale items also
Will haul or
buy Auto's,
Buses &amp; Scrap metal Ph.
446-3698 ask for Robert.
AUTOMOTIVE
Trucks
1999 DODGE SPORT 4x4
Pick-up Asking $4700 cash
740-379-2388
Want To Buy
Paying
Cash
for
junk,Cars,Trucks,Vans,Call
740-388-0011
or
740-441-7870. No Sunday
calls.
REAL ESTATE SALES
Houses For Sale
For Rent- 2 and 3 BR Apt.
Spring Valley Area. 3 BR
House for Sale or Sale on
Land Contract (Gallipolis Area)
Duplex for Sale (New Haven)
645-7661 or 339-3046

Wanted- PASTURELAND with
livable
HOUSING,
505-384-1101
Lots

2-BR APT
Furnished $475 mo.
PETS
,
Racine,
740-591-5174

NO
Oh

2BR APT.Close to Holzer Hospital
on SR 160 C/A. (740) 441-0194
Twin Rivers Tower is accepting
applications for waiting list for
HUD subsidized, 1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
675-6679

Glass Installer Needed
Irvin's Glass Service of Gallipolis is Looking for a glass installer, Will Train. Must have
clean driving record and pass
background check. Drop off or
mail resume to 1273 Eastern
Ave. Gallipolis, Oh 45631 NO
Phone Calls please.
Medical
PT position available immediately for clinical assistant. Applications may be picked-up
Mon-Fri from 8-4 at Pleasant
Valley Hospital, suite 112.
304-675-1244
Security
Security Professionals

2 &amp; 3 BR APTS. $385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300 &amp; up,
A/C, W/D hook-up, tenant pays electric, EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017
Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5
BA, back patio, pool, playground.
$450
mth
740-646-8231
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

Apartment for Rent
Upstairs Apt.- Kitchen furnished- 1 or 2 people @ 238
1st Ave. $525 + Utilities &amp; deposit-No Pets 446-4926

Apt. For Rent
1-bedroom, 2nd floor, unfurnished apt. AC,water included,
corner 2nd &amp; pine, No pets,
Maximum occupancy 2, References &amp; security deposit required, $300/mo., 1 yr lease.
Call 446-4425 or 446-3936
Jordan Landing Apts, 2 &amp; 3 BR
units available. Rent plus dep
&amp;
Elec.
No
pets.
304-610-0776
Nice 2 br downstairs apt, kit
appl, AC, gas furnace,W/D
hook-up, Pt Pleasant. $375
plus $200 dep,304-675-6375
or 804-677-8621
Houses For Rent
Cute 1 bedroom. log cabin on
river, $500 plus deposit, utilities,
740-992-7680,
740-416-7703

For Sale or Rent 2BR, all electric. S on Rt 7. toward Crown
City call 441-1917 or
740-339-0820
House for Rent
2-3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, private
setting in town with river view.
$600 per month. No Smoking.
Deposit and references required. Call 441-7403 for Application.
MANUFACTURED HOUSING
Rentals
2br &amp; 3br mobile homes, in
Syracuse, $450 &amp; $475 plus
dep., utilities, 740-992-7680,
740-416-7703

FURNISHED 3 BR DBL WIDE
SR 143, Pomeroy, Oh. Some
Utilities Included. W/D $625
mo. NO PETS. 740-591-5174
Nice 16x80, for rent, 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, Country setting.
740-339-3366 740-367-0266.

Smaller 2 BR Trailer for individual or couple, $350 dep.
$350
mo.
NO
PETS.
740-245-5087. No Appliances
Sales
1995 2BR 14x70 Mobile (Clayton)
$7500 or Best Offer must be
moved 709-1657 or 446-1271.
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

WOW! Gov't program now available on manufactured homes.
Call
while
funds
last!
740-446-3570

RESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT

GUARDSMARK, LLC is currently
accepting applications for 2
part-time security officers for immediate employment in the Apple
Grove, WV area.
ALL APLICANTS must be 21 years
of age, have a HS Diploma or
GED, be able to pass
Drug test, have a clear police record and valid Driverʼs license.
We offer Excellent starting wage
with increase after 90 day evaluation.
Call our Charleston office at
304-344-3689 for more information.
EOEM/F

Class of 2012
ATTENTION HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS!
SEE US FIRST FOR YOUR GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS
Continuing to serve you...
Save Time &amp; Money, Shop Local!
“Since 1948”

THE QUALITY PRINT SHOP, Inc.
255 Mill Street • Middleport, OH

740-992-3345
Fax 740-992-3394

UPS Service

Al’s sAw shop
Sharpening Service

—Wood Working ToolS—
10” - 12” Carbide
Saw Blade
19cts. per tooth

Planer &amp; Jointer
Knives
39 cts. per inch

Chain Saw Chain up to 16” (off bar) $2.00
740-541-4119 • altromm@hotmail.com
SR 33 &amp; CR 18 Pomeroy, Oh. Limited time offer

H E L P WA N T E D
Field Data Collector. P/T opportunity in
Middleport performing fieldwork &amp;
computer reporting for a national
industry leader at
www.muellerreports.com Task #15931
No experience. Paid training. Performance based pay. $11-$13/hr. Apply

60250500

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee
Local references furnished and
established in 1975
Call 24 hrs 740)446-0870
Rogers Basement Waterproofing

www.mydailysentinel.com

CARPET SALE- SAVE BIG
$$$$
ON
IN
STOCK
CARPET-FREE
ESTIMATES-EASY FINANCING-12 MONTHS SAME AS
CASH. MOLLOHAN CARPET
317 ST RT 7 N GALLIPOLIS,
OH 740-446-7444

300

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

60239290

SHERIFF`S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
CASE NO.: 11 CV0029
Central Mortgage Company
Plaintiff
vs.
Robert E. Norwood, et al.,
Defendants
COURT
OF
COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale to me directed from said
Court in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on the
Front Steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse on October 28, 2011, at 10:00 a.m. of
said day, the following described premises:
A copy of the complete legal
description can be obtained at
the Meigs County Recorder's
Office, OR Book 123, Page
771
Permanent Parcel Number
15-00095.000
Property address 357 Williams
Street, Middleport, OH 45760
APPRAISED AT: $65,000.00
and cannot be sold for less
than two-thirds of that amount.
Terms of Sale: Ten Percent
(10%) of the purchase price
down at the time the bid is accepted. Balance to be paid
within Thirty (30) days. Any
sum not paid within said Thirty
(30) days shall bear interest at
the rate of Ten Percent (10%)
per annum from the date of
sale.
ROBERT E. BEEGLE, Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
Bradley P. Toman
Attorney for Plaintiff
24755 Chagrin Blvd, Suite 200
Cleveland, OH 44122
(216) 360-7200
10/5/11, 10/12/11, 10/19/11

www.mydailysentinel.com

Saturday, Oct. 8, 2011 @ 10am
Located at the Meigs County Fair Ground,
Rt.7 Pomeroy, Ohio.
Due to Parking, We Have Moved the Personal Items
of Judith H. Morris, Who Has Sold Her Home.

Furniture &amp; Appliances
Two Pc Maple King Size BR Suite • 5Pc Maple
Dine T Set • Maple Top Dresser • Washstand
• Sofa • Wingback Chair • Like New Amana Ref
with Bottom Freezer • Frigidaire 20.3 CF Frost Free
Freezer • Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer • 30” Electric
Range • Love Seat • TVs • Kenmore Sweeper •
Dresser • 2 Pc BR Suite • Porcelain Top Table •
Microwave • Sewing Machine
• Coffee Table &amp; End Table Set • Tables &amp; More.
Misc.
Quilts • Linens • Baskets • Rugs • Comforters
• Glassware • Casio Keyboard • Dehumidifier
• Coffee Broiler • Lg. Oriental Style Rug
• Tupperware • Wheel Chair • Purses
• Yard Tools • Alum. Ladder • Lawn Furn. • New
Drapes • Plus, Other New Items, Never Used.
Terms: Cash or Check w/ ID.
Everything Sold “As-Is”.
Auctioneer Note: Clean Auction
Auction Conducted by

Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Licensed &amp; Bonded by State of Ohio

�Wednesday, October 5, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

Lindsey Wilson edges RedStorm in overtime Mattia, Wilson top
By Randy Payton

Rio Grande Sports Information

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Saturday
night’s highly-anticipated men’s soccer showdown between the University
of Rio Grande and Lindsey Wilson
College certainly lived up to its billing.
Eddy Campbell’s goal just under two minutes into overtime lifted
the fourth-ranked Blue Raiders to a
3-2 Mid-South Conference win over
the third-ranked RedStorm at a cold,
damp Evan E. Davis Field.
Lindsey Wilson, which entered the
game ranked No. 3 in the first Modified Ratings Percentage Index (MRPI)
released Wednesday, improved to 7-0
overall and 3-0 in the MSC with the
victory.
“Every time we’ve played them
since they came into the conference,
it’s been tight,” said Lindsey Wilson
head coach Ray Wells. “Tonight was
the fourth time we’ve played and two
of the games have gone to overtime.
I think the others were 2-0 and 2-1
games, so you expect it to be close.
And the home team has never won how do you explain that?”
Campbell’s goal, with the aid of an
assist from teammate Lebogang Moloto, came 1:41 into the extra session
and allowed the Blue Raiders to remain perfect after failing to maintain
an early 2-0 lead.
“A fair result would’ve been a
tie, but Eddy has good speed and he
got into a one-on-one with the goalie
early in the overtime. Fortunately, he
got their first,” Wells said. “I’m estatic about getting the win. Rio has a
great program and they did a good job

to come back, but I’m proud of our
guys.”
Rio Grande, which slipped to 7-1
overall and 1-1 in the MSC, forced the
overtime when Richard Isberner —
the reigning MSC Offensive Player of
the Week and one of five players tied
for the national lead in goals per game
average (1.71) - scored on a rebound
of his own miss with just 7:49 remaining in regulation to erase the early two
-goal deficit.
“I’m proud of our guys for the way
they fought back,” said Rio Grande
head coach Scott Morrissey. “The one
thing I’m disappointed in is that, for
the first 20 or 25 minutes of the game,
we didn’t show up. I don’t know why,
but we didn’t - and we put ourselves
in a hole. I thought we had a good grip
on the game after that. We showed a
lot of character the rest of the way, we
just came up a little short at the end.”
Samuel Asante gave the Blue
Raiders a 1-0 lead just 10:09 into the
contest, scoring off the rebound of a
shot by Campbell that was knocked
away by URG junior goalkeeper Jack
Marchant.
Campbell extended the lead to 2-0
just over 13 minutes later, fighting
off contact from Rio’s Oliver HewittFisher for a nifty left-footed shot that
slipped past Marchant and into the net.
“We had two costly mistakes defensively in the first half and they
scored both times,” Morrissey said. “It
all came down to our defensive shape
and the frustrating thing is that’s exactly what we worked on for the past
week.”
“I thought we played well, particularly early, and put the pressure on
them,” said Wells. “But they turned
the tables and did the same thing to us

in the last 20 minutes.”
The RedStorm’s road back began at
the 29:35 mark of the first half when
Neil Harries blistered a shot past Lindsey Wilson keeper Yuta Nomura after
a direct kick by teammate Joel Thiessen to make it 2-1.
Rio Grande had numerous other
scoring chances in the first half but
were turned away by Nomura, who recorded five of his seven saves prior to
the intermission.
“We had opportunities, we just
didn’t finish the chances that we had,”
Morrissey said.
The Blue Raiders had a chance to
ice the game away with 17:11 left in
regulation, but Moloto was denied
on a penalty kick thanks to a diving
save by Marchant, last week’s MSC
Defensive Player of the Week. The
junior keeper finished the night with
five stops.
The game was equally even in
terms of shots - Rio had 15 to Lindsey’s 14. Each team had eight shots on
goal.
“Now it’s up to us to make sure that
we take care of business the rest of
the way and maybe we’ll get another
shot at them in the conference tournament,” Morrissey said. “I know our
guys would like that.”
Wells and his players expect to see
the RedStorm again.
“There’s always a chance we could
play each other again two more times
- in the conference tournament and
in the national tournament,” he said.
“Now that we’ve seen each other, we
know what works on what doesn’t.
I’m sure Scott and his guys, just like
us, will try to build on that. The great
thing about playing them is that you
always have to be on your toes.”

Ohio High School Football Poll List

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — How a state panel of sports
writers and broadcasters rates Ohio high school football
teams in the fourth weekly Associated Press poll of 2011,
by OHSAA divisions, with won-lost record and total points
(first-place votes in parentheses):

DIVISION I
1, Lakewood St. Edward (20)		
6-0
283e
2, Cin. Moeller (7)			
6-0
257
3, Mentor (1)			
6-0
233
4, Tol. Whitmer (1)			
6-0
166
5, Hilliard Davidson		
5-0
159
6, Can. GlenOak (1)		
6-0
142
T7, Cin. Colerain			
5-1
108
T7, Dublin Coffman		
6-0
108
9, Middletown			
5-1
70
10, Solon			
6-0
35
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Findlay 20. 12, Cle. St. Ignatius
18. 13, Cin. La Salle 15.
DIVISION II
1, Maple Hts. (17)			
6-0
255
2, Trotwood-Madison (5)		
6-0
235
3, Avon (4)			
6-0
232
4, Warren Howland (4)		
6-0
206
5, Kings Mills Kings		
6-0
191
6, Cols. Marion-Franklin		
6-0
139
7, Zanesville			
5-1
96
8, Canfield			
5-1
75
9, Wapakoneta			
6-0
50
10, Tipp City Tippecanoe		
6-0
24
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Chesterland W. Geauga 23.
12, Dresden Tri-Valley 18. 13, Tiffin Columbian 17. 14, Aurora 16. 15,
Franklin 15. 16, Cols. Mifflin 14. 16, New Carlisle Tecumseh 14.
DIVISION III
1, Steubenville (19)		
6-0
275
2, Kettering Alter (4)		
6-0
250
3, Akr. SVSM (1)			
6-0
208
4, Plain City Jonathan Alder (4)
6-0
198
5, Chagrin Falls (1)		
6-0
170
6, Mentor Lake Cath.		
5-1
131
7, Thornville Sheridan		
6-0
105
8, Alliance Marlington		
5-1
74
9, Youngs. Mooney		
3-2
38
10, Cle. Benedictine		
5-1
32

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Minerva (1) 27. 12, Jackson
21. 13, Spring. Shawnee 18. 14, Bryan 17. 15, Day. Thurgood Marshall 14.
16, Spring. Kenton Ridge 13. 17, Circleville Logan Elm 12.
DIVISION IV
1, Kenton (19)			
6-0
275
2, Cols. Hartley (3)		
6-0
241
3, Genoa Area (1)			
6-0
225
4, Middletown Fenwick (2)		
6-0
190
5, Cin. Madeira			
6-0
156
6, Waynesville (1)			
6-0
131
7, Girard (1)			
6-0
121
8, St. Clairsville (1)		
6-0
47
9, Pemberville Eastwood		
6-0
42
10, Johnstown-Monroe (1)		
6-0
41
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Creston Norwayne 31. 11,
Ironton 31. 13, Sullivan Black River (1) 30. 14, Coshocton 29. 15, OttawaGlandorf 13.
DIVISION V
1, Lima Cent. Cath. (15)		
6-0
277
2, Kirtland (6)			
6-0
237
3, Coldwater (2)			
6-0
195
4, Marion Pleasant (2)		
6-0
175
5, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon		
6-0
154
6, Findlay Liberty-Benton		
6-0
131
7, Bucyrus Wynford (1)		
6-0
118
8, Liberty Center (1)		
6-0
98
9, W. Lafayette Ridgewood (3)
6-0
82
10, Nelsonville-York		
6-0
17
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Covington 16. 12, Versailles
15. 13, Portsmouth W. 14. 14, Jeromesville Hillsdale 13. 14, Lucasville
Valley 13.
DIVISION VI
1, Thompson Ledgemont (17)
6-0
280
2, Berlin Center Western Reserve (7) 6-0
247
3, Maria Stein Marion Local (6)
5-1
239
4, Lockland			
6-0
178
5, Ada				
5-1
168
6, Malvern			
5-1
129
7, Delphos St. John’s		
4-2
118
8, Tiffin Calvert			
5-1
107
9, Arcadia			
5-1
70
10, New Washington Buckeye Cent.
5-1
19
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Spring. Cath. Cent. 13. 11, Ft.
Loramie 13. 13, Danville 12.

Rio’s efforts in All-Ohio
Rio Grande Sports Information

CEDARVILLE, Ohio – Cassie Mattia and Nick Wilson
provided the University of Rio Grande its top finishes in
Friday’s All-Ohio Intercollegiate Cross Country Championships at Cedarville University.
The RedStorm only had three runners in each division
and did not have a team score.
Mattia, a senior from West Chester, Ohio, finished the
women’s 5K course in a time of 19:38.36, which was 103rd
overall and 20th among runners in the Division II/NAIA
portion of the field.
Wilson, a junior from Barlow, Ohio, completed the
men’s 8K course in 26:31.56, which was good enough for
77th overall and 26th among DII/NAIA runners.
Freshman Samantha Barnes was 125th overall and 28th
among DII/NAIA women with a time of 19:55.82, while
freshman Brittany Piccone was 60th in the DII/NAIA field
and 242nd overall in a time of 21:43.32.
Senior Matt Spencer was 79th overall and 27th among
DII/NAIA men by finishing in 26:32.03, while freshman
Dustin Moritz was 60th among DII/NAIA runners and
231st overall with a finish of 28:56.88.
Cincinnati won the men’s overall team crown, with Kent
State and Akron completing the top three. UC’s Eric Finan
had the best individual time of 24:44.49.
Miami took the overall women’s team title, with Dayton
finishing second and Ohio University taking third. OU’s
Juli Accurso had the top individual time of the day among
female runners, posting a finish of 17:55.38.
Rio Grande returns to action in the Fall Classic on October 14.

URG volleyball drops
pair of MSC matches
Rio Grande Sports Information

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande
volleyball team saw its losing streak stretch to three straight
following a pair of Mid-South Conference setbacks over
the weekend.
The RedStorm dropped a 3-2 decision to the University
of the Cumberlands (22-25, 25-21, 23-25, 25-20, 15-8) on
Saturday after suffering a 3-2 loss (19-25, 19-25, 25-17, 2518, 15-11) at St. Catharine College on Friday night.
Rio Grande slipped to 10-9 overall and 3-3 in the MSC
with the losses.
Junior outside hitter Whitney Smith led URG in Saturday’s defeat with 18 kills and 18 digs, while junior libero
Lauren Raines added a team-high 21 digs and sophomore
Kayla Landaker was credited with 42 assists.
Sophomore defensive specialist Nicole Ogg chipped in
with 16 digs and junior middle blocker Erin Sherman had
12 kills.
In Friday night’s opener to the two-game road swing,
Smith backed up a team-high 19 kills with 15 digs and Landaker had a season-high 43 assists to go along with 10 kills
of her own. Sherman added 10 kills and two blocks in the
loss, while Raines led URG with 21 digs and Ogg had a pair
of service aces.
Rio Grande returns to action Friday and Saturday in a
roun-robin tournament at Malone University. The RedStorm will face Ashford University at 5 p.m. and tourney
host Malone at 7 p.m. on Friday, before closing out the
event against Ursuline College at noon and Bluefield College at 2 p.m on Saturday.

Story ideas?
Call The Daily Sentinel at

(740) 992-2156

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday’s TV Listings

�Sports

A8

The Daily Sentinel

Local Schedule

Thursday, October 6
Volleyball
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5:15 p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wayne, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Miller. 6 p.m.
Hannan at Sherman, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Logan, 6:30 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at St. Joe, 6 p.m.
Winfield at Point Pleasant (boys), 5:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant (girls) at Huntington St. Joe,
5 p.m.
Friday, October 7
Football
South Gallia at Belpre, 7:30 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 7:30 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Southern at Miller, 7:30 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 7:30 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Chillicothe, 7:30 p.m.
Chesapeake at River Valley, 7:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7:30 p.m.
Manchester at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Soccer
Calvary at Ohio Valley Christian, 4:30 p.m.
Volleyball
Calvary at Ohio Valley Christian, 6 p.m.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Lady Marauders top Jackson in five
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The
Meigs volleyball team, like a novice fisherman, almost let a big one
get away Monday night, but the
host Lady Marauders ultimately
reeled in hard-fought a 25-19, 2517, 23-25, 15-25, 15-8 victory over
Jackson during a non-conference

matchup at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium.
Meigs (7-8) stormed out to a 2-0
lead in the match and were in a position to sweep the Ironladies (11-7)
in Game 3, but the guests squeaked
out a two-point win. Jackson rode
that momentum into Game 4, posting the only double-digit win of the
night for a decisive fifth game.
Down the stretch, however, the
Lady Marauders’ net attack proved

to be too much for JHS to handle,
as the hosts pounded out a sevenpoint decision and the overall victory.
Meigs finished the night 93-of101 at the service line and also produced team tallies of 65 kills, 60 assists and six blocks in the triumph.
Both Alison Brown and Cheyenne Beaver led the hosts with 10
service points apiece, followed by
Tori Wolfe with eight points. Em-

alee Glass and Tanisha McKinney
each had six points, Mercadies
George added five points and Chandra Mattox contributed four points.
George led the net attack with
21 kills, followed by Brown with
19 kills and Emily Kinnan with 18
kills. Olivia Cremeans added four
kills, Brook Andrus had two kills
and Marlee Hoffman chipped in
one kill nd a team-high four blocks.
Glass had 52 assists in the triumph.

Blue
Angels top
Wellston
in three

Saturday, October 8
Soccer
Circleville at Gallia Academy, 11 a.m.
Midland Trail at Point Pleasant (girls), 1 p.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy at Ceterville Stampede,
TBA

By Bryan Walters

bwalters @ mydailytribune . com

Lady ‘Cats
sweep Covenant
Christian
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

BARBOURSVILLE,
W.Va. —The Hannan volleyball team claimed a season sweep of host Covenant
Christian Monday night during a 25-16, 25-16, 25-12
victory in a non-conference
matchup in Cabell County.
The visiting Lady ‘Cats
(5-10) snapped a two-match
losing skid by winning their
third match in their last five
outings, one of which came
against CCS one week ago
in Ashton. Hannan posted a
3-games-to-1 win on Sept. 26
over Covenant Christian to
earn its first season sweep of
an opponent.
Heather Ellis led the
guests with 15 service points,
followed by Samantha Blain
with 12 and Katie Ellis with
nine points. Tiffany Adkins
added seven points and Jazi
Casto contributed four points,
while Jasmine Wiese and Jessica Cornell rounded things
out with two points each.
Blain led Hannan with
nine service aces, followed by
Heather Ellis with eight aces
and Katie Ellis with six aces.
Adkins and Casto respectively contributed three and two
aces, while Cornell added one
ace to the winning cause.
Blain recorded both of
Hannan’s kills in the contest.
Heather Ellis led the guests
with three digs, while Katie
Ellis led the passing attack
with 10 sets.

Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern sophomore Maddie Rigsby, right, hits a spike attempt as South Gallia’s Chandra Canaday (2) goes
for the block in Game 2 of Monday night’s TVC Hocking volleyball contest in Mercerville, Ohio

Lady Eagles sweep South Gallia
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio —Two
for the price of one.
The Eastern volleyball team remained unbeaten and also claimed
a season sweep of host South Gallia Monday night following a 25-14,
25-21, 25-13 victory in a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
matchup in Gallia County.
The Lady Eagles (17-0, 11-0
TVC Hocking) maintained their sole
perch atop the league standings, winning their second straight match in
straight games. Eastern, currently
ranked ninth in the Division IV
coaches poll, has also won 48 of the
51 games they have participated in
this season.
The Lady Rebels (14-4, 8-4), on
the other hand, dropped their second
straight league decision after losing
a heartbreaking five-game match at
Trimble last week. SGHS also lost
at Eastern by a 25-13, 25-15, 25-20
count back on Sept. 6.
Eastern stormed out to a 7-0 lead
in the opening game before going on
to a 11-point Game 1 win, but the

hosts kept pace in Game 2 — as the
contest was tied late at 19-all. The
guests went on to score six of the
next eight points for a four-point win
and a 2-0 lead in the match.
Like the opening game, Brenna
Holter served EHS out to a sizable
lead early in Game 3 — recording
five aces en route to an 11-0 advantage. SGHS rallied back to within
22-12, but never came closer the rest
of the way in the 12-point finale.
Holter led the Lady Eagles with
20 service points and seven aces,
followed by Jamie Swatzel with 14
points and one ace. Brooke Johnson added four points, Ally Hendrix
chipped in three points and Baylee
Collins contributed two points and
one ace. Gabby Hendrix also had one
service point for the victors.
Swatzel led the EHS net attack
with 11 kills, followed by Maddie
Rigsby with 10 kills. Holter and Erin
Swatzel each added five kills, while
Jordan Parker contributed three kills
and a team-best five blocks.
Gabby Hendrix had two kills,
while Johnson, Ally Hendrix and
Kiki Osborne all added one kill
apiece. Rigsby and Jamie Swatzel

each contributed two blocks to the
winning cause, while Erin Swatzel,
Gabby Hendrix and Ally Hendrix
added one block apiece.
Ally Hendrix led the guests with
28 assists, followed by Gabby Hendrix with 12 assists.
Meghan Caldwell led the Lady
Rebels with seven service points,
followed by Tori Duncan with five
points and Ellie Bostic with three
points. Chrissy Howell and Chandra Canaday contributed two points
apiece, with Lauren Saunders and
Sara Bailey each adding one point.
Caldwell led the net attack with
11 kills and eight blocks, followed
by Canaday with six kills and four
blocks. Brynn Adams contributed
five kills and five blocks. Shelby
Merry added three kills and three
blocks, while Bostic had one kill and
five blocks.
Duncan had a team-high 27 assists and Howell added a team-best
14 digs, while Caldwell and Canaday
contributed 10 and nine digs, respectively.
The Lady Eagles claimed an evening sweep with a 25-20, 25-20 victory in the junior varsity contest.

Local golfers compete at W.Va. State Golf Tournament

CENTENARY,
Ohio
—The Gallia Academy
volleyball team won its
third straight match of the
season Monday night with
a 25-18, 25-15, 25-14 victory over Wellston in a
non-conference matchup
in Gallia County.
The host Blue Angels
(10-8) got better as the
night progressed, as their
margin of victories grew
from seven to 10 to 11 in
the three-game sweep. The
Lady Rockets fell to 6-10
overall this fall.
Kassie
Shriver
led
the hosts with 10 service
points, followed by Heather Ward, Maggie Westfall
and Riley Nibert with seven points apiece.Kanessa
Snyder was next with four
points, while Haley Rosier
and Rachel Morris chipped
in three points each. Halley
Barnes and Breanna West
also added a point apiece
to the winning cause.
Shriver and Ward each
recorded three aces, while
Nibert had two aces.
Shriver had a team-best 27
assists, while Ward made a
team-high 18 digs defensively.
Haley Rosier led the
net attack with eight kills
and two blocks, followed
by Westfall with seven
kills and two blocks. West,
Shriver and Nibert all added three kills apiece, while
Morris chipped in two
kills. Chelsey Slone added
one kill and one block in
the triumph.
Gallia Academy returns
to action Wednesday when
it travels to Point Pleasant for a non-conference
matchup at 5:30 p.m.

Georgetown
edges URG women’s
soccer, 2-1
By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

Sarah Hawley/photos

Local golfers Erik Allbright and Opie Lucas, both of Point Pleasant High School, and Michael MacKnight of Wahama High
School compete during the opening day of the WVSSAC State Golf Tournament at the Speidel Golf Club’s Jones Course
in Wheeling, W.Va. All three will compete again on Wednesday in the final day of competition.

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Becca Dietrich
scored off a direct kick with 4:35 left to play,
lifting Georgetown College to a hard-fought
2-1 win over the University of Rio Grande
Monday night in women’s soccer action.
Dietrich’s goal from the right win came after
a foul was whistled against the RedStorm and
put the Tigers in front to stay.
Georgetown improved to 5-3-2 overall and
3-0 in the Mid-South Conference with the victory. The Tigers held a commanding 11-1 edge
in shots in the opening half, yet the game remained scoreless at the break.
That changed just 37 seconds into the second
half when GC’s Alex Harbowy scored from 12
yards out off of a crossing pass by teammate
Taylor Fiest to make it 1-0.
Rio Grande (4-7, 1-3) tied the game at the
55:04 mark when junior defender Vanessa
Montgomery lofted a shot over Georgetown
goalkeeper Cathie Shaver from 18 yards out,
following a direct kick by junior midfielder
Katelyn Fuller.
The score remained knotted for nearly 30plus minutes and the game appeared headed
to overtime before Dietrich pushed her shot
past URG freshman keeper Allison Keeney for
what proved to be the game-winner.
Georgetown finished with a 22-3 edge in
shots, 14 of which were on goal. Keeney finished with 11 saves in the loss for the RedStorm.
Rio Grande returns to action at home, next
Monday, against the University of the Cumberlands for a 5 p.m. kickoff.

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