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Helping
ScoutTro
9
A2

l'r.lntcd on 100 c
Rcc)clcd l'llt'\\Sprint

· Mid d lep ort • Pomeroy, Ohio

Benefit sing
POJi\'T PLEASANT.
W.Va.. - A benefit for the
Fall Harvest Gospel Sing
will be held at 7 p.m. on
Saturday at the Point
Pleasant Church of Chlist in
Christian Cnion, \\ ith the
Dollys and Blicle; Forghen
Again Trio, Charlie Statts
Fmnily, and Brim1 and
F&lt;m1ily Connections.

Collecting
.JIJr tornado
~ictims

Anderson: Meigs County will help its own after tornado
J.

those people get back on
their feet :md into warm,
safe homes again, County
POMEROY
"It Comm1~sioner
Tom
makes me feel good to Anderson said Thur..day. •
know we arc taking care of
On
Wednesday.
a
our own."
spokesman for Gov. Ted
While it appear'- there Suickland said the state
will be no federal assis- will not seek aid from the
tance available to 300 Federal
Emergency
Reedsville-m·ea residents Management Agency for
left homeless bv last tornado relief because the
. week's tornado syStem. it extent of the damage and
is people in the community the number of people
- paid and volunteer affected do not meet the
who will ultimately help agency's
threshhold.
B Y B RIAN

REED

BREED MYOAILYSENTJNE-COM

RUTLAND
'lhc
Rutland Bottle G~L" in
Rutland is providing a dropoff place for donations of
food. personal hygiene
item-;, and gifts of money for
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
the victim&lt;; of Reedsville.
HOEFL CH@I.IYDA cYSENTINEL COM.
Items can be left there from 8
am. to 5 p.m. for delh ery to •
MIDDLEPORT - It takes a lot
the Eden United Brethern
of
food to feed 300 people but
Church distribution place
members of the ~liddleport Church
near Reedsville.
of Christ didn ·r seem to mind pro 7
viding and preparing a meal for
that many.
Going to Reedsville la~t Sunday
afternoon
to see how they might
GALLIPOLIS - Life
help,
church
members came awa)
Chain Sunday will be
after
agreeing
to feed everyone on
observed on Oct. 3 in Gallia
Wednesday
evening.
County. The annual pro-life
The request for a me;.tl for 300
event is scheduled from
2:30-3:30 p.m. Orgmtizers came from Robin Carter of the
plan to meet at Ohio River Eden United Brethern Church who
Plaza and line up along is coordinating relief efforts. She
A\enue in Gallipoli.,. wanted enough food to provide
dmncr for not only the tornado \ ictim" but emerger:cy personnel and
vol u meers on stte.
Women of the church pro\ ided
BIDWELL ~ Home 28 cakes which were cut intQ 300
and garden expert John pieces and boxed for delivery.
Marra will present a free Wednesday nine hams were baked
fall Iand&lt;;cape \\orkshop and sliced, enough macaroni and
from 6-8 p.m. on Monday. chec/'ie and green beans \\ere preOct. 4 at River Valley High pared to fill several large roasters.
School. In addition to
Marra's fall landscape and hy 2:30 p.m. everything was
workshop, the River Valley cooked and prepared for the move
Fr"A will assist with a to the Eden community building
perennial plant exchange where food is being served.
The church bus loaded with food
. for those who wish to participate. lhis free class is and people to assist in serving the
provided for residents of dinner. with the back of a pickup
the Gallia County Local truck hauling the food overflow,
School Di&lt;;uict in collabo- pul,led out from the Church of
ration with the Gallia- Christ's Family L1fe Center about 3
Vmton Educational Sen ice p.m. and the serving began JUst
Center. Register before after 4 p.m.
Oq. l by contacting

Damage estimates in Olive
Township are at $2 million.
31 homes were destroyed.
Anderson, president of
the board. praised the volunteers who are working to
provide food. clothing and
other personal needs to
families who lost their
homes. as well as public
agencies and larger charitable organizations who
have coordinated effectively to provide for the residents of Eden Ricfge and
Sugar Camp who have lost

virtually everything.
Just a~ impressive,
Anderson 'iaid, is the
response from other counties, including Wa..•mington
and Fairticld. Churches
from those communiticc;
have trucked 300 meals to
the families atfectcd.
'These people have lost
everything, and we need to
do w~at we can to 6Ct them
back mto home~ and hack
to their lives," Anderson
said. "It appears that help
is going to come from the

Church sends meals to Reedsville

Charlene
Hoeflich/photo

Tornado bus
Sonny Randoph
loads food onto
the bus to transport to Reedsville.

O BITUARIFS
Page AS

• Alma Peterson

W EATHER

Charlene Hoeflichlphoto

Steve lane, left, and Des Jeffers cut 28 cakes into 300 pieces and
. pack in containers.

Gas leak·closes road
B Y BETH SERGENT

POMEROY - Many
motorists weRt on an
unexpected detour yesterday thanks to a gas leak in
the Nyc Avenue area.
of
Ken
Stammen
Columbia Gas said it
appears a third party accidentally dug into a fourinch Columbia Gas main
line yesterday morning.
The line was -.till leaking

See Anderson, A5

Committee to
oversee tornado
relief fund
B Y B RIAN

to speak
at workshop

BSERGENT MYDA LYSENTINELCOM

people of this county and
the area."
"As usual, \\ e are going
to roll up our sleeves and
help oursehes.''
Commissioners
Anderson,
Mick
Da\ en port 'and Michael
Bartrum are among the
county officials who have
worked at the scene. where
emergency
agencies
including the Emergency
Management Agency and

J . REED

BREEO@MYDAJLYSENTlNaCOM

Life Chain set
for Oct. 3

Connie BradbUI)' at &lt;740)
245-0593 or by e-mail at
90_cbradbury@ seovec.org

D.,..

~

as of 2:30 p.m. on
Wednesday
though
Stammen said a crew was
on site and hoped to have
the gas shut otf before 3
p.m. Stammen said the
crew would make repairs
to the main line but in
doing so would have to
temporarily take around
eight customers oftline
before service could be
restored.
The Pomeroy Fire
Department
initially

responded to the site to
secure the scene. The
Pomeroy
Police
Department then closed a
section of road from the
Par Mar Convenient Store
on Nye Avenue to the
intersection of Ohio 833
and East Main Street.
This sect10n of road was
still closed at press time.
"Unfortunately. third
party damage happens
pretty
frequently."
Stammen said.

Stammen
said
Columbia Gas stresses
customers need to call
811 at least two da) s
before digging which
connects them to the Ohto
Utilities
Protection
Service. The service dispatches people to mark
underground
utilities.
including natural gas
lines. Stammen suggested
this be done before any
digging happens.

REEDSVILLE - A
committee of people who
li\c and work in the
Reeds\ ille community
will oversee the distribution of funds collected
through a special tornado
relief account.
The Reedsville Tornado
Victims account ha'i been
established at Farmers
Bank and Savings Co. to
allow public donations for
direct support to the 31
· families left homeless
after last Thursday's F-3
tornado. Donations may
be made into the account
at any of the Farmers
Bank's locations: Tuppers
Plains. Pomerov. Mason,
W.Va. and Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
Pastor Adam Will of the
Eden United Brethren in
Christ Church said a committee representing the
community will meet in
the next two weeks to
determine how the relief
funds will be distributed.
but said the money will be
used only for direct assistance to those 300 people
left homeless by the storm.
The church. located in
the heart of the area struck
hardest by last weekend's
stonn. has sen·ed ao; an
emergency center in the
days following.
Meanwhile. all donations rcceh ed are being
carefully recorded and a
trict accounting procedure is in place. Will said.
He said the committee. \\ill
detennine. for example, if
funds are disbursed on a
bash
or
per-fdmily
whether a more individual
detem1mation will be
made case-to-case.
Thous,mds of dollars
were collected in just a
few hours lust Friday. Will
encouraged those who
wish to make direct cash
donations to relief efforts
to do so through thts
F:mners Bank account, so
the benefits can be maximized for the benetit of the
community.

-----------------------------------------

DOT awards grant to Gallia-Meigs airport
High: 92
Low: 64

I NDEX
·~lendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports B Section
&lt;' 2010 Oh10 \all~\

Pubhshmg Co

. lli)!IJ.I !I!I.! J1·
..

BY ANDREW CARTER
MOTNEWSGMYOAILYTR 8\NE COM

GALLIPOLIS - The
U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT) has
awarded a $103.315 grant
to the Gallia-Me)-&lt;Js
Regional
Airport
Authority and the Gallia
County Commissioners to
help fund safety improvements at the facility.
According to a press
releases issued by U.S.
Sen. Sherrod Brown. DOhio, and U.S. Rep.
Charlie Wilson, D-St.
Clairsville. the funds will
be used to imprme runway safety and O\erhaul

and enhance fuel storage
facilities at the Gallia.Mcigs airr&gt;ort. which is
located 111 Gallipoli~
bet\\Cen Ea-.tcm A\enue
und Fm·m Road.
Brown said the funding
is key to developing the
transportation infrastructure of southeastern Ohio.
"These funds provide
the resources needed to
and
enhance
safety
expand economic opportunities in Gallia County
and throughout Ohio's
Appalachian and rural
'communities," he stated.
Gallia
County
Administrator
Karen
Sprague said that the

DOT funding will help
ofT-.ct the cost of project.
\\ hich has been estimated
at $350.000-$450.000.
Spmgue said the county is
applying for a grant
through the Federal
Aviation Administration
that requires. a 5 percent
local match.
''The DOT $103.315
grant has helped us
tremendously by allowing
us to speed up the project
and reduce our local
match," Sprague said.
According to Sprague.
the Airport Fuel System
Project \Vill include
rcmo' a1 of the existing
underground storage tank.

\\ hich is 25-ycars old, and
the above ground fueling
system. Those units will
be replaced \\ ith a new
system that will he- located above ground to ensure
better detection of potential leakage and maintenance.
"The current system at
the airport is so antiquated that we cannot get
repair parts for the fuel
pumps and we arc. therefore. in jeopardy of losing
our fueling system altogether,'' Sprague said.
"The proceeds from the
fuel sales make up 50 percent of our annual operation budget for the airport

so that would be di:-astrous."
"Thi grant makec; the
airport safer and ensures
that the communi!) will
ha\e an airport for a long
time to come." said
Wilson. who Spmgue said
was instrumental in helping to secure the funding.
The
Gallia-.Meigs
Regional Airport was
established in the 1960s.
It features 11 3.998-foot
runway and is home to 22
aircmft. The owners of 20
single-engme rurcraft and
two multi-engine airplane" house their planes
at the airport.

�-

·-·

--· ---,

-

·- .

Thursday, September 23,2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Scouts receive donations

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Casto-Marti ndale
engagement

•

'

Submitted photos
Donations have been received by Boy Scout Troop 299 for replacement of equipment lost in the Aug. 10 arson
fire which destroyed the Hemlock Grove Church where it was stored. The Pomeroy First Baptist Church and
American Electric Power each made a donation of $2,500 to the Troop. Cub Scout Pack 241 of Racine donated food and cooking equipment including a Coleman stove, and several other donations of money and equipment have been received by the troop. Scoutmaster Greg McCall poses with Meigs County Boy Scout Troop
299. Richard Lemley of AEP's Lakin River Operations, presents $2,500 check to Troop 299 Scoutmaster Greg
McCall. Don Dunfee Cubmaster of Cub Scout Pack 241 of Racine, donates new cooking equipment to members of Troop 299.

Tornadoes
lend a hand
Submitted photo
Tornadoes of the welcome
kind blew into the Reedsville
area yesterday to help with
clean up efforts. Pictured are
juniors and seniors from
Southern High School volun-.
teering their time to assist
residents who are still recovering from the storm.

Appalachian Leadership Academy
graduates management class
income families, children
and the elderly, by adminATHENS - Deb Utt of istering a training prothe
Gallia-Meigs granl for middle manageCommunity Action was ment professionals in
awarded
the those agencies.
The
Appalachian
Distinguished Leadership
Academy
Project award for her lead- Leadership
ership project, "Agency (ALA) is a hands-on trainWebsite'' at the recent ing program designed to
Appalachian Leadership help prepare middle management employees for
Academy's graduation.
Her project was selected leadership positions withfrom among many in her in their agencies and in the
· Academy year based upon communities in which
the criteria of demonstrat- they live. ALA's curricued benefit to the agency or lum provides leadership
community and providing and management skillan innovative solution to a building opportunities to
problem, as well as one professionals in commuwhich could be replicated nity action, economic
by another individual. She development, local gov- .
was abo recognized for ernment, and non-profit
throughout
meeting
all
project agencies
Appalachian
requirements and atten- Ohio's
dance for the Leadership region.
This graduating class
Academy.
For her efforts, Utt ha&lt;; been part of a yearreceived an overnight stay long training cow·se with a
and gift certificate at any curriculum that is conOhio State Park Resort. a structed around key conLeadership
Academy cepts such as manageself-knowledge,
watch, and a copy of the ment,
"Appalachian strategic visioning. and
boqk,
communications.
Values" by Loyal Jones.
Since part of the proThe
Appalachian
Leaderskip
Academy gram's goals arc to deepen
(ALA) is a program of the the knowledge and underCorporation for Ohio standing of the history,
Appalachian opportunities, resources
Development (COAD), and challenges of the
developed with support Ohio Appalachian Region
from the Governor's and to motivate the future
of
Ohio
Office of Appalachia, the leaders
Ohio Department of Appalachia to think strateDevelopment, the Institute gically, monthly sessions
for Local Government occur in a different counAdministration and Rural ties of Ohio Appalachia.
This creates a unique
Development (lLGARD).
and the Rural Universities and valuable opportunity
for participants to learn
Program.
The Academy serves to about the culture of the
advance COAD's mission region and to build a netto provide a unified voice work of professional
and representation for its resources that help to
member agencies and the strengthen their agencies
constituencies that they &lt;md communities. In addiserve. primarily low- tion to atll.:nding monthly

Tebaliah Casto and Micah Martindale

Mr. and Mrs. Dennie Casto of Leon, W.Va., and of
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Martindale of Pomeroy
announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their children, Tebaliah Casto and Micah
Martindale.
The bride-elect is a 2002 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School and a 2007 graduate of
Marshall University, where she obtained a degree in
elementary education and Math 5-9. She COIDJ?leted
her master's degree in elementary education m the
spring of 2009, and currently is employed by the
Mason County Board of Education.
She is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Casto of Leon, W.Va. and Mrs. Ellen Morris and the~
late Bernard Morris of Statts Mills, W.Va. Her
Godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Gay Herdman of
Leon, W.Va.
The prospective groom graduated in 2002 and
went on to graduate with a fitness management
degree from Hocking College in 2006. He currently
is employed by Fairfield Medical Center in
Lancaster.
His grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sherlock
of Bremen. and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Martindale •
Carrol. Ohio.
The couple will be married Sept. 25 at 4:30p.m.
at New Hope Bible Baptist Church in Point
Pleasant, W. Va
•

Riley receives doctorate

STAFF REPORT

Submitted photo
Sherry Shamblin, center, Early Childhood Mental health
Specialist for the Tri-County Mental Health and
Counseling Services, Inc., receives a plaque for having
completed all requirements for graduation from the
Appalachia Leadership Academy. With her are Betsy
Gosnell, Leadership Programs Specialist for COAD, and
Ron Rees, Executive Director for COAD.

workshops, each participant is required to complete a project which will
benefit their agency, community or both.
The purpose of the project is to provide an
opportunity for leadership
skill development; meet a
need based on organitational or community
issues: prepare participants for future leadership
activities; to learn project
management' skills; provide participants with an
oppm1unity to practice
team leadership and group
management skills; and to
provide an opportunity for
participants to expand
their network. The projects are significant
because they directly benefit community members
and hel'p to strengthen the
pmticipant's agency.

Among those at the luncheon was Cluisti Lynch
of Meigs County, the
Governor's
Regional
Director, who presented a
commendation to the
agency from Governor
Strickland.
Keynote
speaker at the graduation
luncheon was Joy Padgett,
Director of Government
Relations for Central Ohio
Technical College.
Other guests at the graduation luncheon were the
Reverend Dennis Sparks,
of the West Virginia
Council of Churches; Dr.
George Weigly of TriCounty Mental Health and
Counseling Services. Inc.,
and Wanda Hairston and
Beverly Cooper. both of
the Governor's Office of
Appalachia.

Mary Riley

POMEROY - Mary Riley has received a
Doctorate of Nurse Practice from the Frances
Payne Bolton School of Nursing at Case Western
Reserve University.
Graduating magna cum laude, the degree was
conferred at the spring commencement ceremony
in the Veale Center with the hooding ceremony taking place at University Circle United Methodist
Church in Cleveland.
Dr. Riley practices as a certified registered nurse
anesthetist at the Charleston Area Medical Center
outpatient surgi-center. She is married to Jeff Riley.
formerly of Mason, W, Va. and is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills, Pomeroy, Ohio.

If

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA3
Thursday, September 23,

2010

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Mom finds it hard to
be cool around tweens
Dear Dr. Brothers: My
parents were old, unhip
types, and 1 neve~ want to
be like them. I try to keep
up with all the fads m1d
styles and cool things that
the kids are doing. but no"Submitted photo that they arc heading for
The historic Ariel-Ann Carson Dater Performing Arts Centre is undergoing renovation work that includes new middle school, I lind that I
plaster in the main auditorium
am feeling very old and out
. GALLIPOLIS- It's been 20 years since the restora- based in Gallipolis that possibly even worked on the Ariel of it anyway. I want to be
the kind of mom kids think
tiOn spearheaded by volunteers of the Ariel-Ann Carson when it was built in 1895.
Dater Performing Arts Centre. Originally known as the
"My grandfather worked on the Southern Theatre and of a-; cool, and make our
Ariel Opera House, then the Gallipolis Theatre, the Ariel- Hotel in Columbus,'' said Pymer. ''and it was designed by home the place the
teenagers all want to hang
Ann Carson Dater Perfonning Arts Centre is cwrently the same architect a-; the Ariel."
·
undergoing a facelift.
Also under construction is the third floor of the Ariel- out. How can I make ~ure
In 1990. founder Lora Snow led a group of volunteers Dater Hall facility. Pre\ iously unseen by the general pub- my twins k."'lO\\- that I am
who cleaned. refinished. restored and refurbished the lic. the third floor that \\ao; once a lodge room for the not going to be the kind of
abandoned theatre that had been closed for over 25 years. International Order of the Oddfellows and later. the mom kids hate'! - F.H.
Dear F.H.: Wow. it
"It's time for a refresher." said Snow. "Davis Caulking Masonic Lodge. will now be opened to the public for the
sounds a" though you need
re-painted the bricks for us this summer to seal up any fli'St time in October.
leaks and now Pyrner Plao;tering is repairing the plaster.''
"We are pleased to be presenting it to the public on Oct. to put down the iP&lt;XI, slip
Plaster walls are one of the key ingredients for the 24 at 3 p.m. for a soiree we're having to celebrate.'' into some mom jeans and
try to take a deep breath
incredible acoustics in Ariel-Dater Hall.
remarked Snow.
"We want to maintam the high level of acoustic propThe third floor actually contains a smaller theatre that and relax. It is very obvierties in the Ariel." said Snow. Painting will follow the will be used for pc1formanccs. meetings, presentations ous that you had a hard
plaster work while the scaffolding is still in place.
and other such public events as well as being available for time with your own parents being square or whatDavis Caulking has restored a number of historic prop- rental for special events.
erties in the area includin~ homes and public buildings m
For information, contact the Ariel-Dater box office at ever term you used to
describe them. And maybe
Gallipolis. Pymcr Plastenng is a 125 year old firm once 740-446-ARTS (2787).
you didn't have such a
great time growing up, and
you find it easier to blame
your lack of social success
on your folks th&lt;m to look
at your own shortcomings
or to just admit that it was
a particularly tough scene
in your school. But you've
grown up and become a
woman and a mother, and
all that needs to be left
behind so that you can take
an important step now.
It's going to be crucial
for you to be able to set
some boundaries for your
children. even if they
might not think you arc
cool or they might get mad
at 'you. I imagine that is a
frightening concept for
you: You want to be the
parent whom all the kids
love and want to hang out
with in your house. But it's
Submitted photo sometin1es a slippery slope
Dr. Mike Owens, chairman of the Ohio Valley Symphony's 18th annual Maestro for a Moment campaign gives between being cool and
some conducting pointers to this year's candidates Brent Saunders of Holzer Medical Center and Eddie being overly pennis~ive Lanham of Farmers Bank. Mario Liberatore of Ohio Valley Bank is also a maestro candidate. The three com- the kind of permissive
petitors choose their way to raise funds to help support the OVS and the campaign culminates on Oct. 2 when where kids know they can
winner gets the honor of conducting The Ohio Valley Symphony in John Phillip Sousa's Stars &amp; Stripes go to your house to have
ever. Trckets are still available for the October 2 concert which will be held at the Lillian &amp; Pau Wedge sex. get high or drink. and
uditorium in the Pt. Pleasant Jr./Sr. High School at 8 p.m. and features the Quartetto Gelato as solosits For generally not have to worry
more information, contact the Ariel-Dater Hall otf1ce at 740-446-ARTS (2787) or ohiovalleysymphony.org. T.,is about the ''cool'' parents
who live there. The teenage
concert is sponsored by Ohio Valley Bank.
'
years are going to be chal-

e aestro for ·a Moment

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Thursday, Sept. 23
POMEROY
The
Meigs Soil and Water
ConseNation District Board
of SupeNisors, regular session, 11 :30 a.m. at the district office at 331 01 Hiland
Road.
Monday, Sept 28
RACINE - Southern
Local Board of Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
Southern High School,
media center.
POMEROY - Veterans
SeNice Commission, 9
am., 117 Memorial Dr.

a,.bsand
• ganizations
Thursday, Sept 23
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge 453 special
meeting, 7 p.m. for purpose
of conferring the Entered
Apprentice Degree on one
candidate. Refreshments.
POMEROY
- Alpha
Iota Masters, 11:30 a.m.,
KFC/Long John Silver's.
REEDSVILLE
Riverview Garden Club,
7:40p.m., Reedsville United
Methodist Church.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association, noon luncheon, Trinity Church.
Speaker from Edward
Jones on financial advice
for retirees. School supplies
to be collected. Lunch
reseNations by Tuesday to
992-3214. Guests welcome.
TUPPERS PLAINS Post 9053, regular
.
:ting, 7 p.m., at the hall.

Zf"

Church events
Tuesday Sept 21
RACINE - Pine Grove
Bible Holiness Church,
revival, through Sept. 26.
Cary Thornton to speak.
on
Church
located
Roweville Road, SeNices
through Saturday, 7 p.m.,
Sunday, 9:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.

Sunday, Sept 26
RACINE
Homecoming at Eagle
Ridge Community Church,
dinner at noon. Brian &amp;
Family Connections, Just
Us and Others.
CLIFF
LAUREL
Community wiener roast, 6
p.m., with food, fellowship,
campfire songs, Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
POMEROY
Dayspring in concert, 6:30
p.m., Mt. Union Baptist
Church, Carpenter .Hill
Road.

lenging, and there will be
contlicts. That's what you
should be preparing yourself to face.

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers: 1·
had my first child a year
ago and am very happy
being a mother. The prob-.
lem is that I joined a babyand-mom group when she ·
wao; only a few weeks old,
and through the months it
has become clear that
everyone is comparing
their child's progress to
everyone else's. That's fine.
I guess, but my baby is the.
la-;t one to do everything,
and while the doctor says·
she's pretty much developmentally on track. it's very
hard for me. Should I just
quit the group?- B.K.
Dear B.K.: 01 course
you can quit the baby .
group if the comparisons .
between your child and the ·
others are making you
uncomfortable. Are the
women being unkind or
obnoxious? Everyone is
proud of their child and
thinks he or she is the
"best," but if the baby
group has deteriorated into
a contest among moms, it
would not be in your best
interest or that of your
child to continue. But if
everyone is nice and
understanding. and you
arc just feeling discouraged by your child's slower development. running
away from other kids her
age probably is not going
to make you feel any better
or help your child develop
appropriate social relationships.

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The Key to sav ng tves ..

Other events
Wednesday, Sept 22
POMEROY- Free community fellowship dinner at
New Beginnings Church,
Second Street, Pomeroy.
4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Friday, Sept 24
MIDDLEPORT - Free
commu.nity
dinner
at
Middleport Church of Christ,
5 p.m. Doors open at 4:30.
Chicken, vegetables, rice
and dessert.

Reunions
Sunday, Sept 26
RACINE - The Thomas •
and
Isabel
(Weaver)
Stobart reunion will be held
1 p.m. Racine Star Mill
Park..Take covered dish.
Family and friends invited.
RACINE
- GideonRoush reunion, 1 p.m., Star
Mill Pari&lt;. Covered dish.

Birthdays
Friday, Sept 24
WEST
COLUMBIA,
W.VA. - Josephine Kirby
of West Columbia, W.Va., is
turning 92 today. Cards may
be sent to her at 16698
Ohio River Road, West
Columbia, 25287.
Saturday, Sept 25
WEST
COLUMBIA,
W.VA. - Elizabeth "Sis"
Roush of West Columbia,
W.Va. is turning 80 today.
Cards may be sent to her at
PO Box 7, West Colu:nbia,
25287.

Mommograpny Patent

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'

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 23,

2010

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
·

Publish~r

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cougress shall make tro law respecting an
establishme11t of religion, or prohibititrg the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, a11d to petition tlte
Govemment for a redress of grievances.
The Fitst Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOUR OPINION

Grieved by thieves
Dear Editor:
I am a grieving mother. My son will be gone
four years this month. I visit his grave often
because the pain and hurt is still there.
Today I went to visit only to find someone had
stolen from his grave once again. I do not understand why anyone could do this? The things we
put on our loved one's grave is to honor their
memory of the things they loved. It tears my heart
in two to think that someone could stoop so low as
to steal from a loved one's grave.
What if that was their father, mother. brother,
sister or grandparents or God forbid, their child?
I hope the good Lord looks down on them and
He knows who it is. I hope He does not show any
mercy for a thief that steals from a loved one's
grave that the family loves and misses forever.
Sue Gilmore
Middleport

Dental sealants
Dear Editor:
To the parents of second and sixth graders in
Meigs County public schools. 1 want to encourage
you to participate in the Meigs County dental
sealant program. This school-based program.
which has been in Meigs County schools for over
20 years. is once again offering free dental exams
and dental sealants to all students in those grades.
The program operates on a grant from the Ohio
Department of Health and provides basic dental
screenings. oral health education, and sealant
applications through fully-equipped portable dental clinics that travel to Eastern Elementary, Meigs
· Primary, Meigs Intermediate. Meigs Middle and
Southern Elementary schools.
The program targets second and sixth graders to
provide sealants for the vulnerable newly-erupted
permanent molars. Followup in the third and seventh grade allows screening for sealant retention
and sealing previously unerupted molars. Tooth
decay is the number one chronic childhood illness
in our country and is preventable. Preventive dentistry (regular visits, good oral hygiene, and
sealants) is the key to preventing tooth decay and
having a healthy mouth. The sealants protect the
teeth and prevent decay by sealing out food and
bacteria.
Participation in the program is easy by singing
the yellow consent form the child brought home
the first day of school and promptly returning it to
the student's teacher.
Sue Cammarata
Meigs County Dental Sealant Program

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing, must be signed and include address t;~nd
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste. addressing issues, not person·
alities. "Thank You" letters will not be accepted for publication.

INSIDE WASHINGTON"

•

Millions made in GOP mailings
Bv DENNIS CONRAD

lawmakers to insist there's no
connection between official mail
and their campaigns when the
When Republican members of same mailing firm wears both
Congress need literature to send hats." said Pete Sepp. executive
out to constituents on their doings vice president of the National
in office, dozens turn to a Utah Taxpayers Union.
firm that churns out slick, fullThe owners say they hold no
color mailers at taxpayer expense. party posts, do not coordinate
When they need political mail- non-political work with campaign
ers designed to get them re-t:!lect- organizations and see no legal or
ed. some of them turn to the same ethical problems with how they
people.
operate.
In theory, policy and politics are
They say their companies do
separate
enterprises
in their jobs separately, and note that
Washington. In practice, they are all government-financed mailings
joined at the hip.
are reviewed by a bipartisan
The line between them may be House commission to ensure they
blurred more than usual in the aren't political.
Out of legal· necessity, the
work done by sister companies
with the same owners who pro- Franking Group becomes virtualduce franked constituent mail ly inactive at the height of the
paid by the government, then ' campaign season. The House bars
switch to election propaganda federally financed constituent
paid by campaigns, just as an mailings within 90 days of an
industrial plant retools its assem- election. and that's when lawmakbly line to meet changing ers typically shift to their political
demand.
campaigns to send out their mailUtah-based
Arena ings.
"The Franking Group basically
Communications produces political direct mail for a number of goes dark as we focus on - as we
House members as well as the then put on our hats and work on
national Republican Party and - the political world." said
other GOP candidates. lts sister David Jacobs. its managing partcompany, the Franking Group. ner and co-owner. He. Peter
has collected millions of federal Valcarce and James Ohman jointdollars for design and printing ly own the companies.
It's only natural. they say, to
work for dozens of Republican
House members, many of them work solely for members of one
the same as its political clients.
party.
The two companies' ties could
"That
strategy
obviously
hardly be tighter; both are owned retlects the nature of the House,"
by the same three businessmen. said Valcarce, who more than a
and they share a warehouse in Salt decade ago served briefly as an
Lake City. And it's often hard to aide to Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah.,
distinguish between the polished and soon helped found the
mailers printed on the taxpayers' Franking Group. "Staffers pick
dime and the re-election circulars sides. Consultants pick sides.
produced and paid from political Everybody at one point has to
contributions.
pick a side."·
House rules allow lawmakers to
The Franking Group's website
send federally financed mass identifies 64 House Republicans
mailings to their constituents as who have been clients and says
long as they're not intended to there have been many more.
help in a re-election campaign or House records sho\v the firm was
have some other partisan purpose. paid slightly more than $4 million
''It only becomes tougher for by the government during the 12ASSOCIATED PRESS

month period ended in June for
work done on behalf of 60 House
Republicans - about a third of
the chamber's GOP membership.
Not only is the Franking Group
the dominant direct-mail vendor
for taxpayer-financed mailings
directed by Republicans. it easily
outpaces leading Democratic
firms. according to a review of
House records by The Associated
Press.
The leading Democratic-oriented vendor received about S 1.2
million in the same 12-month
That
company.
period.
Constituent
Communication
LLC, also has ties to a political
direct-mail firm.
Postal Service records show
taxpayer-financed mailings from
the Franking Group wind up in
mail boxes all over the nation. F'
example. a Nov. 6 shipment of
containers with I 00,253 pieces o
mail went to Indiana for GOP
Rep. Dan Burton.
Messages touted .. Dan Burton ·s
Fall Job Fair...Help get Indiana
working again~.. Such boosterism
is common to the franked mail of
members of both parties as lawmakers pitch their events. policies
- and themselves - without
overtly political salesmanship.
At least 19 of the Republicans
named on the Franking Group
website as clients also hired
Arena Communications. typically
for campaign mailings. in one or
more of the election cycles since
2004. according to Federal
Election Commission records.
Since
200 I,
Arena
Communications has done more
than $5.4 million in work on
behalf of Republican House candidates. according to the FEC.
Other FEC records show the company was a major provider of millions of dollars worth of direct
mail for George W. Bush's Ia.
presidential campaign in 2004. a
well as handling business for the
national patty and its House campaign ann.

,
·
·
.

'
·
·

·

The Daily Sentinel
Reade
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error 1n a story. call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflic~. Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Advertising
Advertising
Director: Pam
Caldwell. 740·446-2342, Ext. 17
Retail: Matt Rodgers. Ext. 15
Retail: Brenda Davis. Ext 16
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Circulation
Circulation Manager: 740·446·
2342, Ext 11

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published Tuesday through Friday.
11 1 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second·class postage patd at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Assoctated Press
and · the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
11ons to The Daily Sentinel. PO.
Box 729, Pomeroy. Ohto 45769.

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�Thursday, September 23,

Anderson
from pageA1
911, Olive Township and
other volunteer fire departments, utility companies
and elected officials have
been around the clock
since the storm struck last
sday.
e
Gallia-Jackson• dgs-Vinton Solid Waste
District has provided assistance in removing debris,
which must be taken to the
district's Jackson landfill
because local landfills are
not rated to accept mixed
debris that includes building materials.
The Salvation Army

2010

arrived at the scene on
Wednesday. Workers from
churches in the Reedsville
area, as well as from other
commtmities, have provided hot meals for the 31
families whose homes
were destroyed. Donations
of clothing, drinking water
and materials needed for
debris removal have also
been coming into the Eden
U.B. parish hall, which has
been turned into an emergency response center.
Anderson said churches
from as far away as
Lancaster and Marietta
have sent food for the
affected families.

Unusual worry for
economy: Is inflation
too low?
WASHINGTON (AP)
- It might seem like
prices are rising wherever you look, from medical care to college
tuition. Yet to the Federal
Reserve, they might not
Agoing up fast enough.
.
he Fed says a little
more inflation might be
just the thing to start a
chain reaction that would
ultimately create jobs and avoid a spiral of
falling prices that could
damage the economy.
In a statement Tuesday.
the Fed avoided directly
mentioning the dreaded
word "deflation." But it
signaled its concern that
today's very low inflation might lead to actual
price drops.
The Fed, meeting for
the last time before the
midterm elections, said
its measures show inflation
is
"somewhat
below" desirable levels
for the economy. That
may sound strange,
because inflation is often
made out to be an economic evil.
And it can be, when it
out of control. But
pposite can be even
•
worse.
Once deflation takes
hold, it can wreck an
economy. Workers suffer
pay cuts. Corporate profits shrivel. Stock values
fall. People, businesses
and the government find
it costlier to pare debt.
Foreclosures and bankruptcies rise.
And people spend less,
convinced that prices
will fall even further if
they just wait. That trend
has already emerged in
the housing market.
Many would-be buyers
are standing on the sidelines, waiting for home
prices to fall further.
Spending by shoppers
accounts for about 70
percent of economic
activity in the United
States. A further drop in
tht:ir spending could
entially throw the
nomy back into
ession.
It's true that the costs
of items like health care,
education and transportation have surged.
But the Fed studies a
wide range of prices
across the economy.
Overall consumer prices
- excluding food and
energy prices, which are
volatile - inched up just
0.9 percent for the 12
months that ended in
August. That matched a
44-year low, according to
the government.
And it's well below the
Fed's comfort zone for
inflation, which ranges
between 1.5 percent and
2 percent over a year.
The Fed would like to
see inflation at least that
high because it woul.d
show the economy JS
making a solid recovery.
would mean shoppers
confident enough to
•

l

spend and businesses
confident enough in customer demand to raise
prices.
Confident
employers are more likely to create jobs.
Right now, prices are
relatively low because
the economy is still so
weak. Companies can't
raise prices because high
unemployment and scant
pay gains are making
shoppers
cautious.
Companies have to resort
to discounts and promotions to entice them.
The Fed's statement
Tuesday made clear that
it's prepared to intervene
to prevent deflation. One
way would be to make
big purchases of government bonds to drive
down long-term interest
rates .. That could help
stimulate borrowing and
spending.
"The average person
may be bewildered by
the Fed's concern about
deflation," said Allen
Sinai, chief economist at
Decision
Economics.
"But part of its job is to
be educational. The Fed
wants people to know it
is not going to let this
rare disease happen."
And spreading more
confidence among consumers and businesses
would reduce the likelihood of a deflationary
spiral, Sinai said.
The last time the country endured a destabilizing case of deflation was
during
the
Great
Depression of the 1930s.
Japan suffered what's
often called a ''lost
decade" in the 1990s
after a financial crisis led
to deflation and economic stagnation.
When deflation strikes,
it's hard to embolden
consumers and businesses to spend. Japan is still
fighting deflation even as
it has kept its key shortterm interest rates near
zero, as the Fed has for
nearly two years. Low
rates are supposed to
help neutralize deflation
by spurring people to
borrow and buy things.
Yet so far, the Fed's
ultra-low · rates have
failed to rejuvenate the
economy.
The Fed signaled this
week that it's prepared to
act if the economy worsens, and its next likely
line of attack would be to
flood more money into
the economy by buying
Treasury bonds.
Yet deflation-fighting
moves carry their own
risks. Super-low rates
lead to speculative buying, creating dangerous
bubbles in the prices of
bonds, commodities or
other assets.
A long period of superlow rates after the 2001
recession helped feed a
housing bubble that burst
and led to the 2007-2009
recession.

;

VISit us online at
mydailysentinel.c~m

Your online source for news

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

For the Record

Meigs County Forecast

• David Edward Clark,
63, Kimberly Kay Proffitt.
46, Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Glerk of
• Walid Victor Zahran,
Courts Diane Lynch filed 23, Tiffany Nicole Willis,
the following in the court's 22, Pomeroy.
public record:
Domestic
• Divorce granted to
Kevin Allen Phillips, Jr.,
POMEROY - Meigs
from Brittney Lee Phillips.
• Dissolution granted to County 911 dispatched
Karen Pearl Adams, David these calls for ·emergency
medical assistance:
Lawrence Adams.
Thesday
8:58 am., Manuel Road,
unknown
emergency;
10:59 a.m., New Lima
POMEROY- Judge L. Road, abdominal pain;
Scott Powell issued mar- 2:39 p.m., West Main
riage licenses:
Street, Pomeroy, motor
• Brandon
Michael vehicle collision; 5:25
Kimes, 23, Alysha Lyn p.m.,
First
Avenue,
Gerlaugh, 19, Middleport. Reedsville, fall; 5:33 p.m.,
• Jeremy David Cline, Page Street, difficulty
35, Sabrina Lee Collins, breathing.
5:39 p.m., Railroad
22, Reedsville.
• Jerry Edward Justis, Street, chest pain; 9: 10
19, Carl Nichole Holbrook, p.m., Beech Grove Road,
high temperature.
18, Racine.
Wednesday
• David Ray Eakins, 33.
5:21
a.m., Mulberry
and Patricia Jean Tobias,
Heights, chest pain.
32, Middleport.

Thursday: Sunny. with
a high near 92. Calm wind
becoming west between 7
and 10 mph.
Thursday
~ight:
Mostly clear, with a low
around 64. Light south
wind.
Friday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 91. Calm
wind becoming southwest
between 8 and 11 mph.
Friday
Night:
A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
64. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent. New
rainfall amounts of less
than a tenth of an inch,
except higher amounts
possible in thunderstorms.
Saturday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 79.
Saturday
Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 52.
Sunday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 74.
Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.

Common Pleas

911

Probate

Obituaries
Alma Peterson
Alma G. Peterson, 89, Rutland, passed away
Tuesday, Sept. 21, 2010, at her residence. She was a
beloved mother, grandmother and great grandmother.
Born April 1.1, 1921, at Jenkins, Ky., to the late
Morgan L. and Causby M. Mullens Greer, Alma was a
homemaker and farmer, and worked during World War
II as an inspector at Goodyear. She was an avid fan of
the Cincinnati Reds.
Surviving are two sons, Jack B. (Barb) Peterson and
David (Linda) Peterson, all of Rutland; a brother,
Doyle Greer, Henderson, Tex.; sister, Estelle Sizemore,
Miarni~burg; six grandchildren; 11 great grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
brother, Charlie Greer; five sisters: Belva Wright, Edna
Sizemore, Myrtle Greer, Claire Haynes, and Marcell
McFall; and a nephew, Charlie Chilgren.
Funeral will be at 1 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 24, 2010 at
Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, with Rev. Amos
Tillis officiating. Burial will be at Miles Cemetery,
Rutland.
Family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. on
Thursday at the funeral home.

Sunday Night: A
of
showers.
chance
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 55. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Monday: Showers likely ancJ, possibly a thunderstorm. Some of the storms
could produce heavy rainfall. Cloudy, with a high
near 75. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
Monday
Night:
Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Some
of the storms could produce heavy rainfall.
Cloudy, with a low around
57. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
Thesday: A chance of
showers. Cloudy, with a
high near 78. Chance of
precipitation is 50 percent.
Thesday Night: A
of
showers.
chance
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 55. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Wednesday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near
79.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 36.43
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 61.85
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 45.50
Big Lots (NYSE) - 33.65
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 28.65
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 48.81
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 11.94
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.17
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)- 3.45
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 29.68
Collins (NYSE)- 57.60
DuPont (NYSE)- 44.62
US Bank (NYSE)- 22.52
Gen Electric (NYSE) -16.50
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- 27.73
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 39.94
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.62
Ltd Brands (NYSE)- 26.18
Norfolk So (NYSE)- 58.93
OVBC (NASDAQ) -19.00

BBT (NYSE) - 23.66
Peoples (NASDAQ) -12.54
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.66
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.15
Rockwell (NYSE)- 60.25
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 6.95
Royal Dutch Shell- 59.14
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 71.77
WaH-1arl (NYSE) - 53.82
Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.33
WesBanco (NYSE) - 16.31
Worthington (NYSE) -14.98

Daily stock repotts are the 4 p.m. fT
closing quotes of transactions for
September 22, 2010, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac
Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant

at (304) 674-D174. Member SIPC.

Abbott recalls infant formula
on bug contamination
WASHINGTON
(AP) Drugmaker
Abbott Laboratories
said Wednesday it is
recalling millions of
containers of its bestselling Similac infant
formula that may be
contaminated
with
insect parts.
The voluntary action
affects up to 5 million
Similac-brand powder
formulas sold in the
U.S., Puerto Rico,
Guam
and
some
Caribbean countries.
The company said the
products may contain
a small beetle or larvae,
which
could
cause stomach ache
and digestion problems.
The recall does not
affect any liquid forQlulas or other Abbottbrand products.
A company spokes-

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed
The ~aily
Sentinel
Subscribe
today
7 40-992-2156

woman said Abbott online to determine if
uncovered the insects they are subject to the
last week in one sec- recall. The products
tion of a Michigan should be returned to
manufacturing plant.
Abbott for a full
"We
immediately refund.
shut down that one
"Delivering anything
area and began an less than the highest
investigation,"
said quality infant formula
Abbott's
Melissa is unacceptable to us,"
Brotz. "We're in the said Bratz. "We will
process of resolving it do whatever is necesnow." Abbott manufac- sary to maintain the
tures Similac at sever- trust of parents in the
al U.S. sites.
corning weeks."
Brotz said the comThe affected prodpany has been consult- ucts were sold in plasing with the Food and tic containers and varDrug Administration, ious can sizes, includwhich
determined ing 8-ounce, 12.4there was no "immedi- ounce and 12.9-ounce.
ate health risk" from
Similac is the bestthe contamination.
selling infant formula
The company has set in the U.S. Abbott's
up a website and con- nutritional products sumer hot line at (800) which include adult
986-8850. Consumers brands like Ensure can enter the lot num- had sales of $5.3 bilber on their containers lion last year.

Abbott expects to
lose $100 million in
connection with the
recall. However, the
North Chicago, Ill.,
company confirmed its
third-quarter earnings
guidance
between
$1.03 and $1.05 per
share.
Shares of Abbott
Laboratories fell 12
cents to $52.03 in
afternoon trading.

- ~nJerson 'Mc1JanM •
Pumra( ?feme
;

I
!

Adam McDaniel
&amp; J11me" Anden;on

1

DIREcroRs

~~~~~~

I
•

Pusonaliztd Fu11era/ Stnicts 'I

Middleport Pomero)
992-5141 992-5444

-~.andmoumcdanitl~~-

FREE
HEALTH SCREENINGS
CHOLESTEROL, BLOOD PRESSURE AND DIABETES
Free screening and education for Cholesterol, Blood Pressure and
Diabetes will be available to the community on Friday, September
24, 2010 from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm at the Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center at 36759 Rocksprings Rd. in Pomeroy, Ohio.
Total Cholesterol and Glucose can be non-fasting. Lipid Panel
(cholesterol, triglyceride, HDL &amp; LDL) require fasting for 9-12
hours.
There is no charge for the screenings.
Screenings and health information will be provided by the Ohio
University College of Osteopathic Medicine's Community Health
Programs. Registration is not required. For more information. please
call740-597-1212 or 1-800-844-2654.

Rocksprings
REHABILITATION CENTER

t'

�-

Thursday, September 23, 2010

p

-

w

..... w

•

'*""

w

•

.,....

The Daily Se~tinel • Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

Book unearths divisions over Obam8 war plan
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Barack
Obama·s early attempts
to seize control of a
neglected Afghanistan
war yielded a strategy
that pleased almost no
one and hasn't turned the
tide of a conflict near its
lOth year.
Just how contentious
that plan has been, inside
the Obama White House
as well as outside, is captured
in
Bob
Woodward's new book.
The account exposes the
roots of an Afghanistan
exit plan driven more by
politics than national
security and shows the
president worried about
losing the support of the
public and his party.
"I have two years with
the public on this,''
Obama is quoted as saying at one point, referring to what the administration still considers a
finite well of public
patience.
Such pnvate tears have
been aired publicly.
Defense
Secretary
Robert Gates has said the
United States and its
NATO partners must
show clear progress by
the end of this year or
risk a collapse of public
support.
The book, "Obama 's

Wars,"
reveals
that
Obama's aides were
deeply divided over the
war even as the president
agreed to nearly triple
troop levels in a gamble
reminiscent of former
President George W.
Bush's Iraq war "surge."
"I want an exit strategy," Obama said at one
meeting, as he ahd White
House aides groused that
the Pentagon brass was
boxing him in.
He got one, at leas1 on
paper. Obama has said he
will begin withdrawing
forces in July 2011. an
arbitrary date that many
in the military see as artificial and perhaps premature.
Privately, Obama told
Vice President Joe Biden
to push his alternative
strategy opposing a big
troop buildup in meetings. according to the
book.
While Obama ultimately rejected the alternative plan. the book
says. he set a withdrawal
timetable because, ''I
can't Jose the whole
Democratic Party."
Obama's top White
House
adviser
on
Afghanistan and his special envoy for the region
are described as believing the surge and with-

drawal strategy will not
work.
Details from the book
were first reported by
The New York Times,
which obtained a copy
before
its
release
Monday.
The
Washington Post also
reported extensively on
the book by its longtime
reporter and editor. It
shot to No. 2 on the
Amazon best-seller list
Wednesday.
Obama was among
administration officials
Woodward interviewed
for the book. It contains
previously
classified
information, including a
secret six-page "terms
sheet" that a frustrated
Obama dictated himself
as he tried to bring the
generals to heel.
White House press
secretary Robert Gibbs
said divisions
were
inevitable.
"I think that the book
portrays a thoughtful,
vigorous policy process
that led to a strategy to
get the best chance of
achieving our objectives
and
goals
in
Afghanistan," he said. "I
can't imagine that any
option that the president
looked at would not have
engendered
some
debate."

Pentagon press secre- remain in Helmand ia says U.S. intelligence
tary Geoff Morrell had a .larger numbers than once found Karzai was maniccopy Wednesday, but em isioned. Parts of the depressive and on drugs
decline'd comment on the Kandahar
campaign for it. In Kabul, Karzai's
were put off for months spokesman
substance of the book.
Waheed
"We are not going to amid signs that local Omar said that assertion
start offering literary Afghans did not wel- is baseless and the
criticism," he said.
come it. U.S. forces are dent takes no
A NATO spokesman in now engaged 111 heavy tion.
Afghanistan,
German fighting in districts surObama was deeply
Brig. Gen. Josef Blotz, rounding Kandahar City. angered by insulting
said the strategy is workU.S. casualties mount- comments about senior
ing and will show larger ed through the year, as administration officials
results by the end of this the administration and by aides to then-war
year.
military leaders warned commander Gen. Stanley
"Let's be humble and they would. 2010 is now McChrystal printed in a
modest," Blotz said. the deadliest year for Ro1ling Stone profile in
"This
is
work
in U.S. forces since the
June. McChrystal was
progress. We need some 2001 U.S.-led invasion.
,&lt;;wiftly fired, but the
more time."
The Obama adminisObama announced his tration plans a review of remarks revealed ongoing frustration over what
redrawn war plan in the
strategy
in
December, with a heavy December but no major some front-line officers
emphasis on his promise "course correction." as see as micromanaging by
to begin withdrawing senior officials have put Washington.
The new commander,
U.S. forces next summer. it.
Gen.
David Petraeus. has
The Obama plan's first
Even after the strategy
begun
to give carefully
major test was an early was announced, howevspring military offensive er, sharp divisions per- upbeat assessments of
in the Taliban stronghold sisted.
the war. He and other
of Helmand Province. It
A year after the bruis- officials have said that
was supposed to build ing debate last fall, the only now, with Obama's
momentum for an even administration remains surge forces finally all in
more crucial campaign
at odds over how to cali- place. can results of the
in next-door Kandahar
brate the U.S. relation- strategy be fully meaProvince, birthplace of
ship
with
Afghan sured.
~
the Taliban insurgency.
Obama doesn't t
President Hamid Karzai.
Neither campaign has
He is seen variously as about "winning." an
gone
as
planned.
neither does Petraeus.
Security in the central the linchpin or the The general says success
Helmand River Valley Achilles' heel ' of .U.S. should be defined as
remains iffy, and U.S. chances for even modest achieving
U.S.
and
forces have had to success.
The Woodward book NATO objectives.

Violence in east Jerusalem clouds peace efforts
JERUSALEM (AP) Crowds of Palestinian
youths violently rampaged
in
east
Jerusalem
Wednesday following the
shooting death of a local
man. clouding fragile
peace efforts even as the
Palestinian president signaled he may back away
from threats to quit negotiations if Israel resumes
West Bank settlement construction.
At one point. Israeli riot
police stormed the hilltop
compound known to Jews
ac; the Temple Mount and
to Muslims as the Noble
Sanctuary the most
explosive site in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
and the place where the
last Palestinian uprising
began almost exactly 10
years ago.
That uprising - which
killed thousands of people
over some five years of
violence - erupted after a
failed U.S.-led peace effort
at
Camp
David.
Wednesday's
outburst
comes less than a month
after the sides resumed
peace negotiations, at a
tense moment when those
talks are already facing
possible collapse over
Israel's plans to end its I 0month slowdown of construction in the Jewish settlements of the West Bank.
The "moratorium" on
construction was declared
last November under
intense U.S. pressure to
help coax the Palestinians
into talks with the government of Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, who
- despite having accepted the principle of a
Palestinian
state
inspires very little faith in
the
Palestinians.
Netanyahu said all along
that the measure would
end on Sunday - and the
Palestinians have threatened to walk away from
the talks if this occurs.
The impasse and looming deadline have created a
palpable tension that has
built throughout the week.
On Monday, Israel's
deputy premier made a
public call on
the
Palestinians to abandon
their demand, casting such
a move as a mutual "com. promise" in which Israel
might retain some of the
restiictions. On Tuesday,
Israel's military chief
warned that a collapse of
the talks could well lead to
violence.
Meanwhile, the Israell
political system braced for
either
outcome.
If
Nctanyahu backs down
and extends the freeze,
troubles with his pro-settler coalition partners are
likely and he would have
to persuade the centriSt

Kadirna party to join the
coalition.
If he doesn't and the
talks break down, Israel's
international
standing
would suffer - alongside
the possibility of renewed
violence
with
the
Palestinians.
A glimmer of hope
arrived from the United
States, where Palestinian
President
Mahmoud
Abbas indicated a possible
softening of his position in
a Tuesday night address to
prominent
American
Jewish figures.
"I cannot say I will leave
the negotiations, but it's
very difficult for me to
resume talks if Prime
Minister
Netanyahu
declares that he will continue his (settlement)
activity in the West Bank
and Jerusalem." Abbas
said, according to a transcript of the event obtained
by The Associated Press.
The Palestinian ambassador to the United
Nations later said Abbas'
comments had been misconstrued and Abbas was
still ready to walk away.
"The position of the
president is still the same."
Riyad Mansour said. But
he stopped short of a
denial, and the S. Daniel
Abraham Center for
Middle East Peace, which
sponsored the meeting,
said the comments were
recorded and Abbas was
speaking in English.
In Israel the story led
news reports - before
being overtaken by the
ominous outburst of violence.
Clashes erupted in the
Silwan
neighborhood
shortly after a 32-year-old
Palestinian man was killed
by a private Israeli security
guard watching over
Jewish families in the area.
About 70 ultranationalist
Jewish families live in
Silwan, amid some 50.000
Palestinian residents.
Israeli police said the
man, Sarnir Sirhan, had a
criminal record and was
shot overnight after a
group of youths pelted the
guard with stones. But residents said that Sirhan. a
father of five young children, was unlikely to have
pruticipated in the violence. They also noted he
was killed at about 4 a.m.,
an unlikely time for stone
throwing.
After the shooting, rioting spread throughout
Silwan and to the nearby
walled Old City, intensifying during the man's
funeral.
Young men and boys
with their faces covered
with T-shirts to avoid identification set fire to
garbage bins and tires,

sending plumes of smoke
across the. crammed neighborhood.
They hurled concrete
chunks and rocks at paramilitary
police
and
demanded revenge.. "We
will defend you with our
blood and souls, martyr,"
protesters chanted.
Police responded by firing off rounds of acrid tear
gas, which wafted through
the area.
Police
spokesman
Micky Rosenfeld said
police moved into the disputed compound after
stone throwers attacked
Jewish worshippers at the
adjacent Western Wall, the
holiest prayer site for
Jews.
A Muslim eyewitness
on the compound said the
clashes were brief.
The area was crowded
with people for the beginning of the seven-day
Jewish festival of Sukkot
- one of the three Jewish
pilgrimage festivals dwing
which Jews in biblical'
times would flock to
Jerusalem.
Rosenfeld said the stone
throwers fled into the Al
Aqsa Mosque, Islam's
third holiest site, and after
a standoff for several minutes, riot forces pulled
back without further incident.
A teenage boy held the
hand of Sirhan's fouryear-old son Sultan, taking
him to where clashes were
taking . place. Later he
walked among the protesters waving a large
Palestinian flag.
"Kill the Jews!" he
chanted, at the prompting
of an elderly relative.
In
other
unrest.
Palestinian youths overturned three cars with passengers inside. in one case
dragging a man out of his
vehicle and stabbing him.
They smashed the windows of five buses, forcing
passengers on one of them
to flee, and a paramilitary
police jeep was set on fire
and destroyed.
Ten
Israelis
were
wounded, including the
stabbing victim who was
seriously hurt. police said.
Palestinian medics said 14
people were lightly hurt.
By early evening, sporadic
riots were still taking
place.
The Association for
Civil Rights in Israel. an
Israeli advocacy group,
recently wrote in a report
that Israeli security firms
act like a private police
force for Silwan 's Jewish
residents. It said the firms
often receive government
funding and frequently use
threats and
violence
against Arab residents,
while police are reluctant

to intervene.
The violence underscored the difficulty of
bringing true peace to
Jerusalem - which will
perhaps be the thorniest
issue in the peace talks
launched this month under
U.S. aegis, with President
Barack Obama saying he
hoped for agreement within a year. Other challenges

will be the future of to the Jewish leaders,
Palestinian refugees and Abbas called on Israel to
borders.
'extend
the
building
But for the talks to reach restrictions for several
that stage. the c\:lrrent months while the sides
deadlock over the settle- negotiate the big issues.
ment freeze will have to "At that time, Israelis will
be. finessed - and offibe free to build in their tercials from both sides have
litory
and the Palestinians
been meeting on the disthe
same:·
he said.
pute with U.S. mediators.
· In his two-hour address

On behalf of the many families in
Meigs County who will benefit from your
generous donation during the
2010 Meigs County FairThe Southeastern Ohio Foodbank Staff
sincerely thank you!
Home National Bank, Racine, Ohio
Rhett Beegle- market Jamb
Katelynn Chevalier- market goat
Makayla Findley- market goat
Chelsea Holter- market hog
Doug (Greg) Jenkins- market hog
Adam Pape- market hog
Kirk Pullins- dairy feeder calf
A.J. Roush- market lamb
Taiton Sarver- market goat
Lindsay Teaford- market hog
Morgan Windon- commercial feeder
calf
Ashlyn Wolfe;:- market hog

Dr. Douglas Hunter, Racine, Ohio
Caitlyn Holter- market hog
Faith Teaford- market hog

River Front Meat &amp; Deli, Pomeroy &amp;
Dr. Douglas Hunter, Racine
Garrett Wolfe- market hog

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company
Paige Buckley- market lamb
Allison Deem- market goat

O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
Ohio

AEP- Mountaineer Plant, New
Haven, WV
Courtney Fitzgerald- market hog
Alyssa Smith- market hog
Heidi Willis- market goat

AEP- Gavin Plant, Cheshire, Ohio
Shana Roush-

mark~t

hog

Mark Porter GM Super Center.
·Pomeroy, Ohio
Victoria Curtis- market hog

Thomas Rental Center. Pomeroy.
Middleport &amp; Gallipolis
Mark Gibbs- market hog

Ridenour Gas Service, Chester,
Oliio
Michele Satterfield- market goat

Parker Corporation. Tupper
Plains. Ohio
Jessica Parker- market goat ·

Swisher &amp; Lohse &amp; The Drug
Store
Mallor;y Nicodemus- commercial
feeder calf

Rebecca Chadwell- market hog

Mel Weese, Optometrist, Radne, Ohio
Trenton Cook- market lamb

AEP- Phillip Sporn Plant, New haven,

wv

Justin Cotterill- commercial feeder
calf
Christopher Holter- market hog
Hanna,h Mulford market hog '

Kinsale Corporation, Pomeroy,
Ohio
Zachary Manuel- market hog

Pleasant Valley Hospital &amp; .Mike
Bartrum &amp; Peoples Bank &amp; The
Cuttin Crew
Ke:sey Johnson- market goat

NATIONAL BANK

fQ.L

..

0

�-

•

4 1

"I-'-~------ ~----.·-·-···

&gt;

Bl

Th Daily Sentinel

Inside
Rio Gnmde soccer" ins, Page B2

Thursday, September 23,2010

~locAL;=h,~c:~~
:~r~==
~::f=
:.~~~=
~ ~Ji =B=ig=r=o=ad=g=a=m=e=s=aw=a=it=O=h=io=s=q=ua=d=s=th=is=w=e=e=.k=en=d
Gallt:&gt; counties

'

Ihvmt~y.~~

Volleyball
Manetta at Gall a Ace • 5 15 p.m
Eastern at M llcr 6 p m
Fed Hocking at Southern 6 p 1"'1.
Fetrl~lld at Rtver VaHey. 5 30 p m
Pomt Pleasant at Poca 6 p m
OVCS et Hannan 6 30 p m
Burch at Hannan, 6 p m
,
Cross Country
Metgs Rrver va ey et Jackson
lnvttauonel 4 30 p m
Golf

Eastern at Be pre. 5 p m
Watertord at Southern 5 p m
South Gn a. Federal Hocktng
Pomt at Wahama, 4 30 p m
Soccer
Mar etta et Gallta Ace. 5 p m
PI Pleasant (G) at SISSOnvtllo, 5 p m.
Pt. Pleasant (B) ul Stssonvtlle, 8 p.M.
F.r.idl!Y....S.QQte.~r~

•

Football
Galha Academy at Ironton. 7·30 p.m
Metgs at Southern. 7:30 p m
South Galha at Eastern, 7 30 p.m
ahama at Watertord. 7:30 p m
~~er Valley at Alexander 7 30 p.m
V'tntOf' CO. at Pt. Pleasant. 7.30 p m.
Buffalo at Hannan. 7:30p.m
Golf
Rrver Valley et OJC ChampiOnShips.
9am

Injuries
prompt W.Va.
high school to
forfeit game

BY SARAH HAWLEY
AND BRYAN WALTERS

Ohio will hit the mid\\ ay point of the football
season this weekend as
Week 5 gets underway m
the Buckeye State on
Friday night at 7:30p.m.
Southern and Eastern
\\ill both look to get over
the .500 mark at home,
while South Gallia and
~lcigs will look to do the
same in road contests.
Gallia Academ) will
attempt to stay unbeaten
t'n the season in a major
road battle of stateranked teams, while
River Valley will look to
end a serious scoring
drought
in
a:1other
team's backyard.
Here's a brief look at
the Week 5 contests in
Gallia and Meigs counties.
-

Mike Brace file photo/GAHSsports.com

The Gallia Academy football team returns home after week one's w1n at Athens to ring the v1ctory bell al
Memorial Field in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Please see Road, 86

River
Valley's
Kaitlyn
Roberts
(right)
blocks the
ball after a
spike by
Galli a
Academy's
Morgan
Daniels
(left) dur·
ing
Wednesday
evening's
non-league
match at
River
Valley High
School.
The Blue
Angels
won in four
sets.

'

CHARLESTON.
W.Va. (AP) - Hannan ,
High School has forfeited this week·~ football
game against neighboring Buffalo due to an
injury-depleted roster.
The Mason County
school has as man) as
eight injured players who
haven't received meJil:al
clearance to retum to the
. !:Iannan Prmctpal
aren Oldham
aid
"We knew gomg into
that game we \\Ould h11\e
roughl) 11-12 that could
have been released b)
Frida)," Oldham &lt;;aid.
··we would ha' e been
pia) ing the same bo)s on
offense and defense."
Hannan began the season ,,.·ith 2R pl:l) er~ on its
roster. Three quit the
team. Only eij!ht players
showed up lor practice
early this ,.,·eek. A few
others had scht.·dule conflicts involving other
school activities.
Athletic Director Brian
Hoffman said the Buffalo
~arne couldn't be moved
t(l a later date because

Please see Hanrian, 81

e

Marietta
wins SEOAL
golf title

Eagle golfers
edge Wahama

PREP VOLLEYBALL ROUNDUP

£ryan
Walters/
photo

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYO LYSENTNELCOM

.POMEROY. Ohio - In
a 'I VC Hcx;king Division
varsity golf match played
at the Kountry Hills Golf
Course, the Eac;tern Eagles
(9-4) defeated the Wahama
White Falcons (8-5) by 1
stroke. 178-179.
At times. it almost
1 seemed that neither team
wanted the victOI) with
players from both sides
making mi-.take.;; not normal to their usual play. In
the end, though. Eastern
prevailed in the play 6,
count 4 fonnat.
Eastem's scoring was
con-.istent and was lead by
Christian Amsbul)' and
Kyle Young who both shot
43. Then, Chris Bissell and
Da\ id \'vamer added identical scores of 46 to complete the -;coring for the
.
Jay \\'amers
. )
wmners.
and Luke Kunes's 54 were
not included in the tinal

I

-o

('()Lilli.

Wahama's Kevin Back
contributed the best score
for the White Falcon's with
a
43.
t\ forgan
point decision. Tht&gt;: Nottingham\ 44 was next
Angels broke away from in line while Samuel
a 19-16 lead in Game 4 Gordon added a 45.
by scoring six of the final Dakota Sisk completed the
seven points. wrapping scores that counted for
Wahama b) shooting a 47.
up the 3-1 match deci
Michael MacKnight and
sion.
Heather Ward led the Michael Hendricks both
Angels \\ ith 14 service shot 48 for the match ""ith
points and seven aces. their ~cores not t."'unting in
followed by Morgan the total.
Both Wahama and
Daniels and Hannah
Cunningham "ith 12 Eastern will end their prepoints each.
Kassic state tounament play on
' Saturday in the Riverside
Golf Course High St.:hool
Please see Roundup, 86 ln\'itational.
~

Blue Angel·s soar past RVHS in 4
SENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPORTS@ MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

BIDWELL. Ohio - It
was a spirited tie through
two games, but \isiting
Gallia Academ) ro-;e to
the occasion down the
stretch Wednesda\ night
and claimed a 25:13. 2426. 25-16. 25-17 victory
O\er host Ri,·er Valley
dudng a non-conference
matchup
volleyball
between Gallia County
~chools.

The
visiting
Blue a furious charge
Angels improved to R-2 which resulted in leads of
0\erall after winning 16-8 and 24-19.
The Angels rallied with
their second consecutive
match, while the Lady five straight points to
Raiders had a four-game knot things up at 24-all.
\\inning streak snapped but the hosts responded
wh1le falling to 8-5 over- With t\\ o straight points
for the win and a 1-all
all.
GAHS stormed out to a match tie.
Gallia Academy capcommandin~
19-8
advantag$! m Game I tured the momentum in
before claiming a ·1-0 Game 3. jumping out to
i11atch kad with a 12- an early 14-8 lead before
point \'ictory. RVHS, ultimately taking a 2-l
however, retaliated with . match edge with a nine-

BY CRAIG DUNN
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

LANCASTER . Ohio
- As expected. a veteran
team of Marietta Tigers
succcs~fully
defended
their Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League golf
championship Tuesday
afternoon at Valley View
Golf Club just outside
Lancaster.
The Tigers not onl)
shot a team score of 304,
besting last cason's 310
total on the same course
bv six strokes. but five of
their six players earned
all-league statu~... and
one of those scores didn't
'en count tmvard~ the
1al team -;core.
•
Marietta made its final
SEOAL golf tourney a
winning one by nearly 20
strokes over runner-up
Warren (323). which was
followed by third-place
Gallia Academy (331)
and fourth-place Logan
(335).
Jackson (353) placed
fifth, Portsmouth (369)

Please see Golf, 81
f

Point Pleasant hosting, Wahama hits the road
'

BY SARAH HAWLEY
AND BRYAN WALTERS

Week 5 takes its start
Friday night '' hen a pair of
Mason Cow11y teruns hit
the gridiron in eattcing
matchups at 7:30p.m.
Point Pleasant (2-1) will
be aiming for a home win
this weekend in a non-conference matchup. while
Wahama (3-0. 3-0) will
look to remain unbeaten
and atop the Tri-Valle)
Conference
Hocking
Division standings with
victory on the road.
!Iannan dLte to
injuries - forfeited its
hiday night home .:ontest
"'ith
Buffalo
on
Wednesday.
!Jere's a btief look at the
Week 5 contests in \lasnn
Count).

a

VINTON COUNTY AT POINT
PLEASANT

l11ere 's a first time for
cvetythino.
Justy Burleson \\ill be

•

making his return to the
OVP iirca on Friday night
\\hen Vinton County travel.; to Point PleRsant for ib
first-ever
head-to-head
meeting in a Week 5 nonconference matchup in
.\1ason County.
Burleson - who led
South Gallia to a pair of
pla)off berths (l\Cr se\Cn
)Cars as bead coach before
taking the VCHS job this
fall - enter., the weekend
fresh off his first win with
the Vikings, an I R-17 decision 0\Cr Waverly.
The Vikings (1-3) also
have losses to Unioto .(337). Piketon (21-0) and
Jackson (42-6) this season
and are 0-2 overall in .road
contests.
The Vikinus arc awragin~ 7.X poit~s ollensivcly
tht~ season, but are a lim\ing 28.3 points as a defensive' unit.
The Big Blacks (2-1 ). on
the other hand, have been

Please see W.Va., 86

Jan Haddoxlflle photo

Point Pleasant head coach Dave Darst tallks with quarterback Brandon Toler on
the sidline during the team's home opener on Sept 10 against Sissonville.

..

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.m):dailyscntinel.com

Rio's Hewitt-Fisher wins MSC
Player of the Week honors
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

LOUISVILLE. Ky.
University of Rio Grande
sophomore
midfieldcr/forward
Oliver Hewitt-Fisher hus
been named the MidSouth ConferciK'e Men's
Soccer Offensive Player
of the Week for the week
ending September I X.
TI1e weekly conference
a\Vard is the first this season for Hewitt-Fisher. It
is the second weeki)
honor for a Rio player
this season as sophomore
goalkeeper
Jonathan
Viscosi was the MSC
Defensive Pln) er of the
Week back on August 30.
Hewitt-Fisher. a native
of Swansea.
Wales.
scored three goals, and
had one assist last week
in helping lead the
RedStonn to a 2-0 week.
He scored one goal in the
1-0 MSC' win over West
Virginia Tech and had a
huge game in Rio's
come-from-behind. 4-3
overtime victory (1Ver
Illinois Tech on Saturday
night.
Hewitt-Fi,her
sc~red two goals, including the game-tying marker in the 4Hth minute and

from Page Bl
sixth and Chillicothe
(420) seventh.
The Tigers certain!)
won't win a third-straight
crown next fall. however.
Marktta High School is
ending its 26 -t;cnson
association with the
SEOAL at the end of the
current school ) car to
join the East Central
Ohio League next fal l.
The
title
marked
Marietta':.-. ninth and final
SEOAL champion ~hip.
tied for third all-time
with Jackson . behind
Gallia Academy (16) and
Athens ( 10).
Five of Marietta's six
golfers were seniors the other six schools had
seven seniors combined
- but it was a 1iger
sophomore.
Jared
Hammons, \\ ho shot
e\en-par 37-34- 71 to
earn medalist honor~ on
the 6.241-yard layout.
Also earning
AIISEGAL recognition from
Marietta
were
Nick
Huggins (38-37- 75 ).
Ian Smith (39-37-76).
Eric Mullins (42-4082)
and
Cameron
Bronski
(41-41 - 82).
Since only the best four
scores are used to rcgi.ster
a team score, one of
those ~Qs did not cqunt'.
And Marietta's other
participant, Derek Hov.e.
shot 40-43-83 and
missed all-league honors
by one scant stroke.
Gallia
Academy
(Boeing Smith 40-3979. Rob Canady 39-4281 and Core) Arthur 4042-H2) and Warren
(Levi Thompson 4037-77, Ian Zoller 4039-79
and
Zach
McKenna 40-42-82)
each had three AIISEOAL golfers. Logan
(Kris Cummings 4239-81
and
1~t&gt;lor
Reichling 41-41-X2)
had two and Portsmouth
(40-42-82) had one

.

RedStorm rally to stave off upset .
'

BY MARK WILLIAMS

assisted un the game-winner in the extra session
that clinched the improbHblc \\in for Rio Grande.
''Oliver Hew1tt-Fisher
played an unbelievable
game
(on
Saturday
night)." snid Rio Grande
hend
coach
Scott
Morrissey. "If you just
based it on Saturday's
performance (he was
wm1hy), he was instrumental in the comeback .
and us getting the result
against Illinois Jnstitute.
two goals and an assist
and then a goal against
West V1rginia Tech, he's
pln)ed very \\Cll.''
"He's been asked to
play multiple po~itions
which. is a credit to hi-,
abilit) to play the game
and
be
versatile.''
Morrisse) added. "I'm
really proud of his efforts
and its good recognition
for him.''
He 110\\ has seven goals
on.thc season. which ties
him for team leadership.
With the seven goals. he
ranks fifth in th~ conference and 14th in the
NAIA in that department.
He has a total of I5 points
on the se&lt;L'&gt;on. \\ hich is
17th best in the nation.

SPECIAL TO THE SENT N- L

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
- It was an inauspicious
beginning
for
the
University of Rio Gnlllde
RedStorm men's so.:ccr ·with Harries getting . his
team on Saturday night at pocket picked again and
Evan Davis held. The Barrett finding Diego
shaky stan turnt'd out to Dias to make it a 2-0
be a prelud~.: to one of the game.
greatest c.:omebacks in
Ill inois Tech (3-4)
the history of the pro- gained what seemed to be
!.!ram as the No. 2 ranked an insurmountable 3-0
RedStorm rallied from an lead on another relatively
earl) 3-nil deticit to win eas) goal by Barrett in
4-3 in overtime against the 17th minute, which
lllinoic; Tech.
\\as set up b) Dias off a
The problems b~gan
comer kick.
early for Rio Grande (8The RedStorm then
0) when sophomore forward and leading goal went to work. stayed
with the game plan and
~corer R ichar&lt;l Is berner
accomplished
one of the
was hit with a red card in
the 6th minute, forcing greatest team victories in
the ReJStorm to play a school history.
Senior
forward
man down the remainder
Ederson Lopes started
of the night.
In the 7th minute. Rio the RedStom1 on the road
Grande junior defender back with a goal in the
Neil llarrics had a defen- 3oth minute to cut the
sive lapse which led to an deticit to 3-1. He was
easy goal by Illinois assisted on the play by
Tech "s Liam Bennett. sophomore midfielder
giving the Scarlet Hawks Rafael Maccauro.
Sophomore midfielda t 0 ad\ antage. Two
Oliver
minutes later. it was cr/forward
almost an instant repla) Jlew itt-Fisher had a huge

I

------------------------------------------~---------------------------1

Golf

Thursday, September 23,2010

night on the pitch for Rio
Grande. He scored the
first of two goals in .the
44th minute to make it a
3-2 game. It was a goal
that seemed to signal to
Rio Grande that everything was going to be
fine. Lopes picked up
the assist on the goal.
Illinois Tech held on to
the 3-2 advantage until
48th
minute
when
Hewitt-Fisher and Lopes
teamed up again to even
the score.
The two teams would
battle back and forth the
rest of the way and at the
end of regulation the
score was tied at 3-3.
Rio Grande wasted little time completing the
improbable comeback as
Hewitt-Fisher dropped
the ball into the box and
sophomore forward Scott
Bibby found the back the
net in the opening minute
of the extra session
which sent the Rio team

into euphoria, having
scored four unanswered
goals to stave off an
upset.
Rio
goalkeeper
Jonathan Viscosi recorded t1ve saves on ttie
night.
lllinois TeenA
goalkeeper Jared Svald_r-.
posted three saves.
"1 certainly liaven 't
been in one of those kind
of games for a while,"
said Rio Grande head
coach Scott Morrissey:
Morrissey said he felt
the like the goal right
before halftime steadied
his team for the rest of
the way. "I think the
goal at the end of the half
to make it 3-2 was all the
guys needed." he said.
"When we got the third
(goal) early in the second
half. it was just a matter
of time."
"To be a man down for
basically 8 l minutes and
a little bit of overtime
and to be three goals
down says a tremendous
amount about the character
of the
team,"
Morrissey added.
"I
couldn't be more proud.
of their effort and performance."

RedStorm volleyball goes winless at Cumberlan~ Tourney
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTI~l

Rob Canad) 39-42-81.
Roeing Smith 40-39Lebanon. Tenn. - The
79. Corey Arthur 40Umversity
of Rio Gmnde
42 - 82 , Derrick Gilmore
'oil e) ball
46-43 89.
Warren RedStorm
team
left
the
Cumberland
Patrick 48-43-91. Gus
University Tournament
Graham48-53 - 101.
without
a "ictory. Rio
Logan (335): Kris
lost the finn! two contests
Cummings 42'-39-81.
011 Saturday to Bethel
Tristan Myers 44-40College in four games,
84. Jacob Berry 44-5326-24. 16-25. J X-25 and
97. Taylor Reichling 41 - 24-26
and
Union
41 - X2. Jordan Fizer4J- 1 University
in
three
50 - 91.
Caleb games, 19-25, I H-25, and
Cummings 43-45-88.
19-25.
.
Jack&amp;on (353): Evan
Rio Grande (4-8) \\Oil
Massie 43-50-93. Tyler 1 the first game against
Williams
45-41-86. Bethel, but could not
Katie Dobbins 47-51- close
the
deal.
98. Alec Ray 42-44-86. Sophomor..: outside hitter
Tra\ is Walker 50-48- Whitne) Smith led the
98. Logan Simpson 47- Rio offense with II kills.
59 - 106.
Smith had an outstanding
Portsmouth
(369): defensive effort, racking
Evan Sommer 42-48- up 15 digs.
90. Jan Rowland 40-42Senior outside hitter
82. Mitch Gower 48- Rachel
Walker and
49 - 99. Lev1 Porter 50- sophomore middle hitter
50 - 100, Drew Miller Erin Shennan added nine
44-56-100.
Joe
Amburge:v 55-54-109.
ChiiiTc~the
(420):
Pierce Knisley DQ. Tyler
Morrissey ~3-59- 112.
from Page Bl
Gabe Preston 47-52-99.
Brandon Caylor 54-56110, Jake Brown 52-4799. K.J. King 57-62- Hannan's schedule is
alread) filled up the rest
119.
of the regular season.
Enough players arc
Craig Dwm is the
:,port\ editor of 1he expected to be recovered
l .ogan Dail) New!&gt; in in time for Hannan's
homecoming game Oct.
Lo~an, Ohio.

Hannan

kills each and sophomore
outside
hitter Tresa
SwatLel contributed six
kills.
Sherman also had two
solo blocks and three
block
assists
while
Walker had four block
assists.
Sophomore
libero
Lauren Raines paced the
defensive effort with 30
digs.
Senior setter Ashley
Bloom and freshman,
Kayla Landaker handed
out 18 and 16 assists
respectively. Landaker
was on the verge of double tigures in d1gs with
nine while freshman
defensi\'e
specialist
~icole Ogg and sophomore. outside hitter Erin
Moore had seven digs
and six digs respectively.
Ogg also delivered three
serve aces.
The RedStonn had no
answer defensively for

Thaise
Viera.
"ho
pounded 24 kills to lead
Bethel to victory.
Bethel improved to 6-3
with the win.
Rio struggled in attack
percentage in the match
versus Union as it registered 23 errors. Smith
led the way with seven
kills while Sherman,
Walker and freshman
outside
hitter
Caity
Willis (Athens. OH)
added six kills each.
Swatzel also delivered
five kills.
Raines again paced the
defense with 15 digs
while Smith had I0 and
Landaker posted eight.
Bloom and Landaker
\Vere both in double figures in assists with 17
and
15 respectively.
Ogg again served up
three aces.
REDSTORM VOLLEYBALL
EDGED BY TREVECCA

LEBANON. Tenn. The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm voile) ball team started slow
on Friday night in the
second match of the
TranSouth/Mid-South
Volleyball Classic, rallied and then lost in five
sets
to
Trevecca
Nazarene, 9-25. 25-15,
26-24. 18-25 and 6-15.
Rio Grande (4-6) was
led by sophomore outside hitter Whitney Smith
with 13 kills and 12 digs.
Senior outside hitter
Rachel Walker posted 12
kills.
Sophomore
Iibera
Lauren Raines paced the.
Rio defense with 21 digs
Senior setter Ashley
Bloom continued her
solid play. handing out
27 assists and freshman
Kayla Landaker delivered 12 assists and added
nine digs.

I against Fayetteville
Perry. Ohio.
"We want to keep the
morale up.'' Oldham
said. ··we believe homecoming week helps."
The afflictions included torn ligaments. broken
collarbones and wrists.
and concussions. along
with u stomach virus.
''If it was an injury
bug. \\ e caught it ...

Hoffman said. ··You
name it. we've probably
had it."
Many of the inJuries
occurred two weeks ago
in a 52-0 loss to Franklin
Furnace Green. Ohio.
Last week's game at
Burch had to be postponed until Week II due
to the injuries.
Hannan
'"'ill
play
Gilmer County on Oct. 8.

when the school was
originally supposed to
have its bye week.
"Safety and health will
be fu·st an~ foremost,"
Oldham said. ''I will not
let them on that field ....
without
a
doctor's
release."
Hannan is a Class A
school of about 200 students in grades nine
through 12.

: ,.; ~::-,Tli:URSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE
..,

·

-

I

•

f

•

final
score
from
Tuesda) 's tomnament.
with each team's players
lbted in the order in
\\ hich they played (first
through :.ixth) were as
follows:
Marietta (304): Nick
Huggins 38-37-75. fan
Smith 39-37-76, .Jared
Hammons 37-34-71,
Eric Mullins 42-40-82,
Derek Howe 40 43-83.
Cameron Bronski 4141 -82.
Warren (323): Levi
Thompson 40-37-77.
Ian Zoller 40-39-79,
Ben Ekelman 4H-42-90.
Zach McKenna 40-4282. Nik Gibson 40-4686, Adam Lang 42-43-

85.
Gama Academy (331 ):

"

.J

�Thursday, September 23, 2010
,

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83
.,,

.. ·

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CLASSIFIED

r.

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Meigs County, OH

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Or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

!Jearllir&amp;r

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m ..
HOW TO WRIT.E AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

200 Announcements
Notices

NOTICE
OHIO
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that
you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail until
you have investigating Home Improvements
the offering.
Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740-446.0870,
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

1ctures t at
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.

300

Services

Child / Elderly Care
Rooms available for
clients needing 24 hr
care at Darst Adult
Group Home, 740992-5023

Display Ac;ts

Daily In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Pape_r
sunday In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

Repairs
Joe's Tv repair on
most
makes
&amp;
models. House calls
304-675-1724
400

Financial

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Fee Unless We
Win!
1·888·582-3345

TrY the
Classifieds!!

WantTo Buy
spice
Elderberries,
bushberries,
Animal Supplies
black
pawpaws,
walnuts,
740-698Free Male Dwarf
Bunny 6 months old- 6060
needs to go to a Ginseng- want to buy
good home Call: other
botanicals,
=30=4~-6=7=5=-7=5=8=5=== Twin Oaks Service
Junction
Station
Horses
RT7/33,
5 YR. Old Mare Rec. Wednesdays
12-1
10 wks. of training starting
22
from a cert. trainer. September, call 330$600.00
304.882- 674-4195 for price
3438
list.
Pets
Giveaway 3 long hair
tiger striped kittens
8wks old 740-4468567
700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
Wanted 2 gravity
beds w/runntng gear
in good condition.
740-388-8950

~allipolis

!lBatlp mrtbune

l}otnt l}leasant l\egister
The Daily Sentinel
~unbap

\!rimes -~enttnel

Want To Buy
Want to buy Junk
Cars. call 740·3881 0884

End of Sumer sale
on 4',5',&amp; 6' rotor
tillers Special Round
Bale Feeders were
$195 now $125 Jims
Farm
Equipment
446-9777
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now
Available
at
Carmichael Equipment
740·446-2412
Garden &amp; Produce
Richards
Brothers
Fruit Farm~
l:l.aY.e.~ Mon thru
Sat 8-12 &amp; 1-5. Sun
9-5, Many varieties
aailable jellies, jams.
cicer, apple butter.
Co Ad 46 2054
Orpheus
Ad
Thurman
Oh.
740286-4584

Hay, Feed, Seed,
Grain

900

Merchandise
Equipment/
Supplies

CONVENIENTLY
&amp;
Black
Beauty
Campers/ RVs &amp; LOCATED
AFFORDABLE'
sandblast sand $6
Trailers
Townhouse
per 1OO·Ib bag, ten =======-apartments.
and/or
or more $5 each. 2005 Jayco Eagle
small houses tor rent.
Gooseneck
Hitch,
304-773-5332
Call 740-441-1111 for
sleeps six. Excellent application
&amp;
Miscellaneous
condition.
Asking information.
See
Jet Aeration Motors $19,900.
photos
at Free Rent Special
repafred, new &amp;
I! I
www
carmjchaeltraile
rebuilt In stock. Call
[S.C.QJD
740-446- 2&amp;.3BR apts $395 and
Ron Evans 1·800·
up. Central Air WID
2412
537·9528
hookup, tenant pays
Sunquest
tanning 94 Sunsport Motor electric. Call between
32'
long. the hours of 8A·8P.
bed, exc cond new Home
EHO
bulbs $400 7 40·388- garage kept, exc.
Ellm View Apts.
con.
$17,000
serious
9373
(304)882-3017
calls only 740·3885 piece bedroom 9373
Twin -Rivers Tower is
suite.
large ~=====~ accepting applications
refrigerator, tables &amp;
Motorcycles
for waiting list for HUD
other pieces, 740- -==========;;;;;;;;; subsidized.
1·BR
949-3601
2007 HD Heritage apartment
for the
Softail. 4,695 miles- elderly/disabled,
call
cond 675·6679
2 Grave Lots Seal Showroom
Chapel
(AT
2) $16,000 negotiable
Mason Co. Call for 740-446-0121
more info at 863- .;..;.;...;..;.;;...;;.;.;;.:.._ _
357-1602
2000
Automotive
Want To Buy

Absolute Top dollarsilver/gold coins any
10K/14KI18K
gold
jewerly, dental gold,
pre
1935
US
currency. proff/mint
sets, diamonds, MTS
Coin Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
446-2842
Yard Sale

HAY SQ. BALES Huge Garage Sale
$2.50 (4CUTIING) 1640 Graham School
CALL. 304·675-5086 Road Fri. &amp; Sat,
OR 304-895·3470

.,,

Apartments/
Townhouses
Beautiful
1BR
apartmAnt tri thA
country
freshly
painted very· clean
WID hook up nice
country setting only
10 mins. from town.
Must
see
to
appreciate
Water
pd $375/mo 614=
595-7773 or 7 40645·
5953

1 BR and bath. first
months
rent
&amp;
deposit. references
required, No Pets
and clean. 740-4410245

6 apts $137.000
rent $2030 mo, 740- 1BR, Clean, quiet
446·0390
country living. Deck
has
panoramic
Land (Acreage}
Yard Sale
views.
3 different Garage Wv 13 acres prime Water+Garbage inc.
Hookup.
Sales on Orchard Hill water fomt property WID
Road Rt # 7 South call 740-441-0523 or $400/mo. 446-2242
watch for signs Turn !!7~40~-~4~41~-~95~8~0~==
1BR nicely furnished
at Clipper Mills Rain
Lots
No smoking, no
apt.
or Shine Sept. 23 &amp;
pets. $400 mon &amp;
24
2 Lots for sale w/s/e
Furniture,Antiques,N aval.1 02 &amp;104 Depot dep. 740-446-4782
ascar,Toys,&amp; lots of rd Bidwell 618-402FIRST MONTH
Misc.
0921
FREE
167 Woodland Dr 9-6
Real Estate
2&amp;3 BRAPTS.
3500
Sept
21-23
Rentals
$385 &amp;
tables/chairs, misc.
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
3 Family Yard Sale 9
Apartments/
AJC, WID hook-up,
mi. out Rt. 62
Townhouses
ten·
Leon,WV Sept. 21ant pays electric.
2BR
APT.Ciose
to
23 8am-7pm
EHO
.
Holzer Hospital on SR
Ellm View Apts.
Recreational 160 CIA . (740) 4411000
304-882-3017
Vehicles 0194

~~~~~~~

Autos
•o•3==B•u•ic;;;k:=;;;C;;;e;;;n;;;tu;;;;;ry
6900 miles $5,000
740 •645. 7965
03Neon standard-air
$3200 080 256·
1539
87 Chrysler
Lebaron
2
door
$1500 080 2566002
1998 Olds New Tires
Alloy Whs. 6 cyl. AC,
PW, PL, TS, CC, P/S
$1200 304-882-2796

1

Oiler's Towing Now
buying junk cars
w/motors or w/out.
or Nice
740-388-0011
2BR
apt. 1
740-441-7870.
No appliances.
w/d
Sunday call
hookup, water pd.,
good location on •
Real Estate
Centenary close to
3000
Sales
hospital. No pets. call
after 5. 740-446- ·
9442
Commercial

For Sale By Owner

Business &amp; Trode
School

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• Local Sports
• Community
Calendar
... an·d much more.

Antique truck 50
Chev Pick up. All
original.
740·4467557 or 740-4463617

for sale Commerc1al
office building Corner
lot on 1st Ave. call
740-645-2192

Education

Gallipolis
Career
College
(Career's
Close To Home)
CaiiTodayl 740-446·s-E-PT_I_C_ _P_U,.M""'P""IN....,.G 4367
1·800-214Gallia co. OH and 0452
Member
Mason Co. WV. Ron Accred1ted
eounc11
for
Evans Jackson. OH Act;red•bng
Independent Colleges and
800-537-9528
Schools 12746

Classic I Antiques

~ r-LGoking Fci~l
A New Home?

Money To lend

500

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
.(l~
.I'm
Borders$3.00/perad
~
,~
Graphics 50¢ for small
~
$1.00 for large

POLICIES : O~o "'lley Publl!llllng reee~ves the right to edll. reject. or cancel any ad at anJ time. Errors must be reponed on tl'lt flr11 dey ot P\i)ltcatlon end the
Trtblllt-Ser'ltlnei·Reglste&lt; will be reeponelble tor no more than ttw coli ot the epace oceupted by ti1e e&lt;ror and only the lirst inllertlon We atwM no1 be liable tor
any lost or expenaethat r~lts from the publicatiOn or omlsaiOn of en acrvanlaement Corttctlon w.n be made 1n the ftnll avedable e&lt;1lt1on. • Box nu&lt;nber ada
are alw.ya confldenUal • Cllttnt rate card appHn. • AN reel Ktlle advertlaementa are subject to lht Federal Fall Housing Act oll&amp;$1. • Tllla 11tW8Pfper
~te only t&gt;tlp warced adt mt411l~ EOE 81andards. We will not knotllngly accept arry adv~rtillf19 In viOIII!lOn of them.. Wilt not be reaponsjble for any
11roralnan ad taken oYer the pllOne.

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
Other Services
Affiars toll free at 1866-278·0003 to learn
Pet Cremations. Call if the mortgage broker
or lender is properly
740-446-3745
lrcensed. (This is a
public
service
Will sit with elderly, announcement from the
days, Gallipolis area. Ohio Valley Publishing
call 645-9142
Company)
Professional Services

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publicatton
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaicf

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descr~lon • Include A Prk:e • Avoid Abbre\1atlons
• Include Phone Number And Address WhV~ Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Domestics /
Janitorial
==========
Dependable,
trustworthy-Christian
lady will clean your
home or office. Very
reasonable
rates.
Discounts are given.
Call Dawn at 2566306 or 645·6589

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Valley
Pleasant
Apartments is now
taking
applications
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 br HUD
Subsidized
Apartments.
Applications
are
taken Monday thru
Thrusday
9:00am1:OOpm. Office is
located
at
1151
Evergreen
Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806 •

Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 446·1599.
Commercial

Commercial building
for rent 740-446Tara Townhouse Apt. 6565
2BR 1.5 BA, back - - - - - - patio,
pool, For rent Commercial
ideal
for
playground. No pets. space
$450 rent. 740·645- automotive shop 3
bays and 1 lift call
8599
7 40+645-2192
1BDRM. quite st. in
Houses For Rent
Mason, WV $450 a
month plus $250
deposit. $350 wf New home tn city, 88
pine
renter paying utilities
$450 w/ landlord st.2BR,1BA,LR.DR,K
dep.
paying utilities Roush .$550-mon+
Must
have
excellent
St. behind 2661 2nd
St.
Garage
Apt. reference. Call for
details. 446-2801
Call:304-593-8187

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Houses For Rent

Rentals

2 BR house in
Vinton, . nice area
$400 mon. 2 BR
mobile home 4 mi
from Hospital near
160 $400 mon. 4415150 or 379-2923

Mobile Home on
farm 3Br 2Ba all
appl., including .w/d,
&amp; all utlil. incl. $750.
540-729-1331
-------Nice 16x80, for rent.
3 Bedroom, 2 bath,
Country
setting.

3BR • 1BA• stove
gas
&amp;refrl·g !urn
.·
heat, central AC/,
WID
hook
up,
Carport, no smoking,
no pets. $600mon +
dep. 105 Bastiani,
Gallipolis. 446-3667
taking applications.
For rent 3 BR 1.5
BA, carport, cntrl
A/C,
gas
heat
Kanaugha Sec Dep
$500 rent call 740446-3481
4BR ranch house for
rent, 2 miles west of
Holzer on Jackson
Pike, new ktichen
w/granite, walk out
basement, 2 car
garage. $1100 mon +
dep. 740-446-1299
Downtown Gallipolis.
3 br 1.5 bath, central
air, carpet/hardwood
floors.
kitchen
applicances .
Included,
washer/dryer
hook
up. No Pets. Ample
storage
available.
Dep &amp; Ref Required.
call740-446-7654

740-339-3366
367-0266.
Sales

740-

Bank
owned
manufactured home
wlland
account
number 328368, call
Ron 614-834-3833 or
go
to
mobilehomesexpress
.com for more info
6000

Employment

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Truck
drivers
needed. Glat beds &amp;
dump trailers. Apply
in person ai 935
pinecrest Drive.
Tractor trailer Driver
needed. Must have
Send
Hazmat.
resume to Human
Resources Po Box
705 Pomeroy Oh
45769.
Food Services

full time grill cook
apply in person only
House for sale or Park front diner 314
rent. Pretty, clean, 2nd ave Gallipolis
3BR.
Downtown
Help WontedGallipolis, close to
Washington
Elem. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;;;;e;;;;ne;;;;r;;;;ol~::;;;;;;
Direct
Rent $750, no utlilite. Wanted:
Sale $99,000. Kelly- supervision
Jo 645-9096 or 446- employees
to
4639
overesee male youth
in a staff secure
Beautiful
newly
residential
remodeled/restored
environment.
Must
home in Pomeroy for
pass
physical
rent. 3 bedroom, 2
training requirment.
bath, large kichen,
on
Pay
based
laundry
room,
experience. Call 740fireplace. Nice quiet
379-9083 M-F from
neighborhood. Call
8-4
740-992-9784
daytime or 740-992- Ins. Home Surveyor
5094 evenings.
performed field work
&amp; computer reporting
Very nice home for
for
a
national
rent in Middleport,
industry leader no
good neighborhood.
exp. Paid training
Newly
remodeled.
performance based
New appliances, ·2
$12 a hr. PIT apply at
bedroom, 1 bath.
www.muellerreports.
Large kitchen, sun
com
room, central air &amp;
heat. Nice outdoor Enjoy caring for the
spaces, Call 740- Elderly? Caregivers
992 9784 or 740- needed Pt. Pleasant,
992-5094
Leon &amp; Pliny areas.
Good pay benefits. ·
1BR $350/month in
Drivers
Licel')ses
Syracuse. Deposit. required.
Flexible
HUD approved, no hours.
1-866-766pets. 304-675-5332 9832 or 1-304-766weekends/740-591- 9830
0265
4000

Manufactured
Housmg

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on
SAVINGS

Rentals
2BR Mobile Home
water, sewer, trash
pd.
No
pets,
Johnson's
Mobile
740Home Park
446-3160
Taking applications
for 2BR mobile. Very
good condition. No
pets. $395 mon &amp;
dep. 740-446-3617

Shop the
Classifieds!

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 23, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com
Management /
Supervisory
The Tuppers Plains
Chester
Water
District is accepting
applications/resumes
for
a
Water
Treatment
Plant
Operator. A valid
Class 1 Operators
Certification
is
desired but other
qualifications may be
acceptable su:h as
college for related
engineering fields of
experience. This is a
working supervisor's
position. Starting pqy
and benefit package
will
range
from
$15.00 to $19.50 per
hour commensurate
fo
qualifications.
100% paid Health
Care/
Vacation,
OPERS Retirement,
and
many other
benefits. Interested
parties should send
TPC'
Water
to
District, 39561 Bar
30 Road, Reedsville,
Ohio 45772 and
Attention to Donald
C. Poole, General
Manager. Must be
received
by
September 30,2010.
100

Legals

NOTICE
LEGAL
Pursuant to Section
121.22 of the Ohio
Revised Code, the
Meigs
County
Budget Commission
will meet at 9:00am
on
September
24,2010
in
the
Auditor's Office of
the Meigs County
Courthouse. We will
be reviewing and
approving the 2011
budgets/
Meigs
County
Budget
Commission Mary T.
Byer-Hill, Secretary
Sept23, 2010
PUBLIC
NOTICENOTICE: is
hereby given that on
Saturday September
25 at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
held at 211 W.
Second , Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company is selling
for cash in hand or
certified check the
following
collateral:2005
Cadillac
Es:alade
1GYEK63N75R1657
93The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to wi&lt;hdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank
Savings
and
Company reserves
the right to reject any
or
all
bids
submitted.The above
described collateral
will be sold 'as iswhere is", with no
expressed or implied
warranty given. For
further information,
or for an appointment
to inspect col ateral,
prior to sale date
contact
Cyndie or
Ken at 992-2136. (9)
22,23,24

•

1

THE
CLASSIFIEDS

aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this widely read
sedion to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad ''In Memory"
of a loved one.
For more information, contad your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing offic.e.

~alltpolis

(3aft Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential

• Room additions • Roofing • Garages
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Barns • Vinyl &amp; Wood Fencing
Foundations
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740-985-4141
110-416-1834

Fully insured
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fliot affiliated "ith \like \(an·um Ro&lt;&gt;fin~ &amp; Rcmodclin~)

MAKf
SOMfONf'S
DAY!

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• New Homes • Garages
•
• Complete Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

11Bailp \!Crtbune

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The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
~oint ~leasant

* Prompt and Quality Work
* Reasonable Rates

l\egtster

* Insured * Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley

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cen740-591-8044
Please leave

§at Sometfiina to say
to that Syecia( Someone.

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r;:~mr~~~~fie C[assi_fiedsl
OYME

T

BULLETIN BOARD
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
9:00AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
The Gracemen
In Concert
Cheshire Baptist Church
Sunday, September 26 10:30 am
Public Welcome
Pastor Steve Little

LARGE YARD SALE
(Multi-Family)
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
Rehabilitation Center

I

Benefit event for the
residents' fund
Sand Hill Road

September 23 &amp; 24
Begins at 9 a.m.
Table sites are available for
rent for people
wishing to take part in the
sale· $10/ location
For more information
please call
Ginger Campbell, Activities
· Coordinator,

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
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FOR YOU!!

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'lrbe ~allipolts1.19ailp \tribune
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�Thursday, September 23, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 History bit
1 Cartoonist 3 Slapstick
AI and kin
stunts
6 Some hits 4 Cuban
11 Snowy
coin
wader
5 Treeless
12 Camp
plains
craft
6 Like
13 Renter's
snakes
paper
7 Take it
14 Victim of
easy
Cortes
8 Crumb
15 Knock
carrier
21 "- kick
over
9 '1The
out of you"
17 Sandy
&lt;3old-Bug" 22 Drank to
sound
writer
excess
19 Wield
10 Short time 24 Writer
20 In shape 16 Petitioned
Nellie
23 Navy
17 Concern- 25 Everybuilder
ing
thing
25 Jason's
18 Prepare
27 Capitol
ship
for another
worker
26 Drops off
war
31 College
28 Paris
20 Sky-div1ng
books
airport
acts
33 Fly alone
29 Strike out
30 Apt. units
31 Kayo
count
32 Rage
f-,1.,..1-+-+--+--+--33 Songwriter Neil 13
35 Desk
fixture
38 Senor's
squiggle
41 Traded
42 Little
hooter
43 Friend of
D'Artagnan
44 Stands

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne
_,.,. WA-&amp;

BPT I~ P£PIJJ/fl;/.y' GOING
1'0 '8tJY A
6JJII OF

.

----

0~'(••.

MI'&lt;.IYkJ~ I

34 New
Zealander
35 Writer
Tarbell
36 Trawling
need
37 Scrooge
cry
39 Ruby of
film
40 UFO
pilots

DOWN

1 Animation
frame

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

Wet-L., FOR ONE'. ·n·llf&gt;JG. WI-IE:N
l-le'&lt;G AWAY ON BtJGIN!i:~ 1
CAN i"OtJCI-\ MY RING ANc&gt;
Fee;~.-

William Hoest

t...IKE: l-le'&lt;G !-loMe

wrrn

Me.

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell
"OUR NEfGHBOR
WA~

WONDERING
IF HE COOL.D
BORROW HI~
MOWER."

&amp;

· ~

.

r-·

ZITS

I IAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday,
Sept 23, 2010:
You make changes that point to a
ne"' path this year. Your ability to juggle different concerns emerges once
more as a salient trait. Relationships of
all sorts might be slightly more difficult
as you juggle what you think you
should do and what you want to do.
Boundary issues will appear. Whether
you are single or attached, you will be
dealing with how much to give. Avoid
committing this year if you are single.
If you are attached, you will move in a
new direction if you can relax with
your significant other's swift changes.
ARIFS can be challenging.

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

77w Stars Show the Ki11d of Day You'll
I lave: 5-Dyllamic; 4-Positit•e; 3-A7;erage;
2-S&lt;rso; 1-Difftcult

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

ARIES (March 21-Apri119)

by Dave Green
~

6

3 8
2

7

8
3

5 6
4

6

7
8

1

9

8 5
"I'm five now, but on my next birthdar,
I start my age on a whole new hand. '

1

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Dilficulty I'""'

8

9
1

3
4

3
5 2
8

***

f{/6

"THAT GU'I 15 APAM. Wr; Al..L. !-\AVE;
ON£ OF HIS A"PPLE;S."

9 6 B
v ~ L
£ 9 G
G B 9
6 L 9
~ £ v
9 9 £
L G ~
B v 6

£ L 9
G 9 B
~ v 6
v £ 9
B 9 ~
6 G L
L 6 t
9 B £
9 ~ G

v

G ~
£ 9 6
L 9 B
~ 6 L
G £ v
9 B 9
B ~ G
6 v 9
9 L £

**** Invigorated, the Ram will
be unstoppable. Issues that might be

Full Moon-driven might be easily
resolved with a different perspective
;md a willingnes.&lt;&gt; to try another way. A
partner is difficult. You cannot ch.cmge
what is going on Tonight: Think "fun."
Make weekend plans.
TAURUS (April20-May. 20)
*** Know when to back off. What
you think and feel also might be exaggerated in some form. This could be
the result of the issues that surround
you. Knowing that, the less done and·
the less said, the better the end results
will be. Tonight Vanish early.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
***** Zero in on what you
want A child or new friend could
weigh you down in a substantial manncr. Use diplomacy and walk away
from what might be a distinct issue.
Your smile goes far. Tonight Where
you are, the action is.
CANCER Qune 21-julv22)
*** Step up to the plate. 1 hough
there could be an issue involving a
child or loved one, you see a matter in
a different light. I low you deal with
someone and the choices you make
could be dynamic and long tcm1. Let
go of worry. Tonight A must appearance.
LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22)
***You know how to look at the
big picture. What i&lt;&gt; stopping you? You
know what works and arc an tmusttal
ly creative thinker. Negativity can stop
you from taking a necessary leap of
faith. 'Jiust yourself. Tonight Where
there is music.

· .YIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Inadvertently, one issue or
bond puts pressure on another. You
might want to stop worrying so much
and just do what feels right. Walk
away from controlling behavior by not
playing. Tonight: Listen to a dear older •
friend's suggestion.
~
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
You could take what is
going on personally or you could just
observe. Others seem strong and determined to have a situation unfold in the
style they believe is best. Know when
to say little -like now. Tonight: You
revise your thinking about a key relationship.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
**** Understanding evolves to a
ne\\ level if you ohierve more and
judge less. When asked an opinion, the •
smart Scorp will pull back and diplomatically smile and say little. If you are
feeling a bit av.·kward v.ith a co-work- •
et; distance yourself. Tonight Squeeze
in some exercise.
SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
You can move through a
situation tf you tap into your creativity
and humor. While lightening up the
problem, you'll find the solution with
ease with the support of others. Do
avoid a meeting. Tonight Let the fun

****

****

*****

begin
CAPRICORN (D..'&lt;:. 22-Jan. 19)
****
You might wonder what
you need to do in order to balance

what for many could be a touchy situation. A boss or someone you look up to
could be difficult at best. Know what
you are doing. and be careful which
circles you move in. Tonight: Put your
feet up at home.
AQUARIUS Q,m. 2()-Feb. 18)
*****You hav~ a winning way,
and you know it. Let your ability to
ex~l in situations with many different
i&lt;;sues or changing &lt;;cenarios step right
in. You might want to update your
self-image or opinion about someone
cl~. Tonight Only where the action
b.
PISCES (feb. 1q-rv1arch 20)
** Be sen'&gt;ible when it comes to
spending and enjoying yourself. There
needs to be a strong line of demarcation, whether you want it or not.
Revise your long-term goals or a
friend&lt;;hip that just might not be cutting it for you. lbnight "lime to treat.

}ncque/int• Bignr is on the lnb:rnd
nt http://www.jncqtwlinebigar.com.

.mvdailvsentinel.com

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

W.Va.

Southern, and South
Gallia.
Wahama has outscored
opponents I03-20 in the
first three games of the
season.
The White
Falcons are averagin~ 34.3
points per game ano have
allowed 6.7 points per
game.
Waterford is averaging
19.5 points per game and is
allowing 18.25 points per
contest.
Wahama has had early
season wins at Trimble
( 14-6), against Eastern
(41-14).
and
against
Belpre (48-0).
•
Waterford won its first
two games of the season
with a 40-20 victory over
Miller and a 25-0 win over
Federal Hocking.
The
Wildcats have lost their
last two ~ames, at Fort
Frye (27-u) and against
Eastern (26-13).
The White Falcons tallied 432 yards of total
offense last week against
Belpre - 373 yards on the
~round while holdin~
tts opponent to only 7;&gt;
yards
of
offense.
Waterford had 202· yards
of total offense in last
week's game against
Eastern.
Wahama has won the
last two meeting between
the schools in 2009 and
2007 by scores of 31-0 and
16-13,
respectively.
Waterford's last win in the
series came in 2006 by a
score of 12-0.

fromPageBl
dominant in their last two
outings after suffering an
upset1oss in their opener at
Tolsia (28-21), winning by
at least 40 f&gt;_&lt;?ints aaainst
both Sissonvtlle (49S) and
South Point (48-8).
Point - which is 2-0 at
home this season - is
avera~ing 39.3 points
offensively while allowing
just 13 points as a defensive unit.
PPHS is averaging 413.7
yards of total offense per
contest, including a whopping 315.3 rushmg yards
per game. Point has also
allowed 18 points in the
first quarter this fall. compared to just 21 points over
the remaining three periods of play.
WAHAMA AT WATERFORD

Bryan Walters/photo

River Valley's Kelcie Carter (1 0) and Katelyn
Birchfield (7) attempt to block the spike by Gallia
Academy's Hannah Cunningham during Wednesday
evening's match at River Valley High School.

Roundup
fromPageBl

scores of 25-19 and 2514. In the finale, River
Valley defeated Russell
by $Cores of 25-23 and
25-17.

Shriver and Haley Rosier
MEIGS FALLS
both added 11 points.
TO TRIMBLE
while Morgan Leslie and
Breanna West chipped in
GLOUSTER, Ohio
four and three points
The
Meigs
Lady
respectively.
Morgan Leslie led the Marauders (4-6) dropped
net attack with 16 kills, a non-league contest at
followed by 11 kills and Trimble on Wednesday.
four blocks from Daniels. evening in four sets.
Trimble won by scores
Rosier added eight kills,
of
25-23, 18-25. 25-9.
while Cunningham and
and
26-24.
Amanda McGhee each
Morgan
Howard led
chipped in four.
the
Lady
Marauders
with
Ward had a team-best
11
points
(one
ace).
34 digs on defense, while
Leslie and Caroline Chandra Stanley added
Baxter both added 20 seven points. Emalee
digs apiece. Cunningham Glass had six points.
Jed the passing attack Chelsea Patterson had
points, Valerie
with 21 assists. followed four
Conde
had
three points,
by Shriver with I 7.
Jordan
Anderson
had two
Beth Misner led the
points.
and
Shellie
Bailey
service attack for River
had
one
point.
Valley with eight points,
Bailey led the team at
followed
by Ashley
the
net with 20 kills and
Randolph and Kaitlyn
two
blocks. Howard and
Roberts
with
seven
points apiece. Kelcie Alison Brown each had
Carter contributed six 10 kills and Stanley
points. while Katelyn ·added two kills. Stanley·
Birchfield and Kelsey had one block.
Glass had 33 assists.
Sands added four and
w)1ile
Howard, Bailey,
three points respectively.
Stanley,
and Alaine
River Valley salvaged
Arnold each had one.
an evening split with a 9The Lady Marauders
25, 25-22. 25-16 victory
will play at Warren on
in the junior varsity conSaturday.
test.
lADY RAIDERS TOP
ROCK HILL; WIN
IRONTON INVITE

The River Valley Lady
Raiders have won four
straight games. including
taking the crown at
Saturday's
Ironton
Invitational.
River Valley defeated
Rock Hill on Tuesday in
Ohio
Valley
a
Conference match by
scores of 25-9, 25-14,
and 25-10.
The Lady Raiders were
led by Ashley Randolph
with 20 points (nine
aces). Kelsey Sands had
18 points (six aces),
Kaitlyn Roberts had 17
points (six aces). Beth
Misner added 11 points
(five aces). Katelyn
Birchfield had six points,
and Kelcie Carter had
three points.
Kaitlyn Roberts led the
net attack with 10 kills
and
one
block.
Birchfield had seven
kills, Carter added four
kills. Sands had three
kills. Randolph, Denise
Madriz. Mary Waugh.
and Cierra Layne each
had two kills, and Tracy
Roberts had one kill.
Misner had 32 assists,
while- Sands added 25.
Rock Hill was led by
Morgan Damron with
nine points and Tommi
Butler with five points.
The Lady Raiders won
the JV contest by scores
of 25-19 and 25-10.
Tracy Roberts had 12
points
and
Noelle
Mershon had I 0 points to
lead the team.
At
the
Ironton
Invitational. River Valley
defeated Ashland by
scores of 25-27, 25-19.
and 25-20. In the second
match, the Lady Raiders
defeated
Ironton by

WATERFORD, Ohio The ~ahama football team
takes 1ts 3-0 record on the
road this week to face
TVC Hocking opponent
Waterford.
The White Falcons are
perfect on the season and
m ftrst place in the TVC
Hocking with a 3-0 league
mark. Waterford is in a
four way tie for second in
the league with a 2-1 TVC
Hocking record (2-2 overall) to tie Eastern,

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Tim Tucker/submitted photo

Wahama's Trenton Gibbs carries the ball during
Friday's game against Belpre.

Road
fromPageBl
GALLIA ACADEMY
AT IRONTON

,

A pair of state-ranked
unbeatens will clash for
the 54th time in gridiron
history Friday night when
Gallia Academy travels to
Tanks Stadium for a Week
5
non-conference
matchup against Ironton
in Lawrence County.
Both the Blue Devils
and Fighting Tigers with matching 4-0 records
- have a rich history with
one another. as IHS holds
a commanding 41-12-0
edge in the all-time series.
Ironton has also won the
last
three
contests
between these schools by
an avera~e score of 36-11 .
The Btue Devils- who
enter Friday 4-0 for the
first time since 1994 come in ranked 11th in the
Division Ill AP poll and
Dave Harris/photo
are currently sittmg sec- Meigs' running back Jeffery Roush carries the ball during Friday evening's game
ond in the Region 12 at Minford.
bracket. Ironton, meanschedule.
SGHS - owns an 8-3
The two schools HANNAN DROPS
while, sits atop the
advantage in the all-time
which
are
separated
by
SOUTH
GALLIA
Division IV. Reg10n 15
FOUR MATCHES
series.
AT EASTERN·
standings and is currently less than 12 miles - comThe Hannan volleyball ranked eighth in the D-4 pete in many varsity
sports. but football has not
RIVER VALLEY
A pair of 2-2 tean1s will
team (0- I 0) dropped a AP poll.
AT ALEXANDER
Smce 1997, GAHS has been one of them until be looking to get over
pair of home matches
.500 this Friday night
and two road matches entered the Ironton con- now.
The Marauders are when South Gallia travels
ALBANY. Ohio
of
test
unbeaten
a
total
during the past week.
coming off a disappointThe Lady Cats fell to seven times - and all ing loss at Minford last to East Shade River River Valley will travel to
Cross Lanes Christian seven times the Blue w~ek by a score of 43-0. Stadium to battle Eastern face non-league opponent
and Tug Valley during a Devils have lost. The last For the Marauders (2-2) in a Week 5 Tri-Val lev Alexander on Friday
Conference
Hocking
tri-match at CLC on time an unbeaten Gallia the season began on a Division matchup in evening in Athens County.
Academy team took the
The Raiders (1-3) were
Monday evening.
gridiron again~t IHS and rough note with a loss at Meigs County.
victorious in their week
Cross Lanes Christian won was 1970.
home to Coal Grove (53Both the visiting Rebels one trip to Athens County
won by scores of 25-9
The Devils' last win 13), but two consecutive and host Eagles have a 27-6 win over
and 25-4, while Tug against Ironton came in wins over Fairland ( 13-6) matching 2-1 marks in Federal Hocking - bA
Valley won by scores of 2006, a 14-7 decision at and River Valley (41-0) TVC Hocking play this
have not scored since. 25-16 and 25-18.
the Tank. It was also the gave Meigs momentum faiL and the winner will
River
Valley
has
In the home matches, last time these two teams going into last week's maintain its cunent place dropped three straight
Valley Fayette defeated met as non-league OJ?po- contest.
of second in the league with a road Joss at
Hannan by scores of 25- nents, as Ironton jomed
Southern (2-2) began standings.
Symrm:s Valley (43-0),
21, 25-15. 18-25, 21-25, the SEOAL in 2007 and the season with a pair of
Neither squad has con- and home losses to Meigs
and 15-8. Huntington St. then became an indepen- losses at Symmes Valley secutive wins this year, (41-0) and F01t Frye (43Joe defeated the Lady dent starting this fall.
(39-13) and at home but both are coming off 0). The Raiders oppoCats by scores of 25-9,
against South Gallia (8-6). victories from last week- nents in the first four
The Fighting Ti~ers 25-18, and 25-9.
who are averagmg 27 The Tornadoes are cur- end. The Rebels defeated weeks are a combined I 0Jasmine Weise led the points offensively and rently on a two game win- Miller by a 24-20 count. 6 on the season.
Lady Cats with 17 points allowing eight points ning streak with victories while the Eagles defeated
Alexander is 3-1 one the
over the four matches, defensively- are coming over TVC Hocking oppo- Watetford by a 26- 13 year with its lone loss
including fovr aces. off their most impressive nents Belpre ( 16-0) and margin.
coming in overtime by a
South Gallia - which 22-21 score during a week
Weise also had 24 digs. victory of the season, a Federal Hocking (21-14 ).
Meigs had scored 67 is 1-0 on the road in 2010
Stephanie Di1lon had J0 43-6 thumping of Ashland
three contest at Unioto.
points, 11 spikes, and Paul Blazer in their home points (16.75 points per - defeated Southern ( 8- The Spartans began the
game) in the four games 6) on the road in Week 2,
three kills, Samantha opener.
season with a .31-6 win
IHS also has road wins this season. while 1t has but also has home losses over Eastern. Alexander
Blain had 12 points
(seven aces), 28 digs, and over Wheelersburg ( 12-7), allowed 102 points (25.5 to Sciotoville East (25-8) defeated Huntington 33and Trimble (56-22). Last
(29-13)
and points per game).
nine spikes. Katie Ellis Russell
The Tornadoes have week's victor) over Miller 12 in week two and beat
had I 0 points, 22 assists, Chillicothe (24-6) over
· Frontier bv a score of 41and 36 digs, Emily the first three weeks of the scored 56 points ( 14 was also a season-high in 26
in - week
four.
points
per
game)
this
seapoints
for
the
Rebels.
Holley added 10 points year. Ironton amassed 357
Alexander's
.
opponents
The Eagles, on the other
(one ace) and seven digs, yards of total offense last son, while allowing 61 hand. are 1-0 at the friend- during the first four weeks
points (15.25 points per
week
against
Blazer,
and Tiffany Adkins had
ly confines of home this are a...combined 5-11 this
game).
I0 points (three aces) and including a whopping 334
Meigs had 163 yards of year after beating Miller year entering the fifth
rushing ·yards on 40 car10 digs.
total
offense in last week's 32-0 in Week 2. Eastern week of play.
Angelica Brumfield ries.
River Valle) is aven.
Gallia Academy, on the game at Minford, with also hns road losses to
had three points, one other hand, enters Friday's 139 yards coming on the Alexander (31-6) and ing 6.75 points per gan
spike, and one dig, contest averaging 38.8 ground. The Tornadoes Wahama (41- 14) before and has allowed 33.25
Heather Ellis added one points offensively while had 305 yards of offense last week's road win points per contest.
point and nine digs. allowing 19.3 points as a in the week four win. with against Waterford.
The Spartans have aver
Leandra Harper had one defense.
SGHS is averaging 15.5 aged 31.5 points per game
174 yards on the ground
point and three digs, Jazi
points offensiYely while and have allowed 16.5
and 131 yards in the air.
allowing
26.8 pomts as a points per game.
Each
team
will
be
lookCasto added 11 digs,
MEIGS AT SOUTHERN'
Rtver Vallev defeated
ing to gain momentum defensive unit. EHS is
Emily Bledsoe had five
Alexander
in- the last
allowing
21.3
points
gomg
into
the
second
half
digs.
and
Brittany
RACINE, Ohio
Samarroco had three Friday night will mark the of the season as the defensively while averag- meeting between the two
first time the football team Marauders will begin ing 19.5 points offensi vc- teams in 2007 by a score
digs.
of 29-7. Alexander's last
Hannan
will
host from Meigs and Southern league play in week six ly.
Eastcm - which has win in the series carne in
OVCS and Burch on High Schools have com- and the Tornadoes will
their
league won t\VO straight against 2006 by a 20 6 score.
peted against one another. resume
Thursday at 6 p.m.

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