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                  <text>This
day in
history

Sunny. High
of 68. Low
near 40.

Local
sports
section

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 161, Volume 64

Wednesday, October 8, 2014 s 50¢

Co. discusses virus protocol

Department adds that Meigs has no case,
reminds residents to be calm but vigilant

infections in the U.S. occur seasonally during the summer and
fall, and outbreaks often tend
to occur in several-year cycles.
Enterovirus D68 (EV-D68),
like other enteroviruses,
appears to spread through close
Staff Report
tions occur in the U.S. each
While Ohio is one of 43
contact with infected people. It
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com
year. Most people infected with is also possible for frequently
states with EV-68, ODH has
enteroviruses have no symparranged for specimens to be
touched surfaces to be involved
POMEROY — The Ohio
toms or only mild symptoms,
tested at the Centers for Disin virus transmission.
Department of Health, several
but some infections can be
ease Control and Prevention.
For enterovirus
Ohio local health departments,
Meigs County currently has no serious. Infants, children and
prevention:Wash hands often
and hospitals are assessing
teenagers are most likely to get with soap and water for 20 secdiagnosed or confirmed cases.
increases in severe respiratory
infected with enteroviruses and onds, especially after changing
Enteroviruses are very comillness among children to deter- mon viruses. There are more
become sick. This is because
diapers. Fecal or oral route of
mine if it may be attributable
they do not yet have immunity transmission is possible since
than 100 types of enterovito infections with Enterovirus
from previous exposures to
ruses. It is estimated that 10
the virus first replicates in the
to 15 million enterovirus infec- these viruses. Most enterovirus intestinal tract.
D68 (EV- D68).

Soap and water are preferable for hand washing. Alcohol
sanitizers are not effective
against enteroviruses. Bleach
is preferred for disinfecting
surfaces.
Avoid touching eyes, nose
and mouth with unwashed
hands. Avoid kissing, hugging
and sharing cups or eating
utensils with people who are
sick.
Disinfect frequently touched
surfaces, including toys and
doorknobs, especially if someone is sick.
Stay home when feeling sick,
See PROTOCOL | 5

Council to
keep Baker
for six months

Applications for position
to be revisited March 2015
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Village Council met back-to-back
weeks, with meetings held Sept. 29 and Oct. 6.
The Sept. 29 meeting saw the appointment
of Sue Baker as temporary fiscal officer for the
next six months beginning immediately, with the
understanding that Baker would not be able to
hold regular daytime office hours.
It was also understood that she would work
hours as needed at her discretion. The council
decided this was the best course of action, as
training someone during the end of the year while
also handling all year-end procedures would not be
a good idea. At the end of the six-month period,
in March 2015, council will re-address the issue.
Council also notified those who applied for the
position that their resumes would be kept on file
and re-evaluated March 2015.
Mitch Altier, from M&amp;E Engineering, also
attended the meeting and asked council to
approve the payment of invoice 13 in the amount
of $40,000 for the final payment to Fields Excavating, which still has a one-year warranty. Council
approved the payment. Altier also asked council
to approve disbursement request #15 to OWDA
for the Sewer CSO Elimination project, which
includes the amount owed to Fields, and an
additional $8,100 to M&amp;E Engineering. Council
approved the payment.
Altier said that Pomeroy’s application for a grant
from OPWC for sidewalks, paving and parking lot
repair had not received many “points,” which usually indicates that a project will not get funding.
He said that a letter from the Corps of Engineers
stating their intent to supply funding for the project would help improve the village’s point totals,
See BAKER | 5

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

Program still receiving help
So far program has given Meigs
students 44 desktops, 50 tablets
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — So far,
Computers for Students,
a program started by Iva
Sisson that hopes to provide every high school
student in Meigs County
with internet access, has
given 44 desktops and 50
tablets to students at all
three local high schools.
In particular, Southern
High School teacher
Rachel Hupp has a tablet

of her own and is the official go-to teacher for any
Southern High School
student with a tablet
issue.
“Kids have every
resource available to use
what they’re getting to
the best of their ability,”
Sisson said. “It’s just so
wonderful to know that
if they’ve got a computer
problem, they have someone to turn to.”
While Eastern has had
a demand for tablets,

there has not been as
much demand for the
tablets during school
hours. Recently, Sisson
spoke before the Meigs
Local Board of Education
about the need for tablets during school hours
at Meigs Local, and has
not officially heard back
from the board on their
decision.
Sisson reminded the
community that there
will be a fundraising
concert at the historic
Stuarts Opera House in
Nelsonville..
Sisson said last year
was a tremendous success and the near sellout
crowd had a terrific time,

so the group has the
same lineup this year.
The concert will be 6
p.m. Saturday, with Grassinine, McGuffey Lane
and Jonathan Edwards.
Tickets are still available
at the Connect Ohio website or at the door.
All proceeds from the
concert will support the
CABI mission and this
year’s primary recipient
will be Computers for
Students, the nonprofit
group in Meigs County
that delivers computer
devices to students in
need with the commitment that they will perform well in school.

October SIDS Awareness Month

Health officials urge parents to take
preventative measures with babies

— SPORTS
Volleyball: 6
Cross Country: 7
Browns: 10
— FEATURES
Television: 7
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Iva Sisson, of Computers for Students, and Roma Sayre, Home National Bank president, present a “check” of $325 the bank gave to
Sisson’s group.

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

By Lindsay Kriz

of Health to help spread the word
about safe sleep for babies.
SIDS is the leading cause of
POMEROY — Along with Breast death among infants between one
Cancer Awareness Month, October month and one year of age, but
is also Sudden Infant Death (SIDS) there are ways that caregivers can
Awareness Month, and the Meigs
reduce the risk of SIDS and other
County Health Department is part- sleep related causes of infant death.
nering with the Ohio Department
Juli Simpson, program direc-

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

tor of the Child &amp; Family Health
Services Program and the Meigs
County Health Department, said
there are helpful ways to reduce the
risk of SIDS.
“The goal of this safe sleep campaign is to educate parents, grandparents, families, really anyone that
may be caring for an infant, with
the importance of putting babies to
sleep using the ABC’s of safe sleep:
Alone, on their Back, in a Crib,”
she said. “As a mom of two young
See SIDS | 5

�LOCAL/STATE

2 Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR

GOLDIZEN
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Maxine Goldizen,
82, of Huntington, died Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2014,
at The Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House,
Huntington. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville, Ohio, is in charge of arrangements,
which are incomplete.

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8

MURDOCK
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Virginia Murdock,
92, of Chesapeake, died Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2014,
at home.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in charge of arrangements, which
are incomplete.
THOMPSON
HUNTINGTON, W.Va — Rebecca Joan
Thompson, 55, of Huntington, died Sunday,
Oct. 5, 2014, at St. Mary’s Medical Center in
Huntington.
Funeral service will be conducted 11 a.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2014, at Hall Funeral Home
and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will
follow in Susie Chapel, Huntington. Visitation
will be 10 to 11 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2014,
at the funeral home.
WOODALL
GALLIPOLIS — James Aaron Woodall, 54, of
Gallipolis, died Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2014, at
his residence.
Graveside services will be 1 p.m. Friday, Oct.
10, 2014, at Mound Hill Cemetery with Pastor
Joe Woodall officiating. Willis Funeral Home is
assisting the family.

Nestled in an
angel’s wings

POMEROY — The library is
partnering
with the Chester Shade
MIDDLEPORT — Ash Street
Historical
Association
to host a
Church is holding their revival Oct.
program
on
Mary
Draper
Ingles.
8-12. The revival service will be at
6:30 p.m. Wednesday through Sat- It will be at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy
urday. On Sunday, the homecoming Library.
RACINE — The first annual
service wil be at 10:30 a.m.
Chase Roush “Forever 11” 5K run/
walk will be Oct. 11. Registration
THURSDAY, OCT. 9
is at 9 a.m. and the 5K begins at
RACINE — Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Church is having 10 a.m. at the Star Mill Park in
Racine. The entry free is $20,
an indoor yard sale in the FellowT-shirt included (the shirt is only
ship Hall from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
guaranteed if pre-ordered). All proOct. 9 and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct.
ceeds go to the Chase Roush Foun10. The address is 48540 Carmel
Road in Racine. Proceeds go to the dation, which helps kids in need.
Church Building Fund. Donations
SUNDAY, OCT. 12
accepted. Light lunch items availPOMEROY —The Carleton
able. For more information call
Church homecoming will be Oct.
740-949-2229.
12. Dinner will be at noon with a
program at 1:30 p.m. Special singFRIDAY, OCT. 10
ing will be performed by “The ForGALLIPOLIS — The Regular
given.” Everyone is welcome.
meeting of the O.O. McIntyre
TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Park District Board will be Friday,
Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies AuxilOctober 10, at 11 a.m. in the Park
District Office located at 18 Locust iary is having a baked steak dinner
at the T.P. VFW Post 9053 Hall
St., Gallipolis.
Sunday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
There will be baked steak, mashed
SATURDAY, OCT. 11
NELSONVILLE — The Connect potatoes, green beans, cole slaw,
roll, dessert and drink. A donation
Appalachia Broadband Initiative
Fund is having their concert start- of $10 is requested. Carryouts
ing at 6 p.m. at the historic Stuarts available.
RACINE — The Racine VolunOpera House. Artists include Grasteer Fire Department will have a
sinine, McGuffey Lane and Jonachicken barbecue. Serving begins
than Edwards.
MIDDLEPORT — The Middle- at 11 a.m. at the fire station.
MIDDLEPORT — Victory Bapport Ministerial Association is
sponsoring a special service at Ash tist Church in Middleport will have
their revival Oct. 12-15. On Oct. 12
Street Church at 6:30 p.m. with
services will be at 10 a.m., 11 a.m.
Jewish minister, the Rev. Dennis
and 7 p.m. Oct. 13-15 servies will
Karp, from Maryland. Karp is a
be at 7 p.m. There will be special
representative and regional director of Chosen People Ministries; an music.
international Jewish ministry. Chosen People Ministries is comprised MONDAY, OCT. 13
POMEROY — The Meigs
of Jewish ministers like Karp, who
County Health Department wil be
have come to know Jesus as the
messiah. Their mission is to spread closed for Columbus Day. Normal
business hours will resume Oct. 14
the good news of the gospel to
at 8 a.m.
other Jews here and abroad. Karp
MASON — The Mason County
is traveling through the area and
will also be preaching at Ash Street Solid Waste Authority will have
Church on at 10:30 a.m. Oct. 12.
their monthly meeting Oct. 13 at

10 a.m. at the recycling center in
Mason County.

TUESDAY, OCT. 14

TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
will have their regular meeting at 7
p.m. at the TPRSD office.
BEDFORD TWP — Bedford
Township Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m.
at the town hall.
CHESTER TWP — The Chester
Township Trustees will have their
regular meeting at 7 p.m. at the
town hall.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Board of Health meeting will
take place Tuesday, Oct. 14 at 5
p.m. in the conference room of the
Meigs County Health Department,
which is located at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
SALISBURY TWP — The Salisbury Trustees will have their regular meeting at 5 p.m. Oct. 14 at the
home of Manning Roush.

THURSDAY, OCT. 16

POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teachers Assocation will
meet Oct. 16 for a noon lunch and
program at the Wild Horse Cafe.
Guests are welcome. The speaker
will be Jim Cain, ORTA representative from Columbus, discussing
the numerous benefit programs
available to ORTA members. A
question-and-answer session will
follow. Members are encouraged to
come and hear about the benefits.
SYRACUSE — The Mission in
Syrause will have special ministry/
singing with Carl Ward Oct. 16 and
17 at 7 p.m. followed by Hymn Sing.
On Oct. 18 at 6 p.m. the Connors
will sing. For more information call
Tammy at at 740-508-1086.

SUNDAY, OCT. 18

RACINE — Morning Star
United Methodist Church will have
their homecoming. Lunch will be
served at 12:30 p.m., with service
of singing at 1:30 p.m.

Early voting begins following dispute
By Ann Sanner

a number of legislative
races and the outcome
of more than 1,600 local
COLUMBUS, Ohio —
issues.
Some Ohio voters sought
Ohioans can cast an
to avoid potential Elecabsentee ballot by mail or
tion Day hassles by castin person. The state says
ing their ballots Tuesday, more than 650,000 voters
as early voting for the
have already requested
fall races kicked off in the absentee ballots to vote
swing state.
early.
Adrian Strickland lives
The start of early votsteps away from an early ing shifted last month
voting center in Columamid a lawsuit over two
bus, but that’s not why he election-related measures.
decided to vote early.
One was a Republican“I hate the last-minute
backed state law trimvoting. The lines are just ming the early voting
too long,” said Strickland, period from 35 days to
a 51-year-old supervisor
typically 28 days. It elimiof nutrition services at a
nated so-called golden
hospital.
week, when people could
Voters will pick the
both register to vote and
next governor along
cast a ballot. The other
with other statewide
measure was a direcofficeholders on Nov. 4.
tive issued by the state’s
Residents also will decide elections chief that sets

Associated Press

Submitted photo

A few months ago, Brenda Stalnaker, of Greenwood Cemetery
Road in Racine, noticed that around 8:30 each night three
birds nestled down in her angel statue attached to a
shepherd’s hook. “Everyone says they’re guarded because of
the angel,” she said. “They’re just sleeping at night.”

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)

uniform early voting
times across the state and
restricted weekend and
evening hours.
The American Civil
Liberties Union of Ohio
challenged the measures
in a lawsuit brought in
May on behalf of the
state’s NAACP chapter
and others.
On Sept. 4, a federal
judge temporarily blocked
the law from taking effect
this fall. His ruling moved
the start of early voting
to Sept. 30 and lengthened the voting schedule.
But a ruling last week
from U.S. Supreme Court
returned the start date
to Tuesday, following a
request from state officials.
Democrats have used
the dispute to encourage
their base to cast an early

ballot. All of the party’s
statewide candidates
planned to vote Tuesday.
Columbus resident
Sheila Agbede said she
wanted to make sure she
voted early this year, noting what she described
as an effort by politicians
to try to suppress the
right to vote. Agbede, a
57-year-old food service
clerk, said such efforts
could be a launching
point for political participation, just like the shooting death of an unarmed
black man by a white
police officer in Ferguson,
Missouri.
“I think the people are
figuring it out, just like in
Ferguson,” said Agbede,
who is black. “They’re
realizing that they’ve got
to vote to get to change
things.”

Telephone: 740-992-2155
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Please call for more information on local pricing.
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CONTACT US
EDITOR:
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740-446-2342 Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER:
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jchason@civitasmedia.com
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740-992-2155 Ext. 2555
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

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Cleveland serial killer seeks new trial
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

“There is simply nothing in this record that suggests
that Sowell — before, during, or after his trial — has ever
COLUMBUS, Ohio — A Cleveland been unhappy with the trial court’s decision to close the
man who killed 11 women and hid
courtroom.”
Associated Press

the remains in and around his home
deserves a new trial because a judge
wrongly closed a portion of jury selection and a hearing where attorneys
argued about his police interrogation,
the serial killer’s lawyers told the Ohio
Supreme Court.
Anthony Sowell was convicted and
sentenced to death in 2011.
His attorneys say the judge in the
case improperly closed a July 2010
hearing in which lawyers argued over
an hours-long video of Sowell’s interview with police. They also said in
court filings last week that the judge
shouldn’t have put the individual questioning of potential jurors off limits to
the public as the trial got under way
in June of the following year, because
doing so violated constitutional requirements of trials open to the public.
The judge’s actions followed Sowell’s unsuccessful attempts to have
the trial moved because of intense
publicity.
Prosecutors say Sowell should get

— Written by Cuyahoga County prosecutors

a new evidence suppression hearing,
but not a new trial.
The evidence against Sowell, 55,
now on Ohio’s death row, was overwhelming. But asking for a new trial
or new hearing is more than a legal
exercise, public defender Jeff Gamso
said Tuesday.
“The cases that are the most difficult, the cases where the defendant
is most reviled, the cases where we as
a society are seemingly most happy
with the outcome, the cases where
things seem not to matter, those are
the cases where we must be especially
scrupulous,” Gamso said.
At the time of trial, prosecutors
were so concerned about closing the
individual questioning of jurors they
sought a mistrial, a request denied by
the judge.
Prosecutors now argue, however,

that Sowell’s constitutional rights
were not violated, because his attorneys did not object to closing the
questioning.
“There is simply nothing in this
record that suggests that Sowell —
before, during, or after his trial — has
ever been unhappy with the trial court’s
decision to close the courtroom,”
Cuyahoga County prosecutors wrote.
Sowell’s new attorneys disagree,
saying an objection was noted.
Both sides agree the earlier hearing, over suppressing the contents
of Sowell’s 11 ½-hour interrogation
video, should not have been closed to
the public.
A decision from the Ohio Supreme
Court is not expected for several
months and will likely be preceded by
in-person arguments by attorneys for
both sides.

�STATE/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 8, 2014 3

Reports show Ohio River bridge is crumbling
CINCINNATI (AP) — Years
of inspection reports show that
a high-traffic bridge over the
Ohio River is showing its age
after five decades.
The Brent Spence Bridge —
which carries traffic on Interstate 75 between Cincinnati and
Covington, Kentucky — has
received lower grades throughout the 10 years of inspection
reports obtained through a
public-records request by The
Cincinnati Enquirer.

The bridge’s overall “sufficiency” rating, on a scale from 1 to
100, was 59 in last year’s report,
graded as a “C-minus.” The
bridge rated a 78 in 2006. It has
gotten worsening scores in major
categories of upkeep, maintenance and structural integrity.
The bridge has been deemed
safe, but its deteriorating condition concerns some experts.
The problem continues to be
lack of a funding plan or construction start date for the $2.4

An Ohio Jury
recommends
death for teen
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) — A jury in southwest
Ohio decided that a 19-year-old man should be
executed for killing an 18-year-old U.S. Navy
recruit and dumping his body in the woods several counties away.
The same jury that convicted Austin Myers
of aggravated murder last week deliberated six
hours Monday before voting to recommend the
death penalty for him, instead of life in prison.
The judge will have the final decision when
Myers is sentenced Oct. 16 following a hearing.
If Myers is sentenced to death, he will become
the youngest inmate on Ohio’s death row. He’s
about five years younger than the current youngest person awaiting execution.
Prosecutors urged a death sentence in the
slaying of Justin Back, pointing to evidence that
Myers spent a day and a half planning the crime,
overcoming setbacks and altering the scheme
several times.
“Austin Myers chose to kill,” Warren County
Prosecutor David Fornshell said. “As a result, he
forfeited his right to live.”
Myers and 19-year-old Timothy Mosley were
accused of killing Back, who was about enter the
Navy, during a burglary and then dumping his
body in Preble County, north of Dayton. Prosecutors dropped the death penalty specifications
against Mosley in exchange for his testimony
against Myers. Mosley faces life in prison.
Myers went to the witness stand to deliver a
statement to the jury, according to the Dayton
Daily News.
“I’m sorry that this happened,” he said. “I
know this doesn’t bring Justin back. I wish I
could go back in time and stop this.”
Myers urged the jury to spare his life for his
family’s sake.
“If you choose for me to die, it’s only going to
cause more pain and suffering for another family,” he said. “Not me. I won’t feel anything.”

Justices signal
support for
inmate’s beard
By Mark Sherman

Deputy Attorney General
David Curran said.
Justice Samuel Alito,
WASHINGTON —
sounding like the prosSupreme Court justices
ecutor he once was,
appeared united Tuesday suggested a simple soluas they picked apart pris- tion to the concealment
on rules in Arkansas that issue: Give the inmate a
allow full Afros and mus- comb and instruct him
taches, but no beards, in to comb the beard. “If
a case about a Muslim
there’s anything in there,
inmate’s claim that his
if there’s a SIM card
religious beliefs require
in there or a revolver
that he be allowed to
or anything else you
keep a half-inch beard.
think can be hidden in
The court heard argu- a 1/2-inch beard, a tiny
ments in its first religious revolver, it’ll fall out,”
liberty case since the
Alito said to laughter.
Hobby Lobby case bitterCurran agreed. “That
ly divided the justices in sounds like something
June over whether famthat could be done,” he
ily-owned corporations
said.
could mount religious
Justice Ruth Bader
objections to paying for
Ginsburg also elicited
women’s contraceptives
some agreement from the
under the health care
Arkansas lawyer when
overhaul.
she said, “You have no
There was no such
comparable rule about
division evident in the
hair on one’s head, where
courtroom Tuesday as
it seems more could
several justices were
be hidden than in the
openly skeptical of argu- beard.”
ments made by a lawyer
But here Curran added
for Arkansas in defense
that officials have a secof the state’s no-beard
ond concern, their belief
policy, which has no
that appearance can be
exception for religious
changed more readily by
beliefs.
shaving a beard. “The
The state has a legitimaterial difference there
mate security interest
is our professional judgin prohibiting beards
ment is the disguise-relatbecause prisoners can
ed component of a beard
hide items in them and
and shaving that beard is
change their appearance more profound than one
by shaving, Arkansas
on the head,” he said.

Associated Press

billion replacement job. A proposal to use tolls to help cover
the cost has run into political
roadblocks on the Kentucky
side. Kentucky owns the bridge
that is a key transportation and
commerce link in the region.
Records show the bridge
hasn’t been painted since
1991, adding to rust and minor
cracking; concrete has decayed
to expose internal steel that
could rust, and drains are often
clogged, adding to water pool-

ing on the bridge that drops in
waves to the bottom deck during heavy rains.
The bridge years ago was
deemed “functionally obsolete”
because of design deficiencies
such as narrow lanes and lack
of emergency lanes on a bridge
with high traffic volume.
Results from the latest
inspection conducted last
month by Kentucky and Ohio
highway officials are due in
January.

The continued deterioration
is cause for concern, a bridge
safety expert says.
“From reviewing the inspection reports, it appears that
more things should be done to
get the bridge back into shape,”
said Abolhassan Astaneh, professor of structural and bridge
engineering at the University
of California-Berkeley. “If they
keep waiting to fix it, the
bridge’s condition will continue
to worsen even more quickly.”

Health waivers: Too complicated to claim?
By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Millions of
Americans may qualify for waivers
from the most unpopular part of
President Barack Obama’s health
care overhaul. But getting that
exemption could be an ordeal.
Community groups are concerned about a convoluted process
for applying for waivers from the
law’s tax penalty on people who
remain uninsured. Not everyone is
complaining, however: Tax preparation companies are flagging it as
a business opportunity.
The law’s requirement that
Americans carry health insurance
remains contentious. Waivers were
designed to ease the impact.
But while some exemptions seem
simple, others will require math
calculations. Some involve mailing
in supporting documents, such
as copies of medical bills, police
reports, obituaries, utility shut-off
notices — even news articles.
Two federal agencies have roles,
each with its own waivers and time
schedules. Some people will apply
directly to the Internal Revenue
Service when they file their 2014
tax returns next year. They’ll use a
new Form 8965.
Others can start now and seek
an exemption through HealthCare.
gov. If it’s approved, they’ll get a
number to put on their IRS form
later on.
It will all come to a head this taxfiling season.
Hailed by Democrats as the fulfillment of historical aspirations
for covering all Americans, the
Affordable Care Act has turned out
to have multiple issues. The debut
of online insurance markets last
fall became an embarrassment for
the White House. It took the better
part of two months to get the website working.
Waivers are part of the law’s
complex relationship with the tax
system, a new area of potential
complications just starting to
emerge.
“Many people are going to need
help to file for an exemption,” said

Zach Reat, director of work support initiatives for the Ohio Association of Foodbanks in Columbus.
“There’s definitely the potential for
people getting tripped up,”
“If you are a do-it-yourself person
who is going to try it on pen and
paper, all I can say is, ‘God be with
you,’” said Mark Ciaramitaro, vice
president of health care services at
tax giant H&amp;R Block.
At Intuit, maker of TurboTax,
software engineers and tax lawyers
teamed up to create “Exemption
Check,” a free online tool for people to see if they qualify. Charges
apply later if the taxpayer files
through TurboTax.
“We have dug really deep into
these exemptions,” said Sacha
Adam, Intuit’s team leader.
“I would say that it is complex,”
he added. “That is where we get
excited.”
The requirement that individuals
carry health insurance took effect
this year, alongside the law’s major
coverage expansion. Although an
estimated 10 million people are no
longer uninsured, “Obamacare”
remains divisive in the congressional elections. Soon after election
day, HealthCare.gov’s second open
enrollment gets underway.
From Nov. 15 to Feb. 15, people
who don’t have access to job-based
coverage can sign up for private
insurance that is subsidized by tax
credits. As open enrollment winds
down, tax filing season will go into
high gear, people will start seeing the new connections between
health care and taxes.
Those who got too big a tax
credit this year through HealthCare.gov will have their tax refunds
reduced to pay it back. And those
still uninsured will be scrambling
to check out penalty waivers.
Of the roughly 30 million to 40
million uninsured people, about
20 million are estimated to qualify
for one or more exemptions. That
includes people in the country illegally.
The penalty is sometimes dismissed as puny, just $95. But that’s
an over-simplification. The penalty
is actually the greater of two num-

bers, $95 per person in 2014, or 1
percent of household income above
the threshold for filing taxes.
Take a hypothetical single
woman who makes $25,000 a year
as a call-center operator and was
uninsured all of 2014. She would
owe a penalty of $148.50. (1 percent of $14,850 — her income
above the 2014 tax filing threshold,
which is $10,150.)
For 2015, the penalty will rise to
the greater of 2 percent of income,
or $325.
Many of the people facing fines
are low-income workers, a group
the law was intended to help.
Some exemptions, including
membership in certain religious
groups, were spelled out in the law.
The administration expanded the
list to address the trying circumstances of people living from paycheck to paycheck.
The IRS webpage lists 16 exemptions. Tax preparation companies
say the number is actually higher
because some general categories
allow people to qualify due to different specific circumstances.
For example, HealthCare.gov’s
hardship exemption lists 14 different subcategories, including homelessness, threatened eviction or
foreclosure, unpaid medical bills,
and if someone attests to being a
victim of domestic violence.
Some waivers should be simple,
such as the ones for people who
didn’t make enough money to file
income taxes or for those who
were only briefly uninsured.
But a seemingly important
exemption for people whose
employer coverage doesn’t meet
the law’s test of affordability isn’t
easy to figure out. Tax preparers
say don’t wait until the last minute.
At Foundation Communities, an
Austin, Texas, nonprofit serving
low-income people, Elizabeth Colvin says a major education effort is
needed.
“The process for claiming an
exemption is confusing, even for
people who do this every day,” said
Colvin, whose program helps uninsured people get covered.

Americans living longer, most death rates fall
By Mike Stobbe
AP Medical Writer

NEW YORK — Americans are
living longer than ever before,
according to a new government
report filled mostly with good
news. U.S. life expectancy inched
up again and death rates fell.
Rates also fell or held steady
for nearly all the leading causes
of death. The one exception: The
suicide rate reached its highest
point in 25 years. That figure has
been increasing since 2000 and
“it’s really hard to say why,” said
Robert Anderson, who oversees
the Centers for Disease Prevention
and Control branch that issued the
report Wednesday.
The yearly report looked at
deaths in 2012. It found:
— U.S. life expectancy for a
child born in 2012 was 78 years
and 9½ months, up about six
weeks from life expectancy in 2010
and 2011. That’s a record.
— For someone 65, the CDC
estimates that men have about 18
years of life left and women about

20½ years. The gaps between men
and women grew slightly, compared to 2011.
— There were 2.5 million deaths
in 2012, or about 28,000 more than
the year before. The increase was
expected, reflecting the nation’s
growing and aging population,
Anderson said.
— The infant mortality rate
dropped again slightly, to a new
low of 5.98 per 1,000 births.
That’s a historic low, but the U.S.
infant mortality rate continues to
be higher than in most European
countries.
— Death rates for blacks and
whites dropped but held steady
for Hispanics. However, Hispanic
death rates remain lower than the
black and white numbers.
— The 10 leading causes of
death remained the same, with
heart disease and cancer topping
the list. Suicide is the 10th.
The suicide rate rose more than
2 percent, to 12.6 per suicide
deaths per 100,000 American.
That’s the highest it’s been since

Visit us at

1987, when the rate was 12.8.
Some research suggests suicides
increase during hard economic
times, but this trend has persisted
before, during, and after the recession of 2007-2009. Some experts
have said the sale and abuse of
prescription painkillers in the last
decade have been a contributing
factor.
Whatever the reason, “it’s kind
of surprising,” said Solveig Cunningham, an Emory University
researcher who has studied death
rates during eras of financial hardship.
The overall statistics suggest our
society is getting better at medically managing conditions like diabetes and heart disease, she said. But
maybe “we’re not able to manage
mental health as well, resulting in
devastating results” — the increasing suicide rate, she said.
The CDC report compiles information from all U.S. death certificates from 2012. Researchers use
the death rates to project how long
people will live.

www.mydailysentinel.com

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Ideology that
endangers all
You might have thought political correctness
couldn’t get less well thought-out, or more dangerous. You were wrong.
In the coming weeks, the U.S. Justice Department, spearheaded by outgoing Attorney General
Eric Holder, is expected to announce major policy
changes that will ban law enforcement from profiling based on religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation,
gender or national origin, even in national security
investigations.
This change has been years in the making, but
has been fought by professionals at the FBI who
realize profiling is a critical tool — in fact, sometimes it’s the only tool law enforcement has — to
prevent deadly attacks.
From the skies over Lockerbie, Scotland, to
the Pentagon, to buses in London and trains in
Madrid, to a mall in Nairobi, to the streets of Boston, and to what we used to call the World Trade
Center, but now call Ground Zero, anyone who
denies the common thread of terrorism — Islamic
extremism — is either a fool or a hopeless ideologue.
At a time when the Islamic State is overrunning
large regions of Syria and Iraq, savagely slaughtering innocents — frequently just because of their
religion or nationality — and openly recruiting
homegrown jihadists online to sow chaos and kill
in America, we must not unduly handcuff those
tasked with keeping us safe and free.
Take, for example, the alleged bombers of the
2013 Boston Marathon. There was nothing motivating them to kill and maim bystanders other
than a grievance against their adopted homeland
over perceived wrongs done to their co-religionists
on another continent.
The administration’s unrealized goal of closing
Guantanamo Bay, prosecuting terrorist masterminds in civilian court, and — up until reality
very recently caught up with our president —
withdrawing troops as rapidly as possible from the
Middle East, reveal a deep unwillingness to treat
matters of national security with the seriousness
these issues deserve.
This is not mere crime-fighting. This is a war;
not against other nations, but against a loose affiliation of radicals with little in common besides the
radical religious ideology of jihad, and a determination to destroy and terrorize us.
Can you imagine, during the War of 1812,
American soldiers ordered not to fire on advancing British soldiers because we can’t use their
national origin to “profile” them as enemy combatants? Or, on Okinawa in 1945, instructing soldiers
to not assume the Japanese were the enemy?
We cannot, and should not, assume that all
members of the Muslim faith are terrorists. There
is great disparity of thought and motivation not
just among individual Muslims, but also among
Muslim sects and traditions. This is proved by the
fact that ISIS and al-Qaida are guilty of slaughtering vastly more Muslims whom they view as heretics than Americans.
It would be unquestionably absurd to assume the
late Westboro Baptist Church firebrand Fred Phelps
and the pope hold the same views, just because
they both call themselves Christians, but under a
blanket no-profiling policy, both men would have to
be viewed exactly the same by law enforcement.
This is a waste of time, and a waste of resources. To proscribe legitimate and reasonable law
enforcement options because politically correct
bureaucrats want the world to be religion-blind
and borderless is indefensible.
Cultural sensitivity comes from cultural understanding; knowing and appreciating our differences — not deliberate ignorance — is the answer.
Mandating law enforcement to pretend differences
don’t exist is bad, dangerous, arrogant policy,
forced on us by those blinded by political ideology.
Reprinted from the Orange County (Calif.) Register.

The Daily Sentinel
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 and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be
in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities.
“Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

THEIR VIEW

Trying to outsmart the corn bandits
By Daris Howard

I love autumn time. The leaves
are gold and red, and the smell
of grain dust fills the air from
the combines working their way
slowly up and down the fields full
of ripe grain.
But there is one reason above all
that I love fall, and that is because
the corn in my garden is ready to
be eaten.
There is nothing quite like walking into a corn patch and finding
a big, fat ear. I pull the husk open
slightly so I can check it, and
when I find the kernels yellow and
fat, I twist it from the stock, while
my mouth waters at the thought
of eating it. Though it takes only
a short time, it seems like forever
before I can get it shucked and
into a pot of boiling water.
After only a few minutes, I pull
it out, piping hot from its warm
bath, slather it with rich, creamy
butter and salt, and bite into the
sunshiny flavor it holds. Just writing this makes me need a drool
cloth so I don’t short out my laptop.
But it isn’t always that easy.
Sometimes there are varmints
that lay claim to my corn before I
get a chance to harvest it. These
masked bandits come in the dark
of the night, and often strip everything off that has the slightest

yellow hue. I am, of course, talking
about raccoons, not my neighbors.
Last year, I lost about three
quarters of my patch to the night
raiders, so I was determined I
would be ready this year.
All of my neighbors had advice
for me. John, who used to work for
a classical music station, claimed
that if I put a radio out there playing country western music, that it
would drive them away. He said
for me to make sure not to play
classical music, or they would just
enjoy the music while they dined.
“But,” he told me, “no one, not
even a raccoon, can keep their
appetite while listening to country
western.”
“Why,” he continued, “after
those raccoons have listened to
that rubbish about how sad someone is because his dog ran away
and his wife came back, they will
never want to visit your corn patch
again.”
I know some of my children
like country western music, and
perhaps my neighbor had a few
prejudices, but I decided it was
worth a try.
But there was another problem.
We don’t have any air conditioning, and have to leave the windows
cracked open so that we can sleep.
The cool night breeze is pleasant.
However, when the country music

floated in the window along with
the breeze, I don’t know if the raccoons lost their appetite or not,
but I do know I couldn’t sleep.
Besides, it didn’t seem to stop the
raccoons. Oh, maybe it did for a
while. But either the raccoons got
used to it, or, according to John,
they just learned to tune it out like
he does. Nonetheless, my corn
continued to disappear along with
my sleep.
I thought, perhaps, opera would
have the same effect on the raccoons. When I listen to it, I tend
to lose my appetite, and I thought
it might be easier to sleep on. It
was actually worse. It would be
playing along, and I would just be
drowsing off to sleep, when someone would start bellowing like a
bull, and I’d pop to alert, never
able to sleep again. It seemed to
have the same effect on the raccoons. They ate less and tore up
more. I think it irritated them.
I think it irritated someone else
too. Because it suddenly went
quiet in the middle of the night,
and the next morning my old radio
looked like it had been smashed
with a baseball bat. I may be
wrong, but I don’t think raccoons
carry baseball bats.
Daris Howard, award-winning, syndicated
columnist, playwright, and author, can be
contacted at daris@darishoward.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
Oct. 8, the 281st day of
2014. There are 84 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Oct. 8, 1914, the
World War I song “Keep
the Home Fires Burning,” by Ivor Novello and
Lena Guilbert Ford, was
first published in London
under the title “Till the
Boys Come Home.”
On this date:
In 1869, the 14th president of the United States,
Franklin Pierce (puhrs),
died in Concord, N.H.
In 1871, the Great
Chicago Fire erupted;
fires also broke out in
Peshtigo, Wis., and in
several communities in
Michigan.
In 1918, U.S. Army
Cpl. Alvin C. York led
an attack that killed 25
German soldiers and captured 132 others in the
Argonne Forest in France.
In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann was indicted by a
grand jury in New Jersey
for murder in the death

of the kidnapped son of
Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh.
In 1944, “The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet,” starring Ozzie and
Harriet Nelson, made
its debut on CBS Radio.
Former Republican presidential nominee Wendell
Willkie, 52, died in New
York.
In 1945, President
Harry S. Truman
announced that the secret
of the atomic bomb would
be shared only with Britain and Canada.
In 1956, Don Larsen
pitched the only perfect
game in a World Series to
date as the New York Yankees beat the Brooklyn
Dodgers in Game 5, 2-0.
In 1957, the Brooklyn
Baseball Club announced
it was accepting an offer
to move the Dodgers
from New York to Los
Angeles.
In 1967, former British
Prime Minister Clement
Attlee died in London at
age 84.
In 1970, Soviet author

Alexander Solzhenitsyn
was named winner of the
Nobel Prize for literature.
In 1982, all labor
organizations in Poland,
including Solidarity, were
banned.
In 1992, former West
German Chancellor Willy
Brandt died in Unkel,
Germany, at age 78.
Today’s Birthdays:
Entertainment reporter
Rona Barrett is 78.
Actor Paul Hogan is
75. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Fred Cash (The
Impressions) is 74. Civil
rights activist Rev. Jesse
Jackson is 73. Comedian Chevy Chase is 71.
Author R.L. Stine is 71.
Actor Dale Dye is 70.
Country singer Susan
Raye is 70. TV personality Sarah Purcell is
66. Actress Sigourney
Weaver is 65. Rhythmand-blues singer Robert
“Kool” Bell (Kool &amp; the
Gang) is 64. Producerdirector Edward Zwick is
62. Country singer-musician Ricky Lee Phelps
is 61. Actor Michael

Dudikoff is 60. Comedian
Darrell Hammond is 59.
Actress Stephanie Zimbalist is 58. Rock musician Mitch Marine is 53.
Actress Kim Wayans is
53. Rock singer Steve
Perry (Cherry Poppin’
Daddies) is 51. Actor
Ian Hart is 50. Gospel
and rhythm-and-blues
singer CeCe Winans is
50. Rock musician C.J.
Ramone (The Ramones)
is 49. Actress-producer
Karyn Parsons is 48.
Singer-producer Teddy
Riley is 48. Actress
Emily Procter is 46.
Actor Dylan Neal is 45.
Actor-screenwriter Matt
Damon is 44. Actress
Kristanna Loken is 35.
Rhythm-and-blues singer
Byron Reeder (Mista)
is 35. Rock-soul singermusician Noelle Scaggs
(Fitz and the Tantrums)
is 35. Actor Nick Cannon
is 34. Actor Max Crumm
is 29. Singer-songwriterproducer Bruno Mars is
29. Actor Angus T. Jones
is 21. Actress Molly
Quinn is 21.

�LOCAL/WORLD

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 8, 2014 5

Turkey: Syrian town poised to fall to militants
By Ryan Lucas
and Lefteris Pitarakis

for a final assault.
Warning that the aerial camAssociated Press
paign alone was not enough to
halt the Islamic State group’s
MURSITPINAR, Turkey
advance, Turkish President
— Islamic State fighters were
Recep Tayyip Erdogan called
poised to capture a strategic
for greater cooperation with
Syrian town on the Turkish bor- the Syrian opposition, which is
der, Turkey’s president warned
fighting both the extremists and
Tuesday, even as Kurdish forces forces loyal to Syrian President
battled to expel the extremists
Bashar Assad.
from their footholds on the out“Kobani is about to fall,” Erdoskirts.
gan told Syrian refugees in the
The outgunned Kurdish fight- Turkish town of Gaziantep, near
ers struggling to defend Kobani the border. “We asked for three
got a small boost from a series
things: One, for a no-fly zone
of U.S.-led airstrikes against the to be created; Two, for a secure
militants that sent huge columns zone parallel to the region to be
of black smoke into the sky. Lim- declared; and for the moderate
ited coalition strikes have done
opposition in Syria and Iraq to
little to blunt the Islamic State
be trained and equipped.”
group’s three-week offensive,
Erdogan’s comments did not
and its fighters have relentlessly signal a shift in Turkey’s posishelled the town in preparation
tion: He has said repeatedly

Protocol

Control in Atlanta.
The department
will:Inquire about a history
From Page 1
of travel to West Africa in
the 21 days before illness
and consult with your
onset for any patient prehealthcare provider as
senting with fever or other
needed.
symptoms consistent with
Colorado and the CDC
Ebola.
are investigating a coinRecommend isolating
cidental outbreak of nine
patients
who report a travel
cases of limb (arm and leg)
history
to
an Ebola-affected
weakness and mild paralysis
country
(currently
Liberia,
in youngsters with a median
Sierra
Leone,
and
Guinea)
age of 10 years old who also
and who are exhibiting
had enterovirus-like symptoms. They are looking for a Ebola symptoms in a healthlink to enterovirus or some- care facility with a private
room and private bathroom
thing else.
and implement standard,
If you have sick children
contact, and droplet precauand are concerned it is
tions (gowns, facemask, eye
worse than a “common
protection, and gloves)
cold” take them to a health
Immediately notify the
care professional for evaluOhio
Department of Health.
ation.
The
Meigs County Health
In terms of the Ebola
Department
asks that all
virus, the Meigs County
local health care providers
Health Department will
follow these steps in deter- follow these same protocols, including notifying
mining if patients are at
risk. These steps are based the Meigs County Health
Department, as well as
on recommendations from
the Centers for Disease
ODH.

SIDS

sleep on adult beds, chairs,
sofas, waterbeds, pillows,
cushions or soft surfaces.
From Page 1
Dress your baby in sleep
clothing, such as a sleep
children myself, I know how sack, and do not use a blanoverwhelming it can be
ket.
to hear a lot of conflicting
Avoid letting the baby get
health information, what’s
too hot. Keep room temperasafe, what’s not, what you
tures in a range comfortable
should and shouldn’t be
for a lightly clothed adult.
doing, and so on.”
Infants should receive all
Simpson said that since
recommended vaccinations.
the safe sleep campaign, creBreastfeeding is recomated by the American Acad- mended to help to reduce
emy of Pediatrics (AAP)
the risk of SIDS.
began back in the early
Avoid smoke exposure
1990s, the overall U.S. SIDS during pregnancy and after
rate declined by 50 percent. birth. Place the crib in an
She gave an example from
area that is always smoke
the past, when doctors
free.
insisted that parents put
Supervised, awake tummy
babies to sleep on their bel- time is recommended daily
lies because they worried
to facilitate development.
about a baby choking if they Tummy time is when the
were to vomit. But now that infant lays on his or her
studies have been tested, it
tummy instead of back, with
has been proven that babies adult supervision.
who sleep on their backs are
Consider using a pacifier
less likely to suffocate.
at nap time and bed time,
The health department
once breastfeeding is well
also provided the following established.
tips:The safest place for
Talk to those who care for
your baby to sleep is in the
your baby, including child
room where you sleep, but
care providers, family, and
not in your bed.
friends, about placing your
Never place babies to
baby to sleep on his or her

that Ankara wants to see a more
comprehensive strategy for Syria
before it commits to military
involvement in the U.S.-led coalition.
Turkish tanks and other
ground forces have been
stationed along the border
within a few hundred yards
of the fighting in Kobani, also
known as Ayn Arab, but have
not intervened. And while Turkey said just days ago that it
wouldn’t let Kobani fall, there’s
no indication the government
is prepared to make a major
move to save it.
Since mid-September, the militant onslaught has forced some
200,000 people to flee Kobani
and surrounding villages, and
activists say more than 400
people have been killed in the
fighting. It has also brought the

violence of Syria’s civil war to
Turkey’s doorstep.
Capturing Kobani would give
the Islamic State group, which
already rules a huge stretch of
territory spanning the Syria-Iraq
border, a direct link between its
positions in the Syrian province
of Aleppo and its stronghold
of Raqqa, to the east. It would
also give the group full control
of a large stretch of the TurkishSyrian border.
Syrian Kurds scoffed at the
rhetoric coming out of Ankara.
They say that not only are the
Turks not helping, that they are
actively hindering the defense of
Kobani by preventing Kurdish
militiamen in Turkey from crossing the border into the town to
help in the fight.
“We are besieged by Turkey,
it is not something new,” said

Ismet Sheikh Hassan, the Kurdish defense chief for the Kobani
region.
Relations between Turkey and
Syria’s Kurds have long been
strained, in large part because
Ankara believes the Kurdish
Democratic Union, or PYD —
the leading Syrian Kurdish political party — is affiliated with
the Kurdish PKK movement that
has waged a long and bloody
insurgency in southeast Turkey.
In towns across Turkey, Kurdish protesters clashed with
police Tuesday, while Kurdish
demonstrators forced their way
into the European Parliament
in Brussels — part of Europewide demonstrations demanding more help for the besieged
Kurdish militiamen struggling
to defend Kobani. A 25-year-old
protester in Turkey was killed.

Hellman said that all snow
removal equipment is ready
for Winter, and council memFrom Page 1
bers Spaun and Moon suggested that the county spread salt
but that it wasn’t possible to
at a thinner rate on flat areas,
get the letter currently, and
which helps save salt for hilly
that the Corps of Engineers’
areas in the county.
contribution to the project
Chief Proffitt told council
might be two years from now.
that
he needed to purchase
Altier suggested that the vila
monitor
for the Pomeroy
lage simply let the project
Police
Office’s
holding cell
ride for the moment since
shocks
and
ball
joints for the
there would most likely not
Code
Enforcer’s
car, one new
be a grant on the way. Council
tire
to
replace
one
that blew
approved a vote to table the
and
supplies
for
the
BAC
project for now.
machine,
for
a
total
of
around
Council meetings were also
$600. Council approved the
moved to the first and third
motion. Proffitt said that
Mondays of each month so
proceeds from a 2013 Butthat Baker would be able to
ternut drug bust were split
attend both Middleport and
Pomeroy village council meet- between the Pomeroy Police
Department, the Prosecutor’s
ings. Baker was also named
Office and the Meigs County
signer of all village bank
Sheriff’s Office. The amount
accounts.
received by the PPD, around
Village Administrator Paul
$17,500, was placed in the
Hellman told council that
Law Enforcement Trust Fund.
it has been very difficult
Some of this money will be
to acquire road salt for the
used to purchase four new tascounty this year, but that he
ers and cases, a bullet-proof
has already arranged the purchase of 100 tons from Cargill. vest, five pants and two shirts

for three officers, two refurbished radar guns, boots for
two officers including himself,
seven body cameras, a flasher
box for Car 14, firearms qualifications and an instructor for
taser qualifications, which will
all total about $6,322.40. This
leaves about $10,000 of the
money in the trust fund.
The Oct. 6 meeting was
brief, with council approving
the payment of bills totaling
$17,055.48.
Baker also informed council
that Ohio Public Employees
Retirement System withholding will no longer be permitted for members. The group
also approved the draft of the
letter sent to Fiscal Officer
applicants, informing them
that the job would be revisited in six months. Lastly, a
copy of the letter sent to the
Ohio Department of Job and
Family Services to appeal a
request for unemployment was
released. Council said that
they have not heard back from
ODJFS beyond a confirmation
that they received the appeal.

Baker

back for every sleep.
Obtain regular prenatal
care to reduce the risk of
SIDS even before birth.
Avoid alcohol and illicit
drug use during pregnancy
and after birth.
“A lot of times, I don’t
think this is necessarily
about families intentionally
doing something that puts
a baby at risk,” Simpson
said. “It can be a case of
the caregivers being either
misinformed or not knowing
at all. Sometimes as new
parents we do something
that we think will help with
bonding or comfort of the
baby, such as co-sleeping,
or snapping a really cute
picture of a newborn baby
and parent falling asleep
together on the couch. Now
that we’re learning more
about infant mortality and
safe sleep, we know that
these things can actually be
very dangerous.”
For more information, call
the Meigs County Health
Department at 740-992-6626
or visit the Ohio Department of Health’s Safe Sleep
website at www.odh.ohio.
gov/safesleep/

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 52.96
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 21.14
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 99.79
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.43
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 45.47
BorgWarner (NYSE) —52.52
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 23.79
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.320
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 41.88
Collins (NYSE) — 75.94
DuPont (NYSE) — 69.00
US Bank (NYSE) — 40.60
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.81
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 57.84
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 59.27
Kroger (NYSE) — 52.95
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 65.94
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 108.25
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.10

BBT (NYSE) — 37.37
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.75
Pepsico (NYSE) — 93.10
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.39
Rockwell (NYSE) — 105.88
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.73
Royal Dutch Shell — 73.15
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 30.30
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.30
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 7.96
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.92
Worthington (NYSE) — 35.65
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Oct. 7, 2014, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

For the best local weather coverage, visit www.mydailysentinel.com

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 8, 2014 s Page 6

Tornadoes sweep Eastern
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Southern sophomore Marlee Maynard (1) sets a ball in the
air as teammates Madison Maynard (8) and Brynn Harris
look on during this Sept. 22 file photo of a match at South
Gallia in Mercerville, Ohio.

RACINE, Ohio — The streaks are
over.
The Southern volleyball team beat
Eastern at home for the first time in
nine years and also earned a season
sweep for the first time since 1996
Monday night following a 25-9, 25-19,
25-16 decision in a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division matchup in
Meigs County.
The Lady Tornadoes (12-5, 9-5 TVC
Hocking) were too much for the Lady
Eagles (8-12, 7-7) during their Volley for the Cure contest, as the hosts
stormed out to leads of 7-3 and 15-4 en
route to a 16-point Game 1 win.
SHS took early leads of 6-1 and 11-6
in Game 2, but Eastern countered 13 of
the next 21 points to knot things up at

19-all. The Lady Tornadoes, however,
scored the final six points to secure a
2-0 match advantage.
EHS, which led early in all three
games, stormed out to a small 13-12
edge in Game 3, but the hosts countered
with 13 of the final 16 points to wrap up
the nine-point win and 3-0 triumph.
The Lady Tornadoes have now won
two straight matches while the Lady
Eagles had their three-match winning
streak come to an end.
Southern last defeated EHS at home
on Sept. 26, 2005 at Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium after gutting out
an 18-25, 25-20, 16-25, 25-22, 15-11
victory. SHS also defeated the Lady
Eagles by a 25-9, 25-10, 25-11 margin at
Tuppers Plains back on September 15.
Brynn Harris led the SHS service
attack with 24 points, followed by
Marlee Maynard with eight points and

Madison Maynard with seven points.
Cameryn Harmon was next with five
points, followed by Ali Deem and Hannah Hill with four points apiece. Cierra
Turley also added one point to the winning cause.
Jansen Wolfe led the SHS net attack
with 11 kills, followed by Turley with
five kills. Both Maynards chipped in four
kills apiece for the victors, with Madison
Maynard also providing a team-best two
blocks. Marlee Maynard led the offense
with 12 assists and Deem paced the
defense with a dozen digs.
Hannah Barringer led the EHS service attack with six points, followed by
Morgan Little with five points. Morgan
Baer and Sidney Cook were next with
four points apiece, while Makenzie
Brooks and Katelyn Barber rounded
things out with respective point totals
of three and one.

Lady Rebels
rally past Belpre
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

MERCERVILLE,
Ohio — Its not how
you start, but how you
finish.
The South Gallia volleyball team dropped
the first game to TriValley Conference
Hocking Division guest
Belpre, but the Lady
Rebels won the next
three games to claim
the 3-1 victory, Monday
night.
Belpre, which also
lost to South Gallia
(6-12, 5-9 TVC Hocking) on September
15, took the opening
game of the night by a
25-20 count. The Lady
Rebels rebounded to
take the second game
by a narrow 25-22 margin, while surging to a
25-16 win in the third
game. SGHS capped
off the triumph with a

25-17 fourth game victory, securing the Lady
Rebels second win in
their last three games.
Lexie Johnson led the
Lady Rebels with 12
service points, followed
by Sara Bailey with 10
and Courtney Haner
with seven.Kirstin
Burnette and Mariah
Hineman each had six
points, Jayla Wolford
added five, Tiffany Beaver marked three, while
Katie Bostic finished
with two points in the
win. Haner and Hineman led the way with
two aces each, followed
by Burnette, Bostic,
Wolford and Beaver
with one each.
Wolford led SGHS at
the net with 13 kills,
followed by Hineman
with eight kills and a
block. Haner chipped
in with five kills, Bailey
See REBELS | 10

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Oct. 8
Volleyball
South Gallia at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Jackson at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Fairland at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Meigs at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 9
Volleyball
Miller at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 6 p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Belpre at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Huntington St. Joe, 6 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Girls Soccer
Poca at Point Pleasant, 6:30
Friday, Oct. 10
Football
Eastern at Wahama, 7:30
Athens at Meigs, 7:30
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.
Waterford at South Gallia, 7:30
Trimble at Southern, 7:30
River Valley at Alexander, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Oak Hill, 7:30
Hannan at Twin Valley, 7:30
Volleyball
Calvary at Ohio Valley Christian, 5:30
Boys Soccer
Calvary at Ohio Valley Christian, 5 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 11
Volleyball
Hannan at Cross Lanes Christian, 2 p.m.
Cross Country
SEOAL at Gallia Academy, 9:30
TVC Championships at Meigs, 10 a.m.
Boys Soccer
Greenbrier East at Point Pleasant, noon
Girls Soccer
Greenbrier East at Point Pleasant, 2 p.m.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Kathleen Allen receives a serve during the Blue Angels victory over Marietta on Monday, in Centenary.

Blue Angels avenge Marietta
By Alex Hawley

26-24 win in the third game.
Marietta kept the momentum
and charged to a 14-8 lead early
CENTENARY, Ohio — Revenge in the fourth game, but the Blue
at its finest.
Angels began to chip away. GAHS
The Gallia Academy volleyball
finally regained the lead with five
team dropped its season opener on straight service points by senior
the road at Marietta, but the Blue
Micah Curfman, but Marietta came
Angels earned some revenge Mon- back to tie tie game at 24-24. Gallia
day night, defeating the guest Lady Academy answered with back-toTigers 3-1 in a non-conference tilt
back points, securing the 26-24 win
in Gallia County.
and the 3-1 match victory.
The Blue Angels (16-5) never
The GAHS service attack was
trailed in the opening game and
led by Caldwell with 17 points, folallowed just four service points
lowed by Martin with 10 and Curfen route to a 25-14 victory. Gallia
man with nine. Allison McGhee
Academy surged out to a 12-5 lead added seven points, while Brooke
in the second game, but Marietta
Pasquale and Hannah McCormick
(14-6) battled back to pull within
each finished with four service
two at 17-15. GAHS freshman
points. Curfman, Caldwell, Martin,
Grace Martin marked six straight
McCormick and Pasquale each
service points to help lead the Blue finished with one ace for Gallia
Angels to a 25-19 triumph in the
Academy.
second game.
Shannon Haessly led Marietta
The Lady Tigers, who never led with nine points, followed by Erica
in the first two games, jumped out Roberts with eight. Megan Broughto a 24-19 in the third game. Galton and Abby Harrison each had
lia Academy sophomore Ryleigh
seven points, Chrystal McCoy
Caldwell served four consecutive
added three, while Mattie Miller
points to bring GAHS back into a
finished with one. Broughton fintie at 24-24, but Marietta survived ished with a team-high two aces,
followed by Harrison with one.
the comeback attempt to take the

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

At the net GAHS was led by
Martin with 17 kills and 13 blocks,
followed by Jordan Walker with
14 kills and 11 blocks. Curfman
marked 13 kills and four blocks,
McCormick added eight kills and
three blocks, Caldwell finished
with three kills and five blocks,
Hanna Johnson posted two kills
and nine blocks, while Pasquale
marked a kill and McGhee added a
block.
Curfman led the Blue Angels
with 17 assists, followed by
McGhee with 10 helpers. Pasquale
led the GAHS defense with 40
digs, followed by Curfman with 21
and Kathleen Allen with 13.
McCoy led MHS at the net with
13 kills, followed by Holly Hutchison with 12 and Hannah Grosel
with six. Lauren DeLong marked
five kills, Alexis Pallazzo added
three, while Amber Brooks rounded out the Marietta total with one
kill. Broughton posted a team-high
27 assists, while Haessly led the
defense with 11 digs.
The Blue Angels return to action
Thursday when they host Fairland
in the regular season finale.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 8, 2014 7

Kuenning’s seen his last JV action
By Rusty Miller

Titans matched their scoring average for the season as the Mustangs
played a drop-10 and even drop-11
Bo Kuenning won’t be seeing
defense to try to stop the nationany more action in junior varsity
ally- ranked Triway passing attack.
games.
So, the Titans ran the ball for a seaThe St. Marys Memorial freshson-high 176 yards and five TDs.
man rushed 20 times for 182 yards
“It was pretty bizarre to see
and a touchdown as the Roughrid- Parker (Carmichael) drop back
ers beat Celina 21-13 in the Battle
and have, what seemed like 15
of Grand Lake.
seconds, to throw the ball,” Triway
Kuenning entered the game with coach Tony Lee said. “We probjust 14 yards on three carries while ably could’ve (run) it all night, but
playing primarily in JV games. His I’m too stubborn to give up on the
four-yard TD run in the third quar- pass.”
ter put St. Marys into the lead for
Carmichael, who entered avergood and he averaged 15.3 yards
aging over 435 yards passing per
on his final seven carries to keep
game — third nationally according
the clock running.
to maxpreps.com — finished just
“It worked out pretty well,” said 26 of 38 for 178 yards with three
St. Marys coach Doug Frye. “I told TDs. He did rush for 65 yards and
Bo I don’t think he’ll be playing
two first-quarter scores.
any more JV football.”
WELL GROUNDED: After missDOIN’ IT ALL: Wauseon’s Zac
ing a game and a half, Alex Mount
Robinson ran for four TDs and
returned and carried 41 times
threw for another in a 40-0 win
for 363 yards and three TDs in
over Hamler Patrick Henry, setting
Nelsonville York’s 32-14 win over
up a battle of unbeaten state-ranked
Pomeroy Meigs; J.D. Orr broke
teams this Friday at Delta, which
Mount Vernon’s rushing record,
blanked Montpelier 56-0 for its
sixth win; Ada’s Seth Conley threw carrying 22 times for 311 yards
in a 41-28 victory over Olentangy
for 375 yards and five TDs while
adding two rushing TDs in a 61-14 Orange; Edgerton’s Duane Miller
rushed for 256 yards and four TDs
victory over Paulding; Anthony
and passed for 114 yards and two
Carroll threw for five scores in
Dayton Northridge’s 51-26 victory TDs in a 54-31 win over Antwerp;
Maumee’s Isiah Khalfani ran for
over New Lebanon Dixie; Brody
223 yards and two TDs and Brian
Hoying ran for two scores and
threw for two more in leading top- Utter added 201 yards on the
ground and three rushing TDs, in
ranked Coldwater to a 41-0 win
addition to a pair of TD tosses,
over Parkway; and Doylestown
in a 49-35 win over Napoleon;
Chippewa’s Jerry Bennett caught
Bedford’s Chawntez Moss ran 30
four TD passes from Bailey Bretimes for 296 yards and seven TDs
itenstine and also returned an
interception 22 yards for a score in in a 55-36 win over Lorain; North
leading the way to a 47-26 win over Ridgeville’s Demario McCall is
now at 1,234 rushing yards and 24
Apple Creek Waynedale — giving
TDs through six games; and West
the Chipps their first 6-0 record
Chester Lakota West’s Kole Gentry
since 1956.
ran 27 times for 215 yards and tied
BIG TURNAROUND: Lima
a school record with five TDs in a
Senior won a Division I state
49-21 win over Hamilton.
championship in 1996, but then
THROWIN’ OHIOANS: Seth
fell on hard times, going just 21-99
Conley, a freshman in the same
from 2001 through 2012.
Ada system that produced Denver
But the school tabbed Mike Fell
Broncos’ backup QB Zac Dysert,
to be head coach after the 2012
season, and the Lima Senior alum, completed 33 of 50 passes for 375
yards and four TDs in a 61-14 win
who earlier had success at Celina,
over Paulding; and Grafton MidAda and Columbus Grove, has
view’s Dustin Crum has thrown
turned the program around.
for 1,428 yards and 16 TDs, and
Friday’s 56-17 win over Findrushed for 653 yards and 10 TDs
lay in a matchup of state-ranked
through six games.
unbeatens, marked the first time
SOMETHING HAD TO GIVE:
Lima Senior has ever been 6-0.
Arlington (Division VII) and
KIDS, DON’T TRY THIS AT
HOME: Wooster Triway beat Mas- Liberty-Benton (Division V)
were both 5-0 and ranked No.
sillon Tuslaw 57-13 to start out
6-0 for just the third time in school 4 in their divisions when they
history and first since 1990. The
clashed in a Blanchard Valley

Associated Press

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant senior Joseph Littlepage (198) hits full stride
during this Sept. 2 file photo from the 2014 Coaches Corner
Invitational held at Gallia Academy High School in Centenary,
Ohio.

Point CC
competes at
Ritchie County
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

HARRISVILLE, W.Va. — The Point Pleasant
boys cross country team placed 10th Saturday
afternoon at the 2014 West Virginia Insurance
Invitational held at Cokeley Camp Ground at
North Bend State Park in Ritchie County.
The Black Knights were last in the 10-team
field with 241 points, finishing 184 points back of
eventual-champion Bridgeport and its tally of 57
points. Ritchie County was the overall runner-up
with 82 points, while Wirt County (107) Saint
Albans (117) and Williamstown (122) rounded
out the top five spots.
Hunter White led PPHS by finishing 29th overall with a time of 18:36.09, followed by Joseph
Littlepage in 45th with a mark of 19:30.05. Brandon Henderson (21:40.60) was next in 73rd,
while Brandon Hall (22:25.88) and Wyatt Dean
(26:38.22) rounded out the team tally with respective efforts of 77th and 87th.
Brad Chattin and Byron Fisher also finished 91st
and 92nd overall with respective times of 30:32.37
and 31:14.44.
Daniel Cooper of Ritchie County beat out 91
other competitors for the individual title after
posting a winning mark of 16:50.29. Glenn McMillan of Wirt County was the overall runner-up.
Complete results of the 2014 West Virginia
Insurance Invitational are available on the web at
runwv.com

Offense good,
but defense still
rules in Big Ten
By Rusty Miller

The pendulum swings
Associated Press
constantly. Not so long ago,
defenses adjusted to the
Pat Fitzgerald, once a stal- advent of the spread attack
wart linebacker and now the and seemed to take the high
head coach at Northwestern, ground. Now, however, it may
looks at the numbers put up be swinging the other way.
by offenses these days and
“Back in ‘04, when we
can only shake his head.
were at Utah, that’s the
“When I was playing
easiest. I just felt it was
they’d say hold your oppovery easy to move the ball
nent to 17 points or less
because teams really didn’t
and you’re going to win a
know how to defend the
lot of games,” he said with a spread. You had more yardchuckle. “And now it’s four
age by misalignments and
scores. If you can keep your mistakes by defense than
opponent under four touch- certainly you did in the years
downs you’ve got a chance
following because it wasn’t
to win.”
a novelty,” said Ohio State
In a day when the spread coach Urban Meyer, a prooffense seems to be in com- ponent of getting to the line
mand and when it appears
quickly and squeezing off
every game ends up 45-38,
a play to surprise a gassed
there are glimmers that
defense.
defenses are holding their
That’s the blueprint. An
own in the Big Ten.
innovator comes up with a
Big Ten teams comprise
new way of moving the ball,
six of the top 20 teams in
and his defensive counterthe Football Bowl Subdivipart comes up with a way
sion in total defense, five of to stop it. Back and forth it
the top 20 in scoring defense goes, year after year, a neverand five of the top 25 in
ending struggle.
stopping the run and also
Even though eight Big
interceptions.
Ten teams are averaging at
So even if the perception
least 28 points a game and
is teams are blowing up
10 are averaging at least
scoreboards with points,
26, maybe once everything
defense isn’t dead in the
shakes out over an eightconference where Woody
game conference season it
Hayes and Bo Schembechler all might be a comparative
preached defense wins
stalemate between rock and
championships.
hard place.

Conference game Friday.
Arlington got 242 yards and two
TDs from senior running back
Austin Rettig, but Liberty-Benton
outscored the Red Devils 15-0 in
the fourth quarter to earn a 25-13
win. It was Liberty-Benton’s 13th
straight win over Arlington, and
gave the Eagles a 25-24-1 edge in
the 50-year BVC series.
NOTABLE: After starting out
0-3 in non-conference action
against opponents that now have
a combined 16-2 record, Millersburg West Holmes has won three
straight in the Ohio Cardinal
Conference and is in sole possession of first place; Michael Hoecht
set a record for the longest run
in Dayton Oakwood history with
a 99-yard TD dash and Hayden
Peake had three field goals, including 43- and 46-yarders in a 38-22
win over Brookville; Cole Hull
rushed for 208 yards and four TDs
as Fort Recovery reached five wins
for the first time since 2007 with a
43-7 win over New Bremen; Chesapeake had 427 total yards — all
rushing — in a 34-26 win over rival
Proctorville Fairland, attempting
only one pass that was erased due
to a penalty; in a battle of smallschool unbeatens, McDonald beat
Berlin Center Western Reserve,
14-12, to snap Western Reserve’s
winning streaks of 23 regular-season games and 24 Inter-Tri County
League lower-tier contests; Lisbon
Beaver Local scored on a 72-yard
run by Robert Johnston on the
first play and came up with seven
fumbles and an interception, but
Wintersville Indian Creek scored
twice in the fourth quarter for a
14-7 win; and Athens beat Steubenville 58-42 while scoring the most
points by an opponent at Steubenville since Canton McKinley scored
60 in 1963.
UPCOMING: One of the most
anticipated games this week in the
state takes place at Booster Field in
Maria Stein as defending Division
VII state champion Marion Local
takes on defending Division V state
champion Coldwater. The teams are
undefeated and share first place in
the Midwest Athletic Conference.
Last year the Flyers dominated the
Cavaliers 47-14 en route to a perfect
season, with Coldwater rebounding
to run the rest of the table.
Marion has outscored teams
270-55 this season and is led by
Dustin “Doc” Rethman who is 48
of 74 passing for 1,068 yards and
16 TDs.

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Legends (N)
Legends "Identity" (SF) (N)
(4:00)
Van Helsing (‘04, The Walking Dead "Pretty The Walking Dead
(:05) The Walking Dead
(:05) The Walking Dead "18
Much Dead Already"
Miles Out"
Act) Hugh Jackman. TV14
"Nebraska"
"Triggerfinger"
Dual Survival
Naked and Afraid
Naked "Blood in the Water" Naked "Hearts of Darkness" Tethered
S. Wars "A Storage
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Wahlburgers Wahlburgers
Time to Kiln" Wars
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Commander Commander (N)
Dirt Job "Wetland Warrior" Dirty Jobs "Hair Fairy"
Dirty Jobs
Dirty Jobs "Sponge Diver" Gator Boys (N)
(5:45)
(:45)
Madea Goes to Jail (‘09, Com) Tyler Perry. A wilful and impulsive Preachers of L.A.
Preachers of L.A. "My
Brother's Keeper" (N)
PreachersLA grandmother winds up in jail with a variety of characters. TV14
"Restoration"
LawOrder "All My Children" Law&amp;O. "Brother's Keeper" Law &amp; Order "School Daze" Law &amp; Order "Judge Dread" Law &amp; Order "Deep Vote"
(4:30) The Wedding Pla...
E! News
Live From E! Live From E! Divas "Scared Straight"
The Soup (N) The Soup
Hillbillies
Hillbillies
Hillbillies
Hillbillies
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud The Exes
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Smoky Mountain Money
Kentucky Justice "Cocaine Southern Justice "Hillbilly Southern Justice "All In The Smoky Mountain Money
"'Sengin in the Rain"
Kingpin"
Heroin"
Family" (N)
"Family First"
Football
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Philadelphia Flyers at Boston Bruins Site: TD Garden (L)
NHL Hockey S.J./L.A. (L)
America's Pre-game (L)
UFC Flash
Insider
TUF 20
TUF 20 "Don't Fight Fate" TUF 20 "Make a Big Strike"
American Pickers "Picking American Pickers "White
American Pickers
American Pickers "Need for American Pickers "Big Boy
Superheroes"
Knuckles"
Speed"
Toys"
"California Kustom"
Listing "Flagg vs. Serhant" Listing "Hard Cold Cash"
Million Dollar List
Million Dollar List (N)
Top Chef "Finale" (SF) (N)
The Real (N)
Johnson Family Vacation (‘04, Com) Cedric the Entertainer. TVPG
Like Mike Lil' Bow Wow. TV14
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Property "Maria and Dave" Buying and Selling (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
Ghost Hunters "Tunnels of Ghost Hunters "Orphans of Ghost Hunters "Phantom
Ghost Hunters "An Officer Ghost Hunters "Don't
Terror"
Gettysburg"
Fleet"
and an Apparition" (N)
Forget About Us"

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

The Man in the Iron Mask (‘98, Adv) Leonardo Boardwalk Empire "King of
400 (HBO) DiCaprio. A man is unjustly imprisoned when his existence Norway"
threatens the young King of France. TVPG
(4:30)
Changeling
The Counselor (2013, Drama) Penélope Cruz, Michael
450 (MAX) (‘09, Dra) John Malkovich,
Fassbender, Cameron Diaz. After entering the drug scene, a
Angelina Jolie. TVMA
lawyer finds he's bitten off more than he can chew. TVMA
(:15) Alex Cross (2012, Action) Rachel Nichols, Tyler Perry, Inside the NFL "2014: Week
500 (SHOW) Matthew Fox. A homicide detective is tested when a skilled 6" (N)
serial killer inflicts pain and torture. TV14
(5:45)

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (‘13, Adv) Kristen
Wiig, Adam Scott, Ben Stiller. A man realizes he must act
to maintain the parts of his life that he loves. TVPG
Gravity (2013,
The Knick Thackery is on
edge due to city-wide run on Thriller) George Clooney,
cocaine.
Sandra Bullock. TV14
Homeland "The Drone Queen/ Trylon and (:45)
Perisphere"
Homeland
"Debrief"

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Professional Services

LEGALS
8. Complete Mailing Address
of Headquarters or General
Porters
Business Office of Publisher
(Not printer)
Pumpkin Patch
111 Court Street, Pomeroy,
OH 45769 and
&amp; Corn Maze
9. Full Names and Complete
3 acre corn maze (Great for Kids!)
Mailing Address of Publisher,
Open Sat Sept 12 through Oct 31
Editor, and Managing Editor
Sun – Fri 12pm- dark
Publisher: Bud Hunt, 111
Sat – 10am – dark
Court Street, Pomeroy, OH
Many decorative items: Indian
45769
Corn, Gourds, fodder, straw,
Editor: Michael Johnson, 111
and pick your own pumpkins.
Court Street, Pomeroy, OH
Groups welcome
45769
May call in advance
Managing Editor: Michael
740-416-8844 Alyssa Webb
Johnson, 111 Court Street,
43965 Pomeroy Pike
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Racine, OH 45771 60532328
10. Owner Full Name and address:
WEBB COMPANY Civitas Financing, LLC, 130
Harbour Place Dr., Suite 300,
TRUCKING
Davidson, NC 28036
Civitas Financing, LLC sole
Now hauling commodities!
owner of Civitas Media, LLC
Call for pricing on Ag
Civitas Holdings, LLC, sole
Lime, Stone, Gravel, Sand, owner of Civitas Financing,
LLC
Gypsum, and Grain.
Civitas Investments II, LLC and
Civitas Investments II-A, LLC,
Majority owners of Civitas
Holdings, LLC
and Michael Bush
11. Known Bondholders, Mortgagees, and Other Security
Holders Owning or Holding 1
60532326
Percent or More of Total
Amount of Bonds, Mortgages,
or Other Securities. None.
Stanley
Full Name: RBS Citizens, N.A.,
Tree Trimming
28 State Street, Boston, Mas&amp; Removal
sachusetts 02109.
12. Tax Status: Has Not
• Prompt and Quality Work
Changed During Preceding 12
Months.
• Reasonable Rates
13. Publication Title: The Daily
• Insured
Sentinel
• Experienced
14. Issue Date for Circulation
Data Below: 9/25/2014
• References Available
15. Extent and Nature of circulation: Newspaper
Gary Stanley
15a. Total Number of copies
740-591-8044
(Net press run):
Average No. Copies Each IsPlease leave a message
sue During Preceding 12
Months, 2216
LEGALS
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
STATEMENT OF OWNERDate, 3049
SHIP, MANAGEMENT AND
b. Paid Circulation(By Mail and
CIRCULATION
Outside the Mail)
(All Periodicals Publications
(1) Mailed Outside-County
Except Requester PublicaPaid Subscriptions Stated on
tions)
PS Form 2541 (Include paid
1. Publication Title: The Daily
distribution above nominal
Sentinel
rate, advertiser's proof copies,
2. Publication Number: 145and exchange copies)
966
Average No. Copies Each Is3. Filing Date: 10/1/2014
sue During Preceding 12
4. Issue Frequency: Tues-Fri
Months, 25
5. Number of Issues PubNo. Copies of Single Issue
lished Annually: 208
Published Nearest to Filing
6. Annual Subscription Price:
Date, 25
93.76
(2) Mailed In-County Paid Sub7. Complete Mailing Address
of Known Office of Publication: scriptions Stated on PS Form
3541 (Include paid distribution
111 Court Street, Pomeroy,
above nominal rate,
OH 45769 or
advertiser's proof copies, and
Contact Person: Jessica
exchange copies)
Chason
Average No. Copies Each IsTelephone: 740-578-4835
sue During Preceding 12
8. Complete Mailing Address
Months, 7
of Headquarters or General
Help Wanted General

419-560-4748

60533755

Paper Carrier Needed!
Areas Covered: Rio Grande,
Patriot, Oak Hill, Thurman, Vinton, Bidwell
Training: 3 Days Schedule:
Tues/Wed/Thurs/Fri- 12:30am until finished
Saturday- 4:00pm until finished
Pay: Will fluctuate depending
on amount of Customers
REQUIREMENTS: MUST HAVE A RELIABLE VEHICLE,
DRIVER'S LICENSE, &amp; VALID CAR INSURANCE
Stop by the Gallipolis Daily Tribune office for an application or
send inquiries to gdtcirculation@civitasmedia.com

Help Wanted General

Civitas Media is looking for a general
assignment reporter to help us cover it all
for our virtual newsroom encompassing the
tri-county area. Excellent opportunity for recent
college graduate to immediately join a dynamic
print and digital industry leader that focuses on
hyper-local news and sports. Candidates should
be self-motivated and have excellent writing,
editing and organizational skills. Great benefits
available. Salary negotiable. Email resume, cover
letter and three writing samples to Editor Michael
Johnson at michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com.
No phone calls, please.

60538688

LEGALS
sue During Preceding 12
Months, 7
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 6
(3) Paid Distribution Outside
the Mails Including Sales
Through Dealers and Carriers,
Street Vendors, Counter Sales,
and Other Paid Distribution
Outside USPS
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 1725
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 2728
(4) Paid Distribution by Other
Classes of Mail Through the
USPS (e.g., First-Class Mail)
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 0
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 0
c. Total Paid Distribution (Sum
of 15b (1), (2), (3), and (4))
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 1757
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 2759
d. Free or Nominal Rate Distribution (By Mail and Outside
the Mail)
(1) Free or Nominal Rate Outside-County Copies Included
on PS Form 3541:
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 0
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 0
(2) Free or Nominal Rate InCounty Copies Included on PS
Form 3541:
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 0
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 0
(3) Free or Nominal Rate Copies Mailed at Other Classes
Through the USPS (e.g., FirstClass Mail)
Average No. CopiesEach Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 0
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 0
(4) Free or Nominal Rate Distribution Outside the Mail (Carriers or other means)
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 34
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 22
e. Total Free or Nominal Rate
Distribution (Sum of 15D (1),
(2), (3), and (4))
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 34
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 22
f. Total Distribution (Sum 15c
and 15e)
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 1791
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 2781
g. Copies not Distributed (See
Instructions to Publishers #4
(page #3))
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 425
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 268
h. Total (Sum 15f and 15g)
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 2216
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 3049
i. Percent Paid (15c divided by
15f times 100)
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
Months, 98%
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date, 99%
16. Electronic Copy Circulation
a. Paid Electronic Copies:
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
months 32
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date 26
b. Total Paid Print Copies (Line
15c) + Paid Electronic Copies
(Line 16a)
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
months 1789
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date 2785
c. Total Print Distribution (line
15f) + Paid Electronic Copies
(Line 16a)
Average No. Copies Each Is-

Daily Sentinel

LEGALS
(Line 16a)
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
months 1823
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date 2807
d. Percent Paid (Both Print &amp;
Electronic Copies) (16b divided by 16c x 100)
Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12
months 98%
No. Copies of Single Issue
Published Nearest to Filing
Date 99%
X. I certify that 50% of all my
distributed copies (electronic
and print) are paid above a
nominal price.
17. Publication of Statement of
Ownership
X. If the Publication is a general publication, publication of
this statement is required.
Will be printed in the 10/8/2014
issue of this publication.
18. Signature and Title of Editor, Publisher, Business Manager, or Owner
Bud Hunt Date: 10/1/2014
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
Investigated the Offering.

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

*******************
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Fair Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise
“any preference, limitation or
discrimination based on race,
color, religion, sex, handicap,
familial status or national origin, or an intention to make
any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal custodians,
pregnant women and people
securing custody of children
under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that
all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis. To
complain of discrimination call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777. The toll-free telephone
number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

Home Improvements

Apartments/Townhouses

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

Apartment available Now. Riverbend Apts. New Haven
Wva. Now accepting applications for HUD -subsidized, One
bedroom Apts. Utilities included. Based on 30% of adjusted income. Call 304-8823121. Available for Senior and
Disabled people.

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

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

Help Wanted General
Drivers: Class-A Solos, Signon bonus paid at orientation!
Hazmat &amp; Tank, 40cpm to
Start! All Miles Paid! 1-855975-6806
Help Wanted at a boys' residential treatment center in Patriot, Ohio: physical training, high
school diploma required &amp; and
must be 21; call to apply 740379-9083
Industrial Cleaners Needed in
Buffalo, WV. Full-time Positions Available. Days/Evenings. Must pass background
check and drug test. 304-7686309
Lebanon Township is taking
resumes from October 1st-October 30th for a part-time temporary position. Must have
class B CDL. 32 hours weekly
(Monday-Thursday). $9.00 per
hour. Mail resumes to Lebanon township, 30752 Trouble
Creek Rd Unit B, Portland, OH
45770 or may drop off at township garage.
Legal Secretary needed in the
Gallipolis area. Please send
resume to: Gallipolis Daily
Tribune Box 9-24, 825 3rd
Ave. Gallipolis,Ohio 45631.
ResCare HomeCare
now hiring Direct Care
Professionals in Gallia,
Jackson, Vinton Counties HHA
certified/CNA/STNA or 1yr of
experience working under the
direction of an RN required.
Apply online at
www.rescarehomecare.com
or call 740-532-0599
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Houses For Sale
Yard Sale
Collectibles of a Lifetime part 4
1/2 ,Glassware (fenton), Furniture,Victorian Couch, Chain
Saw, Hurricane Lamps,
Banks,Gallipolis items Occupied japan items, Old Toys
Misc. &amp; More. At 440 Adamsville Rd. 1 mile south of Bob
Evans (Rio Grande). Oct 10th
&amp; 11th 9am to ?.
Garage Sale Sat. Oct 11th,
9am to 5pm. @
1316 Adamsville Rd near Bob
Evans Clothes,toys,
Household items, &amp; more.
HUGE 3 Family Indoor Yard
Sale - Oct 9th 10th &amp; 11th 9am
to 6pm @ Rodney Oh. Comm.
Building. New &amp; Used clothingToys,purses,Jewerly,DVD's LP
&amp; 45 Records, Halloween Costumes, Christmas items.Primitives, wall furniture,old glassware,antiques. Priced to sell!.
Large Yard Sale - Sat Oct 11,
2014 - 7am to ? @ River City
Fellowship 3rd Ave.Gallipolis
Yard Sale Thursday ONLY,
Oct 9th, 9-?, 1¼ mile out
Georges Creek, off RT 7
Donestics/ Janitorial
William Ann Motel Looking for
a Part Time Housekeeper for
Wed-Thurs 9-12, Fri 9-1, Sat &amp;
Sun 10-1, 740-446-3373

3BR, 2BA
READY TO MOVE IN
740-446-3570
Lot for sale on Deenie Dr.
Sunkist Subdivision.
Acreage .73, $14,900
Call 740-446-3481

Clean 1-Bedroom efficiency
apartment. Conveniently located. Reference, deposit and
no pets. Call 304-675-5162.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Immaculate 2 BR apt. in country, new carpet and cabinets.
Freshly painted, appliances,
W/D hook-ups, water/trash
paid. Beautiful country setting,
only 10 minutes from town.
Must see to appreciate
$425/mo 614-595-7773
or740-645-5953
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Houses For Rent
3 - Bdrm / 2 bath Home with
Great Rm, Dining Rm,Heat
pump, located Patriot,OH Rent $550/mth + 1 mth deposit. NO PETS - Water &amp;
Garbage included. Call 740645-8005 Background Check
Req. Show by Appointment
Oct 13 thru 17th, 2014
3 Bdrm - Ranch Style Home Kitchen,Living Rm,Dining Rm,
Back porch,Carport,New appliances,Carpeting and floor tiles.
$750/mo. Open House Fri. Oct
3rd, Sat Oct 4th, Call 5914826.
5 Rooms &amp; Bath, Appliances,
No Smoking, No Pets. $475 &amp;
Deposit, 44 Olive St. 740-4463945
Rentals
Mobile Homes For Rent.
Spring Valley Area. $400$480/mo plus deposit. More
Info Call 740-446-4400
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Garden &amp; Produce
We buy Black Walnuts, starting price $13 per 100lbs. after
hulling. Bring your Walnuts to:
Patriot Produce, 62 Village St.
Patriot OH . Open Mon-WedsFri From Oct 1 to Nov 3 Closed
on Wed. Oct. 8th.&amp; 15th.
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom apartments for
rent, all utilities paid, HUD accepted, Near downtown Pt.
Pleasant, 304-360-0163
1 BR. garage apt. Pt. Pleasant,
electric heat, some utilities
paid. NO pets. $450 month
call 304-593-6542
1BR, Upstairs, Util. Pd, AC,
Wash/Dryer Avail, No
Smoking, No Pets, $450/Mo,
$450/Dep. 258 State St. 740446-3667
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

OMAHA STEAKS:
ENJOY 100 percent guaranteed, delivered to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!
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FREE Burgers - The Family
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ORDER Today 1-800-7124684 Use code 48829ZYL or
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57
Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Manufactured Homes
Used single wides
3 to choose from
starting at $1500.
freedomhomesohio.com
740-446-3093

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, October 8, 2014 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Hilary Price

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7 6
2
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10/08

Difficulty Level

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10/08

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4
9
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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Steelers bracing for improving Browns
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Lawrence Timmons sounded like a
changed man.
It’s not that the Pittsburgh
Steelers linebacker took the
Cleveland Browns lightly when
they faced off in the opener last
month. It’s just that after spending most of his eight-year career
helping the Steelers turn their
longtime rivals into little more
than fodder for the win column,
Timmons has grown used to a
certain level of dominance.
That notion shifted when
Pittsburgh needed every last
second on the clock to escape
with a 30-27 victory five weeks
ago, a game in which the Steelers squandered a 24-point
halftime lead. Having watched
Browns quarterback Brian Hoyer
and an inexperienced running
game push Pittsburgh’s defense
around for 30 minutes — then
see Cleveland do the same last

weekend in a thrilling comeback
win over Tennessee — Timmons
became a convert.
The Browns (2-2), yes the
Browns, look like they’re for real
heading into Sunday’s rematch in
Cleveland.
“I think they’re serious this
year,” Timmons said. “You can’t
take them lightly.”
No chance of that. If anything,
Cleveland provided the Steelers (3-2) with a much-needed
wakeup call after using an uptempo no-huddle in the second
half. Pittsburgh rarely looked
ready as the Browns reeled off
24 unanswered points behind
unheralded rookie running backs
Terrance West and Isaiah Crowell. Cleveland averaged 6.3 yards
per carry while piling up 191
yards on the ground to nearly
pull off a stunning upset even
with hyped rookie quarterback
Johnny Manziel spending the

entire afternoon on the sideline.
“They have a running game
now,” said Timmons, who is
11-2 against the Browns. That’s
the change for us. As we played
them before they never really
got a 100 yards rushing on us.
So now that they did that, that’s
the game changer so we have to
really be on our Ps and Qs.”
Cleveland’s approach forced
the Steelers to make some minor
adjustments to the way they get
the defensive calls on the field.
Rather than rely on Timmons
to relay the information, the
secondary often looks to the
sideline for hand signals to find
out where to line up.
“LT can’t tell everybody at the
same time, he’s got a job to do
too,” cornerback Brice McCain.
“We sometimes know before he
tells us.”
The early returns have been
promising. The Steelers have

limited opponents to 165 yards
rushing and 3.6 yards per carry
over their last three games. Yet
those numbers come with a few
caveats. The Panthers played
without starting running back
DeAngelo Williams. The Tampa
Bay Buccaneers were working Doug Martin back into the
mix following an injury and the
Jacksonville Jaguars are, well,
Jacksonville.
“It’s only been a couple
weeks,” linebacker Arthur Moats
said. “We know we have to get
better.”
On both sides of the ball.
While Pittsburgh managed to
escape north Florida with a 17-9
win over the Jaguars last Sunday,
the Steelers needed a fourth
quarter interception return for
a score by Brice McCain to provide the win.
It’s not exactly the way to
build momentum. Pittsburgh

has alternated wins and losses
through the first five weeks,
looking competitive at times
and confounding at others. The
Steelers have been inconsistent.
It needs to change if they want
to make any kind of run for a
playoff berth.
Scoring more points would
help. Pittsburgh is fourth in the
NFL in total offense but only
18th in points scored, averaging
22.4 points a game, a good field
goal less than Cleveland’s average of 25.8. Finishing drives has
been a problem. The Steelers are
only converting 43 percent of
their trips inside an opponent’s
20 into touchdowns. Pittsburgh
only did it once in four trips
against the Jaguars, kicking a
field goal to end one possession
and having Roethlisberger fumble to end another before ending
the game with knee downs at the
Jacksonville 18.

TCU and Baylor turn Big 12 upside down
first time. The Horned
Frogs were just 6-12 in
their first two years of Big
12 play.
Quarterback Trevone
Boykin gained a careerhigh 395 yards of offense
on Saturday and guided
TCU to its biggest Big 12
win so far.
“If you want to win
championships, you’ve got
to play the best,” Patterson said. “The Oklahoma
game was a big win. But
that’s why you saw me in
my press conference, even
in the locker room. I just

used to be pushovers are
instead pushing for a title.
Programs that used to be
powerhouses might not
even make a bowl game.
“We understand the significance of this ball game.
We’re both undefeated,”
TCU coach Gary Patterson
said. “Whoever wins the
ball game would have the
driver’s seat along with
the other unbeatens going
forward.”
TCU, which knocked off
Oklahoma 37-33 over the
weekend, could contend
for the Big 12 title for the

DES MOINES, Iowa
(AP) — The Texas-Oklahoma game is usually a
bellwether matchup every
year for the Big 12 title
race.
This weekend, the Red
River rivalry showdown is
not even the biggest game
in Texas. That distinction belongs to a matchup
between No. 9 TCU (4-0,
1-0 Big 12) and No. 5 Baylor (5-0, 2-0), the league’s
last undefeated teams.
That’s just the way
things are in the Big 12
these days. Programs that

kind of really (said), ‘Hey
look. I understand what we
just got done and accomplished, and we’ll look
back on this. But you have
maybe, you have a better
football team that you have
to play next week.’”
Just 10 months ago,
Texas and Baylor faced
each other with the Big
12 title on the line. The
Bears rolled past the Longhorns 30-10 to win their
first league championship
and the game suggested a
changing of the guard that
remains in place as the

Rebels

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Television

added three kills, Bostic had two
kills and a block, while Caitlyn
Vanscoy finished with two kills.

Internet

Charlie Strong era begins
at Texas.
This time, Baylor leaned
on its defense to overcome
an uncharacteristically
poor day from quarterback
Bryce Petty. No one was
really surprised to see Baylor beat Texas in Austin, a
relatively easy 28-7 win.
“We’re getting to the
stage to where we are
really a complete football
team, and that’s how you
have opportunities to win
every time you step on the
field,” Baylor coach Art
Briles said.

Vanscoy and Wolford led the
defense with four digs each, followed by Bostic and Beaver with
three each. Bailey and Haner each
finished with two digs, while Burnette rounded out the defensive
effort with one dig.

Baylor showed that the
Longhorns — who won
the old Big 12 South seven
times from 1996 to 2009
— still has a long way to
go on offense.
Texas (2-3, 1-1) has been
outscored 69-14 in two
games at home. Now it
heads to the Cotton Bowl
to face the Sooners, who
know they’ll likely have to
run the table to earn a spot
in the College Football
Playoff.
“We just have to develop
some consistency on
offense,” Strong said.

The Lady Rebels won their first
meeting with the Lady Golden
Eagles in straight games, 25-20,
25-16 and 25-18 in Washington
County. SGHS returns to action
Wednesday in a non-conference
matchup at Point Pleasant.

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60539634

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