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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

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INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

RACO holds
meeting.... Page 2

Partly sunny. High
of 79. Low
of 61........ Page 2

Local sports
action.... Page 6

Ronald D. ‘Ronnie’
Arms, 57
Rondel L. Given, 93
Robert E. Heugel, 91

Harry Roush, 87
Opal G. ‘Sis’
Watterson, 98
50 cents daily

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 159

Meigs no longer No. 1 in unemployment
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — No
longer at the top — and
that’s a good thing.
After two consecutive
months at the top of Ohio’s
unemployment rankings,
Meigs County is now in
the second spot behind
Pike County (12 percent),
who had been at the top
of the rankings prior to
Meigs County.
Meigs County currently
holds and unemployment

rate of 11.8 percent, down
.5 percent from July, and
down nearly 1 percent
from two months ago.
Gallia County also saw a
decrease in unemployment
in August, with a rate
now at 8.2 percent. Gallia
County had an unemployment rate of 8.5 percent
in July and 8.8. percent in
June.
Gallia County ranks tied
for 18th in the state with
Athens County. Gallia had
been tied for 21st in July
with Lucas, Trumbull and

Richland counties, all of
which have seen a larger
decrease in unemployment
than Gallia.
When it comes to unemployment rates — in
terms of rankings, it’s a
good thing when a county’s number rises with the
higher the ranking, the
lower the unemployment.
Counties with an unemployment rate above
10 percent (in addition to
Meigs and Pike) Scioto
at 10.8 percent, Adams at

10.3 percent, Morgan at
10.2 percent and Monroe
and Jefferson at 10 percent.
Mercer County remains
ranked 88th with an unemployment rate of 4.3 percent, followed by Holmes
County at 4.6, Delaware
County at 5.1, Auglaize
County at 5.2 and Union
County at 5.5.
Ohio had an unemployment rate of 6.9 percent
in August, down from 7.3
percent in July. The na-

tional unemployment rate
was 7.3 percent in August,
down from 7.7 percent in
July. Both the state and
national rates are equal
to what they were in May
2013.
A total of 44 Ohio counties had unemployment
rates at or below the state
rate. Another eight counties have a rate between
the state and national
rates.
In Southeast Ohio, other
unemployment numbers
include, Athens County,

8.2 percent; Hocking
County, 7.4 percent; Jackson County, 8.8 percent;
Lawrence County, 7.2
percent; Perry County, 8.6
percent; Ross County, 7.9
percent; Vinton County,
9.5 percent; and Washington County, 6.1 percent.
Mason County, W.Va.,
had an unemployment rate
of 9.7 percent in August, a
decrease of 1 percent from
July. West Virginia’s highest unemployment rate is
in Webster County with a
rate of 11.4 percent.

Meigs addresses
school progress
in nutrition
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Civitas Media

Middleport Youth League players gathered around David Boyd for a picture. He holds his granddaughter three year
old Kyla who is on a T-ball team.

Boyd honored for dedication
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — David
Boyd’s 23 years of working with
the Middleport Youth League was
recognized at a special gathering
of players and supporters Sunday
afternoon at Hartinger Park.
The event was a complete surprise for Boyd who was picked
up by the police and transported
to the park where he was greeted
by a large number of ball players,
league coaches and other people
involved in baseball programs at
the park.
A retired American Electric
Power Co. employee, Boyd noted
that when he started working
with Little League, there were 10
teams. Participation has grown
over the years and today there are
51 teams consisting of 611 kids,
he said.
Boyd has been president of the
Middleport League for 13 years
and also currently serves as secretary-treasurer of the Big Bend
League.
Baseball has long been a part
of Boyd’s life. He was on the first
See BOYD | 5

POMEROY — Research
shows that undernourished
children do not perform in
school as well as those who
have nutritious food on a
daily basis.
On that premise, many
schools, like those in the
Meigs Local School District, started breakfast
programs some years ago.
Students can now get off
the bus and go directly
to the cafeteria and have
breakfast before beginning
their studies for the day. It
is free.
Several years ago a grant
was received by the Meigs
Local District to provide
at the primary/intermediate building nutritious
mid-day treats. That program continued for several
years, but the grant was
not renewed for the current school year.
During the summer, a
grant from the Governor’s

Office of Faith Based and
Community
Initiatives
provided for a summer
food service program. That
grant allowed for families
in the Meigs Local School
District who had children
on the free and reduced
lunch program to receive
weekly free meal allotments for 10 weeks. Distribution points were set up
by Chrissy Musser, Meigs
food service director, and
well over 500 families were
provided food during the
summer months when
school was not in session.
Because of the high percentage of students on free
or reduced priced meals,
Meigs Local for this school
year was one of several
school districts in the Appalachian area which was
funded for free lunches for
all students regardless of
ability to pay. The emphasis is on getting more children into a nutritious food
See NUTRITION | 5

Sarah Hawley| File photo

The strip mall constructed near the site of the former Southern Junior High, pictured here under construction, is now
home to Glow Tanning and the Southern Local Administrative
Offices. Subway will also open at the location in the coming
weeks.

David Boyd was presented a plaque for his 23 years of service to the Middleport Youth League.

New business to
open in Racine
Grand opening set for Saturday

Open horse show set for Saturday
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — An open
horse show with no admission charge will be held
Saturday in t he show ring
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Contests will get underway at 1 p.m. with 12 classes to be judged by Mark
Abell.
The event had originally
been scheduled to be held
during the Meigs County
Fair, but rain caused the
See SHOW | 5 A scene from last year’s show as participants prepared for entering the show ring.

Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — A new business is opening its doors in the
Racine Business District.
Glow tanning salon will hold its official grand opening
on Saturday, Oct. 5 from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
The tanning salon — which was formerly Attitudes Salon and Tanning in Pomeroy — is located in the new strip
mall development just above Dollar General and Home
National Bank in Racine. The Southern Local School District offices are also located in the complex, which will
also include a Subway restaurant.
Glow will offer tanning, spray tans and massage. Owner Natasha Slater Stewart said that the tanning salon will
feature all new equipment, including four large regular
beds, a super lay down bed, a super standing bed, a mystic spray tan booth and a hydro massage bed.
Saturday’s grand opening will feature several specials
and discounts.
Glow will be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Monday
through Friday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Saturday, and noon to
5 p.m. on Sunday.
Glow can be reached at (740) 992-2200.

�Page 2 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Community Calendar
Thursday, Oct. 3
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio
Council of Governments (SOCOG) will
hold its next board meeting at 10 a.m. in
Room A of the Ross County Service Center at 475 Western Avenue, Chillicothe,
Ohio, 45601. Board meetings usually are
held the first Thursday of the month. For
more information, call 740-775-5030, ext.
103.
CHESTER — The Chester Shade Historical Association will meet at 7 p.m. at
the Academy.
Friday, Oct. 4
POMEROY — Meigs County P.E.R.I.
Chapter 74 will hold their meeting at 1
p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center.
Election of officers and planning for 2014
will be on the agenda. Members are encouraged to come.
Saturday, Oct. 5
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange #778
will meet in regular session with potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Final plans for Chicken BBQ
to be held on Sunday October 6 will be
made. All members are urged to attend.
Sunday, Oct. 6
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange #778
will hold a Chicken BBQ with serving
from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. It is opened to
the public.
Monday, Oct. 7
RUTLAND — The Rutland Township
Trustees will meet at 7:30 a.m. at the Rutland Township Garage.
LETART FALLS — The Letart Township Trustees will meet at 5 p.m. at the
Letart Township Building.
SYRACUSE — The Sutton Township
Trustees will meet at 7 p.m. at Syracuse
Village Hall.
Tuesday, Oct. 8
POMEROY — Meigs County Board
of Elections will meet at 8:30 a.m. at
the Meigs County Annex on Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
POMEROY — Salisbury Township

Trustees will met at 5 p.m. at the home of
Manning Roush.
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer Board will have
their regular meeting at 5 p.m. at the
TPRSD office.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Board of Health Meeting will be held at 5
p.m. in the conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department, located at
112 East Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE — Ernie Sisson Memorial
Basket Games will be held at Syracuse
Community Center at 6 p.m. Doors will
open at 5 p.m. $20 for 20 games. There
will be special games, second chance
drawings, raffles, 50/50 drawing and door
prizes. All proceeds benefit the community center. Community center volunteers
will serve refreshments.
CHESTER — The Chester Township
Trustees will meet at 7 p.m. at the town
hall.
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford
Township Trustees will hold their regular
monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the town
hall.
Wednesday, Oct. 9
MARIETTA — There will be a meeting of the Natural Resources Assistance
Council at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District, 1400 Pike
Street, Marietta, Ohio, on Wednesday,
October 9, 2013, at 10:00 a.m. The purpose of the meeting is to review the scoring methodology for Round 8 of the Clean
Ohio Conservation Fund for District 18.
Questions regarding this meeting should
be directed to Michelle Hyer mhyer@
buckeyehills.org at Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development District or
call (740) 376-1025.
Monday, Oct. 14
POMEROY — The Meigs County Republican Executive Committee will hold
its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the
court house. The meeting will be to discuss the bean soup supper that is scheduled for Oct. 23 at 6:30 p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center.

Meigs Co. Local Briefs Church
Calendar

Art in the Village
MIDDLEPORT — An
art show and children’s
art activities will be featured in the Art in the Village program to be staged
Saturday from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. in the Riverbend
Arts Council headquarters
on North Second Street
in Middleport. The show
is free to the public. The
categories for art pieces
are amateur and professional. They will be judged
by a professional artist for
prizes.
On the street adjacent
to the Riverbend Arts
Council there will be art
and other activities for
the children, vendors will
be displaying their wares,
and refreshments will be
served.
The art show is supported in part by the Ohio
River Border Initiative, a
joint project of the Ohio
Arts Council and the West
Virginia Commission on
the Arts.
Appointment Changes
POMEROY — There
will be no reproductive
health/family
planning
clinic held on Friday, Oct.
4, at the Meigs County
Health Department. Those
having an appointment for
that day are asked to call
992-6626, Ext. 36, to reschedule.
NRCS Conservation
programs
POMEROY— The local
work group for the Meigs

County field office of the
Natural Resources Conservation Service will meet
Tuesday Oct. 8, 10 a.m. at
the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District Office at 113 East Memorial
Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.
The purpose of the local
work group is to provide
guidance to NRCS field
offices concerning the implementation and delivery
of conservation programs.
The LWG identifies program priorities by completing a natural resource
needs assessment and
based on the assessment,
develops proposals for priority areas. Generally the
local work group consists
of SWCD, NRCS, FSA and
Extension representatives,
but anyone is invited to attend the meeting.
O’Kan Coin Club Show
GALLIPOLIS — The
O’Kan Coin Club’s annual
fall show will be held from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Oct.
6 at the Quality Inn in Gallipolis.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY —
The westbound lane of
Ohio 124 (located at the
63.91 mile marker, about
1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic
signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting,
both lanes of Ohio 124 will
be open November, 1 2013.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Thursday: A slight chance of showers before 2 p.m.,
then a chance of showers and thunderstorms between 2
p.m. and 3 p.m., then a slight chance of showers after 3
p.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 79. Calm wind becoming southwest 5 to 8 mph in the afternoon. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Thursday Night: A slight chance of showers before 1
a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61. Calm wind.
Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Friday: Partly sunny, with a high near 83. Calm wind
becoming southwest 5 to 8 mph in the afternoon.
Friday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 63.
Saturday: Partly sunny, with a high near 81.
Saturday Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 58. Chance
of precipitation is 60 percent.
Sunday: A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 75. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Sunday Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Cloudy, with a low around 55. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
Monday: A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 70. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Monday Night: A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 50. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Tuesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 70.

Church Yard Sale
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Tuppers Plains St. Paul
U.M. Church will hold
there annual fall yard sale
on Oct. 4 and 5. On Friday,
Oct. 4, hours are 9 a.m. to 7
p.m. and on Saturday, Oct.
5, hours are from 9 a.m. to
2 p.m. Lots of bargains and
good food.
RACINE — CarmelSutton United Methodist
Church will host a yard sale
on Oct. 10 and 11, at the
Carmel Fellowship Building , 48540 Carmel Road,
Racine, Ohio. Thursday
hours are 9 a.m.-7 p.m. and
Friday hours are 9 a.m.4 p.m. All proceeds from
the sale go to the CarmelSutton UMC new church
building fund. There will
also be food sold.
Revival
MIDDLEPORT — A revival will be held Oct. 7-11
at the Old Bethel Freewill
Baptist Church located at
Ohio 7 and Story’s Run.
Services will take place at
6 p.m. with Evangelist Norman Taylor. Pastor is Clyde
Ferrell. Everyone welcome.
Homecomings
POMEROY — Homecoming at the Carleton
Church, Kingsbury Road,
will be held on Sunday,
Oct. 13. Dinner at 12:30
p.m. will be followed by a 2
p.m. program. Guest singers will be the Forgiven
Again Trio. The public is
invited to attend.
POMEROY — The
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church will observe homecoming Sunday, Oct. 6.
Sunday School, 9:15 a.m.,
worship service, 10 a.m.
Carry-in-dinner at 12:30
p.m. and afternoon service
at 2 p.m. There will be special music by Gospel Bluegrass and Hemlock’s Praise
and Worship Team.
Community Dinner
POMEROY — A free
community dinner of wiener schnitzel, wurstchen,
blaukraut, kartoffel salat
and struesel (pork loin,
brauts, red cabbage, potato
salad and dessert) will be
held with serving beginning at 5:30-7 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 10, at St. Paul
Lutheran Church. Public
invited.
Meigs Co-operative
Parish events/service
projects
POMEROY — The
Meigs Co-operative Parish
hosts a variety of events
and service projects available throughout the week
at the Mulberry Community Center.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

RACO holds meeting
RACINE — The Racine Area Community Organization met for their regular monthly meeting on Tuesday, September 24, at Star Mill Park.
Libby Fisher had prayer before the
chicken and noodle potluck meal. President Kathryn Hart presided over our
business meeting. Secretary and treasurer reports were presented and approved. Thank you cards were received
from Meigs County Council on Aging
(donation RACO had given them), from
Rio Grande College (scholarship money) ,and from Olivia Poling (scholarship
recipient). RACO had mailed thank you
notes to all the sponsors of baskets for
our recent basket games.
Basket games were a success and all
proceeds go toward improvements to
our Star Mill Park. RACO’s Party in the
Park raffle winners were: Keith Romine
— Ohio State Cracker Barrell Rocking
chair, Melissa Hoffman — quilt, Mallory Hill — Ohio State Cooler and Longaberger basket). RACO will be presenting plaques to the following businesses:
Glow, Kleski Environmental, Subway,
and Big River Massage. Donations of

$100 each to RACO were received from
Mustard Seed and Victor and Alice
Wolfe.
RACO sponsored awards for Party in
the Park parade floats: first place went
to the Party in the Park Queen Candidates Float, second place went to Pentacostal Assembly, and third place went
to the Parade Marshall Float (all three
gentlemen were World War II veterans:
Kenneth Theiss, Delbert Smith, and
Charles Bush). RACO’s next food drive
to held November 2 at Dollar General.
RACO voted to give $200 to the food
drive. All proceeds will go to the Meigs
Cooperative Parish. RACO will be sponsoring a toy drive to be held at Dollar
General in Racine for Christmas.
RACO donated to give $200 for the
Ernie Sisson Memorial basket games.
David Zirkle led in the Pledge to the
Flag to close our meeting. There were
11 members in attendance. New members are always welcome and our meetings are the fourth Tuesday of each
month at 6:30 p.m. at the Star Mill Park
building.

$1M bail set for suspect
in Fla. airport bomb threat
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
(AP) — A judge set bail at
$1 million Wednesday for
a man accused of telling
security screeners at the
Jacksonville International
Airport he had a bomb in
his backpack, prompting
the evacuation of the airport. Authorities did not
find any explosives.
Zeljko Causevic, 39, remained silent during his
brief hearing before Duval
County Court Judge Russell Healey on charges of
making a false report about
planting a bomb and possessing a hoax bomb.
According to a Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office arrest
report, Causevic, a U.S.
citizen who is originally
from Bosnia, approached

a Transportation Security Administration agent
Tuesday, saying he had a
device in his camouflage
backpack that was “supposed to be a bomb, but it’s
not.” Inside the backpack,
officials found a small luggage scale with two batteries and a microchip. He
told authorities he had a
“detonator,” which was a
remote control device, and
his bag also contained a
cellphone.
The Joint Terrorism
Task Force interviewed
Causevic and he was arrested.
The threat shut down
the airport for about five
hours Tuesday night, delaying outbound flights
and stranding passengers

on planes on the tarmac.
It was unclear whether
Causevic was getting onto
a flight, and authorities
have not released a motive.
The FBI, airport police and
the Jacksonville Sheriff’s
Office are continuing to
investigate.
Phone numbers listed
for Causevic were disconnected.
Arlie Gentry was on a
Southwest flight arriving
from New York via Baltimore just before 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday.
“We moved from one
spot on the runway to another spot,” said Gentry,
who was reached on his
cellphone while still on the
plane. “They told us we
couldn’t get off the plane.”

Pressure mounts to fix
health insurance exchanges
The Associated Press

The pressure is on for the federal government and states running their own
health insurance exchanges to get the
systems up and running after overloaded
websites and jammed phone lines frustrated consumers on the first day they could
sign up for coverage using the new marketplaces.
In some ways, Tuesday’s delays were
good news for President Barack Obama
and supporters of his signature domestic policy achievement because the difficulties showed what appeared to be an
exceptionally high level of interest in the
overhauled insurance system. But if the
glitches aren’t fixed quickly, they could
dampen enthusiasm for the law at the
same time Republicans are using it as a
rallying cry to force most of the federal

government to shut down.
“I’m anxious to see what the insurance
is going to look like for my family at the
beginning of the year,” said David Berge,
a pastor with two young children in Shoreview, Minn., who tried unsuccessfully at
least 10 times to create an online account
on the state-run site MNsure. His highdeductible plan expires at the end of the
year.
“That’s a big unknown right now. I want
to figure that out as soon as possible so we
can begin planning,” Berge said.
In California, home to 15 percent of
the nation’s uninsured, officials pulled the
enrollment portion of the Covered California site down overnight for emergency
upgrades. It was restored midmorning
Wednesday, and 7,770 people had started
applications by then, spokesman Roy Kennedy said.

Neither side budges ahead
of White House meeting
WASHINGTON (AP) — President
Barack Obama summoned congressional
leaders to the White House on the second
day of a partial government shutdown that
has furloughed hundreds of thousands of
workers and closed military cemeteries as
far away as France. Republican and Democratic leaders agreed to meet Wednesday
afternoon but showed no signs of yielding.
Much of the government has been on
hold since early Tuesday — ruining vacations, robbing businesses of customers
and even idling many in the nation’s spy
force — in a dispute over Republicans’ efforts to block or postpone Obama’s health
care law.
White House spokesman Jay Carney
said Obama wasn’t backing down from his

refusal to negotiate health care in return
for reopening the government. Obama
called the lawmakers in to impress upon
them the shutdown’s consequences and to
remind them of the importance of raising
the nation’s borrowing limit before midOctober.
“He will not offer concessions to Republicans in exchange for not tanking the
economy,” Carney said.
Some in both parties have ominously
suggested the impasse might last for
weeks, with tea party-backed conservatives especially committed to the fight,
while a few Republicans seemed ready to
blink.
House Speaker John Boehner’s office
cast the White House invitation as a sign
the president might be backing down.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 43.88
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.54
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 88.47
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.19
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 56.93
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 102.31
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.10
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.25
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.31
Collins (NYSE) — 67.72
DuPont (NYSE) — 58.99
US Bank (NYSE) — 36.39
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.33

Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 65.36
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 52.09
Kroger (NYSE) — 40.58
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 61.63
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 78.52
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 20.17
BBT (NYSE) — 33.82
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.08
Pepsico (NYSE) — 79.56
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.97
Rockwell (NYSE) — 106.96
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 17.94
Royal Dutch Shell — 65.49

Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 64.56
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 73.72
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.62
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.85
Worthington (NYSE) — 35.76
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for October 2, 2013, 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.

�Thursday, October 3, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel s Page 3

Civitas Media

PRO FOOTBALL REVIEW
Rookie Webster proves his worth on NFL’s top team
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Kayvon
Webster has risen up Denver’s depth chart
as quickly as he climbed up the Broncos’
draft board, and not just because of injuries in the secondary, either.
Many personnel people across the
league considered it a bit of a reach when
the Broncos selected Webster with the
90th pick in the NFL draft.
Webster, who led South Florida with 82
tackles as a senior, almost unheard of for a
cover cornerback, is the prototype big cornerback all teams are searching for.
A shade under 6 feet and 200 pounds,
he has the speed and strength to cover
all those fast, physical receivers that are
flooding the field these days.
Three weeks into his rookie season,
nobody’s questioning the Broncos’ thirdround grade anymore.
Webster has played 60 snaps on defense
and 60 on special teams, collecting four
tackles and breaking up three passes, half
as many as he had in college last year. Last
week, he played 25 snaps on defense and
18 on special teams.
“I like that when he goes in the game
he doesn’t look like it’s too big for him,”
defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio said.
“He’s come in and just done his job. He’s
a physical corner. He’s a bigger corner. I
think he can really run. And the moment
doesn’t appear too big for him, which is
great because he’s going to find himself in
a lot of those moments.”
If Champ Bailey’s left foot and Tony
Carter’s right ankle need another week to
recover, the Broncos (3-0) will roll with
Webster as their nickel cornerback Sunday
against the Philadelphia Eagles (1-2).
Looking at the film, Michael Vick
surely won’t be breathing a sigh of relief if that’s the case.
“He’s a rookie, but he doesn’t carry himself like he’s a rookie,” Bailey said. “He
definitely thinks he should be playing ev-

Passing

Mark Reis | Colorado Springs Gazette| MCT

Denver Broncos outside linebacker Wesley Woodyard (52) and Broncos cornerback Kayvon
Webster (36) celebrate after making a big defensive stop during the first half against the Oakland Raiders at Sports Authority Field at Mile High Stadium in Denver Monday, Sept. 23.

ery snap and I like that kind of attitude.”
Bailey also likes Webster’s ability to
move on to the next play when he gets
beat without dwelling on it, an essential ingredient for defensive backs to
stick around a while.
“You have to be born like that. Nobody
can coach that,” Bailey said. “That’s just got
to be part of your makeup. I see that with
him. He’s had some rough spots but you
wouldn’t be able to tell by his demeanor.”
Webster said his heartbeat doesn’t
speed up on game day because he’s picked
the brains of Bailey, Dominique RodgersCromartie and Chris Harris and then
faced the likes of Peyton Manning, Demaryius Thomas, Eric Decker and Wes

Welker throughout the week.
“I feel like there’s nobody better than
them,” Webster said. “And if I’m going
into the game, I’m looking at you like, ‘All
right, you’re nothing, because I’m going
against the best every day.’”
Playing press coverage his senior season allowed scouts to get a glimpse of
how he might do in the pros. Most college coaches have their cornerbacks play
off the receivers, so it’s somewhat of a
guessing game about how well they’ll adjust to the NFL’s tighter coverages.
Webster didn’t have any interceptions
his senior season but broke up a halfdozen passes, forced three fumbles and
collected two sacks.

Jolly making most of a second chance with Packers
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) —
The running back was about
to break free around the edge
when the arm of a Packers defensive lineman emerged from
the pile to take him down.
Johnny Jolly looks just fine
on the line for someone who’s
been away from the game
for three years. He’s wearing
green and gold again after
being suspended by the NFL
for violating the league’s substance-abuse policy.
The stamina isn’t all there
yet. Getting into NFL shape
remains a work in progress.
But so far, Jolly seems to be
making a difference while
shaking off the rust.
“I’ve still got a long way
to go,” Jolly said. “I’m still
working hard every day to
get back, get up to the point
that I need to be at.
“Football is football, it’s
a game that we play. Just a
few technique things with
me … to work on, that I
know I can do better.”
The Packers (1-2) are 11th
in the league against the run
going into this weekend’s
bye at 93.3 yards per game.
It’s still early, but Green Bay
is giving up about 25 fewer
yards than in 2012, when it

was 17th against the run.
There are more pressing
problems for now, such as getting over an early rash of injuries to key players safety Morgan Burnett and cornerback
Casey Hayward. They haven’t
played a down yet because of
sore hamstrings.
Star linebacker Clay Matthews left the Bengals game
with a hamstring injury. Running back Eddie Lacy and tight
end Jermichael Finley are recovering from concussions.
Pass protection remains
inconsistent. Oh, and those
finishes — not good. Fourth
quarters have been a problem, such as when the Packers got outscored 13-0 by
the Bengals in a wild 34-30
loss to Cincinnati.
They’ll have a week to stew
about giving up that lead to the
Bengals; Green Bay hosts Detroit next on Oct. 6.
“Every week we have a message. And frankly, our message this week was to focus
through the finish, and we
didn’t hit that target,” coach
Mike McCarthy said. “So, obviously it will be a part of our
focus in the future.”
The positives? Quarterback
Aaron Rodgers looks fine over-

It’s Always On At B-Dubs!
214 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, OH

740-446-7891
60448586

480, A. Rodgers, GBY vs. WAS 09/15 (34-42, 4 TD)
462, P. Manning, DEN vs. BAL 09/05 (27-42, 7 TD)
450, E. Manning, NYG at DAL 09/08 (27-42, 4 TD)
428, Vick, PHL vs. SND 09/15 (23-36, 2 TD)
421, M. Ryan, ATL vs. NWE 09/29 (34-54, 2 TD)
419, P. Rivers, SND at PHL 09/15 (36-47, 3 TD)
412, Kaepernick, SNF vs. GBY 09/08 (27-39, 3 TD)
406, Roethlisberger, PIT vs. CHI 09/22 (26-41, 2 TD)
401, P. Rivers, SND vs. DAL 09/29 (35-42, 3 TD)
385, M. Stafford, DET at WAS 09/22 (25-42, 2 TD)
383, Roethlisberger, PIT at MIN 09/29 (36-51, 1 TD)
374, M. Ryan, ATL vs. STL 09/15 (33-43, 2 TD)
374, P. Manning, DEN vs. OAK 09/23 (32-37, 3 TD)
362, E. Manning, NYG vs. DEN 09/15 (28-49, 1 TD)
362, Flacco, BAL at DEN 09/05 (34-62, 2 TD)
357, M. Stafford, DET vs. MIN 09/08 (28-43, 2 TD)
357, Brees, NOR vs. ATL 09/08 (26-35, 2 TD)
355, Schaub, HOU vs. SEA 09/29 (ot) (31-49, 2 TD)
352, S. Bradford, STL at ATL 09/15 (32-55, 3 TD)
347, Flacco, BAL at BUF 09/29 (25-50, 2 TD)
346, Schaub, HOU at SND 09/09 (34-45, 3 TD)
342, Brees, NOR vs. ARI 09/22 (29-46, 3 TD)
333, A. Rodgers, GBY at SNF 09/08 (21-37, 3 TD)
331, G. Smith, NYJ vs. BUF 09/22 (16-29, 2 TD)
329, Griffin III, WAS vs. PHL 09/09 (30-49, 2 TD)
327, C. Palmer, ARI at STL 09/08 (26-40, 2 TD)
327, P. Manning, DEN vs. PHL 09/29 (28-34, 4 TD)
326, Griffin III, WAS vs. DET 09/22 (32-50, 0 TD)
322, Brees, NOR at TAM 09/15 (26-46, 1 TD)
321, Hoyer, CLE at MIN 09/22 (30-54, 3 TD)
321, Luck, IND vs. MIA 09/15 (25-43, 1 TD)
320, Griffin III, WAS at GBY 09/15 (26-40, 3 TD)
320, R. Wilson, SEA at CAR 09/08 (25-33, 1 TD)
319, Tannehill, MIA at IND 09/15 (23-34, 1 TD)
317, Cutler, CHI at DET 09/29 (27-47, 2 TD)
316, Brady, NWE at ATL 09/29 (20-31, 2 TD)
307, P. Manning, DEN at NYG 09/15 (30-43, 2 TD)
304, M. Ryan, ATL at NOR 09/08 (25-38, 2 TD)

Rushing

184, L. McCoy, PHL at WAS 09/09 (31 att., 1 TD)
175, D. Murray, DAL vs. STL 09/22 (26 att., 1 TD)
158, L. McCoy, PHL vs. KAN 09/19 (20 att., 1 TD)
153, Gore, SNF at STL 09/26 (20 att., 1 TD)
149, B. Powell, NYJ vs. BUF 09/22 (27 att., 0 TD)
144, D. Martin, TAM vs. NOR 09/15 (29 att., 0 TD)
140, A. Peterson, MIN vs. PIT 09/29 (23 att., 2 TD)
139, Re. Bush, DET vs. CHI 09/29 (18 att., 1 TD)
132, J. Starks, GBY vs. WAS 09/15 (20 att., 1 TD)
129, D. McFadden, OAK vs. JAX 09/15 (19 att., 0 TD)
120, De. Williams, CAR vs. NYG 09/22 (23 att., 0 TD)
112, Pryor, OAK at IND 09/08 (13 att., 0 TD)
107, A. Morris, WAS at GBY 09/15 (13 att., 0 TD)
103, Spiller, BUF vs. CAR 09/15 (16 att., 0 TD)
103, J. Franklin, GBY at CIN 09/22 (13 att., 1 TD)
102, A. Foster, HOU vs. SEA 09/29 (ot) (27 att., 0 TD)
101, Vereen, NWE at BUF 09/08 (14 att., 0 TD)
100, A. Peterson, MIN at CHI 09/15 (26 att., 0 TD)

Receiving

Phil Masturzo | Akron Beacon Journal MCT

Green Bay defensive end Johnny Jolly pressures then-Cleveland
Browns quarterback Derek Anderson in a game in 2009. Jolly has
spent most of the past three years out of football, but is making the
most of his second chance with the Packers.

all despite his two-interception
game against the Bengals.
Green Bay has produced two
straight 100-yard rushers in
James Starks and rookie Johnathan Franklin after not having
one for nearly three years. Although both Starks (knee) and
Franklin (foot) left the Bengals
game, too, with injuries.

Jolly has helped bolster a
line that also includes widebodied veterans Ryan Pickett and B.J. Raji. Last week,
the Bengals did run for two
touchdowns, but were otherwise held to 82 yards on 24
carries, mainly divided between BenJarvus Green-Ellis
and rookie Giovani Bernard.

fever

Mon-Thurs 11am-12am
Fri-Sat 11am-2am
Sun 11am-12am

Top performers
Week 1

Visit our
website to show
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the gridiron for
a chance to win
great prizes!

208, Boldin, SNF vs. GBY 09/08 (13 rec., 1 TD)
196, An. Brown, PIT vs. CHI 09/22 (9 rec., 2 TD)
193, De. Jackson, PHL vs. SND 09/15 (9 rec., 1 TD)
182, Ju. Jones, ATL vs. STL 09/15 (11 rec., 1 TD)
179, J. Graham, NOR at TAM 09/15 (10 rec., 1 TD)
178, Jam. Jones, GBY vs. WAS 09/15 (11 rec., 0 TD)
166, To. Smith, BAL at BUF 09/29 (5 rec., 1 TD)
164, Cruz, NYG at KAN 09/29 (10 rec., 1 TD)
162, A.. Green, CIN at CHI 09/08 (9 rec., 2 TD)
161, De. Thomas, DEN vs. BAL 09/05 (5 rec., 2 TD)
154, V. Jackson, TAM at NYJ 09/08 (7 rec., 0 TD)
154, S. Holmes, NYJ vs. BUF 09/22 (5 rec., 1 TD)
149, Gonzalez, ATL vs. NWE 09/29 (12 rec., 2 TD)
146, Gordon, CLE at MIN 09/22 (10 rec., 1 TD)
146, And. Johnson, HOU at SND 09/09 (12 rec., 0 TD)
143, Shorts, JAX at SEA 09/22 (8 rec., 0 TD)
143, Garcon, WAS at GBY 09/15 (8 rec., 1 TD)
141, D. Bryant, DAL at KAN 09/15 (9 rec., 1 TD)
141, J. Cook, STL vs. ARI 09/08 (7 rec., 2 TD)
141, Avery, KAN at PHL 09/19 (7 rec., 0 TD)
140, Simpson, MIN at DET 09/08 (7 rec., 0 TD)
136, A. Gates, SND vs. DAL 09/29 (10 rec., 1 TD)
134, J. Graham, NOR vs. ARI 09/22 (9 rec., 2 TD)
133, Decker, DEN vs. OAK 09/23 (8 rec., 1 TD)
131, N. Washington, TEN vs. SND 09/22 (8 rec., 0 TD)
130, J. Nelson, GBY at SNF 09/08 (7 rec., 1 TD)
128, Cobb, GBY vs. WAS 09/15 (9 rec., 1 TD)
127, Thompkins, NWE at ATL 09/29 (6 rec., 1 TD)
124, Simpson, MIN vs. PIT 09/29 (7 rec., 0 TD)
124, Hilton, IND vs. MIA 09/15 (6 rec., 0 TD)
124, A. Gates, SND at PHL 09/15 (8 rec., 0 TD)
124, De. Moore, OAK at DEN 09/23 (6 rec., 1 TD)
118, Cruz, NYG vs. DEN 09/15 (8 rec., 0 TD)
118, Cruz, NYG at DAL 09/08 (5 rec., 3 TD)
118, Edelman, NWE at ATL 09/29 (7 rec., 0 TD)
117, De. Hopkins, HOU vs. TEN 09/15 (ot) (7 rec., 1 TD)
116, Cal. Johnson, DET at ARI 09/15 (6 rec., 2 TD)

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Utilities, solar companies
in fight over rates
Jonathan Fahey
Ray Henry

The Associated Press

ATLANTA — Sunlight
is free, but if you use it
to make electricity your
power company wants you
to pay.
Utilities in many states
say solar-friendly rate
plans, conceived to promote alternative energy
sources, are too generous
and allow solar customers
to avoid paying for the grid
even though they use it.
Some power companies
are proposing an extra fee
for solar customers. Others
are trying to roll back or
block programs that allow
those customers to trade
the solar power they generate during sunny days for
power they need from the
grid during other times.
As rooftop solar expands
from a niche product to a
mainstream way to save
money on power bills, utilities are afraid they will lose
so many customers — and
revenue — that they won’t
be able to afford to build
and maintain the grid.
“We want to make sure
that as we change the
way our system works
that all of that is good for
all customers,” said Greg
Roberts, vice president of
pricing and planning at
Southern Co. subsidiary
Georgia Power. The utility is proposing additional
fees for renewable energy
users, including one that
would add up to about $22
per month for typical home
solar systems.
Solar installers say the
utility industry is trying
to hold onto customers —
and protect profits — as
U.S. homes and businesses
become more efficient
and generate their own
electricity. Rooftop solar
systems would not be economical with some of the
new fees or rate changes
being pushed by utilities.
“They are trying to punish people for buying less
electricity,” says Bryan
Miller, vice president for
public policy at Sunrun, a

solar financing company.
“They are trying to kill solar.”
Mike Easterwood, who
paid about $320,000 to
install nearly 400 solar
panels on top of his selfstorage business near Atlanta, says the new charges
are designed to discourage
people from installing new
systems if they go into effect next year as proposed.
“I think it scares the
heck out of (utilities),
quite frankly,” Easterwood
says. “They are a monopoly, and so they operate in
monopolistic fashion.”
The fight has come about
because solar systems have
plummeted in price and
grown more popular at a
time when U.S. electricity
use is flat or even declining. Utilities, already facing the prospect of weak
sales for years to come,
are seeing more customers
buy drastically less power
when they generate their
own with solar panels, fuel
cells, or other so-called
“distributed generation”
technologies.
That reduces the need to
build big new power plants
and transmission lines —
which is how utilities grow
their business, make a
profit for shareholders and
keep their borrowing costs
low. Regulators allow utilities to earn higher profits
when they build large projects.
In most states, solar customers are allowed to trade
the power that their panels
generate during the day for
power they need during
the night. That reduces the
amount they pay to their
traditional utility and the
amount they contribute to
maintaining the grid —
even though they still use
it.
“The cost is being born
by everyone else,” says
Richard McMahon, vice
president for energy supply and finance at the
Edison Electric Institute,
a utility industry lobbying
group.
Forty-three states have
some sort of power-swap-

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ping plan, most of which
include a cap on how large
the programs can grow.
There are 283,000 electric
customers participating in
these programs in the U.S.
as of July, according to the
Energy Department.
Solar advocates argue
rooftop systems instead
benefit other customers
and the grid. When a home
uses the power produced
by solar panels, it pulls less
power through the system.
Even when the panels are
producing more power
than needed at home, the
excess goes to the closest
house that needs power
— and not through the
whole system — as a matter of physics. Both scenarios mean less stress on
the grid.
“Solar customers are
paying more than their
fair share,” says Sunrun’s
Miller.
Utilities disagree, and
have proposed charging
special fees or rolling back
power-swapping rate plans
in Georgia, Arizona, California and Idaho.
Arizona Public Service
Co. officials estimate that
a typical solar customer
is avoiding $1,000 a year
in payments to support
the electricity grid. The
company proposes either
charging new solar users
a rate that recaptures more
of the utility’s costs or reducing the benefit of the
energy swapping program.
California utilities made
a similar push recently.
Legislators there voted in
September to allow the
state’s solar rate plan to
continue and even expand
for now, but said it would
change the way the state
structures rates in a way
that may address utilities’
concerns. A report commissioned by state regulators and released last week
says non-solar customers
in the current rate system are paying between
$75 million and $254 million per year in extra grid
costs now, and that could
expand to $1.1 billion per
year by 2020.

Page 4
Thursday, October 3, 2013

Eric Bogosian returns to
his roots in show, book
Mark Kennedy
AP Drama Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Eric Bogosian has
been looking back on his old angry work
lately and laughing.
The former monologist who used to
speak about substance abuse and dangerous sex has been sifting through two
decades of work for an upcoming book —
“100 Monologues” — and a new one-man
show, “100 (Monologues),” at the Labyrinth Theater Company.
“Man, I talk about drugs, A LOT. I talk
about sex, A LOT. That was what my life
was about, which it isn’t now,” he says. “I
don’t think a monologue show about being
a dad is as interesting as being a guy being
on the edge of some sex, drugs and rock
‘n’ roll kind of lifestyle.”
Both the book and the show, which runs
through Oct. 19, pull pieces from Bogosian’s six solo shows between 1980 and
2000 — including “Pounding Nails in the
Floor With My Forehead” and “Wake up
and Smell the Coffee” — for which he received three Obie Awards.
“I didn’t know what I was doing. And
there was something good about that,” he
says of the monologue style that he now
calls a “shoot-from-the-hip, intuitive, crazy
thing.”
The new show and collection of his
monologues correspond with a special
project involving many of his actorfriends, including Liev Schreiber, Bobby
Cannavale, Vincent D’Onofrio, Jessica
Hecht and Jeremy Sisto. All will help record 100 of Bogosian’s monologues for
online posting starting this winter.
Bogosian is perhaps best known for
his 1987 play, “Talk Radio,” in which he
starred as a shock jock both onstage and
in a film version directed by Oliver Stone.
TV fans likely know him as a police captain on NBC’s “Law &amp; Order: Criminal
Intent.”
He’s written a number of full-length
plays — his “subUrbia” was made into a
film — and appeared in several movies,
including Robert Altman’s “The Caine
Mutiny Court Martial” and “Under Siege
2” opposite Steven Seagal. Bogosian also
has written several books, as well as the
upcoming “Nemesis,” about a group of Armenian assassins who went after Turkish
leaders after World War I.
Bogosian, 60, took a break from rehearsal to talk about the show, the fate of
the monologue, how an angry young man
became a cop on TV, and an odd fantasy
that involves a vampire.
___
AP: Why 100 monologues?
Bogosian: One day I was just curious
as to how many monologues there were.
I counted them up and it was like 99. If I
threw in the guy from ‘Talk Radio,’ then
I had 100 monologues. So I called up my
publishers and I said, ‘You know, there are
a hundred of ‘em. Why don’t we put out
a book?’
AP: You left the monologue around

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2000. Why?
Bogosian: It’s all about real shotgun attitude stuff. Monologues put out one idea
really hard and fast. I sort of moved into
other realms where I could explore something different, like a novel or a history
book.
AP: Is it weird seeing others perform
your work?
Bogosian: They bring something else.
In fact, they do things and I’m like, ‘Oh,
I didn’t know you could do that with that
line.’ Or they find a beat somewhere I
didn’t know about. I wrote it and I didn’t
realize you could do it.
AP: What happened to the monologue
as an art form?
Bogosian: It was at its best when all the
monologues worked in one big theme. But
eventually that started to fall by the wayside. Monologue shows started to become
a showcase for talent, or because of Spalding Gray’s influence, people thought that
the minutia of their personal lives was fascinating, not being the artist that Spalding
was.
AP: Will it ever disappear?
Bogosian: I don’t think it’s something
that will ever die because it’s very cheap
to produce. When you’re a starving artist,
it’s a great way to get started. But I think
when it’s used as a stepping stone to other
things, then it does have a capacity to get
lost.
AP: How did a counterculture icon end
up a police captain on a “Law &amp; Order”
franchise?
Bogosian: I totally accept the idea that
a person’s ideas can change over their life.
But I never said anything against cops, I
never said anything against soldiers, in
my work. I come from a blue-collar town
and grew up with guys who were cops and
carpenters and soldiers. So I have a great
deal of respect for those guys.
AP: What appealed to you about doing
the show?
Bogosian: I wanted to do that kind of
show because I felt that those shows are
very similar to the style of the old Elia
Kazan dramas, where nobody ever smiles
and everything’s very intense. I wanted
to be able to do something where I never
smiled and was grumpy all the time.
AP: Where do you want your career to
go?
Bogosian: Who knows where my little
journey’s going to go as an actor because
I’m not out there all the time. Honestly,
I’ve got one thing left to do: I want to play
a vampire in something and then my entire card will have been filled. I got to play
an intense drama. I got to be the villain
in an action movie. I got to be on ‘Law &amp;
Order.’
AP: A vampire, really?
Bogosian: Yes. I want to be an old vampire. I want to be the leader of all the other
vampires.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
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Sammy M. Lopez
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740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Thursday, October 3, 2013

Coolville TOPS meeting held

Obituary
ARMS
Ronald D. “Ronnie”
Arms, 57, of Pomeroy,
Ohio, passed away on
Tuesday, October 1, 2013,
at Holzer Medical Center
after an extended illness.
He was born on March
19, 1956, in Mason, West
Virginia, son of the late Orville and Mary Arms. Ronnie was formerly employed
at National Gas and Oil.
Ronnie is survived by his
wife of twenty-seven years,

Brenda; his son, Zachary
and his daughter, Chelsey;
two grandchildren, Emma
McKnight and Isaiah
Arms; brothers and sister,
Linda Arms of Tennessee,
Don and Carol Arms of
Florida, Roger and Brenda
Arms of Logan, Ohio, Bob
and Lynne Arms of Racine, Ohio, and Gene and
Brenda Arms of Pomeroy;
mother and father-in-law,
Elwin and Helen James of
Pomeroy; sister-in-law, Rebecca Casey of Cleveland,

Ohio; brother-in-law, Eddie
James of Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 7 p.m. on Friday,
October 4, 2013, with
Pastor James Keesee officiating at the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Visiting hours
will be from 5-7 p.m. on
Friday at the funeral home.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.
com.

Death Notices
GIVEN
Rondel L. Given, 93,
Mason County, W.Va., died
Sept. 29, 2013.
Funeral services will
be held at the Henderson
Church of Christ in Henderson, W.Va., on Saturday,
October 5, 2013, at 2 p.m.,
with Pastor Bill Deem officiating. Burial will follow
in the Kirkland Memorial
Gardens in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. Friends may visit the
family at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant on
Friday evening, October 4,
from 6-8 p.m. and one hour
prior to the service at the
church on Saturday.

HEUGEL
Robert E. Heugel, age
91, formerly of Gallipolis,
died on October 1, 2013.
Visitation will be held at
Hodges Funeral Home in
Ft. Myers, Fla., on October 3, 2013, from 6:30-8:30
p.m. The funeral service
will follow at the funeral
home on October 4, 2013,
at 1:30 p.m.
ROUSH
Harry Roush, 87, of Mason, West Virginia, died on
October 2, 2013, at Overbrook Center.
Funeral arrangements
will be announced by the
Anderson Funeral Home

of New Haven.
WATTERSON
Opal Gladys “Sis” Watterson of Mason County,
W.Va., died at Pleasant
Valley Nursing and Rehab
Center on September 30,
2013, at the age of 98.
The visitation will be
held at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., Thursday, October
3, 2013, from 6-8 p.m. The
funeral service will be held
at the funeral home on Friday, October 4 at 1 p.m.,
with Rev. Ronnie Long officiating. Burial will follow
in the Apple Grove Memorial Gardens.

Marathon suspect wants prison restrictions lifted
BOSTON (AP) — Lawyers for Boston Marathon bombing suspect
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev asked
a judge Wednesday to lift
restrictions placed on him
in prison, arguing that
the conditions are overly
harsh, have left him nearly
totally isolated and are impairing their ability to defend him.
Tsarnaev’s lawyers said
in court documents that
he has been confined to his
cell except for visits from
them and “very limited access” to a small outdoor
enclosure.
Tsarnaev, 20, is accused
of building and planting
bombs near the finish line
of the April 15 marathon,
killing three people and
injuring more than 260.
Authorities say he and his
older brother, Tamerlan
Tsarnaev, 26, ethnic Chech-

ens from Russia who emigrated to the United States
as children, planned and
carried out the attack to
retaliate against the United
States for its involvement
in Muslim countries.
Tamerlan
Tsarnaev
was killed four days after
the marathon following
a gun battle with police.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was
found wounded and hiding
in a boat in a backyard in
Watertown.
Authorities
said he had scrawled antiAmerican messages on the
inside of the boat, including “The U.S. Government
is killing our innocent civilians” and “We Muslims are
one body, you hurt one you
hurt us all.”
In their motion, Tsarnaev’s lawyers said “Special Administrative Measures” were imposed on

their client beginning in
August, at the request of
U.S. Attorney Carmen
Ortiz and the approval of
U.S. Attorney General Eric
Holder.
“SAMs,” as they are
known, are used in terrorism cases and other
high-profile cases when
authorities allege there is
“substantial risk” that a defendant’s communications
or contacts with people
“could result in death or
serious bodily injury” to
others. The special restrictions were placed on shoe
bomb suspect Richard
Reid, “American Taliban”
John Walker Lindh and
other terror suspects.
Tsarnaev’s lawyers say
prosecutors have presented no evidence that
the special restrictions are
needed in Tsarnaev’s case.

Nutrition
From Page 1
program as a possible step toward improving their ability to learn.
Musser reports that since the “free”
provision went into effect the numbers
of meals served has greatly increased.
“We are serving approximately 12 percent
more lunches per day than we did this
time last year,” she said. She explained
that the increase amounts to about 155
more students eating a nutritious lunch at
school each day.
The added bonus, she said, has been
that the breakfast participation has gone
up as well. Breakfast is up about 10 percent, which equals out to about 100 more
students eating breakfast at school each
morning.
At the most recent meeting of the Meigs

Local Board of Education, a certificate of
standards governing types of foods and
beverages which can be sold on school
premises and the times they can be sold
was renewed.
“What this means,” explained Musser.
” is that we do not allow the sale of any
foods, either through the lunch program
or in fundraising efforts, that are deemed
by the USDA to be “foods of minimal nutritional value.” Musser said this requirement is nothing new for Meigs Local, that
it has been in effect in the district for the
past two years.
While evaluation of the benefits of better nutrition on learning ability cannot be
determined in these early stages, there is
optimism that it will be of benefit to the
educational progress of students.

Boyd
From Page 1
Meigs County Legion
Team to make it to the
state competition.
The recognition of Boyd
was planned by Woody
Call III, who has also been
involved with Middleport

The Daily Sentinel s Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Little League for many
years, along with Jackie
Fox and Amy Barber, faithful League workers.
Special guests were
Boyd’s mother, Helen
Boyd, and a faithful Little
League baseball supporter,

Woodrow Call, Jr., both of
whom are in wheelchairs
and reside at Overbrook
Center. His sister, Donna
Boyd, was also there, as
was his three year old
granddaughter, Kyla, who
is already in t-ball.

COOLVILLE — Tops
2013, Coolville recently
met with 12 members
present.
Mary Rankin was the
weekly Best Weight Loss
Winner and she received
a certificate and the contents from the weekly
fruit/veggie basket. Sue
Mason was recnogized
for being the monthly and
quarterly best weight loss
winner.
Perfect Attendance for
Aug. was Pat Snedden

and Pat Hall. Perfect Attendance for Sept. was Roberta Henderson, Pat Hall,
Connie and Mary Rankin
and Pat Snedden.
The group will attend
the Tops Fall Rally on Oct.
26 in Lancaster, Ohio. The
theme for Fall Rally is Flippin’ Over Tops. The group
will decorate a pair of flip
flops to be judged in the
contest and also the group
will fill a basket to be raffled at the Fall Tops Rally.
the group has also started

a walking challenge, the
miles walked will be recorded each week.
The meeting was closed
with the helping hand
circle encouraging each
other in there weight loss
journey. Meetings are held
every Monday night at
the Torch Baptist Church
weigh in is 5-5:45 p.m.
with a meeting beginning
at 6 p.m. Anyone interested in should contact Pat
Snedden at 662-2633 or attend a free meeting.

ESC to participate in Child
and Adult Care Food Program
Staff Report
mdsnews@heartlandpublications.com

OHIO VALLEY — The Athens- Meigs
Educational Service Center announces
sponsorship of the USDA funded Child
and Adult Care Food Program. Meals are
available to all enrolled participants without regard to race, color, national origin,
sex, age or disability and will be served at
no separate charge §226.23(d).
In accordance with Federal Law and
U.S. Department of Agriculture policy,
this institution is prohibited from discriminating on the basis of race, color,
national origin, sex, age, or disability. To
file a complaint of discrimination, write
USDA, Director, Office of Adjudication,
1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call toll free
(866) 632-9992 (Voice). Individuals who
are hearing impaired or have speech disabilities may contact USDA through the
Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339;
or (800) 845-6136 (Spanish). USDA is an
equal opportunity provider and employer.
Agency participating sites are Bradbury
Learning Center Heart of the Valley Head
Start 39105 Bradbury Road Middleport,
Ohio 45760; Heart of the Valley Head
Start Tuppers Plains Elementary 50008
St. Rt. 681 Reedsville, Ohio 45772; Gallia
County Early Childhood &amp; Family Center
Heart of the Valley Head Start 77 Mill
Creek Road Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
The following Income Eligibility Guidleins for free and reduced price meals are
effective July 1, 2013, through June 30,
20134:
Free lunch income guidelines: household
size of one, annual — 14,937, monthly —
1,245, twice per month — 623, every two
weeks — 575, weekly — 288; household
size of two, annual — 20,163, monthly —
1,681, twice per month — 841, every two
weeks — 776, weekly — 388; household
size of three, annual — 25,389, monthly
— 2,116, twice per month — 1,058, every two weeks — 977, weekly — 489;
household size of four, annual — 30,615,

monthly — 2,552, twice per month —
1,276, every two weeks — 1,178, weekly
— 589; household size of five, annual
— 35,841, monthly — 2,987, twice per
month — 1,494, every two weeks —
1,379, weekly — 690; household size of
six, annual — 41,067, monthly — 3,423,
twice per month — 1,712, every two
weeks — 1,580, weekly — 790; household
size of seven, annual — 46,293, monthly
— 3,858, twice per month — 1,929, every two weeks — 1,781, weekly — 891;
household size of eight, annual — 51,519,
monthly — 4,294, twice per month —
2,147, every two weeks — 1,982, weekly
— 991; for each additional family member
add, annual — 5,226, monthly — 436,
twice per month — 218, every two weeks
— 201, weekly — 101.
Reduced lunch income guidelines:
household size of one, annual — 21,257,
monthly — 1,772, twice per month — 886,
every two weeks — 818, weekly — 409;
household size of two, annual — 28,694,
monthly — 2,392, twice per month —
1,196, every two weeks — 1,104, weekly
— 552; household size of three, annual
— 36,131, monthly — 3,011, twice per
month — 1,506, every two weeks —
1,390, weekly — 695; household size of
four, annual — 43,568, monthly — 3,631,
twice per month — 1,816, every two
weeks — 1,676, weekly — 838; household
size of five, annual — 51,005, monthly
— 4,251, twice per month — 2,126, every two weeks — 1,962, weekly — 981;
household size of six, annual — 58,442,
monthly — 4,871, twice per month —
2,436, every two weeks — 2,248, weekly
— 1,124; household size of seven, annual — 65,879, monthly — 5,490, twice
per month — 2,745, every two weeks —
2,534, weekly — 1,267; household size
of eight, annual — 73,316, monthly —
6,110, twice per month — 3,055, every
two weeks — 2,820, weekly — 1,410; for
each additional family member add, annual — 7,437, monthly — 620, twice per
month — 310, every two weeks — 287,
weekly — 144.

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Show
From Page 1
horse show to be postponed until now.
There will be $1,200 awarded in prize
money. Concessions will be in operation
all afternoon.
Fees are as follows: a ground fee of $3
per horse; small fry events, free; youth
events, $5; and open events, $10. Ten or
more entries are required for guaranteed
payouts. If there is less than 10 entries,
then there is an 80 percent payout of entry
fees only.
The classes are as follows:
1. Lead Line (Rider 6 and under), prizes to the winners
2. $100 open showmanship with payout

4 places
3. Small fry Walk Trot (rider 10 and under), prizes
4. Small Fry Barrels (rider 10 and under), trophies
5. $150 Youth Barrels (rider 18 and under) payout 4 places
6. $150 Open Western Pleasure - payouts 4 places
7. $50 Youth Western Pleasure (rider 18
and under) payout 4 places
8. $100 Open Walk-Trot, payout 4 places
9. $50Youth Walk-Trot, payout 4 places
10. $200 Open Poles, payout 5 places
11. $100 Ladies Open Barrel, payout 4
places
12 $300 Open Barrels, payout 5 places.

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�Page 6

The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 3, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Reds stayed pat, paid for it in playoffs
CINCINNATI (AP) — The Reds
kept their lineup virtually intact in
the offseason, convinced it was ready
for a push deep into the playoffs.
They didn’t add anything at midseason, thinking they were still fine.
They paid for those decisions in
another playoff flameout.
A 6-2 loss at Pittsburgh in the wildcard game on Tuesday night marked
the third straight quick exit from the
playoffs for a team that’s learned how
to win 90 games during the regular
season but can’t translate that success to the playoffs.
“I think everyone has to hold them-

selves responsible and figure out a
way to take the next step because we
changed the culture around here,”
outfielder Jay Bruce said. “We’re a
winning club now. I’m proud of our
season in that aspect.
“But we need to take the next
step,” he added. “We need to find a
way to do that.”
This one ended so much like those
others.
The Reds won 91 games and
reached the playoffs in 2010 as NL
Central champions, breaking the
franchise’s 15-year playoff drought.
They got swept by the Phillies, but

considered it a first step for a young
team.
Last year, they won 97 games and
the first two playoff games in San
Francisco before returning home and
getting swept away. This year, they
won 91 games and a wild card berth,
but dropped their last six games
overall, including the one-game playoff at PNC Park.
Good seasons, ugly endings.
The biggest problem down the
stretch was an inconsistent offense
that went through one of its periodic
downturns at a very bad time. The
Reds scored only 2, 0, 1, 3, 2 and 2
runs in those last six losses.

Submitted Photo

Rio Grande’s Luiz Filho, shown here in Sunday’s win over Point
Park University, was named the NAIA Men’s Soccer Offensive
Player of the Week on Tuesday. Filho had the first two hat
tricks of his career in the RedStorm’s wins over the Pioneers
and Bluefield (Va.) College last week.

Rio Grande’s Filho
named national
Player of the Week
Randy Payton
Special to OVP

KANSAS CITY, Mo. —
Luiz Filho of Rio Grande
(Ohio) has been named the
NAIA Men’s Soccer National Offensive Player of
the Week and Jordan Farr
of Corban (Ore.) has been
selected as the NAIA Men’s
Soccer National Defensive
Player of the Week, the
national office announced
Tuesday.
Filho and Farrwere chosen for their performances
during the week of Sept.
23 – 29 and were selected
out of a pool of conference,
independent, and unaffiliated grouping award winners.
Filho, a sophomore forward from San Paulo, Brazil, recorded consecutive
hat-tricks in Rio Grande’s
blowout victories over
Bluefield (Va.) and Point
Park (Pa.). The hat tricks
were the first two of Filho’s
collegiate career and make
him the Red Storm leader

in goals (9) and points
(19).
For the season, Filho
also ranks among the NAIA
leaders in total game-winning goals (13th, 3), total
goals (14th, 9) goals per
game (20th, 1), game-winning goals per game (21st,
.33), total points (28th,
19) and points per game
(39th, 2.11).
Farr, a freshman goaltender from Turner, Ore.,
notched a pair of shutouts
for the Warriors last week.
The shutouts—in a 1-0 win
over Northwest (Wash.)
and a 0-0 tie with Evergreen
(Wash.)—extend
Farr’s shutout streak to
four games. The freshman
has yet to allow a goal in
nearly 500 minutes in net
for the Warriors and has
helped to lead Corban to
its best seven-game start in
program history.
Farr currently leads the
NAIA in goals against per
game (0.00) and is one of
just two goaltenders who
have yet to allow a goal in
2013.

OVP Sports Schedule
Thursday, Oct. 3
Volleyball
Southern at River Valley,
5:30
Eastern at Wahama, 6
p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Fairland at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Cross Lanes Christian at
Ohio Valley Christian, 5:30
South Gallia at Belpre,
5:30
Boys Soccer
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Crosslanes Christian at
Ohio Valley Christian, 5
p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Hun-

tington St. Joe, 5 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 4
Football
Wahama at Southern, 7:30
Nelsonville-York
at
Meigs, 7:30
Federal Hocking at
South Gallia, 7:30
Chesapeake at River Valley, 7:30
Belpre at Eastern, 7:30
Miller at Hannan, 7:30
Gallia Academy at Belfry, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Brooke,
7:30
Volleyball
Ohio Valley Christian at
Teays Valley Christian, 6
p.m.

Photos by Bryan Walters | Civitas Media

Eastern senior Jordan Parker (12) bumps a ball in the air in front of teammates Kelsey Johnson (22) and Paige Cline
(14) during Tuesday night’s TVC Hocking volleyball game against Belpre in Tuppers Plains.

Lady Eagles sweep Belpre
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio —
Consistency goes a long way.
The Eastern volleyball team led
by at least 13 points in all three
games Tuesday night during a 2513, 25-12, 25-11 victory over visiting Belpre in a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division matchup
at the Eagle’s Nest.
The Lady Eagles (16-2, 11-1
TVC Hocking) won its fourth
consecutive match, all of which
have come in straight-game fashion. The hosts also claimed a
season sweep of the Lady Golden
Eagles after claiming a 25-8, 2514, 25-15 victory at BHS back on
September 10.
Eastern never trailed in Game
1, jumping out to early leads of
10-3 and 15-7. Belpre never came
closer than seven points the rest
of the way, as the hosts extended
their edge to 24-11 before wrapping up the 12-point triumph.
Belpre claimed its first lead of
the night at 1-0 in Game 2, but
EHS responded with a 16-7 run
to double up the guests for a 16-8
cushion. BHS never came closer
than six the rest of the way, as the
Lady Eagles closed the game on a
9-4 surge to take a 2-0 match lead.
There were three ties and four
lead changes in the finale, but
EHS broke away from a 3-all tie
with a 10-2 run to claim a 13-5
edge. The guests closed to within
seven at 13-6, but Eastern followed with a 12-5 charge to wrap
up the 14-point decision.
Eastern had eight different
players record a service point in
the victory and finished the night
with 27 kills, nine blocks and seven aces. Belpre, conversely, managed just eight service points in
the match, with Daisy Cowdery
leading the way with four points.
Jordan Parker and Erin Swatzel both led the hosts with nine

Eastern seniors Erin Swatzel, left, and Maddie Rigsby, right, block a spike
attempt by Belpre’s Brianna Owen (15) during Tuesday night’s TVC Hocking
volleyball game in Tuppers Plains.

points apiece, followed by Katie
Keller, Kelsey Johnson and Sabra
Bailey with six points each. Maddie Rigsby was next with four
points, while Lindsay Wolfe and
Kylie Long rounded things out
with two points apiece.
Parker and Rigsby each had
two service aces, followed by
Keller, Johnson and Bailey with
an ace each. Wolfe led the passing
game with 23 assists, while Parker and Rigsby paced the defense
with 20 and 18 digs respectively.

Paige Cline also had 14 digs in the
triumph.
Swatzel led the net attack with
10 kills and three blocks, followed by Rigsby with six kills and
Parker with five kills. Both Rigsby
and Parker also had three blocks
apiece. Keller and Johnson also
added four and two kills, respectively, for the hosts.
Both teams wore pink in some
way with their uniforms as part of
the Volley for the Cure match at
Eastern.

Lady Marauders march past Vinton County
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio —
Back to winning ways.
The Meigs volleyball snapped
its three game skid Tuesday
night with a four set over Tri-

Valley Conference Ohio Division
guest Vinton County.
The Lady Marauders (6-10, 2-4
TVC Ohio) dropped the opening
game 25-15 but rallied back to
take the next three 25-19, 25-18
and 25-17 respectively.
Brook Andrus led the Ma-

roon and Gold with 10 kills in
the match, followed by Olivia
Cremeans with eight and Aly
Dettwiller with seven. Devyn Oliver had two kills, while Hannah
Cremeans marked one to round
out the MHS total.
Oliver led the Marauders with

15 assists, while Ariel Ellis added 12.
The MHS defense was led by
Hannah Cremeans with seven
blocks, followed by Olivia Cremeans with one. Oliver marked
a team-high five digs, while

Andurs had six serving aces to
lead MHS. Oliver and Ellis each
marked three aces, Olivia Cremeans had two, while Dettwiller
had one.
The Lady Marauders lost to
Vinton County on September 10,
in McArthur.

�Thursday, October 3, 2013

SERVICES

LEGALS

LEGALS

Village of Pomeroy
Is now accepting sealed bids
for 1987 Chevy 3/4 Ton Truck
250 Straight Six Yellow. This
Truck runs great, but has some
brake problems. This truck is
to be sold as is with a min.
starting bid at $600.00.
The Village of Pomeroy has
the right to reject any and all
bids. Bids close out at 6pm on
Oct 14th 2013. Please turn
your sealed bid into Water Office or Clerk, at 660 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Will be opened in council and
accepted at that time. If you
wish to look at the Vehicle,
Please come to 660 E. Main
St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. It
will be in the back parking lot
10/1 10/2, 10/3, 10/4, 10/6

“TO BECKY GILLAND AND
JAMES MICHAEL WALTER
REGARDING THE ADOPTION OF JAMES MICHAEL
TYLER WALTERS”
MEIGS COUNTY PROBATE
COURT
Please be advised a Petition
for the Adoption of James Michael Tyler Walters has been
filed in the Meigs County Probate Court. If you should object to this adoption, please appear before the Court on the
24th day of October, 2013.
Otherwise, if you feel this adoption is necessary, you may
simply call the Law Office of
Trenton J. Cleland at (740)
992-7101 to schedule a time to
sign the Consent for Adoption.
10/3, 10/10, 10/17

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ANNOUNCEMENTS

Notices
GUN SHOW
Marietta Comfort Inn
OCT 19 &amp; 20
I-77 Exit 1
Adm $5
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740-667-0412
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
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through the Mail until you have
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2-Family Garage Sale Rain or
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Rd, Lots of Girls name brand
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choose from. Boys clothes 610, Lots of VCR Disney movies
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4 - Family Yard Sale (Indoors)
@ Lovers Lane 2 1/2 miles
South of Gallipolis Friday &amp;
Saturday 8am to ?
5 - Family Garage Sale October 3rd &amp; 4th @ 4466 State Rt
554. Clothes-infant boys, boys
5 - 5 &amp; 14-16, girls 5-6, mens,
juniors - plus size, nursing
scrubs,maternity, Exesaucer,
jumperoo, Bathroom set, xmas decor &amp; pre-lit tree, harlequim books, toys and lots of
misc.
Antique Sale Oct 4th &amp; 5th at
the Raynor Peach Orchard (
9040 St. Rt. 7 South) 5 miles
below Gallipolis - 9am to 5pm.
Big Moving Yard Sale Friday
ONLY 9-?, 239 Third Ave. Gallipolis
Fri 10/4 &amp; Sat 10/5 8am. 506
McNeil Ave Point. Piano, Mattress, Bx Springs, Carpet,
Glassware, SmAppl, Lawn
chairs Grinder, Drill, Tools,
Dorm Frig, Tv Stand, Coffee
table, Antiques, Clothing.
Garage Sale October 4 &amp; 5th
from 9am to 5pm at the Rodney Community Building on St.
Rt . 850. Lots of Longaberger
Baskets, Fenton Glass, and
other Collectables, Tools,
Crafts and lots of misc. Guns,
Knives.
Household Estate Sale: Paul &amp;
Ruth Karr residence-follow
signs at Chester, OH; Fri.&amp;Sat.
Oct 4 &amp; 5, 9am-6pm. Furniture,
tools, appliances, etc. Also
2005 Mercury Grand Marquis
G, 42k miles $6,500. 740-4167742
Huge Garage Sale October 4th
&amp; 5th - 1/2 mile out Bulaville
pike 1st house on left. Ladies,
mens &amp; boys clothing,TVs,
Furniture, Bedding &amp; misc.
MULTI FAMILY: 10/4 &amp; 5 8am.
Clothes, Toys, Furn, Tools, HH
items, etc. 90 Fairview rd
Camp Conley.
Two Garage Sales Fri &amp; Sat
Oct 4-5th, 377 Buhl Morton Rd.
8-? Lots of Furniture, Decor,
Clothing, Yard Furn. 4-Wheeler, Zero Turn Mower &amp; Misc
Yard Sale 1.2 miles on 218.
October 3rd, 4th, &amp; 5th

YARD SALE
310 Hollaway St, Henderson. Oct 3,4,5th. 9am

Yard Sale
Yard Sale at the residents of
Paulie Cunningham corner of
1st &amp; Center St in Mason, WV
Sat Oct 5th, 9-?
Yard Sale Oct 4th &amp; 5th @
38895 St. Rt. 143 - 9am to
5pm. Trailers, clippers, lots of
misc. Rain or Shine.
Yard Sale Spring Valley Area,
Oak Dr. Fri &amp; Sat 9-5
Yard Saler's Paradise- 25 plus
sales over 75 families participating, Oct. 5th, 9-5, Oct 6th,
10-4, South Cannaan Rd.Athens County Rd 24 (6 1/2
miles long) located off Rt. 50, 2
miles East of Athens. Most
sales are Saturday &amp; Sunday
Rain or Shine. Food, Drinks,
Restrooms available.

Help Wanted General
NOW HIRING
CORRECTIONAL OFFICERS
QUALIFICATIONS: 1 YR
GENERAL WORK EXPERIENCE, VALID DRIVERS LICENSE; HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA OR EQUIVALENT.
OFFERING:
*STABLE WORK ENVIRONMENT
*BENEFITS: PAID VACATION,
HOLIDAYS, SICK LEAVE;
MEDICAL, VISION, DENTAL,
LIFE INSURANCES; RETIREMENT PLAN
*CAREER ADVANCEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
*FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES
*COMPETITIVE SALARY
To apply contact the Lakin
Correctional Center Human
Resources Office at (304) 6742440

SERVICES

PTI Inc
is looking to fill PT/Temp position(s). All shifts. Please sub-

Professional Services

at 800 Fairground Road, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550.
(304) 675-2392

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

FINANCIAL SERVICES

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)

EMPLOYMENT

Installation / Maintenace / Repair

HVAC Technician
Need Installer and Service Technician. Experience Needed. Call
Comfort Air @ 4410114.

EDUCATION

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

REAL ESTATE SALES
Drivers &amp; Delivery

Need Extra
Cash???

Early Morning
Newspaper Delivery Routes Available in
Gallia County, OH,
MUST HAVE RELIABLE
TRANSPORTATION
Call Us
Today
740446-2342
For More Information contact
JESSICA
CHASEN EXT 12
Food Services

Sodexo at the University of Rio Grande is
seeking a qualified cook
/food service worker with
experience,
Please apply in person
at the Marketplace
Help Wanted General
Immediate Opening
District Sales Manager
Looking for self-starter with a
positive attitude, active team
player, have reliable transportation, &amp; dependable.
Responsibilities include: Overseeing Independent Contractors, Daily Customer Service, &amp;
Achieving Circulation Goals.
Position offers company benefits including 401K, Health,
Dental, Vision, and Life Insurance.
Please send resume to:
Circulation Distribution
Manager
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave
Gallipolis, OH 45631
or email to:
gdtcirculation@civitasmedia.co
m
No Phone Calls

For Sale By Owner
HOUSE FOR SALE:3BR, 2BA,
2car garage, outbuilding, on 2
lots, 1 owner well maintained,
1600sqft Pt.Plsnt 149,000.
Please call 304-675-4217
Want To Buy
WANT TO BUY ripe Pawpaw's
- $1.00 lb -Black walnuts starting Oct 1st. 740-698-6060
REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1-Bedroom Apartment Call
740) 446-0390
2 - Rm efficiency Apartment in
the country - 7 miles from Gallipolis on Rt 7 south. 2 car garage, All electric, Utilties not included. $300 /mo, Deposit &amp;
1st mo. rent &amp; References Call
740-446-4514
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.
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
CALL About our RENTAL
SPECIAL
Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2, 3,
4BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets Ph: 304-6740023 or 304-444-4268

Middleport Area 1 &amp; 2 Bdrm
Apartments some with paid
utilities NO PETS Deposit &amp;
References Call 1-740-9920165
New Haven Area 1 &amp; 2 Bdrm
Apartments, NO PETS Deposit &amp; References Call 740-9920165

�Page 8 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 3, 2013

O’Brien ready to lead Penn State into Big Ten play
Dan Gelston

The Associated Press

Penn State coach Bill O’Brien
sure enjoys it when the seasons
change.
Not just summer to fall.
But nonconference to Big Ten.
“When the Big Ten season
rolls around, fall is beginning, it’s
a little cooler out,” O’Brien said,
“and the guys are very aware
that is a very important time of
the year. It starts with Indiana.
I don’t know if there’s extra excitement, but there’s definitely a
level of energy and alertness you
start to see this time of year.”
Penn State (3-1) heads to Indiana (2-2) trying for one more
win to build a nice cushion before Michigan rolls in next week
in front of a sold-out Beaver Stadium.
The Big Ten has a stout first
weekend ahead. Ohio State,
Northwestern and Michigan are
all undefeated and all eyes will
be in Evanston, Ill., for the earlyseason conference game of the
season.
There might not be much suspense at Indiana. The Nittany
Apartments/Townhouses
Nice 2BR, Apt, near Harrisonville. $425 plus utilities No
Smoking, No Pets 740-7423033
Friendly, beautiful 48 unit complex has units available. We
have a total of 24 one bedrooms &amp; 24 two bedrooms.
Rent now and receive $150
gift-card to Walmart after 3
months! Call 740-446-2568 or
stop in at 52 Westwood Dr #27
Gallipolis, Ohio during business hours of M-F 8am4:30pm

Lions are 16-0 vs. Indiana and
Penn State won last year, 45-22.
The Nittany Lions were off last
week — but still may have tallied
their biggest win of the season.
The NCAA restored some of
the scholarships taken from the
school as part of the punishment
over the Jerry Sandusky scandal,
phasing them until the school
reaches normal totals in 2016-17.
O’Brien, who has steadied the
program in the wake of the scandal, had an extra selling point on
the recruiting trail.
“I talked to a few of them,
we’re only allowed one phone
call a week right now,” he said.
“I think it’s positive, and it’s positive news for Penn State. Our
guys feel good about it, but we’re
focused on Indiana. Our guys are
pleased with the news, but we’re
focused on the Indiana game.”
Penn State has had a nice start
to the season, though no one will
confuse Syracuse, Eastern Michigan and Kent State with any of
the Big Ten teams out of Michigan and Ohio.
O’Brien will put the class of
the Big Ten up against just about
Rentals

2BR Mobile Home in Middleport. $325/mo+$325 dep. 1 yr
lease. No Pets. No calls after
9PM. 740-992-5097.
FOR RENT
1BR Trailer. 375mo 375dep
304-962-0167
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Condominiums

Pets

New Condo, 3BR, 2BA, Office,
AC, Patio. NO Pets/Smoking.
$650 month Racine, Oh area
740-247-3008 Must See
Houses For Rent
1Br House, 110 Vinton Court.
$600/month 740-709-1490
2 Bedroom - 438 Burkhart Ln.,
Gallipolis
$575/month No Pets 740-8531101
238 First Ave. House in rear &amp;
2nd floor Apt. furnished Kitchen, Hook ups for Washer &amp;
Dryer. 2 Person occupancy in
each. Apt $525, House $600,
plus utilities. Deposit, References 740-446-4926

2 Male Cavalier King Charles
Spaniel puppies, Black &amp;
White w/Tan markings, $400
ea. 2 Female, Boxers, Black
w/white markings, $450 ea. All
Vet checked &amp; AKC registered
740-696-1085
Free Kittens to a Good Home (
Litter trained) Call 740-4468657
Give Away to a Good Home a
Sm. Carney Terrior
Registered has all papers and
all shots updated. Very
Friendly and is good with Children &amp; Elderly Call 740-6125133
AGRICULTURE

Hate Laundromats ? Washer
&amp; Dryer Available. 2-Bdrm 1
bath, All Electric home with attached one car garage . Includes ice box / stove. Near
grocery, hospital, Ideal place
for 1 &amp; 2 Adults. one sm. pet
allowed, Pet Fee. $625/mo
$625 deposit water includedreferences Sorry NO
SMOKERS. 304) 657-6378
HOUSE FOR RENT: 2BR,
Very clean. Conveniently located, Non-smoker, Ref, dep,
no pets. 304-675-5162
Newly remodeled 2-3 Bdrm
House @ 848 4th Ave (Gallipolis) $500 /mo $500 dep.
water &amp; sewage incl. Call 740612-0565
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

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Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
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the 100th meeting for the Little
Brown Jug. But the Wolverines
have more on their mind than
a piece of pottery. After all, the
jug has pretty much had a permanent home in Michigan — the
Wolverines have won the last five
games in the series, 37 of 40 and
haven’t lost since 2005.
The Wolverines are a threetouchdown favorite and can
move a step closer toward their
goal of their first Big Ten title
since 2004 with a win.
ILLINI ON THE REBOUND:
Illinois (3-1) is an early surprise
and has scored a school-record
161 points over their first four
games, eclipsing the mark of 158
points in the first four games of
1914.
But this week, the schedule
turns tough, and a game at Nebraska (3-1) could go a long way
toward determining if the fast
start is a mirage or the build toward something bigger.
Illinois went 0-8 in conference
games last season and has lost 14
straight Big Ten games. And Illinois hasn’t won a Big Ten game
since Oct. 8, 2011 at Indiana.

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ANIMALS

but the bowl experiences we’ve
had are just amazing,” Wildcats
coach Pat Fitzgerald said. “We’re
very thankful to be Chicago’s Big
Ten team.”
ARRESTED
DEVLOPEMENT: Purdue coach Darrell
Hazell ran into a double whammy in his first season. First, the
Boilermakers (1-4, 0-1) were
crushed 55-24 by Northern Illinois, of all teams. Then, after
a week off, receivers B.J. Knauf
and Jordan Woods were arrested
for theft. Knauf is a starting receiver who has nine receptions
for 95 yards and rushed 11 times
for 92 yards and one score this
season. Woods is a redshirt freshman who has not caught a pass.
Hazell said he’ll announce a
punishment this week. “They
made a bad decision, both of
them,” he said. “We’ll make the
necessary disciplinary action
when we find out all the information.”
MICHIGAN
MOTORING:
The only other conference
matchup with a ranked team
features No. 19 Michigan (40) vs. Minnesota (4-1, 0-1) in

Miscellaneous

Call

RESORT PROPERTY

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

any other conference in the nation.
“The Southeastern Conference is a fantastic league, nobody is going to debate that and
probably the best in the country
right now,” he said. “But I think
we have some really good players
and some really good coaches in
this league.”
The Big Ten will get to showcase that ahead and these are five
things to watch in the first full
weekend of conference play:
GAME OF THE WEEK: This
is the game No. 16 Northwestern (4-0) has been waiting for all
season, if not years. A team that
came in with high expectations is
right where it hoped to be heading into the showdown against
the No. 4 Buckeyes (5-0). But
Ohio State is riding a nation’s
best 17-game winning streak and
plans to spoil Northwestern’s
homecoming party. The Buckeyes haven’t been to Evanston
since 2008 and Northwestern is
9-1 at home since 2012.
“The change in the climate
here, and the way that our fans
have not only supported us here,

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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

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

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BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
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Established in 1975. Call
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! !!! Sixteen Candles ('84, Com) Molly Ringwald. A
! !!! The Breakfast Club ('85, Dra) Emilio Estevez, Judd The 700 Club TVPG
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�Thursday, October 3, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday,
Oct. 3, 2013:
This year you discover that the
unexpected is a major theme. The
upside to this will be how exciting your
life becomes. You also will learn to flex
more. You might wonder why so many
surprises keep heading your way.
Could the reason be a close friend or
associate? If you are single, take your
time choosing Mr. or Ms. Right. Test
out a relationship for a year before
you make a commitment. If you are
attached, the two of you enjoy each
other, even though your sweetie might
be transforming right in front of your
eyes. A fellow LIBRA might be difficult
to make and keep plans with.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You could witness some
radical, unexpected changes that have
the potential to throw you into a chaotic
frenzy. You probably will come out of
the fog quickly, though, as you instinctively make the right choices. Tonight:
Invite a special friend or loved one to
join you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
A great idea will come up
in conversation. You might be wondering what you can do in order to make a
situation work. Listen to others, brainstorm with someone who has unusual
suggestions and be willing to break
patterns. Tonight: Get some rest — the
weekend is coming!
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You might feel as if a
situation has gotten out of control.
Note that a tendency toward excess
surrounds you, and it can affect you.
Know when to back down and say
“no.” You could be surprised by a
comment from a friend in a meeting.
Tonight: Think “weekend.”
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Test out an idea, but allow
only a limited number of questions
in return. The questions will point to
whom you’ll want to work with. Many
people look to you as their leader. The
reason lies in the fact that you know
much more than they do. Tonight:
Paint the town red.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Balance your checkbook,
and be sure to stay on top of work
and other various matters. Return
calls, especially to a new friend. Some
excitement could surround these conversations, which you might be more
involved in than you realize. Tonight:
Catch up on a friend’s news.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Allow your efficiency to
mix with some unexpected news.
Somehow, this situation will work out
to your advantage. You might not want
to have an emotional conversation, but
you will have little choice. Take a deep
breath before you start. Tonight: Beam
in more of what you want.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
You could be quite jolted by
news that comes in from out of left
field. Listen to the wise words of an
older person, and you will gain a sense
of direction as a result. Investigate the
possibilities more openly; you might be
surprised by what happens. Tonight:
Go find some fun.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
You might want to express
more of what you need from a situation. Your ability to get down to basics
helps many people, especially in a
meeting. Clearly, there are no easy
answers. Understand what is expected
from you before you proceed. Tonight:
Go for a good night’s sleep.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Be thankful for your supporters because, even when a situation
is unstable, they come through and
offer you good information and workable solutions. You could be taken
aback by the suddenness of a change.
Look at how revitalized you feel.
Tonight: Ever playful.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You could see a situation far
differently given some space and time.
Look past the obvious and take note
of what is not being said. To be effective, you need to detach more often.
You’ll see and understand much more.
Tonight: Take action, but only if you’re
sure of yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
You could be taken aback
by certain events that are going on
around you. You might see a personal
matter differently from how the other
party sees it. Think before you take
action, as you’ll want to understand
where this person is coming from.
Tonight: A must appearance.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Defer to others, and understand that you might be coming from
a different position in a situation. You
could find it interesting to see what
is going on from a new perspective.
Your sense of humor will help you gain
insight. Use care with your money.
Tonight: Your treat.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Four Turns

Tracks on Tap

... Fan favorite Dale Earn1 SOhardtCLOSE
Jr.’s runner-up showing in

Dover was his third such finish of
2013. Two of Earnhardt’s near-misses
have come to Hendrick Motorsports
teammate Jimmie Johnson (Daytona
500, Dover). Earnhardt’s 80 laps led
on Sunday were the most since he led
95 laps en route to a win at Michigan
in June 2012.

10 For the first time in the
2 PERFECT
history of NASCAR’s Chase, a race’s

top-10 finishers were comprised
solely of Chase drivers. The three
Chasers outside of the top 10 were
Kasey Kahne (13th), Kurt Busch (21st)
and Carl Edwards (35th). Jamie McMurray was 11th. Fittingly, McMurray
is the first driver in the standings on
the outside of the playoffs looking in.

22 Joey Logano and Kyle
3 11BuschFORcombined
to lead 195 of 200

laps in the Nationwide Series 5-Hour
Energy 200 at Dover on Saturday. In
the end, it was Logano who scooted
past Busch with 59 laps remaining
and cruised to a 14.59-second win
over Kyle Larson. It was Logano’s
third NNS win in 13 starts this season.
The crew chief of the the No. 22
Penske Ford, Jeremy Bullins, has engineered 11 wins with four different
drivers behind the wheel this year.

IN IN VEGAS Timothy Pe4 CASHING
ters took the lead of the Smith’s 350

at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on a
restart with three laps remaining and
held off Johnny Sauter and Miguel
Paludo to secore his second Camping
World Truck Series win of the season.
The win was his seventh career Truck
Series victory. He has at least one win
in each of his five full seasons on the
Truck circuit.

Sprint Cup Standings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.

DRIVER (WINS)
POINTS BEHIND
Matt Kenseth (7)
2149
—
Jimmie Johnson (5) 2141
-8
Kyle Busch (4)
2137
-12
Kevin Harvick (2)
2110
-39
Jeff Gordon
2110
-39
Greg Biffle (1)
2108
-41
Ryan Newman (1)
2101
-48
Clint Bowyer
2098
-51
Kurt Busch
2094
-55
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
2092
-57
Carl Edwards (2)
2084
-65
Joey Logano (1)
2083
-66
Kasey Kahne (2)
2071
-78

14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.

Jamie McMurray
Brad Keselowski
Martin Truex Jr. (1)
Paul Menard
Aric Almirola
Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
Jeff Burton

^ CHASE FOR THE SPRINT CUP ^

819
799
781
768
741
727
724

-1330
-1350
-1368
-1381
-1408
-1422
-1425

Nationwide Standings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

DRIVER (WINS)
Sam Hornish Jr. (1)
Austin Dillon
Elliott Sadler
Regan Smith (2)
Brian Vickers
Justin Allgaier
Brian Scott
Trevor Bayne (1)
Kyle Larson
Parker Kligerman

POINTS BEHIND
989
—
985
-4
947
-42
946
-43
942
-47
919
-70
916
-73
903
-86
864
-125
820
-169

Truck Standings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

DRIVER (WINS)
POINTS BEHIND
Matt Crafton (1)
644
—
James Buescher (2)
603
-41
Ty Dillon (1)
591
-53
Jeb Burton (1)
571
-73
Miguel Paludo
567
-77
Timothy Peters (2)
559
-85
Ryan Blaney (1)
552
-92
Johnny Sauter (2)
541
-103
Darrell Wallace Jr.
538
-106
Brendan Gaughan
520
-124

Throttle Up/Throttle Down

BRIAN VICKERS In his six races as the
new full-time driver of the No. 55 Toyota at
Michael Waltrip Racing, Vickers has
four runs of 12th or better. The other
showings being a 24th in Richmond
and a 38th at Chicagoland, the
victim of a blown engine.
DANICA PATRICK Her rookie
season isn’t getting any prettier.
Patrick’s lone top 10 was an eighth
in the Daytona 500. She has six top20 finishes in the season’s 29 events and
sits 28th in the point standings.
Compiled and written by Matt Taliaferro.
Follow Matt on Twitter: @MattTaliaferro.

Dover Domination
Jimmie Johnson rolls,
collects eighth career
Cup win in Dover
By MATT TALIAFERRO
Athlon Sports Racing Editor

“I think Jimmie is probably the
most underrated champion we
have in this industry. He is by far
the most powerful driver over the
course of the last 25, 35 years in
this sport.”
Hendrick Motorsports crew
chief Chad Knaus is not known for
his use of hyperbole. Knaus is
thoughtful, measured and wellspoken when interacting with the
media. And the man’s a genius at
his trade: making cars go fast.
So when the champion crew
chief heaps that sort of praise on a
driver — even if it’s his own —
people have a tendency to stop,
look and listen.
“He’s able to dig deeper, pull
out his cape, make things happen
in winning moments of these
races that other people cannot do.
It’s pretty spectacular,” Knaus
continued.
His statements, of course, were
directed at Jimmie Johnson, with
whom Knaus has won 65 races
and five NASCAR Sprint Cup titles. They were said following another masterful performance by
both driver and crew chief, this at
Dover International Speedway,
where the No. 48 team laid waste
to the field, leading 243-of-400
laps in the AAA 400 en route to its
first victory of the 2013 Chase. It
was also Johnson’s record eighth
career win on Dover’s high banks.
Despite the praise and the accomplishment — Johnson surpassed Richard Petty’s and Bobby
Allison’s seven Dover wins on
Sunday — it was his smooth, workman-like effort that has come to define a driver that will go down as
this generation’s best in NASCAR.
“You’ve got to win when you’re
at your best track,” Johnson said
matter-of-factly. “That being said,
we had to win here today. I think
any points (gained) on the 18
(Kyle Busch) or the 20 (Matt
Kenseth) would have been a very
good day, (but) max points? It’s an
awesome day.”
In order to score the win, Johnson
had to outrun teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the event’s closing laps.
A caution flag 29 laps from the
race’s conclusion brought the field
to pit road. There, Knaus made the
call to change two tires while
many of the leaders — including
Earnhardt — bolted on four. The
quick work in the pits found Johnson lined up first, with the preferred outside groove, alongside
Earnhardt. When the race resumed

SPRINT CUP SERIES

Race: Hollywood Casino 400
Track: Kansas Speedway
Location: Kansas City, Kan.
When: Sunday, Oct. 6
TV: ESPN (1:00 p.m. EST)
Layout: 1.5-mile tri-oval
Banking/Turns: Progressive (17-20 degrees)
Banking/Tri-Oval: 10.4 degrees
Banking/Backstretch: 5 degrees
2012 Winner: Matt Kenseth
Crew Chief’s Take: “Now that they’ve
repaved it, I like Kansas. I used to relate it
to Kentucky, but the progressive banking
makes it unique now — and we’ll see it
change a lot as it goes through a couple
hard winters and hot summers. It will be
more like Homestead, hopefully, where
you have a lot of different racing grooves
and it will become really racy. I like the
track and I like the location. It is a typical
mile-and-a-half track, but I like the location. They put the track out there and kind
of built a city around it with a casino, a
mall and a Cabela’s.”
NATIONWIDE SERIES

Race: Kansas Lottery 300
Track: Kansas Speedway
When: Saturday, Oct. 5
TV: ESPN (3:30 p.m. EST)
2012 Winner: Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES

Race: Fred’s 250 powered by Coca-Cola
Track: Talladega Superspeedway
Location: Talladega, Ala.
Date: Saturday, Oct. 19
TV: FOX SPORTS 1 (4:00 p.m. EST)
2012 Winner: Parker Kligerman

Classic Moments

Jimmie Johnson celebrates his fifth win of the NASCAR Sprint Cup season following Sunday’s
AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway.
(Photo by ASP, Inc.)

with 25 laps to go, Johnson eased
out into the lead and never faltered, leading the rest of the way
to score a .446-second victory.
“I felt like as we got (into) traffic, Jimmie was starting to struggle a little bit in the last couple of
laps,” Earnhardt said. “My car actually got better the longer I ran
and drove better. It wasn’t quite
clicking just yet, (but) our car was
starting to come around.
“I think the difference in the tires
between our two cars was about to
show. But the race is 400 laps.”
Johnson’s quest for a sixth title
was bolstered by the win, as he
leapt over Kyle Busch for second
in the championship standings and
gained six points on leader Matt
Kenseth. Johnson sits eight points
behind Kenseth; Busch is 12 back.
Kenseth, who has found success at
Dover in the past, finished seventh
after winning the first two Chase
races. Busch was fifth, his third top5 showing in NASCAR’s playoff.
“Overall, for how bad I felt like
we struggled with the car, that was
a decent finish,” Kenseth said.
“(But) when you look up, it’s
everybody that finished in front of
you. (They are) all the cars that
you’re racing for points.

■ Kyle Larson, who will assume driving

duties of the No. 42 Earnhardt-Ganassi
Racing Chevrolet in 2014, will
make his Sprint Cup Series debut
at Charlotte Motor Speedway on
Oct. 12.
The 21-year-old California native
will drive the No. 51 Phoenix Racing Chevy with sponsorship from
Target. Larson will also compete in
the Cup Series’ visit to Martinsville
on Oct. 27.
Larson, who currently drives fulltime in the Nationwide Series for
Turner Scott Motorsports, has
been tabbed by EGR team owner
Chip Ganassi to replace Juan
Pablo Montoya in the No. 42 beKyle Larson
ginning in 2014.
Larson is a highly-touted prospect who won the 2012
K&amp;N East Series championship and has one win in six
Camping World Truck Series starts. He ranks ninth in the
NNS standings through 28 races in 2013.

“I feel like this is one of our best
racetracks and you want to do better than seventh at one of your best
tracks. Overall, it was a solid day,
but we wished for a little more.”
While Busch gained two points
on his teammate, Kenseth, the
fifth-place run still left him with a
hollow feeling.
“It’s certainly appealing and you
could be happy with it, but we’re a
little disappointed at the same
time,” he said. “We felt like we
wanted to come in here, we
wanted to run better — we could
run better here. We have before,
and we just could never really get
the feel that I was looking for the
whole weekend.”
With Kenseth, Johnson and
Busch having separated themselves from the Chase pack,
Dover’s race winner is narrowing
his focus.
“My whole thought process was
just how tough this championship’s
going to be,” Johnson said.
“They’re bringing their best and
doing their best. You’ve got to deliver. That was my mindset when I
was racing with both of those guys
for three-quarters of the race.
“We need to win at our best
tracks, and we did that.”

■ While Martin Truex Jr.’s future with

Michael Waltrip Racing remains unclear,
the team still hopes to field three
cars in 2014.
Following the controversial events
at Richmond, longtime sponsor
NAPA Auto Parts announced it will
not return to MWR leaving both
team and driver in facing an uncertain future.
Team co-owner Rob Kauffman has
stated that his collector and performance car company, RK Motors,
could “fill the gap” on a third car
next season, but that MWR would
need to find sufficient funding to
fill the majority of the schedule.
Truex said last weekend that he
had nothing new to report on his
2014 plans. Team co-owner Michael Waltrip said he
would give Truex his blessing should he find employment
elsewhere, but has asked the driver for time to put sponsorship together for the No. 56 team.

Kansas Speedway
It is generally pretty well accepted in
NASCAR that the first driver to cross the
finish line at the checkered flag is the
race winner.
Except when he isn’t.
That’s precisely what happened in the
LifeLock 400 at Kansas Speedway in September 2007. With darkness looming and
NASCAR being forced to call the race 85
miles shy of its scheduled distance, Kansas
native Clint Bowyer crossed the finish line
first under caution on what NASCAR had
declared the race’s final lap.
Yet, the driver who crossed the finish line
in third, Roush Fenway Racing’s Greg Biffle,
was the one celebrating in Victory Lane.
Odd? You better believe it. Controversial?
No doubt about it, considering that Biffle
had just been passed by Bowyer and Jimmie Johnson moments earlier.
But Biffle, whose car sputtered nearly to
a halt as it ran out of gas just feet from the
checkered flag, was saved by a technicality:
NASCAR forbids drivers from passing under
yellow — precisely what Bowyer and Johnson did, despite not really having much
choice in the matter.

Athlon Fantasy Stall
Looking at Checkers: Matt Kenseth is
looking to make it three in a row at Kansas
Speedway. He’ll be the favorite rolling in.
Pretty Solid Pick: And then there’s
Jimmie Johnson, with his two Kansas
wins and 12 top 10s in 14 starts. Not
too shabby.
Good Sleeper Pick: Jamie McMurray hasn’t been great here, but he recorded a seventh at Kansas in April and has been racy
of late.
Runs on Seven Cylinders: Surprisingly,
Kyle Busch, who averages a 22.4-place
finish in Kansas and has runs of 31st and
38th in the last two visits.
Insider Tip: Three of the next five
events are on NASCAR’s “cookie cutter” ovals. This race could set a trend.

Photos by ASP, Inc.

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