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                  <text>High School
football kicks off
in 2 days, B1

Flower show
results on page 3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 134

Fall Gospel
Jubilee set

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Village of Pomeroy hires new clerk
BY BETH SERGENT

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. – The Fall
Gospel Jubilee will be
held Sept. 3, 4 and 5 at
the West Virginia State
Farm Museum, Point
Pleasant, W. Va., rain or
shine. Over 30 groups
will be singing each
day starting at 2 p.m.
There is no admission
charge. For more information contact Evelyn
Roush, promoter, 304882-2049.

Free community
dinners
POMEROY — A free
community dinner will
be held from 5-6:30
p.m., Aug. 24 at New
Beginnings UM Church
on Second Street in
Pomeroy. A spaghetti
dinner, including drink
and dessert will be
served. The staff of the
Pomeroy Youth League
will be recognized at
the dinner as well.
MIDDLEPORT — A
free community dinner
will be held starting at 5
p.m., Friday, Aug. 26 at
Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life
Center. Menu includes
creamed baked chicken,
mashed potatoes with
gravy, corn, jello salad,
dessert.

1976 Class
reunion
POMEROY — The
Eastern High School
Class of 1976 will have
a 35th-year class
reunion at 6 p.m. on
Sept. 17 at 39065
Sumner Road,
Pomeroy. Meat and
sandwiches will be provided.

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Donald P. Wilson

WEATHER

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — The
Village of Pomeroy has
hired a replacement for
outgoing Clerk-Treasurer
Kathy Hysell who is retiring this Friday.
Pomeroy
Village
Council hired Pam Haggy
to replace Hysell at
Monday’s regular meeting. Haggy was hired
under the same pay scale

as Hysell who is earning
$19,000 a year. However,
Haggy’s salary will jump
to $25,000 a year on Jan. 1
if she passes the six-month
probationary
period.
Hysell’s elected term as
clerk-treasurer officially
ends March 31, 2012 and
the village has already
passed an ordinance doing
away with the elected
position and has created
the appointed position of
fiscal officer. Although the

clerk-treasurer reports to
the mayor and council
according to the Ohio
Revised Code, it’s unclear
who the fiscal officer’s
supervisors will be since
it’s a paid position created
by the village.
Haggy, who also works
for Village Solicitor Chris
Tenoglia on a part-time
basis, was recommended
by Mayor John Musser
and chosen from a field of
three other candidates,

including Sonja Wolfe,
Pomeroy
Tax
Administrator Jean Durst
and Rutland Clerk Laura
Curtis. Voting for Haggy’s
appointment
were
Councilmen
Jackie
Welker, Jim Sisson, Pete
Barnhart, Vic Young and
Phil Ohlinger, while
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun abstained. Spaun
said she disagreed with
how the hiring practice
was handled, saying she

Reflecting on ancestral ties

BY AMBER GILLENWATER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POMEROY – While it
was a memorial service for
two relatives that brought
family members from
across the country to Meigs
County last week, the trip
here offered a time for
reflection on the family’s
ancestral ties to August
Goessler, one of Meigs
County’s early businessmen.
Goessler, a jeweler and
watchmaker, was the
founder of Goessler’s
Jewelry Store in the late
1800s. He constructed a
building on Court Street for
his business, marking it at
the very top with his name
in big bold letters.
Goessler in 1910 was
joined in the business by
his son-in-law, Walter A.
Compton who added
optometry. Compton, married to Goessler’s daughter,
Norma, died in 1943.
The next family member to operate Goessler’s
Jewelry Store was Norbert
W. Compton, Walter’s son,
who became a part of the
business in 1945. He was
the husband of Hertha
Jesse, a long time employee at the store. The
Comptons operated the

BIDWELL — A Gallia
County woman recently
arrested in a drug raid is
again behind bars following a second raid on
M o n d a y
evening.
Rochelle K.
Dobbins,
40,
Bidwell, along
with
Megan
Dobbins, 18, and Rochelle
Russell
A. Dobbins
Mullins, 21, both
also of Bidwell,
were arrested by
deputies with the
Gallia County
Sheriff’s Office Megan
following a raid Dobbins
of a residence
located at 1903
Campaign Road,
Bidwell,
on
Monday night.
The raid was
performed with Russell
Mullins
support from officers with the Gallipolis
Police Department and
came with the assistance of
several tips that had been
received through the sheriff’s office tip-line.
During the raid, 22 (40
milligram) Opana tablets,
one 20-gauge shotgun, one
22-caliber rifle and over

Descendants of August Goessler, founder of Goesslerʼs Jewelry Store, pose beside
the big safe still remaining in the late 1800ʼs Goessler building on Court Street in
Pomeroy. For them it was a time for reflection on ancestral ties. (Charlene Hoeflich/photo)

business until about 1979,
their daughter Romona
Kay Compton, operated it
for short time and then Joe
Clark bought it and
renamed it Clark’s Jewelry
Store. Today it is owned
and operated by Susan
Clark-Dingess.
While in Pomeroy the
group of descendants from
the pioneer Goessler family
gathered at Clark’s for a
time of reflection on their
past family history. They

posed for a picture beside
the big old safe still clearly
marked “Goesslers” which
sets in an adjacent area to
the showroom.
The two relatives for
whom the memorial service at Grace Episcopal
Church was held were
Marcella Compton Haslam
and Virginia Compton
Cope, daughters of Walter
and Norma Goessler
Compton. They grew up in
Pomeroy, attended the

Sugar Run Grade School,
Pomeroy High School, and
Grace Episcopal Church,
and wanted their remains
returned to the place of
their childhood.
It was to fulfill their
wishes that the family
returned here for the
memorial service, allowing
them also a time for reflection on the lifestyle and
accomplishments of their
ancestors, the August
Goessler family.

Foothills Festival set for this weekend
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

HARRISONVILLE
–
Many music fans and art
lovers will be heading for the
rolling hills of Meigs County
Friday and Saturday where
the sixth annual Foothills
Blues &amp; Arts Festival will
provide a full weekend of
free family entertainment.
“Music and art bring people together and that is what
this festival is all about,” said
Jared Sheets, president of the
Foothills Music Foundation,
which is co-sponsoring the
festival.
“Twenty-one acts on two

SENTINEL STAFF

1 SECTION — 10 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

A7-8
A6
A4
A9-10

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Dobbins back in
jail after Gallia
County drug raid

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX

See Clerk, A5

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

stages as well as dozens of
local and regional artisans
make this festival a must-see
event, and thanks to donations from local businesses
and individuals as well as
support from organizations
such as the Ohio Arts
Council and the West
Virginia Division of Culture
and History, we can offer this
as a free event,” he added.
Again this year the
Foothills committee has partnered with the Athens Local
Professional Artisan and
Craftsmen
Association
(ALPACA) which means

Larry Garner,
the BBC
Bluesman of
the Year, and
his Blues Band
will perform at
9:15 p.m.
Saturday at the
Foothills
Festival.

See Foothills, A5

(submitted)

TUPPERS PLAINS —
All bus routes will start
earlier this school year due
to school starting at 7:55
A.M. Students should be
at the bus stops early due to
earlier starting time.
Tammy Adams (Bus
15):
Tammy’s route will be
essentially the same as last
school year. She will begin
her route at her house at
6:35 A.M. She will drive
state route 124, Curtis
Hollow, Hudson Hollow
Road, Little Forest Road,
Number 9, Briddle Trail,
681 to Tuppers Plains. The

students on 681 from Eden
Ridge Road to Tuppers
Plains will ride her bus.
Shelly Caldwell (Bus
8):
Shelly’s route will begin
on Bush Road at approximately 6:40 AM. She will
pick up students on County
Road 28 to Keno Hill. She
will turn around at the top
of Keno Hill and travel
Riebel Road to Oak Hill
Road; from Oak Hill Road
she will turn right on ST
RT 248 to Taylor Road;
from Taylor road she will
travel west on ST RT 248
back to Chester picking up
student along the way. At
Chester she will pick up
students on Scout Camp

See Raid, A2

Quake rocks east
coast, felt in Ohio
Valley region
REGISTER STAFF &amp;
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MDRNEWS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Eastern Administrative
Building in Tuppers Plains
and a few select stops on
State Route 7 same as last
year.
Ed Holter (Bus 22):
Ed’s route will begin on
Wickham Road at approximately 6:45 A.M. He will
then pick up students on
Skinner Run Road, West
Shade Road, Burke Road,
Flatwoods Road, Old
Forest Road, Texas Road
to State Route 7.
Becky Maxson (Bus
17):
Becky’s route will begin
at 6:35 A.M. on Lick
Skillet Road. She will then

MINERAL, Va. — A
5.9 magnitude earthquake
centered in Virginia
forced evacuations of all
the monuments on the
National
Mall
in
Washington, D.C. and rattled nerves from Georgia
to Martha’s Vineyard, the
Massachusetts
island
where President Barack
Obama is vacationing. No
injuries were immediately
reported.
In Charleston, W.Va.,
hundreds of workers left
the state Capitol building
and employees at other
downtown office buildings were asked to leave
temporarily.
“The whole building
shook,” said Jennifer
Bundy, a spokeswoman
for the state Supreme
Court. “You could feel
two different shakes.
Everybody just kind of
came out on their own.”
In Ohio, many office
buildings swayed in both
Columbus and Cincinnati
and the press box at the
Cleveland
Indians’
Progressive Field shook.
At least one building near
the Statehouse was evacu-

See Bus, A5

See Earthquake, A2

Eastern District Bus Route Schedule
High: 89
Low: 65

felt the position should’ve
been advertised as an
equal opportunity position
and was under the impression more people had
turned in applications
which she hadn’t seen.
Spaun was also told
Musser,
Village
Administrator
Paul
Hellman and Pomeroy
Chief of Police Mark E.
Proffitt conducted inter-

Road and Allen Street.
Glenn Easterling (Bus
12):
Glenn’s route will be
essentially the same as last
school year. He will pick
up students beginning on
Eden Ridge Road at about
6:35 A.M. He will pick up
students on the following
roads: Eden Ridge Road,
ST RT 124, Hockingport,
and ST RT 124 from
Hockingport to Reedsville.
From Reedsville he will
travel ST RT 681 to
Tuppers Plains. He will be
responsible for students
living on ST RT 681 from
Reedsville to Eden Ridge
Road, Horner’s Day Care
Center, Connolly Drive,

�Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Earthquake
From Page A1
ated
in
downtown
Columbus.
Locally, according to a
dispatcher with the Meigs
County EMS, several
calls were received
regarding the earthquake.
The dispatcher said that
many residents claimed to
have felt the effects of the
quake, however no extensive damage was reported
as of press time.
Dispatchers at the
Mason County 911 and
Gallia County 911 Center
also reported several calls
regarding the earthquake.
As of press time, both
sites also said no injuries
or extensive damage had
been reported.
“We just got a few calls
from folks who were
wondering what was
going on,” a dispatcher at
the Gallia County 911
Center said. “Some of our
dispatchers felt it.”
Also in response to
Tuesday’s earthquake, the
West Virginia Department
of
Evironmental
Protection’s Division of
Mining and Reclamation
announced that they
planned to inspect all
Class C coal-related
impoundments within the
state. According to the
DEP, Class C impoundments have high hazard
potential.
The U.S. Geological
Survey said the earth-

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

quake was half a mile
deep and centered near
Louisa, Va., about 40
miles
northwest
of
Richmond. Shaking was
felt at the White House
and all over the East
Coast, as far south as
Chapel Hill, N.C. Parts of
the Pentagon, White
House and Capitol were
evacuated.
Two nuclear reactors at
the North Anna Power
Station in the same county as the epicenter were
automatically taken off
line by safety systems
around the time of the
earthquake, said Roger
Hannah, a spokesman for
the
U.S.
Nuclear
Regulatory Commission.
The Dominion-operated power plant is being
run off of four emergency
diesel generators, which
are supplying power for
critical safety equipment.
Hannah said the agency
was not immediately
aware of any damage at
nuclear power plants in
the Southeast.
Obama and many of the
nation’s leaders were out
of town on August vacation when the quake
struck at 1:51 p.m. EDT.
The shaking was felt on
the Martha’s Vineyard
golf course as Obama was
just starting a round.
At the Pentagon in
northern Virginia, a low

rumbling built and built to
the point that the building
was shaking. People ran
into the corridors of the
government’s
biggest
building and as the shaking continued there were
shouts of “Evacuate!
Evacuate!”
The U.S. Park Service
evacuated and closed all
National Mall monuments and memorials. At
Reagan National Airport
outside Washington, ceiling tiles fell during a few
seconds of shaking.
Authorities announced it
was an earthquake and all
flights were put on hold.
In New York, the 26story federal courthouse
in lower Manhattan began
swaying and hundreds of
people were seen leaving
the building. Court officers weren’t letting people back in.
The quake came a day
after an earthquake in
Colorado toppled groceries off shelves and
caused minor damage to
homes in the southern
part of the state and in
northern New Mexico.
No injuries were reported
as aftershocks continued
Tuesday.
In
downtown
Baltimore, the quake sent
office workers into the
streets, where lamp posts
swayed slightly as they
called family and friends
to check in.
Effects of the earthquake trickled through
social media following
the earthquake. Facebook

feeds were filled with
comments ranging from
sarcasm to shock at the
span of the quake.
Social media site
Twitter lit up with reports
of the earthquake from
people using the site up
and down the U.S. eastern
seaboard. At the time of
press, “#earthquake” and
“#dcquake” were both
trending topics.
“People pouring out of
buildings and onto the
sidewalks
and
Into
Farragut Park in downtown DC...,” tweeted
Republican
strategist
Kevin Madden.
“Did you feel earthquake in ny? It started in
richmond va!” tweeted
Arianna Huffington, president and editor-in-chief
of the Huffington Post
Media Group.
John Gurlach, air traffic
controller
at
the
Morgantown Municipal
Airport was in a 40-foottall tower when the earth
trembled.
“There were two of us
looking at each other saying, ‘What’s that?’” he
said, even as a commuter
plane was landing. “It was
noticeably shaking. It felt
like a B-52 unloading.”
Immediately, the phone
rang from the nearest airport in Clarksburg, and a
computer began spitting
out green strips of paper
— alerts from other airports in New York and
Washington
issuing
ground stops “due to
earthquake."

Raid
From Page A1
$2,600 in cash were seized.
Rochelle and Megan Dobbins were arraigned in the
Gallipolis Municipal Court on Tuesday and are facing
drug abuse charges. Rochelle Dobbins’ bond has been set
at $100,000, 10 percent and Megan Dobbins’ bond has
been set at $200,000, 10 percent. Mullins was also
arraigned on Tuesday on one count of drug possession, a
drug paraphernalia charge and one count of having
weapons under disability. His bond has been set at
$300,000, 10 percent.
All three suspects are being housed in the Gallia
County Jail. Preliminary hearings in their cases have been
set at Aug. 31. Further charges against the suspects are
pending further investigation.
Rochelle Dobbins, along with Gwynne Darnbrough,
35, were previously arrested by deputies during the early
morning hours of Aug. 8 following a raid of a residence
located at 366 Swisher Hill Road.
Reportedly, during the initial incident, 89 (40 milligram) Opanas, 10 (20 milligram) Opanas and 44 (15
milligram) oxycodone tablets were seized. The prescription medication has an estimated street value of $9,000,
according to a sheriff’s office official. Over $5,000 in
cash was also seized.
Darnbrough was arrested on three outstanding and
unrelated warrants, while Dobbins was later released
pending further charges.
According to Detective Nathan Harvey with the Gallia
County Sheriff’s Office, following Dobbins’ release in
relation to the first incident, investigators continued to
monitor her actions and when alleged drug activity continued, a second raid was performed and Dobbins was
incarcerated as a result.
Harvey further indicated that, following consultation
with the Gallia County Prosecutor’s Office, felony cases
against Dobbins will be presented to a Gallia County
grand jury in September.
The sheriff’s office continues to encourage the public
to call their anonymous tip-line at (740) 446-6555 to
report possible crimes.

Visit us online at

mydailysentinel.com

White House: No major earthquake damage reported
WEST TISBURY, Mass.
(AP) — An hour after an
East Coast earthquake
shook the ground around
him, President Barack
Obama conferred with top
aides and was told there had
been no early reports of
major infrastructure damage, including at airports
and nuclear facilities.
There also were no immediate requests for federal
assistance, the White House
said.
The president, vacationing on Martha's Vineyard
was teeing off at a golf
course when the temblor hit.
A statement from the

White House did not say
whether Obama felt the
ground sway. But reporters
traveling with him said they
had felt it.
The quake shook much of
Washington, D.C., where
sections of the White
House,
Pentagon
and
Capitol were temporarily
evacuated.
CNN broadcast video of
Obama speaking on a cell
phone on the golf course.
The White House did not
say whether that was when
Obama was talking with top
administration officials. The
conference call Obama held
with aides, including his

homeland security secretary,
national security adviser
and the head of the Federal
Emergency Management
Agency, took place just
before 3 p.m. EDT. Obama
also asked for regular
updates on the earthquake.
Obama's golf game came
after he took advantage of
idyllic summer weather to
join his family on biking
and beach outings earlier
Tuesday.
Aides said Obama was
briefed on national security
and the economy before setting out for the bike trail at
Manuel F. Correllus State
Forest with his wife,

Michelle, and daughters
Malia and Sasha. The first
family went biking at the
5,100-acre preserve during
their previous two summer
getaways on this posh island
off the Massachusetts coast.
After biking, they headed to
a private stretch of beach on
the island's south shore for
the second time in three
days.

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of your financial needs, but small enough to know
your first name. Since all of our loan decisions are
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come see us for all your banking needs, we promise
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� ������

�The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar
Public meeting
Thursday, Aug. 25
POMEROY - Meigs
Soil and Water
Conservation District
Board of Supervisors,
regular session 11:30
a.m. at the district office
at 33101 Hiland Road.

Community
meetings
Thursday, Aug. 25
POMEROY – Iota
Alpha Masters, luncheon
meeting at Bob Evans
11:30 a.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS –
VFW 9053, 6:30 p.m. at
the hall in Tuppers
Plains.
Saturday, Aug. 27
CHESTER – Shade
River Lodge 453 will
meet in special session
to confer entered

Page A3
Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Fair flower show winners announced

apprentice degree on
one candidate. Breakfast
at 8 a.m.; degree work at
9 a.m. All Masons invited.

Church Events
Sunday, Aug. 28
POMEROY – Mt.
Union Baptist Church
39091 Carpenter Hill
Road, Pomeroy, will present Dayspring Quartet
in concert, 6:30 p.m. for
more information call
742-2832.

Birthdays
Friday, Aug. 26
SYRACUSE – Esther
Harden will observe her
90th birthday on Aug.
26. Cards may be sent
to her c/o Jim Harden,
530 Denton St., London,
Ohio 43140-8949.

CHIP classes being
held for area residents
POMEROY – A series of informatonal sessions
about CHIP (Coronary Heart Improvement
Project, a healthy-living program is returning to
Athens for the benefit of area residents.
The CHIP classes se to begin Sept. 13 and run
tdhrough Oct. 27 will be held at O’Bleness
Memorial Hospital and other Athens locations
CHIP is a comprehensive lifestyle intervention
program with more than 50,000 graduates nationwide and 47 area graduates. It is designed to prevent, arrest, and sometimes reverse chronic diseases such as hypertension, type 2 diabetes, obesity, arthritis, elevated cholesterol and heart disease.
These clinical results have been published in
seven peer reviewed medical journals.
Previous CHIP participants taking part in the
Athens classes experienced significant changes in
just seven weeks, it was reported. Changes
included loss of excess weight, lower cholesterol,
lower blood pressure and blood sugar levels, and
often afterwards with lower medication requirements. Participants also reported increased levels
of energy, better sleep, improved digestion, and
significantly less depression. Successful graduates can maintain new lifestyle changes with a
supportive CHIP Alumni Association.
To learn more about CHIP or to register for the
program, two informaton sessions will b held
Monday at O’Bleness Memorial Hospital conference room 10, one from noon to 1 p.m. and a second one from 6 to 7 p.m. Call (740) 592-4431 ext.
226 to pre-register for an information session.
Cost of the CHIP program is $350 for an individual or $525 for a couple. Scholarships are
available by contacting Ruth Dudding, Athens
City-County Health Department at (740) 5924431 ext. 225.

OH school workers watch
for smoke ahead of alarms
GROVEPORT, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio school district has
hired human smoke detectors to patrol the halls until new fire
alarms are installed.
The Columbus Dispatch reports the employees carry red
bullhorns and make regular checks of the boiler rooms, classrooms and kitchens at four of the Groveport-Madison schools.
They look for signs of fire or anything that could lead to one.
The schools just south of Columbus have had alarms but the
type you pull in case of emergency, not the kind that would
detect smoke. Upgrades weren't ready in time for the first day
of school on Monday. District spokeswoman Chris Bowser
says she expects the work to be finished soon.
In the meantime, the area's assistant fire chief says the temporary "fire walkers" are keeping the schools safe.

(Charlene Hoeflich/photos)

Melanie Dean with her creative award winning flower
arrangement featuring spider mums.

Four- year-old Hannah Crane took both the grand and
reserve champion rosettes in the junior division of
Thursdayʼs flower show.

POMEROY – Pat Holter and Melanie Stethem
shared top awards in artistic arrangements at the
Thursday flower show held at the Meigs County Fair.
Stethem took both best of show and creativity in
arrangements while Holter won the reserve best of
show rosette. Other blue ribbon winners in the
artistic arrangement classes were Janet Bolin,
three, and Shelia Curtis, with Hannah Crane tak-

ing the blue in the junior division.
Winning the sweepstakes award for specimen
exhibits were Melanie Stethem with the reserve
going to Pat Harris. Blue ribbon winners for specimens were Elizabeth Harris, Shirley Hamm,
Janet Bolin, Christie Crane, Joyce Manuel,
Breeanna Manuel, Sharon Dean, and Hannah
Crane.

Summer fun at First Baptist
MIDDLEPORT – Children’s summer activities at
the Middleport First Baptist Church included Bible
school which concluded with a pizza and pool party
followed later by a trip to Kings Island for a day of
fun at the amusement park.
Pastor Billy Zuspan and his wife, Lori, were
leaders of the Bible school held for preschoolers
through sixth graders. Lessons of the week were
on Noah, the ark builder, Joseph, a man with similarities to Jesus, Joshua, a leader of the Jews, and
David, the great shepherd king. The pool party was

A S K D R . B RO T H E R S

The 8-year-old runs the house
Dear Dr. Brothers: I knew when
I married my wife that her 8-yearold daughter was part of the package. I really do understand that she
loves her very much. But over the
course of four years, it's become
apparent that her daughter runs the
show. Our dinners are always based
on what she wants. Our TV shows
are always her choices. We can't
play any music that she doesn't like.
My wife becomes very upset when I
bring up this stuff, and I'm at the end
of my rope. — G.K.
Dear G.K.: You are in a household where you are the stepparent of
a 'tween, the new definition of a preteen who is already a diva but isn't yet
old enough to wear a bra. She may
just be a bratty kid to you, and it's
unfortunate that you haven't been
able (or perhaps willing) to work
toward having your own relationship
with her. You may have been very
reluctant to step in and assert yourself
in the household, and the child has
sensed that. Many stepparents wonder if they have the right to discipline
their spouse's child, and they never
want to make waves, so they just stay

Dr. Joyce Brothers
out of it. That can yield the power
imbalance you find yourself coping
with — neither you nor your wife has
claimed the head position in the
household, so the kid has grabbed it.
Ask your wife if she is happy with
how things are going — she probably isn't either but doesn't want to be
put on the defensive and be blamed
for the way she is raising her daughter. If you approach her in the spirit
of the three of you being a team that
needs to work together more
smoothly, you may find the balance
you are looking for. You need to set

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held at the New Haven pool for the VBS kids, their
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School was on helping children recognize God’s
presence in their everyday lives.
About 40 children and adults made the trip to
King’s Island on the tour bus. Planning for the trip
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boundaries and expectations right
away, because as the child gets older,
the level of disrespect she has for
both of you is going to grow exponentially if you don't get things
under control. In the meantime, try
to step up to the plate and help the
child grow into a mature, responsible
and happy teenager.
Dear Dr. Brothers: Last week
some new neighbors moved in next
door. They are a very poor family of
three, and the first time the father
knocked on the door, I was happy to
help him out with the good old cup
of sugar. I think that was a really bad
move, because it seems every time
he needs something, he doesn't hesitate to knock. I've given him rides to
the store, food from my refrigerator
and money. I feel really bad for
them, but how can I dial this whole
thing back a bit? — D.B.
Dear D.B.: Wow, you really are a
nice and accommodating neighbor.
But it seems the people next door
have you pegged as their own personal servant and welfare agent. It is nice
to be able to help them out a bit while
they are new residents getting settled

in, but it's really not cool of them to
abuse your generosity. Because they
appear to be living in poverty, you are
understandably a little hesitant to turn
them away when they ask for help.
But it may be the case that they are
not taking advantage of all the community has to offer in terms of assistance to families with low incomes.
Perhaps if you are willing to invest
just a little more time and effort, you
can find out what resources are available for your new neighbors, and ask
some of the people whose responsibility it is to shepherd people through
the processes to give them a call and
get the ball rolling. Even if this family does take advantage of some of the
official help out there, though, they
probably will turn to you occasionally. There is nothing wrong with
establishing limits at this late date —
once they are really OK, you can let
them know what your boundaries
are. Nothing would prevent you
from being friendly neighbors as
long as you feel they respect as well
as need you. Perhaps one day they
will even return that cup of sugar,
along with a homemade pie.

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�OPINION

Quake rocks Washington area, felt on East Coast
BY BOB LEWIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MINERAL, Va. — A
5.9 magnitude earthquake
centered in Virginia forced
evacuations of all the
memorials and monuments on the National
Mall in Washington and
rattled nerves from
South
Carolina
to
Martha’s Vineyard, the
Massachusetts
island
where President Barack
Obama is vacationing.
A District of Columbia
fire department spokesman
said there were numerous
injuries, no reports of serious injuries or deaths.
The U.S. Geological
Survey said the earthquake
was half a mile deep and
centered near Louisa, Va.,
about 40 miles northwest
of Richmond. Shaking
was felt at the White
House and all over the
East Coast, as far south as
Charleston, S.C. Parts of
the Pentagon, White
House and Capitol were
evacuated.
Two nuclear reactors at
the North Anna Power
Station in the same county
as the epicenter were automatically taken off line by
safety systems around the
time of the earthquake,
said Roger Hannah, a
spokesman for the U.S.
Nuclear
Regulatory
Commission.
The Dominion-operated
power plant is being run
off of four emergency
diesel generators, which
are supplying power for
critical safety equipment.
Hannah said the agency
was not immediately
aware of any damage at
nuclear power plants in the
Southeast.
Obama and many of the
nation’s leaders were out
of town on August vacation when the quake struck
at 1:51 p.m. EDT. The
shaking was felt on the
Martha’s Vineyard golf
course as Obama was just
starting a round.
At the Pentagon in
northern Virginia, a low
rumbling built and built to
the point that the building
was shaking. People ran
into the corridors of the

government’s
biggest
building and as the shaking continued there were
shouts of “Evacuate!
Evacuate!”
The U.S. Park Service
evacuated and closed all
National Mall monuments
and memorials. At Reagan
National Airport outside
Washington, ceiling tiles
fell during a few seconds
of shaking. Authorities
announced it was an earthquake and all flights were
put on hold.
Amtrak said its trains
along the Northeast
Corridor
between
Baltimore and Washington
were operating at reduced
speeds and crews were
inspecting stations and railroad infrastructure before
returning to normal.
In New York, the 26story federal courthouse in
lower Manhattan began
swaying and hundreds of
people were seen leaving
the building. Court officers weren’t letting people
back in.
More than 12 million
people live close enough
to the quake’s epicenter
to feel shaking, according
to the U.S. Geological
Survey. The agency said
this quake was in the yellow alert category for
economic damage, meaning there was potential
for local damage but it
would add up to far less
than 1 percent of the
country’s gross domestic
product.
East Coast earthquakes
are far less common than
in the West, but they tend
to be felt over a broad area.
That’s because the crust is
not as mangled and fractured, allowing seismic
waves to travel without
interruption.
“The waves are able to
reverberate and travel pretty happily out for miles,”
said U.S. Geological
Survey seismologist Susan
Hough.
The Virginia quake
came a day after an earthquake in Colorado toppled
groceries off shelves and
caused minor damage to
homes in the southern part
of the state and in northern
New Mexico. No injuries

The Daily Sentinel
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were reported as aftershocks continued Tuesday.
In Charleston, W.Va.,
hundreds of workers left
the state Capitol building
and employees at other
downtown office buildings were asked to leave
temporarily.
“The whole building
shook,” said Jennifer
Bundy, a spokeswoman
for the state Supreme
Court. “You could feel
two different shakes.
Everybody just kind of
came out on their own.”
In Ohio, where office
buildings swayed in
Columbus and Cincinnati
and the press box at the
Cleveland
Indians’
Progressive Field shook.
At least one building near
the Statehouse was evacuated
in
downtown
Columbus.
In downtown Baltimore,
the quake sent office
workers into the streets,
where lamp posts swayed
slightly as they called
family and friends to
check in.
Social media site
Twitter lit up with reports
of the earthquake from
people using the site up
and down the U.S. eastern
seaboard.
“People pouring out of
buildings and onto the
sidewalks and Into
Farragut Park in downtown DC...,” tweeted
Republican
strategist
Kevin Madden.
John Gurlach, air traffic controller at the
Morgantown Municipal
Airport was in a 40-foottall tower when the earth
trembled.
“There were two of us
looking at each other saying, ‘What’s that?’” he
said, even as a commuter
plane was landing. “It
was noticeably shaking.
It felt like a B-52 unloading.”
Immediately, the phone
rang from the nearest airport in Clarksburg, and a
computer began spitting
out green strips of paper
— alerts from other airports in New York and
Washington
issuing
ground stops “due to
earthquake.”

Page A4
Wednesday, August 24, 2011

The cynical politics of compromise
BY RICH LOWRY
It’s easy to pinpoint the
moment when President
Barack Obama became a
tireless advocate of compromise – when he no
longer had the power to
force whatever he wanted through Congress.
Then, he suddenly
switched his pitch from
“Hope and Change” to
“Gee, I Hope We Can
Work Something Out.”
Obama
the
Compromiser depends
on short memories. The
Jefferson-Jackson Day
speech that fueled his
rise in the 2008 Iowa
caucuses was a ringing
statement of principle
and implicit rejection of
compromise. He condemned “triangulation,”
the dastardly word associated with President Bill
Clinton’s work with a
Republican Congress in
the 1990s.
Many of the same
commentators
who
hailed Obama’s voice of
righteous purity in 2008
now praise his call for
splitting differences in
2011. To them, he’s
equally thoughtful and
brave whether he’s passionately extolling “principle” and “conviction,”
or doggedly insisting
that progress is only possible through “common
ground and compromise.” By definition,
whatever is Obama’s
current tack deserves the
support of all rightminded people.
But surely his ecstatic
fans from 2008 would
have fainted less often
had they known that
three years into his presidency, Obama would be
dragging himself around
the Midwest, pleading
with Republicans to
agree with him on creating an infrastructure
bank.
President Obama doesn’t bring much credibility to his new position as
the nation’s lecturer in
Compromise 101. One of
his signature phrases
upon taking office was

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the
freedom of speech, or of the press;
or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Rich Lowry
his killer rejoinder to
House Minority Whip
Eric Cantor in an early
White House meeting:
“Elections have consequences and, Eric, I
won.” Cantor had occasioned this rebuke by
passing around copies of
the Republican economic plan. Clearly, compromise wasn’t the order of
the day.
A clutch of Obama’s
supporters still believes
he compromised his way
through his first two
years because he didn’t
nationalize the banks,
institute a single-payer
health-care system or
pass a stimulus package
north of $1 trillion. None
of this represented bending to the will of
Republicans, but to the
dictates of economic and
political reality. The
president got the leftmost plausible program
he
could
through
Congress. On his own
terms, it was a transformational agenda, not a
middle ground worked
out between Nancy
Pelosi and John Boehner.
Without the country’s
reaction against the
highhanded methods
used to pass this highly
ideological program,
Obama wouldn’t even
bother
to
hector
Republicans. His pivot
to compromise is a confession of weakness,
both of reduced power
in Washington and a
highly tenuous standing
with the public. It is
nothing but a lifeline.
How far Obama has
fallen. In that long ago
Jefferson-Jackson Day

speech, Obama spoke in
favor of fearlessly
“telling the American
people what they need
to hear,” and blasted
“poll-driven positions.”
Did he ever think he’d
be reduced to the cowardly and clever partisan games that now
characterize his performance from the bully
pulpit of the nation’s
highest office?
The president doesn’t
need John Boehner or
any other Republican’s
approval to propose a
budget plan with significant savings in entitlements. Heaven knows
he didn’t wait to push
for ObamaCare or any
version of it until he had
the sign-off of his opposition. But he fears the
reaction of his own
party if he puts himself
on the record in favor of
specific entitlement cuts
without
forcing
Republicans to agree to
new taxes.
And bipartisan compromise always polls
well. With President
Obama’s job-approval
rating sinking to 40 percent, one can imagine
David Axelrod running
into the Oval Office
waving the latest nightly numbers showing that
salvation can be found
in compromise. So, the
president will come up
with some economic
proposals that poll well
and dare Republicans to
reject them. It’s bipartisanship as a partisan
weapon.
This is all rather tinny.
As small-ball politics,
it’s clever, but inadequate to the moment.
It’s only in his desperation and diminishment
that President Obama
has retreated to compromise. The Obama of
2008 would hold the
current iteration of himself in lofty contempt.
(Rich Lowry can
be reached via e-mail:
comments.lowry@nation
alreview.com)
(c) 2011 by King Features Syndicate

The Daily Sentinel
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�Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Forecast

Foothills
From Page A1

Donald P. Wilson, 81
Donald P. Wilson
Donald P. Wilson, 81, of Eagle Ridge Road, Long
Bottom, passed away at his home on Aug. 23, 2011.
He was born on Feb. 6, 1930, in Rand, W.Va., son
of the late Carl and Gaye Wilson. He was a member
of the Racine First Baptist Church. He was an avid
golfer and played in the Riverside Senior League.
Don and his wife owned the former Western Auto in
Middleport for 30 years.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death
by two brothers, three sisters and a great granddaughter, Brianna Pullins.
He is survived by wife of 61 years, Edna Wilson;
daughter, Donna (Chuck) Pullins of Long Bottom;
son, Stan (Carol) Wilson of Columbus; grandchildren:
Chuck (Brandi) Pullins of Westerville, Ohio, Susan
(Brian) Ash of Racine, Stephen (Ryan) Wilson of
Columbus, David Wilson and fiance Stephanie
Ledford of Chicago, Ill., Matthew Wilson of
Columbus; great grandchildren: Zach and Emily Ash
of Racine, Katie and Hannah Pullins of Westerville;
brother, David of St. Marys, W.Va.; sister: Maxine
(Ellis) of Frostproof, Fla..
Funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. on Friday,
Aug. 26, 2011, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Middleport. Officiating will be Rev. Ryan Eaton.
Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends
may call on Thursday, Aug. 25, from 6 to 9 p.m. at the
funeral home.
An on-line registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

Bus
From Page A1
pick up students on Success Road, Osborne Road, Smith
Baker Road, Joppa Road, Coolville Road, Lydia Road,
Rice Run Road, Headley Road, Pine Tree Drive,
Limberger Ridge, and Success Road to State Route 7.
Connie Osborne (Bus 6):
Connie’s route will begin at the Burke Residence on
Mudsock Road at 6:30 A.M. She will then travel Sumner
Road, Keebaugh-Follrod Road, Cherry Ridge Road,
Miller Road, Silver Ridge, Myers Road, Christy Road,
East Shade Road, Owl Hollow Road, Arbaugh Addition
in Tuppers Plains, and Hickory Lake Road.
Tom Pullins (Bus 14):
Tom’s route will being at 6:35 A.M. on Hensley Road
at Sobieski Residence. He will then travel Rainbow
Ridge, Holter Road, County Road 28 to Bashan, Eagle
Ridge Road, Lakewood Road to Karr Construction
Warehouse, State Route 7 to the southern branch of
Sumner Road, New Hope Road, Showalter Road.
Carolyn Ritchie (Bus 18):
Carolyn’s route will begin at 6:30 A.M. on ST RT 681
west of Alfred. She will then pick up students on Elk Run
Road, Carr Road, Woods Road, Alfred Road, Kaylor
Road, Main Street Tuppers Plains, State Route 7 to Meigs
County Line, and Vanderholf Road.
Lesa Sidwell (Bus11):
Lesa’s route will begin at 6:35 A.M. on Scout Camp
Road. She will proceed to pick up students on Sand
Ridge Road, Pine Grove Road, Vinegar Street, Pomeroy
Pike, Flatwoods Road to Five Points, Township Road
1064 and 1066, Lakewood Road, Sumner Road to
Stethem Road and then to Bahr Road.
Lee Swain (Bus 16):
Lee’s route will begin at 6:35 A.M. on Bigley Ridge.
He will then pick up students on Hayman Road, Dewitts
Run Road, Smith Ridge Road, Long Run Road, Mount
Olive, State Route 248 to Edwards Road, Riggs Crest
Road, Apple Tree and Bahr 30.
The above route and directions are subject to change.
If you have any questions you may want to call your bus
driver. We thank you for your interest and cooperation in
advance and wish you and your child a very happy year.
If during the year you have any questions about your
child’s route or the bus schedule please feel free to call
Arch Rose, Transportation Supervisor, at 740-985-3549
or the Superintendent’s Office at 740-667-6079.

artists affiliated with ALPACA will be on site demonstrating and displaying their creative works on both
Friday and Saturday. There will also be many hands-on
activities for children and adults.
The festival is located just off State Route 143 near
Harrisonville on the Sheets’ family farm. Free camping
for the entire weekend is available on-site, including RV
parking by email reservation. Local food vendors will
offer everything from pulled pork and ribs to southern
fried catfish.
Those coming to the festival will need to bring their
own lawn chairs and may bring their own coolers, but
no glass containers are allowed. For details and directions, visit www.foothillsmusic.org or email the
Foothills Music Foundation at info@foothillsmusic.org.
The weekend starts at 5:30 p.m. on Friday with six
acts including International Blues Challenge finalist
Chris Sutton and his band C&amp;S Railroad from
Barboursville, W.Va.; local favorite and host group The
Mudfork Blues Band; 2008 West Virginia Blues Society
winner and 2009 International Blues Challenge finalist
Sam Lamont and his band of Morgantown, and the
smooth sounds of Jazz Spoken Here lead by trumpeter
and director of the Ohio University School of Music and
Fine Arts Dr. Michael Parkinson.
Saturday has 15 musical acts on two stages running
from 12:30 p.m. until midnight featuring the always
entertaining James Armstrong of Chicago, Ill. and the
international blues legend Larry Garner of Baton
Rouge, La. who has been named The BBC Bluesman of
the Year and is three time recipient of the Blues
Songwriter of the Year award. He is considered one of
the contemporary blues finest artists.
The Foothills Music Foundation, a 501(c) (3) nonprofit organization, was founded in 2006 and is dedicated to enhancing the quality of life in the foothills region
of southeastern Ohio and northwestern West Virginia by
encouraging, supporting, and promoting music and the
arts. The Ohio Arts Council and the West Virginia
Division of Culture and History helped fund this program and organization with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all residents of Ohio and West
Virginia.
Festival Schedule
The campgrounds open and the artisan demonstrations begin at 5 p.m. with the music starting at 5:30 p.m.
All music will be presented on a covered stage on both
days.
Friday’s schedule is as follows: Broken Ring at 5:30
p.m.; the Mudfork Blues Band, 6:30 p.m.; Jazz Spoken
Here, 7:30 p.m. C&amp;S Railroad, 8:30 p.m.; Sam Lamont
Blues Band, 9:30 p.m.; and Sit Down Baby, 10:30 p.m.
On Saturday the artisan demonstrations will begin at
noon with entertainment on the electric stage at the
same time. The schedule Duke Junior and the Smokey
Boots, noon; Sit Down Baby, 1:15 p.m.; Magic Mama
Band, 2:30 p.m.; Dennis McClung Blues Band, 3:45
p.m; Ellie Lee and Blues Fury, 5:15 p.m.; Mudfork
Blues Band, 6:45 p.m., James Armstrong Blues Band,
7:45 p.m.; Larry Garner Blues Band, 9:15 p.m.; and The
Jimi Vincent Band, 10:45 p.m.
On the acoustic stage Todd Burge will perform at
12:45 and 2 p.m. with the Bob Stewart Band at 3:14 and
4:45 p.m., and Izzy and Chris in the slots of 4:15 p.m.
and 7:15 p.m.

For the Record
Meigs 911
Aug. 22:
Diabetic emergency, Third St., Racine; passing out, Fifth St., Racine; unconscious, School
Lot Rd., Albany; MVC, Leading Creek Rd.,
Middleport; dehydration, Grant St., Middleport;
allergic reaction, Memorial Dr., Pomeroy; chest
pain, Ohio 124, Portland; hemorrhage,
McMillin Rd., Wilksville; laceration, Second
St., Pomeroy.

Wednesday: A slight
chance of showers and
thunderstorms between 1
p.m. and 5 p.m., then a
slight chance of thunderstorms after 5 p.m.
Mostly sunny, with a
high near 89. Calm wind
becoming southwest
between 11 and 14 mph.
Chance of precipitation
is 20 percent.
Wednesday Night: A
chance of showers,
mainly after 1 a.m.
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 66. South wind
between 6 and 8 mph.
Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent. New rainfall amounts of less than
a tenth of an inch possible.
Thursday: Showers
and thunderstorms likely, mainly before noon.

Partly sunny, with a high
near 84. South wind 6 to
8 mph becoming west.
Chance of precipitation
is 60 percent. New rainfall amounts of less than
a tenth of an inch,
except higher amounts
possible in thunderstorms.
Thursday Night:
Partly cloudy, with a
low around 62.
Friday: Sunny, with a
high near 88.
Friday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low
around 64.
Saturday: Partly
sunny, with a high near
88.
Saturday Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 63.
Sunday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 84.

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US Bank (NYSE) — 21.51
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 15.54
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 34.20
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 34.78
Kroger (NYSE) — 22.85
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 35.71
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 64.50
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 16.40

BBT (NYSE) — 19.82
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 10.45
Pepsico (NYSE) — 63.48
Premier (NASDAQ) — 6.04
Rockwell (NYSE) — 57.31
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 10.94
Royal Dutch Shell — 65.44
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 54.75
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 53.21
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.83
WesBanco (NYSE) — 18.18
Worthington (NYSE) — 15.78
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
August 23, 2011, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Clerk
From Page A1
views of candidates.
Council adjourned once into executive session to discuss hiring Hysell’s replacement. After adjourning back
into regular session, Musser spoke highly of Hysell, saying in her 19 years as clerk-treasurer, she’d always done
what she felt was right for the village.
“I’m proud to have the opportunity to have worked with
her...I think she’s an outstanding person,” Musser said.
In other business:
Residents of Cave Street complained about water rushing into their basement, bringing even more complaints to
council about flooding in the Monkey Run area. Musser
told the residents personnel from the Federal Emergency
Management Agency were arriving on Wednesday to
view projects which need funded in the area, including
flooding in Monkey Run and would see if anything could
be done to help solve the new problem by having an engineer look at the area on Cave Street.
Hysell said a representative from Kinder Insurance,
which has the village’s liability policy, would be attempting to find the village a cheaper health insurance rate by
possibly placing it in a pool of other municipalities to purchase the insurance for employees. Currently, Pomeroy is
facing a 38.9 percent increase in its premium from
provider Anthem.
Council transferred $4,000 from the general fund to
public works fund.
All members of council were present for Monday’s
meeting.

Irene weakens but remains big threat to US
Caribbean.
Federal officials warned
the storm could flood streets
and knock down power lines
as far north as New England.
Irene lost some of its punch
Tuesday afternoon and was
downgraded to a Category 1
hurricane as it lashed the
Turks and Caicos Islands, but
the storm remains likely to

regain strength and become a
major hurricane before making a U.S. landfall.
The hurricane has raked
the Caribbean and could
cause serious problems along
the entire Eastern Seaboard,
Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency
administrator Craig Fugate
said Tuesday during a con-

ference call with reporters.
Fugate urged people not to
become complacent, even
though the forecast is still
uncertain and the storm may
be days from hitting the
U.S.
"We need to remind people, hurricanes are not just a
Southern thing. This could
be the Mid-Atlantic and the

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northeast coast," Fugate
said. "We've got a lot of
time for people to get ready,
but we don't have forever."
Officials on North
Carolina's Ocracoke Island
were taking no chances.
Tourists were ordered to
evacuate Wednesday, while
residents were told to be off
the island by Thursday, said

Tommy Hutcherson, who
serves on the local board that
issues such orders.
Hutcherson, who also
owns the Ocracoke Variety
Store, said authorities have to
issue such orders early
because of the limited capacity of the ferries. Still, that
doesn't mean everyone will
leave.

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School
Mid-Valley Christi, Maidndleport, OH
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500 N. Second Aven

(740) 992-6249

60235491

MIAMI, Fla. (AP) —
Officials and residents from
Florida to the Carolinas
stocked up on supplies, dusted off evacuation plans and
readied for the worst as Irene,
the first hurricane to threaten
the U.S. in three years,
churned over tropical waters
Tuesday after cutting a
destructive path through the

�Wednesday, August 24, 2011

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

MUTTS

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker

THE LOCKHORNS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for
Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2011:
This year, you have an opportunity to move forward and make
waves in your immediate circle. You
will be updating your perspective.
The unexpected could create quite a
kick and cause an issue within a key
relationship. New beginnings become
possible if you stay grounded and
use your sixth sense. Don’t worry so
much about your decisions. If you are
single, someone quite exotic could
enter your life. This person also might
be a foreigner, helping you understand
different lifestyles. If you are attached,
socialize as a couple more. CANCER
understands you.
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)
+++ Pressure builds once more.
Unless you have learned ways of
releasing stress, you could act up in
an unexpected manner. You will take
manipulation personally. Pull back and
refuse to allow agitation and frustration
to get to you. Tonight: Happily head
home.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++++ You are likely to express
your thoughts and ideas. Are you
ready to hear the reactions? People
act in the most unexpected way. Stay
secure, knowing your choices are
right-on. Don’t question another person’s actions so much. Tonight: Visit
and catch up on others’ news.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
+++ Listen to what is being
shared. You need to know more and
handle a situation in a clear, adequate
fashion. Finances could be an issue.
Try to grasp where another person is
coming from and his or her perspective. Tonight: Your treat.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
+++++ You are all smiles, just
because. Others might test their
boundaries, especially if they have
been considering crossing one lately.
The unexpected could cause quite
a reaction. Try to detach before you
react. Take the space needed to form
a response. Tonight: Whatever makes
you smile.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
+++ Everyone needs time off
from the drudgery. You could be very
tired of your routine and whatever you
deem uninteresting and/or stressful. A
child or loved one could be provocative. Use your imagination. Tonight:

HOROSCOPE

Get into the unexpected.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
+++++ You know what you want.
Understand where others are coming
from. Keep a long-term goal in mind,
and you won’t go wrong. Deal with an
eccentric associate or family member
lightly. You cannot change this person.
This person alone can change him- or
herself. Tonight: Where the fun is.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
+++ Pressure builds to an unprecedented level. Your follow-through
counts, as so much is dropped on your
plate. Just when you think you are
done, something else shows up. Try
not to react when someone creates
uproar. Tonight: Working late.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
+++++ Your ability to get past
a problem emerges. Know that one
of your strengths is your ability to distance yourself from others. When you
take a second look, you might want to
move away permanently, if possible.
Tonight: Make escape the theme.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
++++ A partner makes an overture that you cannot resist. Your decisions force your hand with another
person. Expect a little uproar. Use care
with spending. A mistake could be
very costly. Be sensible but optimistic.
Tonight: Dinner with a favorite person.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
++++ Others seek you out,
knowing full well what they want,
and you respond perhaps in a stunning manner. Relax and remake that
decision. In the long run, you want
this person to understand where you
are coming from. Tonight: Defer to
another person.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
++++ Focus on clearing out
a problem that might have reared
its ugly head. You might be surprised by a call or someone’s action.
Accomplish what you can, but don’t
take on any pressure. If you want
a change, look at your life. Tonight:
Choose a stress-buster.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
++++ A risk could backfire. Be
aware of that fact before leaping in.
Your creativity, while wonderful in
some areas of your life, can backfire
when you least expect it. A friend
could change his or her tune, causing a problem. Tonight: Just enjoy
yourself.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

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Dettwiller True Value Lumber

740-992-5500
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Marcum Construction
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The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

AL'S SAW SHOP
Sharpening Service

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740-541-4119
CR 18 &amp; SR 33 North of Pomeroy, OH
Located Next To Quality Window Systems
altomm@hotmail.com

60231631

Count on it.

Located on S. Rt. 7 in Chester at the Intersection of Pomeroy Pike

Baum Lumber

POWER EQUIPMENT SALES &amp; SERVICE

740-985-3302

MANTIS TILLERS - TROY BILT TILLERS - HITACHI TRIMMERS SAWS - BLOWERS - TANAKA - WINCH CABLES - CHOKERS
SERVICING ALL BRANDS
PICK UP &amp; DELIVERY

J. Clifford Construction
General Contracting

Hoe - Dozer Work - Septic Systems - Sewer - Water
Roofing/All Types - Concrete Work
Dura-Last Flat Roofs
Springs - Ponds - Roads
Home &amp; Business Remodeling

Phone 740-416-1436
740-992-7943
740-949-2921

60235886

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A8

www.mydailysentinel.com

�Wednesday, August 24, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Earthquake felt during Indians game
box high above home
plate and the third-base
line moved left and right
and continued for nearly
30 seconds. Fans sitting
in the upper deck at
Progressive Field noticed
the unusual movement,
and weren’t sure what
was happening.
“It went on for at least
a minute,” said Betsy
Hammond, who was

CLEVELAND (AP)
— Shock waves from an
earthquake on the East
Coast made the press box
sway slightly and sent
some fans toward the
exits during the first
game of a doubleheader
between the Indians and
Seattle Mariners.
As the Mariners were
batting in the fourth
inning Tuesday, the press

attending the game with
her husband, Tim, and
their three children. “We
were looking around and
someone stood up and
yelled, ‘Is that an earthquake?’ Then someone
who works here came
over and said they heard
it on the radio.”
Play was not interrupted on the field. The
Indians reported no

structural damage to the
43,000-seat ballpark.
The Hammonds were
celebrating their son
Liam’s 10-year-old birthday with his first game
— one he’ll never forget.
“My first thought was,
‘That’s weird, I can’t
move this seat,’” Tim
Hammond
said.
“I
thought it was the wind. I
know the stadium is

earthquake
centered
northwest of Richmond,
Va., shook much of
Washington and was felt
as far north as Rhode
Island and New York City.
“The odd thing was
that it went on for a long
time,” Betsy Hammond
said. “Then, the longer it
went on, the more I wondered what was happening.”

made to move, but I didn’t know what was moving it. I was thinking
maybe they blew something up on that movie
set. A lot of people got up
and were like ‘We’re out
of here.’”
Filming for “The
Avengers” is taking place
on East 9th Street near
the ballpark.
The 5.8 magnitude

Thomas believes Browns will win
BEREA
(AP)
—
Dripping with sweat,
Browns
tackle
Joe
Thomas stood in the end
zone after practice and
discussed his contract
extension, a deal that will
keep him in Cleveland the
rest of his pro career.
Most players would
make such a milestone
announcement at a splashy
news conference with all

the bells and whistles.
Thomas isn’t most.
“Typical Joe,” tight end
Evan Moore said. “Joe’s
the ultimate professional.”
A Pro Bowl-selection
in each of his four NFL
seasons, Thomas will be
Cleveland’s left tackle for
a long time. On Monday
night, Thomas signed a
seven-year, $84 million

extension to stay with the
Browns, who during an
inglorious return to the
league as an expansion
team have not made any
smarter move than drafting the former Wisconsin
All-American with the
third overall pick in 2007.
Thomas wanted to keep
negotiations and the contract private, so as not to
upstage any of his team-

mates as they get ready
for their first season under
new coach Pat Shurmur.
The Browns have not
yet formally announced
Thomas’ signing, which
includes nearly $44 million in guaranteed money.
After practice, the 6foot-6,
312-pound
Thomas explained his
decision to remain with
the Browns, who have

had just two winning seasons since 1999. Thomas
was entering the final
year of his rookie contract, and could have tested free agency following
the season. However, he’s
excited about the future
in Cleveland, a team and
city he believes are on the
cusp of greatness.
“The things that I’ve
seen here in the last cou-

ple years, the type of
coaches that we’re bringing in here, the type of
players we’re bringing in,
the staff that we put
together, it’s really exciting for me to see the
direction this franchise is
headed,” he said. “That
was the main reason that I
wanted to stay here and
continue to work on this
journey.”

Mariners break 5-game losing streak, beat Indians
ties.
Cleveland closer Chris
Perez (2-6) hit both
Miguel
Olivo
and
Brendan Ryan with
pitches to start the ninth.
Perez compounded his
problems by dropping a
sacrifice
bunt
by
Trayvon Robinson, loading the bases with no
outs.
Ichiro Suzuki, who led
off the game with a home
run, struck out. But
Gutierrez, formerly of the
Indians, hit a fly to medium center field and the
slow-footed Olivo barely
beat Ezequiel Carrera’s
one-hop throw home.
“We have to do it,”
Wedge said of the decision to send Olivo home.
“That’s the ballgame
right there. He was
aggressive. It was a good,

CLEVELAND (AP) —
The Seattle Mariners
found a painful way to
cure their losing streak
Monday night.
Franklin Gutierrez’s
bases-loaded sacrifice fly
in the ninth inning — a
rally keyed by two hit
batters — gave the
Mariners a 3-2 win over
the Cleveland Indians.
The victory snapped
Seattle’s five-game losing
streak and was only their
fourth win in their last 24
road games.
“Our guys hung in
there,” Mariners manager
Eric Wedge said.
Chance Ruffin (1-0)
pitched a scoreless eighth
for his first major league
win while Brandon
League worked out of a
ninth-inning jam for his
31st save in 35 opportuni-

Fairland
from Page B1
meter) race at 9:30 a.m., the
high school girls race (5000
meter) at 10 a.m. and the high
school boys race (5000 meter)
at 10:45 a.m.
High School Girls 2 Mile
Individual Results
1 Katie Blodgett
River Valley 12:55
2 Shanan Ashton
Fairland
13:14
3 Sydney Pettit
Fairland
13:35
4 Madisen Burns
Huntington 13:41
5 Megan Ashton
Fairland
13:46
6 Ariel Schweickart Ironton
14:07
7 Sarah Warnock
Fairland
14:32
8 Jessica Price
Fairland
14:55
9 Audrey McFarland Huntington 15:02 7:31
10 Beth Clapp
Fairland
15:17
11 Faith Hurula
Fairland
15:38
12 Savannah MacGregor Huntington 15:52
13 Savannah Nelson Fairland
16:05
14 Keyana Ward
River Valley 16:10
15 Ashton McMackin Ironton
16:29
16 Shannon Walker Ironton
16:32
17 Brooke Shope
Ironton
16:40
18 Elizabeth Schmitz Huntington 16:47
19 Hannah Cronacher Ironton
16:49
20 Colleen Walker
Ironton
17:09
21 Carmen Webb
Fairland
17:12
22 Karianne Fischer Huntington 17:13
23 Maggie Thomas Ironton
17:29
24 Carrie Tanner
Fairland
18:03
25 Brooklyn Massie Rock Hill 18:21
26 Arinn Gusstin
Rock Hill 18:42
27 Jessica Halley
River Valley 20:11
28 Sonja Rankin
River Valley21:45

»»»

reen
Go G

»»

hard slide and he got in
there.”
Wedge also credited
Gutierrez, who managed
to lift his fly ball deep
enough so Olivo could
score.
“I can’t say enough
about that,” Wedge said.
“He hung in there. He
had a tough at-bat.”
League retired the first
two batters in the ninth,
but singles by Jack
Hannahan and pinch-hitter Lonnie Chisenhall
placed runners at first and
third. Chisenhall stole
second, but League got
Carrera to ground out to
first on a 3-2 pitch, capping a nine-pitch at-bat.
“League didn’t give in
to the fight there,” Wedge
said. “He made some big
pitches.”
Jose Vargas allowed

Girls Team Results
1. Fairland (20): 1. Shanan Ashton13:14, 2.
Sydney Pettit13:35, 3. Megan Ashton 13:46,
4. Sarah Warnock 14:32, 5. Jessica Price
14:55, 6. Beth Clapp 15:17, 7. Faith Hurula
15:38.
2. Huntington (55): 1. Madisen Burns 13:41,
2. Audrey McFarland 15:02, 3. Savannah
MacGregor 15:52, 4. Elizabeth Schmitz
16:47, 5. Karianne Fischer 17:13.
3. Ironton (60): 1. Ariel Schweickart 14:07,
2. Ashton McMackin 16:29, 3. Shannon
Walker 16:32, 4. Brooke Shope 16:40, 5.
Hannah Cronacher 16:49, 6. Colleen
Walker 17:09, 7. Maggie Thomas 17:29.
High School Boys 2 Mile
Individual Results
1 Tanner Mattie
2 Raine Wireman
3 Logan Rowe
4 Jack McGee
5 Sam Smith
6 Ryan Stewart
7 Chandler Smith
8 Chad McComas
9 Dylan Hannon
10 Zack Fannin
11 Aaron Dalton
12 Grant Clarkson
13 Blake Weekley
14 Austin Smith
15 Josh Sifford
16 Levi Runyon
17 Sean Paulding
18 Jared Hollingsworth
19 Sam Nelson
20 Robert Bishop
21 Dylan Bentley
22 Zach Simpson
23 Franklin Norton
24 Nick Bishop
25 Tyler Lawless
26 Brian Okeefe

Fairland
10:22
Fairland
10:34
Fairland
10:34
Huntington 10:56
Huntington 11:08
Fairland
11:15
Huntington 11:16
Fairland
11:26
Fairland
11:54
Fairland
11:55
Rock Hill 12:11
Fairland
12:19
Huntington 12:25
Rock Hill 12:27
Fairland
12:28
Ironton
12:45
Huntington 13:01
River Valley 13:09
Fairland
13:12
Ironton
13:15
Fairland
13:17
Huntington 13:20
Huntington 13:28
Ironton
13:35
Ironton
13:36
Fairland
13:49

27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43

only two unearned runs in
seven innings, a fact that
especially pleased Wedge
since the teams play a
day-night doubleheader
Tuesday.
“He got us deep into
the ballgame,” Wedge
said. “When you’re playing this many games, you
always have concerns
about your bullpen. That
was big for us.”
Ruffin, acquired in the
deal that sent pitcher
Doug Fister to Detroit at
the
trade
deadline,
pitched a perfect eighth
inning.
“I love being in pressure situations,” Ruffin
said. “I’m happy they
have the confidence to
use me in a tie game that
late.”
Although Suzuki didn’t
come through in the

James Jackson
River Valley 13:54
Oscar Lee
Huntington 13:55
Zach Smith
Huntington 14:05
Aaron Oehler
River Valley 14:07
Ethan Hersman
River Valley 14:08
Kyle Randolph
River Valley 14:17
Austin Hamilton
River Valley 14:20
Sean Lawless
Ironton
14:28
Nick Rogers
Huntington 14:31
Nathan Korne
Huntington 14:34
Christian Ruddman Rock Hill 14:37
Sam Elswick
Huntington 14:57
Dustin Akers
Rock Hill 15:16
Jake Bauer
Huntington 15:30
Blake Wolfe
Huntington 15:38
Ben Ball
River Valley 16:01
Bryce Kelley
Rock Hill 16:13

Boys Team Results
1. Fairland (20): 1. Tanner Mattie 10:22, 2.
Raine Wireman 10:34, 3. Logan Rowe
10:34, 4. Ryan Stewart 11:15, 5. Chad
McComas 11:26, 6. Dylan Hannon 11:54, 7.
Zack Fannin 11:55.
2. Huntington (43): 1. Jack McGee 10:56, 2.
Sam Smith 11:08, 3. Chandler Smith 11:16,
4. Blake Weekley 12:25, 5. Sean Paulding
13:01, 6. Zach Simpson 13:20, 7. Franklin
Norton 13:28.
3. Ironton (99): 1. Levi Runyon 12:45, 2.
Robert Bishop 13:15, 3. Nick Bishop 13:35,
4. Tyler Lawless 13:36, 5. Sean Lawless
14:28.
4. River Valley (110): 1. Jared Hollingsworth
13:09, 2. James Jackson 13:54, 3. Aaron
Oehler 14:07, 4. Ethan Hersman 14:08, 5.
Kyle Randolph 14:17, 6. Austin Hamilton
14:20, 7. Ben Ball 16:01.
5. Rock Hill (112): 1. Aaron Dalton 12:11, 2.
Austin Smith 12:27, 3. Christian Ruddman
14:37, 4. Dustin Akers 15:16, 5. Bryce
Kelley 16:13.

Blue Devils
from Page B1
shot respective rounds of 49
and 50 for Warren.
Alec Ray paced Jackson
with a 41, followed by
matching 46s from Evan
Massie and Tyler Williams.
Cole Massie rounded out the
team score with a 47, while
Katie Dobbins added a 49 in
the five-spot.
Gabe Preston and Jake
Brown both led the host Cavs
with identical 43s, followed
by Pierce Knisley with a 45
and Tyler Morrisey with a 49.
Stephen Gilliland and K.J.
King added respective efforts

Point
from Page B1
team did not have a player
shoot better than 50 for the
match. Lonnie Ellis and Caleb
Maige both shot an even 50 to
lead their team. Trace Boso
added a 57 to the team total.
Jon O’Brien and Zack Vannest
turned in identical scores of 61

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with only one of those included in the final count.
Point Pleasant plays again
on Tuesday meeting Poca at
the
Riverside
course.
Wahama is off until Thursday
when they resume TVC play
with a trip to the Cliffside
Golf Course in Gallipolis to
meet South Gallia. River
Valley and Point Pleasant
will join that match as independents.

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of 56 and 64 for CHS.
Brandon
Jones
led
Portsmouth with a 42, followed by Drew Miller and
Joe Amburgey with respective totals of 45 and 46. Levi
Porter completed the Trojans’
tally with a 51, while Jacob
call also fired a 56 for PHS.
Through three of six league
contests, GAHS sits alone
atop the standings with a 150 record. Logan sits second at
11-4, while Warren is the
only other team with a winning mark of 10-5. Jackson
has a 6-9 record, while
Chillicothe is 3-12 and
Portsmouth is 1-14.
The next SEOAL contest
will be held at Brass Ring
Country Club in Logan on
Monday, Aug. 29.

Clark’s Jewelry Store

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Four Seattle batters
were hit by pitches. In
addition to two plunked
by Perez, Carmona hit
Casper Wells and Mike
Carp.
“It’s scary when they’re
up and in like that,”
Wedge said. “Hopefully,
they’re OK.”
Carp went 0 for 4,
snapping his 20-game hitting streak.
Following
Suzuki’s
home run, the Mariners
added a run in the second
on catcher Lou Marson’s
throwing error.
Cleveland tied it with
two unearned runs in the
second off Vargas after a
two-out error by shortstop Ryan, playing his
first game since Aug. 3
after a shoulder injury. He
had another throwing
error later in the inning.

ninth, he did play a key
role in the win. Batting
.266 at gametime, he had
three hits and connected
off Fausto Carmona for
his 35th career leadoff
home run. He tied Barry
Bonds for sixth all-time,
two
behind
Philadelphia’s
Jimmy
Rollins.
Despite the fact Suzuki,
a career .331 hitter, is
having his worst season
in the majors, Wedge has
no plans to cut his playing time or move him out
of the leadoff spot.
“He’s had his struggles
this year,” Wedge said. “I
know it’s been a fight for
him. He’s tried to handle
it the best he can. We’re
going to continue to give
him opportunities at the
top of the lineup as we
play this out.”

133 Court Street, Pomeroy
740-992-2054

Summertime is a great time to schedule
Annual Exams and Sports Physicals.

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Jeff Warner Agency
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Tel 740-992-5479
Fax 740-992-6911
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�SPORTS
LOCAL SCHEDULE
POINT PLEASANT — A schedule of
upcoming high school varsity sporting
events in the Ohio Valley Publishing coverage area involving teams from Mason,
Gallia and Meigs counties.

Wednesday, August 24
Soccer
Sissonville at Point Pleasant
(girls), 6:30 p.m.
Golf
Gallia Academy, River Valley at
Wellston, 4:30 p.m.
Cross Country
Eastern, Meigs, Southern at
Vinton County, 5:30 p.m.
Thursday, August 25
Soccer
St. Maryʼs at Ohio Valley Christian,
5:30 p.m.
Charleston Catholic at Point
Pleasant (boys), 6 p.m.
Golf
Eastern at Southern, 4:30 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 4:30 p.m.
Wahama, River Valley, Point
Pleasant at South Gallia, 4:30 p.m.

A10
Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Blue Devils still unbeaten in SEOAL, overall
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio
— Three down. Three to
go.
The Gallia Academy
golf team continued its
winning ways Monday,
improving to 39-0 overall
this season with a sixstroke victory over the
Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic League field at
Chillicothe Country Club
in Ross County.
The Blue Devils captured their third consecu-

tive league win in three
weeks, which gives
GAHS an impressive 150 season mark in SEOAL
play. Gallia Academy
posted a winning team
score of 154 and also
came away with its third
consecutive
medalist
honor in SEOAL play.
Corey Arthur led
GAHS and all competitors with a par round of
36, which was one shot
ahead of co-runners-up
Zack McKenna (Warren)
and Kris Cummings
(Logan).
Saunders
followed

Arthur with a 38, while
Boeing
Smith
and
Derrick Gilmore rounded
out the winning team
tally with respective
efforts of 39 and 41.
Daniel Rees and Rob
Canady also fired rounds
of 43 and 45 for the Blue
Devils, who recorded
four of the top nine individual rounds on the day.
Logan was the runnerup with a team total of
160, followed by Warren
(167), Jackson (180),
Chillicothe (180) and
Portsmouth (194). The
Ironmen
won
the

Friday, August 26
Football
Alexander at Eastern, 7:30 p.m.
Federal Hocking at River Valley,
7:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Sciotoville East,
7:30 p.m.
Symmes Valley at Southern, 7:30
p.m.
Athens at Gallia Academy, 7:30
p.m.
Meigs at Coal Grove, 7:30 p.m.
Valley Fayette at Hannan, 7:30
p.m.

tiebreaker for fourth
because of a lower score
from their fifth golfer.
Cummings led LHS
with a 37, followed by
matching efforts of 40 by
Tristan Meyers and
Caleb Cummings. Jordan
Fizer rounded out the
Chieftain scoring with a
43. Jacob Berry and
Logan Holbrook also had
respective efforts of 45
and 46.
McKenna led the
Warriors with a 37, followed by matching 43s
by Ian Zoller and Adam
Lang. Rees Patton round-

ed out the WHS scoring
with a 44. Michael Sams
and Steve Farley also
See BLUE DEVILS, B3

Lady Marauders top
Eastern in
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY, Ohio —
The girls golf teams
from Meigs and Eastern
opened the season on
Monday afternoon with
a dual match at Kountry
Hills Golf Course in
Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Lady Marauders defeated Eastern by a score
of 234-298.
Meigs was led by match medalist Natalie
Michael with a 54. Alyssa Cremeans shot a 57,
Jennifer Robinson had a 60 and Rachel Bauer shot
a 64. Also playing for Meigs were Harley Fox (66)
and Kerri Moon (72).
Samantha Cline led the Lady Eagles with a 59.
Grace Edwards shot a 71, Cassidy Cleland shot an
83 and Hannah Hawley had an 85.
The two teams will play again on Wednesday at
4 p.m.

2011 Fall
Preview
comes out
Friday
POMEROY, Ohio —
The 2011 Meigs County
Fall Sports Preview will
be included in the Friday
edition of the The Daily
Sentinel. The annual special section will include
preview stories, rosters,
schedules and team pictures of all of the varsity
squads at Meigs, Eastern,
Southern and Wahama.

Rebels beat
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Meigs County
Volleyball
Preview
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— The annual Meigs
County
Volleyball
Preview will be held on
Saturday, August 27, at
Meigs High School.
Teams from Eastern,
Southern and Meigs will
play two games each.
The event will start at 4
p.m. with the 7th grade
teams from Southern and
Eastern.

URG Baseball
Academy
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande Baseball will be
having its second annual
fall baseball academy for
boys in grades 7-12. The
Academy begins on
September 3 and ends on
October 8 at the
University of Rio Grande
Baseball Complex. The
deadline to register is
Wednesday, Aug. 31. The
equipment needed for
individuals
includes:
cleats, tennis shoes (for
batting cage), glove,
pants and bat. For additional information and
prices, please contact Rio
Grande head baseball
coach Brad Warnimont at
(740) 245-7486 or by email at bradw@rio.edu

URG
Basketball
Golf Scramble
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande
men’s
and
women’s basketball programs will be hosting a
golf scramble on Sunday,
August 28 at Franklin
Valley Golf Course in
Jackson, Ohio. The fourperson scramble will
begin with a shotgun start
at 8:30 a.m.
For reservations or
more information contact
Rio Grande head men’s
basketball coach Ken

Kent Sanborn photo/SouthernOhioSportsPhotos.com
River Valley senior Katie Blodgett runs during the Fairland 2 Mile race on Monday.
Blodgett placed first in the girls race.

River Valley’s Blodgett wins
Fairland 2 Mile run
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

FAIRLAND, Ohio — Off to the
races.
The 2011 Ohio high school cross
country season officially kicked off
Monday with the annual Fairland 2
mile race.
River Valley senior Katie Blodgett
opened the season with a win in the
girls 2 mile event. Blodgett ran a time
of 12:55, to place 19 seconds ahead of
Shanan Ashton of Fairland.
The Lady Raiders Keyana Ward
placed 14th (16:10), Jessica Halley was
27th (20:11) and Sonja Rankin was
28th (21:45).
River Valley did not have enough participants in the girls race to compete as

a team.
In the boys race, the Raiders placed
fourth out of five teams with a score of
110.
Raiders competing were Jared
Hollingsworth in 18th (13:09), James
Jackson in 27th (13:54), Aaron Oehler
in 30th (14:07), Ethan Hersman in 31st
(14:08), Kyle Randolph in 32nd
(14:17), Austin Hamilton in 33rd
(14:20), and Ben Ball in 42nd (16:01).
River Valley will host the Ed Sayre
Memorial Early Bird Invitational on
Saturday, August 27, at River Valley
High School.
The event will begin at 9 a.m. with
the girls’ junior high (3200 meter) race,
followed by the boys’ junior high (3200
See FAIRLAND, B3

Southern beats Miller
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GLOUSTER, Ohio —
The Southern golf team
defeated Miller by a
score of 169-187 on
Monday afternoon during a TVC Hocking golf
match at Forest Hills
Golf Course.
The Tornadoes were
led by match medalist
Adam Pape with a 35.
Jacob Hoback finished as
runner-up with a round of
40. Cole Graham shot a
46, Trenton Cook had a
48
and
Ryan
Schenkelberg had a 51
for the Tornadoes.
Miller was led by
Dakota McGill with a 44,
Andy Jeffers had a 45,
Chris Gamble had a 48,
Shawn Hayes shot a 50,
Brandon Davis had a 50
and Scotty Duffie had a 62.
The Southern golf team
fell to both Waterford and
Trimble last week in separate road TVC Hocking

golf matches.
Southern faced Trimble
on Thursday afternoon at
Forest Hills Golf Course.
Trimble defeated the
Tornadoes 180-186.
Three golfers tied for
medalist honors, including Southern’s Cole
Graham with a 43.
Graham was followed
by Adam Pape with a 44,
Jacob Hoback with a 47
and Trenton Cook with a
52. Ryan Schenkelberg
also played, shooting a
56.
Trimble was led by
Collin
Smith
and
Brayton Hazen with
rounds of 43. Kyle
Russell shot a 44 and
Nick Smith shot a 50 to
round out the scoring for
Trimble. Jeff Andrews
(53) and Michael Everett
(60) also played for the
Tomcats.
On Friday, Waterford
defeated the Tornadoes
by a score of 160-195.
The Wildcats Brandyn

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— The South Gallia
golf team evened their
record on Monday afternoon with wins over
Federal Hocking and
Fairland at Cliffside
Golf Course.
South Gallia earned a
team total of 194, while
Fairland shot a 198 and
Federal Hocking had a
216.
The Rebels are now 4-4
for the season (2-3 TVC Hocking). The win over
Federal Hocking was a league victory.
Fairland’s Bailey Manns was match medalist with a
score of 45.
Casin Roush led the Rebels with a 46, followed by
Seth Jarrell with a 47. David Michal shot a 50 and
Gus Slone had a 51. Also plying for the Rebels were
Ethan Swain (55) and Andy Welch (60).
For Fairland, Manns was followed by Ryan
Wooten with a 49, Blake Kerstetter and Alex Earl
with rounds of 52, Hunter Schenewark with a 54
and Evan Salyers with a 65.
Shane Gillian paced the Lancers with a 51, followed by Tyler Clemons with a 54, Brandon
Russell with a 55 and Austin Russell with a 56.
Steven Coen shot a 64 and Zack Kidder had a 72.
River Valley also played, but did not record a
team score.

Point tops Wahama
and Ravenswood,
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Offenberger was the
medalist with a round of
34 and Shane Kern was
runner-up with a 38.
Southern was led by
Adam Pape with a 39,
followed
by
Cole
Graham with a 49, Ryan
Schenkelberg with a 53
and Jacob Hoback with a
54. Trenton Cook also
played for the Tornadoes,
shooting a 63.
Offenberger and Kern
were followed by Austin
Hiverding with a 41 and
Randee Seevers with a
47. Brent Ginther shot a
49 and Aaron Rogers had
a 56 for Waterford.

MASON, W.Va. —
Even with their number
one scorer playing
under the weather, the
Point Pleasant Big
Blacks varsity golf team
continued their winning
ways in a tri-match held
Monday evening at the
Riverside Golf Course
in Mason, W.Va.
In the play six, count
four format used in the
nine hole match, Point
had little trouble in
besting both Wahama
and
Ravenswood.
Point’s four person
score was 165. Wahama
finished second with a
score of 177 while
Ravenswood struggled
a bit at times and turned
in a 218 for the contest.
Opie Lucas, who normally leads the Big
Blacks in scoring,
played under the weather, but was picked up
nicely by the brothersister duo of Erik and
Kelsey Allbright. Erik’s

score of 37 gave him
medalist honors for the
day. Kelsey tied Opie
for the second best
score for Point with a
40. Denver Thomas
contributed a 48 to
account for Point’s final
score that was included
in the total. Adam
Thomas aslo played for
the Big Blacks with his
score not counting in
the final tally.
Dakota Sisk, for the
fourth time in the previous five matches, led
The White Falcons with
a score of 40. Morgan
Nottingham
and
Michael
MacKnight
turned in identical
scores of 44. Both
Kevin
Back
and
Michael Hendricks had
49 strokes each with
only one of those scores
counting in the team’s
total. Austin Ohlinger’s
score was not part of the
final total for the White
Falcons.
Ravenswood’s young
See POINT, B3

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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="11383">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="11382">
              <text>August 24, 2011</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="246">
      <name>wilson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
