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                  <text>Party in the Park &amp;
Veterans
Appreciation Day,
photos on A3

High school
cross country
action, A8

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 145

VMH employees
reunion
POMEROY – The sixth
annual reunion of employees of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will be held from 1
to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Sept.
17, at the Mulberry
Community Center in
Pomeroy.
There will be a potluck
dinner. Beverages will be
provided. Take photos,
scrapbooks, albums and
other memorabilia for display. Each person attending is asked to take a
canned food item for the
Meigs Cooperative Parish
food pantry.
Plans are to continue the
reunions even though this
may be the last year the
hospital structure will exist.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2011

Crowd comes to ‘Party’

Genealogy Fair
CHESTER – The
Chester-Shade Historical
Associaton will hAve its
annual genealogy fair, Sept.
24 in the library on the top
floor of the Academy, 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. The fair is for
experienced and new
researchers. Help will be
available to beginners.
There is no charge.
Research materials available
include a large number of
Civil War references. Wi-Fi
is available. Food served.
For more information contact chestercourthouse
@windstream.net or see
www.chestercourthouse.com.

Lunches served
POMEROY – Again this
year Trinity Church, corner
of Second and Lynn Streets
in Pomeroy will be serving
lunch during the Sternwheel
Riverfest, Thursday, Friday,
and Saturday from 11 a.m.
until 2 p.m. Menu: chicken
and noodles, variety of
sandwiches, selection of
sides and desserts.

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

County music star Jake Owen, who has a number one song and
album on the charts, helped draw the largest crowd yet to
Racineʼs Party in the Park this weekend. (Beth Sergent/photo)

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE — The crowd definitely came to party at Racine’s
Third Annual Party in the Park.
On Saturday night, at least
for a few hours, Racine not only
became the biggest village in
Meigs County but likely qualified as the only city in Meigs
County.
When Jake Owen took the
stage for his free concert on
Saturday night, it appeared the
crowd had doubled in size from
last year. Owen arrived on-stage
in Racine barefoot with a number one single and album on the
country charts which likely
drew large numbers. The night
before Owen arrived in Racine,
he was the opening act for country music superstar Keith Urban
and the night of his Racine concert he played longer than
expected, giving the crowd a
nearly two-hour show. He also
hosted a meet-and-greet prior to
the concert for members of his
fan club and some local people.
Mayor Scott Hill, who is also
on the Party in the Park
Committee, said two additional

parking lots had been added for
this year’s concert and all were
packed. There were people lined
10 deep for carnival food and
rides producing two tons of
trash when it was all said and
done. Though trash isn’t exactly
a pretty thing to think about, it’s
an indicator as to a good time
being had by all.
Hill said though you can’t
please everyone, he felt the festival went well and would return
in 2012. The festival’s corporate
sponsor Gatling, Ohio LLC
helped pay for much of the
event as did the various business
sponsors. Hill said without them
all, the festival couldn’t happen
year after year.
Other results from Party in
the Park:
After the parade, in which
the Green Marching Band of
Franklin Furnace received first
place in the band unit category,
the Party in the Park Queen
Contest took place with Emily
Ash being crowned. Also,
Courtney Thomas was second
runner-up, Morgan McMillan

See Party, A3

POMEROY – “We are
here today to honor all
those men and women
who over the years have
answered the call to serve
their country.... doing it
with great valor and
courage,” said Lt. Col.
Brent Clark, Ret., speaker
at the third annual
Veterans AppreciationPOW/MIA Remembrance
Day held in downtown
Pomeroy Saturday.
He
followed
his
remarks by asking the veterans attending to stand Lt. Col. Brent Clark, Ret. gives triband be recognized for the ute to veterans at the third annual
“sacrifice and service they Veterans Appreciation-POW/MIA
have rendered to this great Remembrance Day.
country.” Naming each
war or conflict, from
World War 11 to Freedom
Operation in Afghanistan,
the veterans stood to rousing applause from the several hundred people gathered there to show their
appreciation. Among the
veterans honored were 11
men, several in wheelchairs, who reside at the
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center.
“Heroes answer the call
to duty, they put others Never forget the prisoners of war
first, they sometimes die was the message of this float.
trying to save others,”
said the speaker, making
months in active combat in
reference not only to wars Europe, He was injured in the
fought on foreign lands but to Battle of the Bulge and
the Sept. 11, 2001 attack on brought back to the States for
the twin towers. He spoke of treatment and discharged on
the “lasting legacy” left by Sept. 20. 1945.
warriors who give their all for
Other military groups in
their country. At the conclu- the parade were the Mason
sion of his comments, his Veterans of Foreign Wars who
wife, Lt. Col. Amanda Clark, later gave the POW empty
Ret., stood and sang “The chair presentation, Cabot
Army Hymn.”
Blessing Camp 126 of
A parade down Main Street Gallipolis, and units of the
led by the honor guard of National Guard including a
Drew Webster Post 39, float depicting the Tomb of
American Legion, and Grand the Unknown Soldier. The
Marshall Nathan Biggs, a Gallipolis Shriners were there
highly decorated World War II as were bands from Wahama,
veteran, opened the celebra- Eastern High School and
tion. Biggs enlisted in the Meigs High School, several
Army the day after Pearl antique cars, and numerous
Harbor was bombed, and
served three years and nine
See Veterans, A3

First responders remember 9/11
STAFF REPORT
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page A2
• Larry Roger Hoschar

WEATHER

Showing appreciation for veterans
Remembering MIA-POWs
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Art in the Park
MIDDLEPORT – The
deadline for entering art and
photography pieces in the
Art in the Park program to
be held on Sept. 24 at Diles
Park in Middleport has been
extended to Monday,
Sept. 19.
Categories are oil,
acrylic, watercolor, photography, and other. There will
be ribbons and cash awards
for best entries.
Entry forms or more
information is available
from Rhogene McClure,
992-3842, chairman.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Firefighters from around the area salute after the
chiefs from Pomeroy and Middleport Fire
Departments place a memorial wreath into the Ohio
River in remembrance of first responders who lost
their lives on 9/11. (Submitted photo)

POMEROY — Sunday
marked the tenth anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001
terrorist attacks and much
like that tragedy brought a
nation together, it also united the Bend Area this weekend.
On Sunday, first responders from Mason County,
W.Va. and Meigs County
united for the First 9/11-343
Memorial March - the 343 is

in remembrance of the 343
firefighters who lost their
lives on 9/11. There were 65
uniformed firefighters who
attended Sunday’s march
and Cpt. Matthew Shell of
the New Haven Volunteer
Fire Department said it
couldn’t have been possible
without the volunteers who
participated in the event
which he hopes will return
next year. Shell hopes to
ultimately have 343 first
responders participate in the
parade and feels this year’s

turn out shows that goal is
very attainable.
The march, which began
in New Haven, W.Va., traveled from the Bend Area
Community Center to the
New
Haven
United
Methodist Church, where a
brief ceremony took place,
including special singing
and the blessing of the
march. From there, the
march went to Mason,
W.Va. and re-grouped at the

See Responders, A3

Two jailed after alleged kidnapping, burglary
Victim arrested on separate charges
High: 86
Low: 61

STAFF REPORT

INDEX
1 SECTION — 8 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

A4-5
A6
A4
A7-8

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

GALLIPOLIS — Three
people are currently being
lodged in the Gallia
County Jail following a
reported kidnapping that
occurred Sunday afternoon.
According to a press
release issued by the
Gallia County Sheriff’s
Office, Corey R. Taylor,
20,
Bailey
Street,
Gallipolis, was chased
from his bed and captured
outside the backdoor of his
Kanauga-area home on

Sunday by suspects, Brittany
S. Mullins, 21,
and David N.
Maynard, 28,
both
of
Gallipolis Ferry,
Brittany S.
David N.
Corey R.
W.Va.
Maynard
Taylor
The
two Mullins
allegedly kicked
in the front door
allegedly
threatened
of Taylor’s home, captured Taylor with bodily harm
him and forced him into a unless he was able to prowaiting vehicle, then vide them with money
drove him to their Mason that he reportedly owed
County apartment.
them.
Once at the apartment,
After
Taylor
had
Mullins and Maynard arranged for his grandpar-

ents to bring the money,
he was released to them at
a parking lot on W.Va.
Route 2 South in Mason
County.
Deputies were able to
take
Mullins
and
Maynard into custody
without incident. They
are being charged with
kidnapping and burglary.
Taylor was also taken into
custody on pending warrants from the Gallipolis
Municipal Court for theft
and driving under suspension.
Detectives believe that

the incident is drugrelated and are continuing their investigation.
Gallia County Sheriff’s
Deputies have been in
contact with and received
assistance from the
Mason
County
Detachment of the West
Virginia State Police concerning the matter.
Gallia County Sheriff
Joe Browning stated that
the investigation is ongoing and his office is consulting with prosecutors
to ensure that proper
charges are filed.

�Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Obituaries
Larry Roger Hoschar
Larry Roger Hoschar
“Pops,” 69, of Pomeroy
died Monday morning
Sept. 12, 2011 at home
surrounded by his loving
family.
Born on Oct. 27, 1942
in Gallipolis, he was the
son of the late Leonard
Hoschar and Rea Roush.
Larry is survived by his
loving
wife
Wilma
Hoschar of 47 years; sons,
Sherman (Terri) Hoschar
of Pomeroy; Todd (Betty)
Hoschar of Syracuse; Dennis “D.J.” (Darlene)
Hoschar of Rutland, six grandchildren; a sister,
Sharon Koziar of Texas, and a brother, Hugh B.
Roush of Pomeroy.
He is preceded in death by his parents and a brother, Charles “Chuck” Hoschar of Florida.
Larry was a U. S. Army veteran, an E-5 Sergeant.
He was also a steel worker at Foote Mineral for nearly 40 years.
He enjoyed being with his family and hunting with
his sons.
There will be no funeral service. A private family
service will be held.
In lieu of flowers, expressions of sympathy may be
sent to the family by sending cards to Wilma Hoschar
at 181 W. Locust St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
He will be sadly missed by all.

Deaths
Ron R. Reuter
POMEROY — An Open House / Afternoon
Remembrance will be held in honor of the late Ron R.
Reuter who recently passed away. The open house is
from 2-4 p.m., Sunday, Sept. 18 at the Mulberry
Community Center.

State Briefs
Kasich to honor fallen Ohio firefighters
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The governor will
help honor Ohio firefighters killed in the line of
duty one day after the nation remembered first
responders who died in the 9/11 terror attacks a
decade ago.
His office says Gov. John Kasich will be part of a
wreath-laying for fallen Ohio firefighters Monday
morning in the courtyard at the state fire marshal's
office in suburban Columbus.
The fire marshal's office says five Ohio firefighters were killed on the job over the last year. They'll
be celebrated later on Monday in a ceremony that
also will honor this year's civilian and firefighter
recipients of awards given for brave acts that saved
lives.

Ohio zoo's polar bear transferred to Ky.
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — A young male polar bear
born at an Ohio zoo has headed south to Kentucky,
where it's hoped he'll hit it off with a female.
Siku last week left the Toledo Zoo, the only home
he has known since his birth in December 2009.
The Blade newspaper reports he was sent to the
Louisville Zoo to be introduced to Qannik, the
young female. Officials would like them to become
a breeding pair once they're old enough.
Toledo Zoo officials say Siku's move to
Louisville is part of a species survival program set
up by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums.

Union cancels Red Cross
strike in Ohio, Michigan
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — A union called off plans
for a weekend strike against the American Red
Cross in parts of Ohio and Michigan and will sit
down for new talks with the organization.
Saturday's strike threat led the Western Lake Erie
Region of the Red Cross to cancel blood drives during the weekend of the 9/11 anniversary. Officials
said that meant people couldn't donate blood in
memory of victims of the terror attacks.
WUPW-TV of Toledo reports officials with
United Food and Commercial Workers Local 75
said its members stayed on the job because of the
negotiations scheduled to begin Sept. 29. The union
says the two planned days of talks are a positive
step.
Union leaders say the major issue in the labor
dispute involves health insurance costs.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Moving on from 9/11? Not Meigs County Forecast
all Americans are ready
8 mph. Chance of precipTuesday: Patchy fog
NEW YORK, NY (AP) — The momentous anniversary has come and gone, and the nation will move forward, as always. Yet to many Americans, the concept
of "moving on" from Sept. 11 doesn't make sense.
"This is going to be part of our consciousness, part
of our soul, part of our history forever," said Jeff
Parness, a New York venture capitalist who lost one of
his closest friends in the attacks 10 years ago. "I don't
think it's anybody's place to tell somebody else you've
got to get over it."
Preceded by months of buildup, Sunday's 10th
anniversary commemorations produced a remarkable
nationwide sharing of sadness and determination —
an occasion calling for solidarity at a time of wrenching political divisions.
Now it's back to work, back to politicking and campaigning, back to worrying if and when the economy
will right itself. Even New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg, whose entire decade in office has been
intertwined with 9/11, depicted the anniversary as "a
time to rededicate ourselves to look forward."
Across the Hudson River, at a service on the site
where injured World Trade Center evacuees were
treated in 2001, Jersey City Mayor Jerramiah Healy
sounded a similar note.
"It's important to remember and reflect," Healy
said. "It's equally important to press on, to move on,
to take care of today and tomorrow, but not to fixate
on yesterday."
However, Parness said the appropriate way to
approach the future would be look back thoughtfully
— and remember the positive responses that emerged
in the immediate aftermath of the attacks.
"People ask me personally how I deal with 9/11,
and I tell them, 'I don't.' I choose to think about 9/12,"
Parness said.
"I choose to think about what it was like as a New
Yorker, for people in small towns all around the
United States, people around the world, go out of their
ways to be with us in our time of need. I choose to
think about that spirit of kindness and humanity and
volunteerism."
Like many Americans, Parness was trying to rekindle that spirit over the weekend as he and other New
York-based volunteers brought a tattered American
flag recovered at Ground Zero to the tornado-stricken
city of Joplin, Mo. Hundreds of tornado survivors
waited patiently in line for a chance to sew a stitch
into the flag.
Altruism also was on Pam Harcarik's mind as she
wiped away tears in Hilliard, Ohio, while recounting
her 9/11 experience and her approach to moving forward.
Harcarik, who works for the Ohio Emergency
Management Agency, was called to New York City to
help oversee goods donated to the city after the
attacks.
"One of the stupid things that gets to me is right
around this time of year, the sky gets that blue, blue
color that you saw in all the pictures.... I just hate this
time of year," she said.
Ten years on, she's starting to feel better.
"I think you can try to get past it by trying to focus
on all of the good things that came out of it — the
camaraderie that we had, the people that you met that
were incredible examples of humanity."
The Rev. Michael Kinnamon, New York-based general secretary of the National Council of Churches,
said he could understand the emotions of Americans
who are wearying of 9/11 events.
"But as I looked at the commemorations, it was
quite clear they were moving to those who had lost a
loved one, or had been personally touched," he said
Monday. "It's difficult to make a judgment about this
issue at a distance, because people have been affected
so differently."
Moving forward, he said, America should reflect on
lessons that it should have learned from 9/11 and do a
better job of protecting civil liberties and reaching out
to the Muslim community.
"I would hope we'll move on and recover those key
values," he said.
Michael McDonough, an architect whose 9/11
memorial was dedicated Sunday in Bennington, Vt.,
said Americans shouldn't be in a hurry to consign
Sept. 11 to the history books.
"In many respects, we're still paying the price for
that awful day," he said. "Those of us who lived at the
time of 9/11 have a responsibility to see to it that
younger generations don't forget, in the same way that
we have remembered the significance of Pearl
Harbor."
Among those attending the dedication was Don
Goodrich, 68, a Bennington lawyer whose son, Peter,
was killed aboard one of the planes hijacked on 9/11.
"Will Sept. 11 be remembered? Of course it will —
it's a seminal event in our nation's history," Goodrich
said. "But life changes. People move on."
Inevitably, the pervasive media coverage of the
anniversary made the events of 10 years ago all the
more vivid in America's collective memory.
"It's been 10 years, but sometimes, it's like yesterday," said Steubenville, Ohio, policeman Eric Hart,
who helped his Catholic church organize a Mass to
honor 9/11 victims.

before 9 a.m. Otherwise,
sunny, with a high near
86. Calm wind becoming
west between 10 and 13
mph.
Tuesday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
61. Southwest wind
around 6 mph becoming
calm.
Wednesday: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms, mainly between
8 a.m. and 1 p.m. Mostly
cloudy, with a high near
77. Calm wind becoming
northwest between 5 and

itation is 30 percent.
New rainfall amounts of
less than a tenth of an
inch, except higher
amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Wednesday Night: A
slight chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 54. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Thursday: Mostly
cloudy, with a high near
66.
Thursday Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 47.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 37.12
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 43.54
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 47.47
Big Lots (NYSE) — 31.59
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 28.84
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 66.10
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.87
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.38
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) —2.43
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 28.34
Collins (NYSE) — 47.74
DuPont (NYSE) — 44.28
US Bank (NYSE) — 22.35
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 15.01
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 34.86
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 32.42
Kroger (NYSE) — 21.82
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 37.13
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 64.76
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 17.50

BBT (NYSE) — 21.33
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 9.64
Pepsico (NYSE) — 60.14
Premier (NASDAQ) — 5.80
Rockwell (NYSE) — 57.17
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.05
Royal Dutch Shell — 63.82
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 54.24
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 51.82
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.89
WesBanco (NYSE) — 18.07
Worthington (NYSE) — 14.16
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
September 12, 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.

For the Record
Probate Court
POMEROY — Marriage licenses were issued to:
• Crockett Phillip Roush, 34, Brandy Jo Stevens,
30, Middleport.
• Jeffrey Allan Duley, Jr., 20, Kara Nichole Myers,
21, Portland.
• Stephen Richard Abdella, 48, Jane Ann English,
45, Pomeroy.
• Gary Neil Curtis, 42, Christina Lynn Ritchie, 39,
Reedsville.

Common Pleas
Civil
• Foreclosure granted US Bank, N.A., against
Chenoa A. Harris and others.
• Civil judgment granted Ohio Valley Bank against
Debra R. Cochran.
• Action for foreclosure filed by Citimortgage,
Inc., against Robert S. Stanley, and others.
Domestic
• Action for dissolution of marriage filed by Staci
M., Bryan H. Morris.

Bank of America will eliminate 30,000 jobs
NEW YORK (AP) — Bank of America is slashing
30,000 jobs as part of an effort to reverse a crisis of
confidence among investors. It's the largest single job
reduction by a U.S. company this year.
What CEO Brian Moynihan is trying to do is nothing less than save the nation's largest bank. Investors
have cut the bank's market value by half this year. The
bank is facing huge liabilities over soured mortgage
investments and concerns over whether it has enough
capital to withstand more financial shocks.
The cuts, which affect Bank of America's consumer
businesses, represent 10 percent of the Charlotte,
N.C. bank's work force. The bank said it hopes the
cuts and other measures will result in $5 billion in
annual savings by 2014. The bank has already cut
6,000 jobs this year. The bank also said it would look
for cost savings at its other businesses in a six-month
review that will begin next month.
Moynihan has struggled to calm investors ever
since he took the top job in January 2010. He is
reversing the empire-building strategy of his predecessor, Ken Lewis, who stepped down amid controversy over the purchase of Merrill Lynch during the
financial crisis. Lewis also engineered the ill-fated
acquisition of Countrywide Financial Corp., then the
country's largest mortgage lender, which has led to
heavy financial losses, lawsuits and regulatory
probes.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday, Sept. 13
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer Board, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., TPRSD
office.
POMEROY – Salisbury
Township Trustee meeting, 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Manning Roush.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Board of Election,
regular meeting, 8:30
a.m., office.

Community
meetings
Tuesday, Sept. 13
SYRACUSE —
Syracuse Community
Center Board of

Directors, regular meeting, 7 p.m.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Genealogical
Society meets at 5 p.m.
Tuesday at the county
museum.
Thursday, Sept. 15
POMEROY — Meigs
County American Cancer
Society Advisory
Board/Survivorship
Taskforce meeting, noon,
Mulberry Community
Center, new members
welcome, call 992-6626,
ext. 24 for more information.
POMEROY – The Grief
Support Group of the
Meigs Cooperative
Parish will meet at 7 p.m.
at the Mulberry
Community Center. For
more information call

992-5836.
Saturday, Sept. 17
POMEROY — Reunion
of Veterans Memorial
Hospital employees, 1-4
p.m., Mulberry
Community Center. Bring
photos, etc., and nonperishable food item for
Cooperative Parish food
pantry. Potluck meal with
drinks provided.

Reunion, noon, Star Mill
Park, bring a friend and
covered dish.

Reunions

Thursday, Sept. 15
MIDDLEPORT — Free
community dinner, 4:30-6
p.m., Dave Diles Park,
sponsored by Heath UM
Church, menu of pulled
pork, cole slaw, veggies,
desserts, drinks.
Sunday, Sept. 18
TUPPERS PLAINS —
St. Paul United Methodist
Women, Sunday service,

Saturday, Sept. 10
CHESHIRE – Samuel
Allan Eblin family
reunion, 2 to 6 p.m. at
the Cheshire Park. Main
course provided, take
side or dessert, and gift
for auction.
Saturday, Sept. 17
RACINE — Powell

CHESTER – Eastern
High School class of
1976, 35th reunion, 6
p.m. at 39035 Sumner
Road. Meat and sandwiches provided.

Church Events

10:15 a.m., guest speaker
Barbara Cozzens, music
by Tonya Kelley.
RACINE –
Homecoming will be held
at the Mt. Moriah Church
of God, Mile Hill Road,
Racine. Dinner at noon,
special singing beginning
at 1 p.m. Rev. Herman
Stewart, pastor.

Birthdays
Tuesday, Sept. 20
HEATH, OHIO – Jake
Gaul, formerly of Meigs
County, will observe his
90th birthday on Sept.
20. Cards may be sent
to him at 716 Windsor
Lane, Heath, Ohio,
43056.

“A Place to
Call Home”
Foster Parents Needed In Your County!!!
$25 - $45 a day for the care of a child in your
home. Can be single, married or “empty nest.”
Call Oasis to help a child ﬁnd a place to call home.
Training in progress.
Come join us.
Call 1-877-325-1558 for more information or to
register for training.
60239164

�Tuesday, September 13, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Veterans
From Page A1

Honor Guard of Post 39, American Legion, gives a gun salute
to conclude the Remembrance Day observance.

(Charlene Hoeflich photos)

A wagonload of veterans move down the Main Street
parade route.

Masonʼs Stewart Johnson VFW 9926 in tribute
to prisoners of war, performs the empty chair
ceremony.

fire trucks from across the Bend area.
Pomeroy native Lt. Col. Jennifer Menchini-Kirby,
commander of the 142nd Acromedical
Evacuation’s Squadron, Delaware Air National
Guard and flight nurses, Lt. Col. Kay Nardoine
and Sandy Mulroony who work in the evacuation of injured military personnel, returned this
year for the Remembrance Day program. Again

this year there was the flyover of a military
plane with a release of red, white and blue balloons.
A wreath was laid on the Ohio River by Post
39 members in remembrance of servicemen lost
at sea, followed by 21-gun salute to veterans
and taps to conclude the third annual Veterans
Appreciation-POW/MIA Remembrance Day.

Emily Ash, (front row, far right), was crowned Party in
the Park Queen. Beside Ash is Morgan McMillan, Miss
Congenialty and in the back row (from left) are Courtney
Thomas, first runner-up and Ceairra Curran and
Katelyn Hill, members of the court. (Beth Sergent/photo)

Members of the Southern Marching Band perform for
the crowd at Party in the Park. (Beth Sergent/photo)

Party
From Page A1
was named Miss Congeniality and Ceairra Curran and
Katelyn Hill rounded out the rest of this year’s court. Ash
received a $400 college scholarship from the RacineSouthern Class of 1975 and gift baskets from various
businesses.
Another major event within the festival was the
Seventh Annual Cruisin’ Saturday Night Car Show with
90 registered cars which raised at least $5,000 in funds
for scholarships to be awarded to students in the Southern
High School Class of 2012. Organizers feel the total for
this year’s collection will raise once the final count is
recorded and not counting the last six years, the car show
has raised $18,600 in funds used for scholarships.
A more complete listing of car show and 5k run/walk
winners will appear in an upcoming edition of The Daily
Sentinel as results become available. Additional parade
results, antique tractor pull results and kiddie tractor pull
results, along with photos if available, should be emailed
to bsergent@mydailysentinel.com

Adam Phillips (far right), former Southern High School
graduate and now band director of Green High School,
accepted his bandʼs first place trophy for the Party in the
Park Parade. (Beth Sergent/photo)

The Party in the Park 5k Walk / Run gets underway at
Star Mill Park. (Janet Krider/photo)

Visitors to Party in the Park take a spin on the bumper
cars. This yearʼs festival had more rides for kids of all
ages. (Beth Sergent/photo)

The amusement rides got plenty of use this weekend
at Party in the Park with this one lighting up the night
sky. (Charlie Mankin/photo)

The Seventh Annual Cruisinʼ Saturday Night Car
Show had 90 entries and raised at least $5,000 in
scholarship funds for Southern High School seniors.
(Beth Sergent/photo)

Thousands of people showed up to hear Jake Owen
at Racineʼs Third Annual Party in the Park at Star Mill
Park. (Charlie Mankin/photo)

Responders
From Page A1
Faith Baptist Church, followed by stopping at
Wahama High School, crossing the Bridge of Honor
into Pomeroy and to the Meigs High School football
field. After the football field, the march ended at the
Pomeroy river front.
Once at the river front, there was a wreath placed
in the river in remembrance of everyone who lost their
lives in the Sept. 11 tragedy. This march to the riverbank was led by chiefs of the Pomeroy and
Middleport Fire Departments with firefighters from
various departments following and saluting.
“The purpose of this is to honor and remember the
lives of 2,996 victims of the attack on America that
took place Sept. 11, 2001,” Shell told The Point
Pleasant Register.
For a look at photos from ceremonies from the
West Virginia side of the Ohio River, go to
www.mydailyregister.com

This American Flag
waves between the
PVFDʼs Ladder Two
and MVFDʼs Ladder
16 during the First
9/11-343 Memorial
March held on
Sunday in the Bend
Area.
(Submitted photo)

Visit us
online at

Pleasant Valley Hospital - Express Care Suite 116
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675-4340 www.pvalley.org

mydailysentinel.com

Your online source for news

Pomeroy Fire Chief Rick Blaettnar and Middleport
Fire Chief Larry Byer place a memorial wreath into the
Ohio River at Pomeroy. (Submitted photo)

�Tuesday, September 13, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A4

www.mydailysentinel.com

OVCS top Teays Valley Christian, 4-1
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Ohio Valley Christian soccer team
stayed unbeaten this fall season
following a 4-1 victory over Teays
Valley Christian on Friday in a
non-conference matchup in Gallia
County.
The host Defenders (4-0-1) outshot TVC by a 16-8 margin and
never trailed in the contest, but
needed three second-half goals to

break a 1-all tie at the intermission.
Paul Miller gave the hosts an
early 1-0 lead after netting a pass
from Josh Blevins. Miller’s shot
came from 18-feet out in a 22nd
minute.
The visiting Lions, however,
countered with a goal late in the
first half — Sam Montebell headed
in a pass from Chris Bailey to knot
the score up one.
Richard Bowman netted the
eventual game-winner in the 44th
minute after scoring on a pass from

Keeping Meigs County
informed
The Daily Sentinel

Keller Grizzard, giving OVCS a 21 advantage. Bowman scored again
in the 51st minute after netting a
pass from T.G. Miller for a 3-1
edge.
Chance Burleson wrapped up the
scoring with an unassisted goal in
the 58th minute, giving the
Defenders a 4-1 triumph.
Pete Carman made seven saves
in net for the hosts, while Josh
Kiser stopped 12 shots for Teays
Valley Christian. OVCS also had a
7-4 edge in corner kicks.

Subscribe today • 740-992-2156

Defenders sweep Blue Devils, 3-0
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

SAINT MARY’S, W.Va. — The
Ohio Valley Christian soccer team
picked up fifth straight win of the
2011 season Saturday following a
3-0 victory over host St. Mary’s in
a non-conference matchup in
Pleasants County.
The visiting Defenders (5-0-1)
led 1-0 at the half, then tacked on
two insurance goals after the inter-

mission to claim a season sweep of
the Blue Devils. OVCS also beat
St. Mary’s by a 5-3 count back on
August 25 in the home opener at
Gallipolis.
Chance Burleson had the lone
first half goal, but not by his own
doing. Burleson hit a crossing pass
that bounced off of Rachel Miller
for an own goal in the 30th minute.
The score remained that way
until the 70th minute, as Richard
Bowman headed in a pass from

T.G. Miller for a 2-0 edge. Miller
went unassisted for the final goal
of the night with 30 seconds
remaining in regulation.
The Defenders outshot the hosts
by an 18-5 margin overall, including a 9-5 edge on goal. OVCS also
had a 5-2 advantage in corner
kicks.
Pete Carman made five saves for
his third shutout of the season,
while Cory Wilthem made six
saves in net for the Blue Devils.

Notices
Legals
��"����"�����" ��"� !

Lady Knights soccer blanks Scott, 6-0
REGISTER STAFF
MDRSPORTS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

MADISON, W.Va. — The Point
Pleasant girls soccer team made
history Tuesday during a 6-0 victory over host Scott in a Cardinal
Conference matchup in Boone
County.
The Lady Knights (2-3-0)
became the first team to ever win a

girls soccer match at the new facility at Scott High School, and they
did so in a very impressive fashion
— as four different players reached
the scoring column.
Ashtyn Wedge had the first two
goals for an early 2-0 PPHS lead.
Wedge scored at the 18- and 25minute marks, and the first goal
was assisted by Harlee Ziegler.
Sydney Raike added the third

and fourth scores of the night, and
both goals were again assisted by
Ziegler. Cassie Jordan and Allison
Smith tacked on the final scores of
the evening, and assists respectively went to Raike and Kaly
Kinnaird.
Point Pleasant returns to action
Tuesday when it hosts Poca in a
Cardinal Conference contest at
6:30 p.m.

Bengals relish breakthrough win
Cincinnati remains unsure on Dalton
CINCINNATI (AP) —
A quick-snap touchdown
has the long-suffering
Cincinnati Bengals thinking that their karma has
finally changed.
The Bengals caught the
Browns in a brain-lock
moment Sunday, allowing A.J. Green's 41-yard
touchdown pass in the
fourth quarter of a 27-17
win. It's the kind of
breakdown that's been
more typical of the
Bengals during their 20
years of futility.
A change, perhaps?
"That's something we
didn't do last year,"
defensive tackle Domata
Peko said. "Last year in
the fourth quarter, we fell
apart."
The Bengals (1-0) won
only four games last season, repeatedly blowing
chances at the end with
mind-boggling moments.
One of the worst came
when the Saints induced
them into an offside
penalty by pretending
they were going to snap
the ball — a gambit the
Saints call "No-Brainer
Freeze."
This time, the Browns
(0-1) had the brain

freeze, failing to leave the
huddle while the Bengals
lined up and snapped the
ball for a go-ahead touchdown. And the Bengals
had a rare, happy beginning.
Even coach Marvin
Lewis, who usually is
reluctant to read anything
into one win, recognized
the importance of winning the opener the way
they did — with a backup
quarterback throwing to a
rookie receiver while the
Browns hesitated.
"It was a great lesson
for them to learn and to
see something they can
believe in and really hang
their hat on," Lewis said
on Monday.
The most positive sign
was how rookie quarterback Andy Dalton handled his debut on the
road. The second-round
draft pick completed 10
of 15 passes for 81 yards
with a touchdown and no
interceptions,
leading
Cincinnati to 13 points
before getting hurt.
Dalton took a helmet to
his lower right forearm
near the end of the first
half and didn't return
because he had trouble

gripping the ball. Bruce
Gradkowski finished the
game.
Dalton was scheduled
to see a specialist on
Monday. The Bengals are
hopeful that he can start
next Sunday in Denver,
where Cincinnati hasn't
won since 1975, dropping eight in a row.
Dalton declined to talk to
the media on Monday.
Left tackle Andrew
Whitworth had a protective boot on his left foot
following the game in
Cleveland, but walked
without it a day later.
Lewis declined to provide updates on players'
conditions, except to say
everyone was better on
Monday.
Heading into the season, there was speculation that the Bengals
could be one of the NFL's
worst teams because it's
starting a rookie quarterback and a rookie receiver. The victory in
Cleveland showed they're
not even the worst team
in their own state.
Second-year defensive
end
Carlos
Dunlap
understands why fans are
still reluctant to give

them much credit.
"Maybe because we're
young and they don't feel
we have that experience,"
Dunlap said on Monday.
"I'd say we have experience together."
Asked about the low
expectations for his team,
Lewis strayed from his
normal practice of keeping answers short and
went on for more than
300 words to answer that
one question alone.
"I don't know why we
have so many naysayers,"
Lewis said.
He
noted
that
Cleveland fans seemed
upbeat about their fivewin team before the season opener on Sunday, in
contrast to fans in
Cincinnati. The Bengals
have only two winning
records in the past 20
years.
"It's like the opposite,"
Lewis said. "I thought we
were about to play the '68
Packers. It's an unbelievable difference, the attitude and the thing — aura
— the way it was there in
Cleveland
prior
to
Sunday compared to, for
whatever reason, ours is
here.
"But we can't worry
about and dwell upon
that."

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Ravens breeze past Steelers 35-7
BALTIMORE (AP) —
The Baltimore Ravens
vented eight months of
frustration within the span
of three incredibly satisfying hours.
Joe Flacco threw three
touchdown passes, Haloti
Ngata led an inspired
defense that forced a
team-record
seven
turnovers, and the Ravens
defeated the defending
AFC champion Pittsburgh
Steelers 35-7 Sunday.
Ray Rice ran for 107
yards and two scores for
the Ravens, who bolted to
a 14-0 lead in the first
quarter and never let up
against their bitter rivals. It
was a rematch of a second-round
playoff
matchup last January,
when the Steelers rallied
to beat Baltimore 31-24.
In that game, the Ravens
let a 21-7 halftime lead
evaporate with three
turnovers in the third quarter. This time, the Ravens
got three takeaways in the
third quarter to turn a 21-7
advantage into a rout.
Ngata was the driving
force, causing a fumble

and deflecting a pass that
produced an interception.
Ed Reed also picked off
two passes for the Ravens,
who mercilessly harassed
nemesis
Ben
Roethlisberger.
Roethlisberger had won
seven straight starts
against the Ravens, but in
this one he was 22 for 41
for 280 yards and three
interceptions.
The
loss
ended
Pittsburgh’s eight-game
winning streak in season
openers. The Steelers
committed six turnovers
after halftime in their most
lopsided loss to Baltimore
since the series began.
Flacco went 17 for 29
without an interception,
getting the best of
Roethlisberger and giving
the Ravens an early advantage over their AFC North
foes.
In the past 51 games,
only twice has Pittsburgh
allowed a runner to reach
100 yards. Rice did it both
times.
Rice had more yards at
halftime on rushes (89)
and catches (38) than

Pittsburgh did on its 26
offensive plays (113).
The Steelers won the
coin toss and deferred to
the second half, giving the
Ravens the chance to get
the ball first. Baltimore
made the most of the
opportunity — and didn’t
take much time doing so.
Rice ran for 36 yards on
the first play, then carried
for 3 yards to the 27 before
Flacco lofted a touchdown
pass to Anquan Boldin,
who
beat
Bryant
McFadden down the left
sideline.
Baltimore turned a
turnover into a touchdown
to make it 14-0 late in the
first
quarter.
Roethlisberger fumbled
when sacked by Terrell
Suggs and Ngata recovered the ball at the
Pittsburgh 37.
Flacco’s 29-yard completion to tight end Dennis
Pitta set up a 1-yard touchdown run by Rice.
The Steelers then got
their first score of the 2011
season, an 11-yard touchdown
pass
from
Roethlisberger
to

Emmanuel Sanders that
capped a 68-yard drive.
Baltimore went up 21-7
with an 84-yard march in
which Flacco converted
three third-and-6 situations. After completing
first down passes of 14
and 25 yards, he threw an
11-yard touchdown pass
to Rice on third down.
In the third quarter,
Ngata forced a fumble on
the first play from scrimmage by driving into
Rashard
Mendenhall
immediately after the running back took a handoff.
Ngata recovered the loose
ball, and Flacco threw an
18-yard pass to Ed
Dickson on the next play.
To add insult, Baltimore
added a 2-point conversion when holder Sam
Koch ran the ball in on a
fake kick.
After the kickoff, Ngata
tipped a Roethlisberger
pass and teammate Ray
Lewis made the interception. But the Ravens were
stopped on a fourth-and-1.
An interception by Reed
led to a field goal by Billy
Cundiff for a 32-7 lead.

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General Remodeling

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60231179

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

The family of Kevin Lee Gibbs
would like to thank all those who called,
sent a card, said a kind word or helped us
in anyway during the loss of our son,
brother, uncle &amp; husband.

SPEECH PATHOLOGIST
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently accepting
resumes for a full-time Speech Pathologist. A
master’s degree from an approved college or
school of speech language pathology. Current
WV license. Current BCLS (CPR) certification.
Submit resumes to Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Resources, 2520 Valley Dr., Pt.
Pleasant, WV 25550, or fax to (304) 675-6975
or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.

Amish Roofers &amp; Builders

Tuesday’s TV Listings

AA/EOE

�Tuesday, September 13, 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 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 Tuesday,
Sept. 13, 2011:
The unexpected occurs throughout the year, and you will be adjusting often. In your case, these events
often occur with risk-taking, a partnership and others’ funds. You could
win at bingo or get a surprise inheritance. You also might want to look
at what motivates you. If you are single, do your very best not to choose
someone who might not be on the
up and up. Take your time getting to
know a potential sweetie and deciding if you want to commit. If you are
attached, you need to defer to your
significant other more often. ARIES
helps you make money.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 30-April 19)
+++ You might act in a quirky
manner. You wonder which way to
go and for what reason. Listen to
what is being shared by a boss or
parent. He or she is not always this
open. Don’t stress out over a misunderstanding. Tonight: All smiles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++ Know what is going on
behind the scenes. You know much
more of what is going on than you
realize. You think there is a problem
with getting your message understood. Don’t be surprised by a misunderstanding. Tonight: Play it low-key.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
++++ You might want to zero
in on what is going on with a key
partner. A meeting could reveal a lot
more than you realize. Recognize
what is happening with this person.
Though you sometimes don’t like
what you are seeing, honor this person’s process. Tonight: Follow the
gang.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
++++ Recognize that it might be
necessary to take the lead in order
to continue on your present path.
Be careful with a partner who has a
strong sense of entitlement. He or
she could become quite manipulative. Tonight: Until the wee hours.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
++++ You will be challenged
to look at the big picture. The unexpected happens out of the blue.
Once more, you need to understand
what motivates someone. There
could be a control issue going on.
Understand what is going on behind
the scenes. Tonight: Where there is

music.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
+++++ You need to get to the
bottom of an issue with an associate. This person could act like a wild
horse rearing as you try to find solutions. You might not be comfortable
with everything that you are hearing.
Tonight: With a favorite person.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
++++ Defer to others, especially if you cannot handle what
they say they want. A personal or
domestic matter starts building with
importance once more. Others are
acting strange and quirky. You aren’t
going to change them. Tonight: The
only answer is “yes.”
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
+++ Do what you must, but
don’t feel as if you have to push
someone into following through.
Communication could be stilted and
involve a power play. Be open to
revising your schedule. The unexpected actually opens up a new possibility. Tonight: Off to the gym.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
+++++ Your natural knee-jerk
reaction right now draws admirers,
but that is no guarantee it always
will. The innate nature of a new
friendship or tie could be based on
perpetual surprises and changes.
The excitement will become the
glue. Tonight: Infuse your life with
more fun.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
++++ Get down to basics concerning a real-estate matter. You
might need to check in with family.
They could be uneasy with what is
going on. In response, you could
become very controlling. Relax with
the situation. Tonight: Mosey on
home.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
+++++ Listen to news with an
open mind. Stay direct, and express
your ideas. The unexpected occurs,
forcing you to regroup. Your ability
to adapt emerges once you get past
being a bit stubborn. Tonight: On top
of your game.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
+++ Be aware of what is going
on with your finances. Risk-taking
could backfire, so be cautious, or
wait until you are sure of yourself. A
friend could be pushing your limits.
You need to say “enough.” Tonight:
Your treat.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the
Internet at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Tuesday, September 13, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

No. 15 Buckeyes hang
on to beat Toledo, 27-22
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
For 90 years, Ohio State has
stayed unbeaten against every instate opponent it’s played.
On Saturday at Ohio Stadium,
the streak nearly snapped.
John Simon pressured backup
Toledo quarterback Terrance
Owens, forcing an incompletion
on fourth down with 48 seconds
left, to preserve No. 15 Ohio
State’s 27-22 victory over the
error-prone Rockets.
The Rockets, striving to
become the first team from the
state to defeat the Buckeyes since
1921, weren’t disconsolate that
they lost so much as upset that
they had a hand in their own
undoing. They threw one interception, had 102 yards in penalties, missed a 45-yard field goal,
mishandled the hold on a 50-yard
field-goal attempt, gave up a special-teams touchdown and continually made mistakes that saved
Ohio State drives or shortened
their own.
“There’s no doubt,” starting
quarterback Austin Dantin said
when asked if the Rockets had let
the game slip away. “We had (14)
penalties, a missed field goal,
another missed opportunity on a
field goal, then had a punt
returned against us — things that
are just inexcusable.”
The Rockets (1-1) drove from
their own 28 and were 17 yards
away from ending Ohio State’s
43-0-1 run against in-state foes
since a 7-6 setback to Oberlin in
1921. But they couldn’t finish the
deal.
“We got some respect, but that
wasn’t what we were trying to
get,” said Toledo defensive end
Malcolm Riley.
The Rockets led 15-7 after a
quarter and were on top 22-21
before Carlos Hyde went 3 yards
for the winning points late in the
third quarter.
The Buckeyes (2-0) only had to
run out the clock on their last possession, but freshman Rod Smith
lost a fumble to give the Rockets
a final shot. But then Simon, who
went to the locker room earlier in
the game with leg cramps, turned
the tide.
“That was huge. We knew we
had to stop them or they were
going to win the game,” Simon
said of his late pressure. “It was a
big play for us. The secondary did
a great job covering and giving
me extra time to get back there.”
Several players made big plays
for the Buckeyes, who travel to
Florida to play Miami next week.
Chris Fields returned a punt 69
yards and Hyde ran for two scores
for the Buckeyes, still reeling
from NCAA suspensions which
held out seven top players.
“I think and I hope that this is
what’s going to make us better, all
the adversity,” interim head coach

Fred Squillante/Columbus Dispatch/MCT

Ohio State quarterback Joe Bauserman (14) gets pressured by Toledo defensive lineman
Malcolm Riley (97) during the second quarter at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio,
Saturday. OSU defeated Toledo, 27-22.

Luke Fickell said.
Down 21-15 at the half, the
Rockets took the second-half
kickoff and, five plays later, took
a one-point lead after Adonis
Thomas ran 4 yards on fourth and
1.
After a punt, the Rockets drove
to the Ohio State 33. But a fumbled snap ended any chance of a
50-yard field goal.
The Buckeyes promptly came
back. The key was a 36-yard pass
from Joe Bauserman to Devin
Smith, and Hyde capped the
march with the TD run. A failed
2-point conversion pass kept the
margin at five points.
Toledo punted away the ball on
its next three possessions. After
the third, the Buckeyes got the
ball with 5:45 left at their own 25.
A 31-yard completion from
Bauserman to Smith gave Ohio
State a first down at the Toledo
33.
But then Rod Smith fumbled
after a 5-yard gain and the
Rockets’ Johnathan Lamb fell on
the loose ball.
Suddenly, the game was in
doubt and Ohio State’s in-state
winning streak was in jeopardy.
“We knew the game was on the
line,” said Buckeyes defensive
back Tyler Moeller. “It was up to
the defense to win it. You’re
bummed he did fumble but you’re
excited the game’s in your
hands.”
Down 7-0, the Rockets scored
on consecutive possessions to
knock the Buckeyes back on their
heels.
First, Dantin, who was 14 of 26
for 155 yards and one score, hit
Eric Page for a 6-yard touchdown. Page then took a direct
snap in a spread set and passed to
Hank Keighley for the two-point

conversion. The scoring drive was
a short one, set up when Kishon
Wilcher blocked an Ohio State
punt and T.J. Fatinikun rumbled
23 yards to the Ohio State 1 with
it.
The touchdown marked the first
points Toledo had scored against
its big, downstate neighbors. The
Rockets had been steamrolled by
a combined 87-0 in two previous
losses in 1998 and 2009.
After forcing a Buckeyes punt,
the Rockets came right down and
did it again. This time Owens
tossed a 66-yard touchdown pass
to Page, who had beaten Ohio
State’s C.J. Barnett deep.
The Buckeyes rebounded.
They’d scored the first time they
touched the ball on offense, with
Bauserman, who was 16 of 30 for
189 yards in a surprising solo performance (co-starter Braxton
Miller never left the sideline), hitting his favorite target, tight end
Jake Stoneburner, on a 26-yard
scoring strike.
Hyde burst through a hole off
left tackle and angled to the sideline on a 36-yard touchdown run.
Toledo then committed a critical mistake.
Vince Penza’s punt rolled dead
at the Ohio State 17 with a minute
left in the half, but the Rockets
were offside on the kick. The ball
was brought back and Penza
kicked again — this time a line
drive directly to a waiting Fields
who was nearly tripped but
regained his footing and raced to
the end zone.
The game still would come
down to one play.
“That’s what we intended to do:
In the fourth quarter, to be there,
to give yourself a chance to win
it,” Toledo coach Tim Beckman
said. “We fell (17) yards short.”

No. 19 WVU beats Norfolk St 55-12
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
— Coach Dana Holgorsen experienced his first halftime deficit at
West Virginia and got a taste of the
home crowd’s boos.
He also saw one heck of a second-half outburst from the
Mountaineers.
Geno Smith threw for 371 yards
and four scores and No. 19 West
Virginia overcame a rough start to
beat Norfolk State 55-12 on
Saturday.
The Mountaineers (2-0) piled up
533 total yards and scored on their
first seven possessions of the second half to erase a 12-10 halftime
deficit against an FCS opponent.
“Obviously, I’m not really
pleased with the first half, but I
was pleased with the second half,”
Holgorsen said. “We’re a young
football team and inexperienced. I
don’t know if we’re trying too hard
or if it was a coaching error. Either
way I’m proud of the way we came
out in the second half.”
Asked to divulge Holgorsen’s
halftime speech, Smith said, “I
think he’s a laid-back guy to the
media, but us, we kind of see
Jekyll and Hyde. He was kind of
irate, but he stayed positive and
that’s what a great leader does.”
This game may be remembered
for the early scare the Spartans put
into West Virginia, which had a
short week to prepare after beating
cross-state foe Marshall in a lightning-shortened opener last Sunday.
Holgorsen declared he was
pleased with no player’s performance heading into tougher tests at
Maryland next Saturday and at
home Sept. 24 against No. 2 LSU.
“We are going to keep them
accountable for what they do
wrong,” Holgorsen said.
West Virginia got little run pro-

duction for the second straight
game. Four different running backs
got carries, with Vernard Roberts
leading the way with 64 yards on
17 carries.
Smith held the ball too long at
times and even got sacked once by
Norfolk State’s three-man rush.
West Virginia didn’t get its initial
first down until there were 2 minutes gone in the second quarter.
The Mountaineers couldn’t get
into the end zone on three trips
inside the Norfolk State 20 in the
first half. Fans booed after West
Virginia took six plays on firstand-goal from the 1 without
punching it in and settled for a
short field goal.
Things finally started clicking
for the Mountaineers when they
made five first downs on an 81yard drive that ended with Smith’s
18-yard scoring toss to Devon
Brown midway through the second
quarter.
But Corey Smith shanked a 15yard punt to give Norfolk State the
ball at the West Virginia 37 with 29
seconds left. A roughing the passer
call on Bruce Irvin put the
Spartans in field-goal range and
Ryan Estep’s 40-yarder put
Norfolk State ahead at halftime.
It was the Spartans’ fourth field
goal of the half. Everett Goldberg
hit from 50 yards in the first quarter and Estep also had a pair of 39yarders.
Norfolk State’s offense exposed
some weaknesses in West
Virginia’s secondary and the
Mountaineers were outgained 242143 by halftime.
Spartans coach Pete Adrian,
making his first trip to Morgantown
since graduating from WVU in
1970, said his players were fired up
in the locker room.

“We outplayed them in the first
half. There’s no question about
that,” Adrian said. “You can sugar
coat it anyway that you want. We
did, and then we got blistered in the
second half. It was a tale of two
halves I guess.”
West Virginia needed just three
plays to find the end zone after
halftime, and after Smith hit Ivan
McCartney with a 39-yard TD toss
early in the fourth, the
Mountaineers had scored five
touchdowns in a 15-minute span.
“We ran the same plays the second half that we did in the first
half,” Holgorsen said. “It was all
about effort and playing up to
tempo. We probably didn’t respect
our opponent all week.”
Smith finished 20 of 34 passing
after going 8 of 18 in the first half.
“Hats off to those guys,” Smith
said of Norfolk State, “because
they really came in here to win the
game.”
West Virginia’s defense woke up,
too, limiting Norfolk State (1-1) to
two first downs in the second half.
The Mountaineers have yet to
allow an offensive touchdown in
their first two games.
Smith also had scoring tosses of
3 yards to Tavon Austin and 12
yards to Tyler Urban. Backup Paul
Millard finished the game and
threw a 30-yard scoring strike to
Brad Starks with 3:18 remaining.
West Virginia’s 431 passing
yards were the most since a schoolrecord 452 against Missouri in
1998. Brown led WVU receivers
with 109 yards on four catches.
Norfolk State’s Chris Walley
went 16 of 27 for 136 yards. Xavier
Boyce caught eight passes for 100
yards.
The Spartans also were penalized
19 times for 177 yards.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

College Football Briefs
Ohio drops
Gardner-Webb
30-3
ATHENS, Ohio (AP)
—
Ohio’s
defense
allowed only 105 total
yards and forced three
turnovers, dominating
Gardner-Webb 30-3 on
Saturday night.
Gardner-Webb struggled to get anything going
offensively, as Channing
Browning only managed
12 total yards passing and
threw three interceptions
in the second quarter.
Ohio (2-0) took advantage of the early miscues,
with Jelani Woseley
returning one interception
for a touchdown and scoring on drives of 28 and 40
yards after Browning’s
other two turnovers.
Aside from playing
tough pass defense, the
Bobcats only allowed the
Runnin’ Bulldogs (1-1) to
convert 1 of 17 thirddown conversions.
Tyler Tettleton threw
for 139 yards and two
touchdowns for the
Bobcats, including a 14yard pass to Riley Dunlop
to put them up 24-0 with
32 seconds left to play in
the first half.
Donte Harden rushed
for 94 yards on 13 carries
for Ohio, and Beau
Blankenship added 46
yards on 8 carries.

Marshall
rallies to beat
Southern Miss
26-20
HUNTINGTON,
W.Va. (AP) — Rakeem
Cato threw three touchdown passes to rally
Marshall in a 26-20 win
over
Southern
Mississippi on Saturday
in the Conference USA
opener for both teams.
The Thundering Herd
(1-1) trailed 17-3 with
5:30 left in the second
quarter before Cato
orchestrated
three
straight touchdown drives. Cato hit Aaron
Dobson on a 10-yard pass
to bring Marshall within
17-10 with 27 seconds
left in the first half.
Cato and Marshall then
tied it on an 11-yard pass
to Gator Hoskins early in
the third quarter, and took
the lead, 24-17, on a 17yard TD pass from Cato
to Dobson with 1:19 left
in the third quarter.
Cato finished with 275
yards and two interceptions on 27 of 42 passing.
The Thundering Herd,
who forced six turnovers,
tacked on two more
points as Vinny Curry
tackled the Golden
Eagles’ Kendrick Hardy
for a loss of 1-yard in the
end zone.
Southern Miss fumbled
the ball three times,
including one that led to
Cato’s tying TD pass to
Hoskins.
Marshall’s
George Carpenter recovered two fumbles, and
finished with 13 tackles,
including one sack.
Southern Miss (1-1)
made it 26-20 on Danny
Hrapmann’s 28-yard field
goal with 1:22 remaining
and was driving for
another possible score,
but Austin Davis threw
his third interception with
1 minute left.
Davis finished with 309
yards and two touchdowns on 25 of 49 passing and broke Brett
Favre’s career passing
mark at the school. Davis,
who needed 74 yards
coming in, broke the
record of 7,695 set from
1987-1990 by the recently retired NFL quarterback.

LouisianaLafayette
beats Kent
State 20-12
KENT, Ohio (AP) —
Lionel Stokes scored off a
63-yard interception and
Louisiana-Lafayette over-

came a poor offensive
effort to beat Kent State
20-12 on Saturday night.
Louisiana-Lafayette
(1-1) struggled to maintain a consistent drive
with 159 total yards on
offense. The only offensive scoring drive the
Ragin’ Cajuns mustered
was on three plays,
capped by Qyendarius
Griffin’s 1-yard touchdown run to break a 7-7
tie in the second quarter.
Griffin rushed for a
game-high 51 yards on
24 carries for LouisianaLafayette. Chris Masson
completed 5 of 13 passes for 18 yards and
threw one interception.
Kent State (0-2) was
not much better offensively against the Ragin’
Cajuns, who held them
to 186 total yards. The
Golden Flashes scored
their only touchdown
when Spencer Keith
threw a 6-yard touchdown to Jacquise Terry
in the first quarter.
Kent State never
pulled closer than five
points.
Keith threw for 114
yards, one touchdown
and an interception.

Bowling
Green routs
Morgan State
58-13
BOWLING GREEN,
Ohio. (AP) — Matt
Schilz threw five touchdown passes in the first
half, leading Bowling
Green in a 58-13 rout of
Morgan
State
on
Saturday night.
Schilz finished 16 for
23 passing with 258
yards and an interception, leading the Falcons
(2-0) to a 35-10 halftime
lead with his prolific
first-half passing.
Bowling Green outgained the Bears 572193 in offensive yards,
including a 304-37 margin through the air.
Schilz connected with
Eugene Cooper on
touchdown passes of 37,
6, 23 and 18 yards in the
first half. Four of
Cooper’s six receptions
were for scores, as he
finished with 134 yards.
Jordan
Hopgood
rushed 12 times for 90
yards and also had 37
yards and a touchdown
on three receptions for
the Falcons, who have
won consecutive games
to open a season for the
first time since 2003.
Travis Davidson led
the Bears (0-2) with 89
rushing yards and a
touchdown.

Temple routs
Akron 41-3
after lightning
delay
AKRON, Ohio (AP)
—
Bernard
Pierce
rushed for 150 yards and
scored three touchdowns
in the second quarter as
Temple routed Akron
41-3 on Saturday night.
The game was halted
because of lightning
with 6:04 left in the first
quarter, resuming after a
delay of 1 hour and 19
minutes.
The Owls (2-0, 1-0
Mid-American
Conference)
opened
consecutive seasons at
2-0 for the first time
since the late 1960s and
won their fifth straight
over the Zips (0-2, 0-1).
With Temple leading
7-3, Akron quarterback
Clayton Moore was
sacked and fumbled.
Kamal Johnson recovered for the Owls at the
Zips 4, and Pierce
scored on a 3-yard run
with 13:59 left in the
first half. He scored
twice more in the next
8:17, on runs of 2 and 37
yards to give Temple a
28-3 halftime lead.
Pierce tied his career
mark for touchdowns in
a game for the second
straight week.

�SPORTS
LOCAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY — A schedule of upcoming
high school varsity sporting events
involving teams from Meigs and Gallia
counties.

Tuesday, September 13
Volleyball
Trimble at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 6 p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Elk Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Athens at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Parkersburg Catholic at Ohio Valley
Christian, 5:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant (boys) at St. Joe,5:30 p.m.
Poca at Point Pleasant (girls), 6:30 p.m.
Golf
Chesapeake at River Valley, Gallia
Academy, 4:30 p.m.
Miller at South Gallia, 4:30 p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 4:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 4:30 p.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy at Piketon, TBA
Wednesday, September 14
Volleyball
Eastern at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Southern at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Golf
Southern at Federal Hocking, 4:30 p.m.
Thursday, September 15
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Logan, 5:15 p.m.
South Gallia at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Coal Grove at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Chapmanville, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Poca, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Calvary, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Calvary, 4:30 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at Point Pleasant
(boys), 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant (girls) at South
Charleston, 6 p.m.
Golf
River Valley, Vinton County at Meigs,
4:30 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 4:30 p.m.
Meigs (girls) vs Eastern (girls), 4 p.m.
Wahama at Trimble, Miller, 4:30 p.m.
Friday, September 16
Football
Wahama at Belpre, 7:30 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 7:30 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 7:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Miller, 7:30 p.m.
Minford at Meigs, 7:30 p.m.
Marietta at Gallia Academy, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley at Fort Frye, 7:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at South Point, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, September 17
Volleyball
Miller at South Gallia, noon
Wahama, Hannan at Point Pleasant,
11 a.m.
Soccer
Point Pleasant (boys) at Pikeview, 1
p.m.
Chesapeake at Point Pleasant
(girls), 10 a.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy, Southern at Ripley
Covered Bridge Invite, TBA
River
Valley
at
Northwest
Invitational, TBA
Eastern at Galion, 9 a.m.
Meigs at Fairland, TBA
Point Pleasant at Hurricane, 10 a.m.

Point
runners
compete
at Chickfil-A Invite
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Wolfe wins Athens Invitational; McCoy takes third
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ATHENS, Ohio —
Southern’s Kody Wolfe
and Jennifer McCoy each
earned top three finishes
at Saturday’s Athens
Invitational.
Wolfe led the Tornadoes

with a time of 16:28 to finish in first place by more
than one minute over
Davidson’s Luke Hoover
(17:43).
The Tornadoes placed
four other runners in the
top 20 in the boys race.
Justin Hettinger was 13th
(19:39), Bradley McCoy

was 16th (20:26), Andrew
Ginther was 17th (20:27)
and Andrew Roseberry
was 20th (20:35).
Also running for the
Tornadoes were Chris
Yeater in 33rd (21:50) and
Chase Graham in 44th
(25:33).
The Tornadoes took

third place overall with a
team total of 63. Davidson
was first with 21 points
and Athens was second
with 56 points.
McCoy — the lone
female runner for Southern
— placed third with a time
of 21:20, just behind
Trimble’s Johannah Couch

Blue Angels win Run by the River
Gallia Academy outpaces Fairland by 16 points on Saturday
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — The Gallia
Academy Blue Angels made it a one, two, three
finish on Saturday at the Dragons’ Run by the
River.
Peyton Adkins (19:48.3), Mckenna Warner
(20:23.2), and Madison Holley (20:50.1) took
the top three spots as the Blue Angels claimed
the team title by a 16-point margin over
Fairland.
The Blue Angels had two more runners finish
in the top 20 at the meet. Hannah Watts was
sixth (22:04.3) and Elizabeth Holley was 20th
(24:24.7).
Also running for the Blue Angels were
Akeshia Saunders in 48th (29:07.5), Madelynn
Dennison in 52nd (31:30.6), Rylee Stevens in
54th (33:05.2) and Kimi Faro in 61st (37:20.5).
Meigs also took part in the meet, with
Victoria Walker leading the team. Walker
placed 15th with a time of 23:14.0. Also running for the Lady Marauders were Maggie
Smith in 27th (25:28.6), Haley Kennedy in 43rd
(26:59.4), Tara Walzer-Kuharic in 45th
(27:51.1) and Allyson Davis in 55th (33:19.0).
Gallia Academy finished with a total of 31
points, while Fairland had 47 points and George
Washington was third with 76 points. Meigs
placed sixth with a total of 160 points.
On the boys side, Meigs’ Cody Hanning was
the top local finisher. Hanning placed 12th with
a time of 18:30.8. Brandon Mahr placed 22nd
(20:14.6), Bradley Helton was 45th (22:48.2),
Colten Walters was 48th (23:07.6) and Forrest
Nagy was 51st (23:25.0) for the Marauders.
The Blue Devils were led by Michael
Edelman in 14th (18:50.2), followed by Timmy
Warner in 24th (20:29.0), Quenton McKinness
in 37th (21:58.7), Casey Lawrence in 43rd
(22:44.6), Jeremy Wilson in 46th (23:00.2), Ben
Bush in 55th (24:18.6), Ryan Valley in 57th
(24:35.9) and Griffon McKinniss in 60th
(25:08.4).
Fairland won the team title in the boys race
with 29 points, while Gallia Academy was
fourth with 128 points and Meigs was fifth with
133 points.
Complete results of the 2011 Dragons’ Run
by the River are available at www.tristate
racer.com

FRANKLIN
FURNACE,
Ohio — Had them right where
we wanted them … and then
came the third quarter.
Visiting Hannan kept pace
with Green for two periods
Friday night, but the host
Bobcats ran off 20 straight
points in the third quarter to
turn a 6-0 halftime lead into a
26-8 victory in a Week 3 nonconference matchup in Scioto
County.
The Wildcats (1-2) — fresh
off their first win since 2009
last weekend at Hundred (220) — had revenge on their
minds after suffering a 52-0
setback last year in this same
contest. And for the opening
24 minutes, Hannan proved
how much it had improved in a
calendar year.
The lone score of the first
half came with 5:08 left in the
first quarter, as Mark Allen
hauled in a 9-yard touchdown
pass from Cody Bruce — giving the Bobcats (2-1) an early
6-0 advantage.
Coming out of the intermission, Green seemed more
focused on eating clock and
big-play capabilities — both
of which came to fruition on
its opening drive of the second
half.
The Bobcats covered 64
yards in eight plays en route to
a 14-0 advantage after Steven
Ratcliffe caught a 30-yard pass
from Bruce with 7:54 left in
the third quarter.
After forcing a three-andout, Green increased its edge
to 20-0 with 5:11 remaining

River Valley
competes in
Zane Trace
Invitational
BY SARAH HAWLEY
KINNIKINNICK, Ohio —
The River Valley cross country
teams took part in the Zane
Trace Invitational on Saturday
in Chillicothe, Ohio.
The Raiders placed ninth
overall, while the Lady Raiders
were 11th.
Trent Wolfe led the Raiders
with a 23rd place finish (19:04),
Aaron Oehler was 39th (19:45),
Ethan Hersman was 64th
(20:49), Jared Hollingsworth
was 71st (21:07), James
Jackson was 85th (22:03),
Austin Hamilton was 87th
(22:20), Dean Lollathan was
108th (24:16), Kyle Randolph
was 109th (24:23) and Chey
Eblin was 123rd (27:31).
The Raiders finished with a
team total of 213 points. Teays
Valley took first with 61.
In the girls race, Keyana
Ward was the top River valley
finisher, placing 21st (23:49).
Also running for the Lady
Raiders were Cristina Rosello
in 66th (28:15), Ciara Layne in
68th (28:24), Maria Garcia in
85th (30:10) and Sonja Rankin
in 91st (31:48).
The Lady Raiders placed
11th overall with a team total of
250. Zane Trace took first with
a total of 29 points.
Results of the 2011 Zane
Trace Invitational are available
at www.baumspage.com.

Kent Sanborn photo/SouthernOhioSportsPhotos.com

Gallia Academy’s Peyton Adkins runs during the Dragons’ Run
by the River at Fairland High School in Proctorville, Ohio.
Adkins took first place in the race.

20-point third quarter too much for Hannan in Franklin Furnace
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

(20:39) and Alexander’s
Allyson Malone (20:39.5).
Athens won the girls
team title with 35 points,
followed by Trimble with
76 points.
Complete results of
the 2011 Athens Invitational are available at
www.baumspage.com

SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Bobcats claw past Hannan, 26-8
BY BRYAN WALTERS

MINERAL WELLS,
W.Va. — The Point
Pleasant cross country
team was among the
more than 19 teams from
around the region to take
part in Saturday’s Chickfil-A Invitational.
The Lady Knights had
one participant, while the
boys team placed 19th
overall.
Andrea Porter placed
seventh overall in the
girls race with a time
of 21:40. Charleston
Catholic’s Sami Harris
placed first in the race
with a time of 18:25.
In the boys race, Ryan
Bonecutter was the top
local finisher. Bonecutter
placed 32nd with a time
of 19:03. Also running
for the Big Blacks
were Caleb Riffle in
110th (21:57), Joesph
Littlepage in 142nd
(23:10), Riken Nowlin in
162nd (24:18), Elijah
McClanahan in 176th
(25:52), Logan Burch in
182nd (26:39), Nick
Taylor in 185th (27:08),
and Darrell McBeath in
189th (28:38).
Oak Hill took first
place in the boys race
with a team total of 102,
while Point Pleasant was
19th with 471 points.
In the girls race, Shady
Spring was first with a
team total of 74.
Complete results of
the 2011 Chick-fil-A
Invitational are available
at www.runwv.com

A8

after Levi Mollett plunged in
from five yards out — capping
a 5-play, 65-yard scoring
drive.
The lone turnover of the
game came on Hannan’s next
possession, as Kyle Frazier
picked of an errant pass by
Hannan QB Tyler Jenkins —
giving the hosts possession
inside Wildcat territory.
Ratcliffe hauled in his second TD catch of the evening
moments later — a 31-yard
pass from Bruce — giving the
Bobcats a comfortable 26-0
cushion with 1:12 remaining in
the third.
Hannan — which had only
49 yards of total offense in the
first half and just one total
yard in the third quarter — got
its lone score of the night with
4:30 left in regulation.
Chris Smith scored on a 2yard run to make it 26-6, then
Jenkins added a successful
PAT run for a 26-8 margin.
Green claimed a 16-9 advantage in first downs and finished plus-one in turnover differential. The Bobcats produced 337 yards of total
offense in the victory, while
Hannan mustered just 111
yards offensively.
The Wildcats produced 110
rushing yards on 40 tries and
also one passing yard. HHS
was also penalized twice for
15 yards.
Smith led the Wildcats with
54 yards on 18 carries, followed by Korbon McDonald
with 35 yards on six totes.
Jenkins was 1-for-5 passing
for one yard and an interception. Jacob Taylor had the lone
catch for Hannan.

Green had 42 rushes for 204
yards and added another 133
yards through the air. The
hosts were also penalized six
times for 55 yards.
Robbie Applegate led GHS
with 65 yards on 11 attempts,
followed by Mike Avery with
64 yards on a dozen carries.
Bruce finished the night 9-of12 passing for 133 yards and
three TDs, while Ratcliffe led
the wideouts three grabs for 78
yards and two scores.
Hannan returns to action in
Week 5 when it travels to
Buffalo on Sept. 23 for a nonconference matchup at 7:30
p.m. The Wildcats have an
open date in their Week 4
schedule.
Green 26, Hannan 8
H
G

0-0-0-8 — 8
6-0-20-0 — 26

First Quarter
G — Mark Allen 9 pass from Cody Bruce (kick
failed) 5:08
Third Quarter
G — Steven Ratcliff 30 pass from Bruce (Mike
Avery pass from Bruce) 7:54
G — Levi Mollett 5 run (pass failed) 5:11
G — Ratcliff 31 pass from Bruce (pass failed)
1:12
Fourth Quarter
H — Chris Smith 2 run (Tyler Jenkins run) 4:30
First Downs — H: 9,G: 16; Rushes-yards — H:
40-110,G: 42-204; Passing yards — H: 1,G:
133; Total yards — H: 111,G: 337; Cmp-Att-Int
— H: 1-5-1,G: 9-12-0; Fumbles-lost — H: 10,G: 2-0; Penalties-yards — H: 2-15,G: 6-55.
RUSHING
H: Chris Smith 18-54, Korbon McDonald 6-35,
Tyler Jenkins 4-(-1); G: Robbie Applegate 1165, Mike Avery 12-64, Levi Mollett 8-28, Clay
Applegate 5-19, Cody Bruce 5-18.
PASSING
H: Tyler Jenkins 1-5-1 1; G: Cody Bruce 9-12-0
133.
RECEIVING
H: Jacob Taylor 1-1; G: Steven Ratcliffe 3-78,
Clay Applegate 3-37, Mike Avery 2-9, Mark
Allen 1-9.

Lady
Rebels win
tri-match
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

PROCTORVILLE, Ohio —
The South Gallia volleyball
team (6-1) defeated Oak Hill
and Fairland in a tri-match
held Saturday at Fairland
High School.
The Rebels defeated Oak
Hill (1-3) in the opening
match 25-10 and 25-13.
Ellie Bostic had 15 points
(four aces) to pace the Lady
Rebels. Chandra Canaday
added eight points (four
aces), Sara Bailey had six
points and Lauren Saunders
added one point.
Meghan Caldwell had eight
kills and two blocks to lead
the net attack. Shelby Merry
had seven kills, Bostic had
four kills, Jasmyne Johnson
added one kill and one block,
Bailey and Brynn Adams
each added one kill and
Canaday had one block.
Bostic also had one dig.
In the second match, the
Lady Rebels defeated Fairland
(0-3) 25-18 and 25-10.
Bostic again led the team in
serving with eight points, followed by Caldwell with six
(two aces), Chrissy Howell
with five (one ace), Bailey and
Shelby Sanders with four and
one ace each, Canaday with
four points, Merry with three
(one ace) and Saunders with
one.
Caldwell had 14 kills and
five blocks to lead the team in
both categories. Merry and
Canaday each added five kills,
while Johnson, Adams and
Bostic each added three kills.
Merry also added two blocks.
The Lady Rebels host
Trimble on Tuesday as they
return to TVC Hocking competition.

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