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                  <text>Riverside
High School
Invitational, A8

Homecoming
Court, A3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 153

School fundraiser
MIDDLEPORT — The
Mid-Valley Christian
School of the Rejoicing
Life Church in Middleport
is having a ham and cheese
sub luncheon fundraiser
Friday with both pickup at
the church and delivery
available. Orders are to be
placed by Wednesday by
phone at 992-6249 and
leaving an answering service message or faxing an
order to 992-6249.

Making
apple butter
POMEROY — The copper kettles are out and the
first of two apple butter
making sessions to be held
at the Radford farm will be
held Saturday.
Annually members of
the Rocksprings United
Methodist Church gather at
the farm to make apple
butter which they sell to
raise money for maintenance and improvements
to their church.
Orders for apple butter
are now being taken by
Louise Radford, 992-5218.
The second batch will be
made on Oct. 8.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

C8 Science Panel meeting set for Tuesday in Pomeroy
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — The C8
Science Panel will host
one of two public forums
on the status of its
research Tuesday evening
at Meigs Middle School.
The 6 p.m. forum will
provide an opportunity for
the public to ask the C8
Science Panelists questions, and hear their explanation of the scientific
process that goes into

making the determination
of whether there is a probable link between C8
exposure and human disease. The panel has conducted a number of studies examining the links to
C8 and various illnesses
and health conditions, and
is funded through the settlement of a class action
lawsuit filed in Wood
County, W.Va.
The C8 Science Panel
(Dr. Tony Fletcher, Dr.
Kyle Steenland, and Dr.

David Savitz) will be present with a complete
update on the progress
they have made so far, and
the steps they are taking
toward the end result,
according to information
released recently. The
forum will be held at the
middle school auditorium
and will last 90 minutes.
The first such forum was
held
last
ight
in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Most recently, the
Science Panel has filed a

status report to the Wood
County Courtsummarizing
new results on C8 and
pregnancy
outcomes
based on information
from birth certificates provided by Ohio and West
Virginia
Health
Departments. All births
from 1990-2005 in the
study area were analyzed.
Overall, there was little
indication of an association between estimated
PFOA exposure and risk
of stillbirth, pregnancy-

Parade brings out alumni spirit

Correction
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Council on
Aging will host a balance
screening from 9-11 a.m.,
Sept. 27 at the senior center, not at Holzer Meigs
Clinic in rehab department.
Clinic staff will conduct
the screening. No registration needed.

An alumni marching band, flag corps, homecoming queens from past years and floats
representing classes from the 70ʼs, 80ʼs and
even the future marched down Pomeroyʼs
Main Street Saturday. The parade has
become one of the biggest events of the
annual homecoming festivities, and
Saturdayʼs parade was one of the bestattended parades of any kind in town. The
Class of 1981 was just one alumni class
represented by class members on colorful
floats, and this yearʼs Meigs Marauders football team rode on one, too. Hundreds lined
the downtown sidewalks to see their classmates participate. After the parade, the
alumni band performed on Court Street.

Mini Jubilee
POMEROY — Hillside
Baptist Church on Ohio
143 will host a Mini
Jubilee from 5:30 p.m.9:30 p.m. on Oct. 1 at the
church’s outdoor pavilion.
Singers include Annointed,
Voices of Faith, Taylor
Brothers, Mariah and
Garrett Fitch, Truly Saved,
Adam Roush, Covered By
Love, Jamie Humphreys,
Narrow Way, The Tignors,
Miranda Hawbaker. A love
offering will be taken to
support Bend Area Gospel
Jubilee. Concessions sold
and free admission.

OBITUARIES
Page A2
• Toney Manley
• Randell Adkins
• Clara Gilmore
• Mildred Shuler
• Betty J. Spencer

WEATHER

(Brian J. Reed/photos)

2011 Meigs
Homecoming
Queen crowned
Cheyenne Dawn Beaver,
daughter of Doug and
Tracy Beaver of Pomeroy,
was crowned the 2011
Meigs High School homecoming queen in ceremonies held at Friday
nightʼs football game on
Bob Roberts Field. She
was escorted by Austin
Tyler King, son of Brian
and Lee Ann King,
Pomeroy.
(Charlene Hoeflich/photo)

See C8, A2

ODOT
announces
Meigs road
projects
POMEROY — The
Ohio Department of
Transportation (ODOT)
announced today that the
westbound lane of State
Route 248 beginning at
the 4.94 mile marker will
be closed immediately to
allow for a slip repair project.
Motorists will encounter
the one lane closure about
0.41 miles west of the
intersection of Township
Road 115 (Shumway Rd).
Traffic will be maintained
for the duration of the project.

ODOT also
announced that a
redesign project will
begin on Tuesday,
Oct. 4, at the
681/692 intersection in Meigs
County.
Weather permitting,
work is expected to be
completed by Oct. 21.
Earlier this month the
contract for the repair
work in the amount of
$531,790 was awarded to
DGM Inc.
ODOT also announced
that a redesign project
will begin on Tuesday,
Oct. 4, at the 681/692
intersection in Meigs
County. On that day, the
intersection will be converted to a three-way stop
(all-way stop), then on
Nov. 2 and 3, the intersection will be converted to a
one-way stop.
Traffic will be maintain
throughout the duration
of the project, which,
weather permitting, is
expected to be completed
by Nov. 3.
More information on
road
closures
and
improvements can be
learned by visiting
www.BuckeyeTraffic.o
rg or visiting www.
transportation.ohio.gov
/dist10.

Veterans Memorial Hospital furnishings auctioned off

High: 74
Low: 54

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

INDEX

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1 SECTION — 8 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

induced
hypertension,
preterm birth, or low birth
weight. There was some
suggestion that women in
the upper end of the
PFOA ranges had slightly
smaller infants, but it was
not consistent for boys
and girls.
The Science Panel filed
a status report in August
summarizing new results
on markers of thyroid
function and PFOA, also

A6-7
A5
A4
A8

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY – It wasn’t
a pretty picture.
The front lawn of
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital was filled with
everything from an
antique organ to an aluminum bucket, and
behind the building there
were thousands of other
things taken out of the
building as a first step
toward its demolition.

Saturday was sale day,
and Auctioneer Dan
Smith and his associates
were selling everything
off to the highest bidder.
Much of the better equipment and furnishings had
already been passed
along for use in county
agencies or given to nonprofit organizations.
While the sale went on
for most of the day, the
receipts totaled only
about $11,000 with
approximately $2,000

going for expenses leaving
the
remaining
amount to go into Meigs
County’s general fund.
Among the hundreds of
people there were several
former hospital employees who came to the sale
to buy a remembrance of
their happy days as an
employee. In conversations, they reflected on
those days when healing
flourished in the spacious

See Auction, A2

Dan Smith auctions off equipment and furnishings
taken out of Veterans Memorial Hospital which is slated for demolition. (Charlene Hoeflich/photo)

�Obituaries
Toney Manley
Toney Warren Manley, 56, of Wellston, passed
away on Sept. 24, 2011.
He was born on March 20, 1955 in Pomeroy, son of
Rosanna Manley of Middleport and the late Clifford
Eugene Manley.
He is survived by his mother, Rosanna Manley;
brothers and sisters, Catherine (Harold) Elliot of
Racine, John “Jay” (Tina) Manley of Logan, and
Cynthia Hartenbach of Middleport; stepson, Michael
Oliver of Lancaster; granddaughter, Haley Oliver;
several nieces, nephews, great-nieces and nephews,
aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on
Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2011, at Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Middleport with Pastor Al Hartson
officiating. Burial will follow at Gravel Hill
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at the
funeral home. A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Clara Gilmore
Clara Suzanne “Sue” Gilmore, 56, of Middleport,
passed away on Sept. 25, 2011.
She was born April 4, 1955 in Pomeroy, daughter of
Laura Elizabeth Rice of Syracuse and the late Bill Ike
Rice.
Sue was a United States Army veteran. She enjoyed
the outdoors and fishing. She loved spending time
with her family and especially her grandchildren.
She is survived by her husband, Everette Gilmore;
son, Jerod (Brook) Gilmore; grandchildren, Brittany,
Jenna and Shawn Gilmore; mother, Liz Rice; brothers, Bill (Sue) Rice and Harry (Betsy) Rice; and several nieces, nephews and great-nieces and nephews.
Besides her father, she was preceded in death by her
son, Charlie Gilmore and several aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on
Thursday, Sept. 29, 2011 at Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Margaret
Robinson officating. Burial will follow at Bradford
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m.at the funeral home.
A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Randell Adkins
Randell Scott Adkins, 55, of Middleport, passed
away on Sunday, Sept. 25, 2011 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Randy was born Dec. 22, 1955. in Huntington,
W.Va., to Oliver W. and Lula Mae (Dudy) Adkins who
both survive in Gallipolis.
Randy was a 1973 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and a 1977 graduate of Rio Grande
College with a BS Degree. At RGC he was active in
the Alpha Delta Epsilon Fraternity. He was employed
in the family automobile business (Adkins Auto
Sales) and later at the AEP Gavin Power Plant.
Randy enjoyed sports and was an avid Browns and
Buckeyes fan.
Randy was married to Teresa A. (Harris) Adkins on
August 12, 2006 in Gallipolis, and she survives. He is
also survived by his children Elizabeth (Matt) Shope
of Palm Beach, FL, and Christopher Adkins of
Middleport. He had one grandchild, Jacob Shope who
was his joy.
Randy was stepfather to Jason, Jerome (Kate), and
Jordan McIntrye. Also surviving are a brother,
Ronald Adkins and a sister, Tina (David) Russell,
both of Gallipolis; mother-in-law: Rena Harris of
Loganville, Ga., sisters-in-law Lori Harris of
Dowagiac, Mich., and Dawn (Bobby) Howard of
Cassopolis, Mich.; nieces and nephews: Sarah (Kyle)
Deel, Kari (Michael) Anderson, Andrea (Jason)
Jarvis, Tyler Adkins, Lauren Harris, Macy Howard,
and Andrew Howard; two great nephews Logan and
Lane Deel.
A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m. on
Thursday, Sept. 29, 2011, at Willis Funeral Home
with Pastor Jason Simpkins officiating. Burial will
follow in the Calvary Baptist Cemetery in Rio
Grande.
Friends may call from 4-7 p.m. Wednesday at Willis
Funeral Home, Gallipolis.
Please consider a donation in Randy’s name to the
Soul Harvest Church, 500 Adamsville Road, Mason,
W.Va., 25260.
Please send e-mail condolences to www.willisfuneralhome.com.

Deaths
Mildred Shuler
Mildred E. Shuler, 98, of the Racine area, passed away
Monday, Sept. 26, 2011, at her home. Arrangements will
be announced at a later date by Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.

Betty J. Spencer
Betty J. Spencer, 85, Gallipolis, died Friday, September
23, 2011, at her birthplace home at on Pine Street.
A Celebration of Life Service will be conducted at
noon on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2011, in the Paint Creek
Baptist Church. Officiating will be Pastors Melvin
Freeman, Gene Armstrong and Calvin Minnis. The family will receive friends one hour prior to the service at the
church.
Memorials may be made to Holzer Hospice, 100
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio. Cremeens Funeral
Chapel, Gallipolis is entrusted with Betty's funeral
arrangements.

2 rescued from cars in flooded Cincinnati suburb
CINCINNATI (AP) — At least two people have been
rescued from their cars amid flooding from heavy rains in
a suburban Cincinnati neighborhood.
Colerain Township Fire Capt. Shawn Stacy says they
were trapped Monday in rapidly rising water after more
than three inches of rain fell in a short time.
Fire officials say water that spilled from a creek also
flooded basements.
Stacy says fire officials initially thought a few home
evacuations might be necessary but weren't sure whether
any occurred. Red Cross officials say some people moved
to higher ground temporarily but returned to their homes as
the water receded.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Governor spares condemned Meigs County Forecast
killer, cites childhood
percent.
Tuesday: Mostly
BY ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
AP LEGAL AFFAIRS WRITER

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Gov. John Kasich on
Monday spared a condemned inmate who slashed a
woman's throat in a robbery, citing the prisoner's
horrific childhood.
Kasich's decision marked the fifth time since June
that an Ohio execution has been postponed or called
off.
Kasich followed the recommendation of the Ohio
Parole Board, which said last week Joseph Murphy
should be sentenced to life without parole instead.
The board cited Murphy's childhood growing up
in West Virginia in which he was beaten, starved
and sexually abused.
The board also cited the Ohio Supreme Court's
1992 decision that upheld the death sentence by a 43 vote, a rare divided ruling in which Chief Justice
Thomas Moyer voted against a death sentence for
Murphy. The late Moyer, a death penalty supporter,
said he knew of no other case in which a defendant
"was as destined for disaster as was Joseph
Murphy."
Kasich noted both Murphy's childhood and the
Supreme Court ruling. He also said he agreed with
the National Association of Mental Illness, which
had urged him to spare Murphy.
The governor said he decided that, "considering
Joseph Murphy's brutally abusive upbringing and
the relatively young age at which he committed this
terrible crime, the death penalty is not appropriate
in this case."
Murphy, 46, was convicted of killing Ruth
Predmore in Marion in 1987 in a robbery that netted
her penny collection. He had threatened the 72year-old Predmore with an extortion note several
days before the crime.
Marion Prosecutor Brent Yager had opposed
clemency, saying Murphy terrified Predmore before
the crime, killed her brutally, then lied and made
excuses about his motives.
"Murphy's crime is truly one of the worst of the
worst," Yager said in a filing with the parole board
last week.
In June, Kasich spared Shawn Hawkins, saying he
had no doubt the inmate was involved in a 1989
double killing but that the details of his participation were "frustratingly unclear."
In July, a federal judge's ruling in another case
postponed the execution that was to have followed
that of Hawkins.
U.S. District Court Judge Gregory Frost criticized
the state's execution policies as haphazard and
inconsistent. Since then, Kasich postponed two
additional executions scheduled for August and
September while the state updates its policies.
A second legal team representing Murphy had
brought a separate challenge based in part on the
revelation that one of Ohio's executioners has cancer. The attorneys argued that could affect the state's
ability to carry out executions, and Frost allowed
them to gather information about the cancer.
Though Murphy has been spared, attorneys are
certain to continue the cancer argument for the way
it could affect the next execution scheduled for
November.

Ohio to decide 3 issues
after heated fall campaign
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

sunny, with a high near
74. Calm wind becoming
southwest between 6 and
9 mph.
Tuesday Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 54. Light
southwest wind.
Wednesday: A chance
of showers, mainly after
2 p.m. Partly sunny,
with a high near 71.
Southwest wind between
3 and 9 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent. New rainfall
amounts of less than a
tenth of an inch possible.
Wednesday Night: A
slight chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with
a low around 54. Chance
of precipitation is 20

Thursday: Partly
sunny, with a high near
71.
Thursday Night:
Partly cloudy, with a
low around 53.
Friday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 67.
Friday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low
around 44.
Saturday: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
59.
Saturday Night:
Partly cloudy, with a
low around 41.
Sunday: Sunny, with
a high near 64.
Sunday Night:
Mostly clear, with a low
around 40.
Monday: Sunny, with
a high near 68.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 37.77
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 42.45
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 46.39
Big Lots (NYSE) — 34.80
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 29.67
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 59.15
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.37
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.35
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 2.99
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 27.67
Collins (NYSE) — 53.19
DuPont (NYSE) — 41.54
US Bank (NYSE) — 24.36
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 15.57
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 35.00
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 31.65
Kroger (NYSE) — 22.04
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 42.27
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 62.62
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 16.70

BBT (NYSE) —
22.06
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 10.63
Pepsico (NYSE) — 61.89
Premier (NASDAQ) — 4.98
Rockwell (NYSE) — 54.88
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 10.33
Royal Dutch Shell — 61.96
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 53.97
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 51.83
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.99
WesBanco (NYSE) — 17.60
Worthington (NYSE) — 14.11
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
September 26, 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.

C8
From Page A1
known as C8, among children 1-18 years old who participated in the C8 Health Project. Overall, there was no
evidence of an association for thyroid hormones and
PFOA for children aged 1-18 years. However, the
results suggest that childhood exposure to two other
perfuoroalkyl acids, PFOS and PFNA, may disturb thyroid hormone levels. There was some evidence of an
association between reported childhood thyroid disease
and PFOA, but not PFOS nor PFNA.
As another term of the class-action suit, water systems at Lubeck, W.Va., Mason County, W.Va., the
Village of Syracuse and Tuppers-Plains Chester Water
District were fitted with special filtering equipment
designed to eliminate the chemical from the drinking
water supplies. C8 is a chemical used at DuPont’s
Washington, W.Va. works in the manufacture of a number of products, including Teflon. It was released into
the Ohio River which feeds the local water tables.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A clash of political philosophies will play out at Ohio's ballot box this fall in questions concerning public employee unions and a federal
health-insurance mandate.
Labor unions and their Democratic allies have
launched a multi-million-dollar effort to repeal a bill law- From Page A1
makers passed this spring limiting the collective bargain- hospital building with its busy emergency room, 70ing abilities of 350,000 government workers around the bed hospital, and a skilled nursing facility.
state, a measure backed by Republican Gov. John Kasich
The hospital building, to be torn down in the next
as a way to contain costs.
month or so, was built in 1962 with tax dollars as a
Tea party groups, joined by Republicans, are pushing a memorial to veterans.
constitutional amendment that would prohibit government from requiring Ohioans to buy health insurance, a
backlash against President Barack Obama's federal health
care overhaul.
The two campaigns raise sweeping themes — of class
equity, the roles of government, labor unions and taxpayers, and America's partisan divide.
It is an unusually intense off-year election that also
includes a third ballot question. Issue 1, endorsed by the
mydailysentinel.com
Ohio State Bar Association, would increase the age limit
for judges from 70 to 75.
On the two sides of Issue 2, the collective bargaining
battle, are Building a Better Ohio, a business-backed
group defending the law, and We Are Ohio, the laborbacked coalition fighting it.
According to the latest filings, We Are Ohio had collected nearly $7 million in
campaign cash and other
contributions. Better Ohio is
raising money through a
nonprofit arm that's not
required to report its donors,
In order to vote in the November 8, 2011 General Election you must
but the campaign says it will
be registered by October 11, 2011.
publicize donors in late
October. Experts have projected the combined spendVote at your new precinct and avoid long lines at the board on
ing of both sides could
Election Day by changing your address (if you have moved within the
exceed $33 million, the
amount spent in Ohio's
county) or if you changed your name, by updating your registration
2010 governor's race.
by October 11, 2011.
The collective bargaining
question places the entire
law known as Senate Bill 5
The Board of Elections will be open from 9:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m.
before voters and allows
on October 11, 2011.
them to vote yes to keep it,
or no to reject it.
At a hefty 304 pages, the
You may also register at the following locations: Meigs County
measure makes significant
Department of Human Services, Meigs County WIC Office, Bureau
changes to Ohio law govof Motor Vehicles, Board of MR/DD, Pomeroy Public Library,
erning public workers, now
considered the strongest
Middleport Public Library, Eastern Local School Library, Racine
sector of organized labor
Public Library, Meigs County Treasurer’s Office, and all area high
nationally. More than 36
schools.
percent of U.S. public
workers were unionized in
2010, compared to 6.9 perFor any additional information, call 740-992-2697, or stop by our
cent of private workers,
office located at 117 E. Memorial Drive, Suite 1, Pomeroy, Ohio.
according to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics.

Auction

Visit us online at
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ARE YOU A RESIDENT
OF MEIGS COUNTY?

60246614

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

�The Daily Sentinel

Page A3

BY THE BEND

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Homecoming Celebration Parade

Col. John Morris, now of California, was one of the distinguished alumni honored at this yearʼs Meigs High School
homecoming celebration. He traveled the homecoming
parade route in a vintage auto. (Brian J. Reed/photos)

This yearʼs homecoming flower girl, Reilly Veon, and
a friend represented up and coming Meigs
Marauders, riding in Saturdayʼs homecoming parade.

Belles and Beaus dancers party

These happy Marauders alumni rode along
Saturdayʼs homecoming parade on one of many
class-themed floats.

Grange members
to be recognized
SALEM CENTER — Final plans for membership
recognition and a chicken barbecue were made when
Star Grange #778 met recently at the hall.
Master Patty Dyer conducted the meeting. The barbecue will be held on Sunday, Oct. 2 with serving
from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. Membership recognition
will take place at 12:30 p.m. Plans to distribute
Words for Thirds Dictionaries to third graders at
Meigs Elementary School were also discussed.
The next meeting will be Oct. 1 with a potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. followed by a meeting at 7:30 p.m.

AAA8 hosting photo contest
POMEROY — The Area Agency on Aging District
8 of which Meigs County is a part is holding a
“Makin’ Memories” photo contest in conjunction
with national fundraising walk for the Alzheimer’s
Association.

Alive at Five service
Attending the annual pool and picnic party of the Belles and Beaus Western Square Dance Club, left to right,
front, were: Roy Holter, Sharon Horel, Pat Holter, Betty Knight, and Maxine Little; and back, Bill Knight, Bob
Horel, Phyllis Hoffman, Charlie Fielder, Donna Shaw, Nancy Shaw, Don Shaw, Judy Graf, Jim Cunniingham,
Linda Cunningham, Urban Graf. Bill Little, Nora Lucas, Don Lucas, Carolyn Ketchka, Willie Shaw, and John
Ketchka. Not pictured was Donny Lucas. (Submitted photo)

POMEROY — Meigs County’s Belles and Beaus Western Square Dance Club held its annual pool party and
picnic recently at the home of Betty and Bill Knight in Pt. Pleasant, long-time members of the club.
The group enjoyed swimming and socializing along with some cornhole
tossing. The Club meets regularly on Monday nights from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center in
Pomeroy. Roger Steele of Southside, W. Va. is the caller for the dancers from several counties including,
Meigs, Athens, Washington, and Gallia, as well as Mason and Jackson Counties in West Virginia
Earlier this month new classes started and are being given from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the Mulberry Community
Center, located on Mulberry Ave. in Pomeroy. The classes last for six weeks with the first two times being free.
For more information call (304) 675-3275, (740) 592-5668, (740) 992-7261, or (740) 446-4213.

Community Calendar

CLEVELAND (AP) — A federal judge in Ohio
has handed down a 27-month sentence to a man
who posed as an Army general to try to land a sixfigure construction management job.
Judge Donald Nugent in Cleveland sentenced 57year-old Randall Keyser of Barboursville, W.Va., on
Monday on his guilty plea to wire and mail fraud.
Nugent says Keyser must get mental-health treatment after his release. His attorney said in a sentencing memo that Keyser is on medication for
chronic depression.
Prosecutors say Keyser applied for a job pretending to be a major general with references including
the Army chief of staff. The Akron-based company
became suspicious and contacted the FBI.

Ohio office bombarded
by gas company reps
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — As companies snap
up drilling rights leases on land above Ohio’s oiland gas-rich shale formations, a typically-quiet
eastern-Ohio county recorder’s office is being bombarded by visitors.
The Columbus Dispatch reports that the Harrison
County recorder’s office is being flooded every day
with dozens of company representatives who are
racing to secure drilling rights to the oil and gas in
Ohio’s Utica and Marcellus shale.
Tracy Boyer, county recorder since 1993, says
even in the coal days of the 1950s and ‘60s the
office wasn’t as busy as it is now.
The recorder’s office keeps track of deeds and
leases dating back to 1813. Decades-old leases can
apply today, even if current property owners didn’t
sign them, so companies are researching whether
old leases could invalidate new ones.

Ex-city councilman
sentenced in corruption case
CLEVELAND (AP) — A former city councilman
in suburban Cleveland has been sentenced to four
years and nine months in prison for bribery in a
public corruption investigation.
Former Strongsville Councilman Patrick Coyne
has been sentenced in federal court on Monday after
pleading guilty in June to five counts, including
bribery, conspiracy and wire fraud.
The Plain Dealer reports that Coyne’s sentence
was more than doubled for his scamming of an 84year-old man who invested $32,500 in a phony

Krispy Kreme franchise scam.
Coyne had already confessed to accepting
$20,000 in bribes from a developer.
Coyne has close ties to the Cuyahoga County
Democratic Party and has worked for the county
prosecutor, coroner and treasurer.
Before being led away in handcuffs, Coyne apologized to his friends, family and victim, Philip
Susteric.

Changes in Ohio prisons
aim to limit gang violence
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio’s prisons chief
is trying to limit violence linked to gangs and isolate their leaders by putting troublemakers in new
units where they could be restricted to their cells
nearly around the clock.
The Plain Dealer in Cleveland reports Ohio’s
50,000 inmates have been warned that they could
face stiffer punishments if they’re combative with
staff or get into fights. Corrections staff also are
studying inmates’ movements and interactions and
photographing their tattoos to help identify those
affiliated with gangs.
State corrections department Director Gary Mohr
believes moving the ringleaders from dormitorystyle prisons to newly forming units with greater
isolation will help decrease violence.
The newspaper says nearly one-fifth of Ohio’s
inmates are affiliated with gangs, and most multiperson fights or attacks last year involved at least
one gang member.

Chang-Rae Lee, Wilbert Rideau
honored in Ohio
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — A convict-journalist’s
prison memoir and a fictional epic woven from the
Korean War are this year’s winners of the Dayton
Literary Peace Prize.
Wilbert Rideau won the nonfiction award for “In
the Place of Justice: A Story of Punishment and
Deliverance.” It recounts his life in Louisiana’s
Angola prison, where he spent more than four
decades on a murder conviction and became a journalist and editor of an award-winning, crusading
newsmagazine.
Chang-Rae
Lee’s
“The
Surrendered” follows lives scarred by war over a
period of decades. The book was a Pulitzer Prize
fiction finalist.
The winners each receive $10,000 and will be
honored Nov. 13 in Dayton. The prize was inspired
by the 1995 Bosnia peace accords negotiated near
Dayton, and celebrates literature’s ability to promote peace and understanding.

Public meetings
Monday, Oct. 3
RUTLAND – Rutland
Township Trustees, 5
p.m. at the Rutland Fire
Station.
Thursday, Oct. 5
PAGEVILLE — Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., town hall.
Tuesday, Oct. 11
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District, 7 p.m.

Community
meetings
Saturday, Oct. 1
SALEM CENTER –
Star Grange 778 and
Star Junior Grange 878
with potluck at 6:30 p.m.
followed by meeting at
7:30 p.m. Final plans for
Oct. 2 barbeque and
member recogntion service on Sunday, Oct. 2.
Sunday, Oct. 2
SALEM CENTER –
Star Grange 778, chicken barbeque and membership recognition.

Serving 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. Recogntion program at 12:30 p.m.
pujblic invited.

Church Events
Wednesday, Sept. 28
MIDDLEPORT –
Revival at the Hope
Baptist Church 570
Grant St., Middleport.
The Keffer Family
singing and preaching
continuing through
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Child
care provided, everyone
welcome. Rev. Gary
Ellis, pastor.

Birthdays
Monday, Oct. 3
MIDDLEPORT –
Herman Grate will
observe his 90th birthday on Oct. 3. Cards
may be sent to him at
Overbrook Center, 333
Page St., Middleport,
Ohio 45760. For many
years Mr. Grate operated
a Mason County business.

th
Dining Wi Diabetes
Are You A Diabetic?
Do You Know A Diabetic?

FREE

Training &amp; Recipes for
Diabetic Support

October 4th, 11th &amp; 18th
6 - 8 p.m.
Courthouse Annex
Pomeroy, Ohio
For more information contact
Andrew Brumfield
740-992-6626
Meigs County Health Department

60239690

State Briefs
Phony ‘general’ gets
27 months from judge in Ohio

MIDDLEPORT — Alive at Five contemporary
worship services will be held at 5 p.m., every Sunday
at Heath United Methodist Church.
The theme can be carried out in the categories of
Aging Loved Ones, Across the Generations, Caring
for and Supporting Aging Loved Ones, and Aging
with Pets. There is a charge of $10 to enter one photo
or $20 to enter three photos. Registration forms are
available at www.areaagency8.org.
Photos to be entered are to be mailed to the Area
Agency on Aging, P. O. Box 520, Reno, Ohio 45773
postmarked not later than Friday, Sept. 30, with
checks made payable to Alzheimer’s AssociationWV Chapter.
The winning photos will be displayed following the
Oct. 22 announcement of the winners at the AAA8
Choices Expo in Marietta on Nov. 9.

�OPINION

Page A4
Tuesday, September 27, 2011

On spending, Congress can’t agree on easy stuff New-home sales fell in
BY LAURIE KELLMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON —
Congress is once again
allowing shutdown politics to bring the federal
government to the brink
of closing.
For the second time in
nine months, lawmakers
are bickering and posturing over spending
plans. The difference
this time is that everyone agrees on the massive barrel of money to
keep the government
running for another
seven weeks.
“It is embarrassing,”
Sen. Mark Warner, DVa., admitted Sunday on
CNN’s “State of the
Union.” Warner asked:
“Can we, once again,
inflict on the country
and the American people the spectacle of a
near government shutdown?”
At issue is a small part
of the almost $4 trillion
budget intended for an
infrequent purpose: federal dollars to help victims of floods, hurricanes, tornadoes and
other natural disasters
and whether some of the
expense should be offset
by cuts in other government spending.
This sort of crisis
management has cost
Congress credibility in
the eyes of the electorate, with about eight
in 10 Americans disapproving of the institution’s
performance
after this summer’s
debt crisis. A major
credit agency downgraded the nation’s ratings as a result, unnerving the world’s financial markets.
The current standoff
raises a question: If lawmakers can’t even agree
to help victims of natural disasters, how are
they going to strike a
deal to cut $1.5 trillion
in spending this fall in
the white-hot climate of
presidential and congressional politics?
The uncertainty isn’t
helping officials in
Joplin, Mo., desperate
to rebuild homes and
put people back to work

after a devastating tornado in May.
“We can appreciate
the efforts to get our
national economy in
better order, but we’re
concerned about how
that’s going to affect
us,” Joplin Mayor Mike
Woolston said Friday, as
Congress headed home
for the weekend, the
standoff unresolved.

“We can appreciate
the efforts to get our
national economy in
better order, but
we’re concerned
about how that’s
going to affect us,”
Joplin Mayor Mike
Woolston said
Friday, as Congress
headed home for the
weekend, the standoff unresolved.
Woolston said he
thinks
l aw m a ke r s
will come to an
agreement before the
F e d e r a l E m e rg e n cy
Management Agency
runs out of money this
week.
“But the devil’s in the
details,” he said. “How
long will it take, how
much disaster funding
will there be?”
The latest estimate
from FEMA is that is
has $114 million left
in the account, according to Robert Sawicki,
a
spokesman
for
Democratic Sen. Mary
Landrieu. That means
the fund has enough
money to last until
Thursday, longer than
earlier predicted.
Still uncertain is
whether the closely
divided Senate and
Republican-controlled
House can find reason
to agree, and then do it
— a tall order against a
history of nick-of-time
accords over the budget
in April and raising the
debt limit in late July.
This time, even the
promise of a scheduled
vacation this week
couldn’t break the

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impasse. Lawmakers
instead backed themselves into a new standoff last Friday, requiring
at least the Senate to
come back in session
part of this week.
On
Friday,
the
Democratic-controlled
Senate blocked the
House bill that would
provide stop-gap federal
spending, plus aid for
people battered by a
spate of natural disasters. The legislation also
calls for $1.6 billion in
spending cuts to help
defray the disaster
costs.
The House, meanwhile, left town for a
weeklong recess and the
Jewish holidays.
What remained was a
familiar
so’s-yourmother partisan spat,
with trillions of federal
dollars — more than $3
billion for disaster victims — at stake.
Democrats
complained
that
it’s
unprecedented
and
unfair to insist that
spending cuts accompany badly needed emergency
aid.
Senate
Majority Leader Harry
Reid, D-Nev., who earlier in the week had said
passage of the bill was
urgent, on Friday put off
a vote until Monday.
The only option, he
said, was to “capitulate
to the job-destroying
bill” from the House.
While Warner joined
those blaming tea
party-driven
House
Republicans,
Sen.
Lamar Alexander, RTenn., pointed to Reid.
“He manufactured a crisis all week about disaster when there’s no crisis,” Alexander told
CNN.
He
accused
Democrats of “chestpounding and gameplaying.”
Republicans say that
with a $14 trillion-plus
national debt, voters
will find it outrageous
that Democrats wouldn’t accept $1.6 billion
in
spending
cuts.
Democrats, they said,
had not learned the lesson of the 2010 elections, when tea partybacked conservatives

won enough seats to
give Republicans control of the House.
“We are sending a
message to people that
freezing spending is
paramount,” said one of
those GOP freshmen,
Michigan Rep. Bill
Huizenga.
Democrats,
meanwhile, are betting voters
will find it petty and
manipulative to let tornado and hurricane victims wonder if federal
aid will be denied
because
lawmakers
want to cut aid to
automakers.
It’s possible that
Congress will find a
last-minute way to
avoid a shutdown of
many federal agencies
when the fiscal year
ends on Friday. The
Senate plans to vote
Monday
on
a
Democratic bill that
would
not
require
spending offsets to
release new money for
FEMA.
But GOP leader Mitch
McConnell of Kentucky
is confident Republicans
will
block
the
Democrats’ move. It
takes 41 votes to sustain
a filibuster in the 100member Senate, and the
Republicans hold 47
seats.
If the GOP succeeds,
the Senate could accept
the House Republican
bill it rejected on
Friday. Or legislative
leaders could try to
negotiate their way past
the logjam. House leaders said they don’t plan
to call their members
back to Washington.
Still looming is the
rest of the debt-limit
deal. By Thanksgiving,
a supercommittee of 12
House
and
Senate
Democrats
and
Republicans must produce $1.5 trillion in cuts
over the next decade. If
they
stumble,
or
Congress rejects their
proposal, automatic cuts
of $1.2 trillion would
kick in, slashing domestic and defense programs. Congress is slated to vote on that package by the end of the
year.

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

August for 4th month
BY DEREK KRAVITZ
AP REAL ESTATE WRITER

WASHINGTON —
Sales of new homes fell
to a six-month low in
August. The fourth
straight monthly decline
during the peak buying
season suggests the
housing market is years
away from a recovery.
The
Commerce
Department
said
Monday that new-home
sales fell 2.3 percent to a
seasonally
adjusted
annual rate of 295,000.
That’s less than half the
roughly 700,000 that
economists say must be
sold to sustain a healthy
housing market.
New-homes sales are
on pace for the worst
year since the government began keeping
records a half century
ago.
High unemployment,
larger required down
payments and tougher
lending standards are
preventing many people
from buying homes.
Plunging stocks and a
growing fear that the
U.S. could tip back into
another recession are
also keeping people
from entering the housing market.
Pierre Ellis, an analyst
at Decision Economics,
said that until wages
increase and hiring
picks up, home sales
will languish.
The “bad news is the
evident absence of optimism that sales will pick
up to any degree,” Ellis
said.
While new homes represent less than one-fifth
of the housing market,
they have an outsize
impact on the economy.
Each home built creates
an average of three jobs
for a year and generates
about $90,000 in taxes,
according
to
the
National Association of
Home Builders.
Last year was also the
fifth straight year that
sales have fallen. It followed five straight years
of record highs, when
housing was booming.
The median sales
price of a new home fell

nearly 9 percent to
$209,100 — the lowest
price since last October.
That suggests builders
are slashing their prices
in order to compete with
comparably
lowerpriced previously occupied homes.
Foreclosures and short
sales — when lenders
accept less for a house
than a mortgage is worth
— are forcing prices
down. Those homes are
selling at an average discount of 20 percent, and
they are lowering neighboring home values.
That’s made many resales a bargain compared with new homes,
creating an average 30
percent disparity in
prices.
Many builders have
stopped working on projects and are waiting for
demand to pick up.
Home construction is
down nearly 6 percent
over the past year.
Still, permits, a gauge
of future construction,
have risen nearly 8 percent this year. Builders
may be preparing to
start dormant project
once
the
economy
improves.
Sales were uneven
across the country. They
plunged 13.6 percent in
the Northeast, which
was hit by Hurricane
Irene at the end of the
month. They also fell
6.3 percent in the West
and 2.4 percent in the
South. They rose 8.2
percent in the Midwest.
All home sales remain
weak. The August sales
pace for previously
occupied homes was
5.03 million. That’s
slightly above last year’s
sales, which were the
fewest since 1997.
Economists say roughly
6 million older homes
need to be sold each
year to sustain a healthy
housing market.
Home prices have
dropped more since the
recession started, on a
percentage basis, than
during
the
Great
Depression of the 1930s.
It took 19 years for
prices to fully recover
after the Depression.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.
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Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
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Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters will
not be accepted for publication.

Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

�Tuesday, September 27, 2011

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

MUTTS

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

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 Tuesday,
Sept. 27, 2011:
Many currents move through your
life this year. With them come options,
new people and a personal assessment. You could hear many unexpected pieces of news. Often, you
see so many paths that you could feel
confused and not know which way
to go. You get a new beginning this
year. Be honest with yourself about
what part of your life you would like
to change, and do just that. For those
who are single, you have an innate
charisma that draws many admirers
and suitors. If you are attached, you
can infuse your relationship with some
of the initial magic and charisma.
You both will enjoy it. A fellow LIBRA
understands you a little too well for
your comfort!
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)
++++ Understand another person’s expectations. At that point you’ll
have a choice of whether to meet his
or her implied desires. A new beginning is possible within a relationship.
Meanwhile, there could be a misunderstanding, and getting it straightened out could take talent. Tonight:
Say “yes” to an invitation.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++ Pace yourself. Try not to get
involved in an upset. You might have
a very strong reaction. Do everything
you can to distance yourself from a
situation that could be hurtful. Stay
centered on certain key tasks you
need to accomplish. Tonight: Put your
feet up.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
++++ Your creativity keeps
mounting when faced with many different opinions. Some people might
choose to say nothing. You could be
set back by their attitude. Implicit in
this experience is a misunderstanding. Tonight: Your creativity flows.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
+++ You might strive for stability,
but instead you are surrounded by
chaos. Not sure about what to do, you
feel torn. Why not detach and mentally put yourself in a position where you
look down on the situation? It does
look different, doesn’t it? Tonight:
Stay anchored.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
+++++ Speak your mind. There
could be considerable upset in your
immediate circle. Speak directly to a

HOROSCOPE

loved one or dear friend, especially
if you need to neutralize a problem.
A new beginning becomes possible.
Tonight: Where the action is.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
+++ You might need to make an
extra effort to pull a situation together.
The unexpected has an impact.
Confusion surrounds communication
and plans. You might not be able to
handle what is coming up. Tonight:
Buy a little treat on the way home.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
+++++ You naturally bloom,
and many people come toward you.
You could be tired and need to take
another look at a personal matter. A
new beginning becomes possible.
You have a lot to celebrate. Tonight:
Full steam ahead.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
+++ If you’re questioning which
solution might work best, stop. You
aren’t ready to act just yet. You might
consider doing something very differently. Slow down and consider
options you had not previously considered. Tonight: Get a good night’s
sleep.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
++++ Zero in on your priorities.
A meeting could pave the way to better understanding, if you are willing
to let go. You feel very good about a
key friend. Express your caring in a
meaningful way. Tonight: Clear out a
problem with a loved one.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
+++ Take a stand with a boss.
You might not see the end results
immediately, but you will eventually.
In a sense, you have created a new
beginning. Let go of the many selfimposed constraints. Tonight: A force
to be dealt with.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
++++ Try to detach, and you
will be far happier. You have plenty
of energy and get-up-and-go. A new
beginning becomes possible because
of your willingness to do something
differently. Tonight: Change the tune.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
++++ Deal directly with a friend
or loved one. Hemming and hawing
won’t work. Make an effort to loosen
up and try another way. Be direct. Let
someone else put in his or her two
cents. Be ready to grasp a special
opportunity. Tonight Have a longoverdue chat.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Tuesday, September 27, 2011

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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WOOD YARD

ATTENTION HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS!
SEE US FIRST FOR YOUR GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS

Continuing to serve you...
Save Time &amp; Money, Shop Local!
“Since 1948”

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10” - 12” Carbide
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60239290

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RESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT

Troyer
Rooﬁng, LLC
New Roofs - Reroofs
Shingle - Metal - Rubber Rooﬁng
Drywall - Pole Barns - Siding
Gutters - Spouting &amp; More
References available
Insured - Bonded
Free estimates
740-887-3422

Amish Roofers &amp; Builders

Do you want to make a difference?
If you are compassionate and
committed to providing
Quality Care come and be a part
of our Home Care Team.
We have the following position open:

PERSONAL CARE AIDE
(Per Diem)

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THE QUALITY PRINT SHOP, Inc.
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The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

*Performs basic personal care
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respite/companionship duties for
patients at their home
*Maintains a clean, safe and healthy
environment

Please contact Jamie Northup,
Recruitment Coordinator, at
740.441.8052
or visit us on the web at
www.holzer.org
Equal Opportunity Employer

60237854

60247509

�Tuesday, September 27, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

Home town couples win Riverside Couples Classic Golf Tournament
STAFF REPORT

MASON, W.Va — The
2011 Riverside Couples Golf
Classic was held on Sunday,
September 25. There were
20 couples involved in the
tournament, which was
divided into two flights

according to 2011 Ghin
Handicaps. The A Flight was
for teams with both players
having 2011 Ghin Handicaps
and the B Flight was for
teams with either one or both
players not having a 2011
handicap.
The A Flight winners were

Chuck and Norma Stanley of
Mason, W.Va., with a score
of 59.8 after their handicap
was deducted. The winners
of the B Flight were Bob and
Helen Humphreys of Camp
Conley, W.Va., with a score
of 60.7 after their assigned
handicap was deducted.

2011 Riverside Couples Classic Scores
A Flight
Chuck and Norma Stanley
59.8
Ken Pinkston and Kathy Walter
62.4
Todd and Melissa Hudson
62.5
Charlie and Sharon Persinger
62.6
Bill and Judy Hutchins 64.5
Dave and Harriett Nibert
65.7
Gary and Denise Richards
65.8
Pat and Sue Ann Harbour
67.7
Gary and Teresa Roush
67.8
Fred Staley and Peggy Walker
67.8

Tom Dotson and Avalee Swisher 67.8
Charles and Linda McLaurin
72.5
Bobby and Louise Roush
83.5
B Flight
Bob and Helen Humphreys
Ty and Drenda Roush 67.7
Reid and Sue Carroll 67.7
John and Joy Stewart 68.0
Aaron and Frannie Groves
Art and Janet Hartley 74.5
Tom and Becky Epling 77.5

60.7

72.5

Point Pleasant soccer Miscues and injury end
knocks off OVCS, 4-0 Ohioʼs best start since ʻ76
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — One streak came
to a screeching halt, while
another kept moving right
on.
The Point Pleasant soccer team won its fifth
straight decision Friday
night during a 4-0 victory
over host Ohio Valley
Christian in a non-conference matchup in Gallia
County.
The visiting Black
Knights (7-5-0) became the
first team to defeat the
Defenders (8-1-1) this fall,
snapping the hosts’ eightgame winning streak and
nine-game unbeaten streak.
Point Pleasant also did so
with a strong second half
surge, as the game was tied

at zero at the intermission.
PPHS outshot the hosts
15-7 overall, including an
11-2 on-goal edge. Point
also gained a 9-1 advantage
on corner kicks and committed just seven fouls in
the game — compared to a
dozen by OVCS.
Nathan Hannum started
the scoring in the 47th
minute after netting a
rebound off of OVCS
keeper Pete Carmen.
Tommy Foust provided the
original shot that ricocheted off of Carman,
allowing the guests to take
a 1-0 edge.
The Black Knights
increased their lead to 2-0
in the 73rd minute after
Hristian Lenkov headed a
corner kick from Foust,
then Steven Porter scored
an unassisted goal in the

78th minute for a 3-nil
advantage.
Gustavo
Roedel
wrapped up the scoring
later in the 78th minute
after netting a pass from
Rogan Park for the 4-0
finale. Foust had two
assists for the victors,
while Park added one
assist.
Carman made 11 saves
in net for the hosts, while
Brady Reymond had two
saves for the victors. It was
the fourth shutout win for
Point Pleasant in its last
five outings.
The Black Knights
return to action Tuesday
when they travel to
Hurricane for a non-conference matchup. OVCS
travels to Gallia Academy
Tuesday for a non-conference contest.

Rough day physically for QBs in Week 3
BY BARRY WILNER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ouch!
That’s the kind of day
it was for several NFL
quarterbacks,
most
notably Michael Vick,
who broke his right hand,
and Mark Sanchez, who
might have done the
same to his nose.
Adding more pain
Sunday, both lost.
So did Sam Bradford,
who was sacked five
times, and Matt Ryan,
who went down four
times.
Vick
started
for
Philadelphia despite suffering a concussion in
last week’s loss at
Atlanta. He left the 29-16
defeat at the hands of the
New York Giants with
the broken hand in the
fourth quarter after helping the Eagles overcome
a 14-0 first-quarter
deficit to take a 16-14
lead.
It’s uncertain how long
Vick will be out.
Vick not only was hurting, he was annoyed that
no flag was thrown on
the hit by defensive lineman Chris Canty. It
appeared Canty hit Vick

in the facemask with his
helmet. Vick sat on the
ground, lifted his helmet
off slightly before getting
helped up by a teammate
and an official.
“Every time I throw the
ball, I’m on the ground,”
Vick said. “I get hit in the
head. I don’t know why I
don’t get the 15-yard flag
like everybody else does.
I’m not trying to blame
the refs. I just want them
to take notice.”
Sanchez had a red welt
under his right eye that
stretched across the
bridge of his nose. He
was battered by Oakland
in the Raiders’ 34-24
win, but wasn’t sure who
smacked him.
“I have no idea,” said
Sanchez after passing for
a career-high 369 yards
and two touchdowns. “I
just came off the sideline
and my nose was killing
me.”
Elsewhere, Baltimore
routed Bradford and the
St. Louis Rams 37-7, and
Ryan’s Atlanta Falcons
fell to Tampa Bay 16-13.
Also, it was Green Bay
27, Chicago 17; Buffalo
34, New England 31; New
Orleans 40, Houston 33;
Detroit 26, Minnesota 23

in overtime; Pittsburgh
23, Indianapolis 20;
Tennessee 17, Denver 14;
Carolina 16, Jacksonville
10; San Diego 20, Kansas
City 17; Seattle 13,
Arizona 10; Cleveland 17,
Miami 16; and San
Francisco 13, Cincinnati
8.
Washington
is
at
Dallas on Monday night.
Giants 29, Eagles 16
At Philadelphia, with
Vick out, Eli Manning
was the star passer.
Manning threw four
touchdown
passes,
including two to unheralded Victor Cruz.
Without their Pro Bowl
quarterback, the Eagles
(1-2) hardly look like the
“Dream Team” that
entered the season with
Super
Bowl-or-bust
expectations. The Giants
(2-1) have won two in a
row and snapped a sixgame losing streak
against their division
rivals.
“It means the world to
me because a lot of people were saying our
receivers were down and
who would step up and I
was happy to be that guy
that stepped up to help
my team,” Cruz said.

PISCATAWAY, N.J.
(AP) — Four turnovers, a
concussion to top cornerback Travis Carrie and a
record-setting game by
Rutgers
receiver
Mohamed Sanu brought
Ohio’s best start since
1976 to an end.
“You can look at a lot
of things, but bottom line
is, Rutgers played well
and we didn’t,” Ohio
coach Frank Solich said.
“When you start looking
at things, there are things
that add up. Bottom line
for us is that we just have
to play better football.”
The four turnovers led
to 17 points for the
Scarlet Knights (2-1) and
the loss of Carrie contributed to a phenomenal
performance by Sanu,
who had 16 catches for
176 yards and two touchdowns in a 38-26 win
that knocked the Bobcats
(3-1) from the unbeaten
ranks.
“They didn’t beat us,
we beat ourselves,” said
Ohio quarterback Tyler
Tettleton, who threw for
339 yards and three
touchdowns. “We were
ready to play. That was
the only thing that happened.”
What the Bobcats didn’t antipcate was losing
Carrie, who was hurt
making a tackle on
Rutgers’ second series.
“That was huge,” said
Ohio safety Xavier
Hughes, who set up the
Bobcats first touchdown
with an interception. “He
is our No. 1 corner. Jamil
(Shaw) came in and did a
great job, but I felt like if
Travis was able to stay in
the game, we would have
had a better opportunity
(to win). We would be
fresher and Jamil could
come on and off and
make more plays.”
Without Carrie, Sanu
was unstoppable. He
caught touchdowns of 7
and 4 yards from Chas
Dodd, who iced the game
with a 10-yard scoring
pass to Paul Caarrezola
with 5:00 to play.
Sanu’s 16 catches
broke the Rutgers record
of 13 that he tied in his

last game two weeks ago.
It also broke the singlegame mark of 13 for a
Big East Conference
receiver.
“He made some plays,”
Hughes said. “I have to
give him credit, but a lot
of things were mental
that we could have
fixed.”
Freshman
Savon
Huggins scored on a 3yard run and Marcus
Cooper returned a fumbled punt 3 yards for
another
score
for
Rutgers’ other touchdowns.
Tettleton’s touchdown
passes covered 10 yards
to LaVon Brazill, 31 to
Donte Foster and 10 to
Riley Dunlop.
The game had a
dramtic moment at the
end of the third quarter
when a fan in the stands
suffered a heart attack
and was given CPR
behind the Ohio bench.
Solich walked onto the
field after the opening
play of the fourth quarter,
trying to get the officials
to stop the game so a cart
carrying the fan could get
off the field. The cart
rolled down the sideline
and out of the stadium
seconds later.
“I was down on the
sideline and our director
of football operations
yelled at me that someone had a heart attack,”
Solich said. “We thought
that they were going to
try to get the cart across
the field. We weren’t real
sure, but I didn’t bother
to listen to any kind of
explanations.
When
somebody said somebody had a heart attack, I
just went out to get the
game stopped and see if
anything could be done.”
Rutgers
spokesman
Jason Baum said the fans

Tuesday’s TV Listings

was taken to Robert
Wood Johnson Hospital.
He did not know his condition.
The Scarlet Knights
turned two of the
Bobcats’ mistakes into
touchdowns in building a
21-10 halftime lead, with
the last score coming on
a wild fumble return that
Cooper carried the final 3
yards. Ka’Lial Glaud
recovered a fumble by
Brazill on a punt return at
the Bobcats 15 and
returned the ball to the 2,
where he fumbled, only
to see Cooper pick it up
at the 3 and score for a
21-7 lead.
Todd and Sanu put
Rutgers ahead 7-0 with a
7-yard touchdown pass
just five plays after a bad
snap gave the Scarlet
Knights possession at the
Ohio 29.
Hughes’ interception
gave Ohio the ball at the
Rutgers 26 and Brazill
made a one-handed catch
to tie the game at 7 with
2:36 to go in the quarter.
Huggins, who fumbled
inside the Ohio 10 on
Rutgers’ opening drive,
scored from 3 yards out
to put the Scarlet
Knights ahead 14-7 on
the ensuing series and
then the fumble on the
punt return made it a 14point lead.
Matt Weller kicked a
42-yard field goal on the
final play of the half to
get the Bobcats within
21-10. It was the 39th of
his career, setting a
school record.
Tettleton’s TD pass to
Foster closed the cap to
four points, but Dodd,
who passed for 232
yards, drove Rutgers 62
yards in nine plays, hitting a double-covered
Sanu for a 28-17 lead.
A fumble by Ryan
Boykin set up a 44-yard
field goal by San San Te
early in the fourth quarter
and Dodd iced the game
with his last TD pass,
which was set up by a 14yard pass to Sanu on a
third-and-15 and a penalty on the next play
against Ohio for having
12 players on the field.

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

Tuesday, September 27
Volleyball
South Gallia at Belpre, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 5:30 p.m.
Meigs at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Tolsia, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 6
p.m.
Soccer
Ohio Valley Christian at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Point
Pleasant
(boys)
at
Hurricane, 5 p.m.
South
Charleston
at
Point
Pleasant (girls), 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, September 28
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at River Valley,
5:30 p.m.
Thursday, September 29
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth,
5:15 p.m.
South Gallia at Trimble, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5:30
p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Covenant Christian, 6
p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 5 p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant
(boys), 6 p.m.
Cross Country
Point
Pleasant
at
George
Washington, 3 p.m.
Friday, September 30
Football
Belpre at Eastern, 7:30 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia,
7:30 p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs at Athens, 7:30 p.m.
Logan at Gallia Academy, 7:30
p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 7:30 p.m.
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 7:30
p.m.
Hannan at Fayetteville-Perry, 7:30
p.m.
Soccer
Grace at Ohio Valley Christian, 5
p.m.
Volleyball
Grace at Ohio Valley Christian, 6
p.m.

A8
Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Adkins, Blodgett win at Rio Invite
STAFF REPORT

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande’s men’s and
women’s cross country
teams enjoyed big days
on Saturday in the 41st
Annual Patty Forgey
Invitational on the URG
campus.
In the men’s division,
the host RedStorm took
top team honors by grabbing six of the top eight
individual spots, including each of the top three
positions.
Nick Wilson had the
top time of the day with a
finish of 26:46, while
Matt Spencer finished
close behind at 26:49.
Bryce Wilson was third at
27:45.
Ohio Valley Christian
finished second and
Cincinnati Christian took
third place in the team
competition.
In the women’s division, Rio Grande had just
three runners entered, but
each member of the trio
finished in the top four.
Cassie Mattia had the
fastest time of the day at

20:03, while Samantha
Barnes was second at
20:25 and Brittany
Piccone was fourth at
21:51.
OVC topped West
Virginia Tech for the
women’s team title.
The high school portion of the event saw
Fairland High School
take the team title in the
boys’ Red Division and
the girls’ White Division,
while Cabell Midland
captured the boys’ White
Division crown and
Thomas
Worthington
grabbed the girls’ Red
Division crown.
Fairland’s
Tanner
Mattie had the top time in
the boys’ Red Division at
17:02, while Drake
Lohnes of West Branch
took top individual honors in the boys’ White
Division at 17:45.
Thomas Worthington
and Caldwell completed
the top three in boys’ Red
Division team scoring,
while Fairfield Union and
West Branch finished out
the top trio of teams in
the boys’ White Division
bracket.

Gallia
Academy’s
Peyton Adkins took top
honors in the girls’ Red
Division at 19:26, with
River Valley’s Katie
Blodgett doing the same
in the girls’ White
Division in a time of
19:49.
Gallia Academy and
Athens rounded out the
top three in the girls’ Red
Division team scoring,
while
Eastern
and
Williamstown finished
second and third, respectively, in the girls’ White
Division.
Barboursville, Milton
and Winfield were the top
three team finishers in the
boys’
Middle
School/Junior High division, with Winfield’s
Braxton McMillion grabbing the top individual
spot at 11:06.
Winfield, Hurricane
and Barboursville finished 1-2-3 in the girls’
Middle School/Junior
High bracket. Brittney
McMillion of Winfield
had the fastest individual
time with a finish of
12:34.
Local finishers were as

follows,
Girls
Red
Division:
(Gallia
Academy) 1. Peyton
Adkins, 19:26.99; 2.
Mckenna
Warner,
20:06.22; 6. Madison
Holley, 21:15.65; 14.
Hannah Watts, 22:02.25;
33. Elizabeth Holley,
23:51.93; 44. Jenna Bays,
25:18.39; 57. Akesha
Saunders, 27:27.62; 65.
Madelyn
Dennison,
29:24.03; 69. Darian
Miller, 30:53.18; 73.
Kimi Faro, 34:31.32; 74.
Rylee Stevens, 35:20.95;
75.
Kati
Saunders,
39:45.00.
Girls White Division:
(Eastern) 4. Taylor
Palmer, 21:12.37; 6. Asia
Michael, 21:26.11; 16.
Keri Lawrence, 22:42.52;
29. Savannah Hawley,
23:40.94; 35. Katie
Keller, 24:09.69; 58.
Cheyenne
Doczi,
25:39.10; 81. Shelby
Smith, 26:53.15. (River
Valley) 1. Katie Blodgett,
19:49.08; 46. Keyana
Ward, 24:54.52; 82.
Maria Garcia, 26:55.88;
96.
Ciara
Layne,
27:46.71; 107. Sonja
Rankin, 30:40.43.

Adkins

Blodgett

Boys Red Division:
(Eastern) 62. Brock
Smith, 20:54.66; 75.
Tyson Long, 22:15.93.
Boys White Division:
(Gallia Academy) 6.
Michael
Edelmann,
18:33.67; 32. Timmy
Warner, 19:28.93; 102.
Quenton
McKinniss,
22:10.98; 106. Griffon
McKinniss, 22:15.69;
134. Casey Lawrence,
23:27.79; 137. Ryan
Valley, 23:32.70. (River
Valley) 24. Trent Wolfe,
19:14.88; 38. Aaron
Oehler, 19:37.31; 43.
Jared
Hollingsworth,
19:54.37; 84. Ethan
Hersman, 21:30.30; 110.
Austin
Hamilton,
22:28.20; 129. James
Jackson, 23:07.74; 144.
Kyle
Randolph,
24:22.82; 151. Logan
Layne, 25:14.87; 159.
Ben Ball, 26:31.31.

Saturday, October 1
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant,
5 p.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy at Midwest Meet
of Champions, TBA
River Valley at Piketon Invitational,
TBA
Eastern at Pickerington North, 10
a.m.
Southern at Meigs Invitational
(Meigs), 10 a.m.
Point Pleasant at Ritchie County,
10 a.m.

Meigs’ Braden Spencer
Wolfe

J. McCoy

Wolfe, McCoy
win at Bob
Reall Invite
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDILYTRIBUNE.COM

LANCASTER, Ohio
— Southern’s Jennifer
McCoy and Kody Wolfe
both took home individual titles at Saturday’s
Bob Reall Invitational in
Lancaster, Ohio.
McCoy — the lone
female
runner
for
Southern — took first
place in the girls open
race with a time of
21:12.0.
Dublin
Coffman’s
Melissa
Bomberger was second
with a time of 21:41.5.
Wolfe
led
the
Tornadoes in the boys
race with a time of
16:24.8, claiming first
place by nearly three seconds over Paint Valley’s
Daniel
Gardner
(16:27.6).
Andre Ginther was
22nd for the Torandoes
with a time of 20:00.1,
Andrew Roseberry was
30th (20:25.3), Chris
Yeater
was
47th
(21:04.4),
Bradley
McCoy
was
49th
(21:09.1) and Chase
Graham
was
69th
(24:51.3).
The Tornadoes finished sixth overall with a
score of 143. Fairfield
won the boys team title
with a total of 48, while
Wheelersburg was second with a score of 83.
Complete results of the
2011
Bob
Reall
Invitational are available
at www.baumspage.com

Meigs’ Jennifer Robinson

Southern’s Jacob Hoback

Eastern’s Chris Bissell

Tie breakers needed to
decide Riverside Invite
STAFF REPORT

MASON, W.Va. — Tie
Breakers are normally not
required to decide a golf match
at the high school level.
However, a tie breaker was a
common occurrence at the 18th
annual Riverside Golf Course
High School Invitational Golf
Tournament played on Saturday,
September 24. It took a tie
breaker to determine a champion. It took a tie breaker to determine a medalist for the day and
it took a tie breaker to select the
last 2 members of the All
Tournament Team.
20 teams were scheduled to
play in this play 5, count 4 format tournament, but one school
(Gilmer County) was forced to
withdraw because 2 of their
players suffered football injuries
in Friday nights football game.
When all the scores had been
counted, the Charleston Catholic
“A” team and the Point Pleasant
Big Blacks were dead-locked
with 338 strokes each after the
back nine scores for each team
were added, the winner was
Charleston Catholic. Point
Pleasant was second and the
Waterford (Ohio) High School
team was a very close third with
a final total of 339.
Charleston Catholic was led
by freshman Christian Casingal
who shot an excellent 75 for the
day. Aaron Persily and Jordan
Covelli contributed a pair of
82’s. The fourth score that
counted for the winners was a 99
by David Zekan.
The Big Blacks Opie Lucas

shot a 76 for Point’s best score.
He was followed by Erik
Allbright with an 80, while
Kelsey Allbright turned in an 89,
with Denver Thomas posting a
93 to make the final total for the
second place team.
Waterford’s
Brandyn
Offenberger was his team’s best
shooting a 78 for the day. Austin
Hilverding added an 83, with
Brent Ginther turning in an 84.
The fourth score for Waterford,
94, was posted by Shane Kern.
Area teams to participate and
their results were Wahama, who
finished sixth with a score of
362; Eastern shot a 373 to finish
7th after winning a tie breaker
against Ripley; South Gallia’s
379 earned them 10th place;
Southern shot 404 to finish 12th;
a score of 408 placed the Meigs
boys team in 13th position;
River Valley’s 443 gave them
17th place.
For the first time in the tournament’s history, two all-girls
teams competed. The team from
Charleston Catholic finished in
18th place, while the young
ladies from Meigs finished 19th.
It should also be noted that several teams that participated had
girls playing important roles for
their teams. In fact, Wahama’s
Morgan Nottingham had her
teams best score with a season
best of 88. Point’s Kelsey
Allbright contributed a 89.
The medalist for the day was
T.J. White from Nitro who shot a
75. T.J won the title with a tie
breaker win over Charleston
Catholic’s Christian Casingal.
The All Tournament Team

consisted of T.J. White, whose
medalist award makes him captain of the team. Other team
members
were
Christian
Casingal, Opie Lucas, Cory
Hoshor, Brandyn Offenberger,
Erik Allbright, Aaron Persily,
and Jordan Covelli.
Riverside
High
School
Invitational results (by team): 1.
Charleston Catholic*, 338:
Christian Casingal, 75; Aaron
Persily, 82; Jordan Covelli, 82;
David Zekan, 99.
2. Point Pleasant, 338: Opie
Lucas, 76; Erik Allbright, 80;
Kelsey Allbright, 89; Denver
Thomas, 93.
3. Waterford, 339: Brandyn
Offenberger,
78;
Austin
Hilverding, 83; Brent Ginther,
84; Shane Kern, 94; Aaron
Rogers, 99.
4. Warren, 342: Zach
McKenna, 84; Nik Gibson, 85;
Michael Sams, 85; Adam Lang,
88; Ian Zoller, 91.
5. Buffalo, 359: Cory Hosher,
76; Bradley Harris, 91; Blaik
Caplinger, 95; Drew Patton, 97;
Anthony Blankenship, 100.
6. Wahama, 362: Morgan
Nottingham, 88; Dakota Sisk,
89; Michael MacKnight, 90;
Samuel Gordon, 95; Kevin Back,
103.
7. Eastern*, 373: Christian
Amsbary, 89; David Warner, 89;
Kyle Young, 95; Chris Bissell,
100; Josh Parker, 129.
8. Ripley, 373: Jordan
Franklin, 84; Tyler Jones 95;
Jacob Haynes, 97; Wes Withrow,
99; Justin McKowen, 123.
9. Herbert Hoover, 375: Travis
Gibson, 85; Cody Webb, 91;

Matt Holstein, 95; Tyler
Braucher, 104; Nick Calvert,
113.
10. South Gallia, 379: Gus
Slone 84; David Michael 86;
Seth Jarrell 102; Ethan Swain
107; Andy Welch 111.
11. Ravenswood, 382: Lon
Ellis, 84; Jon O’Brien, 95; Caleb
Meaige, 96; Zach Vannest, 107;
Trace Bozo, 112.
12. Southern, 404: Adam Pape,
89; Jacob Hoback, 98; Cole
Graham, 104; Trenton Cook,
113; Ryan Schenkelberg, 113.
13. Meigs, 408: Treay
McKinney, 83; Dillan Andrews,
102; Braden Spencer, 108; David
Davis, 115; Paul Gibbs, 120.
14. Trimble, 431: Colin Smith,
99; Kyle Russell, 110; Jeff
Andrews, 110; Brayton Hazon,
112; Nick Smith, 119.
15. Federal Hocking, 434:
Austin Russell, 91; Steven Coen,
108; T.J. Clemens, 115; Brandon
Russell, 120; Shane Gillian,
DNF.
16. Nitro, 436: T.J. White, 75;
Elizabeth
McIntyre,
108;
Zachary Stamper, 113; Lindsay
Klemm, 130.
17. River Valley, 443: Dan
Goodrich, 90; Jordan Howell,
117; Taylor Wooldridge, 117;
Zach Morris, 119.
18. Charleston Catholic Girls,
476: Allie Persily, 105; Peri
Bailey, 112; Samantha Riggs,
128; Nina Flores, 131; Amanda
Lane, 147.
19. Meigs Girls, 498: Alyssa
Cremeans, 115; Natalie Michael
122; Harley Fox, 124; Jennifer
Robinson, 131; Kerri Moon, 137.
* — won tie breaker

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