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                  <text>High school
football, B1

Community
Corner, A6

Printed on
100% recycled
newsprint

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Briefs

Veterans Day parade

GALLIPOLIS — A Gallipolis
Veterans Day parade will be held
on Friday, November 11 to honor
military veterans and to demonstrate the community support for
their service, organized by the
Gallia County Veterans Service
Commission. All veterans, veteran service groups and community
organizations are encouraged to
participate. Participants are asked
to contact the Veterans Service
Office at (740) 446-2005, no later
than Tuesday, November 8.
Parade participants will gather at 10 a.m., Friday, Nov. 11, on
Spruce Street between First and
Second Ave. to form the parade
order. Groups will be assigned
a number to establish order. The
procession will start at 10:30
a.m., proceeding down Second
Ave., ending at the Doughboy
Monument on First Ave. The Veterans Day ceremony will begin at
11 a.m., with Wayne Hutchinson,
VFW Service Officer as guest
speaker. In case of bad weather,
the ceremony will move to the
Ariel Theatre and will still be
held at 11 a.m.

		

Sunday, October 23, 2011

			

$1.50 • Vol. 45, No. 43

Canterbury denies rape
charges, bond continued
By Brian J. Reed

BReed@mydailysentinel.com

ATHENS — The Gallipolis man charged in the
rape of an Ohio University student has denied the
charges against him. Levi
Canterbury is scheduled
to go to trial on Dec. 13.
Levi Canterbury, 21,
appeared in Athens County Common Pleas Court
and pleaded innocent to
two counts of rape. He

was arrested in El Paso,
Texas, earlier this month,
where he had been serving in the National Guard.
The Athens County Grand
Jury indicted him two
weeks ago.
Canterbury appeared
before Judge Alan Goldsberry with his attorney,
William Eachus, Gallipolis. Goldberry continued a
$200,000 bond set earlier
in the Athens County Municipal Court, and Canter-

bury remains in the Southeastern Regional Jail.
Canterbury is charged
with picking up the unidentified woman, an OU
student, driving her to a
parking lot and raping her.
He is not affiliated with
the university, according
to the OU police department. Police said Canterbury is believed to have
dropped the woman off,
after the crime, at the College Gate on Court Street.

According to an Athens
newspaper, the prosecution alleges Canterbury
bleached his car’s interior
to remove evidence but
that his DNA was found in
the alleged victim’s clothing. Canterbury is reported to have called 911 to
report picking up a young
woman in need of assistance, but investigators
have said he did so in an
effort to cover up the alleged rape.

Board of Education
meeting

RACINE — The Southern
Local Board of Education will
meet at 7 p.m., Monday, Oct. 24
in the high school media center.

URG Safety Council
meeting scheduled

RIO GRANDE — Employers
are reminded that the S.E. Ohio
Safety Council will meet on October 25 at noon on the campus of
the University of Rio Grande in
Davis University Center Conference Room C. Reservations for
lunch must be called in to Phyllis Mason 245-7228 or Carolyn
Berry 245-7170 by Friday.

Free costume jewelry
workshop at OVCS

GALLIPOLIS — A costume
jewelry workshop will be presented by Wanda Willis from 6-8
p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 25 at Ohio
Valley Christian School. The
workshop will feature jewelry
from 1920-1975. Participants
are encouraged to bring their
own jewelry. The free class is
provided for parents and community members in collaboration
with the Gallia-Vinton Education
Service Center. To register, contact Connie Bradbury, 21st Century Community Learning Center
Consultant at Gallia-Vinton ESC,
at (740) 245-0593 or by email
at 90_cbradbury@seovec.org.
Class size is limited.

Obituaries
Page A5

• Johnny Callicoat
• Sarah Irene Hoback, 94
• Virginia M. Kilgore, 89
• Anthony Oiler, 40
• Carol Tannehill, 77

Weather

Welsh Pride in Rio

Amber Gillenwater/photo

New mural represents
spirit of Rio’s Welsh
heritage
By Amber Gillenwater
mdtnews@mydailytribune.com

RIO GRANDE — The
Welsh spirit is alive and well in
the Village of Rio Grande, and
a new beautification project recently completed within the village will serve as a prominent
reminder of the pride in heritage
kept by the residents of the small
college town.
The project, a mural located
on a retaining wall across from
the Rio Grande Post Office on
Ohio 325, was the brainchild of
Rio Grande Mayor Matt Easter
and was designed and recently
completed by University of Rio
Grande art students.
According to Easter, earlier this year, he approached
University of Rio Grande Associate Professor of Art Benjy
Davies about the idea of a
Welsh-themed mural.
“I challenged Benjy Davies
… I said, ‘I would like to do
something, kind of a funky and
fresh painting, a modern look
along that entire wall’ … and
one of the rules that I laid out
to them was it has to be themed
around the Welsh dragon because of the history of Rio
Grande being mostly Welsh,”
Easter said. “It’s a modern art
take on the Welsh flag, it’s the

BReed@mydailysentinel.com

Index

3 SECTIONS — 16 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

C2,3
B3
A4
B Section

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY — Funds remaining in Meigs County
Commissioners’ allocation of
state grant funds for next year
may be used to make needed
repairs in the county jail.
Last month, commissioners
learned one of the projects they
had awarded funding through
Community
Development
Block Grant formula funds
would not proceed. That, Commissioner Tim Ihle said Friday,
left $36,000 to spend on another community improvement
project. Commissioners are
considering at least three, Ihle
said, but will likely earmark
the money to replace plumbing
fixtures and repair the shower
facilities at the county jail next

to the courthouse.
Ihle said there are strict
spending limits on formula
funds, but commissioners and
their grants administrator believe making the facilities in
the jail more accessible will
help the project qualify. The
condition of the plumbing is so
dire, Ihle said, the repairs may
be necessary before the formula allocation is even received
sometime early next year.
Commissioners had also
discussed two separate park
improvement projects as possible grant recipients. A final
decision is expected soon, Ihle
said, because no projects can
be awarded funding until a final project is selected, and a
deadline nears.
In other business:
Collection of a new three-

Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — An
adult and a juvenile were
arrested on Thursday by
officers with the Gallipolis
Police Department following
a morning burglary at a
Gallipolis residence.
At approximately 10
a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 20,
officers were informed of
a burglary at a residence on
Spruce Street in Gallipolis.
Upon their arrival, officers
were told that someone had
kicked in the back door of the
home and had taken several
items, including a gun and a
large amount of change.
Later
on
Thursday,
officers located the gun and,
following leads from this
find, officers were able to
identify two suspects in this
case.
At approximately 3:30
p.m. on Thursday, Thomas
M. Seymour, 18, formerly
of Columbus, Ohio, and a
local youth were taken into
custody and, reportedly,
most of the items taken from
the break-in were recovered
during a probation search of
a local residence.
Following consultation
with the office of Gallia
County Prosecutor Jeff
Adkins, officers expect that
both suspects will be charged
with burglary.

City of
Gallipolis
establishes
leaf pickup
schedule

GALLIPOLIS — The city
of Gallipolis has established
a weekly leaf pickup schedule that will begin Monday,
Oct. 24. The schedule should
Amber Gillenwater/photo
eliminate any questions conThe new mural is a modern art take on the Welsh cerning when leaves will be
dragon and showcases the village’s Welsh pride and picked up. According to City
Maintenance Superintendent
heritage, according to Mayor Matt Easter.
David Walters, he is hopeful
that the schedule will give
everyone uniform service.
Monday: All cross streets
and Fifth Avenue. Tuesday:
First Avenue and Second Avenue. Wednesday: Garfield
Avenue, Ohio 141 and Ohio
588. Thursday: Third Avenue
and Fourth Avenue. Friday:
Eastern Avenue and Maple
Shade Area.
Contact the city maintenance garage at (740) 446Photo courtesy of the village of Rio Grande 0600.
University of Rio Grande art students Emalea Neal
and Elizabeth Hamilton recently completed a Welsh
dragon mural on a retaining wall in the village of Rio
Grande. The mural was designed by fellow student,
Justin Francisco.

Formula remains likely earmarked for county jail repairs
By Brian J. Reed

High: 62
Low: 46

use of the Welsh dragon.”
Davies oversaw the project
and, based upon the design of
art student Justin Francisco, the
wall was completed by fellow
art students Elizabeth Hamilton
and Emalea Neal over a weekend in September.
According to Easter, the
project was funded by the remainder of the village’s beautification budget for 2011, as well
as through donations by the University of Rio Grande’s Madog
Center for Welsh Studies and
Sherwin Williams paint.
“It’s really different, it’s really new-looking … [and] we’re
really proud of how this turned
out,” Easter said.
Lucy Thomas, a Welsh exchange student currently studying at the University of Rio
Grande, commented that the
new mural, as well as other efforts the village and university
make to enrich the Welsh heritage of the area, provide a homelike environment for the Welsh
students during their stay in Rio
Grande.
“It was a really nice surprise
when Matt came to the Madog
Center and told us it was going
to happen,” Thomas said.”With
all the flags around the University of Rio Grande anyway, it’s
just wonderful, and it gives the
Welsh spirit to the university and
to the community; and the wall
just adds that the little quirkiness
to the university and makes me
feel at home when I pass it.”

Two arrested
after burglary
investigation

percent lodging tax, to be levied on guests at the Meigs Motel and other guest housing will
be collected Jan. 1, 2012, after
commissioners imposed the
tax Thursday. Proceeds from
the tax will be used to replace
funds commissioners have
spent from their general fund
on tourism promotion through
the services of the Chamber of
Commerce. The lodging tax
was first proposed in 2008,
and a Convention and Visitors
Bureau board was appointed,
but the tax was never imposed.
Commissioners expect to
spend around $20,000 this year
to fund the tourism office, and
expect as much as $15,000 or
more could be generated from
the lodging tax in its first year.
Commissioners
have
awarded one of the final con-

tracts for their 2011 formula
funding round. At Thursday’s
regular meeting, they approved
a contract with Rose’s Excavating for the excavating work
necessary for development at
the Angela Eason Memorial
Park at Chester. The $44,100
award was made through the
CDBG allocation. Volunteers
are now working to collect donations for dugouts, backstops
and other equipment for the
community ballfields.
Commissioners also passed
a resolution appointing President Michael Bartrum as their
official representative and
Tom Anderson, vice president,
alternate, for the purpose of
voting at the annual meeting
of the County Commissioners
Association of Ohio to be held
in Columbus.

Mason, Putnam
counties file
suit over
redistricting
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@heartland
publications.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
— The controversial redistricting plan passed by the
West Virginia Legislature
this summer now has a fight
on its hands.
A lawsuit was filed
against the new redistricting
plan with the West Virginia
Supreme Court early Friday
morning by Jennifer Scragg
Karr, Esq., of Winfield, who
represents county commissions from both Mason and
Putnam counties.
Karr deemed the new plan
“unconstitutional” in her
argument filed with the supreme court. She states if the
new redistricting law isn’t
struck down, “the people of

See Suit, A5

�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Family won’t support nursing mother
Dear Dr. Brothers: I am
pregnant with my first child,
and everything is great, but I
am worried about one thing.
All the women in my family
are very well-endowed, and
they are all very proud of
their “girls.” None of them
has ever breastfed their children, and the husbands are
just fine with that as well.
The emphasis is on not
wrecking their figures. My
husband and I want our baby
to be nursed. But our family
is already trying to talk us
out of it. Help! — C.A.
Dear C.A.: It’s so strange
how our society has completely distorted the role of
women’s breasts to be sexual objects for men’s enjoyment rather than the natural
and normal means by which
human babies are fed. And
with all the uproar about
nursing in public thrown in,
I can see that you practically
are entering a battleground
when you announce that you
are going to be breastfeeding. It may take some strong
resolve and a lot of support
from your husband to avoid
getting discouraged, but the
experience should prove to
be a rewarding one when

you know you
am having
are doing the
a hard time
best for your
balancing
baby’s health
my love for
and developmy elderly
ment, and are
mother with
building
a
my responclose bond at
sibility
to
the same time.
keep
my
I
don’t
baby safe.
know if your
My
mom
family will be Dr. Joyce Brothers waited for
supportive, so
a long time
you may want
to become a
to turn to an organization grandma. Because she had
that promotes breastfeed- me in her 40s and I had my
ing, or ask the hospital if son in my 40s, my mom rethere is a program to support ally is too old to be babynew mothers. A new study sitting. But that is just what
by researchers at the Uni- she wants to do. My baby
versity of North Carolina is still not mobile, but what
has found that women who will happen when he has to
had trouble with breastfeed- be constantly watched and
ing — whether related to picked up? How do I get
pain or simply disliking the my mom to gracefully retire
experience — were much from grandchild-sitting? —
more likely to suffer from V.L.
postpartum depression a
Dear V.L.: This is a
couple of months down the tough one, since you want
road than were women who to keep your mom feeling
did not have such difficul- vibrant, young and useties. So make sure you are ful when it comes to helpprepared to ask for help and ing you out. You want to
support — whether from have her and the baby get
your family or elsewhere.
to know one another with
***
whatever time she has left to
Dear Dr. Brothers: I be a fully functioning grand-

mother. And most of all, you
don’t want to hurt her feelings or have her feel like
you don’t trust her with the
baby, because those kinds
of things could really crush
her self-esteem. But on the
other hand, you naturally are
still in that super-protective
mode when it comes to your
new baby, so you really are
conflicted about your mother’s ability to handle the job
of baby-sitting.
I’m sure your mom wants
you to get out and about so
that she can give you a hand
when it really counts, but
you probably don’t want
to leave her alone with the
baby. The only good way
to try her out is to ask her
to help you while you stay
in the home and do something else, like cook or do
laundry. Or you can go out
but have someone else in the
house that you trust, doing
something else for you and
keeping an eye on things in
the meantime. So I think it
can all work, and as soon
as your son starts crawling,
your mom probably will resign anyway!
(c) 2011 by King Features Syndicate

Gallia County Briefs
Road closures
continue for
slip repair

GALLIA
COUNTY
— Gallia County Engineer, Brett A. Boothe, has
announced the following
roads will continue to be
closed until further notice
for major slip repairs. Bulaville Pike, from Georges
Creek Road to Morton
Woods Road; Bulaville
Pike, from Keeler Road
to Addison Pike; Bladen
Road, from Hamilton Road
to Davis Road; McCormick
Road, from State Route
588 to State Route 160; and
Hannan Trace Road from
Brumfield Road to Little
Bullskin. Local traffic will

need to use other County
roads as a detour. Local
traffic will need to use other
County roads as a detour.

Gallia County Board
of DD meeting

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Board of DD
will hold its regular monthly meeting at 4 p.m. on
Tuesday, Oct. 25, at 77 Mill
Creek Road, Gallipolis.

Issues program
at Tea Party

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Tea Party
will meet at 7:30 p.m.,
Tues., Oct. 25, at the Mulberry Community Center in
Pomeroy.

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Speakers will include
Courtney Midkiff, administrative assistant, and Larry
Marshall, health commissioner of the Meigs County
Health Department on renewal of the health levy on
the November ballot. Also
speaking will be a representative from Building a Better Ohio who will talk about
Issue Two.
The Tea Party will hold
no meeting on Election Day.

Classes cancelled

ATHENS — The free
breastfeeding class scheduled at O’Bleness Memorial
Hospital, Wednesday, Oct.
26 has been cancelled. The
next scheduled breastfeeding class will be held from
5:30-7:30 p.m. on Nov. 2.

Keep Gallia Beautiful
meeting changed

GALLIPOLIS — The
next Keep Gallia Beautiful meeting will be Wed.
Oct. 26 (instead of 10-19)
at noon at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church. Please RSVP
so we will know how many
pizzas to order. If you have
taken any orders for the new
Keep Gallia Beautiful sign,
please let us know so they
can be brought to the meeting.

888-419-7929

SWCD meeting

POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Board of
Supervisors will hold its
regular monthly meeting at
11:30 a.m, Thursday, Oct.
27, at the district office,
33101 Hiland Road.

Ministry program

POMEROY — Team
Jesus Ministries, 333 Mechanic Street, Pomeroy, will
be having a series of services focusing on restoration,
revitalization, and revival
on Friday, Oct. 28-Sunday,
Oct. 30. Eddie Baer will
speak on Friday, Dan Freeman will speak on Saturday and a special Sunday
service will be held with
Nancy Haney. There will be
music Todd Wolfe and the
Team Jesus praise team.

Ohio River Dance to
offer free class

GALLIPOLIS — Ohio
River Dance will offer a
free dance class on October 29, at 1 p.m. The studio is located at 59 Court
Street, Gallipolis, Ohio.
For more information,
please call (740) 612-0175

See Briefs, A3

Going on Now!

59th

Mon-Fri 6am-8pm • Sat-Sun 8am-6pm
The Breast Cancer Research Foundation is a classiﬁed 501 (c)(3) charity.

Se Habla Español

In Loving Memory of
MICHAEL SHAWN BAKER
January 31, 1968 - October 19, 2010

50%

OFF Storewide

*See Store for Details

20%

OFF Select Window Treatments

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A2

Gallia County
Calendar
Card Showers

PATRIOT — Barbara
Knapp will celebrate her
80th birthday on November
15, 2011. Cards can be sent
to: Barbara (Barbie) Knapp,
911 Gage Road, Patriot,
Ohio 45658.
GALLIPOLIS — Pauline Boster Bartels will celebrate her 87th birthday on
Oct. 23, 2011. Cards may be
6 Airport Road, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.

Events

Tuesday, Oct. 25

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Veterans Service Commission will meet
at 4 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — Free
costume jewelry workshop,
6-8 p.m., Ohio Valley Christian School, presented by
Wanda Willis. To register,
contact Connie Bradbury at
Gallia-Vinton ESC, (740)
245-0593 or by email at
90_cbradbury@seovec.org.

Thursday, Oct. 27

GALLIPOLIS — French
500 Free Clinic, 1-4 p.m.,
258 Pinecrest Drive, off of
Jackson Pike. The clinic
was organized to serve the

uninsured residents of Gallia County, age 18 and over.

Friday, Oct. 28

GALLIPOLIS — Halloween party, 7-11 p.m.,
VFW Post 4464. Will include karaoke, a costume
contest and supper. Open to
all veterans.

Saturday, Oct. 29

GALLIPOLIS — Free
dance class, 1 p.m., Ohio
River Dance, 59 Court
Street. For more information, call (740) 612-0175 or
(740) 367-7893.

Tuesday, Nov. 1

GALLIPOLIS — Holzer
Clinic and Holzer Medical
Center retirees lunch, 12
p.m., Golden Corral.

Thursday, Nov. 3

RIO GRANDE — The
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint
Vocational School District
will hold its annual Advisory Committee meeting, with
dinner beginning at 6:30
p.m. in the cafeteria on the
Buckeye Hills campus.

Monday, Nov. 7

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis Neighborhood Watch
meeting, 6:30 p.m., Bossard
Memorial Library.

Meigs County
Community
Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Oct. 24

POMEROY — Regular
meeting of Meigs County
District Public Library
Board, 3:30 p.m., Pomeroy
library.
RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education will meet at 7 p.m.
Monday in the high school
media center.

Community events
Sunday, Oct. 23

TUPPERS PLAINS —
VFW Post 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary Halloween party,
2-4 p.m. Free games, candy,
refreshments.
Tuesday, Oct. 25
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Tea Party
will meet at 7:30 p.m. on
Tues., Oct. 25, at the Mulberry Community Center
in Pomeroy. Speakers will
include Courtney Midkiff,
administrative
assistant,
and Larry Marshall, health
commissioner of the Meigs
County Health on renewal
of the health levy on the November ballot. Also speaking will be a representative
from Building a Better Ohio
who will talk about Issue
Two.

Wednesday, Oct. 26

POMEROY — American Red Cross bloodmobile,

1-6 p.m., Mulberry Community Center.
POMEROY - The Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation District Board of
Supervisors will hold its
regular monthly meeting at
11:30 a.m Thursday at the
district office at 33101 Hiland Road.

Church events
Sunday, Oct. 23

HARTFORD, W.Va. —
60th anniversary celebration at Church of Christ in
Christian Union, with 9:30
a.m. service and preaching
by District Superintendent
Mik Holbrook. Past pastors,
public invited.
MIDDLEPORT — Dr.
John Moxley, teacher on
“Old Testament Tabernacle,” will speak at the 10
a.m., 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. services Oct. 23 at the Victory
Baptist Church.
CHESTER — Johnny
Staat and the Delivery Boys
to sing at 10:30 a.m. service, Chester Church of the
Nazarene.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
— Homecoming at South
Bethel Community Church,
Silver Ridge Road, 9 a.m.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.
worship, noon dinner, and
afternoon service at 1:30
with special singers.

151 2nd. Ave Gallipolis

740-446-0332
topefurniture.com

FREE
SEMINAR
What: “Dental Implants”

One year ago on October 19, 2010, we, the family of
“Shawn” Baker lost a loving son, husband, brother and
special uncle when God took him to his Heavenly land.
He could not say goodbye to us, he could not clasp our
hands, or give us a big hug.
WE NEVER GOT TO SAY GOODBYE!
Shawn, you are missed so much each and every minute
of every day, our hearts are aching from a wound that
will never heal. Just your presence lit up a room like a
Christmas tree and the laughter began.
We are all so proud of you for everything you accomplished
in your short life, and especially proud of you knowing
that many hearts are still beating today due to your
dedication as a MedFlight Paramedic and an EMT.
You were truly a “difference maker”.
But WE NEVER GOT TO SAY GOODBYE,
so we must say, UNTIL WE MEET AGAIN!
Sadly missed and deeply loved by
Mother Phyllis, Wife Tina, Brother Matt, Sister-in-law
Missy, nieces Emma and Myah, nephew Jackson, and
all extended family, friends, and co-workers from the
MedFlight and EMS families.
May you rest in peace.

Visit us at

www.mydailysentinel.com

When: Tuesday, November 1, 2011, 6 - 7:30

Where:
Riverwalk Dental
530 W. Union St., Suite A. Athens, Oh
Sponsored by: Dr. Craig Mathews

Kristi Dale Waugh
July 13,1975 - October
er 24,1989

Dr. Craig Mathews is a graduate of the Ohio State UniverDr. Mathews will lead
sity School of Dentistry and the
a discussion on the
Misch Implant Institute at the
advantages of Dental
University of Pittsburgh. He is a
Implants, over dentures Fellow of the International Congress of Oral Implantologists, a
and partial dentures.
member of the American Society
He will explain the
of Osseointegration the Ameriprocess of diagnosis
can Dental Association, the Ohio
and placement, using
Dental Association, the Academy
of General Dentistry, and the
a slide presentation to
Hocking Valley Dental Society.
illustrate specific procedural considerations.
Dr. Mathews’ patients who are Dental Implant recipients will be on hand to share their experience with the
group. Refreshments will be served. You are encouraged
to bring family members or guests.

For reservations call
1-740-592-1483 or 1-800-923-7329

Daughter of Jo
John &amp; Wanda
nda Waugh
Kristi, Although 22 years have passed since you parted
this life unexpectedly, I want you to know there has
not been a minute of the day you haven’t been with
me in my heart &amp; in my thoughts. You were a special
gift from God to me for just a while. I look up at the
stars each night and I know that you are the brightest
one shining back at me. When I see the star twinkle
you are telling me that you are in a wonderful place
and for me not to cry.

Kristi, I love you very much and miss you so much.

LOVE MOM

�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Livestock Report

Briefs

From Page A2

or (740) 367-7893.

Buckeye Hills
advisory committees
to meet

RIO GRANDE — The
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint
Vocational School District
will hold its annual Advisory Committee meeting
on Thursday, November 3,
2011. Dinner will begin at
6:30 p.m. in the cafeteria
on the Buckeye Hills campus. Currently, 33 Advisory Committees serve as
a communication channel
between the school and occupational groups in the
community. Each committee consists of six members,
and advises on the type of
skills, knowledge, and attitudes that are needed to
prepare secondary and adult
students to enter into a specific occupation. Members
serve a three-year term and
represent some 200 businesses, industries, and government agencies in Gallia,
Jackson and Vinton counties. Additional information
may be obtained by phoning
the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton
JVSD at 740-245-5334.

Free AARP safe
driving class for
veterans

GALLIPOLIS — A safe
driving class sponsored by
AARP in connection with
the Gallia County Veterans
Service Office will be held
from 12-4 p.m., Nov. 4 at
VFW Post 4464, 134 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis. The
safe driving program is a
classroom driver improvement course for all drivers
but specifically designed for
those 50 and older. The program, developed by AARP,
can sharpen driving skills,
help prevent accidents and
keep older drivers on the
road longer and more safely.
The class can also help drivers save money on car insurance. Ohio law permits auto
insurance carriers to offer
a discount on premiums to
qualified graduates of the
AARP class. Registration
forms can be completed by
calling the Veterans Service
Office at (740) 446-2005.
There will be no charge for
veterans or their spouse for
this class. Participants must
bring proof of veteran status, operator’s license and
AARP card, if a member
of AARP. Participants will
be required to complete a

veterans/spouse participant
form during the class. The
class size will be limited to
the first 25 applicants received.

Soup’s On at
Calvary Baptist

RIO
GRANDE
—
Soup’s On! at Calvary Baptist Church of Rio Grande
held the second Saturday of
the month (Nov. 12) from
noon to 2 p.m. Deliveries
can be made to the elderly,
shut-ins, or those with illness or injury in the Rio
Grande area by phoning
245-5228 by 9:30 a.m.

Stroke Survivors to
celebrate National
Caregivers’ Month

GALLIPOLIS — The
Stroke Survivors Support
Group will host a potluck
dinner and meeting in celebration of National Caregivers’ Month from 5-7 p.m. at
the Bossard Memorial Library on November 17. The
guest speaker will be Neurologist Dr. Lewis, who will
speak about strokes and the
recovery process. Call (740)
925-3788 for more information.

Gallia County Work
Opportunity Center
now offering career
workshops

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Department
of Job and Family Services
Work Opportunity Center will be offering career
workshops at their location,
848 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
on Wednesdays at 8 a.m.
and 1 p.m. Evening sessions
are also scheduled based
on demand. The workshop
will help participants identify careers that are best
for them, prepare a resume,
identify training that can
help improve interviewing
skills, learn who the employers are in Gallia County, and improve their ability to keep a job. To make
an appointment to attend a
workshop, call Jamie Payne
at (740) 388-8567.

Revolving loan fund
available

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Revolving
Loan Fund offers loans to
small businesses at a low
two and three fourths per-

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A3

cent fixed interest rate.
Funds can be used for a
variety of different projects
including, but not limited
to, fixed assets, machinery,
equipment and working
capital. Businesses must be
located in or planning to locate in Gallia County, must
meet USDA’s definition of
small and emerging business and demonstrate the
ability to create or retain at
least one job. All borrowers
are required to provide adequate loan security, promissory note and personal
guarantee. A $100 non-refundable application fee is
due upon submission of application. Contact Melissa
Clark, Economic Development Director at (740) 4464612, ext. 271 or mclark@
gallianet.net for more information or visit www.growgallia.com.

First Church of God
hosts Logos program

GALLIPOLIS — The
First Church of God, 1723
State Route 141 in Gallipolis, is hosting the Logos
Ministry on Wednesdays.
Children and young people
can take part in a family
time meal, Bible Study, recreation and worship skills.
The group meets Wednesdays at 6 p.m. to share
a meal prepared by the
church followed by Bible
study, recreation and worship skills development. All
children must have a current
registration form filled out
by the parent or guardian.
For more information you
may call the church office at
(740) 446-4404.

Enroll now for VA
health care

GALLIPOLIS — Veterans are encouraged to enroll
now for VA health care at
the new Gallipolis VA Clinic, located at 323A Upper
River Road, from 8 a.m.-5
p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Interested parties may
contact the clinic at (740)
446-3934. Enrollment may
also be attained at the Gallia County Veterans Service
Office located at 1102 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, from
8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday
through Thursday or 8 a.m.noon on Friday. Interested
parties may contact the office at (740) 446-2005.

Visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

GALLIPOLIS — United
Producers, Inc., livestock
report of sales from Oct. 19,
2011.
Feeder Cattle

275-415 pounds, Steers,
$100-$154, Heifers, $100$135; 425-525 pounds,
Steers, $100-$147, Heifers, $90-$130; 550-625
pounds, Steers, $98-$138,
Heifers, $90-$127; 650725 pounds, Steers, $95$125, Heifers,
$90-$120;
750-850
pounds, Steers, $90-$120,

Heifers, $90-$115.
Cows

Well Muscled/Fleshed,
$63-$73.50; Medium/Lean,
$53-$62; Thin/Light,
$35-$52; Bulls, $59.75$85.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $600$1,085; Bred Cows, $475550; Baby Calves, $75;
Goats, $30-$110; Lambs,
$145.

Manure to give away.
Will load for you.
Upcoming specials
10/26/11 — replacement
brood cow sale, 1 p.m.
Direct sales and free
on-farm visits. Contact Dewayne at (740)
339-0241, Stacy at (304)
634-0224, Luke at (740)
645-3697, or visit
the website at www.uproducers.com.

Research planned at Ohio
uranium plant project

CINCINNATI (AP) —
The Department of Energy
said Friday that it plans to
work with the developer of a
uranium enrichment project
in southern Ohio on research
and development to reduce
technical and financial risks
that have held up the developer’s application for a $2
billion loan guarantee.
The loan guarantee application from USEC Inc. is
still pending. But, the government and the Bethesda,
Md. -based developer of the
planned American Centrifuge Plant in Piketon have
agreed on a potential project that would involve testing and building clusters
of machines used to enrich
uranium, Richard Kauffman,
senior adviser to the Energy
secretary told The Associated Press on Friday.
“We want to be able to
demonstrate that the technology would work on a commercial basis,” Kauffman
said.
He said that if that if that
can be done, then it also
would be easier for the company to get contracts and attract other investors.
“DOE, USEC and our

partners remain supportive
of a path to commercializing the American Centrifuge
and believe additional work
demonstrating this innovative technology would be
beneficial to the project,”
John Welch, president and
chief executive of USEC,
said in a statement. “This
preserves a path for USEC
and our shareholders to obtain value from the investment they have made.”
The government’s part of
the funding of the research
and development would be
capped at $300 million and
would have to be approved
by congressional committees.
Ohio’s GOP U.S. Sen.
Rob Portman encouraged the
White House to approve the
loan for the plant and said
he had requested a meeting
with Energy Secretary Steven Chu.
“The workers supporting
this important national security and energy security project deserve certainty after
waiting for more than three
years for a final decision,”
he said.
Ohio’s U.S. Sen. Sherrod
Brown, a Democrat, called

the agreement a positive step
for southern Ohio and said
the project “shows that when
we transcend partisan politics, we can do big things.”
If the centrifuge project
is successful, Brown said, it
could bring as many as 4,000
construction jobs and 400
long-term, full time jobs to
Piketon.
“This is the most significant step yet in realizing
the thousands of jobs that
would be created through the
American Centrifuge Project,” said Brown, who also
has encouraged the Obama
administration to move forward with the loan approval
process.
The department says it intends to ask for approval to
use existing DOE funds for
the first $150 million needed
for the first phase of the research program. USEC and
its partners would pay for
20 percent of the program
through a technical verification phase involving the construction of the cascade or
initial cluster of centrifuges
and 80 percent of the phase
that would involve building remaining clusters into a
train of multiple clusters.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Opinion

Aiding the fight against
breast cancer
By Rep. John Carey

The brown and orange
colors of October are all
around us, but you can also
find a lot of pink to mark
Breast Cancer Awareness
Month. Whether it is found
on products, posters or in
commercials, the color
serves as a great reminder
of how we must continue
the fight to find a cure for
this disease.
Many Relay for Life
teams and student athletes
in the area have been raising money for the cure. I
was able to attend an event
called the Spielman Classic—named after Stefanie
Spielman—in which the
football players wore pink
socks and everyone from
both schools wore pink to
stamp out breast cancer.
Walks and other fundraising
activities are constantly taking place, and I urge you to
get involved. Our area has

always been very generous
in donating time and money
in the battle against cancer.
Unfortunately,
breast
cancer accounts for nearly
one out of every four cancers diagnosed in American
women, and about 230,000
new cases of invasive breast
cancer will be diagnosed in
American women in 2011
alone. In fact, the odds of
a woman developing breast
cancer over the course
of her lifetime are one in
eight. And let’s remember,
men can be diagnosed with
breast cancer also.
Early detection is key in
the fight against breast cancer. In addition to annual
clinical exams and monthly
self-exams, the American
Cancer Society recommends obtaining regular
mammograms starting at
the age of 40, having them
at least every other year. If
you notice anything out of

the ordinary while performing a self-exam, do not hesitate to call your physician.
Many of us have friends,
family members and other
loved ones who have had
to deal with breast cancer,
and it’s important to remind
them that they are not alone.
Finding a cure for breast
cancer is not only aimed at
preventing the disease, but
also to prevent hardship on
a personal level. I am convinced that detecting disease before it progresses is
always the best result.
I am always willing to
assist in the fight against
breast cancer in any way
that I can. Coming together in times like these can
make a huge difference, and
I hope that this month—
Breast Cancer Awareness
Month—you will do all you
can to help out, also.

Letters to the Editor
Oct. 22 is Make
a Difference
Day
Dear Editor,
October 22 is Make a
Difference Day. Across
the nation, Americans
will work together to
make their communities
better places to live.
Wondering how you
can make a difference?
Consider helping low
income, senior and military taxpayers in your
community to prepare
their federal taxes free
of charge by volunteering for the Internal
Revenue Service’s Volunteer Income Tax As-

sistance (VITA) or Tax
Counseling for the Elderly (TCE) programs.
Over 88,000 volunteers made a difference
by preparing 3 millionplus returns at thousands
of sites nationwide earlier this year. That includes hundreds of Ohio
volunteers who put their
tax knowledge to use,
helping community taxpayers reduce their tax
liability by identifying
and claiming tax credits and deductions that
might otherwise have
been overlooked, such
as the Earned Income
Tax Credit (EITC). The
result? More money in
Ohio taxpayers’ pockets.

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.

Sunday Times-Sentinal
Reader Services

Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error in
a story, please call one of our newsrooms.

Our main numbers are:

Tribune • Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446-2342
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
(740) 992-2155
Register • Pt. Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-1333

Our websites are:

Tribune • Gallipolis, OH
www.mydailytribune.com
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
www.mydailysentinel.com
Register • Pt. Pleasant, WV
www.mydailyregister.com

Our e-mail addresses are:

Tribune • Gallipolis, OH
mdtnews@mydailytribune.com
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com
Register • Pt. Pleasant, WV
mdrnews@mydailyregister.com

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Published every Sunday, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631. Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis. Member:
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Newspaper Association. Postmaster:
Send address corrections to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.

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To make a great thing
even better, new partner
organizations and VITA/
TCE volunteers are
sought to help prepare
and submit returns during the upcoming filing
season for Gallia County residents. Training is
provided.
Interested in making
tax time less taxing for
others? Search “Volunteer” at www.IRS.gov
for VITA/TCE information, then email TaxVolunteer@IRS.gov. Your
support will be greatly
appreciated.
Jennifer Jenkins
IRS Field Media Relations
Columbus, Ohio

Page A4

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Journey up the
mountain
My
message of
faith, hope
and love
Becky Skidmore
Riepenhoff
guest editorial

In the early spring
of 2009, I started having pains in my neck,
shoulders, lower back,
right hip and leg.
Since I have always
had yearly check ups
and quit smoking and
drinking at age 35,
I just thought, “This
will go away”. No one
wants to hear someone
complain. We
were taught to keep
your complaints to
yourself.
Needless
to say, the pain became worse. I had leg
cramps that would literally take me to the
ground.
I called my primary care physician.
He saw me and said I
probably pulled some
muscle and suggested
physical therapy. This
was June. Needless to
say, I didn’t go. We
know our own bodies, and there was no
way I could do physical therapy. The pain
worsened, and I saw
my primary care physician four more times
— no relief.
This past Febru-

ary, I was suffering 24
hours a day. My pain
was a 10. I called my
primary care physician again, went to
see him, explained my
pain to him, and told
him I spent most of
my time on two heating pads. I would take
a rolling pin and roll it
up and down my right
leg to try to relieve
some of the pain.
I explained to him
that I had a chance to
see a pain management doctor, but my
primary care physician wouldn’t refer me
until I went to physical therapy. “No way,”
I thought.
When
I
arrived
home, I was in tears.
My pain was horrific.
My husband Jay
said, “You need a second opinion; you can’t
continue to live like
this.”
Jay called Dr. Doug
Jones. Dr. Jones saw
me that afternoon and,
within four days, Dr.
Jones had diagnosed
me, and I was on my
way to Adena for more
tests and to see an oncologist. Dr. Doug
Jones saved my life.
When you’re sitting
in the doctor’s office,
and he tells you you
have cancer, you go
into an out-of-body
experience. You say,
“No, not me. This is
not happening.” Then,
all of the negative
thoughts flood your
mind: death, family.

“Oh no,” you say to
yourself, “I’m not going to die. I’m fighting for my life.”
I call my cancer
the “Devil’s curse”.
My treatments I call
“climbing the mountain,” and when I
reach the top, that will
be remission.
My
doctor
says
there is no cure for
my cancer, but it is
treatable. I won’t accept that. I believe in
miracles. They happen
everyday. I believe in
the power of prayer.
I cannot begin to
thank all of my friends,
family and acquaintances and people who
have heard about me
through other friends,
from all the prayers,
cards, flowers, phone
calls and, of course,
Facebook messages.
If you have been diagnosed recently with
a life-threatening disease, or you just need
someone to talk to or
pray with, you can call
me. I’ll be right over. I
can help!
I will never give
up. I’m climbing the
mountain every day.
With all my prayer
warriors, I will reach
the top. It’s in sight.
(Becky Riepenhoff
has mulitple myeloma,
a cancer of the immunoglobulin producing
plasma cells found in
the bone marrow. It is
a cancer that involves
the immune system.)

Analysis: Gadhafi’s death a cautionary tale
By Hamza Hendawi

Associated Press
CAIRO (AP) — Images
of Moammar Gadhafi’s
bloodied body flashed on
TV screens across the world
may send shivers down the
spines of Syria’s Bashar
Assad and Yemen’s Ali
Abdullah Saleh, two leaders clinging to power in the
face of long-running Arab
Spring uprisings.
For the millions of Arabs yearning for freedom,
democracy and new leadership, the death of one of the
region’s most brutal dictators will likely inspire and
invigorate the movement
for change.
Gadhafi’s death sent ripples across the Arab world
and set the Internet’s social
networks abuzz with comments, mostly celebrating the demise of a leader
whose bizarre and eccentric
behavior over the years defined the woes of an Arab
world mostly ruled by autocratic or despotic leaders.
“There is an emotional
connection between the
revolutionaries in the region. Hope is contagious,”
said Egyptian activist Mona
Seif. “Our revolution is one.
The fall of another tyrant is
a victory for all of us,” she
said in a post on her Twitter
account.
Gadhafi was shot dead
Thursday in the final battle
for his hometown of Sirte

on Libya’s Mediterranean
coast. He had been in hiding
for the two months since the
capital of Tripoli fell to rebels who rose up against his
42-year rule in February.
The 69-year-old Gadhafi — the first leader to be
killed in the Arab Spring
wave of popular uprisings — had vowed to fight
to the end. In his world of
nationalism and desert valor, it was a fate better than
the perceived humiliation
of exile or incarceration
endured by Tunisia’s Zine
El Abidine Ben Ali and
Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak.
But while the death of
Gadhafi and the triumph
of the uprising in his North
African nation has instantly given heart to proreform activists dreaming
of change, the Arab world
will watch closely what
happens next in Libya —
and to whether the region’s
“Assads” and “Salehs” will
see in his fate an incentive
to cling to power and crack
down even harder on any
sign of unrest.
As word spread of Gadhafi’s death, jubilant Libyans poured into Tripoli’s
central Martyr’s Square,
chanting “Syria! Syria!” —
urging the Syrian opposition on to victory.
“Winning the war in Libya is the easy part. Building
democracy will be the tough
part,” said Ronald Bruce of

St. John’s College in Santa
Fe, N.M. “It is going to be
chaotic, but the Libyans
will be up to the task.”
Ominously, regional and
ethnic differences have already surfaced in Libya.
Another source of tension is
the conflicting views of the
country’s Islamists and liberals about what post-Gadhafi Libya should look like.
On Thursday, Libyans
set aside their worries and
differences to celebrate, firing in the air and singing in
the streets.
Similarly, most Egyptians were ecstatic when
Hosni Mubarak stepped
down in February after 29
years in office. But optimism and jubilation soon
gave way to differences
between the youth groups
behind the 18-day uprising
that forced the Egyptian
leader out and the military
council that took over the
reins of power.
With the economy in tatters, crime significantly up,
labor unrest spreading and
almost daily street protests,
Egyptians are far from certain about the future of their
nation, even though some
believe the worst may be
behind them.
Gadhafi’s death instantly resonated across Arab
countries touched by the
Arab Spring.
“This will signal the
death of the idea that Arab

leaders are invincible,” said
activist and blogger Hossam
Hamalawi. “Mubarak is in a
cage, Ben Ali ran away, and
now Gadhafi killed. … All
this will bring down the red
line that we can’t get these
guys.”
On hearing the news,
thousands staged jubilant
demonstrations to celebrate Gadhafi’s demise in
Syria and Yemen, countries
where months of massive
street protests have yet to
bring regime change.
Tens of thousands of Yemenis danced and sang in
the streets of several cities
in that Arabian Peninsula
nation. Their celebration
was met with violence when
security forces loyal to the
regime opened up with tear
gas and live ammunition.
“Saleh must be feeling
more isolated now after
Gadhafi’s death and feels
the noose getting tighter
around his neck,” Yemeni
analyst Ali al-Horeiby said
of his nation’s embattled
leader. “His time is up.”
Omar Idilbi of the Local Coordination Committees, which helps organize
the demonstrations and
documents human rights
violations in Syria, said
protesters in several Syrian cities chanted slogans
congratulating the Libyans
on Gadhafi’s death but also
stressing the movement’s
peaceful nature.

�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A5

Obituaries
Johnny Edward
Callicoat

Johnny Edward Callicoat, Of Sebring, Florida,
passed away October 12,
2011, following a long and
gallantly fought battle with
illness. Born in Gallipolis,
Ohio, he moved to South
Florida a young man with
big dreams. Johnny was a
tireless, hard worker and
brilliant in many respects.
An entrepreneur and successful businessman, he was
owner of one of South Florida’s most prestigious Auto
Collision Shop’s. Having
learned from the best, his
grandson Kyle took over
the business when Johnny
became too ill to continue.
Today, the shop remains
on CarStar’s top ten list of
auto collision repair shops.
Always having been a hardworking man, Johnny still
found projects to enjoy,
such as investing in real estate and antiques. He leaves
behind an empire of success
and an array of accomplishments that showcase his incredible life.
The hobbies that made
him the happiest involved
his grandchildren and greatgrandson. He had a soft
spot in his heart for each of
them. He helped with their
school projects, built a fourstory fort, and also an authentic log cabin playhouse.
And proudly, his wife Jeanette was always near, capturing the moments and
snapping pictures of these
endeavors from his heart.
His favorite color in big
boy toys was John Deere
green. And it wasn’t just his
family and friends that he
offered great love and generosity to. Johnny had a big
heart and without hesitation
would help anyone in need.
In recent years, Johnny split
his time between Sebring
and Davie, FL. He had
enormous love for family
and was happy having both
children and grandchildren
in each location. A master
of humor and entertainment, Johnny made every
passing day a joy for his
wife and family. He even

spoiled his little dog Xev.
He loved all the family
pets, from his Koi fish in
the cascading pond that he
created, to his grand-dogs,
Lucky and Stranger, and
cat, Belle. His philosophy
on life was YOLO — You
Only Live Once. He was
deeply loved by family and
friends and will be missed
tremendously.
Johnny was preceded in
death by his father, Jim Callicoat and sister, Mary Lee
Petri, both of Gallipolis.
Johnny is survived by his
beloved wife Jeanette. Inseparable, she remained at
his side with love and support every step along the
way. He is also survived by
children, Melinda Jividen
of Sebring, FL and Lynette
Jividen of Fort Lauderdale,
FL; grandchildren, Kyle
Wharff and Ashley Smith
of Davie, FL and Brittany Jividen of Sebring,
FL; greatgrandson, Kaiden
Johnny Wharff of Davie,
FL, son of Kyle (Kelle);
mother, Thelma Callicoat and sister, Cindy McQuaid, both of Gallipolis;
and many nieces, nephews,
aunts, uncles, cousins and
many friends. Memorial
services were held at Fred
Hunter’s Funeral Home in
Davie, FL on October 15,
2011. An online LIFE’S
tribute remains posted and
can be visited at www.fredhunters.com.

Sarah Irene Hoback

Sarah Irene Hoback, 94,
of Syracuse, passed away at
11:30 p.m. on Oct. 21,2011,
at the Overbrook Center in
Middleport.
Born on April 11, 1917,
in Racine, she was the
daughter of the late Carl H.
and G. Belle Karr Theiss.
She was a homemaker and
a member of the Syracuse
United Methodist Church.
She is survived by: her
husband, Charles Edward
Hoback whom she married
on June 29, 1937, in Racine.
She is also survived by: her
son, Paul L. (Charlotte)
Hoback of Jacksonville,
Fla.; five grandchildren; 10
great-grandchildren;
one

Suit

From Page A1
Putnam and Mason Counties, and many others similarly situated across the State of West
Virginia will be forced to endure another 10
years of inadequate, unequal representation
in the West Virginia House of Delegates.”
The suits states the people of Mason
County have been denied their own delegate
for approximately 20 years and under the
new plan, are still guaranteed none. Karr
says it’s difficult to ascertain the reasoning
behind the plan and hence it may be “irrational, arbitrary or capricious” – adding, although Mason County has sufficient population for its own delegate and Putnam County
has the population to support three delegates,
both counties are divided and forced to share
representation.
The suit states for nearly 20 years, “Mason County has been divided in half to create portions of two delegate districts even
though it has had the population to support a
delegate all on its own. Its people have been
outnumbered by Putnam County residents
in the past two reapportionment plans and it
has become generally known that because of

brother, Kenneth (Bernice)
Theiss, of Racine; and one
sister-in-law, Audrey Boichyn of Michigan.
In addition to her parents, she is preceded in
death by her son, Carl E.
Hoback who passed away
on June 14, 2003.
Funeral services will
be at 1 p.m., Tuesday, Oct.
25, 2011, in the Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine. Officiating will be Rev. Bob
Robinson. Interment will
be in the Greenwood Cemetery, Racine. Friends and
family may call from 6 to
8 p.m. at the funeral home
on Monday, Oct. 24,2011.
Expressions of sympathy
may be sent to the family
by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com

Virginia M.
“Ginny” Kilgore

Virginia M. “Ginny”
Kilgore, age 89, of Scottown and formerly of Gallipolis, passed away Friday
evening Oct. 21, 2011 at the
Imogene Dolan Jones Hospice House in Huntington,
W.Va.
Born Oct. 26, 1921 in
Lawrence County, Ohio.
She was the daughter of the
late Cecil and Donna Wall
Watson.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
by her husband, Carmie
Kilgore; by a sister, Hazel
Watson; and by a nephew,
Dwight Watson.
Ginny was a graduate of
the Waterloo High School.
She and her husband Carmie, owned and operated
the Shake and Burger Res-

it, Mason County cannot elect its own delegate. With the new apportionment of House
Bill 201, Putnam County is now placed in a
similar situation.”
In addition, the filing argues Putnam
County Clerk and Putnam County Commission will now require more ballot styles at
taxpayers’ expense every election because
instead of being divided into three delegate
districts, Putnam County will comprise five.
Also, the people of Putnam County who are
entitled to three representatives in the House
of Delegates are now only guaranteed one.
Karr reminds the court that “approximately 10 years ago, after the previous delegate apportionment of 2001, the Mason
County Commission petitioned this Court
to prevent another 10 years of inadequate
representation in the West Virginia House
of Delegates. The Court refused to hear
the Writ. Consequently, Mason County has
spent the past 10 years without any of its
residents representing it in the West Virginia
House of Delegates. “
In addition to asking the honorable court
to declare the new redistricting plan in violation of the state’s constitution, the suit asks
the case be expedited so the court “may do
substantial justice before the filing period for
candidates to the House of Delegates begins
on Jan. 9, 2012.”

taurant on Vine Street for
22 years. Prior to opening
the restaurant , she worked
at Johnson Supermarket
and Gallagher’s Drug Store.
She is survived by: two
sons, Donavan (Gloria)
Watson Sr. of Scottown,
with whom she made her
home, and Phillip (Lois)
Barry of Medway; a stepson, Chester Kilgore of
Dousman, Wisc.;
two
step-daughters, Charlene
Kilgore of Gallipolis, and
Allene of Athens; five cherished grandchildren, Megan
Kilgore of Columbus, Donavan (Kathy) Watson Jr.
of Scottown, Sherry (Mike)
Spence of Urbana, Cindy
(Jim) Ferguson of Ashburn;
seven great grandchildren;
two great great grandchildren; and her brother David.
The family will greatly
miss seeing the pleasure
and playful love that Ginny
enjoyed during her visits
with her grandchildren, her
great grandchildren, and her
great great grandchildren.
In her last years, Ginny was
very appreciative of all the
care given to her by Stacy
Patterson, Kathy Watson,
and Patsy Julian.
The family would like
to give special thanks to
Becky Hopper and the staff
at the Hospice House for
the loving care Ginny and
the family received.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m., Tuesday Oct. 25,
2011 at the Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home with
Pastor Bethel G. Wall officiating. Burial will follow
in Locust Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday
from 5-8 p.m.
An online guest registry
is available at waugh-halley-wood.com

Anthony Oiler

Anthony Oiler, 40, of
Bidwell, Ohio, originally
of Hollywood, Florida,
died October 15, 2011, at
St. Mary’s Hosptial from
severe complications of
diabetes. He was born on
Februray 28, 1971, in Piqua, Ohio. He is the son
of Haroldine Thomas Oiler

Stocks

Wells and stepson of Darrell
Wells. He was proceeded in
death by his father, John G.
Oiler. Tony is survived by
two brothers, John Thomas
Oiler and wife, Sally, and
Joey Jay Oiler and friend,
Diane; stepsisters, Tammy
White and Sheila Mayo,
and stepbrother, John Harrison. His special companion
Bruno gave him unwavering love and adoration.
Tony was a good person
— a true gentleman, and in
a world where friendships
don’t last — an expeceptional friend.
When he relocated to the
Gallia County area, he met
the love of his life, Sandy
Burris, and his last thoughts
were regrets of leaving her.
By Tony’s own request,
no service will be held. He
will be cremated and his
ashes will be put with his
father’s. Although there will
not be a special marker or
grave, everyone who knew
him and love him will not
forget him. Tony was the
“baby” of the family and
his mother’s only comfort
is that he no longer suffers.
The family would like to
thank all the good doctors
and nurses who made special effort to help and make
his last days more comfortable — especially the two
young ladies in Oncology at
St. Mary’s who treated him
and his loved ones like family the night he died.

Carol Jane Bachtel
Tannehill

Carol Jane Bachtel Tannehill, 77, died on October 15, 2011, at the Holzer
Medical Center. She was
formerly of Middleport,
but at the time of her death,
she was living in the Holzer
Assisted Living Facility in
Gallipolis.
Carol was born on July
25, 1934, in Mason, W.Va.,
daughter of the late Forrest and Juanita (Dawson) Bachtel. She attended
schools in Mason, Akron,
Pomeroy, Point Pleasant
and Middleport, where she
graduated from high school
in 1952.
She earned her nurs-

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Norfolk So (NYSE) — 70.90
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 17.10
BBT (NYSE) — 23.05

ing degree at Saint Joseph’s School of Nursing
in Parkersburg, and spent
her entire nursing career in
Meigs County. She began
at Meigs General Hospital
and worked for many years
as office nurse for Dr. J.J.
Davis. At the time of her retirement, she was Director
of the Meigs County WellChild Clinic.
Carol’s marriage to
Chester Tannehill was all
too brief due to his untimely death. She was the nurse
who ministered to him as
well as to her father and
mother at the times of their
death.
She will be missed by
her sister, Kitty Bachtel
Dallas and her husband
George, as well as by her
brother, Forrest Bachtel and
his wife Carol. She was a
very special aunt to Katie,
Missy, Jeremy, Mike, Steve
and Bill.
Also
surviving
are
cousins, Claudia and Po,
and Chet’s children, Janice, Mark and John. Carol
leaves behind a number of
good friends, especially
Norma, Jean, Margie and
Brittany.
There will be a memorial
service in celebration of her
life on Saturday, November
5, 2011, at 2 p.m. at Heath
United Methodist Church in
Middleport. The ceremony
will be followed by a reception in the church rooms.
Interment will be in the
Riverview Cemetery near
sunset as Carol wished.
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport
is in charge of arrangements. In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made to
Heath United Methodist
Church in Middleport.
The family would like
to thank the staff members
of Holzer Senior Care and
Holzer Assisted Living for
their kind care of Carol.
This is such a trivial
tribute to a life that was so
well-lived.
An on-line registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

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Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 74.95
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 56.92
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.65
WesBanco (NYSE) — 20.01
Worthington (NYSE) — 16.35
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for October 21,
2011, provided by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Visit us online at
mydailytribune.com

CORRECTION
NOTICE
Pricing updates were not included in our
alcohol promotion advertised in our
October 23 thru 29 advertisement.
The following items have had pricing updates:
-Miller Lite, Coors Light 18 pk cans &amp; btls
Budweiser &amp; Bud light 18 pk cns
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-Natural Light or Ice 24 pk cans
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�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Community Corner
beside the
exercisers,
are invited to
participate.
Getting
enough food
together for
that
program,
as
well as for
the 150 or so
Charlene
families each
month who
run out of
food, is quite the challenge
for the Parish right now.
***
We love to hear about
former Meigs Countians
who’ve gone away and
made good but have never
forgotten their roots.
In the fall issue of the
Ohio
State
University
Medical Center is a picture
of Milisa Rizer, graduate
of MHS, who is now the
Clinical Director, Outpatient EMR at University
Hospital. She not only sees
patients but provides leadership for the electronic medical record implementation at
the Medical Center, teaches
medical students and monitors undergraduate students
who want to pursue a career
in medicine.
Both of her parents,
Franklin and Wanda Rizer,
are now deceased, but Milisa can be seen frequently

By Charlene
Hoeflich

Tuesday night’s Zumba
class taught by Jeannie
Owen and Paulette Harrison
at the Mulberry Community Center will be a Monster Bash. The music will
be Halloweenish, and those
coming are invited to wear
costumes if they want.
A drawing for a special
prize will take place during
the evening and the names
of everyone there, in costume or not, will go into the
pot.
Paulette reports attendance runs about 70 every
week with everyone paying
to play with a food contribution for the Meigs County
Parish which right now is
struggling to have enough
for the many families who
need food on an ongoing
basis.
The Parish is also trying
to get enough food together
for the Christmas giveaway
where hundreds of Meigs
Countians are given bags
of groceries with specific
items.
Zumba has decided to
help with that and each class
member will be bringing
specific items needed for
the Christmas bags during
November. The first week’s
collection will be soup and
crackers. Of course, others

puttering
around the
homeplace.
Incidentally,
she and her
husband
have a 14year
old
daughter.
***
Speaking
Hoeflich of those who
left to fulfill
their dreams,
Bruce Wolfe, now parade resources and projects director
for the Magic Kingdom Park
in Florida, flies back and
forth every few weeks, not
only to see his family, but
to practice for a show which
he will be presenting at the
Ariel Theatre come June.
He’s in rehearsals for a
show, “‘the Midnight Cloggers’ 25th Anniversary Silver Spectacular,” on Saturday, June 16 at 7:30 p.m.
with a matinee performance
on Sunday, June 17, at 3
p.m. I’m told tickets are already on sale at the Ariel’s
box office and on their website,.
The clogging group organized by Wolfe many years
ago has been reunited for
the show to celebrate the
anniversary and are already
rehearsing on the Ariel stage
every few months.
Incidentally,
Darby

BIDWELL

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Gilmore will be handling
the technical aspects of the
production for Bruce’s production.
***
Going through some old
papers the other day, I came
upon a newspaper clipping
with a Washington dateline
and the headline, “$6.6B in
cash sent to Iraq might have
been stolen.”
It was about money sent
by the United States to Iraq
to be used in rebuilding the
country after the invasion.
The shrink-wrapped bricks
of $100 bill which went by
plane from here to there was
never accounted for, according to the article bylined by
Paul Richter.
It also said that, after that
initial planeload of cash, we
sent 20 others in the following year making it the “the
biggest international cash
airlift of all times.”
The article went on to say
that Congress shelled out
$61 billion of U.S. taxpaper
money for reconstruction
and development programs
in Iraq.
Granted, we probably
owed them something because we invaded their
country. But to send such
large amounts and not be
able to account for its use
just isn’t acceptable to me as
a taxpayer.

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Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A6

Girl scout activities
are announced
POMEROY — Several girl scout activities are
planned for the remainder
of October.
On Saturday, there will
be a camp fire sing from 6
to 8 p.m. at Camp Kiashuta
near Chester. Those attending are to take a canned
food item for the food pantry in Chester.
A girl scout reunion tea
has been set for next Sunday from 2-4 p.m. at the
Carleton School. Scouts are

being asked to bring their
scrapbooks along with any
mementos they might have
for display. For more information on the reunion tea
contact Shirley Cogar at
992-2668.
Recently Lindsey Putman, Troop 1208, received
her Silver Award following
a presentation at her home
church during the 10:45
a.m. worship service of the
Fellowship of the Nazarene
at Reedsville.

ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP)
— An owner of dozens of wild
animals who freed them before
committing suicide this week
was an avid gun collector who
had traded weapons for a monkey, a leopard and a tiger cub,
federal documents show.
Terry Thompson built his
collection of exotic animals by
swapping guns, sheltering animals no longer wanted by their
owners and buying others at
auctions, according to public records released Friday and interviews with those who knew him.
“Once you have an exotic
animal, you’re somewhat tagged
as someone who will take unwanted or abandoned animals.
And that’s how it grew,” Thompson said, according to a deposition that was part of the government’s attempt to seize 133
weapons from him.
No one knows for sure why
Thompson freed 56 animals including lions, tigers and bears
on Tuesday and then committed
suicide, triggering a big-game
hunt in the Ohio countryside as
police officers shot and killed
48 of them for fear they would
harm humans. A 49th animal
was killed by one of the big cats.
The remaining animals were
captured and taken to the Columbus Zoo.
The frightening situation put
a spotlight on the lack of oversight on exotic pets in some
states. Ohio has some of the
nation’s weakest restrictions.
Gov. John Kasich announced
he would push for a moratorium
on exotic animal auctions and a
crackdown on unlicensed auctions. He had let an order that
banned buying and selling exotic
animals expire this spring.
Thompson likely would have
been in violation of that order
because he had animal cruelty
convictions in the past, but it’s
unclear if or when he would
have lost his animals.
“All the statutes in the world
don’t keep something like what
happened from happening,” Kasich said. “I mean, who would
have ever dreamt the guy’s
gonna commit suicide, open up
the cages? The question is why
did he have all those animals to
begin with.”
Deputies killed 18 rare Bengal tigers, 17 lions and eight
bears in a hunt across eastern
Ohio that has been criticized
by some who say the animals
should have been saved. The officers were ordered to kill the animals instead of trying to bring
them down with tranquilizers
for fear that those hit with darts
would escape in the darkness
before they dropped and would
later regain consciousness.
Over the years, neighbors
complained about a lion running loose and regularly called
the sheriff about Thompson’s
horses roaming away from the
property where the wild animals
were kept.
Thompson, 62, had his share
of troubles in the last year. He
owed thousands of dollars in unpaid taxes, had marital problems
and just returned home only a
few weeks ago after spending a
year in federal prison for possessing unregistered weapons.
A week before Thompson
killed himself, a sheriff’s deputy
visited his farm because a neighbor complained about his horses
getting out again.
Thompson promised he’d
check the fences and admitted
he was struggling to take care of
all the animals, authorities said.
“Terry stated to me that he
had just recently got home out of
prison and he has not had very
good control over any of his animals since he had been locked
up,” the deputy wrote in a report
released Friday.
Thompson’s estranged sister
said he likely was overwhelmed
financially when he committed
suicide.
“I can just see him standing
on that hill looking at every animal, thinking, ‘How am I going
to do this?’” Polly Thompson
told The Associated Press. “And
I’m sure he thought, ‘Nobody
wants me.’”

Terry Thompson got by financially on proceeds from a
motorcycle business he sold,
sales of horse trailers and other
equipment and a small family
inheritance. He also was a pilot
who occasionally flew chartered
planes for businesses.
Polly Thompson reluctantly
testified against her brother
about five years ago when he
was charged with starving bison
and cattle kept at their parents’
farm near Zanesville.
“Anybody that has animals
should take care of them,” she
said in an interview at her home
on the outskirts of Zanesville.
Terry Thompson was a gun
dealer in Zanesville for many
years but told federal authorities he never hunted, according
to court records. “Absolutely
unequivocally not a hunter,” he
said.
His wife, Marian Thompson,
told investigators that they never
sold the animals or opened the
farm to visitors.
“We don’t want them on display,” she said.
She told detectives in the past
that they took in the animals because no one else wanted them.
She also said she was trying to
end the practice.
“I’m going to put a stop to
bringing in all these animals.
I’m telling Terry, ‘No more,’”
she said in a report filed in April
2005.
Authorities and animal experts went to the farm three
years ago during a cruelty to
animals investigation and found
that some of the cages weren’t
padlocked and a few were secured with plastic ties that had
been partially chewed, according to the records released by the
Muskingum County Sheriff’s
Office.
The director of animal management from a wildlife preserve in Ohio said the bottoms of
fences weren’t secured and gates
meant for dog kennels were used
in pens housing the big cats.
He also noted that a cage housing two lions should have had a
much higher fence.
“There was also a tree in this
cage area, and there was nothing to prevent the animal from
climbing the tree and escaping,”
a report said.
Animal pens were scattered
on the patio and driveway of the
Thompsons’ home on the property, and there were several others inside the garage and basement. They had a black leopard
in the basement and two tigers
and two lion cubs in the garage.
On a patio next to the
Thompsons’ pool, two lion cubs
and one black bear cub were in
the same pen.
A veterinarian from Columbus Zoo saw that a tiger was
missing its tail and thought it
had been ripped or bitten off by
another animal in an adjoining
cage. Two tigers were in a cage
filled with standing water, rotting carcasses and lots of bones.
The zoo officials also expressed concerns about malnutrition and the sizes of the pens.
Thompson also kept a monkey in a cage too small for it to
stand up in, kept a wolf in an old
car and had a zebra in a horse
trailer, said a Muskingum County resident familiar with Thompson who saw the conditions and
spoke with the AP on condition
of anonymity for fear of repercussions over the comments.
Authorities decided not to
take the Thompsons’ animals
because there were no serious
health problems but told the
couple to fix the cages or they
would get a court order forcing
the changes.
Within three weeks, taller
fences had been constructed. A
county prosecutor then told detectives there was little else they
could do because they had no
authority to regulate anyone who
keeps wild or exotic animals.
Even after the changes, detectives wrote in their final report that “it is impossible for
the sheriff’s office to say the
Thompson property is safe.”

Ohio animal owner traded
guns for tiger, monkey

�Sports

B1

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Local Schedule
Monday, October 24
Volleyball
Point Pleasant at Ohio
Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Valley (Fayette), 6 p.m.
Tuesday, October 25
Volleyball
Point Pleasant at Calhoun
County, 6 p.m.
Thursday, October 27
Volleyball
Wahama at Hannan, 6
p.m.
Friday, October 28
Football
Miller at Wahama, 7:30
p.m.
Symmes Valley at South
Gallia, 7:30 p.m.
Alexander at Meigs, 7:30
p.m.
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley at South
Point, 7:30 p.m.
Herbert Hoover at Point
Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.
Montcalm at Hannan,
7:30 p.m.
Saturday, October 29
Football
Eastern at Southern, 7:30
p.m.

Tournament
Schedule

Wednesday, October 26,
2011
Volleyball
Division IV District
semifinal
at Jackson H.S.
(5) Whiteoak vs (1) Eastern, 6 p.m.
Thursday, October 27,
2011
Volleyball
Division IV District
semifinal
at Jackson H.S.
(4) South Gallia at (1)
South Webster, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Regional Final
Charleston Catholic at
Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Saturday, October 29,
2011
Cross Country
WVSSAC State Meet at
Cabell Midland
OHSAA Regional Meet
at Pickerington North

Lancers
spoil Senior
Night at
Eastern,
20-19

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Marauders cruise past Vinton County, 30-0
By Dave Harris

Sports Correspondent

POMEROY, Ohio —
Meigs kept their playoff
hopes alive by defeating
Vinton County 30-0 Friday night before a sparse
crowd at Bob Roberts Field
in Pomeroy. The Marauders
entered the contest ranked
eighth in Region 15 in
Ohio, the Marauders must
be ranked eighth or above
to see action in week 11.
Meigs played without
the services of senior running back Jeffrey Roush
was out with an ankle injury suffered at Wellston
last week. Senior fullback

Charlie Barrett scored two
touchdowns and accounted
for 17 points for the maroon
and gold.
Meigs scored first with
6:38 left in the first period
on a one yard plunge by
Zach Sayre, Barrett added
the kick for a 7-0 Marauder
lead. That score was set up
by a 26 yard pass from Dillon Boyer to Ty Phelps to
the Viking five yard line.
Barrett made it a 10-0
advantage when he kicked
a 30 yard field goal with
31 seconds left in the half.
Cody Oliver recovered the
ensuing squib kick for the
Marauders at the Viking 36.
Boyer then hit Barrett for

a 17 yard scoring toss with
one second left on the clock.
Barrett then added the extra
points and the Marauders
took a 17-0 lead into the
locker room at the half.
The Marauder defense
held the Vikings to four
and out to begin the second half, a bad snap on the
punt enabled Jesse Smith to
tackle Ryan Disbennett for
a 13 yard loss to the Viking
14.Two plays later Barrett
scored from eight yards
out. Barrett added the extra
points for a 24-0 lead with
9:43 left in the third.
Dave Harris/photo
Meigs capped off the
scoring when freshman Meigs’ running back Charlie Barrett carries the ball
See CRUISE, B6 during Friday’s TVC Ohio game against Vinton County.

Blue Devils burn Warren
on Senior Night, win 27-13

By Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
It wasn’t easy, but nothing
worth having ever is.
The Gallia Academy
football team celebrated Senior Night in style Friday
during a hard-fought 27-13
victory over visiting Warren
in a Week 9 Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League gridiron matchup at Memorial
Field in the Old French City.
The host Blue Devils (63, 3-1 SEOAL) kept both
their league title hopes and
playoff aspirations alive by
snapping a two-game home
losing streak, although the
Warriors (4-5, 2-3 SEOAL)
did their best to try and spoil
the party.
After a scoreless first
quarter, GAHS reeled off 17
straight points in a five-minute span for a commanding
three-possession lead with
less than three minutes left
in the half. Warren, however, countered with a touchdown to pull back to within
17-6 entering the break.
Gallia Academy worked
its way into field goal position midway through the
third for a 20-6 edge, but
the Warriors countered with
Mike Brace/photo another touchdown to make
Gallia Academy head football coach Mike Eddy, second from right, give the victory bell a ring following Friday it a one possession contest
night’s 27-13 SEOAL victory over Warren on Senior Night at Memorial Field.
See DEVILS, B6

Rebels fend off Waterford, 27-7 Trimble topples
B K
P
y

evin

Tornadoes, 60-19

ierson

Special to OVP

WATERFORD, Ohio —
For three and a half quarters the Waterford defense
kept the Wildcats in the
ball game with the visiting
South Gallia Rebels.
But football is four quarters long, and when the deBy Sarah Hawley
fense gets a grand total of
shawley@mydailytribune.com
four plays off the field in
the fourth quarter, it’s ineviTUPPERS
PLAINS, table that eventually points
Ohio — The best first half are going to be scored.
of the season for the EastSouth Gallia used a pair
ern football team (2-7, 2-5 of grueling drives, poundTVC Hocking) did not turn ing the football incessantly
out as planned on Friday with the running game, to
evening at East Shade River take nearly 11 minutes off
the clock in the fourth quarStadium.
ter to pull away with a 27-7
After an early 19-0 lead, win at Waterford Elementhe visiting Lancers (4-5, tary School Friday night.
“This was a game we
4-3 TVC Hocking) rallied
to try to beat on someto spoil Senior Night for the had
body for three and four
Green and White.
quarters,” said South Gallia
The Eagles ran nearly six football coach Jason Peck.
Down just 14-7 late in
minutes off the clock on the
opening drive of the game, the third quarter, Watertaking a total of 10 plays to ford turned the ball over
go 80 yards for the score. on downs and was forced
After nine consecutive run- to watch as the Rebels sysning plays, quarterback Joey tematically wore out the deScowden hit Max Carnahan fense with run after run afin double coverage on the ter run, which was followed
left side of the end zone for with a few more runs.
In the second half, South
the score. The extra point
kick was no good, giving Gallia attempted just a single pass while running the
Eastern the 6-0 lead.
Federal Hocking fum- football 30 times for 181
bled the ball on its first pos- yards, including 160 on the
session of the game, with final two scoring drives to
the Eagles recovering. East- preserve the win.
“They (South Gallia)
ern was unable to capitalize
on the turnover, punting the played like a veteran team,
ball back to Federal Hock- and a team that’s been pluging. The Lancers punted the ging along to get better as a
ball back to Eastern with football program,” said Wajust seconds remaining in terford football coach Chad
Ross.
the first quarter of play.
Despite a better than
The Eagles took possession near midfield, taking 2-to-1 advantage in total
nine plays to put the ball yards, the Rebels had their
in the endzone for the sec- hands full with the feisty
ond time. Chase Cook ran Wildcats, who were just a
around the left side for the couple breaks away from
six yard touchdown run. pointing points on the
Carnahan added the extra board.
Instead, it was the Rebels
point kick, giving the hosts
who made plays when they
the 13-0 advantage.
Federal Hocking threw were most needed as every
three straight incomplete South Gallia scoring drive
See LANCERS, A2 had at least one play of 25

By Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

Kevin Pierson photo/The Marietta Times

South Gallia tailback Jacob White (32) breaks the
tackle of Waterford’s Coty Streight (52) during the first
quarter of a football game at Waterford Elementary
School Friday night. South Gallia beat Waterford 27-7.
yards from scrimmage. for a moment it appeared
Much of that was a credit to the Wildcats had it. A little
on a halfback pass
the Rebel line, which held a trickery
had senior Matt West wide
considerable size advantage open behind the South
while tailbacks Ethan Spur- Gallia defense, but Brian
lock, Austin Phillips and Moore’s pass was too far
Jacob White, who are all and to the sideline for the
three 195 pounds or bigger, completion.
“The ball’s got to bounce
hit the holes for big gains.
“Take what we want, not your way in a big game like
what they give us. It’s been that. We didn’t make the
our battle cry all year long,” plays,” Ross said.
Peck said.
Instead of capitalizing on
What South Gallia want- the touchdown, the Wilded was big plays from play- cats were forced to punt and
makers.And the Rebels got the offense went into hiding
that from the first drive on.
for better than a quarter and
Receiving the opening a half.South Gallia, meankickoff, which Waterford
tried to recover on an on- while, continued to use its
side kick, the Rebels used bread and butter of a potent
big plays, including a 23 three-pronged rushing atyard run by White and a 26 tack to pick up chunks of
yard run by Phillips, to adyardage and establish the
vance to the red zone.
On a third down play passing game. Leading 8-0
at the Waterford 15, quar- midway through the second
terback Cory Haner used quarter, another play action
a play action built off the
running game to find a wide had Haner connecting with
open Danny Matney in the Matney on a 37-yard gain
back of the end zone for down to the Waterford 14.
an 8-0 advantage after the
Three plays later SpurRebels converted on the lock plunged into the end
two point try.
zone for a 14-0 advantage.
Trailing 8-0 after one
“The running game does
drive, Waterford turned to a lot for you. It opens up the
the big play to try and get passing game,” Peck said.
the momentum back and

See REBELS, B6

GLOUSTER, Ohio —
Talk about the wrong place
at the wrong time.
On a day that the
OHSAA handed Trimble a
loss by forfeit, the Tomcats
took out their frustrations
on visiting Southern Friday
night during a 60-19 decision in a Week 9 Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division matchup in Athens
County.
The host Tomcats (6-3,
6-1 TVC Hocking) were
notified earlier in the day by
the Ohio High School Athletic Association that their
illness-postponed Week 4
contest at Coal Grove how
been ruled a forfeit in favor
of the Hornets, due mainly
to the Tomcats’ failure to
show up for the rescheduled
game last Monday.
The OHSAA noted that
the school would have to
pay the penalty for not honoring their signed contract,
and therefore awarded the
victory to Coal Grove.
With that said, the Tomcats charged out to an early
21-0 lead in the second
quarter and held a 34-6
halftime advantage over the
Tornadoes (2-7, 2-5). THS
increased its sizable edge to
47-6 through three periods
before both teams traded 13
points in the finale to wrap
up the 41-point outcome.
Trimble churned out 472
yards of total offense, including 357 rushing yards,
while limiting the guests to
just 35 rushing yards and
166 yards of total offense.
Trimble had five different
running backs score at least
once in the triumph, and the
hosts did not have a single
punt on the evening.
Austin Keith started the
scoring with 10:09 showing in the opening period,
plowing in from 10 yards
out for a 7-0 advantage.
Justin Jewell gave the hosts
a 14-0 cushion at the 5:37

mark with a one-yard scoring run, then Keith made it
a 21-0 game with 11:25 left
in the first half after a 13yard scamper.
Southern
countered
with its first score at the
10:13 mark, as Ryan Taylor hauled in a 25-yard TD
pass from Tristen Wolfe
for a 21-6 contest. Trimble,
however, answered with
five consecutive scores that
turned a 15-point cushion
into an insurmountable
47-point deficit.
Keith added his third,
and final, rushing score of
the night at the 7:43 mark
of the second quarter after plunging in from four
yards out for a 28-6 edge.
Jewell added the last of his
two scoring runs with 1:19
left in the half, going eight
yards to paydirt for a 34-6
halftime advantage.
Jacob Hooper opened
the second half scoring by
hauling in a two-yard pass
from Jewell, making it a
40-6 contest just 22 seconds
into the third quarter. Bryce
Smathers followed with
a 30-yard TD jaunt at the
8:16 mark for a 47-6 edge,
then Cyrus Jones added a
four-yard scoring run at the
10:25 mark for a 53-6 lead.
Zac Beegle stopped the
SHS bleeding at the 6:09
mark of the fourth after
hauling in a five-yard pass
from Wolfe, making it 5313. Smathers countered
with a 39-yard scoring run
for a 60-13 cushion with
five minutes left, then Taylor concluded the scoring
with 2:10 left in regulation
after hauling in a 19-yard
strike from Wolfe for a 6019 finale.
Trimble posted a 17-11
advantage in first downs
and forced six Southern
punts on the night. THS
was also plus-1 in turnover
differential. The hosts were
flagged five times for 49
yards, while Southern was
penalized four times for 30
yards.
Tyler Barton led the
Tornadoes with 64 rushing

See TRIMBLE, B4

�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B2

White Falcons
Former reporter mulls
changes to newspaper biz shut out

Madonna, 33-0

I recall reading with
some interest Stephanie
Filson’s editorial a couple
of weeks ago on changes
taking place in the newspaper business, particularly
the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company newspapers.
Although it has only
been a dozen or so years
ago since I last worked
for the newspaper, seeing
all the changes that have
taken place in the newspaper industry it seems like a
lifetime ago. It wasn’t exactly the Stone Age – we
did have computers – but
it might as well have been,
there were no cell phones
and no internet (although
that technology was waiting in the wings) and digital cameras were more of a
novelty. Now I can’t recall
the last time I actually shot
a photo with 35 millimeter
film.
In a real sense I was one
of the last of the old-school
journalism school graduates; our Introduction to
News Writing assignments
were written on electric
typewriters and then proofread by hand, the papers
covered with red lines and
squiggles, and the occasional “F” that automatically
resulted whenever we misspelled a proper noun.
Then along came the internet. At first it was sort of
a novelty, popular with only
a few people, but it didn’t
take long until it became

an everyday source of news
and information for the
masses. Newspapers both
big and small were left reeling like mugging victims,
and they really haven’t adjusted or discovered their
niche in this internet age.
Newspapers were already
hurting, even before the
economy went down the
drain, and it isn’t going
to get better until they rediscover their place in the
world.
I have always thought
our corner of southeastern
Ohio and West Virginia was
very fortunate to be served
by daily newspapers, and
I mourned the loss of the
Monday paper — even
though I remember that filling that Monday paper with
news was occasionally a
struggle. Most areas like
ours are lucky if they have a
semiweekly or weekly publication.
It seems like people
have lost that connection
with their local newspapers.
“Back in the day” it seemed
more like the newspaper
was “your” newspaper. The
readership to a large extent
determined what was in
there, from the news from
outlying communities like
Alfred and Harrisonville,
to family reunions, birthday parties and club and
organization meetings, all
submitted by community
members.
These “country cor-

respondents” played an
important role in sharing information from little
communities like Laurel
Cliff, Forest Run, Hemlock
Grove, Wolf Pen and Reedsville. Things like graduations, vacations, visits and
births, from people in the
community or their children
or grandchildren now residing elsewhere were regular
features in these columns.
It allowed people to stay in
touch with their friends and
neighbors and with those
who had moved away, long
before internet social networking was dreamt of or
invented.
In the outdoors arena,
people would frequently
submit “first deer” photos
or even stop by the office
with a trophy deer in the
back of their pickup truck
so I could take a photo of it
for the newspaper.
Some of us might have
chuckled at reading news
like “Mr. and Mrs. So-andso entertained visitors from
Columbus,” but nonetheless we still read it. In a very
real sense those communities died a little bit when the
community correspondents
went away. I bet you have
a scrapbook somewhere in
your house full of newspaper clippings; Facebook
status updates aren’t quite
the same.
A hundred years from
now, 200 years from now, a
person will be able to read

through those older newspapers and know what went
on in those communities.
That time has passed. I don’t
believe stories published
solely online will have that
sort of permanency.
Stephanie said one of
the keys is for readership to
“submit, submit, submit.”
This is crucial. Generally
speaking, when somebody
asks why they don’t have
junior high sports or other
activities in the paper, my
answer is “because nobody
submits it.”
I consider myself blessed
to get to know many fine
people from my “newspaper days,” co-workers, editors, publishers and story
subjects (including Stephanie by the way). From former OVP publisher Bob
Wingett, I learned that the
newspaper wasn’t a history
book and that every person
has a story if you take the
time to find it. I learned that
all news is local news.
I even learned, like so
many others, to just “Keep
smiling.”

By Andy Layton

son.
“Our rushing game
wasn’t clicking early in the
game,” said Head Coach
Dave Darst. “I put the ball
in the hands of our senior
quarterback and he had a
big performance.”
While it was a big performance for the quarterback,
it was once again the hardhitting Big Blacks defense
that only allowed 6 points
on the night. That defense
— playing without senior
linemen Trey Livingston
for the second straight game
— allowed just 218 yards
of offense and just four first
downs on the night.
Scott started the game

with a three and out and
Point started their first drive
with several nice gains from
junior Marquez Griffin and
Chase Walton before being
forced to punt.
After the punt sailed into
the end-zone for a touchback, Scott struck quickly
on the fourth play of the
drive with a 68 yard quarterback run from Jesse
Belcher. The two-point conversion was no good and
the Skyhawks took the early
lead.
After several runs from
Griffin and sophomore Teran Barnitz to start the next
drive, it was a big pass from
Roberts to senior tight end

Jason Stouffer that set up
the first score of the game.
Stouffer would rumble to
the 15 yard line on a big
pass play before senior fullback Jerrod Long rumbled
14 yards to the one yard line
before Roberts punched it
in from one yard out. The
Josh Parsons extra point
was good.
After both teams traded
possessions, it was the first
turnover of the night by
Scott that would begin to ignite the Big Blacks offense.
Jason Stouffer would recover a fumble deep in Scott
territory and Jerrod Long
would score four plays later
to make the score 14-6.
On the next possession
for the Skyhawks, the Big
Blacks forced a turnover
on the third play as senior
safety Brandon Toler got
the recovery. Toler was then
able to cash in on his own
recovery as he caught a 47
yard touchdown pass from
Roberts on the first play of
the drive. After another Parsons kick, it was 21-6 Point.
The next Scott possession featured back to back
blocking in the back penalties that pinned Scott
deep into Point territory. A
Scott receiver was carrying the ball on second down
when junior defensive end
stripped him from behind
and Toler recovered his second ball of the night.
Once again, it was a
quick strike offense for
Point as Roberts hooked
up with Griffin on first
down for 17 yards and then
Stouffer for a 10 yard pass
on the second play of the
drive for his second throwing score of the game. The
extra point snap was high
and the score was 27-6.

By Gary Clark

Sports Correspondent

Jim Freeman is wildlife
specialist with the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation District. His column
generally appears every
other weekend. He can be
contacted weekdays at 740992-4282 or at jim.freeman@oh.nacdnet.net.

Big Blacks win huge against Scott, 55-6

Sports Correspondent

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — On a night of record setting performances
for the Big Blacks, it was
a bright performance from
the quarterback that shined
above all on Friday night as
Point rolled 55-6 over the
visiting Scott Skyhawks.
Senior quarterback Eric
Roberts — who entered the
game with 15 touchdown
passes on the season — had
a career high 221 yards and
threw for four more touchdown passes to eclipse the
1000 yard mark for the sea-

See WIN, B4

FAIRMONT, W.Va. —
The much anticipated dogfight between third ranked
Wahama and ninth rated
Madonna never really materialized Friday night at
Fairmont State University
as Anthony Grimm and
Isaac Lee scored a pair of
touchdowns each in leading
the White Falcons to a 33-0
shutout win over the Blue
Dons. The contest was the
first out of conference foe
Coach Ed Cromley’s team
has faced this year and was
also the first West Virginia
opponent for the Mason
County team this season.
While Grimm and Lee
were sparking the offense
it was the Bend Area defensive unit that came away
with the heroics by limiting
Madonna to just 15 yards
rushing and a mere 119
yards in total offense. Jamin Branch, Zack Wamsley,
Anthony Grimm, Crandale
Neal and Matthew Stewart
disrupted the Blue Dons
offense the entire evening
with four quarterback sacks
and two interceptions. WHS
defensive coordinator, Dave
Barr, utilized an assortment
of defensive schemes that
kept the Blue Dons offense
off guard throughout the
night which was a major
factor in the Falcons’ conquest.
Wahama remained unbeaten on the 2011 grid season with the victory as the
local gridders improved to
8-0 on the year. Madonna
dropped its third decision in
eight tries to fall to 5-3 on
the year.
The White Falcons
opened up a 13-0 first period lead and never looked
back in securing the shutout
win. Kane Roush got things
rolling o the Falcons first
play from scrimmage with
a 66 yard touchdown run at
the 8:49 mark of the opening quarter. The point after
kick sailed wide to make it
a 6-0 affair.
Later in the stanza Anthony Grimm capped a short
34 yard, seven play drive
with a one yard plunge into
the end zone. Zack Wamsley booted the extra point to
give WHS a 13-0 advantage
with 3:53 to play in the first
quarter.
The White Falcon defense recorded the Bend
Area teams third score of
the night with 7:19 remaining in the first half when
Anthony Grimm stepped in
front of a Ross Comis pass
and returned the interception 34 yards for the score.
Again the point after kick
sailed wide giving Wahama
a 19-0 edge at the intermission break.
The locals wasted little
time in increasing their lead
following the second half
kickoff as the Bend Area
team went 61 yards in only
two plays with Isaac Lee
outracing the Madonna defense on the 61 yard scamper. Kane Roush hauled in
the two-point conversion
pass from Trenton Gibbs
to up the WHS lead to 27-0
with 11:06 to play in the
third quarter.
The final touchdown of

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Wahama 33,
Madonna 0
M
W

0-0-0-0 — 0
13-6-8-6 — 33

SCORING SUMMARY
First Quarter
W — Kane Roush 66 run (kick
failed), 8:49
W — Anthony Grimm 1 run (Zack
Wamsley kick), 3:53
Second Quarter
W — Grimm 34 INT return (kick
failed), 7:19
Third Quarter
W — Isaac Lee 61 run (Roush pass
from Trenton Gibbs), 11:06
Fourth Quarter
W — Lee 2 run (run failed), 10:17
TEAM STATISTICS
First Downs — M: 6, W: 12;
Rushes-yards — M: 25-44, W: 38235;
Passing yards — M: 15, W: 57;
Total yards — M: 104, W: 292;
Comp-Att-Int — M: 11-20-2, W:
4-11-0;
Fumbles-lost — M: 1-0, W: 1-0;
Penalties-yards — M: 6-40, W:
4-25
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing —M: Stevie Maus 1-6,
Eliott Nero 3-4,; James Fulciniti
2-3, Ryan Mozingo 1-0, Ross Comis 11-(-3), Christian Roe 4-(-3),
Anthony Antinone 2-(-6), Brandon
Matez 1-(16); W: Isaac Lee 13135, Kane Roush 5-81, Anthony
Grimm 11-34, Trenton Gibbs 4-6,
Zack Wamsley 1-1, Austin Cole
1-0, Crandale Neal 1-(-1), Clay
VanMeter 1-(-2), Wyatt Zuspan
1-(-19).
Passing — M: Ross Comis 11-192 104, Anthony Antinone 0-1-0;
W: Trenton Gibbs 4-9-0 57, Tyler
Roush 0-1-0, Isaac Lee 0-1-0.
Receiving —M: Marcello Biondella 1-30, Garrett Hypes 2-28, Doug
Howell 2-23, Will Bowser 2-22,
Christian Roe 3-4, Stevie Maus
1-(-3); W: Anthony Grimm 1-23,
Isaac Lee 2-17, Kane Roush 1-17.

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the evening came in the final period when an errant
snap from center gave Wahama the football at the Blue
Dons 20 yard line. Three
consecutive carries by Lee
covered the short distance
with Lee taking it in from
two yards out for the score.
The point after run attempt
failed giving the White Falcons a 33-0 edge with 10:17
left in the contest.
Neither team threatened
throughout the remainder
of the contest as substitutes
finished out the game with
Wahama holding on to a
convincing 33-0 football
victory.
Lee paced WHS offensively with a couple of
scores, 135 yards on the
ground and two pass receptions for 17 yards. Kane
Roush scored once while
rushing for 81 yards with
one pass reception for 17
yards. Anthony Grimm was
denied his fourth straight
100 yard rushing night but
the senior fullback still
scored twice, ran for 34
yards, caught a pass for 23
yards and returned an interception 34 yards for a score.
Trenton Gibbs completed
four of nine passes for 57
yards on the night.
Quarterback Ross Comis, after leading Madonna
to 244 yards in total offense
in a win over Notre Dame
last week, was limited to minus three yards rushing and
connected on 11-19 passing
for 104 yards through the
air. Grimm and D.J. Gibbs
came up with an interception apiece off the talented
sophomore signal caller.
Madonna’s leading ground
gainer was reserve running
back Stevie Maus who had
six yards in one carry. Receiving leaders for the Blue
Dons included Marcello Biondella with one catch for
30 yards, Garrett Hypes two
grabs for 28 yards, Doug
Howell two receptions for
23 yards and Will Bowser
with two catches for 22
yards.
Wahama will return to
Bachtel Field for senior
night next week for its final
home game of the season
against visiting Miller in a
TVC Hocking Division affair before closing out the
regular season with a road
contest at seventh ranked
Buffalo. Madonna will
travel to Toronto Ohio next
week before ending their
regular season campaign
against eighth rated Clay
Battelle.

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�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B3

Lady Rebels win first sectional volleyball title

By Sarah Hawley

shawley@mydailytribune.com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio —
Thursday evening’s four set victory made history at South Gallia
High School.
It was the first ever sectional
volleyball title for the Lady Rebels.
South Gallia (18-5) won the
match and the Division IV Sectional title by scores of 15-25, 2517, 25-7 and 25-10.

In the opening set, the Lady
Rebels jumped out to the 5-2 lead,
before Southern rallied to take the
12-7 lead. The Lady Tornadoes
scored nine consecutive points
to take a 22-9 advantage. South
Gallia scored six of the final nine
points, but it was not enough as
Southern held on for the 25-15
first set win.
The Lady Rebels did not trail
in the second set of the match,
leading by as many as 11 points
(18-7).

After a 1-0 deficit in the third
set, the Lady Rebels held Southern to just one point on serve in
the remainder of the set. The Lady
Rebels did not trail in the fourth
set.
Tori Duncan led the Lady Rebels with 13 points (one ace), followed by Lauren Saunders with
nine points (three aces), Meghan
Caldwell and Chandra Canaday
with eight points (one ace) each,
Chrissy Howell added seven
points, Ellie Bostic had five points

(one ace), Brynn Adams had one
point (one ace) and Shelby Merry
had one point.
Katelyn Hill led the Lady Tornadoes with 11 points, followed
by Jordan Huddleston with seven
points, and Courtney Thomas,
Emily Ash and Maggie Cummins
with three points each.
Caldwell had 13 kills for the
Lady Rebels, Adams had 12 kills,
Merry added eight kills, Bostic
had seven kills, Canaday with five
kills, Duncan with two kills and

Howell with one kill. Caldwell
had nine blocks and Canaday
added eight to pace the Lady Rebels. Bostic added five blocks and
Merry had one.
SGHS had defeated S0uthern
twice during the regular season,
winning in three sets at Southern
(25-12, 25-15, 25-14) and in four
sets just a week ago at home (1625, 25-17, 25-13 and 25-19).
The Lady Rebels will face top
seeded South Webster at 6 p.m. on
Thursday at Jackson High School.

Sarah Hawley/photo

Sarah Hawley/photo

Lady Eagles win 16th straight sectional title
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

TUPPERS
PLAINS,
Ohio — Now that’s going
out in style.
The Eastern volleyball
team made quick work of
visiting Miller Thursday
night in its 2011 home finale, posting a 25-6, 25-4,
25-8 victory in a Division
IV sectional final at the Eagles’ Nest in Meigs County.
The top-seeded Lady Eagles (23-0), ranked sixth in
the final D-4 coaches poll,
captured their 16th consecutive sectional crown after
dissecting the ninth-seeded
Lady Falcons (5-18) for the
third time this season. EHS
also swept Miller by counts
of 25-7, 25-11, 25-9 and
25-13, 25-6, 25-11 in TVC
Hocking play this fall.
Eastern advances to
district play Wednesday
at Jackson High School,
where it will face fifthseeded Whiteoak in the first
semifinal match at 6 p.m.
Portsmouth Notre Dame
and Waterford will play in
the second matchup that
night.
Whiteoak rallied back
to knock off fourth-seeded
Leesburg Fairfield by a 2125, 18-25, 25-13, 26-24, 1614 score Thursday to get to
district play. Fairfield won
the Southern Hills League
and had swept WHS during
the regular season.
Eastern volleyball coach
Howie Caldwell was praiseful of his group afterwards,
particularly in its attention
to detail in preparing for a
team it had already beaten
twice.
And with 15 straight sectionals titles under the pro-

gram’s belt, this could have
been a real easy match to
overlook.
“We’ve had some pretty
focused practices this week,
so we knew these girls
would be ready to go tonight,” Caldwell said. “I always worry about the opening match of the tournament
because you just don’t
know how the kids will react, but I was pretty pleased
with how they performed
tonight. They got right after
it and did everything well.”
Eastern never trailed in
the entire match, although
Miller did force a pair of
1-all ties in the first and final games. The Lady Eagles
had double-digit advantages in all three games by the
time MHS had three points
in each contest.
Most of those major
runs came from the service
line, where EHS racked up
16 aces and 58 of their 75
points on the night.
Jamie Swatzel led the
hosts with 30 service points
and eight aces, with 28 of
those points coming in the
opening two games. Gabby
Hendrix was next with 10
points and three aces, followed by Brenna Holter
with seven points and three
aces.
Ally Hendrix and Baylee Collins each added four
points and an ace, while
Jordan Parker and Brooke
Johnson respectively closed
things out with two points
and one point.
Parker led the net attack
with team-highs of 12 kills
and two blocks, while Maddie Rigsby added seven kills
and Swatzel contributed six
kills. Ally Hendrix chipped
in five kills and Holter added four kills.

Ally Hendrix led the
hosts with 28 assists, while
Parker and Swatzel each
contributed three assists.
Holter, Swatzel, Rigsby and
Kiki Osborne also had a
block apiece in the triumph.
The Lady Falcons received a point apiece from
Abby Murphy and Sara
West in the setback.
The Lady Eagles, who
have competed in nine
straight district championship matches, are now two
wins away from their seventh regional berth in program history.
“We cannot be satisfied
with where we are. We need
to keep working hard and
getting better at what we
do,” Caldwell said. “We can
make a heck of a run in this
postseason, but we must
keep improving.
“I don’t think this group
is tired of playing volleyball. They enjoy playing the
game and I think they understand that clubs like this
only come around every so
often. We’re looking forward to going to Jackson.”
Eastern has now won
eight consecutive matches
in straight games and has
also won 66 of the 69 games
it has played in this fall.

Bryan Walters/photo

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Gallipolis
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The Daily
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Sentinel
Register

�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B4

Ohio Prep Football Scores

PREP FOOTBALL
Ada 33, Delphos Jefferson 26
Akr. Firestone 28, Akr. Garfield 7
Akr. Manchester 50, Navarre Fairless 28
Akr. SVSM 17, Akr. Buchtel 14
Alliance Marlington 29, Beloit W. Branch 28
Amanda-Clearcreek 52, Bloom-Carroll 9
Antwerp 26, Defiance Ayersville 21
Apple Creek Waynedale 17, W. Salem NW
14, OT
Arcadia 42, Dola Hardin Northern 21
Arcanum 20, Tipp City Bethel 10
Archbold 41, Wauseon 18
Arlington 42, Vanlue 0
Ashland 39, Mansfield Madison 14
Ashland Crestview 28, Norwalk St. Paul 24
Athens 36, Wellston 7
Atwater Waterloo 30, Garrettsville Garfield
17
Aurora 68, Painesville Harvey 7
Austintown Fitch 34, Uniontown Lake 7
Avon 14, Grafton Midview 10
Avon Lake 42, Olmsted Falls 13
Bainbridge Paint Valley 27, Chillicothe
Huntington 14
Baltimore Liberty Union 40, W. Jefferson 9
Barberton 14, Rocky River 0
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 28, Tiffin Calvert 14
Batavia Amelia 33, Bethel-Tate 7
Beallsville 47, Paden City, W.Va. 14
Beavercreek 31, Kettering Fairmont 24
Bedford Chanel 12, Warren JFK 7
Bellbrook 14, Day. Oakwood 3
Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 12, Spring.
Greenon 7
Bellevue 42, Shelby 6
Berea 21, Westlake 14
Berlin Center Western Reserve 52, N.
Jackson Jackson-Milton 7
Blanchester 35, Goshen 13
Bluffton 21, Paulding 0
Bradford 47, Union City Mississinawa Valley 12
Brecksville-Broadview Hts. 32, Middleburg

Hts. Midpark 9
Brookfield 41, Warren Champion 20
Bryan 43, Swanton 0
Bucyrus Wynford 22, Galion 20
Burton Berkshire 38, Newbury 6
Cadiz Harrison Cent. 48, Belmont Union
Local 12
Caledonia River Valley 34, Morral Ridgedale 6
Cambridge 34, Zanesville 27
Cameron, W.Va. 55, Bellaire St. John 12
Campbell Memorial 35, Newton Falls 16
Can. Glenoak 38, N. Can. Hoover 13
Can. McKinley 41, Youngs. Boardman 20
Can. South 30, Carrollton 27
Canal Fulton Northwest 30, Louisville
Aquinas 16
Canal Winchester 38, Ashville Teays Valley 31
Cardington-Lincoln 56, Galion Northmor
12
Carey 19, Attica Seneca E. 17
Carlisle 54, Camden Preble Shawnee 7
Centerburg 21, Fredericktown 7
Centerville 56, Springfield 15
Chagrin Falls 27, Orange 6
Chagrin Falls Kenston 12, Chesterland W.
Geauga 9
Chesapeake 48, S. Point 0
Chillicothe Zane Trace 23, Chillicothe
Unioto 17, OT
Cin. Colerain 28, Hamilton 0
Cin. Country Day 41, Lockland 35
Cin. Hills Christian Academy 45, Hamilton
New Miami 7
Cin. Indian Hill 44, Cin. Deer Park 13
Cin. Madeira 42, N. Bend Taylor 39
Cin. Mariemont 42, Reading 12
Cin. Mt. Healthy 17, Hamilton Ross 7
Cin. N. College Hill 43, Cin. Christian 0
Cin. NW 48, Norwood 13
Cin. Oak Hills 16, Fairfield 14
Cin. Princeton 33, Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 7
Cin. Shroder 28, Cin. Aiken 0
Cin. Summit Country Day 44, Cin. Clark

Montessori 20
Cin. Sycamore 30, W. Chester Lakota W. 0
Cin. Turpin 48, Morrow Little Miami 6
Cin. Walnut Hills 24, W. Carrollton 0
Cin. Winton Woods 39, Cin. Anderson 34
Cin. Wyoming 28, Cin. Finneytown 16
Circleville Logan Elm 28, Circleville 0
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 58, London
Madison Plains 13
Cle. Benedictine 42, Chardon NDCL 16
Cle. Glenville 35, Cle. John Adams 0
Cle. Hts. 28, Warren Harding 0
Cle. JFK 42, E. Liverpool 6
Cle. John Marshall 26, Cle. Lincoln W. 2
Cle. Rhodes 54, Cle. Collinwood 0
Clyde 47, Milan Edison 20
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 28, Proctorville Fairland 8
Coldwater 30, New Bremen 21
Collins Western Reserve 27, Plymouth
20, OT
Cols. Africentric 28, Cols. South 20
Cols. Beechcroft 21, Cols. Brookhaven 14
Cols. Centennial 14, Cols. East 12
Cols. DeSales 52, Cin. La Salle 7
Cols. Grandview Hts. 40, Canal Winchester
Harvest Prep 21
Cols. Hamilton Twp. 49, Lancaster Fairfield
Union 7
Cols. Hartley 38, Coshocton 7
Cols. Marion-Franklin 30, Cols. Eastmoor
20
Cols. Mifflin 21, Cols. Linden McKinley 12
Cols. Northland 35, Cols. Whetstone 0
Cols. St. Charles 23, Cols. Watterson 13
Cols. Walnut Ridge 28, Cols. Briggs 22
Cols. West 62, Cols. Independence 12
Columbiana Crestview 34, Canfield S.
Range 19
Columbus Grove 46, Convoy Crestview 20
Corning Miller 22, Belpre 7
Cortland Lakeview 35, Youngs. East 19
Covington 52, Ansonia 12
Crooksville 34, McConnelsville Morgan 14
Crown City S. Gallia 27, Waterford 7

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Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 42, Parma
Padua 15
Cuyahoga Hts. 21, Beachwood 14
Dalton 12, Doylestown Chippewa 10
Danville 33, Utica 7
Day. Chaminade-Julienne 34, Cin. Purcell
Marian 7
Day. Christian 28, Cols. Ready 18
Day. Thurgood Marshall 20, Day. Dunbar
14
Defiance Tinora 48, Holgate 0
Dover 55, Marietta 14
Dresden Tri-Valley 38, Thornville Sheridan
14
Dublin Coffman 34, Worthington Kilbourne
7
Dublin Jerome 24, Dublin Scioto 12
E. Can. 14, Rootstown 13
E. Palestine 26, Lisbon David Anderson 6
Eastlake N. 23, Geneva 0
Eaton 35, Germantown Valley View 17
Edon 32, Tol. Christian 20
Elida 56, Celina 0
Elyria Cath. 38, Bay Village Bay 6
Fayetteville-Perry 32, Grove City Christian
27
Findlay 33, Tol. St. John’s 14
Fostoria 21, Bloomdale Elmwood 8
Fostoria St. Wendelin 13, Lima Perry 2
Franklin 26, Brookville 14
Fremont St. Joseph 34, Sycamore Mohawk 20
Ft. Loramie 65, Day. Jefferson 6
Ft. Recovery 25, St. Henry 0
Gahanna Lincoln 33, Reynoldsburg 0
Gallipolis Gallia 27, Vincent Warren 13
Garfield Hts. 28, Lakewood 26
Gates Mills Hawken 25, Middlefield Cardinal 0
Genoa Area 62, Rossford 12
Gibsonburg 30, Lakeside Danbury 6
Girard 50, Leavittsburg LaBrae 0
Glouster Trimble 60, Racine Southern 19
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 49, Massillon
Tuslaw 28
Granville 38, Newark Cath. 24
Green 42, Richfield Revere 14
Greenville 35, Greenfield McClain 19
Greenwich S. Cent. 21, Ashland Mapleton
12
Hannibal River 29, Lore City Buckeye Trail
8
Hanoverton United 40, Mineral Ridge 21
Harrison 44, Milford 0
Heath 56, Hebron Lakewood 0
Hicksville 34, Edgerton 21
Highlands, Ky. 34, Cin. Elder 29
Hilliard Darby 45, Galloway Westland 7
Hilliard Davidson 25, Cols. Upper Arlington 7
Hubbard 22, Struthers 13
Huber Hts. Wayne 51, Clayton Northmont
30
Hudson 27, Elyria 21
Huron 22, Port Clinton 6
Ironton 28, Simon Kenton, Ky. 20
Ironton Rock Hill 48, Bidwell River Valley
14
Jackson 51, Chillicothe 10

Trimble
From Page B4

yards on 15 tries, followed
by Ryan Billingsley with
eight yards on three totes.
Wolfe was 9-of-15 passing for 131 yards, throwing
three touchdowns and one
interception. Taylor led the
wideouts with four catches
for 78 yards and two scores.
Keith finished the evening with 162 rushing
yards and three TDs on 12
chances, while Smathers
added 82 yards and two
scores on nine tries. Jewell
completed 6-of-9 passes for
98 yards and a touchdown,
with Konner Standley leading the wideouts with five
catches for 58 yards.
Southern will conclude
its TVC Hocking and regu-

Win

From Page B2

After a big sack by senior
Toby Martin on third down,
the Scott punter kicked the
ball off the side of his foot
and the ball sailed out of
bounds deep inside their
own territory. One play later it was Roberts hooking
up with sophomore Chase
Walton for a 28 yard pass.
Another Parsons kick and it
was 34-6.
Point would add two
more scores to end the first
half as Walton ran for a six
yard run for a score and
Barnitz caught the fourth
touchdown pass of the night
from Roberts just before
the end of the half to set the
score at 48-6 at halftime.
The second half began
with a bang as junior Zach
Canterbury
scampered
down the sideline with a
65 yard run on the first play
of the second half. Another
kick made the score 55-7.
The rest of the second
half featured a lot of time
for the second string and
junior varsity football players with no more scoring for
either squad.
There were many records that fell on the night.
The biggest record perhaps
being that the all-time team

Jeromesville Hillsdale 47, Rittman 0
Johnstown-Monroe 62, Howard E. Knox 20
Kent Roosevelt 54, Norton 7
Kenton 54, Defiance 15
Kings Mills Kings 37, Wilmington 7
Kirtland 54, Fairport Harbor Harding 6
Lancaster 27, Groveport-Madison 25
Lebanon 41, Fairborn 28
Lees Creek E. Clinton 36, Batavia Clermont NE 8
Leipsic 27, Findlay Liberty-Benton 0
Lewis Center Olentangy Orange 33, Hilliard Bradley 14
Lewisburg Tri-County N. 62, New Paris
National Trail 29
Lexington 21, Mansfield Sr. 7
Liberty Center 34, Delta 6
Lima Cent. Cath. 48, Lafayette Allen E. 0
London 27, Washington C.H. 21
Lorain 32, Euclid 27
Lorain Clearview 47, Brooklyn 12
Loudonville 49, Johnstown Northridge 2
Louisville 21, Salem 7
Loveland 42, Cin. Glen Este 7
Lucasville Valley 39, Wheelersburg 27
Lyndhurst Brush 49, Parma 10
Macedonia Nordonia 24, Lodi Cloverleaf
22
Madison 59, Ashtabula Lakeside 6
Magnolia, W.Va. 17, Barnesville 13
Magnolia Sandy Valley 28, Tuscarawas
Cent. Cath. 14
Malvern 46, Bowerston Conotton Valley 0
Mantua Crestwood 24, Akr. Springfield 21
Maple Hts. 22, Bedford 0
Marion Pleasant 53, Marion Elgin 20
Martins Ferry 33, St. Clairsville 28
Marysville 30, Westerville N. 7
Massillon Jackson 35, Massillon Perry 18
Mayfield 28, Cuyahoga Falls 7
McComb 48, Pandora-Gilboa 7
McDonald 24, Sebring McKinley 13
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 59, DeGraff
Riverside 21
Medina Buckeye 27, LaGrange Keystone 8
Mentor 38, Strongsville 7
Mentor Lake Cath. 28, Akr. Hoban 6
Metamora Evergreen 48, Montpelier 20
Middletown 21, Mason 14
Milford Center Fairbanks 59, Ridgeway
Ridgemont 14
Millbury Lake 37, Tontogany Otsego 34
Minerva 42, Alliance 19
Minster 28, Rockford Parkway 16
Mogadore Field 34, Akr. Coventry 12
Monroe 50, Day. Northridge 26
Mt. Orab Western Brown 17, Batavia 13
N. Baltimore 30, Kansas Lakota 29
N. Lewisburg Triad 26, S. Charleston SE 7
N. Olmsted 40, Amherst Steele 0
N. Ridgeville 34, Vermilion 12
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 40, Mt.
Blanchard Riverdale 7
N. Royalton 10, Stow-Munroe Falls 3
Napoleon 38, Sylvania Northview 0
Nelsonville-York 53, Albany Alexander 0
New Albany 45, Delaware Hayes 17
New Carlisle Tecumseh 42, Bellefontaine
14

lar season schedule next
Saturday when it hosts
Eastern on Senior Night at
7:30 p.m.

Trimble 60,
Southern 19

S
0-6-0-13 — 19
T
14-20-13-13 — 60
First Quarter
T - Austin Keith 10 yard run (Jon Stevens
kick) 10:09
T - Justin Jewell 1 yard run (Stevens kick)
5:37
Second Quarter
T - Austin Keith 13 yard run (Stevens kick)
11:25
S - Ryan Taylor 25 yard pass from Tristen
Wolfe (kick failed) 10:13
T - Austin Keith 4 yard run (Stevens kick)
7:43
T - Justin Jewell 8 yard run (kick failed)
1:19
Third Quarter
T - Jacob Hooper 2 yard pass from Justin
Jewell (kick failed) 11:38
T - Bryce Smathers 30 yard run (Chris
Spears kick) 8:16
Fourth Quarter
T - Cyrus Jones 4 yard run (kick failed)

scoring record from 1956
— 350 points — fell after
all of these years.
The second record was
Roberts’ big night, which
put him well over the 1000
yard mark for the season
and broke a school record
previously held by Pete
McDermitt from 1968.
The third record was a
record that was just established one year ago – junior
Josh Parsons now has 45
extra points on the season.
He broke teammate Jerrod
Long’s record from one
year ago.
Now the Big Blacks
will finish the home slate
of games with a date with
conference rival Herbert
Hoover. It will be senior
night and also a special
night in Big Blacks history.
The #20 jersey will be retired in a pre-game ceremony, which was previously
worn by Jarod Stouffer and
currently worn by his brother Jason.

Point Pleasant 55,
Scott 6
S
PP

6-0-0-0 — 6
7-41-7-0 — 55

SCORING SUMMARY
First Quarter
S —Jesse Belcher 68 run (run failed), 9:02
PP — Eric Roberts 1 run (Josh Parsons
kick), 5:37
Second Quarter
PP — Jerrod Long 1 run (Parsons kick),

New Lebanon Dixie 26, Middletown Madison 16
New Lexington 32, Zanesville W. Muskingum 0
New London 37, Monroeville 6
New Middletown Spring. 22, Columbiana
19
New Richmond 48, Oak Hill 8
New Washington Buckeye Cent. 46, Lucas
0
Newark Licking Valley 23, Cols. Bexley 17
Niles McKinley 29, Canfield 28
Northwood 49, Tol. Ottawa Hills 9
Norwalk 49, Willard 7
Oberlin Firelands 55, Sullivan Black River
26
Ontario 48, Crestline 0
Oregon Clay 17, Fremont Ross 14
Orrville 20, Bellville Clear Fork 13
Ottawa-Glandorf 35, Lima Bath 18
Parma Normandy 21, Parma Hts. Valley
Forge 14
Pataskala Licking Hts. 28, Sugar Grove
Berne Union 6
Pataskala Watkins Memorial 56, Cols.
Franklin Hts. 6
Pemberville Eastwood 82, Elmore Woodmore 21
Peninsula Woodridge 49, Windham 21
Perry 56, Wickliffe 21
Perrysburg 47, Bowling Green 7
Philo 21, Zanesville Maysville 20
Pickerington Cent. 34, Grove City 0
Pickerington N. 31, Newark 14
Piketon 22, Southeastern 14
Piqua 21, Vandalia Butler 8
Plain City Jonathan Alder 51, Marion Harding 7
Poland Seminary 42, Lisbon Beaver 0
Pomeroy Meigs 30, McArthur Vinton
County 0
Portsmouth 24, Logan 21, 2OT
Portsmouth Sciotoville 48, Franklin Furnace Green 21
Portsmouth W. 55, McDermott Scioto NW
7
Powell Olentangy Liberty 24, Westerville
Cent. 19
Ravenna 49, Streetsboro 14
Ravenna SE 35, Mogadore 28
Richmond Hts. 12, Independence 7
Richwood N. Union 35, Delaware Buckeye
Valley 21
Rocky River Lutheran W. 14, Oberlin 6
Salineville Southern 12, Lowellville 0
Sandusky 35, Tiffin Columbian 34
Sandusky Perkins 6, Castalia Margaretta 0
Sarahsville Shenandoah 45, Beverly Ft.
Frye 0
Shadyside 35, Bridgeport 7
Sherwood Fairview 49, Haviland Wayne
Trace 42

10:25
S - Zac Beegle 5 yard pass from Tristen
Wolfe (Ryan Billingsley kick) 6:09
T - Bryce Smathers 39 yard run (Tanner
Koons kick) 5:00
S - Ryan Taylor 19 yard pass from Tristen
Wolfe (kick fail) 2:10
First Downs: S 11, T 17
Rushes-Yds: S 32-35, T 40-357
Passing Yds: S 131, T 115
Total Yds: S 166, T 472
Cmp-Att-Int: S 10-15-1, T 8-13-0
Fumbles-Lost: S 0-0, T 1-0
Penalties-Yds: S 4-30, T 5-49
Punts-Yds: S 6-21.2, T 0-0
RUSHING
S — Tyler Barton 15-64, Ryan Billingsley
3-8, Paul Ramthun 1-0, Tristen Wolfe 7-(-19),
Hunter Johnson 6-(-18).
T — Austin Keith 12-162, Bryce Smathers
9 -82, Cyrus Jones 8-22, Justin Jewell 3-6,
Konner Standley 6-77, Jacob Koons 1-6,
Brandon Auflick 1-2.
PASSING
S — Tristen Wolfe 9-15-1 131.
T — Justin Jewell 6-9-0 98, Jacob Kish
2-4-0 17.
RECEIVING
S — Ryan Taylor 4-78, Zac Beegle 1-5,
Paul Ramthun 1-25, Tyler Barton 1-17, Tren
11:19
PP — Brandon Toler 47 pass from Roberts
(Parsons kick), 10:12
PP — Jason Stouffer 10 pass from Roberts (kick failed), 7:04
PP — Chase Walton 28 pass from
Roberts(Parsons kick), 4:55
PP — Walton 6 run (Parsons kick), 3:37
PP — Teran Barnitz 5 pass from Roberts
(Parsons kick), :31
Third Quarter
PP — Zach Canterbury 65 run (Parsons
kick), 11:48
TEAM STATISTICS
First downs —S: 4, PP: 19;
Rushes-yards —S: 26-174, PP: 32-205;
Passing yards —S: 44, PP: 221;
Total yards —S: 218, PP: 426;
Comp-Att-Int —S: 7-13-0, PP: 14-17-0;
Fumbles lost —S: 2, PP: 1;
Penalties-yards — S: 3-25, PP: 4-30.
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing —S: Jesse Belcher 7-49, Triston
Crone 9-19, Robert Bias 7-9, Draven Riffle
4-8, Michael Hatfield 3-5, Dustin Mitchell
1-(-1); PP: Zach Canerbury 3-76, Robbie
Wallace 7-37, Teran Barnitz 6-28, Marquez
Griffin 6-28, Jerrod Long 5-19, Chase Walton
1-6, Gabe Buskirk 2-7, Cody Marcum 1-3,
Eric Roberts 1-1.

Passing —S: Jesse
Belcher 6-12-0 24, Elijah
Prince 1-1-0 20; PP: Eric
Roberts 14-17-0 221.
Receiving — S: Cameron Loftis 3-27, Brandon
McNeeley 1-20, Draven
Riffle 2-(-1), Hunter Bradley 1-(-2); Brandon Toler
3-71, Chase Walton 4-56,
Jason Stouffer 2-50, Marquez Griffin 1-16, Layne
Thompson 1-12, John Kinniard 1-8, Teran Barnitz
2-8.

For more news and
sports visit us at
www.mydailysentinel.com

�Sunday, OctOber 23, 2011

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Sunday, October 23, 2011

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Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B5

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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)
HHHH Defer to others, knowing
full well that if there is a problem, you
would prefer it be someone else’s.
Remain sensitive to a boss or someone you look up to. Unpredictability
and another person’s power play
could toss you out of kilter. Tonight:
Go with a suggestion.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH Your nerves could be fried
due to many unexpected events. You
wonder what the best thing to do is
under the circumstances. You might
want to analyze what is happening.
Resist a knee-jerk reaction. Tonight:
Finish up a project.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Allow more playfulness.
You might wonder when enough
is enough. Pressure builds around
your work or a routine. Clearly, you
might need to reorganize your plans.
Unexpected developments could
make a meeting quite different and
exciting. Tonight: Time for fun.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHH Someone you look up to
could be tossing havoc into your
path. Try to steer clear. It appears as
though everyone wants a situation to
tumble his or her way. You could witness a bunch of controlling people trying to control each other. Back away
with grace. Tonight: Close to home.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH Keep conversations moving. Explore why a situation might
not be working like you would like it
to. This situation could provoke your
imagination, encouraging solutions.
Push comes to shove with a demanding associate. Tonight: Catch up on a
friend’s weekend.

Ad goes here

Horoscope

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH Rethink a personal matter.
Your ability to think through another
person’s problem is great for him
or her, but can you do the same for
yourself? Don’t take a child’s or new
friend’s actions personally. Tonight:
Treat yourself well.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Your spirit is hard to beat.
You seem to be able to deal with
nearly anyone at any time. Right now,
that skill is good news, because you
might need it when dealing with a
partner or loved one. Know that no
one can control you unless you want
them to! Think positive. Tonight: All
smiles.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HH Take your time; take a deep
breath and think through a problem.
You have a unique ability to understand many dimensions. You also
might not want to enlighten others
just yet as to what you are perceiving.
Tonight: Take some much-needed
personal time.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHH Allow more give-and-take
between you and another person.
You have similar goals but very different approaches. Understand what is
going on with a loved one or a friendship. Be careful with your finances,
especially if someone has an agenda.
Tonight: With friends.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH Instead of pushing so much,
work on being a good receiver. An
investment with real estate might be
a problem. Try to understand if you
made a bad judgment call. Don’t push
too hard. The unexpected occurs
when you least expect it. Tonight:
Burning the midnight oil.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH Much could be going on
that is uncomfortable and encourages
you to detach. You know better than
anyone that you don’t need to be in
the middle of everything. You might
want to rethink a situation that always
seems to be unstable. Tonight: Put on
a great piece of music.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH Someone comes forward
and shares a lot more of him- or
herself. You want to flow with this
person, but you still might not be sure.
You might start veering off course.
Perhaps questioning your goals would
be smart. Tonight: Talk over dinner.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

www.mydailysentinel.com

�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Lancers
From Page A1

Federal Hocking threw
three straight incomplete
passes on the next drive, before punting the ball back to
Eastern.
Eastern put together an
11 play, 46 yard drive, taking over five minutes off
the clock, before scoring
for the third time in the first
half. Ethan Nottingham ran
in from the one yard lien on
a fourth and goal attempt to
give Eastern the 19-0 lead.
Federal Hocking scored
its first points of the game
on the next drive, taking
just six plays to put the ball
in the endzone. Delbert
Crum scored from three
yards out, cutting the deficit
to 13 points.
Neither team could score
in the opening minutes of
the second half, with Federal Hocking putting points
on the board once again
with two minutes remaining
in the third quarter. Kyle
Jackson ran in from the
eight yard line for the score.
Eastern looked ready to
extend the seven point lead
early in the fourth quarter,
with a 10 play and nearly
five minute drive. Faced
with fourth down at the
Federal Hocking 24 yard
line, the Eastern pass fell
incomplete, giving Federal
Hocking another chance.
The Lancers wasted little
time — going no huddle
for the majority of the sec-

Rebels
From Page B1

Facing a two score deficit, the Wildcats mounted
their only scoring drive of
the game when quarterback
Trevor Lang connected on
two big pass plays, the first
moving the ball into Rebel
territory and the second resulting in points.
On a third and 15, Lang
found Devan Patterson behind the secondary for a 43yard touchdown pass, making the score 14-7, which
proved to be the halftime
mark.
At the break, Waterford
had ran the ball 15 times for
zero yards while South Gallia had 20 attempts for 103
yards. All told, the Rebels
maintained a 167-86 advantage in yardage.
“We had some points in
the game we really moved
the ball,” Ross said. “We
just couldn’t get any con-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

ond half — moving the ball
down field. a 49 yard pass
play from Jackson to Josh
Cunningham setup a four
yard touchdown run by
Cunningham. The two point
conversion pass from Jackson to Romey Casey was
good, giving the Lancers
their first and only lead of
the night,
Eastern had two chances
to regain the lead, turning
the ball over on both possessions. The Eagles tossed
an interception near midfield with 1:56 remaining,
and fumbled the ball at the
Federal Hocking 15 yard
line with 1:21 remaining.
Eastern was led by junior
running back Ethan Nottingham with 157 yards on
22 carries. Joey Scowden
led the Eastern passing
game with a 4-4 performance and 57 yards, all in
the first half.
Carnahan led the Eastern
receivers with three catches
for 37 yards, before moving
to quarterback for the second half.
Federal Hocking was led
by quarterback Kyle Jackson with 228 passing yards
on a 16-27 passing game.
Defensively,
Zach
Scowden had an interception for the Eagles, while
Daschle Facemyer and
Cody Rayburn each had a
fumble recovery. For Federal Hocking, Jackson had a
fumble recover and Peyton
Seel had an interception.
Eastern will conclude the
2011 season on Saturday as
they travel to Southern for

sistency going.”
The two squads meandered through a scoreless
third quarter, with the Wildcats coming within 14 yards
of tying the game only to
watch it slip from their
grasp.Taking
possession
at the Rebel 35 after a 20yard punt, the Wildcats advanced to South Gallia’s 14
before turning the ball over
on downs when Lang’s pass
to Hunter Schlotterbeck
was a little behind.
“We didn’t come away
with any points. That was a
crucial point in the game,”
Ross said.
Following that turnover
on downs, South Gallia
began a 15 play drive that
took more than eight minutes off the clock. Facing a
pounding ground attack, the
Wildcat defense kept creeping closer and closer to the
line of scrimmage and when
Spurlock broke through the
line at the Waterford 34 he
was off to the races for the
back breaking touchdown.

the annual week 10 meeting
between the TVC Hocking
teams.

Federal Hocking 20,
Eastern 19
FH
E

0-6-6-8 — 20
6-13-0-0 — 19

SCORING SUMMARY
First Quarter
E — Max Carnahan 18 pass from Joey
Scowden (kick failed), 6:21
Second Quarter
E — Chase Cook 6 run (Caranahan kick),
7:45
E — Ethan Nottingham 1 run (kick failed),
2:06
FH — Delbert Crum 3 run (pass failed), :16
Third Quarter
FH — Kyle Jackson 8 run (pass failed),
2:00
Fourth Quarter
FH — Josh Cunningham 4 run (Romey
Casey pass from Jackson), 3:17
TEAM STATISTICS
First Downs — FH: 12, E: 15;
Rushes-yards — FH: 22-37; E: 52-222;
Passing yards — FH: 228, E: 57;
Total yards — FH: 265, E: 279;
Comp-Att-Int — FH: 16-27-1; E: 4-9-1;
Fumbles-lost — FH: 2-2, E: 5-1;
Penalties-yards — FH: 2-10; E: 8-48.
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing — FH: Kyle Jackson 12-19, Andrew Smith 3-6, Delbert Crum 3-5, Romey
Casey 2-4, Josh Cunningham 1-4, Josh
Barton 1-(-1); E: Ethan Nottingham 22-157,
Chase Cook 10-25, Joey Scowden 9-23,
Zach Scowden 6-16, Max Carnahan 5-1.
Passing — FH: Kyle Jackson 16-27-1 228;
E: Joey Scowden 4-4-0 57, Max Carnahan
0-5-1 0.
Receiving — FH: Payton Seel 10-136,
Josh Cunningham 2-57, Romey Casey 4-35;
E: Max Carnahan 3-37, Ethan Nottingham
1-20.

Under duress on the ensuing possession Lang’s
pass was intercepted by
John Johnson at the Rebel
27. This time the Rebels
needed just eight plays and
nearly five minutes to score
as Phillips again broke
through the line to score
from 19 yards out, setting
the final score with 40.5
seconds to play in regulation.
“Waterford, they’re an
excellent coached football
team. Coach Ross, I have
more respect for him than
anybody else around,” Peck
said, adding the Wildcats
were one of the most physical teams the Rebels faced
this year.
Behind by three scores,
the Wildcats ran just one
play after Phillips touchdown to run out the clock as
Derek Brown was tackled
for a two-yard gain, dropping the Wildcats to 5-4 on
the year while South Gallia
is now 7-2.
Kevin Pierson is a sports
writer for the Marietta
Times in Marietta, Ohio.

Cruise
From Page B1

Ty Phelps stepped in and
picked off a Shawn Thompson pass and returned it 21
yards for his first career
score and give Meigs the
30-0 wins.
“The kids gave really
great effort tonight,” Mike
Chancey said after the
game. “I’m always proud
of the kids, but upper and
younger classmen both
stepped up and made some
plays. We have one more
night of football in this
great stadium. We need to
make sure we do everything
in our power to finish the
right way.”
Joey Batey led the Vikings with 36 yards in 17
tries; Levi Thompson added
24 in seven tries. Shawn
Thompson was 4 of 18
passing with three interceptions for 101 yards. Curtis
Linder caught three passes
for 80 yards.

Devils

From Page B1

(20-13) headed into the finale.

Warren’s hopes of a comeback fell by the wayside early
in the fourth, as Gallia Academy added the final points of the
night with an 11-play, 76-yard
drive that ate up more than five
minutes between the third and
fourth frames for a 27-13 cushion.
Gallia Academy then came
up big on Warren’s ensuing
drive, as the hosts thwarted
three straight running plays
on second-and-goal at the one
— which all but sealed the
deal on the outcome. The Warriors had possession two more
times after coming up short
near the goalline, but both of
those drives resulted in a loss
of downs.
Gallia Academy took a knee
on the final play with 1.8 seconds remaining, allowing the
hosts to extend their winning
streak to three headed into the
season finale with archrival and
league-leading Jackson.
Afterwards, GAHS coach
Mike Eddy was praiseful of
a very tough opponent. More
importantly though, Eddy was
proud of the way his troops answered the challenge put before
them in their 2011 home finale.
“This is a night of great ad-

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B6
Zach Sayre led a balanced marauder ground
attack with 66 yards in 12
tries, Barrett added 53 in
nine carries, Boyer 33 in
11 carries and Andrew Burt
added 22 in seven carries.
Boyer was four of 10 for 53
yards. Barrett caught two
for 16 yards, Phelps one for
26 and Alex Morris one for
11.
Sayre had two interceptions for Meigs and Phelps
one.
Meigs will play their final game ever at Bob Roberts Field next week against
Alexander. The game will
be followed by a short ceremony and all former players, band members and
cheerleaders are asked to
attend, after the ceremony
the award winning Meigs
Marauder Marching Band
will perform their show one
final time.

Meigs 30,
Vinton County 0

M

7-10-7-6 — 20

SCORING SUMMARY
First Quarter
M — Zach Sayre 1 run (Charlie Barrett
kick), 6:38
Second Quarter
M — Charlie Barrett 30 field goal, :31
M — Barrett 17 pass from Dillon Boyer
(Barrett kick), :01
Third Quarter
M — Barrett 8 run (Barrett kick), 9:43
M — Ty Phelps 21 INT return (pass failed),
7:40
TEAM STATISTICS
First Downs —VC: 8, M: 12
Rushes-yards —VC: 37-55, M: 42-179;
Passing yards —VC: 101, M: 53;
Total yards — VC: 156, M: 232;
Comp-Att-Int — VC: 4-18-3, M: 4-10-0;
Fumbles-lost — VC: 1-0, M: 2-1;
Penalties-yards — VC: 2-25, M: 3-40.
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing — VC: Joey Batey 17-36, Levi
Thompson 7-24, Wesley Yors 4-13, Mathew
Smallwood 1-1, Ryan Disbennett 1-(-13),
Curtis Linder 1-(-11), Leif Smith 1-(-2),
Shawn Thompson 6-(-24); M: Zach Sayre 1266, Charlie Barrett 9-53, Dillon Boyer 11-33,
Andrew Burt 7-22, Jordan Hutton 3-5.
Passing — VC: Shawn Thompson 4-18-3
101; M: Dillon Boyer 4-10-0.
Receiving —VC: Curtis Linder 3-80,
Mathew Smallwood 1-10, Joey Batey 1-6;
M: Charlie Barrett 2-16, Ty Phelps 1-26, Alex
Morris 1-11.

VC 0-0-0-0 — 0

versity. Senior Night just wears
on their minds all week. When
they walk down those stairs for
the last time, it’s a special moment that really tears you up,”
Eddy said. “I thought they did
a great job of overcoming the
adversity. They played together
as a team all the way through,
because they had to.
“Warren was a great opponent and they kept us on the
ropes all night, but the kids
rose to the occasion and just
did a great job of getting things
done.”
Warren coach Andy Schob
may not have come away with
the victory, but Eddy wasn’t
the only coach to leave the field
with a proud feeling for his
team.
“There are games that you
win and games that you lose,
but our kids gave a solid effort
the entire time tonight,” Schob
said. “We were down 17-0
against a pretty good Gallia
Academy team, but we didn’t
quit and got ourselves back in
the game by battling. I want
to commend Gallia Academy
on their efforts, but I’m really
proud of our kids for not giving
up tonight.”
Both teams committed two
turnovers in their first three
possessions, but Gallia Academy finally got on the scoreboard early in the second canto.
The Blue Devils, following a

Bryant Bokovotz interception,
marched 13 yards in six plays
for a 7-0 lead after Brandon
Taylor plunged in from a yard
out at the 7:43 mark.
On the first play of Warren’s
ensuing possession, Dylan
Leffingwell had a pass intercepted by Drew Young — who
returned the ball 33 yards to
paydirt. Young’s touchdown
gave the hosts a 14-0 lead with
7:28 remaining in the half.
GAHS forced a three-andout on the Warriors’ next possession, then marched 38 yards
in seven plays down to the
WHS 24. Brandon Taylor split
the uprights on a 41-yard field
goal attempt with 2:58 remaining, allowing the Devils to take
a comfortable 17-0 cushion late
in the half.
Warren, however, finally
got on the scoreboard with 1:13
left in the half after Jeremy
Fivecoait hauled in a 55-yard
scoring pass from Leffingwell
— making it a 17-6 contest.
Fivecoait’s score capped a
four-play, 69-yard drive that
lasted just 1:40.
The Warriors then worked
a little trickery to perfection,
as the guests successfully executed an onside-kick that gave
them possession at the GAHS
33 with 1:13 still remaining in
the half. WHS marched the ball
down to the 19, but Chas Miller
missed a 36-yard field goal
with 40 seconds left.

Bob’s Market and
Greenhouses, Inc.
CONGRATULATES
The City of Gallipolis
and the

Gallipolis In Bloom Committee
on winning the

National Award for
America In Bloom
4,000 - 10,000 Population Category

“This achievement shows what can be
accomplished when individuals, clubs,
organizations, and businesses work together
for the betterment of a community!”

Congratulations!

1 Jenkins Lane
Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446-1711

�Along The River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

C1

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Classic Pizza Margherita

FAMILY FEATURES

F

orget about delivery pizza — make your own fresh and flavorful creations for
a fantastic family pizza night sure to bring everyone together at the table.
These recipes use ingredients that let you put your own tasty and creative spin
on classic favorites — fresh herbs; a blend of rich Italian cheeses; and high-quality,
flavorful Johnsonville Italian sausage, available in mild, sweet or hot varieties.
Whether it’s putting a twist on the classic “Pizza Margherita,” spicing things up
with “Sausage Diavolo Pizza,” or serving a “Morning Terrace Pizza” for dinner,
pizza night just got a whole lot tastier.
For more ways to do pizza night right, visit www.johnsonville.com.

Classic Pizza Margherita

Serves 4 to 6
1 package refrigerated pizza dough
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil, divided
1 package Johnsonville Mild Italian Sausage
1/2 medium red onion, minced
1 tablespoon parsley, minced
1 tablespoon garlic, minced
1 tablespoon oregano
8 Roma tomatoes, sliced (divided — save 10 slices
for the top)
10 fresh basil leaves (divided)
2 cups mozzarella cheese, shredded
1 cup fontina cheese, shredded
Pepper and sea salt
1/2 cup fresh Parmesan cheese, grated
Position oven rack on lowest shelf and preheat to 425°F. Lightly
oil a pizza pan. Roll out dough as thin as possible. Let rest
10 minutes.
In small skillet, heat 1 tablespoon oil over medium-high,
add sausage and cook until browned. Remove from skillet,
cool slightly and coin slice. In the same pan, sauté onion and
parsley to golden, then stir in garlic and oregano for a few
seconds. Add tomatoes to pan, crushing them as they are
mixed (do not substitute crushed tomatoes). Boil, stirring 5
minutes or until thick.
Spread sauce over crust, sprinkle with half the basil, mozzarella, fontina, sausage, remaining slices of tomatoes and
finally remaining olive oil. Finish with generous pepper and
a little sea salt. Bake for 10 minutes.
Using a spatula and an oven mitt, slip pizza off pan directly
onto oven rack, bake for two minutes. Slip pizza back onto pan,
remove from oven. Sprinkle with Parmesan cheese and remaining fresh basil. Cut and enjoy.

Family
pizza night
done right

Morning Terrace Pizza

Serves 4
1 10- to 12-inch baguette, cut in two and sliced open,
inside dough removed
1 package Johnsonville Mild Italian Sausage
1 1/2 cups fontina, mozzarella or Monterey Jack cheese,
shredded
Dried red pepper flakes
3 Roma tomatoes, diced
4 whole eggs
Pepper, to taste
1/3 cup Parmesan cheese, grated
2 tablespoons fresh chives, chopped
Position oven rack in center of oven and preheat oven to 400°F.
Cut baguette in half and then slice it open to create four equal
open-faced pieces. Remove the doughy center, leaving a halfinch border close to the edge.
In large skillet, sauté sausage until browned. Remove from
heat, thinly coin slice and set aside.
Top baguettes evenly with 3/4 of shredded cheese. Shake
on red pepper flakes to taste. Place sausage pieces evenly on
top around the edges. Add the rest of the cheese and the diced
tomatoes. Bake for 5 to 8 minutes and remove from oven.
Using the back of a spoon, lightly make 4 indentations in the
center of the baguettes, not too close to the crust, pushing some
of the ingredients to the sides. Carefully crack an egg into each
depression. Grind pepper on each egg, and top with Parmesan
cheese.
Return to oven for 5 to 7 minutes, until egg whites are set,
but yolk is still soft. Remove, sprinkle with fresh chives, cut
and enjoy.

Morning Terrace Pizza

Sausage Diavolo Pizza

Serves 4 to 6
1 refrigerated pizza dough crust,
Sausage should
rolled out thin
always be
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
prepared to
1 package Johnsonville Hot Italian
reach an
Sausage Links
internal
3/4 teaspoon dried red pepper flakes
temperature
5 cloves fresh garlic, peeled and minced
of 160°F.
3/4 cup onion, chopped
12 cherry tomatoes, halved
1 can crushed tomatoes (14 ounces)
1 1/2 cups dry white wine
1/2 teaspoon oregano, dried
Sea salt and pepper
3 tablespoons Italian parsley, chopped
1 cup Italian blend cheese, grated
1 cup Parmesan cheese, grated
1 long, sweet red pepper, cut into rings
Other fresh herbs such as basil (optional)
Position oven rack to center and preheat to 450°F. Lightly oil a pizza pan
and roll out crust, thin.
In large skillet, heat oil and sauté sausage and red pepper flakes until
browned. Remove from heat, drain fat, cool slightly and chop, roughly.
Add garlic and onion to skillet and cook about five minutes until onion
is soft.
Add cherry tomatoes, canned tomatoes, wine and oregano. Season with
salt and pepper to taste. Let simmer about 20 minutes, stirring when necessary, until cherry tomatoes are soft and sauce thickens.
Add parsley and sausage back into skillet. Remove from heat.
Top pizza crust with sausage mixture, grated cheeses and red pepper rings.
Bake 8 to 10 minutes.
Remove from oven, sprinkle with fresh herbs, cut and enjoy.

Sausage Diavolo Pizza

�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C2

Yard Sale

Home Improvements

Want To Buy

Houses For Sale

Apartments/Townhouses

Apartments/Townhouses

YARD SALE &amp;
BEAN DINNER

FALL FESTIVAL: clean gutters, driveway seal coating,
barn painting, odd jobs, 25
yrs exp, sr discount, license
&amp; bonded. 304-882-3959 or
304-812-2374

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

FALL FESTIVAL: clean gutters, driveway seal coating,
barn painting, odd jobs, 25
yrs exp, sr discount, license
&amp; bonded. 304-882-3959 or
304-812-2374

2 bedroom apartment available in Syracuse. $250 deposit, $400 per month rent.
Rent includes water, sewer
and trash. NO PETS. Sufficient income needed to qualify. Call 740-378-6111

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

5 BR, 3 bath, NEWER HOME,
on 1.16 acres, 20 mins from
Gallipolis &amp; Huntington, 5
miles from South Gaillia HS,
owner finance avail. $10,000
down,
$842.52
mo.
740-256-1686
or
740-861-0110
For Rent- 2 and 3 BR Apt.
Spring Valley Area. 3 BR
House for Sale or Sale on
Land Contract (Gallipolis Area)
Duplex for Sale (New Haven)
645-7661 or 339-3046

2 room eff apt in country setting, 7 miles from Gallipolis on
Rt 7 S. Furn, W/D incl, all elec,
util not incl. $300 mo, dep and
1st mo rent req. NO PETS
740-446-4514

BIDWELL
METHODIST CHURCH
OCT 28 &amp; 29
9:00-5:00
WILL ACCEPT
LEFTOVER
YARD SALE
ITEMS

Other Services
Pet
Cremations.
740-446-3745

Call

Want To Buy
Will pick up unwanted Appliances&amp; yard sale items also
Will haul or
buy Auto's,
Buses &amp; Scrap metal Ph.
446-3698 ask for Robert.
AUTOMOTIVE

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

JO
388-8525

Repairs
Help Wanted- General
Commercial Cleaners
Immediate Opening
Buffalo. FT. 7:15pm-3:45pm
Must Pass Background Check
304-768-6309

EXPERIENCED
PAINTERS
CALL:
740-367-7680
LEAVE A MESSAGE
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Need someone to do major repair on barn 740-256-1399 after 4 pm or leave message
FINANCIAL
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

300

SERVICES

Lost &amp; Found

Autos
2006 Dodge Grand Caravan,
103,000 miles, good cond,
asking $5500. 1999 Z71
Chevy 4x4 ext cab, 5.7 liter,
good cond, asking $5500.
740-379-9515/ 740-645-6857
AUTOS FOR SALE
Cavaliers, Saturns, Trucks,
Hondas, SUVs, Vans, Focus's,
853-2468 or 446-7278
Trucks
For sale: 2006 Ford Siera
1500 Club Cab truck, 77,000
miles, asking $12,000.
304-675-5403
or
304-539-9740
For sale: 2006 Ford Siera
1500 Club Cab truck, 77,000
miles, asking $12,000.
304-675-5403
or
304-539-9740
Want To Buy

West Columbia, 96 Valley
Brook Dr, bank home, ranch, 3
br 3 bath, new paint and carpet, $94,900. Property Pros
304-736-1200
West Columbia, 96 Valley
Brook Dr, bank home, ranch, 3
br 3 bath, new paint and carpet, $94,900. Property Pros
304-736-1200
600

GALLIA CO 5 acres on SR
218, $21,500, 8 acres off SR
554, $12,500 or 10 acres
against USA off SR 233,
$21,500. MEIGS CO Danville
8 acres $19,900, More @
www.brunerland.com or call
740-441-1492. We gladly finance!

REAL ESTATE SALES

2BR APT.Close to Holzer Hospital
on SR 160 C/A. (740) 441-0194

ANIMALS
Pets

Other Services

FREE TO A GOOD HOME-4
mo old mixed breed, blk &amp; wh,
small. 740-441-9077

FREE: 4 female cats, spayed,
small kittens too, indoor only,
liter trained. 740-446-3897 or
740-446-1282

Wayne

AGRICULTURE

Notices

Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that
you do business with people you
know, and NOT to send money
through the mail until you have investigating the offering.

HAY FOR SALE, round &amp;
square starting @ $2.60/bale,
wire tie. Call for more details
304-675-5724

CARPET SALE- SAVE BIG
$$$$
ON
IN
STOCK
CARPET-FREE
ESTIMATES-EASY FINANCING-12 MONTHS SAME AS
CASH. MOLLOHAN CARPET
317 ST RT 7 N GALLIPOLIS,
OH 740-446-7444

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

HAY FOR SALE, round &amp;
square starting @ $2.60/bale,
wire tie. Call for more details
304-675-5724
MERCHANDISE

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting
applications for waiting list for
HUD subsidized, 1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
675-6679

Nice 2 br downstairs apt, kit
appl, AC, gas furnace, W/D
hook-up, Pt Pleasant $375
plus $200 dep 304-675-6375
or 804-677-8621
Nice 2 br downstairs apt, kit
appl, AC, gas furnace, W/D
hook-up, Pt Pleasant. $375
plus $200 dep. 304-675-6375
or 804-677-8621

Pets

Apartments/Townhouses
1 Bedroom Apt, 1100 sq ft,
Bidwell area, all utilities included, WIFI, $600 mo. Call
740-441-5551

t

3 br, $425 plus deposit, utilities
&amp; references; 1 br, $325
month plus deposit &amp; utilities,
740-247-4292

New 1 br apt, LR, equipped kit,
laundry, HP/CA, extra storage.
$390 mo, ref plus dep req. NO
PETS
740-245-5114 or
740-446-2801

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Paying
Cash
for
junk,Cars,Trucks,Vans,Call
740-388-0011
or
740-441-7870. No Sunday
calls.

Elec

NO
Oh

Apt. For Rent
1-bedroom, 2nd floor, unfurnished apt. AC,water included,
corner 2nd &amp; pine, No pets,
Maximum occupancy 2, References &amp; security deposit required, $300/mo., 1 yr lease.
Call 446-4425 or 446-3936

Wanted- PASTURELAND with
livable
HOUSING,
505-384-1101

FOUND: small male brown
dog on Racoon Rd, 1 mile off
Rt 7. 740-446-7334

LOST: Hemlock Grove, blk
lab, blue collar, $50 reward.
740-992-2196

ANIMALS

2-BR APT
Furnished $475 mo.
PETS
,
Racine,
740-591-5174

Apartment for Rent
Upstairs Apt.- Kitchen furnished- 1 or 2 people @ 238
1st Ave. $525 + Utilities &amp; deposit-No Pets 446-4926

CLONCH

Elec

Addison

t

Township Trustee
Paid for by: The Candidate
2910 Addison Pike, Gallipolis OH 45631

Want To Buy

CASH PAID

For your scrap gold jewelry, gold and
silver coins and sterling.
MTS Coins
151 2nd Ave. Gallipolis
446-2842

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

60248647

Auctions

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

ABSOLUTE REAL ESTATE AUCTION
Sat. October 29, 10:00am

FOR SALE: football tickets,
CLEVELAND BROWNS, several games, excellent seats.
740-256-1267
Want To Buy
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884

Business

Patterson Construction

SNOW
REMOVAL
Business

No Job To Big or To Small
We Do It All

Roofing, Siding, Remodel, Decks, Porches,
Pole barns and Custom Built Homes

FREE ESTIMATES
740-388-8931
l
l
a
740-853-1024
C

Painted metal and bare metal available in
20 year, 45 year and no warranty.

Houses For Sale

Rio Grande home and 16 acres 3120 sq. Ft. Home
with 5 bedrooms, 3 baths,
large family room, kitchen and
dining room . lots of closet
space, 2 and half car attached
garage , lg. Deck and porch ,
16/32 storage bldg. Great view,
great neighbors, hunting and 4
wheeling. Home is 14 yrs. Old
but in like new Cond. 1 mile from Rio Grande and new school.
Asking 289,000. Price is below recent appraisal.
Phone (740)645-6496

11 Court Street, Gallipolis, OH 45631
Sells to the highest bidder!

60250579

We now have Kinco winter and
summer gloves in stock!
Warranty Forms Available Upon Request
10% Tax Credit On All Colors
Energy Star® Certified Metal &amp; Fanfold
21 Colors Available • Cannonball
Products • All Metal Accessories
Specializing in Pole Barn &amp;
Garage Packages

See our website for more photos, video &amp; details!
Real Estate: Sell to the highest bidder! Built in 1820, this 4
bedroom, 4 bath, TWO FAMILY, 2 story colonial sits on a 45x162
lot (parcel # 00700401800). The home has 3800 sq. ft. of living
area with 2 family rooms, 10 rooms total w/ part basement.
Located right near the river in the heart of Gallipolis, directly
across the street from Gallipolis City Park. Great opportunity!
Terms: 10% non-refundable deposit due on sale day balance
within 45 days. OPEN HOUSE SUN. OCT 23. 2-4 pm. A 5%
buyer’s fee added to final bid to generate sales contract price.
Any inspections must be made prior to bidding.

FIRST QUALITY AUCTION &amp; REALTY
Mark Walton, Broker / Auctioneer
Medina. OH (330)607-3687
www.waltonauctionsite.com

�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C3

Apartments/Townhouses

Apartments/Townhouses

Houses For Rent

Rentals

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Help Wanted- General

Nice 2 br downstairs apt, kit
appl, AC, gas furnace, W/D
hook-up, Pt Pleasant. $375
plus $200 dep. 304-675-6375
or 804-677-8621

Very nice upstairs apartment
for rent in Middleport, good
neighborhood. Newly remodeled. New appliances, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Central air &amp;
heat. large deck on back. Garage available. Smoke and
animal free. Call 740-992-9784

3 br, trailer in country, between
Athens &amp; Pomeroy 1 mile off
33, No pets, utilities not included, $400 mo., $400 dep.,
740-416-2960

FURNISHED 3 BR DBL WIDE
SR 143, Pomeroy, Oh. Some
Utilities Included. W/D $625
mo. NO PETS. 740-591-5174

DRIVERS: start up to .41 mile,
home weekly or bi-weekly.
CDLA 6 mo, OTR req. Equipment you will be proud to
drive. 888-247-4037

Investigator / QA Reviewer
Make a difference in the developmental disabilities field.
Seek independent, self-motivated individuals. Flexible
schedule. Full-time and
contract positions available in
15-county region.
See full position postings at
www.socog.org. EOE. Apply to
SOCOG by fax 740-775-5023
or email llippert@socog.org.
Wanted:
State Certified Mine Foreman,
A Person with an Associate
Degree in
CAD systems, or Engineering.
A Front-End loader operator,
An Equipment Oiler with at
least a
class “B” CDL
Offering competitive wages
and benefits.
Please send resumes to:
P. O. Box 626
Jackson, Ohio 45640
740 286-5633 ext. 225
employment@waterloocoal.
com

Pleasant Valley Apts is now
taking apps for 2,3 &amp; 4 BR
apts, HUD subsidized. Apps
are taken Mon-Thur 9:00
AM-1:00 PM. Office is located
a 1151 Evergreen Dr, Pt
Pleasant, WV. 304-675-5806
Pleasant Valley Apts is now
taking apps for 2,3 &amp; 4 BR
apts, HUD subsidized. Apps
are taken Mon-Thur 9:00
AM-1:00 PM. Office is located
a 1151 Evergreen Dr, Pt
Pleasant, WV. 304-675-5806
Very clean 1 br. apt., w/d
hookup, stove, ref., country
setting, SR 33, Pomeroy area,
$375 + dep &amp; util., No Pets,
740-541-4119

4 br, 3 ba, close to Gallipolis,
recently remodeled. $900 rent,
$900 dep. Ref and BG check
req. NO SMOKING. Call or
text 740-339-2494

Houses For Rent
2-BEDROOM DUPLEX
@ 644 2nd Ave, Gas/Elec.,
Large Kitchen, Laundry Rm,
Security Deposit &amp; References
required. No Pets $450/month
446-0332 - 9am to 5pm
Mon-Sat.

In country, 3BR, 2 BA, full
basement. Located between
Gallipolis &amp; Huntington. $600
mo plus dep. 740-256-6128 or
740-645-2007
Just renovated. Two bedroom
with bonus room, all electric
rural home. No pets. $535.00
per month and a deposit of
$535.00 Phone 740-992-5421

3 &amp; 4 BR houses for rent,
Syracuse,
no
pets.
304-675-5332
or
740-591-0265

Nice Brick Ranch/3bed/2ba/2
car/HWFloor/Appliances/close
to town &amp; bike trail.
750rent/750dep/Smoke &amp; Pet
free. Ph. 740-709-9294

3 &amp; 4 BR houses for rent,
Syracuse,
no
pets.
304-675-5332
or
740-591-0265

MANUFACTURED HOUSING

Fuel / Oil / Coal / Wood / Gas

Small 2 br mobile home for
rent, $225 rent, $225 dep, yrs.
lease, No pets, No calls after
9pm, 740-992-5097
Sales
1995 2BR 14x70 Mobile (Clayton)
$7500 or Best Offer must be
moved 709-1657 or 446-1271.
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

WOW! Gov't program now available on manufactured homes.
Call
while
funds
last!
740-446-3570

RESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT
Drivers &amp; Delivery

Education
Teacher's asst, M-F daytime
hrs. Range $7.85 hr, limited
benefits. Send resume by Oct
27, 2011 to Early Education
Station, 817 30th St, Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
Teacher's asst, M-F daytime
hrs. Range $7.85 hr, limited
benefits. Send resume by Oct
27, 2011 to Early Education
Station, 817 30th St, Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
Help Wanted- General
FT cleaning position (day), Apple Grove area. Call for info
304-529-7379
FT cleaning position (day), Apple Grove area. Call for info
304-529-7379

Bus Driver needed at Carleton
School. Must have Ohio CDL
with School Bus Endorsement.
Send resume/application by
10/24/2011 to:
Carleton School
P.O. Box 307
1310 Carleton Street
Syracuse, Ohio 45779
EEO
Auctions

Medical

Large Gun Auction
Saturday, October 29, 2011 10:00AM
Location: Am Vet Bldg 108 Liberty St.,
Gallipolis, OH near intersection of US 35
and Rt. 7

TIRED OF
PAYING TAXES?

This is your opportunity to make money
on the oil and gas you own.
Cunningham Energy, a
West Virginia based producer
is interested in leasing or buying
your minerals. We are hosting a
lease signing to discuss the potential
of leasing your acreage. Just bring
your most recent tax statement
showing mineral ownership to one of
the below locations to speak with a
qualified company representative.
The first 100 people to sign a lease
will receive a complimentary gift.
For more information go to
cunninghamenergy.com
Quality Inn

577 State Rd. 7
Gallipolis, Oh 45631

31 Oct. 2011 &amp; 1 Nov. 2011

Stockport Inn

Dairy Inn Barn

1995 Broadway St.
8000 Dairy Lane
Stockport, Oh 43756
Athens, Oh 45701
26 Oct. 2011 and 27 Oct. 2011 28 Oct. 2011 and 29 Oct. 2011

Sharps Colts Winchester Remington US
Springfield Smith and Wesson Civil War
Sabers Military Knives Bayonets 1824
Powder Horn Army Saddle Ammunition
Boxes Modern Guns Black Raven Axe and
Hatchet Collection Early Fishing Rod and
Reel Collection
Terms: Cash or Local Check w/ ID
Preston Mustard Auctioneer
79 Pierce Cemetery Rd
Jackson, OH
740-286-5868
Licensed State of Ohio
To see pictures go to www.auctionzip.com

A Celebration of Life... Overbrook Center, Located at 333
Page Street, Middleport, Oh is
Accepting Applications for
LPN'S. Stop By And Fill Out
An
application
M_F
8:30am-5:00pm or Contact
Susie Drehel, Staff Development
Coordinator
@
740-992-6472. EOE &amp; A Participant of The Drug-Free
Workplace Program
Family Medicine offices in in
Gallia &amp; Jackson Co. seek Receptionist/Medical Assistant
FT/PT, skills required,
740-441-9800
Synergy Rehab Solutions
Hiring : PT, PTA, OTR, COTA,
SLP. Full-Time, Part-Time and
PRN Positions. Call Cindy @
(740)357-0405
SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Manufactured Homes
Mobile homes for rent. Pt
Pleasant area. 304-675-3423
or 304-675-0831 before 8:30
pm
Mobile homes for rent. Pt
Pleasant area. 304-675-3423
or 304-675-0831 before 8:30
pm
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee
Local references furnished and
established in 1975
Call 24 hrs 740)446-0870
Rogers Basement Waterproofing

Auctions

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, October 29 – 10:00 a.m.
478 Estate Drive, Athens, OH
DIRECTIONS: From Rt. 50 west of Athens (2.5 miles from Rt.33/50 interchange), turn north on Radford Road, less than 1 mile onto
Estates Drive on left bearing left around road, or from Rt. 56, go 6 miles on Radford Road, turning on Estates Drive, watch for signs.
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: Oak dining table w/6 chairs &amp; matching buffet, replica ice box cabinet, wrought iron corner knick
knack shelf, assorted knick knacks, 2-Plaid Sofas (1-Lane Hide-a-Bed), 2-rocker/recliner chairs, 3-recliner chairs (1-leather),
platform rocker w/foot stool, coffee/end tables, sofa table, lamps, braided area rug, Mitsubishi &amp; Sylvania TVs, storage trunk,
Futon-double w/loft single bed, some nice framed prints, newer oak bedroom set w/queen bed, side chairs, oak rocking chair,
Maple bedroom set w/double bed, newer Blonde bedroom set w/queen bed, Gateway computer, 2-corner work desk units, desk
w/shelf unit, 2-4 drawer ﬁle cabinets, 2-bookshelf units, metal closet, miscellaneous kitchen dishes, pots, pans &amp; small kitchen
appliances, Signature sewing machine in cabinet, Weslo Cadence 850 treadmill, Kenmore upright freezer, tent, screen room,
folding table, Christmas decorations, set of McGregor golf clubs in bag, Roadmaster 10 speed bicycle, 2-patio tables/chairs,
double chaise lounge, Radio Flyer wagon, old metal Cola Cooler,
TOOLS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: Yardman Hydrostatic 17.5 hp. 42” cut Riding Mower w/bagger, Lawn Chief push mower,
leaf blower, Craftsman 3 hp. Electric edger, hedge trimmer, wheel barrel, lawn seeder/fertilizer yard/garden hand tools, 14 ft
alum. Extension ladder, metal shelf unit, car luggage carrier, and other miscellaneous items.
TERMS: Credit Cards, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of funds available.
Food will be available. Not responsible for loss or accidents.

OWNER: Jean Vernell

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE

WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
AUCTIONEERS:
John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan, Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd, Brent King
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com • PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

Sunday’s TV Guide

�Sunday, October 23, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Manley anniversary Vining Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manley

Eldon and Wanda Vining

MIDDLEPORT — Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manley, Sr. of
Middleport, will celebrate their 47th wedding anniversary
on Oct. 25. They were married on Oct. 25, 1964 in Middleport with the late Rev. Guy Sayre of Racine performing the
ceremony.
Mr. and Mrs. Manley are the parents of two children and
five grandchildren. They plan a trip to Pigeon Forge to celebrate the occasion.

Eldon “Bud” and Wanda Vining of Rutland recently celebrated their 55th wedding anniversary.
They were married on Aug. 20, 1956, at Rutland Nazarene parsonage by Rev. Harold Klingel. Mr. and Mrs. Vining are the parents of three daughters: Sherri Darst of Pomeroy, Terri Smith of Syracuse, and Rita Smith of Middleport
and have six grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C4

Reynolds 50th
anniversary

Aaron and Jurrie Reynolds
Aaron and Jurrie (Wolford) Reynolds will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary on November 4, 2011.
They will be honored at a reception from 2-4 p.m.,
November 5, 2011, at Mercerville Baptist Church. The
couple married in 1961 in Kentucky.
They have a son and daughter-in-law, Terry Joe and
Amy (Clagg) of Mercerville. They have five grandchildren, Amber Reynolds of Chillicothe, Travis Fulks of
Mercerville, Cody (Megan) Fulks of Fort Lewis, Wash.,
Tyler Reynolds of Mercerville and Tess Reynolds of Mercerville.
Aaron retired from Local 132 heavy equipment operators in 2000 after 30 years of service. Jurrie currently
owns and operates Flowers by Jurrie, out of their home,
Winter Place Drive.
They would be honored if you come help them celeclined to comment Monday.
Jimmy Flynt is seeking at brate this day with them.
least $20 million in compensation and damages in the federal lawsuit filed last week in
Cincinnati.
In May, a federal judge
ruled that Larry Flynt is the
sole owner of his pornography
company and his brother isn’t
entitled to half the business.
The judge said Jimmy Flynt
provided no evidence he was
ever a partner in the business.

Names in Entertainment
Algerian writer Sansal
wins Frankfurt peace
prize

BERLIN (AP) — Algerian
writer Boualem Sansal has
won the top award at the annual Frankfurt Book Fair for
his struggle for democracy in
his homeland.
Sansal
accepted
the
€25,000 ($35,000) Peace
Prize in Frankfurt on Sunday,
saying it will encourage the
region’s people who are trying
to liberate themselves from
“vicious and archaic dictatorships.”
The German news agency
dapd reports the author says
he hopes the Arab Spring
movement will eventually allow Algerians “to finally liberate themselves” and obtain a
fully democratic state.
German Foreign Minister
Guido Westerwelle congratulated Sansal, saying “may his
vision of a free and democratic society in Algeria become
true.”
Previous winners of the
Bookseller Association’s annual prize include Orhan
Pamuk, Vaclav Havel and Susan Sontag.

French judge puts
L’Oreal heiress under
protection
COURBEVOIE, France
(AP) — Lawyers for L’Oreal
heiress Liliane Bettencourt
say a judge has ordered the
French billionaire and her
fortune placed under the legal
protection of her daughter and

grandsons.
Bettencourt lawyer JeanRene Farthouat called Monday’s decision by a judge in
the western Paris suburb of
Courbevoie “profoundly disappointing” and “quite simply
criticizable.”
Bettencourt’s heirs reportedly are concerned about her
health and management of her
fortune, estimated at $20 billion by Forbes magazine.
The daughter, Francoise
Meyers-Bettencourt, and her
mother have tussled over the
management of the fortune
and late last year appeared to
end a legal dispute over more
than €1 billion ($1.3 billion).

Actress Shannen
Doherty marries for
third time
NEW YORK (AP) —
Shannen Doherty has married
for the third time.
Doherty’s publicist confirms the actress married
wedding photographer Kurt
Iswarienko on Saturday in
Malibu, Calif.
The 40-year-old actress is
most famous for her performance as Brenda Walsh on
“Beverly Hills 90210.” She
reprised the role in the CW
“90210” spinoff.
She was previously briefly married to actor Ashley
Hamilton in 1993 and Rick
Saloman in 2002. Saloman is
known for making a sex videotape with then-girlfriend
Paris Hilton that surfaced in
2003.
Iswarienko is a Los Angeles-based photographer who

specializes in celebrity portraits.

Giuliana Rancic says
she has breast cancer
NEW YORK (AP) — “E!
News” co-host Giuliana Rancic says she has early stages of
breast cancer.
The 37-year-old made the
announcement Monday on
NBC’s “Today” show.
Rancic says the cancer was
discovered during a mammogram while she was undergoing a third round of in-vitro
fertilization in an effort to get
pregnant.
Rancic says she will have
surgery this week, followed
by six and one-half weeks of
radiation therapy.
She is married to Bill Rancic, winner of the first season
of “The Apprentice.”
Rancic says she still wants
to get pregnant because “this
baby will have saved my life.”

Fired brother sues
Hustler publisher for
$20M
CINCINNATI (AP) — The
estranged brother of Hustler
magazine publisher Larry Flynt is suing him in Ohio for $20
million, saying he was wrongly fired from his job at Flynt’s
pornography company.
Jimmy Flynt says his
brother stopped paying him
his $250,000 annual salary
in 2009 as part of an effort to
squeeze him out of the business.
Larry Flynt’s publicist de-

Conley baby
shower held

Selena Gomez granted
temporary restraining
order
BURBANK, Calif. (AP)
— A judge has granted Selena
Gomez a temporary restraining order from a man with a
history of mental illness who
police say threatened the singer-actress.
Court records show the
“Wizards of Waverly Place”
star was granted the order
Thursday in Burbank, which
is north of downtown Los
Angeles. Thomas Brodnicki
is required to stay 100 yards
away from Gomez and her
workplace until a Nov. 4 hearing, when the order may be
extended for three years.
Gomez wrote in a sworn
declaration that she is in “extreme fear” of Brodnicki.
The filings, first reported
Monday by celebrity website
TMZ, state police were notified by mental health workers that the 46-year-old had
threatened to harm or kill the
actress while on a psychiatric
hold.
Attempts to reach Brodnicki were unsuccessful.
Chasidy Leib

Country stars raise $500K
for Texas fire victims

AUSTIN, Texas (AP)
— Dixie Chicks lead singer
Natalie Maines told a thunderous crowd Monday night
that “there was zero hesitation” when the band was
asked to perform with fellow country stars to raise
money for victims of recent
wildfires in her home state
of Texas.
She and her band mates
joined
Willie
Nelson,
George Strait and other
musicians during a megaconcert in Austin that
raised more than $500,000.
A fire that started Sept. 4
in Central Texas’ Bastrop
County destroyed at least
1,500 homes and killed two
people, marking the most
devastating of the numerous fires that have scorched
about 6,000 square miles in
Texas in the last year.
Maines told the crowd
she was worried that without homes, “you all might
not look lovely.” But she

told them they all looked
fantastic.
“When they called us to
do this show, there was zero
hesitation,” she said. “You
can take the girl out of Texas, but you can’t take Texas
out of the girl.”
Nelson was joined onstage by folksy newcomers The Avett Brothers and,
backed up by Asleep at
the Wheel, they roused the
crowd with rowdy versions
of Nelson’s classic “On the
Road Again” and the gospel
“Will the Circle Be Unbroken.”
Nelson recently spent
time filming a movie in Bastrop and, in an interview before the concert, called the
fires “tragic.” He said he has
lost homes to fire and knows
how devastating it can be.
“You never really get
over it,” he said. “There’s
nothing I can tell them to
make it better except some
of us have been there and

done that and we survived
it, and they will too. Be
strong.”
Asleep at the Wheel
front man Ray Benson, who
helped book the performers, said he seldom asks
his friends for favors but
thought this cause was important enough.
“This one was so compelling, I said ‘OK, let me
call Willie and let me call
Lyle (Lovett)’ and they both
said yeah,” Benson said.
“Willie actually cancelled a
show to do it. Lyle also canceled an appearance.”
Benson said the music
community felt a responsibility to help.
“I just think the scope of
devastation was so great and
so close to home,” he said.
“The numbers in Bastrop
were so overwhelming, how
do you deal with something
like that? And also you do
feel … that we’re in a position to not sit on the side-

POMEROY — Chasidy Leib and Michael Conley, Jr.
were honored with a baby shower recently at the Colonial
Park recreation in anticipation of the arrival of their child in
February to be named Rilee Adalyn Conley.
Hosting the shower were her grandmothers, Paula Cunningham and Cindy Conley. Decorations were done by
Chasidy’s sister, Katlin Clarke, and her friend, Kayla Stiffler.
Guests attending the shower were Rilee’s sisters Alyssa
and Kailey Leib, Charlotte Gibbs, Linda and June Cunningham, Jessica and son Chris Conley, Jr., Austin and Braxton
lines and do something.”
The concert started with Bare, Angel Cunningham, Cora and Peyton Hill, and Sandy
Christopher Cross. Eleven Henderson. Sending gifts, but unable to attend were, Lee
acts were scheduled to per- Roberts, Ruby Gibbs, and Lacee and Mackenzie Arms.
form, and helping emcee
was actor Kyle Chandler,
who won an Emmy last
month for his role as a Texas
high school football coach
in “Friday Night Lights.”
Images of charred forests, skeletal remains of
vehicles and homes were
PARIS (AP) — French (0900 GMT) — his third
shown between sets at the first lady Carla Bruni-Sar- trip Wednesday to the facilFrank Erwin Center at the kozy gave birth to a baby ity.
University of Texas at Aus- girl on Wednesday night
Europe 1 radio said the
tin campus.
— the first infant born to a birth “went well” for the
The concert was nearly sitting president of modern- 43-year-old mother, a singer
full, but officials said they day France, the French me- and former supermodel. She
didn’t yet have numbers for dia reported.
entered the medical facilthe number of tickets sold.
President Nicolas Sar- ity in western Paris in the
But one of the concert’s kozy, finishing up a meet- morning accompanied by
hosts told the crowd that ing in Frankfurt on the euro Sarkozy, according to the
they’d raised “way north of debt crisis, was absent when reports.
$500,000.”
the couple’s first child was
There was no official
Several attendees wore born shortly before 8 p.m. confirmation of the birth.
T-shirts representing local (1800 GMT), according to The presidential entourage
volunteer fire departments BFM TV. He reportedly ar- reiterated earlier Wednesthat battled the recent blaz- rived at the small, private day that no birth announcees.
Muette Clinic about 11 p.m. ment would be forthcoming.

French first lady
gives birth to girl

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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="11528">
              <text>October 23, 2011</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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      <name>bachtel</name>
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    <tag tagId="1613">
      <name>callicoat</name>
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      <name>hoback</name>
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    <tag tagId="2755">
      <name>kilgore</name>
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    <tag tagId="1398">
      <name>oiler</name>
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    <tag tagId="3031">
      <name>tannehill</name>
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    <tag tagId="581">
      <name>theiss</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="469">
      <name>watson</name>
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</item>
