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                  <text>High school
volleyball,
page 6

Dr. Brothers,
page 3

Printed on
100% recycled
newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 119, No. 173

Briefs
Hydrants tested

RACINE — Racine water
and fire departments will be
testing and flushing fire hydrants on Saturday and Sunday. Residents may notice discolored water during this time.

Bridge closed

POMEROY — One lane
of the Bridge of Honor will be
closed for maintenance work
this week.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation announced that
one lane of State Route 833 in
Meigs County will be closed
for maintenance work starting
today. Weather permitting it
will be completed by Nov. 7.

Breakfast planned

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2011

$65K awarded for home repairs
By Brian J. Reed

BReed@mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY — Homeowners waiting for repairs
to their homes will soon
see those repairs completed
through a $65,000 grant
award from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
U.S. Senator Sherrod
Brown, D-Ohio, announced
that Meigs, Portage, Pickaway and Pike counties will
receive federal funds to improve rural housing conditions. The award was made
to the Meigs County Commissioners.

Special meeting

Association to meet

POMEROY — ChesterShade Historical Association
will meet at 7 p.m. on Thursday at the Chester Courthouse.

Trustees meeting

CHESTER — Regular
November Meeting Chester
Board of Township Trustees
will be held at 7 p.m., at the
town hall.

Obituaries

Page A2
• William Arthur, 84
• Janice Rice, 62
• James “Mike” Smith, 32
• Anne Suavage, 92
• Brandi Wyatt, 30
• Clarence R. Hash, 75

Brown is the chairman of
the Subcommittee on Jobs,
Rural Economic Growth,
and Energy Innovation. The
grants, he said, through the
U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Housing Preservation Grant Program, will
make critical repairs and
improve housing conditions
in rural areas including
Meigs County.
Meigs County’s Grants
Administrator Jean Trussell
said seven or eight homes
will be repaired through the
program. The homeowners
were selected from those on
an existing waiting list for

funds through the Community Housing Improvement
Program. Those homeowners have been waiting for
assistance in making needed repairs.
Trussell said if funds
remain once those projects
are completed, other homeowners on the waiting list
might be selected to participate.
“Ohio’s small towns and
rural communities have
been particularly hard-hit
by the recent economic
downturn,” Brown said.
“These funds will help
Ohioans repair and main-

tain their homes while increasing energy efficiency
and improving property
values.”
Housing
Preservation
Grants are provided to town
or county governments,
public agencies, and nonprofit and faith-based organizations. The grants are
then distributed to qualified homeowners and can
be used to weatherize and
repair existing structures,
install or improve plumbing
or provide access to people
with disabilities.

Mini-park improvements begin

TUPPERS PLAINS — St.
Paul United Methodist Church
will hold a pancake and sausage breakfast 7-11 a.m. on By Charlene
Saturday. Donations will be
Hoeflich
accepted.
Hoeflich@mydailysentinel.com
Grange events
POMEROY — It’s been
SALEM CENTER — Star a long time in coming, but
Grange #778 and Star Junior improvements to the Court
Grange #878 will meet on Sat- Street mini-park in downurday with potluck supper at town Pomeroy are finally
6:30 p.m., followed by meet- under way.
ing at 7:30 p.m. Meigs County
While the park has been
Pomona Grange will meet on
available
for community
Friday with officers converence at 6:30 p.m., followed by events for several years,
courtesy of the O’Brien
meeting at 7:30 p.m.
family, improvements have
Election Day dinner been delayed by the lack of
RACINE — Racine United a long-term lease.
Methodist Church will hold
The village has now sean Election Day dinner from cured a 15-year lease on the
11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Soups, sand- property from the O’Brien
wiches and pies will be sold, family and in appreciaand carryout is available. tion will install plaques
Those ordering soups for car- honoring Jim and Roberta
ryout are asked to bring a con- O’Brien at each of the two
tainer.
entrances to the park.
Sometime ago Mayor
Accepting coats
LETART FALLS — The John Musser secured a
Thursday morning Bible study $10,000 grant from the
of East Letart United Method- state to pay for the needed
ist Church is accepting clean improvements at the park.
coats for children of any age, With that money electricfor donation to the Peoples ity is now being installed
Bank Coats for Kids program. and a 14x14 foot stage conThose who wish to donate may structed in a corner of the
call 247-2014.
POMEROY — Special
meeting of Pomeroy Village
Council will be held at 7:30
p.m., Thursday, to award sewer bids and discuss waterline
replacement, water treatment
plant.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Charlene Hoeflich/photo

Brian Grindstaff, right, and Marty Rayburn begin foundation work for the new stage
as Mayor John Musser, right, and Jackie Welker, Pomeroy Village Council president, look on.

park. Musser said there will
be two steps up to the stage
level and that railings will
be put around the floor and
along the roof to provide a

place for accent lighting.
Plans are also being made
to develop a portion of the
park into space for seating.
To provide more space

in the park for community
events, several trees will be
removed.

Boyd retires after 32 years
Brian J. Reed/photo

Donna Boyd, second from left, said goodbye to courthouse
employees, co-workers and folks downtown Monday, her last
day on the job as a Meigs County employee. Boyd, an employee of Prosecuting Attorney Colleen S. Williams, began her
career with the county 32 years ago in Meigs County Court,
and the courtroom of Judge Steven L. Story was the setting
for her reception, hosted by office co-workers also pictured,
Melissa Rizer, Linda Taylor and Penny Elam. She also worked
in child support for then-Judge Charles Knight, and the Department of Job and Family Services, before coming to the
prosecutor’s office under Pat Story.

Halloween haunting

High: 71
Low: 54

Index

1 SECTION — 10 PAGES

A7-8
A9
A4
A6

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

SYRACUSE — The
Ohio NatureWorks program
has awarded Syracuse a
grant of $26,250 to be used
toward the cost of purchase
and installation of a slide
for the village’s swimming
pool.
Syracuse operates the
only public swimming pool
in Meigs county and it has
become more difficult to finance its operation. The village is responsible for the
total operation and maintenance of the pool which
is used by many persons of
all age groups in all parts of
Meigs county.
Syracuse Mayor Eric
Cunningham said he and
pool officials have been interested in adding a slide
at the pool for a number of
years in an effort to attract
more activity there. The addition of this slide will be an
attraction which should help
the pool to increase attendance by giving individuals
something different to do
while there, the mayor said.
The village will be responsible for providing
$8,750 in some type of local
funds for the total cost of the
project which is $35,000.

Woman
enters plea
in vehicular
assault case
Cotton to pay
$400K in restitution
to Amish family

By Amber Gillenwater
mdtnews@mydailytribune.com

Weather

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

Syracuse gets
$26,250 grant
for pool slide

Charlene Hoeflich/photo

Roaming the streets of Pomeroy, going in and out of stores along the way, was this one in Halloween costume.
Here the scary one visits with Susan Clark, Eric Chambers and Megan Long, left to right, at Clark’s Jewelry
Store.

GALLIPOLIS — A plea
has been entered in a case
against an Ohio woman
charged with vehicular assault following a two-vehicle crash involving an Amish
carriage that occurred earlier
this year in Gallia County.
Lori A. Cotton, 37, Columbus, pleaded guilty to
one count of aggravated
vehicular assault, a third degree felony, and one count
of operating a vehicle under
the influence, a first degree
misdemeanor, on Friday in
the Gallia County Common
Pleas Court.
During the plea hearing,
the court ordered a pre-sentence investigation be completed and that the case be
continued to Tuesday, Nov.
8 for sentencing.
Cotton had been charged
with three felony counts of
aggravated vehicular assault
and one felony count of assaulting a peace officer following the May 29 incident.
Reportedly, at approximately 9:50 p.m. on the day
in question, Cotton, the driver of a 1997 Nissan Sentra,
was traveling on Ohio 160
in Huntington Township,
when her vehicle went left
of center and struck a horsedrawn carriage.
The driver of the vehicle,
Andrew Schrock, 41, and
passengers, Katie Schrock,
27, and David Schrock, 2,
all of Vinton, were taken to
Cabell-Huntington Hospital following the accident.
A third passenger, Salome
Schrock, 4, Vinton, was
transported to Holzer Medical Center.
Reportedly, Katie, David
and Salome Schrock were
all completely ejected from
their vehicle.
Cotton, as well as her
passenger, Brayden Cotton,
6, were also transported to
Holzer Medical Center. Lori
Cotton was later arrested
and taken to the Gallia

See Assault, 2

�Tuesday, November 1, 2011

County Jail.
The defendant was later
arraigned in the Gallipolis
Municipal Court on charges
of child endangerment, aggravated vehicular assault,
assault, resisting arrest, operating a vehicle under the
influence and driving left of
center.
The charges of aggravated vehicular assault and assault were later bound over
to the Court of Common
Pleas, while the remaining
charges were dismissed in
lieu of the felony charges.
According to the plea
agreement filed with the
court, as well as the corresponding victim’s statement
signed by Sgt. Barry Call
of the Ohio State Highway
Patrol, as to the charge of
aggravated vehicular assault, the defendant will be
sentenced to a total of five
years of community control
and 45 days in jail or the
work release center, with
jail time to be paid by the
defendant. As to the charge
of operating a vehicle under
the influence, Cotton will be
sentenced to three days in
jail, will be ordered to pay
$375, the minimum fine for
a first OVI offense, and will
have her operator’s license
suspended for one year.
Additionally, the plea
agreement stipulates that
restitution in this case be
paid to the victims of the
incident.
“The Defendant will
pay restitution to Andrew
Schrock for all medical

bills incurred for Andrew
Schrock, Katie Schrock,
Salome Schrock, and David Schrock. The amount
of restitution is an approximate amount as of October
05, 2011 in the amount of
$386,973.06 and there are
still medical bills forthcoming,” the statement reads.
According to Gallia
County Prosecutor Jeff Adkins, the main concern of
the Amish community was
for the restitution be paid
for the Schrocks’ medical
bills.
“The Amish, basically,
they wanted their restitution
paid. This lady’s got insurance and she’s got a good
job and so she’s pleading
to one of the aggravated
vehicular assaults and she’s
got five years over her head;
but she’s going to do some
jail time and pay for it and
work out of jail and she’s
got probation for five years
and she’s supposed to pay
almost $400,000 in medical
bills,” Adkins said. “That
was their main concern.
They didn’t say, ‘I want this
to happen or that to happen,
but we do want our money,’
and the best way for them to
get their money was for her
to keep working.”
Adkins also reported that
Andrew Schrock — who
remained in serious condition for a period of time after accident — has made a
good recovery and remains
in physical therapy for injuries sustained during the
accident.

Janice Rice

Janice Marie Rice, 62,
of Russells Point, danced
her way into heaven at 5:20
p.m. Friday, Oct. 28, 2011,
at Mary Rutan Hospital.
She was born Dec. 18, 1949
in Meigs County, to the late
Milton W. and Ilenea Gladys Frazier Little.
On Feb. 3, 1967 she married John Franklin “Bud”
Rice, and he survives in
Russells Point.
Together they created
two daughters, Mindy Oda
and Shannon (Herb) Titus; two sons, Terry (Ruth
Clark) Rice and Jerry (Ruth
Sowers) Rice, all of Russells Point; grandchildren,
Jessica and Leeah Rice,
Cheyenne, Nicolas, Devyn
and Zachary Titus, Haley
and Kaley Rice, and Kolton
and Lillian Rice; greatgrandchildren,
Lynnsey
Henry, Carter Oakley, and
John “Frankie” Titus.
She is survived by a
sister, Mona Little of Russells Point; a brother, Milton Little of Russells Point;
and numerous nieces and
nephews. She was preceded
AEP (NYSE) — 39.28
in death by an infant son,
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 52.98
Lenny D. Rice; a sister,
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 52.96
Leah Jane Howard; and two
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.69
brothers, Jerry and Emerson
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 32.90
“Lee” Little.
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 76.49
Janice had a passion
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 11.16
for spending time with her
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.11
family. She loved her entire
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 3.46
family, and would often be
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 32.86
heard; saying to her husCollins (NYSE) — 55.83
band Bud, “Look at what
DuPont (NYSE) — 48.07
we started.”
US Bank (NYSE) — 25.59
She worked as a personal
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 16.71
assistant to Mrs. Janet HubHarley-Davidson (NYSE) — 38.90
bard for many years.
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 34.76
A celebration of life will
Kroger (NYSE) — 23.18
be
held from 3-7 p.m. on
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 42.71
Saturday,
Nov. 5 at their
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 73.99
home
at
617
High Ave. RusOVBC (NASDAQ) — 17.10
sells Point, Ohio. At 7 p.m.,
BBT (NYSE) — 23.34
there will be a luminaries
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 13.23
release in her honor.
Pepsico (NYSE) — 62.95
In lieu of flowers, it is
Premier (NASDAQ) — 4.80
the family’s request that
Rockwell (NYSE) — 67.65
memorial contributions be
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 10.60
made in Janice’s memory
Royal Dutch Shell — 70.91
to the Logan County CanSears Holding (NASDAQ) — 78.18
cer Society, 122 N. Main
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 56.72
Street, Bellefontaine, Ohio
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.06
43311-2021. Funeral arWesBanco (NYSE) — 19.86
rangements are in the care
Worthington (NYSE) — 17.28
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of of Smith-Eichholtz Funeral
transactions for October 31, 2011, provided by Edward Home in Lakeview. CondoJones financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) lences may be expressed at
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304) www.smith-eichholtz.com.
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Stocks

Ohio Valley Weather
Tuesday: Sunny, with
a high near 61. Calm wind
becoming south around 5
mph.
Tuesday Night: Increasing clouds, with a low
around 36. Calm wind.
Wednesday:
Sunny,
with a high near 65. Calm
wind becoming south between 4 and 7 mph.
Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around
41.
Thursday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 60.
Thursday Night: A
chance of showers. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around

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Brandy Wyatt

Brandy Lovena Wyatt,
30, went to be with the Lord
42. Chance of precipitation and will finally hold her
daughter, Allie, on Oct. 29,
is 40 percent.
Friday: A chance of
showers. Partly sunny, with
a high near 55. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
DETROIT (AP) — Parts
Friday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around shortages from three months
of catastrophic flooding in
41.
Saturday: Mostly sun- Thailand have forced Honda to cut U.S. and Canadian
ny, with a high near 59.
Saturday Night: Mostly factory production by 50
cloudy, with a low around percent for the second time
this year, the automaker said
47.
Sunday: A chance of Monday.
The cuts, which come
showers. Partly sunny, with
just
as Honda was recovera high near 60. Chance of
ing
from
the March 11 earthprecipitation is 30 percent.
quake and tsunami in Japan,
will run from Wednesday
at least through Nov. 10 as
Honda tries to find alternate
sources for microprocessors
that are made in Thailand.
The flooding, which began in July and has forced
many auto parts plants to
close, also affected Toyota
Motor Co., which cut overtime for production in North
America through the end of
this week.
Honda Motor Co.’s announcement comes the
same day the Japanese automaker announced that
its quarterly profit tumbled
56 percent, battered by the
strong yen and production
disruptions from the March
tsunami disaster.
The automaker, which
makes the Accord and Civic
sedans, said Monday that
net profit for the July-September fiscal second quarter
fell to 60.4 billion yen ($788
million).
Quarterly sales sank 16.3
percent from a year earlier

Visit us at

Twin Oaks

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

Obituaries

Assault
From Page 1

www.mydailysentinel.com

2011.
She was born on Oct. 3,
1981.
She is survived by her
husband, Adam Wyatt, and
their daughter Olivia Wyatt; her parents, Larry and
Virginia Laudermilt and
Virginia (Sis) and Richard DeMoss; sisters, Jessica Anderson, Ashley and
Ariel DeMoss; brother,
Steven (Josie) Anderson;
mother-in-law and fatherin-law, Brenda (Keith)
Phalin; brother-in-law and
sister-in-law, Rob (Marcy)
Wyatt; brother-in-law, Michael Wyatt; sister-in-law,
Tara (Skip) Dodson; grandmothers, Nelia Seyler, Patty
Barton, Esther DeMoss and
Margaret Wyatt; as well as
several aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins,
and many, many friends.
Preceding her in death
were her precious infant
daughter, Christa Allie Wyatt; grandfathers, Robert
Barton, Richard DeMoss,
and Dick Seyler; and a sister and nephew, Autumn
DeMoss and Baby Caden.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. on Tuesday,
Nov. 1, 2011, at the Anderson-McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Burial
will follow in the Howell
Cemetery.
An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

George Sauvage on Oct. 22,
1944 in Hebron, Ohio. Ann
worked in several stores in
Pomeroy during her high
school years, after graduation at the Blue and Gray
in Pomeroy and later in the
TNT plant. She also had her
own cosmetic business and
was a loving homemaker.
Ann belonged to the
Asbury United Methodist
Church in Syracuse from
its beginning. She was a
member of the WSCS at
the church and directed the
choir, leading many cantatas, and performing at other
churches, as well. She was
also a member of the Syracuse Homemakers Group.
Ann was a loving and
giving mother, grandmother
and great-grandmother and
enriched the lives of all
those she knew.
She is survived by
her daughter, Jean (Tom)
Weaver; her son, Rev. Dr.
John R. (Jan) Sauvage; five
grandchildren, Tami Sauvage Brown, Chris Weaver,
John Matthew Sauvage,
Lee Ann Weaver and Carla
Sauvage Snell; nine greatgrandchildren, Alexandra,
Carter and Emma Brown,
Abby and Evan Weaver,
John Shad and Euodia Sauvage and Kyleigh and Caydance Snell.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her husband John
G. Sauvage; and two brothers, Carl and Donald Weese.
Funeral services will
be conducted at 11 a.m.,
Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2011,
at Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with her son officiating. Burial will follow
in the Gilmore Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 8
p.m. Tuesday evening.

day, Nov. 2, 2011, at the
Lone Oak Church of God
Mission,
Red
House.
Friends may call from 6 to
9 p.m. on Tuesday at the
Waybright Funeral Home,
Ripley, W.Va., and one hour
prior to the service at the
church.
Memorial donations may
be made to Kanawha Hospice, 1001 Kennewa Dr.,
Charleston, WV 25312.

Clarence Richard
Hash

Ann America Weese
Sauvage, 92, of Syracuse,
left this life to be with her
Lord on Sunday, Oct. 30,
2011, at the home of her
son, the Rev. Dr. John R.
(Dick) Sauvage in Barboursville, W.Va.
She was born April
23, 1919, in Syracuse, the
daughter of the late Bert
and Nellie Potts Weese.
She
married
John

William V. Arthur Sr.,
84, of Fairplain, W.Va.,
went home to be with his
Lord and to sing bass in the
Heavenly Choir on Saturday Oct. 29, 2011.
He was a U.S. Army veteran and retired from Kaiser
Aluminum. He sang with
the Builders Quartet for 50
years.
He was preceded in
death by his wife, Audrey
Hill Arthur; his parents, Romie and Ara Magdalene Arthur; brothers, Donald Arthur and Rev. Paul Arthur;
and granddaughter, Angie
Craigo Settle.
He is survived by one sister, Roma Lee Harrison, and
one brother, Ronald Arthur;
three sons, David (Trudy)
Arthur, William V. (Phyllis)
Arthur and Scott (Brittany)
Arthur; five daughters,
Mary (Henry) HudsonHoppe, Sherry Craigo, Joy
(Dave) Stephens, Lisa (Jim)
Casto and Tammy (Eugene)
Roub; and one Angel sent
from God, Marilyn Beran.
He is also survived by 31
grandchildren, 40 greatgrandchildren and one
great-great-grandchild.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. on Wednes-

Clarence Richard Hash,
75, Bidwell, Ohio, passed
away unexpectedly at his
residence Saturday, October
29, 2011. He was a retired
roofer, a member of Roofers Local 185, Charleston,
W.Va., and, at present, Morgan Township Trustee who
had completed 27 years of
service. Clarence was born
August 27, 1936, son of the
late William Glen and Levina Martin Surber Hash.
He is survived by his
wife of fifty-seven years,
Ruth Ellen Franklin Hash;
two sons, Ben (Theresa)
Hash, Bidwell, Ohio, William “Hot Dog” (Janet)
Hash, Bidwell, Ohio; and
two daughters, Kristal
(Mark) Becker, Cincinnati,
Ohio, Melodie (Robert)
Haynes, Charleston, W.Va.;
and one adopted son, Benjamin Salvant, Haiti, West
Indies.
Also surviving are fourteen grandchildren: Melissa (Jason) Deem, Dusty
(Molly) Hash, Lacey (Josh)
Staton, Billy (Nickie) Hash,
James (Sarah) Hash, Jessica Belcher, Nathan (Karra) Becker, Corrie Becker,
Sarah (James) Ditty, Robert Haynes, Brent Becker,
Tonya Haynes and Kelly
(Brandon) Jones.
The light of his life were
his
great-grandchildren:
Will, Grace, Phillip, Morgan, Kimber, Emma, Errand, Jorja, Aiden, Avery,
Morgan Lynn, Cody, Clare,
Conner, Bradley, Sydney,
Ethan and Karson, with
three
great-grandpups:
Jack, Jill and Delmer.
In addition, he is survived by a brother, Martin
(Judy) Hash; sister-in-law,
Phyllis Hash, and several
nieces and nephews.
Preceding him in death
were brothers, Frank, Neal
and Leonard Hash; and sisters, Ruth Hersman, Dorcas Dodrill, Josie Hash and
Maggie Morgan Hersman.
Funeral Services will be
held at 11 a.m., Thursday,
November 3, 1911, in the
Morgan Center Weslyan
Church with Rev. Robert
Haynes and Rev. Mark
Becker officiating. Burial
will follow in the Miller
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Morgan Center Wesleyan
Church on Wednesday after 2 p.m. where there will
be an all-night wake with a
service beginning at 6 p.m.

to 1.885 trillion yen ($24.6
billion), with sales in North
America falling the most —
22.3 percent.
Flooding in Thailand,
where Honda has parts suppliers and assembly lines,
made it too difficult to forecast earnings for the full
fiscal year through March
2012. A projection will be
announced when it becomes
available, the company said.
Honda also said it will
stop all production in the
U.S. and Canada for one day
on Nov. 11, and all Saturday
overtime work will be canceled through November.
Spokesman Ed Miller said
it’s too early to tell if there
will be a repeat of model
shortages that occurred during the summer and early
fall due to parts shortages
from the earthquake and
tsunami.
The company said in a
statement that the December sale date for the 2012
version of the popular CR-V
crossover vehicle could be
delayed by several weeks.
Honda says it will announce
the sale date in the near future.
Last year, 87 percent of
the Honda and Acura luxury
vehicles sold in the U.S.
were made in North America, the company said. Most
of the parts are produced
here, but a few critical electronic parts such as engine

control modules come from
Thailand and other countries, Honda said.
Miller said the company is trying to find other
sources for the parts made
in Thailand, but production
of newer models such as the
Civic compact and CR-V
will be most affected by the
parts shortages.
Honda said it will not lay
off any workers at its U.S.
and Canadian auto plants.
The company has 21,000
U.S. factory workers and
10 U.S. and Canadian auto
factories in Ohio, Alabama,
Georgia, Indiana and Alliston, Ontario.
Other major automakers
also were affected by the
flooding in Thailand, but
only Honda and Toyota reported factory disruptions
in North America. Nissan
Motor Co. said its plant in
Thailand would be down
until Friday because of parts
shortages, while Ford Motor Co. said production had
ceased at plants in Thailand
and South Africa. General
Motors Co., Chrysler Group
LLC and Hyundai Motor
Co. reported no production
problems.
The Thai floods are the
latest blow to Japanese manufacturers as they struggle
to recover from the tsunami
while also being pummeled
by the yen’s record surge.
Earlier Monday, Japa-

nese authorities intervened
in the currency market to
weaken the yen against the
dollar and ease pressure on
Japanese exporters. That
caused the dollar to jump
nearly 5 percent to above
79 yen after earlier touching
a post-World War II low of
75.32 yen — a level that is
excruciating for exporters
such as Toyota and Nintendo Co.
Honda said revenue from
nearly all regions declined.
Domestic sales were down
13.2 percent, revenue from
Europe sank 10.4 percent,
and in Asia outside Japan,
sales fell 10 percent. Sales
to South America, Africa
and the Mideast inched up
0.8 percent from a year earlier, the company said.
The Thailand floods were
fed by unusually heavy
monsoon rains and a string
of tropical storms. They
have killed 381 people and
affected more than a third of
the country’s provinces. The
flooding has destroyed millions of acres (hectares) of
crops and forced thousands
of factories to close.
Officials said Monday
they hoped seven submerged industrial areas
would be running again in
about three months. They
house the factories of global
companies including Honda, Toshiba and Western
Digital.

James “Mike” Smith

James Michael Smith,
32, of Reedsville, passed
away Saturday, Oct. 29,
2011, at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born May 20,
1979 in Parkersburg, son of
Carl and Jeannette Haning
Smith. He was a member
of Forked Run Sportsman
Club, the AMA and was
employed by the D.V. Weber Construction Co.
He is survived by Amanda, his girlfriend and the
mother of his children:
Mackenzie Smith, Sierra
Smith and Paige Smith; and
two brothers, Jay Haning
and Jody Smith.
Funeral services will be
held at 11 a.m., Thursday,
Nov. 3, 2011, at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home,
Coolville, with Kenny Tolliver officiating. Burial will
be in the Heiney Cemetery.
Friends may call 6-8
p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home. You can sign
the online guestbook at
www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com.

Ann America
Sauvage

William Arthur, Sr.

Honda to cut US, Canada production by half

�Tuesday, November 1, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Superstitious girlfriend
makes him laugh
Dear Dr. Brothers: I’m
having a hard time with
one aspect of my cute new
girlfriend’s personality. She
seems to be fairly intelligent, and she’s nice and all,
but she’s really over-thetop superstitious. I mean, I
can’t walk down the street
with her without avoiding
stepping on cracks, avoiding cats crossing our path,
buying “lucky” lottery
tickets, etc. She consults
some horoscope instead of
using her common sense
and making grown-up decisions. Is all this really bad?
— L.T.
Dear L.T.: It sounds as
though you are trying to figure out whether this girl is
really OK or whether she is
a little bit too off-center to
qualify as your girlfriend.
You may not mind quirky,
but you definitely want to
draw the line well before
you encounter loony or
any other kind of behavior
that just seems stupid. And
that’s cool — maybe she
is just different enough to
hold your interest, knock on
wood! On the other hand,
who wants to be dating a
loon? Nobody. Yet what you
must realize is that almost
everyone — you included
— wants to find a cause-

and-effect re30s, and I
lationship in
work in a
just about evlarge goverything. It’s
ernment
our way of
installation.
making sense
I’ve
beof a somegun dating
times chaotic
someone
world.
who also
So what
works in
you need to
the builddecide
for
ing,
but
yourself
is
in a very
how
much
low-level
superstition
capacity
is too much.
— he is a
Dr. Joyce Brothers
If your girlcomputer
Advice
friend seems
repairman.
to be using
We
get
Columnist
every trick in
along very
the book to
well, but I
decide things rather than can’t help but notice how
thinking for herself, that’s many times he complains
not a good thing. You want about “rich people.” I come
a woman who can put two from a very comfortable
and two together and come background, and I don’t like
up with four, not because it what he says. It seems very
was written in a spell book juvenile. Is this relationship
but because she understands doomed from the start? —
the way things work and P.D.
has confidence in her own
Dear P.D.: It may seem
powers of reasoning and very juvenile to hear such
judgment. Only you can stereotypical views from an
decide what level works for adult you are trying to build
you. You should be able to a relationship with, espesize up this girl rather well cially if the group he has
by now.
decided to target is one in
***
which you just might have
Dear Dr. Brothers: I a lifelong membership!
am a woman in my early When he starts to sound off

about the evils of the ruling
class, you might try listening carefully and asking
some questions — it could
have been that he has had a
bad experience or two with
a rich person and therefore
feels justified in his anger.
Use your judgment to decide whether his personal
saga plays into his attitudes.
If someone wealthy has
done him wrong or if “the
system” is the villain, you
at least will have discovered the root of his feelings.
If you feel it is worth the
time and effort, you can try
to persuade him not to generalize — his one bad experience ought not be used
to demonize an entire class
of people. You can take a
light or serious approach to
this — point out that you
might be one of the people
he loves to hate — but give
him the time and space to
think about your point of
view without pressure. If
you can understand and
empathize with where he’s
coming from, he may feel
less reason to be defensive
and extreme. He may even
grow up a little in your eyes.
(c) 2011 by King Features Syndicate

Local quartets to sing in western show
POMEROY — Two local barbershop quartets,
The French Chorders and
River’s Blend, will perform
in “Way Out West”, a production of the 23- member
River City Treblemaker
Chorus of ParkersburgMarietta area. Over 100
voices are slated to entertain guests at showings in
both cities with barbershop
music and humor.
On Saturday Nov. 5, at
7 p.m. at Marietta High
School, the lineup will
include the school’s 45
voice “Cantabile” singers. Sunday Nov. 6, at 3:30
p.m., the Parkersburg High
school site will include
that school’s 35-member
“Men’s A Capella Ensemble”.
Both shows will feature
the award winning guest
male quartet, The Franchise, of Kentucky, and
several quartets from the
chorus, Just By Chance, of
New Martinsville, and The
Prairie Dogs. The host chorus will open the show with
a range of western-themed
music and will be joined by
The French Chorders for a
rousing rendition of “Swing
Down Chariot”.
The ladies will be joined
by River’s Blend for an encore of their popular duo
of “Lida Rose/Dream of
Love”. Each of these quartets, from both Meigs and
Gallia Counties, will have
solo spots during the show,
before joining the cast for a
stirring finale in a tribute to
“America the Beautiful”.
The French Chorders include Bev Alberchinski and
Sue Priest of Gallipolis, Nan
Heiskell of Cheshire, and
Suzy Parker of Syracuse.
River’s Blend members are
Gerald Powell and Gerald
Kelly of Pomeroy and Vinton Rankin and Mike Edelmann of Gallipolis.
Show chair Brent Ash,

Literary members
hear of FDR’s infidelity
POMEROY — Marlene
Kuhn reviewed the historically-based novel, “Lucy,”
by Ellen Feldman at a recent
meeting of the Middleport
Literary Club held at the
Pomeroy Library.
The book chronicles the
epic love affair between
President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt and his wife’s social secretary. Lucy Mercer,
whose family was socially
connected but had suffered
financial setbacks, began
her job as Eleanor Roosevelt’s secretary in 1914.
There was a polio epidemic shortly thereafter, and
Mrs. Roosevelt took their
children away leaving her
husband and the secretary
alone. Their numerous love
letters were discovered by
Mrs. Roosevelt in 1918; she
offered FDR a divorce but
his mother was against such
a radical move.
Political ambitions and
social mores kept this early
twentieth century love affair
concealed from the general

public for years. The book
incorporated information
obtained via many interviews with family members and close friends of the
Roosevelts and Lucy Mercer Rutherford. FDR was the
President of the USA during
the great depression and
WW II. He was the author
of Social Security and the
only President to be elected
four times. Mrs. Kuhn noted
that FDR to the presidency
four times during the Great
Depression and World War
II and was the author of the
Social Security system. She
recommended the book noting that she found Lucy a
charismatic person despite
the deceptive lifestyle she
chose to share with FDR.
The
next
meeting will take place at 2
p.m.Wednesday, Nov. 2, at
the Pomeroy Library Meeting Room when the book,
“Homesick, My Own Story” by Jean Fritz will be reviewed by Nancy Reames.
It is open to the public.

SALEM CENTER —
The Salem Center Meigs O’
Mind 4-H Club met on Oct.
18 at the Salem Center firehouse with three advisors
and 11 members attending. Projects and ribbons
were passed out from the
fair. Goals were discussed
for next year and it was decided to have a fund raiser.

Members were encouraged
to decide the projects they
want to take for next year.
Cloverbuds did crafts and
games were played by all.
Jason and Marlene Pierce
served refreshments. The
next meeting will be Jan.
17 at the Salem Center Firehouse.

4-H club meets

This was just one of many rooms where parents, teachers, and students participated in activities hosted by
the first “Book Club” meeting at Southern Elementary.
Here teachers Patty Struble and Christy Essick teach
students about “themes” of a book as students make
name tags to the them of “Froggy Goes to School”.
French Chorders

Submitted photo

Southern Book Club
gets under way
RACINE — Tuesday
evening, Oct. 25, the Southern 21st Century Afterschool Kids Program held
its first Book Club meeting
of the year. The event was a
huge success with over 30
students and parents in attendance.
Coordinator Kim McClain stressed that reading
aloud, introducing print
materials to children and
encouraging positive reading experiences all have a
beneficial effect on a child’s

River Blend Quartet
who will serve as emcee,
and Treblemaker’s Director Bill Hathaway, state
that this third annual show
promises to be the chorus’s
biggest and best, with expanded resources, yet the

ticket prices have been reduced from previous shows
to encourage even greater
attendance at the two dates
and venues.
Advance sale tickets,
featuring a $2 discount, will

Charlene Hoeflich/photo

be available for adults at
$10, from chorus members.
Tickets for students and
their families are $8, both
in advance and at the door,
where adult tickets will be
$12.

Meigs County Community Calendar

Public meetings
Tuesday, Nov. 1
ALFRED — Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., at the home of Fiscal
Officer Osie Follrod.
Wednesday, Nov. 2
CHESTER — Regular
November Meeting Chester Board of Township
Trustees, 7 p.m., town hall.
Thursday, Nov. 3
POMEROY — Special meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council, 7 p.m.,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

to award sewer bids and
discuss waterline replacement, water treatment
plant.
Monday, Nov. 7
RUTLAND — Rutland
Township Trustees at 5
p.m. at the firehouse.
Community events
Thursday, Nov. 3
POMEROY — ChesterShade Historical Association will meet at 7 p.m. on
Thursday at the Chester
Courthouse.

TUPPERS PLAINS —
VFW Post 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary meets at 7 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 5
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 will
meet on Saturday with potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.,
followed by meeting at
7:30 p.m.
Church events
Birthdays

Thursday, Nov. 3
LONG BOTTOM —
Chloe Weber will celebrate
her 80th birthday today.
Cards may be sent to her
on Ohio 248, Long Bottom.
Friday, Nov. 4
WEST COLUMBIA,
W.Va. — May Roach,
3159 Sassafrass Rd., West
Columbia, W.Va., will celebrate her 90th birthday
today.

learning and literacy. Children who are ‘read to’ at
least three times a week are
almost twice as likely to
score in the top 25 percent
in reading than those who
are read to less than three
times a week. As a result,
reading to kids can have
lasting effects on their educational level in the future.
The event is open to
grades K-3. Nov. 15 will be
the next Book Club meeting. All families are welcome.

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�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Studies challenge wisdom
of GOP candidates’ plans
By Charles Babington

Associated Press
WASHINGTON
(AP)
— Key proposals from the
Republican presidential candidates might make for good
campaign fodder. But independent analyses raise serious
questions about those plans
and their ability to cure the nation’s ills in two vital areas, the
economy and housing.
Consider proposed cuts in
taxes and regulation, which
nearly every GOP candidate is
pushing in the name of creating jobs. The initiatives seem
to ignore surveys in which
employers cite far bigger impediments to increased hiring, chiefly slack consumer
demand.
“Republicans favor tax
cuts for the wealthy and corporations, but these had no
stimulative effect during the
George W. Bush administration, and there is no reason to
believe that more of them will
have any today,” writes Bruce
Bartlett. He’s an economist
who worked for Republican
congressmen and in the administrations of Presidents
Ronald Reagan and George
H.W. Bush.
As for the idea that cutting
regulations will lead to significant job growth, Bartlett said
in an interview, “It’s just nonsense. It’s just made up.”
Government and industry
studies support his view.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics, which tracks companies’ reasons for large layoffs,
found that 1,119 layoffs were
attributed to government regu-

lations in the first half of this
year, while 144,746 were attributed to poor “business demand.”
Mainstream economic theory says governments can spur
demand, at least somewhat,
through stimulus spending.
The Republican candidates,
however, have labeled President Barack Obama’s 2009
stimulus efforts a failure. Instead, most are calling for tax
cuts that would primarily benefit high-income people, who
are seen as the likeliest job
creators.
“I don’t care about that,”
Texas Gov. Rick Perry told
The New York Times and
CNBC, referring to tax breaks
for the rich. “What I care about
is them having the dollars to
invest in their companies.”
Many existing businesses,
however, have plenty of unspent cash. The 500 companies
that comprise the S&amp;P index
have about $800 billion in cash
and cash equivalents, the most
ever, according to the research
firm Birinyi Associates.
The rating firm Moody’s
says the roughly 1,600 companies it monitors had $1.2 trillion in cash at the end of 2010.
That’s 11 percent more than a
year earlier.
Small businesses rate “poor
sales” as their biggest problem, with government regulations ranking second, according to a survey by the National
Federation of Independent
Businesses. Of the small businesses saying this is not a good
time to expand, half cited the
poor economy as the chief rea-

son. Thirteen percent named
the “political climate.”
More small businesses
complained about regulation
during the administrations of
Bill Clinton and George H.W.
Bush, according to an analysis
of the federation’s data by the
liberal Economic Policy Institute.
Such findings notwithstanding, further cuts in taxes
and regulations remain popular with GOP voters. A recent
Associated Press-GfK poll
found that most Democrats
and about half of independents
think “reducing environmental
and other regulations on business” would do little or nothing to create jobs. But only
one-third of Republicans felt
that way.
The GOP’s presidential
hopefuls are shaping their
economic agendas along those
lines.
Former
Massachusetts
Gov. Mitt Romney says his
59-point plan “seeks to reduce
taxes, spending, regulation and
government programs.”
Businessman Herman Cain
would significantly cut taxes
for the wealthy with his 9 percent flat tax plan. Rep. Michele
Bachmann of Minnesota said
in a recent debate, “It’s the
regulatory burden that costs us
$1.8 trillion every year. … It’s
jobs that are lost.”
The candidates have said
little about another national
problem: depressed home prices, as well as the high numbers
of foreclosures and borrowers
who owe more than their houses are worth.

Page 4

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Regulating the ownership
of exotic animals in Ohio
The recent Zanesville
tragedy involving a man
who released his lions, tigers, and other dangerous
animals and subsequently
committed suicide is no
doubt a sad story. This disastrous event has put a
global spotlight on Ohio and
its policies toward the ownership of exotic animals.
Because the owner was
a private citizen, who did
not display these animals to
the public, it appears that he
fell below the radar of federal regulations. Still, it is
important to note that under
current law any person who
knowingly puts another individual in jeopardy could
be charged with negligent
homicide. However, the
man responsible was just
released from prison, so
it is unclear whether a law
would have prevented his
behavior.
What is clear is that new
regulations need to be put in
place. The owner was able
to function under Governor
Strickland’s executive order
to control the possession of
exotic animals. Governor
Kasich allowed this order to
lapse when it became evident that its language was
unenforceable. Fortunately,
the governor already had a

group actively developing
legislation to present to the
General Assembly, and it
should be ready for review
by the end of November.
Although common sense
tells us that a private citizen
should not hold ownership
of 18 Bengal tigers, legislators are walking a legal
tightrope when developing
new bills to deal with this
issue. Anytime the House
debates issues concerning
animals, especially pets, the
discussion is very difficult
to navigate.
I applaud the Kasich
administration for taking
the time to understand the
intricacies of the situation
before jumping into the po-

litical fray. Too often when
an incident occurs, there is
a rush to introduce legislation that draws headlines,
but may have adverse or unintended consequences. As
of now, some of the ideas
for consideration reportedly
include requiring liability bonds and standards for
proper care of animals.
This will not be an easy
debate to resolve because
the treatment and regulation
of animals becomes an emotional issue. For instance,
there are folks already saying that deer cause more
damage than exotic animals.
While this argument may be
true, no one has ever been
eaten by a deer. There will
also be people who want
to talk about pit bulls and
gamecocks. As you can see,
letting the cats out of the
cage could lead to a real
dogfight in Columbus. My
advice is to stick to the task
at hand regarding exotic
animals and leave all those
other issues for another day.
Rep. Carey may be
reached by calling (614)
466-1366, e-mailing District87@ohr.state.oh.us, or
writing to State Rep. John
Carey, 77 South High Street,
Columbus, Ohio, 43215.

About a quarter of the
world’s people are between
the ages of 10 and 24. We
used to say our youth will be
the leaders of the future—
but, as we have seen in many
parts of the world, we now
know that they are already
leaders of today.
Young people have the
potential to transform economies, politics, and whole
societies. They have the
potential to drive development through their creativity,
ideas, enthusiasm, and innovative spirit. However, in
order for this potential to be
realized, governments, UNFPA and the wider United
Nations should take steps to
ensure our youth populations
are healthy and have access
to education, including sexuality education, so they may
understand how to protect
themselves from HIV and
have the knowledge to make
informed decisions. Girls

who stay in school are less
likely to have unintended
pregnancies, are healthier,
and more economically productive in adulthood.
We must ensure that our
youth have jobs and opportunities for sustainable livelihoods. Today, only about
half of the world’s youth participate in the labour force,
and almost everywhere,
young women have fewer
job opportunities than men
do. Investments in young
people’s education, health
and employment can enable
countries to build a strong
economic base and reduce
poverty, a key aim of the
Millennium Development
Goals.
Lifting people out of poverty, maintaining a healthy
planet, promoting economic
growth and development,
and tearing down barriers to
equality are one and the same
fight. Development can only

be sustainable when it is equitable and serves all people
By investing in people
now—empowering them to
make choices that are good
for themselves and the global commons–our world of
7 billion can have thriving
sustainable cities, productive
labour forces that can fuel
economic growth and youth
populations that can fully
contribute to their communities and nations.
Our world of 7 billion
presents unprecedented challenges and opportunities. We
must meet the challenges and
seize the opportunities now
to chart a sustainable, equitable, healthy and socially
just path to the future.
Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin is an Under-SecretaryGeneral of the United Nations and Executive Director
of UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund.
© American Forum

Rep.John Carey

Invest in the 7 Billion as Human Capital
By Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin

On 31 October, the
world’s population is projected to reach 7 billion.
The 7 billionth person
will be born into a world
that is very different from
when the United Nations was
founded in 1945, when our
numbers were only about a
third of what they are today.
We are living 30 per cent
longer. More of our children
survive. We are now more
urban. We are more interconnected and interdependent
than ever.
The 7 billionth person will
also be born into a world of
contradictions. While most
people are having smaller
families, our numbers grow
globally. While some poor
countries’ populations are
growing more quickly than
their economies, the populations of some rich countries

are shrinking, threatening to
undermine economic growth.
There are more young people
in the world, but there are
also more elderly.
The challenges ahead are
formidable, with new pressures on land, energy, food
and infrastructure and on the
governments that must provide services, such as education and health, and with the
global economic crisis shaking the foundations of individuals, families and communities.
We can—and must—confront these challenges. But
we must act now. What we
do today can have a profound
impact on the lives of people
everywhere tomorrow and
for generations to come.
We have to protect our
environment, provide clean
water and energy and enough
food, and address the threat
of climate change.
We have to rectify in-

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26 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . .$70.70
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$140.11

Outside Mason County
12 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . .$56.55
26 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$113.60
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$227.21

equalities between women
and men, girls and boys. We
must change attitudes so that
violence or discrimination
against women and girls becomes unacceptable everywhere. We must ensure girls
have the same educational
opportunities as boys. We
must continue work against
skewed sex ratios.
We also need to make
motherhood safe. That
means caring for pregnant
women, preventing deaths in
childbirth, and providing nutrition to mothers and babies.
Millions of mothers
must still give birth without
help from a skilled birth attendant. And millions more
have little or no say in basic
decisions about how many
children they have or when
to have them. An estimated
215 million women in the
developing world lack access to modern family planning.

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

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.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

�Tuesday, November 1, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Briefs
Geologists eye new well
after 7 quakes in NE Ohio
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
(AP) — Geologists are
checking for possible links
between a brine-water injection well and seven
minor earthquakes since
March in the Youngstown
area of northeast Ohio.
The quakes are the only
ones recorded with epicenters in Youngstown and the
Mahoning River valley.
According
to
The
(Youngstown)
Vindicator, experts are checking
the 18-month-old injection well completed in
Youngstown 10 months
before the quakes began.
Of the seven earthquakes,
six had epicenters near the
well.
Brine water, a byproduct
of oil drilling and hydraulic-fracturing for natural
gas, is flushed underground.
“There’s definitely a
coincidence,” said Jeffrey
Dick, geology department
chairman at Youngstown
State University. “But
whether or not there’s a
link, nobody has enough
data quite yet.”
Heidi Hetzel-Evans, a
spokeswoman for the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources, said the agency
stood by regulations allowing the well operations. The
agency has “not seen any
evidence that shows a correlation between localized
seismic activity and deepinjection well disposal,”
she said.
D&amp;L Energy Inc., an oil
and gas exploration company that operates the well,
believes there’s no data
linking the well to earthquakes, said Nick Paparodis, the company’s vice
president of land operations.
Wastewater from Pennsylvania drilling makes
up most business for the
Youngstown well. Some
wells, including the one in
Youngstown, go 9,000 feet
below the surface.
The Youngstown site
has had a daily injection
average of 2,000 barrels, or 84,000 gallons, of
wastewater. D&amp;L also is
establishing at least two
other injection wells in the
Youngstown area.
Ohio steps up abandoned mine cleanup program
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — An Oho program
to clean up after abandoned
coal mines is taking on far
more projects to restore
land and streams, thanks
to a steady increase in federal funding. But even more
money would help, because
the state is discovering additional sites that pose environmental or health threats,
officials said.
“We’re finding about
15 new problem spots per
week,” said Terry Van
Offeren, manager of the
program within the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources.
Ohio plans to take bids
on 53 cleanup projects in
2012, compared to 18 that
the state paid for in 2007,
Van Offeren told The Columbus Dispatch for a story
Monday. The expansion
follows a 2006 change in
the formula for dividing
coal company taxes among
the states, a move that increased Ohio’s share from
$7.5 million in 2007 to
$18.4 million for next year.
The state’s list of locations needing attention has
been growing with a new
effort begun in June to identify old coal sites in eastern
and southeastern Ohio that
are potentially hazardous to
people or the environment.
The risks include cave-ins,
landslides, cave-ins, unsecured mine openings and
piles of waste coal called
“gob.”
The new survey work
is updating a state list of
trouble spots mostly relying on information that was
collected in the 1980s. That
database already includes
36,000 acres of land spoiled
by strip mining and underground mines, but still there
were gaps left by the older
surveys, said Blake Arthur,
a Department of Natural
Resources public health
and safety manager.
“These are regions that
have a lot of narrow valleys
and rough terrain,” Arthur
said. “It’s very easy to miss
some of these problems.”

For example, the database did not include a cliff
left from an old, 1960sera strip mine in Guernsey
County. The cliff collapsed
last year and ruined a section of road below.
The updated database
likely won’t be finished until the end of 2013, Van Offeren said. The state plans
to hire four recent retirees
to work part-time exploring
old coal fields for issues not
already documented.
Ohio gov: union bill
kept focus off budget
ZANESVILLE,
Ohio
(AP) — Gov. John Kasich
says the fight over Ohio’s
collective bargaining law
made it easier to pass a
budget that made sweeping
changes to many areas of
state law.
The Columbus Dispatch reports that Kasich
told reporters the budget
made “dramatic reforms
that Ohioans hadn’t seen in
probably 100 years.”
He says people probably
didn’t oppose the budget
because their focus was on
something else — such as
the law limiting union bargaining rights for 350,000
public workers, or the
semi-private JobsOhio job
creation engine that takes
economic development duties away from the state.
In addition to allocating
$55.8 billion, the budget
that took effect in July also
leased state-controlled liquor profits to fund JobsOhio, instated a merit-pay
system for teachers and
privatized prisons.
Ohio zoo: Quarantine
testing won’t start for
weeks
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Ohio’s state veterinarian says testing of a halfdozen exotic animals that
survived release after their
owner killed himself won’t
begin for several weeks.
Dr. Tony Forshey said
Monday the animals must
be anesthetized to have
blood drawn. He’s worried
they’re too weak to survive
the procedure.
The Columbus zoo is
caring for three leopards,
two monkeys and a young
grizzly bear taken from a
Zanesville home two weeks
ago after owner Terry
Thompson freed dozens of
animals, then shot himself.
Police were forced to
kill 48 animals, including
lions, bears and 18 endangered Bengal tigers.
An email seeking comment was sent Monday to
an attorney for the owner’s
widow, Marian Thompson,
who had sought to reclaim
the animals. Both she and
her attorney have repeatedly declined comment.
Man kills self in Ohio
Greyhound bus bathroom
CINCINNATI (AP) —
A man ran aboard an empty
Greyhound bus and shot
himself to death in its bathroom Monday after a minor
confrontation with an employee, police said.
The Cleveland-to-Dallas
bus had emptied at a scheduled stop in Cincinnati and
the man was among passengers who were told by
a bus company employee
to move their smoking to
another area at around 11
a.m., Greyhound spokeswoman Maureen Richmond said.
The man then showed
a gun and ran back aboard
the bus, the company and
police said. The employee
called police for help, Richmond said.
Officers swarmed the
station, closing it along
with an adjacent street and
Interstate 71 ramp. About
90 minutes later, police Sgt.
Danita Kilgore reported
that the man had been found
dead of a self-inflicted gunshot inside the bathroom of
the parked bus. No one else
was injured.
Streets and the station
were reopened by early afternoon. Passengers headed
to Dallas were put aboard
another bus.
The man’s identity
wasn’t immediately released. Authorities said
they don’t know why the
man shot himself.
Greyhound Lines Inc.
serves nearly 25 million
passengers annually.
Ohio death penalty re-

view committee to meet
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — A committee
charged with examining
possible changes to Ohio’s
death penalty law meets the
first time this week.
Ohio Supreme Court
Chief Justice Maureen
O’Connor has convened
the task force while making it clear the committee
won’t debate whether Ohio
should have capital punishment.
The committee, to meet
publicly on Thursday at the
Ohio State Bar Association,
includes veteran prosecutors who have long supported the death penalty, along
with defense attorneys who
have fought its imposition.
The committee also includes judges, lawmakers,
a sheriff, academic experts
and a representative of the
state prison system.
O’Connor, a Republican
and a former prosecutor,
has said the committee’s
goal is to produce a fair, impartial, and balanced analysis of the state’s 30-year-old
law.
Board rejects mercy
for Ohio man who killed
3 sons
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — The Ohio Parole
Board has rejected a request for mercy from a condemned man who shot his
three sons to death as they
slept in 1982.
The board voted unanimously Monday to turn
down Reginald Brooks’ argument that he is a paranoid
schizophrenic who suffered
from mental illness long
before the shootings.
The board’s 13-page ruling says Brooks carefully
planned the crime and has
never needed mental health
treatment in 28 years in
prison.
The 66-year-old Brooks
is scheduled to die Nov. 15.
He would be the oldest man
put to death in Ohio if the
execution proceeds.
Brooks shot his 11-,
15- and 17-year-old sons
in Cleveland two days after his wife had served him
with divorce papers.
Ohio Supreme Court
building named for late
justice
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — The building housing Ohio’s Supreme Court
will be renamed in honor of
the state’s second longestserving chief justice who
died early last year.
The state Supreme Court
announced Monday that the
Ohio Judicial Center will
be dedicated on Dec. 2 in
honor of the late Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer.
Moyer died unexpectedly after suffering gastrointestinal problems. At the
time of his death he was
the longest-serving current
state chief justice in the
country.
The Republican Moyer
was lauded by lawyers as
being able to set aside politics in his rulings.
Moyer also pushed to
have Supreme Court justices appointed by the governor instead of elected. He
had said he felt campaign
contributions were “corrosive” to the process.
Hanging-man Halloween display draws complaints
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) —
An Ohio homeowner has
moved a Halloween decoration of a hanging man
because police said some
found it too realistic and
spooky.
Officers in the Columbus
suburb of Dublin said they
received five complaints
about the 6-foot figure
hanging in a tree close to
a road. Police told WSYXTV that people found the
display disturbing and
feared it could cause a traffic accident.
The homeowner, who
asked not to be identified,
tells the station that Halloween should be creepy
and that his decoration was
“all in good fun.”
But he moved it to a
tree closer to his house
and away from the street.
Where it used to hang, he
has placed a sign that says:
“less realistic decoration.”

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Massive smuggling ring
dismantled in Arizona
PHOENIX (AP) —
Arizona authorities have
disrupted a Mexican drug
cartel’s distribution network, arresting dozens of
smugglers in dismantling
a ring responsible for
carrying more than $33
million worth of drugs
through the state’s western desert every month,
officials said Monday.
The ring is believed be
tied to the Sinaloa cartel
— Mexico’s most powerful — and responsible
for smuggling more than
3.3 million pounds of
marijuana, 20,000 pounds
of cocaine and 10,000
pounds of heroin into
the U.S. through Arizona
over the past five years,
according to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Their efforts in that
time generated an estimated $2 billion, according to ICE.
ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations and the
Pinal County Sheriff’s Office arrested 22 suspected
smugglers tied to the ring
on Thursday, the latest of
three busts they say have
brought it down following
a 17-month investigation
dubbed “Operation Pipeline Express.”
In the three busts combined, the agencies have
arrested 76 suspected
smugglers and seized
more than 61,000 pounds
of pot, about 160 pounds
of heroin, about 210
pounds of cocaine, nearly
$760,000 in cash, and 108
weapons, including assault rifles and shotguns.
The other busts came in
mid-September and midOctober.
Although the agencies
released some information about Thursday’s bust
last week, they held back
most of their information
for a Monday news con-

ference in which they displayed dozens of guns and
hundreds of pounds of pot
seized for members of the
media.
The smuggling ring operated by using backpackers and vehicles to move
drugs from the border to a
network of so-called stash
houses in the Phoenix
area. The drugs were then
sold to distributors from
states across the country.
Authorities say the ring
virtually
monopolized
smuggling routes along an
80-mile section of the Arizona-Mexico border from
Yuma to just east of the
small Tohono O’odham
Nation town of Sells.
Some of the officials
at the news conference in
Phoenix lauded the bust
as a significant blow to
the Sinaloa cartel, while
others acknowledged that
it affects only a portion of
the cartel’s massive operation, which still has cells
operating in the state.
“It’s a body blow but
it doesn’t knock them out
by any sense of the imagination,” Pinal County
Sheriff Paul Babeau said.
“This literally is just a
fraction of what’s going
on.”
It’s only a matter of
time before either the
Sinaloa cartel or another
operation reclaims the
area affected by the bust,
said Matthew Allen, ICE’s
special agent in charge for
Arizona.
“This is not a closing
chapter in this book,” he
said. “We have every expectation that command
and control in Mexico is
working to re-establish
their presence, and it’s our
job to go after them.”
Authorities began investigating the smuggling
ring in June 2010, when
a Pinal County sheriff’s deputy stopped two

smugglers hauling 1,500
pounds of pot in Stanfield,
about 50 miles south of
Phoenix. At least one of
the smugglers gave investigators detailed information about the ring.
Allen said that those
arrested range from lowlevel drug haulers and
scouts to those who were
in command.
“This is how you attack
international
organized
crime and transnational
criminal organizations, by
focusing on the people,
the leadership and the illicit pathways that they
exploit,” he said. “Our
goal is to take them out by
their roots.”
The case is a reminder
of how important it is for
the federal government to
gain operational control
over the border, Arizona
Attorney General Tom
Horne said.
“I find it completely
unacceptable that Arizona neighborhoods are
treated as a trading floor
for narcotics,” Horne
said. “Children are not
safe when their homes
are located near the other
homes that are used as
distribution centers for
drugs. Our highways are
not safe when criminal
organizations battle each
other, sometimes violently and at risk to innocent
bystanders, for control
of loads of drugs being
transported in vehicles.”
Authorities need to
send a message to cartel
leaders through continued
busts, Babeau said.
“We have to stand up to
bring the fight to the cartels to say, ‘This is America. You’re not bringing
your violence, you’re not
bringing your drugs and
your trash to our country. We’re going to stop
you,’” he said.

WE WANT TO KNOW

WHAT’S
HAPPENING!
We would like to know what your
church, schools, charities &amp; organizations
are doing for the holiday season.
Please submit your Holiday Happenings
by November 7th to

mds@mydailysentinel.com
Subject: Holiday Happenings.
This will be published in our
Holiday Happenings special edition that
publishes On Thanksgiving Day.
NO in ofﬁce submissions will be accepted!

•Parades
•Dinners
•Where is Santa
•Home Tours
•Charitable Events
•Childrens Activities
•Church Events
•Light Display’s &amp; More!!

�Sports

6

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Schedule
Friday, November 4
Football
Wahama at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Chapmanville, 7:30 p.m.
Hannan at Gilmer County, 7:30 p.m.
Volleyball
Ohio Valley Christian Volley for the Cure,
5:30 p.m.

Tournament
Schedule
Thursday, November 3
Volleyball — Regional Semifinal
at Lancaster H.S.
Eastern vs. Plain City Shekinah Christian,
6 p.m.
Pike Eastern vs. Newark Catholic, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, November 5
Football — Regional Tournament
(7) South Gallia at (2) Buckeye Central, 7
p.m.
Volleyball — Regional Final
at Lancaster H.S.
Eastern-Shekinah Chr. winner vs. Pike
Eastern-Newark Catholic winner, 2 p.m.
Cross Country — State Meet
at National Trail Raceway, Hebron
Peyton Adkins, Mckenna Warner, 11:45
a.m.
Kody Wolfe, 1:30 p.m.

Sports Briefs
Point Pleasant JSHS
Basketball Signups

Lady Eagles sweep Waterford for district title Rebels
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

JACKSON, Ohio — How
sweet it is.
The Eastern volleyball
team is headed to its seventh
Sweet 16 appearance in program history following a 2519, 25-13, 26-24 victory over
Waterford in a Division IV
district final held Saturday at
Jackson High School.
The top-seeded Lady Eagles (25-0) captured their seventh district championship in
10 postseasons and also posted
their third straight three-game
sweep of the third-seeded
Lady ‘Cats (20-5) this season. EHS also won in straight
games in both TVC Hocking
matchups against WHS this
fall.
EHS also tied a school record by winning its 25th match
of the year, matching the mark
set by the 25-1 club in 2006.
Eastern, which has never won
a regional tournament match
Bryan Walters/photo
in six previous attempts, is
Members
of
the
Eastern
volleyball
team
pose
for
a
picture
after
winning the pronow one win away from setgram’s
seventh
district
title
in
school
history
Saturday
with
a
straight-game
decision
ting the alltime school record.
over Waterford in a Division IV district final at Jackson High School.

See Title, 10

CENTENARY,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be holding a
Winter Sports Orientation at
6 p.m. on November 3. This
is a mandatory meeting for
Gallia Academy athletes and
their parents’ grades 7-12
that are interested in participating in winter sports for
the 2011-2012 season. The
orientation will be held in
the Holzer Center for Performing Arts Auditorium
at Gallia Academy High
School.

GAHS Fall Sports
Awards Ceremony
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be holding their
2011 Fall Sports Awards
Ceremony at 6:30 p.m. on
November 21. The Sports
Awards Ceremony will be
held in the Holzer Center for
Performing Arts Auditorium
at Gallia Academy High
School.

PPHS Alumni
Basketball Game
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The Point Pleasant basketball program will
be holding an alumni basketball game on Wednesday,
November 23. Each player
is asked to donate to the
program, and will receive
an alumni game shirt and a
dinner. For more information contact Andy Layton at
aljdgbb@gmail.com.

headed to
playoffs
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@mydailytribune.
com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio
— It’s official!
The South Gallia football
team is headed back to the
postseason.
In the official playoff
pairings released Sunday
by the OHSAA, South Gallia (7-3) is the seventh seed.
The Rebels will face No. 2
Buckeye Central.
South Gallia made backto-back playoff appearances
in the 2005 and 2006 seasons, playing on the road
both times.
The Bucks (8-2) will be
in the playoffs for the second straight season, after an
overtime victory over Colonel Crawford on Friday.
The game is set for 7
p.m. on Saturday at Buckeye
Central High School in New
Washington, Ohio.
Presale tickets for the
game will be available beginning Tuesday morning at
South Gallia High School.
The tickets maybe purchased
for $7 in room 110 TuesdayFriday during school hours
and from 6:30-7:30 p.m.
Tuesday-Thursday. Tickets
will also be available at the
school on Saturday morning
from 8-9:15 a.m. The school
will receive a percentage of
the money raised from presale tickets. The cost will be
$9 at the game.
There will also be a Community Pep Rally on Thursday evening at the Guyan
Township Fire Dept., beginning at 6:30 p.m. There will
be a hog roast to raise monSubmitted photo ey for the team’s trip.
Members of the Ohio Valley Christian soccer team pose for a picture after finishing second to Lakewood Hearts For Jesus Christ Saturday at the Ohio Christian
School Athletic Association state championship game at Ohio Christian University
in Circleville, Ohio.

Defenders fall to Hearts for
Christ in state final, 3-0

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Point Pleasant
JSHS boys basketball signups and parent meeting will
be held on November 1, at
6:30 p.m. in the auditorium. By Bryan Walters
bwalters@mydailytribune.com
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio — So
GAHS Basketball
close, and yet so far.
The Ohio Valley Christian socReserve Seats
cer team had its state title hopes
CENTENARY, Ohio — come to a halt Saturday afternoon
Reserve seats for the 2011- following a 3-0 setback to Lake12 Gallia Academy Boys wood Hearts of Jesus Christ in the
Ohio Christian School Athletic
and Girls Basketball season Association championship game
will go on sale November at Ohio Christian University in
14th for Big Blue Super Pickaway County.
Boosters.
The top-seeded Defenders (15Parents of varsity and 4-3) battled through 55 scoreless
junior varsity basketball minutes with the defending OCplayers, cheerleaders, and SAA champions, but the secondpep band members may pur- seeded Guardians netted consecuchase reserve seats on No- tive goals in an eight minute span
that allowed the guests to turn a
vember 15th.
scoreless game into a commandReserve seats for the gen- ing 2-0 edge with 16 minutes left
eral public will be available in regulation.
on Wednesday, November
OVCS tried to force the issue
16th. Tickets may be pur- on scoring a goal by moving its
chased in the Athletic Direc- players up into the attack zone,
tor’s office at Gallia AcadSee Defenders, 8
emy between the hours of
8:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.

GAHS Winter Sports
Orientation

Tuesday,, November 1, 2011

Eagles run past Southern, 27-8
By Sarah Hawley

RACINE, Ohio — Three
was the common theme on Saturday evening as the Eastern
and Southern football teams
faced off in Racine, Ohio.
For the Eagles, it was their
third win of the season, and
their third straight over Southern.
Also, the victory was by a
three touchdown margin, 27-8.
It was also the final game
for the three Southern seniors
— Ryan Taylor, Dustin Custer
and Devin Dillard.
After forcing Southern to
punt on the opening drive of
the game, the Eastern offense
put together a 14 play, six and
a half minute scoring drive to
take the 7-0 lead. Senior lineman Tyler Cline — in the game
at running back — ran the ball
in from the two-yard line for
the first offensive score of his
career, with Max Carnahan
adding the extra point kick.
Southern’s next drive
ended in an interception by
Eastern’s Zach Scowden at
the Eastern 45 yard line. On
the next play, Joey Scowden
completed a pass to Carnahan in the endzone for the
Eagles second touchdown of
the game. Carnahan added the
extra point to give Eastern the
14-0 lead.
Neither team moved the
ball inside the opponents 20
yard line during the second
quarter of play. Southern’s
Paul Ramthun intercepted an
Eastern pass near the endzone
as time ran out in the second
quarter. The Eagles led 14-0 at
the half.
The Eagles opened the second half with a 12 play drive,
but the drive stalled at the
Southern 20 yard line and the
Eagles were forced to punt.
Southern’s next drive ended in
a punt from their own 38 yard

Sarah Hawley/photo

Eastern’s Zach Scowden carries the ball during Saturday’s season finale against
Southern as the Tornadoes’ Zac Beegle attempts a tackle.

line.
Eastern began the next series at the Southern 30 yard
line, with Cline scoring his
second touchdown of the game
on a one yard run. Carnahan
added the extra point kick to
give Eastern the 21-0 lead.
Following a short Southern possession, Eastern’s Joey
Scowden ran the ball in from
the 15 yard line on the first
play of the drive. The extra
point attempt failed, with the
Eagles maintaining the 27-0
lead.

Southern’s best drive of the
game began with 4:27 on the
fourth quarter clock. Southern quarterback Tristen Wolfe
completed a 10 yard touchdown pass to Ryan Taylor with
16 seconds remaining in the
game. Ryan Billingsley added
the two point conversion run.
The Eagles won by the
27-8 final score.
Ethan Nottingham led the
Eagles with 103 yards rushing
on 19 carries.
Tyler Barton led Southern
with 47 rushing yards on 12

carries.
This was the final game for
Eastern seniors Tyler Cline
and Paul Morrison.
Saturday was also the second time in three years that the
Eastern football team defeated
Southern and the Eastern vol-

leyball team won the district
title on the same day.
Eastern 27, Southern 8
E
14-0-13-0 — 27
S
0-0-0-8 — 8

See Eagles, 8

Raiders
end season
with a win
Staff Report

SOUTH POINT, Ohio —
The River Valley football
team ended the season the
same way they started it —
with a win.
The Raiders (2-8, 1-4
OVC) defeated South Point
(2-8, 0-5 OVC) by a final
score of 45-30.
River Valley led 7-0 after the first quarter and led
25-14 at the half. The Raiders scored 14 unanswered
points in the third quarter to
take a 39-14 lead.
Patrick Williams led
the Raiders with 246 yards
rushing on 26 carries and six
rushing touchdowns in his
final game for River Valley.
Austin Whobrey led the
passing game with 72 yards
and one touchdown, while
Trey Noble was the leading
receiver with four catches
and 58 yards.
As a team, the Raiders
had 303 rushing yards in 38
carries, and had an offensive
total of 375 yards and seven
touchdowns.
Defensively, River Valley
had seven fumble recoveries
— two each by Kyle Brown
and Jacob Hefner, and one
each by Austin Lewis, Justin
Mabe and Austin Davies.
Lewis had 14 tackles to
lead the team, while Brown
and Noble had five tackles
each.
This was the final game
for River Valley seniors
Trey Noble, William Bowman, Patrick Williams,
Blake Burdette, Stephen
Brown, Cody Holley, Adam
Clagg, Jason Lucket, and
Travis Potter.

�Tuesday, November 1, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL LIMITATION1
R.C. 3501.11(G), 5705.19,
5705.25
________________________
_

Legals
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
In compliance with Village Ordinance No. 751, the Village of
Pomeroy shall offer the following real property for sale to the
highest bidder, to wit:
Being a part of Lot No. 83 as
shown on the County Auditorʼs
Tax Map Book, Village of
Pomeroy, Volume 2, Page 36,
1929, and being more fully described as follows: Commencing at a point in the intersection of the existing centerline
of Sycamore Street and the
existing northerly right-of-way
line of Main Street; thence N.
61° 00' 00" E. along the existing northerly right-of-way line
of Main Street, 553.09 feet to
the real point of beginning for
the land herein described;
thence N. 24° 32' 42" west
along a line, 190.01 feet to a
point; thence N. 61° 00' 00" E.
along a line, 125.53 feet to a
point; thence S. 24° 32' 42" E.
along a line, 190.01 feet to a
point in the existing northerly
right-of-way line of Main
Street; thence S. 61° 00' 00"
W. along the existing northerly
right-of-way line of Main
Street, 125.53 feet to the point
of beginning, and containing
0.546 acre.
Subject to all legal highways
and easements of record.
Description of the above-described tract being the results
of a survey made by Richard
C. Glasgow, R.S. 5161.
Reference Deed: Volume 267,
Page 37, Meigs County Deed
Records.
Auditorʼs Parcel
16-02545.000

Number:

EXCEPTING ANY AND ALL
MINERALS PREVIOUSLY EXCEPTED, CONVEYED, RESERVED OR SOLD. HOWEVER, IT IS THE INTENTION
OF THIS INSTRUMENT TO
CONVEY ANY AND ALL MINERALS HELD BY THE GRANTORS, IF ANY.
Subject to all legal highways,
easements, right of ways, zoning ordinances, restrictions
and conditions of record.
Said property is also sometimes referred to as the “Old
Pomeroy High School.”
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
OF SALE:
The Village of Pomeroy reserves the right to reject any
and all bids;
The Village of Pomeroy is selling said building in “as is” condition, with no warranties either express or implied;
SEALED BIDS MARKED “VILLAGE HALL BID” must be received by 4:00 pm on the 9th
day of December, at the
Pomeroy Village Hall, 660
East Main Street, Suite A,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Terms of sale: 10% of accepted bid paid within 7 days
of bid opening. Balance within
30 days thereafter. (11) 1, 8,
15, 22, 29, 2011
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL LIMITATION1
R.C. 3501.11(G), 5705.19,
5705.25
________________________
_

Notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Village Council of the Middleport Village of Middleport,
Ohio passed on the 23rd day
of May, 2011, there will be
submitted to a vote of the people at the GENERAL ELECTION to be held at the regular
places of voting on Tuesday,
the 8th day
of November,
Legals
2011, the question of levying a
tax, in excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit of
Middleport Village for the purpose of Current Expenses.
Tax being:2 A renewal of an
existing tax of 3.0 mills at a
rate not exceeding 3.0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to thirty cents
($0.30) for each one hundred
dollars of valuation, for five (5)
years.
The polls will open at 6:30
a.m. and remain open until
7:30 p.m. on election day.
Run 2 times: October
25 and November 1
By order of the Board of Elections,
of
Meigs
County,
Ohio.
John Ihle, Chair
Dated September 12, 2011
Rita D. Smith, Director
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL LIMITATION1
R.C. 3501.11(G), 5705.19,
5705.25
________________________
_
Notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Village Council of the Rutland Village of Rutland, Ohio
passed on the 28th day of
July, 2011, there will be submitted to a vote of the people
at the GENERAL ELECTION
to be held at the regular places
of voting on Tuesday, the 8th
day of November, 2011, the
question of levying a tax, in excess of the ten mill limitation,
for the benefit of Rutland Village for the purpose of Current
Expenses.
Tax being:2 A renewal of an
existing tax of 2.0 mills at a
rate not exceeding 2.0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to twenty cents
($0.20) for each one hundred
dollars of valuation, for five (5)
years.
The polls will open at 6:30
a.m. and remain open until
7:30 p.m. on election day.
Run 2 times: October
25 and November 1
By order of the Board of Elections,
of
Meigs
County,
Ohio.
John Ihle, Chair
Dated September 12, 2011
Rita D. Smith, Director

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL LIMITATION1
R.C. 3501.11(G), 5705.19,
5705.25
________________________
_
Notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Village Council of the Rutland Village of Rutland, Ohio
passed on the 28th day of
July, 2011, there will be submitted to a vote of the people
at the GENERAL ELECTION
to be held at the regular places
of voting on Tuesday, the 8th
day of November, 2011, the
question of levying a tax, in excess of the ten mill limitation,
for the benefit of Rutland Village for the purpose of Current
Expenses.

Tax being:2 A renewal of an
existing tax of 2.0 mills at a
rate not exceeding 2.0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to twenty cents
($0.20) for each one hundred
dollars of valuation, for five (5)
Notice is hereby given that in years.
pursuance of a Resolution of The polls will open at 6:30
the Village Council of the Mid- a.m. and remain open until
dleport Village of Middleport, 7:30 p.m. on election day.
Ohio passed on the 23rd day
Run 2 times: October
of May, 2011, there will be 25 and November 1
By orsubmitted to a vote of the peo- der of the Board of Elections,
ple at the GENERAL ELEC- of
TION to be held at the regular M e i g s
County,
Ohio.
places of voting on Tuesday, John Ihle, Chair
the 8th day of November, Dated September 12, 2011
2011, the question of levying a Rita D. Smith, Director
tax, in excess of the ten mill
SERVICE
/ BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
limitation, for
the benefit
of
Middleport Village for the purpose of Current Expenses.

Legals
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL LIMITATION1
R.C. 3501.11(G), 5705.19,
5705.25
________________________
_
Notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Village Council of the Middleport Village of Middleport,
Ohio passed on the 8th day of
August, 2011, there will be
submitted to a vote of the people at the GENERAL ELECTION to be held at the regular
places of voting on Tuesday,
the 8th day of November,
2011, the question of levying a
tax, in excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit of
Middleport Village for the purpose of Police Protection.
Tax being:2 An additional tax
of 2.0 mills at a rate not exceeding 2.0 mills for each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to twenty cents
($0.20) for each one hundred
dollars of valuation, for five (5)
years.
The polls will open at 6:30
a.m. and remain open until
7:30 p.m. on election day.
Run 2 times: October
25 and November 1
By order of the Board of Elections,
of
Meigs
County,
Ohio.
John Ihle, Chair
Dated September 12, 2011
Rita D. Smith, Director
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL LIMITATION1
R.C. 3501.11(G), 5705.19,
5705.25
________________________
_
Notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Board of Township Trustees of the Township of Rutland passed on the 5th day of
July, 2011, there will be submitted to a vote of the people
at the GENERAL ELECTION
to be held at the regular places
of voting on Tuesday, the 8th
day of November, 2011, the
question of levying a tax, in excess of the ten mill limitation,
for the benefit of Rutland
Township for the purpose of
Maintaining and Operating
Cemeteries.

REAL ESTATE SALES

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
Automotive
2010 AUDI Q 5 - SUV - PRESTIGE S LINE PACKAGE
740-645-1563
Other Services
Pet
Cremations.
740-446-3745

Call

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

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

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

ANIMALS
Pets
FREE
young
female
cat-spayed, shots, litter
trained, not good with children.
Will provide food, litter &amp; litter
box. 304-882-8278
Want To Buy
Wanted to buy, shallow well
pump, call 740-992-2272
AGRICULTURE

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

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884

Lost &amp; Found
A Personalized Afghan has
been found in the Centenary
Area (St. Rt 141) Call to identify 446-7632

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

Want To Buy

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

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

Notices

Want To Buy

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.

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.

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

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

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Houses For Sale
Price Reduction - Need to Sale
- Move in Ready - 3BR &amp; 2
bath in Gallipolis Area.
446-2106
600

ANIMALS

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

Tax being:2 A renewal of an
existing tax of 1.0 mill at a rate
not exceeding 1.0 mill for each
one dollar of valuation, which
amounts to ten cents ($0.10)
for each one hundred dollars
of valuation, for five (5) years.
The polls will open at 6:30
a.m. and remain open until
7:30 p.m. on election day.
Run 2 times: October
25 and November 1
By order of the Board of Elections,
of
Meigs
County,
Ohio.
John Ihle, Chair
Dated September 12, 2011
Rita D. Smith, Director

Marcum Construction

Tax being:2 A renewal of an
and
General
existing tax
of 3.0
mills at a Contracting
rate not exceeding 3.0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation,
Commercial
&amp; Residential
• General Remodeling
which•amounts
to thirty
cents
($0.30)• for
eachAdditions
one hundred
Room
•
Roofing
dollars of valuation, for five (5)
• Pole &amp; Horse Barns
years. • Garages
The polls
will open at 6:30 • Home Repairs
• Foundations
a.m. and remain open until
740-985-4141
• 740-416-1834
7:30 p.m. on election
day.
Run 2 Fully
times: Insured
October - Free Estimates
25 and November 1 30 Years
By or- Experience
der of the Board of Elections,
Not
Affiliated
with
Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Remodeling
of
Meigs
County,
Ohio.
John Ihle, Chair
Dated September 12, 2011
Rita D. Smith, Director

Notices

60231179

Sales

REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

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

3 bedroom, $425, utilities &amp;
deposit, references required: 1
bedroom, $325, Racine, Oh
740-247-4292
Twin Rivers Tower is accepting
applications for waiting list for
HUD subsidized, 1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
675-6679

Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5
BA, back patio, pool, playground.
$450
mth
740-646-8231
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Apartment for Rent
Upstairs Apt.- Kitchen furnished- 1 or 2 people @ 238
1st Ave. $525 + Utilities &amp; deposit-No Pets 446-4926
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
FIRST MONTH FREE
Jordan Landing Apts-2, 3 &amp; 4
BR units avail. Rent plus dep
&amp; elec. No pets. 304-610-0776
FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS, $385 &amp;
up. Sec dep $300 &amp; up,
AC, W/D hook-up, tenant pays electric, EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Call

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

RESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT
Accounting / Financial
Kelly Services is seeking an
Administrative/Accounts Payable/Receivable clerk to work
for a company in the Gallipolis,
OH area. Must have A/P and
A/R experience and be proficient in Microsoft Word &amp; Excel. Qualified candidates submit resume to 4777@kellyservices.com
Education
Instructors in Computer Science and Medical Terminology. A minimum of an associate's degree required in related field. Email cover letter
and resume to bshirey@gallipoliscareercollege.edu.
Help Wanted- General
PARALEGAL
Recent Graduate With Associate Degree From Accredited School Seeking
Local Employment in the
Legal Profession Call
740-441-5543
Medical
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 Develop@
ment
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
SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Middleport North 4th Ave, 2 br
furnished apt, No Pets, deposit
&amp; references 740-992-0165
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
Small efficiency-all utilities
paid. Stove and refrigerator included. $350 plus dep.
304-675-7783
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
Houses For Rent
2 BR, $400 mo plus dep.
304-593-5308
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.
3 &amp; 4 BR houses for rent,
Syracuse,
no
pets.
304-675-5332
or
740-591-0265

4 - BR Large Home in Rio
Grande
$1350.00
mo.
www.cedarvalleyestates.net
740-645-5785

SNOW
REMOVAL

WARD'S TRAILER LOT
For Rent Call : 446-7834

1995 2BR 14x70 Mobile (Clayton)
$7500 or Best Offer must be
moved 709-1657 or 446-1271.

Middleport, 2 bedroom home,
$450 a month, No smoking,
No pets, call 740-992-3823

Mike W. Marcum - Owner

Rentals
FURNISHED 3 BR DBL WIDE
SR 143, Pomeroy, Oh. Some
Utilities Included. W/D $625
mo. NO PETS. 740-591-5174
Small 2 br mobile home for
rent, $225 rent, $225 dep, yrs.
lease, No pets, No calls after
9pm, 740-992-5097

In country, 3BR, 2 BA, full
basement. Located between
Gallipolis &amp; Huntington. $600
mo plus dep. 740-256-6128 or
740-645-2007
MANUFACTURED HOUSING

Miscellaneous
12" Radial saw, 10" Contractors table saw for sale. 1 metal
desk
to
give
away.
304-882-2804
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee
Local references furnished and
established in 1975
Call 24 hrs 740)446-0870
Rogers Basement Waterproofing

�Tuesday, November 1, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

OHSAA Football Playoff Pairings

Eagles
From Page A1

High School Football Playoff
Pairings:
Division I
Games tentatively scheduled
for 7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5.

Sarah Hawley/photo

Eastern quarterback Joey Scowden (7) attempts to avoid Southern defender Trenton Deem (9) during Saturday’s TVC Hocking game in Racine, Ohio.

SCORING SUMMARY
First Quarter
E — Tyler Cline 2 run
(Max Carnahan kick), 3:06
E — Carnahan 27 pass
from Joey Scowden (Carnahan kick), 1:11
Third Quarter
E — Cline 1 run (Carnahan kick), 2:15
E — Scowden 15 run
(kick failed), :03
Fourth Quarter
S — Ryan Taylor 10 pass
from Tristen Wolfe (Ryan
Billingsley run), :16
TEAM STATISTICS

5;

First Downs — E: 17, S:

Rushes-yards — E: 47215, S: 29-111;
Passing yards — E: 58,
S: 10;
Total yards — E: 273, S:
121;
Cmp-Att-Int — E: 4-101, S: 1-11-1;
Fumbles-lost — E: 2-0,
S: 2-0;
Penalties-yards — E:
4-30; S: 7-71.
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing — E: Ethan

Nottingham 19-103, Joey
Scowden
10-50,
Zach
Scowden 5-35, Chase Cook
6-24, Josh Robinson 2-4,
Tyler Cline 3-2, Tyler Morris
1-2, Matthew Durst 1-(-5);
S: Tyler Barton 12-47, Trenton Deem 3-37, Paul Ramthun 3-29, Ryan Taylor 2-14,
Hunter Johnson 6-0, Tristen
Wolfe 3-(-16).
Passing — E: Joey
Scowden 4-10-1 58; S: Tristen Wolfe 1-11-1 10.
Receiving — E: Max Carnahan 2-37, Zach Scowden
1-12, Chase Cook 1-9; S:
Ryan Taylor 1-10.

Defenders

Division II
Games tentatively scheduled
for 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 4.

From Page 6

but that strategy ultimately cost
it when a late breakaway turned
into the final goal — wrapping up
the contest at 3-0.
The Defenders were outshot 23-7 in the contest, and the
Guardians also claimed a 5-2
edge in corner kicks while repeating as state champions.
But even in defeat, OVCS
coach Jeff Patrick was still proud
of what his team had accomplished this season in getting to
this point. After all, the Defenders did produce the most wins and
best record for a team that he has
coached in eight seasons at the
school.
“Offensively, we were outplayed, but our backline and
(goalkeeper) Pete Carman had
a great game. They really did a
great job under all of the constant
pressure,” Patrick said. “Overall,
we did a great job of representing the school and the alumni.
I’m really proud of them, both for
what they have done this season
and for how they have conducted
themselves.”
The game was scoreless at the
intermission, but the Guardians
broke the drought in the 56th minute when Dan Koniarczyk scored
on a rebound from a corner kick
for a 1-0 lead. Rob Franko made
it a 2-0 game in the 64th minute

Region 1
8 Cle. John F. Kennedy (9-1)
at 1 Mentor (9-1)
7 Boardman (7-3) at 2 Cle. St.
Ignatius (8-2)
6 Lakewood St. Edward (7-3)
at 3 Cleveland Heights (9-0)
5 Solon (9-1) at 4 South (8-2)
Region 2
8 Whitehouse Anthony
Wayne (8-2) at 1 Tol. Whitmer
(10-0)
7 Wadsworth (9-1) at 2 Canton GlenOak (9-1)
6 Findlay (9-1) at 3 Hudson
(9-1)
5 Canton McKinley (8-2) at 4
Sylvania Southview (9-1)
Region 3
8 Lewis Center Olentangy
Orange (8-2) at 1 Hilliard Davidson (9-0)
7 Dublin Coffman (8-2) at 2
Pickerington Central (7-2)
6 Gahanna Lincoln (8-2) at 3
Westerville Central (8-2)
5 Troy (8-2) at 4 Upper Arlington (8-2)
Region 4
8 Centerville (7-3) at 1 Middletown (9-1)
7 Cin. Walnut Hills (8-2) at 2
Cin. Colerain (9-1)
6 Mason (7-3) at 3 Cin. St.
Xavier (7-3)
5 Cin. Sycamore (8-2) at 4
Cin. Archbishop Moeller (7-3)

Bryan Walters/photo

Ohio Valley Christian senior goalkeeper Pete Carman
boots the ball downfield after making a save in this Friday, Oct. 28 file photo against Mansfield Temple Christian at Ohio Christian University in Circleville, Ohio.

after also scoring on a rebound off
a corner kick.
Tom Kennedy wrapped up the
scoring in the 77th minute after
getting a one-on-one with Carman, which resulted in the final
score for a 3-goal decision.
Carman made 20 saves in goal

for the Defenders, while Warren
Gellings stopped seven shots in
net for Hearts for Jesus Christ.
It was the final soccer game
for seniors Pete Carman, Ben Tillis and Paul Miller in the Blue and
Gold.

Region 5
8 West Geauga (7-3) at 1
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit (81)
7 New Philadelphia (7-3) at 2
Tallmadge (8-2)
6 Madison (8-2) at 3 Aurora
(9-1)
5 Howland (9-0) at 4 Kent
Roosevelt (9-1)
Region 6
8 Medina Highland (6-4) at 1
Avon (9-1)
7 Tiffin Columbian (8-2) at 2
Sandusky (9-1)
6 East Cleveland Shaw (6-3)
at 3 Maple Heights (8-1)
5 Olmsted Falls (7-3) at 4 Tol.
Central Catholic (7-3)
Region 7
8 Cols. Brookhaven (7-3) at 1
Cols. Marion-Franklin (10-0)
7 New Carlisle Tecumseh (64) at 2 Dresden Tri-Valley (9-1)
6 Ashland (6-4) at 3 New Albany (8-2)
5 Cols. Beechcroft (9-1) at 4
Sunbury Big Walnut (8-2)
Region 8
8 Hamilton Ross (8-2) at 1
Trotwood-Madison (10-0)
7 Harrison (7-3) at 2 Kings
Mills Kings (10-0)
6 Cin. Turpin (7-3) at 3 Tipp
City Tippecanoe (9-1)
5 Wapakoneta (9-1) at 4
Franklin (9-1)
Division III

Games tentatively scheduled
for 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 4.
Region 9
8 Oberlin Firelands (10-0) at
1 Chagrin Falls (10-0)
7 Cle. Benedictine (7-3) at 2
Mentor Lake Catholic (9-1)
6 St. Vincent-St. Mary (8-2)
at 3 University School (9-1) 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5
5 Ravenna Southeast (10-0)
at 4 Ravenna (8-2)
Region 10
8 Caledonia River Valley (73) at 1 Columbus St. Francis DeSales (6-3)
7 Napoleon (5-5) at 2 Clyde
(8-2)
6 Urbana (8-2) at 3 Cols.
Eastmoor Academy (8-2)
5 Elida (7-3) at 4 Bellevue
(7-3)
Region 11
8 Wintersville Indian Creek
(8-2) at 1 Steubenville (10-0)
7 Thornville Sheridan (9-1) at
2 Dover (9-1)
6 Poland Seminary (7-3) at 3
Minerva (10-0)
5 Canal Fulton Northwest
(8-2) at 4 Youngstown Cardinal
Mooney (6-3)
Region 12
8 Cin. Taft (7-3) at 1 Springfield Shawnee (10-0)
7 Jackson (10-0) at 2 The
Plains Athens (10-0)
6 Circleville Logan Elm (91) at 3 Plain City Jonathan Alder
(10-0)
5 Kettering Archbishop Alter
(10-0) at 4 Day. Thurgood Marshall (9-1)
Division IV
Games tentatively scheduled
for 7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5.
Region 13
8 Canton Central Catholic (82) at 1 Girard (9-1)
7 Leavittsburg LaBrae (6-4)
at 2 Orrville (7-3)
6 Brookfield (9-1) at 3 Creston Norwayne (9-1)
5 Akron Manchester (7-3) at
4 Sullivan Black River (8-2)
Region 14
8 Wellington (7-3) at 1 Kenton (10-0)
7 Ottawa-Glandorf (8-2) at 2
Pemberville Eastwood (10-0)
6 Richwood North Union (91) at 3 Cols. Bishop Hartley (9-0)
5 Huron (9-1) at 4 Genoa
Area (9-1)
Region 15
8 Chesapeake (7-3) at 1 St.
Clairsville (9-1)
7 Gnadenhutten Indian Valley (7-3) at 2 Johnstown-Monroe
(10-0)
6 Ironton (6-4) at 3 Amanda
Clearcreek (8-2)
5 Coshocton (8-2) at 4 Martins Ferry (8-2)
Region 16
8 West Milton Milton-Union
(8-2) at 1 Waynesville (10-0)
7 Cincinnati Hills Christian
Academy (7-3) at 2 Cin. Madeira
(10-0)
6 Cin. North College Hill
(8-2) at 3 Clarksville ClintonMassie (8-2)
5 Day. Chaminade Julienne
(7-3) at 4 Williamsport Westfall
(8-2)

Division V
Games tentatively scheduled
for 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 4.
Region 17
8 Columbiana (8-2) at 1 Kirtland (10-0)
7 Louisville St. Thomas
Aquinas (6-4) at 2 Woodsfield
Monroe Central (9-1)
6 Cuyahoga Heights (9-1) at
3 Columbiana Crestview (9-1)
5 New Middletown Springfield (8-2) at 4 Sugarcreek Garaway (8-2)
Region 18
8 Carey (8-2) at 1 Liberty
Center (10-0)
7 Hicksville (8-2) at 2 Bascom Hopewell-Loudon (10-0)
6 Findlay Liberty-Benton
(9-1) at 3 Lima Central Catholic
(10-0)
5 Hamler Patrick Henry (8-2)
at 4 Northwood (9-1)
Region 19
8 Smithville (8-2) at 1
Bucyrus Wynford (10-0)
7 West Lafayette Ridgewood
(8-2) at 2 Lucasville Valley (100)
6 Ashland Crestview (10-0)
at 3 Cols. Grandview Heights
(10-0)
5 Portsmouth West (9-1) at 4
Nelsonville-York (9-1)
Region 20
8 Versailles (8-2) at 1 West
Liberty-Salem (10-0)
7 Cin. Summit Country Day
(7-3) at 2 Marion Pleasant (10-0)
6 West Jefferson (8-2) at 3
Frankfort Adena (9-1)
5 Coldwater (7-3) at 4 Covington (10-0)
Division VI
Games tentatively scheduled
for 7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5.
Region 21
8 Cle. Villa Angela-St. Joseph
(6-4) at 1 Berlin Center Western
Reserve (10-0)
7 Wellsville (5-5) at 2 Shadyside (7-3)
6 Mogadore (7-3) at 3
Youngstown Christian (9-1)
5 Malvern (9-1) at 4 Ledgemont (10-0)
Region 22
8 Arcadia (7-3) at 1 Leipsic
(9-1)
7 Toledo Ottawa Hills (7-3) at
2 Delphos St. John’s (7-3)
6 Edon (7-3) at 3 Tiffin Calvert (8-2)
5 McComb (7-3) at 4 Edgerton (8-2)
Region 23
8 Glouster Trimble (7-3) at
1 Willow Wood Symmes Valley
(9-1)
7 Crown City South Gallia
(7-3) at 2 New Washington Buckeye Central (8-2)
6 Zanesville Bishop Rosecrans (6-4) at 3 Danville (7-3)
5 Beallsville (8-2) at 4 Portsmouth Sciotoville (7-3)
Region 24
8 Lockland (7-3) at 1 Maria
Stein Marion Local (8-2)
7 Cin. Country Day (7-3) at 2
Fort Loramie (9-1)
6 Minster (7-3) at 3 Springfield Catholic Central (8-2)
5 Ada (8-2) at 4 Lewisburg
Tri-County North (8-2)

Tuesday’s TV Guide
TUESDAY PRIMETIME
6

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10

(WBNS)

11

(WVAH)

12

(WPBY)

13

(WOWK)

18
24
25
26
27
29
30
31
34
35
37
38
39
40
42
52
57
58
60
61
62
64
65
67
68
72
73
74
400
450
500

(WGN)
(FXSP)
(ESPN)
(ESPN2)
(LIFE)
(FAM)
(SPIKE)
(NICK)
(USA)
(TBS)
(CNN)
(TNT)
(AMC)
(DISC)
(A&amp;E)
(ANPL)
(OXY)
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
(NGEO)
(VS)
(SPEED)
(HIST)
(BRAVO)
(BET)
(HGTV)
(SCIFI)
(HBO)
(MAX)
(SHOW)

PM

6:30

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1
7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

11

PM

11:30

Jeopardy!
WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
The Biggest Loser The contestants and trainers change Parenthood "Forced
WSAZ News (:35) Tonight
News
Fortune
teams for a new challenge. (N)
Family Fun" (N)
Tonight
Show (N)
Jeopardy!
WTAP News NBC Nightly Wheel of
The Biggest Loser The contestants and trainers change Parenthood "Forced
WTAP News (:35) Tonight
at Six
News
Fortune
teams for a new challenge. (N)
Family Fun" (N)
at 11
Show (N)
Entertainm- Access
Last Man
Man Up! (N) Dancing With the Stars:
Body of Proof "Hard
ABC 6 News ABC World
ABC 6 News (:35) News
ent Tonight Hollywood
at 6
News
Standing (N)
The Results
Knocks" (N)
at 11
Nightline
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
Justice: What's the Right
John
Antiques Roadshow
Will Ferrell: Twain Friends and
The Return
McLaughlin Business
"Unique Antiques"
colleagues pay tribute to Will Ferrell.
of Mitch.
Thing to Do?
Judge Judy Entertainm- Last Man
Man Up! (N) Dancing With the Stars:
Body of Proof "Hard
Eyewitness ABC World
Eyewitness (:35) News
ent Tonight Standing (N)
News at 6
News
The Results
Knocks" (N)
News 11PM Nightline
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
Unforgettable "Road
10TV News (:35) LateS
NCIS "Devil's Triangle" (N) NCIS: Los Angeles
at 6:00 p.m. News
Fortune
"Honor" (N)
Block" (N)
(N)
Two and a
Two and a
The Big
Glee "Pot ‘O Gold" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10
The
Excused
The Big
New Girl
Raising
Bang Theory Half Men
Half Men
Bang Theory
"Naked" (N) Hope (N)
p.m.
Simpsons
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
BBC News
Secrets of the Dead "The Frontline "The Anthrax
Women, War and P "The Charlie Rose
America
Business
World's Biggest Bomb"
Files"
War We Are Living" 4/5 (N)
NCIS "Devil's Triangle" (N) NCIS: Los Angeles
News 13 at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
Unforgettable "Road
News 13 at (:35) LateS
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition
"Honor" (N)
Block" (N)
11:00 p.m.
(N)
Christine
Christine
Funniest Home Videos
30 Rock
30 Rock
Met-Mother Met-Mother WGN News at Nine
30 Rock
Scrubs
Slap Shots
Game 365
WPT Poker
UEFA Soccer Champions League
After Party
The Dan Patrick Show
SportsCenter
E:60 (N)
ESPN Films "Unguarded" (N)
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
SportsCent.
NFL 32 (L)
NCAA Football Northern Illinois vs. Toledo (L)
Gold Glove Awards (N)
SportsCent. Poker
Unsolved Mysteries
Unsolved Mysteries
Unsolved Mysteries
+ Wandering Eye ('10, Thril) Maren Abbott.
Unsolved Mysteries
'70s Show
++ Remember the Titans Denzel Washington.
++ Remember the Titans ('00, Dra) Denzel Washington.
The 700 Club
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction (N) Flip Men (N) Auction
Auction
iCarly
Victorious
Big Time R. SpongeBob Brainsurge
Wife Kids
G. Lopez
G. Lopez
Friends
Friends
'70s Show
'70s Show
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Alternate" Law&amp;O.:SVU "Trials"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Mask"
Law &amp; Order: SVU "Dirty" Covert Affairs (N)
Psych
Queens
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
Conan (N)
(5:00) The Situation Room OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
Bones
Bones
Bones
Bones
Bones
South. "Punching Water"
(5:30) ++++ Boyz 'N the Hood Laurence Fishburne.
+++ The Mummy ('99, Adv) Rachel Weisz, Brendan Fraser.
(:45) +++ The Mummy Brendan Fraser.
Cash Cab
Cash Cab
Dirty Jobs "Bug Detective" Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
American Guns
Auction
Auction
The First 48
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Untamed "Under My Skin" I, Predator
Blue Planet "Coral Seas"
Blue Planet "Coasts"
B. Planet "Ocean World"
Blue Planet "Coral Seas"
(4:30) The Wedding Pla...
Party "Bridesmaid Wars"
Bad Girls Club
Bad Girls "Parting Shots" The Sing-Off "Top 7 Groups: Superstar Medleys"
Charmed
Charmed
Joan/Mel "Kiss My Ash"
Joan/Mel "Family Feud"
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
(5:00) ++ Georgia Rule
E! News (N)
Sex &amp; City
Sex &amp; City
Dirty Soap
THS "Kara DioGuardi"
C. Lately (N) E! News
Sanford
Sanford
D. Van Dyke D. Van Dyke Married
Married
Scrubs
Scrubs
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Witness
Alaska State Troopers
Factories "Jack Daniel's"
Factories "Coca-Cola"
Factories "BMW X3" (N)
Factories "Jack Daniel's"
NBC Sports Talk (L)
NHL Live!
NHL Hockey Anaheim Ducks vs. Washington Capitals (L)
NHL Live!
Overtime
NBC Sports Talk
NASCAR Race Hub (N)
Pass Time
Pass Time
RideRule
RideRule
Dumbest
Dumbest
Wrecked
Wrecked
RideRule
RideRule
Marvels "Whiskey"
Marvels "Fast Food Tech" Brad Meltzer's Decoded
You Don't Know Dixie
Top Gear "Death Valley"
Beverly Hills
Beverly Hills
Millionaire
Millionaire (N)
Fashion (N) Fashion (N) Millionaire
106 &amp; Park: BET's Top 10 Live
+ Phat Girlz ('06, Com) Jimmy Jean-Louis, Mo'nique.
Reed (N)
Reed (N)
Reed
Reed
Property
Property
House
House Hunt. My Place
My Place
Property (N) Property
HouseH (N) House
House
Property
Star Trek: NG "Justice"
Grimm
+++ The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian ('08, Fant) Ben Barnes.
The Odyssey (Adv) 1/2
++ Couples Retreat Four couples vacation on an island and belatedly learn that couples therapy is mandatory. 24/7
Enlightened Bored
Boardwa.
(:20) +++ The Frighteners ('96, Hor) Michael J. Fox.
(:15) ++ Sister Act ('92, Com) Whoopi Goldberg.
+++ It's Complicated ('09, Rom) Meryl Streep.
++ How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days
(:55) Jolene ('08, Dra) Jessica Chastain.
Dexter
Homeland "Blind Spot"

�Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

BLONDIE

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt
www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
Nov. 1, 2011:
You discover the power of popularity this year. Many people gravitate
toward you. If you are single, you
could meet someone who will be significant to your life’s history. If you are
attached, be careful not to make your
sweetie jealous. You seem to have a
way with words and a twinkle in your
eye that encourages others to go
along with you. Use care with spending, as you could go overboard. Your
home life soars to the top of your priorities. AQUARIUS can be so boring.
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 You push hard to finish
your to-do list, but by late afternoon,
others become more important. A
meeting allows you to visualize your
goals and see others’ support. What
starts out as a relatively stern gettogether loosens up. Tonight: Just
don’t be alone.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHHH Your ability to gain a
total picture proves to be very helpful.
Your understanding of what is happening with a partner comes through.
This person’s words have unusual
meaning. Grab the pedestal in the
p.m. and let others know what you
want too. Tonight: A force to be dealt
with.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH A partner plays a role in
your thoughts and actions. How you
handle a person and the choices you
make could affect this relationship, but
that might not be news. Make calls,
find an expert or two, but test out an
idea before acting on it. Tonight: Let
your mind wander.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Others seem to be consumed by their thoughts. You might
not be sure which way to go with a
personal matter. Laughter goes far
with an associate, and both of you
can relax. Let others make the decision. Do your thing. Tonight: Visit over
dinner.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Remain nurturing and
direct. You will accomplish a lot,
though you’ll want to push peopletype activities to the late afternoon.
Someone clearly enjoys flirting with
you. The unexpected wings through
your door (or your phone or computer). Tonight: Dance the night away.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH Creativity helps you walk
in another person’s shoes. What
might be a casual introduction could
evolve into more, if you wish. Do
check out an investment. Concerns
involving your personal or domestic
life need to be assuaged. Tonight:
Exercise time.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHH Family and/or a domestic
matter dominates your thoughts.
Your ability to hop through problems
marks nearly anything you do. A child
or friend depends on this quality. Be
willing to help another person learn or
understand your resilience. Tonight:
Be playful.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH Keep talks moving, and
refuse to get into unnecessary details.
The smart move is to bypass gossip if
you have any intention of completing
your work. Touch base with a family member later today. You have an
awful lot to discuss. Tonight: At home.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH Be careful with a tendency
to spend too much or go to extremes.
You might not always be comfortable
with what happens. Be open and
direct. Laughter marks your interaction with a sibling, neighbor or close
friend. Tonight: Let the good times
roll.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH You are in your element
this morning. Though you might feel a
little drained by a boss or responsibility, you bounce back well. Don’t overthink a money matter. Listen to your
intuition, but keep risk minimal. Call
a loved one in the evening. Tonight:
Splurge a little.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHH You might be out of sorts,
but that mood won’t last long. By the
end of the afternoon, you are energized, running around accomplishing more than you thought possible.
Make plans before you leave work.
Tonight: The world is your oyster.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH Use the daylight hours
to accomplish as much as possible.
Your sense of humor comes out when
dealing with a child or loved one.
Meetings are unusually beneficial.
Schedule an important meeting for
the end of the day. Get to the bottom
of an issue. Tonight: Thinking time.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

Visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

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�Tuesday, November 1, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 10

Title

From Page 6

EHS
coach
Howie
Caldwell, who is now 16-2
alltime at Eastern in district
play, has guided all seven
Lady Eagle squads to the regional tournament over the
last 10 years. Caldwell also
led the Green and White to
district crowns in 2002, 2003,
2005, 2006, 2007 and 2009.
Eastern’s lone regional
game win came in the 2009
semifinals against Tuscarawas
Central Catholic, a match the
Green and White lost by a 3-1
count. Caldwell is hoping his
squad can improve on their
last trip to Lancaster.
“We have seven district
championships, but we’ve
only won one game up at
the regional tournament,”
Caldwell said. “Some years
up there, we were intimidated
and maybe even felt like we
didn’t belong there. These
kids, they belong there. They
really do.”
Caldwell also noted Saturday that Waterford did not
make things easy on his Lady
Eagles.
“This was what volleyball
is all about. You like playing
in good games, and Waterford
gave us a pretty good match.
We told our girls that every
point was going to be precious,” Caldwell said. “Coach
Drayer and I both tell our
teams that you want your last
game to be your best. I don’t
think Waterford has anything
to hang its head about because
they never quit.”
Both teams struggled to
gain momentum in the opening game, as the combatants
battled through eight ties and
seven lead changes just to get
to 18-all in Game 1. Eastern,
however, closed the opener
with a 7-1 surge, giving EHS
a 1-0 match lead with a 25-19
decision.
Eastern kept that momentum going into Game 2, as the
Lady Eagles broke away from
a 6-all tie with a 16-4 run for
a commanding 22-10 cushion.
The Lady ‘Cats twice rallied
back to within 10 points at
22-12 and 23-13, but Eastern
scored the final two points for
a two-games-to-none match
advantage.
Both teams battled through
nine ties out to a 12-all contest, but Eastern jumped out
to multiple four-point leads en
route to a 23-19 edge in Game
3. Waterford rallied with four

Bryan Walters/photo

Ohio Valley Christian’s T.G. Miller (4) celebrates with teammates after scoring a
goal with 2:53 left in regulation Friday in an OCSAA state semifinal match against
Mansfield Temple Christian at the Ohio Christian University soccer facility in Circleville, Ohio.

Defenders headed to OCSAA state final
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.

Bryan Walters/photo

The Eastern duo of Jordan Parker (13) and Brenna
Holter (10) go up to block a spike attempt by a Waterford attacker during Game 1 of Saturday’s Division IV
district final volleyball match at Jackson High School.
straight points to knot things paced WHS with six service
up at 23 and again at 24-all, points. Drayer led the net atbut EHS scored the final two tack with 10 kills, while Alyspoints to wrap up the straight- sa Miller had 19 assists in the
game decision.
setback.
Gabby Hendrix led the
The Lady Eagles will face
Lady Eagles with 11 service Plain City Shekinah Christian
points, followed by Brenna in the regional semifinal at 6
Holter and Jamie Swatzel p.m. Thursday at Lancaster
with nine points apiece. Ally High School. Shekinah ChrisHendrix was next with eight tian defeated Worthington
points, while Baylee Col- Christian in straight games,
lins and Brooke Johnson re- 25-15, 25-16, 25-12, to adspectively added four points vance to the regional tournaand one point to the winning ment.
cause.
Beaver Eastern will face
Swatzel led the net attack Newark Catholic in the secwith 13 kills, followed by ond regional semifinal ThursMaddie Rigsby with 10 kills day at Lancaster. The winners
and Jordan Parker with eight of those two matches will play
kills. Holter added seven kills, at 2 p.m. Saturday in the reAlly Hendrix contributed four gional final.
kills and Erin Swatzel had
From here on out, Caldwell
two kills. Parker and Jamie acknowledges that there will
Swatzel each had five blocks, be nothing easy about the rest
while Rigsby and Erin Swat- of the postseason.
zel respectively added three
“With 16 teams left in the
blocks and two blocks.
state, we are going to have
Holter had a team-best 22 to play top of the line volleydigs and Johnson added 20 ball,” Caldwell said. “It’s a
digs, while Ally Hendrix led great challenge, but this team
the passing game with 35 as- has answered every challenge
sists.
put in front of them so far this
Brooke Drayer, Chelsea season. We’ll definitely be
Paxton and Jayde Heiss all ready to play, that’s for sure.”

The Daily Sentinel

com

CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio
— After 77 minutes of
missed opportunities Friday, one make made all the
difference.
T.G. Miller headed in
a crossing pass for a goal
with 2:53 left in regulation,
allowing the Ohio Valley
Christian soccer team to
advance to the state championship game following a
1-0 victory over Mansfield
Temple Christian in an Ohio
Christian School Athletic
Association semifinal at
Ohio Christian University.
The top-seeded Defenders (14-3-3) battled both the
mud and the fourth-seeded
Crusaders (8-7-2) for a
scoreless first half, then
both team braved the elements for another 37 minutes without a goal.
But just after entering the
78th minute of play, good
fortunes came to OVCS.
Chance Burleson started a
break by attacking the left
corner, then crossed a pass
toward the front of the goal.
Miller happened to be at the
right place at the right time

and leaped up to put his
head on the ball.
Miller’s header beat
Austin Adkins to the high
side of the left net, giving the Defenders a hardfought 1-0 advantage with
less than three minutes left
in the game. Burleson was
credited with an assist.
Temple Christian didn’t
manage a shot the rest of
the way, which allowed the
Ohio Valley Christian soccer program to advance to
its first OCSAA state championship final in school history.
The Defenders will face
either Toledo Emmanuel
Christian or Lakewood
Hearts for Jesus Christ in
the finale on Saturday at
12:30 p.m. OVCS is also
now one win away from its
first state soccer title since
2003 as a member of the
Association of Christian
Schools International.
For eighth-year OVCS
coach Jeff Patrick, who
took over the program in
2004, Friday’s long wait for
a goal was well worth it.
“This is a big win for
us. We’ve been to the Final Four several times, but
we’ve never been able to

get to the final game,” Patrick said. “In order to win
the final, you have to win
today. We did what we had
to do today.
“I know that our guys are
excited about it and we’ll be
ready to go Saturday.”
The Defenders outshot
the Crusaders by a 15-12
overall margin, which included a 9-5 advantage
at the intermission. Both
teams had three corners
kicks in the game and two
corners in the first half.
Pete Carman made 13
saves in net for the victors,
while Adkins stopped 14
shots in goal for Temple
Christian. Carman also
made one save on a bad
pass by his own team.
Things didn’t have to be
so difficult for the Defenders, who had a goal taken
off the board with 16:38
left in the first half. Burleson found Richard Bowman with a pass on a 2-on-1
break against Adkins, but
Bowman was whistled for
being offsides – nullifying
the would-be goal.
Lakewood Hearts for Jesus Christ is the defending
state champion in soccer.

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