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                  <text>High school
cross country,
page 6

Dr. Brothers,
page 3

Printed on
100% recycled
newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 119, No. 174

Briefs

Chevrolet anniversary

POMEROY — Mark Porter Chevrolet Cadillac Buick
GMC will celebrate 100 years
of Chevrolet from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. on Nov. 7. Food and
drinks will be served and prizes awarded.
Trustees to meet
SYRACUSE — Sutton
Township Trustees will meet
at 7 p.m. on Nov. 7 at village
hall.

Lodge meeting set

CHESTER — Shade River
Lodge 453 will hold its regular stated meeting at 7:30
p.m., Nov. 10. Officers will
be elected, and annual dues
need to be paid prior to voting.
Oyster stew will be served.

OPWC meeting

MARIETTA — District
18 Ohio Public Works Executive Committee will meet at
10 a.m. on Nov. 17 at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District,
Marietta, to review and prioritize all eligible Job Ready Site
application for Round 4.

TB office closed

POMEROY — The tuberculosis office will be closed at
noon on Nov. 8 for Election
Day.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Appeals court upholds HEAP
winter
Rizer murder conviction crisis
By Brian J. Reed

BReed@mydailysentinel.
com

POMEROY — The
Fourth District Court of
Appeals has denied Paula
Rizer’s appeal, and the convicted murderess will remain in prison.
In an entry filed late last
week, the court affirmed
Rizer’s murder conviction
but overturned an order for
payment of her dead husband’s funeral costs. Judges
with the appeals court heard
oral arguments in the case
in Pomeroy in May.
Rizer was found guilty
of murder with a firearms
specification in January,
2010, after a second jury
trial. After the first trial,
in December, 2009, jurors
found her not guilty of aggravated murder but could
not reach a unanimous verdict on the murder charge.
She killed her husband,
Kenneth Rizer, Sr., at their

home in Lebanon Township in 2009. She claimed
she was a victim of domestic violence at the hands of
her husband, and had fired
shots at her husband in self
defense during an escalated
argument, although she first
told investigators she and
her husband were preparing
to target shoot.
Rizer appealed her conviction on the basis that a
state forensic expert’s testimony violated her right
against self-incrimination,
and four other assignments
of error, including claims
the court erred when it prohibited the defense from
calling Rizer’s granddaughter as a witness, erred in its
jury instructions on the law
of self defense in batteredwoman syndrome cases,
that her defense counsel
was deficient, and that the
court erred in ordering
$10,000 restitution for funeral costs, and $17,580 for
the costs of her confinement

in the Washington County
jail while she awaited trial.
At the time of her appeal, Rizer’s trial attorneys,
Herman Carson and Glen
Jones, filed affidavits with
the appeals court admitting
oversight in failing to object
to the violation of Rizer’s
constitutional rights by a
state expert witness, who
called Rizer’s self-defense
claim a “double defense,”
and in not objecting to
faulty jury instructions.
Testimony from Dr.
Robert Stinson, a state rebuttal witness, pointed to
inconsistencies
between
Rizer’s account to police in
the hours following her husband’s death and what she
later told him in an October,
2009 interview, just prior to
her first trial.
Just after her arrest,
Rizer told a sheriff’s deputy
and an investigator with the
Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation that she and her

husband had a happy relationship, but in her second
trial, she relied heavily on
allegations her husband
had intimidated and struck
her. That, Stinson said, was
malingering, and an attempt
to create a second defense
when her first did not seem
effective.
In their only action to
overturn the orders of Judge
Fred W. Crow III, the appeals court vacated Crow’s
$10,000 restitution order
and instructed him to impose an order of $9,200.
“A trial court abuses its
discretion when it orders
restitution in an amount that
has not been determined to
bear a reasonable relationship to the actual loss suffered as a result of the offense,” the appeals decision
reads.
Rizer is serving a sentence of 18 years to life and
is incarcerated in the Ohio
Reformatory for Women in
Marysville.

Spaghetti dinner

SYRACUSE — Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene will
hold a spaghetti dinner from
5-7 p.m. on Nov. 12. Veterans
may eat at no cost, and the
price for adults is $6, $4 for
children.

Plan revival

POINT ROCK — Revival
services ill begin Nov. 8 and
continue through Nov. 13 at
Point Rock Church of the
Nazarene, Ohio 689, Albany.
Rev. Randy Peters is the evangelist and Faith Harkins will
be the special singer. Services
are at 7 p.m. nightly, and 11
a.m. and 6 p.m. on Sunday.
Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr. is pastor.

Southern band takes awards

Beth Sergent/photos

Revival begins

MIDDLEPORT — Dr.
Jerry Chaney will be the revival speaker at Victory Baptist Church for the 10 a.m., 11
a.m. and 7 p.m. services on
Sunday, and at 7 p.m., Nov.
7-9. There will also be special
singing. Rides are available
by calling 992-9052.

Southern High School’s Marching Tornadoes
competed in Point Pleasant High School’s Battle
of the Bands over the weekend and went away
with several awards. Southern received first place
color guard and second place percussion, drum
major and band. This was the first competition of
the year for the band. Pictured are band members performing their competition show and then
exiting the field afterwards.

Spaghetti dinner

SYRACUSE — Carleton
School and Meigs Industries
will hold a benefit spaghetti
dinner from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
on Sunday. The cost is $6 for
adults and $3 for children.
Carryout will be available.

Obituaries
Page A2
• Illa Jean Grueser, 82
• Calvin Hoschar, 51

Southern’s ASK program preparing for
Ohio Department of Eduation presentation
By Charlene
Hoeflich

Weather

Hoeflich@mydailysentinel.
com

High: 71
Low: 54

Index

1 SECTION — 10 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

7-8
9
4
6

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACINE — “Southern’s
ASK “After School Kids”
program is zooming off into
the 21st Century and beyond.”
That’s the word from
Scott Wolfe, director of
Federal Programs including
the 21st Century ASK one
at Southern. The program is
funded with a federal grant
administered through the
Ohio Department of Education (ODE). On Tuesday,
Nov. 15, by invitation students from Southern will be
going to Columbus to make
a presentation at the ODE
Capital Conference, Wolfe
said.
Last year, Southern was
honored for its outstanding
student, parent participa-

tion, by the ODE. “Being
invited to participate at the
Capital Conference is a
great reflection on the success of our program over the
past four years,” said Southern ASK Coordinator Kim
McClain.
21st Century Learning
Skills are broken into four
main areas: Core Subjects
and 21st Century Themes,
Learning and Innovation
Skills, Information, Media
and Technology Skills; and
Life and Career Skills.
“Learning and innovation skills are the main
premise of what Southern
Elementary is built on,” said
Wolfe. ” We believe that if
we create an environment
that promotes students to
think on their own, how to
problem solve, and how to
develop their critical thinking skills, that they will be

See ASK, 2

Academics, activities, snacks, and homework are
part of Southern’s highly successful ASK program.
This photo depicts one of the reading activities that
proves to be both fun and engaging to young students. Coordinated by Kim McClain, the ASK students will make a presentation at the Ohio Department of Education Capital Conference on Nov. 15.
(submitted)

program
begins

Heating assistance available to eligible
households

Staff Report

mdtnews@mydailytribune.com

COLUMBUS — With the
frigid weather approaching, the
Ohio Department of Development prepares to protect Ohioans for another winter season
with the Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP) Winter
Crisis Program.
The program assists qualified
low-income and elderly Ohioans
with winter heating costs, beginning November 1, 2011 and running through March 31, 2012.
“Ohio winters can be extreme, especially for those without heating,” said Nick Sunday,
Deputy Chief of the Department’s Office of Community
Assistance. “The HEAP Winter
Crisis Program answers the call
for help and steps in to assist our
citizens with the high costs of
heating their homes.”
The HEAP Winter Crisis
Program, administered by the
Ohio Department of Development’s Office of Community
Assistance, provides assistance
once per heating season to
eligible households that have
been disconnected, are being
threatened with disconnection,
or have less than a 10-day supply of bulk fuel. Approximately
458,000 households were served
during the 2010-2011 Winter
Crisis Program.
Qualifying for HEAP is dependent upon the size of the
household and the total gross
household income for either
the past three or twelve months,
which must be at or below 200
percent of the federal poverty
guidelines listed below:
The following income
guidelines are in effect for Program Year 2011-2012:Size of
Household
Yearly Income
Income in the Past
Three Months
1
$21,780
$5,445
2
$29,420
$7,355
3
$37,060
$9,265
4
$44,700
$11,175
5
$52,340
$13,085
6
$59,980
$14,995
7
$67,620
$16,905
8
$75,260
$18,815
For households with more
than eight members, add $7,640
to the yearly income or $1,910
to the quarterly income for each
additional member.
To apply for assistance
through the HEAP Winter Crisis
Program, households must have
a face-to-face interview at their
local provider agency. Qualified
Ohioans may call the Department’s toll-free hotline at (800)
282-0880, Monday through
Friday for a referral to one of
Ohio’s 56 local service providers. Hearing impaired customers
may dial (800) 686-1557 for assistance.
For more information about
the HEAP Winter Crisis Program, visit energyhelp.ohio.gov.

�Wednesday, November 2, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

Obituaries
Illa Jean Grueser

Illa Jean Roush Grueser,
82, Mason, W.Va., went to
be with her Lord on November 1, 2011.
She was born on May
22, 1929, in Mason, daughter of the late Eber and Pearl
(Dudding) Roush. She was
a homemaker. She was a
member of Legion Post
140, and a lifetime member
of the VFW Post 9926.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her husband, John
“Jack” Grueser; daughters,
Gloria Jean Grueser and
Eloise Sue Grueser; son,
John Michael Grueser; and
sisters, Ruth Ryan and Agnes Roush.
She is survived by her
sister, Minnie (Marion)
Rizer; grandchildren, Kevin
(Mandie) Grueser, Scott
(Kathy) Grueser; four greatgrandchildren, Jonna, Jus-

tin, Allie and Cera; and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 11 a.m. on Friday,
November 4, 2011, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Rev. Charlie
Cundiff. Friends may call
6-8 p.m. on Thursday at the
funeral home.
An on-line registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Calvin Hoschar

Calvin Lee Hoschar, 51,
Southside, W.Va., died Oct.
29, 2011. Funeral services
will be held at 11 a.m. on
Thursday, November 3,
2011, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point Pleasant,
W.Va., with burial to follow at Hoschar Cemetery,
Southside. Friends may call
6-8 p.m. on Wednesday at
the funeral home.

Ohio Valley Weather
Wednesday: Areas of
fog before 10 a.m. Otherwise, sunny, with a high
near 65. South wind between 3 and 5 mph.
Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around
38. Calm wind.
Thursday:
Showers
likely, mainly after 5 p.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a high
near 60. Light south wind.
Chance of precipitation is
60 percent. New rainfall
amounts of less than a tenth
of an inch possible.
Thursday Night: Showers likely, mainly before 10
p.m. Cloudy, with a low
around 42. Light northeast
wind. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New
rainfall amounts between a
tenth and quarter of an inch
possible.
Friday: A chance of
showers, mainly before

Stocks

noon. Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 55. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Friday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around 35.
Saturday: Sunny, with a
high near 61.
Saturday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
45.
Sunday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 61.
Sunday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
45.
Monday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 57.
Monday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
44.
Tuesday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 59.

AEP (NYSE) — 38.71
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 51.55
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 51.06
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.21
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 31.95
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 73.85
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.59
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.04
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 3.33
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 31.23
Collins (NYSE) — 53.48
DuPont (NYSE) — 46.88
US Bank (NYSE) — 24.56
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 16.02
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 38.01
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 32.71
Kroger (NYSE) — 22.49
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 43.08
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 72.70
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 17.10
BBT (NYSE) — 22.48
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 12.13
Pepsico (NYSE) — 62.23
Premier (NASDAQ) — 4.80
Rockwell (NYSE) — 65.68
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 10.27
Royal Dutch Shell — 69.57
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 78.03
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 56.23
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.09
WesBanco (NYSE) — 18.68
Worthington (NYSE) — 16.51
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for November 1, 2011, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

Southern students Austin Hart, Justin Reitmire, Drew Jenkins, Dustin Layne and Brad Branham, assist in delivering the over 1500 cans of food, collected by Southern students, to the Meigs Cooperative Parish.( submitted)

Students collect food for Parish pantry

RACINE — More than
1,500 cans of food was collected by students of the
Southern Intermediate School
and delivered Tuesday to the
Meigs Cooperative Parish for
the pantry which distributes
foods to families in need.

The program in the school
was initiated by the Racine
Area Community Association
( RACO) with Carolyn Robinson spearheading the drive.
The class of Mrs. Edwards
collected the most food, 364
cans, and will be rewarded

with a pizza party Friday
hosted by RACO.
Saturday RACO will have
its annual food drive for the
food pantry on the parking
lot of Dollar General in Racine. In addition to canned
food, other non perishable

food items, personal hygiene
items, paper products, and
monetary donations will be
accepted for the benefit of
the Cooperative Parish. Dollar General is also accepting
food items this week for the
drive.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— Ohio Republicans continued efforts Tuesday to resolve
a dispute with Democrats over
the state’s new congressional
districts, even as the head of the
state Democratic party vowed to
move forward with a campaign
to get the Republican-favoring
map thrown out by voters.
The disagreement has
thrown into limbo congressional lines in a key battleground
state ahead of the 2012 presidential election.
The 15-member Ohio Legislative Black Caucus was at
the center of the negotiations
because of the bargaining clout
associated with minority representation among voters. Its
members told The Associated
Press that the verbal concepts
for a new map that they’d heard
from ruling Republicans were a
good start, but their ideas didn’t
meet the larger Democratic demand for an entirely new map
with more competitive districts.
An analysis by voter groups
of the map passed in September
suggests that 12 of the 16 congressional districts favor Republicans while the other four
lean Democratic. Ohio is losing
two congressional districts due
to slow population growth; both
parties stand to lose one seat
each.
As private compromise talks
took place Tuesday, the Ohio
Democratic Party kicked off
its official petition drive to put
the map’s fate in the hands of
voters in 2012 — an effort that
has placed the new map on hold

while signatures are gathered.
Black caucus members said
they’ve been presented a proposal for a revised map that
creates larger concentrations of
minorities in districts containing Dayton, Cincinnati, Toledo
and Columbus.
In interviews with the AP,
however, they said the GOP
proposal looks largely like the
map approved in September —
a map that came under fire from
Democrats and voter groups
that said it was gerrymandered
to protect Republicans’ majority
in Ohio’s congressional delegation.
Knowing it was likely black
lawmakers’ last chance to create
districts favorable to minorities, and thus more Democrats,
the caucus was mulling its options Tuesday. Republicans
were considering holding fast to
their existing map if Democrats
rejected their compromise offer, to see how the repeal effort
proceeds. Democrats have until
Christmas Day to submit
State Rep. Clayton Luckie, a
Dayton Democrat, said that the
original GOP-drawn map split
apart most minority communities.
“(The new proposal) was
close, but it didn’t meet the
mustard,” Luckie said. “They
put all of the minority districts
back together, but it still wasn’t
good enough. They still had
more districts to work on.”
Luckie said he didn’t see
the population or demographic
numbers for the revised map,
but he was presented drawn

lines.
Cleveland Democratic Rep.
Sandra Williams, president of
the black caucus, said to get her
caucus’ support, a map would
have to make urban counties
with large minority populations
— counties broken apart in the
original map such as Hamilton,
Franklin and Lucas — whole
again and protect the five Democrats currently serving in the
House.
The first Republican map
created a district that would
force incumbent Democratic
Reps. Marcy Kaptur and Dennis
Kucinich into a primary battle,
as well as some GOP incumbents.
In a statement Tuesday, Williams denied media reports that
a deal between Republicans and
black Democrats was close.
“The GOP so far is only offering minor tweaks to district
lines without fundamentally
changing the huge disparity
between Republican and Democratic majority seats,” Williams
wrote. “This status quo is unacceptable to us.”
The GOP needs seven Democratic votes to pass a new map
in order to have it in place in
time to move Ohio’s presidential and House primaries from
June back to March. Batchelder
says he wants to avoid two primary races.
Republican Gov. John Kasich signed a bill on Oct. 21
to hold two primaries — state,
local and U.S. Senate races in
March and presidential and U.S.
House contests in June.

Republican legislators said
the move was needed to give
more time to draw new congressional maps in light of the
Democrats’ effort to repeal the
GOP’s original proposal.
Ohio Democratic Party
Chairman Chris Redfern said
he is confident his coalition of
party workers, voter advocates
and progressive groups could
collect the necessary signatures
to put the question on the 2012
ballot. He said he plans on staffing Ohio’s most-trafficked precincts on Election Day Nov. 8
to catch voters as they leave the
polls.
“If you live in Cincinnati and
your neighborhood has been cut
up like a pepperoni pizza … you
expect the state party to stand up
on your behalf, and that’s what’s
occurring,” Redfern said.
In a statement in response
to Redfern, Batchelder said the
congressional map passed with
bipartisan support. In Batchelder’s House, three of 40 Democrats crossed party lines to vote
for the map in a chamber of 99
representatives. In the Senate,
two of 10 Democrats signed on
in support of the districts, in a
chamber of 33.
“Despite innuendo otherwise, House Republicans are
continuing to work with the
elected Republican and Democrat members of both houses of
the General Assembly, and I am
delighted to continue working
with them,” Batchelder wrote.
“It is my hope that deliberations will continue in the coming days.”

gram said “We have had
three great years and three
years of having excellent
schools. One reason for this
is because we integrate the
theories of all of our programs for maximum success. Three of our biggest
funding sources, Title I, the
Math Coaching Grant, and
21st Century grants come
together to bring us a first
class delivery of curriculum
to our students.”
Over the past couple
years, Southern has seen
great success in its Math
scores, mainly because of
the implementation of the
Math Coaching Program.
Coach Tricia McNickle said
the success has hinged on
utilizing 21st Century skills
on a daily basis. The entire
math program centers on
teaching critical thinking
skills.” McNickle is now
a regional facilitator for
the Ohio State University
Mathematics Coaching Program, the program which
originally trained her in a
pilot program six years ago.
Seventy-six percent of

students in the ASK program scored proficient or
better on the Ohio Achievement Assessment and 79
percent of students in ASK
passed the Math portion of
the test.
Additionally, Southern
has added a Literacy coach
this year to help boost
reading and language arts
scores. Longtime first grade
teacher Meg Guinther filled
this position. With the assistance from Principal Kent
Wolfe the Title program has
implemented a book room
filled with leveled reading books, and has implemented the “Developmental Reading Assessment”
(DRA) program.
“Part of our local assessment system has set guided
reading levels that are standards for each grade level,”
said Guinther. “The DRA
will assess reading level,
comprehension,
fluency,
and from 3rd grade on,
writing connected to reading. All this goes along with
critical thinking and 21st
Century skills.”

The ASK program, HS
21st Century grant, and
Title I will team up for Literacy Night Nov. 8 from 6
to 8 p.m. at Southern Elementary. The theme for the
event will be “Once Upon A
Book” featuring fairy tales,
fables, and fractured fairy
tales. There will be a scavenger hunt, a variety of fun
games, storytelling, along
with a performance by second grade students at 7:15.
There will
e prizes
and free refreshments.
Additionally, the 21st
Century ASK program has
started a Book Club, and
will host the Math and Science Expo on March 8.
Southern will also host its
fall carnival on Nov. 5 from
5 to 9 p.m.
At the high school level
of the 21st Century program, video-clubs, and
clubs including cooking,
photography,
bowling,
alone with a fitness program
is reportedly going well.

Ohio GOP tries to woo black
lawmakers for map deal

ASK

From Page 1

ELECT
JACKIE R. WELKER
MAYOR OF POMEROY
PROGRESSIVE • COMMITTED • CONCERNED
• Married and raising a family in Pomeroy
• President of Pomeroy Village Council
• Successful Local Business Owner
• Proud Member of Pomeroy Merchants Assoc.
• Founding Member Pomeroy Blues &amp; Jazz Society
• Graduate of Meigs High School
• Graduate of Hocking College
• Graduate of Ohio University

I ask for your vote so together we can make
Pomeroy a great place to live and work.

PLEASE VOTE
JACKIE R. WELKER, MAYOR.
NOVEMBER 8, 2011
Paid for by Jackie R. Welker For Mayor
David L. Deem, Treasurer,
148 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, Ohio.

able to do their course work
and ultimately be successful in life,” said Wolfe.
“Southern Local believes
in the concept of mastery
of core subjects that these
are essential to student success. That’s what separates
students who are prepared
for increasingly complex
life and work environments
in today’s world and those
who are not.” ” Core subjects include English, reading or language arts, world
languages, arts, mathematics, economics, science,
geography, history, government and civics.
Southern Local promotes an understanding of
academic content at much
higher levels by weaving
21st century interdisciplinary themes into core subjects: Global Awareness,
Financial, Economic, Business and Entrepreneurial
Literacy, Civic Literacy,
Health Literacy, and and
Environmental Literacy.
Superintendent
Tony
Dee commenting on the
success of the the ASK pro-

�Wednesday, November 2, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Meigs County Community Calendar Boss doesn’t do
Public meetings
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., 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.
SYRACUSE — Sutton
Township Trusteees, 7 p.m.,
village hall.
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.
Friday, Nov. 4
RACINE — Meigs
County Pomona Grange
will meet at Racine Grange
Hall for Officers Conference at 6:30 p.m. followed
by meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 5
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 will
meet on Saturday with pot-

luck supper at 6:30 p.m.,
followed by meeting at 7:30
p.m.

Church events
Sunday, Nov. 6
MIDDLEPORT — Dr.
Jerry Chaney will be the
revival speaker at Victory
Baptist Church for the 10
a.m., 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
services on Sunday, and
at 7 p.m., Nov. 7-9. There
will also be special singing.
Rides are available by calling 992-9052.
Tuesday, Nov. 8
POINT ROCK — Revival at Point Rock Church
of the Nazarene, 7 p.m.
through Nov. 13. Sunday

services at 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Rev. Randy Peters, evangelist, with special singing by
Faith Harkins.

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.

Star Grange recognizes membership

Submitted photo

410 years of membership were recognized recently at Star Grange #778’s Membership Recognition program.
Front from left to right are Maryln Wilcox, 50 years; Catherine Shenefield, 70 years; Rex Shenefield 70 years;
back row left to right, Master Patty Dyer making the presentations; Larry Montgomery, 50 years; Rose Barrows,
55 years and Vera Holcomb, 55 years. Unable to attend but receiving recognition was Dorothy Cray, 60 years.
The recognition program was held in conjunction with the granges annual chicken BBQ.

Girls selected for National 4-H Congress

POMEROY — Rebecca
Chadwell and Kayte Lawrence
were selected to attend the National 4-H Congress, Nov. 2529 at Atlanta, Ga.
Delegates were selected
earlier in the year based on 4-H
and community achievements.
Chadwell is the daughter of
Jim and Cindy Chadwell, Long
Bottom, and an 11-year member of the Lakeside Leaders
club. Lawrence is the daughter
of Tim and Kenda Lawrence,
Long Bottom, and a nine-year
member of the Pioneers club.
The purpose of the Congress is to reward each del-

egate’s achievements, provide
new and educational and cultural experiences, provide a
forum for interaction and exchange of ideas among youth
and adults, and encourage
leaders of business, government, education and public
affiars to share in the development of youth. This year, the
theme is “Become a Catalyst
of Change.”
More than 1,000 youth are
expected to attend, but only
28 Ohio 4-H members were
selected out of more than 500 Rebecca Chadwell
interested applicants.

POMEROY — Barbara Crow of Pomeroy
was among the volunteers
recognized for their commitment to saving lives at
the annual Ambassador Appreciation dinner hosted by
Lifeline of Ohio.

Crow, whose daughter Morgan Matthews had
a liver transplant over 10
years ago, was recognized
and received a Shining Star
Award for contributing between 20 and 39 hours of
service.

The event was held in
Columbus with 77 awards
being given for outstanding
service to spreading the Donate Life message.
The mission of Lifeline
of Ohio is to coordinate
the donation of human or-

gans and tissue for transplantation. Lifeline serves
37 counties in Central and
southeastern Ohio along
with Hancock and Wood
Counties in West Virginia.

NEW YORK (AP) — The
number of overdose deaths
from powerful painkillers
more than tripled over a decade, the government reported Tuesday — a trend that a
U.S. health official called an
epidemic, but one that can be
stopped.
Prescription
painkillers
such as OxyContin, Vicodin and methadone led to
the deaths of almost 15,000
people in 2008, including actor Heath Ledger. That’s more
than three times the 4,000
deaths from narcotics in 1999.
Such painkillers “are
meant to help people who
have severe pain,” said Dr.
Thomas Frieden, director of
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, which issued the report.
“They are, however, highly
addictive.”
The report shows nearly 5
percent of Americans ages 12
and older said they’ve abused
painkillers in the past year
— using them without a prescription or just for the high.
In 2008-09 surveys, Oklahomans reported the highest rate

of abuse; the lowest was in
Nebraska and Iowa.
The overdose deaths reflect the spike in the number
of narcotic painkillers prescribed every year — enough
to give every American a onemonth supply, Frieden said.
Prescriptions rose as doctors aimed to better treat pain
and as new painkillers hit the
market.
Frieden and White House
drug czar Gil Kerlikowske,
who joined him at CDC headquarters in Atlanta, said states
need to take sharp actions
to reverse the long-running
trend.
States oversee prescription
practices and can rigorously
monitor prescriptions and
crack down on “pill mills”
and “doctor shopping” by patients, Frieden said.
Doctors should limit prescriptions — giving only a
three-day supply for acute
pain, for example — and look
for alternative treatments, he
said.
“For chronic pain, narcotics should be the last resort,”
he added.

A federal drug plan announced this year calls for
state programs to track prescriptions. All but two states
— Missouri and New Hampshire — have approved them,
said Kerlikowske. But a number of states don’t have them
in place yet or doctors aren’t
using them enough to check
on their patients’ past prescriptions, he said.
“America’s prescription
drug abuse epidemic is not
a problem that’s going to be
solved overnight, but at the
same time, we’re not powerless,” said Kerlikowske, who
urged parents to get rid of unneeded or expired painkillers
so they aren’t misused.
Some states are taking
action. Earlier this month, a
doctor in Southern California was sentenced to prison
for illegally selling tens of
thousands of prescriptions for
painkillers and sedative. Ohio
now requires pain clinics to
be licensed by the state, and
limits the amount of pills that
can be dispensed at clinics.
Florida also has cracked down
on so-called “pill mills.”

Overall, there were 36,450
fatal overdoses in 2008, including accidental cases and
suicides involving illegal
drugs like heroin and cocaine
along with prescription medicines. About three-quarters of
the deaths from prescriptions
involved narcotic painkillers.
That’s the year Ledger
died from an accidental overdose of painkillers and sedatives. A few months later, a
12-year-old girl from suburban New York overdosed on
methadone she bought from a
15-year-old boy.
Narcotics also played a
role in the recent deaths of a
27-year-old model at the mansion of an Anheuser-Busch
heir and of former hockey
player Derek Boogaard.
Frieden noted the wide
differences between overdose
death rates among states. For
example, West Virginia’s rate
is about 26 per 100,000 while
neighboring Virginia’s rate is
only 9.
“This highlights the importance of states getting policies right on preventing drug
abuse,” he said.

any work all day
Dear Dr. Brothers: It took
me a while to catch on about
how things work at my new
job, but now I get it: We three
employees do all the work —
and I mean ALL of it — while
the boss sits in her corner office
and keeps her Facebook and
Twitter accounts up to date.
Or she’s shopping on eBay or
chatting with who knows who.
Everything is delegated to
us. When we leave at the end
of the day, she is still there,
“working.” Is this my business
or not? It is really making my
blood boil. — G.K.
Dear G.K.: It is your business if it truly is making your
blood boil. Boiling blood can
mean high blood pressure, tension headaches, suppressed or
inappropriately expressed anger, inability to concentrate …
shall I go on? If your boss has
a boss of her own, chances are
at some point her poor work
habits are going to be exposed
and she will be taken down a
notch or two. She may be taking advantage of the evening
hours to catch up on all the real
work she has neglected during the day — or she may be
so efficient at her job that she
is doing something worthwhile
in between your visits, when
all you can see is her wall of
Facebook pictures. In any case,
there is a good chance that the
four of you — boss included —
don’t have quite enough work
to go around.
If your boss were doing her
job — as you understand it —
would you still have a busy
enough day to justify your existence in the company? Perhaps not — but that might free
you up to spend more quality time on an in-depth project
where you could show your
worth and not just clean up. Try
suggesting such a project to the
boss, and ask her if you could
have some help with your regular duties. She just might redistribute the work so that she
is doing some of it. But if she
dumps it on one of your other
colleagues, that could be very
enlightening.
***
Dear Dr. Brothers: I’m a
member of a new group at my
office — supposedly we were
all hand-picked by the manager
for our ability to think on our
feet, be creative and exercise
leadership qualities. We are
mostly men, with a couple of
bright women. But so far everyone is just sniping at one an-

Dr. Joyce Brothers
Advice
Columnist
other, and nothing is getting accomplished. We have to make a
report soon about our progress,
and I’m afraid we will look
bad. Any tips for pulling the
group together? — E.L.
Dear E.L.: Sometimes
picking the best and the brightest and putting them together
to achieve a goal doesn’t live
up to the expectations. The assumption is that the whole will
equal or exceed the sum of its
parts, but that isn’t necessarily
so. The most brilliant group of
individuals is not guaranteed to
work together flawlessly. But
whoever made up the group
may have been looking at the
wrong qualities. A new Union
College study, reported in the
journal Science, which studied
more than 600 people in groups
in Pittsburgh and Boston, came
to some interesting conclusions: It’s not necessarily the
brainpower in the group that’s
important, but the ability to
have social sensitivity, understand what the other members
are feeling and cooperate well.
The study concluded that
women were more likely to display these traits and use them
to the advantage of the group.
So perhaps your male-heavy
group will have a few obstacles
to overcome because of sex —
but now that you know, perhaps you can make better use
of the collective intelligence of
the group instead of trying to
outshine one another as leaders. What a group needs most
is people who can channel their
individual egos into positive
results that will reflect well on
everyone. Leadership is not as
important as cooperation. So
start cooperating.
(c) 2011 by King Features
Syndicate

Upward Sports
registration
Kayte Lawrence

Volunteer honored for service
Deaths from painkiller overdose triple in decade

TUPPERS PLAINS —
Early registration for basketball and cheerleading is
being offered through Nov.
12 at Bethel Worship Center. The program, which
will hold games beginning
Jan. 21, 2012 at the Chester
Community Center, is open
to all area boys and girls in
K-6th grade, and is sponsored by Bethel primarily
as a convenient local team
sports option for children
residing in the eastern part
of Meigs County.
Registration forms and
a fee of $60 for players and
$65 for cheerleaders will
be accepted at the Bethel
church office any time between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.

Monday through Friday
through Nov. 11, or at the
Chester Community Center
on Nov. 12 from 8:30 a.m.
until 1:00 p.m. Participants
will need to attend a required brief evaluation and
orientation session at the
Chester Community Center on Nov. 12, at any time
between 8:30 a.m. and 1:00
p.m. After that date, the fees
will increase to $65 for players and $70 for cheerleaders, with a final registration
deadline on Dec. 1. Butcher
added that those in need of
limited partial scholarship
assistance should contact
the church for more information, 667-6793.

60253286

�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page 4

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Dr. Simon: A career serving What other regional
God and His people
newspapers are saying:
By Paul R. Sebastian

A few days ago, Dr. Mel
Simon officially retired from
surgical practice as a urologist and past president of the
medical staff at the Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W.Va. after 39 years
there. The next day, he turned
76. One would never think
that; he does have the right
genes…….his mother bore
and raised 12 kids and died
at 102. He will however, continue at a reduced scale in his
private practice out of loyalty
to his old patients with whom
there is a bond.
Although Dr. Simon will
never retire completely —
this dynamo of energy has
been too active for that in
every facet of his life for so
many years — this occasion is a good time to recognize his many achievements,
thank him for his many contributions, and encourage him
to continue serving God and
His people. Retirement can
be liberating in giving more
time to serve the Church and
the community in related
and other ways while being
able to spend more time with
grandchildren and extended
family while getting closer to
God.
A book could be written
about his life of achievement and service. So for the
purposes of this blog (a comprehensive collection of short
commentaries), I will focus
mainly on his contributions
to the Church and the community that could inspire all
of us, including those who are
outside the medical field.
Dr. Mel Simon is literally
the fulfillment of the American dream and his wife Lydia,
always at his side as faithful friend, financial adviser,
and sometimes manager, had
a lot to do with it. Her help
and encouragement made it
easier to spend more time
in his professional and community activities. Mel grew
up in the strongly Catholic
Philippine Islands during the
Japanese occupation. He was
there when his hero, General Douglas MacArthur was
forced to leave and two years
later when he kept his pledge,
“I shall return”. Mel studied
medicine in Manila and completed his residency in Chicago. In 1966 Dr. Charles Hol-

zer, a pioneer in medicine in
southeastern Ohio and founder of an extensive health care
system that bears his name,
invited the young immigrant
to find the American dream
through hard work as Chief
of the Department of Urology
in Gallipolis, across the Ohio
River from Point Pleasant.
Soon he became a very successful and eminent urologist on both sides of the river,
serving both communities.
Dr. Simon is active in medical
societies and was a Colonel in
the Air Force Reserve.
Immigrants such as Dr.
Mel Simon made America.
They are the best that their
native countries have to offer. That is their intelligence,
ingenuity, self-confidence,
courage,
resourcefulness
and spirit of adventure to
take the risk of leaving their
countries of birth and adapting to a new culture and a
new system. They are willing to work hard, pursue new
paths, and do what it takes to
be successful. They give the
country new blood and fresh
ideas; they come to America
seeking opportunity and freedom. Then they work hard to
achieve the American dream
and so often find it.
Mel has enjoyed the fruits
of his success, but is very
generous with his time and
financial resources in giving
back so much to the twin sister communities that gave hm
the opportunity as well as to
his country of birth that raised
him. That’s what makes this
prominent physician stand
out and led to his being chosen for the Ohio Senior Citizens Hall of Fame (http://
www.aging.ohio.gov/news/
halloffame/) in Columbus.
That makes him an example
to both the very successful as
well as to the many unknown
people who think that they
can only contribute in little
ways — not realizing that
many little deeds done over
many years are also very important and also add to greatness.
He exemplifies Christian
stewardship, which recognizes that everything belongs to
God and comes from Him …
His providentially help, one’s
endowed talents or gifts, opportunities in life, etc., all
of which the individual has

The Daily Sentinel

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be accurate. If you know of an error
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little or no control … that
God gives us earthly possessions, property, and financial
resources in trust as stewards
to be used responsibly to
provide for our own genuine needs and to serve one’s
fellow man for the common
good of all. Greater wealth
entails greater responsibility
and God will hold us accountable for the use of these gifts.
Thus Dr. Simon has contributed significantly to his
parish, St. Louis Church, to
the University of Rio Grande,
and many other charitable
causes. He has given his time
and energy as a member of
the Board of Trustees of the
University of Rio Grande
since 1994 to assist in its
growth and guide it through
a severe financial crisis. Mel
contributed significantly to
the restoration of the historic
Ariel Theater in 1990, originally built in 1896 as an opera house in the gas light era
for this steamboat stop on the
Ohio River. That led to the
birth of the Ohio Valley Symphony Orchestra at the same
time and his subsequent participation as a member of its
Board of Directors. Dr. Simon
is also a 4th Degree member
of the Knights of Columbus,
a Catholic men’s fraternal and
service organization.
Operation We Care. Perhaps Dr. Simon’s most significant contribution of all is his
very active participation in
the Rotary Club. As President
of the Society of Philippine
Surgeons in America in 1988,
he organized an uninterrupted
annual medical mission to the
Philippines and in 1999 he
strengthened the mission by
obtaining the sponsorship of
the Rotary Club while its District 6690 Governor. Usually
every February for 24 years,
Dr. Simon recruits a team of
some 35 doctors and nurses
and obtains donations of
medical supplies and equipment to do diverse surgeries
for a very intense two weeks
— cleft palate, some genetic
deformities, tumors, eye
surgery, dental surgery, etc.
Each participant in the mission pays his/her own travel
expenses. At the same time
the team members train their
counterparts in a real people
to people outreach.

Akron Beacon Journal,
Oct. 29, on student debt:
The prospect of carrying
for decades a load of student
debt hardly encourages advanced learning. On Wednesday, President Obama took
a well-advised step in issuing the “Pay As You Earn”
executive order. There are
many reasons postsecondary enrollment has increased
22 percent nationwide the
past five years. In its recent
“Trends in College Pricing”
report, the College Board illustrated one of them, noting:
“In 2010, the $99,716 median
family income for families
headed by a four-year college
graduate was more than twice
the median income for families headed by a high school
graduate.”
In short, the demand for
higher education is growing
along with the value, while
college costs are rising faster
than inflation. At the same
time, family finances have
been battered by a poor economy. …
Congress approved legislation last year to ease the
loan repayment burden. The
president’s plan, in effect,
expedites that initiative, pushing to have the relief fully in
effect in 2012 rather than in
2014. The current law caps
monthly payments at 15 percent of income and forgives
outstanding loans after 25
years. Obama’s order lowers
the cap to 10 percent and loan
forgiveness after 20 years. …
The president’s plan isn’t
novel, and it doesn’t address
escalating college costs, the
root cause of indebtedness.
… What it does is promise
modest relief, when every last
buck counts, to about 1.6 million borrowers, among them
roughly 76,000 in Ohio.
Online:
http://bit.ly/vhNMRY.
***
The Inter-Mountain, Elkins, W.Va., on gas well fracking safety:

Oil and gas well fracturing has been around for more
than 60 years. We have heard
of no major environmental
problems from “fracking” —
yet it has become a subject of
controversy during the past
few years.
Most major players in the

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.

gas drilling boom in West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania
are involved in an initiative
that should lessen criticism
about fracking. Their policy
of transparency should be
adopted by everyone drilling
wells in our region.
Some environmentalists
question whether chemicals
used in fracking can get into
ground water and contaminate
it. Drillers point out nearly all
the fluid used to frack a well
is water (99 percent or more).
Most chemicals used are not
dangerous and, because wells
are cased securely, fracking fluid does not mix with
ground water, according to
the industry.
Still, industry critics say
they would like to know more
about chemicals used in the
process.
Some companies already
make available lists of chemicals they use. But recently, an
industry coalition announced
its members will provide
much more specific information.
The Marcellus Shale Coalition revealed its members
will provide information
about fracking chemicals used
at individual drilling sites.
The information will be available through the coalition’s
www.FracFocus.com website.
…
Companies participating
in the coalition have made a
wise decision. Those not involved should follow suit. If
not, legislators in West Virginia and Ohio should consider making disclosures such
as that agreed to by industry
leaders mandatory.
Online: http://www.theintermountain.com.
***
The (Canton) Repository, Oct. 31, on exotic animal ownership and Sunshine
Laws:

Ohio’s lack of regulations
governing ownership of wild
animals turned a harsh spotlight on the state earlier this
month.
But in contrast to that glare
of publicity, suddenly it has
grown very dark and quiet in
Columbus.
At a time when public interest in this issue couldn’t
be higher, the group charged
with making recommenda-

tions on how to change state
law is meeting in secret.
Terry Thompson of Muskingum County freed more
than 50 of his exotic menagerie, including tigers and
bears, before he committed
suicide on his Muskingum
County property. County
sheriff’s deputies then had the
unenviable job of hunting for
the dangerous creatures and
shooting them before they
could harm anyone.
This worst-case scenario
that came to life made it imperative for Gov. John Kasich
to act. He assigned a study
committee to come up with
recommendations for changes
in state law by the end of November.
But as The Columbus Dispatch noted last week, the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources has closed the
group’s meetings, saying that
the committee isn’t a public body and does not have
to abide by the state’s openmeetings laws. …
ODNR should abide by
both the spirit and the letter
of the state’s Sunshine Laws
and open these meetings to
the public.
There is simply no good
reason to shut Ohioans out.
Online:
http://bit.ly/
uBr4a4.
***
Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette on state prison overcrowding:
Back in the 1970s, West
Virginia averaged about 1,000
felons in prison. By the 1990s,
the average had doubled to
2,000. Today, with the state’s
population unchanged, the
number of convicts has soared
to 6,800.
Why the upsurge? Are
West Virginians seven times
more criminal than before? Of
course not. The explanation is
that the lock-‘em-up mentality caused laws to turn harsher,
especially toward dope-users.
Taxpayers pay through the
nose for excessive incarceration. Each prisoner in a steel
cage costs about $28,000 per
year, so West Virginians pay
$190 million annually for the
lockups. And society suffers,
because the 6,800 aren’t holding jobs, supporting families.
Online: http://www.wvgazette.com.

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

�Wednesday, November 2, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Briefs
Retired officers form
Ohio Valley cold case
group
WHEELING, W.Va.
(AP) — Retired law enforcement officers in
West Virginia and Ohio
have formed a task force
to help investigators
solve cold cases in the
Ohio Valley.
The Ohio Valley Cold
Case Initiative plans to
work with prosecutors
and law enforcement
agencies on homicides,
missing persons and
questionable death cases
within a 25-mile radius
of Wheeling and Bridgeport, Ohio.
Coordinator Fred Connors tells The Intelligencer and Wheeling News
Register that the group’s
members have expertise
in all phases of homicide
investigation.
They include former
FBI and IRS agents, police chiefs and state police officers
Ohio
withdraws
milk-labeling rule
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Ohio milk produced without the use of
a synthetic growth hormone no longer needs to
carry a disclaimer along
with the label advertising
its absence.
The Ohio Ecological
Food and Farm Association announced Tuesday
that it has reached an
agreement with the Ohio
Department of Agriculture to withdraw a 2008
dairy labeling rule.
The rule required that
milk boasting to be free
of the synthetic bovine
growth hormone rBST
print a disclaimer on the
container stating that the
Food and Drug Administration says there’s no
significant difference between milk produced by
cows given the hormone
and cows that aren’t.
Opponents had said
that the rule made it costly to produce labels and
market the milk.
A call to an Agriculture Department spokesman was not immediately
returned.
Police: Ohio steroid
probe uncovers Tennessee lab
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Authorities say
an anabolic steroid ring
uncovered in Ohio used
drugs imported from
China and processed at
a secret lab in Tennessee
to peddle to high school
athletes and other customers.
Warren county officials said Tuesday that
a grand jury in Lebanon, north of Cincinnati, indicted 32 people
in the operation, including a bank manager, a
pro wrestler, and a stayat-home mom. Charges
include engaging in a
pattern of corrupt activity, trafficking drugs and
drug possession.
Officials say the indictments stem from an
undercover operation at a
local YMCA that started
after they received two
unrelated tips.
They say one man in
Ohio received drugs from
Tennessee and that a suburban Cincinnati man
working under him ran
a drug-dealing business,
offering bonuses and other incentives to dealers
with high sales.
Rex Energy drills
first Utica Shale well in
W. Pa.

PITTSBURGH (AP)
— Rex Energy says it’s
completed a Utica Shale
natural gas well in western Pennsylvania and is
encouraged by the results.
The Utica Shale is a
mineral formation that
lies below the Marcellus Shale, thousands of
feet underground. Some
gas drilling companies
believe the Utica formation may be productive
in Pennsylvania but they
haven’t had much proof.
Rex Energy, based in
State College, says in a
statement Tuesday that
its first Utica well was
drilled in Butler County,
about 40 miles north of
Pittsburgh. The horizontal well produced an average of 9.2 million cubic
feet of dry gas per day
during tests.
Rex says the well is
currently shut and will go
into production in January. The company says it
plans more Utica Shale
wells in Butler next year.
Demjanjuk presses to
reopen US citizenship
case
CLEVELAND (AP)
— The defense for a retired auto worker convicted in Germany of
Nazi war crimes told a
judge Tuesday that hundreds of pages of newly
released documents cast
doubt on the U.S. effort
to revoke his American
citizenship.
Attorneys for John
Demjanjuk, 91, made the
appeal in renewing their
request to U.S. District
Court Judge Dan Aaron
Polster to hold a hearing
on whether Demjanjuk
should regain his U.S.
citizenship.
Last month, prosecutors said the retired autoworker was trying to
cast himself as a victim
following his conviction
in Germany on more than
28,000 counts of accessory to murder.
His attorneys charge
that
the
government
failed to disclose important evidence, including
a 1985 secret FBI report
uncovered by The Associated Press. It indicates the FBI believed a
Nazi ID card purportedly
showing that Demjanjuk
served as a death camp
guard was a Soviet-made
fake.
“Of course these documents are of great importance to the case,” the
defense said. “They cast
doubt on the entire case.
And they are created by
the largest, most powerful law enforcement and
investigative agency in
the country.”
Federal
prosecutors
won’t comment on the
latest defense filing, according to Mike Tobin,
a spokesman for the U.S.
attorney’s office.
Demjanjuk was convicted by a German court
that found he had served
as a guard at the Nazis’
Sobibor death camp in
occupied Poland. He was
sentenced to five years in
prison.
Demjanjuk
denies
serving as a guard at any
camp and is free pending
his appeal. He’s been in
poor health for years and
has been in and out of a
hospital since his conviction.
He currently cannot
leave Germany because
he has no passport, but he
could get a U.S. passport
if the denaturalization
ruling was overturned.
Ukrainian-born Demjanjuk was a Soviet Red
Army soldier captured by

the Germans in 1942. The
Munich court found he
agreed to serve the Nazis
as a guard at Sobibor.
The government’s response to the original
defense citizenship filing
included an Oct. 12 affidavit from retired FBI
agent Thomas Martin. He
said the March 4, 1985
report written by him
was based on speculation
about a Soviet forgery,
not any investigation.
Six-month
suspension proposed for exOhio AG
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — A proposal would
suspend the law license
of former Ohio Attorney
General Marc Dann for
six months but allow him
to keep practicing law
during that time anyway.
Dann, ousted in a scandal three years, agreed
to the punishment with
lawyers representing the
disciplinary wing of the
Ohio Supreme Court.
Dann testifies at a disciplinary hearing Thursday. A court board and
the Supreme Court itself
could accept or reject the
recommended
punishment.
Dann, a Democrat, resigned in 2008 amidst a
sexual harassment scandal, then pleaded guilty
in 2010 to improperly
paying two aides from
political and office accounts and failing to disclose campaign expenses.
Dann’s attorney Alvin
Mathews said Tuesday
he’s pleased the court’s
Disciplinary
Counsel
agreed to the recommended punishment.
Pringles sale delayed
for Diamond walnut
probe
CINCINNATI (AP) —
Procter &amp; Gamble Co.
says the $1.5 billion sale
of its Pringles division
to Diamond Foods Inc.
will be delayed until the
end of June because of
an internal investigation
at Diamond into its accounting.
Procter &amp; Gamble
originally had expected
the sale to close by the
end of this year.
Diamond Foods said
Tuesday its board of directors is investigating
external communication
regarding the company’s
accounting for crop payments to walnut growers.
Procter &amp; Gamble said
the sale would occur after
the investigation is completed.
The companies announced the deal in April.
It would complete P&amp;G’s
exit from all major food
businesses.
Diamond
Foods’
shares fell $6.62, or 10.3
percent, to $57.50 in after-hours trading after the
announcement. Procter
&amp; Gamble shares rose
18 cents to $62.89 after
hours.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — New ownership
of lions, tigers and other dangerous animals
likely would be banned
in the state under proposed recommendations
that would allow existing owners to keep such
wildlife but require new
permit rules for them,
according to members
of a committee studying
exotic animals.
The group faces a
Nov. 30 deadline to
make recommendations
for updating Ohio’s
laws. It’s held expedited meetings since
last month, when police
were forced to kill 48
wild animals — including endangered Bengal tigers — after their
owner freed them from
his Zanesville farm and
then committed suicide.
Ohio has some of
the nation’s weakest
restrictions on exotic pets, and efforts to
strengthen the regulations have taken on
new urgency since farm
owner Terry Thompson
opened the cages and
let the animals out.
Gov. John Kasich
on Monday urged the
group in a conference
call to move swiftly on
a plan that includes humane conditions for the
animals, protects the
public and ensures that
an incident like that in
Zanesville could never
happen again.
The panel’s recommendations are only
suggestions to state officials. Its ideas would
have to be drafted into
legislation, heard before committees and
passed by the state legislature before becoming law.
The office of state
Sen. Troy Balderson, a
Zanesville native, said
Tuesday he intends to
pursue legislation as
soon as the working
group makes its recommendations.
The group likely will

recommend the state bar
the sale, trade and purchase of exotic animals,
Debbie Leahy, a captive
wildlife regulatory specialist for the Humane
Society of the United
States, told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
Should the recommendations become law,
it would be illegal for
Ohio residents to own
the restricted animals if
they didn’t already have
them.
Details of the committee’s consensus on
the new ownership ban
were first reported by
The Columbus Dispatch.
Not all the 10 stakeholders’ organizations
in the working group
are on the same page.
Animal owners fear
some of the recommendations could be overreaching, while animal
protection groups don’t
agree with all the proposed carveouts for
some private owners.
Leahy said the Humane Society takes issue with an exemption
that allows facilities
accredited by the Zoological Association of
America to have animals because they don’t
adhere to the same
breeding rules of zoos.
“It’s going to weaken any law that they
finalize,” Leahy said.
“They’re part of the
problem.”
Current
owners
would face restrictions
on breeding under proposed
recommendations, other members
said. The owners would
be required to post
signs alerting people
there are dangerous
animals on their properties. They would have
to tag their animals
with microchips, brands
or tattoos that would allow officials or others
to identify them.
The committee likely
will recommend new
fines for people who

don’t post signs and
don’t have their ownership information attached to their animals.
It also will suggest new
penalties for those who
knowingly release animals or fail to report
their animals have escaped.
The group’s recommendations likely will
let owners who have
venomous snakes, big
cats and certain monkeys keep them for the
lives of the animals, but
they will have to get
three-year permits from
the state, said Polly
Britton, a lobbyist for
the Ohio Association of
Animal Owners.
To get a permit, the
current owners would
have to meet new standards for how the animals are caged and
cared for, said Britton,
who has been a part of
the committee meetings
since June.
Britton said the association was disappointed the working group
didn’t offer an exemption on state permits for
those who are already
federally licensed.
She also fears the
proposed rules would
force certain animal
parks to shut down and
put small business owners out of jobs.
“I don’t think the
governor realizes the
far-reaching effects of
this,” Britton said.
Kasich has put in
place temporary measures to better enforce
existing laws while the
tougher laws are written
this fall. His spokesman Rob Nichols said
the working group was
“95 percent of the way
there” with its framework.
The panel has been
meeting privately since
June. It plans a final
conference call before
Monday to finalize its
suggestions.

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******Vote For and Re-Elect******

Pomeroy, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

LARRY EBERSBACH
Candidate For Trustee Sutton Township

YOUR VOTE &amp; INFLUENCE APPRECIATED
Paid for by candidate,

2341 Third St., Box 147, Syracuse, OH 45779

Reader Recipe Box
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Hurry! Deadline is Thursday November 10, 2011

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
The Daily
Point Pleasant
Sentinel
Register

�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
GAHS Basketball
Reserve Seats

CENTENARY, Ohio —
Reserve seats for the 201112 Gallia Academy Boys
and Girls Basketball season
will go on sale November
14th for Big Blue Super
Boosters.
Parents of varsity and
junior varsity basketball
players, cheerleaders, and
pep band members may purchase reserve seats on November 15th.
Reserve seats for the general public will be available
on Wednesday, November
16th. Tickets may be purchased in the Athletic Director’s office at Gallia Academy between the hours of
8:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.

GAHS Winter Sports
Orientation

Wednesday, November 3, 2011

Wolfe advances to D-3 state meet in CC

Porter places
16th at state
meet

effort in Meigs County —
placing 26th overall with a
time of 21:25.95. There were
bwalters@mydailytribune.
133 runners in the D-3 girls
By Sarah Hawley
com
event.
shawley@mydailytribune.com
PICKERINGTON, Ohio
Bellaire St. John Central
ONA, W.Va — It was
— Seventeen made the trip. freshman Fallon Doyle won
once
again a historical day
Only one moved on.
the individual crown with
for the Point Pleasant cross
Southern junior Kody a time of 19:29.42, while
country program at the
Wolfe was the lone Meigs Mount Gilead came away
WVSSAC State Meet held
Countian to qualify for the with the team title with 85
state cross country meet next points.
at Cabell Midland High
weekend following SaturEastern, which won the
School.
day’s Division III regional district title as a team the
At last year’s state meet,
competition at Pickerington week before, finished 14th
then sophomore Andrea
High School North in Fair- overall with 285 points.
Porter, made school history
field County.
Freshman Taylor Palmer was
with a 27th place finish. The
Wolfe, who became the 29th overall with a time of
finish was the best ever by a
first-ever Tornado to qualify 21:32.13, while classmate
Point Pleasant runner at the
for state last year, is now Asia Michael was 32nd with
state meet.
the only Southern runner a mark of 21:36.29.
On Saturday, the junior
to make it to the Division
Sophomores Katie Keller
once again made history.
III finale twice. Wolfe fin- (23:37.89) and Keri LawPorter placed 16th in the
ished second overall in the rence (24:22.05) placed
field of 86, with a time of
129-competitor event with 94th and 107th, respectively.
21:18.4. The time was 29
a time of 16:46.97. Wolfe Junior Savannah Hawley LEFT - Eastern junior Savannah Hawley (R)
seconds better than her 2010
placed fifth at regionals a rounded out the team score
mark on the same course.
year ago.
with a mark of 24:47.40.
St. Marys junior Maggie
Paint Valley senior Dan- Seniors
Shelby
Smith
Drazba took first place with
iel Gardner won the indi- (25:19.76) and Cheyenne
a time of 18:25.4, setting a
vidual crown with a time of Doczi (26:25.13) also placed
16:22.42, while Sugarcreek 115th and 122nd, respecnew state record. The old
Garaway won the D-3 team tively.
state record was a time of
title with 77 points.
In Division II boys, the
18:29, set by Letitia Propst
Southern, as a team, fin- Meigs duo of senior Cody
in 2008.
ished 12th overall with a Hanning (18:32.37) and jutally of 282 points. No other nior Steven Mahr (19:03.38)
2011 Class AA-A State
Tornadoes that competed had respective finishes
Cross Country Results
qualified in the top 16 spots of 53rd and 75th in the
— therefore ending their re- 129-competitor event.
Boys
spective seasons.
Fairland won the team
Junior Andrew Roseberry title with 57 points, while
Team scores
was 79th overall with a mark Adrian Ross of Unioto cap1. Philip Barbour 89; 2.
of 19:53.15, followed by tured the individual crown
St.
Marys 95; 3. Oak Hill
freshman Bradley McCoy in with a time of 16:10.29.
99;
4.
Berkeley Springs 139;
88th with a time of 20:13.99.
Wolfe will compete at
5. Ritchie County 151; 6.
Senior Andrew Ginther 1:30 p.m. Saturday in the
Magnolia 164; 7. Doddridge
(20:17.17) and junior Justin Division III championship
County 169; 8. Ravenswood
Hettinger (20:28.82) had re- at National Trail Raceway
171; 9. Shady Spring 195;
spective efforts of 91st and in Hebron, Ohio. The state
10. Scott 224; 11. Westside
98th, while Chris Yeater meet had previously been
236; 12. Charleston Catholic
(20:29.04) rounded thing held at Scioto Downs for the
out for SHS by placing 99th last 26 postseasons.
240; 13. Buffalo 296.
overall.
Complete results of the
In the Division III girls 2011 regional CC meets at
Top 20 finishers
race, Southern junior Jen- Pickerington North are avail- RIGHT - Eastern freshmen Asia Michael and Taylor
1. Andrew Shaffer, Richnifer McCoy had the top able on the web at ohsaa.org Palmer
wood, 16:27; 2. Will Shaffer, Scott, 16:42; 3. Johnny
Hogue, Ritchie County,
16:57; 4. Bill Feeney, Magnolia, 17:02; 5. Charlie
Drazba, St. Marys, 17:03;
6. Wes Stowers, Oak Hill,
17:08; 7. Tyler Kosut, Shady
Spring, 17:12; 8. Jordan
Whitehair, St. Marys, 17:13;
9. Clinton Hardman, Ritchie
County, 17:13; 10. Wes Anderson 17:13; 11. Marcus
Black, Charleston Catholic, 17:16; 12. Alec Hinerman, Magnolia, 17:29; 13.
Jason Weitzel, PikeView,
17:34; 14. Matt King, Philip
Barbour, 17:36; 15. Scott
Nesland, Philip Barbour,
17:37; 16. Lucas Gardner,
Oak Hill, 17:38; 17. Mike
Mayes, Huntington St. Joe,
17:40; 18. Brandon Perdue,
Sherman, 17:41; 19. ForLEFT - Southern senior Southern junior Jennifer Southern junior Kody Meigs senior Cody Han- rest Reed, Wayne, 17:41;
20. Matt Zorn, Doddridge
ning
Andrew Ginther
McCoy
Wolfe
County, 17:44.

Story and Photos
By Bryan Walters

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 Story and Photos
the Holzer Center for Per- By Bryan Walters
forming Arts Auditorium bwalters@mydailytribune.com
PICKERINGTON, Ohio
at Gallia Academy High
—Seven
years good luck.
School.
The Gallia Academy
girls program will have at
least one runner at the DiGAHS Fall Sports
vision II state cross country
Awards Ceremony meet for the seventh conCENTENARY,
Ohio secutive postseason fol— Gallia Academy High lowing Saturday’s regional
meet at Pickerington High
School will be holding their School North in Fairfield
2011 Fall Sports Awards County.
Seniors Peyton Adkins
Ceremony at 6:30 p.m. on
November 21. The Sports and Mckenna Warner both
Awards Ceremony will be qualified for their fourth
straight state competition,
held in the Holzer Center for although it will be individuPerforming Arts Auditorium ally for a third consecutiveat Gallia Academy High year — as the Blue Angels
missed the top-four cutoff
School.
after finishing sixth overall
as a team.
Adkins led the Blue
PPHS Alumni
Angels by finishing sixth
Basketball Game
overall in the 132-comPOINT
PLEASANT, petitor race, posting a
W.Va. — The Point Pleas- time of 19:28.20. Warner
ant basketball program will was eighth with a time of
be holding an alumni bas- 19:39.07, which also allowed her to qualify for
ketball game on Wednesday, state after finishing in the
November 23. Each player top-16 individual spots.
GAHS posted a team
is asked to donate to the
program, and will receive score of 191 points, which
an alumni game shirt and a was 47 points away from
Athens (144) — which
dinner. For more informa- clinched the fourth and fition contact Andy Layton at nal team berth. Zane Trace
aljdgbb@gmail.com.
won the team title with 69

Adkins, Warner advance to state CC meet
points, while Caledonia
River Valley sophomore
Hannah Campbell won first
place individually with a
mark of 19:04.41.
RIGHT - River Valley
Adkins and Warner will senior Katie Blodgett
both compete at 11:45 a.m.
Saturday in the Division II
championship at National
Trail Raceway in Hebron,
Ohio. The state meet had
previously been held at
Scioto Downs for the last
26 postseasons.
The 2011 season ended
for five other Blue Angels
on Saturday. Madison Holley was 48th overall with
a time of 21:09.88, while
Hannah Watts was 89th
with a mark of 22:48.21.
Jenna Bays (23:35.28)
and
Elizabeth
Holley
(23:42.52)
respectively
finished 104th and 106th,
while Maddie Dennison
was 132nd with a mark of
29:31.39.
River Valley senior Katie
Blodgett also had her stellar
season come to a close after
placing 19th overall with a
time of 20:12.98, missing a
state berth by just three individual spots.
Complete results of the
2011 Division II regional
CC meet at Pickerington
North are available on the
web at ohsaa.org

Girls
Team scores
1. Philip Barbour 67; 2.
St. Marys 80; 3. Scott 117;
4. Shady Spring 146; 5. Ravenswood 147; 6. Oak Glen
153; 7. Berkeley Springs
164; 8. Webster County 169;
9. Weir 182; 10. Williamstown 205; 11. Keyser 242.

Top 20 finishers
1. Maggie Drazba, St.
Marys 18:25; 2. Sami Harris, Charleston Catholic,
19:11; 3. Katie Jan, Frankfort, 19:59; 4. Katie Mahoney, Philip Barbour,
20:00; 5. Brianna Waybright, Philip Barbour,
20:07; 6. Sarah Phillips,
Shady Spring, 20:16; 7.
Alexis Virtue, Weir, 20:20;
8. Kristen Mastranoni, Weir,
20:23; 9. Kelsey Chambers,
Oak Glen, 20:34; 10. Kali
Striker, Oak Hill, 20:40;
11. Sarah Smith, Cameron,
20:47; 12. Taylor Jackson,
Shady Spring, 21:02; 13.
Marissa Long, Philip Barbour, 21:02; 14. Hailey Miller,
Ravenswood, 21:06; 15.
Nele Frey, Doddridge County, 21:11; 16. Andrea Porter,
LEFT - Gallia Academy Point Pleasant, 21:18; 17.
sophomore
Madison Allison Clevenger, Webster
County, 21:24; 18. Brittany
Holley
Green, Scott, 21:27; 19.
Ryleigh McCoy, Webster
County, 21:38; 20. Ashley
Cassidy, Tucker County,
21:40.

�Wednesday, November 2, 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
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 County Commissioners of the County of Meigs
of Pomeroy, Ohio passed on
the 16th day of June, 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 Meigs County General
Health District for the purpose
of Current Expenses.
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
26 and November 2
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 Middleport Village of Middleport,
Ohio passed on the 27th day
of June, 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 Fire Protection.

Tax being:2 A renewal of an
existing tax of 2.0 mills at a
rate not exceeding
Legals 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
26 and November 2
By order of the Board of Elections,
of
County,
Ohio.
Meigs
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 Village of Pomeroy of Pomeroy,
Ohio passed on the 13th day
of June, 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
Pomeroy Village for the purpose of Current Expenses.
Tax being:2 A replacement 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
26 and November 2
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
Tax being:2 A renewal of an the Village Council of the Vilexisting tax of 2.0 mills at a lage of Pomeroy of Pomeroy,
rate not exceeding 2.0 mills for Ohio passed on the 13th day
each one dollar of valuation, of June, 2011, there will be
which amounts to twenty cents submitted to a vote of the people at the GENERAL ELEC($0.20) for each one hundred
Auctions
dollars of valuation, for five (5) TION to be held at the regular
places of voting on Tuesday,
years.
The polls will open at 6:30 the 8th day of November,
a.m. and remain open until 2011, the question of levying a
tax, in excess of the ten mill
7:30 p.m. on election day.
Run 2 times: October limitation, for the benefit of
26 and November 2
By or- Pomeroy Village for the purder of the Board of Elections, pose of Fire Protection.
of
Meigs
County,
O h i o . Tax being:2 A renewal of an
tax of 2.0 mills at a
John
Ihle,WILL
ChairBE HELD AT THEexisting
SALE
POINT PLEASANT
YOUTH
Dated September 12, 2011 rate not exceeding 2.0 mills for
each
one
dollar
of
valuation,
Rita D.
Smith,
Director
CENTER, LOCATED ON CAMDEN
AVENUE ACROSS
which amounts to twenty cents
($0.20)
for each
hundred
FROM LAYTON HORSE PARK.
WATCH
FOR one
SIGNS.
dollars of valuation, for five (5)
years.
LARGE COLLECTION
OF TRAINS
The polls will open at 6:30
70 NEW TRAIN SETS-LIONEL; BRICK BUILDING
KITS;
RAIL KITS;
100 until
ANa.m. and
remain
open
7:30AND
p.m.LEFT
on election
day.LOCK
NIVARSARY LIONEL ALARM CLOCK; RIGHT
HAND POWER
Run 2 KIT;
times:
TRACK SWITCHES; TREES YULETIDE TOWN BUILDING
LIGHTEDOctober
OPER26 and November 2
By orATING SWITCHMAN AND FREIGHT STATION;
VARIOUS
PLACTIC
BUILDING
der of the Board of Elections,
KITS; CONCORD STAGE COACH WOODofBUILDING KIT; REVOLVING K-LINE
Meigs
CEXPRESS
o u n t y , SET; OIRISH
hio.
BEACON LIGHT; 14” DISPLAY CASE; CANNONBALL
John Ihle, Chair
RAILWAY SET; SPECIAL FORCES SET;Dated
THOMASSeptember
&amp; FRIENDS SET;
MANY
12, 2011
Rita D.
Director TO LIST
MORE TRAIN SETS; CARS; ACCESSORIES;
ETC.Smith,
TO NUMEROUS

Absolute Real
Estate Auction
Sat. November 4th 10:00 a.m.

THEM ALL.
MUST COME TO SEE.

TOYS
CRAFT KITS; WOODEN BOAT KITS; PLASTIC AIRPLANE KITS; VARIOUS HOT
WHEELS RACING CARS; VARIOUS DIE-CAST TRUCKS; STYLE STUDIE SHOW
CASE; LIMITED EDITION #1802 CORGI(LIONELVILLE) TREE FARM CHRISTMAS TRUCK; MATCHBOX 1957 LINCOLN PREMIER ELVIS “JAILHOUSE ROCK”
DRIVE IN; VARIOUS JOHN DEERE DIE CAST FARM EQUIPMENT; MATCHBOX
COLLECTIBLES; MALIBU COLLECTIBLES; SUN STAR COLLECTIBLES; PLUS
MANY MORE TO NUMEROUS TO LIST THEM ALL. MUST COME TO SEE.

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 Village of Pomeroy of Pomeroy,
Ohio passedLegals
on the 13th day
of June, 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
Pomeroy Village for the purpose of Fire Protection.
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
26 and November 2
By order of the Board of Elections,
of
Meigs
County,
Ohio.
John Ihle, Chair
Dated September 12, 2011
Rita D. Smith, Director
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Lost &amp; Found
A Personalized Afghan has
been found in the Centenary
Area (St. Rt 141) Call to identify 446-7632
Notices
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.

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

HUGE SCRAPBOOK SALE
Nov 4th @ the Gallipolis Visitor's Center Corner of Court St
&amp; 3rd Ave. Diecut set, CM Paper, Stickers, Tools, Books,
Home School Items &amp; More.

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

Apartments/Townhouses

Rentals

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

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

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

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
FREE:
indoor/outdoor cats
and kitten. 304-675-1597
FREE: 4 mo old black lab puppies. 304-812-4809
AGRICULTURE
MERCHANDISE
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Free Firewood, contact O.C.
Gilpin, 39793 Success Rd,
Reedsville, Oh, if not home
leave note in mailbox
New snow blower, price $350
cash, contact O.C. Gilpin,
39793 Success Rd, Reedsville, Oh 45772
Want To Buy
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

2010 AUDI Q 5 - SUV - PRESTIGE S LINE PACKAGE
740-645-1563
Other Services
Call

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

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

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

Middleport North 4th Ave, 2 br
furnished apt, No Pets, deposit
&amp; references 740-992-0165

Yard Sale
Extended yard sale more donations, plus sizes, Christmas
items, Nov 3-4-5, 9am-4pm,
Rutland F.W.B. kChurch
Grace Methodist Rummage
Sale Fri 11/4, 8:30-2pm, Cedar
St. Entrance
Rummage Sale Episcopal
Church 541 Second, Fri Nov
5, 9 to 2

Will pick up unwanted Appliances&amp; yard sale items also
Will haul or
buy Auto's,
Buses &amp; Scrap metal Ph.
446-3698 ask for Robert.
AUTOMOTIVE
Want To Buy
Paying
Cash
for
junk,Cars,Trucks,Vans,Call
740-388-0011
or
740-441-7870. No Sunday
calls.
REAL ESTATE SALES
Houses For Sale
Price Reduction - Need to Sale
- Move in Ready - 3BR &amp; 2
bath in Gallipolis Area.
446-2106
600

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
Houses For Rent

Want To Buy

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

3 bedroom, $425, utilities &amp;
deposit, references required: 1
bedroom, $325, Racine, Oh
740-247-4292

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

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

Automotive

Pet
Cremations.
740-446-3745

Business &amp; Trade School

ANIMALS

Wanted- PASTURELAND with
livable
HOUSING,
505-384-1101
REAL ESTATE RENTALS

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
Middleport, 2 bedroom home,
$450 a month, No smoking,
No pets, call 740-992-3823
4 - BR Large Home in Rio
Grande
$1350.00
mo.
www.cedarvalleyestates.net
740-645-5785

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

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

Marcum Construction
and General Contracting

Mike W. Marcum - Owner

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/VALID ID.

• Commercial &amp; Residential • General Remodeling

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK
PEARSON AUCTION CO. #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR. #A1955
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
www.auctionzip.com for pictures

• Room Additions
• Roofing
• Garages
• Pole &amp; Horse Barns
• Foundations
• Home Repairs
740-985-4141 • 740-416-1834
Fully Insured - Free Estimates
30 Years Experience
Not Affiliated with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Remodeling

Sales
1995 2BR 14x70 Mobile (Clayton)
$7500 or Best Offer must be
moved 709-1657 or 446-1271.
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

SNOW
REMOVAL

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
Someone to work on Trash
Route, requirements are but
not limited too, read &amp; follow
directions. 25 yrs or older,
clean driving record, maintenance work history. Send resume to PO box 21 Bidwell,
OH 45614 or if interested call
740-388-8978, if you don't
want to work don't apply
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 Development
Coordinator
@
740-992-6472. EOE &amp; A Participant of The Drug-Free
Workplace Program

Family Medicine offices in in
Gallia &amp; Jackson Co. seek Receptionist/Medical Assistant
FT/PT, skills required,
740-441-9800
SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

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

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

60231179

Notice is hereby given that in
pursuance of a Resolution of
the Village Council of the Middleport Village of Middleport,
Ohio passed on the 27th day
of June, 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 Fire Protection.

�Wednesday, November 2, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

URG men top Bobcats in Three tie for superiority
regular season finale
in Wayne County
its regular season finale.
W.Va. Wesleyan, ranked
23rd nationally and fifth in
NCAA Division II’s Atlantic Region, fell to 11-4-3
with the loss.
Sophomore midfielder
Mike DeFonte gave Rio
Grande the only goal it
would need just 2:45 into
the contest, scoring off an
assist from Isberner, a junior forward from Sao Paulo, Brazil.
The RedStorm maintained the one-goal cushion for the remainder of the
half, but blew things open
by scoring four times after
the intermission.
Isberner found the back
of the net with the aid of a
pass from Maccauro, also
a junior forward from Sao
Paulo, Brazil, just over two
minutes into the second
stanza and Maccauro scored
off an assist from senior

midfielder Joel Thiessen at
49:43 to make it 3-0.
Isberner and freshman
forward Kenny Doublette
added goals in the final 15
minutes on assists by junior
midfielder Oliver HewittFisher and freshman midfielder Patricio Guerra, respectively, to set the final
score.
Rio Grande finished with
a 20-4 edge in shots. Junior
goalkeeper Jack Marchant
recorded one save in the
shutout win.
Justin McAtee had four
stops in a losing cause for
the Bobcats.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Saturday when
it entertains St. Catharine
in the opening round of
the Mid-South Conference
Tournament at Evan E. Davis Field. Kickoff is set for
7 p.m.

SOUTH EUCLID, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande volleyball team ran
its winning streak to six
straight before falling in its
regular season finale, Saturday afternoon, as part of a
tri-match hosted by Notre
Dame College.
The RedStorm defeated
the host Falcons 3-0 (25-19,
25-19, 25-21), but suffered
a 3-2 loss to another set of
Falcons – Fairmont (W.Va.)
State University — by
scores of 26-24, 23-25, 2325, 26-24, 15-11.
Rio Grande will take a

20-14 record into the MidSouth Conference Tournament, which begins Friday
afternoon at the Frankfort
Civic Center in Frankfort,
Ky.
The RedStorm, who
will be seeded fourth in the
tourney, actually won’t take
the floor until Saturday at
2 p.m. when they square
off against the No. 5 seed,
which will be the University
of the Cumberlands - if the
Patriots defeat St. Catharine
on Tuesday night — or rival
Shawnee State, which lost
both of its regular season
meetings with Rio Grande.
In Saturday’s win over
Notre Dame, junior middle

blocker Erin Sherman and
junior outside hitter Whitney Smith had 12 kills each.
Sherman also had a teamhigh four blocks.
Sophomore setter Kayla
Landaker added 32 assists,
while junior libero Lauren
Raines had 10 digs and a
pair of service aces.
Against Fairmont State,
Smith had 21 kills, 12
digs and two aces, while
Sherman finished with 12
kills and a season-high six
blocks.
Landaker
contributed
40 assists in a losing cause,
while Raines had 13 digs
and five aces.

CHARLOTTE,
N.C.
(AP) NASCAR team owner Rick Hendrick returned
home Tuesday, a day after
he broke a rib and shoulder
when his plane ran off the
runway in Key West, Fla.
Hendrick
Motorsports
said the brakes failed when
the Gulfstream G150 landed
at Key West International
Airport on Monday night.
The plane is co-owned by
Jimmie Johnson and normally shuttles the five-time

defending NASCAR champion and his family to and
from races.
“As everybody is aware,
there was a brake issue with
the airplane landing,” Johnson said. “All four on board
are OK and are home back
in Charlotte. We are just
beyond thankful that everything turned out well with
the crash and there weren’t
any major injuries down
there. It certainly was a scary
event I can only imagine.”

Hendrick, his wife, Linda,
and the two pilots were all
released from Lower Keys
Medical Center on Tuesday
morning and returned to
Charlotte. Linda Hendrick
sustained minor cuts and
bruises. The two pilots were
not injured.
The plane apparently
skidded off the 4,800-foot
runway and came to a stop
along a 600-foot unpaved
safety area that had been
added in May.

Rio Grande Sports
Information

TENNERTON, W.Va.
— Richard Isberner scored
two goals and assisted on
another, while teammate
Rafael Maccauro added a
goal and an assist of his
own to fuel the University
of Rio Grande in a 5-0 win
over West Virginia Wesleyan, Saturday night, in men’s
soccer action at frosty Freal
“Red” Crites Memorial Stadium.
The game was moved to
the artificial surface at nearby
Buckhannon-Upshur
High School after rain,
snow and a football game
earlier in the day left Wesleyan’s Ross Field unplayable.
The RedStorm, ranked
No. 3 in the most recent
NAIA coaches poll, improved to 15-1 with a win in

Rio splits tri-match in
regular season finale

Rio Grande Sports
Information

Hendrick returns to N. Carolina
after plane crash in Key West

By Rusty Miller

Sometimes a tie is a
sweet accomplishment.
Creston
Norwayne
forged a three-way tie in
the Wayne County Athletic League with a 33-22
win over previously unbeaten Jeromesville Hillsdale.
Norwayne’s
Adam
Wallace completed 12 of
21 passes for 117 yards
and three touchdowns,
including the go-ahead
score with just 50 seconds left. He also ran it
30 times for 145 yards in
addition to numerous key
tackles as an inside linebacker.
“I’m feeling great
right now,” Wallace said.
“We’ve been working all
summer for this thing to
happen, to win County.
Championship teams pull
together in crunch time
and that’s what we did.”
Sharing the title with
Norwayne and Hillsdale
was Smithville, which
gave 35th-year coach
Keith Schrock known as
“The Godfather” around
the conference his 250th
career win.
“When you think of
Smithville, you think of
coach Schrock,” QB Alex
Bates said. “He is the face
of Smithville football. He
is the face of our whole
community.”
The Smithies also
earned a spot in the playoffs for the first time since
2006.
“I love these kids,” said
Schrock, who still runs an
old-school Wing-T offense. “I love the way they
play football, the way they
bought into what we were
trying to accomplish.”
R E A L - E S TAT E
AGENTS: Aaron Abbott carried 46 times for
352 yards and five TDs
in Lebanon’s 46-31 win
over rival Springboro; St.
Marys Memorial’s D.J.
Manning’s 250-yard rushing performance in a 4221 loss to Lima Shawnee
allowed him to become
the first Roughrider to
rush for 2,000 yards in
a season; Middletown’s
Jalin Marshall rushed 13
times for 232 yards and
two TDs in a 27-14 win
over Princeton to finish
the season 9-1 and earn a
third straight playoff appearance; Dylan Horner
ran for 241 yards and
four TDs to lead Haviland Wayne Trace past
Defiance Ayersville 340; Jalen Mack carried 19
times for 214 yards and
two scores and QB Javon
Harris 22 times for 204

yards and four TDs in
Huber Heights Wayne’s
52-42 win over Kettering
Fairmont; Brandon Kuhlman ran 17 times for 202
yards and four TDs in Ottawa-Glandorf’s 61-7 win
over Van Wert; and Tyler
Hager ran 21 times for
197 yards and a TD in the
rain and mud to help Ironton beat rival Portsmouth
30-14.
RAMMING SPEED:
Trotwood-Madison
scored on its first six
possessions and one of
Vandalia-Butler’s as Bam
Bradley returned a tippedpass interception 24 yards
for a score in a 56-15 victory. Michael Simpson
completed 15 of 23 passes
for 325 yards (giving him
2,024 for the season) and
two TDs, with Dalin Byrd
grabbing five receptions
for 129 yards and a TD.
The victory gave the
Rams their second 10-0
season, matching the
1981 team on which current head coach Maurice
Douglass played.
THE MAC IS BACK:
Actually it has never left.
The Midwest Athletic
Conference placed half its
membership in the playoffs. Versailles, a six-time
state champion, returns to
the playoffs for the first
time since 2005. Coldwater is back in the postseason for the 15th straight
year, the second-longest
active streak behind Columbus DeSales’ 18.
BULLETIN-BOARD
MATERIAL: Minster collected its first victory over
Coldwater in 18 meetings
with a 22-6 win, also earning consecutive playoff
berths for the first time
since 1990-1991; Everett
Williams caught 10 passes
(giving him a school-record 52 on the year) for
130 yards and a TD in
Franklin’s 26-7 win over
Oakwood for a share of
the Wildcats’ first league
title since 1995; Conneaut
ended a 15-game losing
streak with a 30-28 win at
archrival Ashtabula Edgewood, providing first-year
coach Rocco Dobran with
his first win; Jefferson
had its six-game winning
streak snapped with a
36-0 loss to visiting University Prep, Pa. ending
the school’s longest win
streak in a single season
since 1910; Thompson
Ledgemont set a school
scoring mark with its
69-8 victory over Southington Chalker while extending its regular-season
win streak to 21; Hicksville won its first outright

Green Meadows Conference title since 1976 with
a 46-6 win over Sherwood
Fairview; Jackson beat
Gallia Academy 27-6 for
the fifth 10-0 season ever
at the school, stretching
its regular-season winning streak to 19; Orrville beat Wooster in the
101st meeting in the rivalry that started back in
1903, giving the Riders’
an unprecedented seventh
straight win in the series;
and Springfield Shawnee
has won 19 straight games
since falling to Springfield Catholic Central in
the 2010 season opener.
DEFENSIVE WEAPONS: Liberty Center’s
Bryan Hefflinger put four
of his five punts inside the
20, including a 51-yarder
to the 2-yard line with 2
minutes left that set up a
safety in a 36-29 win over
Archbold. Hefflinger also
had an interception that set
up a TD, a sack and seven
tackles in helping the Tigers to their first NWOAL
crown since 2001. And
Bellbrook’s Alex Oldham
had six sacks and two other tackles in a 10-7 loss to
Monroe.
INSTANT CLASSIC:
The Athens Bulldogs
capped a wild night in
Athens County with a 2421 overtime victory over
Nelsonville-York in a battle of unbeatens.
The Bulldogs won
when kicker Seth Brooks
made a game-winning
21-yard field goal in OT.
Brooks was a captain on
the soccer team at Athens
and just joined the football team the Monday before the game.
Athens’ first win over
Nelsonville-York
since
2003 meant its first 10-0
season. It had been 46
years since Athens had
a perfect regular season,
going 9-0 in 1965. It’s
also Athens’ first outright
league title since 1968.
ALTER BOYS: Kettering Alter completed a fifth
undefeated regular season
in school history with a
17-7 victory over Dayton Chaminade-Julienne.
The Knights clinched
their sixth straight Greater
Catholic League North
Division title and posted
their fourth undefeated
regular season in the past
six years. Alter also is 41-1
in GCL North play since
the league’s realignment
in 2006. The Knights, up
to Division III this season,
are in the postseason for
the 11th straight year. CJ
(7-3) will make its second
appearance since 2005.

Wednesday’s TV Guide
WEDNESDAY 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

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2
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
Up All Night Up All Night Harry's Law "The
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "True WSAZ News (:35) Tonight
(N)
News
Fortune
Rematch" (N)
Believers" (N)
Tonight
Show (N)
Jeopardy!
WTAP News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Up All Night Up All Night Harry's Law "The
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "True WTAP News (:35) Tonight
(N)
at Six
News
Fortune
Rematch" (N)
Believers" (N)
at 11
Show (N)
ABC 6 News ABC World Entertainm- Access
ABC 6 News (:35) News
The Middle Suburgatory Modern
Happy
Revenge "Charade" (N)
at 6
News
(N)
(N)
Family (N)
Endings (N)
at 11
Nightline
ent Tonight Hollywood
European
Nature "The Animal
Nova (N)
Steve Jobs: One Last
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
My
Leading
Journal
Business
House" (N)
Thing (N)
Generation Gen
Happy
Revenge "Charade" (N)
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm- The Middle Suburgatory Modern
Eyewitness (:35) News
ent Tonight (N)
News at 6
News
(N)
Family (N)
Endings (N)
News 11PM Nightline
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
Criminal Minds
CSI: Crime Scene "Freaks 10TV News (:35) LateS
Survivor: South Pacific
at 6:00 p.m. News
Fortune
"Epilogue" (N)
and Geeks" (N)
(N)
Two and a
Two and a
The Big
The X Factor "Top 12 Perform" The finalists from the
The
Excused
The Big
Eyewitness News at 10
Bang Theory Half Men
Half Men
Bang Theory four categories perform live for a recording contract. (L) p.m.
Simpsons
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
Charlie Rose
BBC News
Nature "The Animal
Nova (N)
Steve Jobs: One Last
America
Business
House" (N)
Thing (N)
News 13 at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
Criminal Minds
CSI: Crime Scene "Freaks News 13 at (:35) LateS
Survivor: South Pacific
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition
"Epilogue" (N)
and Geeks" (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
After Party Slap Shots
Sports Tour Championship UEFA Soccer Champions League
Slap Shots
Football
After Party
SportsCenter
NCAA Football Temple vs. Ohio (L)
SportsCenter
NFL 32 (L)
NFL Live
Quarter "The Brady 6"
Year of the Quarterback
MLS Soccer Playoffs (L)
Unsolved Mysteries
Unsolved Mysteries
Unsolved Mysteries
++ The Alphabet Killer ('08, Dra) Eliza Dushku.
Case "Cold Hit/ Silent Kill"
++ The Karate Kid ('84, Dra) Pat Morita, Ralph Macchio.
++ The Karate Kid Part II ('86, Act) Pat Morita, Ralph Macchio.
The 700 Club
UFC Unleashed
UFC Unleashed
Queens
Queens
UFC Unleashed
UFC 14 "Draft Dodger" (N) BlueMont
BlueMont
iCarly
Victorious
Big Time R. SpongeBob Brainsurge
Wife Kids
G. Lopez
G. Lopez
Friends
Friends
'70s Show
'70s Show
NCIS "Twilight"
NCIS: LA "Keepin' It Real" NCIS
NCIS "False Witness"
Psych
Burn Notice: The Fall of...
Queens
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy BigBang
BigBang
Conan (N)
(5:00) The Situation Room OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
Law &amp; Order "Shadow"
Law &amp; Order
Mentalist "Red Letter"
The Mentalist
+++ Patriot Games ('92, Act) Harrison Ford.
(5:30) +++ The Italian Job ('03, Act) Mark Wahlberg. ++ Road House ('89, Act) Sam Elliott, Ben Gazzara, Patrick Swayze. ++ Road House Patrick Swayze.
MythBuster "Car vs. Rain" Myth "Duct Tape Plane"
Myth "Flying Guillotine"
MythBusters
Penn &amp; Teller Tell a Lie
MythBusters
The First 48
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Hoggers
Hoggers
Hoggers
Hoggers
Fatal Attractions
Untamed and Uncut
I Shouldn't Be Alive
Alive "Climb Out of Hell" Extr. Animal Phobia
I Shouldn't Be Alive
Movie
++ Enough ('02, Thril) Bill Campbell, Juliette Lewis, Jennifer Lopez.
Snapped "Kelly Ryan"
Snapped "Wendi Andriano" Snapped "Linda Pedroza"
Charmed "Just Harried"
Charmed
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier 1/2
Frasier 2/2
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
(5:30) Kardash Kardashians E! News (N)
Sex &amp; City
Sex &amp; City
Keeping Up With the Kardashians
C. Lately (N) E! News
Sanford
Sanford
D. Van Dyke D. Van Dyke Married
Married
Scrubs
Scrubs
Hot/ Cleve. Hot/ Cleve. Loves Ray
Loves Ray
MadScie.
MadScie.
Alaska State Troopers
MadScie.
Redneck
Redneck (N) Redneck (N) MadScie.
MadScie.
MadScie.
Redneck
NBC Sports Talk (L)
NHL Live!
NHL Hockey Philadelphia Flyers vs. Buffalo Sabres (L)
NHL Live!
NHL Overtime (L)
SportsTalk
NASCAR Race Hub (N)
Pass Time
Pass Time
Dumbest
Dumbest
Pimp
Pimp
RideRule
RideRule
Dumbest
Dumbest
Disasters "Mega Tsunami" Modern Marvels
Ancient Aliens
Ancient Aliens
Brad Meltzer's Decoded
Decoded "Patton"
Top Chef "Island Fever"
Top Chef "Last Supper"
Top Chef "Final"
Art "Back to School" (N)
Top Chef (N)
Top Chef
106 &amp; Park "Wild Out Wednesday" (L)
+ Motives ('04, Thril) Shemar Moore, Vivica A Fox.
++ Hot Boyz ('00, Act) Gary Busey, Silkk The Shocker.
Property Brothers
House
House Hunt. House Hunt. House (N)
Income
Cousins
Property Brothers (N)
Property Brothers
(4:00) The Chronicles o...
Ghost "Judgement Day"
Ghost "Uninvited Guests" Ghost Hunters (N)
Fact or Faked (N)
Ghost Hunters
(5:30) +++ Men in Black (:15) 1stLook The Rite ('11, Dra) Colin O'Donoghue.
How to
Boardwalk Empire
Bill Maher
(5:45) + Lottery Ticket Bow Wow.
++ Sex and the City 2 ('10, Com) Sarah Jessica Parker.
++ DOA: Dead or Alive Jaime Pressly.
Chemistry
+++ The Hours ('02, Dra) Nicole Kidman.
Homeland "Blind Spot"
Inside the NFL
NASCAR
Penn Teller Inside the NFL

�Thursday, November 3, 2011

Wednesday, November 2, 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 Thursday,
Nov. 3, 2011:
Create a very special spot in your
immediate circle or family. Note a tug
of war between public and personal
commitments. Though you might
believe this is an either/or choice, it
might not be. If you are single, you
might yearn to settle down. You will
meet some great people. Take a
relationship slow this year. Let this
person see you as you are. If you
are attached, the two of you need to
share more of your daily life with each
other. AQUARIUS can be challenging.
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 might decide to pursue an unexpected course or direction. Know when to say you have had
enough. The best place to make a
decision from is detachment. Tonight:
Find your friends.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH Step on stage, understanding others’ expectations. Your precision draws a strong reaction. Clearly
this person doesn’t agree with you. Is
it important that he or she does? Be
willing to take a risk. Tonight: Work
only as late as need be.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH You could be in a substantially different position from in the
recent past. Think positively about
what you need to do in order to push
an idea through. Travel, a new perspective and comprehension braid
together. Do more listening. Tonight:
Let your imagination choose.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Let others make the first
gesture. They will have a strong
idea of what they want, and you can
negotiate accordingly. Don’t underestimate the end results of having
a long-overdue talk. A little anger
might break loose -- walk through it.
Tonight: Relax.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH You could come off a bit
more aggressive or assertive than
you realize. Others might back away,
as they don’t want to get into a tiff.
Unexpected news could distract you
and open you up to different perspectives. Be ready to walk through a new
door. Tonight: Accept an invitation.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH Focus on what must be
done, not what you want to do. You
could be so overwhelmed by another

person’s demanding nature that you
need to back off. You have a unique
understanding with a roommate or
family member. Let it illuminate your
day. Tonight: Relax through exercise.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH You might be shocked or
taken aback by what is happening
behind the scenes. Your vision of
what might work could be very different from a friend’s or a key associate’s. Why not try both, if possible,
to determine which way is best?
Let your creativity emerge. Tonight:
Where you are there is fun.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH Revisit various decisions.
You might not be sure what is best to
do within your immediate circle. Be
clear in a discussion about what is
happening on a personal level. Others
become more indulgent with understanding. Tonight: Loosen up.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHHH You zero in on a conversation, knowing what your priorities
are and which way to head. Though
you are not always in control, you
see the way. A loved one or close
friend might cause some last-minute
flak as you head down a certain road.
Tonight: Catch up on others’ news.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH You are a sign that is known
to be fiscally sound, but you could
go rogue when others least expect
that type of response. Make sure this
behavior is what you want and not
a reaction to circumstances. Avoid
getting into a hassle with someone
in your day-to-day life. Tonight: Your
treat.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH The unexpected plays a
key role within your natural framework. You see a new beginning,
though the path might be a surprise
(even to you). A meeting or group of
friends could be instrumental in pointing out the way. Listen to suggestions
rather than judge them. Tonight: As
you like.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHH Knowing when to pull
back and what to do might not link
up immediately. There is reason to
believe that one will cause the other
to come forward. Detach and gain a
perspective. Listen to all information
that comes in. Tonight: Vanish while
you can.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

Visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

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�Wednesday, November 2, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Polls

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) How a state panel of sports writers and broadcasters rates Ohio high school football teams
in the eighth weekly Associated Press poll of 2011, by
OHSAA divisions, with won-lost record and total points
(first-place votes in parentheses):
DIVISION I
1, Hilliard Davidson (16) 9-0
246
2, Tol. Whitmer (7)
10-0
220
3, Cin. Colerain 9-1
174
4, Middletown (3)
9-1
168
5, Mentor
9-1
145
6, Cle. St. Ignatius
8-2
124
7, Can. GlenOak 9-1
108
8, Cin. St. Xavier 8-2
78
9, Lakewood St. Edward 7-3
29
10, Solon
9-1
27
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Sylvania Southview 20. 12, Cle. Hts. 19. 12, Troy 19. 14, Cin. Moeller 12.
DIVISION II
1, Trotwood-Madison (18) 10-0
247
2, Kings Mills Kings (2) 10-0
220
3, Cols. Marion-Franklin (2)
10-0
178
4, Warren Howland (3) 9-0
163
5, Avon (1)
9-1
144
6, Aurora
9-1
110
7, Maple Hts.
8-1
89
8, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit
8-1
88
9, Dresden Tri-Valley
9-1
51
10, Wapakoneta 9-1
35

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Sandusky 30. 12,
Franklin 24. 13, Tipp City Tippecanoe 21.
DIVISION III
1, Steubenville (18)
10-0
240
2, Kettering Alter (3)
10-0
190
3, Plain City Jonathan Alder (1)
10-0
172
4, Chagrin Falls 10-0
162
5, Mentor Lake Cath. (1) 9-1
145
T6, Minerva (2) 10-0
122
T6, Spring. Shawnee (1) 10-0
122
8, Dover 9-1
48
9, Thornville Sheridan
9-1
45
10, Youngs. Mooney
6-3
34
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Jackson 26. 12,
Athens 24. 13, Akr. SVSM 19. 14, Day. Thurgood Marshall
17. 15, Alliance Marlington 15. 16, Ravenna SE 12.
DIVISION IV
1, Kenton (21) 10-0
252
2, Cols. Hartley (4)
9-0
221
3, Waynesville (1)
10-0
184
4, Pemberville Eastwood 10-0
168
5, Cin. Madeira 10-0
143
6, Johnstown-Monroe
10-0
126
7, Genoa Area 9-1
80
8, Girard
9-1
68
9, St. Clairsville 9-1
61
10, Middletown Fenwick 8-2
22
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Ottawa-Glandorf
20. 12, Day. Chaminade-Julienne 18. 13, Creston Nor-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 10

wayne 13. 14, Martins Ferry 12.
DIVISION V
1, Lima Cent. Cath. (14) 10-0
222
2, Kirtland (5) 10-0
210
3, Marion Pleasant (3)
10-0
199
4, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon
10-0
172
5, Liberty Center (3)
10-0
154
6, Bucyrus Wynford (1) 10-0
134
7, W. Liberty-Salem
10-0
96
8, Lucasville Valley
10-0
75
9, Coldwater
7-3
41
10, Woodsfield Monroe Cent.
9-1
20
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Nelsonville-York
17. 12, Cols. Grandview Hts. 13. 13, Covington 12.
DIVISION VI
1, Berlin Center Western Reserve (19)
1 0 - 0
243
2, Thompson Ledgemont (4)
10-0
204
3, Delphos St. John’s (2) 7-3
176
4, Maria Stein Marion Local
8-2
164
5, Malvern
9-1
137
6, Leipsic (1)
9-1
123
7, Ft. Loramie 9-1
105
8, Youngs. Christian
9-1
66
9, Ada 8-2
58
10, Willow Wood Symmes Valley 9-1
40
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Spring. Cath. Cent.
35. 12, Tiffin Calvert 33. 13, Shadyside 18. 14, Minster 15.

Rio women’s soccer wins second straight

Rio Grande Sports
Information

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
— Erica Nagel’s second

half goal broke a scoreless
deadlock and lifted the University of Rio
Grande to a 1-0 win over
WVU Tech, Friday after-

noon, in women’s soccer
action at Coonskin Park’s
Schoenbaum
Stadium.
With
their
second

straight victory, the RedStorm closed the regular
season with a 6-10 record.
Nagel, a senior defender,
scored in the 63rd minute
off an assist from junior defender
Allyson Schmelzer for
the game’s only marker.
Rio Grande enjoyed an

18-6 edge in shots.
“We played really well,”
said Rio Grande head coach
Callum Morris.
Freshman
goalkeeper
Allison Keeney recorded
six saves en route to the
shutout win.
Bridget Leach was credited with 10 saves in the

loss for the Golden Bears
(8-9-1).
Rio Grande returns to
action next Friday, traveling to Georgetown for the
opening round of the MidSouth Conference Tournament. Kickoff is set for 3
p.m.

Rio volleyball sweeps UVA-Wise in home finale
Rio Grande Sports Information

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RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande started
fast and then rallied from behind in
back-to-back games to post a 3-0
win over UVA-Wise, Friday night,
in Mid-South Conference volleyball
action at the Newt Oliver Arena.
The RedStorm, which won
for the fifth straight time, took the
match by scores of 25-17, 25-19
and 25-22 to improve to 19-13 overall and 6-5 in the MSC. The victory
also allowed head coach Billina
Donaldson’s squad to secure the
No. 4 seed in next weekend’s conference tournament.
“I’m happy that we won, but

I’m not particularly happy with how
we played - not at all,” Donaldson
said. “We had no enthusiasm and
we didn’t give the crowd much to
celebrate. It was dead in here to be
the last home game of the year.”
Rio Grande jumped to a 4-0
lead in Game One and never trailed.
UVA-Wise (11-17, 3-8) twice
pulled within one point of a tie, but
could get no closer.
The Highland Cavaliers opened
up a 10-7 lead in Game Two, but the
RedStorm reeled off 11 of the next
12 points to take control. Freshman
defensive specialist Jocelyn George
had six straight service winners in
the URG run.
Wise also led Game Three 1510 after a pair of winners by Megan

Crabtree, but Rio Grande scored
eight of the next nine points and
took the lead for good at 17-16 on
the fourth of five straight service
winners by junior outside hitter
Whitney Smith.
“We had some stretches where
we ran off a lot of points, but we
were making little dumb mistakes
that got us behind to start with,”
Donaldson said. “We were missing
serves, we weren’t serving aggressively - I just expected a lot more.”
Smith, the reigning MSC Player
of the Week for the past two weeks,
finished with a team-best 13 kills.
She returned to the court after suffering an ankle injury early in the
final game.

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