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                  <text>----~--- --....

Area kids finds
solace at Camp
Beaver,A6

Meigs Tea Party
gathers,A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, phio
: 50 CENTS ·. Vol. 59, ~ri)i~;;l
.
-

Report: 10
states sell
half of imported crime guns
WASHINGTON (AP)
- Nearly half of the
guns that crossed state
lines and were used in
crimes in 2009 were sold
in just 10 states. according to a report being
released Monday by a
mayors' group.
Those states accounted
• for nearly 21.000 guns
Aonnected to cnmes in
.
ther states, said the survey by Mayors Against
Illegal Guns. an association of more than 500
mayors led by New
York's
Michael
Bloomberg and Boston's
Thomas Menino.
The Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives traced more
than 145,000 guns used
in crimes in 2009 and
found that more than
43,000 of those weapons
were sold in other states.
Forty-nine percent of
those guns were sold' in
Georgia,
Florida,
Virginia. Texas. Indiana.
Ohio.
Pennsylvania.
North
Carolina.
California or Arizona.
States were also ranked
by the number of crime
per
guns
exported
I 00.000
inhabitants.
ississippi led that list,
llowed
by
West
rgm1a,
Kentucky,
Alaska, Alabama. South
Carolina,
Virginia,
Indiana, Nevada and
Georgia.
Those states, the report
said. have more relaxed
gun laws. suggesting that
"criminals and gun tra.ffickers may favor ce1tam
states as the sources of
guns."
For example. in states
that do not require background checks for hand
gun sales at gun shows.
the crime-gun export rate
was two-and-a-half times
as much as the rate in
states that do require
such checks.

OBITUARIES
Page AS

•

• Ruby Mae Queen

WEATHER

High: 67
Low: 48

~.~

TANF funds made available to tornado victims
B Y BRIAN

J.

R EED

BREED MYOAILYSENTlNELCOM

POMEROY
-An
additional $60.000 in
Temporary Assistance to
Needy Families funding
has been made available
to Meigs County people
affected by this month's
tornadoes.
Meigs and Perry counties will each receive
$60,000, and Athens

County $120,000, to
assist eligible families
and individuals impacted
by the storm system.
Additional assistance for
elderly and disabled
applicants without children is also being made
available. Governor Ted
Strickland announced.
Last week. Strickland
declared a disaster in
Athens, Meigs and Perry
counties, asking the State

Controlling Board to
approve S 1.6 million in
state assistance for recovery.
Meigs County damage
estimates are at $2 million. Most of that damage
was sustamed in the Eden
Ridge and Sugar Camp
communities in Olive
Township. where 300
were left homeless.
Strickland has also
asked the U.S. Small

Business Adminbtration
to issue a disaster declaration for Athens County.
so that loan assbtance
can be made available
there and in Meigs and
Perry counties.
Early
last
week.
Strickland announced
there would be no point
in seeking assistance
from
the
Federal
Emergency Management
Agency because damage

Art in the Park activities attract crowd

Charlene Hoeflichlphotos
• Helen Bodimer (front) and Velma Rue, view the many paintings which line the old
train track area in front of the historic Depot.

Charlene Hoeflichlphotos
Larry Bragg, winner of best of show, demonstrates his
painting technique.
B Y CHARLENE H OEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
More than a hundred
phopaintings
and
tographs were displayed
at the annual Art in the
Park show sponsored by
the
Riverbend
Arts
Council in Diles Park
Saturday.
Entries were judged
and taking best of show
was Larry Bragg of Point
Pleasant. W.Va.. with a
floral "Southern Beauty"
on a 24x36 inch oil on
canvas. Reserve best of
show went to Julia
Proctor-Houston
of
Middleport
with
"Woman from the Bend,"
a 20x24 oil on canvas.
In addition to the
extensive art display.
there were several artists
on site demonstrating
their painting techniques
including the guest artist
for the day. Betty Stout
of Stoutsville.
A video of Meigs
County pictures was
shown throughout the
day by Charlie Mankin,

and Bob Graham and
John Bentley of the OHKan Coin Club had a display of coins and old
photographs.
Adding to the artistic
flavor of the show was
music by Scott Needs, on
stringed
instruments.
including a banjo, fiddle
and guitar, dance routmes
by the Silver Stars. a
senior dance group. blusy
selections by Dustin
Johnson, and some tall
tales by Donna Wilson.
Meigsican Storyteller.
Children's activities
were held under the
"Adventure Tent" which
also featured nearby a
display of art work completed in the Rivcrbend's
summer program for
children coordinated by
Bobbi
DeLong.
Emceemr the activities
was Dixie Sayre as Ms.
Palette.
Several vendors were
on site displaying their
wares, and throughout
the day refreshments
were served in the renovated Depot where the
prize winning art pieces

Charlene Hoeflichlphotos
Scott Needs adds music on stringed instruments to the Art in the Park program .

were displayed.
Paintings and photographs entered in the
show were judged with
ribbons and cash prizes
going to the winners.
Other winners in oil
besides Bragg, best of
show,
and
ProctorHouston. reserve best of
show. were Clara Cay of
Bidwell, third place, and
Elizabeth Hamilton of
Gallipolis,
honorable
mentiOn.

In acrylic paintings.
the winners were John
Bumgarner.·
. Point
Pleasant. first. ~·1th an
honorable menti~Hl. on
another
pamt1ng;
Hershel
McClure.
Pomeroy, .second; and
Ro~ert ~npp. Tuppers
Plams. thml.
1!1
watercolors,
Shir_ley
Ham~n
of
Racme. took fast on

Please see Art. Al

Health department still waiting
Flu vaccines yet to arrive

INDEX

B Y B ETH S ERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

2 St.CI10NS -

12 P.\GI-:S

Calendars

A3

AClas~ifieds

B3-4

Bs

~OIDlCS

A4

Editorials
Sports

.
B Sect IOn

© 2010 ohio V11lley Puhlishing Co.

. ~li.I!IJ.

!t

,II .

estimates and affected
population requirements
were not met.
The Ohio Emergency
Management Agency has
opened a support hotline.
(800) 545-0553 to assist
residents affected by tl)e
storms. Eligibility for the
newly~released
TANF
assistance is determined
the
local
through
Department of Job and
Family Services.

POMEROY

-

I Though
it's been said
good things some to
those who wait. this
doesn't necessarily apply
when talking about
intluenza.
The Meigs County
Health Department tries
to typically have its
annual flu shot clinic in
October though in recent
years those clinics have
been delayed due to vaccine demand and waiting
on the Ohio Department
of Health to fill the

orders. This year. the
governing board of the
health department decided to go to a private vaccine provider (a first for
the department) in the
hopes of getting the does
earlier and getting the
entire order lillcd.
Shen·y Wilcox. director of nursing for the
MCHD. said 1.500 doses
were ordered from Glaxo
Smith Kline in January.
though the doses have yet
to arrive. Wilcox said she
spoke to GSK two weeks
ago and orders were still
bdng filled. just not the
health department's, at

least not yet. The contract calls for the health
department to receive a
full or partial order by
Sept. 30 and any balance
of doses remaining by
Oct. 30. Still, the private
provider gave no specific
date as to when the doses
will arrive so that staff
can plan the annual flu
shot clinic.
By purchasing the
doses through a private
prov1der. Wilcox said the
health department had
access to lower pricing.
She added the vaccines
will be given. at no cost.
to all Meigs County resi-

dents \\ ithout insurance
though donations arc
appreciated. As usual,
vaccines will also be
given to those with
Medicaid and Medicare.
Wilcox said the health
department has ordered
some doses from •he
Ohio Department of
Health. including: I 00
doses for infants. I00
docs for those ages threc18 years and 40 adult
doses for those \\ ith high
risk conditions who have
no way to pay for the
vaccine from another

Please see Flu, Al

Woman
in shooting
now under
house arrest
B Y BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL Cm.l

POMEROY
-A
Langsville
woman
accused of shooting and
injuring· two passengers
in a \'chicle in front of
her residence is out of jail
and under house arrest.
Tania D. Crawford. 48.
Dexter Road. 1s charged
with two counts of felonious assault and was m
sheriff's custody until her
pre-tnal on Sept. 20
According to a subseg_uent entry from Judge
Fred W. Crow IlL
Crawford was not conveyed to the hearing by
the sheriff's department.
und her bond was modified. She had been in
sheriff's custody since
hl'r arrest immediately
after the incident.
Crawford was permitted to post I0 percent of a
rl'duced $170.000 bona.

Please see Shooting. A5

�- ----·

Tuesday, September 28,

2010

-~

·--

- ~

-- --,-----

www.mydailysentinel.com

-

------

-~ --- -- - -~---~-~ ~

The Daily Sentinel• PageA2

Obama: Money alone can't solve school predicament
WASHINGTON (AP)
Presidei1t Barack
Obama started the school
week Monday with a call
for a longer school year.
and said the worst-performing teachers have
"got to go"' if they don't
improve quickly.
Bemoaning 'Ametica's
decreasing global educational competitiveness,
Obama sought in a
nationally
broadcast
interview to reinvigorate
his education agenda. At
the same time. the president acknowledged that
many poor schools don't
have the money they
need and he defended
federal aid for them. But
Obama also said that
money alone won't fix
the problenis in public
schools. saying higher
standards must be set and
achieved by students and
teachers alike.

Asked in an interview
if he supported a yearround
school
year,
Obama said: ''The idea of
a longer school year, I
think. makes sense." He
did not specify how long
that school year should
be but said U.S. students
attend classes, on average. about a month less
than children in most
other advanced countries.
"That month makes a
difference," the president
said. "lt means that kids
are losing a lot of what
they learn during the
school year during the
summer. It's especially
severe for poorer kids
who may not see as many
books in the house dudng
the summers, aren't getting as many educational
opportunities."
The
Education
Commission of the States
reported last year that

U.S. schools through the
high school level offer an
average of 180 instruction days per year, compared to an average of
197 days for lower
grades and 196 days for
upper grade~ in countries
with the best student
achievement
levels,
including Japan, Korea.
Germany
and
New
Zealand.
On other topics in a
live half-hour television
interview. Obama said
that White House chief of
staff Rahm Emanuel has
not told him whether he
will resign to run for
mayor of Chicago, as is
widely expected. Obama
said he knows Emanuel
must decide quickly to
mount a .serious campaign.
The president also
sought anew to show that
he understands the frus-

tration of millions of people coping with a slow
economy and high
joblessness - some 20
months into his term. He
said that even if people
know he is working hard
to fix their problems,
what they expect from
him is "something concrete" to help them get a
job and pay their bills.
Obama appeared on
NBC's "Today" show in
a live interview that
focused on education.
Education is primarily
the domain of state and
local governments. But
the federal government
has leverage and uses it,
for example, through the
string~ it attaches to
poverty aid that thousands of schools depend
upon to support their programming.
The president admitted
that his own daughters,

Malia and Sasha, couldn't get the same quality
education
at
a
Washington. D.C. public
school that they currently
get at their private
schooL The Obama girls
attend Sidwell Friends
School, an elite private
school in the Washington
area.
"The
DC
public
schools systems are
struggling," Obama said,
though he added that the
school
district
has,
"made some important
strides over the last several years to move in the
direction of reform."
Public
schools
m
Washington have long
faced criticism for their
low test scores and high
dropout rates.
Separately Monday,
Obama announced a goal
of recruiting 10,000
teachers who work in the

fields of science, technology, engineering and
math - over the next
two years. In a statement,
Obama said such education is vital to allowing
students to compete
against their peers in
today's economy.
In the interview,
president said he
to work with teachers
unions, and he embraced
the role they play in
defending their members. But he said that
unions
cannot
and
should not defend a status quo in which onethird of children are
dropping out. He challenged them not to be
resistant to change.
And the president
endorsed the firing of
teachers who, once given
the chance and the training to improve, are still
not serving students well.

NATO strikes in Pakistan prompt rebuke
KABUL. Afghanistan
(AP) - Pakistan disputed
NATO's
claim
Monday that its forces
have the right of hot pursuit across the Afghan
border after coalition
helicopters
launched
airstrikes that killed
more than 50 militants
who had escaped into
Pakistan following an
attack on an Afghan
security post.
Pakistan said it had
. strongly protested to
NATO
over
the
airstrikes, which a coalition spokesman justified
on grounds of "selfddcnse.'' Pakistan is
sensitive about attacks
on its territory. but U.S.
officials have said they
have the right to cross a
few miles (kilometers)
into Pakistani airspace if
they are attacked and in
hot pursuit of a target.
Pakistan
denied
Monday such an understanding exists.
Its Ministry of Foreign
Affairs said in a press
release the mandate of
foreign
troops
in
Afghanistan ends at' the
Afghan harder and said
the strikes were a violation of its sovereignty.
Pakistan said that unless
corrective measures are
implemented, it will
have
to
"consider
response options."
NATO reported it
launched two airstrikes
on
Saturday,
and
Pakistani intelligence
officiah reported a third
attack on Monday - all
in tribal regions located
opposite an increasingly
volatile eastern region of
Afghanistan. It was not
clear which militant
group was targeted, bu.t
the
al -Qaida-linked

Haqqani faction, which
launches
frequent
attacks on NATO and
Afghan forces. is particularly active there.
The first strike took
place after insurgents
based
in
Pakistan
attacked the outpost in
Afghanistan:s
Khost
province, right across
the
border
from
Pakistan's
North
Waziristan tribal region,
said U.S. Capt. Ryan
Donald, a spokesman for
NATO-led
the
International Security
Assistance Force in
Afghanistan.
·'The ISAF helicopters
did cross into Pakistan
territory to engage the
insurgents." Donald said.
"JSAF maintains the
right to self-defense, and
that's why they crossed
the Pakistan border."
Another
ISAF
spokesman. U.S. Maj.
Michael Johnson, said the
first airstrike killed 49
militants. NATO officials
were able to assess the
number of militants killed
in the airstrikes by using
gun cameras mounted on
the helicopters. according
to ISAF.
Abdul
Hakim
hhaqzie, the provincial
police chief in Khost.
cited a higher death toll
of around 60 militants.
He said police at checkpoints at the border
came under attack,
engaged the militants in
a gun battle and then
called for help, prompting
the
helicopter
strikes.
The
air
strikes
occurred on the Pakistan
side as militants fled, but
police said they were
able to go in and count
the bodies. collecting

ammumtwn
and
weapons from the battlefield.
A
second
attack
occurred when helicopters returned to the
border area and were
attacked by insurgents
based
111
Pakistan,
Donald said. It kil1ed at
least four militants.
''The
helicopters
returned to the scene and
they received direct
small arms fire and, once
again operating in selfdefense. they engaged
the insurgents," D0nald
said.
Pakistani intelligence
officials said two NATO
helicopters carried out a
third
strike
inside
Pakistani territory on
Monday
morning.
killing five militants and
wounding nine others.
The strike occurred in
the vi11age of Mata Sanger
in the Kurram tribal area.
which is directly across
the border from the
Afghan provinces of
Paktia and Nangarhar,
said the officials, speaking
on condition of anonymity
because they were not
authorized to talk to the
media.
NATO would not
immediately
confirm
that.
Pakistan is a key ally
of the U.S. and NATO
forces
fighting
m
Afghanistan.
but
Islamabad says it does
not allow foreign troops
to conduct combat operations in its territory and
relations between the
two sides have often
been uneasy. _ Despite
Pakistan· s own military
operations
against
Pakistani Taliban fighters, it has resisted pressure to move against the

Haqqani faction which
does not attack the
Pakistani state.
However, Pakistan's
strong protest Monday
against
the
NATO
airstrikes stands in contrast to the muted criticism that has accompanied a sharp rise in suspected attacks by U.S.
unmanned drones in the
country's tribal areas,
particularly
North
Waziristan.
Pakistan did not comment Monday on a suspected U.S. missile
strike that Pakistani
intelligence
officials
said killed four people
near Mir Ali. a major
town in the North
Waziristan. It was the
20th such attack this
month. The officials
spoke on condition of
anonymity because they
were not authorized to
talk to the media.
Pakistan has criticized
drone attacks as violations of the country's
sovereignty in the past,
but that criticism has
died down in recent
months. It's possible that
Pakistani officials no
longer feel the need to
protest every drone
strike - believed conducted by the CIA since they occur so
often.
Attacks
by
manned aircraft inside
Pakistani territory. however. are quite rare. Also,
U.S. officials refuse to
publicly acknowledge
the drone strikes, whereas NATO confirmed
Saturday's
helicopter
attacks - which may
have prompted Pakistan
to make a public
response.
NATO said they didn't
have a record of how

many times manned aircraft have carried out
strikes inside Pakistan.
In June 2008, Pakistan
accused the U.S•. of
killing 11 of its soldiers
when aircraft bombed
their border post in the
Mohmand tribal area..
U.S. officials said coalition- aircraft dropped
bombs during a clash with
militants. Though they
expressed regret over the
incident, they said the
action was justified.
Meanwhile, in southern Afghanistan. 1\ATO
pressed ahead Monday
with a combat operation
to drive Taliban fighters
from areas around the
southern
city
of
Kandahar in the insurgent heartland.
A top NATO officer
said the alliance a few
days ago had launched
the "kinetic." or combat.
phase of "Operation
Dragon Strike," a joint
military
push
with
Afghan forces around
Kandahar.
The push in Kandahar
is seen as a part of the
Obama administration's
strategy to turn around
the war as insurgents
undermine the ability of
an Afghan government
to rule much of the
country.
Kandahar
remains
particularly
dangerous; seven U.S.
troops have been killed
in Kandahar this month.
Another three have been
killed in the south. but
no further details have
been released.
Coalition forces were
moving into two or three
areas around Kandahar
at once to pressure the
Taliban "so they don't
get the chance to run
away,"
said
Shah

Mohammad
Ahmadi,
chief of Arghandab district northwest of the
city. "Before, when we.
have tried to get rid o
the Taliban, when w
cleaned one area we
found more Taliban in a
different one."
In another volatile section of the nation,
British officials said
Monday that they were
in contact with Afghan
authodties about the disappearance of a British
aid worker and three of
her Afghan colleagues.
The four were ambushed
Sunday as they traveled
in two vehicles in northeastern Kunar province.
Po1ice fought a gunbattle
with the kidnappers near
the attack site before the
assailants fled, Kunar
police chief K.halilullah
Zaiyi said.
The British Embassy
in Kabul said officials
were working closely
with local authorities and
said the worker's
had been contacted.
Steven
0' ~u»u,, v.,
communications director
for
Development
Alternatives Inc., a global consulting company
based in the Washington,
D.C., area, said late
Sunday its employees,
including
a
British
national, were involved.
The company works on
projects for the U.S.
Agency for International
Development
in
Afghanistan.
NATO
also
said
Monday they confirmed
an Afghan civilian was
killed by a coalition service member in the
Alisheng district of
Laghman province on
Sunday. It said an investigation is ongoing.

WASHINGTON~~P~~~e: !~~~m~nep~~il~'=~~~ca~~K~~a~ ~~~e~~. respon!~

- The federal official
running the BP oil spill
response
proposed
Monday having a third
party from the oil industry represent polluters to
- correct perceptions that
the company responsible
in such disa~ters is in
charge of cleaning up
the mess.
ncident Commander
Thad Allen told a panel
appointed by President
Barack Obama to investigate the oil spill that
BP in no way tried to
short-change costs, even
though the public and
politicians thought the
company did. He pro-

from the o_il industry
could represent the polIuter in future spills,
instead of the company
at fault, and eliminate
the "the perception that
the responsible party is
intimately involved m
the response,'' which he
said raises questions
about who is in charge.
In the days and weeks
following the April accident. the Obama administration struggled to
show it was in control.
Oil spill law drafted
after the massive Exxon
Valdez spill is partly to
blame, because it gives
the company responsible

role.
The two-day meeting
of the spill commission
will also look at other
potential missteps by the
administration, including the controversial use
of chemical dispersants.
a moratonum on deepwater
drilling
and
Obama's plans to make
the Gulf's environment
better than it was before
the accident.
"Much was done well
in responding to this
spill, other things not
so," said former Sen.
Bob Graham. the cochairman of the panel.
Five
years
after

said "many have the
same questions whether
the government moved
quickly enough and was
effective enough in its
activities. its communication and its partnership with state and local
governments.''
William K. Reilly. a
former Environmental
Protection
Agency
administrator who coleads
the
panel,
described the relationship between BP and the
federal government as
an "uneasy partnership,"
adding "it's very difficult to make the case
that we were well pre-

The April 20 explosion and fire kil1ed 11
workers.
sunk
the
Deepwater
Horizon
drilling
rig
and
unleashed 206 million
gallons of crude oil. It
also tested the oil industry's and government's
capabilities to respond
to a massive blowout in
deep water.
A BP PLC official
said Monday that while
no single entity could
have
handled
the
response alone. it was
clear the government
was calling the shots.
''I can assure you that
at all times the Coast

was in chMge.•

said Doug Suttles, BP's
chief operation officer
for exploration and production.
But Billy Nungesser
president
of
Plaquemines Parish. one
of the coastal areas most
affected by the spill told the oil spill commission that he still
doesn't know who is in
charge.
"It became a joke ...
the Houma command
was the Wizard of Oz,
some guy behind the
curtain,"
Nungesser
said. "We never got a
yes or no, we just kept
waiting and waiting."

New FDIC rules require banks to share some risk
WASHINGTON (AP)
- Federal regulators are
insisting that banks share
some risk when issuing
the type of asset-backed
securities that nearly toppled the financial system
two years ago.
The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. is requiring banks hold at least 5
percent of the securities
on their books, as part of
new rules 'the regulator

adopted Monday that
were required under the
new financial overhaul
law. Banks would be
required to purchase their
share of the securities
beginning Jan. 1.
The idea is that banks
with such exposure to
risk would be more careful
about
properly
screening borrowers.
Financial industry executives have opposed the

requirements. Banks don't
have enough room on their
bal&lt;mce sheets to retain 5
percent of all the loans
they make. some executives have maintained.
The so-called "skin-inthe-game" requirement
was mandated by the
financial overhaul law
enacted in July. There is
an exemption to the
requirement. Banks won't
have to meet it for mort-

gage securities that contain so-called "safe"
loans, such as a traditional
30-year fixed-rate mortgage with a 20 percent
down payment.
The securities may contain bundles of mortgages.
credit card or auto loans
The secudties will have to
meet the FDIC's requirements to ensure that the
govcmment doesn't seize
them if the bank fails. In

addition to the 5 percent
minimum holding for
banks. there are other
requirements such as what
the banks must disclose to
regulators about the 5ecurities and what documents
borrowers must submit for
the loans.
At a public meeting. the
FDIC board also voted. 41. to extend through Dec.
3 1 a guarantee against
seizme of the securities in

a bank failure if th.
requirements aren't met. I
was set to expire Thursday.
Without an extension,
the market for assetbacked securities would be
completely "shut down,"
Michael Krimminger, a
deputy to FDIC Chairman
Sheila Bair, told board
members at the meeting.
John Walsh, the acting
comptroller of the currency. voted against the rule.

�Old-school spanking vs.
new-school thinking
to find out the latest views
on this issue. Chances are,
you will see corporal punishment relegated to the
junk heap. while settirig
limits and disciplining
children according to
their development and
temperament
gaining
popularity.
Dear Dr. Brothers:
My family probably is
the most middle-class of
our neighborhood. Our
modest ranch house is on
the same block as many
"McMansions." which
were built up around us
in' the '80s. So now that
my 18-year-old has started dating, the girls he
asks out are outside our
social circle. to say the
least. They expect to go
to the most expensive
restaurants and are used
to really elaborate gifts.
He spends his whole paycheck on these girls!
How can I get him to
stop?- K.P.
Dear K.P.: The fact
that he even has a paycheck at the tender age of
18 in this difficult economy shows that he is a gogetter and has something
to offer. Many kids his
age are off to college, and
never think about working until they have to,
when they graduate. So
your less-affluent child

Dr. Joyce Brothers
may have quite an advantage over his more fortunate classmates.
Now, if only he were
more realistic about his
chances of success with
the young women who
are above his pay scale.
This all means that your
son is going to have to
impress girls with something other than his
money, and perhaps learn
to be impressed by other
things as well. The sooner he learns that money
can't buy happiness, the
better; you can keep an
eye on his finances and
try to guide him in the
right direction. Living
within his means is
important, and that's the
main gospel you want to
spread.
(c) 2010 by King
Features Syndicate

-

S ubmitte d photo
A total of 140 students and 10 adults from Meigs High School spent a day in the
Reedsville community last week assisting with the cleanup work.

Community Calendar
Center.
Community
Lunch available at 12:30.
State Senator Jimmy
Stewart to discuss current state events.
Sat urday, Oct. 2
SALEM CENTER Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878,
potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. followed by meeting
at 7:30 p.m., final plans
for chicken barbecue
held on Sunday, Oct. 3
will be made.
Monday, Oct. 4
POMEROY - Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting, noon,
conference room, Meigs
County
Health
Department.
Tuesday, Oct. 5
MIDDLEPORT
Regular stated meeting

2010

What you should know about Ohio's DNA
testing law

MHS helps tornado victims

Clubs and
o rganizations
Tuesday, Sept. 28
POMEROY
The
OH-KAN Coin Club, 6:30
p.m., Pomeroy Library.
CHESTER Past
Councilors of Daughters
of America, 7:30 p.m. at
the hall.
Thursday, Sept. 30
OMEROY - Grand
ning of Meigs County
• .. ~publican headquarters,
West
Second
Street, noon. Luncheon
available. Program to
include Fran DeWine,
State Senator Jimmy
Stewart, other candidates.
Friday, Oct. 1
POMEROY - Meigs
County PERl Chapter 74
meets at 1 p.m., Mulberry

Tuesday, September 28,

Law You Can Use

ASK DR. BRO T H ERS

Dear Dr. Brothers:
usband and 1 are
have our first child
our months. We've
been reading everything
on raising a child rightfrom good old Dr. Spock
to the latest baby-care
blogs. I was horrified to
learn that my husband
condones spanking a
child! He tells me there
are sonic things you can't
learn from a book, and
.says, "l got spanked
plenty when I was a
child, and I turned out
OK." Please settle this
misconception so I can
inundate his thtck head
with facts! - J.N.
Dear J.N.: There may
be times when you are
tempted to spank or hit
your child after he or she
has pushed your buttons!
But inflicting physical
punishment upon a small
child because we are
angry is nothing short of
sive and dehumanizSome peop~e take
•
stand that it is OK to
I it or spank the child so
long as it is done in a
cool and calculated way,
never while angry.
But you are up against a
very powerful force: your
husband's own upbringing. Talk to your family
doctor and the little one's
pediatrician-to-be in order

Pa eA3

liJHIIE

The Daily Sentinel.

Q: What is Senate Bill
77?
A: Ohio Senate Bill 77
(SB77), effective July 6,
2010, is one of the
nation's most comprehensive criminal justice
reform packages. Its ultimate goal is to make it
easier to exonerate prisoners through DNA testing, and to help prevent
wrongful convictions in
the first instance. The
major provisions that will
be implemented through
SB77 include: (1) a
requirement that DNA
evidence be preserved in
all cases of "serious
crime"; (2) police incentives for recording all
interrogations
from
beginning to end in cases
of "serious crime"; (3) a
requirement for police
lineups and photo identification procedures ·to be
conducted in doubleblind fashion; and (4) an
expansion of Ohio's postconviction DNA testing
law to allow for DNA
testing to be done during
the parole phase of the
justice cycle.
Q: What are "serious
offenses?"
A: SB77 requires any
person who is at least 18
years old and who is
arrested on or after July
1, 2011 for a felony
offense to submit to DNA
collection. Individuals
who are presently. incarcerSlted or on community-cbntrol sanctions for a
felony offense also must
submit to DNA collection. DNA also must be
collected from individuals who commit the following
misdemeanor
offenses:
(1) an attempt to commit, or complicity in
committing,
unlawful
sexual conduct with a
minor;
(2) a misdemeanor
offense arising from the
same facts, circumstances and act as a
charge of aggravated
murder. murder, kidnapping, rape, sexual battery,
unlawful sexual conduct
with a minor, gross sexual imposition, aggravated
burglary;
(3) a misdemeanor
offense of interference
with child custody that
would have been considered kidnapping
or
extortion before July 1,
1996; and/or
(4) a sexually oriented
or child-victim offense

tha is a
misdemeanor if, in
relation to that offense,
the offender is a tier III
sex offender.
Q: Who may request
DNA testing to challenge
a conviction?
A: An offender may
request DNA testing if
he/she was convicted by
a judge or jury of a
felony offense, and one
of the following applies:
( 1) the offender was
sentenced to prison or
death for the felony and
is serving that term of
incarceration, the offender has been paroled, is on
probation or post-release
control, or has been
released from prison
under a term of community control sanction for
that felony;
(2) the offender was·
sentenced to and is under
community control sanction for that felony;
(3) the felony was a
sexually oriented offense
or chjld-victim oriented
offense, and the law
requires the offender to
register as a sex offender.
The offender is not eligible if he/she pleaded
guilty or no contest, or
has died before submitting a DNA testing application.
Q: What affect will
SB77 have on criminal
interrogations?
A: SB77 presumes that
all recorded statements in
criminal cases are voluntary if they occur in a
place of detention and are
made by a person who is
suspected of aggravated
murder, murder. voluntary manslaughter, involuntary
manslaughter,
aggravated
vehicular
homicide that is a first- or
second- degree felony, .
Rape, or sexual battery.
The person making the
electronically-recorded
statements has the burden of proving that they
were not voluntary. The
law now requires law
enforcement personnel to
keep both audio and
audio-visual recordings
until all appeals, postconviction relief proceedings, and habeas
corpus proceedings are
finished, or the time limit
for appeals has passed.
The defendant can ask
the court to keep the
recordings beyond these
periods of time.
Q: What affect will
SB77 have on identifica-

tion lineups in criminal
cases?
A: SB77 says that law
enforcement
agencies
conducting live or photo
lineups for eyewitnesses
must use specific procedures. When practicable,
a "blind administrator"
must conduct the lineups.
This means that the officer who oversees the
lineups does not know
the identity of the suspect. If this is not practicable, the administrator
must state the reason in
writing. The administrator also must record, in
writing:
(1) all identification
and non-identification
results obtained during
the lineup, signed b.y the
eyewitnesses, including
the eyewitnesses' confidence statements made
during identification;
(2) the names of all
persons present at the
lineup;
(3) the date and time of
the lineup;
(4) any eyewitness
identification of someone
other than the suspect in
the lineup; and
(5) the names of the
lineup members · and
sources of all lineup photographs or persons. If a
blind admimstrator conducts the lineup, he/she
must tell the eyewitness
that the suspect may or
may not be in the lineup
and that the administrator
does 'not know who the
suspect is. The trial court
will consider any failure
to comply with these
requirements
when
deciding if the jury
should hear eyewitness
identification. Also, evidence of a failure to comply can be used to support any claim of eyewitness misidentification.
Finally, the jury may
consider whether an eyewitness identification is
reliable based on whether
a lineup was conducted
according to the law.
(This "Law You Can
Use" column was provided by the Ohio State Bar
Association (OSBA). It
was prepared by Ian
Friedman
and
Eric
Nemecek of Ian N.
Friedman and Associates,
LLC, Cleveland. The column offers general information about the law.
Seek an attorney's advice
before applying this
information to a legal
problem.)

AAA: Ohio
gas prices fall
12 cents

auto club AAA, the Oil
Price
Information
Service and Wright
Express puts Ohio's average price for regulargrade gasoline at $2.61 a
gallon, down 12 cents
from $2.73 last Monday.
The current Ohio price is
8 cents lower than the
national
average
of
$2.69.

Demand has fallen
since the summer driving
season. Analysts say they
expect oil prices to continue to drop - barring a
hun·icane that disrupts
Gulf of Mexico production or a significant shift
in the economy.

COLUMBUS (AP)Gas prices are down 12
cents this week around
Ohio, thanks to a drop in
oil prices.
The latest survey from

Keeping Meigs &amp;
Gallia informed
~unbap

of Middleport Masonic
Lodge 363, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments at 6:30.
Bring item for food
pantry.
Ch u rch events
S u nd ay, Oct. 3
ROCK SPRINGS
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church,
homecoming,
9:30 a.m. worship service,
Skip Domigan, Joseph
McCall,
12:30
p.m.
potluck, 2 p.m. afternoon
worship with speaker Mike
Hazelton and music~
SYRACUSE - Sixth
Annual Biker Sunday,
Syracuse
Nazarene
Church, 9:30 a.m. registration, 10:30 a.m. service,
music by Heart and Soles,
guest speaker Pastor Bob
Thomas, hot lunch served
after the service.

\!Ctmes -~entttiel
Meigs • 992-2155
Gallia • 446-2342

VISit us
online at
mydallysentlnel.com

Your online
source for news

..
~FREE 24fl Uve Te&lt;hnical Suppor1
~ Unlim~ed

Hours, No Controds!
10 E·moil Addresses
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·267-3266
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- -._,----~..--~:.~o-;-.......,:;-:--:--~--:-----~~:-::~-----------~-----

Page

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 28,2010

The Daily Sentinel

l k tt:MCX:RAT

PLEDGE 1C AMERtCA

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager·News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make tzo law respecting att
establisltmmt of religiott, or prohibiting tire free
exercise thereof; or abridgit1g tire freedom of
speech, or of tire press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Go1'erumeut for a redress ofgrievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Feds to expand rules for
tracking money transfers
BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER,
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

The Obama ~dministration is proposing that banks
report all electronic money transfers in and out of the
country, expanding 1ts anti-terrorism requirements for
financial institutions.
Officials at the Treasury Department's Financial
Crim~s Enforcement Network said Monday that the
new requirement would boost their ability to track the
source of funding for terrorists.
Currently banks are required to only report cash
transactions above $10,000. They are also required to
keep records on all electronic transfers of money in
and out of the country above $3,000 and provide that
information to law enforcement officials if asked to
do so.
James H. Freis Ji·., the director of the Treasury
agency, said that widening the repo1ting requirement
would provide benefits with onl) a "modest cost to
industry."
"This regulatory plan will greatly assist law
enforcement in detecting and ferreting out transnational organized crime, multinational drug cartels, terrorist financing and international tax evasion," Freis
said in a statement announcing that the proposed rules
\Vere being published in the Federal Register for public comment.
The proposed expansion of reporting requirements
would not take effect until 2012.
Bank of Amenca said in a statement that the proposed rule would be analyzed to detennine the impact
it will have on the bank and its customers.
The new policy would fulfill requirements under
the 2004 intelligence law, which gave federal agencies greater authority to monitor potential terrorist
threats.
Critics contend that requiring banks to report all
money transfers involving foreign wire transactions
would represent a massive expansion in government
access to personal data.
"It is an extraordinary overreach by the U.S. government,'' said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of
the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a
Washington-based organization on privacy rights.
"This looks like a big electronic fishing expedition."
He said the proposal would raise serious concerns
in many European countries where banking customers have greater privacy rights with regard to their
financial transactions.
Under current requirements, financial institutions
each year tile about 14 million reports on cash transactions in excess of $10,000.
The proposed rule will not apply to credit card or
ATM transactions, the most common ways that banking customers gain access to their funds when they
are in another country.

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 k&gt;r publication.

The Daily Se1;1tinel
Reader f

.

(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) ~92-2156.

Our main number is
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News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14 ·
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General Manager
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E-mail:
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Web:
www.mydailysent1nel.com

I~

Vulnerable House Dems
declare their independence•
BY CRISTINA SILVA
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Rep. Dina Titus has been a loyal
soldier in pushing the Democrats'
ambitious agenda, voting for
health care legislation, extended
unemployment be.nefits, new
energy taxes and a· repeal of the
military's ban on gays serving
openly.
Her campaign signs, however,
proclaim Titus an "independent
voice" for Nevadans.
Aware that their stock has taken
the same tumble as home values,
Congress'
most
vulnerable
Democrats are declaring their
independence from their party's
agenda in Facebook profiles, television advertisements, news interviews and campaign websites
leading up to the Nov. 2 election.
That's when Republicans hope to
retake control of the House they
lost four years ago.
The
rebranders
include
Democratic Reps. Betsy Markey
and John Salazar in Colorado,
Zack Space in Ohio, Jason
Altmire in Pennsylvania, Glenn
Nye in Virginia and Joe Donnelly
in Indiana. In Texas, Rep. Chet
Edwards, once promoted as a
potential running mate for Barack
Obama, has become a vocal critic
of his party's policies.
.
The
tactic
could
hurt
Democratic turnout at a time
when the party needs to protect its
majority in Congress, some political strategists say.
"They want to get turnout as
high as possible among those who
vote for Democrats," said Joseph
Bafumi, a government professor
at Dartmouth College. "Running
away from the president or the
party might not be the way to do
it.,,
Democrats such as Altmire,
Edwards, Space and Nye stand
out for defying party leaders on
leading issues such as health care.
but they are having to defend their
independent bona fides because
of the "D" after their name.
Titus and others have raised
eyebrows for carrying water for
Obama in vote after vote, only to
pivot and say they are not behold-

en to a party.
Salazar, for example, opposed
federal money for abortions and
new clean-energy taxes. But he
also voted for many Democratic
priorities unpopular among conservatives, including the stimulus
bill, health care reform and debtfinanced extended unemployment
benefits.
Sliding toward the middle is a
tested tactic. It could appeal to
moderate Republican and nonpartisan voters alarmed by the number of hard-right candidates under
the GOP banner this year.
Rep. Chris Van Hollen of
Maryland, chairman of the House
Democrats· campaign committee,
said ideological diversity will
prove an asset as tea party fever
continues to push Republicans to
the far right.
"The Democratic caucus is a
big-tent caucus," Van Hollen said.
"We don't have a purity or an ideological test the way the
Republicans do."
Republicans argue Democrats
are whitewashing their political
records during the sluggish economic recovery that has focused
voter anger on Washington.
"Democrats may try to run
away from their party's unpopular
agenda, but their voting record
tells the real story," Rep. Pete
Sessions of Texas, who leads the
committee charged with electing
House Republicans, said in a
statement. ''Our responsibility
over the coming weeks is to
remind voters that House
Democrats have been complicit in
backing a big-government agenda
that has done nothing to create
jobs in this country."
The party infighting ranges
from minor jabs - Titus criticized Democrats for failing to sell
the health care bill - to bod)
blows.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi,
D-Calif.. is a favorite punching
bag.
In Indiana, Donnelly tell voters
he fought against Pelosi's "energy
tax on Hoosier families."
In Alabama, Rep. Bobby Bright
begged off a question about

whether he would vote for Pelosi
as speaker by pointing out that
"she may get sick and die."
In Texas, Edwards also won't
say whether Pelosi can still count
on his vote.
Nimble politic1ans have tried to
shun their political baggage
before when confronted by a wnry
public.
Republicans did it in 2006 a'nd
2008, when George W. Bush held
the White House. Democrats did
it in 2000 in a failed attempt to
retain the White House in the
bruised final days of Presiden.
Bill Clinton.
"It's an act of desperation more
than anything else. 'What can 1 do
to persuade the voters that I can
be representative of them?'" said
Tom Brunell, a political science
professor at the University .
Texas at Dallas. ''They are star
at a tidal wave and they are lool
ing for any life buoy they ca11
find."
Re-election prospects seem particularly dim for the handful of
Democrats
who
trumped
Republican incumbents while rid
ing Obama 's coattails in 200R.
In Virginia, Nye rarely tells vot
ers he is a Democrat. He calls
himself a fiscal conservative and
has circulated a petition to extend
all income tax rates.
Still, he's in a toss-up race in a
conservative district that seemo:;
eager to return to a Republican.
In Nevada. Titus' independent
message has done little to nudre
poll numbers in her favor in a dis
trict plagued by record high levels
of foreclosures and unemplo}
ment and sinking property values
The first-term congresswoman
defended her claim in a recent
interview with assurances that she
would be \\oilling to vote for
extending Bush era tax cuts for
everyone and would have
against the bank bailout had s.
been in office at the time.
Her challenger, tea part)
favorite Joe Heck, paints her as a
Pelosi henchman.
Titus' "independent voice" sign
hangs in Heck's campaign office
His staff called it motivation.

vot.

I

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Tuesday, September 28,2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Deaths

Meigs County Forecast
1\tesday:
Showers
likely, mainly before 4
p.m. Cloudy. .,.,ith a high
ncar 6 7. West wind
between 9 and 11 mph.
Chance of precipitation
is 70 percent. New rainfall amounts between a
quarter and half of an
inch possible.
Thcsday Night: A
chance of showers, mainly before 7 p.m. Mostly
cloudy, with a low
around 48. Light and
variable wind. Chance of
precipitation b 30 percent.
New
rainfall
amounts of less than a
tenth of an inch possible.
Wednesday: Mostly
sunny. with a high near
74. Light southeast wind.
Wednesday
Nigh t :
Mostly clear. with a low
around 47. Calm wind.

Ruby Mae Queen

Ruby Mae (Ramsey) Queen. 87, Mason, W.Va.,
died Sept. 26. 2010 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Visitation is from 6-9 p.m., Wednesday, Sept. 19 at
Fogelsong-Roush Funeral Home, Mason. W.Va. A
funeral service will be held at II a.m .. Thursday.
Sept. 30. 2010 at the funeral home with Rev. Glenn
officiating. Burial will be in Hill Cemetery.

For the·Record
911

PO:VlEROY- Meigs County 911 dispatched these
calls for medical assistance·
Friday
9:57 a.m.. South Second Avenue. Middleport. chest
pain~ 11: 11 a.m .. Ohio 124, Rutland, weakness~ 12:50
p.m., Pearl Street, difficulty breathing; 8:06p.m., East
Memorial Drive, difficulty breathing.
8:55 p.m., Joe Boring Road, motor vehicle collision; 9:05 p.m., South Fourth Avenue, Middleport,
chest pain; 10:40 p.m., Chestnut Street, syncope.
Saturday
12:04 p.m.. Plum Street, dead on arrival; 1:49 p.m..
Union Avenue, altered mental status; 2:38p.m., Peach
Fork Road. obstetrics; 3:52p.m .. Ohio 7 and U.S. 33,
motor vehicle collision; 8:46p.m., Nye Avenue. chest
pain.
AEP (NYSE) - 36.54
Sunday
Akzo (NASDAQ) 12:51 a.m., Bradbury Road, chest pain; 7)8 a.m.,
North Front Street, Middleport, seizure; 8:48 a.m., 62.85
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)
Walnut Street, Middleport, difficulty breathing; 11: 17
a.m., East Main Street, Pomeroy, domestic violence; - 47.74
Big Lots (NYSE) 06 p.m .. Ohio 681 and Sandridge Road, motor '
34.09
,
icle collision; 5:05 p.m .. Rocksprings Road, diffiBob Evans (NASDAQ)
ty breathing.
-28.60
Monday
BorgWarner (NYSE)
1: 10 a.m., \llorning Star Road, nausea; 1:40 a.m ..
-50.36
Apple Grove-Dorcas Road, difficulty breathing.
Century Alum (NASDAQ)- 12.69
POMEROY - Clerk of Courts Diane Lynch filed
Champion (NASDAQ)
the following as part of the court's public record:
-1.10
Civil
Charming
Shops
• Action for foreclosure filed by J.P. Morgan Chase (NASDAQ) - 3.60
Bank against Larry M. Morgan, and others.
City Holding (NASDomestic
DAQ)-29.95
• Action for dissolution of marriage filed by Phillip
Collins (NYSE)
W. Holsinger. Michelle Lee Holsinger.
57.38
• Divorce action filed by Rosa N. Ratcliff agamst
DuPont (NYSE)
Tracy J. Ratcliff.
45.30
• Divorce action filed by Mary V. McClellan I US Bank (NYSE)
against Ricky L. McClellan, Sr.
21.86
Gen Electric (NYSE)
- 16.43
Harley-Davidson
(NYSE) - 28.22
JP Morgan (NYSE) -

Local Stocks

Common Pleas

Local Briefs

39.08

Benefit tournament
POMEROY- The Kountry Hills Golf Course will
e a golf tournament to benetit tornado victims.
istration is at 8 a.m. with the tournament to begin
a.m., Oct. 2.
The cost is $60, 18 holes, shotgun start. There is
- also a $20.000 prize for the golfer who hits the hole in
one on the 18th hole.
·

Benefit sale
POMEROY - The Catholic Women's Club of
Sacred Heart Church will hold a white elephant sale
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday in the church hall.
Proceeds will benefit the CWC's parish mission activities.
Items, with the exception of clothing, may be delivered to the church from l-3 p.m. on Tuesday and
Wednesday.

Apple Butter making time
POMEROY- The Rock Springs United Methodist
Church will be making its first batch of apple butter
this weekend.
Members will gather at the home of Bill and Louise
Radford Friday to make preparations for cooking the
apple butter on Saturday. The project provides money
for the maintenance and improvements of the Rock
Springs Church.
second weekend of making apple butter wi!J be
on Oct. 8 and 9.
e apple butter sells for $3 a pint and $5 a quart.
In conjunction with this weekend's event. the annual
church picnic will be held.

Parent-teacher
conferences scheduled
POMEROY- Parent-teacher conferences will be
held from 4 to 7 p.m. Thursday at Meigs High.S~hool.
Students have been provided letters pertammg to
the purpose of the conferences which is to allow parents and teachers to discuss student progress and to
keep parents informed about student activities as the)
relate to school behavior and perfonmmce.

Art

1

Kroger (NYSE) 21.92
Ltd Brands (NYSE) 26.98
Norfolk So (NYSE)-

--"""---

.White House,
Dems see tax cut
vote after election

Mostly
T h ursd ay:
sunny. with, a high near
73.
T hursday
Night:
Mostly clear, with a low
around 51.
~'riday: Sunny. with a
high near 71
Friday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around
46.
Satur day:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near
66.
Satur d ay
Night:
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 40.
Sunday:
Mostl)'
sunny, with a high near

WASHINGTON (AP)
- The White House and
Democratic leaders in
Congress said Sunday
they would find a way to
extend middle-class tax
cuts after the November
elections. unable to
secure GOP backing
before lawmakers break
to campaign.
"One way or the other.
we're going to get it
done. And I believe the
64.
pressure is going to build
Sunday Night: Partly among the American
cloudy, with a low people" said David
around 39.
Axelrod,
President
Monday:
Mostly Barack Obarna's top
sunny, with a high near political aide.
64
House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif., had suggested that a vote could
be held this corning week
before lawmakers leave
town for the elections.
But her deputy, Majority
59.57
Leader
Steny Hoyer of
OVBC (NASDAQ)Maryland, said Sunday
19.18
BBT (NYSE) - 24.06 that holding a vote
wouldn't matter because
Peoples (NASDAQ) the legislation is still lan12.24
guishing in the Senate
Pepsico (NYSE) under GOP objections.
66.37
Both parties are using
Premier (NASDAQ) the
delay in a vote on the
6.17
fate of these George W.
Rockwell (NYSE) Bush-era cuts at a time of
61.19
record
deficits as politiRocky Boots (NAScal ammunition this elecDAQ)
7.42
Royal Dutch Shell - . tion season.
Democratic
leaders
60.31
Sears Holding (NAS- have said they want to
freeze tax rates for indiDAQ) -72.50
viduals making up to
Wal-Mart (NYSE) $200,000 and for fami53.48
Wendy's (NYSE) -4.40 lies earning up to
$250.000. Republicans.
WesBanco (NYSE) as well as some more
16.03
Worthington (NYSE) conservative Democrats,
want to extend all of
-15.11
Daily stock reports are Bush's income tax cuts
the 4 p.m. ET closing permanently, even for the
quotes·of transactions for wealthiest of Americans.
Democrats think the
September 27, 2010, proclimate
for compromise
vided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac will improve after the
Mills in Gallipolis at 1 election. The)' will still
(740) 441-9441 and need at ·least one
Lesley Marrero in Point Repuhlican vote in the
Pleasant at (304) 674- Senate to pass a bill.
"We are for making
0174. Member SIPC.

I

Second deadly shoo~ing has Youngstown
church mourning anew
YOUNGSTOWJ\ (AP)
- A church community
haunted by the parkinglot shooting death of an
80-year-old member is
mourning the killing of
another elderly parishioner minutes after leaving church.
Someone fired up to a
dozen shots at Thomas
Repchic. 75. as he
drove from church
Saturday with his 74year-old wife. \\ho was
wounded but expected
to recover. The couple
had
just
left St.
Dominic
Roman
Catholic Church, where
Jacqueline
Repchic
works in the office on
Saturdays
Detectives believe the
couple may have been
vicllrns of mistaken identity. Youngstown Capt.
Rod
Foley
said.
Investigators do not
believe the shooting was
random and think it was
gang related, but no
arrests have been made.
"We're working on a
theory that it was
misidentification," Foley
said. "Common sense is
going to tell you, why
would you want to target
a 75 year-old man and
74 year-old lady?" ,

Youngstown
Police
Chief Jimmy Hughes
said police believe the
suspects were targeting a
Cadillac - the same car
the couple was driving.
"It was just wrong
place, wrong time, wrong
car," Hughes said.
Authorities had an alert
out Monday for a suspected getawa) car. an
older
red
Dodge
Durango.
Councilwoman Janet
Tarpley, who represents
the south Youngstown
area where the shootings
occurred, said the city is
shaken by Saturday's
killing, January's shooting outside St. Dominic
and last week's strangling of a real estate
agent showing ahome in
another neighborhood.
Youn~stown, with a
population of about
73,000, shrunk by more
than half in the last four
decades amid job losses,
especially in the oncedominant steel industry.
Mayor Jay Williams has
pushed a campaign to
clear away vacant houses
and buildings to open up
space
to
make
Youngstown
greener.
cleaner and safer.
The church is located

in a working-class neighborhood of older homes,
some fixed up but 6thers
boarded up and abandoned.
The area is blanketed
with police officers day
and night, Hughes said.
and the police presence
has been beefed up since
the weekend shooting.
On Monday afternoon,
Hughes met with the pastor. Re'v. Gregory Maturi,
to discuss the ongoing
investigation.
"Obviously this is a
shock for them at the
church," Hughes said.
"The victim had been a
longtime member there.''
In January, a gunman
killed
Angeline
Firnognari in the church
parking lot after Mass
during an apparent purse
robbery. A 19-year-old
has been charged in her
death. Two men are
charged in the real estate
agent's death.
The Repchic attack
occurred as he drove his
Cadillac horne in the
early afternoon, and
Tarpley wonders if the
car was mistaken for
someone else's. Six. to 12
gunshots were fired.
The car crashed four
blocks from the church,

from Page Al
one painting and an
honorable mention on
another,
Harold
Bumgarner of New
Haven, second, and Bob
Tripp of Tuppers Plains.
rd .
drawings the winners were Cheyenne
Doczi of Middleport,
both first and second,
Bob Tripp, third, and
Olivia Schuler of Long
Bottom,
honorable
mention.
The other/mix media
category winners were
. Gerry Enrico of Point
Pleasant;
Elizabeth
Hamilton of Gallipolis,

second, and Jo Hill of
Long Bottom, third.
In photography, Joani
Powers of Long Bottom
was the first place winner. and also received
an honorable mention
on another entry; with
Linda
Higgins
of
Rutland, second, and
Mari lou Oleiniczak of
South Carolina third.
Jn landscape photography,
Marilou
Oleiniczak took first
with Jo Hill, second.
and Donna Wilson of
Middleport. third, along
with a honorable mention on another photo.

sure that the middle-class
Americans do not get a
tax increase. And we're
going to make sure that
happens," Hoyer said.
Republicans say they
want a chance to debate
extending the tax cuts
beyond the middle class
or else they will block the
Democratic proposal.
"If she's not willing to
have a: fair and open
debate, she should not
count on our votes,"
House GOP Leader John
Boehner said of Pelosi.
Axelrod said that kind
of strong-arm tactic will
hurt Republicans in this
fall's election.
The Senate's secondranking Democrat said
he hoped the atmosphere
will have changed after
the election and the
irnpassed
ended .
"Occasionally
one
Republican will break
ranks and help us," said
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill .
Still, Republicans have
seized on the impasse in
Congress by alleging that
Dcmocmts are contributing
to consumer uncertainty.
'The Democrats have
failed to lead this," said
Rep. Kevin McCarthy, RCalif. "They are going to
want to leave the House
without dealing with it.
That uncertainty itself is
keeping capital on the
sidelines and keeping
jobs from being created
in America.''
Boehner said that if the
House leaves without
blocking the tax increases, "it will be the most
irresponsible thing that
I've s.een since I have
been in Washington,
D.C."
Axe1r&lt;?d spoke on
ABC's "This Week."
Hoyer, Boehner and
McCarthy appeared "Fox
News Sunday." Durbin
was on C~N's ''State of
the Union."

Shooting

Flu

from Page At

from PageAl

She was placed on house
restraint. ordered to
remain on her 170-acre
farm, and be available to
the court by telephone at
all times.
Crawford must pay any
costs associated with her
house monitoring. She
was also prohibited from
contacting the victims in
the case.
Joshua Price. 19. was
shot twice and a female
juvenile was wounded in

the leg in August. Sheriff
Robert
Beegle
said
Crawford was in her yard
when Price stopped in
front of her house, and she
opened fire, striking two
of the car's four passengers. After Price and his
passenger were shot, he
continued to drive another
mile before stopping at a
residence for assistance.
Both \\'ere treated at
hospitals
for
their
injuries.

prO\ ider.
When the 1.500 doses
arrhc, the flu shot will be
advertised in The Daily
Sentinel and other media
outlets. Wilcox hopes
those doses arrive "any
day no.,.," so the flu shot
clinic can once again be
held in October. Until
then, if people need to
receive a flu shot. there
are pri\ ate providers and
businesses offering doses
now.

an area where many
homes are derelict. Some
commercial outlets up
the street are boarded up.
Tarpley urged crimeweary residents to put
aside fear and report anything
suspicious
to
police.
particularly
attack~ on the elderly.
which she blamed on
young thugs.
Williams has offered a
$10.000 reward for information in the latest
attack. . He told The
Vindicator newspaper
that the shootings were
sickening and disheartening.
Robert Shaw lives several blocks from the late~t shooting scene. but
didn't want to mention
his address to avoid
being targeted by criminals. He said the latest
killings would spur urban
flight.
"So much is going on,
dntg activity, immorality," said Shaw. 37.
"Youngstown's
going
under"
Robert Edmonds. who
lives four streets away
from the latest shooting.
blamed young thugs.
Edmonds. 57, said his
block is mostly safe. in
part because neighbors
watch out for each other.
Edmonds said the city
should extend an anticrime drive mounted during the summer to a yearround operation. "There
should be zero tolerance," he said.

•

�-

Tuesday, September 28,2010

-c-•-~~ ~-

- -

~

....,._-_.._.- _____
-.._llllllll_._._..,.=ji
--;..

.....

-~--~·-~-:-..,.•
w-•~--~--:---~--

~~

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

Area kids find solace at Camp Beaver
BY ANDREW CARTER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
Whether you're an adult
or a child, losing a loved
one is always a painful
experience.
This past Saturday, a
group of volunteers led
by
Holzer
Hospice
offered an opportunity
for area children who
have experienced the
grief associated with the
death of a parent. friend
or other loved one to
express their feelings in
a positive fashion and to
help facilitate the healing
process.
Camp
Beaver.
a
bereavement camp for
children, was held at the
French Art Colony in
Gallipolis. According to
organizers, 18 area children who have lost loved
ones participated in the
camp.
Sharon Shull, RN,
BSN. program director
of Holzer Hospice, said
the bereavement camp
provided the children the
chance to see that people
outside their usual circle
of relationships care
about them and what
they are experiencing.
"We're strangers, but
within the few hours that
they've
been
here,
they've become attached
to us and have been able
to share what they have
lost," she said. "We have
given them such fun
activities to do to relate
to that loss that it's taken
that sadness out of it."
Shull said the inspiration for · Camp Beaver
came
from
various

Andrew Carter/photo
Camp Beaver participants made masks to help them express their emotions about
losing loved ones during the event held this past Saturday at the French Art
Colony in Gallipolis.

sources. including the variety of craft activities
experience her own and helped the children
granddaughter
went make masks, memory
through following the boxes, stuffed animals
loss of the girl's grandfa- and sun prints. All of the
ther.
activities were designed
"I have'been looking at to allow the children to
as a hospice director express their feelings
because there are other through art. The day
hospices that do this in wrapped up with a butour surrounding area. terfly release that was
like Huntington and designed
and
Charleston
VoJunteers included
Kentucky," Shull said. Dr. Fred Williams, direc"My granddaughter lost tor of chaplaincy ser-·
her grandfather tragical- vices for Holzer Health
ly and I watched her Systems, as well as nursgrieve and not be able to es, social workers and
her emotions counselors.
show
''I feel it's been well
because she didn't want
her father to be upset or dispersed as far as the
her other relatives. I just staff that we have here
thought, 'we need this with the children." Shull
here in our community."' said.
Volunteers organized a
Williams, whose fami-

ly dealt with the wide
range of emotions as~o­
ciated with the death of a
loved following the
death of his wife several
years ago, said Camp
Beaver is a safe, positive
place for kids to express
themselves.
"It provides them an
environment
where
they're together with
other people who are
going through the grieving process," he said. "It
gives them a place where
they feel free to let their
feelings out, but in a way
they want to. No pressure is applied. The
activities
generate
thoughts and talking
about their feelings in a
very • non-threatening.
assured way. They feel

Andrew Carter/photo
Children who attended Camp Beaver made memory
boxes, which they filled with items to remind them of
their loved ones who have passed away.
free to let the feelings people that I encounter,

flow. It helps them to be
in that environment."
Williams said he and
the other Camp Beaver
volunteers who may
have lost loved ones
through the years also
experienced some healing just by reaching out
to the children who participated in the camp.
''One of the things
about grieving is finding
new meaning in life
without your loved one,"
he said. "For me, this is
part of who I am now
after losing my wife. To
me, it is a way I'm finding meaning to .invest in
other people's lives and
help children, and other

find new meaning for
themselves in remembering their loved ones. That
provides hope. When
you find new meaning in
life to go on, that provi des hope that r m
going to be okay. Th.
how it's helped
That's the process we
hope they'll find here."
Shull
said
Camp
Beaver was offered at no
cost to the participants.
She said she hopes that
the bereavement camp
will become an annual
event and that it will be
expanded in the future to
three days or even a
week.

Tea Party holds rally in Pomeroy
I

•

POMEROY - 'About
50 turned out for the
recent Meigs County Tea
Party rally held on the
Pomeroy parking lot.
Speaking at the rally
were Joyce Adams, Ron
Eastman, Jim Foreman,
Peter Martindale and
• Craig Wehrung.
In her remarks, Adams
spoke of faith. family
and freedom
as the
inalienable rights which
come from God, not the
government.
Ron
Eastman

described
how
the
United States exhibits
signs of cultures that collapse. He said that in
such a culture the government replaces religion, and charged that
"the more the government gets their fingers in
something, the more it
costs and the less it is
worth."
Foreman read the
Declaration
of
Independence, comparing the issues faced by
the American colonies

under British rule to the
issues that Americ'an citizens face today.
Martindale
talked
about the mindset of citizens on Sept. II comparing them with mindsets
today, and ~asked the.
question "Who would
have thought nine years
ago that the same counthat flew
the
try
American flag and sang
''God Bless America"
would be siding with the
flag burners and reading
from the Koran?" He

charged that the United
States as a nation has
pushed God away and
called for a change to
"welcoming God back.''
C'raig Wehrung read
by
Ronald
quotes
Raegan and talked about
the government's expansive control.
Music at the rally was
by Ladona Stephens and
the French Chorders
with John and Wanda
Fellure leading the group
on "God Bless America"
to close the rally.

The French Chorders

Stoc.ks ·edge lower after 4 straight weeks of gains
NEW YORK (AP) Stocks took a pause
Monday from their big
September rally as worries about the financial
sector offset excitement
over a fresh round of corporate dealmaking.
The Dow Jones industrial average lost 48
points in a late-day slide,
but it's still up 8 percent
for the month, putting it
on track for its best
September since 1939.
Chip Brian, CEO of
SmarTrend, an electronic
trend trading system, said
Monday's modest decline
was largely tied to
investors pocketing profits racked up during the
market's four-week rally.

Prior to Monday the
Dow Jones industrial
average had risen in each
of the past four weeks, its
longest winning streak
since eight consecutive
weekly gains ended in late
April when stocks hit their
highest levels of the year.
Financial stocks mostly dipped as concern
remains about the health
of Europe's banking sector. Moody's Investors
Service cut its rating on
Anglo Irish Bank Corp.,
one of Europe's more
troubled banks in recent
months. Global bankina
giants like Barclays PLC
and JPMorgan Chase &amp;
Co. each fell more than 1
percent.

With no major economic reports to drive
trading, investors focused
on individual stocks after
major deals in the airline,
consumer products and
retailing industries.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 48.22,
or 0.4 percent, to close at
10.812.04.
The Standard &amp; Poor's
500 index dropped 6.51,
or 0.6 percent. to
1.142.16. while the
Nasdaq composite index
fell 11.45, or 0.5 percent,
to 2,369. 77.
In deal nev.·s, consumer
products giant Unilever
NV agreed to buy beauty
proljiucts maker Alberto
Culver Co. for $3.7 bil-

Report: US would make
Internet wiretaps easier
WASHINGTON (AP)
- Broad new regulations
being drafted by the
Obama
aumini~hatiun
would make it easier for
law enforcement and
national security officials to
eavesdrop on Internet and
e-mail communications
like social networking
websites and BlackBerrys.

The New York Times reported Monday.
The newspaper said the
White House plans to
submit a bill next year
that would require all
online services that
enable communications
to
be
technically
equipped to comply with
a wiretap order. That
would include providers
of encrypted e-mail, such
as BlackBeiTy, networking sites like Facebook
and direct communica-

tion services like Skype.
Federal law enforcement and national security officials say new the
regulations are needed
because terrorists and
criminals are increasingly giving up their phones
to communicate online.
The White House plans
to submit the proposed
legislation to Congress
next year.
The new regulations
would raise new questions about protecting
people's privacy while
balancing national security concerns.
James Dempsey. the
vice president of the
Center for Democracy and
Technology, an Internet
policy group, said the new
regulations would have
"huge implications."
The Times said the

Obama proposal would
likely include several
requires:
• Any service that provides encrypted messages must be capable of
unscrambling them.
• Any foreign communications providers that
do business in the U.S.
would have to have an
office i.n the United
States that's capable of
providing intercepts.
• Software developers
of peer-to-peer communications services would
be required to redesign
their products to allow
interception.
The Times said that
some privacy and technology advocates say the
regulations would create
weaknesses in the technology that hackers could
more easily exploit.

lion. Southwest Airlines
Co.
will
purchase
AirTran Holdings Joe. for
about $1 A billion. WalMart Stores Inc. proposed to buy South
African consumer goods
distributor
Massmart
Holdings Ltd. for about
$4.25 billion.
Michael Sansoterra.
portfolio manager of the
Ridge Worth Large Cap
Growth Fund, said the
latest deals are a sign
companies are confident
economic growth wiJl
pick up in the coming
quarters.
Acquisition
activity has been booming this month as companies become more willing to invest some of

their large cash reserves
built up during the recession.
Traders who prefer to
look at the broader economic picture will get
plenty of data later in the
week to review. Traders
get reports on consumer
sentiment, weekly jobless claims and a tina]
reading on second-quarter gross domestk product before the month
ends Thursday.
On Friday, traders
receive a key report on
the manufacturing sector.
The same monthly report
helped jump-start the
September rally when· it
was released at the beginning of the month.

Bond
prices
rose
Monday, indicating some
investors continued to
seek safer alternatives to
stocks. Even with stocks
rising sharply throughout
the month, money has regularly flowed into bonds
and other perceived safe
investments like gold.
The yield on the 10year Treasury note,
which moves opposite its
price, fell to 2.53 percent
from 2.61 percent
Friday.
Falling stocks outpac
rising ones four to three
on the New York Stock
Exchange. where volume
came to 920 million
share.s.

Visit us online at
mydallysentlnel.com

Your online source for news
ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?
In order to vote
in the November 2, 2010 General Election
you must be registered by October 4, 2010.
Vote at your new precinct and avoid long lines at
the board on Election Day by changing your address
(if you have moved within the county) or if you
changed your name, by updating
your registration by October 4, 2010.
The Board of Elections will be open from 9:00a.m.
until 9:00p.m. on October 4, 2010.
You may also register at the following locations:
Meigs County Department of Human Services,
Meigs County WIC Office, License Bureau,
Board of MR/DD, Pomeroy Public Library,
Middleport Public Library, Eastern Local School Library,
Racine Public Library, Meigs County Treasurer's Office,
and all area high schools.
For any additional information, call 740-992-2697,
or stop by our office located at
117 E. Memorial Drive, Ste. 1, Pomeroy, Ohio.

I.

�f'

¥

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
RedStorm Cross Country, Page B2
OVCS, TVC battle to draw, Page B6

Thesday, September 28, 2010

2010 RIVERSIDE HIGH SCHOOL INVITATIONAL
POMEROY

A schedule of upcoming
h1gh school vars1ty sporting events
Involving teams from Me1gs. Mason, and
Gallla counties.

IlwWy. Seotember 28
Volleyball
Jackson at Gallia Aca., 5:15p.m.
Southern at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs. 6 p.m. .
Chesapeake at Rivef Valley. 5:30 p.m.
South Gallla at Wahama. 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Huntington St.
Joe. 6 p.m.
Hannan at Elk Valley (Tri). 5:30 p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at OVCS. 6 p.m .
Lincoln at Pt Pleasant (G), 6:30p.m.
Wednesday. Seotember 29
Volleyball
Southern, Meigs at R1ver Valley,
5:30p.m.
Wahama at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Thursday, September 30
'
Volleyball
Warren at Gallia Aca., 5:15p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
M1ller at Southern, 6 p.m.
Coal Grove at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Lincoln, 5:30 p.m.
OVCS at Teays Valley. 6 p.m.

~·
Gallia Aca. at Jackson. 6:30 p.m.
-~untington St. Joe at Point
'
W : :leasant (G), 7:45 p.m.
Williamstown at Pt. Pleasant (8), 6 p.m.
Cross Country
Point Pleasant at George
Washington Invitational, TBA

Blodgett,
Connery
fmlsh '" ~op Point Pleasant wins 201 0 'Riverside Invitational
10 at RIO .
•

1

•

Sarah Hawley/photos Meigs' golfer Treay McKinney hits from the fairway on the first hole
Eastern's Christian Amsbary chips out of the bunker on the first hole during the 2010 Riverside High School Invitational held on Saturday
during the Riverside Invitational on Saturday in Mason, W.Va.
in Mason, W.Va.

SENTINEL STAFF

BY SARAH HAWLEY

MDSSPORTS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MASON, W.Va. -On
RIO GRANDE, Ohio a day that appeared to be
- River Valley's Katie made for golf with blue
Blodgett skies and a cooling
took third breeze. the Point Pleasant
d High School varsity golf
a
n
Eastern's team won the 17th annuE m e r i al Riverside Golf Course
Connery High School Invitational
placed Golf Tournament. It is
ninth
to not known if Point
lead local played in all the other
competitors tournaments, but it is
known they had never
Blodgett a
t won or even placed in
Saturday's
Rio Grande any of these previous
Invita-tion- contests. A total of 16
teams
representing
al.
schools from both West
Blodgett
Virginia and Ohio particlead
the
ipated in the contest.
L a d y
It was not an easy win
Raiders for Point even though
with a time they were not in serious
-........£..:=~ of
20:53, trouble at any time.
Connery followed by Point's winning score
Jessica was a excellent total of
H a g e r 317 in the play 5, count 4
(24:22) in 41st, Keyana format. A very good
Ward (24:40) in 43rd. Warren Local team finSonja Rankin (33: 13) in ished second with a score
78th, and Olivia Walker of 324 while Scott High
(33: 16) in 79th.
. School Team completed
Connery posted a time the day in third place
of 21:43 to pace the Lady with a total score of 335.
Point's Opie Lucas shot
Eagles, followed by Nikki
Gilbride (25:32.71) in an excellent one over par
53rd, and Shelby Smith 71 to not only lead his
team, but also gain
~7:22) in 72nd.
medalist
honors for the
•
Cheyenne Buckingham
of Worthington Thomas tournament. That honor
took ftrst place with a time automatically made Opie
the Captain of the 8 man
of20:26.
The Lady Raiders post- All-Tournament team.
ed a team score of 167, Joining Opie on the Allearning seventh place.
Please see Golf, 86
Hurricane took top honors ·
in the team competition
with a score of 43.
In the boys race, River
Valley's Trent Wolfe
( 19:46.17) was the top
local finisher in 50th
place. Chris Goodrich
(20:31.59) was 68th, Jared
Hollingsworth (20:46.77)
SENTINEL STAFF .
was 74th, Richie Jackson
MOSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
(21 :49.51) was 93rd,
Jamil Stepney (21 :54.85)
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
was 96th, Aaron Harrison
The Ohio Valley
(22:24.83) was 107th,
Christian
volleyball
Chey Eblin (28:51.48)
team wasn't perfect on
was !41st, and Nate
Monday night against
Shuler (28:54.00) was
visiting Point Pleasant,
142nd.
but the Lady Defenders'
Jonathon Renneker of
record
stayed that way
shland Blazer took first
after claiming a 25-ll,
lace with a time of
•
25-20, 15-25. 25-21 vic16:42.70.
River Valley posted a t0ry during a non-conteam score of 236 for ference matchup at the
ninth place at the event. First Baptist Church
Worthington Thomas was Activities Building in
first in the team competi- the Old French City.
The
host
Lady
tion with a score of 58.
Defenders
improved
to
Complete results are
7-0
overall
this
season
available
at
with the four-game deciwww.baumspage.com
sion, while the Lady
Knights fell to 1-5 this
Please see CC, 82

Sarah Hawley/file photo

The Point Pleasant golf team, pictured here in a preseason team photo, took first place at Saturday's Riverside
High School Invitational. Team members are (front L to A) Alex Potter, Erik Allbright, Adam Thomas, Denver
Thomas, Evan Potter, (back L to A) Austin McBeath, Opie Lucas, Justin Cavender, and Travis Grimm.

Lady Defenders
knock off Point in 4

,,

Ohio Valley
Christian's
Maggie
Westfall hits
the ball
over the net
during
Monday
evening's
match
against
Point
Pleasant at
the First
Baptist
Church
Activity
W.lk;~ote Building in
Gallipolis,
Ohio. The
Lady
Defenders
are 7-0 in
the 2010
season.

fall with the setback.
aves stormed out to
a quick 14-4 advantage
in the opening game and
never looked back, posting a 14-point decision
for a 1-0 match lead. The
hosts increased that lead
to 2-0 after jumping out
to a 15-7 edge en route
to a five-point decision.
The Lady Knights,
however, du~ down deep
in Game 3 - establishing a 22-13 cushion
before ultimately pulling
the match to within 2-1
after posting a 10-point
victory.
Point Pleasant, however, could maintain that
momentum into Game 4,

Bryan
Walters/
photo

Please see Roundup, 86

~I

�.

- ~---~l

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday., September

28, 2010

RedStorm·runners
compete at the Rio
Grande Invitational
junior Justin Hartley, 23rd
(31:51 43) and freshman
Dylan
Roush.
26th
RIO GRANDE. Ohio (32:32.01 ).
- The University of Rio
There were 42 runners
Grande
RedStorm in the men's race.
women's cross country
Alderson-Broaddus
team finished second (out was . the meet champion.
nf five teams} at the 40th sconng
24
points.
Annual
Rio
Grande Glenville State was seclm itational on Saturday one~ with 50 points and
morning at the St&lt;Ulley Qh.IO Valley University
Evans Field Comple".
ftntshed 3rd with 70
Rio Grande scored 39 points. Mid South
points at the meet.
Conference foe West
Junior Cassie Mattia Virginia Tech was 5th. taldestroyed the tield as she lying 130 points.
won the ra~e with a tune
Rio Grande will be
of 19:37.38.
Junior back in competition next
Kayla Renner finished Friday at the All-Ohio
3rd with a time of the Champ!onships
at
20:51.32.
Cedarville. The men's
Other
RedStorm race will 9egin at 2 p.m.
results: sophomore Amy
Rio Grande head coach
Lower finished 9th with a Bob Wil!ey was very
time of 21 :42.73; fresh- pleased wtth how the day
man Genna Baker, 12th turned out and thought his
(22:25.73): senior Hillary team ran very well.
Haines. 17th (23:28.35) "We· revery excited about
and
junior
Danielle the number of participants
Stockham.
20th toda)." he said. ''We've
t25: 13.35).
got close to 1.300 (runThere were 30 nmners !ler~) be~ween college.
in the women's race with JU1110r htgh and hioh
one runner t:ompeting ~ch~)ol. anl the key to the
unatta~hed.
mvt tatJOnal has at ways
Alderson-Broaddus been to introduce people
wins the meet for the sec- to our campus."
ond straight year, scoring
"It seems to be that
24 points. Ohio Valley we· ve done that. The
University finished Jrd weather is wonderful."
(72). Glenville State. 4th Willey added. "We ran
(90) and Mid-South we II and we· re excited
Conference foe West about that and hopefully
Vm!inia Tech rounded out we can bring it altogether
the' field in fifth place by the end of the season."
with 133 points.
"Cassie looked really
The University of Rio good and we· re very
Grande RedStom1 men's excited about her winning
cross countrv team fin- the race."
ished 4th at the event. Rio
Rio Grande made a speGrande totaled 86 point:- cial announcement dunng
at the meet.
the event - concerning a
Rio was the defending name change for the Rio
men's champion. but the In\'itational. The Rio
depleted RedStorm did Grande Invitational will
not have enough firepow- nO\V be referred to as the
er to reclaim the top spot Patty Forgey Memorial
this season.
Invitational 111 honor of
Junior Zane Miller was fonner Rio Grande athletthe top RedStorm finish- ics department secretary
er. He crossed the finish Patty Forgey. who passed
line 111 8th place and cov- away August 21. Forge&gt;
ered the 5-mile course in was instmmental in the
2X: 11.29. TJ Abel of suct:ess of the invitational
Glenville State was the for 35 of the 40 years.
men's individual winner
Rio Grande will be
with a time of 27:55.71.
back in competition next
Other
RedStonn Friday at the All-Ohio
results: sophomore Kyle Championships
at
Goode. 18th with a time Cedar\'ille.
The
of 30:45.06; junior Lucas RedStorm will nm at 2:45
Murphy. 20th (31:12.14): p.m.
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

cc
from PageBl
GALLIA ACADEMY,
SOUTHERN COMPETE AT
LANCASTER

LANCASTER. Ohio
- Runners from GaUia
Academy and Southern
competed in the Bob
Reali Cross Country
Invitational on Saturday
at
Lancaster
High
School.
Peyton Adkins took
third in the D-2 girls race
with a time of 19:22.1.
Mckenna
Warner
(21 :21.2) placed 22nd. ·
Samantha
Barnes
(22:10.4)
was 47th.
Madison
Holley
(22:31.5) placed 56th,
Hannah Watts (24:30.0)
placed 121 st. Elizabeth
Holley (24:57. 7) was
!40th. and Taylor Queen
(29:04.4) was 176th.
'fhe
Blue
Angels
placed sixth in the team
standings with a score of
245. Woodridge placed
fir:-.t with a team total of
95.
In the boys D-2 race
Matt Watts led the Blue
Devils with a time of
I 7:03.1 to place sixth.
Timmy Warner (21 :09.9)
\\as
I 38th. Quenton
McKinniss (22:04.0) was
14~th. Log·an Greenlee
(23: 17.5) was I 64th,

Casey

Lawren~e

(23:57.4) \\;is !68th. Ben
Bush
(24:37.5)
was
!70th. and Ben Roach
(~4:3 1.4) \-Vas I 75th.
Gallia Academy's team
total of 612 placed the
team in 25th for the event.
Woodridge finished in
first with"'ii s&lt;.:ure of 3::!.
Southern':. Kody Wolfe
( 17: 11.8) was third in the

D-3 boys race. followed
by
Andrew
Ginther
(20: 18.6) in 30th. Justin
Hettinger (20:53.9) , in
37th. and Chase Graham
(23:46.4) was 47th.
Complete results of the
20 I 0 Bob Reall Cross
Country Invitational are
available
at
ww,w.baumspage.com

~.:

.

. .

,

Bryan Walters/photo

Oh1o Valle~ Chnst1an.s Sarah Schoonover (12) and Maggie Westfall (22) hit the ball during Monday's match
agamst Po1nt Pleasant as the Lady Knights' Cheyenne Preece (3) prepares for a block.

Roundup
from Page Bl
as the hosts broke away
from a 15-all tie with I 0
of the final 16 points allowing
the
Lady
Defenders to claim their
SC\'enth straight triumph
of the young season.
Beth Martin led the
Lady Defenders with a
game-high 16 service
points, followed by
Sarah
Schoonove~
Samantha Westfall and
Allie Hamliton with
eight points apiece.
Maggie Westfall added
six
points.
while
M.adison Crank rounded
things out with four
points.
Samantha Westfall led
the net attack with eight
kills.
followed
by
Maggie Westfall with
five kills. Samantha
Westfall also had team
bests of'eight assists and
two blocks for the victor~.

Kaci Riffle led the
Lady Knights with II
service points, followed
by Jordan Pierce with
nine points and Rebekah
Dunham with seven
points. Cheyenne Preece
and Michele Gibson
both added three points
apiece. whi lc Courtney
Hatfield rounded things
out with one point.
LADY TORNADOES
BEAT BELPRE IN 3

RACINE. Ohio -The
Southern
Lady
Tornadoes (4-6. 4-4
TVC Hocking) defeated

Belpre in consecutive set rnatchup
in
Meigs
on Monday evening in County.
Racine. Ohio.
The Lady Eagles ( 12Southern
won
by 1) won their fifth
scores of 25-22, 25-20, straight match of the
and 25-15.
season, while the Blue
Courtney Thomas had Angels (8-4) dropped
13 points (one ace) to their second consecutive
lead
the
Lady match in less than a
Tornadoes. Emily Ash week.
had nine points. Bobbi
Both teams came out
Harris had seven points. spirited in Game l.
and Hope Teaford added which Eastern ultimatefive points.
ly held on to win by the
Kelsey Strang had minimum
two-point
four points (one ace), decision in extended
Maggie Cummins had time. EHS then posted a
three points (one ace). pair of nine-point victoKatelyn Hill added two ries in the final two conpoints.
and
Jordan tests. which wrapped up
Huddleston had one.
the deal on the straight
Strang led the Lady game triumph.
Tornadoes at the net
Britney Morrison led
with
15
ki lis. the Eagles with II serHuddleston. Hill. and vice points, followed by
Amber Hayman each Jamie Swatzel with 10
had two kills, and and Janae Boyles with
Cummins
had
one. seven. Ally Hendrix was
Huddleston and Hill next with six points,
each had one block.
· while Beverly Maxson
Thomas Jed the team and
Baylee Collins
in sets with 62 g:ood sets added five and four
in the three games.
points. respectively.
The Lady Tornadoes
Brenna Holter led the
also won the junior var- net attack with 19 kills.
sity contest.
. followed by Swatzel
Southern will play a with six kills and
TVC Hocking game at Maxson with four kills.
Eastern on Tuesday at 6 Swatzel also had teamp.m.
highs of 17 assists and
five
blocks,
while
Hendrix
added
14
LADY EAGLES SOAR
assists.
PAST GAHS
Morgan Leslie led the
TUPPERS PLAINS. Angels with nine service
Ohio - The Eastern points. followed by
volleyball team captured MC:)rgan Daniels with
its
seventh straight tive points and Kassie
match decision over Shriver with four points.
Gallia Academy on Hannah Cunningham,
Monday night following Amanda McGhee and
Rosier
each
a convincing 26-24, 25- Haley
16. 25-16 triumph in a added three service
non-conference points in the setbac.k.

LADY MARAUDERS SPLIT
TAl-MATCH AT WARREN

VINCENT, Ohio The Meigs volleyball
team split a tri-match on •
Saturday against Warren
and Belpre.
Meigs defeated Belpre
by scores of 25-11 and
25-14.
Shellie Bailey led the
Lady Marauders with 11
points (one ace). Jordan
Anderson had eight
points (one ace), Emalee
Glass
added
seven
points
(two
aces),
Chelsea Patterson had
two points, and Valerie
Conde, Morgan Howard
(one ace), and Chandra
Stanley each had one
point.
Bailey, Stanley, and
Alison Brown had seven
kills each to lead the
Lady Marauders at the
net. Howard had five
kills, Kelsey Shuler had
three, and Alaine Arnold
added one. Glass had 24
assists.
Warren defeated
Lady Marauders
scores of 25-19 and
25.
Glass had six points to
lead the team. Bailey
had four points (two
aces), Anderson and
Patterson each had two
points, and Stanley had
one point.
Bailey had seven kill.
Stanley and Brown each
added three, and Howard
and Arnold each had
two.
Glass had 14
assists and Conde had
one. Howard had three
blocks, while Stanley
and Brown each had
one.
Meigs host Vinton
County on Tuesday at 6
p.m.

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

j

iI

�----~....,

Tuesday, September 28, 201 0
I ,

~ribune

,•'
'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

.

:;.~

!;.~4

':~ -).

- Sentinel - 3aegister

•

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if.'iii '\r-,.;:
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Ferr on 9/6/10 (Labor
Day) Please call 304·
812·5227

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Want To Buy

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Services

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or Fax To (304) &amp;75-5234

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia Co. OH and
Automotive
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
2006
Chevy 800·537-9528
Colorado
18949
miles 4x4
Rhino
Repairs
lining, vinyl cover,
sliver garage kept Joe's Tv repair on
$15000.00 call 304- most
makes
&amp;
675-5603
models. House calls
304 675 1724
Child/ Elderly Care
"
.

Want to buy Junk
Cars, call 740-3880884
Oiler's Towing. Now
buying junk cars
w/motors or w/out.
740-388·0011
or
740·441-7870.
No
Sunday call
3000

Real Estate
Sales

'

Frnancial
Rooms available for 400
clients needing 24 hr.
NOTICE
OHIO care at Darst Adult
VALLEY PUBLISHING Group Home, 740·
Money To Lend
CO. recommends that 992·5023
NOTICE
Borrow Smart.
you do business with
the
Ohio
people you know, and Home Improvements Contact
Division of Financial
NOT to send money
Institutions Office of
Basement
through the mail until
Consumer
Affairs
Waterproofing
you have investigating
Unconditional lifetime BEFORE you refinance
the offering.
guarantee. local
your home or' obtain a
references furnished. loan.
BEWARE of
Established 1975. Call requests for any large
24 Hrs. 740·446-0870, advance payments of
Rogers Basement
fees or insurance. Call
Wateproofing.
· the Office of Consumer
~~~!!'!!!!!!!!!!!il!!!!~ Affiars toll free at 10ttrer Services
866·278·0003 to learn
Pet Cremations Call if the mortgage broker
.
•
or lender is properly
740 446 3745
licensed. (This is a

Apartments/
Townhouses
FIRST MONTH
FREE
2&amp; 3BRAPTS.
$385&amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
A/C, WID hook-up,
ten·
ant pays electric,
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
304-882-3017

Notices

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Any pictures
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For Sale By Owner
6 apts $137.000
rent $2030 mo, 740·
446-0390
1acre
in
Poplar
Heights on At. 2
close to Roosevelt
School call 304-6755603
lots
2 Lots for sale w/sle
aval.1 02 &amp;104 Depot
rd Bidwell 618-4029921

service
Will sit with elderly, public
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call 645-9142
Company)
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Hay, Feed, Seed,

HAY SQ. BALES
Business &amp; Trade
$2.50 (4CUTIING)
School
CALL: 304-675-5086
Gallipolis
Career OR 304·895·3470
College
(Career's
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WantTo Buy
CaiiTodayl 740-446·
spice
4367
1·800·214- Elderberries,
bushberries,
0452
black
Accredited
. Member pawpaws,
740·698·
Accrediting Council lor walnuts,
lnde~endent Colleges and 6060
Schools t274B
Ginseng- want to buy
600
Ammals other
botanicals,
Twin Oaks Service
Station
junction
livestock
RT7/33,
Wednesdays
12-1
Butchering roosters,
starting
22
$2.50 each, 740·
September, call S30·
992·3675
674-4195 for price
list.
Pets
CKC Rat Terriers
900
Merchandise
12wks old Asking
$50 Ph. 645-6857 or
379·9515
Equipment/
Supplies
700
Agriculture
Beauty
Black
sandblast sand $6
Farm Equipment
per 1OO·Ib bag, ten
or more $5 each.
End of Sumer sale 304-773·5332
on 4',5' ,&amp; 6' rotor
tillers Special Round ~======
Bale Feeders were· -..;;;;M;;;;i;;;;sc;;;;e;;;;ll;;;;an;;;;e;;;;o;;;;u;;;;s;;;;;;;;
$195 now $125 Jims Farm
Equipment Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
446·9777
rebuilt In stock. Call
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Ron Evans 1-800·
Now
Available
at
537-9528
carmichael Equipment
740·446·2412
5 piece bedroom
Garden &amp; Produce suite without bed,
large
refrigerator,
Richards
Brothers marble top tables &amp;
Fruit Farm~ many other pieces,
haye apple! Mon thru also 2 bedroom, 2
Sat 8·12 &amp; 1·5 Sun bath moble home for
9·5. Many varieties sale, 740-949-3601
aailable jellies, jams,
cider, apple butter.
Co Ad 46 2054
WantTo Buy
Orpheus
Ad ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;:;;;;;;;;
Thurman
Oh.
740286·4584
Absolute Top dollar-

Commercial
Lg. yard sale 245
Apartments/
Oak Dr. Spring Valley
Townhouses
adult clothes many ~~~~::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Commercial building
2BR APT.Ciose to for rent 740-446·
sizes, baby items, &amp;
misc. Oct 1 &amp; 2, 9-3. Holzer Hospital on SR 6565
160 CIA. (740} 441·
Houses For Rent
0194
Yard sale, Hot dogs,
4BR ranch house for
baked goods, Sep 30 CONVENIENTLY
&amp; rent, 2 miles west of
&amp; Oct 1, 10·4, @ LOCATED
Holzer on Jackson
Trinity UM Church, AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
Pike, new ktichen
At 160, Porter
apartments,
and/or w/granite, walk out
3202 At 124 Big small houses for rent. basement,
2 car
clean garage S!lle- Call 740·441-1111 for garage. $1100 mon +
application
&amp;
Sept 29, Tues , Wed
dep. 740·446·1299
information.
30th, Oct. 1st, yellow
house on left wired Free Rent Special 2 BR house in
Vinton, nice area
roof above p1zzra
Ill
shop in Syracuse, 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and $400 mon. 2 BR
coats, kids jackets &amp; up, Central Air, WID mobile home 4 mi
blue jeans, too much hookup, tenant pays from Hospital near
electric. Call between 160 $400 mon. 441to mention
the hours of 8A·8P.
5150 or 379·2923
EHO
Hunting,
Fishing,
Ellm View Apts.
New home in city, 88
OVC,
Designer
(304)882-3017
pine
purses, Misc. 265
Radical LN. Letart Twin Rivers Tower is st.2BR,1 BA,LR,DR,K
dep.
Oct. 1&amp;2 Sat&amp;Sun accepting applications .$550-mon+
for waiting list for HUD Must have excellent
9am to?
subsidized,
1-BR reference. Call for
for
the details. 446·2801
Recreational apartment
1000
call
Vehrcles elderly/disabled,
675·6679
3BR, 1BA, stove
&amp;refrig furn., gas
Campers / RVs &amp;
heat, central AC/,
Trailers
WID
hook
up,
Carport, no smoking,
2005 Jayco Eagle
no pets. $600mon +
Gooseneck
Hitch, Tara Townhouse Apt.
dep. 105 Bastiani,
sleeps six. Excellent 2BR 1.5 BA, back
Gallipolis. 446-3667
condition.
Asking patio,
pool, taking applications.
$19,900.
See playground. No pets.
photos
at $450 rent. 740-645· Downtown Gallipolis.
www carmjchael!raile 8599
3 br 1.5 bath, central
~
740-446·
air. carpet/hardwood
Beautrful
1 BR
2412
floors,
kitchen
apartment in the
applicances
Motorcycles
country
freshly
included,
painted very clean
2007 HD Heritage
washer/dryer
hook
WID hook up nice
up. No Pets. Ample
Softail. 4,695 milescountry setting only
Showroom
cond.
storage
available.
10 mins. from town.
Dep &amp; Ref Required.
$16,000 negotiable Must
see
to
call 740-446· 7654
740-446·0121
appreciate.
Water
pd. $375/mo 614· House for sale or
Automotive 595-7773 or 740645·
2000
rent. Pretty, clean.
5953
3BR.
Downtown
Autos
Nice
2BR
apt. Gallipolis, close to
Elem.
=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ appliances,
w/d Washington
03Neon standard·air hookup, water pd., Rent $750, no utlilite.
$3200 OBO 256- good location on Sale $99,000. Kelly1539
87 Chrysler Centenary close to Jo 645-9096 or 446·
Lebaron
2
door hospital. No pets. call 4639
$1500 OBO 256- after 5. 740-446·
1BR $350/month in
6002
9442
Syracuse. Deposit,
02 Monte Carlo, 1BR nicely furnished HUD approved, no
Sharp, Garage Kept apt. No smoking, no pets. 304-675·5332
pets $400 mon &amp; weekends/740-591$4500
0265
dep. 740·446-4782
304·675·187 4

I I

jl

Real Estate
Rentals

Yard Sale

Grain

silver/gold coins any
gold
1OK/14KI18K
Hay, Feed, Seed, 1ewerly, dental gold,
Grain
pre
1935
US
currency. proof/mint
sets, diamonds, MTS
Square Bale, Quality
Coin Shop. 151 2nd
Hay Call:740) 256·
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
1197
446-2842

Pleasant
Valley
Apartments is now
taking
applications
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 br HUD
Subsidized
Apartments.
Applications
are
taken Monday thru
Thrusday
9:00am1 :OOpm. Office is
located
at
1151
Evergreen
Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806

�.

•

-

M.J-.---- -.-

- - - - - - - .. -- ~ .... ----.------------- - - - -

In Memory

4000

Ma ufactured
Housing
1

-~- ~

Tuesday, September 28, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
In Memory

~

Rentals

In Memory of

Keith
Oiler

I!OBfi!T Bl55fLL
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moderate dairy farm,
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Tuesday, September 28, 201 0

BLOND IE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

..

...

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Pronto, in 1 Shady
memos
spot
5 Cooking
2 Healthherb
club
1 0 Indy a uto
rooms
12 Sports
3 Play
setting
opener
13 Some
4 Sulky
Iimas
state
15 Music's
5 Paul
Yoko
Bunyan's 19 Egg
29 Opera's
16 Phone bill
ox
outlines
Stratas
addition
6 "You 20 Suggest 30 Turned
17 Stadium
Here"
240nebad
cry
7 Blackened
celled
33 Bird
18 Expired
8 Oeeporganism
abodes
20 Singer
seated
25 British
35 Wallet
Seeger
9 Mascara
East India
bills
21 Cut off
targets
Company 38 Keg
22 Keats
11 Fill up the
base
need
creations
tank
26 Wake
39 Sixth
23 Fake
14 Hunting
27 Soup
sense,
name
dog
veggie
briefly
25 Fancy
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (Cilecklm.o.) to
dance
Thomas Joseph Book 2. PO. Box !&gt;36415, Orlando, Fl32853·6475
28 Radiates
31 Metal
sources
32 Settle by
yeas and
nays
34 Wk. start
35 Golf peg
36 Regret
37 Quaffs for
Harry and
Ron
40Thai or
Korean
41 Useful
skill
42 Puppy
cries
43 Tablets

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

we

GOT" A ''G.AR6y'-" FOR
,, MOGT" PtAPERG IN A
GiiJGI.G 6A&amp;:'

William Hoest

,

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell

/

~~1&lt;.

-~

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'

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.

" BASED
FILM RATINGS, NETFLIX
RECOMMENDS YOU STOP WATCHING MOVIES."

' .

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•

·-- '§!

N~··~-t...~~'1J~~;.:r

ZITS

CJ·48

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

7

8
1

6

3

1

7

9
8
1

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

7

6
2
2 5 1
4
5
1

6
" There's nothing wrong with it. It's
a bagel, not a donut."

Difficulty Level

**

7
3

2

5

8V6

9 8 17 G
9 6 8 17
G L ~ 6
~ 9 9 8
8 8 L ~
17 G 6 8
L 17 G 9
6 ~ 9 L
8 9 8 9

L 9
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8 9
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY for 1uesday,
Sept. 28, 2010;
1his ye~ tap into your mind more
often than your foelings, unless you
have been successful at blending both.
Your first idea, your knee-jerk reaction,
will be right-on most of the time.
Don't minimize the importance of following through. If you are attached,
your partner seems to be transforming
right in front of you. Don't push or
demand. Where you have manipulated will backfire oooner rather than
later. If you are single, you intensely
want a relationship. Go for the person
who is very different from your past
choices. GEMINI provokes thought.

Tire Stars Shaw tire Kind of Day You'll
Hat¥!: 5-Dy~rmnic; 4-Positit'!'; 3-At&gt;ernge;
2-So-so; 1-Difficu/t
ARIES (March 21-April19)
A discussion reveals your
level of commitment to a key project.
You need to honor another's needs
and the ability to change and transform. What might have worked originally might not any longer. Tonight.
Hang out with a pal.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You could be awestruck by
what can be completed and handled.
Finances flutter up and down, personally or professionally. Finally. you see
the opening through which you will
be able to walk and feel good about
the choice: Tonight: Do for a loved
one.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
*****After feeling so tired and
pressured, you bloom and resonate
with whatever calls your name. A
partner has attempted to make adjustment after adjustment. Stop and take a
complete, caring and empathetic look
at this person. lie or she needs your
time. Tonight Whatever feels right.
CANCER Qune 21-July 22)
*** Keep your thoughts and feelings out of the mix with people right
now. You are moody. and what irked
you one day might not even be a blip
on your radar tl1e next. Tonight Just
for you.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
*****Bring people together in a
meeting. The power of a group cannot
be denied in suca!eding on a project.
Though you need to make several
adjustments to keep the troops togethei; it is worth it. Screen your call.s; a
friend might be very needy. fonight
Where the action is.

*****

8

t4

2

•

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1

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

~

9
17
G
9
8
B ~ 6
G £ 8
6 t L

8 6
G L
8 9
L 8
6 17
9 ~
9 8
17 9
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***

vmco (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
****Take a stand and move forward toward a better idea through a
brainstorming session. No one can
have all the ideas all the time. Your
\villingness to encourage other vie\'I.'S
helps make friends and associates feel
valued. Tonight: A must appearance.
UBRA (Sept. 2'Ukt. 22)
Reach out for more information. Perhaps you have given some
time and thought to taking a workshop or expanding your knowledge in ,
your chosen field. H you are questioning information, do your own research •
or find an expert. Tonight Choose a
different type of happening.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Your di.rectnes::. \'\ill be
appreciated by those you speak to. Be
aware that several people in your life
might need a touch of diplomacy.
Listen to a totally different viewpoint.
Tonight: Finally, some quality time!
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
***Sometimes you get so wound
up you catmot see past the immediate.
Hyou find yourself in a self-propelled
whirlwind, stop. Defer to others. Usten
to their idea'&gt;. Give up being a force for
at least one day. Meanwhile, try to center yourself. lbnight: The only answer
is "yes."
CAPRICORN(~. 22-Jan. 19)
"-cep focusing_ despite the
chaotic activity that surrounds you.
Your attitude finally wears off on others. Clear out a task that has felt like a
burden. Be open to a new path,
thought or approach. Tonight
Remember to get some exercise. Walk
the dog after dinner.
AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb. 18)
Your mind might be overactive. Cut the judgments and overthinking. Creativity can flow once you
allow the spice to tum on. Sometimes
you interfere with yourself! Note how
flirtatious a key per-;on might be. Are
you going to respond? lonight 'Ihink
less about work and more about fun.
PISCES (reb. 19-March 20)
***You could be dragging from
the moment you wake up. If you can,
take some time off and indulge yourself. Recharging your batteries is a wise
choice. You cannot be effective without
paying a little more attention to your
well-being. Tonight Oose to home.

****

*****

***

*****

]ncqllelme Brgar is on the Intemet

~t lrttp:/hvww.jncqueliuebignr.com.

.mvdailvsentinel.com
•'/

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentincl.com

Defenders battle Lions to 2-2 draw
SENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

TEAYS
VALLEY.
W.Va.
'I he Ohio
Valley Christian soccer
rallied from a halftime
deficit to take a 2 I
advantage,
but host
Teays Valley Christian
retaliated with a late goal
just before regulation
ended for a 2-::! draw during Saturday's non-conference
matchup
in
Cabell County.
The visiting Defenders
(5-3-2) were held score
less in the first half as the
' Lions jumped out to a 1
0 intermission advantage.
Issac Cosby scored the
lone first half goal on an
unassited shot during the
23rd minute.
OVCS countered with
a goal in the 52nd minute
when Alex Haddad found
the back of the net on a
penalty kick: tying the
contest at one.
The Defenders took
their only lead of the
night in the 68th minute
when 1.G. Miller netted a
pass
from
Richard
Bowman. gtvmg the
guests a 2-1 advantage.
OVCS was within two
minutes of victory· when
the tying goal came. as

ing a convincillg 6-2 victory over Chesapeake in
a
non-conference
matchup
in
Mason
County.
The Lady Knights (38-0) picked up their second win in four malches
while also scoring a season-high in goals~against
the Lady Panthers. as the
hosts stormed out to a 60 advantage before CHS
Michael Perrow netted added a pair of late goals.
Miranda
Thompson
an unassisted shot in the
78th minute for the two- started the scoring in the
15th minute after netting
all draw.
a
goal. then Meghan
Pete Carman had five
saves in goal for OVCS. Bowles added a goal
while Josh Kiser stopped shortly afterwards for a
I 0 shots for the host 2-0 lead.
Liz Farley made it a 3Lions.
There
were.
numerous fouls and three 0 contest with a goal.
yellow cards handed out then Amanda King netted
in the contest, including a shot for a 4-0 first half
one yellow for each advantage.
team.
Thompson added her
Ohio Valley Christian second goal of the night
returns to action Tuesday to give Point a 5-0 cushwhen it hosts Gallia ion. then Ruby Schwartz
Academy for the Holzer gave the hosts their final
Cup at 6 p.m.
score of the night making it ·a 6-0 contest.
LADY KNIGHTS BEAT
Point suffered a pair of
setbacks earlier in the
CHESAPEAKE, 6-2
week to Poea (4-1) and
The Point Pleasant Sissonville (6-0). Harlee
girls
soccer
team Ziegler had the lone
snapped a two-game los- Point goal in those two
ing skid Saturday follow- conte!;ts.

Tuesday, September 28,

2010

Week 5 football polls
AP OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL POLL LIST
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - How a
state panel of sports wnters and
broadcasters rates Oh1o h1gh school
football teams 1n the seventh weekly
Associated Press poll of 2010. by
OHSAA div1sions, with won-lost
record and total po1nts (fJrst·place
votes m parentheses)

DIVISION I
t , Cle. Glenville (23)
5-0 352
2, Cin. Colerain (7)
s-o 292
3 Hilliard Dav,dson (3) 5·0 253
4 St Edward (3)
5-0 231
5, Cin. Moeller ( 1)
5-0 223
6, Prckenngton Cen1. (1) 4-0 181
7, Middletown
5-Q 154
8, Canterville
5·0 125
9. Solon
5·0 78
10, Aushntown·FJtch
5·0 38
Others rece1ving 12 or more points:
11, Willoughby S. 22. 12, Tw1nsburg
21. 13. Massillon Perry 18. 14,
Groveport-Madison 16 15 Cin La
Salle t5 16, Spnngflold 14.
DIVISION II
1 Cm. ""urpifl (15)
5-0 317
2. Manon·Frankhn (3) s-o 268
3. Maple Hts. (6)
5..() 237
4 Avon (1)
5·0 194
5, Mentor Lake Cath. (1)4·1
181
6 New Albany (3)
5·0 166
7. Tot. Cent. Cath. (2)
5-Q 161
8, Warren Howland (3) 5·0 160
9. Copley (2)
s-o 137
10, Winton Woods (1) 4-~ 58
Others receiving 12 or more po1nts:
11. Cols. St Charles (1) 47. 12.
Chesterland w. Geauga 42. 13,
Uniontown Lake 23. 14. Sunbury Brg
Walnut 21. 15 Day. Carroll 17. t6,
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jes1.11t 14. 17,
Ashland 13.
DIVISION Ill
1 Steubenville (37)
5·0
2, Roger Bacon (1)
5..()
3. Clyde
5·0
4, Napoleon
5·0
5, Thornville Shendan 5..0
6, Cols. Watterson
3·1
7, Alliance Marhngton 5..()
3·2
8. Cols. DeSales
9, M1nerva
5·0
10, Youngs. Mooney
2·2
Others rece1vmg 12 or more
11. A.kr. SVSM 36. 12, Eaton

379
285
230
187
172
155
145
119
112
75
pomts.
32 13,

T1pp City Tippecanoe 28 14,
Wash,ngton C.H 25 14, ntt,n
Columb1an 25. 16. Spring. Kantor&gt;
R1dge 21 17, Hubbard 15

DIVISION IV
1 Elyna Cath. (20)
5·0 311
2 Chnton-Mass'e (1)
5·0 241
3, Akr Manchester (2) '5·0 238
4, Ironton (7)
5·0 203
5 Kottenng Altor (3)
4-1 172
6, Kenton (1)
4·1 152
7, Genoa Area (1)
5·0 127
8, Middletown Fenwick 5·0 121
9, Ottawa-Glandorf ( 1) 4·1 116
10, Perry
4·1 68
Others receivrng 12 or more points;
11. Cin. N. College Hill 45. 12.
Carhsla 44 13. St. Clairsville 41 14
Martrns Ferry ( 1) 31 t5, Portsmouth
W 27. 16, Plain City Jonathan Alder
21. 17, Campbell Memonal (1) 20
18, Orrville 16. 19 Cofs. Hartley 14
20, Coshocton 13. 20, G1rard 13.
DIVISION V
1, Youngs Ursuline (29) 5·0 361
2, K1rtland (3)
5·0 273
3, Hamler Patnck Henry 5·0 270
4, N Umon (2)
5·0 222
5. M1nford (1)
5·0 196
6, Versailles
4·1 111
7, Archbold (1)
5·0 92
s. Cuyahoga Hts.
4·1 88
9, Western Reserve
5·0 52
10. Fredencktown (1)
5-0 51
Others rece1v1ng 12 or more points:
11, Oak HJI140 12, W Jefferson 38
12, W Lafayette Ridgewood 38. 14,
Dot,anceTtnora 33 15, C1n. Summ1t
Country Day 27 16, Coldwater 25.
17, Crooksville 19. 17. Lucasville
Valley 19. 19, Orwell Grand Valley
(1) 18 19. Anna 18. 21. Lima Cert
Cath. 17.22 Columbiana Crestview
14. 23. Barnesv1lle 13

Josoph 3i 15, Edgerton 29 16,
Bridgeport 27. 17, Snhnevrlle
Southern (1) 18 18. Thompson
Ledgemont 15
19, Bascom
Hopewell-Loudon 12

CHARLESTON DAILY
MAIL POLL
CHARLESTON, W Va (AP) - The
Charleston Dally Ma11 hrgh school
loo1ball poll, as voted on by West
V1rg1nia sportswriters. wrth llrst·
place votes in parentheses,
and total pomts.

CLASSAAA
1 George Wash. (16) 5..() 196
2. Un1vers1ty (2)
5·0 173
3 S. Charleston
3 1 159
4. Martinsburg (2)
5·0 130
5 Brooke
4 1 120
6. Cap1tal
4·1 106
7 Morgantown
4·1 88
4·1 42
8. Hurncane
9. Fa11mont Sr.
3·1 35
10 R.C Byrd
•H 29
1 Others: Parkersburg 12, Nicholas
Colmty 9, Bndgeport 2
CLASSAA
•
1 Magnolia (10)
4·0 187
2. Wayne (2)
4·0 169
3. Bluef,eld (8)
4-1 168
4. Ravenswood
4·0 143
5 James Monroe
5..0 124
6. Frankfort
4·0 95
7 Greenbrter W
5·0 73
1 8.
PikeView
4·1 45
9 Chapmanv1lle
4·1 39
10. Roane Co.
3·1 16
Others. R1ver View 14, Herbert
Hoover 13, Po1nt Pleasant 9.
Braxton County 4, Lrperty Harrison
2, Oak Glen 2

DIVISION VI
CLASS A
1 St. John's (32)
5 o 369
1 Madonna (13)
4·0 192
5·0 303
2 Manon Local
2 B Donahue (4)
5·0 168
3. Bucyrus Wynlord
5·0 223
3. Williamstown
3·1 154
5·0 194
4 Ada
4 Wheeling Cent. (3)
2·2 135
5. Shadys1de (1)
5·0 191
4·0 103
6, McComb (1)
5·0 161 1 5. Matewan
4-0 82
7 Mogadore (1)
5·0 137 1 6 Meadow Bndge
7, Wahama
4·0 81
8, Newark Cath.
4·1 85
8. Buffalo
4-1 54
9. Covmg1on
5·0 65
9. Wirt Co.
4-0 35
10. Western Reserve (1)5..0 61
Others rece,v1ng 12 or more pou'ts:
tO Fayetteville
4·1
11 Dalton 38. 12, Willow Wood
Others: Pendleton County 26. M
21, Mount Hope 7, East Hardy 6.
Symmes Valley (1) 33. 13, Spnng.
Cath Cent 3t. 13, Fremont St.
Marys 6 Tucker County 1

30.

South Gallia's David Michael hits from the bunker near the first green during
Saturday's round at Riverside Golf Course in Mason, W.Va.

Southern's Adam Pape putts on the first green at Riverside during Saturday's
Riversiae High School Invitational.

Sarah Hawley/photo

Point Pleasant's Opie Lucas hits his second shot on the first hole at the 201 0
Rivers1de High School Invitational held Saturday in Mason, W.Va. Lucas took top
individual honors with his round of 71.

Wahama's Matt Arnold hits from the fairway on the first hole Saturday at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason, W.Va.

Golf
fromPageBl
Tournament team was
Point's Erik Allbright
with a fine 75 and Point's
Travis Grimm with an
80.
An additional 5 players
earned honors for the
All-Tournament team.
Warren Local's Ian .loller
shot 77, Cory Hoshor
from Buffalo made the
team With an 80 as did

Ravenswood's

Torrey

Wolfe with an identical
80. Scott's Shane Light
and Waterford's Brand) n
Offenberger completed

the All-Tournament team
with both shooting 81. It
should be noted that both
Levi Thompson and Nic
Gibbson. both from
Warren Local, also shot
81 for the day, but did not
gain membership to the
All-Tournament
team
because of the tie-breaker rules in effect for this
contest.
The following is a
recap of the team and
individual scoring in
order of final place:
Point Pleasant (317):
Opie Lucas. 71. Erik
Allbright, 75. Travis
Grimm, 80. and Justin
Cavender. 91.
Warren Local (324):

Ian Zoller. 77. Le\J
Thompson. 81. Nick
Gibbson. 81. and Adam
Lang. 85.
Scott High School
(335): Shane Light. 81.
Chad Honeycutt. 82. Kris
Halstead, 86. and Cody
Brown. 86.
Ravenswood (349):
Torrey Wolfe. 80. Garrett
Clark.
86.
Jacob
Lavender. R8. and Lonnie
Ellis. 95.
Waterford
(349):
Brandyn
Offenberger.
81. Aaron Miller. 89.
Casey Branham. 89, and
Austin l lilverding, 90.
Charleston Catholk
(352): Aaron Persily. 82.
Brody Prudnick, 89.

David Zekan. 90. and
David Miller. 91.
Wahama
(356):
Michael MacKnight. 87.
Matt Arnold. 88, Samuel
Gordon. 89, and· Dakota
Sisk, 92.
Alexander
(374):
Dustin Mullins. 89, Kyle
Linder. 91, Tayler Bplin.
93. and Zack Weffler.
10 I.
Herbert
Hoo,·er
(377): Travis Gibson. 82.
Nick Calvert. 93. Cody
Webb. I 00. and Daniel
Davis. 102.
Eastern .
(379):
Christian Amsbary, 85.
hy Warner. 89. Chris
Bissell. 94. and Kvle
Young. Ill
•

South GaiJin (385): :Vlarcinko. 107. Cole
Seth Jarrell. 9::!. David Graham,
115.
and
Michael,
94.
Casin Trenton Cook, 141.
Roush. I 00. and Gus
The 16th team playing
Slone. 101.
\Vas an unofficial team
Ripley (389): Jordan made of players from
Franklin.
86.
Jesse Point
Pleasant
and
McComas, 95. Tyler Wahama and this score
Jones. 98, and Jonathan not included in tou
Cobb. 110.
ment totals.
Meigs (433): Trcay
Most. if not all, of the
McKinney. 94, Brayden teams taking part in this
Spencer.
110.
Paul tournament will be pla}
Gibbs. 114. and Dillan ing at least one more time
Andrews. 115.
this week in either secBuffalo (449): Cory tional or regional state
Hoshor. 80. Bradley tournaments.
Point
Harris, 117. Drew Patton. Pleasant will play at the
121. and Katie Allen. Green Hills Golf Course
131.
, while Wahama goes to
Southern (467): Adam the Big Benl Golf
Pape.
I 04, Brandon Course.

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