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Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio
INSIDE STORY
WEATHER
SPORTS
Dr. Brothers ...Page 2
Showers likely
today. High of 82.
Low of 61 ... Page 3
Lady Eagles sweep
South Gallia . Page 6
OBITUARIES
Mary Lou Hawkins, 71
William E. Mullins Jr., 38
Michael E. Pickens, 62
David Lee Rimmey, 50
Gary Lee Thivener, 58
50 cents daily
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2012
Vol. 62, No. 162
Council moves forward on impound lot plan
Charlene Hoeflich
choeflich@mydailysentinel.com
M I D D L E P O RT — A n other step toward establishing a village-operated
vehicle impound lot was
taken by Middleport Village Council at its Monday
night meeting.
Council approved a second reading of the ordinance setting forth operational procedures, and set
a third and final reading for
the Oct. 8 meeting.
The lot to be used for
storage of vehicles is located at the rear of Middleport Village Hall. Currently, Mike Hendrickson,
village building inspector,
is in the process of securing fencing for the three
open sides of the area to be
used for storage.
The ordinance sets forth
regulations regarding the
seizing of vehicles, holding and storing them, and
costs to be levied to the
owners when retrieving ve-
hicles.
At the request of Faymon
Roberts, village administrator, Council approved the
purchase of a used, one-ton
four -wheel pickup truck.
Roberts gave a lengthy report on the deteriorating
condition of some village
trucks and other equipment and the necessity
for some repair work on a
dump truck before winter
sets in.
The repair and paving
project of streets damaged
during the $7 million sewer
project, done at no cost to
the village, got under way
this week on North Second
Avenue, Mayor Michael
Gerlach reported. He also
discussed the digging going on in town by Columbia Gas which includes the
replacement of lines, and
he reported conflicting information regarding completion — one saying there
will be no more digging up
of streets until 2014, while
another indicated more
work to be done now.
Jail Officer Mony Wood
reported that Farmers
Bank had purchased an
animal at the Meigs County Fair and donated it to
Middleport to be used for
meat for jail prisoners. The
only cost to the village for
the meat is the processing
fee of $50 which Council
agreed to pay.
The need for identification cards for police and
other village personnel having regular contact with the
public was discussed at the
meeting. It was the general
consensus that such cards
are needed. Clerk/Treasurer Susan Baker reported on
costs for a photo identification card system would be
about $1,000. She was authorized to check the cost
and get back to Council.
Approved by Council was
the purchase of two regular
jackets for jail personnel
who would then give the
See IMPOUND | 2
Old Pomeroy
High School up
for sale, again
Sarah Hawley
shawley@heartlandpublications.
com
The helicopter lands and military personnel carrying an American flag cross the field.
Submitted photos
Patriotic tribute precedes football game
POMEROY —
A helicopter landed on the football
field, and military
personnel aboard
marched
across
the field carrying
an American flag
— a flag they then
presented to the
America Legion
Honor Guard who
raised it before the
game.
That was the
scene Friday night
before the Meigs
Marauder-Warren
Local
Warriors
game on Holzer
Field in the Farmers Bank Stadium.
The legionnaires
See TRIBUTE | 3
The flag is raised by The flag is presented to from the left, Drew Webster Post 39, American LeSteve Van Meter and gion members, Norm Price, Ed Durst and George Harris.
Jim Frye.
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Village Council unanimously approved the
advertising of the Old
Pomeroy Village Hall,
also known as the Old
Pomeroy High School, for
sale.
This will be the third
time the building has
been listed for sale by the
village. Council member
Robert Payne made the
motion to move forward
with advertising the property for sale, with council
member Ruth Spaun seconding the motion.
The first two listings
resulted in one bid from
Mark Porter GM in December 2011.
The village had accepted the bid of $20,250 in
December 2011, but in
June of this year Mayor
Mary McAngus informed
council the sale did not
go through as approved.
The first round of bids
in July 2011 provided the
village with zero bids.
The council had asked for
a minimum bid of $80,000
in the initial posting,
with bids to be submitted
by July 8. After no bids
were originally submitted, the council posted
the building again at the
lower price of $60,000,
with bids to be in by December 9.
When accepting the
bid, then Mayor John
Musser, noted that it
would likely cost around
$40,000 to demolish the
building.
McAngus had signed
the deed to the property
in April in order to complete the sale of the property, but the sale was not
completed.
The building — which
was built in 1914 — was
home to the Pomeroy
High School Panthers until the school consolidated into the Meigs Local
School District 40 years
ago.
Following the consolidation, the building became the Pomeroy Municipal Building, housing
the water office, police
department and other administrative offices. The
building has set vacant
since the village moved
operations in December
2009 to the former Millennium building.
Council has previously approved a $300 per
month lease for the parking space on the west side
of the building with Mark
Porter GM. A resolution
stating the lease was on
the agenda for Monday’s
meeting, but was voted
down by council. Council
members stated that the
lease did not stated the
length of time it would
be effective and needed
to be revised prior to approval.
Council
members
Payne, Jackie Welker,
Dru Reed, Ruth Spaun
and Phil Ohlinger were
present, along with Mayor Mary McAngus, clerk
Sonya Wolfe and village
administrator Paul Hellman.
More on Monday’s
council meeting will appear in a later edition of
The Daily Sentinel.
Unemployment up in Gallia, down in Meigs, Mason
Beth Sergent
bsergent@heartlandpublications.com
OHIO VALLEY — Unemployment went down in Meigs
and Mason counties but rose
slightly in Gallia County, according to the latest statistics
released for August.
Starting on the West Virginia side of the river, Mason
County’s unemployment went
from 12.1 percent in July to
10.7 percent in August. In
July, Mason County had the
state’s highest unemployment
rate but in August it dropped
to fourth out of 55 counties
in terms of the highest unem-
ployment. Preceding Mason
County was Clay County with
11.5 percent unemployment,
Webster County with 11.6 percent unemployment and Boone
County with 11.9 percent unemployment - the highest in
the state. Unemployment rates
climbed in 29 counties.
Counties with the lowest
unemployment rates in West
Virginia were Pendelton at
5.9 percent, Preston at 5.8
percent, Monroe at 5.7 percent, Putnam at 5.6 percent,
Monongalia County at 5.2
percent and Jefferson at 5.1
percent. In August there were
1,050 unemployed in Mason
County, down from 1,210 in
July. There were 8,790 people
employed in Mason County
in August, up from 8,780 in
July. Across West Virginia the
unemployment rate actually
climbed two-tenths of a percentage point to 7.5 percent in
August.
On the Ohio side of the
river, Meigs County saw it’s
unemployment rate dip to
11.1 percent in August, down
from an unemployment rate
of 12.5 percent in July. However, Meigs County remained
ranked second out of 88 counties when it comes to having
the highest unemployment
- Pike County once again had
the top slot at 12.1 percent unemployment.
In the tri-county area, only
Gallia County saw unemployment rise, going from 8.3 percent in July to 8.4 percent unemployment in August. Gallia
County is ranked 17 out of 88
counties when it comes to the
highest unemployment rates.
Mercer County once again had
the lowest unemployment rate
at 4.1 percent. Other unemployment rates of note across
the state are: Vinton County,
9.9 percent; Jackson County,
8.5 percent; Athens County,
eight percent; Franklin Coun-
ty, six percent; Cuyahoga
County, 7.3 percent; Hamilton
County, 6.8 percent.
The number of workers unemployed in Ohio in August was
413,000, down from 418,000 in
July. Ohio’s unemployment rate
was 7.2 percent in August, unchanged from July. Unemployment rates in both Ohio and
West Virginia are still below
the national average which was
at 8.1 percent in August, down
from 8.3 percent in July.
Information for this article
provided by the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services and WorkForce West Virginia.
�Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Ask Dr. Brothers
Quiz topic: Inside the nostalgia craze
It’s a force in music, fashion, decorating and filmmaking. In fact, there are few elements of everyday life that
haven’t been touched by the
magic of nostalgia. For many,
thinking of the past brings
back thoughts of glory days
in high school; for others —
like the baby boomers reminiscing about Woodstock or
peace marches — nostalgia
helps confirm who they are.
This quiz digs into what’s
so great about recalling the
good old days.
1. Nostalgia generally has
beneficial effects rather than
negative ones.
TRUE ( ) FALSE ( )
2. People in their 20s likely
will be less nostalgic than
other generations.
TRUE ( ) FALSE ( )
3. Nostalgia usually is voluntary.
TRUE ( ) FALSE ( )
4. Nostalgia has the ability
to alter our physical comfort.
TRUE ( ) FALSE ( )
5. There’s no such thing as
too much nostalgia.
TRUE ( ) FALSE ( )
6. Nostalgia inspires business and marketing.
TRUE ( ) FALSE ( )
7. You can practice nostalgia, almost like meditation.
TRUE ( ) FALSE ( )
ANSWERS:
1. TRUE. Nostalgia is a
common phenomenon across
cultures and age groups, although it tends to increase
the older we grow. It provides a valuable psychological link between the past and
present, helps us hold to our
notion of who we are and can
aid in relieving loneliness. It
can enhance mood, lift selfesteem and help strengthen
friendships and family relationships.
2. FALSE. Though in the
past older generations enjoyed reminiscing about hard
The Daily Sentinel • Page 2
www.mydailysentinel.com
of nostalgia can
times in contrast
lead to psychowith their lives
logically living in
at the time, the
the past, which
young people of
in turn can lead
today may find it
to practical probeven more gratilems focusing on
fying to recall
reality, the presthe nostalgia of
ent and the need
the time when
to face the chores
they were young
and relationships
and before they
of daily living.
became adults
Nostalgia can be
in a very tough
a factor in being a
economy. If their
pack rat or hoardlives
continue
to be a financial Dr. Joyce Brothers er, or in being a
collector,
with
struggle, their
Syndicated
space or financial
youths will take
Columnist
issues growing
on an even more
out of control bemagical
aura,
focusing on bands, video cause of the compulsion buy
games, television and all the old toys, etc.
6. TRUE. While individugood times of the ’80s and
’90s, before they had to face als indulge in nostalgia to
contemplate their own pertoday’s difficult realities.
3. FALSE. Most people fall sonal memories, advertisers
into nostalgic reveries un- of products use many of the
consciously, often triggered cues that trigger nostalgia to
by something that reminds sell to specific demographthem of their youth, since ics. Right now, the hordes
most fond remembrances of baby boomers are being
are centered on childhood targeted with soundtracks
and young-adulthood. Smells of music from the ’60s and
such as a certain perfume or ’70s, remakes of TV shows
a kitchen odor, music and ob- and making the books of
jects from the past are strong their youth into movies. Midtriggers for nostalgic feelings. century modern furnishings
4. TRUE. Several experi- also are riding the crest of the
ments by Chinese research- nostalgia wave, appealing to
ers have shown that by boomers’ vision of the childreimagining a pleasant time hood home.
7. TRUE. Anyone can acwith friends or recalling
favorite music while expe- cess memories of his or her
riencing extreme cold, the past that arouses and at the
students in the study actually same time satisfies the bitfelt warmer, or the room felt tersweet yearning for an
warmer to them. The same earlier time. Some set aside
region of the brain is involved a half-hour a day for thinkin emotional awareness as in ing of specific events or time
physiology, so deliberately re- periods, places or people
creating in the mind a past who live on in their minds.
state of comfort can aid in Sometimes an old keepsake,
changing perceptions of cur- a record or a picture album
can aid in this kind of reverie.
rent conditions.
If you had six correct an5. FALSE. While a little
nostalgia generally is a pleas- swers, you really understand
ant diversion, a constant diet the allure of the past.
John got in the game
with a wide range of
sports, movies and
more & saved up
to $850!
Meigs County Community
Thursday, Sept. 27
POMEROY — The Alpha Iota Masters will meet
at 11:30 a.m. at Wild Horse
Cafe in Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE — The ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party will
hold their regular meeting
at 6:30 p.m. at Carleton
School. Refreshments will
be served. All women are
welcome.
Friday, Sept. 28
MARIETTA — The Regional Advisory Council
for the Area Agency on Aging will meet at 10 a.m. in
the Buckeye Hills-HVRDD
Area Agency on Aging office in Marietta.
MIDDLEPORT — A
free community dinner
will be served at 5 p.m. at
the Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center.
Meatloaf, mac and cheese,
green beans, rolls, and dessert will be served. Everyone welcome.
LEBANON TWP. — The
Lebanon Township Trustees will hold their monthly
meeting at 6 p.m. at the
Township Building.
Monday, Oct. 1
ALFRED — Orange
Township Trustees will
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Orange Township building on
the Roger Ritchie property.
SYRACUSE — The Sutton Township Trustees will
meet at 7 p.m. at Syracuse
Village Hall.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Cancer
Initiative Inc. (MCCI)
will meet at noon in the
conference room of the
Meigs County Health Department. New members
welcome. For more information contact Courtney
Midkiff at (740) 992-6626,
M-F, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 4
CHESTER — The Chester Shade Historical Association will meet at 7 p.m.
at the Academy.
Birthdays
POMEROY — Betty
Roberts Butcher of 35698
Long Hollow Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 will celebrate her 87th birthday on
Oct. 9. Cards may be sent
to her at that address.
Meigs County Briefs
MHS Parent-Teacher
Conferences
POMEROY — Meigs High
School parent-teacher conferences will held from 3 to 6
p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 27.
Students will be given letters describing the conference scheduling procedure
along with information on
the conferences. All parents and/or guardians are
encouraged to attend the
conferences since it keeps
them informed concerning
the progress of their children. The form attached to
the letter is to be returned
to the school or contacts are
to be made there by calling
740-992-2158 by Wednesday, Sept. 26,
must be accompanied by a
parent or legal guardian. A
donation is appreciated, but
not required.
Childhood immunization clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Health Department
will conduct a Childhood
and Adolescent Immunization Clinic from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday at
the Meigs County Health
Department. Please bring
shot record and medical
card or commercial insurance if applicable. Children
Flu Shots now available
POMEROY — Flue shots
will be available from 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays at the Meigs County
Health Department. Shots
are available for ages six
months and up. Some insurances are accepted. For
more information contact
the Meigs County Health
Department at 992-6626.
sentation and the community interest and noted that at
the next meeting there will
be program on meth labs.
Date for that meeting has
not been announced.
Councilman Craig Wehrung reported on plans for
two meet-the-candidates’
sessions to be held at 7:30
p.m. on Oct. 9 and 23, at
the Senior Citizens Center.
Candidates with opposition
in the November election
will be invited to participate
in the question and answer
session, Wehrung said.
Councilman Roger Manley was reported on vacation. Council members
attending were Moore,
Brown, Wehrung, Penny
Burge and Emerson Heighton.
Impound
From Page 1
protective jackets with logos which they now have to
active police officers.
Council members Rae
Moore and Sandy Brown reported on the recently held
public Neighborhood Watch
meeting handled by Officer
Frank Stewart. Both reported on the impressive pre-
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The Daily Sentinel • Page 3
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sonshine Circle plans fall activities
Obituaries
Mary Lou Hawkins
Mary Lou Hawkins, 71, of Middleport, Ohio, passed
away on September 25, 2012. She was born on December
11, 1940, in Pomeroy, Ohio, daughter of the late Lawrence
Homer Smith and Dorothy Boyer. She was a member of
the Hope Baptist Church in Middleport.
Mrs. Hawkins was employed by Meigs Local Schools for
twenty years, first as a janitor, then librarian, and finally
as a teacher’s aid. She was the second person from Meigs
County to be inducted into the Ohio Senior Citizens Hall
of Fame in 2005.
She is survived by her husband of fifty-four years, Eugene Hawkins; children, Regina (Mark) Simpson and Ronald (Francis) Hawkins; grandchildren, Joshua Simpson,
Tiffany Simpson, Cindy (Eric) Cisco, Michael Hawkins
and Matthew Hawkins; great-grandchildren, Walker and
Cooper Cisco, Jayda and Dalton Hawkins; brothers, James
Smith and James (Debbie) Boyer; sister, Linda (Donald)
McDade; special friends, Rita Buckley and teachers of Middleport Elementary; special doctor, Dr. Robert Tayengco;
and special nurse, Tonya Carpenter.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in deathby
her sister, Carolyn Triplett; and step-father, Ed Boyer.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, September 29, 2012, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Middleport with Pastor Gary Ellis officiating. Burial will
follow at Gravel Hill Cemetery. Visiting hours will be from
6-8 p.m. on Friday at the funeral home.
A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
RACINE — Fall activities
and fund raisers were discussed
at the recent meeting of the Sonshine Circle held at the Bethany
United Methodist Church.
Plans were discussed for the
November family dinner and the
Halloween party at the Racine
Fire Department building. The
monthly donation was made to
the Meigs County Council on
Aging and plans were discussed
for making noodles for sale this
month. Cleaning the carpet was
Wednesday: Showers likely
and possibly a thunderstorm
before 11 a.m., then a chance
of showers and thunderstorms
after 11 a.m. Cloudy, with a high
near 82. Light and variable wind
becoming southwest 6 to 11
mph in the morning. Chance of
precipitation is 70 percent. New
rainfall amounts between a tenth
and quarter of an inch, except
higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Wednesday Night: Showers
likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 61. West wind around 6
mph becoming light and variable in the evening. Chance of
precipitation is 70 percent. New
rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Thursday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy,
with a high near 74. Northeast
wind around 5 mph becoming
calm in the afternoon. Chance
of precipitation is 40 percent.
William ‘Billy’ E. Mullins, Jr.
William “Billy” E. Mullins, Jr., 38, Gallipolis, Ohio, died
Saturday, September 22, 2012.
Graveside services will be conducted at 12 p.m. Thursday September 27, 2012, in the Centenary Cemetery,
Gallipolis. The McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt
Chapel, Gallipolis is honored to be serving the Mullins
Family in their time of need.
David Lee Rimmey, 50, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died
September 25, 2012, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by the Deal Funeral
Home.
Gary Lee Thivener
Gary Lee Thivener, 58, of Crown City, died on Tuesday,
September 25, 2012, at Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington, West Virginia.
Services will be conducted at 1 p.m., Friday, September
28, 2012, at the Willis Funeral Home with Rev. Randy Patterson, Jr. officiating. Burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery. Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. at the funeral home
on Thursday, September 27, 2012.
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Tribute
From Page 1
of Drew Webster Post 39
participate in the opening
ceremony at each home
game.
As a part of the program
before the game the Ma-
rauder Band, directed by
Toney Dingess, played a
song in tribute to veterans
and all active military personnel following that with
the National Anthem.
Post 39 then presented
New rainfall amounts between
a tenth and quarter of an inch,
except higher amounts possible
in thunderstorms.
Thursday Night: A chance
of showers. Mostly cloudy, with
a low around 55. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent. New
precipitation amounts between
a tenth and quarter of an inch
possible.
Friday: A chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near
77. Chance of precipitation is 30
percent.
Friday Night: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 53. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Saturday: A slight chance
of showers. Partly sunny, with a
high near 73.
Saturday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around 53.
Sunday: Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 72.
Sunday
Night:
Mostly
cloudy, with a low around 51.
Local stocks
Michael E. Pickens
David Lee Rimmey
Cummins, Megan Riley, Maxine Shain, Kim McDaniel and
Antiquity Baptist Church.
King, Hubbard and Blondena
Rainer presented the program
for the evening. Hubbard read
“The First Labor Day” which
was held Sept. 5, 1882, King
read “Honoring Labor Day,”
and Rainer read “Bloopers.”
They also had a scrambled word
game with items about professionals.
They served refreshments
to Ginny Richard, Hazel McKelvey, Jackie White, Evelyn
Foreman, Betty Proffitt, Lillian Hayman, Ruth Simpson,
Bernice Theiss, Mildred Hart,
Mabel Brace, Mary Ball, Ann
Zirkle, Louise Frank and Kathryn Hart.
Next meeting will be on Oct.
11, at the church with Ginny
Richard, Mabel Brace, Mildred
Hart, and Hazel McKelvey as
hostesses. All area women are
invited to attend.
Local weather Beman to celebrate
Death Notices
Michael E. Pickens, 62, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died on
Tuesday, September 25, 2012, at his home.
Funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, September 28, 2012, at the Deal Funeral Home with Rev. Leland
Alman officiating. Burial will be in the Kirkland Memorial
Gardens in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Friends may call from 6
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Thursday, September 27, 2012, at the
funeral home.
also discussed, and new cards
for sending as remembrances
to community members were
ordered.
Martha King opened the
meeting conducted by Kathryn
Hart by reading the first chapter
of Genesis followed by prayer.
Mary Ball and Ann Zirkle gave
the secretary and treasurer’s
reports. The group signed 77
cards provided by King. Edie
Hubbard read thank you notes
from from George and Bev
a plaque and a monetary
gift to Emma Perrin, field
commander, for the band in
appreciation of its participation in the Veterans, MIAPOW Remembrance Day
observance held on Sept. 8.
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Daily stock reports are the 4
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advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.
90th birthday
Luther Beman will celebrate his 90th birthday on
Nov. 6. Luther is a native
of Centerville. For many
years, he was a rural carrier for mail routes of out
the Thurman and Oak Hill
Post Offices. He still loves
mail, and hopes to receive
90 cards to celebrate his big
day. He now resides with
his daugher and family, and
cards should be addressed
to: Luther Beman 5605
Knapp Road Ravenna, OH
44266.
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FISH DAY!!!
NOW IS THE TIME FOR STOCKING!
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ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?
In order to vote in the November 6, 2012 General Election you must be
registered to vote by October 9, 2012.
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 9, 2012.
If you do need to change your address and have access to a computer, you can
go to www.myohiovote.com and complete the form on-line. You can register
to vote at this web-site also. If you have any problems, please give us a call for
assistance.
The Meigs County Board of Elections will have extended hours from 9:00 a.m.
until 9:00 p.m. on Tuesday, October 9, 2012. Come in and register to vote or
update any changes you may have to your name or address.
You may also register at the following locations in Meigs County: Meigs
County Department of Human Services, Meigs County WIC Office, Bureau
of Motor Vehicles, Meigs County 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, Suite 1, Pomeroy, Ohio.
60356874
Stocking National Gypsum High Strength Lite Weight Drywall, Ceiling Tile,
Commercial Doors, Frames & Hardware, Metal Studs & Specialty Products
Visit our website at charlestonacoustics.com
Mike Bastiani
50 Vinton Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631
Office: 740-446-7090 • Free: 866-446-0700 • Fax 740-446-7091
60356141
Steve Marxen
�The Daily Sentinel
Opinion
Page 4
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Boston.com launches 1st New memoir from actor,
online radio with DJs
Lindsey Anderson
The Associated Press
BOSTON — A beloved
Boston-area independent
alternative radio station is
getting new life online several times over in partnership with traditional print
media, and experts say it
could be a model for other
stations that can no longer
be found on a radio dial.
The station was known as
WFNX until its frequency
was sold to media giant
Clear Channel earlier this
year. The Boston Globe
snapped up most of its
popular, live local disc jockeys and created RadioBDC,
which for the past several
weeks has been streaming
similar programming from
Boston.com, the Globe’s
current events and entertainment news site.
“A lot of people around
the country are going to be
looking to this experiment
or this venture to see how
it does and to see if it can
be applied in their market
in their particular circumstances,” Boston University
mass communication professor John Carroll said.
Launched in 1983, Boston’s WFNX was one of the
first U.S. stations to exclusively broadcast alternative
rock. It was the first to play
Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen
Spirit” and its album “Nevermind” in its entirety on
air, pushing the band onto
the national scene.
Fans like Andrea Berman,
who listened to the station
24/7, were devastated when
it announced it would go
silent July 20. She started
an “Occupy WFNX” Facebook page, Twitter account
and blog and was ecstatic
when Boston.com later announced the launch of RadioBDC with WFNX DJs.
“It’s more than just a
brand; it’s more than just
the name,” she said. “It’s
the DJs; they’re the heart
and soul of a station.”
Lisa Desisto, general
manager of Boston.com and
chief advertising officer for
the Globe, owned by The
New York Times Co., said
she’s been taking calls from
other newspapers asking
how and why she launched
RadioBDC, which takes its
name from the initials of
Boston.com. But she said
the station would be hard to
duplicate elsewhere for the
reason Berman articulated:
the DJs.
Phoenix
Media/Communications Group’s MCC
Broadcasting Inc. let most
of the WFNX staff go when
it sold its 101.7 broadcast
license to Clear Channel’s
Capstar Radio Operating
Company this summer for
$14.5 million. People tuning in now hear a hits station called The Harbor.
“Despite its celebrated
history, its cutting edge
programming, its tradition
of breaking new music, its
ardent fans among listeners
and advertisers, for some
time it has been difficult to
sustain the station — especially since the start of the
Great Recession,” Phoenix
Media Publisher Stephen
Mindich wrote in a memo
to its weekly alternative
newspaper, The Boston
Phoenix.
More and more independent stations are disappearing because advertisers
want a bigger platform for
their ads, Carroll said. Web
streaming is a cheaper alternative.
While RadioBDC has
hired
WFNX
staffers,
WFNX.com continues online, playing the same kind
of music it always did,
though without DJs. The
sale of 101.7 granted Clear
Channel the frequency license and equipment, but
Phoenix Media retains the
call sign, trademarks and
intellectual property.
Eventually, WFNX.com
will operate much like RadioBDC.
WFNX personality Kurt
St. Thomas, who helped
launch Nirvana under his
watch, will join WFNX.
com as executive producer
and two Phoenix Media
publications will eventually
be linked to WFNX.com’s
music content. The venture
was planned before the announcement of RadioBDC,
a Phoenix Media spokes-
The Daily Sentinel
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Correction Policy
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man said.
WFNX.com
averaged
18,000 listeners a month
when the station was still on
air; it now averages 6,000.
Meanwhile,
listeners
tuned into RadioBDC online and via mobile application for 51,502 combined
hours its first week.
The commercial station
is two months in the making and a month on air and
has committed advertisers, including Miller Corp.,
Sapporo, Bud Light and
Heineken. It has expanded
the Globe’s 21- to 34-yearold male demographic,
hence the alcohol advertising, Desisto said.
RadioBDC isn’t for national advertisers looking
for an expansive platform,
she said, but for companies
looking “to make a splash”
in the Boston region.
DJs are manually uploading music into RadioBDC
computers, often bringing
in CDs from home to build a
music library from scratch.
The station faced costs like
constructing a new studio,
obtaining music rights and
paying staff salaries but
saves in marketing costs,
utilizing the Globe’s established ad and event staff.
And across the hall are
Globe journalists, ready to
discuss morning news on
air.
“We’re going to be able
to do a lot of things here
that we weren’t able to do
at our last places because
of resources, technology,
money,” said Julie Kramer,
one of the WFNX DJs who
moved to RadioBDC. “We’ll
be able to take this to a new
level.”
The endeavor faces challenges sustaining advertisers, reaching audiences who
don’t own smartphones and
competing against iPods
and online stations, said
Justin Ellis of Harvard University’s Nieman Journalism Lab, who has written
about RadioBDC.
“At least in the initial
phase and the setup, everything seems to be going
their way,” Ellis said. “But
the question is: Will it work
in the long term?”
traveler Andrew McCarthy
Alicia Rancilio
Associated Press
then when I have something to eat usually, or maybe a nap, I come back, ‘Oh,
yeah, no. This is OK.’ I find anywhere
interesting. … You know I was recently
in Sudan and I found that endless and
fascinating. I would love to go back to
Sudan. I’ve been to a lot of places, I was
in Mozambique recently and it was just
ravaged parts of it and I found it fascinating.
NEW YORK — Twenty years ago,
actor Andrew McCarthy read a book
about walking the Camino de Santiago,
the ancient pilgrimage route in Spain,
and it inspired him to walk the Camino
himself.
“That sort of changed the way I felt in
the world and it helped me stop being
afraid of the world,” recalled McCarthy,
AP: Do you plan for trips?
49. “It helped me realize travel obliterMcCARTHY: I like to know what stoates fear.”
ry I’m planning to write before I go and
McCarthy, whose best-known films in- then invariably it changes. I find, like
clude his work as part
with anything, it’s
of Hollywood’s “Brat
like with the acting,
Pack” in “Pretty in
the more prepared
Pink” and “St. Elmo’s “People think they’re
you are, the more you
Fire,” is now an ac- going to escape and
can throw that out the
claimed travel writer
window with surprisfor major magazines have a vacation (but)
es to happen, do you
(he admits that he’s
know what I mean?
people always have
lucky to have “the
When I’m just on my
two best jobs in the meltdowns on vacation. own, I just go. I just
world” as both an
show up without a
actor and a writer). I always think travel is
reservation. I just arAnd he’s just written not about escape at all, rive and figure it out.
his own book about
I like that.
travel called “The it’s about confronting
Longest Way Home:
AP: How did you
One Man’s Quest for yourself.”
start writing about
— Andrew McCarthy travel?
the Courage to Settle
Actor
Down.” He sums up
McCARTHY:
It
his conflicts over setstarted because I met
tling down as, “I want
the editor at National
to be alone and I want to be with you,” Geographic Traveler and I convinced
and says he resolved the conflict “the him after much cajoling to let me write
way I answer all questions in my life, by a piece for them. Eventually I said, ‘Let
traveling.”
me write it, if it doesn’t work, you don’t
Here’s more from McCarthy, who is pay me.’ And he went, ‘I can live with
married and the father of two children, that.’ So I did a piece for him and that
about travel:
worked out so I did more for Traveler
and then my editor there, I kept pitchAP: Are your children good travelers? ing him so much he said, ‘Look, go write
McCARTHY: Everything to them is an for some other people, would you?’ So
adventure. My kids love the plane. They I started writing for the Atlantic, the
love going through security. I mean, Times and numerous things and nobody
there are very few meltdowns when we really put together that it was the actor
travel and most of them are mine. I took Andrew McCarthy writing.
my son to the Sahara when I was doing
a story and he had an incredible experiAP: How does travel affect you?
ence in the Sahara. We had a 12-hour
McCARTHY: People think they’re gocar ride through the wilds of Morocco ing to escape and have a vacation (but)
and at home if we were in the car for people always have meltdowns on vacamore than 20 minutes, he would’ve had tion. You go, you leave everything you
an issue, but he is fantastic, you know? know that you’ve safely constructed to
As long as I supplied him with Coca keep yourself from having any anxiety
Cola, he was great.
and you go to a beach and you lay there
and all you have is your mind. How can
AP: Any place you don’t like?
you not think that’s gonna be a stressful
McCARTHY: Very rarely do I get to a experience? I always think travel is not
spot where I’m like, ‘This is awful.’ It’s about escape at all, it’s about confrontusually me that’s awful in the spot and ing yourself.
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respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the
freedom of speech, or of the press;
or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of
grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
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The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.
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Phone (740) 992-2156
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Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor
�Wednesday, September 26, 2012
The Daily Sentinel • Page 5
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�The Daily Sentinel
WEDNESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 26, 2012
Sports
mdssports@heartlandpublications.com
Rio soccer blasts Georgetown, 6-0
Randy Payton
Special to OVP
GEORGETOWN, Ky. –
Richard Isberner scored two
goals and assisted on another, while Oliver Hewitt-Fisher had one goal and a pair
of assists, leading secondranked Rio Grande to a 6-0
shellacking of Georgetown
College, Saturday night, in
Mid-South Conference men’s
soccer action at Toyota Stadium/iHigh.com Field.
Isberner, a senior forward
from Sao Paulo, Brazil, netted both of his markers after
halftime, as the RedStorm (71, 2-0 MSC) pulled away for
the easy win.
Sophomore
midfielder
Caio Cruz and junior midfielder Maxi Viera also added
goals for head coach Scott
Morrissey’s squad, which
won for the seventh straight
time.
Rio’s first score of the
contest actually came via an
“own goal” just over nine
minutes in when Cruz fired a
ball off the knee of a Georgetown defender and it snuck
past Tiger net-minder Stefan
Iverson to make it 1-0.
Cruz pushed the lead to
2-0 at the 19:14 mark when
he scored from 18 yards out
on the left wing via an assist
from Hewitt-Fisher – a senior
midfielder from Swansea,
Wales.
That’s how things stayed
until a four-goal barrage covering a seven-minute span in
the second stanza.
Isberner scored off an
assist from senior forward
Rafael Maccauro at 58:13
before assisting on a goal by
Hewitt-Fisher just under two
minutes later to make it 4-0.
Isberner scored his second
goal of the game – and his
sixth in the last four outings
– off of a pass from HewittFisher to extend the advantage to 5-0 with just over 28
minutes remaining.
Viera closed out the scoring at 65:32, heading in a
rebound of Hewitt-Fisher’s
miss off the crossbar.
Rio Grande enjoyed a commanding 27-7 edge in shots,
16 of which were on goal.
Senior goal keeper Jack
Marchant collected a pair of
saves for Rio before giving
way to sophomore Jon Dodson over the final 15:07, as
the two combined for a shutout.
Iverson went the first
65:36 in goal for Georgetown
(1-7, 1-3) and had seven
saves, while Justin Davis recorded three stops in a mopup role.
NOTES: University of Rio
Grande’s Richard Isberner
and Campbellsville University’s Max Malachiyev are
the Mid-South Conference
Men’s Soccer Players of the
Week, conference officials
announced on Monday. The
weekly honors are the first of
the season for both Isberner
and Malachiyev. The award
is Isberner’s eighth of his career and Malachiyev’s first.
Isberner scored four goals
and assisted on two others to
earn MSC Offensive Player
of the Week. Isberner is tied
for fifth in the MSC in points
(14) and goals (6) this season. Malachiyev recorded a
pair of shutouts last week to
earn the Mid-South’s Defensive Player of the Week. The
Bowling Green, Ky., freshman goalkeeper stopped a
pair of shots in the Tigers’
4-0 win over Cumberland
University to open the week.
Eastern sweeps
Lady Rebels
Alex Hawley
ahawley@heartlandpublications.com
MERCERVILLE, Ohio —
The streaks continues.
The Eastern volleyball
team won its 10th consecutive match, its 29th straight
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division match and its
15th game in a row Monday
night with a triumph over
host South Gallia.
The Lady Eagles (13-1,
9-0 TVC Hocking) won 2512, 25-8 and 25-9 over the
Lady Rebels (7-5, 3-4).
Eastern’s service attack
was led by Ally Hendrix
with 16 points, including
11 straight to start the second game. Erin Swatzel had
10 points for EHS, while
Maddie Rigsby and Gabby
Hendrix with nine points
apiece. Kiki Osborne had
four points and Jordan Parker finished with three to
round out the Lady Eagles
scoring.
Rigsby led the victors
with 13 kills, followed by
Parker with 12 and Swatzel
with seven. Osborne and
Katie Keller each had three
kills while Gabby Hendrix
and Ally Hendrix each finished with one kill each.
Keller led the Lady Eagles
with two blocks, while Parker and Swatzel each had
one. Ally Hendrix had 38
assists to lead Eastern while
Gabby Hendrix had 20 digs
in the triumph.
Brynn Adams led South
Gallia with three service
points, followed by Ellie
Bostic and Meghan Caldwell
with two points apiece. Bailie Corbin finished with
one point to round out the
SGHS scoring. Bostic and
Caldwell each had four kills
for the Lady Rebels while
Adams had two. Caldwell
led the hosts with four
blocks on the night. Corbin
and Bailey each had two
digs in the contest, followed
by Bostic and Shelby Sanders with one apiece.
This is Eastern’s second
victory over South Gallia
this year. The first came in
the season opener on August 30th in Tuppers Plains.
The Lady Eagles won the
first game 25-6, and the
next two games 25-14.
Alex Hawley/photo
Eastern senior Katie Keller (15) spikes the ball against South
Gallia’s Ellie Bostic during Monday night’s Lady Eagles’ victory
in Mercerville.
Submitted photo
Rio Grande’s Kayla Renner (far left) takes the early lead in Saturday’s 42nd Annual Rio Grande/Patty Forgey Cross Country
Invitational. Renner went on to win the race and was named the Mid-South Conference Women’s Cross Country Runner of
the Week on Monday.
Wilson, Renner earn MSC
Runner of the Week honors
LOUISVILLE,
Ky.
— University of Rio
Grande senior Nick Wilson is the Mid-South
Conference Men’s Cross
Country Runner of the
Week for the week ending Sept. 22, conference
officials announced on
Monday.
The weekly award is
the first of the season
for Wilson and the second of his career.
Wilson won the 42nd
Annual Rio Grande
/ Patty Forgey Cross
Country
Invitational
on Saturday to earn
the conference’s weekly
award.
The former Warren
Warrior standout finished the 8,000 meters
in 27 minutes and 17
seconds. Wilson and
teammate Joe Taranto
— who finished runnerup — were the only two
men to cross the finish
line in under 28 minutes.
Wilson helped the
RedStorm win the 54man, seven-team event.
Rio Grande finished
with 24 team points,
just in front of Campbellsville University’s 31
points.
Also, the University
of Rio Grande’s Kayla
Renner is the Mid-South
Conference
Women’s
Cross Country Runner
of the Week for the week
ending Sept. 22, conference officials announced
on Monday.
The weekly award is
Renner’s first of the season and of her career.
Renner captured the
42nd Annual Rio Grande
/ Patty Forgey Cross
Country Invitational to
earn the conference’s
weekly award.
The Galloway, Ohio,
senior broke the tape in
20 minutes and 32 seconds on the 5,000-meter
course.
Renner
won
the
41-woman race by 36
seconds over her nearest competitor.
Renner was the lone
woman in the field to
break the 21-minute barrier.
Submitted photo
Rio Grande’s Nick Wilson runs alone during Saturday’s 42nd
Annual Rio Grande/Patty Forgey Cross Country Invitational.
Wilson went on to win the race and was named the MidSouth Conference Men’s Cross Country Runner of the Week
on Monday.
OVP Sports Schedule
Wednesday, September
26
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at River
Valley, 5:30
Meigs at Trimble, 6 p.m.
URG Sports
Men’s Soccer at St. Catharine, 5 p.m.
Women’s Soccer at St.
Catharine, 3 p.m.
Volleyball vs. WVU-Tech,
7 p.m.
Thursday, September 27
Volleyball
Southern at South Gallia,
6 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford, 6
p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Portsmouth at Gallia
Academy, 5:15
Chesapeake at RVHS, 5:30
Wahama at Fed Hock, 6
p.m.
Poca at Point Pleasant,
5:30
Hannan at Huntington SJ,
6:30
Boys Soccer
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Herbert Hoover at Point
Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Cross Country
PPHS at George Washington, 4 p.m.
Defenders rally back for 4-4 tie at Belpre
Bryan Walters
bwalters@heartlandpublications.
com
BELPRE, Ohio — The
Ohio Valley Christian soccer team twice rallied back
from two-goal deficits Monday night en route to a 4-all
tie against host Belpre during a non-conference matchup in Washington County.
The visiting Defenders
(7-3-1) never led in the contest and trailed 3-0 late in
the first half before making
an incredible 4-1 surge over
the final 43 minutes of regulation just to earn a tie.
Kyle Windland gave the
Golden Eagles a 1-0 advantage just two minutes
in on an unassisted goal,
then Justin Smith netted a
Trenton Stanley pass in the
30th minute for a 2-0 lead.
Dakota Hoffman gave BHS
its biggest lead of the night
in the 37th minute on an unassisted goal for a 3-0 edge.
The Defenders finally
got in the scoring column
in the 37th minute after
Josh Blevins netted a penalty kick to pull the guests
to within 3-1. Scotty Wood
then netted a pass from Caleb McKitrick in the 39th
minute to cut the deficit
down to 3-2 at the intermission.
Belpre increased its lead
back to two during the 58th
minute, as Devin Darnell
netted an unassisted goal
for a 4-2 advantage. Richard
Bowman pulled the guests
back to within one on an
unassisted goal in the 67th
minute, then McKitrick
netted a pass from Chance
Burleson in the 74th frame
to complete the scoring and
the comeback at four apiece.
OVCS outshot the hosts
by a narrow 9-8 margin.
Marshall Hood made four
saves in net for the Defenders, while Ryan Epperly had
five saves for Belpre in goal.
�Wednesday, September 26, 2012
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Legals
SERVICES
Business
• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured • Experienced
• References Available
Gary Stanley
740-591-8044
60347311
Stanley
Tree Trimming
& Removal
Please leave a message
Legals
12-3742 9/13/12 AD
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Bank of America, N.A., Successor by
Merger to BAC Home Loans
Servicing, L.P., fka Countrywide Home Loans Servicing,
L.P.
Case No.: 12CV067
Plaintiff Judge: Christopher
Tenaglia
vs. Legal Notice
Donna J. Spears, eta!., Defendant
Defendants, Phyllis Cross And
John Doe, Real Name Unknown, The Unknown Spouse,
if any, of
Phyllis Cross, whose last
known address is 300 I 0
Canter Rd, Racine, OH 45771,
will take notice that on July
24, 2012, Bank of America,
N.A., Successor by Merger to
BAC Home Loans Servicing,
L.P., fka Countrywide Home
Loans Servicing, L.P., filed its
Complaint in Case Number
12CV067, Meigs County, Ohio,
alleging that the defendants,
Phyllis Cross And John Doe,
Real Name Unknown, The Unknown Spouse, if any, of Phyllis Cross, have or claim to
have an interest in the real estate described below:
PREMISES COMMONLY
KNOWN AS:180 SOUTH
SECOND AVENUE MIDDLEPORT,OHIO 45760
PERMANENT PARCEL NUMBER: 15-00382.000
The plaintiff further alleges that
by reason of default in the payment of the promissory note,
according to its tenor, the conditions of a concurrent mortgage deed given to secure the
payment of said note and conveying the premises described,
have been broken and the
same has become absolute.
The plaintiff demands that the
defendants named above be
required to answer and set up
their interest in said real estate or be forever barred from
asserting the same, for foreclosure of said mortgage, the
marshaling of any liens, and
the sa le of said real estate,
and the proceeds of sa id sale
applied to the payment of
plaintiffs claim in the proper order of its priority and for such
other and further relief as is
just and equitable.
The defendants named above
are required to answer on or
before
The 7th day of November,
2012:
Bank of America, N.A., Successor by
Merger to BAC Home Loans
Servicing, L.P., fka Countrywide Home Loans Servicing,
L.P.
George J. Annos (00060075)
Attomey for Plaintiff
Carlisle, McNellie, Rini, Kramer
& Ulrich, LPA
24755 Chagrin Blvd. Suite 200
Cleveland, OH 44122
216-360-7200 Phone
216-360-7210 Facsimile gannos@carlisle-law.com
WE UNDERSTAND THAT
YOU WILL, AFTER THE LAST
DATE OF PUBLICATION,
PREPARE AND FILE WITH
THE CLERK OF THE COMMON PLEAS COURT, AN
AFFIDAVIT OF SUCH SERVICE BY PUBLICATION.
PLEASE FORWARD TO US A
COPY OF THE FIRST LEGAL
NOTICE OF SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION IN THE
ABOVE CAPTIONED MATTER.
9/26 10/3 10/10
ANNOUNCEMENTS
PROBATE COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
L. SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF PIPER SHAY MARTIN
TO PIPER SHAY SMECK
CASE NO. 20126018
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
CHANGE OF NAME
(R.C. 2717.01)
Applicant hereby gives notice
to all interested persons and to
Alex Martin , whose last known
address is 41 Flamingo Drive,
Gallipolis, Ohio , that the applicant has filed an Application
for Change of Name in the
Probate Court of Meigs
County, Ohio requesting the
change of name of Piper Shay
Martin to Piper Shay Smeck .
The hearing on the application
will be held on the 29th day of
October , 20 12 at 9:00 o’clock
a m in the Probate Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, located at
Courthouse, 100 East Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Applicant’s Signature : Stacy
Smeck
Address:35941 Flatwoods
Road
City: Pomeroy State OH Zip
45769
9/26
Salisbury Township Trustees Auction
Sat 9/29/12, 10am
1986 International 466 engine
DT, 5 & 2 speed, 10' SFS bed
air tailgate, (minimum bid)
Wabco grader 444, (minimum
bid)
Spreader box roll gate for a
truck
Two backhoe tires 19.5L x 24
Any questions: Bill Spaun 740992-3992, John Hood 740-992
-6991, Manning Roush 740992-5840
9/18 9/19 9/25 9/26
MEIGS COUNTY ENGINEER
34110 Fairgrounds Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
INVITATION AND NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
NEW DUMP BODY, SNOW
PLOW
Sealed bids will be received by
the Board of County Commissioners of MEIGS County,
Ohio at the office of the County
Commissioners, 100 East 2nd
Street, Suite 301 in the City of
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until
1:15 o’clock p.m., prevailing
local time on the 11 day of October, 2012 and then at 1:15
p.m. at said office opened and
read aloud for the furnishing of
one (1) dump body, V-box material spreader and snow plow
for the MEIGS County Engineer.
Bid documents may be secured at the office of The
Meigs County Engineer at
34110 Fairgrounds Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769; Phone
Number 740-992-2911
between 8am-4pm MondayThursday.
QUANTITY
The number of units being purchased will be one (1) dump
body, V-box material spreader
and snow plow.
Each bid shall be accompanied by a satisfactory bond or
certified check on a solvent
bank equal to five percent (5%)
of the bid submitted for the
vehicle and conditioned that
the bidder shall, if his bid is accepted, execute a contract in
conformity to the invitation and
bid within 10 days after notice
of the award of the contract to
them.
The bids shall be submitted on
the attached forms in a sealed
envelope plainly marked
“Dump Body, V-box and Snow
Plow”.
The County reserves the right
to accept or reject any or all
bids or portions thereof.
9/26 10/3
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
LEGAL NOTICE- INVITATION
TO BID
Separate sealed Bids will be
received for furnishing all
labor, materials and equipment necessary to complete a
project known as Combined
Sewer Separation Project at
the village office: 660 E. Main
Street, Suite A, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 11:00 A.M. local
time on Tuesday, October 16,
2012, and at said time and
place, publicly opened and
read aloud. Bids may be
mailed or delivered in advance
to the public opening at the
above address.
pany or Corporation licensed in
the State of Ohio to provide
said surety. Those Bidders that
www.mydailysentinel.com
elect to submit bid guaranty in
the form of a certified check,
cashier’s check or letter of
credit pursuant to Chapter
1305 of the Ohio Revised
Code and in accordance with
Section 153.54 (C) of the Ohio
Revised Code. Any such letter
of credit shall be revocable
only at the option of the beneficiary Owner. The amount of
the certified check, cashier’s
check or letter of credit shall be
equal to ten (10) percent of the
Bid and the Successful Bidder
will be required to submit a
bond in the form provided in
153.57 of the Ohio Revised
Code in conjunction with the
execution of the Contract.
Each proposal must contain
the full name of the party or
parties submitting the Bidding
Documents and all persons interested therein. Each bidder
must submit evidence of its experiences on projects of similar size and complexity. The
Owner intends that this Project
be completed no later than the
time period as set forth in Article 4 of the Standard Form of
Agreement Between Owner
and Contractor on the Basis of
a Stipulated Price.
Each Bidder must insure that
all employees and applicants
for employment are not discriminated against because of
race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap, ancestry, or age. This procurement is
subject to the EPA policy of
encouraging the participation
of small business in rural areas
(SBRAs).
All contractors and subcontractors involved with the
project shall to the extent practicable, use Ohio products, materials, services and labor in
the implementation of their
project. DOMESTIC STEEL
USE REQUIREMENTS AS
SPECIFIED IN SECTION
143.011 OF THE (OHIO) REVILLAGE OF POMEROY
VISED CODE APPPLY TO
LEGAL NOTICE- INVITATION
THIS PROJECT. COPIES OF
TO BID
SECTION 153.011 OF THE
Separate sealed Bids will be
(OHIO) REVISED CODE CAN
received for furnishing all
BE OBTAINED FROM ANY
labor, materials and equipOF THE OFFICES OF THE
ment necessary to complete a
DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISproject known as Combined
TRATIVE SERVICES.
Sewer Separation Project at
Additionally, contractor complithe village office: 660 E. Main
ance with the equal employStreet, Suite A, Pomeroy, Ohio ment opportunity requirements
45769 until 11:00
A.M. local
of Ohio Administrative
Code
Legals
Legals
time on Tuesday, October 16,
Chapter 123, the Governor’s
2012, and at said time and
Executive Order of 1972, and
place, publicly opened and
Governor’s Executive Order 84
read aloud. Bids may be
-9 shall be required. Bidders
mailed or delivered in advance must comply with the prevailto the public opening at the
ing wage rates on Public Imabove address.
provements in Perry County as
The project consists of two
determined by the Davis-Bacontracts. Contract #3 concon Federal Wage Determinasists of 8” gravity sewer, mantions.
holes, services connections,
The Engineer’s estimate for
12” and 24” storm sewer, catch Contract#3 is $3,000,000 and
basins and other miscelContract #4 is $230,000.
laneous appurtenances. ConThe Village of Pomeroy retract #4 consists of several imserves the right to waive any
provements to the existing
informalities or irregularities,
wastewater treatment plant inreject any or all bids, or to including aeration tank improvecrease or decrease or omit any
ments, blower building imitem or times and/or award the
provements, chlorine contact
bid to the lowest and best bidtank improvements and elecder.
trical upgrades.
By order of Village of Pomeroy,
Bid Documents that include all
660 E. Main Street, Suite A,
bid sheets, specifications, and
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, County
any addenda can be obtained
of Meigs, this 24th day of
from M•E Companies, Inc. (the September 2012.
“Engineer”), 5085 Tile Plant
9/26 10/3
Road, New Lexington, Ohio
Request for Proposals
43764 (phone 740-342-6695)
Workforce Investment Act
with a non-refundable pay(WIA) Area 14 is soliciting proment of $150.00 per set for
posals from qualified organizaContract #3 and $100.00 per
tions with extensive experiset for Contract #4. Checks
ence developing and operatshould be made payable to
ing disaster recovery proM•E Companies, Inc. Bid Docgrams. The Area has been nouments will also be on file in
tified that it has been apthe plan room of the F.W.
proved for the Windstorm NEG
Dodge Corporation, Builders’
OH-26 Grant that will enable
Exchange, and the Village ofclean-up and debris removal in
fice.
Athens, Meigs and Perry
Each Bidder is required to furCounties. The NEG funding is
nish with its submission of the
for damage sustained as a resfully completed Bid Docuult of the severe windstorms
ments, a Bid Security in acthat occurred from June 29 to
cordance with Section 153.54
July 2, 2012 per FEMA’s reof the Ohio Revised Code. Bid
security furnished in Bond form quest for a major declaration.
Organizations submitting pro(Bid Guarantee and Contract
posals should be capable and
and Performance Bond as
provided in Section 153.57.1 of interested in providing the following:
the Ohio Revised Code), must
• Removal of debris from
be issued by a Surety Company or Corporation licensed in roads, creeks, streams and
other water-ways that pose a
the State of Ohio to provide
said surety. Those Bidders that threat to public safety;
• Demolition or reconstruction
elect to submit bid guaranty in
of damaged public structures,
the form of a certified check,
facilities, or land;
cashier’s check or letter of
• Repair or cleaning of damcredit pursuant to Chapter
aged public structures, facilit1305 of the Ohio Revised
ies or land;
Code and in accordance with
• Have an emphasis on temSection 153.54 (C) of the Ohio
porarily employing displaced or
Revised Code. Any such letter
currently unemployed individuof credit shall be revocable
only at the option of the benefi- als; and
• Ability to issue payroll, monitciary Owner. The amount of
or worksites and supervise
the certified check, cashier’s
check or letter of credit shall be crews.
equal to ten (10) percent of the WIA Area 14 intends to use the
results of this process to award
Bid and the Successful Bidder
a contract that will be effective
will be required to submit a
October 12, 2012 through
bond in the form provided in
September 30, 2013, with an
153.57 of the Ohio Revised
option to renew for up to two
Code in conjunction with the
additional years. Contract
execution of the Contract.
award is contingent upon the
Each proposal must contain
receipt of NEG funding. Interthe full name of the party or
ested parties must submit a
parties submitting the Bidding
proposal that meets the reDocuments and all persons inquirements of the Request for
terested therein. Each bidder
must submit evidence of its ex- Proposal (RFP). The RFP that
depicts in detail the scope of
periences on projects of similservices being requested, the
ar size and complexity. The
Owner intends that this Project desired minimum qualifications, evaluation criteria, and
be completed no later than the
other submission guidelines
time period as set forth in Artmay be obtained by contacting
icle 4 of the Standard Form of
Mendra Hupp at (740) 342Agreement Between Owner
3551 Ext. 615 or by email:
and Contractor on the Basis of
huppm01@odjfs.state.oh.us.
a Stipulated Price.
The deadline for the Area to
Each Bidder must insure that
receive proposals is 11:00a.m.
all employees and applicants
Wednesday October 10, 2012.
for employment are not disLate proposals and proposals
criminated against because of
that do not follow the
race, color, religion, sex, naguidelines set forth in the RFP
tional origin, handicap, ancestry, or age. This procurement is will be rejected. WIA Area 14
reserves the right to accept or
subject to the EPA policy of
reject all proposals on any
encouraging the participation
of small business in rural areas basis and without disclosure of
a reason.
(SBRAs).
9/26 10/3 10/5
All contractors and subcontractors involved with the
Lost & Found
project shall to the extent practicable, use Ohio products, maLOST: 9/20 Farmers Bank enterials, services and labor in
velope containing money. REthe implementation of their
WARD 740-416-8112
project. DOMESTIC STEEL
USE REQUIREMENTS AS
SPECIFIED IN SECTION
Notices
143.011 OF THE (OHIO) REVISED CODE APPPLY TO
THIS PROJECT. COPIES OF
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY PUBSECTION 153.011 OF THE
LISHING CO. recommends that
(OHIO) REVISED CODE CAN
you do business with people you
BE OBTAINED FROM ANY
know, and NOT to send money
OF THE OFFICES OF THE
through the mail until you have investigating the offering.
DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES.
Additionally, contractor compliGiveaway Wooden Pallets.
ance with the equal employ825 3rd Ave @ the Gallipolis
ment opportunity requirements
of Ohio Administrative Code
Tribune.
Chapter 123, the Governor’s
Executive Order of 1972, and
Governor’s Executive Order 84
-9 shall be required. Bidders
must comply with the prevailing wage rates on Public Improvements in Perry County as
The Daily Sentinel • Page 7
Notices
Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
SERVICES
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528
J & C TREE SERVICE
30 yrs experience, insured
No job too big or small.
304-675-2213
304-377-8547
FINANCIAL
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)
300
SERVICES
Business & Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B
ANIMALS
Pets
2 FREE KITTENS: 20 wks old,
vet checked, rescue kittens,
will pay to have fixed.
740-508-1318
FREE KITTENS: 1 blk/wh long
hair, 1 long hair Siamese/Himalayan. Bottle fed, now
weaned. 740-949-3408.
AGRICULTURE
Garden & Produce
Pick Your Own canning Tomatoes & Peppers. $5 bucket.
Bring your own containers or
buy ours for $1 each. Patriot
Produce, 62 Village St. Patriot,
OH 45658. Watch for canning
Tomato signs, across from
Patriot Metals, CLOSED
SUNDAY'S
MERCHANDISE
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new & rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528
Want To Buy
Absolute Top dollar- silver/gold
coins, pre 1935 US currency.
proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue, Gallipolis. 446-2842
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
500
EDUCATION
REAL ESTATE SALES
For Sale By Owner
1997 Clayton 16x80 3BR, 2BA,
porches & underpinning included. Asking $12,500. 740367-7791
Houses For Sale
3 BR, 2 BA, 2431 Lee Circle,
Syracuse, OH. 740-416-2036
or 740-992-5117
Mobile Home Repos Single
Wides, Double Wides, Financing Available 740-446-3570
Nice 3BR House near SR160
for Sale or Rent, Land contract possible 740-441-5150or 740-379-2923
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
1 & 2 bedroom apartments &
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1 bedroom upstairs Apartment
in Gallipolis - NO PETS References required Call 3392584
1-Bedroom Apartment Ph : 446
-0390
2 & 3 BR apts, $385 & up, sec
dep $300 & up AC, W/D hookup tenant pays elec, EHO
Ellm View Apts 304-882-3017
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$450 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-794-1173 or 740-9886130
2BR, $475+Efficiency $375 Downtown, clean, renovated,
newer appl, lam floor, water
sewer & trash incl. No pets.
Application req. 727-237-6942
Beautiful 1BR apartment in the
country freshly painted very
clean W/D hook up nice country setting only 10 mins. from
town. Must see to appreciate.
Water/Trash pd. $375/mo 740645-5953 or 614-595-7773
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 & 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5
BA, back patio, pool, playground. $475 month 740-4463481
Apts - Racine, Ohio.
Furnished - $450 & Up
w/s/g incl. No Pets
740-591-5174
New Haven, 1 BR apt,
washer/dryer, some furn, no
pets, dep & ref. 740-992-0165
Pleasant Valley
Apartments is
now taking applications for 2,
3 & 4 BR HUD
Subsidized
apts. Applications are taken
Mon-Thur 9AM-1PM. Office is
located at 1151 Evergreen Dr,
Pt Pleasant, WV, 304-6755806
RENT
SPECIALS
Jordan Landing Apts-2, 3 & 4
BR units avail. Rent plus dep &
elec. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets
304-674-0023
304-444-4268
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425+2 BR at
$475 Month. 446-1599.
Want To Buy
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
304-675-6679
Oiler's Towing now buying
Junk Cars Paying $1.00 to
$700.00
388-0011
or
441-7870
1 BR & 4 BR, NO PETS, Syracuse, OH. 304-675-5332 or
740-591-0265
Golf Carts for Sale. Stock,
Custom or Street legal Carts
available 740-245-5633 or 740
-645-0345
AUTOMOTIVE
Houses For Rent
�Wednesday, September 26, 2012
The Daily Sentinel • Page 8
www.mydailysentinel.com
Prep Notebook: Some Ohio football stars who do it all
Rusty Miller
Associated Press
Some guys do it all. Let’s
meet three of them.
— Chillicothe Unioto’s
John Vanderpool has 660
yards rushing and has
thrown a pair of touchdown
passes on offense, plus has
21 tackles, six interceptions
and two sacks on defense.
He’s also averaging 35.4
yards per kickoff return,
19.4 yards on punts and
has scored nine times (four
rushing, one receiving, one
punt return, one kickoff return and two defensive returns).
— Old Washington
Buckeye Trail’s CJ Beaver
had TD catches of 15, 19
and 30 yards, a 78-yard
interception return and a
63-yard punt return for a
score in a 47-7 win over
Bridgeport.
— Columbiana’s Britton
Steiginga scored on a 15yard run, a 47-yard interception return, a 48-yard
punt return and a 75-yard
reception in a 47-20 win
over Sebring McKinley.
GET THIS: There are
74 remaining undefeated
teams, down from 90 a
year ago. Among those falling from the ranks of the
unbeaten are Steubenville,
which lost to Middletown
after winning its last 16
regular-season games, and
Chagrin Falls, which had
won 20 in a row before los-
Houses For Rent
EMPLOYMENT
112 Vinton Court. 3 Bdrm, 1
bath, Carport, Central heat and
air, W/D, range, Refridg. included. $500/mo. $300 deposit. No Pets. Ref & Security ck
required. 304-675-6453
2 BR mobile home in Middleport, OH, $275 mo, $275 dep,
1 yr lease, no pets, $75 non refundable water dep. 740-9925097 No calls after 9 pm.
2BR home, Jackson Pike near
Hosp., Must sign 1yr lease,
Ref, No Smoking, poss.1
small animal, $650/$650, leave
message 1-304-657-6378
3br on Jericho Rd. $675/mo.
Possible for sale on land contract. 304-807-1569
Near Holzer Hospital, 3BR,
2BA, Garage, CA, No Pets, No
Smoking, $675, + Utilities &
Deposit 740-645-3836
MANUFACTURED HOUSRentals
2BR mobile home for rent.
$500/mo. Lakin area. 304-675
-2491
2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331
Nice Mobile Home, 3BR,
Country setting. 740-339-3366
740-367-0266.
Taking Applications 14 x 70 3
Br Mobile Home C/A Private
Country Setting, Rio Grande
Area, Ref & Dep 740-2455893
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570
ing to Chagrin Falls Kenston.
HEAVY STUFF ISN’T
COMING DOWN FOR A
WHILE: Mansfield Madison’s Kale Huss rushed for
309 yards and four touchdowns on 32 carries as the
Rams beat Wooster 49-42
on Saturday. The game was
tied 42-42 with 2:17 remaining in the fourth quarter
when it was postponed by
lightning on Friday night.
Madison piled up 546 yards
of total offense without attempting a pass.
RUSH WEEK: Ada’s
Kellen Decker scored five
TDs (42, 71, 62, 5, 39
yards) and rushed for a
school-record 325 yards
in a 53-29 win over Bluffton in a game that had to
be started in Bluffton and
was completed in Ada because of a storm; OttawaGlandorf’s Tristin Parker
ran for 201 yards and
three TDs in a 52-16 raindelayed win over Kenton;
McComb’s Jerry Brown
rushed for 293 yards on just
10 carries, scoring on runs
of 53, 65, 74 and 52 yards
in a 62-6 win over Vanlue;
Ashtabula
Edgewood’s
Dylan McCaleb ran for 268
yards on 26 carries and
scored three touchdowns
in a 34-13 win at Thompson Ledgemont; Zanesville
Rosecrans’ Luke Lloyd and
Chase Lanning combined
for 353 yards rushing in a
50-29 win against Byesville
Accounting / Financial
The Meigs County Health Department has an immediate
opening for a Fiscal Officer.
The successful candidate will
possess as a minimum and
Associate's Degree in Accounting or Business Management.
BA/BS preferred. Experience
in County accounting a plus.
Salary commensurate with
education and experience.
Ohio Driver's license and good
driving record required. Must
submit to a background check.
Interested persons may apply
by submitting a resume electronically to
meigscohd@odh.ohio.gov by
or before 4pm on Sept 30th.
Only electronic submissions
will be considered. An EEO
employer.
Drivers & Delivery
R & J Trucking in Marietta, OH
is hiring CDL A Drivers for
local & Regional Routes. Applicants must be at least 23 yrs
have min of 2 yr of commercial driving exp. Clean
MVR, Haz-mat Cert. Excellent
health & dental insurance,
401(K), Vacation, Bonus pays
and safety awards. Contact
Kenton at 1-800-462-9365
E.O.E.
Food Services
Experienced butcher needed.
Bring resume to McCormick's
Custom Meats, 2961 Bulaville
Pike. 740-446-8318.
Help Wanted- General
Call
RESORT PROPERTY
Looking for exp carpenters in
roofing timbers & framing.
Send responses to: P.O. Box
1124, Gallipolis, OH 45631
Meadowbrook; Defiance
Tinora’s Kevin McCann
had 28 carries for 297
yards and three TDs in a
34-13 win over Hicksville;
Justin Flory ran for 210
yards and two scores in
Defiance Ayersville’s 37-16
loss to Sherwood Fairview;
Sean Westhoven rushed for
245 yards and three TDs
for Liberty Center in a 1914 victory over Wauseon;
Heath Harding of Dayton
Christian surpassed 1,000
rushing yards halfway
through the regular season by running for 213
yards on just nine carries
in a 47-0 win over Fairfield
Christian; Antwan Persons
of Dayton Chaminade Julienne lit up host Cincinnati
Roger Bacon for 217 yards
rushing and three TDs;
Dayton Jefferson’s T’monte
Watson torched Portsmouth Sciotoville with 15
carries for 305 yards rushing and four TDs in a 34-18
win; and Zak Leko ran for
234 yards and two touchdowns on 24 carries as Lisbon David Anderson beat
North Jackson JacksonMilton 48-34 to snap a 42game losing streak in the
Inter-Tri County League
upper tier.
GROUND CONTROL:
Three
Toledo
Central
Catholic backs rushed for
over 100 yards each and
the Irish (No. 1 in Division
II) ground out 517 yards
rushing in a 56-27 win over
Help Wanted- General
Good Shepherd United Methodist Church in Pt. Pleasant is
looking for a full-time piano
player/music director. If interested, please call 304-6755953. Please leave a message if no answer.
Heartland Publications Ohio
Valley Newspapers has an
opening for a results orientated salesperson capable of
developing multi-media campaigns for advertisers. You
must be a problem solver, goal
oriented, have a positive attitude, and have the ability to
multi-task in a demanding,
deadline-oriented environment.
Must have reliable transportation and clean driving record.
We seek success driven individuals looking to build a future with a growing organization with publications in Gallipolis, OH Pomeroy, OH and
Point Pleasant, WV. Please
email cover letter, resume and
references to Sammy M.
Lopez slopez@heartlandpublications.com
JOB FAIR-Meigs County 1
Stop Jobs, Oct 11th, 10am2pm, Family Life Center,
Middleport, OH. 740-992-2117
ext 161
IMMEDIATE OPENING
District Circulation
Sale Manager
Responsibilities include recruiting and training Carriers,
Customer Service and Meeting
Sales goals. If you have a
positive attitude, are selfstarter, and a team player, we
would like to talk to you. Must
be dependable and have reliable transportation. Position
offers all company benefits including Health, Dental, Vision
and Life Insurance, 401K, Paid
Vacation, and Personal Days.
Miscellaneous
Please
send resume to:
Sammy Lopez
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave.
PO Box 469
Gallipolis OH 45631
Or email to
slopez@heartlandpublications.
com
Findlay (No. 8 in Division
I). Amir Edwards carried
30 times for 220 yards and
four scores; Paul Moses had
146 yards and two TDs on
10 carries; and Cedric Gray
carried 17 times for 113
yards and a score.
DEFEND THIS HOUSE:
Leipsic’s Derek Steffan
returned an interception
100 yards for a score in a
34-3 win over Arlington;
Vanlue managed only one
touchdown in a 54-7 loss
to Liberty-Benton — but it
came on Kevin Duffman’s
99-yard fumble return late
in the game, tying seven
other players for the second-longest fumble return
for a touchdown in the
state.
STREAKING:
Madison’s 7-0 loss to Chardon
marked the first time the
Blue Streaks were shut
out in 110 games and almost 11 years and the first
time Chardon has done it
against them since 1967;
and Painesville Riverside’s
28-10 win at Eastlake North
gave the Beavers their first
4-1 start since 2000.
AIR RAID: Zanesville’s
Thomas Wibbeler hit 23
of 25 passes for 399 yards
and five TDs in a 42-0
winIMMEDIATE
against Jonathan
AlOPENING
der, District
while Circulation
J.T. McFarland
swelledSale
his Manager
season totals to
Responsibilities
re12 receiving include
touchdowns,
cruiting and training Carriers,
three
rushing
and
one
on deCustomer Service and Meeting
fense;goals.
converted
QBa Andy
Sales
If you have
positive
attitude,
arecatches
selfGuilford
had 11
for
starter, and a team player, we
would like to talk to you. Must
be dependable and have reliable transportation. Position
offers all company benefits including
Dental,
Vision
HelpHealth,
WantedGeneral
and Life Insurance, 401K, Paid
Vacation, and Personal Days.
Please send resume to:
Sammy Lopez
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave.
PO Box 469
Gallipolis OH 45631
Or email to
slopez@heartlandpublications.
com
Management / Supervisory
Golden Corrall now Hiring Experienced Kitchen & Service
Managers, for our Gallipolis
OH, location. 35k-45k depending on experience. 5 day week,
Paid PTO every Quarter,
Health/Life/Vision/Dental,
401K. Candidates must have
Restaurant experience. Background Check & Drug Test required. Send Resumes to jlepper@platinumcorrall.com
Medical
Busy medical practice is seeking a full time medical assistant with phlebotomy skills who
is willing to take on medical receptionist responsibilities. To
join our energetic team the
right candidate must be able to
work under pressure, while still
paying close attention to detail.
Please fax resume and references to 304-675-6849
The Gallia County Board of
Developmental Disabilities is in
need of Substitute Aides, Substitute Bus Drivers, Substitute
Cooks and Substitute Teachers for Guiding Hand
School/Preschool and Gallco
Workshop for the 2012-2013
program year. Please apply in
person at: 77 Mill Creek Road,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. The
Gallia County Board of DD is
an equal opportunity employer.
264 yards and three TDs scoring 39 points in the first
leading Sherwood Fairview quarter a week earlier, Havito a 37-16 win over Defi- land Wayne Trace put up 34
ance Ayersville; Evan Wyse points in the opening period
threw for 370 yards and five of a 61-21 victory over HolTDs while adding a scor- gate; Beloit West Branch’s
ing run in Archbold’s 56-29 Brendon Wells ran for 129
win over Swanton; Braden yards and the game-winning
Billger tied his own school touchdown in a 13-7 win
record with six TD passes over Carrollton while becomand broke the school re- ing the school’s career rushcord for career touchdown ing leader wtih 2,687 yards;
Crestview,
passes as Celina beat rival Columbiana
St. Marys 49-7 in the an- averaging 51.8 points in a
nual Battle of Grand Lake 5-0 start, set school records
— the most points ever by for most points in a game
the Bulldogs in the series and longest pass play with
and the widest margin ever; a 99-yard strike from Collin
also, Braelen Bader had 10 Gilbert to Dimitri Gregory
catches for 233 yards and in a 71-7 win over Mineral
tied the school record with Ridge; Versailles knocked off
four touchdown receptions top-ranked Division VI team
for Celina; Fremont St. Jo- Maria Stein Marion Local
seph’s Zach Yeckley broke 24-14 as the teams renewed
the school record for TD their longtime rivalry (56
passes in a career with a 34- games) after a two-year abyard scoring toss to Jordan sence due to an unbalanced
Sessler in a 27-19 win over conference schedule in the
Carey, giving him 32 career Midwest Athletic ConferTD passes; and Salineville ence; and with Norwalk St.
Southern’s Luke Griffith Paul’s 31-6 win at Greenwich
threw for a school-record South Central, coach John
353 yards and three touch- Livengood improved to 22-0
downs on 21 of 25 passing all-time against the Trojans.
in a 35-17 win over McDonFinally, in 2010 Sycaald.
more Mohawk’s Kyle ParkNOTABLE ACHIEVE- er threw for 701 yards and
MENTS: Ironton’s Patrick six touchdowns the entire
Lewis ran just six times but season as the Warriors adgained 165 yards and scored vanced to the second round
on runs of 66, 15, and 66 of the playoffs. In a win
yards in a 61-34 win over over North Baltimore, curPortsmouth; Genoa estab- rent QB Drew Loose threw
lished a single-game school for 239 yards — 216 in the
first half
— forpositions
five touchrecord for points in a 79-0 WANTED:
Part-time
to assist individuals
downs.
victory over Lake; after available
Medical
Job Announcement
The Meigs County Health Department invites applications
for the position of: Part-time
WIC Registered Dietitian
Salary
Dependent upon qualifications.
Final Filing Date: September
28, 2012 @ 4:00 PM
Date Available: October 8,
2012
Minimum Qualifications
Education: Bachelor’s Degree
in Nutrition/Dietetics
Experience: Ideal candidate
will have WIC experience;
good organizational skills; excellent oral and written communication skills and community relations techniques;
flexible schedule.
*Must possess valid driver’s license.
Send Letter of Interest, Resume and Three References
electronically to: Leanne Cunningham, WIC Director, at
wicmeig@odh.ohio.gov
The Meigs County Health Department is an equal opportunity employer and provider.
Overbrook Center, located at
333 Page St, Middleport, OH is
accepting applications for
nurses and STNA's. Stop by
and fill out an application M-F
8:30am-5:00pm or contact
Susie Drehel, staff development coordinator @740-9926472. EOE & a participant of
the drug-free workplace program.
WANTED: Part-time positions
available to assist individuals
with developmental disabilities
at a group home in Bidwell:
(1) 35 hrs: 11p-8:30a Th; 11p9a F; Sat 7p-8:30a Sun
(2) 35 hrs: 9a-5p Sun; 4-9p M;
4-10p W; 4-11p Tu/Th.
(3) 35 hrs: 3-10p W; 2-10p
Th/F; 9a-7p Sat
(4) 27.5 hrs: 3:30-11p F; 9am7p Sat; 1-9p Sun
(5) 20 hrs: 9a-7p Sat; 3-11p
Sun
High school diploma/GED, valid driver's license and three
years good driving experience
required. $9.25/hr, after training. Pre-employment Drug
Testing. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH
45640 or e-mail to: beyecserv@yahoo.com. Deadline
for applicants: 9/26/12. EOE
with developmental disabilities
at a group home in Bidwell:
(1) 35 hrs: 11p-8:30a Th; 11p9a F; Sat 7p-8:30a Sun
(2) 35 hrs: 9a-5p Sun; 4-9p M;
4-10p W; 4-11p
Tu/Th.
Medical
(3) 35 hrs: 3-10p W; 2-10p
Th/F; 9a-7p Sat
(4) 27.5 hrs: 3:30-11p F; 9am7p Sat; 1-9p Sun
(5) 20 hrs: 9a-7p Sat; 3-11p
Sun
High school diploma/GED, valid driver's license and three
years good driving experience
required. $9.25/hr, after training. Pre-employment Drug
Testing. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH
45640 or e-mail to: beyecserv@yahoo.com. Deadline
for applicants: 9/26/12. EOE
Technical Trades
Local mechanical contractor
now hiring for the following positions:
HVACR Service Tech
Commercial Kitchen Tech
Journeyman electrician
5 yrs exp required, competitive pay & benefits. Apply in
person. 800-905-4172 EOE
SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
�Wednesday, September 26, 2012
The Daily Sentinel • Page 9
www.mydailysentinel.com
Wednesday, september 26, 2012
ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt
BLONDIE
Dean Young/Denis Lebrun
BEETLE BAILEY
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
HI & LOIS
Mort Walker
Today’s Answers
Tom Batiuk
Chris Browne
Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS
MUTTS
William Hoest
Patrick McDonnell
Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope
zITS
THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane
DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum
Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for
Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2012:
This year you learn to detach even
more. It becomes very important for
you to understand what is going on
with higher-ups. There will be the
version they present to you, and the
authentic side they choose to reveal
to others. Travel, education and people from a distance are fortunate for
you. If you are single, your affectionate and demonstrative nature attracts
many potential sweeties. It could be
difficult to choose which one is right
for you. If you are attached, the two
of you benefit from taking some time
away together to relax and reconnect. Schedule that vacation soon.
AQUARIUS can be provocative.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH You are riding the crest of
a wave. Take advantage of an opportunity that appears out of the blue.
Your vision for what could occur probably is more of a possibility than you
might imagine. Tonight: Where your
friends are.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHH Zero in on what you know
is effective when dealing with an
elder or respected authority figure. In
some way, you might want to be more
authentic. There could be an element
of resentment that surrounds you. Do
not lash out. Tonight: Out with loved
ones.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Your ability to get past an
immediate issue emerges. You see
what many people don’t — an alternative path. Do not hesitate, even if this
way might appear offbeat. If you think
it could end a problem and be successful, why not do it? Tonight: Burn
the candle at both ends.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Allow your imagination
to come forward, and approach a
situation very differently. A partner,
associate or dear friend actively might
be giving you feedback and direction.
Use care with anger, whether it is
yours or someone else’s. Stay neutral. Tonight: Put on some music.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Deal with a partner directly,
or else the mood could turn ugly. In
discussions, you’ll realize that you
have many more options that you
initially thought. A neighbor or sibling
could be difficult as well. Bypass this
person. Tonight: Be a duo.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH Others flock to you. With
one exception, everyone seems
upbeat and friendly. Be careful
with angry words, as they could be
remembered for a long time. Curb
your spending for now, at least until
you feel more confident. Tonight: Sort
through invitations.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH You could be taken aback
by a situation. It is rare to find you
speechless. Deal with strong feelings
first, and allow more compassion to
flow between you and someone else.
Concentrate on a project you want to
finish. Tonight: Put your feet up.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHHH Your creativity rises to
an unprecedented level. Your way of
handling anger might work for you,
but not others. Keeping your feelings
to yourself could cause depression.
The question is: How do you express
them in an appropriate manner?
Tonight: Take a midweek break.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH Try to establish better communication and a sense of community
with others. Your way of thinking
and handling a matter could change
radically after getting input from others. An older friend could be difficult.
Tonight: You do not need to go far.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Be aware of how much you
indulge yourself right now. Ultimately,
you might justify indulging a friend or
loved, but ultimately it impacts you the
same way. Be careful when expressing your displeasure with someone.
Tonight: Return calls.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH You are in your element,
though it is clear that someone else
does not realize it. You might want to
discuss a matter involving a friend at
a distance; perhaps it is time for a trip.
Once you seem more available, so
will the other party. Tonight: Do some
shopping you have putting off.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HH Know when to back off and say
“enough.” You have experienced a
lot of frustration lately. Having someone else add to the disagreeable
commentary might be too much. Let
someone know what your boundaries are. It is important for both of you.
Tonight: Chill with friends.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.
�Wednesday, September 26, 2012
The Daily Sentinel • Page 10
www.mydailysentinel.com
RedStorm women fall to Georgetown, 1-0
Randy Payton
Special to OVP
GEORGETOWN, Ky. –
Bea Cameron’s goal just
over 15 minutes into the
second half snapped a
scoreless tie and lifted
Georgetown College to a
1-0 win over the University of Rio Grande, Saturday night, in Mid-South
Conference women’s soccer action at Toyota Sta-
dium/iHigh.com Field.
Cameron’s goal, which
came without the aid of an
assist, found the net at the
60:30 mark of the contest.
The Tigers (4-1, 3-0
MSC) outshot the Red-
Storm, 15-7, including 12-3
in the second half. None of
Rio’s shots were on goal.
Rio Grande (4-5, 1-2) was
denied in its attempt to get
above the .500 mark beyond
the six-game mark in the
season for the first time in
program history.
Kelsey Givens recorded
the shutout in goal for
Georgetown, which won
for the fourth straight time.
The Tigers have allowed
just one goal since a seasonopening 1-0 loss to Mount
Vernon Nazarene.
Sophomore net-minder
Allison Keeney stopped seven shots in a losing cause
for the RedStorm.
Meyer looks at bright side with Buckeyes this week
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Urban Meyer has
not hid his dissatisfaction
with the way his Ohio
State team has played this
season.
So, with his team hitting
the road for the first time
in its Big Ten opener at
Michigan State on Saturday, he switched gears and
accentuated the positive.
“I know we’re Ohio
State, and there’s all kinds
of expectations here,” he
said Monday. “I still am
not giving up. I think by
the end of the year this
might be a hell of a football team. I mean, it might
be sooner than that.”
In his first year at the
helm of the Buckeyes,
Meyer has been brutally
frank in his evaluations of
players and positions. After Saturday’s closer-thanexpected 29-15 victory
over 37-point underdog
UAB, he followed his usual
pattern and climbed all
over his team.
He said after the game
that his players were very
passive, that it pained him
to watch at times, that the
Buckeyes had depth issues
and were playing too many
freshmen and that he was
disappointed with all aspects. Whew.
Then, with those criticisms still ringing in their
ears, he threw a change-up
at them.
Meyer had a short clip
of highlights created that
he showed to the Buckeyes
on Sunday. Here was offensive tackle Reid Fragel
laying out a defender 10
yards downfield, there was
defensive tackle Johnathan Hankins leveling a
ball-carrier. The offense
looked invincible, the defense was unyielding.
Meyer said the video
made the players feel better about themselves.
Since he said he felt terrible about his team after
the game, it also improved
his spirits.
“I just put together a
reel of four drives and it
was about as well as we’ve
played all year,” he said.
With a grin, he added, “I
did that more for me, I
think. I have to eat lunch tives and the bad things.”
and I wasn’t about to eat
So, two thumbs up from
lunch after what I saw.”
the Buckeyes.
The players loved it.
Meyer knows that his
“I felt better, even mo- team cannot continue to
reso than about myself, but play as erratically and spothe entire
radically as
offense,”
it has in its
center Co- “ I think by the end four victorey
Linsries so far.
ley
said. of the year this
Forget ex“It
kind might be a hell of
pectations
of showed
and point
everybody a football team. I
spreads,
how good
Buckmean, it might be the
we can be.”
eyes have
The star sooner than that.”
had diffiof the show,
culty movFragel,
a
— Urban Meyer ing the ball
c o nv e r t e d
times
Head coach at
tight end
and have
who is still
had a hard
learning
time stopthe tackle position, said it ping other teams. There
was a refreshing change.
have been stupid penal“Coach Meyer kind of ties, missed assignments
mixed it up on us a little and turnovers. The result
bit,” Fragel said. “Nor- has been a perfect record
mally we come in and we even though cracks have
watch the entire (previ- been visible on both sides
ous game) film. What he of the ball and in special
wanted to do was show us teams.
the positive drives that we
Michigan State (3-1),
had, focusing on the posi- which is also disappointed
tives instead of the nega- by its early play, provides a
perfect gauge of whether the
Buckeyes are actually learning from their mistakes.
“One thing about this
team, when it’s time to
go win a game, to date
they’ve gone and won a
game,” Meyer said. “But
we are what we are right
now, and that’s just a workmanlike team that has to
get better.”
Hitting the road for the
first time will be a challenge, since Meyer says
Ohio State is playing more
freshmen than any other
team in the nation. Only
two Buckeyes have ever
even seen action in a game
at Michigan State, which
hung an ugly 10-7 shiner
on Ohio State a year ago
that was built on nine
sacks and its gritty running game.
A blank slate awaits in
the Big Ten.
“You could feel it at practice yesterday,” wide receivers coach Zach Smith
said. “It’s a whole different
mentality around here. I
can’t really explain what it
is, you know it’s different.
It just feels different.”
After games against
predominantly
passing
teams that like to throw
short and keep the pocket
pressure to a minimum,
defensive co-coordinator
Everett Withers said his
unit welcomes playing the
black-and-blue preferences
of the Michigan State offense. The focal point is
6-foot-2, 244-pound Columbus native Le’Veon
Bell, the nation’s thirdleading rusher at 153
yards per game.
“This (Spartans) offense fits more with what
we are,” Withers said.
“This is a traditional Big
Ten offense.”
Meyer said the trip to
Spartan Stadium will provide a grade card for how
far his team has come —
and also how far it has yet
to go.
“By the end of the year I
think people will be thinking and saying great things
about Ohio State,” the
glass-half-full Meyer said.
“I really do, if we continue
to grow and mature.”
WVU eager to get
started in Big 12
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) — It’s the week West Virginia has been waiting for.
After three double-digit
wins in nonconference play,
the ninth-ranked Mountaineers
now turn to their Big 12 debut
against No. 25 Baylor.
“It’s a new season, man,”
said West Virginia quarterback
Geno Smith. “It’s all about the
conference.”
Next Saturday, it will be all
about lighting up the scoreboard. Baylor is averaging 51
points a game, the Mountaineers 47.
It’s been 11 months since
West Virginia announced it
was leaving the Big East, but
the move didn’t become official
until the school settled a lawsuit
with its former conference in
February.
Baylor’s visit to Morgantown
starts a round of introductions.
West Virginia (3-0) has never
played the Bears (3-0) in football, and not much against other current Big 12 members, either. The Mountaineers are 9-4
against them dating to 1928.
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In the weeks to come West
Virginia will head to the road
and find out about Texas’
“hook’em horns,” Oklahoma
State’s Pistol Pete and Texas
Tech’s Raider Red.
And Big 12 fans will learn a
lot more about Smith, a Heisman Trophy hopeful who’s
surrounded by star receivers
Tavon Austin and Stedman
Bailey and a coaching staff already familiar with the conference.
“I know that I speak for my
team and the fans, we’re very
excited,” Bailey said. “We
know that we’ll be facing a lot
of challenges going into the
Big 12.”
The first time that coach
Dana Holgorsen brought up
the Big 12 to his players was
after West Virginia’s 31-21 win
over Maryland on Saturday.
Despite some hiccups, Holgorsen likes where his team is
at.
“I’ve got a bunch of guys
who like to play football and
understand what’s at stake,” he
said.
several years.
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September 26, 2012
hawkins
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pickens
rimmey
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