<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2436" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/2436?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T08:56:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="12338">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/669fc979113ff904ba85614a735d68cb.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4bcd4d59417c34047bfaa944a4fdbb4e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8774">
                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Recycle and win with
AEP Ohio spring
raffle .... A2

Partly sunny.
High near 41. Low
around 27......... A2

Prep basketball
action .... B1

Anna Smith Cherry, 82
Tressa E. Cremeens, 91
Robert E. Davis, 85
Roger L. Lee, 80

TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 45

Josine T. Moses, 80
Michael Ohlinger, 48
Louise I. Posey, 99
Janice M. Reynolds, 73
Annette L. Seidel, 85
Richard A. Shuler, Sr., 71
50 cents daily

Dozens turnout to support 2nd Amendment
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Despite a power
outage in the region Friday evening,
approximately 70 people packed into
downtown Pomeroy to speak in support
of their Second Amendment rights.
Beginning on the courthouse steps
and overflowing onto Second Street,
citizens of Meigs County gathered
for a town hall meeting hosted by
the Meigs County Commissioners
to discuss not only Second Amendment rights, but Constitutional
rights as a whole. The group moved
into the common please court room
after power was restored, filling all of
the seating area, with several people
standing along the back wall.

President of the Meigs County
Commissioners Tim Ihle began the
meeting by explaining its purpose.
Ihle said that there are things going on in the county currently that
he and the other commissioners are
not happy about. He added that they
have been called to do something after being elected to serve the county
and its citizens.
“It isn’t about gun violence or gun
crime, I don’t believe that, it is an attack on our Constitution,” said Ihle
of the proposed gun legislation being
discussed at the federal level.
Ihle read a proposed Second
Amendment preservation resolution,
asking for the approval of the citizens of Meigs County.

The resolution read,
SECTION 1: The Meigs County
Board of Commissioners find that:
The 2nd Amendment to the Constitution of the United States reads
as follows, “A well regulated militia,
being necessary to the security of a
free state, the right of the people to
keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.”
And that the Ohio Constitution
states:
Ohio Constitution: Article 1, Section 4
“The people have the right to bear
arms for their defense and security;
Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel
but standing armies, in time of peace,
Despite a power outage in the Pomeroy area on Friday eveare dangerous to liberty, shall not be ning, approximately 70 people turnout to speak in support of
See TURNOUT |‌ 5 Second Amendment rights.

DeLay sculpture to
be unveiled in April
Sentinel Staff Report
tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — The new memorial to students and
teachers of Middleport is scheduled to be unveiled at 2
p.m. on Sunday, April 21, in the lobby of the Middleport
Village Hall on Pearl Street in Middleport.
The memorial features a bronze life-size sculpture created by Charles ‘Bob’ DeLay. DeLay was born and raised
in Middleport and graduated from Middleport High
School in 1957. The sculpture was donated by the artist
and with funds donated by past students and teachers to
create the memorial. A memorial plaque recognizes students and teachers who were honored and sponsored by
donors.
The public is invited to this special unveiling where the
artist, mayor and project coordinator, Linda Myers will
speak. A small reception will follow.

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Some danced and others just listened to the big band music.

And the band played on

One arrested following
domestic incident,
alleged car chase
Staff Report

Charlene Hoeflich

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

MIDDLEPORT — Whether
a dancer or a listener, everyone
attending “Jazz in the Village,”
held at the Riverbend Arts Council auditorium with music by the
Ohio University Jazz Ensemble,
seemed to really enjoy their evening out.
Music from the swing era big
band was featured by the Ensemble directed by Matt James,
professor of music at Ohio University. The featured repertoire
for the evening included the music of the Stan Kenton, Duke Ellington, Thad Jones, and County
Basie. The O.U. Ensemble has
performed several times at the
Arts Council and always attracts
a crowd from over a wide area in
Ohio and West Virgina.
James who teaches instruments, theory and arranging
at OU and has performed as
lead saxophonist with the Glen
Mill Orchestra touring several
countries and recorded with the
orchestra on Barry Manilow’s
Arista records, uses area Ensemble performances, like the one in
Middleport, to give music students performing experience as
well as exposure. The band came
to Middleport this year under the

A food buffet of contributions from local restaurants and delis was available all evening.

sponsorship of King ACE Hardware in Middleport , Tim and
Edie King.
A variety of refreshments for a
food buffet were provided by local
restaurants and delis.
The performance by the James
Ensemble is just one of numerous events which take place at the
Riverbend Arts Council. Other
upcoming programs include John
Marra on spring and summer gardening at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday,
April 30; a concert by the Meigs
Community Band directed by
Toney Dingess at 3 p.m. on Tues-

day, May 7, at Meigs High School;
Doo-Wop on the Block, a Memorial Day concession, on May 24 at
King Ace Hardware; Art in the Village on Oct. 5, the Riverbend Talent Revue on Nov. 29, and Christmas in the Village, on Dec. 21.
The Riverbend Arts Council
is supported by the Ohio Arts
Council and the United Fund for
Meigs County. The facility which
includes a large stage for performance and kitchen and restroom
facilities is available for rent to the
public. Scheduling is to be with
Mary Wise, president, 992-2675.

MEIGS COUNTY —
One person is facing felonious assault and domestic
violence charges after an
early morning incident on
Monday.
According to a news release from the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office, Budd J.
Smith, 31, is facing charges
after allegedly chasing a
man down in his car, ramming him and then trying
to run him off the road.
The incident began
around midnight and ended around 5 a.m., Monday.
The incident began as a domestic violence complaint
in Pomeroy.
The victim later contacted the Sheriff’s Office

and stated she was on her
way to Smith’s residence in
the Chester area, because
he had allegedly stolen her
medication. Another man
was driving her to the residence.
Upon their arrival at
Smith’s residence, Smith
reportedly got in a vehicle
and began chasing them
on Darst Road and Sumner
Road.
There was also a five-yearold boy in the vehicle with
the victim and her driver.
When the deputies arrived at the scene, Smith
was trying the climb
through the passenger side
window of the other vehicle.
Smith faces felonious
assault, domestic violence
and possibly other charges.

Correction
OHIO VALLEY — Because of an error on the part
of Civitas Media Newspapers, the full obituary for Mrs.
Tressa E. Cremeens was inadvertently omitted from the
March 17, 2013, edition of the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Mrs. Cremeens’ full obituary and photo appear inside this
edition of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel. We regret the omission and the inconvenience
created for the family and friends of Mrs. Cremeens as a
result. — Managing Editor Stephanie Filson

Planning continues for Civil War sesquicentennial commemoration
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Battle scrimmages, wagon tours over the
battle grounds with first or third
person narrations, living history
demonstrations and memorial
services were among the topics
discussed at Saturday’s meeting at the Meigs Musseum of
the planning committee for the
150th observance of the Battle of
Buffington Island, July 19-21.

Karen Hassell of the Ohio Historical Society who is the lead
planner for the event, outlined
the scope and the schedule of the
event. Edd Sharp, a Confederate
reenactor, was present to discuss
what role the reenactors will be
taking insofar as scrimmages
to take place. He indicated that
more Confederate reenactors
than originally expected will
probably be there and noted that
there was some indication more
Union reenactors will also be

at the site to provide action for
spectators.
The emphasis of the commemorative program, according to Hassell, is to provide a
“meaningful weekend at the
historic site and tell the story of
what happened there and how it
impacted the surrounding community.” She proposed a driving
tour over a section of the Heritage Trail as another option for
events. As for the wagon tours,
they will be held on Saturday

from noon to 4:30 p.m. on Saturday with six tours on canopy
covered wagons loaned by the
Meigs County Agriculture Board
and pulled by tractors provided
by George Morrison, Sr. over the
battle sites.
Hassell reported that a professor at the University Rio Grande
had been in touch with OHS
regarding a Morgan’s Raid play
performed by students and the
possibility of presenting it as a
part of the observance. A discus-

sion as to when and where the
play could be presented was held
with a decision on the feasibility
as well as location to be checked
into.
It was reported that two acres
of land has been leased from
Bruce McKelvey, Portland Community Center, for use during
the event by the reenactors for
their living history demonstrations as well as other purposes
relating to the commemorative
See PLANNING ‌| 5

�Tuesday, March 19, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Free rain barrel
Historical society workshop slated Teen to be sentenced in
Ohio school shootings

to host Civil War
Ball fundraiser

ATHENS — On Saturday, March 23, the Athens County Historical Society and Museum will
host its second annual Civil War Ball fundraiser
at the Athens Community Center from 6:30 to
10 p.m. The evening provides an opportunity
for people to experience and celebrate life in
the mid-1800s — especially timely this year, the
150th anniversary of the war.
“An event like this is fun way to draw attention
to the history of Athens County and the Civil
War,” said Laura Farrell, ACHS&amp;M assistant
manager and chair ofthe Civil War Ball committee.
“Whether you are a Civil War buff, curious
about the Civil War era or just looking for something smart and different to do on a Saturday
night, there is something for everyone.”
Period dress is encouraged but not required.
The night will feature authentic music by the TriCounty Revelers. Period dances will be demonstrated by the Times Past vintage dancers, and
Elizabeth Reeb, a caller, will guide more inexperienced guests into the proper steps. Civil war
games and purchasable gifts will help everyone
look and feel the part. Hors d’oeuvres, wine and
non-alcoholic beverages will be provided and a
cash bar will be offered.
In preparation for the ball, the Athens Public
Library will be hosting another waltzing lesson
on March 21 from 7 to 8 p.m.
Tickets are $20 for members and students and
$25 for non-members, and space is limited. Call
740-592-2280 to purchase tickets or stop by 65
North Court St between noon and 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.
Complimentary tickets will be given to those
who wish to sponsor the event. Two tickets will
be given for $100, four for $250 and eight for
$500. Sponsors at all levels will be recognized in
the event program, on the museum website, on
Facebook and at the ball.
For more information about the Athens County Historical Society &amp; Museum or the Civil War
Ball, contact Laura Farrell at 740-592-2280 or at
adminasst@athenshistory.org.

RUTLAND — A free rain barrel workshop will be held
Tuesday, April 2 at 6 p.m. at the Meigs SWCD Conservation Area. The workshop is being hosted by the Leading
Creek Watershed Group and the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District.
A rain barrel is a container, generally a 55-gallon plastic
drum that collects and stores rainwater from downspouts
and rooftops for future use watering lawns and gardens.
Other parts include a vinyl garden hose, PVC couplings,
a screen to keep debris and insects out, and other commonly available materials.
Guest speaker will be Jonathan Meier from Rain Brothers LLC. The Rain Brothers are passionate about rain
water collecting and are licensed private water systems
contractors. Topics will include: the benefits of collecting
rain water, different ways of collecting rain water, setting
up your own rain barrel, care and maintenance of your
rain barrel, winterizing, best practices, and much more.
Information will also be available on how people can
get their own rain barrels.
The program is funded in part through a grant from the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources’ Division of Soil
and Water Resources.
The Conservation Area is located on New Lima Road
approximately midway between Rutland and Harrisonville. Registration is not required, but for more information contact Michele Tarian at the Meigs SWCD weekdays from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at 740-992-4282.

CHARDON, Ohio (AP) — A teenager who
pleaded guilty in a deadly school shooting rampage faces up to life in prison at his sentencing in
northeast Ohio on Tuesday.
Victims of 18-year-old T.J. Lane and relatives
of the murdered victims will have a chance to
address the sentencing judge in Chardon on his
guilty plea to killing three students and wounding
three more.
The shootings occurred 13 months ago at Chardon High School. Lane was in the school cafeteria
waiting for a bus to his alternative school.
No motive has been detailed.
The hearing before Geauga County Common
Pleas Judge David Fuhry will offer the families
their first public chance to describe the pain Lane
inflicted on their loved ones and their lives.
According to The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer,
it was unclear whether Lane would address the
judge or provide an explanation of why he fired
the shots. His attorneys said earlier that Lane
didn’t want to present any mitigating factors in
his favor, including a troubled family life.
Lane faces life in prison. Under Ohio law, the
earliest release possible will be in 26 years. Fuhry
will decide when — and if — Lane would be eligible for release from prison.

Recycle and win with AEP Ohio spring raffle
New promotion encourages
residents to recycle old refrigerators
OHIO VALLEY — AEP
Ohio customers can win
one of four $250 VISA gift
cards when they recycle an
outdated refrigerator or
freezer between March 1
and April 30.
While the appliance
recycling program pays
incentives
year-round,
customers have an extra
reason to recycle outdated
units during this spring
cleaning season. In addi-

tion to receiving complimentary pickup of their
old, inefficient refrigerator
or freezer, participating
AEP Ohio customers will
receive a $50 incentive
check and be automatically
entered into a drawing for
a chance to win one of four
$250 VISA gift cards.
With spring cleaning
right around the corner,
think of what you can do
with an extra $250, like
purchasing items to make
your home more energy efficient.
Recycling refrigerators

www.gallipoliscareercollege.edu

60396009

60369668

New Year New Career

and freezers creates numerous benefits for utility
customers and the environment.
“Everyone is a winner
with this program. When
you recycle your old fridge,
not only do you get paid
$50, but you can also save
up to $150 a year in electricity costs and help the
environment, said Dave
Tabata, AEP Ohio consumer programs manager.
“Recycling a single unit
repurposes more than 188
pounds of materials such
as foam, glass and metal
for future use.”
To schedule a free pickup, customers can call
1-877-545-4112 or visit

Ohio Valley Forecast
Tuesday: A slight chance of snow showers after 3 p.m.
Partly sunny, with a high near 41. West wind 9 to 15 mph,
with gusts as high as 26 mph. Chance of precipitation is
20 percent.
Tuesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 27.
West wind 9 to 11 mph.
Wednesday: A slight chance of snow showers before
noon, then a slight chance of rain and snow showers between noon and 1 p.m., then a slight chance of rain showers after 1 p.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 44. Chance
of precipitation is 20 percent.
Wednesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around
26.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 43.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 27.
Friday: Partly sunny, with a high near 46.
Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 30.
Saturday: Partly sunny, with a high near 47.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 29.
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 46.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 47.69
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.53
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 80.03
Big Lots (NYSE) — 35.20
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 40.30
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 78.58
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.29
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.12
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 39.21
Collins (NYSE) — 63.38
DuPont (NYSE) — 49.71
US Bank (NYSE) — 34.13
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.25
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 54.49
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 49.51
Kroger (NYSE) — 31.66
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 44.66
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 75.11
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.91
BBT (NYSE) — 30.75

60386725

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 22.25
Pepsico (NYSE) — 76.68
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.02
Rockwell (NYSE) — 87.45
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 13.71
Royal Dutch Shell — 65.57
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 52.10
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 72.25
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.48
WesBanco (NYSE) — 24.55
Worthington (NYSE) — 29.18
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for March 18, 2013, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

AEPOhio.com/Rebates.
Refrigerators and freezers
must be in working order
with an inside measurement between 10 and 30
cubic feet—standard size
for most units. A maximum of two units per
household a year will be
accepted. Incentive checks
arrive by mail six to eight
weeks after the appliances
are picked up.
AEP Ohio encourages
consumers to take advantage of all our cost-saving
measures. We have programs and incentives to
make your whole house
energy efficient. Go to
AEPOhio.com/Rebates to
learn more.

Chester
DofA
meets

CHESTER
—
Announcement of the Daughters of America rally to
be held at Springfield on
April 1 was made at the
recent meeting of Chester
Council held at the hall.
Nancy King presided at
the meeting where a second rally was announced
for Eastgate Holiday Inn
on April 27. Gifts for the
tables are to be provided. Jo Ann Ritchie read
changes to the by-laws
which are about to go into
effect.
The charter was draped
in memory of Barbara Sargent. It was noted that
Esther Smith’s grandson
is in the hospital but reported doing better. The
meeting opened in ritualistic form with scripture
reading, the Lord’s Prayer,
and the pledge to the flag.
Attending were Opal
Hollon, Charlotte Grant,
Everett Grant, Deloris
Wolfe, Sharon Riffle, Jo
Ann Richie, Betty Jackson, Kianna Osborne,
Gary Holter, Leela Lemley, Nancy King, Mary
Jo Barringer, Pat Drake,
Maxine White, Julie Curtis and Gwin Hall

60396928

�Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Ex-convicts returning to
prison declining in Ohio
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)
— The rate at which Ohio
ex-convicts are being sent
back to prison has been
going down, to well below
national rates.
One newspaper reports
that the recidivism rate for
Ohio was 28.7 percent in
2009. That’s the last year
for which that statistics are
available, because the rate
measures the number of
inmates returned to prison
within three years.
However, the state Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction says its
internal tracking indicates
that the trend is continuing.
“Realistically, there is a

point where you plateau,
but you need to think you
can always do better, and
I think we will do better,”
said Linda Janes, the department’s chief of staff.
“I think it’s the most important thing we have is to
push that recidivism rate
down.”
The rate in 2003 was
39.5 percent. Cutting the
rate is good news for taxpayers. Besides meaning
there are fewer crimes and
victims, the lower return
rate saves some $14 million a year. For each inmate who doesn’t return,
Ohio saves some $23,800,
plus the long-term costs of
building more prisons.

Ohio’s rate has dropped
slowly but surely since
2003, dropping to 31.2 percent in 2008. The 28.7 rate
compares to a national rate
of some 45 percent.
One expert says Ohio
has done a good job in programs for inmates and in
its assessments.
“Ohio has a very impressive drop in recidivism that
can be directly tied to the
types of programming and
assessments that work,”
said David D’Amora, National Initiatives division
director of the Council of
State Governments Justice
Center . “It is very genuine. Ohio is clearly a leader
in the field.”

Hillary Clinton announces
support for gay marriage
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Former Secretary of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton
announced her support for
gay marriage Monday, putting her in line with other
potential Democratic presidential candidates on a
social issue that is rapidly
gaining public approval.
Clinton made the announcement in an online
video released Monday
morning by the gay rights
advocacy group Human
Rights Campaign. She says
in the six-minute video
that gays and lesbians are
“full and equal citizens and
deserve the rights of citizenship.”
“That includes marriage,” she says, adding
that she backs gay marriage both “personally and
as a matter of policy and
law.”
Clinton’s
announcement is certain to further
fuel the already rampant
speculation that she is considering another run for
president in 2016. Other
possible Democratic contenders — including Vice
President Joe Biden, New
York Gov. Andrew Cuomo
and Maryland Gov. Martin
O’Malley — all back the
right of same-sex couples
to marry.
Polls show that public
opinion on gay marriage
has shifted perhaps more
rapidly than on any other major issue in recent

times. In Gallup polling
last November, 53 percent
of adult Americans said
same-sex marriages should
be granted the same status
as traditional marriages,
while 46 percent felt they
should not be valid.
In 1996, when Gallup
first asked about gay marriages, 27 percent felt they
should be valid.
The shift among the
major political parties has
been equally swift. During the 2008 presidential
campaign, Clinton and
rival Barack Obama both
backed civil unions for gay
couples, but not same-sex
marriage. In the lead-up to
the 2012 election, Obama
announced his support for
gay marriage and Democrats backed the right of
same-sex couples to wed
in their party’s official platform.
The White House welcomed Clinton’s announcement, saying it meant
Clinton’s views on the issue were now in line with
Obama’s.
“The president believes
that anytime a public official of stature steps forward
to embrace a commitment
that he shares to equality,
he thinks it’s a good thing,”
said White House spokesman Jay Carney.
The GOP officially
opposes gay marriage,
though several high profile Republicans have pub-

licly backed the right of
same-sex couples to wed.
On Friday, Ohio Sen. Rob
Portman became the first
Republican senator to announce his support for gay
marriage, saying he had a
change of heart after learning that his son is gay.
More than 100 Republicans also submitted a
“friend of the court” brief
to the Supreme Court asking the justices to overturn
California’s ban on samesex marriage. The court
will hear oral arguments
on California’s Proposition 8 measure next week.
Justices will also hear
arguments in a related
case concerning the constitutionality of a provision in the Defense of
Marriage Act, which defines marriage as between
one man and one woman.
President Bill Clinton
signed the act into law
in 1996, but said earlier
this month that he now
believes it is unconstitutional and should be overturned.
Despite holding back
in supporting same-sex
marriage, Hillary Clinton
was a strong support of
gay rights, both in the
U.S. and abroad, during
her tenure at the State
Department. Under her
watch, the U.S. government made it official policy to promote gay rights
around the world.

Activists seek Ohio
fracking wastewater review
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — A coalition of
environmental and community groups called on
the federal government
Monday to consider suspending Ohio’s authority
to oversee deep wells used
for disposal of chemically
laced wastewater from oil
and gas drilling.
The groups have asked
the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency to investigate and conduct a full
audit of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources’
regulatory program over
the wells, which accept
wastewater from oil and
gas drilling, and consider
taking back control.
A spokesman with the
EPA’s Chicago office said
the agency is reviewing the
request.
The call on Monday to
diminish Ohio’s oversight
role was issued by the
Ohio office of the Center
for Health, Environment
&amp; Justice, the liberal ProgressOhio and the Buckeye
Forest Council.
They question the effectiveness of Ohio’s regulatory program in light of
recent federal indictments
of a Youngstown-area businessman and his employee
that allege they illegally
dumped oil and gas wastes,
a series of earthquakes
near Youngstown centered
near a deep well, and what
they say is a general lack of
public responsiveness.
“We regret that Ohio’s

administration of the nationwide program has become so gravely lacking
that federal controls must
be put back in place,” their
letter to the EPA said.
Ohio is among states with
authority over its own
wells under the national
program.
In indictments last
month, Hardrock Excavating LLC owner Ben Lupo
and employee Michael
Guesman were accused of
violating the Clean Water
Act by illegally dumping
oil and gas wastes into
a storm drain. The two
pleaded not guilty Friday.
Lupo also owns D&amp;L Energy, whose deep injection
well was at the epicenter of
more than a dozen earthquakes in the Youngstown
area mostly in late 2011.
An earthquake on the eve of
2012 prompted Gov. John
Kasich to issue a temporary
moratorium on new injection activity in the vicinity.
After an effective statewide ban of nearly a year,
the state resumed issuing
injection permits in November. State natural resources officials said they
believed ample safeguards
had been put in place, including the ability to order
or conduct seismic testing
before, during and after
drilling.
But Teresa Mills, of the
Center for Health, Environment and Justice, said
the state Natural Resources Department has become

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

“a captured agency.”
“It’s an agency that’s
very existence relies on the
industry it regulates.”
Activists
question
whether the agency can impartially conduct the investigation ordered by Kasich
into whether potentially
lax regulations led to the
dumping incident alleged
by federal prosecutors.
“We don’t believe the
agency responsible for the
lack of enforcement should
be conducting an investigation of itself,” said Cheryl
Johncox, director of the
Buckeye Forest Council.
A message seeking comment was left Monday for
the spokeswoman for the
Natural Resources Department.
The department and
Ohio EPA permanently revoked the permits of D&amp;L
Energy and Hardrock Excavating after investigators observed employees
dumping unknown quantities of a mixture of oil and
chemically laced brine into
a storm sewer on Jan. 31.

High court divided over
Ariz. voter requirement
WASHINGTON (AP) — Supreme
Court justices disagreed Monday over
whether states can require would-be
voters to prove they are U.S. citizens
before using a federal registration
system designed to make signing up
easier.
Arizona and other states told the
justices the precaution is needed to
keep illegal immigrants and other
noncitizens from voting. But some
justices asked whether states have
the right to force people to document
their citizenship when Congress ordered the states to accept and use federal “motor voter” registration cards
that only ask registrants to swear on
paper that they are U.S. citizens.
“I have a real big disconnect with
how you can be saying you’re accepting and using, when you’re not registering people when they use it the
way the federal law permits them
to,” Justice Sonia Sotomayor said to
Arizona Attorney General Thomas C.
Horne.
Said Horne: “It is the burden of the
states to determine the eligibility of
the voters.”
This is the second voting eligibility
issue the high court is tackling this
session. Last month, several justices
voiced deep skepticism about whether a section of the Voting Rights Act
of 1965, a law that has helped millions
of minorities exercise their right to
vote, especially in areas of the Deep
South, was still needed.
The court will make decisions in
both later this year.
In Monday’s case, the court is deciding the legality of Arizona’s requirement that prospective voters
document their U.S. citizenship in
order to use a registration form produced under the federal “motor voter” registration law. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said that that
1993 National Voter Registration Act,
which doesn’t require such documentation, trumps Arizona’s Proposition
200 passed in 2004.
Arizona appealed that decision to
the Supreme Court.
The case focuses on Arizona,
which has tangled frequently with the
federal government over immigration
issues involving the Mexican border.
But it has broader implications because four other states — Alabama,
Georgia, Kansas and Tennessee —
have similar requirements, and 12
other states are contemplating such
legislation.
The federal “motor voter” law, enacted in 1993 to expand voter registration, requires states to offer voter
registration when a resident applies
for a driver’s license or certain benefits. Another provision of that law
— the one at issue before the court
— requires states to allow would-be
voters to fill out mail-in registration
cards and swear they are citizens under penalty of perjury, but it doesn’t
require them to show proof. Under
Proposition 200, Arizona officials
require an Arizona driver’s license
issued after 1996, a U.S. birth certificate, a passport or other similar
document, or the state will reject the
federal registration application form.
Justice Antonin Scalia seemed to
think that a sworn statement wasn’t
enough to allow people to register to
vote. “If you’re willing to violate the
voting laws, I suppose you’re willing
to violate the perjury laws,” he said.
But lawyer Patricia Millett, representing those challenging the law,
answered that courts accept sworn
statements as proof in criminal cases,

some of which end in executions.
Congress decided that a sworn statement with the risk of perjury was
sufficient to register to vote in the
federal system, she said. “This is not
just a ticket into the state’s own registration process so they can go, ‘Thank
you very much, (throw) it in the garbage can, now do what we would like
you to do.’ It is a registration form,”
Millett said.
The Arizona requirement applies
only to people who seek to register
using the federal mail-in form. The
state has its own form and an online system to register to vote when
renewing a driver’s license. The appeals court ruling did not affect proof
of citizenship requirements using the
state forms.
Justice Samuel Alito asked if Arizona kept two different voter rolls, one
for people who used the state system
and one for those who use the federal.
The answer was no.
That means that some people face
one set of requirements to vote, and
others a different set, he said. “This
seems to me like a crazy system,”
Alito said.
Opponents of Arizona’s law see it as
an attack on vulnerable voter groups
such as minorities, immigrants and
the elderly. They say they’ve counted
more than 31,000 potentially legal
voters in Arizona who easily could
have registered before Proposition
200 but were blocked initially by the
law in the 20 months after it passed
in 2004. They say about 20 percent of
those thwarted were Latino.
But Arizona officials say they
should be able to pass laws to stop
illegal immigrants and other noncitizens from getting on their voting
rolls. The Arizona voting law was
part of a package that also denied
some government benefits to illegal
immigrants and required Arizonans
to show identification before voting.
Checks since last fall by The Associated Press showed that in Colorado,
election officials found 441 noncitizens on the voter rolls out of nearly
3.5 million voters. Florida officials
found 207, or 0.001 percent of the
state’s 11.4 million registered voters. In North Carolina, 79 people admitted to election officials that they
weren’t citizens and were removed
from the rolls, along with 331 others who didn’t respond to repeated
inquires.
Horne compared the Arizona system to an airline sending out e-tickets
instead of paper tickets but asking
for identification before allowing passengers to board the airplane. “That
would not contradict the statement
that they are accepting and using etickets,” he said.
But Justice Elena Kagan didn’t accept that analogy, saying Arizona
went further. “Wouldn’t it contradict
it if instead of saying ‘Well, we’d like
you to offer identification,’ saying,
‘Well, we’d like you also to have a paper ticket’?” she said.
Arizona asked the federal government to add the state’s citizenship
eligibility requirements to the federal
form but was turned away. Scalia said
the state should have sued to overturn that decision. “Why didn’t you
do that?” said Scalia, who indicated
that he would look favorably on such
a challenge.
The decision not to challenge was
his predecessor’s, Horne said.
The case is 12-71, Arizona v. Inter
Tribal Council of Arizona, Inc.

UCF believes attack was planned by dead student
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)
— A University of Central
Florida drop-out planned
an attack on campus but
committed suicide in a
dorm before carrying it
out, authorities said Monday.
Materials found in his
dorm room made it appear
that 30-year-old James Oliver Seevakumaran planned
a wider attack, authorities
said a news conference.
Seevakumaran pulled a
gun on another student,
who then called police,
said University of Central
Florida Police Chief Richard Beary. He then killed
himself with a shot to the

head moments later as police officers were responding to the call.
“His timeline got off,”
Beary said. “We think
the rapid response of law
enforcement may have
changed his ability to think
quickly on his feet.”
UCF spokesman Grant
Heston said the university was in the process
of removing Seevakumaran from the dorm before

Monday. Four makeshift
explosive devices were
found in a back pack, and
Beary said he believes that
Seevakumaran pulled a fire
alarm in the dorm to get
other students out in the
open for an attack.
Seevakumaran’s roommates told detectives that
he had shown anti-social
behavior but had never
expressed any violent tendencies, Beary said.

Mary Fowler’s Travel Time Tours
will travel to

ITALY
Depart and Return, Youth Center, Harmon Park - Pt. Pleasant, WV

LAND SURVEYING
SEPTIC DESIGN
LAND DEVELOPMENT
ROADWAY DESIGN

IS YOUR HOUSE OR
COMMERCIAL BUILDING
REALLY IN THE FLOODPLAIN?

FEMA ELEVATION CERTIFICATES AND LETTER OF MAP AMEMDMENTS.

GREAT PRICE / QUICK RESPONSE TIME

CALL US TODAY @ 740-589-5001
www.buckleygroupllc.com

Motorcoach roundtrip to airport with luggage handling throughout
tour. Airfare, taxes and cancellation insurance included. Cities visited
include Rome (Vatican, Sistine Chapel, Colosseum, ectc.) Tuscany,
Florence (Statue of David), Pisa (Leaning Tower), Venice, Pompeii
(destroyed &amp; preserved by a volcano) Naples, and 2 nights stay on the
beautiful Isle of Capri, and much, much more.
Price per person $5,237 double &amp; single persons add $426. Deposits
per person $500 due a travel show (to be held Thursday, April 4th at
1:00 p.m. at the Point Pleasant River Museum) or can be mailed to
Travel Times tours, PO Box 441, Point Pleasant, WV 25550. Final due
August 2. 2013. Call for brochure.
*If you want to attend travel show, call Mary at Ph. 304-675-2305 to RSVP.

60399286

60402239

�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page A4
Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Serious problems persist Appropriators practice
art of compromise
in indigent legal defense
Laurie Kellman

Mark Sherman

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — It is
not the happiest of birthdays for the landmark Supreme Court decision that,
a half-century ago, guaranteed a lawyer for criminal
defendants who are too
poor to afford one.
A unanimous high court
issued its decision in Gideon v. Wainwright on March
18, 1963, declaring that
states have an obligation
to provide defendants with
“the guiding hand of counsel” to ensure a fair trial for
the accused.
But in many states today, taxpayer-funded public defenders face crushing
caseloads, the quality of
legal representation varies
from county to county and
people stand before judges
having seen a lawyer only
briefly, if at all.
“There is no denying
that much, much needs to
be done,” Attorney General Eric Holder said Friday
at a Justice Department
event to commemorate the
anniversary.
Clarence Earl Gideon
had been in and out of jail
in his nearly 51 years when
he was arrested on suspicion of stealing wine and
some money from vending machines at a Panama
City, Fla., pool hall in 1961.
Gideon asked the judge for
a lawyer before his trial,
but was turned down. At
the time, Florida only provided lawyers for indigent
defendants in capital cases.
A jury soon convicted
Gideon and the state Supreme Court upheld the
verdict on appeal. Then,
from his Florida prison cell,
Gideon scratched out his
Supreme Court appeal in
pencil on prison stationery.
It arrived at the court early
in 1962, when the justices
were looking for a good
case to take on the issue of
indigent defense. The court
appointed Washington lawyer Abe Fortas, a future justice, to represent him.

Just two months after
hearing arguments, Justice Hugo Black wrote for
the court that “in our adversary system of criminal
justice, any person hauled
into court, who is too poor
to hire a lawyer, cannot be
assured a fair trial unless
counsel is provided for him.
This seems to us to be an
obvious truth.”
Five months later, Gideon got a lawyer and a new
trial, and the attorney
poked holes in the prosecution’s case. A jury quickly
returned its verdict: not
guilty.
So that was the promise
of Gideon — that a competent lawyer for the defense
would stand on an equal
footing with prosecutors,
and that justice would prevail, at least in theory.
A half-century later, there
are parts of the country
where “it is better to be
rich and guilty than poor
and innocent,” said Sen.
Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee and a former
prosecutor. Leahy said
court-appointed lawyers often are underpaid and can
be “inexperienced, inept,
uninterested or worse.”
Regardless of guilt or innocence, few of those accused of crimes are rich,
while 80 percent say they
are too poor to afford a lawyer.
People who work in the
criminal justice system have
become numb to the problems, creating a culture of
low expectations, said Jonathan Rapping, a veteran public defender who has worked
in Washington, D.C., Atlanta
and New Orleans.
Rapping
remembers
walking into a courtroom
in New Orleans for the first
time for a client’s initial appearance before a judge.
Several defendants in jump
suits were shackled together in one part of the courtroom. The judge moved
briskly through charges
against each of the men,
with a lawyer speaking up
for each one.
Then he called a name
and there was no lawyer

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

Our main number is
(740) 992-2155.

Department extensions are:

News

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Sarah Hawley, Ext. 13

Advertising

Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
Class./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Circulation

Circulation Manager: David Killgallon, 740-446-2342, Ext. 25

General
Information
E-mail:

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com
(USPS 436-840)

Ohio Valley Newspapers

Published Tuesday through Friday,
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Ohio Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route

4 weeks . . . . . . . . . . . .$11.30
12 weeks ..........................$33.20
26 weeks ..........................$65.65
52 weeks . . . . . . . . . .$128.85
Daily . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50¢
Subscribers should remit in advance direct to The Daily Sentinel. No subscription by mail
permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

Mail Subscription

Inside Meigs County
12 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . .$35.26
26 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . .$70.70
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$140.11
Outside Meigs County
12 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . .$56.55
26 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$113.60
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$227.21

present. The defendant
piped up. “The guy said
he hadn’t seen a lawyer
since he was locked up 70
days ago. And no one in the
courtroom was shocked.
No one was surprised,”
Rapping said.
Complaints about the
quality of representation
also are difficult to sustain, under a high bar that
the Supreme Court set in
a 1984 case. The relatively
few cases in which a lawyer’s work is deemed so bad
that it violates his client’s
rights typically have an
outlandish set of facts that
would be funny if the consequences weren’t tragic.
“You see too many instances of ineffective assistance of counsel, too many
instances where you think,
‘Was this lawyer crazy?’”
Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan said at the Justice
Department event.
She recounted a case
from last term in which a
lawyer advised his client
to reject a plea deal with
a seven-year prison term
and go to trial. The lawyer
said prosecutors could not
prove a charge of intent to
murder because the victim
had been shot below the
waist. The defendant was
convicted and sentenced to
30 years in prison.
Kagan was part of the 5-4
decision in the defendant’s
favor.
In some places, lawyers
are overwhelmed by their
caseloads. A public defender in Indianapolis lasted
less than a year in his job after being asked to represent
more than 300 defendants
at a time, said Norman Lefstein, former dean of the Indiana University Robert H.
McKinney School of Law.
“A lawyer with an S on
his chest for Superman
couldn’t represent these
people. He simply couldn’t
do it. There are only so
many hours in a day. But
it’s not just caseload. It’s the
other support services that
go along with it,” including
investigators, said Lefstein,
who has studied problems
in indigent defense for decades.

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — She’s an outspoken
feminist and former social worker. He’s a
cigar-smoking Kentucky lawyer.
But Democratic Sen. Barbara Mikulski
of Maryland and Republican Rep. Harold
Rogers have big things in common as they
steer the House and Senate Appropriations committees toward a spending plan
for the rest of the year that eases the bite
of $85 billion in automatic spending cuts.
Their tiny domain is the only place in
a bitterly divided Congress where bipartisan negotiation thrives, however uncomfortably.
As their bill winds toward Senate and
House approval, the veteran lawmakers
who have a combined 68 years of service
on Capitol Hill are hoping their exercise
is instructive to the dozens of colleagues,
many elected since 2010, who frown on
compromise.
“If they succeed, perhaps in their own
way they will have demonstrated to others
in this Congress that this is about conciliation, it’s about setting priorities, it’s about
cutting waste,” said Jim Dyer, a longtime
appropriations aide who’s now a lobbyist.
“It’s about doing your job as opposed to
getting yourself so wrapped around the
ideological axle that you can’t accomplish
anything.”
Mikulski and Rogers are the pain managers of the nation’s fiscal difficulties, the
two individuals most responsible for averting a government shutdown March 27 and
taking some of the edge off the automatic
spending cuts known as the sequester.
They can’t do anything, though, without the agreement of Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby, the top Republican on the Senate committee, and New York Rep. Nita
Lowy, the senior Democrat on the House
committee.
“We are working well together, now,”
Shelby said.
The headache of sequester is here to
stay for at least six months, until the end
of the current budget year Sept. 30. View
it has the hangover from Congress’s inability to bully itself into a deficit-cutting deal
that might require voters to give up some
of their tax cuts or government benefits.
The job of writing a spending plan for
the rest of the year that achieves the $85
billion in cuts fell to two political opposites of the same generation who share decades of budget experience, a determination to solve the immediate problem and
a grim regard for who’s to blame for the
government-by-crisis that has ruled Washington since the 2010 election.
“We think the sequester is a stupid way
to do business. It’s the coward’s way out,”
Rogers, 75, said during an interview this
past week in his sunlight-filled corner

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

Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words.
All letters are subject to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone number. No unsigned
letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

office just off the House floor. He noted
that the bulk of lawmakers who arrived in
Washington in the past two elections have
no experience with Congress as it’s supposed to run.
It’s been a dozen years since the House
and Senate have passed all of the government spending bills individually, the products of intense bipartisan negotiations
and, yes, compromise. The House calls
that process regular order; sequester represents the ultimate failure of it.
As Mikulski and Rogers labor to minimize the sequester’s pain, they’re also trying to expose colleagues to the value of
the Capitol’s traditional ways.
“We’re in an education phase now,” said
Rogers, a 32-year House veteran.
The temporary spending bill is the duo’s
first collaboration, carried out in daily
and sometimes hourly phone calls and
meetings in either Rogers’ ornate office
or across the Capitol in the historic committee suite that Mikulski has nicknamed
“the mother ship.”
After 24 years in the Senate, she’s the
first woman to lead the committee, which
was controlled for decades by bulls such
as Sens. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and, most recently, Daniel
Inouye, D-Hawaii.
The committees’ control over where
the government spends money gives them
outsized authority in Washington, even
though that power has been shorn somewhat recently by the Congress-wide ban
on letting lawmakers pick special projects
back home for federal money. In the competition for those projects, often known as
earmarks, it was most often the appropriations chairmen who picked the winners
and losers.
This is Mikulski’s first test as committee
head. It’s one she subtly suggested might
teach her colleagues how to do their jobs
in difficult circumstances.
“This is a temporary tool to use during a
fiscal crisis to have smart government and
try and get us a little bit beyond ultimatum
and brinkmanship politics,” said Mikulski,
76. Of Rogers, she added: “We’ve enjoyed
talking with each other. We haven’t always
enjoyed what the other has to say.”
The government-wide spending bill
would cover the day-to-day budgets for
every agency. Rogers and Mikulski are
laboring to shuffle the money in a way
that gives agencies more flexibility to deal
with mandatory across-the-board cuts —
5 percent for most domestic programs, 8
percent for the military.
They are working out different priorities. While Rogers focused on giving the
Pentagon relief from a crunch in readiness
accounts, Mikulski sought to minimize
cuts in domestic programs such as food
aid for pregnant women and their children
and health research.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Tuesday, March 19, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
Tressa E. Cremeens

Tressa E. Cremeens, 91,
Gallipolis, passed away at
2:05 p.m. Friday, March
15, 2013, in the Holzer
Medical Center. Born January 31, 1922, in the Ohio
Township of Gallia County,
she was the daughter of the
late Chauncey L. and Ruth
E. Elliott Johnson.
She was a graduate of Gallia Academy High School
and attended Rio Grande
College. She worked for the
Ohio Bell Telephone Company for several years before going to work at the Gallia
County Courthouse. She later would retire from the Gallipolis Developmental Center. Since 1944, she has been a
member of the First Baptist Church, where she served on
the Board of Deaconess, taught children’s Sunday School
for several years, worked with the youth groups and served
on various committees of the church. She was a member
of the Betty Stam Ladies Bible Class, Ladies Missionary
Fellowship Class and the Ladies Auxiliary of the Veterans
of Foreign Wars, Post #4464 in Gallipolis. Tressa was a loving mother, grandmother and great-grandmother.
Tressa married Marland W. Cremeens on November 28,
1946, in South Point, Ohio, and he preceded her in death
on January 17, 2007.
Tressa is survived by her two sons, Phil (Debbie) Cremeens, of Deerfield Beach, Fla., and Jay (Andrea) Cremeens, of Gallipolis; her granddaughters, Jennifer Lynne
(Nathan) King and Jaymee Lynne Cremeens, both of Gallipolis; her two step-granddaughters, Joan Leetad and Kathryn Chung, both of Deerfield Beach, Fla.; her two greatgrandsons, Tanner Jay King and Kellen Gerald King; two
sisters, Adeline (Edmund) D’Andrea, of Columbus, Ohio
and Barbara (Michel) Huber, Philadephia, Pa.; a special
friend and also a caregiver to Tress, Yvonne King; and numerous nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews.
In addition to her parents and husband, she was preceded in death by her sisters, Bonnie Swindler, Pauline Clark
Sheets and Opal Halley; and her brothers, Lowell Vance
Johnson, Chauncey Kenneth Johnson, Clarence “John”
Johnson, Junior Johnson, Harold Lee Johnson and Billy
Joe Johnson.

Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m., Wednesday, March 20, 2013, in the First Baptist Church in Gallipolis. Officiating will be Pastors Alvis Pollard, Marc
Sarrett and Joseph Godwin. Interment will follow in the
Pine Street Cemetery. Friends may call from 2-4 p.m. and
6-8 p.m. on Tuesday at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel. The
body will lie in state at the church one hour prior to the
funeral service.
Casketbearers will be nephews and great-nephews.
Serving as honorary casket bearers for their “Grandma
T” will be Tanner and Kellen.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Robert Edwin Davis

Robert Edwin Davis, 85, of Danville Community,
Langsville, Ohio, went to be with the Lord, Sunday,
March 17, 2013, at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis,
Ohio.
Born May 19, 1927, at Danville, Ohio, to the late Edwin H. and Elnora Overly Davis. He was the retired owner of Edwin H. Davis and Son, Inc., a member of Danville
Holiness Church, and a Navy veteran of WW II.
Bob was survived by his son, Fred (Judy) Davis of
Chillicothe, Ohio; daughter, Pam (Doug) Jude of Vinton,
Ohio; brother-in-law, Keith (Irene) Kennedy of Langsville, Ohio; sister-in-law, Alice Kennedy of Rutland, Ohio;
grandchildren, Eric (Jesse) Jude of Brazil, Indiana, Alisha Jude of Rio Grande, Ohio, Ryan Jude of Vinton, Ohio,
Ami Holden of Ellicot, Maryland, Hollie Johnson of Chillicothe, Ohio, and Kelly Strinbrook of Indianapolis, Indiana; six great-grandchildren; several nieces and nephews.
Besides Bob’s parents, he was preceded by his wife,
Dorothy Mae Davis in August 2012.
Services are at 11 a.m., Wednesday, March 20, 2013,
at the Danville Holiness Church, 31057 State Route 325,
Langsville, Ohio with Rev. Brian Bailey officiating. Burial
to follow at Danville Cemetery, Langsville, Ohio. Family will receive friends from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, March 19,
2013, at the church.
Online condolences at birchfieldfuneralhome.com.

Louise Isabell Posey

Louise Isabell Posey, 99, of Reedsville, Ohio, passed
away Saturday, March 16, 2013, at Arcadia Nursing
Center, Coolville, Ohio.
She was born December 7, 1913, in Cairo, W.Va.,

daughter of the late Jeffe and Eliza Pratt Cantwell. She
was a member of the Faith Gospel Church.
She is survived by her granddaughter, Edla Rucker;
four grandsons, Bill and Kathy Smith, Brian and Lori
Bailey, Robert and Kelley Bailey and Brent Bailey; and
several great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her husband, William Samuel Posey; a daughter, Martha Bailey; and a great-granddaughter, Julie
Benge.
Services will be held at 11 a.m., Tuesday, March 19,
2013, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville,
Ohio, with Pastor Steve Reed officiating. Burial will
be in the Reedsville Cemetery. Friends may call from
6-8 p.m. on Monday at the funeral home.
You can sign the online guesbook at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.

Richard A. Shuler, Sr.

Richard A. Shuler, Sr., 71, of Tuppers Plains, Ohio,
passed away on March 15, 2013, at the Kobacker
House in Columbus. He was born on February 20,
1942, in Parkersburg, W.Va., son of the late Mildred
and Earl Shuler.
He was a member of the Gold Wing Riders Association and was employed by Community Medicine at
Ohio University. He was a member of the First Southern Baptist Church.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death
by his first wife, Anna Shuler; brother-in-law, Jim Carnahan; and sister-in-law, Charldine Alkire.
He is survived by his wife, Kathleen Shuler; sons
and daughters-in-law, Richard “Alan” and Angie Shuler, Brian and Lori Shuler; step-sons: Shaon, Kendall
and Jamel; daughter, Kaylee; sisters and their husbands: Nancy Carnahan, Ellen and Bruce Swartwout;
sisters-in-law, Denise and Jo-Anne; grandchildren,
Zach, Chris, and Andy; one great-granddaughter; several nieces and nephews.
Funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday,
March 23, 2013, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Burial will be in Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-9 p.m. on Friday, March
22, 2013, at the funeral home.
An registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.
com.

VFW to award
scholarships

Death Notices
Cherry

Anna Smith Cherry, 82,
died March 16, 2013 in
Belleview, Fla. Funeral services will be held March
20, in Lecanto, Fla.

Lee

Roger L. Lee, 80, of
Henderson, W.Va., died
March 18, 2013, at Emogene Dolin Hospice House
of Huntington.
Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by the Deal Funeral Home.

Moses

Josine T. Moses, 80, of
Oak Hill died Monday,
March 18, 2013, at the
Ohio State Medical Center
in Columbus.

Funeral services will
be held at 11 a.m. Friday,
March 22, 2013, at the
Thurman United Methodist Church with Pastor
John Rozewicz officiating.
Burial will follow at the Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call
Thursday, March 21, 2013,
from 4-7 p.m. at the Lewis
&amp; Gillum Funeral Home in
Oak Hill.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may
be sent to the Thurman
United Methodist Church
205 Broad St., Thurman
Ohio 45685.

Ohlinger

Michael Ohlinger, 48, of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died
Monday, March 18, 2013 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Services for Michael
will be held at 11 a.m. on
Thursday, at the CrowHussell Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, W.Va., with
visitation on from 6-8 p.m.
on Wednesday at the funeral home. Burial will follow
at Sunrise Memorial Gardens, in New Haven, W.Va.
In lieu of flowers, please
make donations in Mike’s
name to: New Haven Untied Methodist Church,
PO Box 327, New Haven,
WV 25265.
Mike’s care has been
entrusted to Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home.

Reynolds

Janice M. Reynolds, 73,
of Mason, W.Va., went to
be with the Lord on Sun-

day, March 17, at the Overbrook Nursing Home in
Middleport, Ohio.
Visitation will be from
6-8 p.m. on Thursday,
March 22, at the Foglesong
Roush Funeral Home in
Mason, W.Va. Service will
be at 11 a.m., on Friday,
March 23, at the funeral
home, with Rev. William
Zuspan officiating. Following will be to the Gravel
Hill Cemetery in Cheshire,
Ohio.

Seidel

Annette Lewis Seidel,
85, of Frederick County,
Va., originally of Gallipolis, Ohio, died Sunday,
March 17, 2013, in her
home.
A funeral service will

be conducted at 11 a.m.,
on Wednesday, March 20,
2013 at Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church with
Reverend Dr. James H. Utt
and Reverend Martha Miller-Sims officiating. Family
will receive friends from
10 a..m. until the time of
the service at the church.
Private interment will be
in Mount Hebron Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be
made to Grace Evangelical
Lutheran Church, 26 West
Boscawen Street, Winchester, Virginia 22601 or
Blue Ridge Hospice, 333
West Cork Street, Suite
405, Winchester, Virginia
22601.

MASON, W.Va. — The
Stewart-Johnson Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post 9926 will
award up to 15 tuition scholarships of $500 each to qualifying area college students and
high school seniors who have
been accepted into college.
Members of VFW Post
9926 and their immediate
family will receive first consideration for these scholarships,
but other veterans and their
family may also be considered.
Scholarship applications
may be picked up at the VFW
Post in Mason, W.Va., and
completed forms must be received by the VFW Post no later than April 20. Applications
received after April 29 will not
be considered. For more information, contact the guidance
counselor at your school.

Planning
From Page 1
event, but not for parking.
While awaiting final confirmation, Hassell said the expectation is that the cannons on
the State House Lawn will be
brought in for the event along
with a Civil War battle flag and
other objects from the Ohio Historical Society for display at the
Portland Community Center. As

for the family games and activities, she noted a need for a “drill
sergeant.”
Plans call for the living history
activities to be organized by US
commander Kyle Yoho and CS
Commander J. R. Sharp for the
Saturday program.
As for vendors, the Bashan
Fire Department’s ice cream cart
will be there on Saturday, and
several other vendors, yet to be

confirmed will there on both Saturday and Sunday. Some food is
also expected to be served at the
Community Center.
As earlier announced the Chester Shade Historical Association
will be observing Chester-Shade
days on July 20 and will host a
Civil War tea and an evening
Civil War ball.
Saturday’s tentative schedule calls for the dedication of

the Heritage Trail signs at 11
a.m. with a representative from
the governor’s office, legislators, and county commissioners participating along with
others yet to be confirmed.
That will be followed by the
memorial service coordinated
by representatives of CabotBlessing 126 Camp Jim Oiler
and Benjamen Fearing Camp 2
Dan Hinton and the Auxiliary

of the Daughters of the Confederacy.
On Sunday a church service
will be held at 10 a.m. followed
by battle demonstrations, continuation of the living history, and
family activities.
More activities are expected to
be confirmed at the next meeting to be held on May 11 at the
Meigs County Historical Society’s Museum, Hassell noted.

Turnout
From Page 1
kept up; and the military
shall be in strict subordination to the civil power.”
SECTION 2: Prohibition on federal infringement of the right to keep
and bear arms
The Meigs County Board
of Commissioners declares
that all federal acts, laws,
orders, rules, regulations
— past, present, of future
— in violation of the 2nd
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States
are not authorized by the
Constitution of the United
States and violate its true
meaning and intent as
given by the Founders and
Ratifiers; and are hereby
declared to be an act of
aggression on our Bill of
Rights and a misrepresentation of the intent of
Government to secure the
rights of the people.
Whereby the ratification of such Amendments
to the Constitution of these
United States in order to
prevent misconstruction or
abuse of its powers, must
be adhered.
The Meigs County
Board of Commissioners
call upon the Governor
and General Assembly of
the State of Ohio to immediately pass an act to

nullify the implementation within the State of
Ohio of any Federal law,
executive order or regulations restricting the right
to keep and bear arms,
it continues, and makes
clear that the County
will play no supporting
role to the federal government in attacks on the 2nd
Amendment.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the Board of
Commissioners state that
no county paid staff participate in nor allow any
county resources be used
in the implementation of
any Federal law, executive
order or executive directive
that infringe on the right
to keep and bear arms.
Following the reading,
those in attendance were
encouraged to share their
opinions on the proposed
resolution.
Many spoke of the fear
that the Second Amendment would just be the
first step in taking away
the rights of American citizens.
Carla Shuler stated that
most of the attacks of gun
violence occur in gun free
zones. “Registration, confiscation, and extermination,” were the three words
used by Shuler to describe
what would possibly hap-

pen with gun control legislation.
Daniel Lantz and others
thanked the commissioners for the resolution and
taking a stand on the issue.
While others thanked their
fellow citizens for taking
the time to come to a meeting such as the one taking
place and showing an interest in issues that effect
the county and nation.
Gary Griffith, who said
he learned to shoot and
hunt here in the county
as a youth, said that “guns
don’t kill people, people
kill people.” He suggested
that gun legislation is not
the answer, but changes
to other programs such as
mental health care.
Some questioned what
a resolution passed by
the commissioners of one
county would accomplish.
Ihle said that while it may
not change the laws if
they are eventually put in
place, it would allow for
the county to have a voice
in the ear of its legislators
who can vote on proposed
legislation.
Craig Wehrung spoke on
behalf of the TEA Party of
Meigs County stating that
they were in support of
what the commissioners
were doing.
Meigs County Sheriff

Chief Deputy Charlie Mansfield also said the office
supported the resolution,
going on to say that the
concealed carry permit office was open.
Patty Aldridge said that
education of people is key
in the issue, adding that
people do not understand
the importance of the Second Amendment.
While the main topic
for the evening was the
Second
Amendment,
many talked about the
freedom of religion and
the power of prayer in
making a difference in the
country.
There are three types of
people said Shuler, “those
who make things happen,
those who watch things
happen, and those who
wonder what happened.”
Those in attendance
encouraged one another
to make a difference in
this issue and spread the
word.
Ihle said the resolution would likely be on
the agenda for the regular meeting of the Meigs
County Commissioners
this Thursday. Following
passage of the resolution it will be mailed to
the commissioners of the
other Ohio counties, state
legislators, the Governor,

and national legislators.
Ihle said that commissioners in other counties
have asked for a copy of
the resolution in hopes of
passing something simi-

lar in their counties.
All three Meigs County
Commissioners, Ihle, Michael Bartrum, and Randy
Smith, were in attendance
at the meeting.

BURIED
in CREDIT
CARDDEBT?
Over $10,000 in credit card bills?
Can’t make the minimum payments?

� WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY
� WE CAN SAVE YOU THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS
� WE CAN HELP YOU AVOID BANKRUPTCY
Not a high-priced consolidation loan or one of those
consumer credit counseling programs

CREDIT CARD RELIEF
for your FREE consultation CALL

888-838-6679
Not available in all states

�Tuesday, March 19, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio offers free volunteer firefighter training
REYNOLDSBURG,
Ohio
(AP) — The Ohio fire marshal’s
office is offering free weekend
training intended to help Ohio
volunteer firefighters meet state
certification requirements and to
recruit more of them, a task that
can be challenging because most
volunteers have other jobs and
their departments tend to have
less funding than professional
departments.
More than two dozen participants from around Ohio were set
to get classroom and hands-on
training during the two-weekend
session beginning this weekend
at the Ohio Fire Academy in
Reynoldsburg, east of Columbus.

They learn about equipment,
pump operations and how to attack a fire from the exterior, and
then take the state certification
exam.
Fire Marshal Larry Flowers
said the training, which began
as a pilot program last April, is
meant to help attract volunteers
by providing the 36 hours of
training they need for free and
in a condensed timetable compared with a more typical series
of classes over weeks or months.
“The folks that have come
have said to us, ‘I couldn’t have
done this any other way,’” Flowers said.
Fire chiefs also have praised

the idea, and participants told
officials they liked that the training was intense and quick, he
said.
“It’s just a much easier thing
for a volunteer to pull off, to
donate those two weekends”
instead of going to a periodic
class for weeks, said Chief Jim
Beckner of the Hamden Volunteer Fire Department in Vinton
County, who has sent three volunteers through the training.
The March free training drew
so much interest that the state
is offering a second class in May
— it’s nearly full already — and
plans to continue offering it
twice a year or more if demand

remains high, Flowers said.
About 70 percent of Ohio fire
departments are operated with
volunteers, and those who get
the free training represent just
a tiny fraction of Ohio’s roughly
30,000 volunteer firefighters, according to the fire marshal’s office.
Jason Pollitt, president of the
Ohio State Firefighters Association, said he’s noticed a decrease
in volunteers since he started
two decades ago as a volunteer
with the department in Clermont County’s Williamsburg
Township, where he now works
full time.
Basic fire classes through

vocational schools and private
trainers can cost hundreds of dollars, so the idea of free training
is appealing, especially for volunteer departments that operate
on annual budgets of $15,000 or
$20,000, Pollitt said.
“A lot of them don’t have the
money to send people, so the
free classes help them out,” he
said.
Beckner, the Hamden chief,
said the class offered significant savings for his department,
which uses fundraisers to supplement an annual operating budget
of less than $15,000.
“We will take advantage of it
every chance we get,” he said.

Pope meets Argentine president

Ohio food vendors fear
loss in prison contracting

VATICAN CITY (AP)
— Pope Francis’ diplomatic
skills were put to the test
Monday as he had lunch
with Argentine President
Cristina Fernandez: As leader of Argentina’s Catholics,
he had accused her populist
government of demagoguery while she called his position on gay adoptions reminiscent of the Middle Ages
and the Inquisition.
That was then. On Monday, Fernandez gave the
new pope a mate gourd and
straw, to hold the traditional
Argentine tea that Francis
loves, and he gave her a kiss.
“Never in my life has a
pope kissed me!” Fernandez
said afterward.
Fernandez called on the
former Archbishop of Buenos Aires at his temporary
home, the Vatican hotel on
the edge of the Vatican gardens, and the two later had
lunch together, a day before
she and other world leaders
attend his installation Mass
in St. Peter’s Square that
some estimates say could
bring 1 million people to
Rome.
The Vatican on Monday
released details of the Mass,
saying it would be a simplified version of the 2005 installation Mass that brought
Pope Benedict XVI to the
papacy, with many gestures
to Eastern rite Catholics
and Orthodox Christians in
a sign of church unity.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Small businesses
are concerned they may be hurt financially by
Ohio’s plan to contract out prison food service.
The Kasich administration hopes to save up to
$15 million by using contactors to provide meals
for prisoners in Ohio.
Bids to provide the food-service contract are due
April 12.
The Dispatch reports that some private vendors
that sell to the state are concerned that they will be
shut out if a big company takes over food service.
In addition, the union representing prison employees is working on an alternative money-saving
proposal.
The state says vendors will have a chance to
work as subcontractors and suppliers.
Sam V. Sidoti, president of Stellar International
Food Service, a former Columbus business now
located in Plant City, Fla., said he is worried that
privatizing food service will hurt his company and
dozens of others. He has had state contracts for 30
years.
“Most of the food that is going to Ohio prisons
right now is from small businesses that do $3 million to $5 million a year,” Sidoti told the newspaper.
Supplier EMM Black Inc. of Dayton also fears
the loss of business.
“It will take about half my sales,” said Samuel
Black, company president. “It would be very damaging.”
As many as 456 state jobs could be lost if food
service is privatized, but the Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction said many employees would be offered positions with the contractor.
Agency spokeswoman JoEllen Smith said all current vendors could “align themselves with other
interested bidders, potentially as subcontractors,
material suppliers or joint-venture partners.”

The Vatican also released
details of Francis’ coat of
arms and official ring, both
of which are in keeping with
his simple style and harking back to popes past: The
coat of arms is the same Jesuit-inspired one he used as
archbishop of Buenos Aires,
while the ring was once offered to Pope Paul VI, who
presided over the second
half of the Second Vatican
Council, the church meetings that modernized the
church.
Francis will officially receive the ring and the pallium, a woolen stole, during
Tuesday’s installation Mass,
which is drawing six sovereign rulers, 31 heads of
state, three princes and 11
heads of government to the
Vatican. Fernandez leads
the largest delegation with
19 members.
She and her predecessor
and late husband, Nestor
Kirchner, defied church
teaching to push through
a series of measures with
popular backing in Argentina, including mandatory sex
education in schools, free
distribution of contraceptives in public hospitals, and
the right for transsexuals to
change their official identities on demand. Argentina
in 2010 became the first
Latin American country
to legalize same-sex marriages.
According to Francis’

authorized
biographer,
Sergio Rubin, the former
Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was politically wise
enough to know the church
couldn’t win a straight-on
fight against gay marriage,
so he urged his bishops to
lobby for gay civil unions
instead. It wasn’t until his
proposal was shot down
by the bishops’ conference
that he declared what gay
activists called a “war of
God” on the measure —
and the church lost the issue altogether.
Fernandez issued a perfunctory message of congratulations when Francis
was elected last week, calling the election of the first
Latin American pope “historic” and saying she hoped
that given his namesake, St.
Francis of Assisi, the new
pope would inspire world
leaders to pay greater attention to the poor and pursue
dialogue rather than force to
resolve disputes.
She has, however, remained unusually silent
about the election on her
otherwise prolifically active
Twitter account, posting a
single tweet on his election
day: “To your Holiness Francis I” with a link to her letter
of congratulations, which
wasn’t even signed.
Their chilly relations
became crystal clear after
the Kirchners several years
ago stopped attending the

church’s annual “Te Deum”
address challenging society
to do better, which is delivered each May 25.
In last year’s address,
Bergoglio said Argentina
was being harmed by demagoguery,
totalitarianism,
corruption and efforts to
secure unlimited power: a
strong message in a country
whose president has ruled
by decree and left scandals
unpunished.
The Fernandez meeting
isn’t the only diplomatic
dance Francis will be conducting this week as more
than 132 government delegations descend on Rome
for the Mass formally installing Francis as the 266th
leader of the 1.2-billion
strong Catholic Church.
Italian media say Rome
civil protection authorities
are planning for upward of
1 million people to attend
the Mass, numbers not seen
since the beatification of
Pope John Paul II in 2011,
which drew 1.5 million to
St. Peter’s and the surrounding streets.
One significant VIP is
the spiritual leader of the
world’s Orthodox Christians, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I. His
presence at the installation
is the first from the Istanbul-based Patriarchate in
nearly 1,000 years since
the Great Schism divided
the church in 1054.

fever
The race is on at

mydailytribune.com
mydailyregister.com
mydailysentinel.com
Show off your Auto Racing
knowledge &amp; Sprint to the
Cup for great weekly prizes!

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Point Pleasant Register
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
Get All the Latest NASCAR news &amp;
race results in Thursday’s paper

214 Up
214
21
Upper
River
R ,
U
Uppe
pp
ppe
perr Ri
p
R
ive
ver Rd
ver
Rd,
G
lllliip
liis
Gallipolis,
Gall
Ga
alli
all
ipol
pol
olis
is,
s, OH
OH
740-446-7891
74
7
400-44
446
446
6--7
78
89
91
1
11am-12am
Mon
Mo
n--Th
Thur
urs
urs
rs 11
1
1am-1
am-1
am
-12a
2am
2am
am
Mon-Thurs
Fri-Sat
11am-2am
F
Fr
rii-S
Sa
att 11
a
1
1am
1a
am
m-2
-2am
-2
am
S
1
1am
Sun
11am-12am
Su
un 11
11am
am-1
-12
2a
am

www.markportergm.com
60393671

60378049

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
740-446-2342

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
740-992-2155

Point Pleasant Register
304-675-1333

www.mydailytribune.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailyregister.com
60400436

�The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Sports

TUESDAY,
MARCH 19, 2013
mdssports@civitasmedia.com

2 Ohio football
players convicted
of raping girl
B4

Indians outlast Point in season opener, 6-5
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

SISSONVILLE, W.Va. — A
slow start ultimately led to a
bad finish for the Point Pleasant
baseball team Friday night following a 6-5 setback to host Sissonville during the 2013 season
opener in Kanawha County.
The visiting Big Blacks (0-1)
trailed 4-0 through two innings
of play before rallying to tie
things back up through four-anda-half frames, but the Indians (10) plated two unearned runs in
the home half of the fifth to secure a 6-4 lead.

PPHS scored a run in the sixth
to cut its deficit in half at 6-5, but
the guests struck out in their final four at-bats — allowing SHS
to wrap up the one-run outcome.
Each team scored three unearned runs and had seven hits
in the contest, as well as four errors apiece. The Big Blacks left
seven runners stranded on the
base path, while Sissonville left
only four on the bags.
The Indians’ plated their first
unearned run of the game in the
first inning, as a two-out error
and a Zach Null single allowed
Josh Landis to score for a 1-0
contest.

SHS increased it lead to four
in the second frame after an
Eli Mooney single and a Houston Hill walk started the frame,
then a one-out single by Ethan
Lauchart plated Mooney for a
2-0 cushion. An error allowed
Hill to score, and Fisher singled
home Lauchart for a 4-0 edge after two complete.
Alex Somerville connected on
a one-out triple to start the third,
then later scored on a wild pitch
for a 4-1 contest. Point followed
with back-to-back singles from
Somerville and Tylun Campbell
to start the fifth, then Austen
Toler grounded into a fielder’s

choice that forced Somerville out
at third.
Evan Potter reached safely on
an error that allowed Campbell
to score for a 4-2 contest, then
Levi Doolittle reached safely on
a dropped third strike. An errant
throw by the catcher allowed by
Toler and Potter to score, knotting the game up at four.
Sissonville was down to its
final out in the fifth when J.R.
Sricklen came up with a single,
then Landis reached safely on an
error. Null came through with a
single that plated Sricklen for a
5-4 lead, and an error on the relay allowed Landis to score for a

6-4 advantage through five complete.
With two outs in the top of
the sixth, Somerville singled
and later scored on a Campbell
single — making it a 6-5 contest.
The Big Blacks didn’t manage
a single baserunner from that
point on.
Austin Burford was the winning pitcher of record after
working two innings of middle
relief for starter Ethan Lauchart.
Burford allowed three hits, zero
walks and three runs (zero
earned) while striking out two.
See OPENER ‌| B2

Alex Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Eastern senior Max Carnahan shoots from the lane during the
Eagles district semifinal loss to Portsmouth Notre Dame at
the Convocation Center on the campus of Ohio University.

Photos by Alex Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Eastern junior Jenna Burdette (14) brings the ball up the floor during the Lady Eagels 54-51 loss to Hiland in the
Division IV state semifinal.

OVP area lands 6
on All-TVC boys OVP area lands 10 on All-TVC girls basketball teams
basketball teams
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

A total of six players from the Ohio Valley Publishing
area were chosen to All-Tri-Valley Conference boys basketball teams in both the Ohio and Hocking divisions for
the 2012-13 season, as voted on by the coaches within
their respective leagues.
Each of the five area schools — Meigs, Southern, Eastern, Wahama and South Gallia — had at least one representative on the respective lists, but only one program
managed more than one selection for the past season of
play. One player was also rewarded with a share of player
of the year honors.
Senior Max Carnahan split TVC Hocking Most Valuable Player accolades with Belpre senior Dakota Hoffman, and the Eastern upperclassman was also the only
selection for the Green and White. Carnahan guided the
Eagles to a 7-9 league mark, which was good enough for a
tie for sixth place in the standings.
The Tornadoes (8-8) tied with Trimble for fourth place
in the league standings and had two selections on the
TVC Hocking squad in sophomore Tristen Wolfe and senior Adam Pape.
The White Falcons (7-9) joined EHS in sixth place in
the league standings and had one TVC Hocking representative in junior Hunter Bradley.
The Rebels (4-12) finished tied with Waterford for
eighth place and also had one choice in sophomore
Brayden Greer.
Of the five TVC Hocking selections, only Carnahan is a
repeat winner of this award. Howie Caldwell was named
coach of the year after leading Federal Hocking to an outright TVC Hocking championship.
Other repeat winners from a year ago include Shawn
Parsons and Max Carney of Fed Hock, as well as Dakota
Hoffman of Belpre.
Meigs had only one selection in the TVC Ohio Division, as Treay McKinney earned his first all-league hoops
See BOYS ‌| B2

A total of 10 people from
the Ohio Valley Publishing
area were chosen to AllTri-Valley Conference girls
basketball teams in both the
Ohio and Hocking divisions
for the 2012-13 season, as
voted on by the coaches
within their respective
leagues.
Each of the five area
schools — Meigs, Southern, Eastern, Wahama and
South Gallia — had at least
one representative on the respective lists, with two programs managing more than
one selection for the past
season of play. One player
and one coach were also
rewarded with some special
end-of-year honors.
The Eastern girls led all
area teams with four selections, as the Lady Eagles
tied with Waterford for the
total number of honorees
after each squad earned a
share of the 2012-13 TVC
Hocking crown with matching 15-1 marks. Each team
had three players and one
coach chosen, as John Burdette and Jerry Close shared
coach of the year honors.
Junior Jenna Burdette
was the unanimous choice
for Most Valuable Player in
the Hocking Division after
leading her team in both
See GIRLS ‌| B2

South Gallia senior Meghan Caldwell (21) drives past Waterford senior Brooke
Drayer (22) during the Lady Cats victory in Mercerville.

OVP Sports Schedule Rose leads Fort Loramie to 1st Ohio state title
Tuesday, March 19
Baseball
Greater Beckley Christian at Hannan, 5:30
Softball
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg South, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Parkersburg,
5:30
Cross Lanes Christian at
Hannan, 4:30
Track and Field
Point Pleasant home
meet, 4 p.m.
Wahama at Doddridge
County, 4 p.m.
Tennis
Nitro at Point Pleasant,
4 p.m.

Wednesday, March 20
Baseball
Ripley at Point Pleasant,
5:30
Tennis
Point Pleasant at Hurricane, 4 p.m.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Fort
Loramie coach Carla Siegel walked
into her postgame interview session
and offered an opening statement.
“My first comment is, ‘Finally!’”
she said, breaking into a wide smile.
After a quarter of a century around
the program, her Redskins finally
won a long anticipated title.
Thursday, March 21
Second-team Associated Press AllOhioan Darian Rose scored 19 points
Baseball
Hannah at Greater Beck- and seemed to be in the middle of every big play down the stretch, leadley Christian, 5:30
ing Fort Loramie past Berlin Hiland
Softball
57-42 in the Division IV final on SatWahama at Buffalo, 5:30 urday night for its first state chamTennis
pionship.
Point Pleasant at St. AlSiegel played at Fort Loramie, was
an assistant coach for five years and
bans 4 p.m.

the head coach for the past 14. The
litany of disappointments in six previous trips to the state’s final four
came immediately to mind as her
team closed out the big win.
“I was the assistant coach back in
‘97 when we were up by seven against
Kalida and some people left the game
thinking we were going to win and
we lost on a 3-pointer toward the
end of the game,” she said. “In 2006,
we played Berlin Hiland and it was
a great game and we lost by three.
In 2010, we had the infamous meltdown, up by 18 and lost to Harvest
Prep. Came back the following year
and lost to Harvest Prep again.”
“Yes, this is finally here.”
Rose, a junior, hit all eight of her

free throws and also had five rebounds and five assists as the Redskins (27-3) finally finished on top in
their seventh trip to the state tournament.
During one late span, Rose had
four points and added an assist in an
8-2 run.
“When (Hiland post player Jasmine Goings) fouled out, I knew that
I could drive to the hole and dish out
to my teammates,” Rose said. “I tried
to make things happen at the end.”
Regina Hochstetler poured in 23
points for Hiland (26-4), denied its
fifth state title in a record 13 trips to
the final four.
See TITLE ‌| B2

�Tuesday, March 19, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page B2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Title

Boys

From Page B1
Hawks coach Dave Schlabach
praised the effort by Fort Loramie, particularly on defense.
“Fort Loramie’s pressure really made
us feel uncomfortable throughout the
game,” he said. “That’s the best defensive team we’ve seen all year. They
keep you off balance, they’re so long.”
Holding onto a tenuous 34-28 lead
through three quarters, the Redskins
stretched it to 39-30 on a drive by Jessica Boerger and Paige Ordean’s threepoint play off an assist from Rose.
But Hiland wasn’t going away.
On consecutive possessions, Hochstetler drilled 3-pointers to cut the lead
to 41-36 with 5 minutes remaining.
When Hochstetler netted a baseline
runner a minute later, the lead was
down to 43-40.
“I felt like that started the momentum a little bit,” Hochstetler said. “But
we couldn’t keep it.”

Rose hit a huge shot when she
swished a 12-foot jumper from the left
side with 3 minutes left to push the
lead back to five.
After the teams traded baskets,
Renae Meyer, who finished with 10
points and 11 rebounds, grabbed a
missed Hiland shot and was fouled and
made both free throws for a 49-42 lead
with 1:43 remaining.
The Hawks missed shots sandwiched around a turnover and Rose
was fouled with just under a minute on
the clock. She drilled both shots and
the lead was 51-42.
Rose then rebounded another miss
by Hiland and was fouled, again making both once more to give Fort Loramie a 53-42 lead with 38.5 seconds
left that put a capper on it.
Fort Loramie, at the state tournament for the third time in four
years, opened the game by scoring
the first six points and maintained
the upper hand throughout a de-

fensive-oriented first half.
The Redskins led 14-9 after a quarter and 22-19 at the break. Hiland had
eight turnovers in the first 10 minutes
but just two over the last 6 minutes of
the half.
For a change, the village of Fort
Loramie had something to remember
instead of another ignominious defeat
to forget.
“It was always a goal to win a state
title,” Siegel said. “It’s been a dream for
every team that I’ve helped coach. To
finally get it, it’s for the whole community. It’s for every girl who ever put that
Loramie jersey on, for every girl who
wanted to win a state title and put that
banner on the wall. That’s what this
means to me today.”
NOTES: Darian Rose, who led Fort
Loramie to the school’s first state
championship in its seventh trip to the
final four, is the most outstanding player on The Associated Press Division IV
all-tournament team.

nings. Levi Russell took the losing
decision after allowing three hits,
one walk and two runs (zero earned)
over three frames.
Somerville and Campbell each had
three hits to pace PPHS, while Levi
Russell had the other safety. Campbell drove in the team’s only RBI,

while Somerville led the guests with
two runs scored.
Null and Mooney led SHS with
two hits each, followed by Sricklen,
Lauchart and Jacob Fisher with a
safety apiece. Null drove in a gamehigh two RBIs and Landis scored
twice in the triumph.

Opener
From Page B1
Null worked the final 2.2 innings
of relief and struck out seven while
picking up the save.
Austen Toler started for PPHS and
came away with a no-decision after
allowing four hits, one walk and four
runs (three earned) over three in-

From Page B1
honor for the Marauders.
MHS finished in a tie for
fourth place with Wellston
at 4-6 overall in conference.
Vinton County shared
the league title with Athens with matching 8-2
marks in league, but the
Vikings swept the special
awards. Matt Combs was
named coach of the year,
while senior Jordan Kidd
was chosen as the Ohio Division’s MVP.
Repeat winners from
a year ago include Kidd,
Joe Burrow of Athens and
Bryce Owings of Vinton
County.
2012-13 All-TVC Ohio
Boys Team
ATHENS (8-2): Joe Burrow, Soph; Ibi Wilson, Fr;
Zacciah Saltzman, Fr.
VINTON COUNTY (82): Jordan Kidd, Sr; L.B.
Remy, Sr; Bryce Owings,
Sr.
NELSONVILLE-YORK
(6-4): Jacob Blake, Sr;
Clint Handa, Sr.
MEIGS (4-6): Treay
McKinney, Sr.
WELLSTON (4-6): Toriano Smith, Sr.
ALEXANDER (0-10):

Braden Jones, Sr.
Most Valuable Player:
Jordan Kidd, Vinton County.
Coach of the Year: Matt
Combs, Vinton County.
2012-13 All-TVC Hocking
Boys Team
FEDERAL HOCKING
(13-3): Shawn Parsons, Sr;
Max Carney, Sr; Delbert
Crum, Jr.
BELPRE (12-4): Dakota
Hoffman, Sr; Nick Therriault, Jr.
MILLER (9-7): Skylar
Hook, Sr; Elijah Rader, So.
SOUTHERN (8-8): Tristen Wolfe, So; Adam Pape,
Sr.
TRIMBLE (8-8): Jacob
Kish, Jr; Konner Standley,
Jr.
EASTERN (7-9): Max
Carnahan, Sr.
WAHAMA (7-9): Hunter Bradley, Jr.
SOUTH GALLIA (4-12):
Brayden Greer, So.
WATERFORD (4-12):
Austin Shriver, Sr.
Co-Most Valuable Players: Max Carnahan (Eastern) and Dakota Hoffman
(Belpre).
Coach of the Year: Howie
Caldwell, Federal Hocking.

Girls
From Page B1
scoring (18.1) and assists
(5.0) per game. Burdette
shared the award with
Waterford senior Brooke
Drayer just last season.
Juniors Jordan Parker
and Erin Swatzel were
also chosen to the team
for EHS, with Parker also
being a repeat selection to
the all-league team. It is
the first All-TVC honor for
Swatzel in basketball.
South Gallia (12-4) finished third in the league
standings and had two selections in seniors Meghan
Caldwell and Ellie Bostic.
Caldwell is a repeat choice

for the TVC Hocking team,
while Bostic earned her
first all-league selection in
hoops.
Southern finished seventh overall with a 4-12
mark and had one choice
in sophomore Celestia
Hendrix. Wahama tied
with Miller for eighth place
with a 2-14 record and also
had one selection in junior
Sierra Carmichael.
Other repeat selections
include Brooke Drayer and
Chelsey Paxton of Waterford, as well as Ali Bray of
Miller.
Meigs had just one representative on the TVC

Ohio Division squad, as
junior Brittany Krautter
earned her first selection
for the sixth place Lady
Marauders (0-10).
Dominique Doseck of
Athens was named MVP,
while Athens coach Wayne
Horsley came away with
coach of the year honors
after the Lady Bulldogs
went unbeaten in TVC
Ohio competition.
Other repeat selections
include Caitlyn Owings
of Vinton County, Shelby
True of Nelsonville-York,
Jordan Davis of Wellston
and Kaylee Koker of Alexander. Cheyenne Singer

of Fed Hock also won allleague honors as a freshman.
2012-13 All-TVC Ohio
Girls Team
ATHENS (10-0): Dominique Doseck, So; Emma
Stanley, Sr; Olivia Harris,
So.
VINTON COUNTY (82): Caitlyn Owings, Sr;
Emily Zinn, Sr.
NELSONVILLE-YORK
(6-4): Madison Davis, So;
Shelby True, Sr.
WELLSTON (4-6): Jordan Davis, Sr.
ALEXANDER
(2-8):
Kaylee Koker, Sr.

MEIGS (0-10): Brittany
Krautter, Jr.
Most Valuable Player:
Dominique Doseck, Athens.
Coach of the Year:
Wayne Horsley, Athens
2012-13 All-TVC
Hocking Girls Team
EASTERN (15-1): Jenna
Burdette, Jr; Jordan Parker, Jr; Erin Swatzel, Jr.
WATERFORD (15-1):
Brooke Drayer, Sr; Chelsey
Paxton, Sr; Taylor Hilverding, So.
SOUTH GALLIA (124): Meghan Caldwell, Sr;
Ellie Bostic, Sr.

BELPRE (9-7): Sierra Barker, So; Katelyn
Hughes, Fr.
TRIMBLE (7-9): Demi
Moore, Sr; Tia Altier, So.
FEDERAL HOCKING
(6-10): Cheyenne Singer,
Jr.
SOUTHERN (4-12): Celestia Hendrix, Jr.
MILLER (2-14): Ali
Bray, Jr.
WAHAMA (2-14): Sierra Carmichael, Jr.
Co-Most Valuable Players: Jenna Burdette, Eastern.
Coach of the Year: John
Burdette (Eastern) and
Jerry Close (Waterford).

60401484

�Tuesday, March 19, 2013

60401897

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE

for 12 month

s

1-888-721-0871
Fix Your
Computer Now!

888-781-3386

25

NOTICE OF FIRST PUBLIC
HEARING
The Ohio Development Services Agency has notified
Meigs County of the availability of funding for the 2013 CDBG Formula Allocation Program under the Community
Development Block Grant (CDBG) Small Cities Program, a
federally funded program administered by the State.
Meigs County is eligible for
CDBG Formula Allocation
funding in the estimated
amount of $116,000 providing
the county meets applicable
requirements.
The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first of two
public hearing at the Meigs
County Courthouse
(Courtroom), Second Street
Pomeroy, OH on Friday April
5, 2013 at 4:30 P.M., for the
purpose of providing citizens
and public officials with the
pertinent information about the
2013 CDBG Formula Program
This program can fund a broad
range of activities, including:
economic development
projects, street improvements,
water supply, drainage and
sanitary sewer improvements,
park acquisition and improvements, demolition of unsafe
structures, and rehabilitation of
neighborhood facilities. The
activities must be designed to
primarily benefit low to moderate income persons, aid in the
prevention of sum and blight,
or meet an urgent need in the
community.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on April 5,
2013, to make suggestions
and to provide public input on
various activities which may be
undertaken in these programs.
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailed or
taped material, assistive listening device, other, etc. ) due to
disability, please contact Gloria Kloes, Clerk, prior to April 5,
2013 at 740-992-2895 in order
to ensure that your needs will
be accommodated. The Meigs
County Courthouse is handicapped accessible Written
comments will be accepted until 4:00 P.M., April 5, 2013 and
may be mailed
to the Meigs
LEGALS
County Commissioners, Meigs
County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
OH 45769.
Tim Ihle, President, Meigs
County Commissioners.
3/19 3/22

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a
public hearing will be held at
10:00 am, April 3, 2013 in the
3rd floor conference room at
the Meigs Co. DJFS. 175 Race
St. Middleport, Ohio 45760 to
receive public comment on the
County’s Comprehensive Social Services Plan which is required by Title XX of the Social Security Act.
The plan will encompass funding reimbursement for the eligible Title XX Programs for the
period of October 1, 2013September 30, 2014 and October 1, 2014- September 30,
2015.
The hearing location is handicap accessible and all providers of Title XX eligible services are urged to attend to
provide oral testimony or have
written testimony submitted into the record of proceedings
Chris Shank, MCDJFS
3/19

LEGALS
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of
Forestry, 345 Allen Avenue,
Chillicothe, OH, 45601 offers
for sale an estimated 407,186
board feet International ¼” rule
of hardwood sawtimber and
947 tons of hardwood and softwood pulpwood on 109 acres
in compartment A9 of Shade
River State Forest, Olive
Township, Meigs County,
Ohio. The bid opening shall be
Wednesday, April 10, 2013 at
3:00 pm in Chillicothe. For further information and timber inspection, contact the ODNR
Division of Forestry, Hocking
State Forest, 19275 SR 278,
Rockbridge, OH, 43149, (740)
385-4402.
3/19 3/20

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed bids will be received by
the Treasurer, Southern Local
Schools, 920 Elm St., Racine,
Ohio 45771, until 1:30 pm local time on March 28th, 2013,
for Loose Furnishings in accordance with Drawings &amp;
Specifications prepared by
SHP Leading Design. Bids will
be opened and read immediately after receipt. The construction manager is Hill International. Submit all questions
to Brice Clawson at briceclawson@hillintl.com or by fax:
440-550-4222.
This notice is posted on the
District’s website at
http://www.southernlocalmeigs.
org/
Rentals
A pre-bid meeting is scheduled for 1:30PM local time
March 19th, 2013 at the Southern Local School project site in
the Hill International job trailer,
920 Elm St, Racine, Ohio
45771.
Contract Documents may be
obtained from Key Blue Prints,
195 East Livingston Ave.,
Columbus, OH (614-228-3285)
for a refundable deposit of
$25/set (check payable to
Southern Local Schools). Shipping costs are separate and
the bidder’s responsibility.
The Contract Documents may
be reviewed without charge
during business hours at Builders Exchange Plan Rooms in
Valley View, Cincinnati &amp;
Dayton and FW Dodge Plan
Rooms in Cincinnati, Columbus &amp; Dayton.
All bids must be accompanied
by a Bid Guaranty in the form
of either a Bid Guaranty and
Contract Bond for the full
amount of the bid (including all
added alternates) or a certified
check, cashier’s check, or an
irrevocable letter of credit in an
amount equal to 10% of the bid
(including all added
alternates), as described in the
Instructions to Bidders.
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPEMedical /CIFIED
HealthIN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLIES TO THIS PROJECT.
COPIES OF SECTION
153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
No Bidder may withdraw its bid
within 60 days after the bid
opening. The District reserves
the right to waive irregularities
in bids, to reject any or all bids,
and to conduct such investigation as necessary to determine the responsibility of a bidder.
3/12 3/19

CROSS POINTE APTS

60402019

NOTICE OF FIRST PUBLIC
HEARING
The Ohio Development Services Agency has notified
Meigs County of the availability of funding for the 2013 CDBG Formula Allocation Program under the Community
Development Block Grant (CDBG) Small Cities Program, a
federally funded program administered by the State.
Meigs County is eligible for
CDBG Formula Allocation
funding in the estimated
amount of $116,000 providing
the county meets applicable
requirements.
The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first of two
public hearing at the Meigs
County Courthouse
(Courtroom), Second Street
Pomeroy, OH on Friday April
5, 2013 at 4:30 P.M., for the
purpose of providing citizens
and public officials with the
pertinent information about the
2013 CDBG Formula Program
This program can fund a broad
range of activities, including:
economic development
projects, street improvements,
water supply, drainage and
sanitary sewer improvements,
park acquisition and improvements, demolition of unsafe
structures, LEGALS
and rehabilitation of
neighborhood facilities. The
activities must be designed to
primarily benefit low to moderate income persons, aid in the
prevention of sum and blight,
or meet an urgent need in the
community.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on April 5,
2013, to make suggestions
and to provide public input on
various activities which may be
undertaken in these programs.
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailed or
taped material, assistive listening device, other, etc. ) due to
disability, please contact Gloria Kloes, Clerk, prior to April 5,
2013 at 740-992-2895 in order
to ensure that your needs will
be accommodated. The Meigs
County Courthouse is handicapped accessible Written
comments will be accepted until 4:00 P.M., April 5, 2013 and
may be mailed to the Meigs
County Commissioners, Meigs
County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
OH 45769.
Tim Ihle, President, Meigs
County Commissioners.
3/19 3/22

NOTICE OF FIRST PUBLIC
HEARING
The Ohio Development Services Agency has notified
Meigs County of the availability of funding for the 2013 CDBG Formula Allocation Program under the Community
Development Block Grant (CDBG) Small Cities
Program, a
LEGALS
Professional Services
federally funded program administered by the State.
Meigs County is eligible for
Stanley
CDBG Formula Allocation
Tree Trimming
funding in the estimated
&amp; Removal
amount of $116,000 providing
the county meets applicable
• Prompt and Quality Work
requirements.
• Reasonable Rates
The Meigs County Commis• Insured • Experienced
sioners will hold the first of two
• References Available
public hearing at the Meigs
Gary Stanley
County Courthouse
740-591-8044
(Courtroom), Second Street
Pomeroy, OH on Friday April
Please leave a message
5, 2013 at 4:30 P.M., for the
purpose of providing citizens
LEGALS
and public officials with the
pertinent information about the
NOTICE OF FIRST PUBLIC
2013 CDBG Formula Program
HEARING
This program can fund a broad
The Ohio Development Serrange of activities, including:
vices Agency has notified
economic development
Meigs County of the availabilprojects, street improvements,
ity of funding for the 2013 CDwater supply, drainage and
BG Formula Allocation Prosanitary sewer improvements,
gram under the Community
Development Block Grant (CD- park acquisition and improvements, demolition of unsafe
BG) Small Cities Program, a
structures, and rehabilitation of
federally funded program adneighborhood facilities. The
ministered by the State.
activities must be designed to
Meigs County is eligible for
primarilyMiscellaneous
benefit low to moderCDBG Formula Allocation
ate income persons, aid in the
funding in the estimated
prevention of sum and blight,
amount of $116,000 providing
or meet an urgent need in the
the county meets applicable
community.
requirements.
Citizens are encouraged to atThe Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first of two tend this meeting on April 5,
2013, to make suggestions
public hearing at the Meigs
and to provide public input on
County Courthouse
various activities which may be
(Courtroom), Second Street
undertaken in these programs.
Pomeroy,
OH
onStill
Friday
April Too
Are
You
Paying
If aMuch
participant will need auxili5, 2013 at 4:30 P.M., for the
Make the Switch to Dish
For
Your
Medications?
ary aids (interpreter, brailed or
purpose of providing citizens
Today and Save up to 50%
You
can
save
up
to
90%
when
you
fill
your
taped
material,
assistive
listenand public officials with the
prescriptions about
at our the
Canadian
ingand
device, other, etc. ) due to
pertinent information
International Pharmacy Service.
disability, please contact Glor2013 CDBG
Formula Program
e
r Pric
Kloes,
ThisOuprogram
can fund
a broad
Get
An Extraia$10
Off Clerk, prior to AprilPr5,
omotional
Celecoxib*
PREMIUM MOVIE
2013On
at 740-992-2895 in order
Packages
range of
activities, including:
&amp; Free Shipping
stwill
ar
CHANNELS*
tin
g at only ...
$58.00
to
ensure
that
your
needs
Your
1st
Order!
economic development
Call the number below
save an
be and
accommodated.
The Meigs
Generic
equivalent
projects,
street
improvements,
TM
additional $10 plus get free shipping
.
of Celebrexdrainage
County
Courthouse is handiwater supply,
andﬁrst prescription
on your
order with
Generic price for
capped
accessible Written
Canada Drug Center.
Expires March
sanitary 200mg
sewer
x 100improvements,
31, 2013. Oﬀer is valid
for prescription will be accepted uncomments
mo.
park acquisition and improveorders
only
and
can
not
be
used
in
compared to
4:00
P.M.,
April 5, 2013 and
ments, demolition
of unsafe
conjunction with anytil
other
oﬀers.
TM
Celebrex and
$437.58
may be mailed to the Meigs
structures,
rehabilitation
of 1-800-341-2398
Order Now!
For 3 months.
Typical US brandfacilities.
price
UseThe
code 10FREECounty
to receiveCommissioners, Meigs
neighborhood
for 200mg x 100
this special offer. County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
activities must be designed
to
Call Now and Ask How!
Pleasebenefit
note that welow
do notto
carry
controlled substances
a valid
OHand
45769.
primarily
moderprescription is required for all prescription medication orders.
Tim Ihle, President, Meigs
ate income persons, aid in the
Toll-free:
1-800-341-2398
County Commissioners.
preventionCall
of sum
and blight,
Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0113
Use of these services is subject to the Terms of
Use and3/22
3/19
*Oﬀer subject to change based on premium channel availablity
or meet an
urgentpolicies
need
in the
accompanying
at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
community.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on April 5,
2013, to make suggestions
and to provide public input on
various activities which may be
We’ll Repair Your Computer
undertaken in these programs.
Through The Internet!
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailed or
Solutions For:
taped material, assistive listenSlow Computers • E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
Over $10,000
credit
card
ing device,
other,inetc.
) due
to bills?
Spyware &amp; Viruses • Bad Internet Connections
Can’t make
the
minimum
payments?
disability,
please
contact
Gloria Kloes, Clerk, prior to April 5,
Affordable Rates
WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY
2013 at✔ 740-992-2895
in order
For Home
✔ WE
CANyour
SAVE YOU
THOUSANDS
to ensure
that
needs
will OF DOLLARS
✔ WE CAN HELP YOU
BANKRUPTCY
be accommodated.
TheAVOID
Meigs
&amp; Business
County Courthouse is handiNot a high-priced consolidation loan or one of those
Call Now For Immediate Help
capped
accessible
Written
consumer credit
counseling programs
comments
will be accepted
un-RELIEF
CREDIT
CARD
til 4:00 P.M.,
AprilFREE
5, 2013
and
for your
consultation
CALL
may be mailed to the Meigs
877-465-0321
Service
00 Off
$
County
Commissioners,
Meigs
We’re here to help you Monday - Friday from 9am-9pm EST
Mention Code: MB
Not available
in all states
County Courthouse,
Pomeroy,
OH 45769.
Tim Ihle, President, Meigs
County Commissioners.
3/19 3/22

BURIED
in CREDIT
CARDDEBT?

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Are you interested in becoming
part of the Holzer Team?

Holzer Home Health is looking for
individuals to fill the following positions:

Physical Therapist
Occupational Therapist

ARE YOU A DIABETIC?
Your insurance may pay for your diabetic
supplies with li�le to no cost to you.

Must be licensed in the State of Ohio

Call NOW to make sure
you are ge�ing
the best deal on your
Diabetic Supplies!
����YOU�MAY�QUALIFY�FOR�
• A glucose meter upgrade
• Free prescription delivery
• Great deals on products
&amp; services
• And FREE gi�s

AMERICA’S�DIABETIC�

SAVINGS�CLUB
CALL�NOW!�����-���-����

monitoring

starting aro

und

If interested, please apply online at:
www.holzer.org

per week

*with $99 customer
lation e and
purchase of alarm instal
monitoring charg
services.

Call Today, Protect Tomorrow!

1-888-718-8142

Mon-Fri 8am - 11pm • Sat 9am - 8pm • Sun 10am - 6pm EST

Questions?
740.446.5105
ADA/EOE

60402129

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed bids will be received by
the Treasurer, Southern Local
Schools, 920 Elm St., Racine,
Ohio 45771, until 1:30 pm local time on March 28th, 2013,
for Loose Furnishings in accordance with Drawings &amp;
Specifications prepared by
SHP Leading Design. Bids will
be opened and read immediately after receipt. The construction manager is Hill International. Submit all questions
to Brice Clawson at briceclawson@hillintl.com or by fax:
440-550-4222.
This notice is posted on the
District’s website
at
LEGALS
http://www.southernlocalmeigs.
org/
A pre-bid meeting is scheduled for 1:30PM local time
March 19th, 2013 at the Southern Local School project site in
the Hill International job trailer,
920 Elm St, Racine, Ohio
45771.
Contract Documents may be
obtained from Key Blue Prints,
195 East Livingston Ave.,
Columbus, OH (614-228-3285)
for a refundable deposit of
$25/set (check payable to
Southern Local Schools). Shipping costs are separate and
the bidder’s responsibility.
The Contract Documents may
be reviewed without charge
during business hours at Builders Exchange Plan Rooms in
Valley View, Cincinnati &amp;
Dayton and FW Dodge Plan
Rooms in Cincinnati, Columbus &amp; Dayton.
All bids must be accompanied
by a Bid Guaranty in the form
of either a Bid Guaranty and
Contract Bond for the full
amount of the bid (including all
added alternates) or a certified
check, cashier’s check, or an
irrevocable letter of credit in an
amount equal to 10% of the bid
(including all added
alternates), as described in the
Instructions to Bidders.
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLIES TO THIS PROJECT.
COPIES OF SECTION
153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
No Bidder may withdraw its bid
within 60 days after the bid
opening. The District reserves
the right to waive irregularities
in bids, to reject any or all bids,
and to conduct such investigation as necessary to determine the responsibility of a bidder.
3/12 3/19
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Lost &amp; Found
LOST: Wedding Ring in or
around Wal-Mart. 3/13/13. 740
-367-7591 or 740-645-1318
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Yard Sale
Rummage Sale @ Rodney
Community Center - Fundraiser to support Ashlee Huffman Student Ambassador for
People to People Friday March
22nd 8am to 6pm &amp; Saturday
March 23rd 8am to 4pm
SERVICES
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
OH
Evans
Jackson,
800-537-9528

Repairs
Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724

�Tuesday, March 19, 2013

OVP Sports Briefs
Point Pleasant youth
softball signups
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The Point Pleasant girls softball league
will hold signups for girls
ages 4-to-15 Thursday
March 21st at the PPHS
Commons from 6 p.m. to 8
p.m. There will be a registration fee.
Racine co-ed softball
tournament
RACINE, Ohio — There
will be a co-ed softball
tournament at Star Mill
Park on Saturday, March
30, to help raise money for
uniforms, equipment and
tournament entry fees for
the Racine Little League
team. There is an registration fee for each team,
and details are available by
contacting Bill Harmon at
(740) 949-3114.
Mason Recreation
summer ball signups
MASON, W.Va. — The
Mason Recreation Foundation will be hold 2013
summer ball signups on
three separate Saturdays
at the Hair Shop. Signups
will run from 11 a.m. until

1 p.m. on Saturday, March
23, and there is a signup
fee for both individuals
and families. If you were released by Mason to play for
another team in 2012, you
are still required to sign up
in Mason until player numbers are evaluated and determined for this year. For
more information, contact
Rick Kearns at (304) 8822312.
GAHS Hall of Fame
Scholarship
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy Hall
of Fame Scholarship applications for graduation
seniors are available from
Renee Barnes at Gallia
Academy High School. Applications must be submitted by May 1st for consideration.
Mason County Little
League signups
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Baseball and softball signups will be held at
the Mason County Youth
Center on Friday March
15th form 6-to-8 p.m. and
Saturday, March 23, at the
ball field concessions for

Money To Lend

Medical / Health

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)

Dental Asst, Family Healthcare, Inc, Pomeroy, FT position avail, Competitive salary,
great working environment.
Send resume to: Family
Healthcare, Inc, C/O Mike Russell, 41865 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, fax 740992-0264. EOE No phone calls
please

EMPLOYMENT

Business &amp; Trade School

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Local Buisness Hiring Delivery
Truck Driver / Warehouse
worker Valid Drivers license Call for Appt. at 740-446-4109
Local Home Medical Equipment Co. now hiring
Delivery/Maintenance Technician. If interested send resume to 740-441-1648
Help Wanted General
Adm. Assistant
Must Have Accounting-quickbooks-computer experienceApply in person-French City
Homes. 269 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh.
New Haven American Legion
Post 140 looking for Club Manager. Please pick up applications at the New Haven American Legion after 4pm.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B4

www.mydailysentinel.com

EDUCATION

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

1-to-4 p.m. There will be
a late registration fee for
anyone signing up after
March 23.
Middleport Softball
Tournament
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
— The Middleport Youth
League will be holding a
co-ed softball tournament
on Saturday March 23rd
as a fund raiser. There
must be five men and five
women per team and the
tournament format will be
determined by the amount
of teams. For additional
information contact Dave
Boyd at 740-590-0438.
SGHS alumni basketball
game
MERCERVILLE, Ohio
— The South Gallia Student Council is sponsoring an Alumni Basketball
Game that will be held at
6 p.m. Saturday, March
23, at South Gallia High
School. Graduates from
Hannan Trace, Southwestern and South Gallia are
invited to participate. To
register, please call Linda
Donohue (740) 256-1054
at SGHS.

Apartments/Townhouses
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Middleport, OH, 1 &amp; 2 BR apts,
no pets, dep &amp; ref.
740-992-0165
Nice 1 BR unfurnished apartment. Refrig. &amp; new range
provided. Water, sewage &amp;
garbage paid. Deposit required. Call 740-709-0072

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

Nice clean efficiency. No
Smoking, References, Deposit,
No Pets 304-675-5162

REAL ESTATE SALES

Pleasant Valley Apartments is
now taking applications for 2,
3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD Subsidized Apartments. Applications
are taken Monday through
Thursday 9:00 am-1:00pm. Office is located at 1151 Evergreen Drive, Point Pleasant,
WV. (304) 675-5806.

Houses For Sale
3BR, 2BA, Family Room, with
fireplace, new flooring,
$109,000. Tara Estates, Addison OH 740-339-3224
For Sale By Owner: Beautiful
Brick cape cod house located
on 4.06 acres at 115 Harrisburg Rd. Price $259,000.00
Serious Inquiries ONLY Call
740-245-5009

FOR SALE: Properties, several locations, call for information. 740-992-5097
House For Sale
921 13th St. Huntington, WV
Needs TLC Assessed Price
$51,400.00 Reduced
$29,500.00 Call 304-295-9090

2 Ohio football players
convicted of raping girl
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio (AP) — Two
members of Steubenville’s celebrated high
school football team were found guilty
Sunday of raping a drunken 16-year-old
girl, and Ohio’s attorney general warned
the case isn’t over, saying he is investigating whether coaches, parents and other
students broke the law, too.
Trent Mays, 17, and Ma’Lik Richmond,
16, were sentenced to at least a year in
juvenile prison in a case that has rocked
this Rust Belt city of 18,000 and led to allegations of a cover-up to protect the Steubenville High team, which has won nine
state championships. Mays was ordered to
serve an additional year for photographing the underage girl naked.
They can be held until they turn 21.
The two broke down in tears after a Juvenile Court judge delivered his verdict.
They later apologized to the victim and
the community, Richmond struggling to
speak through
his sobs.
FOR RENT
60'“My
X 100'
bldg, w/atlifesteel
is over,”
he said as he collapsed
tached
25' x 60'
dock.
in
the arms
of covered
his lawyer.
On each end, there is a 3' walk
The
crime,
which
took place after a
-in door &amp; a 14' x 16' overhead
party
last
summer,
door. Lg
area
avail for shocked
outside many in Steustorage if because
needed. The
benville
of inside
the seeming callousha a reception/office area
ness
with
which
other
took out
w/BR, tool room, employee students
BR
their
cellphones
to record
&amp; 2 other
rooms which
could the attack and
be used asabout
a lunchitroom
or In fact, the case
gossiped
online.
parts room.
Above
all
the
came
to
light
via
a
barrage
of morning-afrooms, is a loft storage area.
ter
messages,
media posts and
Thetext
balance
of bldg issocial
open for
manufacturing
providing
online
photosorand
video.services. The bldg is located 7
miles from I77 exit 146 &amp; 3
miles from Rt 33 on Ohio State
Rt 124. The
drive time to CharCommercial
leston, WV, Gallipolis, OH &amp;
Athens, OH areas is 45 mins.
Lease price is $2500 mo, but I
am willing to discuss special
considerations for new startups. Phone 888-399-6999 &amp;
leave a message.
Houses For Rent
Beautiful, up to date 3 BR/2
bath Approx.2200 sq ft. Near
Holzer $1,000.00 a mo.
$1000.00 sec. dep. Call 740645-2192
Rent or Sale Very nice 3BR,
2BA, FR, w/Fireplace, Land
Contract a possibility. Located
in Vinton. Beautiful Country
Siting. Sits on 2.1 aces. 740441-6658 or 740-208-9523
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY
ANIMALS
Pets

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.
Commercial

FOUND: Chihuahua type looking dog, tan, w/white markings,
near Silver Bridge area 304773-5438
To GIVEAWAY to a Good
Home a Blue Tip Siamese
male cat very friendly also a
Yellow and white male cat both
are approx. 1 year old neither
one is neutered. Call 379-2281
or 379-2727

“Many of the things we learned during
this trial that our children were saying
and doing were profane, were ugly,” Judge
Thomas Lipps said.
Immediately after the verdict, Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said he will
convene a grand jury next month to investigate whether anyone else should be
charged. Noting that 16 people refused to
talk, many of them underage, DeWine said
possible offenses to be investigated include
failure to report a crime.
“This community desperately needs to
have this behind them, but this community
also desperately needs to know justice was
done and that no stone was left unturned,”
he said.
Among those who have been interviewed
are the owners of one of the houses where
parties were held that night, the high
school principal, and the football team’s 27
coaches, many of them volunteers.
Text messages introduced at the trial
suggested the head coach was aware of
the rape allegation early on. DeWine said
coaches are among officials required by
state law to report child abuse. The coach
and the school district have repeatedly declined to comment.
Mays and Richmond were charged with
penetrating the West Virginia girl with
their fingers, first in the back seat of a moving car after a mostly underage drinking
party on Aug. 11, and then in the basement
of a house.

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

AAG
Ever Consider a Reverse Mortgage? At least 62 years old?
Stay in your home &amp; increase
cash flow! Safe &amp; Effective!
Call Now for your FREE DVD!
Call Now 866-935-7730
ACCELLER CLASSIFIED
SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-Digital Phone. Packages start at
$89.99/mo (for 12 months.)
Options from ALL major service providers. Call Acceller
today to learn more!
CALL 1-866-636-5984
CREDIT CARD DEBT
Buried in Credit Card Debt?
Over $10,000? We can get you
out of debt quickly and save
you thousands of dollars! Call
CREDIT CARD RELIEF for
your free consultation
1-888-838-6679
DISH NETWORK.
Starting at $19.99/month (for
12 mos.) &amp; High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month
(where available.) SAVE! Ask
about SAME DAY Installation!
CALL Now! 1-888-476-0098

HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK
OR BOAT TO HERITAGE
FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day
Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free
Towing, All Paperwork Taken
Care Of. 888-740-6292

Miscellaneous
MEDICAL GUARDIAN
Medical Alert for Seniors-24/7
monitoring. FREE Equipment.
FREE Shipping. Nationwide
Service $29.95/Month CALL
Medical Guardian Today
877-356-1913
MY COMPUTER WORKS
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections-FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help.
1-877-617-7822
Want To Buy
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

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Concrete &amp; Masonry
Wanted Concrete Finishers Experience and Valid Drivers
license along with drug testing required . 740-446-0410
Manufactured Homes
Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127
Miscellaneous

BASEMENT WATERPROOFFOR RENT
ING. Unconditional Lifetime
60' X 100' steel bldg, w/atGuarantee. Local references.
tached 25' x 60' covered dock.
HIGH
SPEED
INTERNET
Established in 1975. Call
On each end, there is a 3' walk
REAL
ESTATE
RENTALS
Highspeed
Internet
EVERYRoom Attendants wanted at
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
-in door &amp; a 14' x 16' overhead
Want To Buy
WHERE
By
Satellite!
The Gallipolis Quality Inn, No
Basement Waterproofing
door. Lg area avail for outside
Speeds up to 12mbps! (200x
Experience needed. Apply in
Oiler's Towing now buying
storage if needed. The inside
Apartments/Townhouses
faster
than
dial-up.)
person. No Phone Calls
Junk Cars Paying $1.00 to
RELIGION PAGE
ha a reception/office area
Starting at $49.95/mo. CALL
Please
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp; w/BR, tool room, employee BR $700.00 388-0011 or 441NOW
&amp;
GO
FAST!
houses,
No
p e t s , &amp; 2 other rooms which could
7870
1-877-358-7040
740-992-2218
be used as a lunch room or
OBITUARIES
The Village Of Syracuse is
parts
room.
Above
all
the
AGRICULTURE
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
now Accepting Applications for $400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
rooms, is a loft storage area.
HYDRAFLEXIN
Head Lifeguard and
SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY
The balance of bldg is open for
Attention Joint &amp; Muscle Pain
740-418-7504 or 740-988Lifeguard's, Applications can
manufacturing or providing serSufferers: Clinically proven all6130
AUTOMOTIVE
be picked up in the Clerks Ofvices. The bldg is located 7
natural supplement helps refice Mon-Fri 8-4 Applicant's
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR miles from I77 exit 146 &amp; 3
duce pain and enhance mobil- RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
must be 16 years of age or
townhouse apartments, also miles from Rt 33 on Ohio State
ity. Call 888-602-7109
AUTOMOTIVE
older to apply, Deadline for Ap- renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call Rt 124. The drive time to Charto try Hydraflexin
ANNOUCEMENTS
AFTER
MARKET
plications is April 1,2013.
441-1111.
RISK-FREE for 90 days.
leston, WV, Gallipolis, OH &amp;
Athens, OH areas is 45 mins.
Lease price is $2500 mo,Entertainment
but I
am willing to discuss special
TUESDAY PRIMETIME
TUESDAY, MARCH 19
considerations for new startups. Phone 888-399-6999 &amp;
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8
PM
8:30
9
PM
9:30
10
PM
10:30
11 PM
11:30
leave a message.
WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Off Their
The New
WSAZ News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
Off Their
Go On
Smash "Musical Chairs"
3
(WSAZ)
News
Fortune
Rockers
Rockers
Normal
(N)
Tonight
Show (N)
Jeopardy!
Off Their
Go On
Smash "Musical Chairs"
WTAP News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Off Their
The New
WTAP News (:35) Tonight
4
(WTAP)
at Six
News
Fortune
Rockers
Rockers
Normal
(N)
at 11
Show (N)
ABC6 News ABC World Entertainm- Access
Dancing With the Stars
Body of Proof "Eye for an ABC 6 News (:35) Jimmy
Splash (P) (N)
6
(WSYX)
News
"Exclusive First Look" (N) Eye" (N)
at 11 p.m.
Kimmel (N)
ent Tonight Hollywood
Ohio
Is It Me/ My Hormone The basic science Female Brain Dr. Amen shows tips on
Ohio
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
Three Steps/
7 (WOUB) Basketball
Business
of how hormones affect our bodies.
healing the female brain.
Basketball
Health
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm- Splash (P) (N)
Dancing With the Stars
Body of Proof "Eye for an Eyewitness (:35) Jimmy
8
(WCHS)
News at 6
News
"Exclusive First Look" (N) Eye" (N)
News 11
Kimmel (N)
ent Tonight
NCIS "Seek" (N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
NCIS: Los Angeles "Red: Golden Boy "Vicious
10TV News (:35) David
10 (WBNS) HD
News
Fortune
Part One" 1/2 (N)
Cycle" (N)
HD at 11
Letterman
The Big
New Girl (N) The Mindy
Eyewitness News
The
Two and a
Two and a
The Big
Hell's Kitchen "19 Chefs
Ray "Frank's
11 (WVAH) Bang Theory Half Men
Half Men
Bang Theory Compete" (N)
Project (N)
Simpsons
Tribute"
BBC News
Time Team See an expedition to Jamestown, where the Frontline "Inside Japan's
Nightly
Legislature PBS NewsHour
Legislature
12 (WPBY) America
Today
British planted the seeds for the United States.
Nuclear Meltdown"
Business
Today
News 13 at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
NCIS: Los Angeles "Red: Golden Boy "Vicious
13 News
(:35) David
NCIS "Seek" (N)
13 (WOWK) 6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition
Part One" 1/2 (N)
Cycle" (N)
Letterman
Christine
Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother WGN News at Nine
Funniest Home Videos
18 (WGN) Christine
B.Jacket Pre NHL Hockey Nashville Predators vs. Columbus Blue Jackets (L)
Post-game Reds Live
Cavaliers
WPT Poker
24 (FXSP) Cavaliers
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
NCAA Basketball NIT Tournament First Round (L)
NCAA Basketball NIT Tournament First Round (L)
SportsCent.
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N) NCAA Basketball NIT Tournament First Round (L)
NCAA Basketball NIT Tournament First Round (L)
NCAA Basketball
27 (LIFE) Dance Moms
Dance Moms
Dance Moms "The Apple of Her Eye" (N)
Preachers' Daughters (N) Army Wives
29
Liar "I'm Your Puppet"
Pretty Little Liars (N)
Twisted (P) (N)
Liar "A Dangerous Game" The 700 Club
(FAM) Pretty Little Liars
30 (SPIKE) (4:30) �� Transporter 3
Tenants
Tenants
Tenants
Tenants
Tenants
Tenants
Tenants
Urban
Tenants
Urban
31 (NICK) SpongeBob SpongeBob Drake
Drake
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
The Nanny The Nanny Friends
(:35) Friends
34
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Locum"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Bullseye"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Behave"
SVU "Merchandise"
(USA) Law &amp; Order: SVU "Bully" Law&amp;O.:SVU "Totem"
35
Seinfeld
Seinf. 2/2
Seinf. 1/2
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
Cougar T
BigBang
Conan
(TBS) Queens
37
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
(CNN) (5:00) The Situation Room OutFront
38
Castle "Linchpin"
Castle
Castle "Inventing the Girl" Castle "Fool Me Once"
Southland
(TNT) Castle "Pandora"
39 (AMC) (4:00) Kingdom of Heav... Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers A fellowship created to destroy a ring of power is fractured, putting the quest at risk.
Lord of the Rings: The ...
40 (DISC) Survival "Castaways"
Dual Survival
Dual Survival (N)
Invented the World (N)
Invented "Skyscrapers"
Invented "Cell Phones"
42
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
(A&amp;E) Storage
52 (ANPL) Tanked!
Wild West Alaska
Tanked!
Tanked: Unfiltered
Tanked! "Nuclear Family" Tanked!
57
Bad Girls Club
Bad Girls Club (N)
The Face (N)
Bad Girls /(:15) Bad Girls
Bad Girls Club
(OXY) Bad Girls Club
58
Charmed
Charmed
CSI "Under Suspicion"
CSI: Miami "Three-Way" CSI: Miami "Felony Flight" CSI: Miami "Nailed"
(WE)
60
(4:30) There's Somethin... E! News
Playing With Fire
�� Stick It ('06, Com) Missy Peregrym, Jeff Bridges.
C. Lately
E! News
(E!)
61
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Hot/ Cleve. Hot/ Cleve. Queens
(:35) Queens
(TVL) (:25) The Cosby Show
62 (NGEO) Apocalypse 101
Doomsday "Let Her Rip"
Wicked Tuna
Doomsday Preppers (N)
Apocalypse 101 (N)
Doomsday Preppers
64 (NBCSN) Crossover
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Washington Capitals vs. Pittsburgh Penguins (L)
NHL Live!
Crossover
Pro FB Talk Overtime
65 (SPEED) NASCAR Race Hub (N)
Pass Time
Pass Time
GearZ (N)
GearZ
Dreams To DreamsTo
Translog (N) The List (N) GearZ
GearZ
67 (HIST) Marvels "Truck Stops"
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Top Gear
Vikings "Dispossessed"
Ultimate Soldier
68 (BRAVO) Millionaire
Beverly Hills
A.Studio "Tina Fey" (N)
Millionaire
Millionaire (N)
Watch (N)
Millionaire
72
� I Can Do Bad All by Myself ('09, Com/Dra) Tyler Perry.
Husbands
Husbands
Wayans (N) Husbands
Wayans
(BET) 106 &amp; Park (N)
73 (HGTV) Income Property
House
House Hunt. Buy Sell "Zane and Marie" Income Property
House Hunt. House
Income Property
74 (SYFY) Face Off
Face Off
Face Off
Face Off (N)
Robot Combat League (N) Face Off
400 (HBO) (:10) Parade's End 3/5
(:15) The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel ('11, Com/Dra) Judi Dench.
Girls
Real Sports
Kings Point Movie
450 (MAX) Movie
Joyful Noise ('12, Com) Queen Latifah, Dolly Parton.
��� Rushmore Jason Schwartzman.
��� Bridesmaids ('11, Com) Kristen Wiig.
500 (SHOW) (4:30) Primary Colors
Family Band: The Cowsills Story
�� Our Idiot Brother Paul Rudd.
House Lies Californica. Shameless

�Tuesday, March 19, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
March 19, 2013:
This year you often swing from
being a recluse to a wildly creative
person. You spend a lot of time thinking about who you are and what you
want. Evaluate your experiences. If
you are single, you will express an
unusual interest in romance this year.
Others will respond in kind, and you
will have many potential suitors to
choose from. If you are attached, the
two of you will enter a new phase
in your relationship. Your bond will
strengthen as a result. CANCER
makes your imagination soar.
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’ll go from being efficient to reflective in no time. Those
around you might wonder what’s
going on. Your intentions will come
through as you seek a resolution. The
responsibility to take the lead will land
on you. Listen to feedback. Tonight:
Speak your mind.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHH You keep going back to
the same point as before. Understand
your limitations, and go forward with
an idea. Your mind is heading in a
new direction. Ask someone to pitch
in, if need be. Hopefully, he or she
will fill in where you are not strong.
Tonight: Hang out with friends.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Do what is most important
in the morning. You will find a solution
easily if you relax. What seems like
an inspiring idea might be far from it.
In fact, take your time checking it out.
If there is a suspicious element, pull
back. Tonight: Treat yourself to a new
item for your wardrobe.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Draw in more of what you
want. Listen to feedback from someone close to you. You know what
works, but weigh your options first.
Your ability to read between the lines
will help you decide who you can
work with. Make your choice soon.
Tonight: Be spontaneous.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH Get as much done as possible in the morning. By midafternoon, you might want to handle a
personal matter in a craftier manner.
Being nonresponsive might be OK
for a while. Listen to a partner about
finances, as this person has many
different ideas. Tonight: Say “yes” to
living.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

HHH Tension might be high in the
morning, but once you see the possibility of success, you’ll be able to
relax. A partner will share some special moments with you. Understand
how to handle a particular person or
idea. Your creativity is enormously
high. Tonight: Go for something fun.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH The more you detach,
the more you understand. Your role
in a personal dilemma needs to be
assessed, as you are partially responsible for the outcome. Your imagination helps sort through ideas. Listen
to what is being shared. Tonight: In
the limelight.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH Share more of your ideas
with someone you care a lot about.
Together, you’ll make a great team.
Understand what is happening behind
the scenes as well. You need to get
more feedback. Add more inspiration
to a special relationship. Tonight: On
top of your game.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH You might find that others don’t understand where you are
coming from, and they are too busy
to listen. Stay patient. Discussions
will become more possible later in
the day. Be aware that a relationship could be changing right in front
of your eyes. Tonight: Go with the
moment.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Use the morning to complete tasks, as the afternoon will take
on a social tone. Schedule meetings for later today. You could be
very busy and exhausted by your
impending social life. Schedule some
personal time between appointments.
Tonight: Choose what and when.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHHH You have a chance to
do something very different, and you
probably can’t resist saying “yes” to
this offer. You often dream of situations like this, so why not act on it?
Take the time in the next few days
to consider your options. Tonight: Do
something special just for you.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHH Domestic matters take priority right now. You might want to
straighten out a problem. Stay open
to new possibilities. Your creativity
abilities come forward when speaking to a child. A new friend also could
evoke a similar response. Tonight:
Home is where the heart is.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Tuesday, March 19, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page B6

www.mydailysentinel.com

Find the Golden Egg
and WIN $250!
Ridenour’s Gas Service
REHABILITATION

������ ���������7�6��)V_�����*OLZ[LY��6/

And the glory of the Lord
came into the house by

60401561

the way of the gate whose

Dr. Kelsey M. Henry D.C.
www.drkelseychiro.com or see us on FaceBook

Free Estimates

prospect is toward the East
Ezekiel 43:4

Jeff Warner Agency
��� 7EST �ND 3TREET s 0OMEROY /( �����
4EL� ��� ��� ���� s &amp;AX� ��� ��� ����
WARNERJ� NATIONWIDE�COM
60398979

•
•
•
•
•
•

740-949-2210
60399002

REMEMBER,
WE ALWAYS GOT THE COFFEE POT ON!

COOLSPOT

In Coolville
&amp; Cool Country Farms Restaurant
Convenience Store Open
24 Hrs. A Day/7 Days
1-740-667-6100

Restaurant Open
7 a.m. - 9:30 p.m.
1-740-667-6101

COOLSPOT #2
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
1-740-667-0771

Convenience Store, Gas
Deli, Bakery &amp; Lottery
6 a.m. - 10 a.m./7 days

Where We’ll Treat You Like Part of
Our Family”

PPG Paint

740-992-2476
“We Always Meet By Accident”
105 Hudson Street
Middleport, Ohio
Le’ Anna Davis - Owners

We’ve Got
Money to Lend!

740-667-3177
60401549

And the First Clue is:

1065 South 2nd Street, Mason, WV 304-773-5773

WWW.HUPPAUTOCENTER.COM

PLEASE REMEMBER:
Egg is not at a place of business
Egg is not at a private residence
Egg is not inside a man-made object
You will not need digging tools
You will not need to climb or the
use of a ladder
Clues will not be given over the phone

EXQUISITE ROCK COLLECTION

Clark’s Jewelry Store
60398989

60401532

333 Page Street, Middleport, Ohio
(740) 992-6472
www.overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

60401544

Physical - Occupational - Speech
Therapies

41862 ST. RT. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

60401527

t�))PNF�tt�33FTJEFOUJBM
t�''BSN�tt�$$PNNFSDJBM�tt�**OEVTUSZ
t�3FQQBJS�t�4BMFT�BOE�4FSWJDF
t�7FOUFE���6OWFOUFE�)FBUFST
t�&amp;NQJSF���'SFF�4UBOEJOH�'JSFQMBDFT

“A Celebration of Life”

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="268">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="8598">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="8776">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="8775">
              <text>March 19, 2013</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3216">
      <name>cherry</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1784">
      <name>cremeens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="299">
      <name>davis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1481">
      <name>lee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1823">
      <name>moses</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="674">
      <name>ohlinger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3215">
      <name>posey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="278">
      <name>reynolds</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3217">
      <name>seidel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1657">
      <name>shuler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
