<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2510" 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/2510?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T15:36:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="12413">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c840275c23ff7ef090211de6b6fe1300.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6969e90e940453dfae832fc24a5d43f8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8997">
                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Scholarships
awarded.... Page 3

Partly sunny.
High near 87.
Low around
66......... Page 2

Local diamond
action.... Page 6

Robert T. Barker, 76
Geraldine Parks Cochran, 84
Denise L. (Roach) Kay, 57
Marshall King, 63
Cecil L. (Buddy) Stacy, 75

50 cents daily

FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 88

Farmers Bank in Tuppers Plains robbed
Suspect remains on the run
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS —
For the second time in four
years, the Farmers Bank
Branch in Tuppers Plains has
been the scene of a robbery.
Officers with the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Office
responded to an armed
robbery just before 4 p.m.
on Thursday.
According to Meigs
County Sheriff Keith
Wood, the robbery was reported at 3:51 p.m.
The suspect is reportedly a male in his early to
mid 20s, possibly wearing

a red T-shirt with a “Nike
swoosh” on the front, brown
hair and a small goatee. The
suspect is said to possibly
be driving an older model
red or maroon four-door car.
The suspect was seen
in the area prior to the
robbery where he made
several statements that he
wasn’t from this area.
Deputies are currently in
search of the suspect. Deputies are also on the scene
along with crime scene
units processing the area.
Anyone with information is asked to contact the
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office at (740) 992-3371.

The Farmers Bank Branch
in Tuppers Plains was also
robbed on Sept. 1, 2009.
Sean Bradford Mitchell of Athens was charged
in the 2009 robbery after
being arrested in Ocean
Springs, Mississippi in
Nov. 2009. Mitchell, who
was 41 at the time, has
never appeared in Meigs
County on that charge. He
was convicted of a similar
crime in Mississippi.
Mitchell is currently incarcerated in Mississippi after
a conviction on one count
of aggravated robbery. He
is not scheduled for release
until Nov. 2017 according to
the Mississippi Department
of Corrections website.
The bank in Tuppers
Plains was also robbed in

Photo courtesy of the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Office

The suspect in the robbery
of Farmers Bank is Tuppers
Plains is pictured in this surveillance video.

1987 when it was operated
Stephanie Filson | Daily Sentinel
by Bank One according to The Farmers Bank branch in Tuppers Plains was the scene of
an armed robbery on Thursday afternoon.
previous reports.

Reentry Summit to be
held at Hocking College

The Ohio Valley Christian Assembly is open for events and camping for the 2013 season.

Photos by Carrie Gloeckner

Campground holds open house

OHIO VALLEY — A special event for area residents
working with ex-offenders will be held at Hocking College
on Wednesday, June 19.
The event is the Summer Reentry Summit, which will
be held from noon until 4:30 p.m. at the Hocking College
Student Center. The day will be an excellent opportunity
for anyone working with ex-offenders in Southeast Ohio
to learn about recent changes to the world of ex-offender
reentry, including: House Bill 86; Senate Bill 337; Certificates in Achievement and Employability; Recent changes
to BMV policy and procedure; Reentry Legislative Overviews; Child Support; the Ohio Fatherhood Commission.
The guest speakers for the day will include Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction Director Gary Mohr.
The Reentry Summit is being coordinated by Hocking
College, the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, the Athens County Reentry Task Force, the Fairfield County Reentry Program, and TASC of Southeast
Ohio with the Hocking County Reentry Task Force.
Registration is required to attend the event. Area residents can contact Nida Reid-Williamson at (740) 6527671 or reidn01@odjfs.state.oh.us in order to register.
For more information, please contact Scott Zielinski at
(740) 797-1405 or zielir@odjfs.state.oh.us.

Carrie Gloeckner

Special to The Daily Sentinel
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS — With good food
and a vibrant family atmosphere, a
local campground opened its grounds
for a new season of camping.
The Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly held an open house which
included a cookout and various
activities. Among the activities
were a rock wall to climb, bounce
houses and a petting zoo. The event
was free and many families turned
out to enjoy the event.
“We want to reach out to the community, be a part of the community,”
Ronnie Sisk, camp director.
He said the camp ground is available for receptions and other functions. He also said the camp is planning to add electric sites for family
camping with campers. Expanding of
the activities available at the facility is
also in the works. Sisk said low ropes,
a zip course, sand volleyball and added dorm space are all being planned.
He added the expanded dorm space
will allow for more couples retreats.
Currently, the campground serves
about 1,200 children annually. Sisk
said Holzer’s Bereavement Camp is
held at the facility along with Echoing Meadows holding a camp there
as well. He said the camp ground is
available and is a local feature which
can benefit the community.
More information about the
facilities can be found at www.
ovcacamp.com.

Meigs Council on
Aging partners with
Sentinel on directory

Among the entertainment at the OVCA open house children liked this
kiddie ride.

Many people enjoyed hotdogs and hamburgers at the OVCA open house.

The Meigs County Council on Aging, an agency serving the elderly population of the county for more
than 40 years, partnered with The Daily Sentinel for
publication of the Pomeroy/Middleport Community
Directory as a fund raising project. Thursday Beth
Shaver, executive director, center, was presented a
$500 check of appreciation for the agency’s partnership by Charlene Hoeflich, left, Sentinel general manager, and Brenda Davis, advertising representative.

Holzer Hospice plans for annual bereavement camp
OHIO VALLEY — Holzer
Hospice is planning for its Fourth
Annual Camp Beaver, which is a
bereavement camp for children
who have suffered a loss.
The two-day camp will be held
on Friday, July 19 and Saturday,
July 20 at the Ohio Valley Christian Assembly Camp, 39560
Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio. The camp provides an environment where children, ages 6
to 17, are able to come together
with other individuals who have

experienced a loss in their life.
It gives them a place where they
are free to let their feelings out,
in a way that they want to. The
fun activities that are held during
the camp generates thoughts and
enhances discussion about what
they are feeling in a very nonthreatening pattern.
One of the things about grieving is finding new meaning in life
without your loved one. A camp of
this nature has been very beneficial
to the children in our community.

Camp Beaver was established
through a loss that Sharon Shull,
RN, MSN, Director of Hospice,
experienced and observed her
granddaughter grieving through
that tragic loss. “It only made
sense to see the need that we
could provide locally to our children and have Hospice sponsor
it,” Shull commented. The camp
is provided at no cost to the
participants and is fully funded
through grant dollars and generous
contributions from our local busi-

ness and community members.
Volunteers who help facilitate
the camp and the activities/supervision include registered nurses,
social workers, chaplains, counselors and adult/teen volunteers.
According to national statistics,
childhood bereavement is far more
common than many realize. One
in nine children loses a parent,
friend, sibling or pet before the age
of 20. The loss can also be through
divorce or other circumstances.
Holzer Hospice was developed
in 1994 to meet the need for pal-

liative (comfort) care in our local
communities. Holzer Hospice
serves patients in Gallia, Jackson, and Meigs, as well as portions of Lawrence, Vinton, and
Athens counties.
For more information about
the camp and how to apply for
a child to attend, please call
Hospice at 740-446-5074 or
1-800-500-4850. If anyone would
like for a representative to come
and speak to their organization
about the camp, contact us to
arrange a time.

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 31, 2013

Community Calendar Meigs Local Briefs
Friday, May 31
MARIETTA — The Buckeye Hills Area Agency on Aging Regional Advisory Council will meet at 10 a.m. at the
Comfort Inn, 700 Pike Street, Marietta.
MIDDLEPORT — A free community dinner will be
served at 5 p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ Family Life Center. The menu will include hot dogs, baked
beans, chips and dessert.
Saturday, June 1
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 will meet with potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.
followed by meeting at 7:30 p.m. Hemlock Grange #2049
will be the guests. All members and interested persons are
urged to attend.
POMEROY — The Word 4:12 Youth Group is having
a Car Wash on this Saturday, June 1st, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. at
the New Beginnings United Methodist Church on Second
Street in Pomeroy. Proceeds go to send the kids to camp.
POMEROY — The Prayer Task Force is sponsoring a concert by Ignition Worship on the Pomeroy Parking Lot from
7-9 p.m., Saturday, June 1. Activities for kids, free food, testimonies, and a number of organizations will be there to share
about great things for the youth to be involved in this summer.

Bridge Closing
MEIGS COUNTY —
The bridge on Township
Road 447, Beech Grove
Road, located approximately 500 feet west of
Township Road 9, Romine
Road, will be closed beginning Monday, June 3. This
closing is necessary in order to replace the existing
bridge. The project will be
completed in approximately one month.
Offices closed
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will be closed
from 1:30-4 p.m. on
Wednesday, June 5 for staff
computer training. The Office of Vital Statistics will
be closed from 11 a.m. to 4
p.m. on Wednesday, June 5
for staff computer training.
Normal business hours will
resume at 8 a.m. on Thursday, June 6.

Monday, June 3
SYRACUSE — Sutton Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse Village Hall.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Cancer Initiative
Inc. (MCCI) will meet at noon in the conference room of
the Meigs Coutny Health Department. New members are
welcome. For more information, contact Courtney Midkiff at (740) 992-6626.
Scholarship
LETART TWP. — The Letart Township Trustees will
Applications
meet at 5 p.m. at the Letart Township Building.
SYRACUSE — ApplicaRUTLAND — The Rutland Township Trustees will meet
tions for the Carleton Colin regular session at 5 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.
lege Scholarships for Higher Education are available
Thursday, June 6
PIKETON — The Southern Ohio Council of Govern- for legal residents of the
ments (SOCOG) will hold its next board meeting at 10 village of Syracuse. Resia.m. at 1762 Zahns Corner Road, Piketon, OH 45661. dents can pick up an appliBoard meetings usually are held the first Thursday of the cation from Joyce Sisson,
month in Room A of the Ross County Service Center at College Road, or from Gor475 Western Avenue, Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601. For more don Fisher, 1402 Dusky
information, call 740-775-5030, ext. 103.
Street. Applications are
due back by June 25, 2013.
Legal residents of Syracuse
can qualify for scholarships
awards for a maximum of
two years.
Friday: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms
Benefit Concert
after 11 a.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 87. South
MIDDLEPORT — A
wind 8 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 66. Fall Harvest benefit will
Light south wind.
be held at the Old Bethel
Saturday: A slight chance of showers, then a chance Free Will Baptist Church
of showers and thunderstorms after 10 a.m. Partly sunny, with singers, Everett
with a high near 89. Southwest wind 6 to 15 mph. Chance Caldwell, William Markin,
of precipitation is 30 percent.
John and Wanda Fellure,
Saturday Night: A chance of showers and thunder- Brian and Family Connecstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. Chance of tions and Angela Gibson,
precipitation is 40 percent. New rainfall amounts of less Saturday at 6 p.m.
than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible
in thunderstorms.
Revival
Sunday: Showers and thunderstorms likely before
WEST
COLUMBIA —
2 p.m., then showers and possibly a thunderstorm beA
revival
will
be held May
tween 2 p.m. and 3 p.m., then showers and thunderstorms likely after 3 p.m. High near 80. Chance of pre- 31 through June 4 at Salem
Community Church, 4577
cipitation is 80 percent.
Sunday Night: A chance of showers and thunder- Lieving Road in West Costorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 58. Chance of lumbia, W.Va. Services will
begin at 6 p.m. each night.
precipitation is 50 percent.
Monday: A chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a Evangelist Michael Crawhigh near 76. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
ley will be the speaker.
Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 52.
Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 77.
Alumni Events
Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 52.
CHESTER –The ChesWednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.

Ohio Valley Forecast

����������� ������ �� ������
������­� ���������������� �
-9,, ����������� � ����
����=HS\L�

�

���������������� � ��������������
������ ������� ����������� �
��� ����� ����� �����

�����������������������
����������������������������
�� �����������������
��� ���� ����������

������������������������������
�������������������������������
� ��� ��� ���� ������ �����������
������ ��������� ��� ��������
������ ������
������ ����� � ���������� ��������
�� ���� ������ ���� ����� �

�����������������������������

0RQ�)UL��DP�����SP��6DW��DP����SP��6XQ���DP����SP�(67

Route 143 yard sale
HARRISONVILLE —
The fourth annual Route
143 yard sale, described
as 21 miles of fun and treasures, will be held from 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday,
June 1. The sale will begin
at Route 7 at Pomeroy and
continue to Route 50 near
Albany. The Scip8io Volunteer Fire Department
in Harrisonville will have
a pancake breakfast and
hot dogs later in the day
and Columbia Township
Volunteer Fire Department will also be serving
food. Both fire department will have rest rooms
available for the shoppers.

7YV[LJ[�@V\Y�/VTL

$99.00 Customer Installation Charge. 36-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $35.99 per month ($1,295.64). Form of payment must be by credit card or electronic charge to your checking or
savings account. Offer applies to homeowners only. Local permit fees may be required. Satisfactory credit history required. Certain restrictions may apply. Offer valid for new ADT Authorized Dealer
customers only and not on purchases from ADT Security Services, Inc. Other rate plans available. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Licenses: AL-10-1104, AZ-ROC217517, CA-ACO6320,
CT-ELC.0193944-L5, DE-07-212, FL-EC13003427, EC13003401, GA-LVA205395, IA-AC-0036, ID-39131, IL-127.001042, IN-City of Indianapolis: 93294, KY-City of Louisville: 483, LA-F1082, MA-1355C,
MD-107-1375, Baltimore County: 1375, Calvert County: ABL00625, Caroline County: 1157, Cecil County: 541-L, Charles County: 804, Dorchester County: 764, Frederick County: F0424, Harford
County: 3541, Montgomery County: 1276, Prince George’s County: 685, Queen Anne’s County: L156, St. Mary’s County: LV2039R, Talbot County: L674, Wicomico County: 2017, Worcester County:
L1013, MI-3601205773, MN-TS01807, MO-City of St. Louis: CC354, St. Louis County: 47738, MS-15007958, MT-247, NC-25310-SP-LV, 1622-CSA, NE-14451, NJ-34BF00021800, NM-353366, NV-68518,
City of Las Vegas: B14-00075-6-121756, C11-11262-L-121756, NY-Licensed by the N.Y.S. Department of State UID#12000286451, OH-53891446, City of Cincinnati: AC86, OK-1048, OR-170997,
Pennsylvania Home Improvement Contractor Registration Number: PA22999, RI-3428, SC-BAC5630, TN-C1164, C1520, TX-B13734, UT-6422596-6501, VA-115120, VT-ES-2382,
WA-602588694/PROTEYH934RS, WI-City of Milwaukee: 0001697, WV-042433, WY-LV-G-21499. For full list of licenses visit our website www.protectyourhome.com. Protect Your Home – 3750 Priority
Way South Dr., Ste 200, Indianapolis, IN 46240. **Crime data taken from http://ovc.ncjrs.gov/gallery/posters/pdfs/Crime_Clock.pdf
60412560

911
May 24
1:29 p.m., Trouble Creek Road, chest pain; 2:40 p.m.,
East Memorial Drive, difficulty breathing; 4:12 p.m.,
Kingsbury Road, fall; 4:34 p.m., West Cook Road, stroke/
CVA; 8:16 p.m., Mulberry Avenue, fractured body part.
May 25
7:47 a.m., East Second Street, seizure/convulsions;
11:52 a.m., North Third Avenue, laceration; 8:03 p.m.,
East Memorial Drive, pain general; 11:11 p.m., Hysell
Run Road, pain general.
May 26
3:23 a.m., Pearl Street, allergic reaction; 3:28 a.m.,
North Second Avenue, difficulty breathing; 6;56 a.m.,

Immunization Clinics
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct a
childhood immunization
clinic from 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m. on Tuesday at the
office located at 112 East
Memorial Drive.
ATHENS — The Ohio
University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM), Community Health Programs
offers free immunizations
through the Childhood
Immunization Clinic every Thursday. Created
in 1994, CHIP strives to
keep children in the region
healthy by providing free
or low-cost immunizations
to protect against preventable diseases such as polio,
rubella, meningitis and
mumps. Free services are
available to uninsured, underinsured and Medicaideligible children up to 19
years old. For additional
information, or to make
an appointment, call (800)
844-2654 or (740) 5932432.
Ohio River River Sweep
REEDSVILLE
—The
Ohio River River Sweep at
Reedsville will be held on
Friday, June 14, from 6 to 8
p.m. at Forked Run. There
will be free t-shirts, pizza,
chicken dinners, and beverages, according to Todd
Bissell who can be contacted at 740-444-1388.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 143 (located just 0.25
miles south of State Farm
Road) will be reduced
to one lane to allow for a
bridge replacement project. During construction
there will be a 10’ width
restriction. Traffic will be
maintained with a portable
traffic light. Weather permitting, both lanes of Ohio

143 will be open September 1, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The westbound lane of
Ohio 124 (located at the
63.91 mile marker, about
1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic
signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting,
both lanes of Ohio 124 will
be open November, 1 2013.
Free Diabetic Clinic
POMEROY — A diabetes education and support
group will be held the last
Tuesday of each month
from 5:30-6:30 p.m. at
the therapy gym at Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center, 36759 Rocksprings
Road. For more information call Frank Bibbee,
Referral Manager at (740)
992-6606.
ATHENS — The Ohio
University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM), Community Health Programs
offers a free diabetes clinic
on the second Tuesday
of every month. Patients
at the Diabetes Clinic
are treated by physicians
specializing in diabetes,
diabetic nutritionists and
diabetic nurse educators.
Patients receive two follow-up visits annually with
a diabetic educator and nutritionist. All services are
free to those who qualify.
For additional information,
or to make an appointment, call (800) 844-2654
or (740) 593-2432.
Exercise
Program offered
POMEROY — Open
hours of the Meigs Cooperative Parish’s exercise
room at the Mulberry
Community Center have
been extended to accommodate exercisers. They
are now on both Tuesdays
and Thursdays, 9 to 11
a.m. and 5 to 7 p.m. Cost
of the program is $12 a
month and all proceeds
benefit the Parish.
POMEROY — Water
aerobics classes will be
held at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday at Kountry Resort. For more information call (740) 591-4407
or 992-6728.

Page Street, difficulty breathing; 8:50 a.m., Water Street,
chest pain; 2:48 p.m., South Third Avenue, difficulty
breathing; 2:58 p.m., Ohio 124, water rescue; 4:36 p.m.,
Spring Avenue, weakness; 8:06 p.m., Willow Creek Road,
fractured body part.
May 27
8:23 a.m., Township Road 175, hemorrhage; 12:53
p.m., Bradbury Road, seizure/convulsions; 1:30 p.m.,
West Main Street, fall; 2:21 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
pain general; 5:00 p.m., Ohio 124, pain general; 6:39
p.m., Nichols Road, pain general; 8:20 p.m., Bradbury
Road, pain general; 9:41 p.m., Gilkey Ridge Road, difficulty breathing; 11:11 p.m., Salem School Lot Road,
cardiac arrest.

Time is running out to enter Cutest Kids contest
OHIO VALLEY —
Do you think your kids
are cute? Maybe your
grandchild is just the
most adorable angel?
Well, the Cutest Kids
Contest, sponsored by The

Daily Sentinel, Gallipolis
Daily Tribune and Point
Pleasant Register, can give
you those bragging rights
in southeast Ohio.
Time is running out
to enter your child or

CROSS POINTE APTS
1100 Powell St. Middleport, OH

Accepting Applications

the following week.
Everyone can enter and
the contest is free.
The contest is made
possible through title
sponsor Taylor Motors
of Athens and category
sponsor Home National
Bank of Racine.
The grand prize winner
will receive a $175 cash
prize and each age bracket
winner will win $70 each.

ANNUAL
KIDS FISHING DERBY
SATURDAY JUNE 8 8:00 AM

1 Bedroom apartments.
Eligibility based on income,
62 years of age or older,
disabled, regardless of age.
Handicapped accessible.
This institution is an equal opportunity
provider and employer.
On-site manager and maintenance.
Please call 740-992-3055
TDD #800-855-2880
Equal Housing Opportunity

grandchild through one of
our local news websites,
www.mydailysentinel.com,
www.mydailytribune.com
or www.mydailyregister.
com. Then, watch the
paper, in print and online,
and on Facebook to see
who has entered and, once
voting begins June 2, who
is leading the pack. Voting
ends at 5 p.m. June 14, and
winners will be announced

Meigs County Fish &amp; Game Association

Free Food • PRIZES • Free Drinks

Local Merchants Help Sponsor This Event
15 years or younger
Must be accompanied by an adult
One rod &amp; reel per child
Bait: night crawlers &amp; chicken liver
no minnows or live bait

60421721

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.25
Pepsico (NYSE) — 81.22
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.51
Rockwell (NYSE) — 88.60
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.40
Royal Dutch Shell — 67.64
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.36
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.63
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 6.04
WesBanco (NYSE) — 25.46
Worthington (NYSE) — 35.25
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for May 30, 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.

�������� �� ��

Church Yard Sale
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Amazing Grace Community Church yard sale, 8 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Saturday.
POMEROY — Morning Star United Methodist
church, yasrd sale, 9 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Location 46515 Morning Star Road.
POMEROY — Mount
Herman Church on Wickham Road, Pomeroy will
have a yard sale friom 8
a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday
in the parking lot. Proceeds will go to fellowship hall debt.
RUTLAND — Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church
will hold an inside yard
sale from 9 a.m to 4 p.m.,
May 30, 31 and June 1.
Lunch will also be served.
MIDDLEPORT — First
Baptist Church of Middleport will hold a yard sale
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., on
Saturday, June 1. It will be
held on South Sixth Avenue between Palmer and
Main streets.

Space at both fire departments will be available for
rent to anyone who might
want to sell “goodies.” The
fire department contacts
are Rexie Cheadle at 740591-6086 for Columbia,
and Dan or Rhea Lantz at
740-742-2819 for Scipio.
Dave or Paula Carr can be
contacted at 740-742-2819
for more information or for
rental spaces.

For The Record

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 46.09
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 21.65
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 88.21
Big Lots (NYSE) — 34.93
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.47
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 82.79
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.28
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.10
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 39.99
Collins (NYSE) — 65.93
DuPont (NYSE) — 56.30
US Bank (NYSE) — 35.53
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.60
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 55.41
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 55.62
Kroger (NYSE) — 34.39
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 49.62
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 77.77
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 20.37
BBT (NYSE) — 33.46

ter High School Alumni
banquet will be held at 6:30
p.m. on Saturday, June 2,
at the Eastern Elementary
School Cafetorium. The
dinner and dues are $20.
Dues alone are $5. Reservations are to mailed or
telephoned to Betty Newell, P. O. Box 36, Chester,
Ohio 45720 or telephoned
to 740-985-3351. Classes
to be honored are 1933,
1938, 1943, 1948 and
1953. Decorating for the
banquet will take place at
6:30 on May 31 and volunteers to assist are needed.

DIRECTIONS
from Pomeroy, take Rt. 7 North
turn left on Texas Rd., follow the derby signs
info: 992-0026
60421255

�Cecil Lee ‘Buddy’ Stacy

Cecil Lee (Buddy) Stacy, 75, of Langsville, Ohio,
passed away unexpectedly at his residence May 27, 2013.
He was born in Boone County, West Virginia, to the
late George Dewey Stacy and Gladys Marie Welch Stacy
Molden. Buddy was a Salem Township Trustee for 32
years, construction worker, and farmer and a member of
the Army National Guard.
Buddy is survived by two sons, James Stacy of Wilkesville, Ohio, and Bobby Stacy of Middleport, Ohio; three
grandchildren; brothers and sisters, Wanda Sharp of Salem Center, Ohio, Allen Stacy of Langsville, Ohio, James
Jay Stacy of Canton, Ohio, and Geraldine Spurlock of Columbus, Ohio; special aunt, Ammie Hysell of Wilkesville,
Ohio; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides Buddy’s parents he was preceded by half brother, Bobby Molden and step-father, Robert Molden.
At Buddy’s request there is to be no services. The family will receive friends from 5-8 p.m., Saturday June 1,
2013, at Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, Ohio.
Online condolences may be sent at birchfieldfuneralhome.com.

Death Notices
Barker

Cochran

Hills Cemetery, Flatrock.

Kay

Denise Lorraine (Roach)
Kay, 57, died after a
lengthy illness, on May
24, 2013 at Pleasant Valley
Nursing and Rehab, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
A “Celebration of her
Life” will be held on July 6,
2013, at 11581 State Route
9, Kensington, Ohio at 3
p.m. RSVP is required to
239-368-0621 or lreaves@
embarqmail.com.
In lieu of flowers, the
family requests memorial donations be made, in
Denise’s name to Pleasant
Valley Nursing and Rehab,
640 Sand Hill Road, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550.

King

Geraldine Parks Cochran, 84, Point Pleasant,
W.Va., died Wednesday,
May 29, 2013.
Visitation will be held
from 6-8 p.m. on Friday,
May 31, 2013, at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. A celebration of life
will be held at 11 a.m. on
Saturday, June 1, 2013,
at the funeral home, with
Steve Sanderson, New
Hope Bible Baptist Church
Minister, officiating. Interment will follow at Forrest

Marshall King, 63, of
Gallipolis, died Wednesday, May 29, 2013, at the
Wexner OSU Medical Center, Columbus, Ohio.
Services will be held
at 1 p.m., Saturday, June
1, 2013, at Willis Funeral
Home with Minister Tim
Gainer officiating. Burial
will follow in Ridgelawn
Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home on
Friday, May 31, 2013, from
6-8 p.m. or from 12-1 p.m.
on Saturday prior to the
funeral.

Tess Phelps

Steven Mahr

Thomas Memorial
Scholarships awarded
POMEROY — Two Brandi Thomas Memorial Scholarships were awarded at the recent Meigs High School
Academic Awards Assembly.
This year’s winners of the $1,500 scholarships were
Tess Phelps of Pomeroy, class of 2013, who will be attending Muskingum University, and Steven Mahr of Rutland,
class of 2012, who is attending The Ohio State University.
Any Meigs High School senior or graduate student attending college that lettered in track or cross-country a
minimum of two years in high school can qualify to receive the scholarship for a maximum of two years.
The winners were chosen on the basis of character,
extra-curricular activities, academic performance, and
other accomplishments insuring potential success in college and post-college life.

Emotional funeral
for slain officer

BARDSTOWN, Ky. (AP) — An emotional funeral for
a Bardstown police officer fatally shot on a highway exit
ramp has ended with his fellow officers placing white
flowers on his casket and saluting, one-by-one.
Hundreds of police officers, emergency workers and
others attended Thursday’s services for 33-year-old Jason
Ellis. Ellis was shot to death early Saturday when he got
out of his cruiser to remove debris from the road on his
way home from work.
Ellis was a K-9 officer. His dog, Figo, stood beside his
casket at the cemetery.
Following a morning service at Parkway Baptist Church
featuring six speakers, a miles-long procession inched
slowly through country roads to the cemetery in Chaplin,
about 18 miles away from Bardstown.
People lined the streets as the procession went by,
many clutching American flags or holding their hands on
their hearts.

NYC Police: Mayor had gun threats
WASHINGTON (AP) — A suspicious letter mailed to the White
House was similar to two threatening, poison-laced letters on the gun
law debate sent to New York Mayor
Michael Bloomberg, one of the nation’s most potent gun-control advocates, officials said Thursday.
The Secret Service said the letter
was addressed to President Barack
Obama and was intercepted by a
White House mail screening facility.
Two similar letters postmarked in
Louisiana and sent to Bloomberg in
New York and his gun control group
in Washington contained traces of
the deadly poison ricin.
It wasn’t immediately clear whether the letter sent to Obama contained
ricin. It was turned over to the FBI’s
Joint Terrorism Task Force for testing and investigation.
The two Bloomberg letters,
opened Friday in New York and Sunday in Washington, contained an oily
pinkish-orange substance.
New York Police Department
Commissioner Raymond Kelly said
Thursday that all three letters apparently came from the same machine or
computer and may be identical but
referred specific questions to the FBI.
The FBI said in a statement that
field tests on the letters were consistent with the presence of a biological
agent, and the letters were turned
over to an accredited laboratory for
the kind of thorough analysis that is
needed to verify a tentative finding.
“More letters may be received,” the
statement said, without elaboration.
The body of the letter mailed to
New York was addressed to “you” and
referenced the gun control debate.
Kelly said the unsigned letter says, in
so many words: “Anyone who comes
for my guns will be shot in the face.”
He refused to quote directly from the
letter, saying he didn’t want to do the
author’s bidding.
Bloomberg has emerged as one of
the country’s most important guncontrol advocates, able to press his

case with both his public position
and his private money.
The New York letter was opened at
the city’s mail facility in Manhattan
in a biochemical containment box,
which is a part of the screening process for mayor’s office mail.
“In terms of the processes and
procedures that are in place now
we think they worked,” Kelly said.
“This is sort of an effect of the post9/11 world that we live in that these
checks and facilities are in place and
the system worked.”
The second letter was opened
Sunday by Mark Glaze, director
of Mayors Against Illegal Guns,
the Washington-based nonprofit
Bloomberg started.
The letter Glaze opened tested
positive for ricin initially. The other
letter to Bloomberg at first tested
negative but tested positive at a retest Wednesday.
The postal workers union, citing
information it got in a Postal Service briefing, said the letters bore
a Shreveport, La., postmark. Kelly
would not comment on the origin of
the letter.
Louisiana State Police spokeswoman Julie Lewis said state authorities
have deferred to the FBI and have not
opened an investigation. The Shreveport postal center handles mail from
Louisiana, Texas and Arkansas, so
the letter could have come from any
of those states, Lewis said.
The people who initially came into
contact with the letters showed no
symptoms of exposure to the poison,
but three officers who later examined
the New York letter experienced minor symptoms that have since abated, police said. The mayor visited the
mailroom on Thursday but made no
public comments on the topic.
On Wednesday, he said he didn’t
know why they were sent.
One of the letters “obviously
referred to our anti-gun efforts,
but there’s 12,000 people that are
going to get killed this year with
guns and 19,000 that are going to

commit suicide with guns, and we’re
not going to walk away from those
efforts,” said Bloomberg, adding that
he didn’t feel threatened.
According to the federal Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention,
ricin is a poison found naturally in
castor beans. Symptoms can include
difficulty breathing, vomiting and
redness on the skin depending on
how the affected person comes into
contact with the poison.
The letters were the latest in a
string of toxin-laced missives, but
authorities would not say whether
the letters to Bloomberg and Obama
were believed to be linked to any
other recent case.
In Washington state, a 37-yearold was charged last week with
threatening to kill a federal judge in
a letter that contained ricin. About a
month earlier, letters containing the
substance were addressed to Obama,
a U.S. senator and a Mississippi
judge. One of the letters postmarked
in Memphis, Tenn., was traced back
to Tupelo, Miss., and a Mississippi
man was arrested.
Bloomberg and Boston Mayor
Thomas Menino founded Mayors
Against Illegal Guns, which now
counts more than 700 mayors nationwide as members. It lobbies federal
and state lawmakers, and it aired a
spate of television ads this year urging Congress to expand background
checks and pass other gun-control
measures after the school shooting
in Newtown, Conn. The background
check proposal failed in a Senate vote
in April, and other measures guncontrol advocates wanted — including a ban on sales of military-style
assault weapons — have stalled.
Separately, Bloomberg also has
made political donations to candidates who share his desire for
tougher gun restrictions. His super
PAC, Independence USA, put $2.2
million into a Democratic primary
this winter for a congressional seat
in Illinois, for example. Bloomberg’s choice, former state lawmaker Robin Kelly, won.

Would-be bomber gets 23 years
CHICAGO (AP) — A young
Lebanese immigrant was sentenced
Thursday to 23 years in prison for
placing a backpack he believed contained a powerful bomb along a bustling city street near the Chicago
Cubs’ baseball stadium.
Sami Samir Hassoun’s sentencing
in federal court in Chicago came little
more than a month after bombs concealed in backpacks exploded at the
Boston Marathon, killing three people
and wounding hundreds more.
In imposing the sentence, the judge
invoked the specter of the Boston Marathon, saying had Hassoun’s bomb been
real, it would have made Boston look
like a minor incident by comparison.
Minutes before, Hassoun, a 25-yearold one-time Chicago baker and candy-store worker, apologized for what
he’d done in a five-minute statement.
Crying, he also turned to look at his
mother and several friends on a nearby bench and told them he was sorry
“for the shame I brought on you.”
His mother sobbed aloud and said

back to her son: “I love you.”
The defense has depicted Hassoun as a uniquely gullible youth
sucked into the 2010 terrorism sting
during an alcohol-addled stretch of
his life by an informant eager to
please his FBI handlers.
But prosecutors say he showed
enthusiasm and initiative, including
by deciding to drop the device given
to him by undercover agents into a
trash bin near Wrigley Field and a
bar packed with late-night revelers.
As part of a plea deal with the
government, Hassoun pleaded guilty
last year to two explosives counts. In
return, he faced a sentencing range
of 20 to 30 years, rather than a maximum term of life in prison.
At Thursday’s hearing, government attorneys displayed the fake
bomb undercover agents gave to
Hassoun on a September weekend
in 2010. It’s a paint can fitted with
blasting caps and a timer.
They also played a surveillance
video of Hassoun dropping the de-

vice into a trash bin near the stadium
shortly after receiving it. FBI agents
arrested him moments later.
Before Thursday’s sentencing, Hassoun apologized in a seven-page letter
to his sentencing judge, Robert Gettleman. He also insisted he’s worked
hard at becoming a better person, including by doing yoga in jail.
The Beirut-born Hassoun blamed
his actions in part on childhood trauma living in Abidjan, Ivory Coast.
During civil strife there, Hassoun,
then 11, witnessed machete killings
from an apartment balcony, he wrote.
Fleeing that African nation, he said
he left everything he knew behind,
even his beloved collection of “ninja
turtles, matchbox cars (and) Japanese cartoons.” His family emigrated
from Lebanon to the U.S. in 2008.
To dampen his lingering emotional
pain, he wrote that he drank alcohol
“all day, every day” for months before
the would-be stadium attack in 2010.
He favored whole bottles of Johnnie
Walker Black, he wrote.

Cheap leases offered to spur electric car sales
DETROIT (AP) — Auto
companies are hoping
lower lease prices can put
a charge into sluggish electric car sales.
Honda
announced
Thursday that it’s slashing
the monthly lease cost of
its tiny Fit EV by one third,
following similar moves by
other automakers. Honda
also is throwing in other
goodies, such as a free
home charging station and
unlimited mileage.
Electric vehicles once
were billed as the answer
to high gas prices and dependence on foreign oil.
But U.S. oil production is
rising and gasoline supplies are abundant. Pump
prices have remained relatively stable the past three
years, while gas-powered
cars have gotten more efficient, making consumers
reluctant to give them up.
There’s also the worry
that an electric car could run
out of juice on longer trips.
As a result, electric car
sales are only a tiny fraction of overall U.S. auto
sales. Automakers sold just
over 12,000 pure-electric
vehicles in the U.S. through
April, according to Ward’s
AutoInfoBank and Tesla
Motors. That’s less than 1
percent of the 4.97 million
cars and trucks sold during
the same period. Even a
$7,500 tax credit from the
U.S. government that effectively lowers prices couldn’t
persuade most car buyers.
Automakers need to

create a market for the
cars among buyers who
won’t ordinarily go for
the latest technology,
said Larry Dominique, a
former Nissan Motor Co.
product chief.
“The early adopters are
kind of phased out of the
EV market. To get that
broader appeal to the EV,
they’re doing some pretty
aggressive lease deals,”
said Dominique, now an
executive with the TrueCar.
com auto pricing website.
The sluggish sales
have dampened high
expectations for electric
car use. President Barack
Obama has said he wants
to put 1 million plug-in
electric vehicles on the
road by 2015, but with
two years left, the nation
is far short of that goal.
Still, the cheap leases
and a broader selection of
models are giving electric
vehicles a boost. Sales for
the first four months of
this year already are 80

percent of last year’s total
sales of about 15,000.
The added models,
though, have multiple automakers competing for a
small number of buyers.
Automakers generally
lose money on electric
cars because the technology is so new and the batteries are costly. But they
have been subsidizing
sales by lowering prices.
Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne said earlier this
year that his company
will lose $10,000 on every
Fiat 500 electric vehicle it
sells. Others have reported similar losses.
With the Fit EV, Honda is
offering a $259 per month
lease, down $130 from the
initial $389 per month offer when the car went on
sale in July of last year.
The reduced price starts
June 1 and will apply to existing Fit EV leases, Honda
said. The three-year lease
requires no money down
and comes with unlim-

ited mileage, free routine
maintenance,
collision
insurance coverage and a
free 240-volt home charging station, the company
said Thursday. The charging station normally costs
$995. The car buyer must
take care of installation.
“Although we feel the Fit
EV offers significant product benefits over other
electric vehicles, in order
to effectively compete in
the EV market, we need a
more competitive price,”
Honda Motor Co. spokeswoman Robyn Eagles said
in a statement.
Earlier this month, General Motors Co. said that
it would lease the subcompact Spark EV for $199
per month with $999 due
at signing as it goes on
sale in California and Oregon. Nissan is offering a
$199-per-month lease on
its Leaf electric car with
$1,999 down. That’s down
from a high of $369 per
month back in 2011.

Racine American
Legion
Last of the Season
Dinner
Sunday - June 2nd
Serving 11-1
Turkey- Pulled Pork
Fried &amp; Baked Chicken
Carry Out Available

740-949-2044

60421730

Obituary

Robert T. Barker, 76, of
Debary, Fla. formerly of St.
Albans, W.Va. and Columbus and Dayton, died May
13, 2013, at his home in
Florida.
A memorial service to
celebrate Bob’s life will be
held at 11 a.m., Saturday,
June 1, 2013, at Parchment
Valley Baptist Church in
Ripley with Pastors Herman Robinson and Joe
Hammack
officiating.
Graveside service will follow in Teays Hill Cemetery,
St. Albans at 2 p.m. with
Military Graveside Rites
to be conducted. Casdorph
and Curry Funeral Home is
assisting the family.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

60421726

Friday, May 31, 2013

�The Daily Sentinel

Faith and Family

Page 4
Friday, May 31, 2013

AT LEFT, Eastern Eagle, Adam McDaniel sandwiches himself between Tornadoes, T.C. and Tammy Chapman on Alumni Sunday at Carmel Sutton UMC. AT RIGHT, Maxine Rose and Luke McDaniel
both graduated from Point Pleasant High School, riding the same bus to school.

Alumni Sunday held at Carmel-Sutton UMC
RACINE — Alumni pride was
abundant during “Alumni Sunday”
last week at Carmel-Sutton United
Methodist Church near Racine.
This was a Sunday designated
for everyone to wear their school

colors for alumni weekend. Almost
20 schools were represented in the
service. Some mentioned were
Southern, Eastern, Meigs, Gallia
Academy, Hannan Trace, Logan/
Fairfield County, Logan (W.Va.)

High School, Brilliant Memorial High School, Point Pleasant
(W.Va.) High School, Philo High
School, Nicholas County (W.Va.)
High School, Rutland High
School, Middleport High School,

and the list goes on. One person
was from a high school in Newfoundland, Canada, and another
a graduate from Hay Sung High
School in South Korea.
Everyone in the church knows

Jesus died to prove A Hunger For More
his love for us all
In the long-ago days of folk
music, one song declared that
though “on the far side of the
hill” the grass was green, the
singer was himself going “where
the grass is greener still.”
Green now appears as the
dominant color; add in some
rain and sun and the grass
ought to be “greener still” —
longer, too. Yet, for lack of
rain, the color brown yet could
emerge as the dominant color
of summer, a fact which has impressed itself upon me of late.
That color, brown, is begin- Thomas Johnson
Pastor
ning to show in many yards hereabout. Should this trend continue, we may soon find ourselves mowing our yards only
sporadically — which, in one sense, I won’t mind; if ever I
enjoyed mowing, I was much younger and got paid for it.
There was always one yard I was required to mow,
no matter what. It was put to me NOT as an option (it
wasn’t), but as something I would do IF I wanted to continue eating my Mom’s cooking and have her do my laundry. I most certainly did!
Normally sane and compliant, but still an adolescent
male, once or twice my mind suffered from some bizarre,
hormonal imbalance, which led to my becoming a virtual
idiot and defying my father’s authority. Major mistake:
Dad’s cup never overflowed with patience, ever.
I’m almost positive there are those among you who can
readily relate to what I’m saying. As our parents weren’t
inclined to indulge us all that much, we learned early-on
life wasn’t about “us” — as many young people seem to
imagine life today being all about them.
Neither my mother nor father ever quoted the Bible; that
wasn’t their nature. However, there was one verse in the Bible
they were in full compliance with — i.e., Proverbs 23:13-14.
Allow me to refresh your memory, quoting from the
NKJ version: … “Do not withhold correction from a child,
for if you beat him with a rod he will not die. You shall
beat him with a rod, and deliver his soul from hell.”
No rod was ever involved; there was, however, a leather
belt Dad was fond of, and which came into contact with
my backside a few times in my youth. Dad would tell me
his punishing me hurt him more — but I never observed
him afterwards to have any discomfort sitting!
Through the V.A. I recently acquired new hearing aids, so
am now able to hear infinitely better than I could just a short
while ago. I really had no idea what I was missing out on.
Much to my great delight, I hear birds and bugs I was
completely ignorant of otherwise, and background noises
way beyond my capacity to apprehend and discern.
Speaking of which: I returned home one evening last
week, and my eyes were drawn to a small pile of sawdust
beneath a wooden chair on our porch. One other time had
I seen something similar; that was when I discovered termites gnawing away in one of the four legs of a table I
had purchased overseas, and intended to send home to
my parents.
The culprit last week was a wood-boring bee, an insect I had never heard of before. This insect does as its
name suggests, and bores into wood for the purpose of
laying its eggs.
First, I saw the sawdust: then I heard the buzzing of the
bee itself; I then made the bee dead — very dead. I like
working with wood, but I will allow no bee to compete
with me!
I’m not big on bugs; I find them annoying — like the
“small stuff” of life, in general. Just as bugs can be annoying, the trivial things of life can cause us to take our eyes
off of the Lord.
Consider these words of Jesus: … “No one, having put
his hand to the plow, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God” (Lk. 9:62).
In other words, in our commitment and quest to serve
the Lord let there be neither regret, remorse, nor retreat.
Once you’ve decided to follow Jesus, neither “turn back”
nor back down.
F.Y.I.: God isn’t finished with anyone reading this; He’s
still working on me and you!
Likewise, none of us were created “perfect.” Indeed, it
would be totally uncharacteristic of our perfect Heavenly
Father to demand perfection of us; He doesn’t, so stop
beating your head against a wall trying to be something
God never intended.
Here we are, an amazing variety of people types: native
“River Rats” and transplants, Christians and non-Christians, blue-collar and white-collar, college grads and high
school drop-outs — the whole gamut. And God loves us
all. Jesus died to make this point. Get it?

handled lovingPeople
ly can be like a
like
the
light that protruth. Well,
motes a cure to
that’s
not
the ailments of
quite right.
the psyche and
I think that
the afflictions
it’s more acof the soul.
curate to say
Don’t believe
that people
it? Who hasn’t
like the idea
heard that the
of
truth…
first step for
as long as
someone sufit is somefering from an
thing
that
addiction is to
conforms
Thom Mollohan admit (tell the
to their exPastor
truth) that he
pect ations
has a problem?
and wishes
(which isn’t the truth at And how can one know
all). Bummer. Just think! the sweet release of forgivFolks (generally speaking) ing another if she hasn’t
want a person to speak the admitted (told the truth) a
truth when it comes to his hurt suffered at the hands
own shortcomings (such of another?
Take this to the bank:
as a salesperson who tells
a potential buyer of prob- Unless one is ready and
lems of consequence in a willing to turn his eyes to
product) but not when it the actual condition of his
comes to anything that heart, mind, life, and situcould be construed as crit- ation, he cannot expect to
icism of the hearer - even be freed from the bonds
if it is the truth… such as of darkness that are the
the fact of an obnoxious shackles of denial, obstiattitude that others find nacy, pride, selfishness,
offensive (“You’re very unforgiveness, and hate.
“This is the message we
rude sometimes.”) or an
unhealthy habit that inter- have heard from Him and
feres with wholesome or proclaim to you, that God
healthy living like smok- is light, and in Him is no
ing or overeating (“I’m darkness at all. If we say
concerned about your we have fellowship with
eating all those deep-fried Him while we walk in
darkness, we lie and do not
foods all day long”).
The truth, however, if practice the truth. But if

that Carmel-Sutton is the church
where the Southern Tornadoes
meet the Easter Eagles. Long
time school rivals are the blunt of
many a joke thus making “Alumni Shirt Sunday” quite the event.

we walk in the light, as He
is in the light, we have fellowship with one another,
and the blood of Jesus His
Son cleanses us from all
sin. If we say we have no
sin, we deceive ourselves,
and the truth is not in us. If
we confess our sins, He is
faithful and just to forgive
us our sins and to cleanse
us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:5-9 ESV).
Living
meaningfully
and joyfully in the life to
which Christ has called us
requires that you and I be
ready to not just “speak the
truth” (quote Bible verses), but to live it. And we
live it by bringing the light
of God’s Word into the
dark places of our hearts.
We cannot know, for instance, cleansing power of
His grace if we do not first
concede that there is the
filth of selfishness within
us; we cannot see His holiness filling up the vessel of
our hearts if we keep our
eyes shut to the shadows of
sin inside us; and we cannot be truly free unless we
hold out the chains of our
small-minded fears and resentments to Him for His
truth to break them.
There are times when
truth is wielded like a club
to bring a sense of condemnation to another by someone who loves to puff himself up. “Truth” expressed

this way is only a clever lie.
But just because a truth is
inconvenient or even painful, it must not be discarded
as if it were unnecessary or
unwanted. Yes, the truth
hurts sometimes, but without it, we resign ourselves
to appalling horrors on
earth and eternal damnation afterwards.
Happily, the “Truth” has
been given to us and if we
are willing to embrace it,
we have all of heaven to
look forward to.
“Thomas said to Jesus,
‘Lord, we do not know
where You are going. How
can we know the way?’ Jesus
said to him, ‘I am the way,
and the truth, and the life.
No one comes to the Father
except through Me. If you
had known Me, you would
have known My Father also.
From now on you do know
Him and have seen Him… If
you abide in My word, you
are truly My disciples, and
you will know the truth, and
the truth will set you free”
(John 14:5-7, 8:31-32 ESV).
Thom Mollohan and his family
have ministered in southern Ohio
the past 18 years, is the author of
The Fairy Tale Parables, Crimson
Harvest, and A Heart at Home with
God. He blogs at “unfurledsails.
wordpress.com”. Pastor Thom
leads Pathway Community Church
and may be reached for comments
or questions by email at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com.

God’s opinion is that marriage is for one man and woman
record, God performed the
“Among those supfirst marriage, and, in doing
porting gay marriage
so, specified and specialized
is the Reverend Darthe marital participants,
ryl Kistler from Caliwhich are set by God as one
fornia. ‘I have a lot
man for one woman.
of gay and lesbian
What is the Biblical repeople in my congrecord? What does the Bibligation, family memcal record teach us about
bers who are gay and
God’s will for marital parlesbian, a lot of good
ticipants?
friends who are gay
Note in Genesis 2 that
and lesbian, so, since
God recognized that the
they are not here I
man, Adam, whom He had
feel like I can carry
formed creatively from the
them with my heart
Ron Branch
ground, was lonely, which
and can speak for
Pastor
according to God was not
them’” (as reported
good. God brought before
by Jim Malone, Voice
Adam all created animal life God
of America, March 26, 2013).
The U. S. Supreme Court is set to formed from the ground. This was
soon cite opinion on two issues basi- done for two purposes: first, “to see
cally concerning traditional marriage what Adam would call them,” and,
and sodomite marriage. The opinion second, to compare which might be
of the proponents of sodomite mar- a “helpmeet” for Adam.
“Helpmeet” refers to one which
riage believe that the momentum of
corresponds to, or is appropriate for.
public opinion is on their side.
For good reason — much of this There was neither appropriate for
“momentum” is coming from the Adam. So, God created an appropriranks of the institutional church ate companion for Adam in the perwhich has come to share supportive son of a female, who was named Eve.
opinion about sodomite marriage. She was not made from the ground
Practicing sodomites have the privi- as were animals or as was Adam.
lege to access the love of Christ and Actually, she came from Adam when
be ministered to by the Church up- God took the rib as the starting creative point for her.
holding the principles of Christ.
In the creation of the woman for
But, herein is the rub. In God’s opinion, marriage for practicing sodomites Adam, the principle was set. There
is not a divine-sanctioned option. emerges an appropriate understandWhat is meant by “God’s opinion” re- ing for us on the basis of the prinfers to His revealed will based on His ciple. If God would have considered
absolute and authoritative truths. It that a man would have been approamounts to what He thinks and conse- priate for Adam, God would have
quently expects! According to Biblical had to form another man from the

ground. Once again, it was God who
determined this creative principle
Himself. The corresponding helpmeet for Adam came from his own
bone and flesh by the specific will
and specialized principle of God.
Note further, it was Adam specifically into whom God breathed the
breath of life. It was not breathed
into Eve, because God’s breath was
already evident and sufficient in the
life of the man. Another created man,
based on the principle set by God,
would have required breathing into
another man God’s breath of life. It
did not happen that way.
However, the Bible says succinctly that when God created the ribbased woman that God “brought
her unto the man.” God put Adam
to sleep. Operated. Created. Presented. Joined.
God
has
declared
and
demonstrated who are the divinely
ordained participants for marriage.
It involves one man for one woman.
God set this dynamic principle for
the good of life.
Because of the passivity of the
Church, and because the Church is
ignoring the tenets of God’s Word,
there is this debate over sodomite
marriage Expected from the
people of the institutional church
is that personal opinion should be
reflective of the opinion of God. The
saddening observation is that the
people of the institutional church
are opting for the opinion of human
reasoning rather than holding to
the Word of God. It is absolutely
the responsibility of the Church to
verify the opinion of God.

�Friday, May 31, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Meigs County Church Directory
FELLOWSHIP APOSTOLIC
Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic
Van Zandt and Ward Road. Pastor:
James Miller. Sunday school, 10:30
a.m.; evening, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley Apostolic Worship
Center
873 South Third Ave., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Michael Bradford.
Sunday, 10:30 a.m.; Tuesday, 6:30
p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Emmanuel Apostolic
Tabernacle, Inc.
Loop Road off New Lima Road,
Rutland. Pastor: Marty R. Hutton.
Sunday services, 10 a.m. and 7:30
p.m.; Thursday, 7 p.m.
***
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Liberty Assembly of God
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant. Sunday
services, 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
***
BAPTIST
Pageville Freewill Baptist
Church
Pastor: Floyd Ross. Sunday school,
9:30-10:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30-11
a.m.; Wednesday preaching, 6 p.m.
Carpenter Independent Baptist
Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
preaching
service,
10:30
a.m.; evening service, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
Cheshire Baptist Church
Pastor: Jon Mollohan. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.; contemporary service, 6:30
p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 6:30
p.m. Call: 740-367-7801.
Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
570 Grant Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Gary Ellis. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m. and 6
p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Rutland First Baptist Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
East Main Street, Pomeroy. Pastor:
Jon Brocket. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor:
David Brainard. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 9:45 a.m. and 7
p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
First Baptist Church
Sixth
and
Palmer
Street,
Middleport. Pastor: Billy Zuspan.
Sunday school, 9:15 a.m.; worship,
10:15 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Racine First Baptist
Pastor: Ryan Eaton. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:40 a.m. and
6 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening, 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 6:30 p.m.
Mount Union Baptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver. Sunday
school, 9:45 a.m.; evening, 6:30
p.m.; Wednesday services, 6:30
p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will Baptist
Church
28601 Ohio 7, Middleport. Sunday
service, 10 a.m.; Tuesday and
Saturday services, 6 p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church
Ohio 143 just off of Ohio 7. Pastor:
Rev. James R. Acree, Sr. Sunday
unified service. Worship, 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Victory Baptist Independent
525 North Second Street,
Middleport. Pastor: James E.
Keesee. Worship, 10 a.m. and 7
p.m.; Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
Railroad Street, Mason. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
and 6 p.m.; Wednesday services,
7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pomeroy. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11:30 a.m.
Mount Moriah Baptist
Fourth
and
Main
Street,
Middleport. Pastor: Rev. Michael
A. Thompson, Sr. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:45 a.m.; Sunday evening, 6 p.m.
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Salem Street, Rutland. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.; Youth meeting,
Sunday, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;

evening, 7 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
First Baptist Church of Mason,
W.Va.
W.Va. Route 652 and Anderson
Street. Pastor: Robert Grady.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; morning
church, 11 a.m.; evening, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
***
CATHOLIC
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Pastor: Rev. Tim Kozak. (740)
992-5898. Saturday confessional
4:45-5:15 p.m.; mass, 5:30 p.m.;
Sunday confessional, 8:45-9:15
a.m.; Sunday mass, 9:30 a.m.; daily
mass, 8:30 a.m.
***
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Westside Church of Christ
33226 Children’s Home Road,
Pomeroy.
(740)
992-3847.
Sunday service, 10 a.m.; Bible
study following worship; evening
service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, 7 p.m.
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church
Church school (all ages), 9:15
a.m.; church service, 10 a.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 West Main Street. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
Fifth and Main Street. Pastor:
David
Hopkins.
Children’s
Director: Doug Shamblin. Teen
Director:
Dodger
Vaughan.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
8:15 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Keno Church of Christ
Pastor: Jeffrey Wallace. First and
Third Sunday. Worship, 9:30 a.m.;
Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.
Bearwallow Ridge Church of
Christ
Pastor: Bruce Terry. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 6:30 p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
Harrisonville Road, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
Worship
service,
9
a.m.;
communion, 10 a.m.; Sunday
school, 10:15 a.m.; youth, 5:50
p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Bradbury Church of Christ
39558
Bradbury
Road,
Middleport. Minister: Justin
Roush. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Minister: David Wiseman. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship and
communion, 10:30 a.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
Ohio 124 and Bradbury Road.
Minister: Russ Moore. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 8 a.m.
and 10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening
service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday adult
Bible study and youth meeting,
6:30 p.m.
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Tuppers Plains. Pastor: Mike
Moore. Bible class, 9 a.m.; Sunday
worship, 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible class, 7 p.m.
Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor: Jack Colgrove. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship service,
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, 6:30 p.m.
Dexter Church of Christ
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday
worship, 10:30 a.m.
***
CHRISTIAN UNION
Hartford Church of Christ in
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va. Pastor: Mike
Puckett. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
***
CHURCH OF GOD
Mount Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Road, Racine. Pastor:
James Satterfield. Sunday school,
9:45 a.m.; evening service, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Larry Shreffler. Sunday
worship, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Syracuse First Church of God
Apple and Second Streets. Pastor:

Rev. David Russell. Sunday school
and worship, 10 a.m.; evening
services, 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 6:30 p.m.
Church of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Road off Ohio 160.
Pastor: P.J. Chapman. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
***
CONGREGATIONAL
Trinity Church
Second and Lynn Streets, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Rev. Tom Johnson.
Worship, 10:25 a.m.
***
EPISCOPAL
Grace Episcopal Church
326 East Main Street, Pomeroy.
Father Thomas J. Fehr. Holy
Eucharist, 11 a.m.
***
HOLINESS
Community Church
Main Street, Rutland. Pastor: Steve
Tomek. Sunday worship, 10 a.m.;
Sunday services, 7 p.m.
Danville Holiness Church
31057 Ohio 325, Langsville.
Pastor: Brian Bailey. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday worship,
10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday
prayer service, 7 p.m.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville
Road.
Pastor:
Charles McKenzie. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m. and 7
p.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Road, Rutland.
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday worship,
7 p.m.; Wednesday prayer
meeting, 7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Holiness
Church
One half mile off of Ohio 325.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Doug Cox. Sunday:
worship service, 10:30 a.m.;
Sunday evening service, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
***
LATTER-DAY SAINTS
Church of Jesus Christ of LatterDay Saints
Ohio 160. (740) 446-6247 or
(740) 446-7486. Sunday school,
10:20-11 a.m.; relief society/
priesthood, 11:05 a.m.-12 p.m.;
sacrament
service,
9-10-15
a.m.; homecoming meeting first
Thursday, 7 p.m.
***
LUTHERAN
Saint John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove. Worship, 9 a.m.;
Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Our Savior Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Streets,
Ravenswood, W.Va. Pastor: David
Russell. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.
Saint Paul Lutheran Church
Corner Syracuse and Second
Street, Pomeroy. Sunday school,
9:45 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
***
UNITED METHODIST
Graham United Methodist
Pastor: Richard Nease. Worship,
11 a.m.
Bechtel United Methodist
New Haven. Pastor: Richard
Nease. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
Tuesday prayer meeting and Bible
study, 6:30 p.m.
Mount Olive United Methodist
Off of 124 behind Wilkesville.
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Thursday services,
7 p.m.
Alfred
Pastor: Gene Goodwin. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m.
Chester
Pastor: Angel Crowell. Worship, 9
a.m.; Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Null. Worship, 9:30
a.m.; Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.
Long Bottom
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m.
Reedsville
Pastor: Gene Goodwin. Worship,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday school, 10:30
a.m.; first Sunday of the month, 7
p.m.
Tuppers Plains Saint Paul

Pastor: Jenni Dunham. Sunday
school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10:15 a.m.;
Bible study, Tuesday 10 a.m.
Asbury
Syracuse. Pastor: Wesley Thoene.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m.; Wednesday services, 7:30
p.m.
Flatwoods
Pastor: Angel Crowell. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11:15
a.m.
Forest Run
Pastor: Wesley Thoene. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.
Heath (Middleport)
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m.
Asbury Syracuse
Pastor: Wesley Thoene. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10
a.m.
New Beginnings
Pomeroy. Pastor: Brian Dunham.
Worship, 10 a.m.; Sunday school,
11:15 a.m. Alive at Five worship,
5 p.m.; book studies, 6:30 p.m.;
youth group, Tuesday 6-7:30 p.m.
Rocksprings
Pastor: Angel Crowell. Sunday
school, 9 a.m.; worship, 8 and 10
a.m.
Rutland
Pastor: Mark Brookins. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.; Thursday services, 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: John Chapman. Sunday
school, 10:15 a.m.; worship, 9:15
a.m.; Bible study, Monday 7 p.m.
Snowville
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship,
9 a.m.
Bethany
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.;
Wednesday services, 10 a.m.
Carmel-Sutton
Carmel and Bashan Roads, Racine.
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday
school, 9:45 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, noon and
7 p.m.
Morning Star
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday
school, 11 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.
East Letart
Pastor: Bill Marshall. Sunday
school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.;
First Sunday evening service, 7
p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Racine
Pastor: Rev. William Marshall.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m.; Tuesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Coolville United Methodist
Church
Main and Fifth Street. Pastor:
Helen Kline. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.; Tuesday
services, 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Road 468C. Pastor:
Phillip Bell. Sunday school, 9 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Hockingport Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m.
Torch Church
County Road 63. Sunday school,
9:30 am.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
***
FREE METHODIST
Laurel Cliff
Laurel Cliff Road. Pastor: Bill
O’Brien. Sunday school, 9:30;
morning worship, 10:30; evening
worship, 6 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
Study, 7 p.m.
***
NAZARENE
Point Rock Church of the
Nazarene
Route 689, Albany. Pastor: Rev.
Lloyd Grimm. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship service, 11
a.m.; evening service, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene
Pastor: Daniel Fulton. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Reedsville Fellowship
Pastor: Russell Carson. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
Pastor:
Shannon
Hutchison.
Sunday worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.; Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene
Pastor: William Justis. Sunday

school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 6 p.m.
Chester Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Warren Lukens.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening, 6 p.m.
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Ann Forbes. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.; Sunday evening, 6 p.m.
***
NON-DENOMINATIONAL
Common Ground Missions
Pastor: Dennis Moore and Rick
Little. Sunday, 10 a.m.
Team Jesus Ministries
333 Mechanic Street, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Eddie Baer. Sunday
worship, 11 a.m.
New Hope Church
Old American Legion Hall, Fourth
Ave., Middleport. Sunday, 5 p.m.
Syracuse Community Church
2480 Second Street, Syracuse.
Pastor: Joe Gwinn. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; Sunday evening, 6:30 p.m.
A New Beginning
(Full Gospel Church).
Harrisonville. Pastors: Bob and
Kay Marshall. Thursday, 7 p.m.
Amazing Grace Community
Church
Ohio 681, Tuppers Plains. Pastor:
Wayne Dunlap. Sunday worship,
10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Oasis Christian Fellowship
(Non-denominational fellowship).
Meeting in the Meigs Middle
School cafeteria. Pastor: Christ
Stewart. Sunday, 10 a.m.-12 p.m.
Community of Christ
Portland-Racine Road. Pastor: Jim
Proffitt. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Bethel Worship Center
39782 Ohio 7 (two miles south
of Tuppers Plains). Pastor: Rob
Barber; praise and worship
led by Otis and Ivy Crockron;
Youth Pastor: Kris Butcher.
(740) 667-6793. Sunday 10 a.m.;
teen ministry, 6:30 Wednesday.
Affiliated with SOMA Family of
Ministries, Chillicothe. Bethelwc.
org.
Ash Street Church
398 Ash Street, Middleport. Pastor:
Mark Morrow. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; morning worship, 10:30 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday service,
6:30 p.m.; youth service, 6:30 p.m.
Agape Life Center
(Full Gospel church). 603 Second
Ave., Mason. Pastors: John and
Patty Wade. (304) 773-5017.
Sunday 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday, 7
p.m.
Abundant Grace
923
South
Third
Street,
Middleport.
Pastor:
Teresa
Davis. Sunday service, 10 a.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Pastor: Steve Reed.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.; Friday fellowship service,
7 p.m.
Harrisonville Community
Church
Pastor: Theron Durham. Sunday,
9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Sam Anderson. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening, 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7:30 p.m.
Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev.
Emmett Rawson. Sunday evening,
7 p.m.; Thursday service, 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman Street, Syracuse.
Pastor: Rev. Roy Thompson.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; evening,
6 p.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Dyesville Community Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Church
Worship, 5 p.m.
Faith Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:45 a.m. and 7:30
p.m.; Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Roy Hunter. Sunday
school, 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday evening, 7:30 p.m.
South Bethel Community
Church
Silver Ridge. Pastor: Linda
Damewood. Sunday school, 9
a.m.; worship, 10 a.m. Second
and fourth Sundays; Bible study,
Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

Carleton Interdenominational
Church
Kingsbury. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship service, 10:30 a.m.;
evening service, 6 p.m.
Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob on County Road
31. Pastor: rev. Roger Willford.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
7 p.m.
Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va., Route 1. Pastor:
Brian May. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Faith Fellowship Crusade for
Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens.
Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev. Blackwood.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7:30 p.m.
Stiversville Community Church
Pastor: Bryan and Missy Dailey.
Sunday school, 11 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Rejoicing Life Church
500
North
Second
Ave.,
Middleport.
Pastor:
Mike
Foreman.
Pastor
Emeritus:
Lawrence Foreman. Worship, 10
a.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Church of the Living
Savior
Route 338, Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse
Morris. Saturday, 2 p.m.
Salem Community Church
Lieving Road, West Columbia,
W.Va. (304) 675-2288. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday evening,
7 p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Hobson Christian Fellowship
Church
Pastor: Herschel White. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Restoration Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens. Pastor:
Lonnie Coats. Sunday worship, 10
a.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
House of Healing Ministries
(Full Gospel) Ohio 124, Langsville.
Pastors: Robert and Roberta
Musser. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Hysell Run Community Church
33099 Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio; Pastors Larry and Cheryl
Lemley. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.;
morning worship 10:30 a.m.;
Sunday evening service, 7 p.m.;
Sunday night youth service, 7
p.m. ages 10 through high school;
Thursday Bible study, 7 p.m.;
fourth Sunday night is singing and
communion.
Endtime House of Prayer
Ohio 681, Snowville; Pastor
Robert Vance. Sunday School 10
a.m., Worship 11 a.m.; Bible Study,
Thursday 6 p.m.
***
PENTECOSTAL
Pentecostal Assembly
Tornado Road, Racine. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
***
PRESBYTERIAN
Harrisonville Presbyterian
Church
Pastor: Rev. David Faulkner.
Sunday worship 9 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Pastor: Jim Snyder. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship service, 11 a.m.
Pastor Jim Snyder. (740) 645-5034.
***
UNITED BRETHREN
Mouth Hermon United Brethren
in Christ Church
36411 Wickham Road. Pastor:
Ricky Hull. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7
p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Eden United Brethren in Christ
Ohio 124, between Reedsville and
Hockingport. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
***
WESLEYAN
White’s Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road. Pastor: Rev.
Charles
Martindale.
Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

FRIDAY,
MAY 31, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

OSU head jabs Notre Dame, Catholics
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
The president of Ohio State
University said Notre Dame was
never invited to join the Big Ten
because the university’s priests
are not good partners, joking
that “those damn Catholics”
can’t be trusted, according to a
recording of a meeting he attended late last year.
At the December meeting of
the school’s Athletic Council,
Gordon Gee also took shots at
schools in the Southeastern Conference and the University of Louisville, according to the recording,
obtained by The Associated Press
under a public records request.
The university called the statements inappropriate and said
Gee is undergoing a “remediation
plan” because of the remarks.
Gee apologized in a statement
released to the AP.
“The comments I made were
just plain wrong, and in no way
do they reflect what the university stands for,” he said. “They
were a poor attempt at humor
and entirely inappropriate.”
Gee, who has taken heat previously for uncouth remarks,
told members of the council
that he negotiated with Notre
Dame officials during his first
term at Ohio State, which began more than two decades ago.
“The fathers are holy on Sunday, and they’re holy hell on the
rest of the week,” Gee said to
laughter at the Dec. 5 meeting at-

tended by Athletic Director Gene
Smith and several other athletic
department members, along with
professors and students.
“You just can’t trust those
damn Catholics on a Thursday
or a Friday, and so, literally, I can
say that,” said Gee, a Mormon.
The Big Ten had for years
courted Notre Dame, but the
school resisted, seeking to retain
its independent status in college
football. The school announced
in September that it would join
the Atlantic Coast Conference in
all sports except football. It also
agreed to play five football games
each year against ACC teams.
In the recording, Gee referred
specifically to dealing with the
Rev. Ned Joyce, Notre Dame’s
longtime chief financial officer,
who died in 2004.
“Father Joyce was one of those
people who ran the university for
many, many years,” Gee said.
Gee said the Atlantic Coast
Conference added Notre Dame at a
time when it was feeling vulnerable.
“Notre Dame wanted to have
its cake and eat it, too,” Gee said,
according to the recording and a
copy of the meeting’s minutes.
Gee was introduced by Athletic
Council then-chairman Charlie
Wilson, and Gee’s name and introduction are included in written minutes of the meeting. Gee’s
comments drew laughter, at times
loud, occasionally nervous, but no
rebukes, according to the audio.

The Athletic Council meets
monthly during the fall, winter
and spring and makes recommendations on athletic policy including ticket prices. December’s
meeting was at Ohio Stadium.
Ohio State trustees learned of
“certain offensive statements”
by Gee in January, met with the
president at length and created
the remediation plan for Gee to
“address his behavior,” board
president Robert Schottenstein
said in a statement.
“These statements were inappropriate, were not presidential
in nature and do not comport
with the core values of the University,” Schottenstein said.
Gee has gotten in trouble for
his offhand remarks, most recently during a memorabiliafor-cash and tattoos scandal that
cost football coach Jim Tressel
his job. Tressel had known about
allegations that players were
trading game paraphernalia for
money and tattoos but didn’t tell
the university in violation of his
contract and NCAA regulations.
Gee was asked in March 2011
whether he had considered firing
Tressel. He responded: “No, are
you kidding? Let me just be very
clear: I’m just hopeful the coach
doesn’t dismiss me.” Tressel
stepped down three months later.
In November 2010, Gee
boasted that Ohio State’s football
schedule didn’t include teams on
par with the “Little Sisters of the

Poor.” An apologetic Gee later
sent a personal check to the real
Little Sisters of the Poor in northwest Ohio and followed up with a
visit to the nuns months later.
Last year, Gee apologized for
comparing the problem of coordinating the school’s many divisions
to the Polish army, an off-the-cuff
remark that a Polish-American
group called a “slanderous” display of bigotry and ignorance.
Gee has one of the highest-profile resumes of any college president in recent history. He has held
the top job at West Virginia University, the University of Colorado,
Brown University and Vanderbilt
University. He was Ohio State
president from 1990 to 1997, and
returned in 2007. He earns about
$1.9 million annually in base pay,
deferred and performance compensation and retirement benefits.
He is a prolific fundraiser and is
leading a $2.5 billion campaign at
Ohio State. He is omnipresent on
campus, attending everything from
faculty awards events to dormitory
pizza parties. He is known for his
bow ties — he has hundreds — and
his horn-rimmed glasses.
During his comments to the Athletic Council, Gee also questioned
the academic integrity of schools
in the Southeastern Conference,
and the University of Louisville.
The top goal of Big Ten presidents is to “make certain that we
have institutions of like-minded
academic integrity,” Gee said. “So

you won’t see us adding Louisville,”
a member of the Big East conference that is also joining the ACC.
After a pause followed by laughter from the audience, Gee added
that the Big Ten wouldn’t add the
University of Kentucky, either.
During the meeting, Gee also
said he thought it was a mistake
not to include Missouri and Kansas
in earlier Big Ten expansion plans.
Missouri has since joined the SEC.
“You tell the SEC when they can
learn to read and write, then they
can figure out what we’re doing,”
Gee said, when asked by a questioner how to respond to SEC fans
who say the Big Ten can’t count
because it now has 14 members.
Gee noted he was chairman
of the SEC during his time as
Vanderbilt University chancellor.
He also told his audience that
speculation about the SEC “remains right here,” according to
the recording.
Gee took a swipe at Big Ten
Commissioner Jim Delaney,
one of the most powerful leaders in college athletics, when
he answered a question about
preserving Ohio State’s financial interests in light of Big Ten
revenue-sharing plans.
“No one admires Jim Delaney
more than I do — I chaired the
committee that brought him here,”
Gee said. “Jim is very aggressive,
and we need to make certain he
keeps his hands out of our pockets
while we support him.”

John Sleezer | Kansas City Star | MCT photo

Cleveland Browns running back Trent Richardson (33) plows
through the Kansas City Chiefs defensive line in the third
quarter as the Cleveland Browns beat the Kansas City Chiefs
30-7, Dec. 9, 2012, in Cleveland, Ohio.

Richardson says
he’s not injury prone Eastern track

Photos by Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Eastern junior Maddie Rigsby clears a height of 5 feet, 2 inches during the girls high jump final held Wednesday at
the Division III Southeast Regional Track and Field Championships at Fairfield Union High School.

BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Browns running back Trent
Richardson isn’t concerned about his latest injury and
doesn’t believe he’s injury prone.
Richardson did not practice again Thursday because of
a strained muscle in his lower right leg that could sideline
him for an extended period.
As his teammates went through the final session of organized team activities under first-year coach Rob Chudzinski, Richardson worked on his conditioning off to the
side. It wasn’t his choice.
“It ain’t no biggie,” said Richardson, who sustained the
injury recently while running during practice. “It ain’t
nothing to worry about. I could be out there, but they
want to be cautious about it to make sure I’m healthy and
be right for camp.”
Richardson also missed last week’s workouts and
Chudzinski said there’s a chance the second-year back
could miss next month’s minicamp. Richardson said the
only pain he feels is not being on the field. With quotes
“It’s terrible,” he said. “It’s hard to watch. I tell coach
every day I can put my helmet on and we laugh about it.
But I know he means well.”
The injury doesn’t appear to be serious, but Richardson’s history of injuries has some wondering if he can
stay healthy.
As a rookie, Richardson missed the exhibition season
while recovering from knee surgery and played most
of the year despite having two broken ribs. The firstround draft pick still managed to rush for 950 yards
with 11 touchdowns.
Richardson is confident he will be able to stay on the
field this season.
“It’s not going to be like last year, being hurt and injured,” he said. “Injury prone is not going to be me. I just
can’t wait to get back out and running. “

earns 2 state
berths on Day 1
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

RUSHVILLE, Ohio — Two out of three ain’t bad.
The Eastern girls track and field team netted a
pair of state berths in three event finals Wednesday
during Day 1 of the 2013 Division III Southeast Regional Championships being held at Fairfield Union
High School in Fairfield County.
The Lady Eagles scored a pair of third-place finishes in the 4x800m relay and the high jump finals,
with the top four placers in each event final earning
a spot in the D-3 state meet next weekend at Jesse
Owens Stadium in Columbus.
The quartet of Taylor Palmer, Keri Lawrence,
Maddie Rigsby and Asia Michael qualified for
state in the 4x800m relay with a third-place time
of 9:56.58. Rigsby also earned a repeat trip to state
in the high jump event after finishing third with a
cleared height of 5 feet, 2 inches.
Those two placements allowed Eastern to score
12 team points after Day 1 of the girls meet, which
currently ranks it second only to Columbus Academy with 18 points. Manchester currently sits third
out of 21 scoring teams with 11 points.
The EHS duo of Katie Keller and Cassidy Cleland
both failed to qualify for state in the other event final
held Wednesday. Keller placed ninth overall in the shot Southern senior Justin Hettinger hits full stride during
put event with a heave of 33 feet, 4.5 inches and Cle- the boys 4x800m relay final held Wednesday at the Divi-

sion III Southeast Regional Track and Field Champion-

OVP Sports Schedule
Friday, May 31
Baseball
Southern/Newark Catholic winner vs. Whiteoak/
Tuscarawas C.C. winner at
Beavers Field, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Division III regionals at
Fairfield Union HS, 6 p.m.
Saturday, June 1
Softball
S o u t h e r n / S t ra s b u rg Franklin winner vs. Newark Catholic at Pickering-

ton HS Central, noon
Track and Field
Division II regionals at
Athens HS, 11:30

See EASTERN ‌| 8 ships at Fairfield Union High School.

Handley regains lead of Riverside senior league

Staff Report
Friday, June 7
Mason County Commissioner
Track and Field
OHSAA Championships Rick Handley has regained the
at Jesse Owens Stadium, lead in the first half of the 2013
Riverside senior men’s golf league.
9:30
Handley’s 120 points leads Richard
Mabe by 5.5 and Bill Yoho by 11.5.
Saturday, June 8
There were 69 players on hand
Track and Field
OHSAA Championships at Tuesday, making up 15 four-man
Jesse Owens Stadium, 9 a.m. teams and three three-man teams.

The low score of week nine was an
11 under par 59 by the team for Randy
Simpkins, Norman Roush, Kenny Cooper and Cecil Gillette. There was a tie
for second place at 10 under par between the team of Richard Mabe, Tom
Hoschar, Roger Hoschar and Bruce
Zirkle and the team of Bob Oliver,
Bobby Joe Roush and Tom Duncan.
Randy Simpkins won the closest to
the pin award on the ninth hole, while

Larry Davis won closest to the pin on
the 14th. There are four weeks remaining in the first half of the season.
The current top-10 standings of
the 2013 Riverside Senior Men’s Golf
League are: Rick Handley (120), Richard Mabe (114.5), Bill Yoho (108.5),
Jimmy Gress (106), Jim Lawrence
(102), Dave Bodkin (99.5), Jack Ocheltree (96.5), Dave Seamon (92.5), Bob
Edgar (91.5) and Bruce Zirkle (91).

�Friday, May 31, 2013

Miscellaneous

Estate Sales

ANNOUNCEMENTS

HONDA
1988 GL1500
MOTORBIKE
FOR FREE
IF INTERESTED
CONTACT:

yahieltammy@hotmail.com

60418383

Professional Services

Gary Stanley

60419955

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

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.

Estate Yard Sale, Dryer, Furniture,Tools, Shelves, Shoes,
Clothes, still unpacking, lots of
Misc. 472 Ball Run Rd, Sat
June 1, 9-5 (only)
Yard Sale
*** $1 YARD SALE ***
Sat. 6/1, 8a-? 2306 Mt.Vernon Ave,
Pt. Pl. EVERYTHING $1, &amp; NEW
items. Come early for best deals!

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.

740-591-8044

Yard Sale

5/31-6/1-6/3 thru 6/5, 9-4 daily,
Racine, 1/2 past SHS on 124,
signs, antiques, lots of quality
teen, babies &amp; mens, Limited
2, Buckle, glassware, furniture,
collectibles, TV/VCR. 740-4167703

Notices

• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured • Experienced
• References Available

2 FAMILY YARD SALE: Sat.
6/1, 8-?, Womens sz. 4-24W.
Lots of misc items. Gallipolis
Fy, beside Par Mar Station.
2- Family Yard Sale May 31st
&amp; June 1st @ 230 &amp; 252 White
Rd. 8am - ?
Antiques,furniture.,crystal
glass,Household items,Adult
clothes, toys,electronics

AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

Please leave a message
Miscellaneous

Are You Still Paying Too Much
For Your Medications?

Celecoxib*
$58.00

Generic equivalent
of CelebrexTM.
Generic price for
200mg x 100
compared to

CelebrexTM $437.58
Typical US brand price
for 200mg x 100

Get An Extra $10 Off
&amp; Free Shipping On
Your 1st Order!

Promotiona
Packages l
starting at
only ...

Call the number below and save an
additional $10 plus get free shipping
on your ﬁrst prescription order with
Canada Drug Center. Expires March
31, 2013. Oﬀer is valid for prescription
orders only and can not be used in
conjunction with any other oﬀers.

Order Now! 1-800-341-2398
Use code 10FREE to receive
this special offer.

Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid
prescription is required for all prescription medication orders.

Call Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398
Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and
accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.

BURIED
in CREDIT
CARDDEBT?

for 12 month

s

1-888-721-0871

Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0113
*Oﬀer subject to change based on premium channel availablity

Fix Your
Computer Now!
Solutions For:

Slow Computers • E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
Spyware &amp; Viruses • Bad Internet Connections

Affordable Rates
For Home
&amp; Business

✔ WE CAN HELP YOU AVOID BANKRUPTCY

Call Now For Immediate Help

877-465-0321

We’re here to help you Monday - Friday from 9am-9pm EST
Not available in all states

25

$

5 FAMILY, Fri 5/31 &amp; Sat 6/1Caldwell's, 822 Vine St, Racine. RAIN OR SHINE

5 FAMILY, St Rt 7 by EHS,
king sz bed, lg TV, bikes, electronics, crafts, toys, kids &amp;
adult clothes, truck wheels
5/31 &amp; 6/1, 32105 Minersville
Rd, Pomeroy, Justice clothes,
boys AE &amp; Nike, riding toys,
kitchen set, playhouse
ESTATE SALE of Bob Jeffers5/30-5/31-6/1, 2200 3rd St,
Syracuse, OH, 9-5, antiques,
HH items, furn, misc. 416-8574

Huge 3 Family Yard Sale
Rain/Shine. 1024 Litchfield Rd
Gall. Ferry, WV. Fri 10:45am?, Sat 1:30-6:30. Sun 10-? &amp;
Mon 8:30-?. Follow Signs on
Crab Creek Rd, Off Rt 2
HUGE Moving Sale May 30,&amp;
31st, June 1st at Hysell Run
Road towards Rutland. 2Cattle gates,sm. teen clothes,
brand name, 3x women, Lg
Harley Davidson women's
shirts &amp; Jackets, Glassware,
RC Cars, Grain Scales, To
much to list.
May 31, 8-4 &amp; June 1, 8-1 at
257 Salem St, (St Rt 124),
Rutland. Kids &amp; adult
clothes, HH &amp; misc items
MULTI FAMILY YARD SALE:
5/31, 6/1. Clothing, furniture,
household items. Belle Road,
3.5mi out Sandhill.

Saturday June 1st, Tomato
stakes, baby items, glass
storm door, new metal garden
gate, washer/dryer. 1804 &amp;
1914 ST RT 141. 9-to dark
Yard Sale - June 1st @ 6003
State Rt 141 - 8am to ?.
Childrens clothing,Toys,
Yard Sale - June 1st @ Intersection of 4th &amp; Pine - 8am to
4pm. Tons of girls &amp; boys
clothes , Toys &amp; Houseware.

888-781-3386

CREDIT CARD RELIEF

3-Family Yard Sale 5/31 &amp; 6/1
- 9am to 5pm @ Corner of St
Rt 850 &amp; Kerr, Tools,Longenberger, Baby Clothes,

QUAIL CREEK COMMUNITY
Annual YARD SALE June 1st
8:30am to 3pm.

We’ll Repair Your Computer
Through The Internet!

✔ WE CAN SAVE YOU THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS

for your FREE consultation CALL

mo.

Call Now and Ask How!

✔ WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY

Not a high-priced consolidation loan or one of those
consumer credit counseling programs

PREMIUM MOVIE
CHANNELS*

For 3 months.

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

3 FAMILY YARD SALE: 5/31,
6/1, 8-? Boys, jr girls, ladies,
primitives, antiques, toys &amp; lots
more. 2612 Mt Vernon, Pt Pl.

GARAGE-A-PALOOZA,
5/31 &amp; 6/1, 9-5, multi family,
Smith's, 1691 Lincoln Hgts,
Pomeroy. Lots of good stuff.

Make the Switch to Dish
Today and Save up to 50%

You can save up to 90% when you fill your
prescriptions at our Canadian and
International Pharmacy Service.

3 Family Yard Sale. 2812
Meadowbrook Dr. 5/31, 6/1
8am-4pm. Across from PVH
Nursing Home.

Fri 5/31 &amp; Sat 6/1, 9am!!,
Maple St, Middleport, furn,
Gravely tractor, antiques, toys,
everything.

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE
rice
Our P

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

00 Off Service
Mention Code: MB

Yard Sale @ Bunce Road May
31st &amp; June 1st. 9am to 3pm
Yard Sale @ F.V.C 4.5 miles
out Bulaville pike 5/31 &amp; 6/1 9am to 3pm

Yard Sale Everything must go June 1st thru June 4th 8am to
5pm- one tenth mile on right
out 218 off St Rt 7 Look for
Signs Big Red Barn. Rain or
Shine
Yard Sale June 1-2-3 @ 67
Plymale Road off State Rt 7 S.
A little of this and that - Come
&amp; See.
SERVICES
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

ARE YOU A DIABETIC?

FINANCIAL SERVICES

Your insurance may pay for your diabetic
supplies with li�le to no cost to you.

Money To Lend

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

per week

*with $99 customer
ation e and
purchase of alarm install
monitoring charg
services.

Call Today, Protect Tomorrow!

1-888-718-8142

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

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)

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted General
In the next 2 weeks, Part time
help needed, 2 days a week.
Apply in person at 1743 Centenary Rd., Gallipolis, 740446-9585 or 740-339-2490
Part-Time Administrative Assistant.
Needs to be proficient in Excel and
Word. Outlook is a plus. Casual atmosphere. Send resumes to:
Office
PO Box 309
Mason, WV 25260

Medical / Health
Medical Billing-If you are seeking full-time employment and
possess these skills: Strong
Organizational and follow up
skills, Excellent communication,problem solving-analytical,
computer and microsoft office
software, ability to change and
adapt. Send resume to : Family Oxygen Attn : Medical
Billing 70 pine street
Gallipolis,Oh 45631 NO
PHONE CALLS.
EDUCATION
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

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

REAL ESTATE SALES
Commercial
Commercial Bldg in downtown
Middleport, 3 apts and 2 store
fronts, $70,000. Call
740-985-3646
FOR SALE: Ambrosia Machine Inc. Point Pleasant, WV.
Complete manual machine
shop, weld shop and fabrication. 9 acres on Kanawha
River. Call 304-675-1722 or
304-675-4144 ask for Marvin
Bing.

Apartments/Townhouses
FOR RENT:2 BR Apt 450 a
month, including water. 400
deposit. Call 304-834-1128.
Near PVH.
Middleport, OH, 1 &amp; 2 BR apts,
no pets, dep &amp; ref.
740-992-0165
MUST SEE: Lg 3 BR, 2 full
bath apt. 2000sq ft. Over Huttons Car Wash. 750 per mo.
Includes gas, water &amp; trash.
304-372-6094.
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.
Houses For Rent
2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331
3-BR - 2 story home in Bidwell,
Also 3 Bdrm home in town. Applications available at Wiseman Real Estate. Call 4463644 for more info.
4BR, 1 1/2 BA, 424 Burkhart
Lane, Gallipolis. No Pets,
$600/Month, 740-853-1101
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
2-BR Trailer, partly furnished $375/month and $375/deposit.
NO PETS 740)446-9151
Condo Rental - 3 BR / 2 bath
Surfside, Surfside Beach, Sat.
to Sat rental $900wk Ph: 304532-7210
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

ANIMALS
Animal Supplies
FREE: Kittens, to good home.
304-675-6781

Houses For Sale

Pets

2001 16 x 70 2 BR, 2 BA mobile home on 2.6 acres, with a
cabin. 50810 Bigley Ridge Rd,
Long Bottom, OH. $39,500
OBO 252-564-4805

FREE KITTENS: Rescued-to
good homes only.
740-949-3408 between 5-8pm.

3.53 acres w/3BR, 2BA,
Double Wide, permanent
foundation, black top driveway.
8x24 sun porch, 8x16 covered
back deck, 24x24 detached
vinyl siding garage, 30x24 pole
barn, w/small lean to. Evenings 740-446-6689 or 740-4417488
FOR SALE: 2 BR house.
Completely renovated. In
Bellemead Addition. 304-6751602.
Lots
Trailer lot for rent, $175 mo, incd water, 33533 Bailey Run
Rd, 252-564-4805

AUTOMOTIVE
ATVs/Dune Buggies
For Sale
2013 Honda Recon 250 low
mileage
304-545-6739 or 304-8122379
Motorcycles
FOR SALE:2009 Harley Davidson FLSTC HRTG SFTL
CLSC. Low miles, new tires.
Lots of extras. MUST SEE.
$13,000. 304-675-5137
MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Miscellaneous

Apartments/Townhouses

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

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

2 BR, $375 mo plus dep &amp; util,
3rd St, Racine, OH. 740-2474292
2 Room efficiency Apartment
in County setting, 7 miles from
Gallipolis on Rt 7 South. Furnished, all Electric, Utilities
NOT included. $300/mo, Dep
&amp; 1st mo. Rent &amp; References
required. Call 740-446-4514

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
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

FOR RENT: Beautiful Townhouse 3 BR. 750 a month, 500
dep. Could be used as commercial office. Near PVH. 304834-1128

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

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Firearms
For Sale - Rossi 38 special 6
shot, Walther by S. W. - Red
Dot Scope,2clips w/case. S.W.
22 A- 6"2 Barrels w/case. Remington 22-250 w/Busnell
Scope 3x9 wide angle, S.W 22
Auto Model, Glock-40 cal. ph
446-7327 or 441-7095.
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

OVP Sports Briefs
Blue Angels Youth Basketball Camp
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
girls basketball program will be holding the Blue
Angel Youth Girls Basketball Camp for students
entering grades 3-6 from 8:30 a.m. until 11 a.m.
on Thursday, June 20, through Saturday, June 22,
at the GAHS gymnasium.
The camp is structured to teach the
fundamentals of the game and players will be
taught fundamentals through individual and
group drills by the Blue Angel varsity coaches
and players. All campers will get a Blue Angel
basketball t-shirt and will be able to compete for
prizes at the last day of camp.
There is a signup fee for each player and a discounted rate for families with two or more campers. For more information, contact GAHS varsity
girls coach Joe Justice at (740) 645-0080 or by
email at joe.justice@gc.k.12.oh.us
PPHS Athletic Physicals
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Dr. Kelly Roush
and staff will be pro forming sports physicals for
the upcoming year on Monday June 3rd at 9 a.m.
in the Point Pleasant High School gymnasium.
Please have you physical form filled out completely and you must have parental consent. The cost
is $10, which will be donated to the PPHS athletic department. Forms can be picked up in the
PPHS office or downloaded at www.wvssac.org

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 31, 2013

Wrestling, baseball-softball, squash on IOC list
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) —
And now for the gold-medal match.
Three months after wrestling got
kicked out of the 2020 Olympics, the
ancient sport is back in the frame and
will compete against baseball-softball
and squash for a spot in the games.
“We had the opportunity to have a second chance to compete,” international
wrestling federation head Nenad Lalovic
said Wednesday after the three sports
made the IOC short list. “We took the
opportunity. We won the first match but
there is another one to fight.”
Of eight sports competing for a place
on the 2020 program, five were eliminated — karate, roller sports, sport
climbing, wakeboarding and the Chinese martial art of wushu.
The IOC executive board decided to
recommend wrestling, squash and baseball-softball to the full IOC assembly for a
final decision on Sept. 8 in Buenos Aires,
Argentina. Only one will get through.
“We are competitors. We had seven
and now we have two,” said Lalovic, a
Serb who has revamped FILA and led
the campaign for reinstatement. “Be
careful, we are good fighters.”
Despite a tradition dating to the Olym-

pics of ancient Greece, wrestling was cut
from the list of core sports by the IOC
board in February. The decision caused
an international uproar and prompted
the United States, Russia, Iran and other
countries to join forces in an unlikely political alliance to save the sport.
Wrestling has gone through a major
upheaval since the rejection. Raphael
Martinetti resigned as FILA president
within days of the decision and was replaced by Lalovic, who won election as
full-time leader 10 days ago.
FILA has brought women and athletes
into decision-making roles and enacted
rule changes to make the competition
more compelling. Matches will now
consist of two three-minute sessions instead of three two-minute periods, and
scoring will be cumulative instead of the
previous best-of-three system.
“Everybody understood what we have
done,” said Lalovic, wiping away sweat
from his forehand after the decision
was announced in a packed conference
room. “They probably trust us that we
can do more and this is the result.
“But we have to do much more, and
to prepare ourselves for Buenos Aires
with additional arguments. These will

not be sufficient in Buenos Aires.”
Asked whether the result showed the
IOC’s earlier decision was a mistake,
Lalovic said: “I can’t say that. Simply,
I don’t judge them. They are in the
position to judge us.”
Wednesday’s announcement came
after the eight sports federations each
made 30-minute, closed-door presentations to the IOC board.
The board voted by secret ballot
over several rounds, with a majority
required for making the short list and
low vote-getters eliminated. Wrestling
showed its newfound strength by winning on the first round with eight of
the 14 votes. It took baseball-softball
and squash several votes before they secured enough votes for selection.
“The number of this vote today
doesn’t have any influence on the voting in the session,” Lalovic said. “It
doesn’t mean we have any advantage
in Buenos Aires. In Buenos Aires, we’ll
have the same starting position.”
Baseball-softball beat karate 9-5 in a
head-to-head vote to win its spot on the
list. Squash got through in the final round,
getting eight votes to defeat wushu with
four and sport climbing with two.

Eastern
From Page 6
land was 15th with a throw
of 30 feet, 10.5 inches.
The Lady Eagles also
qualified for Friday night’s
finals in the 4x100m,
4x200m and 4x400m relays Wednesday, as well as

in both hurdles events.
The Lady Tornadoes of
Southern failed to score or
qualify in their two races
Wednesday night. The
4x800m squad of Jennifer
McCoy, Shelby Pickens,
Angie Eynon and Joyce
Weddle just missed scor-

ing a point after finishing ninth with a time of
10:58.42 in the event final.
The foursome of Pickens, Weddle, Eynon and
Brittany Cogar missed
qualifying for Friday’s final in the 4x400m relay
after placing 15th overall

with a mark of 4:45.67.
On the boys side of
the D-3 tournament,
Columbus Academy holds
the team scoring lead with
24 points after Day 1.
Seneca East is the current
runner-up with 19 points
and Colonel Crawford is

Entertainment

Entertainment

third out of 21 scoring
teams with 16 points.
Southern was the only
local boys team to compete
on Wednesday night, as the
4x800m relay team of Kody
Wolfe, Joseph Morris, Justin
Hettinger and Bradley McCoy failed to qualify for state

after placing 14th in the final
with a time of 9:05.99.
Complete results of Day
1 of the 2013 Division
III Southeast Regional
Championships at Fairfield Union High School
are available on the web at
baumspage.com

�Friday, May 31, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 31, 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 Friday, May
31, 2013:
This year many decisions come
your way. You have to weigh your
personal needs against the importance of your professional image.
A conflict could emerge as a result.
You have plenty of energy and can
handle more than you think. If you are
single, you will enter a period where
you’ll attract many people; however,
you often might wonder how authentic
they are. Only time will tell. If you are
attached, you and your significant
other might find yourselves fighting
over nothing. Work on better communication. PISCES pushes you into the
limelight.
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)
HHH You might note that others
are in a less-than-agreeable mood. A
domestic issue demands your attention. Interestingly, the more you study
the problem, the more likely you are
to see it in a different light. Be sure to
choose your words with care. Tonight:
Not to be found.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHH You might be compared to
a fast-moving freight train that’s unwilling or unable to stop. You know what
you want, and will do your best to get
someone to go along with your idea.
Be a little more patient, and you will
achieve better results. Tonight: Where
people are.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH You will note a sudden
energy swing. You might not have
as much under control as you would
like. Consider your options involving
a boss or some other authority figure.
This person will help you achieve your
goal — you just have to ask. Tonight:
A force to be dealt with.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH A recent reflective streak
transforms into a more verbal selfexpression. Others could have quite
a reaction, as they might view your
ideas as unconventional. Curb your
irritation by expressing your feelings.
Tonight: Take off for the weekend if
you really want to get away.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH You might be consumed by
an idea and feel like you’re unable to
come up with a solution. A discussion
with a friend presents many workable
ideas. Try them out. Curb your anxiety
through yoga, exercise or whatever
works for you. Tonight: Share with a
favorite person.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH You might be overthinking and sharing only some of your
thoughts. You need to rethink a decision more carefully. Getting feedback
from the right people can only help.
Refuse to respond to an older friend
who might be cantankerous. Be polite
if you can. Tonight: At a favorite place.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Mellow out despite a difficult conversation. The positive lies
in the fact that you gained a new perspective and can identify with others
more easily. Someone you respect
might share some confidential information that needs to be kept hushhush. Tonight: Relax first, then decide.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH How you handle a difficult
situation changes because you are
able to detach and see the issue differently. You might trigger others by
not responding to their bait. Maintain a
sense of humor, and share only when
you feel comfortable. Tonight: Make
the first move.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHH You might not be in sync
with someone else. You could wonder where to start with a project. If
you feel the need to change your
schedule, make an adjustment. Stay
centered. Be sure to share your feelings with a close friend or loved one.
Tonight: Entertain at home.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH Think in terms of finally
establishing a stronger bond with
someone you care a lot about. This
person will share, given some space.
You might note that if you can’t
achieve what you want, you tend to
get frustrated. Take frequent walks to
ease the tension. Tonight: Out late.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHH Remember that you have
many talents. Do not give too much;
otherwise, others might think you don’t
value yourself. Be aware of the cost
of following through on a certain set
of plans involving friends. You’ll need
to stay on top of your end of the bill.
Tonight: Let the party begin.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHHH A loved one will share
a secret that makes you smile from
ear to ear. Your light mood might
encourage others to ask you for help.
Say “no” to an offer or invitation that
implies more work and responsibilities.
Right now, you need to take a break.
Tonight: As you like it.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 31, 2013

Adam ‘Pacman’ Jones finally settles in
CINCINNATI (AP) — Adam
“Pacman” Jones is finally in a
comfortable place, playing up to
expectations after years of digging
his career out from another mess.
And he’s thinking big for whatever time he has left.
The cornerback has developed
into a regular with the Cincinnati Bengals, who gave him a final chance after years of off-field
problems and missed opportunities. He’s an important part of a
defense that finished sixth last
season in yards allowed.
The 29-year-old cornerback
has not only revived his career
after a year out of football, he’s
starting to embellish it.

“And the story ain’t written
all the way yet,” Jones said on
Wednesday following one of
the team’s offseason workouts.
“So we’ll see.”
His story was mostly a bad drama after Tennessee took him with
the sixth overall pick in 2005. He
repeatedly got in trouble off the
field, resulting in repeated suspensions. He missed the entire
2007 season on suspension and
sat out the 2009 season when no
NFL team was interested.
The Bengals gave him a final
chance, and he has taken advantage of it. Jones started five
games last season and played
in all of them. He also returned

punts, running one back 81 yards
against the Browns for his first
touchdown since 2003.
He’s found a home.
“It’s been great,” Jones said.
“I’ve got a lot of guys in the locker
room that I can trust. The people
upstairs (in the front office) have
been great. With the injuries I’ve
had, they’ve had me stick around.”
In addition to signing him for
the 2010 season, they stuck with
him after he damaged a disc in
his neck and missed nearly a
year. He also missed time with a
hamstring injury.
He has played in 29 games
overall with the Bengals, starting
13 of them.

Coach Marvin Lewis said one of
the biggest changes in Jones has
been the way he now studies the
game. He understands defensive
coordinator Mike Zimmer’s methods better, allowing him to be in the
right spot and do the right thing.
“Really, before I got here I just
relied on straight athleticism and
ability,” Jones said. “With Zim, you
have to know what you’re going
to get out of certain formations,
know when you are getting the ball
toward your way, know what different offenses are trying to attack
when we’re in certain calls.”
Jones would love to get deep
into the playoffs — the Bengals
have lost to Houston in the first

round each of the last two seasons. He thinks Cincinnati’s defense, which added linebacker
James Harrison in the offseason,
is good enough to do it.
“We have a good group,” he said.
“If we can keep everybody healthy,
we should have a good run at it.”
Harrison, who left the rival
Steelers after they failed to agree
on a restructured contract, has
been learning the defense a little
more each day during two weeks
of OTA workouts. Harrison said
the switch from Pittsburgh’s 3-4
alignment to Cincinnati’s 4-3
hasn’t been much of an adjustment. He expects to have a little
different role, however.

Meghan Caldwell signs with OCU
SUBMIT YOUR CHILD’S PHOTO TO WIN!

www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailyregister.com

SUBMISSIONS OPEN
VOTING BEGINS
VOTING ENDS

April

28

June

1

5pm, June

14

CASH WINNERS

Grand Prize • Newborn (0-12 months) • Toddler (12-24 months)
2-3 Years Old • 4-5 Years Old • 6-8 Years Old • 9-12 Years Old

We’ve Got
Money to Lend!

60410930

Submitted photo

South Gallia’s multi-sport standout Meghan Caldwell has signed a letter of intent to join Ohio Christian University. Caldwell
will play volleyball and basketball for the Trailblazers. OCU is a member of the NCCAA Division II, where the basketball
team has made four consecutive national tournament appearances, while the volleyball team claimed its first Mid-East
Region title in 2012. Caldwell has earned All-Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division honors in basketball and volleyball
in each her junior and senior seasons. Caldwell was named to the all-district first team in volleyball this past season,
while earning second-team all-district honors in basketball. Caldwell holds SGHS records in blocks and kills for the Lady
Rebels volleyball program. Pictured above sitting in the front is Meghan Caldwell (center) with her parents Tim and Susan
Caldwell. Standing in the back, from left is SGHS volleyball coach Tracey Burnette, OCU volleyball coach Dave Hopewell,
OCU basketball coach Mandy Wray, SGHS basketball coach Brett Bostic and SGHS assistant basketball coach David Small.

740-949-2210

CONGRATULATIONS SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
For winning District Titles in Division 4.

Softball • Baseball • Track
CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR HARD WORK

740-949-2210

60422181

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
    <file fileId="12414">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b1c02faa91c8a55f1f32929eee20c31a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c80afd0f02e1c0e85ff75bfa5d8cb9b4</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8998">
                  <text>Salute to
Meigs County
Graduates 2013

A Special Supplement to The Daily Sentinel • Friday, May 17, 2013

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

Friday, May 17, 2013

Eastern High School Graduates 2013

60414929

Marshall Aanestad

Hannah Adams

Alex Amos

Randall Armes

Lauren Boggess

Nettie Brooks

Maxwell Carnahan

Rebecca Chadwell

Katlin Clark

Samuel Collins

Larissa Cunningham

Randal Davis

Devin Dye

Timothy Elam

Anna Fulks

Troy Gantt

�Friday, May 17, 2013

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Eastern graduation to be held May 19
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS — The Eastern High
School Class of 2013 will receive their diplomas during the annual commencement
ceremony at 2 p.m. on May 19 in the Eastern High School gymnasium.
There are tentatively 58 students set to
graduate as part of the Class of 2013.
Victoria Anne Goble will be the valedictorian for the Eastern High School Class
of 2013. Goble is the daughter of Melissa
Jones and Dennis Ault of Rutland. She
plans to attend Kent State University to
major in pre-medicine/biology.
Larissa Lynn Riddle is the salutatorian
for the Eastern High School Class of 2013.
Riddle is the daughter of Randy and Melissa Riddle of Coolville. She plans to attend
Ohio University to major in education.
Honorarians for the Class of 2013, in addition to Goble and Riddle, are,
Rachael Erin Markworth of Long Bottom, daughter of Amy Markworth and
David Markworth; Alex Burke Amos of
Coolville, son of Jeff and Lori Amos; Timothy James Minear of Chester, son of Jim
and Karin Minear; Kiana Cheyenne Osborne of Reedsville, daughter of Jim and
Connie Osborne; Alexandria Mary-Elizabeth Hendrix of Coolville, daughter of
Tony and Sherri Hendrix; Rebecca Louise
Chadwell of Long Bottom, daughter of Jim
and Cindy Chadwell; Marshall Stephen
Aanestad of Rocksprings, son of Erik and
Jane Ann Aanestad; Mallory Paige Nicodemus of Reedsville, daughter of Betsy and
Warren Entsminger.
A tentative list of Eastern High School
graduating seniors for the Class of 2013
are:
Marshall Stephen Aanestad, Hannah
Lynn Adams, Alex Burke Amos, Randall
James Armes, Lauren Brooke Boggess,
Nettie Renee Brooks, Maxwell Peat Carnahan, Rebecca Louise Chadwell, Katlin
Danielle Clark, Samuel Charles Collins,
Larissa Dawn Cunningham,
Randal William Davis, Devin Ray Dye,
Timothy Allen Elam, Anna Noel Fulks,
Troy Anthony Gantt, Nicole Ashley Gilbride, Victoria Ann Goble, Bradley Allan
Goeglein, Garret Andrew Hall, Kayla Marie Hawthorne, Breanna Kalynn Hayman,
Jeremy Lee Haynes,
Zakkary O’Rein Heaton, Alexandria
Mary-Elizabeth Hendrix, Gabrielle Thomas Hendrix, Jason Theodore Kelley, Robert

Photo courtesy of Eastern High School
Austin Lute, Rachael Erin Markworth, Ryland Thomas Michael, Dylan Keith Milam, Eastern High School Class of 2013 honorarians are (front, left to right) Larissa Riddle, Rebecca
Krista Noel Miller, Timothy James Minear, Chadwell, Mallory Nicodemus, Alexandria Hendrix, Victoria Goble, (back, left to right) Rachael
Markworth, Alex Amos, Marshall Aanestad, Timothy Minear, and Kiana Osborne.
Nicole Leeann Moodispaugh,
Christopher Dylan Morris, Shawna Rebecca Murphy, Mallory Paige Nicodemus,
Justin Charles Noce, Ethan Jacob Nottingham, Kiana Cheyenne Osborne, Julia Amber Poole, Derick Alden Powell, Tyler Michael Price, Thomas Kirk Pullins, Larissa
Lynn Riddle, Garrett Lee Ritchie,
Jordan Isaiah Russell, Brandon Michael Scott, Joseph Bryan Scowden, Maria Christine Sharp, Joshua Levi Shook,
Jeremiah Andrew Smith, Savannah Rilan
Middleport, OH
Speelman-Hawley, Jennifer Alexis SpenSt Rt 7 • 2nd Ave • Hartinger Pkwy
cer, Miranda Kelly Tanner, Emily Brooke
992-6200 • 992-3397 • 992-1400
Wheeler, Jesse Colter Woodyard, and Kyle
Austin Young.
Chester, OH
Syracuse, OH
NOTE: Individuals photos of Eastern
St Rt 7
St Rt 124
seniors were submitted by the students
740-985-3350
740-992-6542
through the school.

TNT
PIT
STOP
CONVENIENCE STORES

60413822

�Page 4 • The Daily Sentinel

Nicole Gilbride

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

Victoria Goble

Bradley Goeglein

Garret Hall

Friday, May 17, 2013

Kayla Hawthorne

Breanna Hayman

Jeremy Haynes

Zakkary Heaton

Alexandria Hendrix

Gabrielle Hendrix

Jason Kelley

Robert Lute

Rachael Markworth

Ryland Michael

Dylan Milam

Krista Miller

Timothy Minear

Nicole Moodispaugh

Christopher Morris

Shawna Murphy

Mallory Nicodemus

Justin Noce

Ethan Nottingham

Kiana Osborne

Derick Powell

Thomas Pullins

Larissa Riddle

Garrett Ritchie

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service
We Now Have
Interest Free Easy Financing

*

Congratulations Graduates!
204 Condor Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2975 • 740-508-1936
*See store for details

�Friday, May 17, 2013

Jordan Russell

Joseph Scowden

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

Maria Sharp

Joshua Shook

Jeremiah Smith

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Savannah SpeelmanHawley
Jennifer Spencer

Jesse Woodyard

Do we have your attention now?
Advertise your business in
this space, or bigger
Call us at:

The Daily Sentinel
740.992.2155

Kyle Young

60413787

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

Friday, May 17, 2013

Meigs High School Graduates 2013

Jacobe Atkinson

Paula Barthelmas

Shauna Bare

Rachel Bauer

Elizabeth Bearhs

Dillon Boyer

Savanna Capehart

Ryan Caruthers

Kimberly Casci

Matthew Casci

Raeven Clampitt

Nails - Pedicures - Spray T
Ta
ans

Way To Go Grads!
God Bless!
Pam Napper - Owner/Nail Tech
271 N. 2nd Avenue • Middleport, Ohio
60413929

Casi Arnold

740-992-9947 • 740-416-6524

Visit us at www.mydailysentinel.com

60413778

�Friday, May 17, 2013

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

MHS graduation set for May 24
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The 45th annual commencement of Meigs High School will take
place at 8 p.m. on Friday, May 24, in the
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
In their maroon and gold gowns, the
115 graduates will enter the auditorium to
“Pomp and Circumstance” played by the
Meigs Marauder Band directed by Toney
Dingess.
Following the processional the program
will open in ritualistic form with the National Anthem, followed by the pledge of
allegiance led by Mercadies Marie George,
and the invocation by Joshua Dunham.
Keana Robinson, class president, will extend the welcome, and Emma Perrin, class
treasurer, will handle introductions of personnel.
The band will play “Mazoma” by Jay
Chattaway, after which Rusty Bookman,
superintendent of the Meigs Local School
District, will handle the recognition of student honors. Alyssa Cremeans will give
the salutatorian address, followed by addresses by Megan Dyer and Emma Perrin,
valedictorians of the class.
Meigs High School Principal Steve Ohlinger will present the senior class to the
Meigs Local Board of Education and to
the roll call by Shawnella Patterson, class
secretary, diplomas will be presented by
Roger Abbott, president of the Meigs Local Board of Education. Casci Arnold,
class vice president, will give the symbol
of graduation.
Following the Alma Mater by the Meigs
High School Band and the benediction by
Jack Ray Kitchen Junior, the recessional to
“Fanfare on Recessional “ by the band will
take place.
While a few of the seniors have yet to
complete requirements for graduation, a
tentative list of seniors to participate in
the exercises is as follows:
Casci Jordan Clay Arnold, Jacobe
O’Brian Atkinson, Paula Jo Barthelmas,
Shauna Michelle Bare, Rachel Elizabeth
Bauer, Elizabeth Nicole Bearhs, Thomas
Dillon Boyer, Savanna Lynn Capehart,
Ryan Joseph Caruthers, Kimberly Ann
Casci, Matthew Allen Casci, Raeven Dawn
Clampitt, Michael Vale Clark, Shayne
Douglas Clary, Kayla Ashley Conlin,
Hunter Brian Keith Cox, Michael Lee Cox,
Vanessa Lynn Crane, Alyssa Nicole Cre-

means, Brittany Beth Cremeans, Allyson
Lee Davis, Robert Brian Dillon, Joshua
Allen Dunham, Megan Danielle Dyer, Tyler Michael Eblin, Kasie Alexandra Ellis,
Thadaeeus James Ellis, Haley Francine
English, Jorden Michelle Evans, Kacyn
Lynn Fink, Delilah Levinna Fish, Christopher Michael Folmer, Erika Lynn Fox,
Harley Leeann Jane Fox, Mercadies Marie
George, Shana Jade Gorslene, Kayla Faye
Graham, Layla Rae Graham, and MaKenzie Nicole Greene.
Michael Keith Sullivan Grueser, Karlie
Anne Hall, Brandi Dawn Haning, Brandon
Lee Haning, Kendra Lynn Haning, Brooklyn Dawn Harless, David Christopher
Chase Hayes, Edward Grayson Hendricks,
Addie Mae Hill, Odessa Ann Marie Jacks,
Justin Ryan Jeffers, Cassandra May Johnson, Christopher Anthony Jones, Matthew
Edward Keesee, Corey Tyler King, Hannah Elizabeth King, Emily Christine Kinnan, Jack Ray Kitchen Junior, Anthany
Allen Lee Lane, Ronald Rex Lavender
Junior, Jaimee Rena Little, Michael William Marshall, Chandra Nicole Mattox,
Kayla Rae McClure, Anthony James McCollum, Kirsten Dawn McGuire, Austin
Treay McKinney, Gunner Lee McKinney,
Gregory Scott McKnight, Jessi Alexandra
Meadows, Natalie Virginia Michael, Brett
Allan Milhoan, Alexander William Morris, David Jacob Mulholland, Tyler Jerome
Neal, Cody Ryan Oliver, Shawnella Rose
Patterson, Rachel Danielle Frances Payne,
and Emma Rose Perrin.
Tress Marie Phelps, Ashley Dawn Phoenix, Nakayla Blu Ratliff, Tiaira Leann
Richmond, Keana Chantel Cerreoa Elaine
Robinson, Danelle Ranee Runyon, Bailey
Marie Rupe, Samuel Robert Scherfel, Kenneth Chadwick Searles, Katrina Nichole
Shockey, Kenzie Rose Shuler, Jesse Alexander Siders, Charles Joseph Franklin Smith,
Maggie Lauren Smith, Odis Steven Smith
II, Colton Skyler Sparks, Bethany Hope
Spaun, Cody Lawrence Stewart, William
Arthur Taylor III, Madelyn Elise Thomas, Dustin Quade Ulbrich, Jesse Noah
Vaughan, Florence Anita Warth, Gage
Matthew Weisenmuller, Thomas Randall
Werry, Seth Aaron White, McKenzie Allyn
Whobrey, Caitlyn June Will, Haley Nichole
Will, Autumn Renee’ Williams, Jared Lee
Williamson, Cory James Wise, Sharon
Kathyren Wright, Zachary Allen Yeauger,
Benjamin Austin Young, Christopher Michael Zacharias, and Tisha Nicole Zeigler.

Photo by Charlene Hoeflich

The 10 top students academically in the 2013 Meigs High School graduating class are center
front, valedictorians, Megan Dyer and Emma Perrin, and salutatorian, Alyssa Cremeans, with other honorarians from the left, Matthew Casci, Keana Robinson, Delilah Fish, Shawnella Patterson,
Tess Phelips, Karlie Hall, and Madelyn Thomas.

Jane Ann Karr Aanestad, M.A.
Licensed Audiologist
Phone (740) 594-6333
Fax (740) 592-2103
800-451-9806
499 Richland Avenue
Athens, Ohio 45701

Dream Big Marshall

60414204

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

Friday, May 17, 2013

Kayla Conlin

Hunter Cox

Michael Cox

Vanessa Crane

Alyssa Cremeans

Brittany Cremeans

Allyson Davis

Robert Dillon

Josh Dunham

Megan Dyer

Tyler Eblin

Kasie Ellis

Thaddaeus Ellis

Haley English

Jorden Evans

Kacy Fink

Delilah Fish

Christopher Folmer

Erika Fox

Harley Fox

Mercaides George

Shana Gorslene

Kayla Graham

Layla Graham

MaKenzie Greene

Michael Grueser

Karlie Hall

Brandi Haning

Trophies &amp;
Engraving

Celebrate your team’s achievement with a personalized
award. We offer timely and accurate engraving
service at competitive rates.
Traditional Trophies • Sports Trophies • Dance Trophies
Victory Cups • Plaques • Custom Awards • Name Plates • Business Card Holders
Desk Accessories • Corporate Gifts

LOCKER 219

219 North 2nd Ave. • Middleport, OH

740-992-5627

�Friday, May 17, 2013

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Brandon Haning

Kendra Haning

Brooklyn Harless

Chase Hayes

Eddie Hendricks

Addie Hill

Odessa Jacks

Justin Jeffers

Cassandra Johnson

Morgan Johnson

Christopher Jones

Matthew Keesee

Corey King

Hannah King

Emily Kinnan

Jack Kitchen

Congratulations
Graduates of 2013
Anthany Lane

Ronald Lavender

Jaimee Little

Michael Marshall

The Key to Success
Congratulations
to Our Graduate:
Robbie Dillon
Middleport Dairy Queen

740-949-2210

700 N. 2nd Avenue Middleport, Ohio

740-992-3322

Owned &amp; Operated by the Davis Family

60413768

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

Friday, May 17, 2013

Chandra Mattox

Kayla McClure

Anthony McCollum

Kirsten McGuire

Treay McKinney

Gunner McKinney

Gregory McKnight

Jessi Meadows

Natalie Michael

Brett Milhoan

Alex Morris

Jacob Mulholland

Tyler Neal

Shawnella Patterson

Rachel Payne

Emma Perrin

Tess Phelps

Ashley Phoenix

Tiaira Richmond

Keana Robinson

Danelle Runyon

Bailey Rupe

Samuel Scherfel

Kenneth Searles

Congratulations Class of 2013

Reach For The Stars!

Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center

333 Page Street • Middleport, Ohio • 740-992-6472

www.overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

60413771

60413761

�Friday, May 17, 2013

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Katrina Shockey

Kenzie Shuler

Jesse Siders

Charles Smith

Maggie Smith

Odis Smith

Bethany Spaun

Cody Stewart

William Taylor

Madelyn Thomas

Dustin Ulbrich

Jesse Vaughan

Anita Warth

Gage Weisenmuller

Thomas Werry

Seth White

Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home
McKenzie Whobrey

Caitlyn Will

Autumn Williams

Jared Williamson

590 E. Main St.,Pomeroy, OH
740•992•5444

“Let Our Family Help Protect Your Family”
Locally Owned &amp; Operated

264 South 2nd Ave,
Middleport, OH
740•992•5141
209 3rd Street,
Racine, OH
740•949•2300

• Fire Extinguishers
• Restaurant Suppression Installation
• Fire Alarms
• Security Systems

Tradition - Service - Value

Adam McDaniel &amp; James Anderson

www.snouffers.com

740-992-7075 • 1-800-353-0837 • 740-446-4778
60414542

DIRECTORS

www.andersonmcdaniel.com

60414200

�Cory Wise

Sharon Wright

Zach Yeauger

Benjamin Young

Christopher Zacharias

Tisha Zeigler

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

Friday, May 17, 2013

Ridenour’s Gas Service
Bulk &amp; Bottled • Home • Farm
Industry • Repair
Sales and Service

Congratulations
Graduates!

6041
60414214

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Congrats 2013 Graduates
(704) 985-3307 • P.O. Box 55, Chester, OH
60413753

�Friday, May 17, 2013

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 13

Southern Class of 2013 to graduate May 19
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Southern High School’s
Class of 2013 will receive their diplomas
during a graduation ceremony scheduled
for 8 p.m. on Sunday, May 19 in Charles
W. Hayman Gymnasium at Southern High
School.
There are tentatively 38 students set to
graduate as part of the Class of 2013.
Kody Dean Wolfe has been named the
valedictorian of the Southern High School
Class of 2013. Wolfe is the son of Joe and
Betty Ann Wolfe of Racine.
Johnny Ray Lewis VanCooney is the
salutatorian for the Class of 2013. VanCooney is the son of Johnny and Angela
VanCooney of Long Bottom.
Honorarians, in addition to Wolfe and
VanCooney, are, Jaclyn Katherine Mees
of Portland, daughter of Larry and Dollie Mees; Jennifer Anne McCoy of Racine,
daughter of Barry and Deborah McCoy;
Paige Nicole Wehrung of Racine, daughter of Seth and Carletta Wehrung; Kyrie
Jordanne Swann of Middleport, daughter
of Bryan Swann and Brenda Seagraves;
Olivia Faith Poling of Racine, daughter
of Brian and Angie Burkhamer and Lannie Poling; Tara Marie Eakins of Syracuse,
daughter of Steve and Teresa Burton; Joseph Lee Smith of Racine, son of Kenneth
and Kathy Smith; and Stefanie Morgan
Pyles of Racine, daughter of Amiee Pyles.
A tentative list of graduating seniors for
the Class of 2013 are as follows:
Christa Renae Berryman, Christopher
Photo courtesy of Southern High School
Allen Chaney, Brittany Ellann Cogar, Cait- Southern High School Class of 2013 honorarians are (back, left to right) Olivia Poling, Kody Wolfe, Joe Smith, Johnny VanCooney, Paige Wehrung,
lyn Jennifer Cowdery, Maggie Marin Cum- (front, left to right) Kyrie Swann, Jennifer McCoy, Stefanie Pyles, Tara Eakins, and Jaclyn Mees.
mins, Zachary Tyler Davis, Tara Marie
Eakins, Angelica Marie Eynon, Makayla
Maria Findley, David Cole Graham, Robert Ray Hendrix, Justin Wesley Hettinger, Danielle Kay Taylor,
Kristen Michelle Holbrook, Teela Diane
Johnny Ray Lewis VanCooney, Jeremiah
Lemley, Brandon Michael Marcinko,
Douglas-Neil Warden, Julie Ann Weddle,
Jennifer Anne McCoy, Megan Marie Whitney Paige Weddle, Paige Nicole WehMcGee, Jaclyn Katherine Mees, Adam rung, Nicolete Leigh Wells, Kody Dean
Lee Pape, Shelby Dawn Pickens, Olivia
Faith Poling, McKayla Elizabeth Powell, Wolfe and Jessica Lee Wood.
NOTE: Individuals of Southern seniors
Stefanie Morgan Pyles, Daniel Raymond
Ramthun, Tedra Nicole Sayre, Joseph Lee were submitted by the students through
Smith, Mica Markita Maria Smith, Kyrie the school and provided to The Daily
Jordanne Swann, Cody Edward Taylor, Sentinel.

At t e n t io n C l as s of 2 0 1 4

GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS
School Colors, Picture Announcements
At Lowest Prices

Visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

QUALITY PRINT SHOP
P
Serving the area’s graduates since 1948

255 Mill Street • Middleport OH 45760

740-992-3345

Mon.-Fri 8:30am to 5pm

60414230

�Page 14 • The Daily Sentinel

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

Friday, May 17, 2013

Southern High School Graduates 2013

Christa Berryman

Christopher Chaney

Brittany Cogar

Caitlyn Cowdrey

Maggie Cummins

Zachary Davis

Tara Eakins

Angelica Eynon

Makayla Findley

Robert Hendrix

Kristen Holbrook

Teela Lemley

Cool Spot
In Coolville &amp; Cool Country Farms Restaurant
Store Open
24 Hrs/7 days
1-740-667-6100

Cool Spot

Restaurant Open
7am - 9:30pm
1-740-667-6101

Meigs Carpet &amp; Decorating Center

2

#

Carpet &amp; Vinyl
Remnants

In Tuppers Plains, Ohio

- Gas - Deli - Bakery - Lottery 1-740-667-0771

1/2 Price

Beer Available
7 days a week
6am - 10pm
Everyday

New

Selection of
Wallpaper

Congrats

Great Prices
on
Curtains
&amp; Blinds

We Love You!

Large Selection

McKenzie

of Bound Rugs

39080 Hobson Drive, Middleport, Ohio • 740-992-6173

60414178

Visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

60413814

�Friday, May 17, 2013

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

Jennifer McCoy

Megan McGee

Jaclyn Mees

Adam Pape

Tedra Sayre

Danielle Taylor

Johnny VanCooney

Jeremiah Warden

Shelby Pickens

Whitney Weddle

The Daily Sentinel • Page 15

Olivia Poling

Paige Wehrung

McKayla Powell

Stefanie Pyles

Nicolete Wells

Kody Wolfe

Ohio University graduates nearly 3,300 in 2013
ATHENS — Ohio University sent
the class of 2013 into the world during its 259th undergraduate commencement exercises on Saturday.
Degrees from the colleges of Business and Fine Arts, University College, Russ College of Engineering and
Technology, Scripps College of Communication and regional campuses
were conferred in the 9 a.m. ceremony. Degrees from the colleges of Arts
and Sciences and Health Sciences

and Professions, the Patton College
of Education, Honors Tutorial College and the Center for International
Studies were conferred in the 2 p.m.
ceremony. In all, nearly 3,300 undergraduates walked across the stage in
both ceremonies.
Keynote speaker Andy Alexander drew on his own experiences as
an Ohio University undergraduate
and as an alumnus. He spoke of the
unique relationship Ohio graduates

have to their alma mater.
“In a year, get in touch with your
friends who graduated from Ohio
State or Bowling Green, and ask
them if they want to revisit their college town, and they’ll probably say,
‘Not really,’” he said. “Then ask your
friends from OU. Damn near every
one of our alumni is sentimental
about this place.”
Alexander, BSJ ‘72, began his career while still

at Ohio, writing for The Post and
interning with the Melbourne (Australia) Herald, covering the Vietnam
War and the 1968 Soviet invasion of
Czechoslovakia. He spent much of
journalism career with Cox Newspapers, rising to become the chain’s
bureau chief, overseeing staffs in the
United States, Europe, Asia, and
Latin America. Under his tenure, the
Washington Bureau shared the Pulit-

zer Prize for national reporting. He
currently is Scripps Howard Distinguished Visiting Professional in the
E.W. Scripps School of Journalism.
In his remarks, Ohio University
President Roderick J. McDavis saluted all soon-to-be graduates for their
hard work.
“Today, we honor you—your
achievement, your commitment, and
your passion,” he said.

Do we have your attention now?
Advertise your business in
this space, or bigger
Call us at:

The Daily Sentinel
740.992.2155

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

Follow Your Dreams, Graduates!
60413790

�Page 16 • The Daily Sentinel

Salute to Meigs County Graduates 2013

Friday, May 17, 2013

Rep. Smith addresses Rio Class of 2013
Eric McKinney,

For the University of Rio Grande
Special to the Sunday Times-Sentinel

RIO GRANDE — Spring is in full blossom, and the 137th Commencement of the
University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College ushered in our next generation of pioneers and leaders.
Four hundred, thirty-nine graduates were
celebrated at 1 p.m. on Saturday May 11 at
the Rio Grande campus. Friends and family from across the country and around the
globe convergeed to celebrate the accomplishments with 329 students scheduled to
participate.
State Representative Ryan Smith, of
Bidwell, was the commencement speaker.
Rep. Smith is a strong supporter of southeastern Ohio and education. He serves on
multiple state committees — Education, Finance and Appropriations, Agriculture and
Development (subcommittee) and Health
and Aging — holds membership in the Gal-

lia County Renewable Energy Committee
and is active in his local church.
“I am deeply honored to be the guest
speaker for the 137th Commencement of
Rio Grande,” Rep. Smith said. “Higher
education plays a vital role in our society
through life enrichment and continued economic stimulus. Thanks to its unique partnership as the country’s only private university and public community college, Rio
Grande is a tremendous resource for all of
Ohio, and I look forward to welcoming the
Class of 2013.”
Rep. Smith also has served as president
of the Gallia County Chamber of Commerce
and Gallia County Community Improvement Corporation. He is a former member of the Gallipolis City School Board of
Education and a board member of Holzer
Health System.
The Class of 2013 included 238 associate’s degrees, 160 bachelor’s degrees and 41
masters degrees.
“Commencement is one of those truly spe-

cial days in higher education,” Rio Grande
President Dr. Barbara Gellman-Danley said.
“It’s a day where faculty and staff, friends
and family come together to celebrate the
journey and tremendous accomplishment of
so many wonderful individuals. I am honored to personally congratulate and shake
the hand of each graduate.”
Among those who received degrees were
Bradley Altier, Sheri Marcum, Andrea Merry and Whitney Smith — Rio Grande’s first
Bachelor’s of Science in Chemistry recipients.
More than 70 different degrees have been
earned. Degrees range from a Masters in
Educational Leadership to a Bachelor’s in
Wildlife &amp; Fish Conservation and Management to an Associate’s in Business Management.
For Raymond C. Matura, Ph.D., and Professor of Sociology, who serveed as Grand
Marshal, commencement is about tradition: graduates singing the alma mater together on the lawn; two student marshals

representing the highest grade point averages among the 2014 class; tears of joy; and
happy memories.
“We try to keep it simple,” Dr. Matura
said. “We process in, we have a prayer, we
say a few things, we have a guest speaker
and then we get to why we’re all there, and
that’s to reward and honor the students for
their accomplishment.
“I think it’s a day to celebrate the university and what we’re all about,” he continued.
“We are here to get them to that particular
moment, and we hope it’s the first of many,
many successes.”

Visit us at

www.mydailysentinel.com

60414138

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="270">
    <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="8600">
                <text>05. May</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="9000">
            <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="8999">
              <text>May 31, 2013</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="42">
      <name>barker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="52">
      <name>cochran</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2106">
      <name>kay</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="470">
      <name>king</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2294">
      <name>parks</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="160">
      <name>roach</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2622">
      <name>stacy</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
