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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

Dr. Brothers
.... Page 2

Sunny. High near
85. Low around 56.
........ Page 2

OVP lands 5 on
All-Ohio boys
teams .... Page 5

OBITUARIES

William L. Cromlish, 77
Charles D. McCallister, 34
Sally S. Nibert, 68
Russell F. Patterson, Sr.
Marilyn L. Powell, 84
Barbara Spears, 78 .......... Page 3
50 cents daily

THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 2012

Vol. 62, No. 47

Commissioners approve agreement with CAA
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@heartlandpublications.com

POMEROY — During their recent meeting, the Meigs County
Commissioners approved a resolution allowing for Community
Housing Improvement Program
(CHIP) grant funds to be handled
by the Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency.
The resolution of intent for

CHIP only goes into effect if the
grant is awarded to Meigs County.
The Administrative Services
Agreement approved by the 3-0
vote outlined a payment structure
between the county and Community Action.
The county would pay $77,300
for implementation of services,
with $25,300 for home repair soft
costs, $25,600 for private owner
rehab soft costs, and $26,400 for

home ownership soft costs.
In addition, the county would
pay $32,000 for administration
services and $10,000 for non-specific administration costs.
Payments to the agency will be
made from CDBG (Community
Development Block Grant) funds
according to the resolution.
Meigs County Grants Administrator Jean Trussell was named
the local government representa-

tive to provide oversight to the
agency for grant compliance.
In other business, the commissioners approved an appropriation adjustment in the amount
of $21,000 into Special Fund Account, Meigs Soil and Water.
Bids were opened for the CDBG
project — Portland Community
Center Gym Roof Repair, with the
lone bid coming from Advanced
Seamless Gutter in the amount

of $16,500. The commissioners
refereed the bid to the community
center for review before final approval.
Bills were approved in the
amount of $135,449.62, with
$7,124.43 being paid from the
general fund.
The commissioners will meet
for their regular weekly meeting
at 1 p.m. on Thursday.

Piece of Smithsonian
to visit river museum
Beth Sergent

bsergent@heartlandpublications.com

June VanVranken, a 54 -year cancer survivor, was recognized and presented a “Hope” bead necklace. With her here is her
husband, Harvey.

Cancer survivors ‘Rock Around the Clock’
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY — Good food and
entertainment carrying out a fifties
theme along with recognition of
cancer survivors were highlights of
the “Rock Around the Clock Against
Cancer” dinner party held Friday
night at the Mulberry Community
Center.
About 130 people, including 57
cancer survivors, attended the event
planned by the American Cancer
Society’s (ACS) Meigs County
Volunteer Leadership Council and
Survivorship Taskforce and the
Meigs County Cancer Initiative, Inc.
(MCCI).
JoAnn Crisp was the emcee for
the evening. ACS Meigs County
Volunteer Leadership Council President Rae Moore, gave the welcome
and the Rev. Lawrence Foreman had
prayer before the catered dinner
served by volunteers of Invincible
Industries, the teen center, and the
Christian Motorcycle Association,
Delivered Chapter.
Keynote speaker was Pastor Diana Kinder on behalf of ACS’s “I Can
Cope” program. Members of the
River City Players performed several
musical selections from the 1950’s,
and Meigs Middle School student
Ailiana Large sang the Martina Mc-

Charlene Hoeflich photos

Fifty-seven of the 130 people attending the annual Cancer Society recognition
dinner party were cancer survivors. (submitted)

Bride song “I’m Gonna Love You
Through It All” accompanied by her
music teacher Metra Smith-Peterson
on piano.
Numerous door prizes were
awarded including a beaded hope
necklace presented to June VanVranken, the longest survivor attending
the dinner. She had a bout with cancer 54 years ago, survived that, but
is currently back in treatment for
cancer. Crisp announced that the
Meigs County Relay for Life would
take place on June 8-9 at the Meigs
Middle School and encouraged survivors to participate.

Sponsors for the dinner included
MCCI, ACS, Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Peoples Bank (Pomeroy Branch), Home National Bank,
Meigs County Health Department, Meigs Cooperative Parish,
Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home,
Cremeens-King Funeral Home,
Bigony-Jordan
Funeral
Home,
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home.
Holzer Clinic, Racine United Methodist Church First Place Prayer
Group, Tax Express, Pleasant Valley Hospital, Dan’s BP, Middleport
Flower Shop, Howard and Nancy
Ervin, Roger and Mary Gilmore.

OCC seeks additional refund for AEP customers
Staff report

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

COLUMBUS — The Office of the Ohio Consumers’ Counsel (OCC) will be
continuing its advocacy for
American Electric Power
customers tomorrow when
it presents oral arguments
at the Supreme Court of
Ohio against the utility’s
significantly excessive earnings. The OCC joined the
appeal of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio’s
(PUCO) decision in a significantly excessive earnings case involving AEP’s
Columbus Southern Power
utility.
The OCC previously secured the return of $43 million after AEP overcharged
its Columbus Southern
Power customers in 2009.

The 2009 earnings test was
the first to occur under the
Ohio electric energy law.
Ohio law prohibits electric utilities from collecting
significantly excessive earnings and entitles customers
to a larger refund than the
PUCO ordered. Specifically,
the OCC is asking for the
return of an additional $22
million to customers after
the PUCO allowed AEP to
omit profits from electricity
sales made outside its Ohio
territory with Ohio-based
assets.
The OCC has said all
profits should be considered in the significantly
excessive earnings test and
the exclusion of some sales
resulted in an unreasonable
comparison against other
public companies, and was
a violation of Ohio law.

Ohio’s electric energy law
gives electric utilities flexibility about how to structure their rates, the power
to veto a plan the PUCO
approves, and the ability to
earn profits that are excessive. As a counterbalance to
these provisions, a consumer protection tool is built
in which allows annual reviews of the profits earned
and requires a return to
customers of profits determined to be significantly
excessive.
The OCC, and the Ohio
Energy Group, will argue
before the Court that it
should return significantly
excessive earnings associated with profits from electricity sales outside Ohio,
as these are profits that
the law intended to reach.
The request from the OCC

and Ohio Energy Group to
reverse the PUCO’s decision is important because
it is the first time the Court
has looked at the earnings
review required under the
statute, and it is important
that this consumer protection tool be upheld so customers pay no more than
what is just and reasonable.
The Industrial Energy Users, an association of large
Ohio industrial energy consumers, and AEP also will
present separate arguments
to the Court on the treatment of the utility’s profits.
A decision from the
Court is not expected until
late 2012 or 2013.
For more information
about this case, consumers can search the Supreme
Court of Ohio case docket
for Case No. 2011-751.

POINT PLEASANT —
A piece of the world’s largest museum and research
complex is coming to Point
Pleasant’s River Museum
for a limited engagement
starting Saturday, March
24.
The
world-famous
Smithsonian
Institution
and the National Archives
along with the West Virginia Humanities Council
have made available to the
River Museum a traveling
exhibition known as “The
Way We Worked.”
Again, the exhibition
debuts on Saturday, March
24 and will be on display
until May 5 with five informative programs presenting a local perspective
on “The Way We Worked”
and two children’s events
scheduled throughout the
duration of the exhibit.
Organizers say the exhibition documents the
lives of ordinary working
people, who were the backbone of this county. While
these individuals were usually little known or anonymous, their contribution
to society - through the
communities they built,
the goods they produced
and they led - were often
extraordinary, according
to organizers.
Included in the exhibition presented by the river
museum will be the many
ways the people of Mason
County earned a living and

contributed to the growth
of this country.
Starting next week, the
river museum will extend
its hours through the week
for this special exhibit
from 10 a.m. - 7 p.m., Tuesday - Friday. The museum
is open from 11 a.m. - 4
p.m. on Saturdays and 1
p.m. - 5 p.m. on Sundays.
The museum is closed on
Mondays.
The river museum will
also have extended hours
for the five informative
programs which go along
with the exhibit. All programs start at 7 p.m. and
are as follows: April 13,
Charles Keeney will present “History of Mason
County,” April 17, Glenn
Miller will present “The
Lambert Lands ‘A Journey
to Freedom,’” April 20,
Leonard “Buster” Riffle
will present “Reminiscing
About Old Point Pleasant,” April 26, Middleport,
Ohio Mayor Mike Gerlach
will present “The Underground Railroad,” May 4,
Butch Leport will present
“Life on the River.”
The children’s events
planned for the exhibition
are set for: April 7, Kid’s
Day at the River Museum,
including a visit with the
Easter Bunny; April 22,
Chip and Heather Wood
present “The Way We
Played.”
The Smithsonian Institution has 19 museums
with over 137 million objects, and nine research
centers across the globe.

Middleport Community
Association plans
upcoming events
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@heartlandpublications.com

MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport
Community
Association recently finalized plans for the Easter
Basket and Bear Games
and the Lunch Along the
River.
The annual Easter Basket Games will be held on
March 27 at the Middleport Fire Station. The
doors will open at 5 p.m.,
with games beginning at 6
p.m.
Prizes for the games
include Longaberger Baskets, Vera Bradley Bags,
and Ohio River Bears and
Hares. There will be also
be food, door prizes and
special games.
Tickets for the event are
on sale now at Locker 219,
Ohio River Bear Company
and Shear Illusion in Middleport; Dan’s and Hartwell House in Pomeroy;
and Rutland Bottled Gas
in Rutland. There will be
an Early Bird Drawing for
those who purchase tickets
early.
In addition to the basket

games, the Lunch Along
the River menu for April
through October was finalized.
The first Lunch Along
the River will take on April
4, with other dates of May
2, June 6, July 11, August 1,
September 5, and October
3. The menu for April and
September will be chicken
and noodles, green beans,
rolls, and cake. The menu
for the May lunch will be
macaroni and cheese, hot
dog with sauce and relish,
and cake. In June hot dogs,
sloppy joes, slaw chips and
cookies will be served.
Pulled pork sandwiches
with slaw, macaroni salad,
and cake will be served in
July. In August, hamburgers, pickles, baked beans,
chips, and brownies will
be served. Stuffed pepper or potato soup will be
served in October, along
with homemade pie.
Lunches will be served
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
with delivery available by
calling 416-2247 or 5916095.

�Thursday, March 22, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Forecast Meigs County Local Briefs

Thursday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 85. Calm
wind becoming southwest
around 5 mph.
Thursday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
56. Calm wind.
Friday: A chance of
showers, with thunderstorms also possible after
noon. Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 79. Calm wind
becoming south between
4 and 7 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
New rainfall amounts of
less than a tenth of an inch,
except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Friday Night: Showers
and thunderstorms likely
before 2am, then a chance of
showers between 2am and
3am, then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after
3 a.m. Mostly cloudy, with
a low around 54. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent.

New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of
an inch possible.
Saturday: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 69. Chance of
precipitation is 50 percent.
Saturday
Night:
A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 48.
Chance of precipitation is
50 percent.
Sunday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 66. Chance
of precipitation is 40 percent.
Sunday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
45.
Monday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 69.
Monday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around 45.
Tuesday: Sunny, with a
high near 67.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 38.23
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 19.60
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 61.23
Big Lots (NYSE) — 45.53
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 37.69
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 84.46
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.40
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.70
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 5.96
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 35.10
Collins (NYSE) — 57.71
DuPont (NYSE) — 52.61
US Bank (NYSE) — 31.54
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 20.07
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 49.68
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 45.12
Kroger (NYSE) — 24.28
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 48.14
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 67.20
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.21

BBT (NYSE) — 31.07
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 17.20
Pepsico (NYSE) — 65.36
Premier (NASDAQ) — 7.47
Rockwell (NYSE) — 81.42
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 12.55
Royal Dutch Shell — 70.83
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 76.69
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 60.56
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.04
WesBanco (NYSE) — 20.19
Worthington (NYSE) — 18.13
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
March 21, 2012, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

Ask Dr. Brothers

Middle-schooler
has identity crisis
ing an arguDear
Dr.
ment about a
Brothers:
new
program
I’ve heard of a
the
elemenmidlife
crisis
tary school has
and have been
started, which
through
one
will affect our
myself, but I’m
two children. It
a little conhas to do with
fused by the
building charsimilar
thing
acter and that
my 13-year-old
sort of thing. I
son seems to be
think it might
e x p e r i e n c i n g.
be helpful for
There seem to
the kids, and
be several difhusband
ferent cliques Dr. Joyce Brothers my
thinks
the
in his school,
Syndicated
school
should
and he’s tryColumnist
be focusing on
ing them out
math and readone by one. It’s
very confusing to me to ing and leave the characsee him pal around with ter stuff up to the parents
a bunch of kids, and then and church. I want to let
a week later he’s changed our kids take advantage
from clean-cut to scruffy of this, but he insists on
and has a different set of berating the program in
friends. Is there anything front of them. — L.L.
Dear L.L.: It is interI can do to help him setesting that a program
tle? — I.D.
Dear I.D.: It’s good that at school has sparked
you can reflect on a recent a debate between you
midlife crisis of your own and your husband about
for some insight into the whose job it is to educate
process of struggling with the children in areas that
changing
environments are outside the academic.
and hormones. Your son And you and your husband
may seem a little bizarre have split into the obvious
to you as he changes two factions: Those who
friends and styles with want the school — or are
alarming rapidity. But at least OK with it — to
there probably is noth- delve into issues that go
ing to worry about. He to the heart of ethics,
is merely trying on vari- morality and character,
ous personas to see what and those who think that
kinds of activities and is strictly the purview of
friends come with each the family unit, possibly
change, and in the end he supplemented by religious
may find one group that training. But there is no
suits him perfectly. This reason you can’t look into
is not to say that he might the curriculum and folnot start the process all low along with your own
over again in another year discussions with the kids
at home, something you
or so.
Give your son room to probably have been doing
make his own decisions, all along. Now you can do
and follow up if he asks it in a more structured
for advice. He really will way and get lots of feedknow best where he fits in, back from the children to
and it will be pretty obvi- help shape the path you
ous. I don’t think you have would like them to walk
anything to worry about, down.
School programs such
unless the quest becomes
an aimless one because as these are showing
he is being rejected by all promise. A new study by
the various groups. But it Oregon State University
doesn’t sound like that is indicates that in areas
happening. He probably is where there is teacher
a popular boy just trying training and parent incombined
out his wings, so relax a volvement,
bit and give him the space with ongoing positive
to find himself. The pro- reinforcement, the process could take a while, grams have helped bring
but it undoubtedly is a down levels of absenteeworthwhile one. When he ism and suspensions, as
does decide who he wants well as improved perforto run with, encourage mance on math and readhim to keep his individu- ing standardized tests. So
ality while he bonds with there’s a good chance that
you will find your prothe group.
gram a helpful one.
***
(c) 2012 by King FeaDear Dr. Brothers: My
tures Syndicate
husband and I are hav-

Employment and Job
Fair
CHILLICOTHE — The
23rd annual employment
and job fair is being held
today, March 22, from noon
to 4 p.m. at the Ohio University-Chiillicothe Shoemaker Convocation Center,
located at 101 University
Drive, Chillicothe. Over 80
employers are registered to
interview applicants. It has
been suggested that those
coming bring several resumes.
Prayer Task Force
Strength Encounter
POMEROY — Prayer
Task Force Strength Encounter, 6:30-8:30 p.m., on
Saturday, March 24, at the
Mulberry Community Center. Music provided by the
Soul Harvest Band — Sacrifice of Praise, food provided by Cops for Christ and
the Christian Motorcyclist
Association — Delivered
Chapter. Testimony and
Infomercials for resources
will be available to help in
the fight against drug addiction.
Mulberry Avenue hill
closed
POMEROY — Columbia
Gas Co. workers will be
working for the remainder
of the week on the gas line
relocation on the Mulberry
Avenue hill near the pond.
Earlier it was announced
the work would be completed Wednesday. While the
hill remains open for part
of today, Thursday it will be
closed all day as the workers cut away a section of the
road in order to lay new gas
lines. New lines will also be
laid along the upper bank of
the pond.
Syracuse church
program
SYRACUSE — At 11

a.m. Sunday at the Syracuse
Community Church on Second Street, Gary and Pam
Gillispie of South Charleston, W.Va. will be the special singers.The pastor invites the public
Free community dinner
MIDDLEPORT — A
free community dinner will
be served at 5 p.m. Friday
at the Middleport Church
of Christ, Family Life Center, corner of 5th and Main
Streets.
MHS musical
postponed
POMEROY
—
The
Meigs High School musical,
“The Wedding Singer,” announced for this weekend
has been postponed due to
the hospitalization of a lead
character. It has been rescheduled for April 20 and
21.
Southern Alumni
Banquet
RACINE — The annual reunion of the Racine/
Southern Alumni banquet
will be held on Saturday,
May 26 at 6:30 p.m. at the
Southern High School.
Tickets are $15 and available now at Southern High
School and Racine Home
National Bank.They will be
$25 at the door. Flags are
$30. The website is www.
tornadoalumni.net.
Meigs SWCD Board of
Supervisors
POMEROY
—
The
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors will meet
in regular session at 11:30
a.m. on Thursday, March
22, at the district office at
33101 Hiland Road.
Tree and bush
trimming clinic
MARIETTA
—
On
March 31 at Lanes Farm
and Market west of Mari-

etta, a tree and bush trimming clinic will be held by
educators of the OSU Extension Service. The class
will be held rain or shine
from 1 to 4 p.m. Topics covered will be pruning apple
and peach trees integrating
pest management of fruit
crops, and pruning bramble
and blueberries. Registration is required at http://
go.osu.edu/H2Q or call the
office, 740-376-7431.
Farmer’s Market
POMEROY — Anyone
interested in taking part in
the Farmer’s Market on the
Pomeroy Parking Lot this
Summer is asked to contact Derek Brickles at (740)
590-4891.
Wanted: old
computers
POMEROY — The Invincible Industries Teen
Center at the Mulberry
Community Center is in
need of old computers, both
PCs and Macs, for repair or
use of parts. Mike Tipptin,
a computer specialist, has
volunteered to see what he
can do to get some working computers for the teen
center. He has volunteered
to pick up old computers.
Call 740-444-5599 and leave
a message so that he can
call back. Beth Clark is the
lead volunteer at the youth
center and says she has
long recognized the need
for computers for the kids
to use for study and/or entertainment.
Cemetery cleanup
RACINE — The Racine
Village spring cleanup of
the Greenwood Cemetery
will be the week of March
25, 2012. Anyone wishing
to save any decorations are
being asked to remove before March 25.
RUTLAND TWP. — The

Rutland Townshp Trustees
request that grave decorations be removed from the
Miles, Robinson, Wright
and Rutland Cemeteries until April 1 for spring cleanup which is about to begin.
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Cemetery cleanup will
begin on April 2 in Olive
Township. Trustees request
removal of items from grave
sites.
Preschool
registration
MASON COUNTY —
Mason County Schools
Preschool Registration will
be taking place from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. on the following
days, March 23 at the Early
Education Station in Point
Pleasant and Leon Elementary, April 20 at New Haven
Elementary, and April 26
at the Nazarene Church on
Mt. Vernon. April 26 will
also be a make up day. For
information call 304-6754956.
Community Lenten
services
MEIGS COUNTY —
Meigs County Ministerial
Association is hosting community Lenten services
each Thursday during Lent.
An offering is received to
help those in need in Meigs
County. Refreshments will
be served following the services. All Thursday evening
services will be held at 7
p.m.
March 22 — New Beginnings United Methodist Church, Pastor Warren
Lukens speaking.
March 29 — Grace Episcopal Church, Pastor Brenda Barnhart speaking.
Good Friday (April 6th)
at Noon the Ministerial service will be The Stations of
the Cross at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church.

Nursing reunion held

Submitted photo

The Holzer School of Nursing Class of
1961 held a banquet reunion for those
who were able to attend. Most of the
graduates currently live in Ohio, but
several came from Kentucky, West Virginia and Pennsylvania. Front row, left
to right: Linda (Tope) Hamilton, Bobbi
Holzer, special guest, Betty Plymale, former supervisor and student instructor,
Patty (Belville) Daniels, and Jeannine
(Bond) Caudill. Second row, left to right:
Joann (Wiggins) Elliot, Nan (Thompson)
Heiskell, Mary Ann (Prindle) Galloway,
Barbara (Blankenship) Shelton, Martha
(Gross) McCurdy, and Evelyn (Swope)
Clonch. Third row, left to right: Nancy
(Stewart) Collier, Judi (Shuler) Webster,
Sue (Smith) Zirkle, Doris (Wells) Mertz,
Linda (Hayes) Dolby, Donna (Plummer)
Cline, Joyce (Smith) Edgington, Caroline (Davis) Brown. Unable to attend was
Betty Belle (Cooper) Morell. The class
enjoyed several stories related by class
members and Mrs. Holzer.

Meigs County Retired Teachers meet
POMEROY — Karen Butt, Past
President (2011) of the Ohio Retired Teachers Association, was the
speaker for the March 15, meeting
of the Meigs County Retired Teachers held at the Wild Horse Cafe.
Gay Perrin, president, welcomed
the group and all said the pledge
to the flag. Maxine Whitehead had
devotions, reading “Something to
Think About” and “Rejoice with
Spring” by Helen Keller. She then
had prayer before the meal.
The speaker, Karen Butt, of Johnstown, Ohio, spoke on “Retirement
Issues in 2012.” She said years of
talking about major changes to
Ohio’s five public pension systems
could quickly turn into action this
spring in the Ohio Senate. Senate
Republican leaders say they expect
to act before summer break on plans
the pension systems have already

proposed to address their long-term
solvency issues — if their boards
prove that they and their members
support the changes.
But, as of now, House Republicans are not on board with that
timetable, preferring to wait until
after the election, when they can
get a full look at the actuarial study
being completed by the two out of
state firms. She said we need to talk
to our active teachers and legislators about this. She also stressed we
need to keep our defined benefits.
Those who have computers can keep
up to date on the situation. Also
mentioned was contacting Debbie
Phillips to move on the pension
plan.
During the business meeting, the
secretary and treasurer reports were
given. A letter from Rio Grande University was read, thanking the group

for the scholarship money for Daniel
Buckley. Joan Corder, scholarship
chairman, reminded the group to
have students who are in education
to apply.
Cards were signed for Eileen
Buck, Vinas Lee, John Riebel, Sr.,
Kathleen Scott and Martha Vennari.
This is ORTA 65th year and
their motto is “to serve and not be
served,” stressing volunteerism.
The president reminded everyone to
keep track of their volunteer hours.
She said to look in our quarterly
magazine to see what can be done.
Door prizes were given to the
speaker, Gay Perrin, Bill Downie
and Linda Lear.
The next meeting will be April
19 at the Trinity Church. We are
to bring in paper products and personal care items for the women’s
shelter.

Alfred UMW holds March meeting

The Alfred United Methodist Women met March
13 at the church with six
members present. Mary Jo
Barringer, president, conducted the meeting. All
members read the UMW
purpose. The secretary read
the minutes and reported
96 friendship calls made.
The treasurer gave her report.
Mary Jo Barringer had
the prayer calendar birthday card and chose Debra
Aylmer, Deaconess, of Black
Creek, Ga. Mary Jo Buckley
will have the April card.
The president reported
the Foothills District UMW
Spring Retreat will be April
21, 2012, at the River of

Life United Methodist
Church, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Barringer, Buckley, Sarah
Caldwell, and Janice Weber
plan to attend. She also reported the West Ohio Cooperative School of Christian
Mission will be July 9-12
for the week school, July
14 for the day sampler and
July 13-15 for the weekend
event. This will be held at
Ohio Northern University
in Ada, Ohio.
The Festival of Sharing
will be the last Saturday in
September. For the West
Ohio Conference, in June,
they would like each church
to make 10 health kits for
tornado victims.
It was reported that Don

Roush is doing good after
major surgery, and Lloyd
Dillinger is in Riverside
Hospital.
Mary Jo Buckley gave
the mission report from the
Response magazine, titled
“Tap the Living Waters.”
Just as our bodies need water, so our souls long for a
relationship with God. Spiritual growth includes increasing in our knowledge
and understanding of God’s
Word. It requires discipline
and there are many ways
to develop our spiritual
muscles. Some are 1. Bible
reading; 2. regular participation in worship services
at church; 3. praying daily;
4. remembering to walk in

the Spirit. Spiritual growth
is a lifelong process.
Janice Weber had the program titled “National Ministries.” The group read the
opening prayer and Osie
Follrod read Matthew 10:115. The leader read the section about the Bible reading. She gave each member
a list of the National Ministries in Ohio. The leader
and members read the closing Psalm.
Mary Jo Barringer read
“Kids in Church.” She had
prayer before the refreshments were served by Sarah
Caldwell.
The next meeting will be
April 10.

�Thursday, March 22, 2012

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

For The Record

Marilyn L. Powell

Marilyn L. Powell, 84, of Racine, passed away Tuesday,
March 20, 2012, at 10 p.m., in Overbrook Center, Middleport. She was born to the late Oval and Sarah Roush Diddle
on July 25, 1927, in Antiquity, Ohio. She was retired from
Southern Local School District where she was a secretary
for many years and she also tutored children in reading. She
was a member of Racine Baptist Church where she was a
long time Sunday school teacher, a charter member of the
Racine Volunteer Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary, and
she also vounteered at the Megis County Senior Citizens
Center.
She married Jerry A. Powell on December 12, 1945, in
Xenia and who preceded her in death on August 29, 2004.
Surviving are two daughters, Jane Ann (Roger) Hill, of
Racine, and Donna Rae (Austin) Wolfe, of Racine; grandchildren, Jerry (Dixie) Wolfe, Scott (Debbie Michael) Hill,
Heather (Jamie) Jones and Aimee Pyles; great-grandchildren, Hannah Wolfe, Betsy Wolfe, Grace Wolfe, Charley Pyles, Stefanie Pyles, Molly Hill, Raegan Jones, Jacoby Hall,
Chais Micheal, and Macie Micheal; sisters, Libby Fisher
and Carolyn Adams, both of Racine; brothers, Tom (Pam)
Diddle, Donald (Carol) Diddle; sisters-in-law, Vicki Diddle,
Betty Diddle and Opal Diddle; and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents and husband ,she was preceded in death by two great-grandchildren, Jedediah Paul and
Josiah Nathaniel Wolfe; brothers, George Ralph, Waid and
Bernard Diddle; and sister Adria Dials.
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. on Saturday March 24,
2012, in the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine with Rev.
Ryan Eaton and Rev. Don Walker officiating. Interment will
follow in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call from
6-8 p.m. on Friday at the funeral home. In lieu of flowers
memorial contributions may be made to the Racine Baptist
Church P.O. Box 340 Racine, Ohio 45771 or the Antiquity
Baptist Church P.O. Box 12 Racine Ohio 45771.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

William Larry Cromlish

William Larry Cromlish, 77, Gallipolis, died on Tuesday,
March 20, 2012, at his residence.
Services will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday, March 24, 2012,
at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Alfred Holley and Pastor Randy Carnes officiating. Burial will follow in Providence Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Friday,
March 23, 2012, at the funeral home.

Charles Dewayne McCallister

William Larry Cromlish, 77, Gallipolis, died on Tuesday,
March 20, 2012, at his residence.
Services will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday, March 24, 2012,
at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Alfred Holley and Pastor Randy Carnes officiating. Burial will follow in Providence Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Friday,
March 23, 2012, at the funeral home.

Sally Sue Nibert

Sally Sue Nibert, 68, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed
away on Tuesday, March 20, 2012, at her home.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, March
24, 2012, at the Deal Funeral Home with Jimmy Jordan officiating. Burial will follow in the Pine Grove Cemetery in
Leon, W.Va. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Friday at the
funeral home.

Russell F. Patterson, Sr.

Russell Franklin Patterson, Sr., of Russell, Kentucky, and
formerly of Point Pleasant, West Virginia, passed away
March 5, 2012, at Kindred Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky.
Burial was held March 8, at Rose Hill Burial Park in Ashland, Kentucky. A special memorial was held at The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on March 10, 2012, in
Russell, Kentucky.

Barbara Spears

Barbara Spears, 78, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away
at Holzer Medical Center on March 21, 2012. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by the Deal
Funeral Home as they become available.

Ohio, Kansas sign concealed
carry agreements
COLUMBUS — Ohio
and Kansas have signed an
agreement permitting reciprocity between the states
for citizens who have valid
concealed carry permits.
“This agreement between
Ohio and Kansas allows
Ohioans with valid concealed carry permits the
same rights to carry a concealed handgun in the State
of Kansas,” said Ohio Attorney General DeWine. “Likewise, it also allows Kansans
who have valid concealed
carry permits to do the
same in Ohio.”
Ohio law permits the Attorney General to enter into
written agreements with
other states whose laws are
“substantially comparable”
to Ohio’s eligibility requirements for a license to carry
a concealed handgun. In
Kansas, this authority falls
under the state Attorney
General’s office.
Concealed carry permit
holders will be required
to comply with all of the
other state’s laws regarding possession, transportation, storage, and use of

www.mydailysentinel.com

concealed weapons and all
other applicable laws except
those regarding issuance,
suspension, revocation and
renewal of concealed weapons licenses, which remain
within the power of the issuing state.
Each state will make
their verification systems
available to the other to enable the status of the other
state’s concealed carry licenses to be checked.
The agreement remains
in force unless statutory authority for it is withdrawn
by either of the state’s legislatures or terminated in
writing by either party upon
30 days of notice.
With the addition of
Kansas, Ohio now has reciprocity agreements with 23
states including: Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware,
Florida, Idaho, Louisiana,
Michigan, Missouri, Kentucky, New Mexico, North
Carolina, North Dakota, Nebraska, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Oklahoma,
Washington, West Virginia,
Wyoming and Virginia.

Need to
advertise?
Call

The Daily Sentinel
740.992.2155

Staff report

911
March 15
12:47 p.m., Ohio 143, weakness; 12:58 p.m., East Second
Street, swelling; 1:10 p.m.,
Bucktown Road, seizure/convulsions; 2:04 p.m., East Memorial Drive, difficulty breathing; 2:11 p.m., East Memorial
Drive, allergic reaction; 5:55
p.m., Mulberry Avenue, nausea/vomiting; 6:56 p.m., East
Memorial Drive, hemorrhage;
9:53 p.m., unknown, chest
pain.
March 16
9:45 a.m., Union Avenue, diabetic emergency; 10:06 a.m.,
Mulberry Avenue, fall; 11:24
a.m., New Lima Road, altered
mental status; 3:01 p.m., East
Memorial Drive, rapid heart
rate; 4:39 p.m., Elm Street,
difficulty breathing; 6:22 p.m.,
Tornado Road, unknown; 9:11
p.m., Powell Street, chest pain;
10:38 p.m., Landaker Road,
unconscious/unknown.
March 17
6:05 a.m., North Third Avenue, fall; 10:31 a.m., Third
Street, difficulty breathing;
11:32 a.m., Riverview Drive,
fall; 3:18 p.m., Silver Ridge
Road, fall; 3:45 p.m., East
Memorial Drive, chest pain;
5:39 p.m., Star Hall Road, unknown; 11:07 p.m., Ohio 7, unknown; 11:22 p.m., Ohio 143,
motor vehicle collision; 11:52
p.m., East Second Street, assault/fight.
March 18
12:09 a.m., Curtis Hollow
Road, unconscious/unknown;
10:16 a.m., Mulberry Avenue, unknown; 10:29 a.m.,
Rocksprings Road, burns;
11:57 a.m., Peacook Avenue,
pain general; 1:16 p.m., East
Memorial Drive, chest pain;
1:27 p.m., Page Street, unconscious/unknown; 2:29 p.m.,
Ohio 124, motor vehicle collision; 5:14 p.m., East Second
Street, fall; 5:45 p.m., Ohio 7,
fall; 5:52 p.m., East Memorial Drive, difficulty breathing;
6:58 p.m., Beech Street, chest
pain; 11:40 p.m., Pine Tree
Drive, nausea/vomiting.
March 19
3:13 a.m., North Third
Street, chest pain; 10:54 a.m.,
Old Forest Road, diabetic
emergency; 11:00 a.m., Roy
Jones Road, difficulty breathing; 1:26 p.m., Main Street, unable to urinate; 1:42 p.m., East
Memorial Drive, seizure/convulsions; 7:01 p.m., Rose Hill
Road, difficulty breathing; 9:05
p.m., South Third Avenue; difficulty breathing.
March 20
1:22 p.m., Page Street, fall;
2:01 p.m., East Memorial
Drive, unknown; 2:13 p.m.,
Sidehill Road, difficulty breathing; 6:37 p.m., Bradbury Road,
chest pain.
March 21
2:27 a.m., Third Street, laceration.
Common Pleas Court
Criminal
Recently sentenced in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court were, Ishi Grimm,
non support of dependents,
three years community control; Larry Jacks, attempted
illegal manufacture of drugs
(36 months), aggravated possession of drugs (9 months),
total of 36 months prison;
Chad Diddle, receiving stolen
property, possession of heroin,
three years community control.
Recently arraigned in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
were, Richard Kennedy, driving under the influence; Jennifer Partlow, theft/grand theft;
Charles Williamson, receiving stolen property; Timothy
Roush, non-support of depen-

dents; Eric N. Priddy, unlawful
sexual conduct with a minor or
corruption of a minor; Shannon Scholderer, receiving stolen property; Robbie Clonch,
trafficking; Trenton Qualls,
probation violation; Steven
Chapell, non-support of dependents; Alfred Robinson, probation violation; Laura Curtis,
grand theft in office.
Domestic
An action of dissolution of
marriage was filled by Elizabeth Louise Rollins and Andrew Nathan Rollins.
An action of dissolution of
marriage was filed by Kimberly Hart and Richard Hart.
An action of dissolution of
marriage was filed by Ralph
Deenes Jones, Jr., and Leigha
Louise Bryant.
A dissolution was granted to
Wesley Towe, Jennifer Towe.
A dissolution was granted
to Erin Yost, Michael Yost.
An action of divorce was
filed by Joyce A. Allen against
John H. Allen.
An action of divorce was
filed by Carl Stewart against
Pamela Stewart.
A divorce was granted to
Belinda Dalton from Danual
Dalton.
Civil
An action of foreclosure was
filed by Home National Bank
against Kim D. Meadows.
Land Transfers
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Recorder’s Office
recently recorded the following land transfers: Leslie L.
Whittington to Leslie Leroy
Whittington, deed, Salisbury;
Dorothy Hagerty, Richard A
Hagerty to Ricky A. Priddy,
Connie A. Priddy, deed, Salem; Warren Calaway to Dennis Newland, Helen Newland,
deed, Orange; Joseph A Maier
to Melody Dotson, deed, Bedford.
T. W. Karr to Buckeye Pipe
Line Company, right of way,
Sutton; Elmer D. Swearinger
to Buckeye Pipe Line Company, right of way, Sutton; A. J.
Edwards to Buckeye Pipe Line
Company, right of way, Sutton;
Shannon McPeek to Buckeye
Pipe Line Company, right of
way, Noble; Eli Guess to Buckeye Pipe Line Company, right
of way, Salisbury; Mary Jones
to Buckeye Pipe Line Company, right of way, Salisbury;
John Stobart, Jane Stobart to
Buckeye Pipe Line Company,
right of way, Sutton; David
Edwards to Buckeye Pipe
Line Company, right of way,
Sutton; Thomas Edwards,
Edith Edwards to Buckeye
Pipe Line Company, right of
way, Sutton; Fannie E. Wolf to
Buckeye Pipe Line Company,
right of way, Sutton; George
Williamson, Emmoralis Williamson to Buckeye Pipe Line
Company, right of way, Sutton;
Jacob Dean, R.C. Longstreth
to Buckeye Pipe Line Company, right of way, Salisbury/
Pomeroy Village; T.H. Lasley
to Buckeye Pipe Line Company, right of way, Salisbury/
Pomeroy Village.
Robert Cremeans to Alice
J. Cremeans, deed, Rutland;
Ernest Eugene Imboden,
deceased, to Wanda Jane Imboden, affidavit, Middleport
Village; Norman Ray VanMatre, deceased, Norman
VanMeter, deceased, to Ancill
VanMatre, affidavit, Village
of Middleport; James Farley,
Betty J. Farley to James Farley,
Betty J. Farley, deed, Syracuse
Village; Patrick L. Lawson to
Franklin B. Howard, Penny
Howard, deed, Columbia.
Robert D. Williams, Jr.,
Teresa L. Williams to Ohio
Power Company, easement,
Rutland; Mary E. Davidson,
Wilma J. Davidson to Ohio
Power Company, easement,

Thursday, March 22
POMEROY — The Meigs
County American Cancer
Society Volunteer Leadership Council/Survivorship
Taskforce meeting will take
place at noon at the Wild
House Cafe. New members
are welcome. For more information contact Courtney
Midkiff at (740) 92-6626
ext. 24.
POMEROY — Alpha Iota
Masters Sorority will meet
at 11:30 a.m. at the McClures in Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAINS —
VFW Post meeting, 6:30
p.m. at the hall.
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party will meet
at 6:30 p.m., at Carleton
School. Refreshments will
be served. All women are
welcome.
Saturday, March 24
POMEROY — Prayer
Task Force Strength En-

counter, 6:30-8:30 p.m. at
the Mulberry Community
Center. Music provided by
the Soul Harvest Band —
Sacrifice of Praise, food provided by Cops for Christ and
the Christian Motorcyclist
Association — Delivered
Chapter. Testimony and Infomercials for resources will
be available to help in the
fight against drug addiction.
Monday, March 26
RACINE — The Southern
Local Board of Education
will hold its regular board
meeting at 7 p.m. in the high
school media center.
POMEROY — The Veterans Service Commission will
meet at 9 a.m. Monday at
the office, 117 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Ikes will hold a
White Elephant Sale at 7
p.m. Bring a covered dish
and table service.

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County
Community Calendar

Rutland; Sheena Caston, Jeremy Casto to Ohio Power
Company, easement, Chester;
David T. Hendrix, Janis L.
Hendrix to Ohio Power Company, easement, Rutland.
Andrea D. Lundy, Jeffery H.
Lundy to Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., deed, Pomeroy
Village; Kathy J. Fausnaugh
to Daniel Goeglein, deed,
Salisbury; Patrick H. Obrien,
Tara Obrien, James Michael
Obrien, Mary Obrien, Peggy
Lynn Harris, Robert Harris,
Pamela Sue Obrien to Wilcox Land Finance Company,
deed, Salisbury; Wilcox Land
Finance Company to Joseph
White, deed, Salisbury; John
R. Weeks, Barbara Weeks to
Meigs Local Enrichment Foundation, right of way, Salisbury;
Christopher Roush to Jack B.
Freeman, deed, Middleport
Village; Evelyn Smallwood to
Brandon W. Goble, Amanda
L. Goble, deed, Salem.
Robert A. Jones, Kimberly
R. Jones to Robert A Jones,
Kimberly R. Jones, deed,
Bedford; Stephen C. Dowler
to Scott E. Taylor, deed, Middleport Village; Charlotte A.
Hess, Charlotte A Stover, Roy
Alfred Stover to David Hess,
deed, Salisbury; Carl T. Lane,
Sharon K. Warner, Sharon K.
Lane to Jay P. Hamilton, deed,
Middleport; Norman Neece,
deceased, to Madeline Neece,
affidavit, Salisbury; Madeline
Neece to James T Schartiger,
Loretta J. Schartiger, deed,
Salisbury; Ronald Master,
Catherine Masters to Frederick Held, William White, deed,
Olive.
Lindsey Green, Walter
Green to Bonnie Sue Battin,
deed, Olive; Raymond W.
Reynolds, deceased, Raymond
William Reynolds to Penny L.
Reynolds, affidavit, Rutland;
Penny L. Reynolds to Richard
Kelly Stitt, Amanda K. Stitt,
deed, Rutland; Judith A. Williams to Mark Proffitt, deed,
Pomeroy Village; Freda Jacks
to Bethany L. Tobin, Arthur
A. Tobin, Jr., deed, Rutland;
Roger C. Smith, Helen Smith
to Roger C. Smith, Jr., Martha
J. Smith, deed, Chester.
Walter A. King, Tonya L.
King to Warren M. Haning,
Lora L. Haning, deed, Scipio;
Cathy A. Lee, Paul A. Lee to
Warren M. Haning, Lora L.
Haning, deed, Scipio; Shirley
A. Carter, Larry G. Carter to
Tracy L. Hall, deed, Lebanon;
Drenda L. Elliott, Donald C.
Elliott II to Drenda L. Elliott,
Donald C. Elliott II, deed, Bedford; Clyde R. Fisher, Emmogene, Clyde R. Fisher to Marjorie B. Wigal, deed, Middleport;
Charles S. Allman, Susan E.
Allman to Shawn L. Day, Jessica E. Day, deed, Salem; Jack
L. Ervin, Tamela S. Ervin to
Richard A. Crouse, Mary K.
Crouse, deed, Salem.
Connie E. Carleton, James
E. Carleton to Eileen Faye
Grueser, deed, Salisbury;
Christina M. Ooten to Jeffrey
L. Hirzel, deed, Orange; Regina A. Life, Regina Life, Terry
L. Life to Appalachian Investments, deed, Salisbury; Opal J.
Kauff to Renee M. Kauff, deed,
Orange; Sharlene M. Gray,
deceased, to Denver Gray, affidavit, Sutton; Terry F. Geddes,
deceased, Bonnie S. Behm
Geddes, affidavit, Scipio; Jay
Dewhurst to Nehemiah Institute, deed, Rutland; Henry E.
Huggins, Emma Rose Huggins
to Henry J. Horn, Christina
Horn, deed, Rutland; Henry E.
Huggins, Emma Rose Huggins
to Henry J. Horn, Christina
Horn, deed, Rutland; James
Drehel, deceased, to Susie J.
Drehel, certificate of transfer,
Rutland; Janice I. Cardone,
Paul D. Cardone to Janice I.
Cardone, Paul D. Cardone,

deed, Sutton.
Janet Krider, Janet Angela
Krider Janet A. Krider to Premier Bank, sheriff’s deed, Middleport Village; Janet Krider,
Janet Angela Krider Janet
A. Krider to Premier Bank,
sheriff’s deed, Racine Village;
Adam B. Sanders, Ashley N.
Sanders to Jeff N. Durst, Ashley N. Durst, right of way, Olive; Paul M. Kauff, Debbie S.
Kauff, Debbie S. Kauff to Paul
M. Kauff, Gary Kauff, deed,
Meigs; Correna L. Cottrill to
Larry D. Raymer, deed, Salem;
Tammi Lavender to Jeffrey W.
Tracy, Amber B. Tracy, deed,
Salisbury.
Jeffrey A. Hawk, Robyn G.
Hawk to Tuppers Plains Chester Water District, right of way,
Chester; Natasha Stewart to
Tuppers Plains Chester Water
District, right of way, Chester;
Pamela Trussell, Scott Trussell to Tuppers Plains Chester
Water District, right of way,
Chester; John T. Williams to
J. Tucker Williams, deed, Syracuse/Sutton; Jon Houdashelt,
Don Houdashelt to J. Tucker
Williams, Shannon Marie Williams, easement, Syracuse/Sutton; J. Tucker Williams, Shannon M. Williams to Shannon
Marie Williams, J. Tucker Williams, deed, Syracuse/Sutton;
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
to Christopher A. Brown, Jade
M. Brown, deed, Pomeroy Village.
Ronald W. Meredith, Fatih
F. Meredith to Daniel J. Bentley, Elizabeth A. Bentley, deed,
Bedford; D.T. Atha Incoporation to Paul Stanley, release,
Meigs; Williams A. Barley to
Wells Fargo Bank, sheriff’s
deed, Salem; Ronald A. Hibbard, Karen S. Hibbard to
Kelly C. Winebrenner, deed,
Chester; Jill Holter to Gary R.
Holter, deed, Chester; Geneva
Wise to Lester Wise, Charles
Wise, Wesley Wise, Gene
Wise, Dennis Wise, Danny
Wise, Fona Smith, deed,
Middleport; Geneva Wise to
Lester Wise, Charles Wise,
Wesley Wise, Gene Wise,
Dennis Wise, Danny Wise,
Fona Smith, deed, Middleport;
Bruner Land Company Inc. to
David W. Gudakunst, deed,
Orange.
Mary F. Price, deceased,
to William H. Price, David D.
Price, Penny E. Mullen, Debra
J. Howard, James R. Price, certificate of transfer, Middleport
Village; Laura M. Stewart,
Laura M. Salser to Gregory M.
Stewart, deed, Rutland; Bradley S. Casto, Lorene Casto
to Shaun Seth, Jennifer Seth,
deed, Chester; Ty Ault, Ashley
L. Ault to Ohio Power Company, easement, Salisbury.
Heather Tucker to Ohio
Power Company, easement,
Salisbury; Nancy K. Jeffers
to Valerie Stroud, deed, Salisbury; Rodger W. Barnett,
Carol A. Barnett to Oscar Dale
Wilson, deed, Salem; Pearlie S.
Peterson, deceased, to Donald
J. Peterson, Sr., affidavit, Columbia; Pearlie S. Peterson, deceased, to Donald J. Peterson,
Sr., affidavit, Columbia; Pearlie
S. Peterson, deceased, to Donald J. Peterson, Sr., affidavit,
Columbia; Pearlie S. Peterson,
deceased, to Donald J. Peterson, Sr., Terry McGrath, Clara
Shirley Kauffman, Susan Diane Nichols, Dennis Towery,
Holly Howery, Helena Howery, Wiladean Dailey, Christina
Reeves, David Starcher, Randy
L. Tolley, certificate of transfer,
Columbia; Donald J. Peterson,
Sr., Yveta K. Peterson to Clara
Shirley Kauffman, Susan Diane Nichols, Dennis Towery,
Holly Howery, Helena Howery, Wiladean Dailey, Christina
Reeves, David Starcher, Randy
L. Tolley, deed, Columbia.

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Page 4
Thursday, March 22, 2012

‘Sick-minded American In the mood for wine?
A wine for every mood
savages’ at war
Michelle Locke,

For The Associated Press

By John LaForge,
Nukewatch

A U.S. Army Staff Sergeant walked through two
villages in Kandahar Province, Afghanistan around
3 a.m. March 11, methodically shooting 16 people
that he’d dragged from their
beds with single shots to
the head. Then he dragged
corpses outside and set
some on fire. Eleven were
reportedly from one family.
Nine were children.
The Taliban has promised
revenge against “sick-minded American savages.” Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta appeared to confirm
this characterization when
he callously told the press
later the same day, “War is
hell. These kinds of events
and incidents are going to
take place. They’ve taken
place in any war. They’re
terrible events. This is not
the first of those events, and
they probably won’t be the
last.”
“Events” and “incidents”
aren’t the pronouns that
come to mind when contemplating
premeditated
multiple murders of sleeping women and children.
Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai called the massacre an assassination and
“an intentional killing of innocent civilians and cannot
be forgiven.”
Seth Jones of the Rand
Corporation, a former
Special Forces Command
officer in the Pentagon,
tried to cement the bloodthirsty image of the U.S. at
war when he said March
12 on the PBS News Hour,
“This is not as out of the
norm as it’s appearing in
the media. … Afghans are

used to being killed.”
Sick-minded American
savages clearly are not confined to the killing fields.
With the long record of U.S.
massacres that have gone
unpunished or been treated
lightly, Afghans can be forgiven for demanding that
the latest Son of Uncle Sam
be turned over to Afghan
authorities for trial.
In late November 2001,
hundreds of captured Afghan fighters were packed
into sealed shipping containers and moved to the
town of Mazar. Hundreds
died of asphyxiation en
route, were executed when
some of the bodies were
dumped along the way, or
were killed when the containers were riddled with
machine gun fire in Mazar
under the watchful eyes of
30 to 40 U.S. Special Forces
soldiers. The documentary
Massacre at Mazar includes
eyewitness accounts of the
killings. No soldier has ever
even faced a U.S. inquiry.
No U.S. personnel have
been prosecuted for jet
fighter attacks gone astray,
or for bombing civilians
targeted with unreliable
“intel,” or for the pilotless
drone massacres directed
from thousands of miles
away that have left scores
of children dead. Eleven
children ages 2 to 7 were
killed last May 28; six kids
were killed Nov. 24; eight
more were killed Feb. 15.
No charges were brought
against two Marines in
charge of a unit that killed
19 people and wounded 50
by firing indiscriminately at
cars and bystanders in Afghanistan in 2008.
When U.S. crimes of war
have been prosecuted the

official trivialization of the
atrocities and the lack of
severe consequences have
been appalling. The literate
population of Afghanistan
may be more attuned to the
pattern than U.S. readers.
Pvt. Charles Graner, a leader of the Abu Ghraib torture
cell in Iraq was released after 6 ½ years of a 10-year
sentence. In 2009, charges
were dropped against four
U.S. military contractors
from Blackwater, Inc. who
massacred 17 civilians in
the square in Baghdad.
This year, Marine Staff Sgt.
Frank Wuterich was allowed
to plead guilty to ‘dereliction of duty,’ after having
overseen the cold-blooded
murders of 24 sleeping civilians in Haditha, Iraq in
2005. He had told his men
“Shoot first, ask questions
later.” Six of them had their
charges dropped and one
was acquitted. Sgt. Wuterich walked free without
any jail time.
A May 31, 2011 warning from President Karzai
should now be reread by
the Pentagon’s generals:
“If they continue their attacks on our houses, then
their presence will change
from a force that is fighting
terrorism to a force that is
fighting against the people
of Afghanistan. And in that
case, history shows what
Afghans do with trespassers
and with occupiers.”
John LaForge is on the
staff of Nukewatch, a nuclear watchdog and anti-war
group in Wisconsin, and edits its quarterly newsletter.

Letter to the editor

A bridge by another name?

Dear Editor,
I cannot remember the source of my information but believe it was a Public Television documentary, “The Fallen Bridge,”
which we have always referred to as the Silver Bridge, was actually named the Hoover
Bridge, but took the Silver Bridge name
due to its color. Now we have a New Silver
Bridge, or is it the New Hoover Bridge?
I crossed the old bridge about 10 min-

utes before the collapse. My dad, Byron
Dudding, a postal employee, was working
in the Point Pleasant Post Office when the
old bridge fell. Hearing the noise, he rushed
to the top floor to look out. He then called
the U.S. Coast Guard, who were, as yet, unaware of the disaster.
Judy Corbin
Point Pleasant

The Daily Sentinel
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You know wine and food
pairings. But how do you
feel about wine and mood
pairings?
That’s the approach being taken by a new line
of wines — “Be.” — from
Treasury Wine Estates
that are aimed at an
emerging segment of the
market: millennial women.
With marketing pitches
like “Be Radiant” and “Be
Bright,” and descriptors
like “Fresh Chardonnay”
and “Flirty Pink Moscato,” there’s no mistaking these wines for more
staid,
chateau-studded
labels.
“We wanted to create a
brand that would inspire
and not necessarily intimidate because the wine
category can be intimidating,” says Leslie Walters,
Be. wines brand manager.
This isn’t wine’s first attempt to lighten up. The
last decade or so has seen
the rise of “critter label”
wines, wines with odd
or provoking names and,
most recently, a bevy of
“mommy” wines.
The new wines follow
research that included
spending 3 to 4 hours at
home with female wine
consumers and finding
out more about their buying habits and general
lifestyles, as well as their
attitudes toward wine.
What they found was
that women in their midto-late 20s — parameters
for the millennial generation differ, but 1982 is
often considered a benchmark beginning point
— wanted to buy wine
but didn’t want it to be a
chore.
“When we shopped with
her for wine, the biggest
‘Aha!’ that we found was
that she really wanted to
buy wine, but she had a
really difficult time making a choice,” says Jennifer Kimpe, senior man-

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

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

ager of consumer and
shopper insights at Treasury Wine Estates. Part
of the problem was a lack
of really engaging brands,
Kimpe says. “If she had
to decipher the label and
try to figure out what the
wine tasted like and it
took too long, she didn’t
seem to have the patience
for that.”
Be. labels have a clean,
eye-catching design. (The
period after the Be. is
meant to emphasize the
idea of being in the moment.) On the front is the
brand name, the varietal,
the vintage and the adjective used to describe the
wine. On the back, the descriptions are lighthearted. “Be unforgettable. Be
playful. Be Flirty!” advises the back of the pink
moscato bottle, describing the wine as a “mischievous Moscato” that is
“made to be enjoyed with
a wink and a smile.”
That’s the kind of talk
that might make a traditional wine critic’s head
explode.
Truth is, say Kimpe and
Walters, that’s not their
target audience.
“Millennial women in
particular, across all the
age groups, said that they
want something that is engaging to them, that’s not
too serious, but it needs
to be quality and taste
good to them, so we were
really focused on the taste
quality and getting the
right taste profile,” says
Kimpe. “What they said
is, ‘If it tastes horrible
but still is engaging, then
I probably will never buy
it again. But if it’s engaging and fun and light but
also tastes great, it will
become a go-to for me.”
Targeting a specific segment of the market can
work, provided the approach isn’t too blatant,
says John Gillespie, who
has studied the millennial
wine market as president
of the Internet research
company Wine Opinions.

He thinks the Be. marketing “sounds to me like
something that is quite
clever and quite suggestive of being in the moment.”
Alyssa Rapp, founder
and CEO of Bottlenotes,
a popular online wine site
where members can learn
about, rate and buy wines,
hasn’t yet tried Be. wines,
but she sees the approach
as “helping to demystify
wine, combating the stereotype of wine being
an incredibly stodgy, intimidating,
pretentious
industry.” And with the
varietal clearly presented
on the bottle, it doesn’t
appear that the marketing
is straying into dumbeddown territory, which
would be a mistake based
on Bottlenotes’ interaction with millennials.
“We’ve learned that
millennials are absolutely curious about wines.
They’re smart and interested,” she says.
Bottlenotes’ key strategy in trying to appeal to
the millennial market is
presenting wines as “cool,
fun, hip and approachable,” says Rapp. “On face
value,
packaging-wise,
Be. wines does hit these
benchmarks.”
Be. wines, which are being released this spring,
also include a chardonnay — unoaked and very
fresh and fruity — and
pinot grigio, and sell for
between $9.99 and $12.99
a bottle.
Based in Australia,
Treasury Wine Estates is
a global wine company
with more than 50 brands,
including Beringer Vineyards and Penfolds.
And if you’re not a millennial woman? Not to
worry. Treasury Wine Estates has another brand
that might suit. Billed as
“No sipping. No swirling,” it comes with a
handy website tutorial on
how to use a sneaker to
open a bottle.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

THURSDAY,
MARCH 22, 2012

mdtsports@heartlandpublications.com

Lady Knights top Wahama, 6-0
Alex Hawley

ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
— The Lady Knights grabbed
their second win of the season with a 6-0 victory over in
county rivals Wahama, Monday
night in Mason County.
Point Pleasant (2-0) jumped

out to an early 2-0 lead over the
Lady Falcons (0-1) in the first
inning. The Lady Knights did
not score again until the bottom of the fourth when they
notched one run. PPHS marked
three more times in the contest, all in the bottom of the
sixth as they took the 6-0 victory over the Lady Falcons.

Point Pleasant’s Madison
Barker pitched seven innings
striking out six batters and only
allowing two to reach base, one
via hit and one via walk.
Mariah VanMatre pitched for
Wahama and while she struck
out two, she also gave up seven
hits and two walks.
The Lady Knights were led by

Regan Cottrill who went 2-for-4
with a home run and three runs
batted in. Sara Hussell finished
with two hits, while Brooke
Fisher, Ashleigh Diddle, and
Kaitlin Liptrap each finished
with one hit.
Mariah VanMatre had the
lone hit for WHS, a single.
The Lady Knights finished

with six runs seven hits and no
errors, while Wahama finished
with no runs, one hit and one
error.
The Lady Knights travel to
face Wayne Thursday at 5:30
p.m. while the Lady Falcons
travel to Wayne Saturday at
noon for a doubleheader.

Bearcats-Buckeyes game
a rarity despite proximity
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — It appears that if
the NCAA isn’t the matchmaker, Cincinnati and Ohio
State will never get together
in basketball.
When the two old adversaries — who’ve met just
one time since the 1962
national
championship
game — meet in Thursday
night’s East Regional semifinal in Boston, it’ll have to
be enough to mollify fans
longing for a regular-season
meeting.
Buckeyes coach Thad
Matta concedes there are
too many old grudges and
roadblocks to the teams
ever agreeing to get together annually.
“We’re going to play ‘em
Thursday night,” Matta
cracked. “What else do you
want?”
Over the years, fans of
both schools — just a couple
hours apart on Interstate 71
— have hoped and prayed
for the teams to battle each
year like other in-state rivals
such as Louisville-Kentucky
and Iowa-Iowa State. But
there’s a wealth of bad blood
separating them.
There have been allegations — on each side — of
recruiting violations. Also,
when Bob Huggins was UC’s
coach, he felt slighted when
Ohio State — where he was
an assistant — wouldn’t
even talk to him when it had
a job opening in the 1990s.
Then-Ohio State AD Andy
Geiger vowed that he would
not even consider renewing the rivalry. On top of all
that, Ohio State stubbornly
refuses to leave its campus
to play another school from
within the state’s borders,
while Cincinnati insists on
the Buckeyes coming to
their home court.
The schools’ football
teams have met four times
in the last dozen years, with
all of the games but one —

the Bearcats almost ruined
Ohio State’s national championship season in 2002 before falling 23-19 at neutral
site Paul Brown Stadium in
Cincinnati — played at the
Buckeyes’ Ohio Stadium.
But the basketball teams
remain separated by a
scheduling civil war. Their
only meeting in the last 50
years was the Buckeyes’ lopsided 72-50 victory in the
2006 Wooden Tradition in
Indianapolis.
Cincinnati coach Mick
Cronin declines to talk
about why the Bearcats and
Buckeyes never meet.
“You’re asking the wrong
guy,” he said. “I think that’s
a fairly well documented
story. I really don’t have any
interest in it. As you can
see, I’m losing my voice.
I’m trying to save it for stuff
that matters.”
It’s more than just an unbending will between the
two schools, of course. Each
has a huge fan base, neither
of which is particularly fond
of the other school or its followers.
The Bearcats’ fans consider the Buckeyes as overrated bullies who are obsessed
with their favorite team and
who look down on anybody
else. Ohio State’s followers
look at the Bearcats players
as a bunch of thugs (they
were involved in a big fight
against another NCAA regional semifinalist, Xavier,
earlier in the season). And
they don’t even consider
the Bearcats to be from the
same state — more like a
renegade institution from
across the Ohio River in
Kentucky.
But the players and
coaches do have respect for
the other side.
“They are playing great
basketball right now,” Matta
said of the Bearcats. “Looking back at film, the wins
See RARITY ‌| 6

Neal C. Lauron/Columbus Dispatch/MCT photo

Ohio State’s Jared Sullinger (0) celebrates with the crowd during a first-half run against Michigan in the Big 10 Tournament
semifinal game at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana, on Saturday, March 10.

OVP Sports Schedule
Thursday, March 22
Baseball
Point Pleasant at
Ravenswood, 5 p.m.
Softball
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 5:30 p.m.
Friday, March 23
Baseball
Charleston Catholic at
Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Saturday, March 24
Baseball
Southern at Gallia
Academy (DH), noon
Point Pleasant at Tolsia (DH), noon
Wahama at Meigs

(DH), noon
Softball
Chapmanville at Point
Pleasant, 2 p.m.
Wayne at Wahama
(DH), noon
Track and Field
Eastern at Warren, 10
a.m.
River Valley at South
Point, noon
Boys Tennis
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg, 10 a.m.
Girls Tennis
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg, 10 a.m.

Bryan Walters/file photo

South Gallia senior Cory Haner, right, drives past a Pike Eastern defender during this Division IV district final contest at the
Ohio University Convocation Center in Athens, Ohio.

OVP area lands 5 boys
on All-Ohio teams
Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio —
The Ohio Valley Publishing
area landed a total of five
players on the 2012 Associated Press All-Ohio boys
basketball teams in divisions
1-4, as recommended by a
panel of media voters.
Neither Gallia County nor
Meigs County were represented in the first three divisions, but each county came
away with at least two selections on the Division IV list.
Both Southern and South
Gallia came away with two
picks each, while Eastern
landed one choice on the
D-4 squad.
Both the Tornadoes (184) and Rebels (13-10) had
a special mention and honorable selection apiece, as
both teams captured sectional titles this winter. All
four selections from these
squads are also seniors.
Andrew Roseberry led
Southern with 15.3 points
and 11.1 rebounds per game,
which earned Roseberry special mention honors in D-4.
Nathan Roberts won honorable mention accolades with
averages of 11.9 poinys and
6.4 rebounds a game.
Cory Haner paced the
Rebels with 15 points and
4.8 assists per outing, which

yielded special mention honors for the senior. Classmate
John Johnson was an honorable mention pick in D-4
after averaging 14.7 points
and 7.3 rebounds for the district runners-up.
Junior Max Carnahan also
garnered honorable mention
accolades in Division IV
after leading the Eagles (516) with 16.9 points and 3.3
steals per outing.
Between the five selections, four are first time AllOhio recipients. Haner was
an honorable mention selection last winter.
Other area players to earn
first, second or third team
All-Ohio honors include:
Jake Kretzer (Waverly), Malik London (Chillicothe), Jacob Horsley (Sheridan) and
Colt Chapman (Jackson) in
Division II; Dion McKinley
(Portsmouth), Austin McMaster (Chesapeake), Zac
Carter (Ironton) and Wayne
Evans (Portsmouth) in Division III; and Austin Loop
(South Webster), Travis
Combs (Manchester) and
Tyler Noel (Ports. Notre
Dame).
McKinley was one of
three players to share D-3
player of the year honors,
and Trojans coach Gene Collins also won a three-way
share of coach of the year
honors in Division III.

Alex Hawley/file photo

Southern senior Andrew Roseberry passes the ball during
this Division IV district semifinal contest against Manchester at the Ohio University Convocation Center in Athens,
Ohio.

Point baseball falls in
season opener to Bison
Alex Hawley

ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

BUFFALO, W.Va. — Point Pleasant baseball team was held to one hit
Tuesday night in a 3-1 loss to non-conference foe Buffalo in Putnam County.
The Bison (1-0) never trailed in the
contest as they took the 2-o lead in
the bottom of the fourth inning. The
Big Blacks (0-1) finally made it on
the scoreboard in the top of the sixth,
scoring one run off of a Buffalo error.
The Bison answered right back with
a run of their own in the bottom half

of the sixth to push its lead to 3-1. Buffalo held PPHS scoreless in the in the
top of the seventh and claim the 3-1
victory in the season opener.
The Big Blacks Eric Roberts began
the night on the mound giving up just
three hits and three walks while striking out six over three innings. Roberts
received a no decision. Levi Russell
was charged with the loss as he gave
up all three run, though just one was
earned, on four hits and two walks in
3 innings pitched.
Travis Colman received the win for
the Bison after pitching 4.2 innings,

striking out eight while giving up just
one hit and two walks. Player Lewis
received the save for his performance
as he struck out six in 2.1 innings
while giving up 1 unearned run and
one walk.
The lone hit for the Big Blacks was
a single by Alex Potter.
Buffalo was paced by Nathan
Rhoads with two hits while five other
Bison ended up with one hit apiece.
The Big Blacks’ defense was
charged with two errors while Buffalo
was charged with one. PPHS stranded
five runners while Buffalo left nine.

�Thursday, March 22, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 6

OVP Sports Briefs 2012 AP Boys Divisions
River Valley summer
baseball-softball
signups

BIDWELL, Ohio — Summer softball and baseball
signups will be held at
River Valley Middle School
on Tuesday, March 20 and
Tuesday, March 27 from
6:30 p.m. until 7:30 p.m.
Junior girls and junior pony
leagues have extended their
age group to 13-16 as of Dec.
31, 2011 for girls and May 1,
2012 for boys. Little league
is for boys ages 11-12.

Mason summer
baseball/softball
signups

MASON, W.Va. — Children may be signed up for
baseball or softball from 10
a.m. to noon, every Saturday
in March at the Hair Shop
in Mason. A copy of the the
child’s birth certificate is
needed to register. For more
information, call Ryan Miller
at 604-857-1548, or Rick Kearns at 304-674-3491.

Softball league
sign-ups

I-IV All-Ohio teams

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Point Pleasant girls
softball league signups will
be held from 6-8 p.m. on the
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
Tuesdays of March 20 and
(AP)
—
The
2011-12
As27 at PPJSHS Commons.
sociated Press All-Ohio
boys basketball teams in
Eastern-Southern
divisions I-IV, based on
Alumni Game
the recommendations of a
TUPPERS
PLAINS, media panel:
Ohio — Any graduate from
DIVISION I
either Eastern High School
FIRST TEAM: Jalen
or Southern High School Robinson, Cols. Northis invited to participate in land, 6-8, sr., 19.1; Josh
the 2012 Eastern-Southern Lemons, Cin. La Salle,
Alumni Basketball Game 5-11, sr., 18.0; Marc Lovon Saturday, March 24, at ing, Tol. St. John’s, 6-8, jr.,
EHS. The women’s game 22.9; Justin Fritts, Mentor,
will start around 4:30 p.m. 6-2, sr., 28.1; David Walkand the older alums will er, Stow, 6-7, sr., 25.6.
Players of the year: Jalen
take the floor at 5:30 p.m.
The younger division will Robinson, Cols. Northbe the final contest around land; Marc Loving, Tol. St.
John’s; Justin Fritts, Men7 p.m. There is a registrator.
tion fee and the deadline is
Coaches of the year:
Friday, March 16. For more Steve Gray, Norwalk; Greg
information, contact Sam Nossaman, Powell OlenThompson at sthompson@ tangy Liberty.
easternlocal.net
SECOND TEAM: Caris
LeVert, Pickerington Central, 6-4, sr., 18.4; Nigel
Hayes, Tol. Whitmer, 6-7,
jr., 13.8; Myles Hamilton,
Lakewood St. Edward, 6-1,
sr., 16.1; Devaugntah Williams, Canton McKinley,
6-3, sr., 21.9; Terry Rozier,
Shaker Hts., 6-2, sr., 25.6.;
Tony Farmer, Garfield
Hts., 6-7, jr., 20.4; Devon
Scott, Cols. Northland,
6-8, sr., 17.2.
THIRD TEAM: Mike
Wells, Delaware Hayes,
5-7, jr., 25.2; Geovonie
McKnight, Middletown,
6-3, sr., 19.5; C.J. Gettys,
Findlay, 6-11, sr., 20.6;
Mark Donnal, Whitehouse
Anthony Wayne, 6-9, jr.,
19.6; Evan Bailey, Massillon Jackson, 6-5, soph.,
20.3; Jerome Lane, Akron
Firestone, 6-4, jr., 18.0;
Tyree Gaiter, Cleve. Hts.,
5-6, sr., 19.1; Pharoah
Brown, Lyndhurst Brush,
6-7, sr., 18.3.
Special Mention
Nick Archer, Powell

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Olentangy Liberty; Jacob
Phillis, Zanesville; Kade
Haddox, Zanesville; Avery
Williams, Dresden TriValley; Maverick Morgan,
Springboro; Josh Davenport, Cin. Moeller; Max
Mischkulnig,
Hamilton
Ross; Luke Miller, Logan;
Keon Johnson, Mansfield
Senior; Jordan Marrow,
Cleve. JFK; Eric Truog,
Chagrin Falls Kenston;
Mike Davis, Garfield Hts.;
Jordan Humphrey, Massillon Perry; Taylor Moore,
North Canton Hoover;
Kyle Scelza, Stow; Jarrett
Ruffin, Macedonia Nordonia; Antonio Hearn, Akron
Kenmore; Jesse Hardin,
Warren Harding.
Honorable Mention
Andy Bosley, Lewis
Center Olentangy Orange;
Jake Butt, Pickerington
North; Jordan Cowgill,
Thomas
Worthington;
Jordan Potts, Cols. Northland; Isiah Rogers, Westerville South;
Vincent Edwards, Middletown; Isaiah Johnson,
Cin. Walnut Hills; Monty
Boykins, West Chester
Township Lakota West;
Ben Esposito, Lebanon;
Jalen Camper, Beavercreek; James Turner, Fairfield;
Tyler White, Lima Senior; Mookie Mustafaa,
Tol. Bowsher; Clemmye
Owens, Tol. Rogers; Keith
Towbridge, Tol. Central
Cath.; Jeff Thomas, Norwalk;
Marcus Bagley, Cleve.
Hts.; Anthony Howard,
Cleve. JFK; Derek Sloan,
Cleve. St. Ignatius; Curtis
Oakley, Lyndhurst Brush;
Kody
Bender,
Elyria;
Danny Wallack, Mentor;
Pierce Cumpstone, Chagrin Falls Kenston; Mark
Murray, Lakewood St.
Edward; Kash Blackwell,
Shaker Hts.;
Larry Hunter, Canton
Timken; Miles Griffin,
Massillon Jackson; Bobby
Conley, Massillon Washington; Josh Kipfer, Wadsworth; Ryan Badowski,
Brunswick; Billy Geschke,
Medina; Evan Keeslar,
Uniontown Green; Will
Mahone,
Austintown
Fitch; Mike Hornbuckle,
Youngs. East; Kevin Gladney, Akron Firestone.
DIVISION II
FIRST TEAM: Eric
Roby, Plain City Jonathan
Alder, 6-5, sr., 17.9; Dan
Monteroso, St. Clairsville,
6-2, jr., 26.4; Adolphus
Washington, Cin. Taft, 6-5,
sr., 23.1; Reggie McAdams, Elida, 6-5, sr., 20.2;
Jake Kretzer, Waverly, 6-7,
sr., 26.8; Joey Vuyancih,
Mentor Lake Cath., 6-2,
sr., 18.5; Jake Jacubec,
Struthers, 6-0, sr., 26.2;
Gary Akbar, Day. Dunbar,
6-5, sr., 17.4.
Players of the year: Dan
Monteroso, St. Clairsville;
Adolphus
Washington,
Cin. Taft; Reggie McAdams, Elida; Joey Vuyancih,
Mentor Lake Cath.; Gary
Akbar, Day. Dunbar.
Coaches of the year: Brian Bates, Franklin; Mark
Chicone, Mentor Lake
Cath.; Larry Kukura, Alliance; Kirk Lehman, Defiance.
SECOND TEAM: Eric
Siefert, Cols. Hartley, 6-2,
sr., 11.8; Mason Mamarella, Dover, 5-10, jr., 20.4;
Jordan Lauf, Napoleon,
6-5, jr., 21.9; Malik London, Chillicothe, 6-8, sr.,
13.6; Davonte Brunson,
Akron East, 5-10, sr., 22.8;
Jordan Barham, Hunting
Val. Univ. School, 6-3, sr.,
25.0.
THIRD TEAM: Zack

Atkins, New Concord
John Glenn, 6-3, sr., 16.9;
Anthony Kidston, Defiance, 6-2, sr., 16.4; Jacob
Horsley, Thornville Sheridan, 6-4, sr., 18.7; Colt
Chapman, Jackson, 6-5,
sr., 21.5; Lucas Strouble,
Alliance Marlington, 6-4,
jr., 22.1; David Blanks, Akron SVSM, 6-2, sr., 19.2;
Devon Carter, Cleve. John
Hay, 6-2, sr., 20.0; Desmond Ridenour, Cleve.
Benedictine, 6-2, sr., 18.0.
Special Mention
John Draper, Cols. Eastmoor Acad.; Khalid King,
Cols. Brookhaven; Boo
Osborne, Cols. Centennial; Joe Bowers, Wintersville Indian Creek;
Marky Thompkins, East
Liverpool; Fletcher Watt,
Cadiz Harrison Central;
Luke Kennard, Franklin;
Zack Denny, Germantown
Valley View; John Staley,
Day. Chaminade-Julienne;
Evan Salyers, Proctorville
Fairland; Evan French,
Vincent Warren; Dillon
Young, Circleville Logan
Elm; Ryan Chesser, McArthur Vinton County; Wade
Wooley, Wauseon; Vitto
Brown, Bowling Green;
Rasheed Brooks, Lexington; Mike Roberts, Cleve.
Benedictine; Robert Jackson, Painesville Harvey;
Vernon Martin, Alliance;
Mycle Shadie, Akron East;
Eddy Grenert, Wooster
Triway;
Ben
Gency,
Streetsboro; Bob Peters,
CVCA; Colin Reardon, Poland Seminary.
Honorable Mention
Randal Clarkson, Cols.
Brookhaven;
Khaleed
Franklin, Cols. Beechcroft;
J Murrell, Cols. Mifflin;
Alex Randall, Plain City
Jonathan Alder; Jordan
Tomlinson,
Delaware
Buckeye Valley;
Stephen Ericksen, Carrollton; Riley Carlton, St.
Clairsville; Taylor Wise,
Uhrichsville
Claymont;
Malik Richmond, Steubenville; RyLee Rogers,
Cambridge; Ronnie Miller,
New Philadelphia;
Zach Stillings, Urbana;
Orlando Berry, Cin. Taft;
Travis Lakins, Franklin;
Drew Hall, Cin. McNicholas; Andre Yates, Day.
Dunbar;
Joshua Skinner, The
Plains Athens; Josh Windland, Vincent Warren; Tim
Grosel, Marietta; Nathan
Moats, Circleville; Zach
Johnson, Chillicothe; Andrew Warner, Chillicothe
Unioto; Tyrand Cumberland, Hillsboro; Jacob
Martin, New Lexington;
Jordan Kidd, McArthur
Vinton County; Derek
Clark, Lancaster Fairfield
Union;
Josh Scott, Defiance; Jacob Myers, Van Wert; Brad
Davis, Lima Bath; Dontonio Kynard, Tol. Scott;
Connor Nelson, Shelby;
Nic Williams, Sandusky
Perkins;
Hunter Skolnicki, Sheffield
Brookside;
Kyle
Smith, Oberlin Firelands;
Mark Baniewicz, Mentor
Lake Cath.; Hayden Diedrich, Chesterland West
Geauga; J.R. Randolph,
Chardon NDCL; Tyler Ptacek, Parma Padua Franciscan;
Tyler Sherman, Norton;
Jalen Mays, Alliance; Zach
McDivitt, Cortland Lakeview; Jermaine Justice Jr.,
Ravenna; Doug Caputo,
Youngs. Mooney; Dylan
Schmidt, Struthers; DeAllen Jackson, Akron Hoban;
Lorenzo Cugini, Akron
SVSM; Aaron Vanbuskirk,
Norton; Noah Kainrad,
Ravenna Southeast.

DIVISION III
FIRST TEAM: Damon
Jones, Bedford Chanel, 6-1,
sr., 19.6; Peyton Aldridge,
Leavittsburg LaBrae, 6-7,
soph., 15.0; Nolan Todd,
Collins Western Reserve,
6-1, sr., 17.5; Dion McKinley, Portsmouth, 6-5, sr.,
19.0; Andrew Benintendi,
Cin. Madeira, 5-10, jr.,
24.2; Brandon Taylor,
Coshocton, 6-4, sr., 21.0;
Isaac McGlone, BloomCarroll, 6-1, jr., 17.2.
Players of the year: Dion
McKinley,
Portsmouth;
Isaac McGlone, BloomCarroll; Andrew Benintendi, Cin. Madeira.
Coaches of the year: Michael Bradley, Cin. Summit Country Day; Gene
Collins, Portsmouth; Tom
Petty, Bloom-Carroll.
SECOND TEAM: Austin McMaster, Chesapeake, 6-5, sr., 19.2; A.J.
Ireland,
Bloom-Carroll,
6-3, sr., 18.8; Tanner Stoffer, West Lafayette Ridgewood, 6-4, sr., 19.6; Evan
Bradds, Jamestown Greeneview, 6-7, jr., 18.8; Tyler
O’Connor, Lima Cent.
Cath., 6-3, sr., 11.7; Ron
Rogers, New Middletown
Springfield, 6-3, sr., 18.0;
Ryan Logan, Fredericktown, 6-6, jr., 24.1.
THIRD TEAM: Shon
Smith, Beverly Ft. Frye,
6-0, jr., 18.6; Zac Carter,
Ironton, 5-8, jr., 22.2;
Wayne Evans, Portsmouth,
6-2, sr., 16.0; Levi Licata,
Jeromesville
Hillsdale,
6-4, sr., 16.4; Tim Goff,
Burton Berkshire, 6-7, sr.,
19.4; Michael Rosebrock,
Ottawa-Glandorf, 6-4, jr.,
11.8; Blake Green, Delta,
6-4, sr., 16.4.
Special Mention
Julian Johnson, Cols.
Horizon Science; Kolby
Snyder, Mount Gilead;
Cody Schau, Martins Ferry; Duane Troyer, Sugarcreek Garaway; Eli Hurst,
Sarahsville Shenandoah;
Gunner Shirk, Casstown
Miami East; Luke Creditt,
Waynesville; Max Hassel,
Cin. Clark Montessori;
Trey Fletcher, Ironton;
Blake Yates, Lucasville
Valley; Dylan Gragg, Chillicothe Huntington; Nigel
Courts, Wellston; Seth
Rall, Bucyrus Wynford;
Rashad Smith, Millbury
Lake; Caleb Schillace,
LaGrange Keystone; Anthony Fears, Lorain Clearview; David Linane, Gates
Mills Gilmour Acad.; John
Davis, Beachwood; Jeremy
Holley, Elyria Cath.; Cody
Dillon, Newton Falls; Jaylen Mann, Youngs. Liberty; Drew Brenner, Orrville;
Drew Kline, West Salem
Northwestern; Cody Berg,
Garrettsville
Garfield;
Ryan Strollo, Youngs. Ursuline; Brandon Pluchinsky, Canfield South Range.
Honorable Mention
Alan Andrix, Amanda-Clearcreek;
Antonio
Blount, Cols. Horizon
Science; Rodney Porter,
Heath; Zach Ratcliff, Cols.
Academy; Brooks Weygandt, Worthington Christian;
Jacob Bailey, Belmont
Union Local; Drew Jarvis, Coshocton; Christian
Grove, West Lafayette
Ridgewood; Zach Eddy,
Beverly Fort Frye; Kyle
Larrick, Lore City Buckeye Trail; Ryan Troyer,
Sugarcreek Garaway;
Joey Adleta, Middletown Madison; Mitchell
Campbell, Versailles; Erik
Edwards, Cin. Roger Bacon; Kevin Johnson, Cin.
Summit County Day; Jake
Adams, Camden Preble
Shawnee;

most of his coaching career
in Cincinnati, heaped praise
on the Buckeyes.
“You try to think about
how you’re going to stop
them, it’s head scratching,” he said of the lineup
built around All-American
forward Jared Sullinger.
“You’re going to have to
pick your poison in some
places. They’re that good
on offense.”
It’s a risk to call the
schools rivals, since they so
seldom cross paths. Neither

is hotly pursuing any future
meetings, either.
Matta was asked if the
two sides might somehow
meet in the middle.
Mentioning a commercial
location midway between
the Queen City and Capital
City, Matta said, “You mean
like at Jeffersonville at the
outlet mall?”
After the laughter died
down, he added, “I doubt
it. It’s probably highly unlikely.”

Rarity
8880 United Lane
Athens, Ohio 45701

1830 Old Logan Rd., S.E.
Lancaster, Ohio 43130

(740) 593-3279

(740) 653-2827

Your Friendly Outdoor Power Equipment and Tractor Superstore
(1) Subject to credit approval on a Cub Cadet credit card account. Not all customers qualify. Additional terms
may apply. Please see your local Cub Cadet dealer for details.
* Product Price — Actual retail prices are set by dealer and may vary. Taxes, freight, setup and handling charges may be additional and may vary.
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Specifications and programs are subject to change without notice. Images may not reflect dealer inventory and/or unit specifications.
© 2012 Cub Cadet

EPS_Q_BW

From Page 5
they’ve been able to put
up, they’ve really found
their rhythm in terms of
how they’re playing. The
guards are multi-dimensional and Yancy (Gates) inside
is really a load.”
He also said the Bearcats
(26-10) might be as quick as
any team his Buckeyes (297) have played this season.
Matta spent three years
battling UC head to head
while the coach at Xavier.
Cronin, who has spent

�Thursday, March 22, 2012

post on the west line of the to Cecil L. Blackwood and Claaforesaid 14.25 acre tract and tine L. Blackwood. Thence
on the west line of the afore- West with the South line of the
www.mydailysentinel.com
said southeast
quarter; thence said 17-3/4 Acre Parcel 549.5
along the west line of said feet to a point on the face of a
14.25 acre tract and the west ledge of rocks (this point is 63
line of said southeast quarter feet East of the South-West
North 10 deg. 59' 08" East corner of the said 17-3/4 Acre
170.64 feet to a point at the parcel); thence North-easterly
southwest corner of aforesaid with the center of the face of
0.50 acre tract; thence leaving the ledge of rocks to a post on
the west line of said 14.25 the face of the ledge of rocks
acre tract and the west line of and on Roy Ellis' West line,
the southeast quarter of Sec- (this post is 787 feet South of
tion 26 and along a rock ledge the North-East corner of said
the following seven bearings 17-3/4 Acre Parcel;) thence
and distances:
South with the Roy Ellis' West
line 550 feet to the place of be1) North 46 deg. 09' 25" East ginning, containing 5 Acres,
37.44 feet to a point; thence
more or less.
2) North 52 deg. 37' 05" East
113.38 feet to a point; thence
Reference Deeds: Volume
3) North 00 deg. 25' 58" East 183, Page 465 and Volume
22.76 feet to a point; thence
105, Page 511, Meigs County
4) North 06 deg. 17' 22" West Official Records.
82.16 feet to a point; thence
5) North 06 deg. 24' 19" East Being Auditor s Parcel Num37.60 feet to a point; thence
bers 17-00170.000 and
6) North 06 deg. 20' 35" East 17-00171.001.
34.35 feet to a point; thence
7) North 12 deg. 03' 12" East The above described real es24.36 feet to the point of be- tate is sold “as is” without warginning and containing 1.142 ranties or covenants.
Acres and being a part of a
14.25 acre tract described in P R O P E R T Y
ADDRESS:
Volume 188 Page 091 of the 3 3 5 5 0
Cotterill
Road,
Meigs County Deed Records.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Also included with the above
described 1.142 acre tract is
the following easement for ingress and egress:

SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
11 CV 117, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF, VS. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, NEXT OF
KIN, SPOUSES, DEVISEES,
LEGATEES, ADMINISTRATORS, EXECUTORS, SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS, IF
ANY, OF DENVER R. COTTERILL AKA DENVER RAY
COTTERILL, DECEASED,
AND THE ESTATE OF DENVER R. COTTERILL AKA
DENVER RAY COTTERILL,
DECEASED, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Notices

Mammograms are
still available for
those who qualify.
Through the
Susan G. Komen
Grant At
Holzer Center
for Cancer Care
For more
information,
please call
740.446.3064.
Legals
PROBATE
COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

OF

L.SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF BREANNA ELIZABETH
SMITH
TO: BREANNA ELIZABETH
BUTCHER
CASE NO. 20126006
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
CHANGE OF NAME
Applicant hereby gives notice
to all interested persons and to
Brian E. Smith that the applicant has filed an Application
for Change of Name in the
Probate Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, requesting the
name of Breanna Elizabeth
Smith to Breanna Elizabeth
Butcher.
The hearing on the application
will be heard on the 2nd day of
May , 2012, at 1:00 oʼclock
p . m., in the Probate Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, located at
Courthouse, 100 East Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.
Applicantʼs signature: Billie Jo
Butcher
Address:
38780 Mudford
Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 (3) 22,
2012

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Rutland Township Trustees do hereby give notice to
the owners of First Baptist
Church of God, located at
33276 New Lima Road, Rutland, Ohio 45775, and Parcel
No. 11-01332.000, that pursuant to Ohio Revised Code
Section 505.86 the Townshp
Fire Department has declared
the building on this property to
be insecure, unsafe and structurally defecive and that the
buildings or structures have
been declared unfit for human
habitation by the Board of
Health of the General Health
District of which the township
is a part. The Township Trustees also provide notice that
pursuant to Ohio Revised
Code Section 505.86, they will
remove the building or other
structure on this property
based on these same findings
and shall do so, no sooner
than (30) days after this notice
has been published.
For
questions/objections to the removal, contact Opal Dyer at
740-742-2805.
Opal Dyer
Fiscal Officer
Rutland Township (3) 22, 2012
SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
11 CV 117, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF, VS. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, NEXT OF
KIN, SPOUSES, DEVISEES,
LEGATEES, ADMINISTRATORS, EXECUTORS, SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS, IF
ANY, OF DENVER R. COTTERILL AKA DENVER RAY
COTTERILL, DECEASED,
AND THE ESTATE OF DENVER R. COTTERILL AKA
DENVER RAY COTTERILL,
DECEASED, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
By virtue of an Order of Sale
issued out of said Court in the
above action, Robert E. Beegle, the Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action on the
front steps of the Meigs

By virtue ofLegals
an Order of Sale
issued out of said Court in the
above action, Robert E. Beegle, the Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action on the
front steps of the Meigs
County
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy, Meigs County, Ohio,
on Friday, March 30, 2012, at
10:00 a.m., the following lands
and tenements:
Parcel One:
Situated in the southeast quarter of Section 26, Town 7
North, Range 14 West, Scipio
Township, Meigs County, Ohio
and described as follows:
Commencing at the northwest
corner of the southeast quarter
of Section 26; thence along
the west line of said southeast
quarter on an assumed bearing South 10 deg. 59' 08' West
1,337 feet to a point at the
northwest corner of a 0.50
acre tract described in Volume
307 Page 395 of the Meigs
County Deed Records, thence
leaving the west line of the
southeast quarter and along
the north line of said 0.50 acre
tract South 79 deg. 14' 24"
East 63.00 feet to a set iron
pin on an existing rock ledge
at the northeast corner of said
0.50 acre tract and on the
north line of a 14.25 acre tract
described in Volume 188 Page
091 of the Meigs County Deed
Records, said set iron pin is
THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING; thence along the north
line of said 14.25 acre tract
South 79 deg. 14' 24" East
154.58 feet to a set iron pin;
thence along a random line the
following three bearings and
distances:
1) South 21 deg. 53' 40" West
200.12 feet to a set iron pin,
thence
2) South 37 deg. 37' 57" West
313.63 feet to a set iron pin,
thence
3) North 88 deg. 42' 51" West
39.61 feet to an existing fence
post on the west line of the
aforesaid 14.25 acre tract and
on the west line of the aforesaid southeast quarter; thence
along the west line of said
14.25 acre tract and the west
line of said southeast quarter
North 10 deg. 59' 08" East
170.64 feet to a point at the
southwest corner of aforesaid
0.50 acre tract; thence leaving
the west line of said 14.25
acre tract and the west line of
the southeast quarter of Section 26 and along a rock ledge
the following seven bearings
and distances:

Situated in the southeast quarter of Section 26, Town 7
North, Range 14 West, Scipio
Township, Meigs County, Ohio
and described as follows:
Commencing at an existing
fence post on the west line of
the southeast quarter of Section 26 and on the west line of
a 14.25 acre tract described in
Volume 188 Page 091 of the
Meigs County Deed Records
at the southwest corner of the
above described proposed
1.142 acre tract, said point is
located South 10 deg. 59' 08"
West 1,819.64 feet from the
northwest corner of the southeast quarter of Section 26 and
said point is THE TRUE
POINT OF BEGINNING;
thence along the south line of
said proposed
1.142 acre tract
Legals
South 88 deg. 42' 51" East
39.61 feet to a set iron pin at
the southeast corner of said
1.142 acre tract; thence on a
random line South 13 deg. 37'
25" West (passing a set iron
pin at 194.41 feet) for a total
distance of 218.15 feet to a
point in Meigs County Road
17, thence along said road
North 79 deg. 03' 12" West
29.00 feet to a point in the
west line of aforesaid 14.25
acre tract and the west line of
aforesaid southeast quarter of
Section 26; thence leaving
said road and along the west
line of said 14.25 acre tract
and the west line of said
southeast quarter North 10
deg. 59' 08" East 211.27 feet
to the point of beginning and
containing 0.167 acres and being a part of a 14.25 acre tract
described in Volume 188 Page
091 of the Meigs County Deed
Records.
Note: Unless otherwise noted
all set iron pins are 5/8 inch in
diameter and 30 inches in
length and capped with a plastic identification marker scribed
Leonard F. Swoyer R.L.S.
6765.
The above description was
prepared under the supervision of Leonard F. Swoyer
Registered Professional Land
Surveyor Number 6765 and
based on a survey performed
by Southeastern Land Surveys
dated May 17, 1993.
Subject to all easements and
right of ways of record.
Parcel Two:
Also, the following Parcel of
real estate, beginning at the
South-East corner of a 17-3/4
Acre Parcel described as Parcel #2 in deed dated July 9th.,
1956 from Oleva E. Cotterill,
also known as Leva E. Cotterill
to Cecil L. Blackwood and Clatine L. Blackwood. Thence
West with the South line of the
said 17-3/4 Acre Parcel 549.5
feet to a point on the face of a
ledge of rocks (this point is 63
feet East of the South-West
corner of the said 17-3/4 Acre
parcel); thence North-easterly
with the center of the face of
the ledge of rocks to a post on
the face of the ledge of rocks
and on Roy Ellis' West line,
(this post is 787 feet South of
the North-East corner of said
17-3/4 Acre Parcel;) thence
South with the Roy Ellis' West
line 550 feet to the place of beginning, containing 5 Acres,
more or less.

1) North 46 deg. 09' 25" East
37.44 feet to a point; thence
2) North 52 deg. 37' 05" East
113.38 feet to a point; thence
3) North 00 deg. 25' 58" East
22.76 feet to a point; thence
4) North 06 deg. 17' 22" West
82.16 feet to a point; thence
5) North 06 deg. 24' 19" East
37.60 feet to a point; thence
6) North 06 deg. 20' 35" East
34.35 feet to a point; thence
7) North 12 deg. 03' 12" East
24.36 feet to the point of beginning and containing 1.142
Acres and being a part of a
14.25 acre tract described in
Volume 188 Page 091 of the
Meigs County Deed Records.

Reference Deeds: Volume
183, Page 465 and Volume
105, Page 511, Meigs County
Official Records.

Also included with the above
described 1.142 acre tract is
the following easement for ingress and egress:

REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
AT: $60,000.00. The real estate cannot be sold for less
than 2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal may not
include an interior examination
of any structures, if any, on the
real estate.

Situated in the southeast quarter of Section 26, Town 7
North, Range 14 West, Scipio
Township, Meigs County, Ohio
and described as follows:
Commencing at an existing
fence post on the west line of
the southeast quarter of Section 26 and on the west line of
a 14.25 acre tract described in
Volume 188 Page 091 of the
Meigs County Deed Records
at the southwest corner of the
above described proposed
1.142 acre tract, said point is
located South 10 deg. 59' 08"
West 1,819.64 feet from the
northwest corner of the southeast quarter of Section 26 and
said point is THE TRUE
POINT OF BEGINNING;
thence along the south line of
said proposed 1.142 acre tract
South 88 deg. 42' 51" East
39.61 feet to a set iron pin at
the southeast corner of said
1.142 acre tract; thence on a
random line South 13 deg. 37'
25" West (passing a set iron

Being Auditor s Parcel Numbers 17-00170.000 and
17-00171.001.

CURRENT OWNER: Denver
Cotterill.
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
AT: $60,000.00. The real estate cannot be sold for less
than 2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal may not
include an interior examination
of any structures, if any, on the
real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
only) down on day of sale, balance (cash or certified check
only) due on confirmation of
sale.
ALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
Douglas W.Legals
Little, LITTLE,
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(3) 8, 15, 22
Lost &amp; Found
A Pit Bull / Boxer mixed
mostly White with some black
and brown markings was
FOUND in the Jackson area.
Call 590-3750.
FOUND:
2 female tri-color beagles.
Call to identify.
304-675-5853

We have lost our dog. She is
a salt &amp; pepper schnoodle
(part schnauzer &amp; part poodle). She answers to the name
Sophie. Please help us find
our dog. A reward will be given
to anyone who leads to our recovery of Sophie. If you have
any information, please call
304-675-7474.
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that
you do business with people you
know, and NOT to send money
through the mail until you have investigating the offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
SERVICES
Child / Elderly Care
Will take care of the elderly in
their homes. Have exp.
304-675-3264
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

FINANCIAL
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

300

SERVICES

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants.

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

PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
33550
Cotterill
Road,
Pomeroy, OH 45769

ANIMALS

CURRENT OWNER: Denver
Cotterill.

FREE KITTENS: 2 gray, 1
grey/white, 1 black/white.
304-812-4203

TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
only) down on day of sale, balance (cash or certified check
only) due on confirmation of
sale.
ALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
Douglas W. Little, LITTLE,
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street,
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Pomeroy,
OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(3) 8, 15, 22

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pets

Want To Buy
Cash for junk autos. 388-0011
or 441-7870
AGRICULTURE
Farm Equipment
1989 Hillsboro stock trailer,
model 4020. 304-675-3456
Case IH 1190 3 cylinder deisel
w/canopy, 37 Hp drawbar, 43
Hp Pto, good condition all hydrolics work, $4250; Ford 501
sickle bar 7' cut mower, $500,
phone 740-247-2117 or
740-444-2793
MERCHANDISE
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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

Want To Buy

Houses For Rent

Absolute Top dollar- silver/gold
coins, pre 1935 US currency.
proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue, Gallipolis. 446-2842

2 BR house, family room, W/D
hook-up, Carport, @ 32 madison Call 441-8578 leave message $450/mo
NO PETS.
Nice 2 - Story country home
on lg lot (Rm for garden)
near RV Schools - 3 BR
renovated bath, All electric,
stove,frig,w/d hook-ups, attached garage. $575 rent
plus dep. Applications Call
446-3644.

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

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

MANUFACTURED HOUSING

AUTOMOTIVE

Lots

Trucks
2009 F-250 V-10, gas engine,
56,000 miles, asking $23,000
new condition, run's great,
740-742-3029, 740-416-0019
call after 4pm
REAL ESTATE SALES
For Sale By Owner
1978 Nashua trailer-2 BR, w/d,
stove, frig, covered porch, live
in or use as rental, $5000
304-882-2539
Houses For Sale
For Sale by Owner, 3103
Kathnor Ln. Pt. Pl. 3BR, 2-1/2
bath, nice neighborhood,
$90,000 (304)675-5403
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 &amp; 3 BR apts, $385 &amp; up,
sec dep $300 &amp; up,
AC, W/D hook-up,
tenant pays elec, EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$450 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-645-7630
or
740-988-6130
2 BR, furnished, $600 deposit,
$600 Rent, Electric. Small
dogs
considered
740-446-9595
2BR APT.Close to Holzer Hospital
on SR 160 C/A. (740) 441-0194

Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5
BA, back patio, pool, playground.
$450
mth
740-646-8231
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

Trailer lot on Bailey Run Rd for
rent, $150 per month. includes
water, 252-333-2495
Rentals
Nice 14 X 70 2 bedroom
Trailer in country. Lg Porch,
water pd. You pay gas &amp; Elec.
$525 per/mo. 590-8670.
Small 2 bedroom trailer, $250
rent, $250 dep, yrs lease, no
pets, no calls after 9pm,
740-992-5097
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

WOW! Gov't program now available on manufactured homes.
Call
while
funds
last!
740-446-3570

RESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted- General
LOCAL CONVENIENCE
STORE CHAIN
is NOW Hiring Cashiers,
ALL SHIFTS.
Apply online at
www.parmarstores.com
or fax resume
to 740-376-1565.
Olive Township is currently accepting applications for the position of Fiscal Officer. Please
send resumes to PO Box 242,
Tuppers Plains, Oh 45783 by
March 30th
Medical
Overbrook Center is accepting
applications for RN's and a
part time receptionist/secretary.Must have knowledge of
Microsoft Word and Excel programs and be availablr for
some weekend hours. Applications are available at our facility, 333 Page Street, Middleport, Oh 45760 EOE

Lg 1 Bedroom Apt. with DW
and W &amp; D. Garbage &amp; water
pd. located on 588 $450mo.
$450dep. Call 419-359-1768.
One
Bedroom
740-446-0390

Apt.

RENT
SPECIALS
Jordan Landing
Apts-2, 3 &amp; 4
BR units avail.
Rent plus dep &amp;
elec. Minorities
encouraged to apply. No pets.
304-674-0023
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425+2 BR at
$475 Month. 446-1599.
Studio Apt. Rio Grande area,
within walking distance to
Campus. $425 mo / $425 dep.
Call or Text 740-339-2494.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
304-675-6679
Upstairs Apt. on Viand St.
$400 + Deposit. Call for details
304-812-4350.
Houses For Rent
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1 BR, $350 mo, $350 dep, ,
NO PETS,Syracuse, OH
304-675-5332
or
740-591-0265

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Manufactured Homes
2-BR 1 bath small mobile
home for rent. 1-2 persons
only. Water/Trash paid. NO
PETS! Great Location @
Johnsons Mobile Home Park!
Call 740-446-3160.
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

�Thursday, March 22, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

www.mydailysentinel.com

URG softball tops Patriots
Randy Payton

WILLIAMSBURG,
Ky. — Katie Fuller had
three hits and drove in a
career-high six runs as the
University of Rio Grande
completed a doubleheader
sweep of the University of
the Cumberlands with a 9-2
win, Tuesday afternoon, at
Briar Creek Park’s Gene
Mosley Field.
The RedStorm, which
rolled to an 11-0 five-inning
triumph in the opener, improved to 11-4 overall and
4-0 in the Mid-South Conference with the wins.
Fuller, a junior from
Hamilton, Ohio, had a
two-out, two-run single in
Rio’s three-run third, a runscoring hit in a three-run
fifth and a two-out, threerun double that plated all of

the RedStorm’s runs in the
sixth inning.
The Patriots (2-18, 2-5)
took a 1-0 lead against Rio
senior starter Allison Mills
in the second inning when
Kayla Shelton drew a oneout walk, advanced to second on a passed ball and
scored as Ashley Wampler
reached on a throwing error.
Rio Grande went in front
to stay in the third when junior Kaitie Stewart reached
on an error to begin the
frame and moved to second
on a sacrifice bunt by freshman Jessi Robinson. Junior
Kaylee Walk followed with
an infield single to shortstop and a groundout by junior Jaymie Rector put both
runners in scoring position.
Fuller followed with her goahead hit to right-center
and scored all the way from

first moments later on a single off the right field fence
by senior Anna Smith.
Cumberlands
sliced
the deficit to 3-2 in the
home fourth when Shelton
reached on a two-out error
and scored on a single by
Wampler, but the RedStorm
pulled away with their fifth
inning uprising.
Walk and Rector reached
on consecutive bunt singles
to open the fifth and Fuller
followed with a run-scoring
hit to right. Smith then hit
a sacrifice fly to center and
freshman Allison Hurst followed with a grounder to
short which scored Fuller to
make it 6-2.
Rio added three more
insurance markers in the
sixth after the first two batters were routinely retired.
Robinson kept the inning
going with a single to right,

Walk had a bunt single and
Rector singled to left before Fuller brought the trio
home with a two-base hit to
left.
Walk finished with three
hits, while Rector and
Hurst had two each in the
win. Mills (5-1) scattered
six hits, while walking one
and striking out five in a
complete game effort.
Jessica Speake started
and took the loss for the
Patriots, while Brittany
Lovelace finished with two
hits.
In Tuesday’s opener, Rio
Grande was held hitless
and managed just one baserunner through the first
three innings before exploding against Cumberlands
starter Angela Steuer in the
fourth.
Rector led off with an
infield single to second,

moved to second on a walk
to Fuller and scored on a
single to center by Smith.
Senior Nicole Sargent singled home Fuller to make
it 2-0, before Hurst singled
to left to load the bases
and Stewart singled to left
to bring home sophomore
Lauren Barnes, who was
running for Smith, with the
third run of the inning.
Freshman Haley Gwin followed with a two-run double to left and, two batters
later, Rector brought home
Stewart with a groundout
to first to make it 6-0.
Fuller then scored Gwin
and Walk, who had reached
on an error, with a single to
left, before Smith added her
second run-scoring hit of
the inning to push across a
ninth marker.
The RedStorm finished
things off in the fifth against

reliever Carrie Cobb when
Hurst led off with a single
to center, moved to third on
a one-out double to left by
Gwin and scored on a twoout single to left-center by
Walk.
Rector, Smith, Hurst and
Gwin all had two hits in
Rio’s 12-hit attack. Smith
earned the win in the circle,
allowing just two hits and
striking out eight.
Rio Grande returns to
action Thursday afternoon,
traveling to rival Shawnee
State for another MSC twinbill. First pitch for game one
is set for 2 p.m.
Shawnee took an unbeaten record into Tuesday’s
doubleheader at St. Catharine.

CINCINNATI (AP) —
Punches flew. Blood dripped
on the court. Two proud basketball programs saw their
reputations stained in mere
seconds last December,
when Cincinnati and Xavier
players lost their cool at the
end of their game.
The moment would follow them everywhere for
the next three months. The
video was played countless
times. The questions kept
coming.
Finally, that’s changing.
By reaching the round of 16
in the NCAA tournament together, the crosstown rivals

have finally gotten beyond
the brawl.
“It’s a good thing both
teams are doing well now,”
Xavier point guard Tu Holloway said on Tuesday.
Far better than anyone
expected three months ago,
when four players from each
team were suspended for the
melee at the end of Xavier’s
23-point win on its home
court on Dec. 10. It became
a national talking point and
a turning point for both
teams.
Both teams have gotten
past the fallout and made it
deep into tournament time.

Cincinnati (26-10) plays
Ohio State (29-7) in Boston
on Thursday in a regional
semifinal. Xavier (23-12)
plays Baylor (29-7) in Atlanta on Friday.
The only time they think
about the fight now is when
it invariably comes up during interviews before NCAA
tournament games. They
don’t mind the question as
much as the implication in
some of them.
“After a win, they try to
make it out as if we didn’t
have that fight, we wouldn’t
be where we are now, that
the reason we’re playing so

good is because of that,”
Cincinnati power forward
Yancy Gates said on Tuesday. “Where really, the reason we’re playing good is
just that we’re playing good
now, we figured it out. I
think that’s what makes it so
annoying.”
Fair or not, the fight became the lens through which
the rest of their seasons
would be viewed.
Xavier was 8-0 and ranked
No. 8 when Holloway, guard
Mark Lyons and forward
Dez Wells were among those
suspended, costing the Musketeers their top three scor-

ers and knocking everything
out of sorts. They lost five of
their next six games and had
a tough time regaining their
confidence and chemistry.
Plus, they seemed to be affected by the national attention, losing the toughness
that Holloway and Lyons
had bragged about after the
Cincinnati game.
For the first time in six
years, the Musketeers failed
to win at least a share of the
Atlantic 10 regular-season
title. When they got to the
A-10 tournament, they knew
they had to win some games
to keep playing.

Xavier reached the A-10
final in Atlantic City, then
knocked off Notre Dame and
Lehigh in the NCAA tournament to reach the round of
16 for the fourth time in five
years.
They’re back in a familiar
place, with their confidence
restored.
“We played so free in Atlantic City because we knew
we had so much against us,”
Holloway said. “We knew if
we lost our opening game,
we’d be in the NIT. We play
free with our backs against
the wall. We just started
clicking.”

Special to OVP

Xavier, Cincinnati get past brawl, into NCAA 16

Bobcats get long-awaited breakthrough: Sweet 16

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) — Walter
Luckett arrived in the ’70s, made
a magazine cover and created a
stir, but left without getting the
Bobcats very far.
Gary Trent morphed into the
“Shaq of the MAC” in the ’90s,
taking the program to national
heights that didn’t translate at
tournament time.
Ohio University went 48 years
looking for more than one shining moment in the NCAA tournament, going through seven
coaches and a handful of stars
without advancing past that opening weekend. It’s finally changed
for the school nestled in the hills
of southeast Ohio.
The Bobcats have become the
tournament’s latest mid-major
darlings, knocking off Michigan
and South Florida to reach the
round of 16 for the first time since
1964. They’ll play North Carolina
on Friday in St. Louis.
The long wait has made it sweet
indeed.
“It’s very warming,” Trent said
in a phone interview from Minneapolis, where he’s an elementary
school intervention specialist.
“It’s so great to see them advance.
There’s only 16 teams playing in
the country, and Ohio U. happens
to be one of them.”

Even though the school was on
spring break, the students still
around campus jammed Court
Street after the 13th-seeded Bobcats ousted Michigan in their
opening game. Then, the MidAmerican Conference tournament
champions topped the Big East’s
best defensive team for another
celebration that got more than just
the town talking.
“This has been unreal,” said
Walter Offutt, a transfer from
Ohio State. “Let’s continue the
run.”
Their win on Sunday became
an immediate talking point. Clark
Kellogg was calling the LehighXavier game when Ohio finished
off the Bulls, giving him a chance
to exult on the air. Kellogg’s son,
Nick, is a sophomore guard for
the Bobcats.
“Oh wow!” Kellogg said. “Oh
my goodness! Way to go Bobcats!”
The postgame celebration was
shown on TBS and got more rave
reviews. School President Roderick J. McDavis, dressed in a green
Ohio jacket, gave players a pep
talk: “I told you a few weeks ago
there was another level!”
Now, the school has something
to talk about other than parties
and potatoes.
Ohio, which is known regional-

ly for its annual Halloween party,
was ranked the top party school in
the country by the 2011 Princeton
Review last summer, an annoyance to administrators who have
been trying to change that image.
“Honestly, I don’t know where
that party thing comes from,”
Trent said. “I’ve been on other college campuses. It’s no more wild
than any other.”
The football program got its
first bowl victory in December,
beating Utah State 24-23 in the
Famous Idaho Potato Bowl with
a touchdown drive in the last 2
minutes.
The basketball team was looking for a breakthrough as well
— that Sweet 16 thing. Ohio had
a chance in 2010 when it beat
Georgetown 97-83 in its opening
game, then played poorly in an 8368 loss to Tennessee.
Coach John Groce, who helped
Thad Matta take teams to the
tournament as an assistant at
Butler, Xavier and Ohio State,
changed his between-game approach this time to limit the distractions. He took away their cell
phones and limited their internet
access between games.
“It wasn’t punishment,” Groce
said. “They did have a couple of
hours after they got back to return
Miscellaneous

some of their text messages and
emails and tweets and Facebook
and MySpace and email, whatever
else they do. So we gave them
time to do that.
“Then we grabbed the phones,
and not one guy — that’s how I
knew this team was really locked
in — not one single guy complained.”
Groce is getting much credit for
the long-awaited breakthrough.
“The biggest thing for him —
and he’s done a great job of it —
is getting his team to play at the
right time,” Ohio State’s Matta
said. “As crazy as it sounds, if they
don’t win the MAC tournament,
they’re not in the NCAA tournament. That’s something he and I
had spoken about going into the
MAC tournament, knowing that
hey, we’ve got to play our best
basketball.”
Ohio’s last trip to the round of
16 in 1964 included wins over
Louisville and Kentucky followed
by a loss to Michigan. They lost
opening games in 1965, 1970,
1972 and 1974. Ohio beat Illinois
State in 1983, then lost to Kentucky. The Bobcats also had opening losses in 1985, 1994 and 2005.
They’ve been ranked in the AP
poll during only four seasons in
their history. Ohio was No. 18

for one week during the 1959-60
season, was consistently ranked
and made it up to No. 5 during
the 1969-70 season — followed by
a first-round NCAA loss to Notre
Dame — and was ranked for one
week during the 1971-72 season,
just before Luckett arrived.
The Bobcats also were in the
poll during the 1994-95 season,
making it as high as No. 14 behind
Trent, a three-time MAC scoring
champ.
Ohio expected great things
when Luckett, one of the nation’s
top prep scorers, picked Athens.
He was featured on the cover of
the Nov. 27, 1972 cover of Sports
Illustrated for a feature story on
freshmen, shown dribbling with
his left hand at midcourt at The
Convo.
The issue included an ad with
Joe Namath sitting in a recliner
and another one for an eight-track
cartridge recorder.
In the SI story, Luckett noted
that Ohio State got more attention
back then, but that could change.
“I’ll be followed here,” Luckett
said. “I’ll be known. I hope I can
take the school with me.”
It took a lot longer for the Bobcats to arrive.

�Thursday, March 22, 2012

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt
www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Thursday, March 22, 2012

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

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

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 Thursday,
March 22, 2012:
New beginnings earmark this year.
You will be direct, and others will
respond in kind. Communication flows.
Above everything, you greet life with
renewed excitement and interest;
boredom will not be an issue. You
draw many new people into your life.
If you are single, you could meet “the
one.” However, time is your ally. Take
the time to get to know this person. If
you are attached, the two of you romp
around as if you have not a care in the
world. As a couple, you might make a
radical change involving your lifestyle.
Another ARIES often surprises you
with his or her energy.
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)
HHHHH Today’s New Moon in
your sign signals a new beginning
in a most appropriate area. You will
feel far more connected and free as a
result. An element of the unexpected
adds excitement to your day. Enjoy
the spontaneity. Tonight: Seize the
moment.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH You could decide to say little
and observe a lot. You also could
have an unusually strong reaction to a
situation. Try to process your feelings
before responding. You gain insight
into someone else’s decision that previously baffled you. Tonight: Do your
thing,
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHHH Zero in on a meeting. The
discussion that ensues could have a lot
more to do with your plans than you’d
thought. Others act strangely, leaving
you wondering what might be going
on. The people behaving in this manner might not even know why they are.
Tonight: Where the action is.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH You are on top of a project,
work or errands. You feel as if you
cannot be stopped from attaining a
long-desired goal. Do not be surprised
by an unanticipated change that comes
from out of left field. Tonight: Work with
the situation.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Look past the obvious. It
might be time to finally indulge a longterm goal or desire. This wish could
involve travel, someone at a distance
or a special seminar. You might not
know what to do with some good news,
but you will figure it out. Unexpected
developments happen out of the blue.
Flex. Tonight: Try a new spot.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH You could be exhausted
by recent events and might wonder
how much more of yourself you can
give. A new beginning in a relationship becomes possible. You could be
surprised by a money matter. Tonight:
Keep it personal, with just you and one
other person.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Others believe they are in
control, yet it is rather obvious that
that might not be true. You might opt
not to burst their bubbles. Use today
to contact someone you want to get
to know better. An unexpected action
could have you regrouping. Tonight:
Sort through invitations with an eye to
the weekend.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH You could be taken aback
by someone who affects your day-today life. This person’s words could toss
your mood and/or plans into disarray.
Flex, and find a way to do everything.
Yes, it is possible. Start a long-overdue
project. Tonight: Do errands.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHHH Whether approaching a
creative project or deciding to date a
special person, a green light beams.
Though you might be focused on serious matters a lot of the time, you like
the lightening up that occurs. Share
plans with a friend or sibling. Tonight:
Be a wild thing.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH Stay close to home, and be
aware that you really are not limited.
A discussion with a roommate or family member could enlighten you about
alternatives. You will have a lot to consider. Unexpected happenings could
force you to regroup. Tonight: Stay
close to home.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH Your words have an impact.
Conversations evolve from a simple
statement. You can clear out what
has been a problem or start over with
a new beginning. Use caution when
driving or handling machinery, as you
could be happily distracted. Tonight:
Join friends.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH Be aware of your needs
and what you have to offer. Financial
matters easily could change in your
favor in the near future. Make a personal resolution, and refuse to get into
impulse buying. Still, you just might
buy one last item. Tonight: Indulge a
loved one.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Thursday, March 22, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 10

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