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                  <text>Honoring
ancestors, page A2

Point Pleasant girls
soccer, A8

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 142

Zumba returns
POMEROY —
Zumba classes will
return to the Mulberry
Community Center
from 6:15 p.m. - 7:15
p.m., Tuesday, Sept.
13. Admission into the
popular classes is nonperishable food to be
immediately donated
to the Meigs
Cooperative Parish.

Scholarship
deadline nears
POMEROY — The
deadline to apply for
the Meigs County
Retired Teachers’
scholarship is Sept. 30.
Applicants must be a
resident of Meigs
County, a junior or
senior enrolled in a
college, majoring in
education, with a
grade point average of
at least 2.5.
Applications must
include a current college transcript with the
two previous years’
credits and grades, a
resume of work and
volunteer activities,
current photograph
and three references,
along with the college’s name and
address.
Applicants will be
evaluated on grade
point average and
completion of requirements, with consideration of extra activities
and career objectives.

Antiques
club meets
POMEROY — Big
Bend Farm Antiques
Club will meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the
Mulberry Community
Center.

VFW meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS
— VFW Post 9053
will meet at 6:30 p.m.
on Thursday, with dinner at 6.

OBITUARIES
Page A3
• Irwin “Jay” Lance III
• Margaret Harbrecht

WEATHER

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Suspect in Gallia stabbing death to be arraigned today
BY AMBER GILLENWATER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS — An
arraignment has been set
in the case against the
suspect alleged to have
caused the stabbing
death of a Gallia County
man early on Saturday.
Donald E. Karns, II,
25, is scheduled to

appear in the Gallipolis
Municipal Court at 8:15
a.m. on Wednesday to
face a first degree murder charge.
Karns was arrested at
approximately 5:15 a.m.
by a detective with the
Gallia County Sheriff’s
Office after he had fled
the scene of a stabbing at
a home located at 908

Story’s Run Road in
Cheshire
Township,
Gallia County.
Deputies and paramedics were dispatched
to the residence at
approximately 4:15 a.m
on Saturday and, upon
their arrival, found the
victim, Charles Ray
Stewart, 39, lying unresponsive on the floor of

the residence. He was
later pronounced dead at
the scene.
According to a press
release issued by the
sheriff’s office, investigators were advised that
the suspect had apparently stabbed the victim
before fleeing the residence. He was subsequently arrested near

10th Annual Mothman Festival set for Sept. 16-18
BY HOPE ROUSH
HROUSH@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT PLEASANT —
The mysterious red eyes are
getting more intense as the
Mothman Festival is just
around the corner.
This year the festival,
which pays tribute to the
area’s legendary Mothman
creature, will celebrate its
10th anniversary. A variety
of activities, entertainment
and events are scheduled to
make this year’s event the
best yet. In addition, the
festival will be in memory
of Linda Scarberry, one of
the original Mothman witnesses, who passed away
in March.
Since its small beginning
in 2001, the Mothman
Festival has expanded to a
full weekend event with
activities for young and
old. The event also has
grown to be one of the
largest populated festivals
in Mason County. This
year’s festival action will
get under way Friday, Sept.
16 with the fourth annual
Miss Mothman Festival
Pageant, which has grown
to be the largest open pageant in the state of West
Virginia. Girls from all
states are eligible to compete in the annual pageant,
which also features a special children’s contest, slat-

ed for Saturday, Sept. 17.
Vendors will be on hand
during Friday’s pageant as
well. The pageant will take
place on the Point Pleasant
Riverfront Park main
stage.
The festival will get off
to an early start on
Saturday, Sept. 17 with the
second annual Mothman
5K Run/Walk. More than
80 runners and walkers
participated in last year’s
inaugural event, which
made the 5K one of the
largest races in the tricounty area. The run will
begin at 8:30 a.m. on
Main St. by the Point
Pleasant River Museum
and Tu-Endie-Wei State
Park. The 3.1 mile course
is relatively flat with a few
small grades. Race registration for those who did
not pre-register is scheduled for 7 a.m. adjacent to
the start line. Participants
will receive goody bags
while supplies last. The
first 50 entrants also will
receive commemorative
Mothman 5K T-shirts. At
the conclusion of the race,
prizes will be awarded to
the top overall male and
female finishers as well as
age group winners. Age
groups are 19 and under;
File photo
20-29; 30-39; 40-49; and 50 The Mothman himself was spotted during the
2010 Mothman Festival. This yearʼs festival is

See Mothman, A3 slated for Sept. 16-18.

Women in Business welcome Brook
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — Meigs
County’s Office of
Economic Development
will welcome Cara
Dingus Brook, president
and
CEO
of
the
Foundation
For
Appalachian Ohio, to the
latest installment of its
Women’s
Business
Luncheon series.
The luncheon, which
has a theme of “Stories of
Success,” will be held at
noon, Wednesday, Sept.
14 at the Wild Horse
Cafe. Seating is limited

Vo i n o v i c h ’s
and lunch is $10
Wa s h i n g t o n
per
person.
team
to
RSVP
with
enhance quality
Brenda Roush by
of
life
in
Monday, Sept. 12
Appalachian
at 992-3034.
Ohio. Brook
Prior to the
m a n a g e d
position with the
Vo i n o v i c h ’s
Foundation For
Southeast Ohio
Appalachian
Office, which
Ohio, Brook was
a district repre- Cara Dingus Brook serves a 17county region
sentative for forfrom
mer United States Sen. extending
George V. Voinovich. As Lawrence County in the
Voinovich’s representa- south to Tuscarawas
tive in Southeast Ohio, County in the northeast.
In addition, prior to
Brook worked closely
with elected officials, joining Voinovich’s team,
community leaders and Brook led Appalachian

Ohio Giving, a consortium of community foundations and The Ohio
State
University
Extension Office serving
Appalachian Ohio with a
mission of promoting
philanthropy as a community and economic
development tool.
Brook is a graduate of
Ohio
University’s
Honors Tutorial College,
where she received a
bachelor's degree in
English. She also holds a
master's degree in public
administration from OU.
See Women, A3

URG/RGCC names Sarin Williams new Director of Choral Activities
STAFF REPORT

High: 74
Low: 62

INDEX
1 SECTION — 8 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

A5-6
A7
A4
A8

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RIO GRANDE — The
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College has
named Sarin Williams as
its new Director of Choral
Activities, and she is
looking for community
members interested in
being part of a vocal
music group on campus.
Williams
recently
earned her Doctorate in
Musical Art and Choral
Conducting from the
University of Missouri at
Kansas City, and moved
from Missouri this summer to take the position at
Rio Grande. She previously taught music and
conducted for three years

at a high school and for
two years at a community
college.
Asked to explain what
made her want to move
across the country to take
this position at Rio
Grande, William said the
answer is simple.
“It was the people,” she
said.
Williams enjoyed meeting faculty, staff and students during her visit to
campus, and appreciated
the positive atmosphere
on at Rio Grande.
“The students are just
so enthusiastic here, that’s
one thing I love about Rio
Grande,” Williams said.
Assistant
Professor
Chris Kenney, Ph.D., said
Rio Grande officials were

impressed with Williams’
energy and attitude
toward the position, as
well as her skills as a
teacher and director.
“She is exactly what we
needed,” Kenney said.
“She has a lot of great
ideas on how best to help
the music program grow.”
Although she has only
been on campus for a
short time, Williams has
already come to love Rio
Grande. She is impressed
with the small, scenic
campus and said that the
southeastern Ohio landscape is similar to where
she lived in Missouri.
“I think Gallipolis is
beautiful,” said Williams,
who lives in the city. She
is enjoying living near the

Ohio River and getting to
know people on campus
and in the community.
At
Rio
Grande,
Williams is teaching and
is also directing the
Grande Chorale vocal
music group and the
Masterworks
Chorale
vocal music group.
The Grande Chorale is
made up of entirely of Rio
Grande students and has
performed vocal jazz
music in recent years.
The
Masterworks
Chorale is made up of students and community
members, and Williams is
actively looking for more
area residents to join the
group.
See URG/RGCC, A3

Story’s Run Road.
During his initial
appearance
in
the
municipal court on
Tuesday, the court
appointed
attorney
Barbara Wallen to represent the defendant.
Karns is currently
being held in the Gallia
County Jail under a $1
million, 10 percent bond.

‘Party’ people
expecting Owen
to draw large
crowd
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - With his hit
“Barefoot Blue Jean
Night” climbing the
country music charts,
organizers of Racine’s
Third Annual Party in the
Park are hoping Jake
Owen draws the largest
crowd yet to the growing
festival.
Interest is high in
Owen’s free concert
which begins at 8 p.m.,
Saturday, Sept. 10 at Star
Mill Park.
Last week, Owen’s
latest album was number
one on the
iTunes country
charts,
creating more
buzz around
his appearance
in
Racine this Owen
weekend.
Extra security is being
arranged and extra parking is already in place for
the free concert which
also offers free parking shuttles will be available
to accommodate the
crowds.
So who is Owen and
why are people so excited for his arrival on
Saturday night? Owen
went from performing in
his native Florida to
Nashville, Tenn. in 2005
where within months he
had a Music Row songpublishing contract and
in less than a year later,
he was signed by RCA
Records and was on the
charts with his first two
singles, “Yee Haw” and
“Startin’ with Me.” Owen
then went from spectator
to the opening act for
Kenny Chesney and later
for Brad Paisley.
In 2007 Owen had his
third hit, “Something
About a Woman” and in
2008 he opened shows
for Sugarland and had
another hit with “Don’t
Think I Can’t Love You”
followed by 2009’s
“Eight Second Ride.” His
revival of “Life in a
Northern Town” with
Sugarland and Little Big
Town in 2008 even
earned him Grammy and
CMA award nominations. In 2009, Owen was
named Top New Male
Vocalist by the Academy
of Country Music and
most recently, he has
been asked by Keith
Urban to be his touring
partner on the “Get
Closer 2011 World Tour.”
In making his third
and latest album, he
reached out into a songwriting community he
had never tapped.
“I searched out songs.
I searched out songwriters. I got to pick songs
from this amazing community of writers, and I’d
never done that,” Owen
said via his website.
See Owen, A3

�BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Southern Wellness offers flu shots
RACINE
—
The
Southern Local Schools
Wellness Center is offering season flu vaccines
for ages five and up during regular business
hours, Monday-Friday.
The Southern Wellness
Center,
located
in
Southern Elementary
School, accepts payment
from major insurance
providers which is billed
through a third party -

the school district doesn’t actually accept any
payment or make any
money on services rendered.
Those at the wellness
center encourage people
with underlying health
conditions,
pregnant
women, children, young
adults, caretakers of
infants and health care
workers to get vaccinated against the flu. The

traditional flu season is
just beginning and typically lasts until May.
To
schedule
an
appointment at the wellness center, call 9492348. The staff is also
available for any community activity or business interested in holding a flu clinic. Call
Denise Toler at 304273-1033 to schedule a
clinic.

Page A2
Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Honoring ancestors

OU free cancer screens, exams
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Breast and cervical cancer screenings and education will be provided by
the Ohio University
Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine’s
(OU-HCOM) Community
Health Programs from 9
a.m. -3 p.m., Oct. 8 at St.
Paul United Methodist

Church.
Free pap tests, pelvic
and breast examinations,
breast health education
and appointments for
mammograms will be
provided to uninsured
and underinsured women.
Appointments are required
and can be made at 1-800844-2654 or 740-593-

2432.
The free tests are provided as a community service by the Ohio University
College of Osteopathic
Medicine’s Community
Health Programs, Breast
and Cervical Projects of
Southeast Ohio and the
Susan G. Komen For The
Cure Columbus.

Latest C8 research shows possible
link to kidney disease
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — Another
study of the health impact
from exposure to a chemical used by DuPont at its
Washington Works plant
in Wood County, W.Va.
shows it may affect kidney health.
West
Virginia
University’s C8 Health
Project has released
yet another study,
Perfluoroalkyl Chemicals
and Chronic Kidney
Disease in U.S. Adults, and
it was published recently
in the American Journal
of Epidemiology. It is the
first study to link exposure to C8 to kidney problems in the general population.
The study examined
data for more than 4,500
adults and found associa-

tions between higher levels of C8 and chronic kidney disease.
“Our findings are of
public health importance
because serum PFCs (C8)
appear to be positively
related to kidney disease
even at relatively low
background exposure levels in the U.S. general
population,” researchers
concluded.
This new WVU study
comes on the heels of the
C8 Science Panel’s report
outlining
associations
between chemical exposure and kidney cancer
deaths in DuPont workers, according to the West
Virginia Gazette.
C8 is a chemical used in
the manufacture of many
DuPont products, including Teflon. Its release into
the Ohio River was the
subject of a class-action

lawsuit filed by customers
in the Lubeck, W.Va.
water system, which later
became a class-action
lawsuit including water
customers in the Tuppers
Plains-Chester, Pomeroy,
and Mason County, W.Va.
water systems.
Residents participated
in a year-long study of the
health effects of C8, and
water systems affected by
the chemical were later
fitted with equipment to
eliminate the chemical
from the water supply, as
a part of the settlement of
the class-action suit.
Since the C8 Health
Project
began
its
research, several studies
have been released that
might lead health experts
to identify a positive link
between exposure to the
chemical and health problems.

Eddie Murphy selected
to host Academy Awards
LOS ANGELES (AP)
— Eddie Murphy is
hosting the Oscars.
The actor and comedian will host the 84th
annual
Academy
Awards, producers Brett
Ratner and Don Mischer
said Tuesday.
Ratner called the 50year-old entertainer "a
comedic genius; one of
the greatest and most
influential live performers ever."
"With his love of
movies, history of crafting unforgettable characters and his iconic performances — especially
on stage — I know he
will bring excitement,
spontaneity and tremen-

dous heart to the show
Don and I want to produce
in
February,"
Ratner said.
Mischer
called
Murphy "a truly groundbreaking
performer"
whose "quick wit and
charisma will serve him
very well as Oscar host."
This will be Murphy's
first time hosting the
Academy Awards. He
said in a statement
Tuesday that he is
"enormously honored"
to join the ranks of past
Academy Awards hosts
such as Johnny Carson,
Bob
Hope,
Billy
Crystal, Steve Martin
and Whoopi Goldberg.
Murphy started his

career as a standup
comic when he was 15
and has gone on to
amass dozens of film
credits as a writer, actor
and producer. He was
nominated for an Oscar
for his supporting role
in 2006's "Dreamgirls."
His stint as Oscar host
marks a return to the
single-host format the
show has employed
most often since the
mid-1980s. Pairs of
actors hosted the two
most
recent
Oscar
shows: Anne Hathaway
and
James
Franco
helmed the 2011 telecast, and Steve Martin
and Alec Baldwin hosted
last year.

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Submitted Photo

This summer Russ Well (left) and Larry Well (right) restored the monument of their
ancestor Abraham Well in Keebaugh Cemetery in Orange Township. The 10-byeight-foot granite monument had fallen over in three pieces but the Wells, who are
cousins, decided to clean and reset the piece on a new footer. The work took three
days to complete. Abraham Well died in 1883 at the age of 73. As one member of
the Well family put it, with so much destruction going on around the country, itʼs
nice to see something being restored for a change.

In financial crisis, Post office turns to Congress
WASHINGTON (AP)
— Postmaster General
Patrick Donahoe warned
that the Postal Service is
on "the brink of default"
as he battles to keep his
agency solvent.
Without legislation by
Sept. 30, the agency "will
default on a mandated
$5.5 billion payment to
the Treasury," Donahoe
told the Senate Homeland
Security
and
Governmental
Affairs
Committee on Tuesday.
And with no congressional action, a year from
now, next August or
September, the post office
could run out of money to
pay salaries and contractors, hampering its ability
to operate, Donahoe said.
"We do not want taxpayer money," Donahoe
said, "We have got to get
our finances in order."
Committee Chairman
Joe Lieberman, I-Conn.,
said: "We must act quickly. The U.S. Postal
Service is not an 18th
century relic, it is a 21st
century national asset,
but times are changing
rapidly now and so, too,
must the post office."
Sen. Susan Collins, RMaine, noted that the post
office supports a $1.1 trillion mailing industry
employing more than 8
million people in direct
mail, periodicals, catalogs, financial services

and other businesses.
Sen. Tom Carper, DDel., noted several proposals have been put forward to improve postal
operations and said that
Congress needs to work
on areas where agreement
can be found. Both
Carper and Collins have
introduced bills to reform
postal operations, and
measures have also been
introduced in the House.
Donahoe and his predecessor John Potter have
warned for months that
without changes in the
law governing postal
operations the Postal
Service will be unable to
make advance payments
to cover future retiree
medical benefits.
taggered by the economic downturn and the
massive shift from firstclass mail to email, the
post office lost more than
$8 billion last year and is
facing losses at least that
large this year, despite
having cut 110,000 jobs
over the last four years
and
making
other
changes, including closing smaller, local post
offices.
The Postal Service,
which does not receive
tax money for its operations, is not seeking federal funds.
Instead, postal officials
want changes in the way
they operate, including

relief from the requirement that it prefund medical costs. No other federal agency has to prefund
retiree health benefits,
but because of the way
the federal budget is
organized the money
counts as income to the
government, so eliminating it would make the
federal deficit appear
larger.
When
Congress
restructured postal operations in 2006 it ordered
the agency to establish a
separate fund to begin
covering those benefits,
instead of using money
for the post office's general fund, starting in
2017, and to make annual
advance payments to that
account. The payment
due Sept. 30 would be
$5.5 billion.
Also, the post office
wants to reduce mail
delivery to five days-aweek; close 3,700 offices,
further cut the workforce
by up to 220,000; and to
withdraw from federal
retirement systems and
set up its own. It also
seeks the return of $6.9
billion it overpaid into
retirement funds.
Contracts with its
employee unions currently strictly limit layoffs
and closing post offices
riles local communities
who complain to their
members of Congress.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Wednesday, Sept. 7
POMEROY — Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
health department conference room.
Monday, Sept. 12
POMEROY – The
next regular meeting of
the Meigs County
Agricultural Society has
been postponed from
Sept. 5 to September
12, 7:30 p.m. at the
Coon Hunters Building
on the Rocksprings fairgrounds.
Tuesday, Sept. 13
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer Board,
regular meeting, 7 p.m.,
TPRSD office.

Community
meetings
Wednesday, Sept. 7
CHESTER – Chester
Garden Club, open
meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
the Chester Church.
Maureen Burns-Hooper
“the tea lady” to speak.
Members of garden

clubs and others invited
to attend.
Thursday, Sept. 8
CHESTER - Shade
River Lodge 453, regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
followed by refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS —
VFW Post 9053 meets
at 6:30 p.m., with meal
at 6.
Saturday, Sept. 10
POMEROY – Return
Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of
the American
Revolution, 1 .m. at the
Pomeroy Library. State
vice regent and organizing secretary will be
guests.
Monday, Sept. 12
POMEROY — Meigs
County IKES, 7 p.m.,
regular meeting.
POMEROY — Big
Bend Farm Antiques
Club, monthly meeting,
7:30 p.m., Mulberry
Community Center.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting, noon,
Meigs County Health
Department, new members welcome.

Reunions
Sunday, Sept. 4
CHESHIRE – Ross
Fife reunion, noon
luncheon, Kyger Creek
Club House.
Saturday, Sept. 10
CHESHIRE –
Samuel Allan Eblin
family reunion, 2 to 6
p.m. at the Cheshire
Park. Main course provided, take side or
dessert, and gift for
auction.

Church Events
Friday, Sept. 9
LONG BOTTOM —
Faith Full Gospel
Church, gospel sing
featuring Pathway, 7
p.m. at the church on
Ohio 124.
Sunday, Sept. 11
COOLVILLE —
Homecoming at Orange
Christian Church, 53
Lattridge Rd., preaching by Dr. George F.
Pickens, 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday school, 10:30
a.m., sermon, noon,
dinner, 1 p.m., homecoming service.

�Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Forecast

Mothman
From Page A1

Irwin R. "Jay" Lance, III

plus. Race applications are available at www.tristateracer.com.
Following the 5K, the Miss Mothman children’s pageant will take place. Several other festival activities are
scheduled for Saturday as well, including band performances at riverfront park and karaoke on Main St. In addition, a variety of vendors will be on hand, including a festival favorite, Mothman Pancakes. At 6 p.m., a screening
of the film, Eyes of the Mothman, will take place at the
State Theater on Main St. Starting a 9 p.m., a screening
of the Mothman Prophecies film will play. Also scheduled for Saturday evening are the Mothman TNT area
hayrides, which will take place at the West Virginia State
Farm Museum.
Guest speaker presentations are slated for Saturday
as well. All presentations will take place at the State
Theater. The current guest speaker schedule
includes: Chad Lambert, Mothman Comics creator,
10 a.m.; Joe Clark, Commonwealth Paranormal, 11 a.m.;
Alvin Caviness, UFO investigator, Caviness Report;
noon; Andy Colvin, author, Mothman Photographer, 1
p.m.; Susan Shephard, author/ghost hunter, 2 p.m.;
Rosemary Guiley, author/investigator, 3 p.m.; and Tom
Ury, Mothman eyewitness, 4 p.m. Guest speakers also are
on tap for Sunday’s festival, however, the line-up was not
available as of press time.
Tram rides of downtown Point Pleasant will be
available throughout the fesitval. The World’s Only
Mothman Museum will be open as well.
For more information, visit the Web site,
www.mothmanfestival.com.

Irwin R. "Jay" Lance, III, 54, of Pomeroy, passed
away Monday, Sept. 5, 2011 in the Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis.
Born May 7, 1957, in Pittsburgh, Pa., he was the son
of Irwin R. "Jay" and Mary Ireland Lance II, of
Racine.
He was a construction plumber for Elite Mechanical
and was a member of the Pomeroy-Racine Lodge
#164 Free and Accepted Masons of Ohio. He loved
photography and gardening and enjoyed growing
pumpkins and going on family outings on his pontoon
boat.
In addition to his parents he is survived by his wife
Patti Walick, whom he married on May 10, 2001, in
Pomeroy; his sons, Stephen Beseny, Athens and
Matthew John Beseny, Middleport; two grandchildren, Mattison Wolfe and Adam Matthew Roberts; his
dog and best friend Harley and Timber; a brother:
Howard (Gidget) Lance, Austin, Tex., two sisters:
Mary Ann Sciullo, Atlanta, Ga., and Emily Lance,
Pittsburgh, Pa.; several nieces and nephews and
cousins and his best friend Carey Lour, Pomeroy, and
special friend Bev Roush.
He was preceded in death by his maternal grandparents, Edward and Catherine Stover Ireland and paternal grandparents, Irwin and Emma Lance, Sr. and sister, Charlene Cook Lance on Aug. 27, 2011.
Funeral will be conducted at 1 p.m. Thursday, Sept.
8, 2011 in the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, with
Rev. Brian Durham officiating. Interment will follow
in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call from 24 and 6-8 Wednesday at the Funeral Home. Masonic
Funeral Services will be conducted by the PomeroyRacine Lodge #164 at 8:00PM. Expressions of sympa- From Page A1
thy may be sent to the family by visiting
www.creemensfuneralhomes.com.
She is a graduate of the Jo Ann Davidson Leadership
Institute and in 2003, she was appointed by former
Gov. Bob Taft to serve as a commissioner to the Ohio
Community Service Council. A native of Lawrence
Margaret Elizabeth (McCallum) Harbrecht, age 88, County, Cara resides in Logan
As for the Foundation for Appalachian Ohio, it
of Worthington, passed away Sunday, Sept. 4, 2011,
describes
its organization as being comprised of a
peacefully at Riverside Methodist Hospital.
Margaret was deeply loved by her family and will be small but highly skilled staff which enjoys a reputadearly missed. She was born May 7,1923 in tion as an excellent manager of its donor funds and a
Minersville, to Norman and Mary Hazel (Childs) leader in promoting regional and community grantMcCallum. Graduated from Ohio University in 1945 making initiatives.
Also, in 1998, the Foundation received the Fuerst
and taught home economics before retiring to raise her
Outstanding Community Leader Award from the Hills
children.
A long-time member of the Worthington Women's of Ohio Chapter of National Society of Fundraising
Club, she enjoyed reading, crossword puzzles, and Executives. In 2007, FAO received the Wilmer
travel. Margaret was also an avid golfer and bridge Shields Rich Award for Excellence in Communication
for its “I'm a Child of Appalachia®” campaign supplayer. Her greatest joy was her family.
In addition to her parents she was preceded in death porting access to post-secondary education in
by husband, Robert F Harbrecht; infant son, David; Southeast Ohio.
sister, Mary (McCallum) Leonard.
Survived by sons, Robert M. (Linda) Harbrecht and
Thomas A. Harbrecht both of Worthington; daughter,
Mary L. (Robert) Harman; grandsons, Tommy and
Ben Harman all of Perrysburg; great granddaughter, From Page A1
Courtney Berry of Johnson City, Tenn.; sister-in-law,
Terry Harbrecht of Louisville, Ky.; nieces: Barbara “Before, I’d written everything because I felt like that
(Dean) Faulkinberry of Easton, Pa., Carol (Tim) Kay was expected of me. On this record, I wanted to
of Lake Hiawatha, N.J. and Valerie (Dean) include the incredibly talented writers in this town.”
He also set out to find a more personal sound. In
McNaughton of Atlanta, Ga.; nephews, Dr. Jeffrey
(Mary) Harbrecht of Worthington, Dr. Brian search of a new musical direction, he initially teamed
(Katherine) Harbrecht of Louisville, Ky., and Grant up with legendary producer Tony Brown, who is
(Sasha) Harbrecht of Charlotte, N.C.; many great- famed for his work with George Strait, Reba, Steve
Earle, Vince Gill and dozens of other hit makers.
nephews and great-nieces.
Friends may call from 4-7 p.m., Thursday at Brown produced the first five songs that Owen chose
Rutherford-Corbin Funeral Home, 515 High Street, for his album.
Racine’s Party in the Park opens at 5 p.m. on
Worthington.
Thursday and continues through Saturday night when
Private Family Interment.
Memorials may be directed to the American Cancer Owen’s concert closes the festival. For a complete list
Society, 870 Michigan Avenue, Columbus, OH 43215 of activities for Party in the Park, check out the
or the charity of one's choice.
Please visit event’s Facebook page. Each night offers a free conwww.rutherfordfuneralhome.com to send on-line con- cert and concert goers are asked to bring lawn chairs.
dolences.

Women

Margaret Harbrecht

Owen

Top Gadhafi loyalists flee
to Niger in desert trek

URG/RGCC

TARHOUNA, Libya (AP) — Convoys of Moammar
Gadhafi loyalists, including his security chief, fled
across the Sahara into Niger on Tuesday in a move that
Libya's former rebels hoped could help lead to the surrender of his last strongholds.
Still, efforts to negotiate the peaceful handover of
one of the most crucial of those bastions, the city of
Bani Walid, proved difficult.
Tribal elders from Bani Walid who met Tuesday
with former rebels were confronted by angry residents
of the city, including Gadhafi supporters, who fired in
the air and sent them fleeing, mediators said. Many in
Bani Walid remain deeply mistrustful of the forces
that have seized power in Libya and are reluctant to
accept their rule.
Some former rebels depicted the flight to Niger as a
major exodus of Gadhafi's most hardcore backers. But
confirmed information on the number and identity of
those leaving was scarce as the convoy made its way
across the vast swath of desert — over 1,000 miles —
between populated areas on the two sides of the border.
Gadhafi himself is not in the convoys, the U.S. State
Department said.
As the first group of a dozen vehicles pulled into
Niger's capital, Niamey, a customs official said it
included Mansour Dao, Gadhafi's security chief and a
key member of his inner circle, as well as around 12
other Gadhafi regime officials.
The official, Harouna Ide, told The Associated Press
other Libyan convoys had passed through Agadez, a
town about halfway between Niger's border with
Libya and its capital in the far southwest.
The convoys included heavily armed contingents of
Tuareg tribal fighters from Niger, who have long been
enlisted as mercenaries for Gadhafi's regime, Niger
officials said. A Gadhafi opponent said it was also carrying gold and cash belonging to the regime.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria
Nuland said the U.S. has urged Niger to detain anyone
who might be subject to prosecution in Libya, confiscate weapons and impound any state property such as
money or jewels that were illegally taken out of the
country.
Nuland said some senior members of the Gadhafi
regime were in the fleeing group, but not Gadhafi or
members of his family.
The West African nation of Burkina Faso, which
borders Niger, offered Gadhafi asylum last month,
raising speculation the convoys were part of plan to
arrange passage there for the ousted leader. But on
Tuesday, Burkina Faso distanced itself from Gadhafi,
indicating he would be arrested if he came there.

“The Masterworks Chorale is open to anyone with
enthusiasm for singing,” Williams said. Members of
the group could be newcomers to vocal music groups,
or they could have a great deal of experience with
music.
The group is truly open to everyone and Williams is
hoping to keep the veteran members of the group and
attract several new members this year.
“We are going to have a good time singing great
music together,” Williams said.
The Masterworks Chorale rehearses on Mondays
from 7-9 p.m. in room 115 in the Berry Fine and
Performing Arts Center. Area residents do not need to
call ahead, as they are welcome to just show up for
rehearsal.
For the group’s fall semester concert, Williams is
planning a show featuring classical music from composers such Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven.
For more information on the Masterworks Chorale or
on the vocal music program at Rio Grande, call
Williams at 1 (800) 282-7201.

From Page A1

Wednesday: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms, then showers
likely and possibly a
thunderstorm after noon.
Cloudy, with a high near
74. East wind around 7
mph becoming southwest. Chance of precipitation is 70 percent. New
rainfall amounts between
a tenth and quarter of an
inch, except higher
amounts possible in
thunderstorms.
Wednesday Night: A
chance of showers.
Cloudy, with a low
around 62. Light southwest wind. Chance of
precipitation is 50 percent. New rainfall
amounts between a tenth
and quarter of an inch
possible.
Thursday: A chance
of showers. Mostly

cloudy, with a high near
78. Southwest wind
around 5 mph becoming
calm. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent. New
rainfall amounts between
a tenth and quarter of an
inch possible.
Thursday Night: A
chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 60. Chance
of precipitation is 30
percent. New rainfall
amounts of less than a
tenth of an inch possible.
Friday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 77.
Chance of precipitation
is 50 percent.
Friday Night: A
chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 58. Chance
of precipitation is 40
percent.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 38.13
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 44.85
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 48.44
Big Lots (NYSE) — 31.88
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 29.48
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 67.50
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.93
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.38
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 2.71
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 27.63
Collins (NYSE) — 46.76
DuPont (NYSE) — 46.14
US Bank (NYSE) — 21.27
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 15.25
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 35.15
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 33.44
Kroger (NYSE) — 22.76
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 35.75
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 65.03
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 17.01

BBT (NYSE) — 20.89
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 9.93
Pepsico (NYSE) — 62.45
Premier (NASDAQ) — 5.97
Rockwell (NYSE) — 57.18
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.42
Royal Dutch Shell — 64.07
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 53.80
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 51.68
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.91
WesBanco (NYSE) — 17.90
Worthington (NYSE) — 14.39
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
September 6, 2011, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

State Briefs
Ohio State students find body
in off-campus apartment
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Police say some Ohio State
University seniors found the body of a suspected burglar and a
lot of blood when they returned to their off-campus apartment
from a Labor Day weekend away.
Columbus police Sgt. Steven Little tells The Columbus
Dispatch that investigators believe the man broke a window to
enter the apartment and severed an artery on his arm in the
process.
In Little's words, “The burglar had a bad weekend.” He says
the apparent intruder “sat down on the floor and bled to death.”
Police believe the man died Sunday or on Monday, when the
body was found.
Student Nick Bockey tells WBNS-TV he and his roommates
moved into the apartment last week. He says he's now thinking
about moving out.
The dead man was not immediately identified.

Ohio serial killer's victims remembered on
Labor Day
CLEVELAND (AP) — An annual Labor Day parade on
Cleveland's east side finished with a tribute to the 11 victims of
a serial killer in the area.
WJW-TV reports 11 doves and 1,000 balloons were released
Monday at a park where marchers made their way during the
Ohio 11th Congressional District Labor Day parade.
Anthony Sowell was convicted in July of murdering 11 troubled women and scattering their remains around his Cleveland
home and yard. Sowell has been sentenced to death.
The district's congresswoman, Democrat Marcia Fudge, said
the meaning of the memorial ceremony was to release the
women's spirits to a higher place and to release the community's hurt and anger to a higher place.

Group asks if too many
Ohio licenses are suspended

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Officials are considering
whether Ohioans should be granted limited driving privileges
after their license has been suspended for something not related to driving, such as not paying child support.
The suspension procedures are being studied by a working
group including agencies such as the Bureau of Motor Vehicles
and insurance company representatives. The Columbus
Dispatch has reviewed the group's recommendations and
reports they include allowing deadbeat parents to drive to work
or to job interviews.
Another proposal would let judges authorize limited driving
Springer to lead rally against Ohio election law privileges after a driver has been suspended for repeatedly not
CINCINNATI (AP) — A political rally is bringing being able to show proof of insurance.
State Sen. Peggy Lehner of the Dayton area assembled the
Jerry Springer back to Cincinnati, the city where the
working
group. She calls the recommendations “easy quick
talk-show host once served as mayor.
The county Democratic Party says Springer will fixes” to reduce suspensions not related to road safety.

lead a rally Thursday evening in support of an effort to
repeal an Ohio elections overhaul law.
The Cincinnati Enquirer reports that an email from
the party says Springer “no doubt will have a few
words to say.”
The law moves Ohio's 2012 presidential primary
from March to May and makes other changes, such as
shortening the early voting period. It's opposed by
Democrats, including President Barack Obama's reelection campaign in Ohio.

“A Place to
Call Home”
Foster Parents Needed In Your County!!!
$25 - $45 a day for the care of a child in your
home. Can be single, married or “empty nest.”
Call Oasis to help a child ﬁnd a place to call home.
Training in progress.
Come join us.
Call 1-877-325-1558 for more information or to
register for training.

NOTICE
Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program
OPEN WAITING LIST
The Meigs Metropolitan Housing Authority (MMHA)
will begin taking applications for Section 8 Rental Assistance through the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher
Program beginning on Tuesday, October 4, 2011 between
9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. and continuing every Tuesday between 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. until further notice. Applications can be picked up at the MMHA office located
at 117. E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Questions regarding
the application process can be answered by calling (740)
992-2733 Monday through Friday.
Jean Trussell
Executive Director, MMHA

60239164

�Page A4

OPINION

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Solo living drops in Manhattan, rises elsewhere
The biggest growth in
BY MIKE SCHNEIDER
solo
dwelling has been
&amp; VERENA DOBNIK
in small communities
ASSOCIATED PRESS
such as Chattahootchee
NEW YORK
— County, Ga., near Fort
and
Park
Nowhere else is living Benning,
County,
Colorado,
a
alone celebrated the way
it is in Manhattan, where result of other parts of
solo dwelling has been the nation catching up
exulted in pop culture with what had been a
from “Seinfeld” to “Sex big-city trait. While
some people initially are
and the City.”
by
the
But single living frightened
declined during the past prospect of living in
decade in Manhattan, solitude, others quickly
though it still is the find advantages.
Penny Jacobs was well
nation’s capital of single-person households. aware of the extra
At the same time, living resources required to
alone grew nationwide live alone when she
to an unprecedented divorced her husband in
level, particularly in 2003. But the 58-yearparts of the West and old attorney can tick off
South, according to an the advantages of solo
Associated Press analy- living in her high-rise
sis of 2010 census data. condo in downtown
Escalating rents during Orlando.
“You know that if you
the last decade, as well
as the perception that put something in the
New York’s most capti- refrigerator, it will be
vating borough is more there when you’re ready
family friendly than in to eat it. If your house is
years past, forced a dip a mess, you know you
in the rate in Manhattan made the mess. Nobody
— from 48 percent of moves your stuff. The
households in 2000 to toilet seat is where you
46.3 percent in 2010. left it,” Jacobs said. “I
Nationwide, the rate has like the control, freedom
reached an all-time high and independence.”
Record-high rents in
— almost 27 percent of
the past decade conhouseholds.
Sociologists say long- tributed to the drop in
houseterm consequences of single-person
holds
in
Manhattan,
this phenomenon are
showing already: Parents experts say. Rents averhave less opportunity to aging $2,000 a month
influence who their chil- for studios are forcing
dren select as mates, residents like Mathew
resulting in more interre- Sanders, 27, and Mark
ligious and interracial Bonner, 29, to share an
marriages. More seniors, apartment on the Upper
especially women, are East Side into their late
living by themselves into 20s and beyond.
The college buddies
their later years. And
from
Louisiana rent a
planners and developers
700are figuring out how to one-bedroom,
accommodate the extra square-foot “shotgun”
long-term demand for apartment that requires
Sanders to walk through
housing.
“I see the rise of living Bonner’s sleeping area
alone as one of the great to get to the front door.
demographic changes in The living arrangement
modern history,” said sometimes creates awkNew York University ward moments, especialsociologist
Eric ly when it comes to datKlineberg, author of the ing potential girlfriends.
“Living in Manhattan
soon-to-be-published
is
so irrational,” said
“Going
Solo:
The
Extraordinary Rise and Bonner, an editor. “I
Surprising Appeal of came here with no job,
Living Alone.” ‘’It may but I grew up thinking
be the last great social that New York is the
change that we haven’t greatest city in the
fully come to terms world. And if you’re
going to make a run at
with.”

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPS 213-960)

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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New York — the dream
— you should live in
Manhattan, in the heart
of the city.”
In the past decade,
affordable housing has
been
squeezed
by
Manhattan
landlords
who are allowed to convert hundreds of rentcontrolled and rent-stabilized apartments into
market-rate units. There
also has been a decline
in the number of affordable apartments in many
new buildings, said
Zenaida Mendez, a longtime tenant organizer in
Manhattan’s
Clinton
neighborhood.

“Fifty years ago
it was going to be
really difficult for a
woman to support
herself,” Rosenfeld
said. “If you didn’t
want to live with your
parents anymore, you
needed a husband to
take you away.”
This West Side community had one of the
borough’s
biggest
declines in single-person
households. It is home to
many actors, musicians
and stagehands who
work
in
nearby
Broadway and offBroadway theaters and
restaurants.
Their
incomes have shrunk
because of the economic
downturn and the use of
taped
music
in
Broadway shows, at a
time when real estate
agents estimate that residents need an income
of at least $80,000 to
live alone in Manhattan
in a relatively attractive
apartment.
“There are a lot of
double-up
families
because of the lack of
affordable
housing,”
Mendez said. “People
who come out of college
and are making $45,000
and $50,000 cannot
afford
to
rent
a
Manhattan apartment
alone anymore, so two
or three have to live
together.”
The perception that
the borough is safer and
the schools are better is

contributing to families
staying in Manhattan
rather than moving to
the
suburbs,
said
Mitchell Moss, an NYU
urban policy professor.
“You now see baby
strollers and family dogs
being walked even on
Wall Street,” he said.
Nationally, women are
more likely than men to
live alone. A major reason is that older women
tend to outlive their
male mates, and older
men tend to marry
younger women. For
under-45
single
dwellers, men outnumber women, mainly
because women are
more likely to live with
their children than men,
and women marry at a
younger age than men,
said Stanford University
sociologist
Michael
Rosenfeld.
North Dakota had the
highest percentage of
solo living of any state
— 31.5 percent. It also
had the highest percentage a decade earlier, but
this time the reason is
different. A decade ago,
when the rate was 29.3
percent, young adults
were moving from
North Dakota to other
places for better job
opportunities, leaving
behind a population of
elderly residents who
lived by themselves
after their spouses
passed away.
This time, an oil boom
is transforming the
western part of the state
and attracting thousands
of single, male workers
who have left families
behind, said Richard
Rathge, a demographer
at North Dakota State
University.
Utah had the nation’s
lowest rate of solo living at 18.7 percent, a
result of the dominance
of Mormon culture that
emphasizes marrying
early and having children.
The biggest decline
among states in the last
decade
was
in
California, particularly
in the Inland Empire
counties — likely the
result of higher rents
and California’s growing
population
of

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

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Hispanics and Asians,
experts said.
The current rate of
Americans living alone
is unprecedented in U.S.
history, as solo dwelling
has been frowned upon
for most of the nation’s
history, Rosenfeld said.
In the Colonial era, it
was even illegal for
someone to live alone.
For most of American
history, people would
move out of their parents’ homes only after
they got married. But
the rise of collegebound young adults in
the 1960s, coupled with
rising American midcentury affluence and a
labor force opening to
women in the 1970s,
helped create a new life
stage of independent
living.
“Fifty years ago it was
going to be really difficult for a woman to support herself,” Rosenfeld
said. “If you didn’t want
to live with your parents
anymore, you needed a
husband to take you
away.”
The growth of single,
independent living away
from parents has led to
more interracial and
interreligious
marriages, as well as samesex
partnerships,
Rosenfeld said.
“If you’re living with
your parents, the parents have ample opportunity to dissuade you
from taking up with
someone from a different religion or a different race or a different
ethnic background or
somebody who they
think is inappropriate,”
he said. “But if you’re
living on your own ...
then they don’t really
have any say in the matter, and it has changed
the way the mating system in the United States
works for young people.”
Schneider
reported from Orlando,
Fla. and can be reached
through Twitter at
http://twitter.com/MikeS
chneiderAP. Dobnik
can be reached
through Twitter at
http://twitter.com/Verena
Chirps .

Everyone, at one time or
another, gets locked out. You
get locked out of the car, out
of the house, out of the office.
Generally, people don’t get
locked in. But, as a new
mom, I did just that. I got
locked in the nursery.
Before we were parents to
a human baby, we were petparents to two cantankerous
cats and a spoiled dog. In
preparing for the birth of our
first child, I read all the
books, listened to all the
advice and followed all the
expert recommendations so
our baby would have the best
start. In an attempt to keep the
cats (and their hair) out of the
crib, we took the advice of a
couple further down the road
of childrearing and installed a
screen door on the nursery. It
solved the problem of keeping the cats out and the baby
in, and still allowed air and
sound to escape.
One bright spring morning,
I rocked and nursed my 4month-old baby for his first
feeding of the day. My husband stirred in the next room,
dressed and stopped by the
nursery on his way to work.
Pushing open the screen door,
he leaned in for a kiss from
me.
“I probably won’t be home
for lunch today. Are you two
going to be all right on your
own?”
I grinned and cocked an
eyebrow at him. “Oh, I think
we’ll manage. Especially
since only one of us eats solid
food.”
“I’ll see you at dinner.” He
planted a kiss on the top of
our son’s head, earning himself a toothless, sloppy grin.
Without his audience, my
baby returned to nursing as I
slowly rocked. I heard my
husband’s truck pull out of
the driveway and closed my
eyes, leaning my head against
the back of the rocker, enjoying the warm sunlight pouring in through the windows.
A few moments later, my
eyes flew open as I registered
the metallic sound I’d heard
just after my husband left the
room. It was the unmistakable sound of a little metal
hook sliding into a little
round circle on the outside of
the door.
That day, as a new mom, I
learned that there were going
to be times when I’d have to
rely solely on myself and my
wits. I learned that over the
next 18 years or more I would
need to be resourceful. I also
learned that, when faced with
adversity, I would need to be
creative and use things and
situations to my (and my
child’s) advantage.
I also learned to prop the
door open when I entered the
nursery. And I made sure that
as long as the screen door
stayed on the nursery, Noah
never left the room while I
was still inside.

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Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

�Wednesday, September 7, 2011

300

SERVICES
Auctions

AUCTION
SAT. SEPT. 10, 2011
5:00 P.M.
GLENWOOD WV
20 Miles south of
Pt Pleasant on Rt 2
ANTIQUES, TOOLS, AND MORE

Crocks, churns, advertising
signs, glassware, old cook
stove, early bicycle, nice
wooden cedar trunk, iron skillets, hand tools, water pitcher
and pump, antique pedal car,
copper boiler and Crown
#6,8,10 crocks plus more.

Check Auction Zip for photos

JOE ARRINGTON WV 1462
ERICK CONRAD WV 1796
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EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted- General

SECRETARY
NEEDED
FULL TIME
General
knowledge
of Computers &amp;
Bookkeeping
Required
Send Resume To:
Job Correspondence
48240 Eagle Ridge Rd.
Long Bottom, Ohio 45743

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RESORT PROPERTY
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Please send resume by September 16, 2011 to:

P.O. Box 220
Athens, OH 45701

Two Locations:

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60237854

PRACTIC MANAGER NEEDED
Full Time Experienced Practice
Manager needed for physician’s office.
Qualifications: Associate Degree in Medical
Assisting or Business Management preferred.
Five or more years of supervisory experience in
a related medical field. Responsibilities:
Coding/Billing experience, Credentialing,
setting up a physician practice, and experience
with Athena Collector/Clinical a plus.
Offering a competitive salary
and benefit package
Please send resume by September 16, 2011 to:
P.O. Box 220
Athens, OH 45701

OHIO VALLEY BANK

Business &amp; Trade School

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AGRICULTURE

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Public Auction
Sept. 10, 2011
10:00 a.m.
The Ohio Valley Bank will offer for sale by public auction the following items:

2008
2007
2000
2006
2005
2003
2005
2005

KIA Spectra 5D SX
Honda TRX400EX
Jeep Wrangler Sport 4x4
Dodge 1500 Laramie Hemi 4x4
Chevrolet Tahoe LT 4x4
Toyota 4-Runner Limited 4WD
Lincoln-Continental LS
Ford F150

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#712669
#764592
#628538
#202204
#014176
#665337
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MERCHANDISE
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Must be able to multi-task.
Competitive Benefits

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ANIMALS

Child / Elderly Care

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These items are available at the Ohio Valley Bank Annex, 143 3rd Avenue, Gallipolis, OH on the
date and time specified above. Sold to the highest bidder “as-is, where-is” without expressed or
implied warranty &amp; may be seen by calling the Collection Department at 1-888-441-1038. OVB
reserves the right to accept / reject any and all bids, and withdraw items from sale prior to sale.
Terms of sale: CASH OR CASHIER’S CHECK.

�Wednesday, September 7, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

Remnants of Lee soak South, threaten Northeast
BY BILL POOVEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

C H AT TA N O O G A ,
Tenn. — Disorganized
yet deadly, the leftovers
from Tropical Storm Lee
spread farther inland
Tuesday, soaking much
of the East Coast. Areas
still drying out from
Irene were hit with more
rain while farmers in the
Southeast welcomed the
wet weather.
Lee spawned tornadoes that damaged hundreds of homes. Roads
were flooded, trees
uprooted and power was
knocked out to hundreds
of thousands of people.
Winds from the storm
had fanned wildfires in
Louisiana and Texas,
though
calmer
air
Tuesday was expected to
help firefighters. Lee
even kicked up tar balls
on the Gulf Coast.
At least four people
died in the storm.
Lee formed just off the
Louisiana coast late last
week
and
gained
strength as it lingered in
the Gulf for a couple of
days. It dumped more
than a foot of rain in
New Orleans, testing the
city's pump system for
the first time in years.
The storm then trudged
across Mississippi and
Alabama. By Tuesday, it
had collided with a cold
front leaving much of
the East Coast wet, with
unseasonably cool temperatures.
At one point, flood
watches and warnings
were in effect from
northeast
Alabama
through West Virginia to

New England. Heavy
rain bands scattered
across
the
central
Appalachians
and
Northeast. The National
Weather Service said 4
to 8 inches of rain were
possible, with isolated
downpours up to 10
inches.
In
southeast
Louisiana, Red Eubanks
used a floor squeegee to
clean up his restaurant
and bar. His parking lot
had been dry — and the
headquarters
for
Livingston Parish sheriff's deputies and their
rescue boat — but the
nearby Amite River
slowly rose and overflowed its banks.
Water crept into the
dining hall and back of
Red's Restaurant and
Bar. Eubanks' son and
several friends put the
refrigerator, freezers and
salad display boxes on
cinder blocks to protect
them.
"This makes the fifth
time I've had water in
this building in 31 1/2
years," he said.
In New Jersey, where
many residents were still
cleaning
up
after
Hurricane Irene, the
remnants of Lee were
expected to drop anywhere from 2 to 5 inches
of rain. Officials were
not expecting any new
major flooding but they
were keeping an eye on
the saturated grounds
and still-bulging rivers.
Much of Pennsylvania
was under a flood watch,
and 5 inches or more of
rain were expected.
Lee's damage paled in
comparison with Irene,

Officials say tax points to Cincy
tourism rebound
CINCINNATI (AP) — Cincinnati tourism officials
say higher revenue from a local hotel tax shows
tourism to the area is rebounding from the recession.
The Cincinnati Enquirer reports the Hamilton
County hotel tax generated $5.5 million during the
first six month of this year, compared to $5 million in
the first half of 2010 and $4.8 million during the same
period in 2009.
Cincinnati USA Convention &amp; Visitors Bureau
chief Dan Lincoln says wins by the Cincinnati Reds
early in the season helped bring more people to town
this year. The city also has hosted several major conventions, including a gathering of the League of
United Latin-American Citizens.

though. At least 46
deaths were blamed on
that storm, millions lost
power and the damage
was estimated in the billions of dollars.
Still, Lee was an
unprecedented storm in
some
places.
In
Chattanooga, a 24-hour
record for rainfall was
set with 9.69 inches,
eclipsing the previous
record of 7.61 inches in
March of 1886. By
Tuesday, more than 10
inches of rain had fallen
in the state's fourthlargest city, which had
its driest August ever
with barely a drop of
rain.
The soggy ground
meant even modest
winds were toppling
trees onto homes and
cars. A tree fell on a
Chattanooga
woman
while she was moving
her car, killing her, said
police Sgt. Jerri Weary.
In suburban Atlanta, a
man died after trying to
cross a swollen creek
near a dam. Authorities
in Alabama called off the
search for a missing
swimmer presumed dead
in the rough Gulf waters
and in Mississippi,
another man drowned
while trying to cross a
swollen creek in a car.
Two people in the car
with him were saved
when an alert motorist
nearby tossed them a
rope.
There were other rescue stories, too. At a
flooded apartment complex in Fort Oglethorpe
in northwest Georgia, 33
people were saved by
boat,
Georgia

Emergency Management
Agency spokesman Ken
Davis said.
The American Red
Cross set up a shelter for
them and other residents
displaced in Mississippi,
where damage was
reported in at least 22
counties.
In Gulf Shores, Ala.,
black and brown chunks
of tar ranging in size
from marbles to baseballs washed up on the
beach.
Brandon
Franklin, the city's
coastal claims manager,
said samples would be
sent
to
Auburn
University for chemical
testing to determine if
the tar is from last year's
BP oil spill.
Oil from the spill had
soiled Gulf Coast beaches during the summer
tourist season a year
ago, though officials
said the tar balls found
so far didn't compare
with the thick oil found
on beaches then.
BP has sent survey
teams to conduct poststorm assessments along
coastal beaches to determine what may have
developed on the beaches and barrier islands as
a result of Lee. The oil
giant is prepared to
mobilize response crews
to affected areas if necessary, spokesman Tom
Mueller said.
Connie Harris of
Alabaster, Ala., had
spent the Labor Day
weekend on the Gulf
Shores. She came back
from a walk on the beach
to find she had to scrub
her feet with a wash
cloth and soap.

The money from the 6.5 percent hotel tax is used to
promote the city, to bring in more visitors and conventions. It also goes toward the debt on the downtown convention center, the Duke Energy Center.

Troyer
Rooﬁng, LLC
New Roofs - Reroofs

"When we walked on
the beach, we had tar on
our feet," she said.
In Cherokee County in
northern
Georgia,
National
Weather
Service meteorologists
confirmed that it was a
tornado that damaged or
destroyed about 400
homes. The twister was
about a quarter-mile
wide, with winds of
around 90 mph. It traveled 24 miles on the
ground, meteorologist
Jessica Fieux said.
One man received
minor injuries from flying debris, but otherwise
no one was hurt.
Georgia Insurance and
Safety
Fire
Commissioner
Ralph
Hudgens toured a speedway and other neighborhoods damaged by the
tornado.
"Sometimes a house
would be hit, and a lot of
damage," Hudgens said.
"And then the next door
neighbor, nothing."
The rain was a blessing for some farmers
who had been forced to
cut hay early and had
seen their corn crop
stunted by a summer
drought.
"Obviously we would
like to have this a while
earlier," said Brant
Crowder, who manages
600 acres of the
McDonald Farm in the
Sale Creek community
north of Chattanooga.
"It's been hot and dry
the last two months."
Jim Kelly, who farms
about 5,000 acres of
cotton, peanuts and
corn
in
southeast
Alabama and northwest

Dettwiller True Value Lumber

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740-887-3422

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Phone 740-416-1436
740-992-7943
740-949-2921

60235886

Marcum Construction
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Associated Press writers Jay Reeves in
Orange Beach, Ala.; Bob
Johnson in Montgomery;
Ray Henry in Atlanta;
Janet McConnaughey in
New
Orleans
and
Randall Dickerson in
Nashville, Tenn., contributed to this report.

We Now Have Continuous Gutters 5” and 6”
White in Stock – 10 Special Order Colors

Amish Roofers &amp; Builders

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Florida, said the muchneeded rain came a
couple of weeks before
the harvest will begin.
"It's
pretty
well
rained a little everywhere," Kelly said. "I
think generally we are
OK. We had a lot of
wind. The cotton got
blown around some."
As many as 200,000
had lost power across
Alabama at the height
of the storm, with most
of the outages in the
Birmingham
area,
Alabama Power spokeswoman Keisa Sharpe
said. Outages were also
reported in Georgia,
Tennessee and North
Carolina.
On the Gulf Coast,
crews were out on U.S.
Highway 90 trying to
remove wet sand from
the Biloxi Lighthouse
to the Bay St. Louis
Bridge and other areas.
The wind-blown sand
and rain from Lee
prompted coastal officials to ask motorists to
stay off the highway.
Meanwhile, in the
open
Atlantic,
Hurricane Katia threatened to bring large
swells to the East Coast
but was not expected to
make landfall in the
U.S.

Full Time CMA or LPN needed for
physicians office. Previous Urology and
EMR Experience preferred
Competitive Benefits
Please send resume by September 16, 2011 to:
P.O. Box 220
Athens, OH 45701

Wednesday’s TV Listings
WEDNESDAY PRIMETIME
6
3

(WSAZ)

4

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6

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7

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8

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10

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11

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12

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13

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18
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25
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27
29
30
31
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52
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58
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64
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500

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Business
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Slap Shots

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7
7

PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour

8

10:30

11

Minute to Win It "Like
America's Got Talent (N) Law &amp; Order: Special
Mother Like Daughter" (N)
Victims Unit "Smoked"
Minute to Win It "Like
America's Got Talent (N) Law &amp; Order: Special
Mother Like Daughter" (N)
Victims Unit "Smoked"
The Middle Middle "The Modern
Modern
Primetime Nightline
"The Prom" Math Class" Family
Family
"Family Fat Night" (N)
Relentless:
Moments to Remember My Music Enjoy the music of many great
legends from the late '50s and early '60s pop era.
The Middle Middle "The Modern
Modern
Primetime Nightline
"The Prom" Math Class" Family
Family
"Family Fat Night" (N)
Big Brother
Criminal Minds "Supply &amp; CSI: Crime Scene "Cello
Demand"
and Goodbye"
Buried Treasure (N)
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Buried Treasure (N)

News

PM

8:30

9

PM

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PM

PM

11:30
(:35) Tonight

Show (N)
WTAP News
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at Six
at Eleven
Show (N)
ABC 6 News
ABC 6 News (:35) News
at 6 p.m.
at 11 p.m.
Nightline
European
Les Misérables
Journal
Eyewitness
EntertainmEyewitness (:35) News
Judge Judy
News at 6
News at 11 Nightline
ent Tonight
Jeopardy!
10TV News
Wheel of
10TV News (:35) LateS
at 6 p.m.
Fortune
at 11 p.m.
(N)
Smarter-5th
The
Two and a
Two and a
Paid
Grader
Half Men
Half Men
Simpsons
Program
BBC World
Nature "Braving Iraq"
Nova "Engineering Ground Frontline The spiritual lives of believers and
PBS NewsHour
News
Zero" (SP) (N)
nonbelievers were challenged in the wake of 9/11.
13 News at
Inside
Criminal Minds "Supply &amp; CSI: Crime Scene "Cello
13 News at (:35) LateS
13 News
Big Brother
6pm
Edition
Demand"
and Goodbye"
11pm
(N)
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Funniest Home Videos
Christine
Christine
Met-Mother Met-Mother WGN News at Nine
Scrubs
Scrubs
Athletic
Slap Shots
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds vs. Chicago Cubs Site: Wrigley Field -- Chicago, Ill. (L) Post-game
Boys/ Hall
SportsCenter
MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves vs. Philadelphia Phillies Site: Citizens Bank Park (L)
MLB Baseball Seattle vs L.A. Angels (L)
(11:00) ITF Tennis
ITF Tennis U.S. Open Men's and Women's Quarter-final Site: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center (L)
SportsCenter
Unsolved Mysteries
Unsolved Mysteries
Dance Moms
Dance Moms
Dance Moms
Dance Moms
Funniest Home Videos
Melissa
Melissa
Melissa (N) Melissa (N)
Cheaper by the Dozen ('03, Com) Steve Martin.
The 700 Club
DEA
DEA
Deadliest Warrior
Deadliest Warrior
Deadliest Warrior (N)
Deadliest Warrior
iCarly
iCarly
iCarly
SpongeBob Brainsurge
Wife Kids
G. Lopez
G. Lopez
'70s Show
'70s Show
Married
Married
NCIS "UnSealed"
NCIS "Reveille"
NCIS "Identity Crisis"
NCIS "Dog Tags"
Necessary Roughness (N) Burn "Better Halves"
Queens
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Madea Goes to Jail ('09, Com) Tyler Perry.
Payne
Payne
Conan
(5:00) The Situation Room John King, USA
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight
Anderson Cooper 360
Terror in the Dust (N)
Bones
Bones
The Mentalist
The Mentalist "Red Bulls"
1408 ('07, Hor) Samuel L. Jackson, John Cusack.
(5:00)
Ocean's Twelve ('04, Act) George Clooney.
Goodfellas (1990, Crime Story) Joe Pesci, Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta.
Goodfellas
Cash Cab
Cash Cab
Sons of Guns
Guns "AK/ Sniper Rifle"
Guns "The Taser Shotgun" One Man Army
Guns "The Taser Shotgun"
The First 48
Storage
Storage
Storage Wars
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Untamed and Uncut
Untamed and Uncut
Animal Cops: Houston
Saved (N)
Confessions (N)
Saved
(5:30)
The Next Karate Kid
The Wedding Planner ('01, Rom) Jennifer Lopez.
The Skeleton Key ('05, Thril) Kate Hudson.
Charmed
Charmed
Steel Magnolias ('89, Com/Dra) Dolly Parton, Sally Field.
Steel Magnolias Sally Field.
Kourtney
Kourtney
E! News (N)
Sex &amp; City
Sex &amp; City
True Hollywood "Snooki" Pawn (N)
Kardashians C. Lately (N) E! News
Sanford
Sanford
All in Family All in Family M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
HappilyDiv. Retired at35 The Nanny
The Nanny
Interrogating Saddam
Deadly (N)
Deadly (N)
Border Wars
Border Wars
Wars "Cocaine Sting"
Border Wars
Motorsport Hour
AdventSport AdventSport
North Dallas Forty ('79, Dra) Nick Nolte.
Madden NFL '12
North Dallas Forty
Pass Time
Pass Time
NASCAR Race Hub
Dumbest (N) Dumbest
RideRule (N) RideRule
Car Show "Prove It" (N)
Dumbest
Dumbest
Marvels "Mad Electricity" Marvels "Wiring America" Pickers "Urban Cowboys" Top Gear
Top Gear
Top Gear
Top Chef "Showpiece"
Top Chef: Just Desserts
The Rachel Zoe Project
Beverly "Group Therapy"
Top Chef "Villa Rosa" (N) Top Chef "Villa Rosa"
106 &amp; Park "Wild Out Wednesday" (L)
Exit Wounds ('01, Act) Isaiah Washington, Steven Seagal.
Belly ('98, Crime Story) DMX, Method Man, NAS.
My Place
My Place
House
House Hunt. Income
Income
Property Brothers
Property
House (N)
House
Income
Ghost Hunters
Ghost Hunters
Ghost "Frozen in Fear"
Ghost "Dark Shadows" (N) Paranormal Witness (N)
Ghost "Dark Shadows"
Movie
Jonah Hex ('10, Act) Josh Brolin.
True Blood
True Blood "Soul of Fire" Hard Knocks
24/ 7
Movie
(:45)
The Replacement Killers
(:15)
Fargo ('96, Cri) Frances McDormand.
Knight and Day ('10, Act)
Movie
(5:45) Love's Kitchen John Atterbury.
(:25) The Tillman Story Josh Brolin.
Inside the NFL
NASCAR
Green Room Inside the NFL

�SPORTS
LOCAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY — A schedule of upcoming
high school varsity sporting events
involving teams from Meigs and Gallia
counties.

Wednesday, September 7
Volleyball
Meigs at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Golf
River Valley at Wahama, 4:30 p.m.
Southern at Eastern, 4:30 p.m.

Eagles, Wildcats
win Week 2
games
A pair of local football
teams picked up their
respective first wins of the
2011 campaign this weekend as both Eastern and
Hannan won Week 2 road
contests.
The Eagles (1-1, 1-0
TVC Hocking) picked up
a hard-fought 13-6 triumph over Miller in the
TVC Hocking opener for
both teams, which resulted in the first varsity win
for EHS coach David
Tennant.
The Wildcats (1-1)
snapped a 23-game losing
skid with an impressive
22-0 victory over host
Hundred in a non-conference matchup in Wetzel
County. Hannan last won
at Burch in Week 5 of
2008, which also came
under current head coach
Keith Taylor.
No statistical or other
information was made
available from either contest.
Eastern hosts Wahama
on Friday in another TVC
Hocking matchup, while
Hannan
travels
to
Franklin Furnace for a
non-conference
game
with Green. Both Week 3
contests will start at 7:30
p.m.

A8
Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Lady Knights
soccer starts
season 1-3

Browns undergo
youth movement
BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
Scott Fujita’s cubicle has
been moved from one end
of Cleveland’s locker
room to the other, right
next to where kicker Phil
Dawson dresses.
“Yeah, this is the old
guys’ section,” the 32year-old
linebacker
cracked.
Everywhere else, these
are the baby Browns.
One of the NFL’s oldest
teams last season, Cleveland has undergone a
major infusion of youth.
First-year coach Pat Shurmur’s current roster is
overloaded with young,
inexperienced players.
The Browns have 11 rookies and 31 players with
three seasons or less of
NFL playing service, a
dramatic shift from last
year’s squad.
For last year’s season
opener against Tampa
Bay, the Browns had a
league-high 18 players
who were 30 or older. This
year, they have nine. In
2010, Cleveland’s average
age on Week 1 was an
AFC-high 27.49 and the
Browns had six rookie or
first-year players. Their
current average age is
26.01 with 15 rookie or
first-year players.
“We got young in a hurry,” Shurmur said. “That’s
no excuse for failure.”
But their youth is probably why so little is expected from the Browns this
season. They are rebuilding with youngsters, ones
who will have to grow up
in a hurry for Cleveland to

escape this 12-year cycle
of losing. Youth has been
served. It remains to be
seen if it will survive.
“I look at it positively,
we’re going to find out
pretty quick who can play
and who can’t,” said Dawson, 36. “I still believe
there are enough veteran
guys around here to steer
the way. We’re certainly
young, there’s no way
around it, but ignorance is
bliss some times. We’ll
embrace it and go with it.”
When the Browns take
the field for their opener
Sunday against Cincinnati, they’ll do so with
inexperienced players dotting their starting lineup
and at vital positions.
Quarterback
Colt
McCoy, who turned 25 on
Monday, made eight starts
as a rookie last season,
which he began as the
team’s No. 3 QB. McCoy
will be protected up front
by rookie left guard Jason
Pinkston, pressed into
duty sooner than expected
after Eric Steinbach
underwent season-ending
back surgery. One of
McCoy’s top targets will
be rookie wide receiver
Greg Little and McCoy
will hand the ball to running backs Montario
Hardesty and Armond
Smith, who have yet to
play one snap as pros.
Cleveland’s defensive
line will include two rookies, tackle Phil Taylor and
end Jabaal Sheard, and
rookie defensive back
Buster Skrine appears to
be the team’s nickel back.

Staff Report

Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journal/MCT
Cleveland Browns quarterback Colt McCoy celebrates his second-quarter touchdown pass against
the Detroit Lions at Cleveland Browns Stadium on
Friday, August 19, in Cleveland, Ohio.

Also, Richmond McGee
hasn’t punted in a regularseason game or held for a
PAT or field-goal attempt.
“It’s going to be the first
live action for a lot of
these guys,” Fujita said.
“Until you play real
games, you really don’t
know what you have.”
Following a 5-11 season, general manager Tom
Heckert entered the offseason with a goal to
make
the
Browns
younger. Like a plastic
surgeon, he made a series
of nips, tucks and lifts to
Cleveland’s aging roster.
Heckert cut the veterans
brought in by former
coach Eric Mangini,
whose ex-Jets did little to
turn around the Browns.

Heckert also signed free
agents in their 20s and
kept all eight 2011 draft
picks.
“We knew we were an
older team last year and it
wasn’t necessarily just the
age, we wanted to improve
at certain positions,” Heckert said. “We just wanted to
get younger from a team
perspective. We want guys
that are going to be out
there all the time and it’s
tough when you get older.
That’s just the way it is.
“It wasn’t really a statement where we are going
to get younger, but we
know building through the
draft that you’re going to
get younger anyway.
That’s kind of been our
plan.”

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The Point Pleasant Lady Knights soccer
team moved to 1-3 on the
season with a win over
Lincoln County and losses to Sissonville, Cross
Lanes Christian and Lincoln County.
In the opening contest
of the season, Point Pleasant edged Lincoln County
1-0 on an unassisted goal
by Cassie Jordan. The
Lady Knights had 114
shots to just five for Lincoln County. Maggie
Criste make a diving save
to give the team the win.
Top ranked Sissonville
defeated
the
Lady
Knights by a score of 7-0
in the second game of the
season.
On Thursday, the Lady
Knights fell to Cross
Lanes Christian by a 1-0
score. The two teams battled for 60 minutes before
CLC hit a shot into the
right corner of the net.
Cross Lanes Christian had
five shots in the game to
four shots for Point Pleasant.
On Saturday, the Lady
Knights traveled to Lincoln County for a
rematch. Point Pleasant
lost by a 1-0 score. The
Lady Knights dominated
the contest, but were
unable to connect with the
goal. Point Pleasant out
shot Lincoln County 19-2
in the game and the Lady
Knight had eight corner
kicks to one for Lincoln
County.

Wahama Hall of
Fame meeting
MASON, W.Va. —
WHS Athletic Hall of
Fame Board of Trustees
will be conducting a
meeting on Tuesday September 13, at 6 p.m. at the
high school. Final plans
for the upcoming Hall of
Fame weekend on September 23 and 24 will be
discussed. All Board of
Trustee members are
urged to attend along with
anyone interested in
assisting with the Hall of
Fame selection process.

Wahama Hall of
Fame Banquet
MASON, W.Va. —
Reservations are now
being accepted for the
2nd annual Wahama High
School Athletic Hall of
Fame Banquet on Saturday September 24, at 6
p.m. at the Mason United
Methodist Church. Former Wahama High School
greats Ralph Batey,
Eugene Hesson, Tim
Howard, John Kelly and
Blaine Staats will be honored at halftime of the
Wahama-Waterford football game on Friday
before being inducted into
the Athletic Hall of Fame
during the 6 p.m. Saturday evening banquet.
Reservations or more
information may be
obtained by contacting
Kenny Greene at (304)
882-2389 or Ralph Sayre
at (304) 882-3259 prior to
September 15.

MLEF co-ed
softball tourney
RUTLAND — The
Meigs Local Enrichment
Foundation will hold its
Second Annual Co-Ed
Benefit Softball Tournament Sept. 10 and 11 at
the Rutland Ball Fields
behind the Rutland Civic
Center. Hit your own 44
core max or less softballs.
Contact Randy Butcher at
444-3645, 742-2302 or
Mike Bartrum at 4165443.

Neal C. Lauron/Columbus Dispatch/MCT
Ohio State Buckeyes takes the field for the game against the University of Akron at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio, Saturday, September 3. Ohio State beat Akron, 42-0.

Toledo hopes to add another big-time upset
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — As bad as things
have been on the national
stage for Ohio State’s
football program the last
nine months, the Buckeyes remain the kings of
the Buckeye state.
That’s what it’s like
when you go 32,844 days
since your last loss to a
backyard opponent.
Suspensions, NCAA
investigations, a vacated
season, a deposed coach
and a departed quarterback have stung Ohio
State. But by virtue of
Saturday’s 42-0 beatdown
of Akron, and the overwhelming popularity of
the scarlet and gray, the
Buckeyes continue to
maintain their in-state
dominance within Ohio’s
borders.
The Buckeyes are 42-01 against their closest
neighbors since their last
loss, a 7-6 setback to
Oberlin during native son
Warren Harding’s administration back in 1921.
Next up is Toledo, a far
more talented Mid-Amer-

ican Conference team
than Akron, which comes
to Ohio Stadium on Saturday.
“You can’t take anyone
lightly and I don’t think
we ever do,” Buckeyes
defensive back Nate Ebner said. “Anyone we’re
going to play against, we
know they’re capable of
anything. We understand
that and have that mentality during the week.”
Ohio State has played
the Rockets twice — and
won by a combined score
of 87-0.
But the Rockets are
coming off a 58-22 victory over New Hampshire
in their season-opener on
Sept. 1. In addition to the
extra time to get ready for
the game at Ohio Stadium, they’re also the preseason pick to win the
MAC. And with Ohio
State still without four
and possibly seven players suspended for trading
memorabilia for cash,
many don’t believe this
will be an easy game.
“Our players are excit-

ed, there’s no question
about it,” Rockets coach
Tim Beckman, a former
Ohio State assistant
coach, said on Monday.
“A majority of our football team is from the state
of Ohio, from what we
call Rocket Nation — a
four-hour radius (from
Toledo). They all know
about the Buckeyes.”
While
Akron
got
$850,000 for coming to
Columbus, the Rockets
get
nothing.
That’s
because Toledo was the
home team two years ago
when the teams met at
Cleveland Browns Stadium and got to keep all the
money then.
It’s not like the Rockets
haven’t played — and
won — big games against
big-time programs before.
Upsetting the high and
mighty, or at least teams
from automatic qualifying Bowl Championship
Series conferences, is
almost a yearly occurrence.
Last season Toledo beat
Purdue of the Big Ten 31-

20, the year before that
the Rockets romped over
Colorado of the Big 12,
54-38, and the year before
that they administered
one of the most shocking
losses Michigan has ever
had, beating the Wolverines 13-10 at The Big
House.
The Rockets have also
whipped Kansas, Minnesota, Cincinnati and
Penn State this decade.
Beckman isn’t afraid to
give a history lesson to his
charges.
“We’ve brought up that
(Michigan) win, we’ve
brought up the win
against Colorado and the
win against Purdue last
year and the great wins
that they’ve had here at
UT, like the Pittsburgh
win when Pittsburgh was
rated ninth in the country,” Beckman said. “This
program has won a lot of
big football games.”
Since 2003, the Rockets
have six victories against
opponents from BCS
automatic-qualifying conferences. That’s the ninth-

most by a non-BCS
school, just two behind
renowned
giant-killer
Boise State. And the
Rockets play Boise State
next after they take on
Ohio State.
On the other sideline,
despite missing eight
players who were suspended for violating
NCAA rules the Buckeyes looked like their old,
bullying selves against
overmatched Akron.
The two quarterbacks
ranked No. 1 and No. 1-A
on the roster, Joe Bauserman and Braxton Miller,
tuned up by looking
poised and focused. They
completed a combined 20
of 28 passes for 293 yards
and four touchdowns,
plus ran 12 times for 62
yards.
“It was good for both
Braxton and I to get out
there,” said Bauserman, a
fifth-year senior. “Braxton came in and did well
and moved the ball. We
both were focused. Now
it’s time to watch the film
and prepare for Toledo.”

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