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                  <text>Locals to
honor Flight 93
on page 3

Cross country
action, A8

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 143

Statewide mobile
billboard to arrive
POMEROY — The
Trollbeads Mobile
Billboard which is traveling the state of Ohio
at the moment, will stop
in Pomeroy from 11
a.m. - noon, Friday at
Hartwell House.

Meigs County
Bikers reunion
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Bikers
Association’s 25th
Reunion will take place
at 6 p.m., Sept. 17 at
Pomeroy Eagles. Bring
a covered a dish. All
past and present members welcome.

Party in
the Park 5K set
RACINE - The third
annual Party in the Park
5K Run/Walk will be
held 9 a.m., Saturday at
Star Mill Park with proceeds benefitting the
Southern Fitness
Center. Registration is
$12 in advance or $15
the day of the race with
race-day registration
beginning at 8 a.m.
Overall and age group
awards for runners and
walkers will be
announced after the
parade at the Star Mill
Park stage at noon, with
activities going on all
day including country
music star Jake Owen
at 8 p.m. The route is
Star Mill Park to the
end of Yellowbush
Road, back to the park
and around the track to
the finish line. For more
information contact
Junie Maynard at
Southern Elementary
School 949-4222 ext.
1129.

Buckeye HillsHocking Valley
Council meeting
MARIETTA —
Regional advisory
council of Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development
District will meet at 10
a.m. on Sept. 23 at BHHVRDD Area Agency
on Aging.

WEATHER

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2011

Arrests made in suspected Cole Street arson
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
—
Arrests were made late
Wednesday in the suspected arson of a multifamily apartment building
in
downtown
Middleport.
Calvin E. Freeman, III,
29 and David R. Eakins,
34, both of Middleport,
have been arrested and

charged with one count of
aggravated arson to an
occupied structure, a
felony of the second
degree, according to
Shane
Cartmill,
spokesperson for the
Division of State Fire
Marshal. Investigators
say additional charges are
possible.
The building at 140
Cole Street, owned by
Dottie Turner, Pomeroy,

INDEX
1 SECTION — 8 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

A6
A5
A4
A7-9

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

was evacuated overnight.
Cartmill said the fire,
which started in the
garbage room of the
apartment
building,
caused moderate damage
to the building which had
six units, four of which
were occupied at the time
of the fire. Residents
were evacuated from the
building but allowed to
return yesterday.
Cartmill said Freeman

and Eakins were arrested
by Middleport Police
officers after investigators
were able to develop
information from witnesses and the examination of the fire scene.
Because this is a criminal
investigation, specific
information about how
the fire was set will not be
released at this time.
There were no injuries
reported. The investiga-

New spin (tin) on Old Glory
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — A new
spin on Old Glory can be
found on a hillside in
Pomeroy.
An American flag
which is nine feet tall and
teen feet wide has
emerged
along
the
entrance to Monkey Run
and is made out of discarded and spray-painted cat
food tins - that’s part of the
“new spin” or “new tin.”
Steve Vanmeter of
Pomeroy and the Drew
Webster Post 39 of the
American Legion, originally wanted to create
something large for the
Post’s float in this
Saturday’s
Veterans
Appreciation Day in
Pomeroy. Soon, the idea
grew into a more permanent thought and even
though the flag may still
find its way onto a parade
float this Saturday, it has
found a permanent home
on Vanmeter’s property.
Vanmeter said the flag
consists of 34 rows, each
containing 26 cans which
equals 884 total cans - this
also equals a lot of cat
food. Vanmeter does have
a cat but feeding his one
cat was not going to provide him with enough
materials so he turned to

the
Meigs
County
Humane Society and various friends and neighbors
to help accumulate what
he needed.
After constructing the
frame out of lumber,
Vanmeter then attached
the rows of cans on to
pieces of lath from an old
home. This not only
secured the cans but
allows the tin flag to
appear as if it’s moving
when the wind picks up.
Vanmeter said he wanted the large, unique flag to
honor the men and women
of the US Armed Forces.
Vanmeter himself is a veteran of the US Marine
Corps and he agreed there
was a strong community
of veterans in the immediate area. He guessed this
comes from growing up in
small towns where everyone knows everyone else.
He recalled being
taught how to hook a
bowling ball at the
Pomeroy bowling lanes by
the late Tommy Lind of
Pomeroy who was killed
in Vietnam at the age of
21. Then, there was his
neighbor, the late William
Neutzling
also
of
Pomeroy, who was killed
in Vietnam at the age of
25. Vanmeter says he was

See Glory, A2

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
—
Contents
of
Meigs
County’s former hospital
will be sold off on Sept.
24 as county commissioners proceed with
plans to demolish the
building.
Commissioners have
planned a public auction
of hospital furnishings,
building materials and
other items for several
weeks. They say the site
is best put to use without
the 50 year-old hospital
building on it, but have
not yet determined how
that real estate will be
developed.

Salvagable building
materials have been
removed and are now
ready for sale, and commissioners hope the auction will generate revenue for the county and
allow the materials to be
used constructively.
Commissioner Tom
Anderson said Tuesday
the hospital will be emptied of filing cabinets,
desks and other office
equipment,
building
materials such as doors,
and furnishings and
appliances, such as
kitchen equipment — all
to the highest bidder. He
said Auctioneer Dan
Smith will catalog the
inventory of materials to

Homemade chicken and noodles and
other items were on the menu at
Wednesdayʼs monthly Lunch Along the
River, held in Middleportʼs freight depot.
The monthly luncheons are sponsored by
the Middleport Community Association,
and benefit community events. They are
also an opportunity for local merchants
and residents to visit. Octoberʼs soup luncheon will be the final luncheon of the
year for the association. Here, Kathy
Mullins and Sandy Swisher prepare to
serve yesterdayʼs lunch.
(Brian J. Reed/photo)

tion was conducted by the
Division of State Fire
Marshal,
Middleport
Police Department and
Middleport
Fire
Department.
A second Wednesday
Middleport fire, on Pearl
Street, was not related. It
is being blamed on a
water heater malfunction,
a village spokesman said
yesterday. That home sustained extensive damage.

Former Village
Administrator
sentenced
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

(Beth Sergent/photo)

Steve Vanmeter of Pomeroy and his dog, Stray, stand
below a 9x10-foot American flag he has constructed
out of tin cans and placed on a hillside in the Monkey
Run area.

Auction of hospital contents set for Sept. 24

Lunch Along the River
High: 73
Low: 59

www.mydailysentinel.com

be sold.
The hospital has been
vacant since it closed in
2001. At first, county
officials hoped it could
be re-developed, either
for use as a health care
facility or for another
use, but those plans have
been abandoned.
The current board is
looking to the site for its
development potential,
but they have deemed the
building of little use to
the public. Health care
services have not been
ruled out, but commissioners are also considering the potential of the
site for county use, such
as offices or storage.
The building itself has

been deemed beyond
repair. A leaking roof has
taken its toll, and structural damage has begun
to show from the building’s exterior. It would,
they say, be cheaper and
better to tear it down and
build something in its
place better suited for
21st-century use.
Some items have been
removed from the old
hospital, including some
furniture, and have been
relocated for county use,
and some items donated
to the hospital by various
groups.
Commissioners said
earlier this week they
have no time schedule for
demolition.

COLUMBUS – John A.
Anderson,
64,
of
Pomeroy, has been sentenced in United States
District Court for making
false statements to the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency (Ohio
EPA) related to the operation of the sewage treatment plant that services
the Village of Pomeroy.
According to a press
release from the US
Department of Justice,
Southern District of Ohio,
Anderson was sentenced
to serve 36 months of probation, the first 12 months
of which will be served as
home confinement. In
addition, Anderson was
fined $2,000 and ordered
to perform 104 hours and
community service. As a
result of this conviction
and the Court’s order,
Anderson will never again
operate a sewage treatment plant.
Carter M. Stewart,
United States Attorney for
the Southern District of
Ohio, Ohio Attorney
General Mike DeWine,
Randall K. Ashe, Special
Agent in Charge of the
US
Environmental
Protection Agency and
Scott J. Nally, Director of
the Ohio EPA, announced
the sentence imposed by
US District Court Judge
Peter C. Economus.
Anderson was the village administrator of
Pomeroy from approximately 1989 to 2009. Part
of his job duties included
responsibility for the
operation of the village’s
wastewater
treatment
plant, including filing the
required reports with the
State of Ohio. The plant
discharges the treated
sewage to the Ohio River.
The plant has a permit
issued by Ohio EPA that
limits the amount of pollution that can be discharged into the Ohio
River. Discharge limits
have been established to
protect human health and
the environment. The permit also requires the sampling of the discharge
from the plant. The press
release states, on one
occasion in 2007 and one
occasion in 2008, Ohio
EPA inspectors found the
plant to be in an unsatisfactory condition in that
large quantities of solids
were being discharged
into the Ohio River. Also
stated in the release, during 2006, 2007, 2008, and
2009, Anderson, on some
occasions, failed to collect and/or analyze the
required samples from the
plant.
In addition, the release
explains because samples
were not taken and/or

See Sentenced, A2

�Thursday, September 8, 2011

Glory
From Page A1
in eighth grade and was burning trash in his yard when
the military caravan arrived at his neighbor’s home to tell
of Neutzling’s death. These losses made an impact on
him much like they have made on countless Americans
who still salute the flag, which no matter the material,
hasn’t changed in a very long time - unlike a lot of other
things in this country and in this big world.

Sentenced
From Page A1
analyzed, there is no way to verify if the plant's discharge was below or above the applicable permit limits, however, Anderson did not report that he failed to
collect and/or analyze the samples. Instead, on those
occasions, Anderson fabricated numbers for several
pollutants, including solids and fecal coliform bacteria,
and submitted the fabricated numbers to Ohio EPA and
therefore, the release further states, the fabricated numbers misrepresented that the plant was in compliance
with the permit.

Stocks rally after
Germany upholds
bailout plan
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks rallied for the
first time in three days Wednesday after a German
court backed the country's role in bailing out other
European countries. The ruling renewed hopes that
Europe will find a solution to its long-running debt
problems.
The Dow Jones industrial average jumped 253
points, or 2.3 percent, to 11,392 at 2:30 p.m. EST.
The Dow and other U.S. indexes fell over the previous three days on worries about Europe's debt
woes and weakness in the U.S. jobs market. All 30
stocks in the Dow rose.
"The market has been pricing in an out-and-out
recession, so any hints that policy issues might be
solved is a plus," said Brian Gendreau, market
strategist at Cetera Financial Group.
The Standard and Poor's 500 index jumped 31, or
2.7 percent, to 1,197. All 10 company groups that
make up the S&amp;P index rose. The Nasdaq composite shot up 70, or 2.8 percent, to 2,544.
European indexes rose broadly after the German
court ruling eased fears that Europe's bailouts of
Greece and Ireland could be stalling. Germany's
DAX index surged 4.1 percent; France's CAC-40
jumped 3.6 percent.
The ruling also pushed the prices of Treasury
securities lower as investors were more willing to
hold risky assets like stocks. Treasury prices have
been rising over the past week, sending their yields
lower, as demand for lower-risk investments
increased.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to
2.04 percent. It traded at 1.97 percent late Tuesday,
one of the lowest rates since the Federal Reserve
Bank of St. Louis began keeping daily records in
1962. Gold, another traditional safe haven, fell $56,
or 3 percent, to $1,817 an ounce. It closed at $1,891
on Aug. 22.
Historically low Treasury rates are prompting
some institutional investors to see stocks as a better
value. The yield on the benchmark 10-year
Treasury note began plunging from just over 3 percent on July 27 to 2.2 percent by the end of August.
Investors were piling into lower-risk assets as the
stock market swung wildly. The yield has hovered
around 2 percent this week. An investor who buys
the S&amp;P 500 index, meanwhile, earns a 2.38 percent yield in the form of dividends.
"Market sentiment has actually been worse than
economic data lately, and now you are seeing institutional investors saying, 'I can get a better yield
from the S&amp;P 500 than I can from a 10-year
Treasury'," said Howard Ward, portfolio manager
of the GAMCO Growth Fund.
Yahoo and Bank of America rose sharply after
announcing the departures of key executives after
the market closed Tuesday. Yahoo gained 5 percent,
to $13.57, after announcing that CEO Carol Bartz
had been fired. Some analysts said the move made
the company a takeover target. Bartz spent nearly
three years steering the company.
Bank of America jumped 7.5 percent, to $7.51,
after the bank announced a management reorganization that will result in two top officers leaving.
The changes were seen as one of chief executive
Brian Moynihan's most dramatic moves to reshape
the embattled bank. Bank of America shares have
fallen 48 percent this year through Tuesday, compared with a 7 percent drop in the S&amp;P 500 index.
Financial companies were the top performing
group in the S&amp;P 500 index. JP Morgan Chase &amp;
Co., Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo each rose
more than 2 percent.
Urban Outfitters fell 3 percent, to $25.14, after
the retailer said its sales were slipping in the current quarter. Computer graphics company Nvidia
Corp. jumped 10 percent, to $14.47, after the company said it expects its revenues to be higher than
Wall Street analysts forecast.
A Federal Reserve survey found that that the
economy grew modestly in its 12 bank regions in
July and August as consumers spent more.

JobsOhio Network regional
meeting scheduled
CHILLICOTHE — Officials from the Ohio
Department of Development and JobsOhio will discuss Ohio’s new economic development strategy from
1-2:30 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 8. The discussion will
outline the future role of the Ohio Department of
Development and the relationship with JobsOhio and
the JobsOhio Network partners. The meeting will be
held at: Kenworth Auditorium, 446 Hospital Road,
Chillicothe, Ohio 45601.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Shocker: Power
demand from US
homes is falling
NEW YORK (AP) — American homes are more
cluttered than ever with devices, and they all need
power: Cellphones and iPads that have to be
charged, DVRs that run all hours, TVs that light up
in high definition.
But something shocking is happening to demand
for electricity in the Age of the Gadget: It's leveling
off.
Over the next decade, experts expect residential
power use to fall, reversing an upward trend that
has been almost uninterrupted since Thomas
Edison invented the modern light bulb.
In part it's because Edison's light bulb is being
replaced by more efficient types of lighting, and
electric devices of all kinds are getting much more
efficient. But there are other factors.
New homes are being built to use less juice, and
government subsidies for home energy savings programs are helping older homes use less power. In
the short term, the tough economy and a weak
housing market are prompting people to cut their
usage.
As a result, many families can expect their
monthly bills to remain in check, even if power
prices rise. For utility executives, who can no
longer bank on ever-growing demand, a major shift
is under way: They're finding ways to profit when
people use less power.
"It's already having an impact and we may just be
in the early innings of this," says Michael Lapides,
a utilities analyst at Goldman Sachs.
From 1980 to 2000, residential power demand
grew by about 2.5 percent a year. From 2000 to
2010, the growth rate slowed to 2 percent. Over the
next 10 years, demand is expected to decline by
about 0.5 percent a year, according to the Electric
Power Research Institute, a nonprofit group funded
by the utility industry.
Overall demand, including from factories and
businesses, is still expected to grow, but at only a
0.7 percent annual rate through 2035, the government says. That's well below the average of 2.5 percent a year the past four decades.
Utility executives have been aware that the rate of
demand growth is slowing, but a more dramatic
shift than they expected may be under way.
Executives were particularly surprised by a dip during the first three months of this year, the most
recent national quarterly numbers available.
Adjusted for the effects of weather, residential
power demand fell 1.3 percent nationwide, an
unusually sharp drop.
Executives and analysts are perplexed because
residential demand doesn't usually track economic
ups and downs very closely. Even when the economy is stagnant, people still watch TV and keep
their ice cream cold.
"No one knows if it's customer concern about the
economy or a structural change," says Bill Johnson,
CEO of Progress Energy, which serves Florida and
the Carolinas.
For now, meters are spinning more slowly due to
a mix of long-term and short-term factors:
Lighting, which accounts for 10 to 15 percent of
a typical family's power use, is much more efficient
than it used to be. Americans are installing compact
fluorescent bulbs and light emitting diodes, which
are up to 80 percent more efficient than incandescent bulbs. Traditional incandescent bulbs will start
disappearing from store shelves next year because
they waste too much energy to meet federal standards crafted in 2007.
Federal and state efficiency programs have
expanded rapidly. Twenty-eight states have passed
laws that force utilities to help customers use less
power. The federal stimulus program allocated $11
billion to local efficiency programs, including subsidies for home weatherization and the purchase of
energy-efficient appliances.
With the U.S. economy in the doldrums and gas
prices high, families are trying to save money. It's
easier to turn off the air conditioner than shorten
your commute, says John Caldwell, director of economics at the Edison Electric Institute, a trade
group.
‚Äî The weak housing market has kept people
from moving into bigger homes. And high unemployment is forcing college graduates and other
family members to live together.
When Stephen Botelho, a software designer in
Westwood, Mass., moved his family into a 2,000square foot, 80-year-old ranch, he knew his electric
bill would rise. There was an electric dryer in the
basement. The insulation was poor. And the kitchen
was lit with 15 high-watt incandescent light bulbs.
"You could get a suntan if you turned all the
lights on," he says. "I could practically hear the
meter spinning outside."
He requested an energy audit from his utility,
Nstar, to help cut his power use. Nstar installed
what Botehlo estimates to be $200 worth of compact fluorescent bulbs. He replaced his electric
dryer with a gas-powered one. And with the help of
rebates from the state, he had insulation blown into
his attic. Next up: replacing a 14-year-old electric
water heater with a gas model, which he expects
will cut his $950 annual water-heating bill in half.
National Grid, a gas and electric utility whose
territory includes Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
New York and Rhode Island, is seeing the effects of
such behavior.
"Over the last six years we have seen decreased
or flat growth, especially on the residential side,"
says Ed White, the company's vice president of
customer and business strategy.

P&amp;G gets some advice from Oprah Winfrey
CINCINNATI (AP) — Marketers for the world's
largest consumer products maker are getting some guidance from one of the world's most successful women.
Oprah Winfrey was among the scheduled speakers
Wednesday at an internal training workshop for Procter
&amp; Gamble Co. marketers in Cincinnati. Spokesman Dave
McCracken of the company that makes Pampers diapers,
Olay skin cream and Pantene shampoo says Oprah's topic
was titled "Purpose-driven Journey to Defy Gravity."
No other details were released.

Meigs County Forecast
Thursday: Scattered
showers. Cloudy, with a
high near 73. South
wind between 3 and 6
mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
New rainfall amounts
between a tenth and
quarter of an inch possible.
Thursday Night: A
slight chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with
a low around 59. Light
west wind. Chance of
precipitation is 20 percent.
Friday: A chance of
showers. Partly sunny,
with a high near 74.
Calm wind becoming
southwest between 4
and 7 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent. New rainfall

amounts of less than a
tenth of an inch possible.
Friday Night: A
chance of showers,
mainly before 9pm.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 57. Chance
of precipitation is 30
percent. New rainfall
amounts of less than a
tenth of an inch possible.
Saturday: A chance
of showers after 10am.
Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 75. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Saturday Night: A
chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 55. Chance
of precipitation is 30
percent.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 38.24
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 45.62
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 50.46
Big Lots (NYSE) — 32.79
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 29.83
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 69.88
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 11.65
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.30
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 2.73
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 28.79
Collins (NYSE) — 48.99
DuPont (NYSE) — 47.44
US Bank (NYSE) — 22.69
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 15.80
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 36.61
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 34.82
Kroger (NYSE) — 23.50
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 37.64
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 66.86
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 17.10

BBT (NYSE) — 22.24
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 10.64
Pepsico (NYSE) — 61.62
Premier (NASDAQ) — 5.97
Rockwell (NYSE) — 59.25
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.46
Royal Dutch Shell — 65.98
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 55.91
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 52.42
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.05
WesBanco (NYSE) — 18.57
Worthington (NYSE) — 15.24
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
September 7, 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.

For the Record
911
Sept. 6
8:42 a.m., South Third Avenue, pain; 11:32 a.m.,
East Memorial Drive, abdominal pain; 1:47 p.m.,
Ohio 7, Middleport, motor vehicle collision; 4:17
p.m., Ohio 124, Portland, difficulty breathing; 4:56
p.m., East Memorial Drive, allergic reaction; 5:10
p.m., Lincoln Heights, kidney stone; 10:56 p.m.,
Bigley Ridge Road, domestic violence; 11:29 p.m.,
Mulberry Avenue, difficulty breathing.
Sept. 7
1:32 a.m., Beech Street, assault; 2:11 a.m., Coal
Street, structure fire; 4:24 a.m., Pearl Street, structure fire.

Recorder
POMEROY — Recorder Kay Hill reported these
transfers of real estate:
• Dwight P. Medley, Amy Medley, Joyce M. Medley,
to John M. King, deed, Sutton; Karen Lee Neumann,
deceased, to Eddie Lee Russell, certificate of transfer, Letart; Jason McDaniel, Ursula McDaniel, to
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District, right of way,
Bedford.
• Mary Frances Vineyard to Heather Cantrell, certificate of transfer, Olive; Jay Hill, Jr. Trust to
American Municipal Power, affidavit, Letart; LMH
Real Estate to AMP, deed, Letart, corrective; Clifford
A. Whitley, Renee Whitley, to Brian E. Hooper, deed,
Columbia; Debra Mirgon, John Mirgon, Debra A.
Fitch, Tammy E. Fitch, to Mathew Mirgon, deed,
Lebanon.
• Randall T. Roush, Lori Roush, to Tony J. Pierce,
Shelly A. Pierce, deed, Sutton; Joshua D. Wandling,
Lea Wandling, to Laura L. Nowicki, deed, Columbia;
Luther Paul Smith, deceased, to Mary E. Smith, affidavit, Village of Middleport; OWB REO, LLC, to
Gerald E. Hawk, deed, Bedford; Craig M. Wolfe,
Bobby Jo Wolfe, to Judy Wise, deed, Village of
Middleport.

Settlement proposed
on AEP Ohio rate-change plan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — American Electric Power
says it has reached a proposed settlement on Ohio electricity rate changes in a plan that would separate services for
electricity generation and delivery.
Columbus-based AEP said Wednesday that average customer electric bills would increase about $4.40 a month for
Ohio Power customers and drop about $4.50 for Columbus
Southern Power users. The two companies would merge.
About 20 groups have signed onto the agreement that
would need approval by the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio.
The Ohio consumers' counsel office that advocates for
residential utility customers has not accepted the plan. It
says the settlement doesn't include several previous,
deferred cost increases.
The office has said the plan shifts a larger share of generation costs from commercial and industrial customers to
residents. AEP has said the change would bring rates in line
with actual costs.

“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.
60239164

�The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND

A S K D R . B RO T H E R S

Mom of boys can’t
stand wrestling

Page A3
Thursday, September 8, 2011

Locals to honor Flight 93
at national event

BY DR. JOYCE
BROTHERS
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
always
envisioned
myself as the mother of
little princesses, but I
have ended up with
three rough-and-tumble
boys. My husband is a
workaholic, and it’s
pretty much up to me to
cope with them. The
problem is that they are
very physical, always
roughhousing, and I
really can’t stand it.
The boys are 5, 6 and 8.
I try to get them
involved in artistic or
science projects, but
they just want to wrestle. What can I do to
keep my sanity but not
turn them into sissies?
— G.G.
Dear G.G.: It would
be great if your husband
could get involved with
his sons, at least on the
weekends. They need a
strong presence of a
father, guiding them
and helping them grow
into good kids. It
sounds like they have a
lot of energy, but constant scrapping easily
can turn into real fights
or end up with someone
getting hurt — so you
are not being entirely
unreasonable when you
prefer that they do
something else. They
probably are taking
advantage of you being
the only enforcer at this
point. You also know
that they don’t enjoy
the activities you have
suggested so far, so you
need to be a little more
sensitive to their interests while not stifling
their boyish enthusiasm.

They need a
strong presence
of a father,
guiding them
and helping
them grow into
good kids.
When you do engage
with your sons, try to
do something that interests them. It’s not too
early to get them
involved in some sports
like baseball, soccer
and tennis. They don’t
all have to choose the
same thing. Some boys
who like physical contact might prefer something like martial arts,
but you can always
point them toward running, biking or swimming. The list is endless. If you can, find a
middle-school-age boy
to hang out and play
sports with them. I
think they just need
their abundant energy
directed toward some
more-organized activities. In the meantime,
you can work on your
husband to get him to
be more of an involved
dad. It’s really important, and the whole family will be healthier and

Dr. Joyce Brothers
happier.
***
Dear Dr. Brothers:
I’ve been married six
years, and have always
had mixed feelings
about pregnancy — not
about motherhood. I
can’t wait to have our
baby girl. But since I
pride myself on my
great figure, it is very
hard to watch my waist
disappear and find
myself putting on the
pounds. I feel fat and
ugly, and my husband is
less interested in having
sex with me. He says I
am still beautiful, but
I’m only five months
along, and I’m worried
about looking even
worse. Can you help
me? — K.F.
Dear K.F.: I am sure
that as you move farther
into
the
middle
trimester of your pregnancy, you will start to
feel better about your
body. The baby will be
moving and kicking
eventually, and you will
look like a pregnant
woman instead of an
overweight one who has
let herself go. As soon
as you begin showing a
bit more, you can go
shopping for some of
the wonderful maternity
styles that are offered
today — those that
prominently feature the
baby bump! So a little
patience and getting
used to the changes in
your body will help
you. Please don’t diet.
I’m willing to bet that
your husband still
thinks you’re beautiful,
just as he says, but he
may feel a little hesitant
to make love right now
because he’s afraid of
hurting the baby or
endangering the pregnancy, a common fear
of dads-to-be. A talk
with his or your physician should clear that
up. Understand that he
has to make adjustments in his emotion
and mental state during
pregnancy as well, and
try to give him the benefit of the doubt. You
both are heading into an
exciting time, and soon
you will be feeling that
special glow that pregnant women are famous
for. With your pride in
your body, you won’t
have much trouble getting back into shape
after the birth of your
daughter. And please
don’t let your vanity
deprive her of mother’s
milk. Try to stop worrying and enjoy this special time.
(c) 2011 by King Features Syndicate

(Submitted photo)

The 135-man Flight 93 Memorial Chorus will perform at Flight 93ʼs memorial site on Saturday, Sept. 10 in
Shanksville, Pa. The chorus includes many local men from Ohio and West Virginia.

STAFF REPORT
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SHANKSVILLE, Pa.
— Eight area barbershop
singers will perform with
the 100-man Flight 93
Memorial Chorus when
it honors the memory of
the passengers and crew
of Flight 93 on Saturday,
Sept. 10, in Somerset, Pa.
The free choral tribute
will be at 7 p.m. in
Somerset
Alliance
Church, following a chorus appearance that
morning at the Flight 93
National
Park
at
Shanksville, Pa. That
National Park Service
event is reportedly to be

attended
by
Vice
President Biden and covered by TV networks.
The eight men, members of the local
Parkersburg Chapter of
the Barbershop Harmony
Society, are Brent Ash of
Sistersville, W.Va., Tom
Blissett
and
Jim
McCrady of Parkersburg,
W.Va., Gerald Kelly of
Pomeroy, Rusty Kidd of
Washington,
W.Va.,
Warren Myers of Mineral
Wells, W.Va., Will
Wilburn of Pullman,
W.Va. and Lew Yeager of
Marietta. Blissett, Kelly
and Wilburn are rehearsing as part of an octet to
sing “This Is My

Country.”
Chorus director Jeff
Avey, who directs barbershop
choruses
in
Morgantown, W.Va. and
in Cumberland, Md., said
“it is a pleasure to have
such fine voices from the
Parkersburg Chapter in
our chorus." He added:
"This is going to be an
inspiring experience of a
lifetime for both our
audiences
and
our
singers." The veteran
director said he hopes to
fill the 1000-seat church.
The tribute's songs
were chosen by Avey for
both their spiritual inspiration and for their patriotic fervor. They range

from the moving "You
Raise Me Up" and
"Follow the Flag" to Lee
Greenwood's
rousing
"God Bless The USA"
and Sousa's "Stars and
Stripes Forever." Chorus
members, representing
barbershop
choruses
from four states, are provided sheet music and a
learning disc but are
required
to
attend
rehearsals
in
Morgantown
and
Cumberland. The chorus
web
site
is:
flight93memorialchorus.com or additional
information is available
by calling cell number
740-629-4276.

Bidwell man charged with murder after stabbing death
STAFF REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — A
Gallia County man has
been charged with murder
following an early morning incident that lead to
the stabbing death of a
second man on Saturday.
Donald E. Karns, II, 25,
Bidwell, was present in
the Gallipolis Municipal

Court on Wednesday and
charged with a murder,
a special category
felony.
Karns was arrested
by deputies with the
Gallia County Sheriff's
Office at approximately 5:15 a.m. on
Saturday after the body
of Charles Ray Stewart,
39, was found in the

victim's Story's Run
Road home in Cheshire
Township.
Emergency officials
were called to the
scene at approximately
4:15 a.m. and, according to a press release, it
was
apparent
that
Karns had stabbed the
victim and fled the
scene.

Stewart was pronounced dead at the
scene by the Gallia
County Coroner.
Karns is currently
being held under a $1
million, 10 percent bond.
The defendant's next
court appearance is
scheduled for Sept. 12 at
10:30 a.m. in the municipal court.

Ohio Senate gave pay raises after state cuts
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — State records
show staffers for both
Republicans
and
Democrats in the Ohio
Senate got pay raises this
summer in the aftermath
of state budget cuts and
the passage of a law lim-

iting public employee
unions.
Payroll data reviewed
by The Associated Press
show 19 Senate caucus
employees got pay hikes
since July. The raises
were
first
reported
Tuesday on the liberal

political
blog
Plunderbund.
Republican
Senate
President Tom Niehaus
says he ordered a pay
review in December after
experienced staff members began leaving during
the transition of adminis-

trations. He says he was
looking to see if he could
make pay for experienced
employees more competitive so the Senate could
retain their expertise.
Niehaus says raises
didn't require a budget
increase in the Senate.

Ohio Briefs
Cleveland casino flooded
with job applications
CLEVELAND (AP) — Job seekers eager to cash
in on a casino opening early next year in Cleveland
are flooding its operator with applications.
The Horseshoe Casino Cleveland began taking
applications on its website Wednesday. A spokeswoman said more than 1,000 applications were
received by mid-afternoon for 500 dealer and super-

visor openings. Dealers will earn up to $40,000 a
year, and supervisors will make $40,000 or more.
The application deadline is Sept. 30. More openings will be filled starting in December.
Rock Gaming President Matthew Cullen told
reporters Wednesday in Columbus he wants the
facility to be a catalyst for growth in downtown
Cleveland.
The Cleveland casino will be the first of four to
open in Ohio. The others will be in Cincinnati,
Columbus and Toledo.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
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
— Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer
Board, regular meeting, 7 p.m., TPRSD
office.

Community
meetings
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.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Republican
Executive Committee,
regular meeting, 7:30
p.m., courthouse.
Tuesday, Sept. 13

SYRACUSE —
Syracuse Community
Center Board of Directors,
regular meeting, 7 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 17
POMEROY — Reunion
of Veterans Memorial
Hospital employees, 1-4
p.m., Mulberry
Community Center. Bring
photos, etc., and non-perishable food item for
Cooperative Parish food
pantry.

Reunions
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.
RACINE — Southern
Charge United Methodist
Church, evening service,
7 p.m., Bethany UM
Church.

Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home
Adam McDaniel
&amp; James Anderson
DIRECTORS

Pet Cremation Available

Middleport
992-5141

Pomeroy
992-5444

www.andersonmcdaniel.com

�OPINION

Page A4
Thursday, September 8, 2011

Civility for thee, not for me Soccer’s Andy Carroll:
drink and double standards
President
Barack
Obama delivered his loviest speech as president in
Tucson, Ariz., after the
shooting of Rep. Gabby
Giffords. It was moving,
pitch perfect and -- in its
key passages calling for
civility in our political
discourse -- brazenly
insincere.
Obama said we should
be sure that “we are talking with each other in a
way that heals, not a way
that wounds.” He framed
his call as a way to honor
the victims of the Tucson
tragedy: “Only a more
civil and honest public
discourse can help us face
up to our challenges as a
nation, in a way that
would make them proud.”
Teamster President
Jimmy Hoffa must have
been too busy watching old episodes of
“The Sopranos” that
night. In a warm-up
act for the president’s rally the other
day in Detroit, Hoffa
unloosed a witless,
stereotypically crude
tirade standing at a podium about to be affixed
with a presidential seal
and graced by the presence of the Master of
Civility himself.
Hoffa told the rally that
the tea party had declared
“war on workers,” but
told his listeners that
organized labor likes “a
good fight.” He thundered: “They got a war
with us and there’s only
going to be one winner.”
He assured President
Obama that “this is your
army,” and urged the
crowd to vote: “Let’s take
these son of a bitches out
and give America back to
an America where we
belong [sic].”
This passage is so hot
in tone and freighted with
martial imagery that had
Sarah Palin uttered it,
MSNBC would pre-empt
its usual prison documentaries to do 24-hour coverage of the supposed
incitement to violence.
But President Obama
took the stage shortly
afterward with nary a
word about Hoffa’s rant,
and the White House has
refused to condemn it.
Perhaps the president

Rich Lowry
gave the unions a secret
waiver from his injunctions to civility?
Of course, the summons to civility was
never intended as a bipartisan initiative. Born of a
smear of the right as
somehow responsible
for the crimes of the
lunatic
who
shot
Giffords, it was a

If civility is a good
in its own right, the
functioning of our
big, unruly democracy has never
depended on it. It
will survive Hoffa’s
ham-handed
metaphors and
Obama’s hypocrisy.
But next time, Mr.
President, please
spare us the pose
and the lectures.
handy way to try to
delegitimize conservatives and mute their
voices. Soon after
Tucson, liberal protesters in Madison,
Wis., were lambasting
Republican officeholders in rancorous terms
and even threatening
them, without anyone
standing up for civility.
When
Giffords
returned to Washington
at the end of the debt
debate to cast her first
vote since the shooting, it was in an atmosphere thick with liberal
accusations
that
Republicans were “terrorists” and “hostagetakers.”

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When he extolled
civility nine months
ago, President Obama
didn’t count on his
political base becoming more enraged than
ever, or on his own
desperation as president of a country with
9.1 percent unemployment. The most elemental act of civility is
assuming the sincerity
and patriotism of your
opposition. President
Obama’s latest theme
is that Republicans are
putting party before
country in opposing
his program, an argument that implicitly
rules out the possibility that they genuinely
think his policies are
foolhardy and worthy
of opposition. It’s a
kidney punch masked
as high-mindedness.
Unless the economy
rebounds
suddenly,
President Obama will
be left with only one
option next year -winning ugly. He will
have to make his opponent even more unacceptable than he is, and
if the past is any guide,
he’ll do it without
scruple. All Obama’s
promises about process
are highly conditional.
He jettisoned his support for the public
funding of campaigns
in 2008 as soon as it
became clear he could
raise $750 million. He
sloughed off “post-partisanship” when he had
the
congressional
majorities necessary to
ram through major legislation on a partisan
basis. And now he’s
saying goodbye to
civility, too.
So be it. If civility is
a good in its own right,
the functioning of our big,
unruly democracy has
never depended on it. It
will survive Hoffa’s hamhanded metaphors and
Obama’s hypocrisy. But
next time, Mr. President,
please spare us the pose
and the lectures.
(Rich Lowry can be
reached via e-mail:
comments.lowry@
nationalreview.com)
(c) 2011 by King Features Syndicate

BY JOHN LEICESTER
AP SPORTS COLUMNIST

PARIS (AP) — Walk
through an English town or
city late on a Friday night and
the chances are good that
you’ll see people staggering
drunk out of pubs, perhaps
vomiting stomachs of beer
into the gutter or simply
passed out on the pavement.
Yet, if those people include
professional soccer players,
the chances also are good that
it could become news even if
they don’t have a match to
play the next day. Why?
The inference is that soccer
players should somehow
know better, live more soberly
than the fans who pay to watch
them play. That kind of thinking is not without hypocrisy
because, for many of those
same fans, no trip to a game is
complete without stopping in
a pub or liquor store before or
afterward.
The latest player caught in
the spotlight of Britain’s double fascination with both drink
and soccer is Andy Carroll, the
towering 22-year-old striker
who, if he can only turn his
obvious potential into consistent goals, could become the
match winner England needs
to stop going home from
major championships with its
tail between its legs. So far,
Carroll has made just three
England appearances and
scored once.
Liverpool’s big-spending
new American owners gambled a reported $56 million at
the time that Carroll can help
revive the formerly dominant
team when they bought him
from Newcastle in January.
But since then, and partly
because he had injuries, the
club has squeezed only 13
appearances and three goals
from the bearer of its No. 9
shirt worn previously by such
prolific scorers as Ian Rush
and Robbie Fowler.
In short, Carroll has everything to prove.
That,
unfortunately,
includes apparently having to
prove that he doesn’t have a
problem with alcohol, that he
isn’t destined to become simply another name on the roll
call of players — Paul
Gascoigne and George Best
are obvious examples —
remembered in Britain as
much for their soccer as for the
damage they inflicted on their
careers and bodies with excessive drinking and partying.

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

Twice in the past six
months, England manager
Fabio Capello has seen fit to
state publicly that Carroll
shouldn’t drink too much. The
most recent example was
before England beat Wales 1-0
in Euro 2012 qualifying this
week. Carroll played for just
four minutes at the end of that
sorry performance that again
suggested that Capello is still
far from turning his Premier
League stars into anything
even close to the world-beating team England fielded way
back in ... 1966.
In response to reporters’
pre-match questions about
Carroll, the Italian replied in
his English that remains clumsy despite nearly four years in
his high-paying job that the
player wasn’t in pristine condition and that “his style of life
is a problem if you no good,
because he needed to be careful, because he is important
player not only for England
team, also for Liverpool. I
think he understand what he
need to do.”
“If he want to be a good
player, a good sportive man,
he need to drink less than the
normal,” Capello later added.
What Capello meant by
“normal” wasn’t clear. Nor is
it clear why Capello feels
compelled to feed the public
and media fascination with
Carroll’s off-field life, when a
simple “I’m not going to talk
about that” would have killed
this line of questioning stone
dead. Liverpool took the wiser
option of subsequently refusing to comment about what
Capello had said.
But Capello is also right.
Excessive alcohol consumption is not going to help any
young athlete’s career and he’s
not speaking out of turn by
pointing that out. In fact, he’s
duty bound to make sure that
England players are at their
best playing for their country
— which is one reason why he
bans alcohol in his team
camps.
Putting aside the English
tabloids’ lurid accounts of his
supposedly late-night partying
— after all, given their methods, how much of what they
report really bears repeating?
— Carroll has, to a certain
extent, also brought attention
on himself. A court last
October fined him and ordered
him to pay compensation after
he pleaded guilty to assaulting
a man at Newcastle’s Blu
Bambu nightclub.

And Capello, remember, is
Italian, and many Italians
don’t drink in the same way as
the English. If the English
drinking culture seems alien to
Capello, that could also
explain why he has taken
Carroll aside for a few words
of fatherly advice, especially
since the English tabloids are
so quick to jump not only on
perceived excesses by players
but to report even occasions
where they are spotted out
having an innocent beer.
“Here a lot of people drink.
It is normal here,” Capello said
last November. Then, picking
up a mobile telephone, he
added: “It can record all the
time. It can take pictures. You
can find everything on
Facebook, et cetera. This is the
worst. For this reason people
can speak about this person
drinking or this person being
out. In Italy and Spain, I know
the life of the players. They
like to drink when they eat,
during dinner. Not after.”
So what does this all add up
to when it comes to Carroll?
Really, at this stage, not much.
He is a young player, trying to
learn his trade in a goldfish
bowl of massive expectations
not made easier by the big
price tag on his head and by
Capello talking publicly about
him when he could have kept
this issue private. Carroll also
is a young Englishman who,
like so many of those who
watch him play, seems to like
a drink when he’s not at work.
So what? Is that news? Or
could this instead be more of a
story about England, its drinking habits and about double
standards?
“Why shouldn’t players go
out and get drunk? Everyone
else does,” former Liverpool
and England star John Barnes
said in a telephone interview.
“This is just binge drinking,
whereby he likes to go out and
drink too much and party, type
of thing, so it’s more of a
lifestyle rather than a problem,” added Barnes, who previously worked with current
Liverpool manager Kenny
Dalglish at Celtic. “The
hypocrisy comes from the
public wanting to hang somebody because he went out and
got drunk when it shouldn’t
even be an issue — as long as
it’s the right time.”
John Leicester is an international sports columnist for The
Associated Press. Write to him
at jleicester@ap.org or follow
him at twitter.com/johnleicester

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�Thursday, September 8, 2011

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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday,
Sept. 8, 2011:
This year, you often go back and
forth when making decisions. You
think you should do something one
way but want to do it another way.
Whether to follow your heart or your
mind could become an issue. If you
are single, you could go through
a string of lovers and date a lot.
Perhaps you won’t want to settle
down until June 2012 or later. If you
are attached, the two of you have
the same core issues, which is the
glue in the bond. Respect each
other’s different solutions. Count on
AQUARIUS to pitch in and help.
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)
+++++ You wake up brighteyed and bushy-tailed, ready to take
the world by storm. You could feel
out of kilter unexpectedly with news
from a loved one. A child or loved
one creates quite a smoke screen.
Tonight: Only where the action is.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++ Just when you thought
a personal matter was resolved,
you discover otherwise. A misunderstanding needs to be ironed
out. Count on some confusion,
too. Realize where the problems
began. Don’t talk too much. Tonight:
Burning the midnight oil.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
+++++ Keep reaching out for
others at a distance. If you need to
find an expert, do. You really cannot go wrong. A misunderstanding
is a definite possibility. Confirm and
clarify. Tonight: Think “weekend.”
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
++++ Relate directly to key
individuals. If you feel as if you have
gone far enough working though a
problem, communicate that issue.
You might not be seeing a situation
clearly — whether it is your perception or faulty information. Tonight:
Chat over dinner.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
+++++ Others clearly have
different concepts. You will be able
to juggle the back-and-forth. Verify
a statement or meeting time, as
an element of confusion exists.
Someone attempts to create a haze.
Tonight: Strutting your stuff.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
+++++ Handle a matter in a
more conciliatory manner. Someone

in your daily life means well and can
inspire you, but at the same time
can make goulash out of the most
precise communication and situations. Enjoy this person for his or her
different facets. You are not changing him or her. Tonight: Kick up your
heels.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
++++ Add that special creative
touch. You are well known for your
imagination. Listen to others and get
feedback. Others do the unexpected
and create a lot of excitement, if
not chaos. Maintain your sense of
humor. Tonight: Easy works.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
++++ Don’t respond to a partner’s or roommate’s demands if
you don’t want to. You might feel
the need to focus on another issue
first. Juggling needs to happen if
you want to remain in control today.
Tonight: Deal with a domestic matter.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
+++++ You might want to
make that extra effort as you deal
with others. Communication has a
strange quality to it. No one is trying
to be evasive; there is simply a quality of haziness or a lack of clarity.
Confirm meetings. Ask about any
situation you find vague. Tonight:
You don’t need to go far.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
++++ Deal with a financial situation, especially if you are having
difficulty being on the same page
as someone else. You have much
more going for you than you realize.
Stay open to potential change; you
cannot, nor do you want to, control
change. Tonight: Treat time.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
+++++ You are at your monthly
peak. Approach a situation with
greater openness. Your words could
be misunderstood. Try to clarify, but
don’t be vested in being on the same
page as someone else. Follow your
instincts. Tonight: King or queen of
the moment.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
+++ Keep your cards close to
your chest. Do understand what is
going on with another person. You
might not have the clarity you want
at this juncture. Don’t guess what is
going on with someone. Wait and
allow this person to reveal him- or
herself. Tonight: Play it low-key.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

Notices

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White in Stock – 10 Special Order Colors

Hoe - Dozer Work - Septic Systems - Sewer - Water
Roofing/All Types - Concrete Work
Dura-Last Flat Roofs
Springs - Ponds - Roads
Home &amp; Business Remodeling

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

Mike W. Marcum - Owner

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P.O. Box 220
Athens, OH 45701

AUTOMOTIVE

General Contracting

Marcum Construction

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Thursday, September 8, 2011

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

�Thursday, September 8, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

2011 Coachʼs Corner Cross Country Invitational
GIRLS
Team scores (Top 7 team finishers
overall)
1. Gallia Academy (43) — 1.
Peyton
Adkins
19:42.4,
2.
McKenna Warner 20:34.2, 5.
Madison Holley 21:24.3, 14.
Hannah Watts 23:03.9, 23.
Elizabeth Holley 24:48.4, 31.
Jenna Bays 26:14.2, 44. Abby
Wiseman 27:44.6;
2. Fairland (84) — 6. Shanan
Ashton 21:59.1, 15. Megan Ashton
23:14.9, 20. Sarah Warnock
24:19.1, 21. Jessica Price 24:30.2,
27. Savannah Nelson 25:31.6, 29.
Sydney Pettit 25:47.4, 37. Faith
Hurula 26:23.5;
3. Piketon (126) — 9. Megan Day
22:24.1, 16. Elisha Manley
23:42.4, 18. Shaniah Begley
24:07.6, 43. Madison Reed
27:39.8, 50. Kayla Stone 28:16.4,
62. Taila Hodge 29:10.7, 72. Karlie
Obrien 30:06.0;
4. Alexander (133) — 4. Allyson
Malone 21:15.0, 12. Reana
Putnam 22:55.6, 36. Kaylyn
Sigman 26:52.2, 40. Mary Jess

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Daugherty 27:06.5, 51. Adrian
Love 28:18.6, 60. Rebecca
Daniels 29:04.9, 76. Kayla Coffee
30:44.8;
5. Eastern (136) — 8. Asia Michael
22:13.4, 13. Keri Lawrence
22:55.8, 22. Savannah Hawley
24:35.7, 38. Cheyenne Doczi
26:54.5, 64. Shelby Smith 29:21.8;
6. Jackson (165) — 19. Haley
Shank 24:13.6, 24. Kaetlyn Sheets
25:13.7, 30. Shannon Reed
26:08.4, 47. Jessica Ridgeway
27:59.2, 57. Avery Walke 28:49.5;
7. Chillicothe (172) — 7. Audra
Metzler 22:10.0, 10. Rachel
Conaway 22:44.6, 49. Kassandra
Stewart 28:12.9, 53. Casandra
Parker 28:20.4, 66. Megan Sparks
29:26.1, 85. Kylie Bethel 32:21.8;
8. Logan (196) — 32. Jessie
Tirpak 26:15.0, 37. Faith Freeman
26:52.2, 45. Greer Perkins
27:45.9, 46. Emily Starlin 27:56.3,
52. Tabitha Bigham 28:20.1, 54.
Katie Driggs 28:30.3, 65. Kristen
Harden 29:25.0;
9. Oak Hill (218) — 17. Breanna
Butler 23:57.7, 42. Kari Taylor
27:33.9, 56. Kelsey Hoskins
28:40.4, 59. Shelby Stapleton

29:02.0, 61. Natalie Davis 29:09.2,
94. Emily Davis 36:05.8, 95. Emily
Brewer 36:11.1;
t-10. River Valley (218) — 3. Katie
Blodgett 20:45.0, 28. Keyana
Ward 25:45.0, 58. Maria Garcia
28:56.7, 75. Ciara Layne 30:33.9,
87. Sonja Rankin 32:43.4;
t-10. Meigs (218) — 25. Victoria
Walker 25:21.2, 33. Maggie Smith
26:16.9, 48. Haley Kennedy
28:04.6, 55. Tara Walzer-Kuharic
28:35.1, 82. Brette Crane 31:22.0;
12. Coal Grove (296) — 35. Sami
Stormes 26:39.9, 69. Katey Erwin
29:56.1, 70. Kim Short 30:02.1,
78. Leah Crum 30:56.8, 89.
Brittany Webb 33:38.7, 92.
Morgan Sites 34:16.6, 96. Darrien
Hankins 36:33.2;
Southern — 11. Jennifer McCoy
22:50.3;
Wellston — 26. Taylor Davis
25:26.2, 39. Katlin Martin 27:06.5,
41. Tori Negrau 27:23.3, 70.
Amber Gilliland 29:58.0;
Rock Hill — 83. Brooklyn Massie
31:27.4, 84. Madison Nelson
31:38.7;
Point Pleasant — 90. Avery
Daughtery 33:42.7.

BOYS
Team scores (Top 7 team finishers
overall)
1. Fairland (31) — 1. Tanner Mattie
17:03.2, 3. Logan Rowe 17:41.2, 4.
Raine Wireman 17:45.8, 5. Chad
McComas 18:35.9, 20. Dylan
Hannon 20:20.1, 22. Zack Fannin
20:33.5, 26. Josh Sifford 20:44.1;
2. Piketon (93) — 7. Zack Varney
18:49.7, 14. Josh Cornett 19:46.0,
21. Isaac Dixon 20:30.9, 30. Kane
Dixon 21:00.0, 31. Seth Farmer
21:03.1, 66. Jordan Pendleton
23:53.6, 75. Tony Carson 24:57.4;
3. Southern (102) — 2. Kody Wolfe
17:24.7, 18. Justin Hettinger
20:05.3, 23. Bradley McCoy
20:35.1, 28. Andrew Ginther
20:49.6, 44. Andrew Roseberry
21:59.5, 46. Chris Yeater 22:13.2,
83. Chase Graham 26:07.5;
4. Logan (108) — 9. Seth
Vermillion 19:25.7, 17. Colin
Brooks 20:02.9, 19. Kenton
Lawson 20:19.5, 38. Michael
Geiger 21:39.2, 41. Scotty Burghy
21:46.8, 51. Christian Perkins
22:32.8, 63. John Vargo 23:35.0;

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Full Time CMA or LPN needed for
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Competitive Benefits
Please send resume by September 16, 2011 to:
P.O. Box 220
Athens, OH 45701

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5. Meigs (145) — 6. Cody Hanning
18:49.6, 11. Steven Mahr 19:38.8,
32. Brandon Mahr 21:06.3, 62.
Colten Walters 23:35.0, 64.
Bradley Helton 23:40.1, 71. Forrest
Nagy 24:24.2;
6. River Valley (158) — 13. Trent
Wolfe
19:45.7,
24.
Jared
Hollingshead 20:38.1, 33. Aaron
Oehler 21:11.4, 49. Ethan Hersman
22:25.1, 65. James Jackson
23:45.8, 70. Austin Hamilton
24:23.9, 78. Kyle Randolph
25:28.0;
7. Chillicothe (176) — 27. Jacob
Johansen 20:44.8, 39. Arioch
Parker 21:41.1, 42. Seth McGuire
21:49.0, 43. Mark Hirsh 21:51.8,
55. Xavier Newsome 23:05.5, 68.
Brandon Mingus-Harris 24:02.7,
69. Phillip Streicher 24:20.1;
8. Gallia Academy (200) — 8.
Michael Edelman 18:57.9, 45.
Quenton McKinniss 22:03.8, 58.
Jeremy Wilson 23:22.6, 59. Casey
Lawrence 23:26.0, 72. Ryan Valley
24:39.9, 76. Evan Moore 25:04.0;
9. Jackson (204) — 12. Ian Kilgour
19:45.5, 40. Matthew Collins
21:42.6, 47. Justin Molihan
22:16.5, 53. Adam Neer 22:42.2,

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Medical

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92. Caleb Cunningham 27:14.7;
10. Coal Grove (242) — 10. Jacob
Pauley 19:32.3, 50. James Kazee
22:29.7, 73. Paul Brisson 24:50.5,
80. Chris Camp 25:43.0, 84. Wyatt
Schultz 26:09.4, 87. Andrew
Gannon 26:15.1;
11. Point Pleasant (259) — 34.
Caleb Riffle 21:25.7, 35. Riken
Nowlin 21:32.7, 77. Joseph
Littlepage 25:12.4, 86. Darrell
McBeath 26:14.0, 88. Elijah
McClanahan 26:16.9, 89. Logan
Burch 26:23.8, 91. Nick Taylor
27:09.3;
Eastern — 37. Brock Smith
21:37.3, 48. Tyson Long 22:24.0,
54. Greyson Wolfe 22:45.8;
Wellston — 15. Tylor Retterer
19:49.6, 36. Cody Blake 21:33.9,
82. Michael Pressley 26:04.5;
Rock Hill — 16. Aaron Dalton
20:00.2, 25. Austin Smith 20:42.6,
93. Dustin Akers 27:20.3, 94. Bryce
Kelley 27:59.1;
Alexander — 56. Ryan Dael
23:07.1, 60. Carson Calhoun
23:29.0, 61. Sam Jones 23:29.3,
67. Jason Ash 24:00.9;
Oak Hill — 96. Dirk Dempsey
28:42.3, 97. Zack Kiser 33:25.6.

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OHIO VALLEY BANK

®

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

#017822
#712669
#764592
#628538
#202204
#014176
#665337
#B32595

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.

Thursday’s TV Listings

�A8

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

Thursday, September 8
Volleyball
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy,
5:15 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia,
6 p.m.
Fairland at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Eastern at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Athens, 6 p.m.
Poca at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Valley (Fayette) at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy
at
Warren,
6:30 p.m.
Golf
Gallia Academy at Jackson
(SEOAL), 4:30 p.m.
Trimble, Buffalo, Point Pleasant at
South Gallia, 4:30 p.m.
River Valley, Wellston at Meigs,
4:30 p.m.
Wellston at Meigs (girls), Eastern
(girls), 4 p.m.
Wahama at Federal Hocking,
Belpre, 4:30 p.m.
Friday, September 9
Football
Belpre at Southern, 7:30 p.m.
Wahama at Eastern, 7:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Trimble, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley at Meigs, 7:30 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Wellston,
7:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville,
7:30 p.m.
Hannan at Green, 7:30 p.m.
Soccer
Teays Valley at Ohio Valley
Christian, 5 p.m.
Volleyball
Teays Valley at Ohio Valley
Christian, 6 p.m.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Lady Eagles soar past South Gallia
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — The Eastern Lady
Eagles defeated South
Gallia in the home opener
at Eastern High School on
Tuesday evening.
The Lady Eagles (5-0, 20 TVC Hocking) won by
scores of 25-13, 25-15, and
25-20.
In the first set, Eastern
jumped out to the 5-0 lead
on the serve of Brenna
Holter, before the Lady
Rebels scored their first
points. The Lady Eagles
continued to lead in the
first set, taking a 12-3 lead
on serves by Baylee
Collins. Eastern and the
Lady Rebels traded points
for the next few serves,
with Breanna Hayman
serving the final four
points to give Eastern the
25-13 win. Holter had five
points in the first set to lead
all scorers.
In game two, the Lady
Eagles once again scored

first. Eastern stretched the
lead to three (7-4) after
consecutive points on the
serve of Hayman. Ally
Hendrix served three
straight points, followed by
four consecutive points by
Baylee Collins to give the
Lady Eagles a 20-11
advantage. Eastern won
game two by a 25-15 score.
Collins paced the Lady
Eagles with four points in
the set.
The Lady Eagles had
first serve to open the third
set, but South Gallia took
the 1-0 lead – their first of
the match. The Lady
Eagles stretched out a 1710 lead — the largest of the
set — before South Gallia
pulled back to within three.
The Lady Eagles earned
the 25-20 win in the final
set. Ally Hendrix led the
Lady Eagles in the third set
with four points.
Collins had 11 points
(one ace) to lead the Lady
Eagles, followed by
Hendrix with nine (one
ace), Hayman with seven

and Jamie Swatzel (one
ace), Holter and Brooke
Johnson each added five
points.
For the Lady Rebels,
Chrissy Howell had three
points, Lauren Saunders,
Meghan
Caldwell,
Chandra Canaday, and Tori
Duncan each had two
points and Jasmyne
Johnson added one point.
Caldwell had one ace for
South Gallia.
Jamie Swatzel led the net
attack for the Green and
White with 10 kills. Jordan
Parker had eight kills,
Holter added six kills,
Maddie Rigsby had five
kills, Kiki Osborne and
Erin Swatzel each added
three kills and Johnson had
one kill.
Rigsby led the team in
blocks with seven, Parker
added three and Holter,
Erin Swatzel and Jamie
Swatzel had one block
each.
Caldwell led the Lady
Rebels with six kills, followed by Jasmyne Johnson

Sarah Hawley/photo

Eastern’s Jamie Swatzel (2) spikes the ball over the outstretched
arms of South Gallia's Meghan Caldwell as Eastern players (from
left) Maddie Rigsby, Brooke Johnson, and Brenna Holter prepare
to hit the return.

with four kills, Ellie Bostic
with two kills and Merry,
Canaday and Duncan with
one kill each.
Caldwell also led the
team in blocks with eight,
Bostic and Canaday added
four each and Merry had
two blocks.
Duncan had several

SG golfers
net quad
win at
Riverside

Lady Cats
split trimatch

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TEAYS
VALLEY,
W.Va. — The Hannan
volleyball team (1-3)
earned its first win of the
season on Tuesday
evening during a trimatch at Teays Valley
Christian School.
In the opening match,
the Lady Cats defeated
Regional Christian by
scores of 25-17 and
25-18.
Megan Hocker led
Hannan with 12 points
(four aces) in the match,
followed by Samantha
Blain with 10 points
(three aces). Tiffany
Adkins and Jazi Casto
(one ace) each added
eight points and Katie
Ellis had five points,
while Jasmine Wiese and
Heather Ellis each had
three points (one ace).
Casto led the team in
digs with 10, Wiese,
Heather Ellis, Blain and
Katie Ellis added five
digs each and Hocker had
two digs. Katie Ellis led
the team in sets with 15
and Hocker added 12.
Katie Ellis and Adkins
each had one kill in the
win. Blain paced the
team in spikes with 12,
Adkins had six, Katie
Ellis had four spikes,
Heather Ellis had two
spikes and Hocker had
one spike.
In the second match,
the Lady Cats fell to
Teays Valley Christian
by scores of 25-10 and
25-11.
Blain led the team with
six points in the match.
Katie Ellis added five
points, Wiese had four
points, and Casto, Adkins
and Hocker each had two
points.
Casto, Heather Ellis,
Blain,
Katie
Ellis,
Brittany Samarrco and
Hocker each had one
spike in the game, with
Katie Ellis having the
lone kill in the match.
Katie Ellis led the Lady
Cats in digs with six,
Blain added five, Adkins
and Wiese had three each,
Casto and Hocker added
two and Heather Ellis had
one. Katie Ellis had seven
sets in the match.

assists and Howell had
multiple digs to pace the
Lady Rebels.
The Lady Eagles were
90-106 passing (.849), 7584 spiking (.893), and 6776 setting (.882) in the win.
South Gallia won the JV
game in three sets, 25-15,
8-25 and 25-19.

Bryan Walters/photos

Meigs senior Cody Hanning, right, reaches the top of a hill Tuesday during the 2011 Coach’s Corner CC Invitational in
Centenary, Ohio.

Blue Angels, Dragons win Coach’s Corner Invite
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CENTENARY, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy girls and Fairland
boys came away with titles in their
respective divisions Tuesday night
during the 2011 Coach’s Corner
Cross Country Invitational held on
the campus of Gallia Academy
High School in Gallia County.
Both the Blue Angels and
Dragons repeated as team champions at the event in impressive style,
as Fairland won the boys crown by
62 points while the GAHS girls
captured the ladies title by 41
points at the 16-school competition.
Both FHS and the Angels also
had the top individual finishers in
the divisional races, as well as a
minimum of three top-five efforts
in each event.
Tanner Mattie of Fairland won
the boys race with a time of
17:03.2, while Peyton Adkins won
the girls event with a mark of
19:42.4. The senior duo won both
individual championships last year
at the inaugural event.
The Blue Angels had five top-25
finishes individually, which helped
the hosts to a winning team score of
43 points. Fairland was second
with 84 points, while Piketon
(126), Alexander (133) and Eastern
(136) rounded out the top-five team
finishes in the 12-team event.
Adkins defeated the other 101
girl competitors by 50-plus seconds, and all but one runner was
over a minute behind the senior in
the overall race. The Angels also
came away with runner-up honors
as senior McKenna Warner finished second with a time of
20:34.2.
River Valley senior Katie
Blodgett was third overall with a
time of 20:45, which was the only
other sub-21 minute effort in the
girls race. RVHS (218) shared 10th
place with Meigs (218), as neither

team had a sixth runner to break the
tie. Victoria Walker (25:21.2) paced
MHS by placing 25th overall.
The fifth-place Lady Eagles were
led by freshman Asia Michael, who
finished eighth overall with a mark
of 22:13.4. EHS, in its first season
with a team, had four top-40 efforts
overall.
Southern junior Jennifer McCoy
was also 11th overall with a time of
22:50.3. Avery Daughtery placed
90th overall for Point Pleasant with
a mark of 33:42.7. Both McCoy
and Daughtery were the lone representatives from their respective
schools.
Fairland posted a winning team
mark of 31 points in the boys competition, as the Dragons also
claimed third, fourth and fifth
places individually to go along with
Mattie’s championship. All seven
FHS runners finished in the top-26
at the 99-strong event.
Piketon was the runner-up in the
11-team field with 93 points, followed by Southern (102), Logan
(108) and Meigs (145) in the top
five.
Southern junior Kody Wolfe was
the individual runner-up with a
time of 17:24.7, only one of four
sub-18 minute efforts in the boys
race. Senior Brandon Hanning
paced the Marauders by finishing
sixth overall with a mark of
18:49.6. SHS and MHS had four
and three runners, respectively, in
the top-30 spots.
River Valley was sixth overall
with 158 points and was led by
sophomore Trent Wolfe, who finished 13th overall with a time of
19:45.7. The Raiders also had three
top-30 efforts overall.
Gallia Academy placed eighth as
a team with 200 points. Freshman
Michael Edelman led the Blue
Devils with a time of 18:57.9, good
enough for eighth overall.
Point Pleasant finished 11th with
259 points, with junior Caleb Riffle
(21:25.7) leading that charge by

Eastern freshman Asia Michael, left,
avoids a puddle Tuesday during the
2011 Coach’s Corner CC Invitational
in Centenary, Ohio.

Southern junior Kody Wolfe strains
through the tough conditions Tuesday
during the invitational.

finishing 30th overall. Eastern
freshman Brock Smith placed 37th
with a time of 21:37.3.
Complete results of the 2011
Coach’s Corner CC Invitational were provided by
TriStateRacer.com and are available online at mydailytribune.com

MASON, W.Va. — The varsity golf team from South
Gallia came to a wet Riverside
Golf Course on Tuesday and
played better than their counterparts from Wahama, Ripley and
Trimble. The contest against
Wahama was a TVC Hocking
Divison match up.
It was a close match with
South Gallia winning by 2
strokes. The final total for the
winners was 180, while
Wahama turned in a 182 in the
play 6, count 4 format. Ripley’s
final total was 187 while
Trimble posted a 216 total.
Medalist for the day and
leading scorer for South Gallia
was Gus Slone who fired a 38.
Gus was the only player to
break 40, under the difficult
conditions. David Michael also
played well for the winners
shooting a 40. Seth Jarrell and
Andy Welch posted identical
scores of 51 to give South
Gallia the winning total. Ethan
Swain’s score of 52 was not
included in the final tally.
Wahama’s match against
Trimble was also a TVC
Hocking Division contest.
Although the White Falcons
split the 2 matches, their recent
scoring struggles continued. 5
of their 6 golfers broke 50 for
the match, but the lack of an
excellent score has cost the
team a couple of close matches.
The TVC loss, their second in
the conference, could turn out
to be costly in the final standings. Morgan Nottingham was
the leading scorer for the White
Falcons posting a 44. Kevin
Back followed Morgan with a
45 while Dakota Sisk added a
46. The final score that counted
for Wahama was a 47 by
Michael MacKnight. Samuel
Gordon shot a 48 and Caroline
Thompson a 55, but their scores
were not part of the final count.
Ripley’s best score for the
day was a 44 from Jacob
Haynes. Jordan Franklin posted
a 46 with Tyler Jones added a
47 with Wes Withrow shooting
a 50 to account for the Ripley
total for the day. Justin
McKown and Taylor Casto also
played for Ripley with their
scores not added to the final.
Trimble’s
inexperienced
team was led by Michael
Everett’s 49. Colin Smith shot a
55 with both Kyle Russell and
Brayton Hazen posting 56.
Nick Smith and Jeff Andrews
added non counting scores for
the Trimble team.
Wahama is preparing for
another dual TVC Hocking
Division match against Federal
Hocking and Belpre at the
Oxbow Golf Course.

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