Putnam Standard

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November 9-10, 2012

STORM PICTURES INSIDE

HONORING OUR VETERANS PAGES 9-12

First Lady’s Festival of Songs to Feature 15 High School Choirs CHARLESTON - Fifteen high school choirs from across the state will participate in the First Lady’s Festival of Songs from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 10, in the Norman L. FaganWestVirginia State Theater at the Culture Center, State Capitol Complex in Charleston. Each of the choirs will have a 15-minute performance during the daylong event. The event is sponsored by theWestVirginia Division of Culture and History (WVDCH), West Virginia Department of Education and the Arts and the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission. Commissioner Randall ReidSmith of theWVDCH said “We are delighted to welcome these talented young performers to the Culture Center to celebrate the art of vocal music. The First Lady’s Festival of Songs is just one example of how the Division is working to promote the arts in the Mountain State.” The Festival of Songs program is free and open to the public. The performance schedule is: 10 a.m. Roane County High School Ensemble 10:15 a.m. Riverside High School Melodic Fusion 10:30 a.m. Nitro High School Showcats 10:45 a.m. Winfield High SEE CHOIRS ON PAGE 7

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Veterans honored in Putnam County

On Sunday, November 4th, Patriotism was alive at the 5th Annual Veterans Appreciation Day in Winfield. More than 50 showed up to honor those who have served and sacrificed for our great nation. Photo by Justin Waybright.

These are the men and women who have served the country. They were all recognized Nov. 4 outside the Putnam County Courthouse in Winfield. Photo by Justin Waybright.

Manchin’s Message from the Hill to the Mountains:

Honoring Our Veterans All Year Long I love a parade. And I really love a Veterans Day parade because it’s not just a joyous celebration of America’s freedom – it’s also a grateful salute to the brave men and women of who have helped to preserve that freedom. With every snap of a flag, every blast of a bugle or crack of a drum during a Veterans Day parade, I am reminded that the freedom we are celebrating has been secured and preserved by the courage and sacrifice of American patriots. And I am filled with pride in every veteran in the parade. This is the 10th consecutive year we have observed Veterans Day with our country at war. And that fact should be a solemn reminder for everyone

of our nation’s obligation to the men and women who have sacrificed and suffered for the cause of America’s security.

Not one of these courageous Americans should have to come home from war and face another fight – a fight for the

benefits, services and care they have earned as veterans. In this long war, one of the longest in our country’s history, they have served us well. We must do the same for them. The men and women of our country go to war with a noble pride, a raw courage, and a firm conviction that the power of America’s values is at least as great as the power of America’s weapons. It has been that way for every generation of Americans that has been willing to step into the line of fire for their fellow countrymen for the last 237 years, from Concord to Calais to Khe Sanh to Kabul. But rarely is it easy for these heroes to come home from war – even in victory, as they always SEE VETERANS ON PAGE 7

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