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                  <text>Gallia store
celebrates
new location.

Mostly sunny.
High of 86.
Low near 62.

District
baseball
teams.

BUSINESS s 3A

WEATHER s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 85, Volume 69

Meigs Local
Board makes
hires for ‘15-‘16
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Meigs Local Board on Tuesday was all about hiring for both sports and
academics.
For varsity football, board members approved
Cassady Willford, Rick Olexa and Bryan Swan
as assistant varsity football coaches, and
approved Tyler Brothers and Danny Davis as
volunteer varsity football coaches.
For Meigs Middle School football, the board
approved Dan Thomas and Scott Powell as
eighth-grade coaches, and Jeff McElroy as the
seventh-grade coach.
Edmond Fry was approved as the the head
varsity boys basketball coach, while Cassady
Willford, who was also approved for football,
was also approved as the head varsity wrestling
coach. For volleyball, the board also hired LeeAnn King as the junior varsity volleyball coach,
Amanda Newsome as the eighth-grade volleyball coach, and Chrissy Musser as the seventhgrade volleyball coach.
The following were hired in supplemental
positions for the 2015-16 school year: Denise
Arnold will work with the high school yearbook
and newspaper; Lena Yoacham will work with
the middle school yearbook; Lisa Froehlich
will work with the middle school newspaper;
Linda Riggs will work as a middle school cheer
advisor; Amy Perrin will serve as the drama
coach; Janel Kennedy will serve as the freshman class advisor; Joshua Eddy will serve as
the sophomore class advisor; Abby Harris and
Cara Knight will be co-junior class advisors;
Judy McCarthy will serve as the senior class
advisor; Donna Wolfe will serve as the high
school student council advisor; Jackie Ortman
will serve as the National Honor Society advisor; Scott Brinker will serve as the webmaster;
Sarah Lee will serve as the TAG coordinator;
Jennifer Henson will serve as the lead mentor/
coordinator; Toney Dingess will serve as band
director; Nicholas Michael will serve as the
assistant band director; and Dan Thomas will
serve as the archery coordinator.
The board accepted the resignation and rehiring of Rick Blaettner, assistant principal at
Meigs High School. Blaettner resigned and was
re-hired to initiate earned retirement benefits.
The board also accepted the resignation of
Jennifer Riffle, a teacher at Meigs Elementary,
and the resignation of Nolan Yates, a teacher at
Meigs Intermediate School. Both resignations
will go into effect Aug. 21.
J. Scott Cleland was hired as an intervention
specialist at Meigs Middle School, Mackenzie
Brink was hired as a language arts teacher
at Meigs Middle School, Marlene Pierce was
hired as a substitute bus driver, and Bobbi
Moleski and Timothy Norris were both hired
as substitute custodians.
Josh Eddy, Teresa Carr, Dreama EnglishSmith, Christine Miceli and Meghan Perry
were all hired as summer tutors for handicapped students for up to 20 hours a week at
$20 an hour.
The proposed 2015-2016 school year calendar was approved, and the board also voted to
move the June 23 board meeting to June 30.
The next board meeting will be 7 p.m. June 9.

Gas usage tops Johnson’s talk
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Liquid
and natural gas usage was
the main topic of conversation Wednesday during
Congressman Bill Johnson’s visit to Pomeroy.
Locally, Johnson said
that shale counties —
those areas that produce
natural gas from Utica
Shale — north of Meigs
are booming when it
comes to this production.
“You can’t go up and
down the Ohio River
in those shale counties
(where) you don’t see construction going on,” he said.
In particular, Johnson discussed Belmont
County, Ohio, which was
named in April as one of
the potential places for a
cracker plant. “Cracking”
refers to the ethane molecules that are extracted
from Utica Shale and
then “cracked,” or scientiﬁcally engineered,
to become ethylene,
Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel which is part of polyethMike Parks, local membership representative for the National Federation of Independent Businesses, ylene. Johnson said this
listens as Congressman Bill Johnson discusses topics a sit-down talk Wednesday afternoon at
Farmers Bank. Topics included FEMA, liquid and natural gas and Utica Shale.

Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
of the American Legion,
Middleport, conducted
tributes on Memorial Day
at various area cemeteries
(Middleport-Riverview,
Bradford, Middleport Hill,
Addison, Cheshire Gravel
Hill, Middleport Gravel Hill,
Howell Hill, and Burlingham)
as well as the Stewart/
Bennett Park and the
Middleport Levee, where a
wreath was tossed into the
Ohio River. Pictured at right
is 3-year-old Owen Frazier,
who is attending his first
Memorial Day Observance
with Post members tribute.
Courtesy photos

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Business: 3A
Opinion: 4A
Weather: 6A
— SPORTS
Softball: 1B
Baseball: 1B
Schedule: 1B

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook or twitter to
share your thoughts.

See TALK | 4A

Middleport honors Memorial Day

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

— FEATURES
Television: 6A
Classified: 3-4B
Comics: 5B

Thursday, May 28, 2015 s 50¢

TOP RIGHT, Jim Bradbury plays “Taps” as Bob Byer salutes. ABOVE, 21-gun salute.
AT RIGHT, Roscoe Wise and Jacky Coughenour present flags.

�LOCAL/NATION

2A Thursday, May 28, 2015

OBITUARY

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

ROBERT MANNING HYSELL
SYRACUSE — Robert
(Bob) Manning Hysell,
longtime resident of
Syracuse, passed away
Tuesday, May 26, 2015,
at Brookdale Skilled Nursing in Greenville, S.C.,
following a brief illness.
He was born Dec. 3,
1926, in Pomeroy, to
the late Charles and Ina
Hysell. Bob worked and
retired from Kaiser Aluminum. He was a World
War II veteran and also a
longtime member of the
American Legion.
He is survived by his
wife of 65 years, Julia;
son Charles Robert and
Juanita Hysell; daughter
Rhonda and Max Folmer;
grandchildren Eric Folmer and Pamela Jett, and
Michael, Jason and Stephen Hysell; seven great-

grandchildren; brothers
William Hysell and Gene
Mills; and several nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded in
death by his parents;
stepmother Oma; brother
Charles Hysell; and sister
Dorothy Badgley.
Graveside services will
be 9:30 a.m. Saturday,
May 30, 2015, at Beech
Grove Cemetery. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Friday, May 29, 2015, at the
funeral home in Pomeroy
for family and friends.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
memorial donations may
be made to the Alzheimer’s Association at www.
alz.org.
Online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Local Briefs will only
list event information that is free and open to the
public.

Free Summer Meals for Kids
MEIGS COUNTY — This summer, the Southeast
Ohio Food Bank and Kitchen, a division of Hocking
Athens Perry Community Action, will be operating
an Innovative Summer Feeding Program. The program will provide a weekly box of shelf-stable meals,
for free, during the summer to participating children
in grades K-6. Each participating child will receive
a box of shelf stable food for the week. Each eligible
family will also receive fresh produce as available,
for free. Food boxes will be distributed once a week,
during the summer months when school is not in
session. Meal pick-up date and location will be designated upon approval. To enroll your child, call Asti
Payne at 740-385-6813 ext. 2212.

Meigs United Methodist
Scholarship Apps Available
MEIGS COUNTY — Applications for the Meigs
United Methodist Cooperative Parish Scholarship
are available at participating churches in the Meigs
area. Applicants must meet eligibility requirements,

including attendance at a participating church that
is afﬁliated with the MCP. The church that is participating must have made their current year’s donation
to the scholarship endowment by May 29. Applicants must complete the written application, be at
least a second-year college student, have a minimum
2.5 grade point average and be a full time student.
For more information, call the Meigs United Methodist Co-op at 740-992-7400.

Sixth annual RT 143 Yard
Sale to be held May 30
OHIO VALLEY — The sixth annual Route 143
yard sale will be 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 30. The event
will feature 21 miles of fun and treasures from State
Route 7 in Pomeroy to State Route 50 near Albany.
Scipio Volunteer Fire Department in Harrisonville
will have a pancake breakfast and hot dogs later in
the day. Columbia Township Volunteer Fire Department will also have food. If you don’t live on State
Route 143 and know someone who does, you can
rent space at each ﬁre department to sell goodies.
Contact numbers for ﬁre departments are: Columbia
— Rexie Cheadle at 740-591-6086; and Scipio —
Dan or Rhea Lantz at 740-742-2819. For more information and more spaces to rent, call Dave or Paula
Carr at 740-742-4002.

DEATH NOTICES
BECKLEY
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Jeannie Lou Beckley, 73,
of Huntington, passed away Monday, May 25, 2015,
at Huntington Health &amp; Rehabilitation Center, Huntington.
Funeral service will be 11 a.m. Friday, May 29,
2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Visitation will be 10-11 a.m. Friday, May
29, 2015, at the funeral home.
YOHO
GALLIPOLIS — Lynn Moore Yoho, 57, died
Wednesday, May 27, 2015, at Ohio State University’s
James Cancer Center.
Arrangements are pending. Willis Funeral Home is
assisting the family.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155

Confinement of chimps akin to slavery
By Jake Pearson

Christopher Coulston, an assistant state attorney general representing the university, argued that
NEW YORK — A lawyer seek- the case was meritless on proceing to free two chimpanzees from dural grounds because the venue
a state university told a judge
was improper and because grantWednesday that their conﬁneing the chimps personhood would
ment for research purposes is
create a slippery slope regarding
akin to slavery, the involuntary
the rights of other animals.
detention of people with mental
Much of the proceeding focused
illnesses and imprisonment.
on centuries-old legal principles
Steven Wise, an attorney with
including the social contract, the
the Nonhuman Rights Project,
writ of habeas corpus and the
told Manhattan Supreme Court
equal protection of laws.
Judge Barbara Jaffe in a nearly
Wise repeatedly cited legal
two-hour hearing that Hercules
decisions
that granted the writ
and Leo are “autonomous and
of
habeas
corpus to groups hisself-determining beings” who
torically
denied
it — including to
should be granted a writ of
Native
Americans
and blacks durhabeas corpus and be moved from
ing
the
1800s.
Stony Brook University on Long
Coulston said that it was
Island to a sanctuary in Florida.
improper
for a court to decide
“They’re essentially in solitary
whether
the
animals are entitled
conﬁnement,” Wise told the
to
a
writ
of
habeas
corpus and
judge before a crowd of about 100
people packed into the Manhattan that doing so would be unprecedented, telling Jaffe it is up to the
courthouse’s ceremonial courtroom. “This is what we do to the legislature to deﬁne personhood
in this case.
worst human criminal.”
“The reality is these are funThe 8-year-old chimps are used
damentally different species,”
for locomotion studies at Stony
he said. “There’s simply no precBrook.

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edent anywhere of an animal getting the same rights as a human.”
He also argued that removing
the chimps from Stony Brook and
sending them to an island sanctuary is essentially trading one type
of conﬁnement for another, further complicating the law.
“They have no ability to partake
in human society, the society that
has developed these rights,” he
said.
Wise pointed to a hundred
pages of afﬁdavits by legal and
scientiﬁc experts that he says support his claim that chimpanzees
are cognitively advanced beings
that — not unlike elephants, dolphins, bonobos and orangutans
— should be granted personhood
status under the law in cases of
conﬁnement.
The rights project has ﬁled
similar cases before. In October,
an attorney with the group argued
before a state appeals court over
Tommy, a 26-year-old chimp in
upstate Fulton County. The court
ruled against the group.
Two other cases are pending in
state court.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 28, 2015 3A

Forth’s Foods, pharmacy
form partnership
Staff Report

Courtesy photos

Treasure Cove ribbon-cutting participants include, from left, Jordan Rardin, Missy Rardin, Dinah
Harman, Michelle Miller (Gallia chamber executive director), Jamesetta Walker (vendor), Tara
Stumbo (employee), owners Wade and Lisa Carroll, Joseph Caldwell, Eddie Eurell, Nathan Eurell,
Tammi Brabham (CIC immediate past president), Jennifer Walker (chamber associate director),
City Commissioner Tony Gallagher, Josh Simmons (chamber board vice president) and Tom Kessel.

The Treasure Cove
celebrates new location
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Chamber
of Commerce ofﬁcially
welcomed one of its newest
members during a ribboncutting celebration at their
new location.
“We are excited to
welcome The Treasure
Cove to the membership,”
chamber Executive Director
Michelle Miller said. “We
are working very hard to
add programs that beneﬁt
all of our members, as well
as the business community,
as a whole.”
Like many small businesses, owner Lisa Carroll
said The Treasure Cove
was really opened out of
necessity. Having undergone surgeries that made it
difﬁcult for her to work for
someone else, Carroll began
holding regular yard sales
at her home. Eventually, she
opened a second-hand store
in Gallipolis and held a contest to name her store. Out
of the submissions, Carroll
picked The Treasure Cove.
“I wanted this store to be
a little, quaint, unique place,
where you never knew what
you were going to ﬁnd and
it’s just full of treasures,”
Carroll said.
The original store closed
in 2007, but on Nov. 1,
2012, Carroll reopened
in Spring Valley, working
to grow her store into a
unique location that doesn’t
ﬁt in to any mold.
While The Treasure Cove
still offers second-hand
items for sale, she expanded
the store in 2013 to include
a variety of vendors, ranging from handmade furniture to soaps.
“I really don’t know what
label to put on The Treasure Cove,” Carroll said.
In February, The Treasure Cove moved just up

Owner Wade Carroll and a few of The Treasure Cove’s vendors
and staff operate the food tent

a variety of other local nonproﬁt organizations and has
received assistance from
local businesses to make
their programs a success.
“We are only limited by
how much the public is willing to help,” Carroll. “If we
don’t have something on
hand, then we reach out to
the public.”
As with any nonproﬁt,
Carroll said they are in need
of volunteers. God’s Hands
at Work meets at The Treasure Cove every second
Monday at 7 p.m.
For more information
about The Treasure Cove or
God’s Hands at Work, call
(740) 446-6900 or visit them
at their new location, 1378
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.

the street to a new location
that allows them to house
all their items in one building.
While Carroll is excited
about the success of her
business so far, one thing
has come out of the business that is close to Carroll’s heart. The nonproﬁt
organization, God’s Hands at
Work, ﬁrst started with several house ﬁres in the area.
“Again, it was born out
of necessity.” Carroll said.
“We started taking donations and acted as a drop off
point to assist the families.
Then, community members
started coming out of the
woodwork, saying they
wanted to help.”
Carroll and other volunteers created God’s Hands
at Work and conducted a
fundraiser to ﬁle their nonproﬁt paperwork. They
were successful in gaining
their 501 (c) 3 status and
began actively collecting
clothing, household items,
personal hygiene items and
other necessities for families in need.
They also expanded
their mission to include
non-emergency medical transportation, back
to school supplies and a
Princess Prom program.
Since their inception, God’s
Hands at Work has assisted

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
— FoodFair customers will
soon have a convenient way
to pick up prescriptions while
they shop.
Tim Forth, of Forth’s
Foods, and Lynne Fruth, of
Fruth Pharmacy, have formed
a new partnership that will
bring Fruth Pharmacy inside
two FoodFair locations this
summer.
“The Fruth family and the
Forth family have a business
relationship that started with
founders Jacks Fruth and
Charlie Forth years ago. I am
pleased to be expanding on
that relationship with Forth
Foods through the next generation,” Lynne Fruth said.
In mid-June, Fruth Pharmacy will take over the
existing pharmacy located
inside Powell’s Food Fair in
Pomeroy, Ohio. Later in midJuly, Fruth will open a new
pharmacy in the Grayson,
Ky., Food Fair.
Opening the location in
Grayson will expand the
Fruth Pharmacy chain into a
new state.
The partnership between
Forth Foods and Fruth Pharmacy will bring great convenience to customers, Lynne
Fruth said. While shopping
for groceries, customers can
drop off prescriptions and
have them ﬁlled during their
shopping time.
Although the Fruth locations in FoodFair will be
reduced in size, customers
will still get to experience
Fruth Pharmacy’s full service
pharmacy. Fruth Pharmacy
offers prescription counseling, prescription savings
card, prescription rewards
club, immunizations, medication ﬂavorings for children
and more.
Customers will also be
able to take advantage of the
Fruth Mobile App. The app
can be downloaded from the
Apple, Android or Windows
app stores for free. Once
the app is installed and the
customer has registered,
prescription ordering is easy.
Customers can request reﬁlls,

Courtesy photo

Pictured is the current pharmacy inside Powell’s FoodFair. Fruth
Pharmacy will be taking over the old pharmacy by mid-July.

keep track of medications,
and receive text alerts when
medications are ready for
pick-up. The app also has a
special built-in feature to help
keep track of family members’ medications in the event
a customer is a caregiver.
“We are looking forward
to serving the community of
Grayson and entering into
business in the state of Kentucky,” Lynne Fruth said. “We
have a unique variety of services to provide the citizens
of Grayson and the customers
of FoodFair. We pride ourselves on customer service
and taking care of entire
families. Fruth Pharmacy
wants to be ‘Your Hometown,
Family Pharmacy’.”
“We are excited to bring all
of Fruth Pharmacy’s services
to our grocery stores for
our customers. We wanted

to give them a convenient
option for their medications
while they shop. We are
looking forward to this new
partnership with Fruth,” Tim
Forth stated.
Pharmacy hours at both
FoodFair locations will be
9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday
through Friday, and 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. Saturdays beginning in
July. Grand Opening celebrations are also being planned.
As a way to meet the community, customers coming
in to speak with a Fruth
Pharmacist will be entered
into a drawing for a chance to
win a $25 FoodFair Gift Card
during Grand Opening week.
Watch for more details.
The FoodFair locations will
increase the Fruth Pharmacy
chain to 28 stores in Ohio,
West Virginia and Kentucky.

60585822

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�LOCAL

4A Thursday, May 28, 2015

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
THURSDAY, MAY 28

Party will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
the Carlton School in Syracuse.
POMEROY — Alpha Iota
Masters will meet at 11:30 a.m. Everyone is welcome to attend.
at the home of Linda Bates on
FRIDAY, MAY 29
Flatwoods Road.
MARIETTA — The Regional
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of
the Meigs County Republican
Advisory Council for the Area

Talk
From Page 1A

potential new Belmont
plant, which would be a
$5 billion project over ﬁve
years, would create 10,000
temporary construction
jobs and 1,000 permanent
jobs once construction is
complete.
“That’s just the tip of the
iceberg,” he said. “Once
ethylene comes out of
the plant, manufacturers
are going to want to park
close to where the plant is.
There are lots of big things

happening, it’s getting
bigger and bigger every
day. It seems like every
week I ﬁnd out about new
projects. There’s so much
activity it’s almost hard to
keep track of it — and it’s
coming in this direction.”
While Johnson said
there’s not a lot of shale
in Meigs County, there
will still be an overﬂow
of opportunities that will
reach the area, and that
the liquid and natural gas
market has the potential to
create 45,000 jobs in the
United States alone.
Johnson also spoke
about liquid and natural

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SATURDAY, MAY 30

CHESTER —The Commu-

gas usage, citing his recent
international trip to the
European countries of
Portugal, Belgium, Ukraine
and Germany.
“They’re our friends and
allies, and they are begging for America to lead
politically and economically
on the liquid/natural gas
front,” he said.
Johnson also discussed
Russia’s monopoly on
Ukraine’s energy resources
and said that currently
there’s not yet a global market for liquid and natural
gas.
“Our producers sit on the
sidelines and jobs don’t get
created,” he said. “We need
a time clock on the Department of Energy to make a
decision on some 33 liquid
natural gas permits that are
languishing, so it is a big
deal.”
Johnson is involved
with the LNG Permitting
Certainty and Transparency Act, which will call on
the Department of Energy

nity Center in Chester (the
old elementary school) will
hold a “Gospel Sing” from
2-8 p.m. Featured artists will
be John and Velma Dolly,
Everette Grant, Mike Cadle,
Brian and Family Connec-

to give a certain time as
to when they expect to
approve or deny applications regarding natural
gas. Johnson said the bill is
currently in the Senate, and
he hopes to see it on President Obama’s desk before
the August Congressional
break.
During a question-andanswer session, Johnson
also discussed funding
highway bills, and how
Washington, D.C., is
exploring that issue. He
also shared how he helped
pass legislation to extend
the authorization of the
Highway Trust Fund,
which was set to expire
May 31 but will now expire
July 31, allowing ofﬁcials to
have more time to come up
with a solution for the fund
so the country can move
on with infrastructure and
highway projects.
Mike Hendrickson, Middleport’s building inspector
and ﬂoodplain administrator, shared with Johnson

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his frustration over Federal
Emergency Management
Agency regulations regarding the “50 percent rule.”
According to Hendrickson,
if one purchases or already
owns a building, and takes
the improved value of only
the structure, FEMA limits that person to put 50
percent of that cost back
into the building. Similarly,
residents in the area who
own property must make
sure their property is above
the base ﬂood elevation,
and business owners suffer
because businesses in the
area require ﬂood gates,
which are incredibly expensive.
“After that, you can
put whatever you want
into your structure, but
you’re only allowed to put
50 percent back into that
structure,” Hendrickson
said. “In Middleport, our
buildings just aren’t up to
that. It devastates this area.
It really does. I have to take
a businessman to court
just because he wants to
improve his business.”
Johnson said that a few
years ago, FEMA wanted
to redraw the ﬂoodplain
maps and Congress told
FEMA to ﬁrst perform an
economic analysis, which
they didn’t do. Now, certain
locations are in a ﬂoodplain that were not before.
This includes Pomeroy
and Marietta, who were

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both hit hard by rising
ﬂood insurance premiums.
However, thanks to the
Biggert-Waters Flood Insurance Reform Act of 2012,
which extends the National
Flood Insurance, it expires
in 2016.
“There’s no certainty
right now,” Johnson said.
He also mentioned the
EPA being overreaching
and said that nearly $2
trillion comes out of the
United States economy
every year in the form of
compliance with federal
regulations. He compared
it to a person paying to get
into a movie theatre without a working screen or any
snacks available.
In particular, Johnson
critiqued the EPA’s coal/
ﬁre regulations that are
attempting to get both “off
the grid” with nothing to
replace the two in terms of
energy.
“We have made ourselves
so ‘business unfriendly’ it’s
not even funny,” he said.
On his trip, Johnson
observed that many European countries are making
a return to coal because
their citizens are no longer
willing to pay the high
price for alternative energy.
But, Johnson said he does
believe the answer for
affordable alternative fuels
is out there.
“I think we will ﬁgure
that out,” he said. “Faith
motivates everything that
I do. God’s a lot bigger
than we are He’s so big
and we’re so small, I think
anything we can imagine
we can do, someday. We’ll
crack that nut, but we’re
not there yet.”
Tim King, of King Hardware in Middleport, asked
Johnson how local residents can show their displeasure regarding FEMA
changes and regulations.
Johnson said letters can be
written to congressional
members, including himself, as well as the White
House, since FEMA and
the EPA are both under the
U.S. executive branch.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155.

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�E ditorial
5A Thursday, May 28, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

The historical
relations between
Iran and America
By Jack Stevenson
Guest Columnist

At the beginning of the 20th century, the British
were busy converting their steam navy to engines
powered by petroleum. Oil had been discovered in
Iran, and the British government bought the right
to exploit the oil ﬁelds.
They called their operation the Anglo-Iranian
Oil Co. The next few decades saw massive industrial development, and two world wars. There
was a fantastic increase in the use of petroleum to
power vehicles, airplanes, ships and other machinery. Iranian petroleum allowed the British to
defend their empire. Unfortunately, they neglected
to pay fair royalties to the Iranians for the oil. The
Iranians became increasingly unhappy with that
situation.
The British managed their Iranian enterprise
with the cooperation of a weak monarch, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, who would eventually
become known to the United States as the Shah
of Iran. Iranian citizens promoted a very popular democratic leader who had been educated in
Europe — Mohammad Mossadegh. After World
War II, Mossadegh and followers nationalized the
Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and expelled the British.
The British, recovering from prolonged war,
nationalized their own coal and steel industries.
But when Iran’s leader, Mossadegh, nationalized
Iranian petroleum, the British were incensed. The
British considered going to war against Iran, but
they were rebuffed by U.S. President Harry Truman. So, the British asked Truman to grant U.S.
assistance in an overthrow of the democratically
elected Iranian government. Truman declined.
President Eisenhower was elected in 1952. He
had been a ﬁrst-hand witness to the carnage of
industrial war. That caused him to consider clandestine operations as an alternative to war. At the
time, not much thought was given to the possible
consequences of clandestine operations. Two of
Eisenhower’s appointees, the Dulles brothers,
were fervently anti-communist.
Foster Dulles became secretary of state, and
Allen Dulles directed the Central Intelligence
Agency. The British seized the opportunity to
again present their case for recovery of their oil
wealth, but this time they presented the scheme as
an anti-communist operation. Cold war fear was a
motivating factor in that era, and the U.S. agreed
to the British request. The U.S. government
assigned the task of overthrowing the Iranian government to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.
America’s CIA station chief in Iran was so
opposed to the overthrow idea that he had to be
removed. Our new man in Iran was Kermit Roosevelt, grandson of former U.S. President “Teddy”
Roosevelt. He managed a successful coup in 1953
and removed the Mossedegh government. The
U.S. government kept the CIA role secret from
Americans, but the Iranians knew what happened,
and they were angry and dismayed because the
one Western country they admired had betrayed
them.
The U.S. embellished the power of the Shah
of Iran as a replacement for the Mossedegh government. The Shah became a ruthless tyrant,
developed a brutal secret service, the Savak, and
eliminated any and all political competition. He
used Iranian revenue to purchase fancy military
hardware from the U.S., honed his anti-communist
credentials, and allowed his family to become
wealthy while most Iranians suffered. In 1979, the
Iranians sent the Shah into exile.
The next inﬂuence in Iranian governance was
not foreign, royal, democratic, or military; it
was religious. The Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
returned to Iran from years of exile, demonized
America, and imposed a religious orientation in
Iranian government. Subsequently, Khomeini’s followers seized the American Embassy and held the
embassy employees hostage for almost 15 months.
Their eventual release was obtained, in part, by
the sale of U.S. military weapons to Iran. The U.S.
secretly and unlawfully transferred the funds from
that transaction to Nicaraguan terrorists.
In the 1980s, Iran and Iraq were at war. The
U.S. provided assistance to Iraq’s Saddam Hussein. More recently, the U.S. spiked the computers
at Iran’s nuclear generating station. We continue
to embargo Iran.
Currently, the U.S. is attempting to negotiate
a sensitive agreement with Iran that would allow
that country to use nuclear power to generate
electricity but not to develop nuclear weapons.
Some American politicians say that Iran cannot be
trusted.
That may be true. It is equally difﬁcult to imagine any Iranian would trust the United States.
The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company changed its
name to British Petroleum, the same BP that gave
us a major oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.
Jack Stevenson served two years in Vietnam as an infantry officer,
retired from military service, and worked three years as a U.S. Civil
Service employee. He also worked in Egypt as an employee of the
former Radio Corporation of America. He occassionally writes about
world affairs.

THEIR VIEW

Combatting prescription drug abuse
struggling with addiction
Drug overdoses are on
and, for the ﬁrst time, allow
the rise across Ohio.
certain nurse practitioners
In 2013, we saw a record
and physician assistants to
2,110 fatal overdoses in
provide supervised, medicaour state. Opioid abuse
tion-assisted treatment for
in particular has wreaked
patients.
havoc across Ohio, devWe must ensure that there
astating thousands of
Sherrod
are
a variety of treatment
families. When it’s easier
Brown
options
available for those
for Americans to access
Contributing
who need help battling addicopioids than it is for them Columnist
tion, including effective medaccess help to treat their
ication-assisted treatment.
addiction, we have a seriBy allowing doctors to treat more
ous problem.
patients and utilize medicationThat’s why I worked across the
assisted treatment in combination
aisle this week to introduce The
Recovery Enhancement for Addic- with behavioral health support, we
tion Treatment Act (TREAT Act), can change the course for treating
opioid addiction for the better.
which would allow health care
Opioid addiction is a chronic
providers to treat larger numbers
disease that, when left untreated,
of patients struggling with addicplaces a large burden on our health
tion to opioids like painkillers and
care system. Deaths from opioid
heroin.
overdoses in the United States
Current law limits the number
have increased by more than ﬁve
of patients a health care provider
times since 1980. Each year, about
can treat for opioid abuse prob475,000 emergency room visits
lems using medication-assisted
are attributable to the misuse and
treatment programs. This has left
abuse of opioid pain killers across
patients to languish on waiting
the U.S.
lists for critical treatment.
We also need to do more to
My bill would update U.S. law
get drugs out of wrongful hands.
to enable qualiﬁed physicians to
Too many Ohioans can easily get
treat larger numbers of patients

prescription drugs from the family
medicine cabinet or from family
and friends who no longer use the
medicines they were legally prescribed.
That’s why last week I, along
with several of my Senate colleagues, sent a letter to Attorney
General Loretta Lynch urging her
to reinstate the Drug Enforcement
Administration’s National Drug
Take-Back Days. This program has
successfully provided Americans
with the opportunity to safely turn
over unwanted, unneeded, and
expired medications so they don’t
end up in the hands of people who
may abuse them.
Last September’s Take-Back Day
in Ohio featured 194 sites available
for safe drug disposal throughout
the state, and was a tremendous
success.
Abuse of prescription drugs
— especially painkillers — can
devastate communities. We can
and must do more to keep these
medications out of the hands of
those who abuse them, and to get
Ohioans dealing with addiction
the help that they need.
U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown represents Ohio in the
U.S. Senate in Washington, D.C.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
May 28, the 148th day of
2015. There are 217 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On May 28, 1945, the
novel “Brideshead Revisited” by Evelyn Waugh
was published in London
by Chapman &amp; Hall.
On this date:
In 1533, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer, declared the
marriage of England’s
King Henry VIII to Anne
Boleyn valid.
In 1892, the Sierra
Club was organized in
San Francisco.
In 1912, the Senate
Commerce Committee
issued its report on the
Titanic disaster that
cited a “state of absolute unpreparedness,”
improperly tested safety
equipment and an “indifference to danger” as
some of the causes of an
“unnecessary tragedy.”
In 1929, the ﬁrst allcolor talking picture, “On
with the Show!”, produced by Warner Bros.,
opened in New York.
In 1934, the Dionne
quintuplets — Annette,

Cecile, Emilie, Marie and
Yvonne — were born
to Elzire Dionne at the
family farm in Ontario,
Canada.
In 1937, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
pushed a button in
Washington signaling
that vehicular trafﬁc
could begin crossing the
just-opened Golden Gate
Bridge in California.
Neville Chamberlain
became prime minister
of Britain.
In 1940, during World
War II, the Belgian army
surrendered to invading
German forces.
In 1959, the U.S. Army
launched Able, a rhesus
monkey, and Baker, a
squirrel monkey, aboard
a Jupiter missile for a
suborbital ﬂight which
both primates survived.
In 1961, Amnesty
International had its
beginnings with the
publication of an article
in the British newspaper
The Observer, “The Forgotten Prisoners.”
In 1977, 165 people
were killed when ﬁre
raced through the Beverly Hills Supper Club in
Southgate, Ky.

Five years ago: President Barack Obama visited Grand Isle, La., where
he personally confronted
the spreading damage
wrought by the crude
gushing into the Gulf
of Mexico from the BP
blowout — and the bitter anger rising onshore.
Suspected Islamist
militants attacked two
mosques packed with
hundreds of worshippers
from a minority sect in
eastern Pakistan; at least
93 people were killed and
dozens wounded. Gary
Coleman, the former
child star of the 1970s
TV sitcom “Diff’rent
Strokes,” died at Utah
Valley Regional Medical
Center in Provo two days
after suffering a brain
hemorrhage; he was 42.
Today’s Birthdays:
Rockabilly singer-musician Sonny Burgess is
86. Actress Carroll Baker
is 84. Producer-director
Irwin Winkler is 84.
Actor John Karlen is 82.
Basketball Hall-of-Famer
Jerry West is 77. Actress
Beth Howland is 74.
Former New York City
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
is 71. Singer Gladys

Knight is 71. Actressdirector Sondra Locke is
71. Singer Billy Vera is
71. Singer John Fogerty
is 70. Country musician
Jerry Douglas (Alison
Krauss and Union Station) is 59. Actor Louis
Mustillo is 57. U.S. Rep.
Mark Sanford, R-S.C.., is
55. Actor Brandon Cruz
(TV: “The Courtship of
Eddie’s Father”) is 53.
Country singer Phil Vassar is 51. Actress Christa
Miller is 51. Singer-musician Chris Ballew (Presidents of the USA) is 50.
Rapper Chubb Rock is
47. Singer Kylie Minogue
is 47. Actor Justin Kirk
is 46. Sen. Marco Rubio,
R-Fla., is 44. Olympic
gold medal ﬁgure skater
Ekaterina Gordeeva is
44. Television personality
Elisabeth Hasselbeck is
38. Actor Jake Johnson
(TV: “New Girl”) is 37.
Actor Jesse Bradford is
36. Actress Monica Keena
is 36. Actress Alexa
Davalos is 33. Actress
Megalyn Echikunwoke
is 33. Pop singer Colbie
Caillat (kal-LAY’) is 30.
Actress Carey Mulligan
is 30. Actor Joseph Cross
is 29.

�LOCAL

6A Thursday, May 28, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Mason Co. places third in W.Va. stock market game
CHARLESTON, W.Va. —
West Virginia State Auditor
Glen Gainer capped off the
second year of his ofﬁce’s
partnership with the West
Virginia Future Business
Leaders of America-Phi Beta
Lambda by awarding four
high school business teams
as best in the state.
FBLAPBL chapters
entered their second year of
participation in the online
stock market game after
their fall leadership meeting.
Teams were formed to
invest in corporate stocks,
and students became “specialists” in individual com-

West Virginia State Auditor Glen Gainer
presents a certificate to Macy Adkins of the
Mason County FBLA.
Courtesy photo

THURSDAY EVENING
WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
(WTAP)
at Six
ABC 6 News
(WSYX)
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur

4
6
7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10

(WBNS)

11 (WVAH)
(WVPB)

12

13 (WOWK)

6

27

(LIFE)

29

(FAM)

30 (SPIKE)
31
34
35
37
38

(NICK)

39

(AMC)

40

(DISC)

(USA)
(TBS)
(CNN)
(TNT)

42

(A&amp;E)

52

(ANPL)

57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(TVL)

62

(NGEO)

(WE)
(E!)

64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67

(HIST)

68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74

(SYFY)

7:30

PM

8

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
ABC World
Judge Judy
Entertainment Tonight
News
CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
News
Fortune
Two and a
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Half Men
Theory
Theory
Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inBusiness
depth analysis of current
Report
events.
CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition

Eyewitness
News at 6
10TV News
at 6 p.m.
Two and a
Half Men
BBC World
News:
America
13 News at
6:00 p.m.

CABLE

18 (WGN)
24 (ROOT)
25 (ESPN)
26 (ESPN2)

7

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
SciGirls "Bee
Haven"

(WSAZ)

3

THURSDAY, MAY 28

6:30

PM

6:30

PM

7

Funniest Home Videos
The Dan Patrick Show (N)
SportsCenter
Around Horn Interruption
Hoarders "Terry/ Adelle"

9

9:30

PM

10

Aquarius "Everybody's Been Aquarius "The Hunter Gets
Burned" (P) (N)
Captured by the Game" (N)
Dateline NBC
Aquarius "Everybody's Been Aquarius "The Hunter Gets
Burned" (P) (N)
Captured by the Game" (N)
J. Kimmel "The President"
500 Questions The current reigning genius hopes to
continue their journey. (SF) (N)
Sean Penn, Barack Obama
Song of the Mountains
Voices Unt. Stories The
The Jewel in the Crown
"Country Classics, Sweet
personal struggles of people "An Evening at the
Potato Pie, Tone Blazers"
with mental illness.
Maharanee's"
500 Questions The current reigning genius hopes to
J. Kimmel "The President"
continue their journey. (SF) (N)
Sean Penn, Barack Obama
The Big Bang Couple "The Mom
Elementary "The Five
Mike &amp;
Theory
Ghostwriter"
Molly
Orange Pipz"
Bones "The Woman in the
Wayward Pines "Our Town, Eyewitness News at 10
Whirlpool" (N)
Our Law" (N)
Death in Paradise
Lewis "The Great and the Good"
Humphrey claims that
someone is trying to kill him.
The Big Bang Couple "The Mom
Elementary "The Five
Mike &amp;
Theory
Ghostwriter"
Molly
Orange Pipz"

8

8:30

PM

9

9:30

PM

10

6

6:30

PM

7

7:30

PM

8

8:30

PM

9

9:30

PM

10

Last Week
Draft Day ('14, Spt) Jennifer Garner, Tom Welling, Veep
Silicon
400 (HBO) Jackson: Sea Tonight With Kevin Costner. The general manager of the Cleveland
Valley
of Monsters John Oliver
Browns trades for the number one pick on Draft Day. TV14
(:15)
28 Days (2000, Drama) Elizabeth Perkins, Steve
Red 2 (2013, Action) Helen Mirren, John Malkovich,
450 (MAX) Buscemi, Sandra Bullock. A woman is ordered to serve time Bruce Willis. A team of retired C.I.A operatives reunite to
at a rehabilitation clinic after a drunken escapade. TV14
track down a missing nuclear device. TVPG
(5:20) Iverson ('12, Doc) Tom
Delivery Man (2013, Comedy) Chris Pratt, Cobie
Brad Williams: Fun Size
500 (SHOW) Brokaw, Larry Brown, Allen Smulders, Vince Vaughn. A man, who donated sperm in his
Iverson. TVMA
youth, finds out that he has fathered 533 children. TVPG

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

66°

80°

80°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

82°
64°
78°
56°
93° in 1918
36° in 1907

Precipitation

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.21
0.93
4.05
20.27
17.43

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:07 a.m.
8:45 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
3:16 a.m.

Low

MOON PHASES
Last

Jun 9

New

First

SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for ﬁsh and game.

Today
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Moderate

Moderate

High

Major
8:49p
9:28p
10:08p
10:51p
11:38p
---12:57p

Minor
2:38p
3:17p
3:57p
4:39p
5:25p
6:16p
7:10p

WEATHER HISTORY
A tornado 100 yards wide caused
$100,000 damage at Allentown, Pa.,
on May 28, 1896. The same system
had ripped through St. Louis, Mo.,
a day earlier, killing 306 people and
producing $13 million in damage.

Some sun, a t-storm
around in the p.m.

Partly sunny and
warm; a p.m. t-storm

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Variable clouds with a
thunderstorm

High

Lucasville
86/63
Very High

Portsmouth
87/64

AIR QUALITY
500

Primary pollutant: Ozone
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
12.85
16.23
21.17
12.41
13.03
25.21
12.97
26.10
35.33
13.23
16.00
34.40
14.30

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.27
+0.76
-0.10
-0.09
-0.11
-0.18
-0.23
+0.70
-0.01
+0.23
+0.40
+0.20
+0.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Murray City
84/58
Belpre
86/62

Athens
84/60

St. Marys
85/61

Parkersburg
84/60

Coolville
84/61

Elizabeth
86/62

Spencer
86/63

Buffalo
87/63
Milton
87/63

Clendenin
85/58

St. Albans
87/63

Huntington
84/61

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
78/56
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
65/53
0s
-0s
-10s
T-storms
Los Angeles
Rain
77/61
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Some sun, then
increasing clouds

82°
63°
Mostly cloudy with a
t-storm possible

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
85/62

Ashland
85/63
Grayson
86/64

WEDNESDAY

79°
59°

Marietta
84/61

Wilkesville
83/58
POMEROY
Jackson
85/61
86/60
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
86/62
86/62
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
83/65
GALLIPOLIS
86/62
87/62
86/63

South Shore Greenup
85/63
86/63

38
300

Logan
84/59

McArthur
85/59

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Jun 16 Jun 24

Minor
2:16a
2:54a
3:34a
4:15a
5:00a
5:49a
6:43a

Low

TUESDAY

78°
58°

Waverly
85/64

Primary: hackberry, other
Mold: 2987

MONDAY

75°
56°

Chillicothe
85/65

Pollen: 33

SUNDAY

79°
59°

3

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Seeking a Friend for
the End of the World ('12,
Rom) Steve Carell. TV14
Penny Dreadful "Evil Spirits
in Heavenly Places"

88°
64°

Adelphi
84/59

0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme

10:30

PM

Game of Thrones

SATURDAY

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Primary: ascospores
Fri.
6:07 a.m.
8:45 p.m.
4:56 p.m.
3:47 a.m.

FRIDAY

Mostly sunny and warm today. Partly cloudy
tonight. High 86° / Low 62°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

Major
8:27a
9:06a
9:45a
10:27a
11:13a
12:03p
12:30a

10:30

PM

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC

Jun 2

AEP (NYSE) — 56.06
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.77
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 128.36
Big Lots (NYSE) — 45.30
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.69
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 60.79
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 12.29
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.340
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 45.77
Collins (NYSE) —96.68
DuPont (NYSE) — 70.78
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.86
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 27.52
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 54.97
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 66.47
Kroger (NYSE) — 74.19
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 87.28
Norfolk So (NYSE) —94.83
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.90
BBT (NYSE) —39.91
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.19
Pepsico (NYSE) — 96.38
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.10
Rockwell (NYSE) — 124.66
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 19.13
Royal Dutch Shell — 60.12
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.76
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.19
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 11.35
WesBanco (NYSE) — 32.00
Worthington (NYSE) — 27.34
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotes of transactions May 27, 2015, provided
by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Funniest Home Videos

(4:30) Percy

Full

LOCAL STOCKS

Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother
Pirates Ball
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pit./S.D. (L)
The Scripps National Spelling Bee "2015" (L)
Baseball Tonight (L)
NCAA Softball Division I Tournament World Series (L)
NCAA Studio NCAA Softball Division I Tournament (L)
Hoarders "Verna/ Joanne"
Hoarders "Anna/ Claire and Hoarders: Family Secrets
Smile "Reconstruction or
Vance"
"Live Special" (N)
Relapse?" (N)
Boy Meets
Despicable Me A criminal mastermind uses three
The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement Princess Mia has 30
orphans in his grand scheme to steal the moon. TVPG
days to find a husband before she can be crowned Queen of Genovia. TVG
World
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
(5:00)
Joe Dirt ('01,
Lip Sync
Com) David Spade. TV14
Battle
Battle
Battle
Battle
Battle
Battle
Battle (N)
Battle
Thunder
Thunder
H.Danger
SpongeBob Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Waste" Law&amp;O: SVU "Resilience"
SVU "Appearances"
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Futility" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Grief"
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy
Family Guy
Family Guy
Family Guy
The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Somebody's Gotta
CNN Tonight
Castle "Still"
Castle "The Human Factor" NBA Tip-Off NBA Basketball Playoffs Cleveland Cavaliers at Atlanta Hawks (L)
The Bucket List Two men leave their deathbeds to take a National Lampoon's Vacation A family embarks on an
National Lampoon's
road trip and do things they have always wanted. TV14
all-American summer vacation filled with comical mishaps. European Vacation TV14
Fast N' Loud
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
The First 48 "Game Over/
The First 48
Cleveland Abduction The true story of Michelle Knight
Beyond the Headlines
who was abducted and held captive for 11 years. TV14
Long Walk Home"
"Cleveland Abduction"
RivMon "Russian Killer"
RivMon "Atomic Assassin" Riv Monsters: Unhook (N) The Cannibal in the Jungle
Botched "The Bacon Bra"
Botched "Four Leeches and Botched "Mo' Steroids Mo' Botched "Dolly'd Up"
Snapped "Kimberly Michaud
a Funeral"
Problems"
and Jimmie Dale Kelley"
Braxton "Surprise Me Not" Braxton "A Split Decision" Braxton Family Values
Braxton Family Values (N) Cutting It: In the ATL (N)
(4:00) Sex and the City
E! News (N)
The Kardashians
Kardash (N) #RichKids "#Textgate"
#RichKids
(:20) Gilligan "The Pigeon" Gilligan
(:35) Gilligan (:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "Robert's Divorce" King-Queens King-Queens
Life Below Zero "Alone in
Dead End Express
Life Below Zero "Alone in
Life Below Zero
Dead End Express "Grizzly
the Dark"
"Stranded in the Tundra"
the Dark"
"Emergency Cache" (N)
Goner" (N)
(5:30) FB Talk Leauge Live Men in Blazers
Premier League Count
EPL Soccer
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Whiparound (L)
Skateboarding Street League
UFC Unleashed (N)
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn "Pawn Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
(:05) Lost in Transmission
"Fool's Gold"
"Mini Rick"
Creature"
(N)
(N)
"Off Road Rust Bucket" (N)
The Real Housewives "100th Episode Special"
Kandi's Ski Trip
Wives of Melbourne (N)
The Real Housewives
(5:00)
The Cookout ('04, Com) Ja Rule. TVPG
Poetic Justice (1993, Drama) Tupac Shakur, Joe Torry, Janet Jackson. TVM
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
House Hunt. House (N)
(5:00) Die Another Day James Bond must uncover the
WWE Smackdown! WWE superstars do battle in
Lost Girl "Here Comes the
connection between a terrorist &amp; a deceitful diamond broker. elaborate, long-running rivalries. (N)
Night" (N)

PREMIUM

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

10:30

PM

Dateline NBC

7:30

PM

Funniest Home Videos

8:30

PM

Charleston
86/61

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

Winnipeg
68/44

Toronto
79/54

Billings
65/49

Montreal
73/51

Minneapolis
82/63
Chicago
83/64

Denver
72/47

Detroit
81/61

New York
86/65
Washington
90/71

Kansas City
79/65

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
83/57/s
64/47/s
84/67/t
81/65/t
88/64/t
65/49/c
78/54/s
81/60/t
86/61/t
86/65/t
66/44/c
83/64/s
82/64/pc
79/61/s
82/63/s
82/68/t
72/47/c
81/66/t
81/61/s
83/69/c
86/72/pc
83/65/s
79/65/t
95/72/s
83/69/pc
77/61/pc
86/68/pc
87/74/pc
82/63/t
84/65/pc
86/72/pc
86/65/t
79/66/t
88/69/pc
88/68/pc
98/73/s
82/60/pc
79/57/t
86/66/t
88/68/t
85/70/t
67/51/t
65/53/pc
78/56/s
90/71/t

Hi/Lo/W
82/58/pc
66/50/s
85/66/t
78/63/pc
86/65/pc
64/48/sh
84/61/pc
70/57/pc
87/64/t
85/62/t
57/42/t
81/61/t
85/68/t
86/66/t
87/66/t
78/67/t
62/48/t
78/55/t
86/66/t
83/70/sh
84/70/t
83/65/pc
78/58/t
97/73/s
85/69/t
80/63/pc
86/70/pc
88/76/pc
71/48/r
86/67/t
87/74/t
82/66/pc
79/62/t
89/71/t
87/67/pc
101/76/s
86/66/t
74/52/pc
87/65/t
86/67/t
83/67/t
72/53/pc
68/54/pc
77/55/pc
87/71/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
84/67

High
Low

El Paso
93/63
Chihuahua
93/59

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

93° in Presidio, TX
32° in Truckee, CA

Global
High
118° in Nawabshah, Pakistan
Low -16° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
86/72
Monterrey
93/72

GOALS

Miami
87/74

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

60576589

6

BROADCAST

panies. Each team began
the game with a $100,000
cash balance in their online
portfolio.
At the conclusion of the
2015 WV FBLAPBL Online
Stock Market Game, John
Marshall High School’s
Team 2 was recognized
by Gainer and the State
FBLAPBL Executive Board
as the top performing portfolio. John Marshall’s Team
1 received the honor as top
presenter at the FBLAPBL
Spring Leadership Conference, with MOVTI in
second place, and Mason
County coming in at third.

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 28, 2015 s Section B

GA lands 9 on SEOAL diamond teams
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Gallia Academy landed a total of nine
players on the 2015 All-Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League baseball and softball
teams, as voted on by the coaches within
the league.
The Blue Devils had ﬁve players chosen to the baseball squad, while the Blue
Angels landed four on the all-league softball team.
The Blue Devils had three all-league
selections in juniors Kole Carter and
Anthony Sipple, as well as senior Seth
Wills. Juniors Matt Bailey and Eric Ward
were also named to the honorable mention
squad.
Hunter Sexton of Jackson was named
the
2015 player of the year and JHS skipAlex Hawley| OVP Sports
Gallia Academy senior Kendra Barnes slides safely into base ahead of a throw during a per Josh McGraw was the SEOAL coach of
the year.
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League softball game against Warren in Centenary, Ohio.

The Blue Angels had two all-league
selections in senior Kendra Barnes and
junior Makenzie Barr. Sophomores Kimberly Edelmann and Jenna Meadows were
also named as honorable mention choices.
Kacee Jenkins of Jackson was the 2015
player of the year and JHS skipper Chris
Hammond was the SEOAL coach of the
year.

2015 All-SEOAL Baseball team
Kole Carter, Gallipolis 11 OF-P
Anthony Sipple, Gallipolis 11 C
Seth Wills, Gallipolis 12 P
Austin Leach, Jackson* 11 P-3B-SS
Hunter Sexton, Jackson* 11 P-SS
Zack Stapleton, Jackson 12 2B
Tyler Storms, Jackson 11 P-OF
Hunter Krannitz, Logan* 10 C
Sky Oliver, Portsmouth* 12 OF
Ryan Williams, Portsmouth 10 P-SS
See SEOAL | 6B

URG SUMMER CAMPS
RIO GRANDE,
Ohio — The University of Rio Grande has
announced its 2015
summer camp/shootout
schedule for men’s and
women’s soccer, men’s
and women’s basketball,
volleyball, track &amp; ﬁeld/
cross country and softball.
MEN’S AND
WOMEN’S SOCCER
The University of
Rio Grande soccer programs have announced
their 2015 summer
camp schedule.
A team camp for girls’
high school squads is
planned for July 12-15,
with a boys’ high school
team camp slated for
July 19-23. Cost for
the girls’ camp is $270,
while the boys’ camp
has a fee of $305.
Fees for the residential camps include
lodging, meals, training
sessions and tournament play.
Camp directors are
URG men’s soccer head
coach Scott Morrissey,
men’s assistant coach
Tony Daniels and Rio
women’s soccer head
coach Callum Morris.
The camp brochure
is available on the
men’s soccer link of the
school’s athletic website, www.rioredstorm.
com. Online registration
and payment is available
at www.rioredstormsoccercamps.com.
Registration forms
should be mailed to
URG Lyne Center, P.O.
Box 500, Rio Grande,
OH 45674. Checks
should be made payable
to Scott Morrissey.
For more information,
contact Morrissey at
740-245-7126, 740-6456438 or e-mail scottm@
rio.edu; Daniels at 740245-7493, 740-645-0377
or e-mail tdaniels@rio.
edu; or Morris at 740853-2639 or cmorris@
rio.edu.

MEN’S BASKETBALL
The University of Rio
Grande men’s basketball
program has announced
its extensive summer
camp schedule for 2015.
A Point Guard Camp
for boys and girls age
12-18 is set for Saturday, June 6, from 9 a.m.1 p.m. Cost is $40.
The Little Storm Day
Camp is scheduled for
June 15-17, from 1-3
p.m. each day, at the
Lyne Center on the
URG campus. The camp
is open to boys and
girls, ages 6-9, and the
cost is $60.
The camp will focus
on the fundamentals
of the game and will
be conducted by Rio
Grande head coach Ken
French, his staff and
current players.
There are also openings still available for a
trio of one-day shootouts.
A junior high-only
shootout is set for Saturday, June 13, while
coaches who would
like to bring both their
high school varsity and
junior varsity teams can
do so during shootouts
scheduled for June 18
and 19. Cost is $170
and teams will again
receive at least four
games. Efforts will be
made to avoid conﬂicting game times.
All games for the
team shootouts will
take place inside the
Lyne Center, using both
the upper (Newt Oliver
Arena) and lower gyms.
A coaches hospitality
room will also be available.
There will also be
a shooting camp for
both boys and girls, age
8-18, June 15-17, from
10 a.m.-noon each day.
Cost is $60 per camper.
The crown jewel of
the camp schedule is
the annual Hard Work
See CAMPS | 6B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, May 28
Baseball
Meigs vs. Big Walnut at Zanesville, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
D-2 regionals at Muskingum University, 4 p.m.
Friday, May 29
Track and Field
D-3 regionals at Fairﬁeld Union HS, 5 p.m.
Saturday, May 30
Track and Field
D-2 regionals at Muskingum University, 11:30

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Christian Speelman, right, watches a ball take flight during an at-bat in the Division IV district semifinal baseball game
against Peebles at Paint Stadium in Chillicothe, Ohio.

OVP area lands 12 on district teams
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

The Ohio Valley Publishing area
had a dozen players selected to the
2015 Ohio High School Baseball
Coaches Association Southeast
District teams for divisions 1-4,
as voted on by the coaches in the
region.
Of the six local programs in
Gallia and Meigs counties, only
South Gallia failed to have at least
one athlete make the squad. Gallia
Academy and Eastern led the way
with three choices apiece, while
Meigs, River Valley and Southern
each had two athletes selected.
Junior Anthony Sipple led the
Blue Devils with a ﬁrst team selection in the Division 1-2 South
category, while junior Kole Carter
was a second team selection and
senior Seth Wills earned honorable
mention.
Sophomore Chase Whitlatch was
also a ﬁrst team selection for the
Marauders in Division 1-2 South,
while teammate and classmate
Cody Bartrum was named to the
second team.
The Raiders’ top honoree was
senior Brycen Hatﬁeld, who picked
up second team accolades in Division 3 South. Junior Dillon Ragan
was also an honorable mention
choice for RVHS.
Senior Christian Speelman came
away with ﬁrst team honors for the
Eagles in Division 4 North, while
teammates Cameron Richmond
and Tyler Morris respectively garnered second team and honorable
mention accolades.
Senior Jack Lemley was a ﬁrst
team selection in the Division 4

South bracket for the Tornadoes,
while teammate Trey Pickens was
a second team choice.
Sipple, Whitlatch, Lemley and
Speelman were also chosen to take
part in the Southeast District Baseball All-Star game in June.
Division 1-2 South
First Team
1. Hunter Sexton Jr. Jackson
2. Eli Daniels Jr. Minford
3. Dylan Shockley Sr. Minford
4. Anthony Sipple Jr. Gallia Academy
5. Blake Kidder Sr. Warren Local
6. Brendan Sano Soph. Athens
7. Chase Whitlach Soph. Meigs
8. Caleb Price Sr. Chillicothe
9. Matt Joyce Sr. Minford
10 Ryan Luehrman Sr. Athens
Coach of the Year: Tim Martin, Minford
Second Team
1. Cody Bartrum Soph Meigs
2. Turner Hill Soph Marietta
3. Kole Carter Jr. Gallia Academy
4. Brock Stewart Soph Athens
5. Hunter Krannitz Soph Logan
6. Trent Dawson Soph Marietta
Honorable Mention
7. Zack Stapleton Sr. Jackson
8. Seth Wills Sr. Gallia Academy
9. Austin Ward Jr. Vinton County
10. Dylan Mellinger Fr. Logan
Division 3 South
First Team
1. Wade Martin Sr. Wheelersburg
2. Wesley Book Sr. Portsmouth West
3. Brody McGrath Sr. Alexander
4. Sky Oliver Sr. Portsmouth
5. Jacob Roe Sr. Wheelersburg
6. Blake Lester Sr. Chesapeake
7. Alex Loop Sr. Valley
8. Daniel Rutherford Soph. Coal Grove
9. Kyle Cox Sr. Oak Hill
10. Luke Diamond Sr. Ironton
11. Drew Wolford Jr. Valley
12. Alex Whitt Sr. South Point
Coach of the Year: Dean Schuler, Valley

Second Team
1. Zach Smith Alexander
2. Brycen Hatfield Sr. River Valley
3. Michael Green Sr. Wheelersburg
4. Brandon Schob Sr. Rock Hill
5. Jacob Clark Coal Grove
6. Jacob Henson Sr. Chesapeake
7. Mathew Gilliland Jr. Oak Hill
8. Alex Perry Belpre
Honorable Mention
1. Dillon Ragan Jr. River Valley
2. Kole Counts Belpre
3. Dylan Murphy Fairland
4. Jordan Howard Sr. Wheelersburg
5. Nathan Murphy Sr. Oak Hill
6. Hunter Gibson Portsmouth
Division 4 South
First Team
1. Tanner Mays Sr. Symmes Valley
2. Dillon McFann Sr. Symmes Valley
3. Tyson Montgomery Sr. Port. Notre
Dame
4. Josh Karshner Jr. Green
5. Garrett Rawlins Jr. South Webster
6. Jack Lemley Sr. Southern
7. Sean Frost Jr. Manchester
8. Conner Phipps Sr. Port. Clay
9. Hayden Baker Jr. Port. Notre Dame
10. Shane Zimmerman So. South
Webster
Coach of the Year: Chad Renfroe,
Symmes Valley
Second Team
1. Trevor Carver So. Green
2. Tyler Speas Fr. Port. Notre Dame
3. Trey Pickens So. Southern
4. Trevor Coriell So. South Webster
5. Tyler Ward Jr. Ironton St. Joe
6. Brady Riffe So. Port. Clay
7. Cameron Meadows Jr. Symmes
Valley
Honorable Mention
1. Akia Brown So. Sciotoville East
2. Cody Poole Sr. Glenwood
3. Cole Willis Sr. Ironton St. Joe
4. Taylor Appling Sr. Sciotoville East
5. Mark Allen Sr. Green
See TEAMS | 6B

�SPORTS

2B Thursday, May 28, 2015

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Meigs Football Golf Scramble

projects. Prizes will be awarded to ﬁrst, second and
third place teams, and there will also be skill prizes
awarded. Anyone interested can sign up at Cliffside
Golf Course or contact Rick Howell at 740-446-4624
for more information.

MASON, W.Va. — Marauders head coach Mike Bartrum will be hosting a golf scramble to beneﬁt Meigs
Football on Saturday, May 30, at Riverside Golf Club.
It will be a 9:00 a.m. shotgun start. Format will be
bring your own team with a total team handicap of at
least 40. Only one player may be under an eight handicap. Cost is $240 per team with optional mulligan,
skins and cash game. The top teams will receive club
house credit along with other individual skill prizes.
RACINE, Ohio — The Southern football program
Food and beverages provided. To enter at team please
will
be holding its 2015 Southern Youth Football
contact Tonya Cox (740) 645-4479 or Riverside (304)
Camp
from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Tuesday, July 21,
773-5354.
through Thursday, July 23, at Roger Lee Adams Field
in Meigs County. The cost is $25 for any camperin
grades 3-8 and a t-shirt will be given to all who register before May 27. The camp will be conducted by
Southern coaches and players. Checks should made
payable to Southern Athletic Boosters, courtesy of
BIDWELL, Ohio — The River Valley girls basketKyle Wickline, 920 Elm Street, Racine, Ohio 45771.
ball program will be holding its 2015 Lady Raiders
The makeup date will be Friday, July 24.
Basketball Camp for girls in grades K-8 from 9 a.m.
until noon on Monday, June 8, through Wednesday,
June 10. RVHS head coach Sarah Evans-Moore will be
hosting the camp along with the River Valley assistant
coaches and players. Coach Evans-Moore is a former college basketball player at Stanford University
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy socand former Head Coach of the Marshall University
cer program will be holding a kickball tournament on
Thundering Herd women’s basketball team. She led
Marshall University to a Southern Conference Cham- Saturday, June 6, at the GAHS soccer facility in Gallia
County. The event will serve as a fundraiser for the
pionship and an NCAA Tournament appearance.
GAHS soccer program and there is a team fee of $100
Campers will receive a t-shirt and quality instruction
in the areas of ball handling, passing, proper shooting due at registration Saturday morning. Only 10 players
will be permitted on the ﬁeld at a time, but you can
form, offensive moves, defense and rebounding. Call
have an unlimited roster. All players must be in the
to reserve your spot and there is a cost for the camp.
All questions can be directed to Sarah Evans-Moore at ninth grade or older to participate. Team registration
is due by Wednesday, June 3, by phone or email. The
740-441-1616 or sarah@evans-moore.com
ﬁrst game will start at 9 a.m. There will be split the
pot and concessions available all day. For more information or to pre-register, send team name, captain’s
name and contact information to Josh Simmons no
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipolis Lions Club
later than Wednesday, June 3, by email at js1simm@
will be holding its 17th annual golf outing on Saturgmail.com or call 740-709-7051.
day, June 20, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallia County.
The event will be a four-man scramble format with
a blind draw and will also have a shotgun start of
8:30 a.m. The cost is $50 per Cliffside member and
$60 per non-member, and all proceeds beneﬁt Lions
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The annual Gallia Academy

Southern Youth
Football Camp

Lady Raiders
Basketball Camp

GAHS Soccer
Kickball Tournament

Gallipolis Lions Golf Outing

GAHS Football golf scramble

Football golf scramble will be held on Saturday, June
27, at Cliffside Golf Course. Registration will begin at
7:30 am and the scramble will start at 8:30 a.m. The
format will be bring your own team. The team will
be four players, with only one handicap under 10 and
a team handicap of 40 or greater. There will be two
divisions to choose from. The blue division is a competitive division that will be playing for cash prizes.
The white division is a fun division with no handicap
requirements and winners will be drawn at random.
Food and beverages will be provided. The deadline
for registering is Monday, June 22. To register or for
questions, please call 740-256-1897 or 740-446-8791.

GAHS Youth Baseball Camp
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy baseball program will be holding a youth baseball camp
for any boy entering grades 3-8 on Monday, June 8,
through Wednesday, June 10, at Bob Eastman Field
on the campus of GAHS. The three-day event will
run from 9 a.m. until noon, and the campers will
receive basic fundamental instruction from the GAHS
baseball coach staff and players. The cost is $50 per
camper and there is a family package that costs $40
apiece for two or more children, and each camper will
receive a t-shirt. There will also be daily competitions
and a Camper of the Week award will also be presented on the ﬁnal day of camp. For more information,
contact GAHS coach Rich Corvin at 740-645-4801 or
Craig Sanders at 937-403-1820.

GAHS Basketball Camps
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy boys
and girls basketball programs will be holding a basketball camp for boys and girls entering grades 3-8 next
year at Gallia Academy High School. The camp will
be held on Monday, June 1, through Wednesday, June
3, from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. at the GAHS gymnasium.
The camp will be taught by GAHS coaches and
players. Fundamentals of basketball will be taught. All
campers will get a camp souvenir and will be able to
compete for prizes at the last day of camp.
There is a fee for each participant. For more information, contact Gary Harrison at 740-645-5816 or Joe
Justice at 740-645-0080.

Better than ever, LeBron leads Cavs into NBA Finals
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Escorted by family
members and friends,
LeBron James walked out
of Quicken Loans Arena
cradling his sleepy youngest son with his left arm

while clutching an expensive bottle of champagne
in his right hand.
It was time for one
James to go to bed, the
other to have a latenight drink and get

some much-needed rest.
The NBA Finals lie
ahead.
Taking his magniﬁcent
game to a higher level,
James sent the Cavaliers
into the ﬁnals for the

second time in franchise
history on Tuesday night
with a 118-88 romp
over the Atlanta Hawks,
who couldn’t stop the
four-time league MVP
and were swept in four
straight.
Driven by the chance
to end the city’s halfcentury-old championship drought, James was
brilliant from start to
ﬁnish. He averaged 30.3
points, 11 rebounds and
9.3 assists, the ﬁrst player
in postseason history to
put up that statistical line.
He’s never been better in
the playoffs.
The Cavs don’t have
a ﬁnals opponent yet as
Golden State and Houston still have to settle
things out West. But in
the East, one team stands
above all the others —
the one with James, who
will appear in his ﬁfth
consecutive ﬁnals after
going four times in a row
with Miami.
He came back to Ohio
to win a title for his home
region, where second
place has been as good as
it gets since the Browns
ruled the NFL in 1964.
There has been heartbreak in the years since
as the Indians lost two
World Series, the Browns
were denied in three AFC
championship games by
Denver’s John Elway and
the Cavs were swept by
San Antonio in 2007.
With four wins, James
can change that.

“We all know how long
it’s been since a champion
has been in this city,” he
said. “We will give our
best shot.”
In the delirious
moments after Game 4,
James stood at mid-court
as adoring Cleveland
fans chanted: “N-B-A
Finals (clap, clap, clap,
clap, clap).” He pulled
a conference championship T-shirt over his head
and put on a cap before
turning to teammate J.R.
Smith with a simple message.
“Four more,” he said.
LONG LAYOFF
The Finals don’t start
until June 4, giving the Cavaliers nearly eight full days
to get healthy — or as close
to healthy as possible.
James has been battling
an assortment of injuries
and Kyrie Irving returned
to the lineup after missing Games 2 and 3 with
knee tendinitis. The
break will also give the
Cavs a chance to recharge
mentally for their toughest challenge yet.
IRVING’S ISSUES
Irving has battled knee
soreness and a sprained
right foot throughout
the playoffs. The AllStar scored 16 and had
ﬁve assists in 22 minutes in Game 4. There’s
a good chance Irving
won’t be fully healed
until after the season, so
he might be more a role

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Call 992.2155

player in the ﬁnals.
Sitting again wasn’t an
option.
“I knew that I wasn’t
gonna sit on the bench
and watch our guys
go through a close-out
game,” he said. “I just
wanted to be out there so
bad. These last four days
have been kind of hell
for me. Just icing, icing,
icing.”
Backup Matthew Dellavedova stepped up
against Atlanta, pestering the Hawks with his
belly-to-belly defense and
knocking down big shots.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
The Cavs don’t rely on
James to do everything.
Besides Dellavedova, the
Cavs have gotten major
contributions from several role players. Tristan
Thompson has grabbed 10
or more rebounds in seven
of his nine starts; J.R.
Smith made eight 3-pointers in Game 1 and four in
Game 4 with 10 rebounds;
Timofey Mozgov had 14
points; and Iman Shumpert is the team’s best
perimeter defender.
The Cavs have become
selﬂess.
“That’s what trying to
accomplish a dream is all
about,” James said.
DOMINATING DEFENSE
The Cavaliers are allowing just 92.6 points per
game, tied with Chicago
for best among any teams
in this postseason, and
limiting opponents to
41.2 percent shooting.
Atlanta shot just 23.4 percent from 3-point range
(5 of 32 in Game 4), lowering opponents’ shooting percentage against
the Cavs behind the arc
to 27.8 percent.
“Cleveland’s defense
was good the entire
series,” Hawks coach
Mike Budenholzer said.
HOT IN CLEVELAND
The Cavs will host
Games 3 and 4, and if
necessary Game 6, at
Quicken Loans Arena,
one of the league’s noisiest buildings. They have
won 26 of their last 28
at the Q, including 18 by
double digits.

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

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SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
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Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
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American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-596-9892 for
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Got Knee Pain? Back Pain?
Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost
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60583312

Accepting sealed bids with
“Reserve” for 1998 Ford Cutaway Van (EMS truck) with 7.3
diesel and 1970 John Deer
4020 tractor. Mail bid to Bedford Township, 42774 Helwig
Ridge Road, Shade, OH 45776
by Jun 9. Contact: John Dean
740-416-3294, Tim Hall 740416-4448, or Shawn Hawley
740-591-2666.
05/26,06/02, 6/09/15

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
work? Denied benefits? We
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start your application today!
Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
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Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your
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LEGALS

Thursday, May 28, 2015 3B

Dish TV Retailer- SAVE 50%
on qualifying packages! Starting $19.99/month (for 12
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Movie Channels. FREE Installation! CALL, COMPARE LOCAL DEALS 1-800-401-1670

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Got an older car, boat or
RV? Do the humane thing.
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Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your
stairs! **Limited time -$250 Off
Your Stairlift Purchase!** Buy
Direct &amp; SAVE. Please call 1800-942-6692 for FREE DVD
and brochure.
Switch &amp; Save Event from
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HBO, starz, SHOWTIME &amp;
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no activation fees, no commitment, a 2nd waterproof alert
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SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
work? Denied benefits? We
Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing!
Contact Bill Gordon &amp; Associates at 1-800-509-2201 to
start your application today!

Got Knee Pain? Back Pain?
Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost
to you. Medicare Patients Call
Health Hotline Now! 1- 800430-1045
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delivered-to-the-door Omaha
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Meet singles right now! No
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RV? Do the humane thing.
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REDUCED CLASSIFIED PRICES

Jones Tree Service:
Complete Tree Care,
Stump Grinding
740-367-0266
740-339-3366
Insured
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

60584097

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

18 words, 4 lines

24 words, 6 lines

4 days in all 3 daily publications
FREE Sunday Times
Web 8 days
TMC
Rural Life
Total Cost ..................... $4481

4 days in all 3 daily publications
FREE Sunday Times
Web 8 days
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Rural Life
Total Cost ..................... $5433

7 days in all 3 daily publications
FREE Sunday Times
Web 10 days
TMC
Rural Life
Total Cost .....................$4822

7 days in all 3 daily publications
1 Sunday Times
Web 10 days
TMC
Rural Life
Total Cost ..................... $6162

10 days in all 3 daily publication
FREE Sunday Times
Web 12 days
TMC
Rural Life
Total Cost .................... $6836

10 days in all 3 daily publication
1 Sunday Times
Web 12 days
TMC
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Total Cost ..................... $8755

Call about our
reduced yard
sale prices

Medical Guardian-Top-rated
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Yard Sale

Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
for Seniors. Bathroom falls
can be fatal.Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic
Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In.
Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors.
American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-596-9892 for
$750 Off.

Special Notices

Notices

Dish TV Retailer- SAVE 50%
on qualifying packages! Starting $19.99/month (for 12
months.) FREE Premium
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Covers all 5 publications and online to reach over 285,000 prospects!!
Email all inquiries to gdtclassifeds@civitasmedia.com

2-Barn Sale May 29 &amp; 30th 9am to 5pm - @ 662 Gooch
Rd near Tycoon Lake -Take
554 from Rio Grande follow
signs. Woodworking, Golf
Clubs,Exercise
Equipment,Tools,Bicycles,Glas
sware,Antiques,several
guns,Lots of misc. 19 ft. Boat
too much to list.

Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

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

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Needed 2 Class B Drivers for
Rollback (Transporting)
Call 740-339-1620
Help Wanted General
Accepting Application for immediate openings at Rutland
Department Store, 25-40
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STREET, RUTLAND.OH

Miscellaneous
Adoption
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60585826

�CLASSIFIEDS

4B Thursday, May 28, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Help Wanted General

Business &amp; Trade School

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STATEWIDE ADS

Employment Opportunity –
Service and Support Administrator wanted. Bachelorҋs degree in Human Services related field required, prefer experience working with individuals with developmental disabilities, families and agencies;
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monitoring individualized service plans. Position requires
strong written and verbal
skills. Send resume by June
3, 2015 to Meigs County
Board of Developmental
Disabilities, P.O. Box 307,
1310 Carleton Street, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.

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Gallipolis, OH 45631 or check
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Job opening for full-time
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duties include, but are not limited to, Water Meter Reading,
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Maintenance in Village. Hours
will be day shift, 40 hrs. a
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be $8.50 an hr. May pick up
and return applications until
May 29, 2015 at the Rio
Grande Municipal Building at
174 East College Street, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674
Syracuse Village Council is
accepting applications for the
full time position of Street
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Supervisor at Village Hall,
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45779, until 4:30PM June 1.
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RNҋs, LPNҋs, STNAҋs,
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SEOAL

Daily Sentinel

Camps

From Page 1B
Kyler Dennis, Warren 10 P-SS
Blake Kidder, Warren 12 P-SS-OF
Tanner Proctor, Warren 10 1B-3B
Player of the Year: Hunter Sexton, Jackson
Coach of the Year: Josh McGraw, Jackson
Honorable mention: Matt Bailey (11) and Eric Ward (11),
Gallipolis; Logan Largent (11) and Cole Massie (12), Jackson;
Gunner Conrad (12) and Dylan Mellinger (9), Logan; Hunter
Gibson (12) and Dylan Mullins (11), Portsmouth; Jake Davis
(11) and Collin Welch (12), Warren
*—denotes previous season(s) named to All-SEOAL team.
Williams was honorable mention in 2014; Sexton was
honorable mention in 2013, and McGraw shared Coach of the
Year in 2014.
Team selected by vote of league coaches. Each team was
permitted two automatic honorable mention selections.
Final standings: Jackson 7-1, Gallipolis and Warren 5-3,
Portsmouth 3-5, Logan 0-8
2015 All-SEOAL Softball team
Kendra Barnes, Gallipolis 12 SS
Makenzie Barr, Gallipolis 11 1B
Jordan Banks, Jackson 9 OF
Sam Humphreys, Jackson 12 C
Kacee Jenkins***, Jackson 12 P
Faith Freeman**, Logan 12 P
Grayce Huntsberger, Logan 11 2B
Melanie Starlin, Logan 12 OF
Andi Queen, Portsmouth 10 P
Peighton Williams***,Portsmouth 12 SS
Kaylee Higgins, Warren 12 SS
Kylee Lynch*, Warren 11 C
Arri Schetter, Warren 12 P
Player of the Year: Kacee Jenkins, Jackson
Coach of the Year: Chris Hammond, Jackson
Honorable mention: Kimberly Edelmann (10) and Jenna
Meadows (10), Gallipolis; Lauren Parks (11) and Mariah
Ridgeway (9), Jackson; Payton Frasure (9) and Paige Simons
(10), Logan; Bailey Horsley (10) and Jada Jenkins (12),
Portsmouth; Elizabeth Williams (9), Warren.
*—denotes previous season(s) named to All-SEOAL team.
Jenkins was Player of the Year in 2014; Barnes and Humphreys
were honorable mention in both 2014 and 2013; Starlin,
Meadows, Parks and Schetter were honorable mention in
2014, and Freeman was honorable mention in 2013.
Team selected by vote of league coaches. Each team was
permitted two automatic honorable mention selections; not
all teams chose to do so.
Final standings: Jackson 7-1, Logan 5-3, Warren 3-3,
Portsmouth 2-4, Gallipolis 1-7 (two games between Warren
and Portsmouth were not played)
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Teams
From Page 1B
Division 4 North
First Team
1. Austin Downs Sr. Trimble
2. Anthony McFadden Jr.
Paint Valley
3. Caullin Lunsford Sr.
Trimble
4. Clay Hayes So. Waterford
5. Christian Speelman Sr.
Eastern
6. Teagan McFadden Jr. Paint
Valley
7. Austin Copas Jr. North
Adams
8. Mason McCloy Sr. Paint
Valley
9. Caleb West Fresh Peebles
10. Kenny Branch Jr. North
Adams

Coach of the Year: Shane
Combs, Paint Valley
Second Team
1. Tylor Newman Jr. Miller
2. Cameron Richmond Jr.
Eastern
3. Isaac Huffman So.
Waterford
4. Ethan Leist So. Eastern
Pike
5. Cole Geil So. Miller
6. Andrew Losey Jr. Trimble
7. Dante Brammer Jr. Trimble
Honorable Mention
1. Lane Hanson Sr. Peebles
2. Tyler Morris Sr. Eastern
3. Jordan Welch So.
Waterford
4. Trey Meade Jr. North
Adams
5. Dalton Tomlison Fr.
Eastern Pike
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Year honorees and NAIA
national leaders in their
area of specialty.
From Page 1B
Campers will also be
divided into teams for
Camp, which is scheduled tournament play to confor Sunday, June 21-Friclude the camp.
day, June 26. The indiCost is $200 per
vidual camp is for boys
camper, which includes
only, age 10-16.
overnight lodging, meals
Cost is $200 for comand awards.
muters and $285 for
Registration forms and
overnight campers. Fees
a camp schedule is availinclude lodging, meals,
able on the volleyball link
awards, a reversible camp of the school’s athletic
jersey and a camp t-shirt. website, www.rioredThe camp emphasizes
storm.com.
offensive and defensive
Registration forms and
fundamentals, team play a $100 deposit should
and work ethic. It also
be mailed to Billina
features “The Triple”, the Donaldson, Volleyball
only triple-elimination
Coach, P.O. Box 500,
tournament in the counRio Grande, OH 45674.
try, which begins around Checks should be made
noon on the 26th and
payable to Billina Donaldconcludes in the early
son Volleyball Camp.
morning hours of the
For questions or con26th.
cerns, call Donaldson at
The awards ceremony, 740-988-6497 or send
in which parents are
e-mail to billinad@rio.
encouraged to attend,
edu.
is scheduled for Friday,
June 26, from 9:30-11
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
a.m., and will conclude
The University of Rio
the camp.
Grande’s 2015 Women’s
Online registration for Basketball Camp is schedall of the camps is availuled for July 5-8 at the
able through the men’s
Lyne Center on the URG
basketball link on the
campus.
school’s athletic website,
The overnight instrucwww.rioredstorm.com.
tional camp is open to
Registration forms are
girls in grades 4-12. Cost
also available in the lobby is $280 per camper, which
of the Lyne Center during includes lodging, meals, a
regular business hours.
certiﬁcate of participation
Registration forms
and a t-shirt.
should be mailed to Rio
Campers will also
Grande Men’s Basketreceive 24-hour superviball, P.O. Box 500, Rio
sion from coaches and
Grande, OH 45674.
counselors; lecture/disChecks should be made
cussion groups and ﬁlm
payable to Big Red Bassessions; daily instrucketball Camp.
tion on shooting, ballFor more information,
handling, post play and
contact French at 740defense; and use of the
245-7294, 1-800-282-7201 school’s swimming pool.
(ext. 7294), or send
There will also be a
e-mail to kfrench@rio.
camp store featuring
edu.
drinks, snacks, pizza and
VOLLEYBALL
The University of Rio
Grande will host its 2015
Summer Volleyball Camp,
June 28-30, at the Lyne
Center on the URG campus.
The camp is open
to girls in grades 6-12.
There will be two divisions for campers – grade
6-8 and grade 9-12.
Campers will receive
instruction in fundamentals and various
drills from a staff that
will include a former
All-American, as well as
All-Ohio and Player of the

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Rio Grande apparel for
sale each day.
Veteran Rio Grande
women’s basketball head
coach David Smalley,
who ranks among the top
10 coaches on the active
wins list with more than
400, will be the camp
director.
Online registration
is available through the
women’s basketball link
on the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com. Registration
forms are available in the
lobby of the Lyne Center
during regular business
hours.
Registration forms
should be mailed to David
Smalley, Rio Grande
Women’s Basketball
Camp, P.O. Box 500,
Rio Grande, OH 45674.
Checks should be made

payable to Women’s Basketball Camp.
For more information,
contact Smalley at 740245-7491, 1-800-2827201, or e-mail dsmalley@rio.edu.
CROSS COUNTRY,
TRACK &amp; FIELD
The University of Rio
Grande Cross Country/
Track &amp; Field programs
will simultaneously host
their 2015 Distance
Camp and 2015 Track
Camp, June 28-July 2, on
the URG campus.
The objective of the
camps is to increase the
standards and knowledge
of distance running and
track &amp; ﬁeld, while providing current knowledge
in techniques that will
result in life-long beneﬁts.
Campers will hear from
a number of guest speakers.
Long-time Rio Grande
track &amp; ﬁeld/cross
country head coach Bob
Willey will direct both
camps. Willey has over
40 years of coaching at
the collegiate level and
has fostered a program
of more than 100 cross
country/track &amp; ﬁeld AllAmericans.
Cost is $250 per
runner/athlete, which
includes room, meals and
recreation facilities. A
$25 discount is available
to members of a school
with ﬁve or more athletes
attending. A $25 deposit
is required with the
return of a camp application, with the balance
payable on the participant’s arrival at camp.
On-site registration
will take place on Sunday,
June 28, from 1-1:30 p.m.,
at Bob Evans Farm Hall
on the URG campus.
Registration forms and
the camp brochure are
available on the track &amp;
ﬁeld and cross country
links of the school’s athletic website, www.rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms
and the non-refundable
deposit should be mailed
to URG Lyne Center, P.O.
Box 500, Rio Grande, OH
45674. Checks should be
made payable to Coach
Bob Willey.
Deadline for early registration is June 22.
For questions or concerns, send e-mail to
rwilley@rio.edu or call
740-245-7487.
SOFTBALL
The University of Rio
Grande softball program
has announced its 2015
summer camp schedule.
A two-day instructional

camp is scheduled for
June 23 and 24, at Rio
Softball Park on the URG
campus. The session for
players age 7-13 is scheduled from 9 a.m.-noon
each day, while the session for players age 14-18
is set for 1-4 p.m. on both
days.
Cost is $70.
A pitching camp is also
scheduled for Sunday,
July 19, at Rio Softball
Park.
The camp will run from
1-3 p.m. for players age
7-13 and from 3-5 p.m. for
players age 14-18 on both
dates. Cost is $30.
Rio Grande softball
head coach Amber
Bowman will direct the
camps, while RedStorm
players will also be assisting in the instruction.
Bowman was a four-year
starter at shortstop for Rio
from 2008-11. She then
spent two years as a graduate assistant coach for the
RedStorm before serving
as an assistant coach at the
University of Northwestern Ohio in 2014.
Earlier this year, Bowman guided the RedStorm to a 32-16 record, a
KIAC Tournament championship and the school’s
second NAIA National
Tournament berth.
The pitching camp
will provide beginning
pitchers with a speciﬁc
fundamental basis. They
will leave with a daily
workout progression.
Advanced pitchers will
receive instruction on
spin pitching along with
advanced coaching on leg
drive and balance.
Parents and coaches are
welcome to attend any of
the sessions to observe
and ask questions.
Players MUST have a
completed Medical Consent Form, which is available from the Rio softball
webpage on the school’s
athletic website (www.
rioredstorm.com), before
being allowed to participate. Softballs will be provided, but players should
also bring appropriate
gear to the tryout.
Both an online registration form and a registration form which can be
printed and returned by
mail are also available on
the website,
Checks should be made
payable to Amber Bowman and mailed to 218
North College Avenue,
P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674.
For more information,
contact Bowman by
phone at 740-245-7490 or
by e-mail at abowman@
rio.edu.

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