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                  <text>This
day in
history...

Mostly
sunny. High
82, low 59

Reds
beat
Cubs

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 116, Volume 69

Local Memorial Service

Wednesday, July 22, 2015 s 50¢

Council
hires
two new
members
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Lorna Hart | Daily Sentinel

Participants gather for Saturday’s memorial.

Service held at
Buffington Battlefield
By Lorna Hart

Columbia County, Ohio.
The following took part in
the ceremony, sponsored by
PORTLAND — A memorial
the Ohio Department Sons of
service to honor soldiers who
Union Veterans of the Civil War
took part in the Battle of Buffand the Ohio History Connecington Island, a decisive battle
tion: Jim Oiler, Commander,
that lead to the end of Morgan’s Bill McCreedy, Chaplain Henry
Raid, was held on Saturday at
Myers, Dale Lamphier, CadotBufﬁngton Island Battleﬁeld.
Blessing Camp No. 126; Scott
The Battle of Bufﬁngton
Britton, Past Commander, Andy
Island took place on July 19,
Francis, Norm Pape, Jr., Vice
1863, and was the only signiﬁCommander; Gen. Benjamin
cant battle of the Civil War in
Fearing Camp No. 2; Shawn
Ohio. The encounter began
Cox, Commander, Honor Guard,
when Union troops supported
Sons of Union Veterans of the
by artillery, cavalry and navy
Civil War.
gunboats converged on General
Following introductions and
John Hunt Morgan’s Raiders.
a welcome by Shawn Cox, Andy
Morgan’s troops planned to
Francis gave the invocation. The
cross the Ohio River at Bufﬁng- pledge of allegiance followed.
ton Island ford, escaping Union Wreaths had been placed to
forces. The battle lasted two
honor the soldiers and Chaplain
hours and involved approximate- Henry Myers gave the benedicly 1,800 Confederate cavalrymen tion. The ﬁring of salute was
and 3,000 Union troops.
preformed by SUVCW Honor
With one third of Morgan’s
Guard and taps played by Scott
forces captured and the remainBritton and Dale Lamphier
der scattered, the threat from
echoed through the park, closing
the raid that had begun 46 days
the ceremony.
before the skirmish and covered
Future events are planned to
over 1,000 miles beginning in
preserve this important part of
Tennessee and traveling through
Meigs County and Ohio history.
Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio,
was extinguished and Morgan
Lorna Hart can be reached at 740-992-2155
EXT. 2551
Scenes from Saturday’s memorial.
himself captured July 26 in

lhart@civitasmedia.com

Kasich begins presidential bid

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

By Julie Carr Smyth

— SPORTS
NASCAR: 6
Briefs: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Classified: 7-8
Comics: 9

“I am here to ask you for your prayers,
for your support, for your efforts because I
have decided to run for president,” Kasich
COLUMBUS — Saying “big ideas
said in a scattered 43-minute speech
change the world,” Ohio Gov. John
packed with family anecdotes, historical
Kasich declared his candidacy for the references and calls for national renewal.
Republican nomination Tuesday and
A veteran congressman as well as
pitched his well-rounded resume to
governor, Kasich is telling voters he is
voters who have a multitude of high
the only GOP candidate with experiachievers to size up.
ence in three broad areas of political
Kasich, 63, launched his campaign at leadership — the federal budget,
Ohio State University before a crowd
national security and state governof 2,000 at an event marking the entry ment. He also spent nearly a decade
of a strong-willed and sometimes
at Lehman Brothers.
abrasive governor in a nomination race
See BID | 5
now with 16 notable Republicans.

Associated Press

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.

POMEROY — Pomeroy Council on Monday
night announced two
open council seats that
need to be ﬁlled as soon
as possible.
There will be a special meeting at 7 p.m.
July 27 with the intent
to appoint two new
council members. Letters of interest can be
given to council up until
the time of the meeting.
Council also acknowledged the resignation of
former council members
Drew Reed and Phil
Moon.
Council also voted for
Phil Ohlinger to serve
as council president.
Council approved
the renewal of EyeMed
Insurance at no cost.
Fiscal Ofﬁcer Sue Baker
said she received an
email about the renewal
advantage, and council
said they were satisﬁed
with their insurance as
to renew.
Fred Holmes, of
Volunteer Energy,
announced his retirement and discussed
adding electric aggregation for the village. The
aggregation will not be
on the ballot this year,
but may make a ballot
appearance in fall 2016.
Council approved the
Lions Club placing an
American ﬂag outside
of Pomeroy Village Hall
during eight holidays a
year. The total cost of
a year is $25. Members
also gave Pomeroy Police
Chief Mark Profﬁtt
approval to explore the
possibility of purchasing
two Ford Interceptor
models — one all-wheel
drive SUV and one allwheel drive Sedan — for
the police department.
Council also approved
the purchase of a unisex
vest at a cost of $620.
Profﬁtt emphasized the
need for the vest to be
unisex, saying it’s getting
more tough out in the
ﬁeld and his male and
female ofﬁcers need it.
Council also authorized the mayor to
apply for the Lincoln
Terrace Project and
discussed the amount
to be paid. Pullins Excavation’s bid was also
accepted.
Members also
approved the draw from
the Ohio Public Works
Commission fund for
the downtown paving
project and okay-ed a
draw from the Ohio
Water Development
Authority for Layne
Christensen Co. for the
well cleaning and booster station projects. The
mayor and Pullins Excavation also entered into
a contract with OPWC
for emergency funds.
The 2016 budget was
also approved.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

�LOCAL

2 Wednesday, July 22, 2015

OBITUARIES

DEATH NOTICES

VIRGINIA HOPE BIRD DODSON
POINT PLEASANT —
Virginia Hope Bird Dodson, 59, of Point Pleasant,
passed away at 4:11 p.m.
Sunday, July 19, 2015, in
the Emergency Department at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Point Pleasant.
Born March 18, 1956,
in Meigs County, she
was the daughter of the
late Harold William Bird
and Emma Lee Knighting Bird who survives in
Racine, Ohio. She was the
produce manager at WalMart in Mason, W.Va..
She attended Rejoicing
Life Christian Church, of
Middleport, Ohio.
In addition to her
mother, she is survived
by her son Craig (BobbiJo) Wolfe, of Pomeroy;
stepsons Ryan (April)
Dodson, of Allen, Texas,
and Josh Dodson, of
Bradenton, Fla.; stepdaughters Tirzah Smith,
of Racine, and Chelsie
(Jason) Able, of Bradenton; a brother, Bill (Judy)

Bird, of Racine; a sister,
Genevieve (Mike) Rush,
of Racine; and numerous
nieces and nephews.
In addition to her
father, Virginia was preceded in death by her
husband, Daniel Dodson,
whom she married April
19, 2001, in Middleport
and who preceded her in
death on May 22, 2015;
and a son, Shawn Wolfe,
who preceded her in
death on Sept. 28, 2003.
Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Friday, July
24, 2015, at Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine,
with Pastor Ryan Eaton
ofﬁciating. Interment
will follow in Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may
call the funeral home two
hours prior to the service
on Friday.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensfuneralhomes.
com.

GARY L. ELLIS
DUBLIN, Ohio — Gary
L. Ellis, 62, of Dublin,
passed away Monday,
July 20, 2015, at Kobacker House after a hardfought battle with ALS.
He was born May 30,
1953, in Pomeroy, to
Louis and Anna Mae
Ellis. He served for many
years as a volunteer ﬁreﬁghter and paramedic in
Meigs County. He retired
from AEP in 2010 after a
37-year career, beginning
in the power plants and
later in the commercial
operations department
in Columbus. He was
a devoted member of
Amlin United Methodist Church. He was an
avid musician and played
bass for his church praise
team, and also was a part
of the group Prescription,
and the group Late Night
Pick Up.
He was preceded in
death by his mother,
Anna Mae Ellis; and cousin Adam Kishbaugh.
He is survived by his
loving wife, Pam (Kirby)
Ellis; son James Ellis;
daughter Mychal Ellis;
father Louis Ellis; sister

Teresa (Kevin) Hansher;
father- and mother-inlaw Earl and Connie
Kirby; brother-in-law
Brad (Karen) Kirby; and
numerous nieces, nephews, cousins, aunts and
uncles.
Gary was also lovingly
taken care of by a host
of wonderful caregivers
through Ohio Health
Hospice. We were also
blessed to have in his and
our lives the God-sent
angel Ronda Barber.
Visitation will be 4-8
p.m. Friday, July 24,
2015, and 10 a.m. Saturday, July 25, 2015, with
a Celebration of Life
service to follow at 11
a.m. Both will be held at
Amlin United Methodist
Church, 5441 Cosgray
Road, Dublin.
In lieu of ﬂowers, contributions may be made
to the ALS Association
of Central and Southern
Ohio Chapter at alsohio.
org or The Kobacker
House of Columbus.
Messages may be sent
to his family by visiting
www.cotnerfuneralhome.
com.

GALYEN
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Patricia R. Galyen, 76, of
Gallipolis, died Saturday, July 18, 2015, at Holzer
Medical Center.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Saturday, July
25, 2015, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home,
Gallipolis. Burial will follow in Mound Hill Cemetery, Gallipolis. Friends may call the funeral

3

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Wheel of
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Fortune
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ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
EntertainmJudge Judy
ent Tonight
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events.
13 News at Inside
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Edition

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PREMIUM

Ex-Gov. Ted Stickland to visit

through high school are invited to attend. They will learn
about and participate in baseball, ﬂag football, basketball
MIDDLEPORT — Former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, and cheerleading. Soccer is also offered for the younger chilcandidate for U.S. Senate, will be on hand for a donation- dren. Practice and pizza will be Saturday and the program
only fundraiser for the Strickland for Senate campaign.
on Sunday. There will be a daily give-away and all particiThe Meigs County Democratic Party will host the event pants will receive a T-shirt with the Bible School logo. on it.
on July 25 from 6-8 p.m. at Riverbend Arts, 290 N. Second St. Activities include entertainment by the Gilmores
and hot dogs, potato chips, desert and drinks.

Digital Works Job Fair

PORTLAND — Gertie Lehew will celebrate her
95th birthday on July 30. Cards may be sent to
53460 Bald Knob Road, Portland, OH 45770.

MIDDLEPORT — Digital Works will be holding
a public job fair from 10 a.m. to noon July 28. Job
opportunities will be presented, as well as information
on the Digital works training program. Job and Family
Services will be present to discuss available funding
resource to help jump start your new career. Available
positions include client services and technical support
agents with opportunity for advancement. The job fair
will be held at Digital Works, 349 North Second Street,
Middleport. For more information contact Sonya
Wolfe, Digital Works facilitator, at 740-742-1004 or
740-444-9010. Also visit www.digitalworksjobs.com.

Vacation Bible School

Coad4Kids

RUTLAND — “Mega Sports” is the theme of Vacation Bible School at Zion Church of Christ, located on Rt
143 (37420 Zion Rd), July 22-24. Students from nursery

OHIO VALLEY —Cod4Kids is a coalition of 17 Community Action Agencies serving Appalachian Ohio.
Free resource materials are available to help child care
providers plan fun learning experiences for children.
Information on becoming a child care provider, advice
and guidelines on what to look for in a child care provider and a list of providers in your area are available
upon request. For more information go online to www.
coad4kids.or or call 740-354-6527 or 800-577-2276.

85th birthday card shower
COOLVILLE —Bob White will be turning 85 on
July 26. Cards may be sent to 44107 Carr Road,
Coolville, OH 45723.

95th birthday card shower

8:30

Masterchef "Moo-vers and
Bakers" (N)
Life on the Reef Green sea
turtles return to the breeding
colony. (N)
Big Brother

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Comic "The Premiere" 100 of America's best and brightest
comics perform for judges in front of a live audience. (N)
Comic "The Premiere" 100 of America's best and brightest
comics perform for judges in front of a live audience. (N)
Black "The
Black-ish
Modern
Modern
Dozens"
Family
Family
Nova "Why Planes Vanish" Nova "Sunken Ship Rescue"
Examine the story of the
The operation to salvage the
search for Flight MH370.
Costa Concordia.
Black "The
Black-ish
Modern
Modern
Dozens"
Family
Family
Extant "Cracking the Code" Criminal Minds "Rock
(N)
Creek Park"
Home Free (P) (N)
Eyewitness News at 10
Nova "Why Planes Vanish"
Examine the story of the
search for Flight MH370.
Extant "Cracking the Code"
(N)

9 PM

9:30

Nova "Sunken Ship Rescue"
The operation to salvage the
Costa Concordia.
Criminal Minds "Rock
Creek Park"

10 PM

10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother
Driven (N)
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Kansas City Royals Site: Kauffman Stadium (L)
MLB Baseball Baltimore Orioles at New York Yankees Site: Yankee Stadium (L)
Baseball Tonight (L)
Pan American Games -- Toronto, Ont. (L)
Little Women: LA "Pain in Little Women: LA "Into the Little Women: LA "Home
Little Women: LA "Little
Little Women: LA "New
the Butt"
Woods"
Wreckers"
Women, Big Easy"
Orleans, New Engagement?"
Baby Daddy
Mean Girls A new student is a hit with the popular Melissa &amp;
13 Going on 30 Thirteen-year-old Jenna wishes away
crowd until she falls for the wrong guy. TV14
(N)
her youth and wakes up as a 30-year-old woman. TVPG
Joey (N)
Cops "Las
Jail
Cops "Coast Cops "Grand Cops "Jersey Cops "Coast Cops "Las
Cops "Coast Cops
Cops "Stupid
Vegas Heat"
to Coast"
Theft Auto" Cop"
to Coast"
Vegas Heat" to Coast"
Behavior"
Thunder
Thunder
WitchWay
Talia (N)
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Gaffigan (N) Impastor (N)
Law&amp;O: SVU "Hardwired" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Conned" Law&amp;O: SVU "Disabled"
Suits "Toe to Toe" (N)
Mr. Robot (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anthony Bourdain
CNN Tonight
Castle "Secret Santa"
Castle "Significant Others" Castle
Castle "Death Gone Crazy" Castle "Recoil"
(5:30)
300 The Spartan king assembles a small army
I Am Legend The seemingly lone survivor of a
I Am Legend (‘07,
of soldiers to defend his land from the Persians. TVMA
plague struggles to survive and find a cure. TV14
Sci-Fi) Will Smith. TV14
Repo "Armed on Arrival"
Repo "Panic at 10,000"
Repo "Ken Gets Played" (N) Repo "Repo Roulette"
Bush People "Rocky Seas"
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck Dyn.
Duck Dyn.
Duck
Duck
Wahlburgers Donnie
Lachey's Bar
Dynasty
"Jerky Boys" Dynasty
"G.I. SI"
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty (N) (N)
Loves J. (N) (N)
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
The Last Alaskans
Last Alaskan "The Hunted"
Player Gets Played "The
Player Gets Played "The
Player Gets Played "Don
Player Gets Played "Sweet Player Gets Played "Sweet
Model Boyfriend"
Tinder Trap"
Juan Leon"
Revenge" (N)
Revenge"
Law &amp; Order "Grief"
LawOrder "Faccia a Faccia" Law &amp; Order "Divorce"
Law &amp; Order "Carrier"
Law &amp; Order "Stalker"
Kardashians Kardashians E! News (N)
Hollywood "Odd Man Out" Kardashians "Buggy Boo" Kardashians "Lip Service"
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Jim Gaffigan Impastor (N)
Southern Justice "Hide and
Rocky Mountain Law "Off Southern Justice "Meth
Rocky Mountain Law "Off Rocky Mountain Law
"Fugitive Manhunt" (N)
Road Remains"
Manhunt"
Road Remains"
Seek" (N)
NASCAR
NPGL Fitness San Francisco vs Phoenix
Cycling Tour de France Stage 17 Digne-les-Bains - Pra Loup
CONCACAF Soccer Gold Cup (L)
Racing
NCWTS
NASCAR Racing Mudsummer Classic (L)
FS Live
American Pickers
American Pickers "The
American Pickers "The
American Pickers "Red,
(:05) The Woodsmen
"Everything Must Go"
Maineiacs"
Empire Picks Back"
White and Blues" (N)
"Search and Rescue" (N)
Housewives "Full Circle"
H.Wives "Bowling in Heels" Flipping "Womb for Rent" Flipping "It's Sabotage" (N) Million Listing SF (N)
(:25) Fresh Prince of Bel Air (:55) Fresh P.
White Chicks (‘04, Com) Marlon Wayans, Shawn Wayans. TV14
Game (N)
Frankie (N)
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Kitchens (N) Kitchens
Buying and Selling (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House
(5:00)
Sharknado (‘13,
Sharknado 2: The Second One A freak weather
Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No! Fin tries to save his children as
Hor) Tara Reid. TV14
system unleashes a sharknado on New York City. TV14
sharknadoes merge and grow bigger then ever before.

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Submitted by Tina Wood Richards

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
Game 365
24 (ROOT) In Depth
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption
27 (LIFE)

toys, collars, dog food and puppy
chow, four stainless steel buckets,
mops, mop bucket, scooper, ﬂea
collars, disinfectant wipes, bleach,
cleaning supplies, tarps, rawhides
and more.
“Farmers Bank is a community
bank and it shows,” Commissioner Randy Smith said. “Mr.
Reed and his staff always seem
at the ready to help whatever the
time or the reason. We are blessed
to have these folks as friends and
neighbors.”
Currently, the shelter is in need
of people to attend the Walk-aDog night on Thursdays from 6-8
p.m. Smith said the only things
people need to bring are themselves, some energy and a heart
full of love.

To participate, people were
encouraged to drop off wish-list
MEIGS COUNTY — The staff items at any of the six Farmers
at the Meigs County Dog Shelter Bank branches. In addition, one
say they are grateful and overlocal business, Pizza Dan’s of Rutwhelmed by the generosity of the land, also conducted a donation
community.
night in which customers could
“Everything is greatly apprecireceive a restaurant discount in
ated and will be put to great use,” exchange for shelter donations.
said Karen Lambert Smith, Meigs That event, held at Pizza Dan’s,
County dog warden when she
was organized by Pam Patterson
arrived Tuesday afternoon with
and resulted in $100 in monetary
shelter volunteer Angie Smith to donations, in addition to multiple
pack all of the donations received items of dog food, all delivered to
from the public.
the shelter.
The end of June marked the
At the end of the month-long
end of Farmers Bank’s month-long Dog Days campaign, the followcampaign, Dog Days of Summer,
ing much-needed donations were
to assist the Meigs County Dog
collected, in addition to more
Shelter. The campaign, organized than $225: over a dozen cases of
by Tina Wood Richards and Erica dog bones, wheeled hauling carts,
Martyn, employees of Farmers
paper towels, dishwashing liquid,
Bank, was held throughout June. storage totes, leashes and dog

America's Got Talent "Best
of Auditions" (N)
America's Got Talent "Best
of Auditions" (N)
Black-ish
Black "The
Prank King"
Life on the Reef Green sea
turtles return to the breeding
colony. (N)
Black-ish
Black "The
Prank King"
Big Brother

8 PM

SAYRE
STARKE, Fla. — Charlotte Ann Sayre, 58, of
Starke, passed away Saturday, July 18, 2015, in the
Haven Hospice, Gainesville, Fla.
Private burial will be in Letart-Evergreen Cemetery, Letart, W.Va. Casto Funeral Home in Evans,
W.Va., is assisting the family.

Contributed article

WEDNESDAY, JULY 22
7 PM

home between 5-7 p.m. Friday.

Dog Shelter grateful for donations

WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

Daily Sentinel

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The Daily News strives
to publish correct and
factual information and
makes every effort to
avoid errors.
In the Friday, July 17
edition of The Daily Sentinel a story titled “Mid-

dleport Council rejects
nomination” incorrectly
identifed Teri Hockman
and her occupation of ﬁscal ofﬁcer.
The Daily Sentinel
regrets the error.

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(5:45) The Book of Life Diego Luna. A love- The Brink

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

True Detective
The Maze Runner (‘14, Sci-Fi) Thomas Brodie-Sangster,
struck young man sets out on adventure
Dylan O'Brien. A group of boys with no memories of their
that spans three fantastical worlds. TVPG
past lives are trapped inside an enormous maze. TV14
(5:25)
16 Blocks (2006, (:10) Wish I Was Here (‘14, Com/Dra) Mandy Patinkin,
The Untouchables (‘87, Act) Sean Connery, Robert
Thriller) Mos Def, Bruce
Kate Hudson, Zach Braff. A struggling actor finally starts to De Niro, Kevin Costner. Federal agent Eliot Ness forms a
Willis. TV14
figure himself out when he home-schools his kids. TVMA
fearless foursome to take on crime boss Al Capone. TVM
Starring Adam West Explores the life of
Ray Donovan "Ding"
(4:55)
Mission:
Walking Tall A retired soldier sets
Impossible III (‘06, Act) Tom Adam West, best known for his role in the out to clean up his hometown, despite the
Cruise. TV14
dangers to his family. TV14
television series 'Batman.'

CORRECTION

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
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Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 22, 2015 3

Cosby testimony puts ‘70s party drug back in news
By John Rogers
Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Before
there was Molly there was the
quaalude, the most popular
party drug of the 1970s.
It was also, as we now know,
the one Bill Cosby kept on
hand to give to young women
he wanted to have sex with.
In 10-year-old testimony
uncovered this week, Cosby
said he would offer the drug
“the same as a person would
say, ‘Have a drink.’”
He never tried to sneak any
of it into someone’s drink, he
added, as many others did
during those years. But when
asked whether a woman who
accused him of drugging and
sexually assaulting her in 1976
could have resisted him while
on quaaludes, he replied, “I
don’t know.”
One thing is certain. The
drug, outlawed in the United
States since 1982, was hugely
popular 40 years ago. People
routinely swallowed it with
their drinks at nightclubs from
coast to coast.
The 13-year-old girl with
whom Roman Polanski pleaded

guilty to having unlawful sexual
intercourse in 1977 said the
Oscar-winning director plied
her with champagne and half a
quaalude before raping her at
Jack Nicholson’s house. Polanski ﬂed to France in 1978 to
avoid a long prison sentence
and continues to live there as a
fugitive.
Holly Madison, in her
recently published memoir,
“Down the Rabbit Hole: Curious Adventures and Cautionary Tales of a Former Playboy
Bunny,” writes that Hugh Hefner once offered her a handful
of quaaludes.
“’Usually, I don’t approve of
drugs, but you know, in the
‘70s they used to call these pills
thigh openers,’” she says he
told her. Hefner has declined to
discuss Madison’s book.
At one point during Cosby’s
testimony for a lawsuit he
eventually settled out of court,
he said he had seven different
prescriptions for quaaludes. He
got them by asking his doctor
for some, he said. The doctor
asked him if he had a “bad back
or anything,” and Cosby said
yes.

But Cosby said in the deposition that he wanted them for
non-medical reasons. “Quaaludes happen to be the drug that
kids, young people were using
to party with and there were
times when I wanted to have
them just in case,” he said.
The drug, synthesized in the
1950s, was originally intended
as an anti-malarial treatment,
says James Adams, associate
professor at the University of
Southern California School of
Pharmacy. When doctors discovered what a great painkiller
and sleep aid it appeared to
be, they prescribed it for that
instead.
Soon, people discovered that
it also released sexual inhibitions, particularly in men, and
that when mixed with alcohol
it produced a mellow euphoria. It also made it difﬁcult if
not impossible for an intoxicated woman to resist a man’s
advances.
As it spread through the hippie culture and then into the
bars and private parties of the
hipster crowd, bootleg versions
known as “ludes” began to
ﬂood the streets. Doctors who

COSBY LAWYERS: KEEP SEAL
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Lawyers for Bill Cosby argue in a new court
filing his admission he used quaaludes in the 1970s doesn’t mean he
drugged and sexually assaulted women.
The lawyers on Tuesday asked a court to preserve the confidentiality
of his 2006 settlement in a sexual-battery lawsuit.
Cosby’s lawyers are attacking the weekend release of his deposition
by a court reporting service. They say the deposition and other
filings unsealed this month have led to inaccurate reports branding
the Philadelphia native a rapist.
They insist the married Cosby only admitted having consensual sex
with other women.
More than two dozen women have come forward to accuse the
78-year-old Cosby of molesting them. The former star of the hit
sitcom “The Cosby Show” has not been charged with a crime.

prescribed it began to be seen
as pariahs.
“Quaalude accounted for
less than 2 percent of our sales
but created 98 percent of our
headaches,” the chairman of
the William H. Rorer pharmaceuticals company told The
Associated Press in 1981, three
years after the company sold its
rights to make the drug. The
following year the Food and
Drug Administration banned it
in the United States.
It’s still legal with a prescription in Mexico, but until
Cosby’s testimony it seemed

to have become the forgotten
party drug among American
millennials. Save for those fans
of the 2013 ﬁlm “The Wolf of
Wall Street,” whose anti-hero,
Leonardo diCaprio’s Jordan
Belfort, was wildly addicted
to it.
“Party drugs go in and out
of favor,” Adams says. “They
come and go in waves. MDMA
is another drug from the ‘60s
that used to be really popular
and went out of popularity and
then came back.”
These days it’s known as
Molly.

Forms revised,
changes made
after Ohio ruling
By Ann Sanner
Associated Press

Karen Warren | Houston Chronicle via AP

Carie Cauley, left, the Rev. Hannah Bonner and Rhys Caraway protest the death of Sandra Bland in front of the Waller County
Sheriff's Office and county jail on Monday in Hempstead, Texas. Authorities said Bland hanged herself in the jail three days after
being pulled over by police for a traffic violation and then arrested for allegedly kicking an officer during the stop. Bland's family is
ordering an independent autopsy, lawyers said.

Texas jail admits breaking rules
By Michael Graczyk
Associated Press

HEMPSTEAD, Texas
— The operators of a
Texas jail where a black
woman died after she was
arrested in a trafﬁc stop
have acknowledged violating state rules on guard
training and the monitoring of inmates.
The Waller County Jail,
about 60 miles northwest
of Houston, is under investigation in the death of
Sandra Bland, a Chicagoarea woman whose family
disputes authorities’ ﬁnding that she hanged herself
with a plastic garbage bag
in her cell.
The Texas Commission
on Jail Standards last week
cited the jail for not providing documents proving
that jailers in the past year
had undergone training on
interacting with inmates
who are mentally disabled
or potentially suicidal.
The citation also
showed that jailers fell
short by not observing
inmates in person at least
once every hour.
The sheriff’s ofﬁce said
Friday in a statement
that jailers checked on
the 28-year-old Bland via
intercom on one occasion
rather than in person.
Commission Executive
Director Brandon Wood
has declined to say if
the citation is related to
Bland’s death. But sheriff’s
ofﬁcials mention her when
explaining the violations,
noting that they don’t
believe “either one of these
deﬁciencies had any part
in the death of Ms. Bland.”

The Texas trooper who
pulled Bland over for failing to signal a lane change
said in an afﬁdavit that
after handcufﬁng her for
becoming combative, she
swung her elbows at him
and kicked him in his right
shin.
In the afﬁdavit released
Tuesday, trooper Brian
Encinia said he then used
force “to subdue Bland to
the ground,” and she continued to ﬁght back. He
arrested her for assault on
a public servant.
Bland was taken to the
jail on July 10 and found
dead in her cell July 13.
Texas authorities said
last week that the trooper
violated procedures and
the department’s courtesy
policy during the trafﬁc
stop and was placed on
administrative leave.
Encinia has been a
trooper for the Texas
Department of Public
Safety for just over a year.
A Texas Rangers investigation into Bland’s death
is being supervised by the
FBI.
Waller County District
Attorney Elton Mathis has
asked for extensive scientiﬁc testing, including
ﬁngerprints and DNA, “so
we can ﬁgure out and say
with certainty what happened in that cell.”
Although a medical
examiner has ruled Bland’s
death a suicide, supporters
insist she was upbeat and
looking forward to a new
job at Prairie View A&amp;M
University, where she
graduated in 2009. Bland’s
family and clergy members
have called for a Justice

Department probe, and an
independent autopsy has
been ordered.
However, Bland posted
a video to her Facebook
page in March, saying
she was suffering from “a
little bit of depression as
well as PTSD,” or posttraumatic stress disorder.
Family members have
said nothing in her background suggested she
was mentally troubled,
and at least one friend
said she was just venting
after a bad day.
Her death comes after
nearly a year of heightened
national scrutiny of police

and their dealings with
black suspects who have
been killed by ofﬁcers.
The case has resonated on social media,
with posts questioning
the ofﬁcial account and
featuring the hashtags
#JusticeForSandy and
#WhatHappenedToSandyBland. Others referred
to #SandySpeaks, the
hashtag Bland used in
monologues she posted
on Facebook in which
she talked about police
brutality and said she
had a calling from God to
speak out against racism
and injustice.

COLUMBUS — Same-sex couples in Ohio can now
hold their weddings in the Statehouse, ﬁle their state
taxes jointly and list their spouses on death certiﬁcates following the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last
month that legalized gay marriage across the country.
The lead plaintiff in the case that led to the landmark ruling was Jim Obergefell of Cincinnati. He sued Ohio’s health
director for refusing to list him as the surviving spouse on
his husband’s death certiﬁcate. Ohio voters banned gay
marriage in 2004. The state’s health department oversees
vital statistics that include birth and death records.
Now that gay marriages are allowed, the state is
working to comply with the ruling. Here’s a look at
some changes that have already been made and others
still in the works:
Statehouse ceremonies
A Statehouse rule requires couples to have an Ohio
marriage license if they wish to walk down the aisle
at the historic building or hold their receptions there.
The policy makes no reference to same-sex marriages.
But the rule had prevented gay couples from holding
their ceremonies in the building’s rotunda, atrium and
other spaces, because they had been barred from getting the licenses until the high court’s ruling.
A spokesman for the board that oversees the Statehouse
and its grounds said the policy remains unchanged since
the Supreme Court’s decision. All couples must still submit their licenses to the board to wed at the Statehouse,
said Luke Stedke of the Capitol Square Review and Advisory Board. No same-sex couple has applied yet.
Taxes
Ohio’s tax department has done away with a form used by
married same-sex couples. The document had allowed those
ﬁling taxes jointly at the federal level to separate their returns
for the state. In 2014, 9,894 taxpayers ﬁled this form, according to the department. That’s out of 5.4 million tax ﬁlers.
Taxation spokesman Gary Gudmundson said the
form was retired at the beginning of July. He said couples can ﬁle amended returns, but it’s not required.
“The only guideline now is however you ﬁle at the federal level is how you have to ﬁle at the state level,” he said.

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�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Daily Sentinel

YOUR VIEW

Home Rule group: County
denies right to protect water
Dear Editor,
The Meigs County Commissioners’ taking “no
action” (July 14) was to arbitrarily deny county
residents the right to protect their water through a
lawful charter petition.
The Board of Elections met the legal requirement of the Ohio Revised Code (307.94) when
their director and deputy examined the petition
form and signatures, certifying as valid the petition form with sufﬁcient signatures with a “report”
accompanied by a cover letter to the commissioners on July 2, well before the July 6 deadline.
The law required the commissioners to accept
the “certifying” work of the BOE. Though they
deny it, the commissioners actually accepted the
BOE July 2, letter and report, written and signed
by the director and deputy, as being from the
BOE.
Their July 9 letter was to “Meigs County Board
of Elections,” and states, “We are in receipt of
your letter dated July 2, 2015.” And, “Your letter
advises that ‘the required number of signatures
was found to be sufﬁcient as evidenced by the
attached report.’”
In that same letter to BOE (July 9), the commissioners speciﬁed supposed deﬁciencies in the
July 2 BOE report, a “certiﬁcate” and stipulations
not required by law. They then agreed “… to hold
a special meeting …” the purpose of which was “…
to allow time before the deadline of Tuesday, July
14, 2015, at 4 p.m. for the Board of Elections to
provide (as stated in ORC 307.94).” Nonetheless,
the four members of BOE, along with their director and deputy, complied and on July 13 provided
the commissioners with exactly what they wanted,
and all in time for the commissioners to still comply with the July 15 deadline, being 111 days prior
to the election this November (307.94).
The court ﬁling and exhibits correspond with
what I have here presented. It’s about safe water,
not politics.

Dennis Sargent

Meigs County Home Rule Committee member

Meigs Commissioners
make wrong decision
Dear Editor,
It looks like Meigs County Commissioners
Randy Smith, Mike Bartrum and Tim Ihle may
have squelched the Initiative for the Petition
signed by 885 concerned citizens for the a Charter
and Clean Water Rights (the underlying issue in
this).
They have done this by failing to act on certifying a legal and timely petition for the Charter
using “deadlines” as a means to do this. When in
fact, as your article of July 15 stated, director of
the Board of Elections Becky Johnson and Deputy
Director Meghan Lee had certiﬁed the petition
signatures as valid and sufﬁcient, and wrote a letter to that effect on July 2 to them.
The commissioners illegally claimed that all
members of the BOE needed to sign that letter.
So, when the BOE met again to sign another letter
to the commissioners, the original deadline had
passed. They used this as an excuse not to act to
certify the legal validity of the timely submitted
petition. This game playing by the commissioners could cost Meigs County residents concerned
about drinking water contamination from an
unprecedentedly high volume of fracking wastes
imported from neighboring states, their health
and possibly even their lives.
The Meigs County Commissioners are good
people who, I believe generally have the interests
of Meigs County citizens in mind and have done
good work. However, if they choose to ignore this
extremely important issue, then they are ignoring
an issue about which a majority of residents are
concerned.
I have to ask whether the commissioners even
considered these possible dire outcomes when
they failed to act. My message to them is this: Our
health, welfare and right to clean water is not a
“game” or something to be played with.

Tom and Sue Zano
Meigs County

The Daily Sentinel
Letters to the Editor

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

THEIR VIEW

Fixing errors on credit reports
be a voice for consumers in our
Too many Ohioans are still
ﬁnancial system, and together,
feeling the effects of the 2008
debt collection and credit
ﬁnancial crisis — particularly
reporting made up the majoron their credit scores.
ity of the complaints the CFPB
More than 50 million conreceived from consumers over
sumers saw their credit scores
the past year.
plunge more than 20 points
Sherrod
Since the CFPB opened its
during the worst days of the
doors, 20,000 Ohio consumers
crisis, from 2008 to 2009.
Brown
Contributing have ﬁled complaints with the
Many still haven’t fully recovColumnist
Bureau — and roughly 8,000
ered.
of those were about debt colTo make matters worse, onelection and credit reporting.
in-ﬁve consumers has an error
We need to ensure that credit scores
on his or her credit report. These
errors can have serious consequences. are accurate, and that errors and old
debt aren’t compounding the problem.
Today, credit scores are being used
Millions of Americans are haunted
more than ever, and often for nonby debts they have already paid or discredit purposes, like employment and
charged, yet that continue to appear
rental housing. Inaccurate scores can
on their credit reports — so-called
lead to Ohioans being given incorrect
“zombie debts.” While a bankruptcy
interest rates or no credit at all.
remains on a credit ﬁle for up to 10
We know that these issues are
years, the debt erased by the bankfrustrating too many Ohioans. The
ruptcy should be removed from the
Consumer Financial Protection
ﬁle once it’s discharged.
Bureau was created after the crisis to

That’s why last week I introduced
the Consumer Reporting Fairness Act.
It would require creditors to ensure
that debts discharged in bankruptcy
show a zero balance on the consumer’s credit report in an accurate and
timely manner.
This will ensure that debts prior to
bankruptcy aren’t, in effect, doublecounted and don’t continue to haunt
Ohioans looking for jobs, apartments
and home loans. We also know that
debt collectors are too often going
after debt that is not owed, often in
abusive ways. This bill will put a stop
to that harassment.
Foreclosures already wreaked havoc
on consumers’ credit scores during
the crisis. We need to make it easier
for Americans to get back on their feet
with common-sense reforms like this.
Democrat U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown represents
Ohio in the U.S. Senate in Washington, D.C.

THEIR VIEW

Consumers whose identities are stolen
A southwest Ohio consumer who tried to move
her Cincinnati Bell account
received a rude surprise: It
was blocked because ﬁve
iPhones had been bought
in her name without her
knowledge and the bill for
the $2,300 purchase had yet
to be paid.
A consumer in Canﬁeld
was shocked to learn that a
woman in Georgia cashed a
$5,000 check for a loan that a
payday lender had issued in
his name.
When Target asked a
Columbus consumer about a
line of credit he supposedly
opened, he checked his credit
report and discovered several
other credit cards he never
applied for had been issued
in his name.
After these three consumers contacted our ofﬁce, we
were able to resolve their
cases and collectively save
them more than $13,000.
But their stories, and others
like them, give a glimpse into

data breaches have
why our volume
compromised more
of identity theft
than 815 million
complaints more
records containing
than doubled from
consumers’ sensitive
2013 to 2014, and
ﬁnancial information.
why identity theft
If a Social Security
joined our list of top
Mike
number is involved,
10 consumer coma full-blown identity
plaints for the ﬁrst
DeWine
Contributing theft can cost a contime last year.
Columnist
sumer an average of
In 2012, I cre$5,100.
ated a consumer
States have largely
Identity Theft Unit
taken the lead in responding
to help victims rectify the
effects of identity theft. Since to data breaches and identity
theft. They’ve helped conthen we’ve received more
sumers deal with the reperthan 3,300 complaints and
cussions of data breaches
helped adjust or clear about
and investigated the causes.
$900,000 from consumers’
Forty-seven states have
accounts.
enacted laws requiring data
While identity theft is
collectors to notify consumoften a random crime of
opportunity, breaches in both ers when a data breach has
commercial and government compromised their personal
information.
data bases have emerged as
Congress has contemnew and signiﬁcant dangers.
plated passing a national law
Data breaches don’t always
on data breach notiﬁcation
result in identity theft, but
and data security. However,
they do put individuals at
state laws already in place to
greater risk.
protect consumers from data
Since 2005, nearly 5,000

breaches and identity theft
should not be limited or preempted by federal legislation.
That’s why earlier this
month I signed a letter
with 46 other attorneys
general asking Congress to
maintain states’ authority
to enforce data breach and
security laws. Our letter
urged Congress to preserve
existing breach notiﬁcation
requirements under state law
and not to hinder states that
are helping their residents
by pre-empting state data
breach and security laws.
We want to keep the ﬂexibility we need to effectively
assist consumers who contact us from Cincinnati, Canﬁeld, Columbus, and every
other corner of the state.
For help with situations
involving a data breach, identity theft, or other consumer
problems, contact my ofﬁce
at 800-282-0515 or www.
OhioAttorneyGeneral.gov.
Mike DeWine is Ohio Attorney
General.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday, July 22, the
203rd day of 2015. There are 162 days
left in the year.
Today’s Birthdays: Former Senate
Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan.,
is 92. Actor-comedian Orson Bean
is 87. Actress Louise Fletcher is 81.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Chuck
Jackson is 78. Actor Terence Stamp
is 77. Game show host Alex Trebek
is 75. Singer George Clinton is 74.
Actor-singer Bobby Sherman is 72.
Former Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison,
R-Texas, is 72. Movie writer-director

Paul Schrader is 69. Actor Danny
Glover is 69. Singer Mireille Mathieu
is 69. Actor-comedian-director
Albert Brooks is 68. Rock singer Don
Henley is 68. Movie composer Alan
Menken is 66. Singer-actress Lonette
McKee is 62. Jazz musician Al Di
Meola is 61. Actor Willem Dafoe is
60. Rhythm-and-blues singer Keith
Sweat is 54. Actress Joanna Going is
52. Actor Rob Estes is 52. Folk singer
Emily Saliers (Indigo Girls) is 52.
Actor John Leguizamo is 51. Actorcomedian David Spade is 51. Actor

Patrick Labyorteaux is 50. Rock musician Pat Badger is 48. Actress Irene
Bedard is 48. Actor Rhys Ifans (rees
EYE’-fanz) is 48. Actress Diana Maria
Riva is 46. Actor Colin Ferguson is
43. Retired NFL player Keyshawn
Johnson is 43. Rock musician Daniel
Jones is 42. Singer Rufus Wainwright
is 42. Actress Franka Potente (pohTEN’-tay) is 41. Actress A.J. Cook is
37. Actor Keegan Allen is 28. Actress
Camila Banus is 25. Actress Selena
Gomez is 23. Britain’s Prince George
of Cambridge is two.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 22, 2015 5

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Community Calendar will only list
event information that is open to
the public.

dation at AEP Gavine equine and
hunting area, located at 30225 St.
Rt. 124. Registration begins at 9a.m.
with the ride following at 10 a.m.
Lunch will be a Hog Roast. Contact
Kenny Turley 740-949-2657 or Paul
McDaniel 740-742-2320 for more
information.
TUPPERS PLAINS — 9053 VFW
Ladies Auxiliary, light music and
refreshments, 7-9 p.m.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 22
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will be closed
from noon to 1 p.m. Normal business
hours will resume at 1 p.m.

THURSDAY, JULY 23
John Minchillo | AP

Ohio Gov. John Kasich announces he is running for the 2016 Republican party’s nomination for
president during a campaign rally at Ohio State University on Tuesdayin Columbus, Ohio. Kasich, a
two-term governor and former congressman, has little name recognition in the crowded GOP field, but
he is already airing television ads in New Hampshire where he is heading immediately after making
his run official.

Bid

and to school districts speciﬁcally, as
well as his closing of centers for people
with development disabilities.
From Page 1
“I’m here to make sure that the nation
knows, as John Kasich announces his
“I have the experience and the testrun for president, that he is not an
ing,” he said, “the testing which shapes advocate for anybody that is vulneryou and prepares you for the most
able,” said Melissa Svigelj, 42, an educaimportant job in the world and I believe tor from suburban Cleveland. “Unless
I know how to work and help restore
you are part of the 1 percent, Kasich is
this great United States.”
not your friend.”
As budget chairman in the House, he
Among his supporters, Margo Bishop,
became an architect of a deal in 1997
77, of Gahanna, Ohio, said she values
that balanced the federal budget.
his candor.
Now in his second term in swing“I just like his honesty,” she said. “I
state Ohio, he’s helped erase a budget
think he’s speaking out, and even if I
deﬁcit projected at nearly $8 billion
don’t agree all the time, at least he’s saywhen he entered ofﬁce, boost Ohio’s
ing something.”
rainy-day fund to a historic high
Kasich embraces conservative ideals
and seen private-sector employment
but bucks his party on occasion and disrebound to its post-recession level.
dains the Republican sport of bashing
This, through budget cutting, privaDemocrat Hillary Rodham Clinton.
tization of parts of Ohio’s government
His entry nearly rounds out an unusuand other, often business-style innovaally diverse Republican lineup with two
tions. “We didn’t really have to slash
Hispanics, an African-American, one
things,” Kasich said of the budget
woman and several younger candidates
squeeze. “We just had to use a 21st cen- alongside older white men. So many
tury formula.”
are running that it’s unclear Kasich will
But unions, which turned back an
qualify for the GOP’s ﬁrst debate in his
effort by Kasich and fellow Republicans home state in just two weeks, when
to limit public workers’ collective baronly the top 10 candidates in national
gaining rights, say Kasich’s successes
polling will be on stage.
have come at a cost to local governIn recent months, he’s made trips to
ments and schools, and that new Ohio
New Hampshire, South Carolina, Iowa,
jobs lack the pay and beneﬁts of the
New York and Michigan, and will be
ones they replaced.
returning to early voting states. His
As a marching band kept up a spritely allies at the political organization New
cadence before Kasich spoke, scores
Day for America reported raising $11.5
million on his behalf before his entry
of demonstrators gathered across the
into the race.
street to protest his cuts to the budget

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

60°

78°

75°

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.

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

1.72
7.85
3.03
33.48
24.99

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:21 a.m.
8:49 p.m.
12:33 p.m.
none

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Jul 23

Jul 31

Last

Aug 6 Aug 14

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

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
5:04a
5:49a
6:33a
7:17a
8:02a
8:48a
9:35a

Minor
11:15a
12:00p
12:22a
1:05a
1:49a
2:34a
3:22a

Major
5:25p
6:11p
6:56p
7:41p
8:27p
9:14p
10:03p

Minor
11:36p
---12:45p
1:29p
2:14p
3:01p
3:49p

WEATHER HISTORY
On July 22, 1918, one lightning strike
killed 504 sheep in Wasatch National
Park, Utah. In one year, lightning
often kills more people than ﬂoods,
tornadoes or hurricanes do.

LANGSVILLE — Ohio Horsemans Council Meigs Chapter will
host a “Ride for Wishes” trail ride
beneﬁting the Make a Wish Foun-

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 54.89
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.50
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 116.80
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.13
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 50.81
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 52.30
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.21
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.338
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 50.70
Collins (NYSE) —88.91
DuPont (NYSE) — 59.28
US Bank (NYSE) — 45.74
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.85
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 57.67
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 69.10
Kroger (NYSE) — 38.96
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 83.74
Norfolk So (NYSE) —85.92
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.00

Chillicothe
81/61

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Lucasville
82/58

Primary: unspeciﬁed
Mold: 1451
Moderate

High

Very High

Portsmouth
82/59

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

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
12.65
16.38
21.31
12.37
12.84
24.49
12.15
26.71
35.77
12.89
21.70
34.80
23.30

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.50
-0.08
-0.14
+0.01
-0.58
-0.38
+0.24
+0.14
-0.60
+0.82
-1.30
-0.40
-3.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Logan
79/59

Ashland
81/60
Grayson
82/60

BBT (NYSE) —41.27
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.82
Pepsico (NYSE) — 96.93
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.58
Rockwell (NYSE) — 120.81
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 19.10
Royal Dutch Shell — 57.03
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 22.02
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 72.75
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 10.27
WesBanco (NYSE) — 35.25
Worthington (NYSE) — 28.02
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
July 21, 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.

SUNDAY

89°
66°

MONDAY

89°
67°

Sunny to partly cloudy
and warm

A strong afternoon
t-storm possible

TUESDAY

90°
66°

84°
67°

Some sun, a t-storm
possible; humid

Mostly sunny with a
t-storm possible

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
79/59

Murray City
79/59
Belpre
80/60

Athens
80/59

Today

St. Marys
80/58

Parkersburg
80/60

Coolville
80/59

Wilkesville
80/59
POMEROY
Jackson
81/59
81/60
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
82/61
82/60
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
79/62
GALLIPOLIS
82/59
82/61
81/60

South Shore Greenup
82/60
80/58

51

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Sunshine and nice

McArthur
80/60

Waverly
80/61

Pollen: 15

SATURDAY

87°
64°

Adelphi
80/58

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

0 50 100 150 200

New

Partly sunny and
pleasant

2

Low

MOON PHASES

SATURDAY, JULY 25

FRIDAY

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

Primary: cladosporium

Thu.
6:22 a.m.
8:48 p.m.
1:28 p.m.
12:18 a.m.

THURSDAY

Pleasant today with plenty of sunshine. Mainly
clear tonight. High 82° / Low 59°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

85°
70°
86°
66°
104° in 1934
51° in 1951

RUTLAND — The Rutland Township regular meeting for August has
been moved to July 24 at 7:30 a.m.

85°
63°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

FRIDAY, JULY 24

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

CHESHIRE — The 2015 Mulford
Reunion for the family of Harvey
and Emma Margaret (Rupe) Mulford will be 1 p.m. at the Gavin
Clubhouse. Bring a covered dish and
dessert. Do not bring home canned
food. Guest and friends are also
welcome.
MASON, W.Va. — The Soul Harvest Church Biker Sunday event
will be 10 a.m. There will be fresh
coffee and donuts starting at 9 a.m.
before the service. After the service join the group for a ride, food,
bike show, fun and entertainment
for all ages. Everyone is welcome.
The event will be at 500 Adamsville Road in Mason. The church
is located by Dollar General. Call
304-761-2804 for more information.
Remember to wear helmets if riding.
All cars and bikes are welcome.

Elizabeth
81/60

Spencer
81/60

Buffalo
81/60

Ironton
81/60

Milton
82/60
Huntington
81/59

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
75/57
90s
80s
70s
Billings
60s
90/62
50s
40s
30s
Denver
20s
San Francisco
87/59
71/61
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
78/66
T-storms
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
97/75
Flurries
Chihuahua
Ice
90/66
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Clendenin
82/60

St. Albans
82/61

Charleston
81/61

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
80/64
Montreal
73/58

Minneapolis
83/65
Chicago
81/64

Toronto
76/55
New York
84/69

Detroit
80/61

Kansas City
80/67

Washington
88/70

Thu.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
90/66/t 90/66/c
Anchorage
70/57/r 69/57/sh
Atlanta
87/73/t
89/72/t
Atlantic City
83/67/s 81/69/s
Baltimore
86/64/s 85/64/s
Billings
90/62/t
81/61/t
Boise
87/64/pc 88/60/pc
Boston
82/65/s 80/64/s
Charleston, WV
81/61/s 83/61/pc
Charlotte
94/70/pc
89/68/t
Cheyenne
81/56/pc 86/58/s
Chicago
81/64/s 83/64/s
Cincinnati
80/62/s 82/63/pc
Cleveland
76/60/s 79/62/s
Columbus
78/61/s 81/62/pc
Dallas
99/80/s 100/82/s
Denver
87/59/t 93/60/s
Des Moines
81/65/pc 84/68/pc
Detroit
80/61/s 82/64/pc
Honolulu
90/77/sh 89/77/pc
Houston
97/78/s 98/78/s
Indianapolis
80/61/s 82/62/pc
Kansas City
80/67/t 85/72/pc
Las Vegas
99/77/s 99/74/s
Little Rock
91/75/t 96/77/pc
Los Angeles
78/66/pc 79/63/pc
Louisville
84/66/pc 84/66/pc
Miami
91/78/t
92/78/t
Minneapolis
83/65/pc 85/69/s
Nashville
85/71/t
83/71/t
New Orleans
92/77/t
93/78/t
New York City
84/69/s 82/68/s
Oklahoma City
94/75/pc 98/75/s
Orlando
93/76/t
91/76/t
Philadelphia
87/68/s 85/67/s
Phoenix
104/83/pc 103/85/pc
Pittsburgh
78/58/s 80/59/s
Portland, ME
80/59/pc 77/58/s
Raleigh
88/71/pc
85/69/t
Richmond
86/68/s 85/67/s
St. Louis
83/69/pc
83/71/t
Salt Lake City
88/67/pc 87/68/pc
San Francisco
71/61/pc 70/60/pc
Seattle
75/57/c 78/58/pc
Washington, DC
88/70/s 87/70/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
87/73

High
Low

103° in Columbia, SC
34° in Pinedale, WY

Global
High
119° in Mitribah, Kuwait
Low -6° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
97/78
Monterrey
100/75

GOALS

Miami
91/78

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

TODAY

SUNDAY, JULY 26

SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the
Meigs County Republican Party
will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Carlton
School in Syracuse. Everyone is welcome.
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors will hold their regular
monthly meeting at 11:30 a.m. at the
district ofﬁce. The ofﬁce is located
at 113 E. Memorial Drive, Suite D,
Pomeroy.

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 22, 2015 s Page 6

Heavy rains, car race give Eldora tight turnaround
ROSSBURG, Ohio (AP)
— As the sun came up over
Eldora Speedway, track general
manager Roger Slack carefully debated a contract with
the head of the World Racing
Group.
Heavy rains had wreaked
havoc on the schedule for the
32nd running of the Kings
Royal, and the prestigious
sprint car race didn’t end until
4:30 a.m. Sunday. But at least
15,000 fans had waited out
a pair of thunderous storms,
and the historic dirt track was
packed when the feature ﬁnally
began some ﬁve hours after its
scheduled start.
When track owner Tony
Stewart attempted to weave

his way through the post-race
crowd, he was stopped dozens
of times by fans thanking him
for ensuring they saw the show
to its completion.
But there was zero time for
Stewart’s staff to rest. Slack
needed to ﬁnalize any lingering business with the World
of Outlaws, clear the campgrounds and begin prepping for
NASCAR’s arrival. Eldora hosts
the Truck Series on Wednesday night in what’s become a
marquee event on the NASCAR
schedule. This year’s ﬁeld
includes Brad Keselowski, Ty
Dillon and Austin Dillon, winner of the inaugural 2013 race.
This year marks the third
running of the “Mud Summer

Classic” — the only NASCAR
event run on dirt — and the
preparation time this year is
brutal. A change in NASCAR’s
scheduling put the event ﬁve
days after the Kings Royal,
Eldora’s second-biggest event
of the year that draws 33,000
people.
So when Fox Sports said it
needed to begin building its
television compound on track
property late last week to prepare for the truck race, Slack
had to explain the network’s
designated compound area was
in use as a campground and
vending area for Kings Royal.
Add in the headaches created
by a month of almost daily rain
and Stewart’s staff hasn’t been

able to catch a break.
“A lot of this would have
worked perfectly if not for the
wettest July since 1875,” Slack
said Monday. We’re proud to be
considered one of the cleanest
speedways anyone ever visits.
The paint is always crisp and
the grass is always freshly cut
and you never see any weeds,
and we’ve hardly had time to
do that.”
It’s also been a bear of a task
to prep the dirt on the halfmile oval. The task is headed
by Chad Schmitmeyer, the
grandson of track founder Earl
Baltes. Sweating under a bright
sun Monday, the track caretaker didn’t mind the heat.
“Mother Nature has been

testy for us,” Schmitmeyer. “All
this rain, and back-to-back big
races has been a challenge for
our crew.”
But they wouldn’t change
anything as everyone at Eldora
wants to continue the legacy of
excellence that began in 1954
when the track was opened by
Baltes, who died in March at
age 93. Stewart, the three-time
NASCAR champion, purchased
the track from Baltes in 2005
and has made it the crown
jewel of his business empire.
Eldora is his baby, and persuading NASCAR to give him a
national series race has widened the track’s exposure.
See RACE | 10

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

GAJHS Football
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Gallia Academy Jr. High
Football will hold a helmet ﬁtting on Friday, July
24 at 11:00 a.m. at Memorial Field. All players
planning on participating need to be there. The
Gallia Academy Jr. High Football Camp will be
held on Monday, July 27, Tuesday, July 28, and
Thursday, July 30 from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. at Memorial Field.

GAHS Athletic Hall of Fame
Accepting Nominations
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy High
School Athletic Hall of Fame is currently accepting
nominations for the 2015 Athletic Hall of Fame class.
This will be the 14th class of to enter the GAHS hall
of fame. Nominations may be made for male athletes
in the graduating class of 1994 or before and female
athletes in the graduating class of 1997 or before.
Nomination forms may be acquired from the Gallipolis City School website or gahssports.com. Deadline
for nomination entries is July 25, 2015. Completed
forms may be sent to Hilliard Lyons c/o Lori Young,
PO Box 1151, Gallipolis, Ohio or delivered to the
ofﬁce at 352 Second Avenue.

GAHS youth track camp
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
track and ﬁeld program will be hosting a track
camp July 21 through August 8 to all kids in grades
1-6. The cost is $25 per kid and you must sign
a waiver form upon arrival. Camp will be every
Tuesday and Thursday from 6:15 p.m. until 7:15
p.m. at the new Gallia Academy High School track
complex. The camp staff will be working with kids
on the basics of track and ﬁeld. The main focus will
be on long jump; instructed by Capital University
Stand out and former state champion and school
record holder Logan Allison. Sprint mechanics,
pace work for distance events and basic techniques
in the shot put and high jump for the older kids.
Events may vary based on participation. At the end
of the camp, there will be a small meet so that the
the kids can display the skills they have been working on. Free t-shirts will be provided to the ﬁrst 25
campers, so please include shirt size. Make check
payable to GAHS Athletic Boosters and mail to
Paul Close, 132 Pine Street. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Youth football signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — Local youth football
signups will be held every Saturday in July from 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Middleport Stadium. Kids will
be placed on a team by the school they attend, cost
is $35 and all equipment is provided by the league.
Area commissioners are Tye Schwall (Gallipolis),
Eber Pickens (Southern), Pat Newland (Eastern),
Bill Milliron (Meigs) and Dave Barr (Wahama). For
addition information please contact Sarah at (740)
444-1606 or Tony at (740) 992-4067.

Meigs Football
concussion testing
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — There will be mandatory concussion testing for all Meigs Football
players from grades 7-12, on July 22, at 6 p.m. The
Marauders’ varsity team will hold their combine
following the testing.

2015 Meigs Marauder
Youth Football Camp
POMEROY, Ohio — The 2015 Meigs Marauder
Youth Football Camp will be held on Saturday,
See BRIEFS | 10

Gary Landers | AP

Chicago Cubs relief pitcher Justin Grimm, right, kicks at the mound after giving up a two-run homer to the Cincinnati Reds’ Jay Bruce
(32) during the sixth the inning Monday in Cincinnati.

Cubs give up 3 homers, lose 5-4 to Reds
CINCINNATI (AP) — Justin
Grimm came on with two outs,
nobody on and the Cubs holding
a one-run lead in the sixth. All the
right-hander had to do was retire
either Todd Frazier or lefty Jay
Bruce.
Grimm walked Frazier and left a
pitch up to Bruce, costing Chicago
the game.
Frazier connected for the ﬁrst
time since he won the All-Star
Home Run Derby, and later scored
on Bruce’s key two-run shot Monday night, powering the Cincinnati
Reds to a 5-4 victory.
The Reds hit three homers in
all, including Marlon Byrd’s solo
shot, and beat the Cubs at Great
American Ball Park for the ﬁrst
time this season. Bruce’s drive off
Grimm (1-3) put Cincinnati up 5-4
and spoiled manager Joe Maddon’s
decision to bring him in.
“That falls under the category of
it being the right thing to do, but it
just didn’t work,” Maddon said. “I
felt pretty good about it.”
Grimm walked Frazier to bring
up Bruce, who hit only the second
homer allowed by the reliever this
season.
“I was just trying to attack Frazier,” Grimm said. “It didn’t work
out.”
Ryan Mattheus (1-1) pitched
a hitless inning for Cincinnati in
relief of Michael Lorenzen. J.J.
Hoover escaped a threat in the
eighth. Aroldis Chapman pitched
the ninth — a day after he threw
a career-high 44 pitches — and
retired the side on 13 pitches for
his 19th save in 20 chances.

The Cubs are 7-3 against Cincinnati this season, including 2-1 at
Great American. They haven’t won
their season series since 2009.
Frazier won the derby at Great
American last Monday night, hitting the clinching homer with his
ﬁnal swing. Those 15 minutes of
aiming for the seats tired him out
— he was 0 for 3 in the All-Star
Game and hitless in 10 at-bats during a series against Cleveland over
the weekend.
His solo shot in the ﬁrst inning
off left-hander Clayton Richard was
his ﬁrst homer since June 28th and
his ﬁrst at Great American since
June 21. He has hit 16 of his 26
homers at home.
The Cubs’ Kris Bryant and
Anthony Rizzo also participated in
the All-Star derby and helped them
pull ahead 4-3. Rizzo had a sacriﬁce ﬂy, and Bryant doubled home
a run. Jorge Soler’s two-run double
put Chicago ahead in the ﬁfth.
DOUBLEHEADER SET
The teams ﬁrmed up their pitching plans for Wednesday’s daynight doubleheader, which makes
up a game rained out in April. The
Cubs will go with Kyle Hendricks
and Dallas Beeler. The Reds will
start Mike Leake and Tony Cingrani.
GREAT PLAY
Brandon Phillips went behind
second base to get Jorge Soler’s
grounder in the seventh, and
then flipped behind his back for
a barehanded force out by shortstop Eugenio Suarez at second,

ending a Cubs threat.
YOU’RE GONE
Cubs catcher David Ross was
ejected by plate umpire Paul
Schrieber for arguing from the dugout in the seventh inning.
SECOND HOMECOMING
Cubs catcher Kyle Schwarber batted second and went 1 for 4 with a
single. The rookie is from nearby
Middletown, Ohio, and played at
Great American for the ﬁrst time
eight days earlier, winning the MVP
award in the All-Star Futures Game.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Cubs: LHP Zac Rosscup ﬂew to
Double-A Tennessee on Monday to
continue his rehab stint at a higher
level. Rosscup, on the 15-day DL
since June 17, had been pitching
with the rookie team in Mesa, Ariz.
Reds: LHP Manny Parra went
on the 15-day DL with a strained
elbow. … Mattheus twisted his left
knee while ﬁelding Starlin Castro’s
grounder in the 6th but stayed
in the game after a few practice
throws.
UP NEXT
Cubs: Jason Hammel (5-4)
returns from a hamstring problem.
He pitched only one inning on July
8 against the Cardinals before leaving with a tight left hamstring.
Reds: Raisel Iglesias (2-5) makes
his second start since returning
from a strained left oblique. He
gave up ﬁve runs and eight hits in
only 4 1/3 innings of a 14-3 loss at
Miami on July 11.

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

LEGALS

Professional Services

packets will be available July
27, 2015 by close of business
on the AAA8 website:
www.areaagency8.org. Proposal packets and instructions
will be available in electronic
format only. Contact Mindy
Cayton at 740-376-7645 or
mcayton@buckeyehills.org

740-856-4213

60591630

WOLFE HOME
SOLUTIONS
Providing Residential
Heating &amp; Cooling
Service &amp; Installation
26 years experience

$59 Diagnostic fee
$59 Preventative Maintenance
Tune-up
Help Wanted General

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute
OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

$$$$$$$$$

Yard Sale

The Area Agency on Aging at
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District,
P.O. Box 370, Reno, Ohio
45773 is requesting proposals
for 2016-17 Title III-D Disease
Prevention and Health Promotion Services. Title III-D Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion Services proposals
are being requested for
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington counties.
Title III-D seeks to initiate evidence-based programs designed to help older adults prevent/manage chronic diseases,
increase healthier lifestyles
and to provide caregiver education. Details of allowable service and funding available are
included in the Request for
Proposal. Small, minorityowned and women business
enterprises are encouraged to
submit. The PY 2016-17 proposal packets will be available
on the AAA8 website:
www.areaagency8.org July 27,
2015 by close of business.
Proposal packets and instructions will be available in electronic format only. Completed
2016-17 proposal submissions
are due to the Area Agency on
Aging on August 28, 2015 by
close of business.

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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

Huge Garage Sale
214 Magnolia Drive
Behind Dominoes Pizza
Thursday - Friday
9am- ?

Wednesday, July 22, 2015 7

For Sale By Owner

Apartments/Townhouses

Mobile home and 19 storage
units next to Walmart in Mason, WV. Storage units are all
full and will make the mortgage payment. $130,000; obo.
740-992-3961.

Home Improvements

Houses For Sale

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call
24HRS 740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
$0 DOWN
LENDERS AVAILABLE
740-446-3570

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)

Help Wanted General
NOW HIRING
Part time janitor in Point Pleasant. Wed &amp; Fri 6:30 pm8:30pm. Must pass drug
screen and background check.
Call Tammy: 304-346-1675.
Patton Building Services is an
Equal Opportunity Employer.
SECRETARY POSITION
NEEDED
Send Resume to:
PO Box Holder
PO Box 994
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Middleport Area
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments
no pets. Deposit and
Reference required
740-992-0165

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

Apartments/Townhouses

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
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8 Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Cavs, Richard
Jefferson agree
to 1-year deal

Feds end prosecution of Bonds
By Paul Elias
and Sudhin Thanawala
Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — After a
nearly decade-long steroids prosecution, Barry Bonds emerged
victorious Tuesday when federal
prosecutors dropped what was left
of their criminal case against the
career home runs leader.
The government’s pursuit of
Bonds ended quietly with a oneparagraph motion by the U.S.
Department of Justice announcing
Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli
Jr. will not ask the U.S. Supreme
Court to review the appellate
decision that overturned Bonds’
obstruction of justice conviction.
A jury found the former San
Francisco Giants star guilty in
2011 for giving a meandering
answer to a federal grand jury
in 2003 when asked whether his
personal trainer gave him anything that required a syringe for
self-injection. An 11-judge panel
of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals overturned that conviction in April, and the government
had until Wednesday to ﬁle for a
Supreme Court review.
The jury deadlocked on three
counts accusing Bonds of making false statements when he
denied receiving steroids or
human growth hormone or any
substance that required a syringe
for self-injection from the trainer,
Greg Anderson. The government
dismissed those counts in August
2011, and the 9th Circuit barred a
retrial on the obstruction charge,
citing double jeopardy.
“The ﬁnality of today’s decision
gives me great peace,” Bonds, who
turns 51 on Friday, said in a statement. “As I have said before, this
outcome is something I have long
wished for. I am relieved, humbled
and thankful for what this means for
me and my family moving forward.”
Major League Baseball had no
immediate comment. The U.S.
Attorney’s ofﬁce in San Francisco
didn’t immediately respond to a
phone call seeking comment.
Bonds’ legal victory is unlikely
to win over critics who concluded
he cheated by using performanceenhancing drugs, or help him with
Hall of Fame voters.
In his third year on the Hall ballot in 2015, Bonds received 202
votes for 36.8 percent from the
Baseball Writers’ Association of
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By Tom Withers
AP Sports Writer

CLEVELAND — Richard Jefferson has experience,
deep knowledge of the NBA and a deft shooting touch.
The Cavaliers plan to lean on all those attributes.
The free agent forward has agreed to terms on a
one-year deal for next season with Cleveland, a person
familiar with the negotiations told The Associated
Press on Tuesday. The person spoke on condition of
anonymity because Jefferson has not yet signed his
contract.
Jefferson, who came off the bench for coach Rick
Carlisle in Dallas last season, will receive the veteran’s
minimum salary of roughly $1.5 million. The 35-yearold averaged 5.8 points and 2.5 rebounds in 17 minutes per game in his one season with Dallas and shot
a team-leading 43 percent from 3-point range. He had
been expected to return to the Mavericks, but he may
have become expendable when the club signed shooting guard Wesley Matthews.
Jefferson ﬁlls the roster spot created by the retirement
of Shawn Marion. While Marion wasn’t a major contributor on the ﬂoor, he helped mentor Cleveland’s younger
players and Jefferson could have a similar impact.
Like Marion, Jefferson is no stranger to the playoffs, appearing in 105 postseason games. He has
also played for New Jersey, Milwaukee, San Antonio,
Golden State and Utah.
ESPN ﬁrst reported Jefferson’s deal with the Cavs.
Cleveland has been in the market for wing players
like Jefferson, the No. 13 overall pick in the 2001 draft,
this summer. The Cavs remain interested in re-signing
free agent J.R. Smith, who declined his $6.4 player’s
option when free agency opened. Smith is expected to
meet with the team later this week.
The streaky shooter, who came to Cleveland in a
midseason trade from the New York Knicks, had a
disappointing NBA Finals. The Cavs were without
All-Star guard Kyrie Irving and forward Kevin Love
against Golden State and needed someone to pick up
the scoring slack and help LeBron James. But Smith
didn’t deliver, and his shaky performance — he shot
31 percent from the ﬂoor — raised speculation about
whether he would be back for a second season with
the Cavaliers.
The team, though, remains interested in Smith and
vice versa.
Cleveland also continues to have talks with
restricted free agent forward Tristan Thompson
and guard Matthew Dellavedova. Thompson had
a strong postseason with the club and could land
a deal worth over $15 million per season. Dellavedova’s popularity soared when he performed well
while ﬁlling in for Irving, and the Cavs love the Australian’s energy and attitude.

Eric Risberg | AP file

San Francisco Giants Barry Bonds celebrates after his 756th career home run in 2007.
The U.S. Department of Justice formally dropped its criminal prosecution of Bonds, Major
League Baseball’s career home run leader. The decade-long investigation and prosecution
of Bonds for obstruction of justice ended quietly Tuesday, when the DOJ said it would not
challenge the reversal of his felony conviction to the U.S. Supreme Court.

America. A player must garner at
least 75 percent of the vote to be
elected.
But it brings to a close one of the
most high-proﬁle prosecutions to
emerge from an investigation of the
Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative
that began in 2002 and saw the
convictions of Olympic track gold
medalist Marion Jones, elite sprint
cyclist Tammy Thomas and former NFL defensive lineman Dana
Stubbleﬁeld along with coaches,
distributors, a trainer, a chemist
and a lawyer.
“It seems that the government
has ﬁnally come to their senses,”
BALCO founder Victor Conte, who
was sentenced to four months in
prison and four months of home
conﬁnement, said in a statement.
“In my opinion they should have
never brought charges against
Barry Bonds and wasted tens
of millions of taxpayer dollars.

... The Bonds case was simply a
trophy-hunting expedition by these
federal agents and prosecutors
and I believe they need to be held
accountable for this waste of federal funds.”
The BALCO investigation also
helped lead to the report by former
Senate Majority Leader George
Mitchell, which called out many
of baseball’s top players, including Roger Clemens, for alleged
steroids use. Clemens was acquitted in 2012 on all charges that he
obstructed and lied to Congress
in denying he used performanceenhancing drugs.
Bonds was charged four years
after he testiﬁed before a grand
jury after receiving a grant of
immunity. Bonds didn’t dispute
that he took steroids, but testiﬁed
to the grand jury that Anderson
told him they were ﬂaxseed oil and
arthritic balm.

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Mason County Public Service District Items for Sale
Typewriter: IBM Wheelwriter
1500
John Boat: Polar Craft 14 foot
Jib-Crane: Abell-Howe 1 Ton

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Items can be seen by appointment. Telephone (304) 6758940 to speak with a representative or leave a message.
Mailing address is 332 Viand
St., Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550.
Submit bid in writing to the
above address no later than
July 31, 2015. These items are
sold "as is" and "where is".
MCPSD makes no warranty,
express or implied, as to the
condition of description of the
vehicle, or its fitness for any
use or purpose. Any oral statement or representation by any
representative of MCPSD,
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condition thereof, is unauthorized and shall confer no right
upon the Bidder or Purchaser.
The District reserves the right
to reject any and all bids.

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, July 22, 2015 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

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Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

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ZITS

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By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Hilary Price

7/22

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

7/22

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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Big 12 gets
tougher on
practice limit
DALLAS (AP) —
TCU defensive end
James McFarland says
defensive-minded coach
Gary Patterson doesn’t
need players hammering each other in pads
every day to keep up
the intensity in practice.
“Matter of fact,
he’s had more of his
intense moments when
people had nothing but
shorts and helmets on
because he feels like
since we’re not hitting,
you should do everything right,” said the
senior returning sacks
leader for the Horned
Frogs. “He doesn’t
have a different way of
doing things if we have
pads on or we don’t
have pads on.”
McFarland mirrored
what his coach said at
media day Monday after
the Big 12 announced
that it was taking an
NCAA rule limiting
contact in practice a
step further by allowing
two tackling sessions
per week, including a
game.
The national rule
allows for a total of
three full-contact sessions, game included.
The Big 12 will allow
two practices for players
held out of games. Two
full-contact workouts
for the team are permissible in bye weeks.
Big 12 Commissioner
Bob Bowlsby said the

change came from a
discussion with athletic
directors, who talked
to their coaches before
approving the more
stringent rule.
Patterson said the
tighter restrictions
won’t change the Frogs’
approach because
they’ve had just one
practice during game
weeks for years.
“There’s a false sense
of we just try to bang
our kids around,” said
Patterson, whose physical coaching style has
helped TCU lead the
nation in defense ﬁve
times since 2000. “I
think all of us, we like
keeping our jobs, and
we want to keep our
kids healthy. Fresh
shoulders, fresh legs,
means more physical
players.”
Patterson said most
teams get the heavier
work done in the spring
before turning the focus
more to preservation
during the regular
season. And Bowlsby
said that’s what administrators found as they
considered the change,
which was approved in
the spring.
“I don’t think that
we’re going to ﬁnd that
this is a disadvantage,”
Bowlsby said. “In fact, I
think you may ﬁnd that
you have a healthier
team in the second half
of the season.”

Briefs
From Page 6

Aug. 1, at Holzer Field, Farmers Bank Stadium at
Meigs High School. The camp is open to students
in grades 1-8 and a child in any school district can
attend. Camp Fee is $20 per camper. If you register
before July 19, you are guaranteed a camp t-shirt.
Register the day of the camp begins at 8 a.m., and
the camp will be from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. For more
information or to register, call Tonya at 740-645-4479,
follow the camp on Facebook at “Meigs Youth Football
Camp”.

Daily Sentinel

Curry among standouts in League
LAS VEGAS (AP) —
It’s only Summer League.
It’s a mantra that’s been
uttered over and over in
Las Vegas over the last
week while the league’s
highest proﬁle exhibition
has been played.
It’s important context
to consider when evaluating the level of play
— good or bad — from
the youngsters and journeymen participating.
Many stars of summers
past have been unable to
parlay that success into
meaningful NBA careers,
but the level of competition and the desperation
of some players who are
trying to get a foot in the
door has made for some
compelling basketball in
Vegas this week.
Steph Curry’s kid
brother is lighting it up
for New Orleans. Rashad
Vaughn showed the scoring instincts that Milwaukee sorely lacked last
season and Kelly Oubre
Jr. played with a drive for
Washington that seemed
to be lacking last season
at Kansas.
San Antonio’s Kyle
Anderson was named
MVP of the league and

TERRY ROZIER, Boston
Some Celtics fans
grumbled when their
team grabbed the Louisville combo guard with
the 16th overall pick,
which may have been a
few picks higher than
Rozier was projected to
go before the draft.
But Rozier was solid all
week, exhibiting a heady
game, some toughness
SETH CURRY, New Orleans
He has bounced around on the defensive end and
some clutch shooting.
the league early in his
He hit a crazy step-back
career and played only
four total games for three 3-pointer with under 3
different teams. He came seconds to play against
the Spurs on Saturday
to Vegas without a guaranteed contract, but may that tied the game before
Shannon Scott won it
have played his way into
for San Antonio with a
one after averaging 25
buzzer beater.
points per game in the
His intensity and grit
ﬁrst ﬁve games.
could give coach Brad
New Pelicans coach
Alvin Gentry You can see Stevens a formidable backcourt rotation with Marcus
a little of Steph’s game
Smart and Avery Bradley.
in baby bro. The way he
comes off screens, pulls
“I’m a conﬁdent perup in transition for 3s and son no matter what I’m
has worked to improve
doing,” Rozier said. “I
his handle.
believe in myself more
“I think he’s done great than anybody. I’m just tryfor himself. He’s contining to help the team and
ued to play well within
do whatever I can.”
himself, within the sysDOUG MCDERMOTT,
tem, playing under conChicago
trol,” Pelicans assistant
The scorer known as
coach Robert Pack said.

Toronto’s Norman Powell
earned a contract from
the Raptors with his
strong play.
The Spurs will play the
Suns in the tournament
championship Monday
night, but here is a look
at some of the players
who have stood out in
Vegas this week.

A template is there for team medal
ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP)
— Only individual medals will
be awarded next year when golf
returns to the Olympics for the ﬁrst
time since 1904. Whether a team
competition is added for Tokyo in
2020 depends partly on the success
of golf in Rio, and more on whether
the IOC deems it worthy of adding
golf medals.
Based on the Olympic Agenda,
IOC president Thomas Bach said
there can be no more than 320
events in 2020.
The hard part would seem to be the
format for a team competition. The

answer might have come in the Youth
Olympic Games last year in China.
Consider this option.
The team competition would last
two days and effectively kick off the
Tokyo games by behind held on the
ﬁrst weekend. It would be mixed
team consisting of one man and one
woman. If qualifying ended today,
28 countries could participate in a
72-hole competition.
The ﬁrst score would be from
foursomes. The second score would
be from fourballs. The ﬁnal day
would be singles, with each score
counting.

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 Kyle Wickline, 920 Elm Street, Racine,
Ohio 45771. The makeup date will be Friday, July
24.

Southern Girls
Basketball Golf Scramble

MASON, W.Va. — The Southern girls basketball
program will be hosting a beneﬁt golf scramble at the
Riverside Golf Club on Saturday August 29, at 9 a.m.
The cost is $60 per player with skill prizes on every
hole and food and beverages served throughout the
round. Prizes will be awarded to the top three teams.
RACINE, Ohio — The Southern football program For more information contact Lady Tornadoes head
will be holding its 2015 Southern Youth Football
coach Kent Wolfe at (740)949-4222 ext. 1212 or at
Camp from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Tuesday, July 21, (740)444-9334.

Southern Youth
Football Camp

60576582

Race

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“McBuckets” had a frustrating rookie season last
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Hoiberg who ﬁgures to
bring more offensive
ﬂow to Chicago, and that
should help McDermott
be more of a factor in his
sophomore year.
Hoiberg coached the
summer team in an effort
to re-familiarize himself
with the NBA game after
spending ﬁve years coaching at Iowa State. And
McDermott averaged
18.8 points per game in
ﬁve games.
“I think the biggest
thing with Doug is to go
out and aggressive,” Hoiberg said. “He’s such a
versatile scorer. He didn’t
shoot the ball great this
week, but he did everything else well. … The
one thing I know he can
do is shoot, so I thought
he showed some other
things this week that will
deﬁnitely get him on the
ﬂoor this year.”

GOALS

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

That’s how it was at Nanjing
last year, and it came down to the
wire. Sweden wound up winning
at 16-under 272, but only after a
playoff against South Korea. There
also was a playoff for the bronze
between Italy and Denmark.
Based on current rankings, a
team competition would feature Jordan Spieth and Stacy Lewis playing
for the United States. They would
compete against teams like Sweden
(Anna Nordqvist and Henrik Stenson), Australia (Jason Day and Minjee Lee) and Spain (Sergio Garcia
and Azahara Munoz).

Gallipolis Lions Golf Outing
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipolis Lions Club
will be holding its 17th annual golf outing on Saturday,
July 25, 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 nonmember, and all proceeds beneﬁt Lions 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.

Middleport Fall Ball signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — Baseball and softball signups will be held on the Saturday, July 25 from 11 a.m.
until 4 p.m. at the Middleport ball ﬁelds for the Middleport Fall League. It will be for boys and girls from the
age of 7 through 18. You can come as an individual or
as a team. For any information, contact Dave at 740590-0438, Jackie 740-416-1261, or Pat at 740-590-4941.

state-of-the-art infield care center,
rooftop viewing area and concession
stand all in the building were funcFrom Page 6
tioning for the Kings Royal.
The upgrades also include an HD
“That’s huge for us to get nonsystem that broadcasts the races on
traditional fans to come to the track a video board — a luxury not found
and have a good experience,” said
at many dirt tracks — and occasional
Stewart, who hopes NASCAR fans
pay-per-view events. The track staff
who make the pilgrimage to his track is also able to produce its own highwill be pleased enough to return for light packages to feed to web sites
some of the regular events.
and local television.
He stays involved with what’s
Because it’s just one piece of Stewgoing on at Eldora, and as he pulled art’s portfolio, he relies on Slack and
into the track early Monday folhis staff to keep the wheels turning.
lowing the Sprint Cup race in New
When he arrives, he knows everyHampshire, he immediately tried to
thing will be just as he likes.
inspect the grounds to gauge how
“When it comes to the day-to-day
damp it was for the campers.
side, it’s fun for me to pull in (to
He feels a sense of responsibilthe track). I can pull in and drive
ity to honor Baltes, who personally
through the campground and see
called Stewart a decade ago and told people having a good time,” he said.
him he and his wife believed Stewart “I’m a race fan, too. If I go there
was the right person to take over the and the show runs smooth, watch a
track.
good race, then you see people when
“When you get an endorsement
they’re leaving, they’re smiling,
like that, it’s like, ‘I need to figure
they’re talking about what they saw,
this out, I need to figure out how to you know, that makes all that worthdo it,’” Stewart said.
while.
Stewart has pumped at least $1.5
“You’ve got to be passionate about
million into the facility in the last
it. You’ve got to love what you’re
year to build a 9,000-square-foot
doing. I love dirt track racing.
building that will serve as the new
Always have, always will. I love Eldoinfield media center.
ra Speedway. That’s what I’m meant
That portion will open Tuesday,
to do, that’s what I do on the side,
that’s what my energy goes to.”
a day before the truck race. But a

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