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                  <text>On this
day in
history …

Pryor
confident of
switch to WR

Rain
possible
High of 74

EDITORIAL s 4A

SPORTS s 1B

LOCAL s 6A

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 125, Volume 69

Thursday, August 6, 2015 s 50¢

Ohio Tax Holiday to begin Friday
By Lindsay Kriz and
Michael Johnson

Lorna Hart | Daily Sentinel

Local officials hope students and parents take advantage of this holiday and
shop locally and in-state for school supplies.

MEIGS COUNTY — With
families readying their children and young adults to walk
back through the doors at
their respective schools, this
weekend’s tax holiday is a
perfect time for parents to get
discounts on back-to-school
supplies.
This tax holiday comes to
Ohio after Senate Bill 243 that
Gov. John Kasich signed into
law Dec. 2014, although many
lawmakers are hoping this
will become a recurring event.
Ohio joins 18 other states that
offer a similar temporary tax

break for its residents.
This speciﬁc sales tax
holiday, which only applies to
businesses within Ohio, will
begin at 12:01 a.m. Friday,
Aug. 7 through Sunday, Aug. 9
at 11:59 p.m. During this time
all in-store and online vendors
are required to waive the collection of the state’s sales tax
on designated items. Ohio
joins 18 other states that offer
a similar temporary tax break
for its residents.
Meigs County local ofﬁcals
want residents to know about
this holiday.
“SB 243 has given us this
(potentially) one-time taxfree holiday in time for school

supplies and school clothes,”
Smith said. “I hope everyone
takes advantage. It’s a great
weekend to shop local.”
These items include items
of clothing priced at $75 or
less, commonly used school
supplies, including book bags,
pencils and crayons, among
other items priced at $20 or
less and instructional materials
including textbooks and workbooks priced at $20 or less.
Price restrictions on items are
solely for individual items. The
qualiﬁcation of the exemption
is determined item by item
and there are no restrictions
on ﬁnal prices.
See TAX | 5A

OSHP: Watch
for school buses
By Michael Johnson
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — With the new school year
fast approaching and children attending preseason
sports practices at many area schools, the Ohio
State Highway Patrol will be out in full force to
ensure those kids are safe.
Speciﬁcally, OSHP wants drivers to be alert for
stopped school buses that will soon be on the road
again every weekday once school starts.
“All Ohioans play a part in making it safe for
students to load and unload school buses,” Lt.
Max Norris, commander of the Gallia/Meigs
highway patrol post, said. “Motorists must be cautious when driving near school buses and parents
should teach their children to stop and look both
ways before crossing the street. The Patrol will do
our part by watching for motorists driving recklessly and inspecting school buses.”
Extra patience and attention will help make a
safer school year for children statewide, he said.
Gallia County had 11 reported crashes that
involved a school bus while Meigs County checked
in with 10 such incidents. In District 9, which also
includes Ross, Pike, Scioto, Lawrence, Jackson,
Vinton, Hocking and Athens counties, there were
145 motor vehicle crashes that involved a school
bus.
Statewide between 2012-14, there were 3,972
trafﬁc crashes that involved a school bus, according to OSHP statistics. Ten of those crashes resulted in 13 deaths, but none of the fatalities were on
a school bus. In 2014 alone, there were seven fatal
bus crashes that killed 10 people. Those crashes
occurred between September and December of
that year.
Norris said motorists should remember to stop
at least 10 feet back, per Ohio law, when approaching a school bus from either side while it displays
ﬂashing lights and an extended arm, and to not
resume driving until the school bus begins moving.
See WATCH | 5A

A INDEX
Obituary: 2
Opinion: 4
TV Guide: 5
Weather: 6
B INDEX
Sports: 1, 3, 6
Classifieds: 2, 3
Comics: 5

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CONVERSATION
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thoughts.

Courtesy photos

The first farmers Market at Alligator Jacks was considered a success.

County health announces grant projects
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

MEIGS COUNTY
— Meigs County residents now have more
ways to create a healthy
lifestyle thanks to the
Meigs County Health
Department and two
grants: Creating Healthy
Communities, which
is through the Ohio
Department of Health,
and Together on Diabetes, which is through
Marshall University.
Laura Cleland, Grant
Coordinator at the
Meigs County Health
Department, said that
by the end of the year
the department will
hopefully have about
20 projects ongoing
through these two
grants. Currently, she
said, there are many
projects that the Health
Department wants the
community to know
about.
Currently the largest
project is a new farmers market that began
Sunday, July 19 in partnership with Alligator
Jacks Flea Market. The
ﬁrst Sunday of the new
farmers market saw nine
local vendors participating, with two more vendors joining the event in
subsequent weeks. The
market is set to run from

noon to 4 p.m. through
Oct. 25. Cleland said
that a new season startup date for next year has
not yet been decided,
but will probably be in
late June or early July.
“It’s been well
received and successful,”
Cleland said.
For a special
event Aug. 30, Katie
McGushin, a chef from
Hocking College, will
be at the farmers market
to demonstrate how to
cook four meals from
Rural Action’s cookbook,
which shares healthy
recipes using locally
grown produce. Samples
will also be available.
The farmers market is
through the Together on
Diabetes and Creating
Healthy Communities
grants.
Starting Monday,
Middleport and Pomeroy public libraries will
be implementing a new
bike rental program
called “Book a Bike,”
in which residents who
have a library card may
borrow one of ten bikes
found at either library
for a total of three hours
per day. Five bikes can
be found in Middleport,
the other ﬁve in Pomeroy. Anyone renting a
bike at one library may
return it to the same
library or the other

These bikes will be available to those with a Middleport or
Pomeroy library card starting Monday. There are ten total, with five
in Middleport and five in Pomeroy. Anyone participating must sign
a consent form, and can use the bike for up to three hours daily.

library when they are
ﬁnished.
For security purposes,
anyone participating in
this program will need
to sign a consent form
which will go one ﬁle,
and those who have
a driver’s license will
also need to provide it
to the library so that a
copy can be made. Bikes
must also be returned
within one half hour of

the library closing. For
the Middleport Library
Monday through Saturday, bikes must be
returned by 5:30 p.m.
For the Pomeroy Library
Monday through Friday,
bikes must be returned
by 7:30 p.m. and during
Pomeroy Library’s Sunday hours bikes must be
returned by 4:30 p.m.
See HEALTH | 5A

�NEWS

2A Thursday, August 6, 2015

OBITUARIES
RUBY CASTO EYNON
MIDDLEPORT —
Ruby Casto Eynon, 76,
of Middleport, Ohio
passed away on Aug. 4,
2015. She was born on
Oct. 7, 1938 in Middleport daughter of the
late George and Lucille
Casto.
Ruby is survived by
her husband, James O.
Eynon; four children,
Don (Maria) Eynon,
Debbie (Larry) Cundiff,
Timothy (Marife) Eynon
and Dana (Shammra)
Eynon; grandchildren,
Don Eynon, Jr., Cristina
Eynon, Alexa Eynon,
Andrea Turnquest, Chris
Turnquest, Heather

(Dustin) Wyant, Eric
Cundiff, Timothy Eynon,
Jr., Angie Eynon, Amber
(JJ) Eynon-Rojas, Casey
Eynon, Brittany Eynon,
Olivia Eynon and Jada
Eynon; great grandchildren, Carley Wyant, Ezra
Ramoutar and Azarias
Ramoutar; her brother,
Jimmie Casto and her
special pet dog, Whitey.
Private services will be
held at the convenience
of the family. Funeral
arrangements are under
the direction of Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

MILDRED FAE PAULEY
LONG BOTTOM —
Mildred Fae Pauley, 78,
of Long Bottom, Ohio
went home to be with
our Heavenly Father,
Sunday morning, Aug. 2,
2015. She was loved by
many friends and family
members. Mildred was
born Oct. 14, 1936 in
Sandyville, West Virginia.
She lived most of her
adult life in Pomeroy and
Long Bottom, Ohio.
She was married to
Maury Darrett Miller
and had three daughters,
Jane, Sandi and Mary.
Mildred has a full life and
experienced many adventures. She loved reading,
painting and dealing in
antiques. She was also
devoted to God. Some
years after losing Maury,
she married Paul Pauley.
They resided in Long
Bottom and spent some
time traveling and doing
antique shows. They also
spent winters in Florida.
Mildred was preceded
in death by her brothers,
Gene and Donald; sister,
Margie; husbands, Maury
Miller and Paul Pauley;
and a grandson, Corporal
Joshua Darrell Jones.
She is survived by one
sister, Myrtle. She also
has many nieces, nephews, great nieces and

great nephews. She was
loved by all and will be
greatly missed.
Mildred is also survived by her children,
Jane (Jerry) Oldaker, Sandi Miller (Arlyn
Ploen), Mary (Steve)
Rosson and David (Jan)
Kelly; grandchildren,
Gabriel (Sarahanne)
OLdaker, Sierra (Darrick) St. Clair, Kendra
Oldaker, Tessa (Tom)
Daniel, Elisabeth Oldaker, Joshua (Tiffany)
Jones, Caleb Jones (Bethany Rifﬂe), Pete Jones
(Diana Kleckner) Jacob
Jones, Alexandria Jones,
Zachery (Aly) Gorby,
Alex Rosson and Noah
Rosson; great grandchildren, William, Brandon
Gabrielle and Kearns
Oldaker, Ezra St. Clair,
Mathew Barker Daniel,
Cami and Sadie Jones,
Gunner, Landon and Lexi
Kae Jones, Jayden and
Joshua Jones, Keigan,
Aeidan, Aeidyson and
Maddi Jones.
A memorial service
will be held on Saturday,
Aug. 8, 2015 at 10:30
a..m. at the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

DEATH NOTICES
RUSSELL
COOLVILLE, Ohio — Margaret Russell, 81, of
Coolville, died Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2015, at Marietta
Memorial Hospital. Arrangements will be announced
later by White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville.

SCHUMAN
IRONTON, Ohio — Charles William Schuman, 85,
of Ironton, passed away Saturday, Aug. 1, 2015, at St.
Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va. Services
will be 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 8, 2015 at Flatwoods
First Baptist Church, Flatwoods, Ky. Visitation is 1-2
p.m. Saturday at the church.

WILSON
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Bernard Allen
Wilson, 64, of Point Pleasant, died Monday, Aug.
3, 2015. A celebration of Big Al’s life will be 1 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 7, 2015, at Deal Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant. Burial will be at the convenience of the family. Friends may visit the family at the funeral home
between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Friday.

Daily Sentinel

Oct. 2 selected for West Virginia Makes Festival
Staff Report

of entrepreneurs and
innovators so they can
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. interact with likeminded
— The Robert C. Byrd
makers.”
Institute for Advanced
RCBI is presenting the
Flexible Manufacturing
2015 festival in partner(RCBI) and a group of
ship with Advantage Valstatewide partners will
ley, Claude Worthington
present the 2015 West
Benedum Foundation,
Virginia Makes Festival, Education Alliance, City
a celebration of ingenuof Huntington, Heritage
ity and creativity, on
Farm Museum and VilOct. 2 at Heritage Farm lage, i-79 Development
Museum and Village in
Council, Huntington
Huntington.
Museum of Art, Marshall
“Our festival celebrates University, Superintenmakers,” said Charlotte
dent of Cabell County
Weber, RCBI director
Schools, the West Virand CEO. “It taps into
ginia Department of
the inventive community Education and the Arts,

and the West Virginia
Small Business Development Center.
Scheduled to coincide
with national Manufacturing Day, RCBI’s annual celebration focuses on
today’s manufacturing.
By staging the 2015 festival at Heritage Farm,
we can expose today’s
makers to our Appalachian heritage when
making was a necessity,
Weber said.
The Oct. 2 event is
open to everyone and
will feature 3D printing, special exhibits and
attractions, local food

vendors and tours. A
Design Challenge at the
festival will provide makers the opportunity to
demonstrate their new
ideas and skills, and will
reward their creative
inspirations. Hobbyists,
inventors, enthusiasts,
artists and students of
all ages who enter the
Design Challenge are
eligible for one of ﬁve
awards — including a
$1,000 “Best of Show”
grand prize.
More information,
including registration
details, is available at
www.rcbi.org.

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Supplies
include backpacks, pencils, pens
and note pads. There will be free
food and games and a limited
number of shoe gift certiﬁcates.
RUTLAND — River of Life
Thursday, Aug. 6
Church of God (formerly RutCHESTER — The ChesterShade Historical Association will land Church fo God), located
on SR 124 across from Meigs
meet at 7 p.m. at the Academy.
Elementary Schools, is having a
day of Ministry, Praise, Worship
Friday, Aug. 7
and Fellowship beginning at 10
POMEROY — The regular
a.m. Speaking in the morning
meeting of Meigs County PERI
is Minister Martin Grifﬁn of
Chapter 74 will be at the MulMount Carmel Church of Bidwell
berry Community Center, 156
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, at 1 p.m. and Brother Mark Jackson of
Humana Account Advisor Sherma Christian Community Fellowship
Church of Rio Grande. Speaking
Brown will be the guest speaker.
in the evening is Jessica Haggy of
Carolyn Waddell, PERI District
Valor Christian College Alumni.
7 Representative, will provide
Ministering in Worship will be
state updates. All Meigs County
Zani Hernandez of the Wave MinEmployee Retirees are encouristries. Lunch provided at at no
aged to attend.
charge. Come and enjoy the presence of the Lord.
Saturday, Aug. 8
HARRISONVILLE —Harrisonville Presbyterian Church will Monday, Aug. 10
hold a school supply giveaway
POMEROY — Meigs MaraudEditor’s Note: The Meigs Community Calendar will only list
event information that is open to
the public.

ers Athletic Boosters will hold a
planning meeting for the 20152016 sports seasons at 6:30 p.m.
at the concession.Everyone is
welcome.
Tuesday, Aug. 11
POMEROY —The Meigs
County Board of Elections will
hold their regular monthly meeting at 8:30 a.m. at the Meigs
County Annex building on the
second ﬂoor on Mulberry Heights
in Pomeroy.
SALISBURY —The regular
meeting of the Salisbury Township Trustrees will be held at 5
p.m.
BEDFORD — Bedford Township Trustees will hold their regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at
the town hall.
Wednesday, Aug. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS — The
regular meeting of the Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer will be at 7
p.m. at district ofﬁce.

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

contact Jenny Simmons
at 740-376-1026.

Christian and Mary Roush
Hart Reunion Scheduled
RACINE — The
9oth birthday card shower descendents of ChrisCOOLVILLE — Retha tian and Mary Roush
Hart, who married in
Day will be celebrating
1849, in Mason County,
her 90th birthday Aug.
Va./W.Va.,will hold their
8. Cards may be sent
reunion Sunday, Aug. 9,
to: 43735 Elk Run Rd.,
at 1 p.m. at the AmeriCoolville, OH 45723.
can Legion Hall, 16th
St., Racine, OH 4577.
81st birthday card shower
Everyone is asked to
POMEROY — Floyd
bring family pictures (a
Ross celebrates 81st
Birthday on August 12. scanner will be availPlease send all cards to: able) and a covered dish
and salad or dessert.
37690 Peach Fork Rd.,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
Meigs Cleanup Day
Buckeye Hills-Hocking
POMEROY — Meigs
Valley Regional
Cleanup Day will be
Development District
Sept. 12, from 9 a.m.
Executive Committee/
to 1 p.m. at the Meigs
RTPO Policy Committee
County Fairgrounds,
Meeting Announced
1850. Fairgrounds Road,
Pomeroy. This event is
MARIETTA — The
open to Meigs County
Buckeye Hills-Hocking
residents only and proof
Valley Regional Development District Execu- is required, such as a
drivers license or utility
tive Committee, which
also serves as the RTPO bill. Industrial or commercial customers are
Policy Committee, will
not eligible. For more
meet Aug. 7, at 10:30
a.m. at 1400 Pike St. in information on what
Marietta. For questions items can be recycled,
regarding this meeting, visit www.gjmvrecycle.

com or call l800-5441853.
1975 Meigs High School
Reunion
POMEROY — The
1975 graduating class
of Meigs High School
will be celebrating their
40th reunion at 2 p.m.
Saturday Sept. 19 at
the Gavin Recreational
Building on St. Rt.
554 in Cheshire, Ohio.
The class is currently
seeking classmates
addresses they have
been unable to locate
which, includes but are
not limited to:Robert
Michael Allen, Gail
Patsy Bailey, David
Eugene Christian, Lois
April Fraser (Frasier),
Linda Anne Gerard,
Cheryl Dian Haning,
David Dewayne Jones,
Eileen Ann Kennedy,
Roy E. Lawson, Jr.
,Irene Malone, Charles
M. Miller, Christopher
J. Miller, Debra Diane
Mowery, Virginia Viola
McCune, Patricia Lou
Darst Smith, Kimberly Elizabeth Stevers,
Thomas Stevers, Daniel
E. Taylor, Susan L. Tillis, Alisa Walker, George

Reino Ward, Tery Ray
Warner, Gerald Wayne
White and Linda Diane
Williams. Anyone who
may know addresses
for the aforementioned
classmates or for questions about the reunion
contact Cynthia Manley
Hartenbach at 740-9922775 or email chartenbach57@gmail.com or
Scherry Lane Spears at
740-645-2244.
Free Resources available
from Coad4Kids
OHIO VALLEY —
Coad4Kids 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.

W.Va. GOP delegate files Common Core petition
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — A
Republican lawmaker has asked the
state Supreme Court to determine
whether West Virginia can legally
participate in Common Core, as
state GOP leaders look to repeal the
educational standards next year.
The Charleston Gazette-Mail
reports that the petition says the
standards violate state law and the

U.S. Constitution, which requires
congressional approval of agreements between states.
Berkeley County Del. Mike Folk
ﬁled the petition Friday. He has
ﬁled a similar lawsuit in Berkeley
County Circuit Court, which lawyers for Democratic Gov. Earl Ray
Tomblin’s administration pegged as
“procedurally deﬁcient and substan-

tively ill-conceived.”
State Schools Superintendent
Michael Martirano said if the high
court accepts the petition, he’s conﬁdent justices will uphold the Board
of Education’s authority to develop
and implement the Next Generation
Content Standards and Objectives
for English Language Arts and
Mathematics.

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�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 6, 2015 3A

GOP activists in Ohio keen to watch debate
By Dan Sewell

12 percent or more of the
Republican nominee’s votes in
recent presidential elections.
WEST CHESTER, Ohio — The region’s big margins
For Republican activists in
for George W. Bush in 2004
a party stronghold of swinghelped lift him to the narrow
state Ohio, Thursday night’s
Ohio victory he needed for reﬁrst major presidential camelection.
paign debate in Cleveland will
Chris Kelley, a political
be must-see TV as the GOP
scientist at Miami University
starts deciding which candiin Butler County, said the
date to support, volunteer for candidates need to attract
and write checks to.
early support from enthusiasts
There are plenty of shopwho will get involved in their
ping days left, but a lot to sort campaigns and help ﬁre up
through with 17 announced
support in a state that hiscandidates.
tory says Republicans need
“I think it’s good that are
to reach the White House
so many, because it gives us
— none has without carrying
choices,” said Lori Viars, a
Ohio.
longtime conservative activist
“A good ground game is
in Warren County. “There are very important for the Repubquite a few horses in the race, lican candidates … to really try
so let’s get them out of the
to solidify and motivate their
gate and watch them run for a voters in places where they
while.”
are strong,” Kelley said.
The suburbs and small cities
One candidate in the ﬁeld,
that form a crescent over the
of course, already has a readycity of Cincinnati comprise
made network in Ohio — Gov.
a big GOP base. Ohio has 88
John Kasich, coming off a
counties total, but four —
lopsided re-election last year.
Butler, Clermont, Hamilton
Kasich, who ofﬁcially entered
and Warren — in southwest
the race just two weeks ago
Ohio have been delivering
but has been picking up

Associated Press

ground in recent polling, has
some detractors among southwest Ohio conservatives who
dislike his support for Medicaid expansion under President
Barack Obama’s health care
overhaul and for the new Common Core school standards.
“He should be on the Democrats’ ticket,” said Sue Hardenbergh, who’s active in the
GOP and the tea party in the
eastern Cincinnati suburb of
Anderson Township.
However, Harry Prestanski,
of West Chester Township in
Butler County, doesn’t agree
with Republicans who criticize
Kasich, saying he has solid
conservative credentials overall.
“I hear it,” Prestanksi said.
“But to be perfectly honest, I
don’t understand it.”
Prestanski, who served as
a Marine and now works on
veterans’ issues, said Kasich’s
policies have helped veterans
and that he offers a strong
presidential resume with
congressional, governing and
business experience.
Kelley thinks if Kasich gains
momentum nationally, Ohio

LOCAL STOCKS

Newborn’s body found in tub

AEP (NYSE) — 56.65
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 24.07
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 115.00
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.27
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 49.22
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 47.76
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.31
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.274
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.16
Collins (NYSE) —84.91
DuPont (NYSE) — 54.57
US Bank (NYSE) — 45.43
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.10
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 58.11
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 68.74
Kroger (NYSE) — 39.08
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 84.49
Norfolk So (NYSE) —82.58
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.03
BBT (NYSE) —40.87
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.42
Pepsico (NYSE) — 99.19
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.09
Rockwell (NYSE) — 116.03
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 18.26
Royal Dutch Shell — 57.71
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 21.34
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 73.51
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 10.11
WesBanco (NYSE) — 32.68
Worthington (NYSE) — 27.37
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes
of transactions Aug. 5, 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.

Mom died of suspected overdose

Karosy wrap the baby in a towel,
which was placed in a box in a
bathtub.
STERLING, Ohio (AP) — A
Wayne County coroner Amy
Jolliff said she could not deternortheast Ohio woman died of
Jolliff said Wednesday that the
mine how far along Karosy was
a suspected heroin overdose
man called 911 about eight hours in her pregnancy because she
hours after giving birth to a child after the female child was born at never received prenatal care.
whose body was found in a bath- home. Jolliff said autopsies perJoiliff added that the man living
tub, authorities said.
formed in Summit County found in the home said Karosy had
Kimberly Karosy, 23, was
no signs of trauma on either
recently told him she was seven
pronounced dead at a hospital
the woman or the child. She
months pregnant. The baby
Saturday after a 51-year-old man also said the baby had no birth
appeared to be about two months
who lived with her called 911 to defects. Jolliff said she’s trying to premature, Jolliff said.
report that she had become unre- determine if the baby was alive
The 51-year-old told authorisponsive. Karosy and the man
at birth.
ties he wasn’t the baby’s father
lived in Sterling, about 20 miles
Authorities said the man told
and that Karosy was a heavy user
west of Akron.
investigators that he helped
of heroin and methamphetamine.

Ohio seeks to drug test welfare applicants
Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio —
Ohio would screen and
test welfare applicants
for drugs under a bill
expected to be introduced in the legislature.
The proposal from
Republican Reps. Tim
Schaffer of Lancaster
and Ron Maag of Lebanon would create a twoyear pilot program in
three counties that have
yet to be determined.
Adults applying for
cash assistance would
complete a screening
or questionnaire. If that
shows they likely abuse
drugs, they would need
to take a drug test.
They could not get the
beneﬁt if they test positive. But the bill allows
a third party, a so-called
“protective payee,” to
receive the payment on
behalf of the person’s
children and dependents.
The bill is expected
to be introduced on
Wednesday.
The state had
109,596 people in its
cash assistance program as of May. Those
on Ohio Works First
included 94,240 children and 15,356 adults.
The program provides
monthly beneﬁts for up
to 36 months. In 2015,
a payment for a family
of three is $473.
The bill’s sponsors
told reporters at a
Statehouse news conference Tuesday that the
legislation ensures that
taxpayer money isn’t
supporting drug habits
or addiction.
“Right now, if someone is addicted to
drugs, they may be getting the money,” Maag

said. “They might be
giving it to the drug
dealer and their family
is still suffering. This
is to take care of the
families and to get help
for the person who is
addicted to drugs.”
The American Civil
Liberties Union of Ohio
opposes the proposal.
Among other issues,
the group says it unfairly targets a people who
receive public beneﬁts.
“The overall conversation of placing the
blame on people with
public assistance is not
the solution to Ohio’s
struggle with addiction,” said Lisa Wurm,

a policy manager for
ACLU Ohio.
The bill’s sponsors
could not estimate a
speciﬁc cost for creating the drug-testing
program or its potential
savings. But Schaffer
described it as “affordable” and believed the
state would save some
money.
The proposal would
set aside $100,000
annually for drug treatment. The state also
would pay for drug
tests that come back
negative, Schaffer said.
But those who fail the
urine tests would cover
the expense, which is

about $35.
Other aspects of the
proposal are not yet
known, such as the speciﬁc form of screening
the state would use and
what would be required
of the applicants or
county case workers.
Schaffer said the state’s
Department of Job and
Family Services would
help decide the policy
and write the rules.
Other versions of
the measure have been
pitched in prior General
Assemblies but never
got traction.
State lawmakers are
currently on summer
break until September.

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By Ann Sanner

govern?”
Ray Warrick, the Warren
County Republican Party
chairman, said Trump’s poll
support is “no mystery,”
because it reﬂects restlessness
within the party after Obama
twice beat what Warrick considers “old-style Republican
nominees.”
“People I talk to are amused
that Donald Trump is the leader of the pack,” Warrick said.
Warrick said there are several candidates he’s interested
in, particularly Wisconsin Gov.
Scott Walker. Hardenbergh is
watching Texas Sen. Ted Cruz
and also likes Kentucky Sen.
Rand Paul as conservatives
she can believe in.
Hardenbergh is a little
concerned that the large ﬁeld
— even trimmed to 10 for
the Fox News debate — will
make it difﬁcult for the best
candidates to show off their
strengths and differentiate
themselves. But she’ll be
watching to see.
“It makes for great television for people who love following politics,” Kelley said.
“It’s hard not to eat this up.”

Republicans will rally behind
him.
“It’s hard to go against the
hometown favorite,” Kelley
said.
Early Quinnipiac University
polling has indicated another
plus for Kasich — he starts
with more support in a hypothetical matchup with Democratic front-runner Hillary
Rodham Clinton in a state her
husband Bill carried twice.
Prestanski hasn’t committed to a candidate yet and
is also interested in Florida
Sen. Marco Rubio and former
Texas Gov. Rick Perry. But he
has struck billionaire businessman Donald Trump, leading
in recent polls, off his list. He
doesn’t like Trump’s recent
criticism of John McCain’s
background as a Vietnam prisoner of war.
“I think Trump is very
interesting,” Hardenbergh
said. “But he has never served
in ofﬁce, and that keeps him
from having any track record.
What we’ve learned about
most politicians is that they
say what they think you want
to hear. But how will you truly

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�E ditorial
4A Thursday, August 6, 2015

Daily Sentinel

TODAY IN HISTORY …
Today is Thursday, August 6, the 218th day of
2015. There are 147 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On August 6, 1945, during World War II, the
United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, resulting in an estimated 140,000
deaths. (Three days later, the United States
exploded a nuclear device over Nagasaki; ﬁve days
after that, Imperial Japan announced its surrender.)
On this date:
In 1813, during the Venezuelan War of Independence, forces led by Simon Bolivar recaptured
Caracas.
In 1825, Upper Peru became the autonomous
republic of Bolivia.
In 1862, the Confederate ironclad CSS Arkansas
was scuttled by its crew on the Mississippi River
near Baton Rouge, La., to prevent capture by the
Union.
In 1914, Austria-Hungary declared war against
Russia and Serbia declared war against Germany.
In 1926, Gertrude Ederle became the ﬁrst
woman to swim the English Channel, arriving in
Kingsdown, England, from France in 14 1/2 hours.
In 1930, New York State Supreme Court Justice
Joseph Force Crater went missing after leaving a
Manhattan restaurant; his disappearance remains
a mystery.
In 1956, the DuMont television network went
off the air after a decade of operations.
In 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Gherman Titov
became the second man to orbit Earth as he ﬂew
aboard Vostok 2.
In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed
the Voting Rights Act.
In 1978, Pope Paul VI died at Castel Gandolfo at
age 80.
In 1986, William J. Schroeder died at at Humana
Hospital-Audubon in Louisville, Kentucky, after
living 620 days with the Jarvik 7 artiﬁcial heart.
In 1993, Louis Freeh won Senate conﬁrmation
to be FBI director.
Ten years ago: Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan, whose soldier-son, Casey, was killed in Iraq,
began a weeks-long protest outside President
George W. Bush’s Texas ranch. Former British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook, who’d quit Prime Minister Tony Blair’s Cabinet to protest the Iraq war,
died in Inverness, Scotland, at age 59. A Tunisian
airliner plunged into the Mediterranean while trying to make an emergency landing in Sicily; 16 of
the 39 people aboard were killed.
Five years ago: In a stunning announcement,
Hewlett-Packard Co. said it had ousted CEO Mark
Hurd after an investigation of a sexual harassment
complaint found that he had falsiﬁed expense
reports and other documents to conceal a relationship with a contractor.
One year ago: President Barack Obama closed
a three-day U.S.-Africa summit in Washington
which brought together leaders from more than
50 African nations. Michael Worthington was put
to death by the state of Missouri for raping and
killing college student Melinda “Mindy” Grifﬁn in
1995, making him the ﬁrst U.S. prisoner executed
since a lethal injection in Arizona the previous
month in which an inmate took nearly two hours
to die.
Today’s Birthdays: Children’s performer Ella
Jenkins is 91. Actor-director Peter Bonerz is 77.
Actress Louise Sorel is 75. Actor Michael Anderson Jr. is 72. Actor Ray Buktenica is 72. Actor
Dorian Harewood is 65. Actress Catherine Hicks
is 64. Rock singer Pat MacDonald (Timbuk 3) is
63. Country musician Mark DuFresne (Confederate Railroad) is 62. Actress Stepfanie Kramer is
59. Actress Faith Prince is 58. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Randy DeBarge is 57. Actor Leland Orser
is 55. Actress Michelle Yeoh is 53. Country singers
Patsy and Peggy Lynn are 51. Basketball Hall of
Famer David Robinson is 50. Actor Jeremy Ratchford is 50. Actor Benito Martinez is 47. Country
singer Lisa Stewart is 47. Movie writer-director
M. Night Shyamalan is 45. Actress Merrin
Dungey is 44. Singer Geri Halliwell is 43. Actor
Jason O’Mara is 43. Singer-actor David Campbell
is 42. Actress Vera Farmiga is 42. Actress Ever
Carradine is 41. Actress Soleil Moon Frye is 39.

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

Fighting to reduce med costs
Just like Medicare,
which celebrated its
50th anniversary last
week, prescription drugs
have helped Americans
live longer and healthier
lives.
But for too many
Americans, the high cost
of prescription drugs
forces them to choose
between taking their full
dosage and putting food
on the table or keeping
their lights on.
And drug costs are
on the rise. A report
released last month by
the Medicare Trustees
found an alarming 10.9
percent increase in the
cost of drugs offered
through Medicare’s prescription drug plans last
year – primarily due to
the high prices of new
and specialty drugs.
That’s why I’m

not be forced to
cosponsoring legbuy from a middle
islation that would
man. Unfortuincrease access to
nately, in order to
more affordable
get drug coverage
prescription medithrough Medicare,
cations for seniors.
you must join a
This would drive
plan run by an
down the costs for
insurance commore than 24 mil- Sherrod
Brown
pany or another
lion Americans,
private company.
including the more Guest
Columnist
These plans vary
than one million
in cost and coverOhioans enrolled
age.
in one of Medicare’s
My legislation would
Part D prescription drug
provide for a consistent
plans.
Part D plan adminisThe Medicare Pretered directly by the
scription Drug Savings
Medicare program, and
and Choice Act would
would allow Medicare
allow seniors to enroll
to negotiate the best
in a Part D prescription
prescription medication
drug plan administered
prices for seniors.
directly by Medicare,
Current law expressly
instead of a private
bans Medicare from
insurance company.
negotiating with pharYou should be able to
get drug coverage direct- maceutical companies
for the best possible
ly through Medicare,

prices – even though
the government can
often negotiate bigger
discounts than private
insurance companies.
For example, the
Department of Veterans
Affairs uses this type
of negotiating authority and has cut name
brand drug prices by as
much as 50 percent. My
legislation would save
taxpayers money while
providing seniors with a
high-quality, affordable
prescription drug plan.
It’s not enough to just
celebrate the 50th anniversary of the creation of
the Medicare and Medicaid. We must defend
Medicare for future
generations and make
sure it works for today’s
seniors.
Sherrod Brown is a Democratic
U.S. senator from Ohio.

THEIR VIEW

ChalleNGe Academy: W.Va.’s best kept secret
teer mentors from their home
KINGWOOD, W.Va. — Spending time at the Mountaineer Chal- communities. These role models
assist the cadets with their PostleNGe Academy this past week
Residential Action Plan, helping
was a real honor and indeed an
them achieve even greater suceye-opening experience. Nestled
cess. In fact, mentor reports indialong the majestic Cheat River
cate some rather impressive
just off W.Va. Route 7 in
statistics. For example, 41
Kingwood on the grounds
percent enter the workof Camp Dawson, this outforce, 17 percent go into
standing program remains
the military and 12 percent
West Virginia’s best kept
go to college.
secret.
But beyond the starIts mission is a simple
tling success rate, there
one — to train and mentor
John
is a uniquely human side
selected at risk students
Dahlia
to the Mountaineer Chalusing eight core compoGuest
leNGe Academy very few
nents in a quasi- military
know about or even heard.
environment. The goal is to Columnist
According to its longtime
help these unique and couDirector Kathy Tasker, most
rageous young men and women
of the teens who end up at the
between the ages of 16 and 18
academy actually requested to
become contributing members of
attend on their own. So the idea
society. For 22 weeks, they learn
that these teens were forced to
those eight core components,
spend 22 weeks at Camp Dawson
which are life-coping skills, job
skills, health and hygiene, citizen- because they are perhaps juvenile
delinquents is a misconception.
ship, education excellence, service to the community, leadership These teens, who either learned
about the amazing program from
and fellowship and, of course,
a brother or sister who
physical training.
attended or because they
The success rate is nothing
short of amazing. The ChalleNGe wanted a chance to succeed, took
the initiative to sacriﬁce all that
Academy’s “whole person” conwe take for granted to become
cept has helped graduate 3,279
a cadet. They actually consider
cadets from all 55 counties since
it an honor and, in many cases,
opening in 1993. Those who
a chance and opportunity to
proudly run the program boast
achieve a better way of life.
an average of 272 graduates each
The driving force behind the
year. And as of 2013, those who
program is, of course, the staff
qualify can actually attain high
school diplomas from the counties who keep the wheels moving forward on a daily basis. There are
they hail came from. Even more
62 people who work at the Mounremarkable, beyond graduation,
taineer ChalleNGe Academy
cadets participate in a one-year
under four areas of operation.
follow-up program led by volun-

The Administration Department
handles cooperative activities on
the state and national levels to
sustain and develop the program.
The Cadre Department, which
is overseen by the Commandant
of Cadets, provides the 24-hour
supervision, training schedule
development and instruction,
physical training and community
service. The Education Department, provides support through
high school equivalency instruction, life-coping skills and job
skills. The Recruiting, Placement
and Mentoring Department handles goal planning, mentor training and placement functions. The
Logistics Department provides
the general business support
necessary to operate a residential
school.
The truth of it is, we live in a
time when hope for one’s future is
hard to ﬁnd. West Virginia’s jobless rate continues to spiral out of
control. Drug abuse has literally
decimated the workforce to the
point where those who wish to
work can’t even pass a drug test.
But in the small city of Kingwood
at Camp Dawson, the Mountaineer ChalleNGe Academy is
making a difference. The young
men and women who complete
the program become outstanding,
successful members of society.
They are the embodiment of the
can-do West Virginia spirit, who,
if given the chance, could lead our
state to a new era of prosperity.
John Dahlia is editor of the Preston County
News &amp; Journal. His column was made available
via the West Virginia Press Association and its
statewide story-sharing service.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 6, 2015 5A

IN BRIEF
Blue Bell back in production
BRENHAM, Texas
(AP) — Public health
ofﬁcials are allowing
Blue Bell to resume the
production and sale of
ice cream manufactured

at its Alabama plant.
Jim McVay, director
of health promotion and
chronic disease at the
Alabama Department
of Public Health, said
Wednesday that Blue

Bell can resume full production at its facility in
Sylacauga.
McVay says product
testing and trial runs
have shown no indications of the listeria con-

Tax

retailer to third-party reimbursement, such as a manufacturer’s coupon, the discount
provided by the coupon does
From page 1A
not reduce the item’s sales
The tax holiday does
price for purposes of determinacknowledge retailer coupons
ing whether the item is eligible
and loyalty cards. The ﬁnal
for the exemption. This same
price charged by the store is
principal is used on rebated
what is looked at for qualiﬁca- items.
tion of the sales tax.
Qualifying items placed on
However, if a retailer accepts or picked up from layaway dura coupon that entitles the
ing the sales tax holiday are

tamination that caused a
crippling recall in April
following illnesses in
four states, including
three deaths in Kansas.
Production facilities remain closed in

exempt from sales tax.
The clothing items vary and
include many options, not just
shoes and general clothing.
Some of the more obscure
things mentioned on the list
that might not be thought of
include athletic supporters, lab
coats, bathing suits and caps,
costumes, diapers, rubber
pants, garter belts, formal wear
and wedding apparel.
The only items not included

Oklahoma and Texas.
Woman slips into cockpit
SAUGET, Ill. (AP) —
A woman talked her way
past a security guard
early Wednesday and

in the sales tax holiday include
accessories, items used in a
trade or business, protective
wear, sewing materials, and
very few limited items. An
entire list can be found online
at the Ohio.gov website.
All vendors are required to
abide by the rules laid out in
the bill, as it is law. No establishment may choose to not
participate in the tax free holiday. According to the National

entered the cockpit of a
private plane at an Illinois
airport before she was
caught and taken to a
hospital for observation
for possible mental illness, authorities said.

Retail Federation, the average
family with children in grades
K-12 will spend $669.28 on
apparel, shoes, supplies and
electronics.
The tax holiday could be saving the average family nearly
$50.
Meigs Local Schools and
Eastern Schools begin their
new year Wednessday, Aug. 26,
with Southern Local Schools
beginning Thursday, Aug. 27.

Health

makes the trail safer for use, Cleland said.
rims and nuts (the fabric part of a basketball goal).
“Before and after school hours, staff, students and
Meigs High School also received assistance in the
form of culverts, or tubing, that facilitated rain runoff residents can use the trail, and that’s nice for parents
that had been washing away some of the hills near the who have kids in sports (too),” she said. “They can
From page 1A
school. Cleland said the culverts can also help prevent walk while their child participating. We encourage the
Any children ages 0-11 must have a parent or guard- against runoff-related injuries.
parents to use the trail and residents as well.”
ian present when borrowing bikes. Anyone ages 12-17
The trail pavement is made possible through the
Eastern Local Schools have also received aid in the
may borrow bikes without an adult present, but must form of the pavement of a walking trail that can be
Creating Healthy Communities Grant.
have a parent or guardian’s signed consent form on
found weaving through around the building. The trail
ﬁle. The bike rental program is through the Together previously consisted of crushed gravel. The paving
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.
on Diabetes grant.
THURSDAY EVENING
THURSDAY, AUGUST 6
Another Pomeroy project involved the resurfacBROADCAST
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9:30
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WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
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Watch

OSHP conduct school bus
inspections for the state.
Every bus used to transport students is inspected
From page 1A
before the start of each
From 2012-14, 4,059
school year and once
drivers were convicted of more during the year.
failing to stop for a school Between 2012-14, OSHP
bus that was loading or
performed 136,765 such
dropping off passengers.
inspections — an average
OSHP wrote 1,446 citaof 45,588 per year.
tions during that time.
The school year begins
Norris added that
Aug. 20 for schools in
motorists should plan
Gallia County Schools
ahead and allow extra
and Gallipolis City
time for school bus stops. Schools; Aug. 26 for
Motorists are also urged
Meigs and Eastern
to exercise patience and
schools, and Aug. 27 for
never pass a stopped
Southern Local Schools.
school bus, he said.
As for inspections,
Reach Michael Johnson at 740-4462342, ext. 2102, or on Twitter @
Ohio law requires that
OhioEditorMike.

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Met Mother Met Mother
The Dan Patrick Show
Baseball Tonight (L)
CFL Football Edm./BC (L)
Project Runway "Finale Part Project Runway "Finale Part Project Runway "Road to
Project Runway "Mad Dash Mayhem" (SP) Project
1" Pt. 1 of 2
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Job or No Job "Chicago
Bruce Almighty A man is given God's powers in
17 Again A man wishes he had made different life
order to teach him how difficult it is to run the world. TV14 decisions and is given the chance to be 17 again. TVPG
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Fantastic 4: Rise of the Silver Surfer The Fantastic 4 face off Lip Sync
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(5:00)
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Back to the Future II
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Scared "Richland County SC: Behind Bars: Rookie Year
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Tanked: Unfiltered
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(5:30)
True Hollywood Story
THS "Amanda True Hollywood Story
E! Investigates "Last Days
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"Co-ed Nightmares"
"Social Media Nightmares" Bynes"
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Braxton "One Wild Ride"
Braxton "In the Hot Seat" Braxton Values "Last Call" Braxton Family Values (N) L.A. Hair (N)
Total Divas "Tea Mode"
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Botched "I Love New Work" Botched "The Bacon Bra" Botched
(:25) Gilligan's Island
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(:35) Gilligan (:10) Ray
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6A Thursday, August 6, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Suspect wielding hatchet, gun dead at movie theater
By Erik Schelzig
Associated Press

ANTIOCH, Tenn. — A
suspect wielding a hatchet,
gun and pepper spray inside a
Nashville-area movie theater
died after exchanging gunshots with a SWAT team as
he tried to escape through the
theater’s rear door, police said
Wednesday.
The suspect, whom police
identiﬁed as a 51-year-old
white local man, was armed
with a gun and a hatchet or an
ax during a showing of “Mad
Max” at the Carmike Hickory
8 theater in Antioch, said Don
Aaron, a spokesman for Metro
Nashville police.
Aaron said the suspect

detonate it.
Aaron said an ofﬁcer came
into the theater, where at
least 20 people were present,
seconds was ﬁred upon by
the suspect. The ofﬁcer shot
back, then backed off. About
two dozen gunshots could be
heard in a 10-second period
in raw video footage posted
online by WKRN TV.
Eric Vale, 32, an Uber
driver, told The Tennessean
newspaper that he was dropping off passengers in the
theater’s parking lot when he
heard gunshots.
He described it as “utter
chaos.”
“I just couldn’t believe this
was happening again,” he
said.

was carrying a backpack on
his chest and was wearing
a surgical mask, possibly to
protect himself from the pepper spray he unleashed in
large amounts, Aaron said.
He said three people were
blasted with the spray and
treated. One of those people
also had a superﬁcial wound
that could have been caused
by a hatchet, said ﬁre department spokesman Brian Haas.
No one was taken to a hospital. The only person shot was
the suspect, Aaron said. A
bomb squad was checking the
backpack to make sure it did
not contain any explosives
and Aaron said people in the
immediate vicinity might hear
a loud boom if they had to

Mark Humphrey | AP

Police work outside a movie theater complex in Antioch, Tenn., where officials
reported a man with a hatchet, a gun and pepper spray was killed by police
on Wednesday. Several moviegoers were hit with the pepper spray and one
had a wound that may have been caused by the hatchet, but the only person
shot was the gunman, officials said. No one required hospital treatment.

Half of blacks say police have treated them unfairly
arrested for theft in Burbank, Illinois, as a teenager. “When I got to the
police station, the ofﬁcer
who arrested me told
me that I looked like I
wanted to do something
about it,” Washington
said, adding, “And he
kept calling me ‘nigger.’”
“It’s been like this for a
long time,” Washington
said. “It’s just now that
everybody starting to
record it and stuff, it’s
just hitting the spotlight.
Most Caucasians, they
think it’s just starting to
go on when it’s been like
this.”
The AP-NORC poll
also showed:
�Ceh[�j^Wd�jme#
thirds of blacks — 71
percent — thought
police are treated too
leniently by the criminal
justice system when they
hurt or kill people. A
third of whites say police

Affairs Research, comes
as the Michael Brown
shooting in Ferguson,
WASHINGTON — A
Missouri, approaches
majority of blacks in the its ﬁrst anniversary and
United States — more
the nation continues
than 3 out of 5 — say
to grapple with policethey or a family member related deaths of black
have personal experiAmericans.
ence with being treated
White Americans who
unfairly by the police,
live in more diverse
and their race is the
communities — where
reason.
census data show at
Half of African-Ameri- least 25 percent of the
can respondents, includ- population is non-white
ing 6 in 10 black men,
— were more likely
said they personally had than other whites to say
been treated unfairly by police in their communipolice because of their
ties mistreat minorities,
race, compared with
58 percent to 42 per3 percent of whites.
cent. And they’re more
Another 15 percent said likely to see the police as
they knew of a family
too quick to use deadly
member who had been
force, 42 percent to 29
treated unfairly by the
percent.
police because of their
Larry Washington, 30,
race.
of Merrillville, Indiana,
This information, from described his encouna survey conducted by
ter with a white police
the Associated Pressofﬁcer when he was
NORC Center for Public

Associated Press

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

65°

71°

71°

Mainly cloudy today. Clouds breaking tonight.
High 74° / Low 63°

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

Trace
0.12
0.65
33.72
27.16

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:34 a.m.
8:35 p.m.
12:01 a.m.
1:39 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

New

First

Full

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

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

Minor
11:56a
12:22a
1:14a
2:03a
2:50a
3:36a
4:21a

Major
6:09p
7:03p
7:54p
8:42p
9:29p
10:14p
10:58p

Chillicothe
77/58

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Lucasville
74/60

Primary: ragweed, other
Mold: 1876
Moderate

High

Very High

Portsmouth
75/61

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Minor
---12:50p
1:41p
2:29p
3:16p
4:01p
4:46p

WEATHER HISTORY
A barrage of hail on Aug. 6, 1979,
shelled the Crane Ammunition Depot,
20 miles southwest of Bloomington,
Ind. The hailstones were 2 inches in
diameter.

300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates
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
12.73
15.82
21.59
12.98
13.14
25.22
13.35
25.80
34.61
13.32
16.50
34.50
13.90

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.28
-0.27
+0.59
+0.66
-0.18
-0.01
-0.07
+0.72
+0.01
+0.78
+0.90
+0.30
-0.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Mostly cloudy and
humid with a t-storm

Humid with plenty of
clouds

Marietta
76/60
Belpre
76/59

Athens
75/57

83°
62°
Mostly sunny

Today

St. Marys
77/61

Parkersburg
77/60

Coolville
75/59

Elizabeth
76/59

Spencer
75/60

Buffalo
74/62
Milton
74/62

Clendenin
73/61

St. Albans
75/63

Huntington
72/63

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
78/58
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
76/62
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
86/67
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

WEDNESDAY

83°
64°

Murray City
76/56

Ironton
73/63

Ashland
72/63
Grayson
74/63

TUESDAY

85°
69°

Wilkesville
74/60
POMEROY
Jackson
74/61
75/59
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
75/60
74/61
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
77/59
GALLIPOLIS
74/63
75/60
74/62

South Shore Greenup
73/62
75/61

37

Partly sunny

said African-Americans
have more encounters
with police than whites
because of crime rates in
urban areas. “If you have
more interaction with
the police because of the
crime and the disorder
in our urban centers —
the American ghetto I
like to say it — it’s going
to skew the numbers,”
Clarke said.
David Thomas, 80, of
Vienna, Georgia, said he
was treated roughly by
police as a young man
in Savannah, Georgia,
but relations between
black communities and
law enforcement have
improved since then.
“Everything is not
right, but it’s better,”
Thomas said. “We have
bad cops and we have
good cops. I don’t know
where we’re going to
from here, but we need
police.”

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
75/57

Waverly
74/57

Pollen: 4

0 50 100 150 200

Aug 6 Aug 14 Aug 22 Aug 29

Major
5:42a
6:36a
7:27a
8:16a
9:03a
9:48a
10:33a

Adelphi
77/56

MONDAY

87°
68°

Partly sunny

Logan
77/56

police in their communities decide to use deadly
force. Among blacks, 71
percent thought police
were more likely to use
deadly force against
black people in their
communities, and 85
percent said the same
thing applied generally across the country.
Fifty-eight percent of
whites thought race
had nothing to do with
police decisions in most
communities on use of
deadly force.
Seventy-two percent of
whites said they always
or often trust police to
do right by them and
their community, while
66 percent of blacks said
they only sometimes,
rarely or never trust
the police to do what is
right.
David A. Clarke Jr,
sheriff in Milwaukee
County, Wisconsin,

SUNDAY

87°
67°

Warmer with some
sun returning

5

Low

MOON PHASES

SATURDAY

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

Primary: cladosporium

Fri.
6:35 a.m.
8:34 p.m.
12:42 a.m.
2:43 p.m.

FRIDAY

84°
66°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

85°
66°
86°
65°
102° in 1918
50° in 1951

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

are getting away with it,
while nearly half — 46
percent — say the police
are treated fairly by the
criminal justice system.
�I_njo#jme�f[hY[dj�e\�
whites said a major reason why police violence
happens is that civilians
confront the police,
rather than cooperate,
when they are stopped.
Three out of 4 blacks,
or 75 percent, said it is
because the consequences of police misconduct
are minimal, and few
ofﬁcers are prosecuted
for excessive use of
force. More than 7 in 10
blacks identiﬁed problems with race relations,
along with poor policecommunity relations, as
major reasons for police
violence.
�D[Whbo�)�ekj�e\�*�
whites — 74 percent
— thought race had
nothing to do with how

Charleston
74/64

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
74/58

Billings
85/55

Toronto
77/57

Minneapolis
80/68
Chicago
82/63

Denver
94/60

Montreal
72/55

New York
85/69

Detroit
80/61

Kansas City
84/69

Washington
84/71

Fri.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
96/67/s 92/65/c
Anchorage
72/57/pc 75/58/s
Atlanta
86/71/t
88/72/t
Atlantic City
81/70/pc
80/71/r
Baltimore
82/65/sh
82/65/r
Billings
85/55/pc 83/60/pc
Boise
85/59/s 89/66/s
Boston
80/64/s 74/64/s
Charleston, WV
74/64/r 81/65/pc
Charlotte
91/70/t
83/68/t
Cheyenne
86/55/s
84/56/t
Chicago
82/63/pc
83/67/t
Cincinnati
76/61/r 83/62/pc
Cleveland
78/59/pc 81/62/pc
Columbus
76/60/c 83/63/pc
Dallas
103/82/s 104/81/s
Denver
94/60/pc 91/60/s
Des Moines
85/71/pc 87/68/pc
Detroit
80/61/pc 82/63/pc
Honolulu
88/78/sh 88/77/sh
Houston
99/78/s 100/78/pc
Indianapolis
79/62/c 83/63/pc
Kansas City
84/69/pc 89/68/s
Las Vegas
104/81/pc 100/72/t
Little Rock
94/77/t 100/79/s
Los Angeles
86/67/pc 80/63/pc
Louisville
79/67/r 86/69/pc
Miami
92/78/t 92/76/pc
Minneapolis
80/68/t 80/63/c
Nashville
81/68/t 87/71/pc
New Orleans
92/78/t 96/80/pc
New York City
85/69/s 82/67/pc
Oklahoma City
99/76/s 101/77/s
Orlando
92/74/t 90/75/pc
Philadelphia
85/70/pc
82/69/r
Phoenix
109/86/pc 107/85/pc
Pittsburgh
79/61/pc 82/64/pc
Portland, ME
78/55/pc 74/56/pc
Raleigh
89/69/t
85/67/t
Richmond
83/68/t
79/69/t
St. Louis
84/72/c
88/73/t
Salt Lake City
90/68/pc 80/61/pc
San Francisco
76/62/pc 76/60/pc
Seattle
78/58/pc 82/58/s
Washington, DC
84/71/t
82/71/r

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
86/71

El Paso
102/76

High
Low

109° in Needles, CA
34° in Tuolumne Meadows, CA

Global
Chihuahua
95/66

High
121° in Khanaqin, Iraq
Low -1° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
99/78
Monterrey
102/72

GOALS

Miami
92/78

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

60576589

By Jesse J. Holland

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 6, 2015 1B

Ledecky wins 200 free at world swims

AP Photo | Michael Sohn

United States’ Katie Ledecky holds her gold medal after winning the women’s
1500m freestyle final at the Swimming World Championships in Kazan, Russia,
Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2015.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS
GAHS Football Reserve Seats
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Reserve seats for the
2015 Gallia Academy football season will go on
sale Monday, Aug. 10, for Gallia Academy Athletic Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity football
players, Gallia Academy band members, and varsity and junior varsity cheerleaders will be able
to purchase Reserve Seats on Tuesday, Aug. 11.
Reserve seats for the general public will be
available on Wednesday, Aug. 12.
The price will be $25 per ticket. Tickets may
be purchased in the Athletic Director’s ofﬁce at
Gallia Academy High School between the hours
of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Gallia Academy Athletic Super Boosters will
be limited to 10 tickets purchased on the ﬁrst
day of sales. After the ﬁrst day, there will be no
limit on the number of tickets that may be purchased.
Mason County senior sports passes
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Mason County
Board of Education is offering sports passes for
senior citizens over the age of 65. The pass is
$25 and is good for all home sporting events
for the 2015-16 season. Passes are available at
the Mason County School Board ofﬁce MondayThursday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
RVMS football practice
BIDWELL, Ohio — River Valley will start its
middle school football on Monday, August 10,
from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at RVMS. Students must
have an up to date physical in order to participate. Helmet ﬁtting will be August 11, starting
10 a.m. at RVMS.
RVMS volleyball practice
BIDWELL, Ohio — River Valley Middle
School’s volleyball will begin on August 10, with
the eighth grade going from 8 a.m. to noon, and
the seventh grade going from 4:30 p.m. to 6
p.m.
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. For more
information contact Lady Tornadoes head coach
Kent Wolfe at (740)949-4222 ext. 1212 or at
(740)444-9334.
Football Officials Training Program
The Ohio-Kanawha Rivers Ofﬁcials Association is planning to conduct a training class for
individuals who may be interested in becoming
registered football ofﬁcials. Interested individuals must be at least 18 years of age, of good
moral character, and shall not have been previously convicted of a felony or crime of moral
turpitude. They should have a knowledge of the
game of football, and be willing to attend the
training classes and devote the time necessary
to the study of the rules to become a competent
ofﬁcial. Those who successfully complete the
training class and register as a football ofﬁcial
with the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Commission will be eligible to be assigned
to ofﬁciate middle school, junior varsity and
youth league football games during the upcoming season. For more information, you can contact Kevin Durst at (304) 593-2544.

Do your part!
Recycle this newspaper!

KAZAN, Russia (AP) —
Katie Ledecky is unbeatable
in the distance races. Turns
out she’s awfully good going
shorter, too.
The 18-year-old American
rallied to win the 200-meter
freestyle at the world swimming championships Wednesday night, beating a stellar
ﬁeld that included defending
champion Missy Franklin of
the United States and two-time
winner Federica Pellegrini of
Italy.
Ledecky had a good view
of the competition from lane
7. Breathing to her right, she
saw all but one of her rivals
and halfway through she knew
another gold medal was hers.
She rallied from fourth after

the ﬁrst two laps to touch ﬁrst
in 1 minute, 55.16 seconds for
her second gold medal of the
championships. She already
won the 1,500 free, lowering
her own world record in the
preliminaries and ﬁnal.
Pellegrini of Italy ﬁnished
second in 1:55.32, and Franklin was third in 1:55.49.
“I knew it was going to be
a really competitive ﬁeld and
that was something that was
really special for me,” Ledecky
said. “It was an honor to be in
a heat like that.”
Femke Heemskerk of the
Netherlands took it out strongly, dipping under world-record
pace on the opening lap. She
was still in front through the
third lap before fading to

eighth.
Franklin was second and
Ledecky fourth halfway
through the most anticipated women’s race in Kazan.
Ledecky moved up to second
behind Heemskerk on the third
lap while Franklin dropped to
third.
“After racing with Katie
for the last couple of years, I
know her last 25 is always just
ridiculous and that’s how Katie
is too,” Franklin said. “I knew
she was going to come back
really strong.”
Two years ago in Barcelona,
Ledecky won four golds and
set two world records. The
recent high school graduate
shows no signs of slowing
See LEDECKY | 3B

Browns’ Pryor confident of switch
BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
Terrelle Pryor took the
handoff, set his feet and
unloaded a deep pass
that ﬂuttered, ﬂoated
and somehow landed in
Travis Benjamin’s hands
for a touchdown.
Pryor knew the trickplay toss would get poor
reviews.
“They said it was
wobbly and ugly,” Pryor
joked. “They said I lost
my QB skills. I told them
I never had them. It
was a duck, but it was a
completion.”
And, not a bad one for
a wide receiver.
Attempting the switch
from NFL quarterback
to receiver with the
Browns, Pryor is making
progress and believes his
chances of making the
roster are growing daily.
“It’s very realistic,” he
said. “I’m pushing it and
we’ll see, but I believe
it’s very realistic and
I believe I can make it
happen with the way I
work.”
Five practices into
training camp, the Pryor
experiment has gone better than expected. The
former Oakland quarterback and Ohio State star
has opened eyes with
his athleticism, drawn
praise for his work ethic
and become the biggest
story in camp — quite a
contrast from last summer’s media circus when
quarterback Johnny Manziel made headlines with
every move on the ﬁeld.
Pryor sustained a
minor setback Tuesday
when his right hamstring tightened. He
spent the ﬁnal hour of
practice watching from
the sideline with his leg
wrapped. Afterward, the
6-foot-4, 223-pounder
said he doesn’t believe
the injury is serious and
it’s possible he may sit
out a day to rest.
“I didn’t really tweak
it,” said Pryor, who felt
his hamstring stiffen during a special team’s drill.
“I just thought it would
be best for me to pull out
because obviously I’ve
never played receiver, so
I don’t even know what a
hamstring pull is.”
Pryor doesn’t expect
the injury to stop him
from playing in the
team’s instrasquad scrimmage Friday at Ohio Stadium in Columbus. It will
be his ﬁrst visit to Ohio
State since leaving amid
an NCAA investigation
into players selling memorabilia. As part of his

AP Photo | David Richard

Cleveland Browns wide receiver Terrelle Pryor walks on the field during practice at NFL football
training camp, Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2015, in Berea, Ohio.

penalty, Pryor was sent a
disassociation letter from
the school, banning him
from several privileges,
including using the Buckeyes’ facilities. However,
he can participate as a
member of the Browns.
As the days go on, his
odds of making Cleveland’s roster seemingly
rise.
Pryor’s skill set
intrigued the Browns to
claim him off waivers,
and to this point, he has
passed every test while
learning a new position.
He’s no longer a quarterback — in body or mind.
“I feel like I’m a receiver. I don’t drop balls. I
pride myself on that,”
said Pryor, who spends

10 minutes before each
practice catching 100
balls — many of them
with one hand — from
the JUGs machine. “I’ve
just got to keep on continuing on bettering my
route game and also bettering knowing where to
block on the run game.
That stuff’s starting to
come to me very good,
too, so I deﬁnitely do feel
like the transition’s going
well.
“I can’t say I’m all the
way there because I’m
not.”
Pryor’s versatility gives
him an advantage, which
is why he felt good about
his completion — warts
and all — to Benjamin.
The more that he
shows he can do, the

better Pryor’s odds the
Browns will give him
a job. The trick play
on an end-around was
an example of how the
Browns can use him,
and his background with
offensive coordinator
John DeFilippo — they
were together in Oakland
— can only help.
“Anytime you can do
different things, anytime
you can go out of the box
and put defenses on their
heels, I think it’s great,”
Pryor said.
NOTES: DL Billy
Winn will be out at least
a week with a sprained
right ankle. Coach Mike
Pettine expressed relief
Winn did not hurt his
See PRYOR | 3B

�CLASSIFIEDS

2B Thursday, August 6, 2015

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Daily Sentinel

Pryor

Ledecky

knee. … Rookie RB
Duke Johnson missed
his third straight
practice with a hamstring injury, and
Cleveland’s backﬁeld
has already been ravaged by minor injuries
with Terrance West
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… CB Tramon Williams
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… TV actress Valerie
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breaststroke, a non-Olympic
event. He set the world record
in the semiﬁnals Tuesday and
came back to win in 26.51.
Cameron van der Burgh of
South Africa ﬁnished second
in 26.66. Kevin Cordes of the
United States was third in
26.86.
Peaty and van der Burgh also
ﬁnished 1-2 in the 100 breaststroke.
Vladimir Morozov of Russia,
a gold-medal favorite in the 100
free, was disqualiﬁed for a false
start after winning his semiﬁnal heat. He sat on the lane line
in shock at the announcement.
“When I jumped, I knew it
was a false start,” he said. “The
really painful thing was that
I gave it everything and got
that kind of result, 48.1, pretty
much a gold medal. I had the
best chance over that distance.”
Britain’s Chris Walker-Hebborn, Peaty, Siobhan O’Connor
and Fran Halsall won the mixed
relay in 3:41.71, a world record
in the new event.
The United States was second and Germany third.

Defending champion Le Clos
settled for silver in 1:53.68,
and Jan Switkowski of Poland
earned bronze in 1:54.10.
“I tried to take it out really
hard. I wanted to see if I could
scare them off the ﬁrst 100 but
it didn’t work out,” Le Clos
said.
It was Cseh’s ﬁrst gold at the
worlds since 2005 in Montreal,
where he won the 400 individual medley. He has reunited
with his childhood coach ahead
of next year’s Rio de Janeiro
Olympics.
“I know I need to keep working on the race,” Cseh said.
“My last 20 was a little bit hard
but it was an enjoyable race and
I’m very happy.”
Michael Phelps, the worldrecord holder, was forced to
miss the world meet as part of
his suspension by USA Swimming after a second drunk-driving arrest. He will be competing at U.S. nationals in Texas
this week.
Adam Peaty of Britain earned
his second individual gold
medal with a victory in the 50

helped the U.S. ﬁnish third in
the 4x100 free relay Sunday.
She was ﬁfth in the 100 backstroke. She recently turned proFrom page 1B
fessional after swimming in coldown in Kazan, where she still lege for two years, and has yet
has the 400 and 800 freestyles
to regain the form that carried
remaining.
her to a record six gold medals
“I never really feel pressure,” two years ago at the worlds.
said Ledecky, who burst onto
Sun Yang of China rallied to
the world stage with a gold
take the lead on the next-to-last
in the 800 free at the 2012
lap and won the 800 free in
Olympics. “Going into London 7:39.96 to go with his earlier
I didn’t and since then I’ve just victory in the 400 free.
tried to maintain that same
Gregorio Paltrinieri of Italy
mentality.”
ﬁnished second in 7:40.81 after
Better known as a distance
leading for six laps until he was
specialist, Ledecky was compassed late by Sun, who earned
peting in the 200 free for the
his third consecutive world
ﬁrst time at the worlds.
title.
“I had plenty of training to
Mack Horton of Australia,
do all of these races and I knew who led the ﬁrst eight laps,
that I could trust in my trainsettled for third at 7:44.02.
ing,” Ledecky said. “That conﬁLaszlo Cseh of Hungary overdence has fueled my swims this took Chad Le Clos to win the
week.”
200 butterﬂy as the oldest man
Ledecky’s successes have
in the ﬁnal at age 29.
been the lone bright spot for
Cseh trailed Le Clos after the
the U.S. team halfway through
ﬁrst two laps before passing the
the meet in Kazan.
South African midway through
Franklin picked up her
the third lap. He hung on and
second bronze medal, having
touched ﬁrst in 1:53.48.

From page 1B

Inspection hours

Thursday, August 6, 2015 3B

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Call Now! 800-618-5313
See complete listings at rbauction.com

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Auction Firm # 2008000166 / Auctioneers Frederick R. Vilsmeier

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Daily Sentinel

A jug in hand, Zach Johnson gets back to work
AKRON, Ohio (AP) — Jordan Spieth gets to play with
Zach Johnson one tournament
too late.
When last seen on the golf
course, Spieth missed out on a
three-man playoff at the British
Open that ended his bid for a
Grand Slam. He came back out
and watched from the steps of
the Royal &amp; Ancient clubhouse
at St. Andrews as Johnson, a
good friend, won the claret jug.
The only players to win
majors this year will be paired
Thursday when the Bridgestone Invitational begins at
Firestone.
The World Golf Championship event offers big money,
free FedEx Cup points and for
some of the 77 players in the
ﬁeld, a chance to make sure
their games are in shape for
the PGA Championship the following week in Wisconsin.
Spieth and Johnson are coming off three-week breaks, both
taking time off to celebrate

after getting back from St.
Andrews.
Johnson hasn’t let the silver
claret jug out of his sight,
though golf’s oldest trophy has
been put to good use.
“We’ve had wine in there.
We’ve had champagne in there,
obviously some beer in there
and that kind of stuff,” he said.
“My kids drank water out of it.
They thought that was pretty
cool. I did have a corn on the
cob in it.”
Corn on the cob? Indeed, he
posted a photo on Twitter over
the weekend of a corn cob in
the jug as he pretends to take
a bite. He ﬁgured it was only
ﬁtting since Johnson still sees
himself as a regular guy from
Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
“I did have a corn on the cob
in it. I did not eat the corn on
the cob out of it,” Johnson said
Tuesday. “It was just a picture
because I am from the state
of Iowa. … I thought it would
be a cool little picture, and

I’m telling you, the Iowa folk,
the Midwest folk in general,
thought it was pretty awesome.”
Spieth’s celebration was
more personal. He turned 22
last week.
It’s a peculiar friendship if
it were based strictly on age.
Johnson’s wife reminded him
recently that at 39, the twotime major champion is nearly
old enough to be Spieth’s
father. They spent time together late in 2013 during Spieth’s
rookie season and have a few
friends in the same circle that
keep them connected.
Spieth surprised Johnson
by living up to his word even
as his fame grew. He had told
Johnson after winning the
Masters that he would take
part in his charity event ahead
of the John Deere Classic. And
then he won the U.S. Open
that put him halfway home to
the Grand Slam. Spieth still
showed up at the charity event,

and the John Deere Classic,
which he won for his fourth
title this year.
“What he did, and honoring
his commitment, is beyond
classy and just goes to show
once again how much he truly
gets it,” Johnson said. “He
didn’t have to do it, but maybe
he thought it was in his best
interests, too.”
The Bridgestone Invitational
will be missing its defending
champion for the ﬁrst time
since 2008 when Tiger Woods
was recuperating from knee
surgery. Rory McIlroy won last
year during his summer trifecta — British Open, Bridgestone, PGA Championship —
but he still is recovering from
an ankle injury he suffered
playing soccer in Northern Ireland and has not determined if
he can even play at Whistling
Straits next week.
Woods won’t be around
either, missing for the ﬁrst
time because he wasn’t eli-

gible. The ﬁeld is for the top
50 in the world (Woods is
No. 262), members of the last
Ryder Cup team (he wasn’t on
it) and winners of top events
from tours around the world.
Woods hasn’t won in two years
dating to his eighth career victory at Firestone.
“You win the bloody tournament eight times, you probably should … oh man, it’s
tough,” Day said about Woods’
absence. “It’s something that
we have to earn our spots in
these tournaments. Unfortunately, right now he’s going
through a spell where he’s not
playing that great. For him,
he never had to think about
it because he was No. 1 for
so long, it was just part of his
schedule.
“Someday I’m going to go
through the exact same thing
where I have to somehow earn
my way back into this tournament, but I’m hoping it’s a long
way away from now.”

Bengals veteran tackles determined to hold onto starting job
CINCINNATI (AP) —
Andrew Whitworth and
Andre Smith could see
what’s next when the
Bengals took offensive
tackles with their first
two picks in the draft.
For now, they’re dug in
as the starters, refusing
to give the team a reason to replace them.
Starting left tackle
Whitworth is preparing for his 10th season.
When he came to camp
as a rookie in 2008, the
Bengals had Levi Jones
and Willie Anderson as
their starting tackles.
Jones was gone after

that season. Anderson
was released at the end
of camp.
Now, he’s on the other
side of a coming change.
Whitworth is one of
29 Bengals players who
are in the final year of
their contracts, including 23 who can become
unrestricted free agents.
That includes Smith,
the right tackle who is
getting ready for his seventh season.
The Bengals took
tackles Cedric Ogbuehi
of Texas A&amp;M and
Oregon’s Jake Fisher
with their first two draft

picks. Ogbuehi is recovering from reconstructive knee surgery, and
Fisher is being worked
into a backup spot. By
next season, one or both
could be starting.
“To me there are
a couple of ways of
handling that,” Whitworth said on Tuesday
before practice. “You go
through something like
this and you don’t enjoy
it, you don’t want to be
in the situation.
“But the truth is you
can either worry about
it, you can complain
about it, or you can be

in the best shape you’ve
ever been in and expect
to play the best football
you’ve ever played and
see how it unfolds. The
latter is what I chose to
do.”
Whitworth is coming
off a season in which he
played all 16 games for
the seventh time in his
career. He has missed
only eight games in his
career, only two since
the start of the 2009
season.
Smith weighs less
than 320 pounds this
camp. He said he played
at 345 last season before

suffering a torn triceps
in late November at
Houston.
“I rededicated myself
to football, being a pro,”
Smith said. “It’s not
getting out of shape,
but staying in shape all
of the time, so when it
gets time to really get in
shape, it’s not that hard.
“I just want to be the
best at what I do. That’s
my motivation. I’m tired
of being mediocre.”
Veteran Eric Winston
— signed after Smith
was hurt last season —
and the rookies provide
the Bengals with an

abundance of depth at
the position. Fisher is
getting a lot of time in
practice as Whitworth’s
backup.
Whitworth and Smith
are getting the rookies
ready to move into bigger roles eventually.
“Like I said, every
guy in this locker room
that’s going to be a free
agent needs to focus on
one thing, and that’s on
playing the best football
they can possibly play,”
Whitworth said. “And
things will work out
in their best interest if
they do that.”

60599024

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