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                  <text>Marshall lowers
tuition for high
school students

Chance of
rain, high
79, low 56

VC wins
2nd TVC
match

BUSINESS s 3A

WEATHER s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 133, Volume 69

Longtime Ohio
Congressman
dies at age 90
By Mark Gillispie
Associated Press

CLEVELAND —
Former U.S. Rep. Louis
Stokes, a 15-term congressman from Ohio
who took on tough
assignments looking
into assassinations and
scandals, has died at
the age of 90, his family
said Wednesday.
He died peacefully
at home Tuesday with
his wife, Jay, at his
side, a month after
he announced he had
brain and lung cancer.
“During his illness, he
confronted it as he did
life — with bravery and
strength,” his family
said in a statement.
Stokes was elected
to the House in 1968,
becoming Ohio’s ﬁrst
black member of Congress and one of its
most respected and
inﬂuential. Just a year
earlier, his brother,
Carl, had been elected
mayor of Cleveland —
the ﬁrst black elected
mayor of a major U.S.
city.
The White House
issued a statement
from President Barack
Obama that noted how
Stokes overcame hardships while growing
up in Cleveland and
praised him for his
belief that everyone
should have a chance to
succeed.
“Lou leaves behind
an indelible legacy in
the countless generations of young leaders
that he inspired, and he
will be sorely missed,”
Obama said.
Stokes headed the
House’s Select Committee on Assassinations
that investigated the
slayings of President
John F. Kennedy and
Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. in the late 1970s and
concluded there “probably” had been a conspiracy in both cases.
Later, he served on
the Iran-Contra investigative committee,
where he drew attention for his unﬂinching
interrogation of Lt. Col.
Oliver North.
He was just as
unﬂinching with his
probe of fellow Demo-

crats when he led
the ethics committee
investigation of a corruption scandal known
as ABSCAM, which led
to convictions of one
senator and six House
members. The senator
and ﬁve of the House
members were Democrats.
Stokes was repeatedly called upon to exercise his legal training
and diplomatic skills.
He did two tours of
duty as chairman of the
ethics committee and
stepped in upon request
during the investigation
of a case involving the
private life of U.S. Rep.
Barney Frank, D-Mass.,
who retired in 2013.
He was one of the
Cold War-era chairmen
of the House Intelligence Committee,
led the Congressional
Black Caucus and was
the ﬁrst black on the
House Appropriations
Committee — a powerful panel that decides
how much each authorized federal project
actually gets to spend.
That post gave him
a platform for protecting major Cleveland
employers, such as
NASA Lewis Research
Center, and for directing federal dollars
toward hometown
projects.
His seniority on
that panel eventually brought him the
chairmanship of the
subcommittee with
jurisdiction over all federal housing programs,
plus the Department of
Veterans Affairs, NASA
and other independent
agencies.
Stokes’ public
demeanor was patient
and analytical, but colleagues also knew him
as tough, principled
and skillful.
U.S. Rep. Marcia
Fudge, a Clevelandarea Democrat, called
Stokes her “predecessor, mentor and friend.”
“He was a giant of
a man — the person
everyone measured
themselves against,”
Fudge said in a statement. “It was easy to
See STOKES | 6A

A NEWS
Obituary: 2
Business: 3
Editorial: 4
Weather: 6
B SPORTS
Golf: 1
Football: 1, 3, 4, 6
NASCAR: 4
Classifieds: 2-3
Comics: 5

Thursday, August 20, 2015 s 50¢

Fair features races, shows

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Gray skies kept the fair at cooler temperatures Tuesday afternoon. The fair ends Saturday night.

Pulls, mud volleyball, performances available
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Meigs
County Fair continues as
planned Thursday and
Friday.
Gates will open at 7
a.m. and close at 11 p.m.
both days.
A Junior Fair Rabbit
Show will begin at 8

a.m. Thursday in the RL
Arena. At 10:30 a.m.,
patrons will have the
chance to participate
in Bingo at the Grange
Annex. Flower Show
judging will begin at
noon in the Thompson
Roush Building.
Anyone looking to
place their bets will have
plenty of luck at noon

with harness racing with
paramutual betting. The
next event of the day
will be the singing group
Campbell &amp; Rowley, who
will take the Hill Stage
at 3 p.m. A Showman
of Showman Contest
will take place in the
RL Arena at 4 p.m. and
simultaneously another
round of Kiddie Tractor

Pulls will take place at
the Small Animal Arena.
For anyone who still
has a hankering for
music, Buick MacKane
will be performing at 5
p.m. on the Hill Stage.
At 6 p.m. the Pull Track
will host the Tractor
and Local Truck Pull,
See FAIR | 6A

Motocross accident at fair leaves one dead
By Lindsay Kriz
and Lorna Hart
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — One
person is dead after a
Motocross accident at
Tuesday night’s Meigs
County Fair.
Practice for the races
began at 6 p.m. at the
Grandstand and the
Motocross event began
at 7 p.m.
According to Meigs
County Sheriff’s Department ofﬁcials, the accident occurred around 8
p.m. when Justin Hill, 21,
crashed his motorcycle
during Motocross competition. He was thrown
from his bike and suffered
life-threatening injuries.
The race was halted
while EMS workers
attended to Hill. Only a
few laps were left in the
event when the incident
occurred and once the

receiving eyewitness
track was cleared, racaccounts of the accident.
ing resumed. No other
Wood is asking that anycyclists were involved in
one with video footage of
the accident.
Hill was taken by para- the crash come forward
medics from Meigs Coun- so the sheriff’s ofﬁce can
better underty EMS to
Holzer Emer- “Justin has been a stand how
gency Room resident of Meigs the accident
in Pomeroy,
County all his life occurred.
To contact
and was pronounced dead and was well-loved their ofﬁce,
from his inju- by his friends and call 740-9923371.
ries shortly
family.”
The Meigs
thereafter. He
— Keith Wood, Meigs
County
Fair
was wearing
County sheriff
Board has
a helmet and
no comment at this
protective equipment
time and stated that all
during the race.
information regarding
“Justin has been a
resident of Meigs County the accident would be
handled by the Meigs
all his life and was wellCounty Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
loved by his friends and
According to the
family,” Meigs County
American Academy of
Sheriff Keith Wood said.
Orthopaedic Surgeons,
The sheriff’s ofﬁce,
as of 2012, the most
along with the Ohio
commonly sustained type
State Highway Patrol,
of injury involving Motohave been investigatcross riders 18 and under
ing the crash scene and

are fractures, which
make up 70 percent of
all sustained injuries.
Fracture types included
femoral shaft, humerus,
forearm, clavicle and
tibial shaft injuries. The
next most common type
of injury involving Motocross is a head injury,
which can also include
concussions.
There has been no
ofﬁcial statement as to
the cause of death or any
factors that might have
contributed to the accident.
This is the ﬁrst fatality
involving entertainment
in the Meigs Fairs modern history.
All other fair activities are set to run as
scheduled, according to
the Meigs County Fair
Ofﬁce.
Reach Lindsay Kriz and Lorna Hart
at 740-992-2155.

One in hospital after two-car crash on SR 143
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

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

MEIGS COUNTY — The Gallipolis Post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol is investigating
a Wednesday morning crash on
State Route 143.
According to information from
OSHP, the crash occurred around
10:30 a.m. when Anthony Vance,
19, of Pomeroy, was driving a
1990 Ford Ranger northbound
on County Road 3, also known

as New Lima Road. His speed is
unknown.
Vance allegedly failed to yield to
Donald Philips, 37, of Albany, who
was driving a 2008 Ford F-150
eastbound on SR 143 at 45-50
mph.
Philips’ vehicle struck Vance’s on
the driver’s side, and both vehicles
came to rest off the north side of
SR 143. Vance was taken by MedFlight to Cabel Huntington Hospital. An OSHP report describes
his injuries as “incapacitating,”

but does not elaborate. The report
states Vance was not wearing a
seat belt. As of Wednesday afternoon, Vance remained in surgery
according to the hospital.
Philips’ injuries are described
as “possible.” OSHP would not
elaborate.
This is the second vehicle crash
on SR 143 in less than a week.
Maynard D. Fitzgerald, 57, of
Pomeroy, died at approximately
See CRASH | 6A

�OBITUARIES/LOCAL

2A Thursday, August 20, 2015

DEATH NOTICES

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

JUSTIN DANIEL HILL

BOWEN

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Danielle Renee Bowen,
24, of Chesapeake, passed away Friday, Aug. 14,
2015, at Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus,
Ohio. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 21,
2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio.

JORDAN

LEON, W.Va. — The Rev. Herman Jordan, 92,
of Leon, died Aug. 18, 2015. Services will be 11
a.m. Friday, Aug. 21, 2015, at Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will follow in Baden
Presbyterian Cemetery, Leon. Friends may visit
the family at the funeral home between 5-8 p.m.
Thursday.

MANNING

PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Rama Norene Manning, 82, of Proctorville, Ohio, passed away Monday, Aug. 17, 2015, at Mt. Carmel East Hospital,
Columbus, Ohio. Services will be 2 p.m. Saturday,
Aug. 22, 2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow. Visitation will
be 1-2 p.m. Saturday at the funeral home.

MCCLINTOCK

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Helen Maxine
(Viers) McClintock, age 80, of Point Pleasant, died
Tuesday, August 18, 2015, at the Adena Health
System, in Chillicothe.
Service at 1:30 p.m. on Sunday, August 23, 2015,
at the Main St. Baptist Church, with Rev. Dr. Richard Sargent ofﬁciating. Burial will be conducted
privately at the convenience of the family.

NUNLEY

WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — Tywanna V. Nunley,
50, of Willow Wood, passed away Tuesday, Aug.
18, 2015, at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va. Funeral service will be 11 a.m. Saturday,
Aug. 22, 2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will follow. Visitation
will be 6-8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.

SCARBERRY

POMEROY, Ohio — Robert Milton Scarberry,
66, of Pomeroy, passed away Tuesday, Aug. 18,
2015. Services directed by Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home will be 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 22,
2015, at Rocksprings Cemetery.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Norma Jean Wicks, 84,
passed away Monday, Aug. 17, 2015, at The Ohio
State Medical Center. Friends may call Schoedinger Northeast Chapel, Gahanna, Ohio, between
6-8 p.m. Monday, Aug. 24, 2015, where the funeral
service will be 1 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2015.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

CONTACT US

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Carleton School
preschool screenings
SYRACUSE —Carleton School will be conducting preschool screenings for children ages 3 and 4
on Aug. 28. If you have concerns about your child’s
development, call 740-992-6681 to schedule an
appointment.

Meigs Cleanup Day
POMEROY — Meigs Cleanup Day will be Sept.
12 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Meigs County Fairgrounds, 1850. Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy. This
event is open to Meigs County residents only and
proof is required, such as a drivers license or utility bill. Industrial or commercial customers are not
eligible. For more information on what items can be
recycled, visit www.gjmvrecycle.com or call 1-800544-1853.

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 740-992-2775 or email chartenbach57@
gmail.com or Scherry Lane Spears at 740-645-2244.

CHARLES A. MOLDEN
NEWARK, Ohio —
Charles A. Molden, 81,
of Buckeye Lake, Ohio,
passed away Monday,
Aug. 17, 2015, at Kindred Transitional Care,
Newark.
Born July 10, 1934, to
the late George L. and
Bernice Irene Gilmore
Molden, he was a laborer at Structure Light
Manufacturing, after
which he retired.
Charles is survived
by two brothers, Keith
and Clarence Molden;
and several nieces and

nephews.
Besides his parents,
he was preceded by
three brothers, Frank,
Bobby and Thomas
Molden.
Graveside services
are Friday, Aug. 21,
2015, at 2 pm at
Bradford Cemetery,
Pomeroy, with the Rev.
Amos Tillis ofﬁciating.
Arrangements with
Birchﬁeld Funeral
Home, Rutland.
Online condolences
can be made at birchﬁeldfuneralhome.com.

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@civitasmedia.com

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

RACINE — Braxton
Andrew Turley, infant,
passed away at birth
Monday, Aug. 17, 2015,
at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.Va. He went to
be with the Lord surrounded by all of his
family members. He
would have been an
enjoyment to all.
Little Braxton is survived by his parents,
Kevin and Kimberly
Lynn Roush Turley, of
Racine; a brother, Tyler
VanInwagen; and a sister, Khloe Jones, both
of the home; maternal
grandparents Roger
and Christy Roush, of
Racine; paternal grandparents Karen (Dan)
Meadows, of Middleport, and Kenneth
“Kenny” (Cindy) Turley
Sr., of Racine; maternal great-grandfather
Charles Michael Sr., of
Racine; paternal greatgrandmother Evelyn
Russell, of Mason,
W.Va.; maternal aunts
Jenny (Jay) Mershon,
of Patriot, Ohio, and
Kasey Roush, of Racine;

paternal uncle Kenneth
“Kenny” (Michelle)
Turley Jr., of Pomeroy;
and numerous cousins,
great-nieces and greatnephews.
Little Braxton was
preceded in death by his
maternal great-grandparents, Herbert and
Mary Roush and maternal great-grandmother
Patricia Michael; his
paternal great-grandparents Clarence and
Gladys Turley, and June
Russell; and maternal
uncles Ryan Roger
Roush and Charles
“Chuck” Michael Jr.
Graveside services
will be noon Friday,
Aug. 21, 2015, in the
Chapel of Letart Falls
Cemetery. Pastor James
R. Acree Sr. will ofﬁciate and interment will
follow. Friends may call
two hours prior to the
graveside service Friday
at Cremeens Funeral
Home, Racine.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensfuneralhomes.
com.

WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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.

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 58.80
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Daily stock reports are
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financial advisors Isaac
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CIRCULATION MANAGER
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

He graduated from
Eastern High School
in 2012 and attended
three years of college
at the University of Rio
Grande. He was planning to attend Ohio
University this fall.
Justin was a loving
son and grandson.
He was always kind
and considerate. He
attended Long Bottom
Methodist Church.
Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Friday, Aug.
21, 2015, with the
Rev. George Horner
ofﬁciating, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.
Visiting hours will be
2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.
Thursday at the funeral
home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

BRAXTON ANDREW TURLEY

WICKS

PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Justin
Daniel Hill, 21, of Long
Bottom, went to be
with his Lord and Savior on Tuesday, Aug. 18,
2015, after a motocross
accident.
He was born March
10, 1994, in Columbus,
the son of Roberta and
Daniel Hill.
He was preceded in
death by his mother,
Roberta Larkins Hill, in
2012.
Justin is survived by
is father, Daniel Hill; his
sister, Danielle Hagedorn; paternal grandmother Nancy Hill;
uncle Jerry Larkins;
grandparents Robert
and Freda Larkins; a
very special person
whom he went to for
advice, Vickie Joseph;
and many friends and
relatives.

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

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 20, 2015 3A

Frontier Communications
offers new products

Marshall lowers tuition for program

Contributed article

Staff report

business customers, the
general public doesn’t
CHARLESTON, W.Va. realize that we also pro– Frontier Communicavide services to other
tions Corp. is offering
telecommunications
a new product called
companies, who then
Ethernet Internet Access provide services such as
to its wholesale partners telephone and internet
that will allow them to
service to their own retail
offer end-to-end internet customers,” said Richard
access to their customO’Brien, vice president of
ers.
Marketing for Frontier’s
Frontier has sold Ether- Mid-Atlantic region.
net transport services to “We are in an industry
other carriers for many
in which competitors
years, but EIA builds on
are also customers of
and expands the capaeach other. This product
bilities of these Ethernet announcement is an
services.
example of how we sell
EIA combines an Ethservices to other telecomernet Access circuit, an
munications providers so
internet port and bandthey can offer better serwidth tiers ranging from vices to their own retail
1Mb to 1Gb so that carcustomers.”
riers can provide internet
EIA is available in
service directly over their more than 177 communilast mile connectivity to
ties in all parts of West
their own retail customVirginia, including rural
ers.
communities such as
“While Frontier serves Elkins, Philippi, Augusta
retail residential and
and Capon Bridge.

Courtesy photo

State Rep. Ryan Smith (R-Bidwell) tours Brown-Forman Cooperage
and Aluchem of Jackson County.

Smith tours Jackson
County businesses
Staff report

manufacturing base of
our region,” Smith said.
COLUMBUS —
“Each of these companies
State Rep. Ryan Smith
have beneﬁtted from the
(R-Bidwell) toured
region’s skilled workforce
Brown-Forman Cooperand Ohio’s businessage and Aluchem of Jack- friendly climate.”
son County on Aug. 13.
Smith also met with
Located on Salem
the Jackson County
Road in Jackson, Brown- Economic Development
Forman Cooperage is a
Board to discuss active
major supplier of staves
projects and opportuniused in the Jack Daniels’ ties for economic growth
brands. Aluchem, located in the county.
on Beaver Pike in Jack“Growing the economy
son, produces tabular alu- and assisting job creators
minas that can be found
is vitally important to
in the airplane engines.
combatting most of
Smith discussed with
our area’s challenges,”
the business leaders the
Smith said. “Jackson
challenges that their busi- County was hit hard by
nesses face and how state the recession, but there
government could assist has been a great deal
with their needs.
of new economic and
“Brown-Forman and
infrastructural activity
Aluchem are shining
that could yield positive
results for the area.”
examples of the strong

Mike &amp; Kevin remind you to support
the Youth of Meigs County

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— Marshall University
has lowered the price
of its College Courses
in the High Schools
program, which allows
students to earn college
credits while they are
still in high school.
Students enrolled in
the program will now
pay only $25 per credit
hour instead of the previous $84 per credit hour.
Dr. David Pittenger,
who serves as interim
associate vice president
for outreach and
continuing studies and
as interim dean of the
university’s Graduate
College, says Marshall’s
College Courses in
the High Schools is a
“dual credit” program
that allows high school
students to get a head
start on their college
career by offering
classes that count for
both high school and
college credit. He adds
that it is an attractive
and effective way for
advanced students to
make the transition to
college more readily
and to complete basic
undergraduate courses
before they graduate
from high school.
“We are pleased to
offer this option that
can help students save
a signiﬁcant amount of
time and money as they
go on to pursue their
college educations,” says
Pittenger. “We have hundreds of students already
in the program. They
are jump-starting their
college coursework while
still in high school and
will realize a tuition savings by completing their
college degrees in shorter time frames. It’s even
possible for students to
come to Marshall from
high school as rising

Courtesyphoto

Students enrolled in Marshall University’s College Courses in the High Schools program will now
pay only $25 per credit hour instead of the previous $84 per credit hour.

sophomores.
“We are committed to
making a college education as affordable and
convenient as possible
for students and their
families. By lowering the
price of the program,
we hope even more high
school students will take
advantage of this opportunity.”
The program is available to qualiﬁed high
school students in
Cabell, Wayne, Randolph
and Webster counties,
as well as St. Joseph’s
High School and Grace
Christian School, both in
Huntington.
Rachel Gwilliams, a
2015 graduate of Spring
Valley High School in
Wayne County, participated in the program.
She says, “Having my
high school teachers help
me with college classes
mentally prepared me
for what to expect once
I start on campus. When
I ﬁrst began taking the
dual credit classes, I did

Junior Fair Livestock Sale
Dairy Feeder
Market Goats
Market Lambs
Market Beef Steer

Market Dairy Steer
(none for 2015)
Market Hogs
Market Poultry

at Pleasant Valley Hospital

JUST GOT BETTER.
MARSHALL ORTHOPAEDICS SURGEON JOHN CROMPTON, MD,
JOINS PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL ORTHOPAEDICS
Orthopaedic patients in the Point Pleasant
area have long been able to depend on
Pleasant Valley Hospital (PVH) for quality
orthopaedic services. And now, PVH’s
partnership with Cabell Huntington Hospital
and Marshall Health is proving that
advanced orthopaedic care can be better,
faster, and right here in our community.

From simple sprains to orthopaedic
trauma, from reconstructive surgery to
total joint replacement, patients with
orthopaedic concerns now have access to
comprehensive, highly specialized care.

Market Rabbits
Commercial Beef
Feeders

White
Schwarzel
Ewing
Schwarzel

Because health happens here in the
community we love.

Introducing…
JOHN
CROMPTON, MD
“The Marshall School
of Medicine has made
it a priority to stay at
the forefront of the
field of orthopaedics,
which has grown
exponentially in recent years,” said
Dr. Crompton. “Marshall Orthopaedics
has expanded its specialties to include
services like pediatric orthopaedics,
orthopaedic traumatology and orthopaedic
oncology – services that weren’t available
anywhere in the state of West Virginia just
10 years ago. Now, with the partnership
between Pleasant Valley Hospital and the
Marshall School of Medicine, we are able
to provide immediate access to those
services to residents of Point Pleasant and
surrounding areas. It’s an exciting time
in the field of orthopaedics, and it’s an
exciting time at Pleasant Valley Hospital.”

60603604

60603496

Funeral Homes &amp; Cremation Service
Coolville, OH
Pomeroy, OH
740-667-3110
740-992-2121

apply.
Available courses
vary by high school and
include general education options like English,
mathematics, biology,
history and communications. Many of the courses will transfer to any
college or university.
High school teachers
in the dual enrollment
program must meet
the same standards as
Marshall instructors for
knowledge in the discipline, advanced training
and teaching experience.
Pittenger says Marshall is working to
expand the program to
high schools in additional counties and that
interested students
should work with their
high school guidance
counselors to enroll.
For more information
about the College Courses in the High Schools
program, visit www.
marshall.edu/cchs or call
304-696-6649.

ORTHOPAEDIC CARE

Pleasant Valley Hospital is pleased to
welcome John Crompton, MD, fellowshiptrained Marshall Orthopaedics Surgeon to
their orthopaedic team. Dr. Crompton is now
seeing patients with all types of orthopaedic
concerns Monday through Friday at PVH.
Per past buyer input, we will not have set times
to start each individual species this year. There
will be short breaks throughout the day.

it to try to get a head
start. I never would have
imagined it would actually put me an entire year
ahead! I believe every
college-bound student
should consider taking
any dual credit class during high school to help
give him or her a head
start in college.”
According to Pittenger, an additional
beneﬁt of the program is
that it gives high school
students the opportunity
to enjoy a more full and
rigorous curriculum in
the last two years of
high school, which helps
combat academic apathy often referred to as
“senior slump.”
College Courses in the
High Schools is open to
high school juniors and
seniors with a cumulative grade point average
of 3.0 or higher. Some
courses also require the
ACT/SAT exam. Freshmen and sophomores
may be eligible, but
additional requirements

For more information or to schedule an
appointment, call 304.675.2781.

�E ditorial
4A Thursday, August 20, 2015

Daily Sentinel

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, August 20, the 232nd day of
2015. There are 133 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlights in History:
On August 20, 1940, during World War II,
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill paid
tribute to the Royal Air Force before the House of
Commons, saying, “Never in the ﬁeld of human
conﬂict was so much owed by so many to so few.”
Exiled Communist revolutionary Leon Trotsky
was assassinated in Coyoacan, Mexico by Ramon
Mercader, a Spanish Communist agent working
at the behest of Josef Stalin. (Trotsky died the
next day.)
On this date:
In 1833, Benjamin Harrison, 23rd president of
the United States, was born in North Bend, Ohio.
In 1866, President Andrew Johnson formally
declared the Civil War over, months after ﬁghting
had stopped.
In 1882, Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture” had its
premiere in Moscow.
In 1910, a series of forest ﬁres swept through
parts of Idaho, Montana and Washington, killing
at least 85 people and burning some 3 million
acres.
In 1914, German forces occupied Brussels,
Belgium, during World War I.
In 1953, the Soviet Union publicly
acknowledged it had tested a hydrogen bomb.
In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed
the Economic Opportunity Act, a nearly $1 billion
anti-poverty measure.
In 1968, the Soviet Union and other Warsaw
Pact nations began invading Czechoslovakia to
crush the “Prague Spring” liberalization drive.
In 1972, the Wattstax concert took place at the
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.
In 1977, the U.S. launched Voyager 2, an
unmanned spacecraft carrying a 12-inch copper
phonograph record containing greetings in dozens
of languages, samples of music and sounds of
nature.
In 1989, entertainment executive Jose
Menendez and his wife, Kitty, were shot to death
in their Beverly Hills mansion by their sons, Lyle
and Erik.
Fifty-one people died when a pleasure boat sank
in the River Thames (tehmz) in London after
colliding with a dredger.
In 1994, Benjamin Chavis Jr. was ﬁred as head
of the NAACP after a turbulent 16-month tenure.
Ten years ago:
Northwest Airlines mechanics went on strike
rather than accept pay cuts and layoffs; Northwest
ended up hiring replacement workers.
San Francisco 49ers offensive lineman Thomas
Herrion, 23, died of a heart attack shortly after a
preseason game against the Denver Broncos.
With a deafening boom, the ashes of gonzo
journalist Hunter S. Thompson were blown into
the sky above Woody Creek, Colo.
Five years ago:
President Barack Obama invited Israel and
the Palestinians to meet face-to-face in
Washington the following month for talks
aimed at achieving an agreement to establish an
independent Palestinian state and secure peace
for Israel.
One year ago:
The United States launched a new barrage of
airstrikes against Islamic State extremists and
weighed sending more troops to Iraq as President
Barack Obama vowed to be relentless in pursuit
of a terrorist group that beheaded American
journalist James Foley.
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder arrived
in Ferguson, Missouri, to meet with federal
investigators and reassure residents of the
community torn by several nights of racial unrest
since the fatal shooting of a black 18-year-old by a
white police ofﬁcer.
Today’s Birthdays:
Writer-producer-director Walter Bernstein is
96. Boxing promoter Don King is 84. Former Sen.
George Mitchell, D-Maine, is 82.
Former U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, is 80.
Former MLB All-Star Graig Nettles is 71.
Broadcast journalist Connie Chung is 69.
Musician Jimmy Pankow (Chicago) is 68.
Actor Ray Wise is 68. Actor John Noble is
67. Rock singer Robert Plant (Led Zeppelin) is
67. Country singer Rudy Gatlin is 63. Singersongwriter John Hiatt is 63.
Actor-director Peter Horton is 62. TV
weatherman Al Roker is 61. Actor Jay Acovone is
60. Actress Joan Allen is 59. Movie director David
O. Russell is 57.
TV personality Asha Blake is 54. Actor James
Marsters is 53. Rapper KRS-One is 50. Actor
Colin Cunningham is 49.
Actor Billy Gardell is 46. Rock singer Fred
Durst (Limp Bizkit) is 45. Rock musician Brad
Avery is 44.
Actor Jonathan Ke Quan is 44. Actor Misha
Collins is 41. Rock singer Monique Powell (Save
Ferris) is 40.
Jazz/pop singer-pianist Jamie Cullum is 36.
Actor Ben Barnes is 34.
Actress Meghan Ory is 33.
Actor Andrew Garﬁeld is 32. Actor Brant
Daugherty is 30. Actress-singer Demi Lovato
is 23.

THEIR VIEW

Anyone want to go snipe hunting?
Many, many years ago
I was asked if I wanted
to go snipe hunting. I
was as eager then to do
anything outdoor as I
am now so of course my
answer was, “Yes.”
I started asking all the
appropriate questions
and in fast succession
and short order as young
folks do when excited
about a new opportunity.
Where are we going
to hunt them? When do
we leave? What kind of
gun do we need? What
size shells? How many
do you usually kill? The
list of questions was
unending I am sure, but
it wasn’t until my older
uncles started answering
my questions that I knew
something wasn’t right.
They started saying
something about going
out late in the night,
with a ﬂashlight and a
sack. Then you had to
make crazy sounds and
all sorts of gibberish. I
immediately wanted to
know how on earth you
were supposed to shoot a
ﬂying bird at night while
holding a ﬂashlight.

This is when I started
Well you really have to
getting some odd looks
dig hard to ﬁnd out more
from my uncles. Granted, information about real
I had never known them
snipe hunting. Sept. 1 is
to be great hunters of
the traditional opening
anything, but I thought
of the migratory bird seamaybe snipe was their
son in West Virginia. One
thing. Come to ﬁnd out
such bird is the Common
they were in the midst of Snipe. Sora and Virginia
what they thought
Rails are also on
Roger
was going to be a
the list along with
great prank to get Wolfe
woodcock and
a kid in the woods Contributing morning dove,
Columnist
at night and turn
which are by far
him loose.
the most widely
They had no idea that
known and hunted migrathere was actually a beast tory birds of the early
called a snipe, much less
seasons.
that it was a migratory
For those of you
bird. In the end, their
looking for a humbling
prank went south and I
experience as a hunter,
still didn’t get to go on
take to the ﬁelds for an
a snipe hunt. I think we
early season bird hunt.
were all a little disapEven though there may
pointed.
not be many who speciﬁcally target the Common
When looking up a
Snipe you do see one
snipe on Wikipedia, the
every now and then.
internet’s answer to an
Most commonly folks
encyclopedia, you do get
are hunting for morning
a picture of the somedove, and a snipe might
what smallish shore bird
show up, but any bird
that is very similar to
hunt is a true test of
a woodcock. Read the
description further and it marksmanship. One bit
immediately tells you that of advice I would give to
anyone going on a bird
a snipe hunt is known as
hunt is to take plenty of
“the fool’s errand”.

shells.
Be sure to check the
migratory bird hunting
regulations that will be
available soon because
the bag limits for each
species vary, but no matter what the limit, take a
lot more shells than you
have birds to kill.
The action is fast and
comes in a ﬂurry with
most any bird hunt and
you have to be quick.
Those birds can really
scoot by you in a hurry. If
you are lucky enough to
harvest a few, they sure
do make a ﬁne meal.
No matter which species you are targeting,
if you happen upon a
snipe, be sure to brag to
all your buddies that you
went on a snipe hunt and
actually got one. Even
the innocent bystanders that may overhear
the conversation will
be amused that anyone
went on a snipe hunt, but
imagine their surprise
when they ﬁnd out you
actually got one!
Roger Wolfe is an outdoors
columnist for Civitas Media.

THEIR VIEW

An extraordinary diplomatic feat
Obama may have
stopped a war with Iran
before it started, but
stopping a war isn’t the
same as peace.
The nuclear agreement
with Iran is an extraordinary feat of diplomacy.
First and foremost,
non-proliferation experts
agree that the deal blocks
all of the routes to making an atomic bomb.
There are provisions
for rigorous inspections
— so if Iran cheats, the
world will know.
Second, it isn’t just
Washington to whom the
Iranians are accountable.
All ﬁve permanent members of the UN Security
Council, and Germany
too, signed alongside
the United States. The
UN’s nuclear watchdog,
the International Atomic
Energy Agency, will monitor Iranian activities on
the great powers’ behalf.
Third, the Obama
administration and its
allies got the Iranians to
give up rights they have
under international law.
The Non-Proliferation
Treaty expressly allows
each and every signatory

to develop a peaceful
for the world’s mightiest
nuclear power program,
nation.
and there’s never been
So it’s hardly surprisany proof that Iran’s
ing that Iran drove a hard
research is anything but
bargain too, and won the
peaceful. In accepting
sanctions relief it sought.
limits on uranium enrichThe fact that Iran
ment and the like, the
achieved a key objective
Iranians made a huge
makes the agreement
concession.
stronger, not weaker.
Because the minIt means there
eral and technoare concrete
logical ingredients
beneﬁts to show
for peaceful and
the Iranian people
military nuclear
for sticking to
programs are so
the deal. And
similar, the probthe hardliners
lem has always
in the Islamic
Chris
been a lack of
Republic — who,
trust. The United Toensing like their hawkish
States and its allies Contributing counterparts
Columnist
refused to believe
in Washington,
Iran’s claims to
beneﬁt from poor
innocence without
relations between
veriﬁcation. This agreethe United States and
ment supplies it.
Iran — won’t be able to
The Republicans —
portray their negotiators
echoed by Israel, Saudi
as weaklings or sellouts.
Arabia, and their respecThe White House
tive lobbies — are loudly adeptly tuned out the
objecting to this deal.
naysayers and let the
In their alternate unitalks proceed past sevverse, negotiation means eral deadlines. President
unconditional surrender: Barack Obama and his
They dictate the terms,
team knew they had a
and their opponents
chance to avert another
meekly assent. That isn’t major Middle East war.
how things work, even
Heading off war isn’t

the same thing as peace,
however.
In fact, to placate Israel
and Saudi Arabia in
advance of the deal, the
United States promised
these foes of Iran piles
of fancy new weaponry.
That bribery could wind
up egging on the Saudis
in their various interventions around the region
— particularly in Yemen
and Syria — and inducing the Iranians to follow
suit.
External meddling
didn’t cause these terrible conﬂicts. But it can
keep them going well
past the point of exhaustion.
Bravo to Obama for
boldly parleying with
Washington’s enemies.
He may very well have
stopped a war with Iran
before it started. May
he show still greater
courage and get tough
with the U.S. allies now
wreaking so much havoc
in the Middle East.
Chris Toensing is the editor of
Middle East Report, published
by the Middle East Research and
Information Project in Washington,
DC. www.OtherWords.org.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 20, 2015 5A

Last official charged in chemical spill
By Jonathan Mattise

also faces a ﬁne of up to
$300,000 and perhaps
restitution.
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
He will be sentenced
— The executive who
Dec. 16. Prosecutors
appeared unsympathetic dropped 12 other counts
when he spoke to the
related to bankruptcy
public after a chemical
fraud.
spill sullied tap water for
Freedom’s public image
300,000 people pleaded
suffered after Southern
guilty Wednesday to pol- spoke at a Jan. 10, 2014,
lution charges and could news conference.
face up to three years in
“Look guys. It has been
prison.
an extremely long day,”
Freedom Industries
Southern said, occasionPresident Gary Southern, ally drinking from a
who told reporters a day bottle of water. “I have
after the January 2014
trouble talking at the
spill that he had had a
moment. I would appreci“long day” and tried to
ate if we could wrap this
leave a news conference
thing up.”
multiple times, is the last
Prosecutors portrayed
of six company ofﬁcials
Southern as a wealthy
to plead guilty in the
businessman who cared
spill.
little about safety. In
The spill happened
court documents, they
when a corroded Freeconsidered the United
dom tank in Charleston
Kingdom citizen a ﬂight
leaked coal-cleaning
risk because he had
chemicals into the water a pilot’s license and a
supply for nine counties, plane. Prosecutors said a
spurring a ban on tap
tracking device wouldn’t
water for up to 10 days.
work on him because his
Southern pleaded
Marco Island, Florida,
guilty to three pollution
house was too big.
charges and faces a miniThe government seized
mum of 30 days in prison $7.3 million and a Bentand a maximum of three ley from Southern and
put a lien on his Florida
years in a plea deal. He

Associated Press

house. Under the plea
deal, he would get those
assets back. Prosecutors
said it would be up to
immigration ofﬁcials to
decide whether to deport
him.
The plea deal said
some assets could go
toward claims in Freedom’s bankruptcy case,
a class-action lawsuit or
court-ordered restitution.
U.S. Attorney Booth
Goodwin said his ofﬁce
will not ask Judge Thomas Johnston for restitution because the applicable environmental laws
are not well designed for
that.
For more than a
decade, ofﬁcials had been
aware of critical deﬁciencies at the Freedom
site, including a cracked
containment wall that let
chemicals seep through
down a bank into the Elk
River, an FBI afﬁdavit
said. But improvements
to the wall weren’t made.
On Tuesday, former
Freedom executive Dennis Farrell pleaded guilty
to a deal that includes 30
days to two years in prison and up to a $200,000
ﬁne.

Southern and Farrell
had said some prosecutors had been affected
by the spill and tried to
get Goodwin’s ofﬁce off
the case, but they did not
succeed.
Businesses and
residents who struggled
without clean water are
closely watching several
ongoing court cases that
will dictate if they are
paid back for their hardships.
A class-action lawsuit
is ongoing against the
chemical’s producer, Eastman Chemical, and West
Virginia American Water,
the utility whose water
supply became laced with
chemicals.
A ﬁnal bankruptcy deal
still hasn’t been struck, as
businesses and residents
compete with other creditors for the little cash
remaining in defunct
Freedom Industries. The
company had proposed
paying out $2.7 million
to spill victims in a larger
bankruptcy plan, but a
federal bankruptcy judge
rejected the proposal over
concerns about paying to
clean up Freedom’s contaminated headquarters.

Former coal chief wants testimony excluded
By Pam Ramsey

advance warning of surprise safety
inspections. He also implicated
Blankenship in the conspiracy durCHARLESTON, W.Va. — Foring his plea hearing in 2013.
mer Massey Energy CEO Don
“All of the testimony from
Blankenship’s lawyers say his com- Hughart that the government seeks
pensation and stock holdings and
to admit concerns mines other
the testimony of a former subordi- than UBB.
nate are irrelevant to his criminal
The indictment speciﬁcally
case and should be excluded from
states that Mr. Blankenship is
his trial.
charged with conspiring to willfully
Evidence of Blankenship’s
violate mine-safety standards and
ﬁnances and testimony from David impede MSHA ‘at UBB,’ not at any
Hughart, a former president of
other mine,” Blankenship’s lawyers
Massey subsidiary White Buck
wrote in one motion.
Coal Co., would unfairly prejudice
Another defense motion seeks
the jury, defense lawyers said in
to exclude previous guilty pleas by
motions ﬁled Tuesday in federal
White Buck Coal and Massey subcourt.
sidiary Aracoma Coal to violating
Hughart was sentenced in 2013
federal mine safety laws. In all, the
to 3½ years in prison on conspiracy defense ﬁled 16 motions seeking to
charges that grew out of the crimi- exclude evidence.
nal investigation into the 2010
Federal prosecutors also are
Upper Big Branch explosion, which seeking to exclude evidence,
killed 29 men. He admitted his role including Blankenship’s claims that
in ensuring that miners at other
company mines were safe despite
Massey subsidiaries got illegal
what prosecutors say were routine

Associated Press

violations of federal safety standards.
“These claims may be convenient
excuses, but they are not legal
defenses. They are not relevant to
the charges against defendant, and
they are not admissible at trial,”
Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven
Ruby wrote.
Other evidence that prosecutors
want excluded includes Blankenship’s argument that federal mine
safety standards were incorrect or
misguided.
“If the only question in this case
is whether defendant violated the
criminal provisions he is charged
with violating, then the answer
is not complicated. He did. Mine
safety laws were violated at the
Upper Big Branch mine … thousands of times — the same, readily
preventable violations, over and
over — with his full knowledge
and under his close supervision,”
Ruby wrote.

W.Va. AG warns
students about
texting scams
Staff report

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
— Attorney General
Patrick Morrisey says
students should be careful about responding to
unsolicited text messages they receive from
unknown telephone
numbers.
This scam targets
young adults by using
an unknown phone
number to mislead them
into responding to text
messages.
“This scam preys
upon young adults
who typically spend a
lot more time on their
phones texting than
other consumers,” Morrisey said. “Students are
particularly susceptible
to this type of scam at
this time of year. As
they go off to college,
they meet lots of people
and can quickly make
many new friends.
Unfortunately, they can
easily think a message
from an unknown number is simply from a new
classmate, only to ﬁnd
a scammer on the other
end of the line.”
Sometimes these messages ask a person to
call the number listed.
After calling that number, the student may be
hit with a hidden fee for
placing the call, or they
could end up connecting
with a person who uses
high-pressure tactics to
try and get the student’s
banking information.
Other times, these messages include a link that
opens a web site that
asks for personal and
ﬁnancial information.
Scammers tend to target numbers completely
at random. They are
typically able to reach
millions of customers
with computer programs
that send bulk messages
using a few simple key-

strokes.
The Attorney General’s Ofﬁce offers
students the following
tips, should they receive
one of these unsolicited messages:Delete it
immediately, especially
if the message asks you
to reply with a code
or with personal information. A legitimate
company will never
send you a text message or an e-mail to ask
you for your credit card
numbers, bank account
information, or Social
Security number.
Don’t be tempted to
click on any links in the
text message. These
links can take you to
spoof sites that can
look authentic, but are
designed to steal your
personal information.
Review your cell phone
bill for any suspicious,
unauthorized charges
and immediately report
them to your carrier.
“Going off to school is
supposed to be a fun and
exciting time in a person’s life, and we want to
make sure students can
enjoy it without falling
victim to scammers,”
Morrisey said.
If your identity has
been compromised or
you believe you have
been scammed, call the
Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Division at 800-368-8808 or
the Eastern Panhandle
Consumer Protection
Ofﬁce in Martinsburg at
304-267-0239. To ﬁle a
report online, visit www.
wvago.gov.
Morrisey issued this
advice as part of his
ofﬁce’s second Back to
School Consumer Protection Week.
To learn about consumer protection efforts
in West Virginia, visit
www.ago.wv.gov/consumerprotection.

Absolute public equipment auction

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Meigs County Health
Department will be
closed from noon to 2
p.m., when operations
will resume as normal.
MASON, W.Va. —
Mason County Solid
Waste Authority will hold
their monthly meeting
at 10 a.m. at 1927 Fairground Road.
MIDDLEPORT —
Richard Werner, local
Master Gardner, will
present “The Art of
Cooking with Summer

Friday, Aug. 21
POMEROY — The
Pomeroy High School
Class of 1959 will be
holding their third Friday
lunch at Fox Pizza at
noon.
Monday, Aug. 24
POMEROY —The

Fruits and Vegetables” at
7 p.m. at Riverbend Arts
Council, 290 North 2nd
Ave., Middleport. Free
Admission. Refreshments
served.
Wednesday, Aug. 26
POMEROY — Meigs
Local School District
begins their ﬁrst day of
school.
Thursday, Aug. 27
REEDSVILLE — Eastern Local School District

begins their ﬁrst day of
school.
RACINE — Southern
Local School District
begins their ﬁrst day of
school.
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil &amp; 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.

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3 of 5 – GMC 2500HD 4x4

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wheel loaders, skid steer
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60603265

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

�WEATHER/NEWS

6A Thursday, August 20, 2015

Military pension tax exemption costly

Crash

leading cause of death
of Americans aged 1-54,
and is the No. 1 cause
of death for teenagers,
From page 1A
and young adults (18-24)
9:13 p.m Saturday. He
have the highest crashwas traveling southbound related injury rates of
on State Route 143 near any age group of adults.
mile post 17 in a 2007
According to 2012 statisNissan Murano and
tics, of the teenagers (13began traveling off the
20) that died in crashes
left side of the road. He
of that year, 55 percent
reportedly overcorrected of the teenagers were not
to the right side of the
wearing seatbelts.
road, but continued off
The CDC reported
road. His vehicle struck
in 2010 that people age
an embankment and
18-34 are less likely to
overturned.
wear a seat belt than
According to the
those 35 or older, and
report, Fitzgerald was
men are 10 percent less
not wearing a seat belt,
likely to wear a seat belt
and ofﬁcials say alcohol
than women. Adults who
was involved. The road
live in rural areas are
remained completely
also 10 percent less likely
closed for two hours folto wear seat belts than
lowing the crash that day. those in urban and suburAccording to the Cenban areas.
ters for Disease Control
and Prevention, motor
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-444vehicle crashes are a
4303.

From page 1A

with Mud Volleyball happening in front of the
Grandstand at 7 p.m.
Also at 7 p.m., the Riverside Cloggers will perform for an hour on Hill
Stage, followed by Campbell &amp; Rowley at 8 p.m.
The ﬁrst event of
Friday’s fair day will be
a 4-H Horse Fun Show
beginning at 8 a.m. At
9 a.m., kids and adults
alike can have fun watching the Junior Fair Pet
Show at the Small Arena.
The ﬁnal day of Kid-

From page 1A

2 PM

71°

73°

70°

Breezy and cooler, a shower this morning.
Mainly clear tonight. High 79° / Low 56°

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

0.00
1.09
2.38
34.69
28.89

SUN &amp; MOON
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Aug 22 Aug 29

Last

Sep 5

Sep 13

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

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

Major
4:24a
5:12a
5:59a
6:47a
7:36a
8:24a
9:14a

Minor
10:35a
11:23a
12:11p
12:36a
1:23a
2:11a
3:00a

Chillicothe
77/54

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Lucasville
78/55

Primary: ragweed, other
Mold: 1690
Moderate

High

Very High

Portsmouth
78/56

Major
4:46p
5:35p
6:23p
7:12p
8:02p
8:52p
9:42p

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Minor
10:57p
11:46p
---1:00p
1:49p
2:38p
3:28p

WEATHER HISTORY
Heavy rain from the remains of Hurricane Camille on and around Aug. 20,
1969, killed 151 people and caused
$100 million in damage in the upper
James River Basin of Virginia.

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.85 +0.27
Marietta
34 15.70 -0.14
Parkersburg
36 21.40 +0.33
Belleville
35 12.72 +0.40
Racine
41 13.33 -0.08
Point Pleasant
40 25.29 -0.19
Gallipolis
50 13.54 +0.12
Huntington
50 25.68 +0.07
Ashland
52 34.73 +0.02
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.98 -0.11
Portsmouth
50 16.70 +0.70
Maysville
50 34.50 none
Meldahl Dam
51 15.80 +2.50
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Logan
76/53

MONDAY

86°
62°
Beautiful with plenty
of sun

WEDNESDAY

82°
58°

85°
58°

Comfortable with
plenty of sunshine

Sunny

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
79/55
Belpre
80/55

Athens
77/54

Today

St. Marys
80/56

Parkersburg
79/54

Coolville
78/55

Elizabeth
80/57

Spencer
78/57

Buffalo
78/57
Milton
79/57

St. Albans
79/57

Huntington
77/55

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
72/58
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
72/60
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
81/65
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

Lots of sun with a
shower or t-storm

Murray City
76/53

Ironton
78/57

Ashland
78/57
Grayson
78/57

Brown, an Ohio Democrat, said in a statement
that Stokes “always did
the right thing.”
“He’ll be remembered
in the communities he
strengthened, the veterans he served, and the
many lives he touched,”
Brown said.

84°
57°

Wilkesville
76/54
POMEROY
Jackson
78/56
77/53
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
79/57
78/55
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
74/54
GALLIPOLIS
79/56
79/57
78/56

South Shore Greenup
78/57
77/55

33
300

Partly sunny and
pleasant

McArthur
76/53

Waverly
77/54

Pollen: 7

SUNDAY

83°
57°

Adelphi
76/51

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

0 50 100 150 200

New

Mostly sunny and
nice

3

Low

MOON PHASES

SATURDAY

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

Primary: cladosporium

Today
Fri.
6:46 a.m. 6:47 a.m.
8:17 p.m. 8:16 p.m.
12:15 p.m. 1:11 p.m.
11:24 p.m.
none

FRIDAY

argued a landmark “stop
and frisk” case before
the Supreme Court and
worked on the NAACP
lawsuit that forced Ohio
to redraw the lines of
what would become the
state’s ﬁrst black-majority congressional district.
U.S. Sen. Sherrod

gress.
Stokes leveled his complaint through ofﬁcial
channels and did not
complain publicly about
the demeaning delay at
his own ofﬁce building.
A criminal lawyer for
two decades before running for Congress, he

80°
56°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

86°
70°
86°
64°
99° in 1936
49° in 1953

AP photo

In this January 1998 photo, U.S. Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, announces, at the Carl B. Stokes
Social Services Mall in Cleveland, that he will retire from Congress at the end of the year. Stokes,
a 15-term Ohio congressman who took on tough assignments looking into assassinations and
scandals, died Aug. 18. Stokes was 90.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

think of him as almost
immortal.”
Stokes was one of
only nine blacks in the
435-member House
when he ﬁrst took the
oath of ofﬁce in 1969 and
never forgot his roots as
the child of poverty and
great-grandson of a slave.
He spoke often of his
admiration for his younger brother, who served
two terms as Cleveland
mayor and was later a
broadcaster and judge.
Stokes lost some of his
zest for politics after his
brother died of cancer in
1996. Stokes served in
the Army from 1943 to
1946 in a segregated unit
where he said he experienced racism for the ﬁrst
time in his life.
Struggles with racism
lasted a lifetime.
In 1991, a Capitol Hill
police ofﬁcer ignored
Stokes’ valid parking tag
and refused to let the
congressman into his
own ofﬁce building; he
didn’t believe the black
man behind the wheel
was a member of Con-

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-4444303.

8 AM

WEATHER

Stokes

die Tractor Pull will take
place at the Small Arena
with the Kiddie Tractor
Pull of Champions beginning at 11 a.m. Activities
continue in the afternoon, with the Junior
Fair Awards Program at
the RL Arena at 1 p.m.
At 6 p.m., a Truck Pull
will take place at the Pull
Track, with arm wrestling taking place at the
Grandstand beginning at
7:30 p.m.
Finally, the last event of
the evening is the group
Amix, who will take Hill
Stage at 8 p.m.

TODAY

get.
“Those people retire, but they
have 20 years left and that second
job is fully taxable,” he said.
The state is projecting it will
lose more than $36 million for ﬁscal year 2017.
The nation has about 2 million
military retirees.
Together, they receive more
than $50 billion in pension
payments a year, according to the
Department of Defense. More
than 46,000 military retirees
live in Ohio, and the federal
government pays them about $1
billion annually.

Tuesday.
Rep. Rick Perales, a Beavercreek Republican and Air Force
retiree, said the state recovers
much of that money when retirees
spend money in Ohio.
“All of that money that they get
to keep, they’re going to spend in
Ohio,” Perales said. “In terms of
taxes, we’ll recover a lot of that
when they go out and buy a new
car, refrigerator or whatever. If
they’re not here, that doesn’t happen.”
He said the state also gets some
of the revenue back through taxes
on any new jobs military retirees

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A
tax break intended to help Ohio
attract military retirees has cost
the state millions more than
expected.
Former Gov. Ted Strickland
signed a bill in 2007 declaring
military pensions tax exempt.
The state estimated it would
cost up to nearly $22 million in
tax revenue. But the Ohio Department of Taxation now says the
exemption cost more than $29
million in ﬁscal year 2014 and
over $31 million in the 2015 ﬁscal year, which ended June 30,
the Dayton Daily News reported

Clendenin
77/55
Charleston
79/58

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
76/57
Montreal
85/67

Billings
86/58

Minneapolis
71/59
Chicago
72/54

Denver
86/56

Toronto
77/57

Detroit
74/56

New York
85/72
Washington
87/72

Kansas City
80/59

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
93/65/s 92/65/pc
68/52/s 68/53/sh
84/70/t
85/69/t
83/74/t
82/70/t
85/68/t
85/62/t
86/58/pc 86/48/pc
92/62/s 87/53/s
81/67/c
80/70/t
79/58/t 79/56/s
89/70/t 86/66/pc
81/50/s 87/55/s
72/54/pc 80/61/s
76/54/sh 78/56/s
76/56/sh 74/54/s
76/55/sh 77/55/s
83/70/pc 92/76/pc
86/56/pc 91/61/pc
78/62/s 82/65/pc
74/56/pc 77/56/s
90/78/s 91/78/pc
89/75/t
93/77/t
75/55/s 78/56/s
80/59/s 82/65/pc
105/78/s 103/77/s
77/61/c 81/67/pc
81/65/pc 80/64/pc
78/60/sh 81/60/s
92/78/t 92/78/pc
71/59/s 79/68/pc
76/60/t 80/60/pc
91/78/t
90/78/t
85/72/pc
81/70/t
79/59/pc
82/67/t
91/75/t
92/76/t
87/72/t
85/71/t
106/85/s 103/83/pc
78/58/t 78/56/s
78/65/c
77/65/t
88/70/t 85/65/pc
88/70/t 83/64/pc
80/63/s 85/65/s
92/67/s 93/64/s
72/60/pc 72/60/pc
72/58/pc 76/56/pc
87/72/t 86/68/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
84/70

High
Low

El Paso
96/75
Chihuahua
91/61

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

102° in Needles, CA
27° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
High
Low

Houston
89/75
Monterrey
91/72

GOALS

Miami
92/78

123° in Basrah, Iraq
1° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

Fair

Daily Sentinel

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

$2?&lt;=.+CM��?1?=&gt;� �M� �� �s��

VC wins 2nd TVC Ohio golf match
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Donald Lambert |OVP Sports

River Valley’s Cliff Chapman chips the ball to the green on the fourth hole
at Cliffside Golf Course. Chapman finished third on the team with a 53 on
Wednesday at the Ohio University Golf Course in Athens, Ohio.

ATHENS, Ohio — The
reigning co-champs are all tied
up again.
Vinton County pulled even
with Meigs atop the season
standings following an eight
stroke victory over the ﬁeld
Tuesday during the second
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division golf match at the Ohio
University Golf Course in Athens County.
The Vikings posted a team
score of 175, which was eight
shots ahead of the runner-up
Marauders (183). River Valley
was third overall with a 198,
while Wellston (206), Athens
(212), Alexander (222) and

Nelsonville-York (227) rounded
out the ﬁnal four spots.
The Marauders and VCHS
now own identical 11-1 league
marks through the second of
seven matches. The Spartans
— Tuesday’s host — are tied
with the Bulldogs, Buckeyes,
Raiders and Golden Rockets
for third place at 4-8 apiece.
Austin Ward paced Vinton
County with a medalist effort
of 2-over par 37, followed by
Alex Boothe with a 42. Bailey Bartoe and Tyler Barnett
rounded out the winning tally
with identical efforts of 48,
while Cameron Hammond and
Noah Waddell respectively
ﬁred 50 and 56 for the Maroon
and Gray.
Levi Chapman led MHS with

a 41, followed by Chase Whitlatch with a 45 and Wyatt Nicholson with a 48. Bryce Swatzal
rounded out the Marauder
effort with a 49, while Brody
Reynolds and Evan George
respectively added efforts of 52
and 55.
Logan Sheets was the individual runner-up and paced
RVHS with a 38. Chance Gillman was next with a 52, followed by Cliff Chapman with a
53. Brandon Cornell rounded
out the Raiders’ tally with a 55,
while Grant Gilmore also shot
a 59.
Scores for Wellston included
Blake Royster (54), Josh Lung
(47), Seth Coulter (52), Ken
See TVC | 6B

Blue Devils
3rd at SEOAL
golf opener
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

BELPRE, Ohio — It’s an uphill battle from here
on out.
The Gallia Academy golf team came away with
third place out of four teams Tuesday following the
ﬁrst Southeastern Ohio Athletic League golf match
held at Oxbow Golf Course in Washington County.
The Blue Devils were 17 shots back of eventual
champion Warren after carding a team a score of
163. The host Warriors won the day with a 146,
while two-time defending champion Logan was
the runner-up with a 157. Jackson was last with
a team tally of 169.Warren had ﬁve golfers shoot
sub-40 rounds, which included medalist honors
for Kyler Dennis following a 3-under par effort of
33. The Warriors had half of the 10 sub-40 rounds
between the four programs.
Max Heprey and Turner Schilling followed Dennis with identical rounds of 37, while Nick Ward
and Josh Jankauskas each posted a 39. Austin
Barta also shot a 41 for the victors.
Taae Hamid paced GAHS with a 39, followed by
Dares Hamid and Marcus Moore with matching
See SEOAL | 6B

Waterford girls beat
Meigs County golfers
By Donald Lambert
elambert@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY, Ohio — It was not a good day for
the home teams.
The Waterford girls golf team secured a victory on the road against host Meigs, Eastern and
Southern on Tuesday at Meigs Golf Course in
Meigs County. The Wildcats ended the match with
a team score of 182, while the Lady Eagles shot a
191 and the Lady Marauders collectively shot 210.
Ashley Acree was the only player for Southern and
her score of 52 was not factored in.
Junior Kendra Robie led the Maroon and Gold
with a 45. Dannett Davis ﬁred a 52, followed
closely by Shalynn Mitchell with a 55. Junior
Sarah Curl ended the day with a 57, while Mersadies Markins and Caroline Roush shot a 61 and 71
respectively to round out Meigs’ ﬁnal score.
The Green and Gold were led by senior Allie
Gruseser and freshman Kylee Tolliver, who both
shot a 47. Kaitlyn Hawk ﬁnished her day right
behind them with a 48, while Katelyn Edwards’ 49
added to Eastern’s tally.
Scores for Waterford included Kenzie Dietz
(41), Liz Leach (44), Ashley Offenberger (45),
Abby Eichmiller (52), Bri Hart (53) and Alishia
Dickens (59).
Donald Lambert can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2106

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, August 20
Golf
River Valley/South Gallia at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Southern/Belpre at Eastern, 4 p.m.
Saturday, August 22
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at Capital, 2 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Capital, noon

Rogelio V. Solis | AP photo

In this July 27, 2015 photo, Mississippi quarterback Ryan Buchanan uses a virtual reality headset to make football play decisions at the
Manning Center in Oxford, Miss. Ole Miss is one of a growing number of football programs in the NCAA and NFL dabbling in virtual reality
technology to help supplement work on the field.

Football’s future? QBs training with VR
OXFORD, Miss. (AP)
— Mississippi quarterback Ryan Buchanan
straps on a headset that
covers his eyes, and
instantly, he sees a scene
that looks like a video
game, all set from his perspective.
In about a minute, he
runs through a handful of
plays, checking his receivers, deciphering defensive
coverages and making
split-second decisions
about where to throw the
football.
And just like that, practice is over.
“I felt like I was in the
future putting this thing
on — something that you
would see on TV shows,”
Buchanan said with a
wide grin.
Getting a few “mental
reps” has never been
easier at Ole Miss: The
Rebels are one of a growing number of football
programs in the NCAA
and NFL dabbling in virtual reality technology to
help supplement work on
the ﬁeld.
Buchanan is one of
three Ole Miss quarterbacks ﬁghting for the
starting job this fall. Part
of their offseason regimen has been 10 tests on
the simulator that include
20 plays each.
When it’s time for the
test, Buchanan can look
around just like in real
life, with a complete
360-degree ﬁeld of vision.
He hears the play call
from a coach or another
player and then checks
the formation and reads
the defense pre-snap.

After the ball is snapped,
he watches how the
defense reacts and then
turns his head to the
player he wants to receive
the ball.
If it’s the right choice,
the ball ﬂies through the
air and connects with the
receiver. If not, the simulator informs the QB a
wrong decision has been
made.
The tests can even be
loaded onto a smartphone
app and then the phone
can be placed into a portable headset. Quarterbacks could theoretically
do the tests from home
and then the results can
be emailed to coaches.
“You do it over and
over again, watching
where guys go and seeing where windows open
up on certain plays,”
Buchanan said. “It’s
pretty much what you see
on the ﬁeld.”
Ole Miss is using a
program developed by
EON Sports, which is a
subsidiary of EON Reality based in California.
UCLA, Kansas, Syracuse,
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and about 100
high schools are among
EON’s clients. Brendan
Reilly — the company’s
28-year-old CEO — says
more potential clients are
in the works and interest
has been high.
Reilly said EON’s software was partially developed from programs that
do things like train ﬁghter pilots and help doctors
practice surgeries.
“Coaches already know
how to make guys big and

strong,” Reilly said. “Now
they want to ﬁgure out
how to get them to make
consistently better decisions on the ﬁeld. We’re
ﬁguring out ways to use
data and technology to
make that happen. And
if you can game-ify the
process to make it more
enjoyable, players will
hopefully embrace that.”
Ole Miss graduate assistant Robert Ratliff spent
several hours using the
EON Sports software to
install the team’s offense
into the system. He’s also
working on simulating
defensive alignments for
teams that the Rebels will
face this season.
He said once the base
system is installed, changing, adding or deleting
plays isn’t too difﬁcult.
There is also a version
of the simulator that uses
real-life footage from the
quarterback’s perspective instead of a video
game simulation. Ratliff
said that version makes
things more realistic, but
once the video is taken,
there is no way to change
the play without ﬁlming
another one.
EON Sports isn’t the
only company vying for
clients in the world of
virtual reality. A company
called STRIVR also has
a growing list of clients,
including Auburn, Arkansas, Stanford, the Minnesota Vikings and the
Dallas Cowboys.
“You’re always looking
for things to help you get
better,” Auburn coach
Gus Malzahn said. “The
quarterback is one posi-

tion that you can actually
get some mental reps.
Even if it’s mental, it can
help you in the fall.”
Not everything can be
simulated of course: The
weather is always perfect
when staring through
the headset, the pocket
stays relatively clean for
the quarterback and the
receivers always run a
perfect route.
“And, of course, there
aren’t guys out there trying to kill you,” Buchanan
said laughing.
But the general consensus is the technology
is only going to get better. And with limited
practice time during the
preseason, giving quarterbacks extra time to learn
the playbook probably
isn’t a bad thing.
It’s also a way to avoid
risking fatigue or injury
on the ﬁeld. Minnesota
Vikings coach Mike Zimmer said second-year
quarterback Teddy
Bridgewater immediately
embraced the new training.
“It’s going to be very
helpful from the learning curve, for not only
me but for other guys in
the room,” Bridgewater
said. “We have backups
who won’t get the same
amount of reps that I will
get throughout the course
of game week, so for
them to be able to go in
and steal reps is going to
be very helpful.”
Will it actually help the
Vikings win more football
games?
Zimmer isn’t sure, but
it’s worth a shot.

�CLASSIFIEDS

2B Thursday, August 20, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

Yard Sale

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Lease

Help Wanted General

Come in to Cheshire turn on
544 first house on left Roush
Lane. washer dryer outdoor
wicker furniture, loads of scrap
booking supplies. seasonal
decorations, tablecloths and
clothing. Fri. 21-Sat. 22

Diesel Mechanic needed
at local business.
Salary negotiable depending
on experience.
Mon-Fri, 7:30am- 4:00pm.
Send resumes to:
Blind Box 15
825 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

FOR SALE OR LEASE
Medical / Professional
office building
close to Holzer Hospital.
Two suites (one rented)
priced to sale
call 740-709-1221

Home Improvements

$$$$$$$$$

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

$$$$$$$$$

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call
24HRS 740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Serving Gallia,
Meigs Co.
and
Mason Wv.
Ron Evans
Jackson,Oh
1-800-537-9528
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Help Wanted General
Arbors at Gallipolis is now
hiring full time STNAҋs and
offering a 600.00 Sign on
Bonus. Must have Certificate
of Completion or State
Certification in Ohio.
Background check and drug
screen required. Please apply
in person at 170 Pinecrest
Drive in Gallipolis.
Arbors at Gallipolis is now
hiring a part time
ACTIVITIES ASSISTANT
for weekend shift. Must submit to background check and
drug screen. Please apply in
person at 170 Pinecrest Drive
in Gallipolis.
Arbors at Pomeroy
is NOW HIRING
Full Time &amp; Part Time
Cook/Dietary Aid Apply Within.
Call 740-992-6606

60583312

Notices
GREETERS NEEDED ...Reps
are scheduled at grocery/department stores outside their
exits to raise funds for a Veterans Charity. Reps hand out
help info and offer patriotic
merchandise for a donation.
Must have a car and be willing
to travel. Comp/Expensives
paid. Seniors welcomed!...
email resume to;
jely@veteransoutreach.com or
call 866.212.5592.
GUN SHOW
MARIETTA
Washington Co. Fairgrounds
Aug 22 &amp; 23
922 Front Street
Adm$5 6ҋ Tbls $35
740-667-0412
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.
Yard Sale
Yard Sale
Friday - Saturday
Cedarwood Lane off
White Road

Arbors at Pomeroy
NOW HIRING
Full Time &amp; Part Time STNAs
or CNAs, Part Time &amp; PRN
LPNs. Apply Within.
Call 740-992-6606

Employment Opportunity
Local manufacturing company seeking to hire skilled
welders and painters.
Looking for experienced individuals who are detail and
job oriented. Benefits
Available. Apply in person at
2150 Eastern Avenue,
Gallipolis, Oh
Laundry &amp; Housekeeping Supervisor II position for work in a
114 bed Long Term Care Facility. Salary is commensurate
with experience. To apply go to
www,personnel.wv.gov. Lakin
Hospital is an EEO/AA Employer.

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

For Sale By Owner
Mobile Home for sale
Proctorville, Ohio area
2002 14 x 60 2 bedroom
1 bath furnished excellent
condition 17,000
813-767-9922
Houses For Sale
3BR 2BA
$33,900
740-446-3570
Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Apartments available Now. Riverbend Apts. New Haven,
WV. Now accepting applicatons for HUD-subsidized,
One bedroom Apts. Utilities included. Based on 30% of adjusted income. Call 304-8823121. Available for Senior and
Disabled people.

Miscellaneous

Houses For Rent
House for Rent near Holzer
hospital 3 bedrooms,
kitchen,dining room, utility
closet. 1 and 1/2 bathrooms,
2 car garage, no pets or
smoking, gas heat and air.
$685 month plus utilities and
deposit phone 740-645-3836

House for Rent-3 Bedroom, 2
Story, No Pets, Gallipolis Area
monthly rent $625.00 deposit
required 740-853-1101

Want To Buy

Completely Furnished
2 bedroom 2 bath mobile
home with carport overlooking
Ohio River.New
furniture and appliances.
$650.00 month
must see to appreciate.
614-595-7773
or 740-645-5953

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

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AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
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304-882-3017

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.

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

3BR, 2BA, on Farm,
$750 per month
540-729-1331

Beautiful 2 bedroom apt.
1400 sq ft, w/d, parking
no pets/no smoking
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740-591-5174

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SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY LAW
Win...No Award / No Fee

All Cases Considered

LEGALS

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that on Saturday, August 22, 2015, at
10:00 a.m., a public sale will be held at 211 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769. The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
is selling for cash in hand or certified check the
following collateral:
2005 Hyundai Elantra VIN: KMHDN46D05U082649
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio,
reserves the right to bid at this sale, and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale. Further, The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company reserves the right to reject any or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”, with
no expressed or implied warranty given. For further information,
or for an appointment to inspect collateral, prior to sale date
contract Randy Hays at 740-992-4048.
8/19/15, 8/20/15, 8/21/15
LEGALS

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that on Saturday, August 22, 2015, at
10:00 a.m., a public sale will be held at 211 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769. The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
is selling for cash in hand or certified check the
following collateral:
2010 Chevy Impala VIN: 2G1WB5EK0A1257282
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio,
reserves the right to bid at this sale, and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale. Further, The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company reserves the right to reject any or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”, with
no expressed or implied warranty given.
For further information, or for an appointment to inspect
collateral, prior to sale date contract Randy Hays
at 740-992-4048.
8/19/15,8/20/15,8/21/15

�Applications/Hearings/Appeals
�Immediate Access to
Experienced Personnel

�We Strive For Quick
Claim Approval

�Free Consultation

CALL TODAY FOR IMMEDIATE HELP!

(800) 301-8203

Bill Gordon &amp; Associates is a nationwide practice limited to representing clients before the Social
Security Administration. Bill Gordon is a member of the Texas &amp; New Mexico Bar Associations. The
attorneys at Bill Gordon &amp; Associates work for quick approval of every case. Results in your case will
depend on the unique facts and circumstances of your claim.

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�CLASSIFIEDS/SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 20, 2015 3B

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

GAHS Meet the Teams night
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Gallia Academy High
School will be holding a Meet the Teams night
at approximately 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20, at
Memorial Field in Gallia County. The event is free
and open to the public, and all levels of fall sports at
GAHS and GAMS will be introduced at the event.

Failed union bid won’t stop
reforms in college athletics

top three teams. For more information contact Lady
Tornadoes head coach Kent Wolfe at (740)949-4222
ext. 1212 or at (740)444-9334.

SOUTH BEND, Ind.
(AP) — With or without
a union, more rights and
beneﬁts are coming for
college athletes.
Whether the NCAA
schools that compete in
big-time athletics can
provide enough to keep
at bay more ominous
threats to college sports
remains to be seen. Even
the failed attempt to
unionize the Northwestern University football
players could be viewed
as progress for those still
pushing reform.
“I certainly don’t think
this is the end of this
type of discussion,” said
David Ridpath, a professor of sports administration at Ohio University
and president-elect of the
Drake Group, a watchdog
group for college sports.
“And certainly regardless
of what happens, this has

NFL Punt, Pass,
and Kick Competition

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipolis Recreation
Department will be hosting a local competition of
the NFL Punt, Pass, and Kick Competition. The
competition will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 13,
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — Meigs High School
at Memorial Field.
will be hosting a Meet the Marauders night at
Pre-registration will begin at 1:30 p.m. The event
7 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 26, at Farmers Bank
is
free and open to boys and girls ages 6-15 years
Stadium Holzer Field. Players from all teams will
old.
The age will be determined as of Dec. 31, 2015.
be introduced to the public and the Marauder band
Boys
and girls will compete in separate divisions.
will also take part in the festivities. Admission to the
Players
must have tennis shoes. No cleats (rubber or
event is free.
metal) or bare feet are allowed.
Combined scores of distance and accuracy for
one punt, one pass, and one kick will determine the
overall winner.
Participants must bring a birth certiﬁcate and can
only compete in one local event. Local winners will
compete at a sectional event. The winners of the
MASON, W.Va. — The Southern girls basketball
sectional events will have their score tallied against
program will be hosting a beneﬁt golf scramble
other state winners to determine if they compete
at the Riverside Golf Club on Saturday, August
before a Bengals’ NFL Football game.
29, at 9 a.m. The cost is $60 per player with skill
For more information, contact Brett Bostic at 740prizes on every hole and food and beverages served
throughout the round. Prizes will be awarded to the 441-6022.

Meet the Marauders Night

Southern Girls Basketball
Golf Scramble

STATEWIDE ADS

CAREER TRAINING:
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training as FFA certified
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Financial aid for qualified students. Job
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Tree Service

Medical / Health

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Sales / Business Development

RN's, LPN'S,STNA'S Overbrook Center, Located at 333 Page
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Stop by and fill out application Monday-Friday 8:30am-5:00pm
or contact Susie Drehel, RN, Staff Development Coordinator
740-992-6472. EOE &amp; a participant of the Drug-Free Workplace
Program

Help Wanted General

PASS
TIME IN
LINE.
READ
THE

energized the athletes’
rights movement for
years to come.”
The National Labor
Relations Board on Monday blocked a historic
bid by Northwestern
football players to form
the nation’s ﬁrst college
athletes’ union.
In a unanimous decision, the board said the
prospect of union and
nonunion teams in college could lead to different standards at schools
— from how much money
players receive to how
much time they practice
— and create competitive
imbalances on the ﬁeld.
The new ruling annuls
a 2014 decision by a
regional NLRB director in Chicago who said
scholarship football
players are employees
under U.S. law and thus
entitled to organize.

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DR_16461_10x4.5

�SPORTS

4B Thursday, August 20, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Former NFL players appeal terms of concussion settlement
PHILADELPHIA (AP) —
Former NFL players who object
to terms of the potential $1
billion concussion settlement
have ﬁled appeals that are likely
to delay payouts to thousands
of retirees until next year.
About a dozen appeals on
behalf of as many as 90 former
players were expected to be
ﬁled by Monday’s deadline.
The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in Philadelphia could
hear arguments on the issues
this fall.
Some challenge the exclusion of future cases of CTE,
or chronic traumatic encephalopathy, the brain decay that

many link to football concussions. Others are concerned the
settlement awards players with
neurocognitive symptoms, such
as Alzheimer’s disease and
dementia, but not those with
behavioral and mood disorders
that some link to CTE and concussions.
A lawyer for 51-year-old former linebacker Jesse Solomon,
who spent eight seasons with
ﬁve teams, called the exclusion
“unfair” and “unreasonable” in
an appeal ﬁled last week. Solomon could get nothing from
the settlement despite suffering from memory loss, slurred
speech, severe headaches and

other disabling conditions, the
appeal said.
Negotiators who forged the
deal argue that the science
on CTE is still evolving. The
estates of players who died and
were diagnosed with CTE from
2006 to 2014 can seek up to $4
million, but future deaths are
excluded to avoid “incentivizing” suicide. The problem
cannot currently be diagnosed
in the living.
Other players want the award
calculations to include time
played in preseason games
or training camp. Currently,
a player had to play in three
regular season games to get

credit for that season. The
awards are sharply reduced for
men with less than ﬁve years in
the league.
Former player Andrew
Stewart, 49, of Surrey, British Columbia, has Parkinson’s
disease.
He would get only one year
of credit for his 1989 season
with the Cleveland Browns
under the current plan. But
the NFL’s disability and pension plan credits him with the
three additional years he spent
in training camp or preseason
games before being injured.
“A lot of players may not be
aware of the difference in deﬁ-

nitions,” lawyer Michael Rosenthal said Monday.
Chris Seeger, co-lead counsel
for the retired-player plaintiffs,
called the appeals “heartbreaking news for injured retired
NFL players who will now be
forced to wait many months
longer for the care and ﬁnancial support they desperately
need.”
The NFL expects about
6,000 former players to develop
Alzheimer’s disease or moderate dementia in the coming
decades. A small number are
also expected to be diagnosed
with Lou Gehrig’s disease or
Parkinson’s disease.

Kiel settles in for Cincinnati
MWR grants Clint
Bowyer release for 2016 team picked to win AAC
By Jenna Fryer

60603262

Ganassi Racing. KauffAssociated Press
man bought 50 percent
of MWR during its
Michael Waltrip’s
debut 2007 season to
rocky nine-year effort to keep the team aﬂoat.
build a successful race
Kauffman said in a
team was on the verge
statement that Bowyer
of collapse Wednesday
and David Ragan will
as the organization said complete the season for
it will not run any cars
MWR, and the team will
full-time next season and “race hard and compete”
released Clint Bowyer
through the end of the
from his contract to pur- year. But the future plans
sue a new job for 2016.
for the organization were
The decisions are the
announced Wednesday
fallout from co-owner
because the team now
Rob Kauffman’s recent
has “clarity” after weighpurchase of an owning its options.
ership stake in Chip
“I want to thank all

DIABETES OR
PROSTATE CANCER?
Your sex life and erection can now survive

of our staff, partners,
sponsors and fans for all
their effort and support
over the years,” Kauffman said. “Clint Bowyer
has done a lot for MWR
since joining us in 2012
and we appreciate the
energy and effort he has
given the organization.
After many discussions,
Clint and I agreed we
would go our separate
ways at the end of the
season and I wish him
well in whatever direction he pursues.”
Bowyer is currently
16th in the Sprint Cup
standings and has
three races remaining
to claim one of the 16
berths in the Chase for
the Sprint Cup championship.
Although he could
end up at Ganassi
with sponsor 5-Hour
Energy, Bowyer is
more likely looking for
a one-year deal to wait
for an opening with
one of NASCAR’s powerhouse teams in 2017.

CINCINNATI (AP)
— The second-string
offense was running a
play during camp, and
quarterback Gunner Kiel
was pacing behind the
group, helmet in hand,
yelling advice as everyone
lined up.
A year ago, he would
have been the one getting
instructions.
The second-year
starter is taking a bigger
role in a deep and
diverse offense that’s the
main reason Cincinnati
is picked to win the
American Athletic
Conference title.
“Now I’m a lot more
conﬁdent,” said Kiel,
who threw a leagueleading 31 touchdown
passes last season despite
missing signiﬁcant time
with injured ribs. “I’m the
guy. I’m being a leader.
Last year, I couldn’t do
it. I was earning guys’
respect. They were
telling me what to do.”
The Bearcats went
9-4 last season, losing to
Virginia Tech 33-17 in the

Military Bowl. In his ﬁrst
season at Cincinnati, Kiel
threw for 3,254 yards
with 13 interceptions.
The Bearcats’ running
game was in ﬂux all
season because of
injuries, so Kiel’s passing
had to carry the day.
The top seven
receivers are back, along
with eight starters overall
on offense.
The Bearcats have
retooled to accentuate
the run more prominently
and take some of the
pressure off Kiel.
And Cincinnati, which
was accustomed to
competing for league
titles in the Big East, is
back to being the team to
beat in the AAC.
“It’s nice to get the
respect,” senior defensive
linebacker Silverberry
Mouhon said. “We’ve got
the target on our back.
That’s ﬁne.”
Things to watch from
the Bearcats:
SECOND TIME AROUND
Kiel forced throws last

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The Bearcats will have
two opportunities to get
national attention.
They host Miami on
Oct. 1 and play their next
game at BYU on Oct. 16.
Last year, they got
blown out in their three
games against prominent
opponents.

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RUN IT
The Bearcats had to go
deep into their group of
running backs because
of injuries last season.
They return senior Hosey
Williams (140 yards in
four games), sophomore
Mike Brown (team-high
650 yards in nine games)
and junior Tion Green
(118 yards in three
games) along with an
experienced line.
The Bearcats threw
it 491 times and ran it
454 times last season, an
imbalance that Tuberville
would like to correct.
“We’ve got tremendous
room for improvement,
and we were pretty good
last year,” Tuberville said.
OH THAT DEFENSE
The defense was the
biggest problem last
season, getting run over
in consecutive losses
to Ohio State (50-28),
Memphis (41-14) and
Miami (55-34).
It was young and
inexperienced and got
better as the season
went along.
There’s ﬁve returning
starters and much
more depth this season,
creating a feeling that it
ought to be able to hold
its own.
“It was difﬁcult last
year,” Mouhon said. “We
had young guys fresh out
of high school. This year,
we feel everyone is on
the same page. We have
a standard to uphold.
The young guys know
what to expect going in
now. We’re a much more
mature team.”

TROUBLE BATHING?

EASYBATH

season and sometimes
held onto the ball too
long, which was expected
in his ﬁrst season. The
Bearcats are looking for
more consistency now
that Kiel knows what to
expect.
“He’s got his head on
right,” coach Tommy
Tuberville said. “His
body’s in better shape
than it’s been. He’s in
a leadership role right
now.”

BACK HOME AGAIN
The Bearcats played
last season at Paul Brown
Stadium — home ﬁeld
for the NFL Bengals —
while their on-campus
Nippert Stadium
underwent an $86 million
renovation.
They’re back home
for their season opener
against Alabama A&amp;M
on Sept. 5.
“A lot of guys are talking about it, being at
the Nipp and all that’s
about,” Kiel said.

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, August 20, 2015 5B

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

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

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By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

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DR_16461_3x3.5

�SPORTS

6B Thursday, August 20, 2015

Daily Sentinel

‘Deflategate’ judge: No deal yet; hopes to rule by Sept. 4
NEW YORK (AP) —
The judge presiding over
the “Deﬂategate” case
said Wednesday that he
hopes to rule before the
NFL opens its season on
whether the league was
justiﬁed in suspending
New England quarterback Tom Brady for four
games. But he urged a
settlement, calling it
a “logical and rational
option.”
U.S. District Judge
Richard M. Berman
announced his plans at
the start of a hearing in

which lawyers made oral
arguments that negotiations were continuing but
have so far been unsuccessful.
Berman said he hoped
to rule by Sept. 4, six
days before the Patriots
host the Pittsburgh
Steelers in the NFL’s
season-opening game.
Neither Brady nor NFL
Commissioner Roger
Goodell was in court
Wednesday.
The Manhattan judge
said both would be
required to attend an

Aug. 31 hearing.
Repeating his sentiments from a similar
hearing a week ago
which Brady and Goodell
attended, Berman said
that he saw strengths and
weaknesses in both side’s
arguments.
“A settlement seems
like a logical and rational
option,” he said.
Berman said he still has
an open mind about the
legal issues after the NFL
asked him to conclude
Goodell properly
followed the terms of

the league’s collective
bargaining agreement
when he upheld Brady’s
suspension.
The union countersued,
saying the suspension
violated the contract and
should be dropped.
Goodell said in late July
that he had concluded
Brady conspired with
two Patriots equipment
employees who handled
game balls to deﬂate balls
prior to the start of January’s AFC championship
game.
New England defeated
the Indianapolis Colts,
45-7, then advanced to
the Super Bowl and won.
The commissioner

also accused Brady
of obstructing the
NFL’s probe into the
controversy by
destroying his cellphone
containing nearly 10,000
messages.
Brady was expected
to join his team for
practice in West Virginia
on Wednesday after he
and Goodell joined their
lawyers for about four
hours of negotiations at
an undisclosed location
in New York City on
Tuesday.
The Patriots are scheduled to play the New
Orleans Saints in an
exhibition game Saturday
night.

SEOAL

60576582

From page 1B

Check out the ﬁve-day forecast
on the weather page or online at

Mydailytribune.com
Mydailyregister.com
Mydailysentinel.com
brought to you by

Let’s Talk
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GOALS

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

efforts of 41. Zach Graham rounded out
the Blue Devil scoring with a 42, while
Miles Cornwell and Josh Davis also
tacked on respective rounds of 45 and
47.
Jake Barstow led the Chieftains with
a 36, followed by Hunter Fizer and Paul
Duffy with identical efforts of 39. Jared
Walker and Parker Keynes were next
with matching 43s, and Kevin Boals

In court papers, the
league has said there
was “ample support” in
evidence for the commissioner to conclude Brady
was involved in efforts by
the Patriots equipment
personnel to deﬂate footballs.
The union said in its
court ﬁling that Brady
was unfairly suspended
because the NFL displayed “a clearly biased
agenda — not an effort at
fairness and consistency.”
It criticized Goodell’s
ruling upholding the suspension as a “smear campaign,” a “propaganda
piece written for public
consumption.”

also carded a 44 for LHS.
Jared Lemaster led the Ironmen with
a 36, followed by Ricky Fraley with
a 43. Evan Coyan and John Bachtel
rounded out the team tally with matching 45s, while Derek Murray and Dakota Simpson also tacked on respective
efforts of 48 and 54.
Barstow and Lemaster were the corunners-up individually.
The second of ﬁve SEOAL matches
will be held Thursday, Aug. 27, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

TVC

Casey McDonald (52) and Tyler Martin
(61).
Scores for NYHS included Chase
Koker (56), David Strausbaugh (60),
From page 1B
Tyler Smith (58), Ben Johnson (58),
Lemaster (55), Justin Rafferty (70) and Hunter Dobbs (55) and Tanner Smith
Michael Channell (53).
(58).
Scores for Athens included Patrick
The next TVC Ohio golf match is
Greer (52), Drew Zorn (45), Owen
scheduled for Monday, Aug. 24, at
Canditelli (56), Greg List (66), Cory
Franklin Valley Golf Club in Jackson.
Wachenschwanz (59) and Matt Xu (60). Vinton County will serve as the host
Scores for Alexander included Ausschool during the third match.
tin McClain (57), Andrew Vogt (52),
Taylor Boggs (64), John Cramer (59),
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

60599033

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