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                  <text>Today in
History …
OPINION s 4

Partly sunny.
High of 88,
low of 67

Fed Hock
downs Lady
Raiders

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 140, Volume 69

Wednesday, September 2, 2015 s 50¢

Southern Local power outage disrupts classes
By Lorna Hart

The power loss was due to an
overloaded 500 kilovolts (kV)
three-prong transformer.
RACINE — Students, teachAccording to Southern Local
ers and staff at Southern Local
School District Superintendent
Schools in Racine had an unexpected day off Tuesday. After the Anthony Deem, there was disschool lost power Monday after- cussion by American Electric
noon, classes were canceled until Power at the time the addition
the problem could be corrected. was added to the school as to

lhart@civitasmedia.com

the kilovolts (kV) size of the
transformer needed.
“They decided to go with
500 kV transformer,” Dean
said. “And yesterday, when the
kV went to 680 and the transformer burned up, it apparently
wasn’t enough”
Back-up generations kept

refrigerators and freezers in
the kitchen operational, but
all other equipment, including
telephones, air conditioning
and lighting were out.
AEP installed a 1,000 kV
transformer and power was
restored to the school by 1:30
p.m. A technician required to

reset all services that use electricity within the school, was
expected to arrive later Tuesday afternoon.
Deem said the school should
be back to normal by Wednesday when classes resume.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155
Ext.2551.

Rio student going to Wales to study
Safe Driving
Awareness
Month in Ohio
For Ohio Valley Newspapers

Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — September is Safe Driving Awareness Month, and the Ohio State Highway Patrol is asking motorists to commit to only driving while buckled,
focused and sober.
In Gallia and Meigs counties, there were more than
a combined 1,100 crashes on average. Gallia checked in
with 755 while Meigs had 364.
In addition, motorists help keep roadways safe when
they take their time, drive defensively and know all trafﬁc
safety laws.
“By devoting their full attention to the road, motorists
can reduce their risk of getting into a crash,” said Lt. Max
Norris Gallia-Meigs
post commander.
“By devoting their full
“We need all motorattention to the road,
ists to practice safe
motorists can reduce
driving habits to
their risk of getting into make the roadways
safe all across Ohio.”
a crash. We need all
From 2010-14, an
motorists to practice
average of 287,303
safe driving habits to
motor vehicle
make the roadways safe crashes occurred
on Ohio’s public
all across Ohio.”
roadways each year.
Of these, an aver— Lt. Max Norris
Gallia-Meigs post commander age of 957 involved
fatalities with 1043
people being killed.
Additionally, 104,551 people were injured in crashes each
year.
Last year, 1,008 people were killed in motor vehicle
crashes. Although the number of fatalities was 2 percent
lower than 2013, it was still the second-lowest total
recorded in Ohio since record keeping began in the
1930s.
From 2010-14, Franklin County has averaged 31,766
motor vehicle crashes per year, the highest in the state.
Over the same period, Franklin County recorded nearly
73 fatal crashes and 78 fatalities per year.
In contrast, rural Noble County averaged just 165
motor vehicle crashes per year with 3 being fatal crashes.
Overall, there are an average of 3,265 crashes per
county per year in Ohio.
September was designated as Safe Driving Awareness
Month by Senate Bill 294, signed by Gov. John Kasich
in June 2014, to honor Maria Tiberi and other victims of
motor vehicle crashes. Tiberi was a 21-year-old college
student who died in a distracted driving crash in September 2013. She was the daughter of Columbus television
sports anchor Dom Tiberi.
To view the statistical analysis regarding the safe driving awareness month visit www.statepatrol.ohio.gov/doc/
SafeDriving_Bulletin_2015.pdf
As always, the Patrol asks drivers to call #677 to report
impaired drivers or drug activity.

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Soccer: 6
Volleyball: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Classified: 7-8
Comics: 9

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

RIO GRANDE — Rio
Grande student Cydnie
Few was awarded the
Lloyd Family Scholarship
in the amount of $1,000
through the National
Welsh-American Foundation.
She was also awarded
the Welsh Exchange
Travel Scholarship in the
amount of $500 from the
Welsh Society of Central
Ohio and a $500 travel
scholarship from the
Welsh Society of Greater
Cincinnati.
The scholarships will
help offset the expense of
spending most of the fall
semester in Wales as part
of an exchange program
between the University
of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College and the University
of Wales, Trinity Saint
David, in Carmarthen,
South Wales.
Few is the ﬁrst Rio
Grande student to receive
the Lloyd Family Scholarship.
Established in 2002,
the exchange program
has seen 55 Rio Grande
students experience a
semester abroad in Wales,
while 37 Trinity students
have been hosted on the
Rio Grande campus during that time. Through
the exchange program,
students earn credit
toward their degree programs while having what
may very well be a oncein-a-lifetime opportunity
for immersion in another
culture.
Few, a junior early education major from Cincinnati, plans to document
her travels and experiences in the form of a
15- to 20-minute video
that will be available via a
YouTube channel following her return. Ultimately
she wishes to create an
informative channel that
will address questions or
concerns others may have
regarding study abroad.
While the focus will be
on living in Wales, Few
plans to include aspects
about travel, schooling,
transportation, cultural
differences, currency
differences and lifestyle
in general. She plans to
incorporate students,
teachers and the people
of Wales as an important
part of this work, with an
end goal of communicating to viewers the importance of understanding
a culture different from
their own, while basing that understanding
on informed, unbiased
opinions rather than on
conjecture.
As a future teacher,

Photo courtesy of University of Rio Grande

Rio Grande student Cydnie Few will spend the fall semester studying in Wales as part of an exchange
program between the University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College and the University
of Wales, Trinity Saint David, in Carmarthen, South Wales.

Few sees this as a project that can not only be
utilized by Rio Grande’s
Madog Center for Welsh
Studies for the purpose of
recruitment, but also as a
wonderful teaching tool
for future classrooms in
which she will teach.
“I could provide people
with a lasting impact
on their world views by
sharing my experience in
Wales,” Few said. “I plan
to develop long-lasting
friendships while studying abroad. My goal is
to connect with those in
my school realm, as well
as those who I may only
encounter through my
YouTube project.”
Few said she anticipates her experience will
allow her to assist the
Foundation in gaining
information regarding the
international experience,
as well as allow her the
opportunity to provide
strong cross-cultural communications with people
she befriends.
A former student of the
School for Creative and
Performing Arts in Cincinnati, Few plans to earn
her degree in early education and intervention
specialist at Rio Grande
— following in the footsteps of her grandmother,
who was a teacher and
who earned her degree

from Rio Grande — and
to eventually earn a doctorate degree in education with an administration license. This future
third-generation teacher
credits her grandmother’s
inﬂuence in her decision
to attend Rio Grande and
plans to pursue a teaching career at a creative
arts school, where she
can share her passion for
the performing arts with
students.
She sees the time she
will spend in Wales as
a valuable experience
she will be able to share
with future students,
studying not only Welsh
plays, playwrights and
actors, such as George
Emlyn Williams, but also
Welsh-based movies such
as “How Green Was My
Valley,” directed by John
Ford.
Few’s upcoming project, which began with
thoughts of creating a
blog, took a completely
different turn when Few’s
mother, also a teacher,
encouraged her to take
it further, incorporating
video and applying to go
to Wales. “A lot of people
probably don’t travel,”
said Few, who went on to
note the importance of
scholarships, as well as
applying for such opportunities. “There are so

many other people and
opportunities,” she said.
Few, who has not yet
traveled internationally,
is now, thanks to scholarships and encouragement
from family as well as faculty, headed overseas for
the ﬁrst time.
“I wish I could leave
tomorrow,” said Few,
who will depart Sept. 13.
“I’m counting down every
day.”
Few is active on the
Rio Grande campus,
serving as a member of
the student senate and
as a movie reviewer for
the student newspaper,
Signals. She is active in
the Alpha Lambda Delta
Honor Society.
Few is also a member
of Enactus, an awardwinning business management program that
conducts a variety of projects on campus ranging
from Rio Rack Shack — a
food donation program
that assists students in
need — to conducting
summer programs that
bring K–12 students from
Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs and Vinton
counties to participate
in community service
projects and to work with
area businesses in a weeklong learning intensive
environment.
See STUDENT | 5

�LOCAL/STATE

2 Wednesday, September 2, 2015

OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES
BARTON
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Bill M. Barton,
86, of Point Pleasant, passed away Aug. 30, 2015.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept.
3, 2015, at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
with Rev. James Kelly ofﬁciating. Burial will follow
in Sandhill (Suncrest) Cemetery in Point Pleasant.
Friends may visit the family between 10-11 a.m.
Thursday at the funeral home.

CLYDE R. (DICK) MORRIS
LONG BOTTOM —
Clyde R. “Dick” Morris,
68, of Long Bottom,
passed away Monday,
Aug. 31, 2015, at his
home following a short
illness.
He was born May 25,
1947, in Portsmouth, Va.,
the son of Clyde J. and
Jean R. Morris.
He retired from the
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers with 38 years of service. He was a member of
the Shade River Masonic
Lodge 0453 F&amp;AM.
He is survived by his
mother Jean R. Morris,
of Long Bottom; a sister,
Liz (Dale) Stewart, of
South Carolina; two sons,
Kevin (Corey) Morris,
of Wheelersburg, Ohio,
and Keith (Eva) Morris,
of Kill Devil Hills, N.C.;
three daughters, Kelly

(Miles) Beene, of New
Bern, N.C., Karen (Branden) Shuler, of Southern
Shores, N.C., and Crystal
(John) Ottman, of Long
Bottom; and seven grandchildren.
He was preceded in
death by his father Clyde
J. Morris; and his loving
wife of 28 years, Angie
Ashe Morris.
Services will be 11 a.m.
Friday, Sept. 4, 2015, at
White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home, Coolville, Ohio.
Burial will be in Meigs
Memory Gardens.
Friends may call the
funeral home between
6-8 p.m. Thursday. A
Masonic service will be
7:30 p.m. by the Shade
River Masonic Lodge 453
F&amp;AM.
You may sign the online
guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfh.com.

RIDER
POMEROY — Verdie Mae Rider, 75, Pomeroy,
died Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2015. Services will be 11
a.m. Friday, Sept. 4, 2015, at Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Visitation will be 6-8
p.m. Thursday at the funeral home.

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

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2

3
4
6

6

PM

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

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

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

6

PM

6:30
NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
SciGirls
"Horsing
Around"
ABC World
News
CBS Evening
News
Two and a
Half Men
Nightly
Business
Report (N)
CBS Evening
News

6:30

7

PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m.
Edition

7

PM

7:30

Shade Historical Association will
meet at 7 p.m. at the Academy.
POMEROY — The 1975
graduating class of Meigs High
School will be celebrating their
40th reunion at 2 p.m. at the
Gavin Recreational Building on
St. Rt. 554 in Cheshire. 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.

29

(FAM)

30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

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

Feeney-Bennett Post
meeting change

PM

(5:30) Hard

6:30

7

PM

7:30

MONDAY, SEPT. 7

SUTTON TOWNSHIP — Sutton Township Trustees Meeting
at 7 p.m. at Syracuse Municipal
Building.
LETART TOWNSHIP — The
regular meeting of Letart Township will be held at the Letart
Township Building at 5 p.m.
CHESTER —Chester Fire
Department will have a Labor
Day BBQ starting at 11 a.m.
There will be chicken, ribs and
homemade ice cream. Anyone can
donate cakes or pies.
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP — The
Bedford Township Trustees will
hold their regular monthly meeting at the Town Hall at 7 p.m.

Grace Episcopal guest
POMEROY — Father Edward Payne will be at
Grace Episcopal Church Sept. 13 and Sept. 27 at the
11 a.m. worship service and Holy Eucharist.

Rock Springs
UMC special guest

MIDDLEPORT — Feeney-Bennett Post No. 128,
American Legion, Middleport, is changing its meetPOMEROY — Rick Ash will be providing the
ing night. Previously, the meetings have been on
message at the Rock Springs United Methodist
the second and fourth Wednesday of each month.
Church Sunday, Sept. 6 at their 10 a.m. worship serBeginning in September, the meetings will be held
vice. Everyone is welcome.
only on the fourth Wednesday with dinner at 6 p.m.,
executive board at 7 p.m., and the regular meeting
at 8 p.m. All meetings will be held at the Post on
RACINE —The RACO Fall Scholarship Yard
Mill Street in Middleport.
Sale, beneﬁting the Southern High School Class
of 2016 Scholarship Fund, will be held at Star
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2
Mill Park in Racine on Sept. 1, from 9 a.m. to 6
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
p.m., Sept. 2 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sept. 3
America's Got Talent
Carmichael Carmichael Last Comic Standing "The
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Contact Kathryn Hart at
"Semifinal Results 1" (N)
"Kale" (N)
"Gender" (N) Showdowns" (N)
740-949-2656 for information or to donate items
America's Got Talent
Carmichael Carmichael Last Comic Standing "The
for the sale.
"Semifinal Results 1" (N)
"Kale" (N)
"Gender" (N) Showdowns" (N)

RACO Yard Sale Sept. 1-3

The Middle

The
Goldbergs
Big Blue Live (L)

The Middle

The
Goldbergs

Big Brother
Masterchef "Return of the
Champions"
Big Blue Live (L)

Big Brother

8

PM

8:30

Modern
Black-ish
Family
"The Nod"
Nova "Bigger Than T.Rex"
Paleontologists reconstruct
fossil bones from Morocco.
Modern
Black-ish
Family
"The Nod"
Extant "Zugzwang" (N)

Wife Sw. "Robert Carradine/
Terrell Owens" (SF) (N)
EARTH a New Wild
"Oceans"
Wife Sw. "Robert Carradine/
Terrell Owens" (SF) (N)
Criminal Minds "A Place at
the Table"
Eyewitness News at 10

Home Free "Long Journey
Holmes" (N)
John Denver: Country Boy Explore the
Steves' Euro
private life and public legacy of renowned "Remote,
singer-songwriter, John Denver.
Sacred, Wild"
Extant "Zugzwang" (N)
Criminal Minds "A Place at
the Table"

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Person of Interest
Person of Interest
Person of Interest
Person of Interest
In Depth
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Milwaukee Brewers Site: Miller Park (L)
Baseball Tonight (L)
MLB Baseball Washington Nationals at St. Louis Cardinals Site: Busch Stadium (L)
ITF Tennis U.S. Open Second Round Site: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center -- Flushing Meadows, N.Y. (L)
Little Women: LA "Seattle Little Women: LA "A Group Little Women: LA "Love
Little Women: LA "Working Terra Little Terra Little
or Bust"
Divided"
and War"
Girls" (N)
Family (N)
Family (N)
(5:00) Harry Potter &amp; the Order of the Phoenix After using
Young and Kevin From Job or No Job "New York
Next Step Realty: NYC
magic outside of school, Harry faces trial &amp; may be expelled f...
Hungry (N) Work (N)
City Interior Designer" (N)
"#ournextstep"
(5:30)
Training Day A cop's first day leads him to
(:05)
Four Brothers (‘05, Act) Tyrese Gibson, Mark Wahlberg. Four American
believe that his mentor may not be what he seems. TVMA brothers reunite to track down their adoptive mother's killer. TV14
History X
Thunder
Thunder
H.Danger
H.Danger
iCarly
iCarly
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
SVU "Beautiful Frame"
SVU "Secrets Exhumed"
SVU "Criminal Stories"
SVU "Downloaded Child"
Mr. Robot (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Special Report
CNN Tonight
Castle "Knockout"
Castle "Rise"
Castle "Heroes and Villains" Castle "Head Case"
Castle "Kick the Ballistics"
(5:30) The Day the Earth Stood Still An advanced life form
Terminator Salvation (‘09, Act) Christian Bale. A group of
Terminator
comes to Earth to save the planet by destroying the human race. survivors tries to stop machines from eradicating all of humanity. TV14
3: Rise of ...
Fast N' Loud
Repo "No Safe Harbour"
Repo "Hired Guns"
Repo "Diving For Repos" (N) Fast N' Loud
Duck
Duck Dynasty "John Luke
Duck
Duck
Wahlburgers Donnie
Lachey's Bar
Duck
Duck
Dynasty
Dynasty
Gets Hitched"
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Loves J. (N)
North Woods Law
The Last Alaskans
Alaska: The Last Frontier Bush "Rise of Browntown" Ice Lake Rebels
(5:15)
Waiting to Exhale (‘95, Dra)
(:45) Bad Girls Club "Flirting (:45) Bad
E! Special
It Takes a
Boss Nails
With Kat-tastrophe"
Girls Club
Sister
Angela Bassett, Whitney Houston. TVM
Law &amp; Order "Bronx Cheer" Law &amp; Order "Ego"
Law &amp; Order "White Lie"
Law &amp; Order "Whiplash"
LawOrder "All My Children"
I Am Cait
E! News (N)
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
WAGS "Is it Another Girl?"
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Gaffigan (N) Impastor (N)
Rocky Mountain "Midnight Drugs, Inc. "Dallas Dope
Drugs, Inc. "New Year's Eve Drugs, Inc. "Mardi Gras"
Southern Justice "Blue
Mountain Madness"
Cowboys"
NYC"
Ridge Bandit" (N)
Pro FB Talk Football
Mobsteel
Mobsteel
Mobsteel
Mobsteel (N)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
FoxFootball Kickoff (L)
UFC Tonight (N)
Insider
UFC Main
UFC Main Event
American Pickers "Bad
American Pickers "Shock
American Pickers "From
American Pickers "Coin-Op (:05) Power and Ice "The
Mother Shucker"
Value"
Coupe to Nuts"
Kings" (N)
Avalanche"
Million Dollar List
Million Dollar List
Mill.Listing "Crossroads"
Million Dollar List (N)
(:15) Million Listing SF (N)
(4:50)
National Security TVPG
All About the Benjamins (‘01, Act) Mike Epps, Ice Cube. TV14
RealHusband Punk'd
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Buying and Selling (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
Ghost Hunters "Tunnels of Ghost Hunters "Heir
Ghost Hunters "Barrels of Ghost Hunters (N)
Para. Witness "Nightmare
Terror"
Apparition"
Boos"
on Chestnut Street" (N)

6

8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Mason United
Methodist Church. Donations only.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

18 (WGN) Person of Interest
24 (ROOT) The Dan Patrick Show (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) ITF Tennis U.S. Open (L)
27 (LIFE)

STEWART
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Mildred Lois Stump
Stewart, 86, of Proctorville, died Sunday, Aug. 30,
2015 at home. Funeral service will be 1 p.m. Friday,
Sept. 4, 2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville. Entombment will follow in Woodmere
Memorial Park, Huntington, W.Va. Visitation will
noon to 1 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.

CHESTER — Chester Garden
Club will be having its annual
open meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester Academy. All garden
clubs and the public are invited.
The speaker will be Rodney Wallbrown, Mason County Extension
agent.
SATURDAY, SEPT. 5
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP — The
OLIVE TOWNSHIP — The
Scipio Township Trustees’ regular
Olive Township Trustees will
monthly meeting will be held at
the Harrisonville Fire House at 7 meet at 5 p.m. at the Township
Garage on Joppa Road.
p.m.
MASON, W.Va. — WV Heaven’s
THURSDAY, SEPT. 3
Saints Motorcycle Ministry will
CHESTER — The Chester
have their annual yard sale from

MASSILLON (AP) — A high school football
team that has had a live tiger cub at games for
decades started the season with its traditional
mascot on hand, even though the district hasn’t
proved to the state that the mascot’s display
would meet stricter rules for possessing exotic
animals.
Boosters for Massillon’s Washington High
School displayed a cub at Thursday’s game
against Perry, wheeling the white and orange cage
across the end zone before kickoff, The (Massillon) Independent reported. Club president Matt
Keller wouldn’t say where the animal came from,
who paid for its appearance or whether it was a
donation, and he told the newspaper it would be
premature to assume the tiger will be at future
games.
“It’s one tradition we were able to continue,
even if just for one game,” Keller said.
Boosters typically lease a cub called Obie each
year as the mascot, and a limited exemption for
the school was included when Ohio tightened regulations on ownership of exotic animals. That law
was enacted after a suicidal man released dozens
of bears, tigers and other creatures that authorities ended up killing out of fear for public safety.

WEDNESDAY EVENING

SPEARS
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Shirley Spears, 76
of Point Pleasant, died Aug. 30, 2015. Visitation
will be 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2015, with the
funeral at 1 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 3, 2015, at CrowHussell Funeral Home.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Ohio team gets
live tiger mascot
for season opener

BROADCAST

Daily Sentinel

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (‘14, Sci-Fi) Jason Clarke, (:45) Show Me a Hero
(:50) Show Me a Hero
Gary Oldman. A nation of evolved apes launches a war
with a handful of human survivors of a virus. TV14
(5:40)
The Ruins (‘08, (:15)
The Invasion (2007, Horror) Daniel Craig,
Strike Back
Alpha Dog (‘06, Cri)
450 (MAX) Hor) Jonathan Tucker, Jena Jeremy Northam, Nicole Kidman. A psychiatrist believes her
Matthew B. Barry, Emile
Malone. TVMA
son holds the key to a body invasion epidemic. TVPG
Hirsch, Bruce Willis. TVMA
(5:00) The Fifth Estate (‘13, (:15) Catch Hell (2014, Thriller) Joyful Drake, Tig Notaro,
Cold in July (2014, Thriller) Sam Sheperd, Michael C.
500 (SHOW) Bio) David Thewlis, Peter
Ryan Phillippe. A washed up Hollywood star is kidnapped, Hall. A protective father kills an ex-con who is robbing his
Capaldi. TVMA
tortured and held captive while on location. TVMA
house. TVMA

Mason Solid Waste
Authority meeting
MASON, W.Va. — The Mason County Solid
Waste Authority will have their monthly meeting
Tuesday, Sept. 8 at 9 a.m. at 1927 Fairground Road.

Meigs Cleanup Day
POMEROY — Meigs Cleanup Day will be 9
a.m. to 1 p.m. Sept. 12 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.

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�NATION

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 2, 2015 3

Stocks plunge
after bleak
manufacturing
By Ken Sweet
AP Business Writer

NEW YORK — Stocks plunged again Tuesday,
continuing a rocky ride for Wall Street, after an
economic report out of China rekindled fears that
the world’s second-largest economy is slowing
more than previously anticipated.
The sell-off adds to what has been a difﬁcult
few weeks for U.S. and international markets.
U.S. stocks just closed out their worst month in
more than three years. Tuesday’s drop also dashed
hopes that, after some relatively calm trading Friday and Monday, the stock market’s wild swings
were coming to an end.
“This market remains fragile,” said Jack Ablin,
chief investment ofﬁcer at BMO Private Bank.
“There’s nothing fundamentally wrong with the
U.S. economy, but we are going through this correction process. We’ve got a rocky road ahead of
us.”
Stocks started the day sharply lower and never
recovered, with the Dow Jones industrial average falling as much as 548 points. No part of the
market was spared. All 10 sectors of the Standard
&amp; Poor’s 500 index fell more than 2 percent. Just
three stocks in the S&amp;P 500 closed higher.
“Monday’s relatively peaceful markets are a distant memory as Chinese data and shares sparked
another severe ... reaction from the developed
world,” said John Briggs, head of ﬁxed income
strategy at RBS.
In the end, the Dow lost 469.68 points, or 2.8
percent, to 16,058.35. The S&amp;P 500 fell 58.33
points, or 3 percent, to 1,913.85 and the Nasdaq
composite fell 140.40 points, 2.9 percent, to
4,636.10.
As it’s been for the last several weeks, the selling and problems started in Asia.
An ofﬁcial gauge of Chinese manufacturing fell
to a three-year low last month, another sign of
slowing growth in that country. The manufacturing index, which surveys purchasing managers at
factories, dropped to a reading of 49.7 in August
from 50.0 in July. A reading below 50 indicates a
contraction.
China’s stocks sank on the news, with Shanghai
Composite Index closing down 1.2 percent. The
index has lost 38 percent of its value since hitting
a peak in June.
The Chinese economy has been a focus for
investors all summer, and the concerns have
intensiﬁed in the last three weeks. China devalued its currency, the renminbi, in mid-August.
Investors interpreted the move as a sign that
China’s economy was not doing as well as previously reported.
Investors moved into traditional havens like
bonds and gold Tuesday. Bond prices rose, pushing the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury
note down to 2.16 percent from 2.22 percent on
Monday. Gold rose $7.30, or 0.6 percent, to settle
at $1,139.80 an ounce.
Faced with the possibility of slowing demand
in China, the commodity markets once again took
the brunt of the hit.
U.S. crude oil fell $3.79 to close at $45.41 a barrel in New York. Brent Crude, a benchmark for
international oils used by many U.S. reﬁneries, fell
$4.59 to close at $49.56 in London.

Andrew Harnik | AP

President Barack Obama speaks to members of the media while on a hike to the Exit Glacier in Seward, Alaska, on Tuesday. According
to National Park Service research the glacier has receded approximately 1.25 miles over the past 200 years. Obama is on a historic
three-day trip to Alaska aimed at showing solidarity with a state often overlooked by Washington, while using its glorious but changing
landscape as an urgent call to action on climate change.

Obama heading up melting glacier
By Josh Lederman
Associated Press

SEWARD, Alaska — President
Barack Obama turned Tuesday
to a dramatic symptom of climate
change — a melting Alaska glacier — to highlight the dangers of
global warming.
As he mounts his most aggressive campaign yet on climate
change, Obama donned hiking
shoes for a trek up Alaska’s famed
Exit Glacier with photographers in
tow, a powerful visual designed to
make an impact in ways his speeches and ominous warnings have not.
The president also was to board
a U.S. Coast Guard vessel to tour
Kenai Fjords National Park, where
swaths of an immense ice ﬁeld are
melting at alarming rates.
Obama’s ﬁrst glimpse of a glacier
on the trip came as Marine One
whisked him about 45 minutes
south of Anchorage to tiny Seward.
As he ﬂew past snow-capped peaks
and sprawling forests, a sheet of
blue-and-white ice could be seen
snaking its way through mountains
toward a teal-tinged lake.
Obama is counting on Alaska’s
exquisite but deteriorating landscape to add urgency to his message
on climate change, the focus of
his three-day tour of the state. He
opened the trip Monday night by
painting a doomsday scenario for
the world if steps aren’t taken to cut
emissions: entire nations submerged
underwater, cities abandoned and
refugees ﬂeeing in droves as conﬂict
breaks out across the globe.
“We will condemn our children

to a planet beyond their capacity
to repair,” Obama said in a speech.
Alluding to the threat of rising
seas, he castigated leaders who
deny climate change as “increasingly alone — on their own shrinking island.”
Some 700 square miles in the
Kenai Mountains are blanketed by
glacier, remnants of the Ice Age,
when roughly a third of the Earth
was covered with sheets of ice. One
of nearly 40 glaciers springing out
from Harding Iceﬁeld, Exit Glacier
has been receding by 43 feet a year,
according to the National Park
Service. It has retreated about 1.25
miles over the last two centuries.
Obama’s carefully choreographed
trip aims to make an impression
with audiences that don’t follow the news through traditional
means. To that end, Obama also
was taping an episode of the NBC
reality TV show “Running Wild
with Bear Grylls,” and putting his
survival skills to the test.
The itinerary also includes a
journey to the Alaska Arctic, the
ﬁrst by a sitting president, amid
concerns that the U.S. has ceded
inﬂuence to Russia in the strategic
waters. The U.S. currently has two
working icebreakers, compared to
Russia’s 40. The White House said
Tuesday it would ask Congress
to speed up construction of new
icebreakers, although it offered few
details about the timeline or costs.
Although the trip hasn’t entailed
new policy prescriptions or federal
efforts to slow global warming,
Obama has said the U.S. is doing

its part by pledging to cut emissions of heat-trapping gases by up
to 28 percent over the next decade.
Obama set that target as the U.S.
commitment to a global climate
treaty nations hope to ﬁnalize in
December. He has urged fellow
leaders to make similarly ambitious
pledges.
Despite these efforts, the U.S.
isn’t a shining example when it
comes to greenhouse gases. Each
American emits more than twice as
much carbon dioxide as a Chinese
and 10 times that of someone from
India, Energy Department ﬁgures
show. China, the U.S. and India are
the top three polluters.
The U.S. has cut its carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels by
about 8 percent since 2000, and
around 7 percent since Obama
took ofﬁce. But some industrialized, European nations have made
even steeper cuts, including Britain, Spain and Denmark.
Obama’s trip to Alaska’s majestic
mountains and stirring coastlines
also brings fresh attention to deep
divisions in the U.S. over balancing
the nation’s energy and environmental needs.
Heavily dependent on energy
revenue, plunging oil prices are hitting Alaska hard. The blow is compounded by the high cost of energy
in the state. Alaska leaders of all
political stripes have implored
Obama to open up more areas to
drilling to alleviate a $3.5 billion
budget deﬁcit that has triggered
steep cuts to state services that are
critical for poor and rural Alaskans.

Senate leader: Not enough votes to defund Planned Parenthood
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The
Senate’s top Republican is
conceding that his party
will have to await the
next president before it
can cut off federal funds
that go to Planned Parenthood.
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.,
says Republicans lack
the votes to halt the payments. He also says that
standing in the GOP’s
way is President Barack
Obama, who doesn’t leave
ofﬁce until January 2017.
“The way you make a
law in this country, the
Congress has to pass it,
the president has to sign
it,” McConnell said in
an interview with Kentucky TV station WYMT
recorded Monday.
“The president’s made
it very clear he’s not
going to sign any bill
that includes defunding
of Planned Parenthood,”
McConnell said. “So
that’s another issue that
awaits a new president,
hopefully with a different point of view about
Planned Parenthood.”
The majority leader’s
remarks drew an angry
response from conservative Rep. Mick Mulvaney,
R-S.C., who has been

gathering signatures on
a letter from House lawmakers who say they’ll
oppose spending legislation this fall if it includes
any funds for Planned
Parenthood.
Mulvaney, who has
clashed before with top
Republicans, likened McConnell’s comments to waving
“a white ﬂag” and said
GOP senators should consider replacing their leader.
“Tell me the difference
between Mitch McConnell and Harry Reid,”
Mulvaney said in an
interview, referring to the
Senate Democratic leader
from Nevada.

Federal agencies run
out of money Oct. 1
unless Congress sends
Obama legislation ﬁnancing them. A stalemate
would lead to a government shutdown, which
McConnell has repeatedly
said will not occur. Congress returns next week
from a summer recess.
Mulvaney, who collected 18 signatures on the
letter before the House
left for a summer recess
in July, said he did not
know how many additional lawmakers have signed
the letter.
Shortly before leaving
on its break, the Sen-

ate fell six votes short
of advancing legislation
that would have blocked
Planned Parenthood’s
federal money. The organization receives over
$500 million annually in
government ﬁnancing,
which includes money
from states.
The GOP effort to

block Planned Parenthood’s funds was prompted by videos, secretly
recorded by anti-abortion
activists, showing the
organization’s ofﬁcials
discussing their provision
of tissue from aborted
fetuses to researchers.
“The real question is
can McConnell convince

the rest of Congress to
not hold the federal government hostage as a few
politicians try to score
cheap political points
by cutting health care
for millions,” said Dawn
Laguens, executive vice
president of the Planned
Parenthood Action Fund,
the group’s political arm.

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By Alan Fram

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Congress wants to
make your taxes
more complicated
Bloomberg View

“Simplify, simplify,” urged Thoreau. No friend
of taxation, he might have been envisioning the
modern Internal Revenue Code. At roughly 3.7
million words, it’s getting more complex by the
day — and a few companies would like to make it
even worse.
Consider a scheme Congress may soon take
up for some individuals applying for the earned
income tax credit, once a relatively straightforward process. If a report from the Senate Appropriations Committee is heeded, what was once
a one-page form for claiming the credit could
expand to four or ﬁve pages, padded out by pointless and bewildering new questions.
The likely result would be that those eligible
would either forgo their credits or hire tax services for help. As it happens, H&amp;R Block, the largest
such service, helped write a report recommending
the changes. Complexity has its advocates.
This plan is doubly wrongheaded.
Most obviously, it would further complicate a
process that already costs more than $30 billion
annually, wastes billions of hours of taxpayers’
valuable time, facilitates fraud and drives Americans — rich and poor — to the brink of madness
every April.
Worse, it would undermine one of the tax
system’s few good ideas. The earned income tax
credit — an earnings subsidy for the working
poor — boosts incomes, reduces poverty, encourages work, rewards companies for creating jobs,
and narrows inequality. It should be substantially
expanded, not made needlessly difﬁcult to administer.
Yet that’s exactly what Congress is mulling.
Advocates say the extended application will combat fraud. But it’s hard to see how: It turns out
that paid services aren’t any better than individual
ﬁlers when it comes to making “overclaims.” And
if the newly convoluted forms leave taxpayers
scratching their heads, good luck: Thanks to years
of budget cuts, the Internal Revenue Service has
had to reduce its workforce by 11 percent and its
training budget by 83 percent since 2010, so don’t
expect anybody to answer the help line.
Services like H&amp;R Block, aimed at ordinary
taxpayers, are unknown in much of the civilized
world. They shouldn’t be necessary in the U.S.,
either. Congress could simplify things enormously
by reducing tax rates while eliminating most of
the exclusions, exemptions, deductions and credits that have clogged up the code for years.
Politically impossible? Maybe so. In the realm
of the more feasible, lawmakers could at least give
the IRS the resources it needs to prevent fraud
and help taxpayers navigate their increasingly
dense returns. It wouldn’t hurt, either, for the IRS
to issue the annual reports on tax complexity that
the law requires, and which the agency has failed
to do with any regularity. You never know: Bringing useless complexity to the attention of Congress might concentrate minds.
But if that can’t be done, please don’t make the
system any worse than it already is by crippling
the earned income tax credit — one of the very
few features of the code that works.

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

THEIR VIEW

Second chances are as American as baseball
Hall of Fame, non-violent
I love baseball. I have
drug offenders belong at
since I was a kid. And I’m
home with their families.
lucky to be married to a
I work in Washington,
woman who loves the game
D.C. — the City of Second
as much as I do.
Chances. Just ask any politiWe recently attended the
cian caught cheating on his
86th annual Major League
John
taxes, exposed for campaign
All Star Game in Cincinﬁnance fraud, or busted in
nati. As part of the opening Kiriakou
Contributing an affair with an intern or
ceremonies, the Cincinnati
Columnist
underage page. They usuReds honored what they
ally go before the voters, hat
called the Franchise Four,
in hand, issue a mea culpa,
the four greatest players in
and get on with their lives.
the team’s history: Johnny Bench,
Most of the time charges are
Joe Morgan, Barry Larkin and
never even ﬁled. That’s true even
Pete Rose.
in high-proﬁle security cases.
Bench, Morgan and Larkin are
Former Deputy Secretary of
members of professional baseball’s
State Richard Armitage, for examHall of Fame. Rose, on the other
ple, was never charged for leaking
hand, is banned from baseball for
life. Despite being one of the great- the name of CIA operative Valerie
Plame, whose husband had written
est hitters and toughest players in
a critical commentary of the last
the game’s history, he may never
Bush administration.
get this distinction. Why?
Scooter Libby, a former aide to
Because he gambled. Rose admitVice President Dick Cheney, was
ted in the late 1980s that he’d bet
convicted of four felonies related
on baseball games, including his
to the case. But thanks to Presiown. Even though he bet on his
dent George W. Bush commuting
team to win, and never threw a
his sentence, Libby didn’t serve a
game, this broke baseball’s rules.
minute in prison.
The 50,000 fans in CincinThe same can’t be said for the
nati went completely crazy when
3,278 Americans serving life senRose’s name was called. Hearing
tences without parole for non-viothem chant “Hall of Fame! Hall
lent crimes that can be remarkably
of Fame!” as he walked out onto
petty — including stealing a jacket
the ﬁeld, I thought about second
or serving as the middleman in a
chances.
$10 marijuana transaction. Don’t
Just as Pete Rose belongs in the

they deserve a second chance?
What about the hundreds of
thousands of people currently
incarcerated as non-violent drug
offenders? They make up half of all
federal inmates. Shouldn’t they get
a second chance too?
A second chance for them
might mean keeping their families intact, saving their jobs, and
sustaining their contributions
to their communities. It might
mean allowing them to maintain
a relationship with their children
or keep employing people in their
businesses. It would also save
taxpayers a bundle instead of wasting money to lock up people who
aren’t dangerous.
Politicians always seem to get
second chances. Just ask David
Vitter, Donald Trump and Mark
Sanford about that.
And Pete Rose — who still autographs baseballs with “I’m sorry I
bet on baseball” — sure seems to
have gotten a second chance from
the people of Cincinnati, if not
from Major League Baseball.
It’s time to extend average
Americans the same courtesy. Just
as Pete Rose belongs in the Hall of
Fame, non-violent drug offenders
belong at home with their families.
OtherWords columnist John Kiriakou is an
associate fellow at the Institute for Policy
Studies. He’s a former CIA counterterrorism
officer and former senior investigator for the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
September 2, the 245th day
of 2015. There are 120 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On September 2, 1945,
Japan formally surrendered
in ceremonies aboard the
USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay,
ending World War II.
On this date:
In 1666, the Great Fire of
London broke out.
In 1789, the United
States Treasury Department was established.
In 1864, during the Civil
War, Union Gen. William T.
Sherman’s forces occupied
Atlanta.
In 1901, Vice President
Theodore Roosevelt offered
the advice, “Speak softly
and carry a big stick” in a
speech at the Minnesota
State Fair.
In 1924, the Rudolf Friml
operetta “Rose Marie”
opened on Broadway.
In 1935, a Labor Day
hurricane slammed into the
Florida Keys, claiming more
than 400 lives.
In 1945, Ho Chi Minh
declared Vietnam an independent republic. (Ho died
on this date in 1969.)
In 1963, Alabama Gov.
George C. Wallace pre-

vented the integration of
Tuskegee High School by
encircling the building with
state troopers. “The CBS
Evening News” with Walter
Cronkite was lengthened
from 15 to 30 minutes,
becoming network television’s ﬁrst half-hour nightly
newscast.
In 1969, in what some
regard as the birth of the
Internet, two connected
computers at the University
of California, Los Angeles,
passed test data through a
15-foot cable.
In 1972, Dave Wottle of
the United States won the
men’s 800-meter race at the
Munich Summer Olympics.
In 1986, a judge in Los
Angeles sentenced Cathy
Evelyn Smith to three years
in prison for involuntary
manslaughter for her role
in the 1982 drug overdose
death of comedian John
Belushi. (Smith served 18
months.)
In 1998, a Swissair
MD-11 jetliner crashed off
Nova Scotia, killing all 229
people aboard.
Ten years ago: A National Guard convoy packed
with food, water and
medicine rolled into New
Orleans four days after Hurricane Katrina. Scorched by

criticism about sluggish federal help, President George
W. Bush toured the Gulf
Coast and met with state
and local ofﬁcials, including
New Orleans Mayor Ray
Nagin; at one point, Bush
praised FEMA Director
Michael Brown, telling him,
“Brownie, you’re doing a
heck of a job.” During a
live TV beneﬁt concert,
rapper Kanye West went
off-script to sharply criticize
President Bush, saying he
“doesn’t care about black
people.” The Labor Department reported the August
unemployment rate was
4.9 percent, a four-year low.
Machinists at Boeing Co.
went on a nearly monthlong strike. Actor Bob Denver, 70, died in WinstonSalem, N.C.
Today’s Birthdays:
Dancer-actress Marge
Champion is 96. Former
Sen. Alan K. Simpson,
R-Wyo., is 84. Actorcomedian Chuck McCann
is 81. Former United States
Olympic Committee Chairman Peter Ueberroth is 78.
Actor Derek Fowlds (TV:
“Yes, Minister”; “Yes, Prime
Minister”) is 78. Singer
Jimmy Clanton is 77.
Rhythm-and-blues singer
Sam Gooden (The Impres-

sions) is 76. Rhythm-andblues singer Rosalind
Ashford (Martha &amp; the
Vandellas) is 72. Singer Joe
Simon is 72. Pro and College Football Hall of Famer
Terry Bradshaw is 67. Basketball Hall of Famer Nate
Archibald is 67. Actor Mark
Harmon is 64. Former Sen.
Jim DeMint, R-S.C., is 64.
International Tennis Hall
of Famer Jimmy Connors
is 63. Actress Linda Purl
is 60. Rock musician Jerry
Augustyniak (10,000 Maniacs) is 57. Country musician Paul Deakin (The Mavericks) is 56. Pro Football
Hall of Famer Eric Dickerson is 55. Actor Keanu
Reeves is 51. International
Boxing Hall of Famer Lennox Lewis is 50. Actress
Salma Hayek is 49. Actor
Tuc Watkins is 49. Actress
Kristen Cloke is 47. Actress
Cynthia Watros is 47.
Rhythm-and-blues singer
K-Ci is 46. Actor-comedian
Katt Williams is 42. Actor
Michael Lombardi is 41.
Actress Tiffany Hines is 38.
Rock musician Sam Rivers
(Limp Bizkit) is 38. Actor
Jonathan Kite is 36. Actress
Allison Miller is 30. Rock
musician Spencer Smith is
28. Electronic music DJ/
producer Zedd is 26.

�LOCAL/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 2, 2015 5

Student

Welsh-Americans. The
organization encourages the exchange of
From Page 1
artists and scholars
between Wales and
Few is a also memNorth America and
ber of Alpha Mu Beta, supports Welsh-Amera social sorority found- ican groups in their
ed on the principles of relations with corpoacademic excellence,
rate, philanthropic
leadership developand governmental
ment, civic engageorganizations in North
ment, sisterhood and
America and in Wales.
the development of
The Welsh Society
personal spirituality.
of Central Ohio, estabNWAF is a nonproﬁt lished in 1948 as The
membership organiza- Columbus Welsh Singtion with volunteer
ing Society, fosters
ofﬁcers and directors
the appreciation and
in North America
preservation of Welsh
and Wales. It was
heritage and traditions
formed to provide a
and promotes the litlink between Wales
erature, poetry, music
and North Americans
and the arts of Wales
who share a common
for the beneﬁt and
interest in Welsh
education of members
culture, heritage and
of the general public.
preservation of the
Their Welsh Exchange
language. The founda- Travel Scholarship,
tion provides ﬁnancial established in 2013,
assistance, fellowships awards $500 to a stuand study grants and
dents participating
coordinates selected
in the University of
cultural and educaRio Grande’s Welsh
tional activities of
Study Abroad Program

Timothy D. Easley | AP

Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis, right, talks with David Moore after her office’s refusal to issue
marriage licenses at the Rowan County Courthouse in Morehead, Ky., on Tuesday. Davis has been
ordered to appear before a federal judge, who could order her fined or jailed.

Federal judge orders Ky.
clerk and her staff to court
By Claire Galofaro

David Moore and David Ermold, a couple for 17 years, then came in, demanding
to speak with Davis.
MOREHEAD, Ky. — A county clerk
“Tell her to come out and face the peowho invoked “God’s authority” as she
ple she’s discriminating against!” Ermold
deﬁed the U.S. Supreme Court yet again
shouted.
on gay marriage Tuesday refused to resign
“We’re not leaving until we have a
and now must face a federal judge who
license,” Ermold responded after she
could impose ﬁnes or send her to jail.
came out and told them to leave.
Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis turned
“Then you’re going to have a long day,”
away several gay and lesbian couples who the clerk replied.
sought marriage licenses — some for a
Davis then retreated behind a closed
ﬁfth time — even though the Supreme
door, sheltered from questions and rival
Court denied her last-ditch appeal the
demonstrations.
night before.
“Praise the Lord! ... Stand your ground,”
“To issue a marriage license which con- her supporters shouted, while the other
ﬂicts with God’s deﬁnition of marriage,
side called Davis a bigot and yelled: “Do
with my name afﬁxed to the certiﬁcate,
your job!” Ordered to move to the courtwould violate my conscience. It is not a
house lawn, each side tried to out-do the
light issue for me. It is a Heaven or Hell
other with chanting, hymn-singing and
decision,” she said through her lawyers.
sign-waving.
“I was elected by the people to serve as
Davis stopped issuing all marriage
the County Clerk. I intend to continue to licenses in June after the Supreme Court
serve the people of Rowan County, but I
legalized gay marriage across the nation.
cannot violate my conscience,” her stateGay and straight couples sued, saying
ment said.
she should fulﬁll her duties despite her
April Miller and Karen Roberts tried
personal religious faith, or step aside. U.S.
ﬁrst, trailed by dozens of television camer- District Judge David Bunning agreed and
as. A deputy clerk said no licenses would was upheld. Her Liberty Counsel lawyers
then asked the Supreme Court for what
be issued, and declined to make Davis
they called “asylum for her conscience.”
available.
Associated Press

8 AM

WEATHER

69°

2 PM

78°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

89°
63°
84°
62°
103° in 1953
47° in 1946

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

Trace
0.00
0.10
34.80
30.35

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:58 a.m.
7:58 p.m.
10:40 p.m.
11:25 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

Last

Sep 5

First

Sep 13 Sep 21 Sep 27

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

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

Major
3:22a
4:24a
5:23a
6:18a
7:11a
7:59a
8:44a

Minor
9:36a
10:37a
11:36a
12:04a
12:57a
1:46a
2:32a

Major
3:50p
4:51p
5:50p
6:45p
7:37p
8:24p
9:09p

Low

Moderate

High

Minor
10:04p
11:05p
---12:32p
1:24p
2:12p
2:56p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Sept. 2, 1935, the Labor Day
Hurricane hit southern Florida. Winds
reached 200 mph, and the barometer
at Matecumbe Key plummeted to
26.35 inches. As the storm moved
northward, it killed more than 400
people.

Mostly sunny, warm
and humid

Partly sunny, warm
and humid

Moderate

High

Lucasville
87/67

Very High

Portsmouth
88/67

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
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 12.50 -0.33
Marietta
34 16.05 none
Parkersburg
36 21.32 -0.45
Belleville
35 12.75 -0.45
Racine
41 12.91 -0.46
Point Pleasant
40 24.99 -0.44
Gallipolis
50 13.56 +0.14
Huntington
50 25.65 -0.27
Ashland
52 34.61 -0.36
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.14 -0.42
Portsmouth
50 15.70 -0.40
Maysville
50 34.30 -0.10
Meldahl Dam
51 13.90 none
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

85°
62°

Mostly sunny and
remaining warm

Mostly sunny and
nice

Marietta
88/65

Murray City
86/67
Belpre
89/67

Athens
87/65

85°
61°
Partly sunny

Today

St. Marys
89/66

Parkersburg
88/65

Coolville
87/66

Elizabeth
89/65

Spencer
88/65

Buffalo
88/66
Milton
88/67

Clendenin
88/65

St. Albans
90/66

Huntington
88/66

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
66/51
90s
80s
70s
Billings
60s
92/57
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
72/60
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
79/63
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Chihuahua
Cold Front
93/63
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
88/67

Ashland
87/67
Grayson
88/67

MONDAY

84°
60°

Wilkesville
86/65
POMEROY
Jackson
87/67
87/66
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
88/67
87/67
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
86/68
GALLIPOLIS
88/67
89/67
87/68

South Shore Greenup
87/67
87/66

64
300

Logan
86/65

McArthur
86/67

Very High

Primary: ragweed/grass/other
Mold: 1227

0 50 100 150 200

Full

Partly sunny, hot and
humid

Waverly
86/66

Pollen: 120

Low

MOON PHASES

87°
65°

Chillicothe
87/66

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

SUNDAY

88°
67°

Adelphi
87/65

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

SATURDAY

90°
67°

2

BBT (NYSE) —35.33
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.13
Pepsico (NYSE) — 91.33
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.49
Rockwell (NYSE) — 107.55
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 17.86
Royal Dutch Shell — 50.54
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 26.15
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 63.87
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.93
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.12
Worthington (NYSE) — 24.29
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Sept. 1, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Do your part!
Recycle this newspaper!
FRIDAY

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

Primary: cladosporium

Thu.
6:59 a.m.
7:56 p.m.
11:23 p.m.
12:33 p.m.

THURSDAY

A.M. fog; otherwise, warm with some sun today.
Mainly clear tonight. High 88° / Low 67°

ALMANAC

AEP (NYSE) — 53.01
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.00
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 101.16
Big Lots (NYSE) — 46.86
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 44.78
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 42.47
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 5.32
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.271
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.24
Collins (NYSE) —79.25
DuPont (NYSE) — 50.02
US Bank (NYSE) — 40.29
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.89
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 54.62
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 61.46
Kroger (NYSE) — 33.85
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 83.85
Norfolk So (NYSE) —75.71
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.58

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

85°

LOCAL STOCKS

Charleston
89/67

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
87/68

Minneapolis
85/70
Chicago
91/71
Denver
91/61

Toronto
89/65

Montreal
86/66
New York
92/74

Detroit
88/69
Washington
93/75

Kansas City
89/72

City
Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
87/64/t
Anchorage
64/48/s
Atlanta
92/73/pc
Atlantic City
85/72/s
Baltimore
92/70/pc
Billings
92/57/pc
Boise
86/54/pc
Boston
90/70/s
Charleston, WV 89/67/pc
Charlotte
94/71/pc
Cheyenne
86/59/pc
Chicago
91/71/pc
Cincinnati
88/68/pc
Cleveland
86/68/pc
Columbus
86/69/pc
Dallas
94/76/s
Denver
91/61/pc
Des Moines
88/71/pc
Detroit
88/69/pc
Honolulu
90/78/t
Houston
88/72/pc
Indianapolis
91/70/pc
Kansas City
89/72/s
Las Vegas
99/75/s
Little Rock
94/73/pc
Los Angeles
79/63/pc
Louisville
93/73/s
Miami
91/77/pc
Minneapolis
85/70/pc
Nashville
93/72/s
New Orleans
91/75/t
New York City
92/74/s
Oklahoma City
92/70/s
Orlando
92/75/t
Philadelphia
93/74/s
Phoenix
102/81/pc
Pittsburgh
87/67/pc
Portland, ME
85/66/s
Raleigh
90/69/pc
Richmond
93/71/pc
St. Louis
94/75/s
Salt Lake City
92/69/s
San Francisco
72/60/pc
Seattle
66/51/r
Washington, DC 93/75/pc

Thu.
Hi/Lo/W
84/63/pc
58/49/r
91/73/c
87/74/s
92/70/pc
78/51/pc
68/48/pc
83/64/pc
88/67/t
93/71/pc
85/55/t
89/69/pc
89/67/pc
86/65/pc
89/68/pc
95/76/pc
88/59/pc
90/72/c
87/68/t
88/78/r
90/73/t
91/70/pc
89/72/pc
96/71/s
96/73/pc
78/65/pc
92/74/s
92/77/pc
88/73/s
92/71/s
88/76/t
93/74/s
93/71/pc
91/74/t
94/74/s
98/78/t
87/66/pc
85/59/t
91/71/pc
92/71/pc
94/74/s
89/64/s
72/59/pc
65/51/sh
93/76/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
92/73

High
Low

El Paso
97/71

99° in Needles, CA
26° in Boca Reservoir, CA

Global
High
Low

Houston
88/72
Monterrey
91/70

GOALS

Miami
91/77

118° in Al Ahsa, Saudi Arabia
4° 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

TODAY

through the Madog
Center. Awardees
write an article for
the WSCO newsletter,
Dragon Tales, following their return from
Wales.
The Welsh Society
of Greater Cincinnati
is a membership organization seeking to
promote and preserve
the Welsh heritage in
Butler County, Ohio.
Their travel scholarship was established in
2012 and is awarded
to a student(s) participating in the Welsh
Travel Abroad Program through the University of Rio Grande’s
Madog Center. An
award of $500 is given
to a student(s) each
fall and the student(s)
present a talk at a
spring meeting of the
WSGC.
For more information about Rio
Grande’s Madog Center for Welsh Studies,
visit www.rio.edu/
madog .

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wahama to
induct 5 into
Athletic HOF
By Gary Clark

ﬁnished his cage career
with over 900 points
scored. Barnitz was an
MASON, W.Va. — A
Honorable mention Allunique group of former State basketball and was
Wahama High school
nominated as a McDonathletes will become
alds All-American while
the sixth edition of the
being a leader on one of
Wahama High School
the best Falcon basketAthletic Hall of Fame
ball teams in WHS histhis weekend.
tory at 16-4 in 1979-80.
The ﬁve newly
Barnitz was also a
selected inductees will
two year starter at quarbe honored during half- terback for Wahama
time festivities at the
football and is conWahama versus Watersidered one of the top
ford football game with signal callers to guide
the ofﬁcial induction
the WHS grid program.
ceremony scheduled for He was President of
the following evening at the Wahama National
the annual Hall of Fame Honor Society and is
Banquet.
currently a successful
This year’s inductees part owner of Bob’s
will be a unique group
Greenhouse. He is a
that includes the second Trustee of Soul Harvest
Falcon female athlete to Church and has three
join the HOF circle, the children and eight
ﬁrst set of brother’s to
grandchildren with his
be honored and three
wife, Lisa, of 34 years.
members who will join
their father’s in the cov- JASON KING
eted White Falcon Hall
Jason King graduof Fame circle.
ated ﬁfth in his graduThe 2015 members
ating class at Wahama
of the Wahama Athletic in 1996. He earned
Hall of Fame will be
11 varsity letters with
Eric “Rick” Barnitz, a
four in baseball, four
1980 Wahama graduate; in football and thee in
Jason King, a 1996 Fal- basketball. Jason was
con grad; Kara Sayre, a an integral member
2003 WHS alum; Tim
of the White Falcons
Sayre, a 1977 WHS
ﬁrst ever state chamgraduate and Troy
pionship during the
Tucker, a 1987 Bend
1996 baseball season.
Area grad.
He assembled some
Kara Sayre will
impressive career stabecome the second
tistics on the diamond
female athlete along
with a .402 batting
with 2013 inductee,
average, 124 runs
Lori Bumgarner Zusscored, 140 hits, 50
pan, to join the HOF
extra base hits and 20
with Rick Barnitz
home runs. In 1995
entering the WHS orga- Jason set a Falcon
nization with brother,
school record in baseJohn Barnitz, a 2014
ball with 54 hits. He
inductee.
was a two time BaseThree of the 2015
ball All-State selection
future Hall of Fame
in 1995 and 1996 and
members will be joinwas chosen as the Alling their fathers in the
State team captain
Wahama Athletic Hall
in 1995. He was also
of Fame. Kara Sayre
a 1996 USA TODAY
will join father Dwight
honorable mention
“Keith” Sayre, a 2014
baseball All-American
inductee, in the group
in 1996. King also was
with Tim Sayre and
an honorable mention
Troy Tucker entering
All-State selection as
the HOF with 2010
a linebacker in 1995
inaugural father selecduring his high school
tions Ralph Sayre and
sports career.
Luther Tucker.
Jason went on to star
in baseball at the UniERIC “RICK” BARNITZ
versity of Rio Grande
Eric “Rick” Barnitz
where he lettered four
graduated third in his
consecutive years. He
class from Wahama in
was a recipient of the
1980. Rick was a foot2000 NAIA baseball
ball and basketball star Scholar Athlete award
where he earned six let- and was a 1999 honorters in the two sports.
able mention American
Barnitz led the White
Mideast Conference
Falcons in scoring his
baseball selection.
sophomore, junior and
senior seasons and
See HOF | 10
For Ohio Valley Publishing

URG women edge WV-Tech
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

MILLIGAN COLLEGE,
Tenn. — Just when it
appeared as if the University
of Rio Grande was ready to
give away a win, the RedStorm received an unexpected gift which allowed them to
emerge victorious after all.
An own goal against West
Virginia University-Tech
with just over three minutes
remaining in overtime gave
Rio a 3-2 triumph in Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference women’s soccer
action, Monday afternoon,
at Milligan College’s Anglin
Field.
The RedStorm, who won
for the second straight time,
improved to 2-1 overall and
Courtesy photo
1-0 in league play.
Rio Grande’s Kasey Crow (2) sprints upfield away from
The Golden Bears, who
West Virginia Tech’s Alexandra Klein during Monday
were
making their KIAC
afternoon’s Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
opener for both teams in Milligan College, Tenn.
debut, slipped to 1-1 overall.

Wednesday, September 2
Volleyball
Southern at Meigs, 7:15
Gallia Academy at Coal Grove, 6:45
Golf
River Valley/Ripley at Southern, 4 p.m.
Thursday, September 3
Volleyball
Southern at South Gallia, 7:15
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.
Alexander at Meigs, 7:15
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 7:15
River Valley at Vinton County, 7:15
Hannan at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Golf
Warren/Piketon at Gallia Academy, 4 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford, 4 p.m.

Senior Kasey Crow (Chillicothe, OH) sent a crossing
pass toward the goal, but the
ball deﬂected off of Tech’s
Alex Blumer and past goal
keeper Martha Reyna for the
game-winner with 3:21 left in
the extra session.
Rio Grande appeared to
have the victory well in hand
in regulation time when
sophomore Cassidy Young
(Okeana, OH) headed in a
corner kick by Crow (Chillicothe, OH) with 11:34 left to
give head coach Callum Morris’ squad a 2-0 lead.
WVU-Tech answered,
though, roaring to life with a
pair of goals in a span of 3:54
to tie the game.
Brianna Enger got the
Bears on the board when she
found the back of the net off
of a crossing pass by teammate Alexis Howell with 6:01
See URG | 10

Donald Lambert | OVP Sports

River Valley junior Angel Toler hits the ball back over the net during the Lady Raiders’ loss against Federal Hocking in Bidwell on Monday.

Fed Hock downs Lady Raiders
By Donald Lambert

the deﬁcit and won the second
game 26-24.
River Valley came out the gates
BIDWELL, Ohio — It just
early in Game 3 with three straight
wasn’t their night.
points from senior Courtney
The River Valley volleyball team Smith. The Lancers ﬁred back to
fell to Federal Hocking in three
even things up at 4-4. The ﬁnale
straight games at home on Monday saw six ties and six lead changes
night in Gallia County.
before Federal Hocking took ﬁrm
The Lady Raiders (1-3) kept
control of the game.
it close with the visiting Lancers
The Lady Raiders were behind
early in the ﬁrst game before the
by as much as 11, before trying
Maroon and Gold started to slip
to mount a comeback. The home
away, leading by as many as eight
team scored six consecutive points
points in the middle of Game 1.
to get within ﬁve points, but the
Federal Hocking took the ﬁrst
Lancers ﬁnished the job and won
game 25-17.
the third game 25-18.
The Silver and Black came back
Jacey Walter led the Lady Raidstrong in the second game, leading ers with 10 service points, followed
the Lancers by as many as nine
by Courtney Smith with six service
points at one point in the contest
points. Ashley Gilmore and Jessi
— including three service points
Steele each had four points, while
by junior Angel Toler. Federal
Angel Toler had three points. Alex
Truance and Brianna McGuire
Hocking came roaring back from

elambert@civitasmedia.com

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

Wednesday, August 2, 2015 s Page 6

both ﬁnished with 2 points apiece.
“We executed extremely well. We
had windows of brilliance for the
fourth game in a row and then just
utter failure,” River Valley coach
Denise Toler said. “Our defense
seemed to be off kilter all night
and that hurt us a little bit. Things
that were deﬁnitely gimmes, like
our passing game, was completely
out of whack. During the second
and third sets, we started passing
a little bit better and communicating, but the girls just seem to get
down a little bit and they seem to
lose it.”
Toler added that the Lady Raiders are currently working on getting mentally better about being
down in games and being able to
bounce back.
Donald Lambert can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2106

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

Yard Sale

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

Huge yard sale
old Chester School
Sept. 4-5
9am-1pm
Yard Sale Fundraiser
for the Spay Neuter
Assistance Program of
Gallia County 9am to 5pm
Sept 3rd,4th &amp; 5th
@ 1031 Second Ave, Gallipolis
Yard Sale: 2902 Spruce Ave,
Pt. Pleasant, WV. Fri &amp; Sat.
Sept 4th &amp; 5th.

$$$$$$$$$

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

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

$$$$$$$$$

Yard Sale: Pine Grove Church,
Friday Sept 4 and Sat. Sept
5th. Off Leon Baden Rd.
Home Improvements
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 Pomeroy
is NOW HIRING
Full Time &amp; Part Time
Cook/Dietary Aid Apply Within.
Call 740-992-6606
Arbors at Pomeroy
NOW HIRING
Full Time &amp; Part Time STNAs
or CNAs, Part Time &amp; PRN
LPNs. Apply Within.
Call 740-992-6606

60583312

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

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Yard Sale
3 Family Yard Sale
Sept. 4 &amp; 5 ( Fri &amp; Sat) 9-5
2416 State Rt 218, Gallipolis
lots of items
(Big reduction sale Sat. 12-3)
4 Family Yard Sale across the
railroad tracks from Beale
School. Thurs &amp; Fri Sept 3rd
and 4th. From 9 am to 6 pm.
5 Family Garage Sale
Sept. 3rd &amp; 4th at
4466 State Route 554
women's, juniors, girls,
men's &amp; boys, nursing scrubs,
comforter set, rugs, household
items, tv stands, toys &amp; lots of
misc.
5 Family Yard Sale. Men and
Women, Girls, Boys &amp; Baby
Clothes and misc. Thurs &amp; Fri,
Sept 3rd, 4th &amp; 5th. 2720 Lincoln Ave.

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

Wednesday, September 2, 2015 7

Apartments/Townhouses

Legal Secretary needed in
Gallipolis. Part-time, with the
possibly of Full time If interested please send Cover
Letter and Resume to Blind
P.O. Box 121, 825 3rd
Ave.Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

Manager needed at Meigs
Industries, Inc. to oversee
operations of janitorial and
mowing services staffed by
persons with developmental
disabilities. Supervisory,
budgeting, maintenance
janitorial experience and
degree in Business
Management/MaintenanceTechnical or related field
preferred. Valid driverҋs
license with good driving
record required. Please send
resume to Meigs Industries,
Inc. at 1310 Carleton Street,
P.O. Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio
45779 by September 9th.

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Available Sept. 1, 2015
1 Bedroom apartment
dishwashers and
washer / dryer
no smoking- no pets
$500 month- $500 deposit
references needed on
State Route 588
740-446-2034 before 8pm
or 419-359-1768

TASC of Southeast Ohio
(TSO) is a private not-for-profit
outpatient program providing
outpatient services for adult
and adolescent populations in
need of non-residential substance abuse treatment services, has the
following positions open:
Counselors, Vinton and Meigs
Offices: Successful candidates must have demonstrated
extensive experience in the
treatment and care of consumers who have substance
abuse issues. Bachelorҋs degree in social work, addiction
studies, and/or other human
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8 Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Harrison, Bryant K-State ready to name QB starter
tied at Cliffside
By Stephen Hawkins
Associated Press

Staff report

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Gary Harrison and Fred
Bryant are tied for the lead in the overall standings at the Cliffside Senior Men’s Golf League held
every Tuesday at Cliffside.
Currently, through 18 weeks of play, the overall
standings are: Gary Harrison and Fred Bryant
(147), Chuck Marshal (142), Connie Harvey
(129), Jeff Sneadker (129), Don Corbin (127),
Jim Bowman (126), Clarence Tucker (125), Mike
Corbin (124) and Ron Ellis (124).
A total of 48 players took part in the Aug. 25
round with a maximum of 15 points being available to each winner of each division. The top three
players of each division were (all scores are net):
Division 1: Craig Barnes (67), Fred Bryant (70),
and Tom Meadows (70). Division 2: John Collins
(66), John Blankenship (68), and Mike Blain (69).
Division 3: Rick Mowrey (67), Bob Smith (68),
and Jim Bowman (70).
The league is played for 22 weeks with 21 weeks
of completion and the last week as a scramble and
awards luncheon. Each player plays their own ball
and competes in one of three divisions. Winners
are awarded in each division and each player earns
points for the overall competition.

Roger Goodell,
Tom Brady await
‘Deflategate’ ruling
NEW YORK (AP)
— NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell
and New England
Patriots quarterback
Tom Brady attended
last-minute settlement
talks between the NFL
and its players union
Monday before a judge
announced he would
decide the dispute over
deﬂated footballs with a
ruling in a day or two.
Everyone involved
“tried quite hard” to
reach a deal in the controversy that has hung
over professional football since New England
easily won the AFC title
game in January, U.S.
District Judge Richard
Berman said in federal
court in Manhattan.
However, Berman
said: “We did not reach
a settlement. … In some
cases, it doesn’t happen
and this is one of those
cases.”
Absent a compromise, Berman will
have to either afﬁrm
or throw out Goodell’s
decision in July to
uphold a four-game
suspension of Brady.
The NFL concluded the
quarterback colluded
with two Patriots ball
handlers to deﬂate foot-

balls to gain an edge
in a 45-7 victory over
the Colts. The NFL
Players Association has
accused the league of
handling the discipline
unfairly for Brady, who
has denied any role in
the scandal nicknamed
“Deﬂategate.”
Speaking at a hearing
that lasted less than ﬁve
minutes, Berman noted
that senior executives
from the league and the
players union who had
not attended several
previous settlement
talks joined more than
an hour of negotiations
Monday morning.
Giants president and
co-owner John Mara
took part, as did free
agent kicker Jay Feely,
Berman said. Feely is a
member of the union’s
executive committee
and Mara is chairman
of the NFL’s executive
committee that oversees
labor matters.
“For us it reinforces
the desire and the need
for an independent arbitrator in these matters
of personal conduct,”
Feely said outside
court. “But we understand Tom’s position
and I think the process
will work itself out.”

Kansas State coach Bill Snyder
knows which of his four quarterbacks will be the Wildcats’ new
starter.
Snyder plans to name Jake
Waters’ replacement during his
campus news conference Tuesday.
Texas Tech’s Kliff Kingsbury
is taking a different approach in
revealing whether Davis Webb or
Patrick Mahomes will be starting
again. The Red Raiders’ depth
chart lists the quarterback as Webb
or Mahomes after both started
multiple games last season.
“They’ve had a great camp. …
Both guys deserve to be the starter,” Kingsbury said Monday during
the ﬁrst Big 12 coaches teleconference of the season.
When asked who would start
Saturday against Sam Houston
State, Kingsbury said one of them
will “jog out there for the ﬁrst
snap, and that will be it.”
At K-State, three players emerged
from the spring competing for the
starting spot, and a junior college
transfer joined the mix during preseason practice. Snyder said it was
a competitive camp and that he has
faith in all four quarterbacks.
Some more details from the ﬁrst
Big 12 coaches’ call of the season:

EARLY STARTERS
Second-ranked TCU, fourthranked Baylor and Oklahoma State
don’t have to wait until Saturday to
open the season, but all are on the
road.
TCU is at Minnesota on Thursday, when coach Gary Patterson
faces old friend and fellow rural
Kansas native Jerry Kill. Oklahoma
State plays Thursday at Central
Michigan, and Baylor goes to SMU
on Friday.

But coach Mike Gundy warns there
will still be some growing pains.
“He’s been a really interesting player,
because he’s only had three games in
his career and there’s been a lot of talk
about where he’s going,” Gundy said.
“We want him to learn to play within
himself, and not try to do too much.”
— Charlie Strong has a better feel
and comfort level with his players
going into year two at Texas — and
the players better know their head
coach. But the preparation level is
much the same.
IMPACT FRESHMEN
“Even this time a year ago, you
While freshman running back
were prepared because you had all
Joshua Thomas is in line to play
preseason to get ready to go play,” he
at Iowa State because of need, and said. “You’re just playing a different
“hasn’t disappointed,” coach Paul
opponent.”
Rhoads said freshman Carson Epps
A year ago, it was North Texas in
is probably more impressive since
Strong’s debut. This season, it’s a
he has gotten noticed among a tal- Saturday night game at No. 11 Notre
ented group of receivers.
Dame.
Freshman receiver Jovon Duran— Bob Stoops is ready to see Oklate could have an early impact at
homa’s offense in Saturday’s opener
West Virginia. Coach Dana Holagainst Akron. Stoops hired offensive
gorsen said Durante has outstand- coordinator Lincoln Riley to bring
back the kind of Air Raid offense that
ing speed and route-running ability. Durante also likely will be part the Sooners helped make popular in
the Big 12.
of the return game.
“I’m very pleased with it, but that’s
only practices and scrimmages,” he
EXTRA POINTS
said.
— Mason Rudolph made a quick
— New Kansas coach David Beaty
impression as Oklahoma State’s startsaid the team’s conﬁdence in new quaring quarterback the ﬁnal three games
last season, including a comeback vic- terback Montell Cozart is evidenced
with him being elected a captain.
tory over Oklahoma and a bowl win.

NFL’s toughest division has changes ahead
CINCINNATI (AP) —
Anytime there’s a debate
about the NFL’s toughest
division, teams in the
AFC North are quick
to point out the playoff
appearances.
Yep. Nobody can top
them.
The AFC North has
sent more teams to the
playoffs than any other
division in the last seven
years — 15 in all. Last
season, the Steelers won
the division at 11-5, and
Cincinnati (10-5-1) and
Baltimore (10-6) got wild
cards.
And that’s pretty much
the norm.
During the last seven
years, the North has sent
at least two teams to the
playoffs six times. It got
three teams into the postseason in 2011 and again
last season. For overall
excellence, it’s tough to
argue with those ﬁgures.
“You see the difference when we play other
teams in other divisions,”
Bengals receiver Marvin
Jones said. “It’s deﬁnitely
not as hard as our division and the games we
play. When you play outside our division, you see
how much easier it is to
have some success.”

There are some notable
changes this time around,
especially in Pittsburgh,
where defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau and
safety Troy Polamalu are
gone, and Michael Vick is
in town as a backup quarterback.
Here’s a look at the
AFC North:
ANOTHER THREEPEAT?: The division got
three teams into the playoffs last season in part
because of the scheduling
rotation. It played the
NFC South, which was
one of the worst divisions
in NFL history; no team
had a winning record. It
also got to play the AFC
South with Jacksonville
(3-13) and Tennessee
(2-14).
The North went 12-3-1
against the NFC South
and 10-6 against the AFC
South. This year, it plays
the West divisions, meaning it will be tougher
to get enough wins to
qualify as a wild card.
RAVENS RELOAD:
Baltimore was the only
AFC North team to
win a playoff game last
season, beating the Steelers before blowing a
14-point lead and losing
to eventual Super Bowl

champion New England.
The Ravens set franchise records for points
and yards last season.
Receiver Steve Smith,
playing his ﬁnal season,
is Joe Flacco’s top target
with Torrey Smith gone
to San Francisco. There’s
no Ray Rice controversy
hanging over the team
this year.
“Overall, I think we’ve
got a lot to build off of
and a lot to feel good
about,” Flacco said.
CURTAINS FOR THE
STEELERS’ DEFENSE:
LeBeau, Polamalu, cornerback Ike Taylor and
end Brett Keisel are
gone from a defense that
slipped last season. The
offense ﬁnished No. 2
in the league and should
be one of its best again,
even with center Maurkice Pouncey sidelined
by a broken ankle. Vick
was brought in as Ben
Roethlisberger’s backup
after Bruce Gradkowski
suffered a hand injury.
Receiver Antonio Brown
is an All-Pro.
But in Pittsburgh, it
always comes down to
defense, and this one has
a lot to prove.
After the defense struggled during a preseason

loss to Buffalo, coach
Mike Tomlin said: “We
continue to be slow starters and that’s disturbing.
Some of those guys, quite
frankly, look like the walking dead.”
GET BACK TO THE
BENGALS AT PLAYOFF
TIME: No other team
has its reputation tied
to one game as much as
Cincinnati. The Bengals
have reached the playoffs
each of the last four seasons and lost the opening
game each time. They
haven’t won a playoff
game since the 1990
season, the sixth-longest
streak of postseason
futility in NFL history.
They’ve invested a lot
of money in keeping the
team intact during that
four-year run, but many
contracts are up after
this season, making it
one of those crossroads
moments.
“It’s been four years
in a row and I think if
it doesn’t happen this
year, then it’s probably
never going to happen,”
running back Jeremy
Hill said. “Getting to the
playoffs every year, that’s
cool and all, but we want
to get to the next level. I
think it’s now or never.”

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, September 2, 2015 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

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

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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Lady Eagles win Cliffside quad
By Bryan Walters

two of the top ﬁve scores individually, but still came up three players
short for a team tally.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — A good
Bethany Johnson of ZTHS won
day to visit.
medalist honors after ﬁring a
The Eastern girls golf team came 13-over par round of 49. Teammate
away with top honors Monday
Lauren Ragland also shot a 55 for
night during a 23-stroke victory in the Lady Pioneers.
a non-league quad match at CliffAllie Grueser and Kylee Tolliver
side Golf Course in Gallia County. both paced EHS with identical 54s,
The Lady Eagles posted ﬁve of
followed by Kate Edwards with a
the top 11 scores overall en route
56. Kate Hawk rounded out the
to winning team total of 225.
winning team tally with a 61, while
Meigs was second overall with a
Kate Ridenour and Sarah Bunce
248, followed by host Gallia Acad- added respective rounds of 64 and
emy with a 248. Zane Trace had
79 for the Lady Eagles.

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Danette Davis led the Lady
Marauders with a 58, followed by
Kendra Robie with a 60 and Shaylin Mitchell with a 63. Sarah Curl
and Mersadies Markins also posted
identical efforts of 67 for MHS.
Breanna Justice led the Blue
Angels with an overall runner-up
effort of 53, followed by Molly
Fitzwater with a 70 and Natalie
Wilcoxon with a 75. Sydney Crothers wrapped up the GAHS tally
with a 79.
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2101.

Eastern junior Katelyn Edwards chips on to the second green at the
Meigs County Golf Course, on August 25.

Eagles win TVC
URG men’s soccer cruises past USF
Hocking golf match
By Randy Payton

for each player, while Paulino had
assists on the second for both.
Cobb, a junior from London,
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — CalEngland, gave the RedStorm a 1-0
lum Cobb had the ﬁrst hat trick
lead off an assist by sophomore
of his collegiate career, while
Matheus Morgan (Vila Velha,
teammates Joao Paulo Antonio
Brazil) with 14:51 gone in the
and Luiz Filho scored two goals
opening half, before Antonio - a
each to lead the University of
sophomore from Sao Paulo, BraRio Grande in a 10-1 rout of
zil - scored twice within a span of
the University of Saint Francis,
3:12 to extend the advantage to
Sunday afternoon, at Marshall
3-0 with 16:05 remaining in the
University’s Hoops Family Field
half.
at the Veterans Memorial Soccer
Freshman Eduardo Zurita (BarComplex.
celona, Spain) made it 4-0 just
Junior Willian Paulino (Sao
three minutes later and Filho - a
Paulo, Brazil) added a career-high senior from Sao Paulo, Brazil
four assists, while junior Pau
- closed the ﬁrst half blitz with
Rodriguez (Barcelona, Spain) had two markers in a span of 3:09 to
a goal and an assist and senior
extend the cushion to 6-0 at the
Kimathi Kaumbutho (Nairobi,
break.
Kenya) had two assists in the win
Saint Francis avoided a shutout
for the No. 5-ranked RedStorm,
on Sam Schlegel’s second goal of
who improved to 3-0.
the season with 19:39 left in the
The Cougars slipped to 0-2 with contest, but Rio responded with
the loss.
four goals over the ﬁnal 12:26 to
Rio Grande raced to a 6-0 halfset the ﬁnal score.
time lead, with Antonio and Filho
Cobb found the back of the net
scoring both of their markers
for the second time off an assist
prior to the intermission. Kaumby junior Jeremy de Hoog (Rotbutho assisted on the ﬁrst goal
terdam, The Netherlands) and

For Ohio Valley Publishing

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

GLOUSTER, Ohio — The Eastern boys golf team
came away with a 23-stroke victory over the ﬁeld Monday night during a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division match at Forest Hills Golf Course in Athens County.
The Eagles posted ﬁve of the top eight scores overall en route to a winning total of 181. Trimble was
second with a 204, while Miller was third with a tally
of 243. Federal Hocking had no team score and only
one golfer at the event.
Ryan Harbour led Eastern and also shared medalist honors with Trimble’s Cacey Moore after the pair
posted identical efforts of 8-over par 42.
Jasiah Brewer was next for EHS with a 43, while Ty
Bissell and Kaleb Honaker respectively rounded out
the winning tally with rounds of 44 and 52. Garrett
Chalfant and Jacob Brewer also had efforts of 54 and
58.
Phillip Arnold followed Moore for THS with a 47,
while Korbin Cruse and and Jason Benner respectively ﬁred rounds of 56 and 59. Zach Bragg also shot
a 66 for the Tomcats.
Collin Pergeon paced the Falcons with a 56, followed by Blaine Needham with a 57 and Brody Dutiel
with a 63. Adam Williams also ﬁred a 66 to wrap up
the MHS tally.
Nathan Kidder shot a 48 for the lone Lancers’ score.

sophomore Danny Carroll (Liverpool, England) booted home a
deﬂection just 82 seconds later to
push the lead to 8-1.
Paulino assisted on each of the
ﬁnal two scores - by Rodriguez at
80:39 and by Cobb with 27 seconds remaining.
Rio Grande ﬁnished with a 32-6
edge in shots, including a 17-3
advantage in shots on goal.
Freshman Ben Martinez (Montpellier, France) collected two
saves in the victory. The lone goal
he allowed came after a scoreless
stretch of just over 250 minutes to
begin the season.
Jesse Flores had seven stops in
a losing cause for the Cougars.
Rio Grande will return to action
on Friday against Westmont (CA)
College in the opening round of
the RedStorm Soccer Classic.
Point Park University will face
Vanguard (CA) University in the
opening contest.
Game times and the game site
is expected to be announced late
Monday.

Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

HOF
From Page 6

KARA SAYRE
Kara Sayre is the second Wahama female athlete to join the Wahama
Athletic Hall of Fame.
Kara was a 2003 graduate of Wahama where
she earned eight varsity
letters in basketball and
softball. She compiled a
.591 batting average her
senior season on the softball diamond and stole
43 of 45 bases during her
senior season. She was
an All-State shortstop in
softball and an honorable
mention All-State selection in basketball. She
also participated in the
prestigious North-South
softball game. Sayre was
a dependable athlete
who sported a signiﬁcant
quality of never missing
a game during her four

chosen as the Tri-County
Athlete of the Year .
He was a four year
starter in baseball at the
Bend Area School and
earned ﬁrst team AllState honors in 1976. He
owns the state record
of 50 baseball games
played as a freshman and
was successful in 50 of
52 stolen base attempts
in 1976. Sayre played
baseball for three years
at Glenville State College
and following graduation has earned his
Master’s Degree +30 and
TIM SAYRE
has taught school for 33
Tim Sayre earned 10
years in Wood County.
varsity letters a Wahama
in baseball, basketball and He has coached boys’
football before graduating basketball, girls’ basketball, golf and football for
in 1977. Sayre was the
14 years.
co-captain of the 1977
football team and caught
50 passes that season. His TROY TUCKER
800 yards receiving durTroy Tucker graduing his senior season is
ated from Wahama in
believed to be the second 1987 and earned seven
most receiving yards in
varsity letters in football
Wahama football history. and baseball. Tucker was
During the 1977 school
the football captain on
year Tim was a Special
the ﬁrst ever Wahama
All-State Honorable Men- grid team to advance
tion selection in football, to the post-season in
an All-Tourney pick in
1986. He was named to
basketball in and was
the ﬁrst team All-State

year athletic career at
Wahama.
Kara was a member
of the Wahama National
Honor Society with a
4.08 GPA and President
of the FBLA in addition
to being selected as the
WHS prom queen in
2003. She was co-captain
of the softball team at
Glenville State College
and was honorable mention on the All-West
Virginia Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference.

team and was selected to
participate in the annual
North-South All-Star
football game. Troy was
also a Special Honorable
Mention pick in 1985 and
was a member of the ﬁrst
team on the All-Little
Kanawha Conference
football team in 198586. In baseball, Tucker
posted impressive batting average statistics of
.476 as a senior, .314 as a
junior and .343 as a sophomore. He was a Special
Honorable Mention AllState baseball selection
in 1987. He was also a
member of the Wahama
National Honor Society.
Tucker was a member
of the West Virginia Tech
football team in 1987. He
was an honor graduate
from Marshall University
in 1992 and earned his
Master’s Degree from
Muskingum College in
2008. During his professional career he has been
a teacher, coach, athletic
director, assistant principal and principal.
Gary Clark is a sports
correspondent for Ohio Valley
Publishing.

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60554222

remaining and Olivia Manthobang scored the equalizer with 2:07 left to play
thanks to an entry pass from
Shelby Swiney.
Neither team managed a
shot in the overtime period
before the deﬂection which
produced the match’s ﬁnal
marker.
Sophomore Kristin Garn
(Morrow, OH) recorded ﬁve
saves in goal for Rio, which
outshot the Golden Bears,
11-10.
Reyna stopped three shots
in a losing cause for Tech.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Sunday at Davenport (Mich.) University.
Kickoff is set for 11 a.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

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