<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2195" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/2195?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T23:32:09+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="12097">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/bac30d3f0f13521f0d950685ccc89e7f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>22280a373949658a76df24a5b2e9570a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8037">
                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

High court misses
chance on religious
freedom ... Page 4

Mostly cloudy.
High near 82. Low
around 62... Page 2

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Local spring sports
action... Page 6

Billie H. Allen, 94
Rosanna I. Simmons, 78
Douglas Alan Wikoff, 43
50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 75

Middleport Council approves director’s position
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — After
months of discussion and discord among Middleport Village
Council members, the position
for a new economic development
director has been established.
At Monday night’s meeting, a
third and final reading of an ordinance to include the position
passed by a split vote. Voting
in favor were council members
Richard Vaughan, Roger Manley, Doug Dillon, Penny Burge

and Sharon Older, with Emerson
Heighton voting “no.”
The ordinance provides for 20
hours of work per week at a cost
of $15 an hour. As required by
law, the position was advertised
and currently two applications
have been received.
The subject of hiring an economic development director
came up last fall after Fred Hoffman made application for such a
position with the village and has
remained a matter of discussion
over the past five months. Now

that the ordinance has been given a final reading with passage,
and the solicitation of applications for the job has been completed, the expectation is that
some action on an employee for
the job will be forthcoming.
Meeting with council were
Don Vaughan, there to discuss
FEMA regulations, and Jared
Hittle, an ODNR representative,
to answer questions regarding
FEMA regulations on local properties, flood plain, regulations
regarding improvements and the

expense FEMA regulations put
on residents.
Vaughan contended that the
regulations discourage fixing
up property, mentioning specifically the former Vaughan grocery in Middleport that he has
been working on getting opened
again, and what he has encountered along the way of remodeling in order to abide by the 50
percent rule. That rule and the
cost of flood insurance, he said,
means that he will not be opening the grocery store as he had

previously announced.
The 50 percent rule pertains
to not spending more than half
as much as the value of the property for the improvement.
Asked what the village can do
about the FEMA requirements,
Mayor Mike Gerlach said there is
nothing that can be done at this
level, that it must go the federal
level.” He suggested writing to
congressmen about concerns, and
to be sure of the accuracy of facts
when presenting information.
See COUNCIL | 3

Southern Passes
State Special
Education Review
Sentinel Staff Report

Submitted photos

ABOVE, Ohio Association of Garden Clubs State President Mary
Lee Minor spoke on the positive characteristics of floral designs
at the recent meeting of Region 11 gathering of gardeners held at
the Syracuse Community Center. AT RIGHT, Using herbs and other
plants for a healthy and happy home atmosphere was the theme
of a talk by Rebecca Wood of Hopewood Holistic Health and United
Plant Savers Goldenseal Sanctuary.

RACINE — The Southern Local School District recently underwent “Prong 2” of its statewide on-site review for
federal programs and Title VI-IDEA Special Education
programs, with both programs being found to be compliant.
Last year, Southern was 95 percent compliant in all areas. As a result, the Southern team wrote an improvement
plan that earned 100 percent compliance in 2014.
A letter from the Office of Exceptional Children stated,
“We commend your district’s hard work and clearance of
the IDEA monitoring. You have satisfied all the requirements of the prong two evaluation. Congratulations for
your hard work!”
Southern Superintendent Tony Deem commended the
Special Education staff, the general education staff and
the administration for doing a great job and having all records in order.
See REVIEW | 3

Region 11 gardeners gather at Community Center
Submitted copy

SYRACUSE — Ohio Association of Garden Clubs’ state president Mary Lee Minor spoke on
the positive characteristics of floral designs while judging arrangements in the flower show. It was
part of the Region 11 Ohio OAGC
meeting held recently at the Syracuse Community Center.
Attending the regional meeting
were gardeners from Meigs, Gallia, Vinton and Washington counties who were welcomed by Shirley Hamm, Meigs County contact
chairman.
In her judging, Minor commented on construction and stillSee GARDENERS | 3

Submitted photo

Rep. Bill Johnson, center, was presented an IFDA Thomas
Jefferson Award by Mark S. Allen, (left) president and CEO
of IFDA, and IFDA Board Chairman Tom Zatina, president of
McLane Foodservice Inc.

Pat Holter of the Chester Garden Club took best of show in the flower show
held as a part of the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs Region 11, meeting
held at the Syracuse Community Center.

Community comes together
to rescue trapped pup
By Amber Gillenwater
agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — It’s an iconic image that many of us remember from cartoons and television shows in our youth:
A firefighter comes to the aid of a cat stuck in a tree.
See LUCKY | 3

AT LEFT, this one lucky dog was not only pulled from certain death inside a culvert Monday evening on Bulaville Pike, but was also
adopted by the local McCoy family, who took this friendly pooch home after her rescue. AT RIGHT, neighbors on Bullaville Pike,
with the help of deputies Jason Brown and Richard Harrison, and Chris Summers of the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office, who operated a backhoe, came together Monday evening to rescue a community dog who had been stuck in a culvert for more than a day.

Johnson receives free
enterprise award
Staff reports
GDTnews@civitasmedia.com

WASHINGTON — U.S.
Rep. Bill Johnson, R-Ohio,
has been named as a recipient of the 2014 Thomas
Jefferson Award by the
International Foodservice
Distributors Association
(IFDA).
The
award
honors
the legislator’s work to
strengthen the free enterprise system. During
each Congress, IFDA
presents the Thomas Jefferson Award to senators
and members of Congress
who demonstrate their
commitment to increasing
economic opportunity and
reducing government regulation. The award is based
on voting records during
the 113th Congress on issues critical to the growth
of the food service distribution industry and our nation’s overall economy.
“Rep. Johnson has taken
positive votes on legislation to support job growth,
the private sector and free
market principles. The
Thomas Jefferson Award
is the food service distri-

bution industry’s way of
recognizing and thanking
legislators who are committed to the Jeffersonian
vision of a strong free enterprise system with limited government involvement in the economy,”
said IFDA President and
CEO Mark S. Allen. “Our
member companies are
pleased to have this opportunity to recognize the
work that Johnson and all
of the Thomas Jefferson
Award recipients are doing in Washington to enact
policies that will return our
nation to prosperity.”
Recipients of the award
supported IFDA’s position
on at least 70 percent of six
House votes deemed critical to the food service distribution industry. These
included votes on the regulations from the Executive
in Need of Scrutiny Act
(HR 367), which requires
Congress to approve all
new major regulations and
the Authority for Mandate
Delay Act (HR 2667) to
postpone the employer
mandate of the Affordable
See AWARD | 3

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Ohio Valley Forecast

Meigs County Community Calendar

Today: A chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 10 a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 82. Light
east wind. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent. New
rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except
higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Tonight: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm
before 3 a.m., then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 3 a.m. Cloudy, with a low around 62. Southeast wind 3 to 5 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of
an inch possible.
Thursday: Showers and thunderstorms likely, then
showers and possibly a thunderstorm after 1 p.m. High
near 71. South wind 5 to 13 mph. Chance of precipitation
is 80 percent. New rainfall amounts between a quarter
and half of an inch possible.
Thursday night: Showers and possibly a thunderstorm before 10 p.m., then showers likely. Low around
49. Chance of precipitation is 80 percent. New rainfall
amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except
higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Friday: A chance of showers after noon. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 63. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Friday night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 44.
Saturday: Partly sunny, with a high near 67.
Saturday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 44.
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 69.
Sunday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 45.
Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 70.

Thursday, May 15
POMEROY —The Meigs County
Retired Teachers will meet for lunch
at noon at Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
Call (740) 992-3214 two days in advance for number to attend. Speaker
will be Mike Bartrum, Meigs County
commissioner, with an update for senior citizens in the county regarding
current issues.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 52.23
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.18
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 103.66
Big Lots (NYSE) — 39.73
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 47.56
BorgWarner (NYSE) —60.84
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 14.27
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.500
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.18
Collins (NYSE) — 79.79
DuPont (NYSE) — 67.69
US Bank (NYSE) — 40.53
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.92
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 73.47
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 54.62
Kroger (NYSE) — 46.59
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 57.54
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 97.58
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.25
BBT (NYSE) — 37.90

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 25.32
Pepsico (NYSE) — 87.23
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.79
Rockwell (NYSE) — 120.69
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.58
Royal Dutch Shell — 79.77
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.23
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 79.14
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.43
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.73
Worthington (NYSE) — 38.69
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions May 13, 2014, 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.

Visit us at

www.mydailysentinel.com

Saturday, May 17
POMEROY — The fourth annual

Meigs County Historical Society golf
scramble fundraiser will be 9 a.m.
at the Meigs County Golf Course,
Wills Hill. The event is a four-person
scramble. A-B-C-D players will draw
the morning of the scramble. Cost
is $40 per player. For more information, call the historical society at
(740) 992-3810.
Monday, May 19
HUNTINGTON TWP. — Huntington Township trustees will meet

at 7 p.m. at the township garage.
Tuesday, May 20
BIDWELL — Modern Woodman
of America, Camp 6335, dinner meeting, 5-7 p.m., Wounded Goose Restaurant, 14728 Ohio 554, Bidwell.
Birthdays
MIDDLEPORT — Henry Clatworthy will observe his 90th birthday on
May 19. Cards may be sent to him
at 764 South Third Avenue, Middleport, Ohio 45760.

Meigs County Church Calendar
Special Singing
LONG BOTTOM — Faith Full Gospel Church, Ohio
124 in Long Bottom, will host special singing and preaching each Friday.
Meigs Cooperative Parish events
POMEROY — The Meigs Cooperative Parish hosts a
variety of events and service projects available through-

out the week at the Mulberry Community Center. Some
of those are as follows: Meals at the Mulberry Community Center — 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday.
Parish Shop — 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Monday-Friday.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.-noon Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11 a.m. Tuesday-Friday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m. and 5-7 p.m. Tuesday and
Thursday.

Meigs County Local Briefs
RACO’s yard sale
RACINE — Racine Area
Community Organization
(RACO) will be holding
its spring yard sale at Star
Mill Park on Wednesday,
May 14, from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m., and Thursday, May
15, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
All proceeds from this yard
sale will go for scholarships
for Southern High School
seniors, Class of 2015. All
three shelter houses will
be used. For more information, contact Kathryn Hart
at 949-2656.
Relay for Life
POMEROY — There
will be a Relay for Life
team captains meeting on
Thursday, May 25, at 5:30
p.m. at the Meigs County
Library, Pomeroy Branch.
Light refreshments will be
served. During the meeting
information will be provided to and support for new
and returning teams will be
offered. Team captains are
encouraged to turn in any

completed luminary orders
at the meeting. The planning committee will meet
immediately following the
team captains meeting.
Southern
Memory Books
RACINE — The Southern High School Class
of 1964 has compiled a
memory book for its 50th
class reunion project. Biographies of the 64 students
who graduated that year,
along with many pictures
and momentos, are included. The cost for the spiralbound and professionally
printed book is $20. Those
interested in getting a copy
are asked to contact Carol
Reed, 949-2910, or Sharon
Cottrill, 992-4275.
Health Department
Change
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department has extended
hours for public visits. On
the first Tuesday of each
month, the office will be
open until 6 p.m. Services
available will include nursing (immunization clinic,
etc.) environmental health
and vital statistics. The du-

ration of the extended services will depend on public
use. The WIC clinic will
also be serving clients on
each Tuesday from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m. beginning today.
Call EIC for an appointment at (740) 992-0392.
Highway Detour
MEIGS COUNTY —
Beginning May 12 County
Road 7 (old SR 733), located between U.S. 33 and
SR 124, will be closed to allow Meigs County highway
crews to perform a tree
trimming operation. The
road will be closed Monday through Friday, 7 a.m.
to 3:30 p.m. Weather permitting, the road will reopen May 20. The pfficial
detour is U.S. 33 to Ohio
833 back to Ohio 733.
Red Cross CPR Class
CHESHIRE — AEP,
Gavin Plant, is holding a
free CPR class at their facility in Cheshire on June
14. The class will run from
7:30 a.m. until 4 p.m. and
will include CPR and AED
adult and child, as well as
First Aid. Upon completion of the class, students
will be certified. Lunch will

be provided. Seating is limited and pre-registration is
required. To register call
the American Red Cross
of Southeastern Ohio at
(740) 593-573.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct an
immunization clinic Tuesday from 9-11 a.m.and 1-3
p.m. Children must be accompanied by a parent or
guardian and bring shot
records.
Alumni association
annual dinner
RACINE — The Racine/Southern Alumni Association annual dinner
will be held at 6:30 p.m.
on Saturday, May 24. The
event has been relocated
to the Racine First Baptist
Church Outreach Center
on Fifth Street (next to the
former Racine Elementary
School/Racine Village offices building) to accommodate for Southern High
School
commencement
event rescheduling. Tickets are available at the Racine Home National Bank
in Racine.

Official: Two killed at West Virginia coal mine
WHARTON, W.Va. (AP)
— Two workers died after
they were trapped as the
ground failed at a West
Virginia coal mine with a
history of safety violations,
federal and state officials
said Tuesday.
The ground failure occurred just about 8:45
p.m. Monday, trapping the
workers, safety agency officials told The Associated
Press in emails. The miners’ bodies were recovered,
and safety personnel were
on the site of Brody Mine
No. 1 in Boone County,
about 50 miles south of
Charleston.
No additional injuries or
trapped workers were reported, spokeswoman Les-

Holzer is proud to
announce that
Khai Vu, DO,
Board Certified
Internal Medicine
Physician, has joined
our team of highly
skilled professionals.

lie Fitzwater Smithson of
the West Virginia Office of
Miners’ Health, Safety and
Training said in an email.
Preliminary indications
show that a coal burst was
responsible, according to
state officials and mine
owner Patriot Coal.
Coal bursts are violent
failures of ribs, roofs or
floors in underground
mines, according to descriptions from the federal
Mine Safety and Health
Administration and the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Monday’s incident involved the
ground, MSHA spokeswoman Amy Louviere told
The Associated Press in an
email.

The Daily Sentinel
Civitas Media, LLC
(USPS 436-840)

SWITCHBOARD: 740-992-2155
Annual local subscription price for The Pomeroy Daily Sentinel is $250. Please
call for more information on local pricing. Full-price single-copy issues are $1.

Prior to joining Holzer, Dr. Vu was with Columbus Neighborhood
Health Center in Columbus, Ohio. He received his medical education
at Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine in Athens, Ohio.
Dr. Vu completed his internship at BiCounty Community/Detroit
Riverview Hospital, Warren, Michigan, and his residency at

CONTACT US
EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-992-2155
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

CLASSIFIED ADS:
740-992-2155

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Jessica Chason
740-446-2342
Ext. 25
jchason@civitasmedia.com

NEWSROOM:
Charlene Hoeflich
740-992-2155
Ext. 12
Sarah Hawley
740-992-2155
Ext. 13

ADVERTISING:
Sarah Thompson
740-992-2155
Ext. 15
Brenda Davis
740-992-2155
Ext. 16

Riverside Methodist Hospital and Doctors Hospital in Columbus,
Ohio. Dr. Vu is Board Certified in Internal Medicine.
Dr. Vu is accepting new patients at our Holzer Meigs location at
88 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, OH. Call 1-855-4HOLZER to
schedule an appointment today!

OBITUARIES:
740-992-2155
SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES:
740-992-2155

111 Court Street.
Periodical postage paid in Pomeroy, Ohio

60505361

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Daily Sentinel,
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

The bursts — a hazard in
mining for decades, according to the CDC — cause
coal to be ejected into the
mine with enough energy
to injure or kill miners.
St. Louis-based Patriot
said in an emailed statement
that Monday’s burst occurred during retreat mining
operations — when pillars
that support the roof are collapsed and removed from a
completed area of work.
In October, the federal
safety agency designated
Brody Mine as a pattern
violator, meaning it had
repeatedly broken federal
health and safety regulations in the previous year.
Patriot said in a statement at the time that it believed the mine didn’t qualify for the status and that it
intended to contest it. The
statement did not address
the mine’s safety record.
During MSHA’s most
recent review period from
April 1, 2013, to March 31,
the mine was cited for 192
safety violations, including
33 for high or reckless disregard for miners’ health
and safety. The mine also
received four citations this
month for violations including damaged rollers or
other conveyor belt components.
Since January, six accidents have occurred at
the mine, including one
incident in which a miner’s
finger was caught in machinery and a portion had
to be amputated, according
to MSHA’s online records.
On March 11, gas ignited
in an entry of a section of
the mine as workers were
extracting coal, according
to MSHA. No miners were
injured.
The remaining four accidents involved muscle
strains and other minor
incidents.

�Wednesday, May 14, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 3

Official: Addiction epidemic filling Ohio prisons
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The
state’s painkiller abuse epidemic is
thwarting efforts to reduce the inmate
population through changes to sentencing laws, the Ohio prisons director said
Tuesday during budget testimony.
Judges trying to keep low-level offenders out of prison are forced to take action
after seeing an offender relapse several
times, the prisons official, Gary Mohr,
told the Senate Finance Committee.
“They kept coming back, and at some
point in time, judges said, ‘I have to vacate this probation and send you to prison,’” Mohr said.
The Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction is asking lawmakers for an extra $14 million this year and $40 million
next year to reopen closed units at two
prison, take steps to address violence at
the Toledo Correctional Institution, add
parole officers because of the growing
population and boost medical and mental
health staffing.

Of that, $4.2 million this year and $8.5
million next year would pay for an additional 400 beds statewide in halfway houses and local corrections facilities to keep
people close to home and out of prison.
Ohio currently has 50,250 inmates,
2,500 more than estimates from a 2011
law meant to reduce the inmate population, Mohr said.
The state has too many low-level offenders, with 42 percent of inmates serving less than a year and nearly one in every four inmates being “truly nonviolent”
prisoners, he said.
“Many of these offenders could be
more effectively punished in a community setting, thereby remaining employed,
paying taxes, and supporting their
families, as opposed to sending them to
prison at a cost of nearly $23,000 a year,”
Mohr said.
There’s reason for optimism in Ohio’s
big cities as prison alternatives like halfway houses are working, with the need

Council

for such programs highest in rural areas,
he said.
The most recent state data says 680
people died of heroin overdoses in 2012,
up from 426 deaths in 2011, a 60 percent
increase. The heroin increase also drove
the overall number of fatal drug overdoses to a record of 1,272 deaths in 2012, up
from 1,154 the previous year.
A provision in the 2011 sentencing law
tied judges’ hands when it came to imprisoning first-time low-level offenders,
and that alone would not have reduced
the population that much, said Mark
Schweikert, director of the Ohio Judicial
Conference. But he said there’s no question the painkiller and heroin epidemic is
countering the intentions of the law.
“In some cases, it’s an attempt to save
a person’s life,” Schweikert said of sentences imposed by judges. “They continue to use and the only way they can keep
the person drug-free for a considerable
period of time is send them to prison.”

AP photo

Gary Mohr, Ohio prisons director, testifies before the Senate Finance Committee about the challenge of reducing the
state’s inmate population Tuesday in Columbus. Mohr says
the state’s painkiller abuse epidemic is forcing judges to revoke many offenders’ probation as they relapse.

Review

From Page 1
At that point, Councilman
Vaughan said there had to be something that could be done by the village if nothing more than “looking
the other way.”
To that Gerlach responded, “You
want us to break the rule?”
Turning to the proposed ordinance on the lowering of water/
sewer rates, Vaughan, backed by
several other council members, said
they want a complete report on how
water and sewer funds are being
spent, why there is so much overtime, whether supplies are being
wasted and what can be done to decrease expenses, yet keep the village
in compliance with state regulations

regarding sewer/water operations.
Vaughan then asked for income
and expenses of the operation for the
past six months so that council members can get a clear picture of income
and expenses before final changes are
made to the water/sewer ordinance.
He also asked that copies of a proposed
ordinance be provided to council members prior to the next meeting.
The mayor again emphasized the
importance of an income flow that
is needed to maintain and properly
operate the water and sewer system
of the village, to pay back on the
loan used for improvements, and
to stay in compliance with state
regulations. He said that if council
follows through on decreasing the
rates, the system will be broken.

From Page 1
In addition to the Title VIIDEA school age review, Title
VI-IDEA preschool and gifted
programs were evaluated for
compliance. Southern’s Special
Education and Gifted programs
were 100 percent compliant.
The Title programs were also
found to be fully compliant as
per federal guidelines.
Scott Wolfe, Special Education director, commended all of
his teaching staff, the general
education staff, support staff,
and fellow administrators.
“I cannot emphasize how
much cooperation it takes to be

successful,” Wolfe said. “We do
have a great team here at Southern and that is what makes it
work so well.”
Debra Buck, of the Region 16 state support team,
worked with Southern teachers
throughout the past two years
to work on writing uniform,
compliant IEP’s across the special education spectrum. Buck
praised the Southern team for
a job well done and for taking
steps to be compliant prior to
the review.
Last year, Southern submitted
a corrective action plan to OEC
for approval of its systemic corrections and Individual correc-

tions. After a review of recent
IEP’s and ETR’s the plan met all
objectives with full compliance.
Special Education teachers
recognized in the district were
Courtney Lively, Patty Cook,
Amy Roush, Courtney Ginther,
Autumn Lisle, Chris Stout, Lisa
Schenkelberg, Scott Cleland,
Rebekah Hawranick, Rachel
Cornell, Carolee Richards and
Marcia Weaver. Also part of the
team last year were Erin Lisle,
Martie Rose, Patty Taylor, and
Jessica Sikorski. Educational
aides are Stephanie Allen, Brittany Hill and Leanna Davis.

Gardeners
From Page 1
life designs, both of which
use a minimal amount of
plant material in arrangements using household
items, where the principles
of artful design are used.
She suggested means of
improving each arrangement and complimented
the positives, noting the
creativity and talent of local
people using flowers from
the area. A retired public
school teacher and faculty
for exhibitor and judges
schools offered twice yearly
by the Ohio Association,
announced that a new

handbook is currently being readied for print and
can be ordered at the website, www.oagc.org.
Pat Holter, of Chester,
who celebrates five decades of winning with her
arrangements in local, regional and state competitions, was awarded best
of show for her design
in a vibratile class using
yellow chrysanthemums,
leaves and twisted vines
which required sound due
to movement or vibrations
within the design.
Using herbs and other
plants for a healthy and
happy home atmosphere

was the theme of a talk by
Rebecca Wood of Hopewood Holistic Health
and United Plant Savers
Golodenseal
Sanctuary.
She discussed how to use
herbs and described them
as offering safe, effective
and economical help to humans and pets, and their
environments, cautioning
that care needs to be taken
since some natural materials may be hazardous
in some instances. Wood
was introduced by Shelia
Curtis of Meigs County,
Region 11 director.
Reports were given on
garden clubs by the direc-

tors of each county, and
numerous activities being
done throughout the area
were noted by Regional
Secretary Sara Spurlock
and treasurer Sharon
Hayes. Following committee reports, statewide
events were highlighted by
OAGC President Minor,
and state vice presidents
Peggy Case and Geri Rea.
Special events upcoming
include a journey to Ireland
and a weeklong Nature
Study Camp at a northern
Ohio lake. The state will
also offer educational and

fun activities at the Exhibitors and Judges School,
with classes in growing,
identifying, showing and
sharing plants. In August,
the annual convention
will feature Native American culture and activities
at Mohican State Park
Lodge. Readers interested
in these activities, in joining a local group, or in gardening, beautification and
nature can check the website, www.OAGC.org
Past state president and
accredited judge Janet Bolin, of Rutland, was recog-

nized for her services to
the local, regional and state
groups, as were Shelia Curtis, also a judge, and Suzy
Parker, judge emeritus.
A coffee hour with
homemade pastries was
served preceding the program, and at noon there
was luncheon prepared by
volunteers of the Syracuse
Community Center.
Sales tables, ceramics
vendors, door prizes and
a silent auction sent many
gardeners home with new
plants and useful decorative items.

Award
From Page 1
Care Act. The complete list of votes can
be found on the IFDA web site at www.
ifdaonline.org/TJ-Awards.
The program, introduced in 1992, was
inspired by Thomas Jefferson, who in his
first inaugural address said, “A wise and
frugal government … shall leave men …

free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not
take from the mouth of labor the bread it
has earned. This is the sum of good government.”
The award itself is a custom-crafted replica of Jefferson standing in his Memorial,
framed by his four pillars of prosperity:
agriculture, manufacturing, commerce
and navigation.

Lucky
From Page 1
Only this time, it was a
dog stuck in a culvert.
A small community of
neighbors on Bullaville
Pike just a few miles outside of Gallipolis came
together Monday evening,
along with Gallia County
sheriff’s deputies, to rescue
Daisy, the neighborhood
stray dog who wandered
into a culvert, traveled
about 100 feet or more
and became wedged in the
small drain under several
inches of concrete.
Daisy, a friendly beagle
who wanders around the
small community collecting scraps and chasing rabbits, may have been after
a bunny this weekend as
she found her way into the
drain.
Neighbors reported seeing her Friday and, by
Monday afternoon, heard
her cries for help as she
struggled up the culvert,
becoming more wedged inside the tight space.
The community worked
together to try to locate
the dog and to open the
end of the drain in an attempt to get her out, but
were unsuccessful. By 5
p.m. Monday, they contacted the Gallia County
Sheriff’s Office, who later
brought in a backhoe and
some manpower, including volunteers with the Rio
Grande Fire Department,
to dig out the stuck pooch.
Over several hours, with
the aid of neighbors and

Holzer is proud to
announce that
Scott Mitchell,
MD, CMD,
Board Certified
Palliative Care Physician,
has joined our team
of highly skilled
professionals.

Dr. Mitchell will be providing palliative care for our communities,
working closely with our Hospice and Cancer programs throughout
the Holzer system.

Gallia County Deputy Jason Brown pulls Daisy from the culvert just after midnight following hours of work Monday evening to rescue the trapped pooch.

law enforcement, the concrete above the culvert was
broken, a large ditch dug
and a length of pipe removed just after midnight
Tuesday, revealing Daisy’s
snout and just enough
room for volunteers to pull
her from the earth.
Despite being shaky and
wet, the beagle was in good
spirits as she was quickly
given some food and water
and greeted her rescuers.

By best estimates, the
pooch may have been stuck
in the culvert 24 hours or
more and, during the ordeal, one neighbor, Dorsil McCoy and his son,
claimed ownership of the
dog, who was taken to her
new home for a warm bath.
McCoy reported that
Daisy would remain under
the watchful eye of his family, but they may change
her name to “Lucky.”

Palliative care focuses on relieving and preventing the suffering of
patients. Unlike hospice, palliative medicine is appropriate for patients
in all disease stages, including those undergoing treatment for curable
illnesses and those living with chronic diseases, as well as patients
nearing the end of life.
Dr. Mitchell received his medical education at Marshall University
School of Medicine and the Marshall University Family Medicine
Residency program. Prior to joining Holzer, Dr. Mitchell served as
a Medical Director for four skilled nursing facilities and provided
inpatient physician services in addition to being the Assistant
Professor of Medicine at the Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine at
Marshall University.
Dr. Mitchell is Board Certified in Family Medicine, Board Certified in
Hospice and Palliative Care, and a Certified Medical Director by the
American Medical Director Association.
60502858

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

High court misses its chance on religious freedom
By E.J. Dionne
To understand why religious freedom
matters, put yourself in the position of
someone who is part of a minority faith
tradition in a town or nation that overwhelmingly adheres to a different creed.
Then judge public practices by how they
would affect the hypothetical you.
This act of empathy helps explain
why religious liberty in the United
States is such a gift. It is based, as
Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan
wrote in her dissent to Monday’s public
prayer decision, on “the breathtakingly
generous constitutional idea that our
public institutions belong no less to the
Buddhist or Hindu than to the Methodist or Episcopalian.”
Religious liberty will not disappear
because of the court’s 5-4 ruling that
the government of Greece, N.Y., could
begin its town board meetings with
prayers — even though, as Kagan put
it, “month in and month out for over a
decade,” they were “steeped in only one
faith,” in this case Christianity.
But the court majority not only failed
the empathy test but also lost the opportunity Kagan offered to find a balance
that would both honor religion’s role in
American public life and safeguard the
rights of those whose faith commitments
diverge from the majority’s.
The facts of the case are straightforward. As Justice Stephen Breyer noted
in his own dissent, from 1999 to 2010,
at more than 120 of Greece’s town
board monthly meetings, only four
opening prayers were delivered by nonChristians. The four exceptions, Breyer
pointed out, all “occurred in 2008,
shortly after the plaintiffs [in the case]

began complaining about the town’s
Christian prayer practice.”
The court ruled that the government
of Greece had not violated anyone’s
rights. “Ceremonial prayer,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority,
“is but a recognition that, since this nation was founded and until the present
day, many Americans deem that their
own existence must be understood by
precepts far beyond the authority of
government to alter or define and that
willing participation in civic affairs can
be consistent with a brief acknowledgement of their belief in a higher power,
always with due respect for those who
adhere to other beliefs.”
The town was justified, Kennedy argued, in drawing on clergy from houses
of worship within its boundaries, which
happened to be Christian. Greece’s nonChristians worship at congregations
outside its borders.
For Kagan, this was an inadequate
rationale, and she asked the essential
questions: Would Christians living in
a predominantly Jewish town feel their
rights were protected if all public functions were presided over by a rabbi
leading Jewish prayers? “Or assume
officials in a mostly Muslim town,”
she suggested, “requested a muezzin
to commence such functions, over and
over again, with a recitation” of a traditional Muslim blessing?
Nonbelievers (and others uneasy with
any link between religion and government) might fairly contend that putting
an end to all such public religious invocations is the simplest solution to these
difficulties. But Kagan was seeking a
middle way. She thus rejected “a bright
separationist line.” A town hall, she said,

“need not become a religion-free zone.”
Instead, “pluralism and inclusion … can
satisfy the constitutional requirement of
neutrality.”
And in insisting on the importance
of bringing in minority religious voices,
you might say that Kagan took faith
more seriously than did Kennedy. Religious expressions can never be merely
ceremonial, she wrote, because they are
“statements of profound belief and deep
meaning.”
Yes, they are.
In the years since the court’s 1962
decision banning government-directed
prayer in public schools, we have engaged in a fierce culture war over the
role of religion in our public institutions.
The school prayer decision has properly stood because it sought to protect
against a form of government coercion.
But friends of religion have charged that
driving all vestiges of faith from every
other corner of the public square was
itself exclusionary behavior.
Kagan’s pluralism principle would
avoid this by allowing citizens of all
faiths to be heard, and ways could be
found to apply it to nonbelievers. It lays
the groundwork for a compromise that
will be imperative as immigration and
declining affiliation render our country
more religiously diverse. Religion would
continue to have a place in our public
institutions, but they would have the obligation to respect differences over “profound belief and deep meaning.”
In contrast to a legal regime insufficiently alive to the rights of minorities
and dissenters, Kagan’s approach would
provide religion with a public role at
once more stable and more sustainable.
Its day will come.

Global warming and climate change
By Robert Samuelson
It would be healthy — in
the sense of promoting honesty — if every report warning of global warming and climate change (the two terms
are interchangeable) came
with the following disclaimer:
“Despite our belief that
global warming poses catastrophic threats to many of the
world’s 7 billion inhabitants,
we acknowledge that we now
lack the technologies to stop
it. The purpose of our analysis and policy proposals is to
create the political and economic conditions that foster
the needed technologies. But
there is no assurance that this
will happen, and much time
and money may be invested in
futile and wasteful efforts.”
I am not optimistic. Our
climate-change debates con-

fuse more than they clarify.
They follow a ritualistic script
that is now playing out again.
First came a downbeat
report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, an international
group of scientists set up by
the United Nations. It found
that global temperatures have
warmed for decades, that
man-made emissions are the
main cause (atmospheric
concentrations are said to be
the highest in 800,000 years)
and that the effects include
rising sea levels, melting ice
packs and more heat waves.
Next arrived the U.S. National Climate Assessment,
a study by 300 American experts that’s more alarming than
the IPCC report. It begins:
“Climate change, once considered an issue for a distant
future, has moved firmly into

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to be accurate. If you
know of an error in a story,
call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156.
Our main number is
(740) 992-2155.
Department extensions
are:
News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich,
Ext. 12
Reporter: Sarah Hawley,
Ext. 13
Advertising
Retail: Sarah Thompson,
Ext. 15
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
Circulation
Circulation Manager:
Jessica Chason, 740-4462342, Ext. 25
General
Information
E-mail:

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com
Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com
(USPS 436-840)
Ohio Valley Newspapers
Published Tuesday through
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated
Press and the Ohio Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address
corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Subscription Rates
Annual Civitas price for The
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel is
$250. Please call for more information on local pricing. Full
price single copy issues are $1.

the present.” Americans already suffer from global warming. Floods are more frequent;
wildfires are harder to control;
rainstorms are more violent.
Naturally, climate skeptics
(aka, “deniers”) denounced
the reports. The evidence
was exaggerated, cherrypicked or both, said Paul
Knappenberger and Patrick
Michaels of the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank.
Consider, they said, a contrasting study headed by a
Harvard researcher. It found
that heat-related deaths in
105 U.S. cities had declined
since the late 1980s.
The rhetorical ping-pong
— claim vs. counterclaim —
suggests a struggle for public opinion. Not really. Right
or wrong, the public already
believes in global warming.
A 2013 Pew poll found that
67 percent of Americans
see “solid evidence” that the
earth is warming. Though
that’s down from 77 percent
in 2006, the margin is still
large. Democrats are stronger
believers than Republicans
but mainly because Tea Party
support is low.
It’s useful for environmental groups to have global
warming “deniers” (and, of
course, behind them the sinister oil companies) as foils.
The subliminal message is
that once the views of these
Neanderthals are swept away,
we can adopt sensible policies to “do something” about
global warming.
The reality is otherwise.
The central truth for public
policy is: We have no solution.
From 2010 to 2040, the
U.S. Energy Information Administration projects global
emissions will increase almost 50 percent. About 80
percent of global energy
comes from fossil fuels (coal,
oil, natural gas), which are
also the major sources of
carbon dioxide emissions. At
present, we have no practical
replacement for this energy.
No sane government will
sacrifice its economy today
— by dramatically curtailing fossil fuel use — for the

uncertain benefits of less
global warming sometime in
the foggy future. (The focus
of the U.S. global warming
report on the present seems
aimed at bridging this gap.)
Worse, almost all the projected increases in global
emissions come from poorer
countries, half from China
alone. By contrast, U.S. emissions (and those of most rich
nations) are projected to stay
stable over the three decades.
Economic growth is slowing;
energy efficiency is increasing; and, in Japan and some
European countries, populations are declining. Because
poor countries understandably won’t abandon their efforts to relieve poverty, any
further U.S. emissions cuts
would probably be offset by
gains in China and elsewhere.
This dims their political and
environmental appeal.
The only real hope of disarming these conflicts is
new technology. As yet, no
magical fix has emerged.
Though increasing, solar
and wind power still represent a tiny share of global
energy. “Carbon capture and
storage” — pumping CO2
emissions from power plants
underground — has been
discussed for years. So far, it’s
not commercially viable.
Amid the rhetoric, there’s
enormous uncertainty about
how much warming will occur, what changes (for good
or ill) it will bring, and how
easily (or not) we can adapt.
My own oft-stated preference is for policies that might
dampen global warming but
would also address other
problems. The most obvious solution is a carbon tax
to help finance government
and stimulate energy-saving
technologies and new forms
of non-carbon energy. If these
technologies went global, the
gap between rich and poor
countries would narrow.
I do not claim this would
be popular or that the desired
technologies would materialize. But it’s our best bet and
would have the added virtue of
being honest.

Page 4
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014

Letter to The Editor
Dear Editor,
Great job West Virginia. It has come to my attention
that the new Pomeroy Mason bridge now has been turned
over to the state of West Virginia. I don’t know if that is a
good thing or not.
There are 64 lights now not burning on the bridge and
six on our end. Maybe we should give it back to Ohio.
I am sure they would at least replace the lights. Doesn’t
anyone do their jobs anymore?
Ralph Ross
Mason

Cruz’s accusations
expose a reckless accuser
By Dana Milbank
Sen. Ted Cruz, in a
speech to fellow conservatives at the Federalist Society last week, provided
detailed evidence of what
the right calls the “lawlessness” of the Obama administration.
The Texas Republican, in
his latest McCarthyesque
flourish, said he had a list of
“76 instances of lawlessness
and other abuses of power.”
To his credit, Cruz made
his list public. But perhaps
he shouldn’t have. An examination of the accusations reveals less about the
lawlessness of the accused
than about the recklessness
of the accuser.
Cruz was particularly
agitated about President
Obama’s use of signing
statements, executive orders, recess appointments
and unconfirmed “czars”
— omitting the salient
detail that this president
has used all four less than
George W. Bush, for whom
Cruz worked as a campaign
adviser and administration
official.
Beyond such perennial
check-and-balance disputes,
Cruz’s list was a recitation
of policy grievances (Cruz,
if you haven’t heard, doesn’t
like Obamacare very much,
nor the president’s immigration policy). These were
interspersed with some
whoppers that the senator,
a former Texas solicitor
general, couldn’t have researched thoroughly.
Consider item No. 2 in
the “Other Abuses of Power” section: “Backed release
of the Lockerbie bomber,
Abdel Baset al-Megrahi.”
This does sound bad — and
strange, given that Obama
had publicly said he was
“angry” about the release,
which was “a bad decision.”
The footnote on Cruz’s
allegation is to an article in
The Australian newspaper,
a curious source. I looked
up the article, and it states
that “the U.S. wanted Megrahi to remain imprisoned
in view of the nature of the
crime.”
Cruz, in a preamble to his
accusations, writes piously
of “the president’s persistent pattern of lawlessness,
his willingness to disregard
the written law and instead
enforce his own policies via
executive fiat.”
The evidence? The first
item in the first category
(“Governing By Executive
Fiat”): “Disregarded 1996
welfare reform law in granting broad work waivers
for work requirements of
Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families.”
Such waivers were at
the heart of welfare reform, which I covered. Ron
Haskins, who drafted the
law, told The Washington
Post that waivers made
the law possible by giving
states freedom to experiment.
A few lines down, Cruz

alleges that Obama “extended federal marriage
benefits by recognizing,
under federal law, same-sex
marriages … even if the couple is living in a state that
doesn’t recognize same-sex
marriage.”
Cruz’s footnote for this
allegation is to a February
news article, which notes
that the administration’s
“changes were set in motion
last year when the Supreme
Court declared it unconstitutional to refuse federal
benefits to married samesex couples.” So Obama is
being “lawless” by obeying
a Supreme Court ruling?
Cruz alleges that the administration “ordered Boeing to fire 1,000 employees in South Carolina and
shut down a new factory
because it was non-union.”
In fact, Obama’s National
Labor Relations Board filed
a complaint — and any order would have been up to
a judge, as the law requires.
In the end, Boeing and the
union struck a deal, and the
complaint was dropped.
Cruz must have found
some of his allegations
too good to check — such
as the charge that Obama
“spent $205,075 in ‘stimulus’ funds to relocate a
shrub that sells for $16.”
Actually, the removal of the
plant (which had been believed to be extinct in the
wild) was part of a massive
road project run by California, not the federal government. Like thousands of
other projects, it got stimulus dollars — less than 10
percent of its total funding.
No item was too small
to escape Cruz’s notice.
Obama “shut down an
Amish farm for selling fresh
unpasteurized milk across
state lines,” he alleges. Actually, the Food and Drug
Administration was acting
under the authority of a
federal court order — not
exactly lawlessness.
There are, among the 76,
legitimate grievances about
expanded surveillance at
the National Security Agency and about efforts to get
reporters’ phone records.
But it’s difficult to avoid the
conclusion that the alleged
abuse and lawlessness are
actually differences of politics and policy.
Obama “shut down the
Amber Alert website, while
keeping up Let’s Move
website, during the partial
government
shutdown,”
writes Cruz — who almost
single-handedly caused the
shutdown.
“Actively aided in George
Zimmerman
protests,”
Cruz complains.
“Canceled all White
House tours after sequestration … even though
President Obama had spent
more than $1 million in tax
money to golf with Tiger
Woods.”
Cruz disagrees with
Obama on just about everything. But this doesn’t make
Obama a criminal.

�Wednesday, May 14, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 5

Death Notices
ALLEN
GALLIPOLIS — Billie
H. Allen, 94, of Gallipolis,
formerly of Beaver Falls, Pa.,
died Tuesday, May 13, 2014,
at Holzer Assisted Living.
A graveside service will
be 1 p.m. Friday, May 16,
2014, at Grandview Cemetery in Beaver Falls, with
the Rev. Mark Ongley officiating. Willis Funeral
Home of Gallipolis is in
charge of arrangements.
SIMMONS
GALLIPOLIS — Rosanna I. Simmons, 78, of
Gallipolis, passed away
Monday, May 12, 2014, at
Holzer Assisted Living in
Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m. Friday, May 16,
2014, at McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt

Chapel, in Gallipolis with
the Rev. Jim Lusher officiating. Burial will follow
in Gravel Hill Cemetery in
Cheshire. Friends may call
at the funeral home from
6-8 p.m. Thursday.
In lieu of flowers, the
family requests memorial
donations be made to the
American Cancer Society,
444 Second Ave. Gallipolis,
OH 45631.
WIKOFF
IRONTON, Ohio —
Douglas Alan Wikoff, 43,
of Ironton, died Monday,
May 12, 2014 at Virginia
Commonwealth University
Medical Center in Richmond, Va. Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory in
Proctorville is in charge of
arrangements, which are
incomplete.

AP photo

General Motors recent recall of 2.6 million small cars has shed light on an unsettling fact: Air bags might not always
deploy when drivers — and federal regulators — expect them to.

GM recall reveals gaps in air bag knowledge

European court:
Google must yield
on personal info
AMSTERDAM (AP) — In a landmark ruling that could
rock the Internet search-engine industry, Europe’s highest court said Tuesday that people are entitled to some
control over what pops up when their name is Googled.
The Court of Justice of the European Union said Google
must listen and sometimes comply when individuals ask
the search giant to remove links to newspaper articles or
websites containing information about them.
The ruling applies to EU citizens and all search engines
in Europe, including Yahoo and Microsoft’s Bing. It remains to be seen whether it will change the way Google
and its rivals operate in the U.S. and elsewhere around
the world.
Nor is it clear exactly how the court envisions Google
and others handling complaints, which could prove to be
a logistical headache if large numbers of people start demanding that information about themselves be removed.
While some digital-rights experts welcomed the decision as a victory for privacy rights, others warned it could
lead to online censorship.
Google said it was disappointed by the ruling — which
cannot be appealed — but was still studying its implications.
The Mountain View, California, company has long argued that people with complaints about Web searches
containing outdated or otherwise objectionable information should take it up with the websites.
The EU, which would be the world’s largest economy if
its 28 countries were counted as one, has a population of
over 500 million.
The case was referred to the European Court from
Spain’s National Court, which asked for advice in the case
of Mario Costeja, a Spaniard who found a search on his
name turned up links to a notice that his property was
due to be auctioned because of an unpaid welfare debt.
The notice had been published in a Spanish newspaper in
1998, and was tracked by Google’s robots when the newspaper digitized its archive.
Costeja argued that the debt had long since been settled, and he asked the Spanish privacy agency to have
the reference removed. In 2010, the agency agreed, but
Google refused and took the matter to court, saying it
should not be asked to censor material that had been legally published by the newspaper.
“It’s a great relief to be shown that you were right when
you have fought for your ideas. It’s a joy,” Costeja told
The Associated Press in a telephone interview. “If Google
was great before, it’s perfect now, because there are game
rules to go by.”
He said that “ordinary people will know where they
have to go” to complain about bad or old information that
turns up on a Google search.
Costeja’s case will now return to Spain for final judgment. There are about 200 others in the Spanish court system, some of which may still prove difficult to decide. For
instance, one involves a plastic surgeon who wants mentions of a botched operation removed from Google’s results.
In its ruling, the European Court said people may address requests directly to the operator of the search engine, “which must then duly examine its merits.”
The right is not absolute, as search engines must weigh
“the legitimate interest of Internet users potentially interested in having access to that information” against the
right to privacy. When an agreement can’t be reached, the
Luxembourg-based court said, the matter can be referred
to a local judge or regulator.
Debates over the “right to be forgotten” — to have
negative information erased after a period of time — have
surfaced across the world as tech users struggle to reconcile the forgive-and-forget nature of human relations with
the unforgiving permanence of the Internet.
Though the idea of such a right has generally been wellreceived in Europe, many in the U.S. have criticized it as
a disguised form of censorship that could, for example,
allow ex-convicts to delete references to their crimes or
politicians to airbrush their records.
Alejandro Tourino, a Spanish lawyer who specializes in
mass media issues, said the ruling was a first of its kind
and “quite a blow for Google.”
“This serves as a basis for all members of the European
Union. It is a most important ruling and the first time
European authorities have ruled on the ‘right to be forgotten’,” said Tourino, who has worked for the AP in several
legal cases and is the author of “The Right to be Forgotten
and Privacy on the Internet.”
Google spokesman Al Verney said the ruling was “disappointing … for search engines and online publishers in
general.”
Some limited forms of a “right to be forgotten” exist
in the U.S. and elsewhere — for example, in regard to
crimes committed by minors or bankruptcy regulations,
both of which usually require that records be expunged in
some way. However, the burden falls on the publisher of
the information, usually a government — not on search
engines.
Viviane Reding, the EU’s top justice official, said in a
Facebook posting that the ruling confirmed that “data belongs to the individual” and that unless there is a good
reason to retain data, “an individual should be empowered by law to request erasure.”

By Dee-Ann Durbin
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Here’s
an unsettling fact about cars
equipped with air bags: they don’t
always deploy when drivers — or
regulators — expect them to.
Thirteen people have died in
crashes involving older GM cars
with defective ignition switches.
In each of those crashes, and in
others in which occupants were
injured, the air bags failed to deploy even after striking trees,
guard rails or other objects.
Puzzled by these failures, federal safety regulators told Congress last month they believed the
cars’ air bags should have worked
for up to 60 seconds after the engine stalled. But GM has since
told The Associated Press that
regulators were mistaken: the cars
only had enough reserve power to
sense a crash and deploy the air
bags for 150 milliseconds after
the switch malfunctioned and cut
off the car’s power.
General Motors is recalling 2.6
million small cars to fix the ignition switches. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
is now scrambling to find out from
other automakers and air bag suppliers how their air bags would
function in similar situations.
Regulators, lawmakers and ordinary drivers are learning what
auto engineers already know:
These billowing white bags are

actually very complex. After a
crash, a car’s computer determines, in 15 to 20 milliseconds,
where it was hit, what position
the occupants are in and whether
the 150-mile-per-hour speed of
the air bag would do more harm
than good. Then it deploys — or
doesn’t. Every automaker programs them differently.
“It’s very complicated, the logic
behind it. It makes it very, very difficult for an automaker or supplier
to explain why it did or didn’t go
off in a certain situation,” said
Joe Nolan, senior vice president
for vehicle research at the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety,
a group funded by the insurance
industry that performs crash tests
and other research.
If an occupant is unbelted or
very small, or the car is traveling very slowly, the air bag may
not deploy because it could cause
even more severe injuries. Depending on the angle, the side air
bags may deploy but not the front
ones. If a car is parked and turned
off when it’s hit, the air bags won’t
work.
GM’s switches created an unusual problem. Because of insufficient resistance, they moved from
the “run” position into the “accessory” or “off” position while the
car was moving, possibly due to
a bump from the driver’s knee or
the weight of a key chain. With
the switch in that position, the engine stalled and the power steer-

ing and power brakes stopped
working, making the car harder to
control.
In a 2006 crash in Wisconsin,
a Chevrolet Cobalt traveling at
71 mph suddenly stalled. Two
seconds later — outside GM’s
150-millisecond window — it hit
a clump of trees. The ignition was
found in the “accessory” position
and the air bags didn’t deploy.
Two passengers died and the driver was severely injured.
GM says the air bags in newer
cars would work for a slightly longer period of time if the ignition
is off, but still less than a second.
If the engine had stalled while
the ignition was still in the “run”
position, the crash might have
had a different outcome. In that
situation, the air bags, steering,
brakes and most other equipment
would have had power for up to
several hours depending on the
amount of charge in the car’s battery, GM said.
A report on the crash, completed by a team from Indiana University that was hired by the government, said the air bags may not
have deployed because the ignition moved out of position. But
the report also noted two other
reasons: The trees bent when the
car hit them, so the impact may
not have triggered the air bags.
And none of the occupants was
wearing a seat belt. Air bags are
meant to supplement seat belts,
not to replace them.

WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6

PM

6:30

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6
Just Seen It

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Nightly
Business
Report
Eyewitness ABC World
News at 6
News
10TV News CBS Evening
at 6 p.m.
News
The Big Bang Two and a
Theory
Half Men
BBC World Nightly
News:
Business
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening
6:00 p.m.
News

6

PM

6:30

WEDNESDAY, MAY 14
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
Jeopardy!
Wheel of
Fortune
Modern Fam The Big Bang
"Yard Sale" Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m.
Edition

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

Revolution "Memorial Day"
(N)
Revolution "Memorial Day"
(N)
The Middle Suburgatory
(N)
(N)
Nature "Leave It to
Beavers" (N)

9

PM

9:30

Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
"Thought Criminal" (N)
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
"Thought Criminal" (N)
Modern "The Mixology (N)
Wedding" (N)
Nova "Escape From Nazi
Alcatraz" (N)

10

PM

10:30

Chicago P.D. "The Docks"
(N)
Chicago P.D. "The Docks"
(N)
Nashville "On the Other
Hand" (SF) (N)
Nazi Mega Weapons
"Fortress Berlin" (N)

The Middle Suburgatory Modern "The Mixology (N)
(N)
(N)
Wedding" (N)
Survivor "Straw That Broke Criminal Minds "Demons"
the Camel's Back" (N)
(SF) 2/2 (N)
American Idol "Three Finalists Perform" Top three finalists
take the stage in hopes of impressing the judges. (N)
Nature "Leave It to
Nova "Escape From Nazi
Beavers" (N)
Alcatraz" (N)

Nashville "On the Other
Hand" (SF) (N)
CSI: Crime Scene "Frame by
Frame"
Eyewitness News at 10

Survivor "Straw That Broke Criminal Minds "Demons"
the Camel's Back" (N)
(SF) 2/2 (N)

CSI: Crime Scene "Frame by
Frame"

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

Nazi Mega Weapons
"Fortress Berlin" (N)

10

PM

10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Rules of Eng Rules of Eng Rules of Eng Rules of Eng
18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
MLB Baseball San Diego Padres at Cincinnati Reds Site: Great American Ball Park (L)
24 (FXSP) Weekly (N) Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
MLB Baseball New York Yankees at New York Mets Site: Citi Field -- Flushing, N.Y. (L)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption SportsCenter
Bs Report (N) SportsCenter Draft Academy
27 (LIFE)
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

400 (HBO)
450 (MAX)
500 (SHOW)

Rules of Eng Rules of Eng
Postgame
Reds Weekly
Baseball Tonight (L)
NFL Live
Bring It! "Street Battle"
Bring It! "Shut Up and
Bring It! "The Lock-In"
Bring It! "Battle Royale"
Bring It! "Behind the
Dance"
Battles" (N)
The Middle The Middle Melissa &amp;
Accepted After his college application is rejected, a
Melissa &amp;
Melissa &amp;
Daddy "Flirty
"The Friend" "The Smile" Joey
Joey
Joey (N)
Dancing" (N) slacker decides to create his own university. TVPG
Bar Rescue "Characters
Bar Rescue "Muscle
Bar Rescue "Drunk and
Hungry Investors "Brisket Hungry Investors "The
Assassination"
Madness"
Dirty Dolls"
Beatdown"
Steak Mistake"
SpongeBob SpongeBob SanjayCraig Sam &amp; Cat Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
NCIS "Jurisdiction"
NCIS "Guilty Pleasure"
NCIS: LA "Burned"
NCIS: LA "Callen, G"
Modern Fam Modern Fam
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Deal With It
(5:00) Sit.Room Crossfire
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
CNN Special Report
Castle "Rise"
NBA Basketball Playoffs Brooklyn Nets at Miami Heat (L)
NBA Basketball Playoffs Por./S.A. (L)
(5:00)
The Core Hilary Swank. Scientists must travel to
The Matrix Reloaded ('03, Sci-Fi) Carrie-Anne Moss, Keanu Reeves. Neo and rebel
the Earth's core in order to save the planet. TV14
leaders have 72 hours to stop an army of machines sent to destroy humankind. TVM
Dual Survival "Castaways" Survival "No End in Sight" Survival "Deadly Dunes" (N) Dual Survival (N)
Kodiak (N)
The First 48 "Bail Out/
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck Dy
Duck
Duck
Seeing Red"
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
"Fowl Play" Dynasty
Dynasty
RivMon "Freshwater Shark" Monsters "Top Ten Beasts" River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters
RivMon "Killer Torpedo"
(5:30) The Fighting Temptations A man must put together (:15) The Princess Diaries A teenager discovers that she is (:15)
The Princess
a successful gospel choir in order to collect his i...
the heir to the throne of a European principality. TVPG
Diaries Julie Andrews. TVPG
Law &amp; Order "Bitter Fruit" Law &amp; Order "Rebels"
Law &amp; Order "Savages"
Law &amp; Order "Jeopardy"
Law &amp; Order "Hot Pursuit"
Sex &amp; City
Sex &amp; City
E! News (N)
E! News
Total Divas "Red and Gold" The Soup (N) The Soup
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Hot In (N)
SoulMan (N)
To Catch a Smuggler
Outlaw Bikers "Hell's
Outlaw Bikers "Masters of Outlaw Bikers "Inside the Outlaw Bikers "Bandido
"Search &amp; Seize"
Angels"
Mayhem"
Outlaws"
Nation"
(5:00) Cycling
NHL Live!
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs (L)
Overtime
Cycling
America's Pre-game (L)
UFC Unleashed (N)
UFC Tonight (N)
TUF "Stand and Bang"
TUF "Too Salty" (N)
American Pickers
American Pickers "Pam's
American Pickers "Mad as American Pickers "Captain Down East Dickering
"Airstream Dream"
Labyrinth"
a Picker"
Quirk"
"Dicker-Fest!" (N)
Million Dollar List
Million Dollar List
The Real Housewives
Million Dollar List (N)
Million Dollar List
106 &amp; Park (N)
RealHusband RealHusband ComicView ComicView
Daddy's Little Girls ('07, Rom) Gabrielle Union. TVPG
Buying "Kathy and Michael" Buying "Saira and Jesse"
Property Brothers
Property "Joey and Mark" HouseH (N) House (N)
(4:30) Age of
Let Me In ('10, Dra) Kodi Smit-McPhee. A young boy befriends a
The Uninvited A mentally fragile teen returns to an
the Dragon... girl who lives secretly as a vampire with her caretaker. TV14
unstable home life and is haunted by a ghost. TVMA

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

2 Days: Adonis Stevenson /(:15)
Warm Bodies
('13, Com) Nicholas Hoult. Julie finds herself in a strange
new series of events when she is saved by a zombie. TVPG
(4:20)
Fantastic Four While doing research
Two for the on a space station, four people get super
Money TVMA powers from cosmic rays. TV14
(:15)
Dark Skies (2013, Horror) Josh Hamilton,
Dakota Goyo, Keri Russell. A series of terrifying events
disrupts a peaceful suburban family's life. TV14

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Silicon
Veep
Prisoners (2013, Thriller) Jake Gyllenhaal, Viola
Valley "Third "Detroit"
Davis, Hugh Jackman. A father kidnaps the main suspect
Party"
when his young daughter and her friend go missing. TV14
(:15)
The Incredible Burt Wonderstone ('13, Com)
Abraham Lincoln:
Steve Buscemi, Steve Carell. A team of magicians decide to Vampire Hunter ('12, Act)
take on their own stunts when their act gets stale. TVPG
Benjamin Walker. TV14
Penny Dreadful "Night
Jim Rome on Showtime (N) Californica. Nurse Jackie
Work"
"Getting the "Rag and
Poison Out" Bone"

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

WEDNESDAY,
MAY 14, 2014

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Marietta wins Ed Sayre Memorial track and field meet
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

BIDWELL, Ohio — Marietta
earns both team titles at Ed Sayre
Memorial.
Marietta earned the girls team
championship with 128 points, followed by River Valley with 123.
Point Pleasant was third (47), Ohio
Valley Christian was fourth (38),
while Wellston was fifth (13) and
Pike Eastern rounded out the six
team field with six points.
Courtney Smith led the Lady
Raiders, winning the 400m dash
(1:04.32) and the high jump (4-06),
while taking fourth in the long jump
(14-00). Kayla Browning won the
300m hurdles (56.39), and took third
in the 100m hurdles (17.47), while
Ramsey Warren was second in both
the 100m dash (13.36) and the 200m
dash (28.73). Kasey Eblin was fourth
in both the 1600m run (6:41.00) and

the 100m hurdles (19.67) for the Silver and Black.
Morgan Greenlee was second in
the 3200m run (17:05.00), Erin
Jackson was second in the 800m
run (2:43.75) and Kali Greenlee was
second in the pole vault (7-00). Rachael Smith was third in the 100m
dash (13.46), while Jacey Walter and
Bridgett Wray tied for third in the
high jump (4-2). Leanne Hively took
fourth in the 800m run (2:56.04),
while Brianna McGuire was fourth in
the discus throw (85-07.5) for RVHS.
The River Valley 4x100m relay
team of Rachael Smith, Carli Dillon,
Rachel Haddad and Warren (52.81),
the 4x400m relay team of Rachael
Smith, Courtney Smith, Warren and
Haddad (4:41.00) and the 4x800m
relay team of Haddad, Hively, Maggie Campbell and Jackson (11:17.62)
all took first place, while the 4x200m
relay team of Abby Campbell, Karly
Williamson, Courtney Smith and

Jackson (2:00.00) took second.
Point Pleasant was led by Aislyn
Hayman with first place finishes in
the shotput (34-08.5) and the discus (111-04.5), followed by Cassie
Jordan, who won the 100m hurdles
(16.93).
Morgan Roush was second in both
the shotput (31-04) and the discus
throw (92-04.5), Brooklyn Blankenship was third in the discus throw
(88-02) and Whitney Layton was
fourth in the shotput (29-05).
Bekah Sargent won the 100m dash
(13.31) and the long jump (15-02)
for Ohio Valley Christian, while Rachel Sargent was first in the 200m
dash (27.88), second in the 400m
dash (1:07.14), third in the long
jump (14-02) and fourth in the 100m
dash (13.89).
The boys competition was won by
Marietta with 137.5 points, followed
See MEET | 10

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior centerfielder Alex White chases down a
flyball during the Blue Devils’ 5-0 victory over Unioto, Monday
night in Centenary.

Gallia Academy
stymies Shermans, 5-0
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CENTENARY, Ohio —
If they don’t score, you
can’t lose.
The Gallia Academy
baseball team allowed just
four baserunners Monday
night, as the Blue Devils
topped guest Unioto by
a 5-0 count in a sectional
semifinal tilt in Gallia
County.
Gallia Academy (174) broke through in the
bottom of the firsy inning when Ty Warnimont
reached on an error and
was driven in by Gustin
Graham. GAHS added on
again in the bottom of the
second when Eric Sheets
found his way home after
being hit by a pitch.
Graham singled home
Warnimont again in the
third inning, while Anthony Sipple brought home
Gage Childers in the fifth
to push the Blue Devil
advantage to 4-0. Sheets
scored for the second time
in the game on a sixthinning passed ball, giving
GAHS the 5-0 lead headed
into the seventh. A pair of
strikeouts and a groundball
to second base ended the
Shermans night and advanced the Blue Devils to
the sectional final.
The winning pitcher of
record for GAHS was senior Gustin Graham, who
allowed just one hit and
one walk in seven shutout
innings. Graham struck
out eight batters and sent

away the final nine batters
in order.
Staten suffered the loss
for UHS after allowing four
runs, three earned on six
hits and two walks in 4.2
innings of work. Anderson
threw 1.1 innings in relief
and allowed a run on two
hits. Anderson struck out
two batters, while Staten
fanned one.
Graham also led the offensive attack for GAHS
with three singles and
two runs batted in. Anthony Sipple had a single
and an RBI for the Blue
and White, while Gage
Childers marked a double.
Eric Sheets, Ty Warnimont and Kole Carter
each had a single for the
victors. Warnimont and
Sheets each scored twice,
while Childers crossed the
plate once. Sheets marked
a game-high three stolen
bases, followed by Warnimont with one.
McCalla had the lone
hit for Unioto, a two-out
single in the third inning.
GAHS finished with five
runs, eight hits, two errors and six runners left on
base, while Unioto had no
runs, one hit, one error and
four runners left on base.
The Blue Devils have
now won six consecutive
games and will host Minford in the sectional final
on Thursday. The Falcons
defeated Athens by an
11-3 county in Minford in
their sectional semifinal on
Monday.

OVP Sports Schedule
Wednesday, May 14
Baseball
River Valley at South Point, 5 p.m.
Winfield at Point Pleasant, 6:30 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Softball
Gallia Academy at Warren, 5 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Wahama Regionals at Laidley Field, 4 p.m.
TVC Champions meet at VCHS, 4 p.m.
Thursday, May 15
Baseball
South Gallia at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Jackson/Warren winner, 5 p.m.
Minford at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Softball
Point Pleasant at Logan, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Wahamat at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
South Webster at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Green at Southern, 5 p.m.
Friday, May 16
Baseball
Trimble at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Softball
Southeastern at Meigs, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
Eastern at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
River Valley at Ohio Valley Conference meet at Chesapeake, 4 p.m.
Point Pleasant Regionals at Laidley Field, 4 p.m.

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Meigs’ Chase Whitlatch, right, safely makes a head-first slide into third base during the fifth inning of Monday
night’s D-2 sectional semifinal baseball game against Marietta in Rocksprings, Ohio.

Marauders win ‘wild one’ over Marietta, 4-3
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio —
Wild would be an understatement.
Despite issuing 15 walks over
six innings of play, the Meigs
baseball team rallied back from
an early 3-0 deficit and ultimately claimed a 4-3 victory over
visiting Marietta in a Division
II sectional semifinal matchup
Monday night in Meigs County.
The fourth-seeded Marauders
(14-7) didn’t allow a hit until the
sixth inning, but the hosts found
themselves in a self-created hole
as 11 walks allowed the fifthseeded Tigers (11-12) to take a
3-0 edge through four full frames.
And since turnabout is fair
play, Marietta committed all
three of its errors in the bottom
of the fifth— which allowed
Meigs to score twice and close to
within 3-2 headed into the sixth.
The hosts started the sixth
with three consecutive hits,
but a pair of walks ultimately
pushed home both the tying
and go-ahead runs — giving the
Marauders their only lead of the
game at 4-3 after six complete.
Marietta had the bases loaded
with one out in the seventh,
but a 5-2-3 double play ended
the late rally bid and allowed
Meigs to move on to the sectional championship game. The
Marauders will play at 5 p.m.
Thursday at the winner of the
Meigs freshman Cody Bartrum delivers a pitch during the fifth inning of MonJackson-Warren contest.
day night’s Division II sectional semifinal baseball game against Marietta in

See MARAUDERS | 10 Rocksprings, Ohio.

Lady Tornadoes fall at Alexander, 8-2
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

ALBANY, Ohio — A tough night
on the road.
The Southern softball team produced just four hits and never led
Monday night during an 8-2 setback
to host Alexander in a non-conference matchup in Athens County.
The Lady Tornadoes (14-5) trailed
3-0 after three complete, but the
guests rallied with a run in both the
fourth and sixth frames to close to

within 3-2 after five and a half innings. The Lady Spartans (16-5),
however, sent 10 batters to the plate
in their half of the sixth — which resulted in five runs and a commanding 8-2 advantage headed into the
seventh.
Southern got a two-out walk in the
seventh, but the guests ultimately
never made a dent in the six-run deficit — allowing AHS to secure the
decision. Alexander outhit SHS by a
9-4 overall margin.
Jordan Huddleston suffered the

loss after allowing four walks over
six innings while striking out three.
Meeks got the win after walking one
and fanning five over seven frames.
Ali Deem, Caitlyn Holter, Baylee
Hupp and Haley Hill had a hit apiece
for the Lady Tornadoes. Deem and
Hannah Hill each scored a run, while
Hupp added the team’s lone RBI.
Hudnall and Meeks paced Alexander with three hits apiece, followed
by Milam, Johnson and Daniels with
a safety each. Hudnall also scored
twice in the victory.

�Wednesday, May 14, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 7

The Daily Sentinel

Notices

Lawn Service

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

Auctions

*******************

Professional &amp; Business

Swisher and Loshe now taking
application for Delivery Driver
call Tracy at (740) 992-2955 or
stop by 112 E. Main St
Pomeroy, OH and pick up an
application.

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal
• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured
• Experienced
• References Available

All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Fair Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise
“any preference, limitation or
discrimination based on race,
color, religion, sex, handicap,
familial status or national origin, or an intention to make
any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal custodians,
pregnant women and people
securing custody of children
under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that
all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis. To
complain of discrimination call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777. The toll-free telephone
number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

Experienced Concrete Finishers and Laborers needed.
Must have 2yrs experience
minimum. Contact
#740-698-4317
Info@stumpdaileyconcrete.co
m

Local Company hiring Carpenters &amp; Helpers. Call
(740)547-7924

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

Lawn Care Service, Mowing,
Trimming, Free estimates. Call
740-645-0546 or 740-4411333

Gary Stanley

740-591-8044
Please leave a message
LEGALS
COUNTY : MEIGS
The following applications
and/or verified complaints were
received, and
the following draft, proposed
and final actions were issued,
by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA) last week.
The complete public
notice including additional instructions for submitting comments,
requesting information or a
public hearing, or filing an appeal may be
obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk,
Ohio EPA, 50 W. Town St.
P.O. Box 1049, Columbus,
Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-2129 email:
HClerk@epa.state.oh.us
FINAL APPROVAL OF PLANS
AND SPECIFICATIONS
POMEROY VILLAGE PWS
660 E MAIN ST STE A
POMEROY OH ACTION
DATE : 05/01/2014
FACILITY DESCRIPTION:
COMMUNITY WATER SYSTEM
IDENTIFICATION NO. :
975792
This final action not preceded
by proposed action and is appealable
to ERAC. DETAIL PLANS
FOR PWSID:OH5300212
PLAN NO:975792
REGARDINGWATER SYSTEM IMPROVEMENTS
TUPPER PLAINS/CHESTER
WATER DISTRICT
39561 BAR 30 ROAD
REEDSVILLE OH ACTION
DATE : 04/29/2014
FACILITY DESCRIPTION:
COMMUNITY WATER SYSTEM
IDENTIFICATION NO. :
977654
This final action not preceded
by proposed action and is appealable
to ERAC. DETAIL PLANS
FOR PWSID:OH5300612
PLAN NO:977654
REGARDINGBASHAN
BOOSTER STATION IMPROVEMENTS. (05),14
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.
SALE
CARPET &amp; VINYL
$5.95 and Up
*While Supplies Last*
MOLLOHAN CARPET
740-446-7444

Yard Sale
Baum Addition Sales May
16th-17th, 9am-?. Queen
Sleigh Bed, Rockers, Nut
Cracker Collection, misc.
Garage Sale Saturday, May
17th 8am-5pm. Top of
Chester Hill on St 248, 4th
House on left Browning’s
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

Money To Lend

Experienced Concrete Finishers and Laborers needed.
Must have 2yrs experience
minimum. Contact
#740-698-4317
Info@stumpdaileyconcrete.co
m

General Cleaners-Responsible for the upkeep and cleanliness of the client's facility, including, but not limited to, removing trash, vacuuming,
dusting, cleaning and stocking
restrooms and performing other various cleaning duties as
assigned at the contracted site.

Are You Still Paying Too Much
For Your Medications?
rice

Our P

Generic equivalent
of CelebrexTM.
Generic price for
200mg x 100
compared to

CelebrexTM $568.87
Typical US brand price
for 200mg x 100

Call the number below and save an additional $10
plus get free shipping on your first prescription
order with Canada Drug Center. Expires June 30,
2014. Offer is valid for prescription orders only and
can not be used in conjunction with any other
offers. Valid for new customers only. One time use
per household.

Order Now! 1-800-341-2398
Use code 10FREE to receive
this special offer.

Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid
prescription is required for all prescription medication orders.

Call Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398
Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and
accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.

Call Today &amp; Start

Saving!

1
1-800-318-9415

SE HABLA
ESPAÑOL

Requires 24-month commitment and credit qualification. All prices, fees, packages,
features, functionality and offers subject to change without notice.

LOCK IN

OF SAVINGS!

2999
with Advanced Receiver Service.

$

Minus additional $5 off for 12 months for
low and medium-risk customers

Per Mo For 12 Mos. After Instant Rebate With 24-mo. Agreement

FREE WHOLE-HOME GENIE HD DVR UPGRADE
NFL SUNDAY TICKET INCLUDED
AT NO EXTRA COST. 2014 SEASON CHOICE™ Package and above.

FREE PREMIUM MOVIE CHANNELS

ALL DIRECTV OFFERS REQUIRE 24-MONTH AGREEMENT.** Offer ends 4/9/14

The Family Value Combo
2 (5 oz.) Filet Mignons
2 (5 oz.) Top Sirloins
4 Boneless Chicken Breasts (1 lb. pkg.)
4 (4 oz.) Omaha Steaks Burgers
4 (3 oz.) Gourmet Jumbo Franks
4 Stuffed Baked Potatoes
49381JNZ Reg. $154.00

39

Now Only...$

99

PLUS,
4 More

Burgers
FREE!

to every shipping
address in your
order from this ad.

Call 1-800-712-4684 ask for 49381JNZ
www.OmahaSteaks.com/sp60
Limit 2. 4 (4 oz.) burgers must ship with $39 order.
Standard S&amp;H added. Expires 4/30/14. ©2014 OCG | 20142 | Omaha Steaks, Inc.

Fix Your
Computer Now!

LOCATED AT THE AUCTION CENTER,
ROUTE 62N, MASON, WV. SELLING THE ESTATE
OF THE LATE NATIJA SALEM OF 102 PLEASANT ST.,
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

We’ll Repair Your Computer
Through The Internet!
Solutions For:

FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCES: Beautiful Broyhill Sofa &amp;
Matching Wing Chair; DR Table &amp; 6 Hi-Back Chairs w/
Matching Server; Maple Corner Cabinet; Maple 2 Pc. Hutch,
LIKE NEW; Kenmore Refrigerator &amp; 30” Kenmore Flat
Top Stove; Antique Gate Leg Table; Walnut Victorian Table;
Kling Maple Bedroom Suite; Whirlpool Washer; GE Dryer;
Blue Swivel Rocker; 4 Maple Bar Stools; TV; Bookcase; Large
GE Upright Freezer, LIKE NEW; Fire Side Bench; Patio
Furniture; Glider; Sofa w/Incliners.
GLASSWARE &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Blue Fenton Lamp,
Must See; Carnival Glass; Fenton Basket; Cut Glass Canister
with Lid; Several Pieces Silver Plate; Roseville Vase &amp; Candle
Holders; 8 Place Setting of English Village (Blue &amp; White);
Crocks; Oil Lamp; Paintings on Canvas; Record Albums.
HOUSEHOLD: Kitchen Appliances; Baking Dishes;
Flatware; Panasonic Microwave; Bird Bath; Garden Tools;
the list goes on.

�),3��,*-10$./�6���� ()����.(+0$.��.,!)$*/
�-53 .$����(.1/$/�6�� #��+0$.+$0��,++$"0(,+/

Affordable Rates
For Home
&amp; Business
Call Now For Immediate Help

888-781-3386

2500 �%%��$.2("$

$

**AUCTIONEERS NOTE: VERY GOOD QUALITY &amp;
CLEAN AUCTION**
Food Available
Terms: Cash or Check w/ Valid ID.

Auction Conducted By:
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR. #1955
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
www.auctionzip.com for pictures
POA: WILLIAM MCKAY

for 12 months
for 12 months (regular price $32.99/mo.)

2 YEARS

800-903-2155

SAT., MAY 17, 2014
10:00 A.M.

Phone

THE REAL DEAL!

CALL NOW!

ESTATE AUCTION

Internet

TV prices start at:

Get An Extra $10 Off
&amp; Free Shipping On
Your 1st Order!

Celecoxib
$62.00

FOR 3 MONTHS. CHOICE™ PACKAGE AND ABOVE

Auctions

Television

You can save up to 75% when you fill your
prescriptions at our Canadian and
International Pharmacy Service.

Advanced receiver fees apply. Minimum 2-room setup required.

Please Contact Aetna Building Maintenance (304)5221100, Fax (304)523-7109

Swisher and Loshe now taking application for part-time
cashier call Tracy at (740)
992-2955 or stop by 112 E.
Main St Pomeroy, OH and pick
up an application.

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE

Help Wanted General
Aetna Building Maintenance is
a Multi-State, Growing janitorial company seeking a qualified General Cleaner for immediate hire in the Point
Pleasant &amp; Chesire area. We
desire candidates who want a
long term career opportunity
with a successful company in
the janitorial industry.
Valid Driver's License or
State ID, proof of insurance
with reliable transportation
Position Requirements:
At least 1 year of cleaning, janitorial or housekeeping experience. Ability to work independently without direct supervision and be able to follow supervisor's directives when given.

Liquid Asphalt Drivers needed.
Must be at least 21 years old.
Have a clean MVR. Class A
CDL. With Tanker endorsement and Hazemat with TWIC.
1-800-598-6122
Miscellaneous

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)

60486168

60498450

Miscellaneous

�$+0(,+��,#$����

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Edwards again has everybody guessing
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) —
Social media was abuzz all weekend as Carl Edwards celebrated
his return to Kansas Speedway:
Carl sat with Joe Gibbs Racing at
the driver meeting! Carl was flustered when asked if he can win a
championship at Roush Fenway
Racing!
Here we go again.
It’s another contract year for
Edwards, and everybody is talking about his future. Well, everybody except Edwards.
When Clint Bowyer removed
himself from the free agent market last week by re-signing with
Michael Waltrip Racing, attention turned to Edwards, the top
available driver. The gossip and
speculation is nearing a fevered
pitch, and all signs point to Edwards ending his 12-year run with
Roush to move into a fourth car
with Gibbs.
It’s a sensible move for Edwards, who was heavily courted
by JGR in 2011 as he found himself in the hunt for his first Sprint
Cup championship.
Edwards went back and forth,
weighing both offers, dragging
the process deep into the summer.
It was practically unheard of for a
points leader to consider leaving
for another team while also racing
for the title, but Edwards looked
beyond the moment.
He rides a performance rollercoaster at Roush, where one season could produce multiple wins
and a solid run at the title, only
to go winless the next year and
watch the Chase for the Sprint
Cup championship from the sidelines.
That’s not changed since Edwards scored a huge payday
— thanks to a big assist from
Ford Motor Co. — by signing a

three-year extension that year.
He went on to lose the 2011 title
to Tony Stewart on a tie-breaker
and hasn’t been a threat since. Edwards went winless in 2012 and
missed the Chase, and although
he made two trips to Victory Lane
last season, he finished last in the
13-driver Chase field.
Now it’s time for Edwards to
negotiate a new contract. It comes
as he sits fifth in the standings
with a win at Bristol that should
be good enough to lock him into
NASCAR’s championship field.
Good enough to make a case for
staying at Roush, right?
Not if he’s again using a wide
lens to look at his options. Edwards should see clearly that he’s
got just 14 top-five finishes since
2011, when he had 19 in one season. That JGR grass has to look
a whole lot greener right now, especially after Matt Kenseth bolted
Roush last season and racked up
seven wins, 12 top-fives and raced
Jimmie Johnson to the finale for
the championship.
Of course he’s going to JGR!
Or is he?
Remember, many thought an
Edwards deal to Gibbs in 2011
was a sure thing. But for whatever
reason — maybe things fell apart
at JGR, maybe the Ford financial
aid swayed Edwards’ decision —
he returned to Roush.
It means his next move is a
mystery in part because Edwards
likes to leave people guessing in
this process, and that includes his
bosses at Roush.
Jack Roush and team president
Steve Newmark hear the same
gossip in the garage and wonder
what is going on. Edwards, who
acts as his own agent, allows it to
continue.
Only Edwards knows what he

wants to do next year, and he isn’t
saying.
“You guys know that I don’t
like to talk about that stuff in the
media,” Edwards told reporters at
Kansas. “To me, that is business
and I have made the mistake of
letting that turn into a big media
thing before, so I would rather
not talk about that and keep that
between me and Jack and Steve
Newmark.”
Their hands are tied at Roush
as they wait for Edwards. If they
knew he was leaving, they could
have made a run at Bowyer as Edwards’ replacement. Now Bowyer
is off the market, and the next
best available driver is Greg Biffle, who already drives for Roush
and the team is actively trying to
re-sign.
The free agent market is thin
after Biffle. Very thin. And if
Edwards bolts, there isn’t an Aleague driver to replace him.
So if Roush management is anything like the fans, they must be
fretting after Edwards stumbled
through an answer Saturday night
when asked by Darrell Waltrip if
he can win a championship with
the organization.
“It’s been 10 years and really,
overall, that’s my goal. I believe
if I work hard enough and Roush
works hard enough, I believe we
can do it,” he said. “There’s not
a better year than this year with
Jimmy Fennig, the Chase format,
and finishing Ford Championship
Weekend at Homestead. So yes, I
know we can and we have to do
it this year. We’ve just got to keep
digging.”
For some reason, Edwards
twice said a championship at
Roush has to be won this year.
Why? Only he knows. And Edwards is letting everybody guess.

NASCAR-owned Iowa Speedway opens Sunday
DES MOINES, Iowa
(AP) — The Iowa Speedway will reopen just six
months after its purchase
by NASCAR.
New president Jimmy
Small is among those eager to see how Sunday’s
Nationwide race will set
the tone for the short
track’s future.
NASCAR took the rare
step in November of purchasing the track for a reported $10 million, a steep
drop from the $70 million it
cost to build it less than a
decade earlier.
The 28-year-old Small
is the third person to run
the Iowa Speedway in
less than three years. He
inherited a track that has
remained popular with
fans and drivers despite
patches of instability.
“As far as challenges, I

think the biggest one has
been timing,” he said. “We
knew we only had a short
amount of time before our
first weekend here in just a
few days now.”
Points leader Chase Elliott, Trevor Bayne and Ty
Dillon headline the list of
drivers in the first standalone race of the Nationwide season.
NASCAR, which also
owns the Road Atlanta
course under its IMSA
sports car banner, became
Iowa’s third owner in just
eight years when it bought
the track from Featherlite
Inc., founder Conrad Clement and his family.
Although NASCAR officials made it clear that they
won’t schedule a Sprint
Cup series race in Iowa
in the immediate future,
Small said the new owners

see plenty of potential for
growth.
NASCAR plans to kick
start the track’s new era
this weekend with some
initiatives based on fan
feedback.
Country music duo
Montgomery Gentry will
perform on Saturday night
following the K&amp;N Pro
Series race. Track organizers will throw a party for
season ticket holders with
a chance to win garage access, pace car rides and a
seat in the driver’s meeting
— which has been moved
from the media center to
a large suite in the grandstand — before Sunday’s
Nationwide race.
“A lot of these initiatives that we’re bringing
to the table are still in
their development phase.
We believe we’re on to

something,” Small said.
Iowa Speedway will host
just three major race weekends in 2014. The track
lost one of its Camping
World trucks series races
and combined the other
with IndyCar’s annual stop
in Newton in mid-July.
The schedule, along
with new NASCAR initiatives in Iowa this summer,
will be up for debate next
year. But NASCAR officials hope to brand the
0.875-mile oval as “fastest
short track on the planet,”
according to Small.
“It’s very racy. You can
have two, two and a half,
maybe sometimes three
lanes in there. It has a
bunch of character,” said
driver Ryan Blaney, who
won a 2012 trucks race in
Iowa and plans to run in
Sunday’s Nationwide race.

Bengals look for well-rounded running backs
CINCINNATI (AP) — LSU’s Jeremy Hill watches other running backs
and knows their value, even as they
become a lesser commodity in the
NFL draft.
For the second year in a row, nobody took a running back during
the first round of the draft last week.
That hadn’t happened since the NFL
and AFL merged in 1967.
The Bengals took Hill the second
round with the 55th overall pick.
Bishop Sankey was the first running back picked, going to Tennessee one slot earlier. That’s the latest for the first running back to get

taken in an NFL draft.
It’s also an indication of how the
position is changing.
“I don’t think the position is devalued,” Hill said. “There’s just general
managers out there that know what
they’re doing as far as drafting at the
position. And if you can get great
value lower in the draft, obviously
they’re going to do that.
“I just think that’s the way it’s going nowadays.”
In the last few years, a trend in
college has filtered up to the NFL.
Schools rely so much on fast-tempo,
spread offenses that the quarter-

backs, receivers and pass-blocking
offensive linemen get the most attention. Running backs often get overlooked in the wide-open schemes.
And they’re dropping to the second round of the NFL draft now, too.
“A little of it speaks to the game
in college football right now,” coach
Marvin Lewis said. “There’s an emphasis on guys playing wideout.”
Teams are trying to keep up with
the fast-paced scoring by getting linemen who can pass block and receivers who can turn a short completion
into a quick score. It shows in the
numbers:

Help Wanted General

Houses For Sale

Apartments/Townhouses

Local company seeking
counter person in parts division. Must have knowledge of
truck and engine parts. Sales
experience, some computer
skills. able to work with the
public. Background check and
pre-employment drug test required. Health insurance and
vacation benefits. Pay compensable with experience. If
interested apply in person at
2150 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis, OH.

VERY NICE BRICK HOME,
CLOSE TO WALMART.
3 BEDROOMS, 1 1/2 BATHS,
1 CAR GARAGE, FULL
BASEMENT, CENTRAL AIR.
CONTACT 1-740-446-7874.

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
MIDDLEPORT 1 &amp; 2 Bdrm
apartments, some with utilities
paid, NO PETS Deposit and
References 740)992-0165
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Houses For Sale
3BR 2BA
READY TO MOVE IN
LENDERS AVAILABLE
740-446-3570
DISABILITY OR SOCIAL
SECURITY INCOME
NO PROBLEM!
GET A NEW HOME
LENDERS AVAILABLE
740-446-3570

Apartments/Townhouses
1BR Apt. 2nd Flr., Util pd.,
$450 + Dep., Wash &amp; Dry
avail. 740-446-3667
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.
Apartment available Now. Riverbend Apts. New Haven
Wva. Now accepting applications for HUD -subsidized, One
bedroom Apts. Utilities included. Based on 30% of adjusted income. Call 304-8823121. Available for Senior and
Disabled people.

Rentals
2 - Bdrm Mobile Home in Addison Township, $550/mo. &amp;
deposit 740-645-3592 or 740367-0654
Nice 2BR, partly Furnished,
NO PETS, $400 month, $300
Deposit. water pd. 740-4469151

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Autos for Sale
Auto For Sale Cavaliers, Saturns, Trucks, Hondas, SUVs,
Vans, Focus's, 740-446-7278
or 740-645-2287
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

ANNUITY.COM
Guaranteed Income For Your
Retirement
Avoid market risk &amp; get guaranteed income in retirement!
CALL for FREE copy of our
SAFE MONEY GUIDE Plus
Annuity
Quotes from A-Rated
companies! 800-423-0676
CANADA DRUG:
Canada Drug Center is your
choice for safe and affordable
medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy
will provide you with savings of
up to 75 percent on all your
medication needs. Call
1-800-341-2398 for $10.00 off
your prescription and free
shipping.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant junior Madison Barker (11) releases a pitch during a Class AAA Region 4, Section 1 tournament game against
Winfield on May 7 in Winfield, W.Va.

Lady Knights
top Ripley, 6-2
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

RIPLEY, W.Va. — Nothing wrong with a quick tune-up.
The Point Pleasant softball team picked up some extra
momentum headed into Thursday night’s regional semifinal at Logan Monday evening following a 6-2 victory
over host Ripley in a non-conference matchup in Jackson
County.
The Lady Knights (24-8) never trailed in the contest as
the guests jumped out to an early 3-0 lead following the
top of the third, but the Lady Vikings (18-7) countered
with two runs to close to within 3-2 after three complete.
PPHS tacked on three insurance runs in the top of the
fourth for a four-run edge and ultimately made that lead
stick the rest of the way.
Point Pleasant — which has won 13 of its last 15 contests — outhit RHS by an 8-6 overall margin and did not
commit an error, while Ripley made both errors in the
contest. PPHS stranded seven runners on base and the
Lady Vikes left five on the bags.
Madison Barker was the winning pitcher of record after allowing two earned runs and one walk over seven
innings while striking out seven. Darby Petersen suffered
the setback after surrendering six runs (five earned), seven hits and two walks over four frames while fanning five.
Karissa Cochran led the Lady Knights with four hits
and three RBIs, followed by Payton Fetty, Cami Hesson,
Makinley Higginbotham and Rebekah Darst with a safety
apiece. Darst also knocked in two RBIs for PPHS, while
Barker knock in a run as well.
Hesson led the guests with two runs scored, while
Fetty, Higginbotham, Cochran and Michaela Cottrill each
scored a run.
Hannah Ford paced Ripley with two hits and Ashley
Mellinger drove in two runs in the setback.

Cavs GM says Irving
not behind Brown firing
INDEPENDENCE, Ohio
(AP) — Mike Brown’s relationship with All-Star point
guard Kyrie Irving didn’t
grow. They got along, but
had their issues.
However, any differences
Brown had with his best
player didn’t get him fired
for a second time by the
Cavaliers.
That’s the point made
by general manager David
Griffin on Tuesday, strongly
denying that Irving had any
direct involvement in the
decision to replace Brown.
The coach was dismissed on
Monday — nearly a month
after the Cavs finished a disappointing 33-49 season.
“Any, any insinuation that
Kyrie had anything to do
with this decision is patently false,” Griffin said, his
voice rising. “It’s unfair. He

was not counseled on this
decision, nor was he counseled on the previous coaching decision. It’s a completely unfair assertion and
one that I want everyone to
understand very clearly.”
Griffin then pounded his
hand on the table for effect.
“That is not a narrative
that we are going to go
with,” he said.
Irving, who will be playing for his third coach in
four NBA seasons, and
Brown rarely seemed on
the same page in their year
together. While Irving’s defense improved, there were
too many times when he
was a liability. Also, Irving
and guard Dion Waiters
struggled during their time
on the court and the pair
had some off-court issues
under Brown’s watch.

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

DISH:
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at
$19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &amp;
High Speed Internet starting at
$14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About
Same Day Installation! CALL
NOW!!
1-800-734-5524

OMAHA STEAKS:
ENJOY 100% guaranteed,
delivered-to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!
SAVE 74% PLUS 4 FREE
Burgers - The Family Value
Combo - Only $39.99.
ORDER Today
1-888-721-9573,
use code 48643XMD - or
www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbff6
9
UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION:
DONATE YOUR CAR - FAST
FREE TOWING
24 hr. Response - Tax
Deduction
UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION
Providing Free Mammograms
&amp; Breast Cancer Info
888-928-2362

MEDICAL GUARDIAN:
Medical Alert for Seniors 24/7 monitoring.
FREE Equipment.
FREE Shipping.
Nationwide Service.
$29.95/Month CALL Medical
Guardian Today
855-850-9105
MY COMPUTER WORKS:
My Computer Works
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections - FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians.
$25 off service. Call for
immediate help.
1-888-781-3386
We will pick up your Scrap
Metal, old Stove, Dryer, &amp;
Washer's, also on Cars &amp;
large amounts of Scrap we
do 50/50, Pick ups. Call 740669-4240, 614-989-7341

Stereo/TV/Electronics
Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
Want To Buy
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

�Wednesday, May 14, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel

Page 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

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

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

Hank Ketcham’s

DENNIS THE MENACE

by Dave Green

By Hilary Price

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

By Bil and Jeff Keane

Make the Switch to DISH Today
and Save Up To 50%
Call Now and Ask How!

1-800-401-1670
All offers require 24-month commitment and credit qualification.Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST
Promo Code: MB0913 *Offer subject to change based on premium movie channel availability

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Promotional
prices
ly ...
starting at on

FREE

OVER 30 PREMIUM
MOVIE CHANNELS

mo.

ths
for 12 monHo
pper
Not eligible wi2 th
or iPad offer.

For 3 months.*

�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Browns not guaranteeing
Manziel starting job

Karen Schiely | Akron Beacon Journal | MCT photo

Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver DeSean Jackson catches the ball for a first down in front of Cleveland Browns
defensive back Joe Haden during the first quarter at Cleveland Browns Stadium Sunday, September 9, 2012 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Eagles defeated the Browns, 17-16.

Browns sign cornerback Joe Haden to 5-year deal
CLEVELAND (AP) — The
Browns aren’t letting lockdown
cornerback Joe Haden get away.
Haden signed a five-year, $68
million extension with Cleveland
on Monday, the total value of the
contract surpassing cornerback
Richard Sherman’s four-year, $57
million agreement last week with
the Seattle Seahawks.
Haden’s contract runs through the
2019 season and includes $45 million guaranteed, agent Drew Rosenhaus told The Associated Press.
One of the AFC’s top defensive
backs and one of Cleveland’s most
popular athletes, Haden made
his first Pro Bowl last season, his

fourth with the team. The Browns
selected him with the No. 7 overall pick in 2010.
“Joe’s a good, young player
who’s made a commitment to our
organization, and he’s somebody
with whom we want to move forward in order to advance our football team,” general manager Ray
Farmer said in a statement. “He’s
a great person. He’s the right
guy to both build with and build
around as we attempt to become
an elite football team.”
Signing Haden to a long-term
deal was a priority for Cleveland
this offseason. During the draft,
the team selected Oklahoma State

cornerback Justin Gilbert early in
the first round to play opposite
Haden.
Last season, Haden had 60
tackles and was credited with 21
passes defensed. He had his first
career multiple-interception game
and scored his first touchdown,
returning an interception 29 yards
at Cincinnati on Nov. 17.
He was suspended for the first
four games in 2012 for violating the league’s substance abuse
policy. He tested positive for the
stimulant Adderall.
First-year Browns coach Mike
Pettine is thrilled to have Haden
for several years.

CANTON, Ohio (AP) — As the crowd of football fans
bowed their heads before Browns owner Jimmy Haslam
spoke, a priest delivering the invocation asked for a special blessing for new quarterback Johnny Manziel.
He may need more than divine intervention.
“Father, I don’t think I’ve ever heard a prayer like that,”
Haslam told the clergy man. “I’m not sure what Brian
Hoyer thought of that either.”
Speaking for the first time since the Browns landed
Manziel, Texas A&amp;M’s playmaking quarterback in the
NFL draft, Haslam made it clear that Johnny Football
will have to earn everything he gets and won’t jump Brian
Hoyer on the depth chart just because he has a Heisman
Trophy, celebrity friends or fame.
“He’s not the starter,” Haslam said of Manziel.
Haslam spoke Monday to a packed room of 500 — most
of them hardcore Cleveland fans, who wanted to know
how the Browns’ boss felt the team did in the three-day
draft.
Cleveland’s biggest move was picking the polarizing
Manziel with the No. 22 overall pick in the first round.
His selection has brought a buzz to the Browns and
sparked sales of season tickets and No. 2 jerseys.
And while Haslam is thrilled at the pick, he said the
Browns — starting with first-year coach Mike Pettine —
have told Manziel not to expect any preferential treatment.
“We were very frank with him that ‘You’re the backup
quarterback. This is a hardworking, blue-collar town.
This isn’t Hollywood,’” Haslam said.
“We want you to come in here, work hard and work as
hard as anybody on the team. He’s not the starter. Brian
Hoyer is our starting quarterback. Johnny is the backup.”
Haslam called Manziel “ultra-competitive” and feels the
21-year-old will come to training camp with the right attitude. He knows Manziel wants to prove he can succeed
in the pros.
“I think you’ll find a guy that’s really hard-working, a
serious guy that doesn’t want to be a three-year-in-theleague flash-and-out who makes a lot of money on endorsements,” Haslam said.
“He’s a football player. He was a little upset he went
22. He was a little upset he was the second quarterback
picked. I think he comes in with a little bit of a chip on
his shoulder and wants to show the people he’s about winning games and not about all the other ‘stuff,’ if you will.”
Following the speech, Haslam also denounced a report
that the Browns originally submitted Lousiville quarterback Teddy Bridgewater’s name on the draft card at No.
22 before changing it to Manziel’s.
“That’s crazy. That’s nuts,” Haslam told The Associated Press.
Earlier, Pettine shot down the same report at the team’s
charity golf outing in Aurora.

Meet
From Page 6
by River Valley (110.5)
and Point Pleasant (70.5).
Wellston was fourth (10.5),
while Eastern rounded out
the five team field with
eight points.

Jacob Kemper lead
RVHS with a win in the
3200m run (11:12.90) and
a fourth place finish in the
1600m run (5:00.66), followed by Andrew Moffett
with a second place finish
in the 200m dash (23.59)

and a third place finish in
the 100m dash (11.48).
John Qualls was third
in both the 200m dash
(24.34) and the long jump
(18-07), while Josh Campbell was fourth in both the
100m dash (12.27) and the

Make the Switch
to DISH Today and
Save 50%

**

Promotional
prices
starting at only ...

mo.

for 12 months

Not eligible with Hopper or
iPad 2 offer.

PACKAGES
UNDER $50

Prices valid for 12 months. Requires 24-month commitment and credit qualification.

ASK ABOUT
HIGH SPEED
INTERNET
AS LOW AS ....

OVER 30 PREMIUM
MOVIE CHANNELS

SAME DAY
INSTALLATION
IN UP TO 6 ROOMS
Where available.

where
whereavailable
available

mo.

CALL TODAY INSTALLED TODAY!

For 3 months.

Offer subject to change based on premium
movie channel availability.

NO ONE CAN COMPARE TO

DISH!

THE COMPETITION
DOESN’T STACK UP
AutoHop commercial skipping*

LARGEST CABLE
PROVIDERS
NO

NO

NO

NO

Lowest All-Digital prices nationwide

YES
YES
YES

NO

NO

FREE Installation in up to 6 rooms

YES

NO

NO

The most HD channels

*Feature must be enabled by customer.

All offers require 24-month commitment and credit qualification.
**Savings applies to AT120 and AT120+ with HD programming, 2 year commitment and credit qualification.
Discount applied to first year of service in form of promotional credits plus free HD for Life which is a $10/mo credit.

Call Now And Ask How To Save Up To 50%

**

1-800-401-1670
Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0913

Important Terms and Conditions: Promotional Offers: Requires activation of new qualifying DISH service. All prices, fees, charges, packages, programming, features, functionality and offers subject to change without notice. After 12-month promotional
period, then-current everyday monthly price applies and is subject to change. ETF: If you cancel service during first 24 months, early cancellation fee of $20 for each month remaining applies. HD Free for Life: Additional $10/mo HD fee waived for life of
current account; requires continuous enrollment in AutoPay with Paperless Billing. Premium Channels: 3-month premium offer value is $165; after promotional period, then-current everyday monthly prices apply and are subject to change. Blockbuster
@Home requires online DISH account, broadband Internet to stream content. HD-only channels not available with select packages. Hopper Features: AutoHop feature is only available with playback the next day of select primetime shows on ABC, CBS, FOX
and NBC as part of PrimeTime Anytime feature. Both features are subject to availability. Installation/Equipment Requirements: Free Standard Professional Installation only. Certainequipment is leased and must be returned to DISH upon cancellation or
unreturned equipment fees apply. Upfront and additional monthly fees may apply. Recording hours vary; 2000 hours based on SD programming. Equipment comparison based on equipment available from major TV providers as of 9/19/13. Watching live and
recorded TV anywhere requires a broadband-connected, Sling-enabled DVR and compatible mobile device. Miscellaneous: Offers available for new and qualified former customers, and subject to terms of applicable Promotional and Residential Customer
agreements. State reimbursement charges may apply. Additional restrictions and taxes may apply. Offers end 1/16/14. © 2013 DISH Network L.L.C. All rights reserved. HBO®, Cinemax® and related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box
Office, Inc. SHOWTIME is a registered trademark of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. STARZ and related channels and service marks are property of Starz Entertainment, LLC.

200m dash (25.01).
George Williams won
the 400m dash (58.37),
Dustin Bickers was first in
the 300m hurdles (46.97),
while Austin Hamilton was
second in the 800m run
(2:16.84) and Ethan Hersman was second in the
3200m run (11:17.7). Ben
Moody was third in the
3200m run (13:28.8), Kyle
Randolph was third in the
1600m run (4:59.06) and
James Williams was third
in the 800m (2:16.85) for
the Raiders.
The
4x200m
relay
team of Bickers, Qualls,
Mark Wray and Moffett
(1:36.25), the 4x400m
relay team of Wray, Hamilton, Qualls and Moffett
(3:41.41) and the 4x800m

relay team of Hamilton,
Chance Gillman, Hersman
and Randolph (9:12.56)
all took first place, while
the 4x100m relay team of
Campbell, Williams, Bickers and Wray was second
(47.78).
Tannor Hill led Point
Pleasant, winning both
the shotput (45-11) and
the discus throw (135-10),
followed by Noah Morgan
with a third place finish in
the shotput (43-05) and a
third place finish in the discus throw (116-06).
Brandon
Henderson
took first in the 800m run
(2:12.07), Cody Mitchell
was second in the discus
throw (123-08.5), while
Hunter White was second in the 1600m run

(4:49.61). Colin Peal was
fourth in the 400m dash
(1:01.13), Trevor Daniels
was fourth in the 800m
run (2:19.94), Chase
Moses was fourth in the
shotput (42-06.5), while
Tate Hawkins and Trevor
Hawkins tied for fourth in
the pole vault (10-00).
The 4x100m relay team
of Jason Wamsley, Grant
Safford, Brandon Sayre
and Mitchell (49.63) and
the 4x800m relay team of
Joseph Littlepage, White,
Henderson and Daniels
(9:42.45) both took third
place.
Complete results of the
Ed Sayre Memorial can be
found on the web at www.
baumspage.com

Marauders
From Page 6
Afterwards, fourth-year MHS coach
Brent Bissell spoke about the roller-coaster ride that this game proved to be — and
the character that his kids showed in getting out of here with a victory.
“I give a lot of credit to our kids tonight,
especially Cody Bartrum. The freshman
came in down 3-0 and didn’t allow anymore damage, which gave us an opportunity to get back in the game,” Bissell said.
“We dodged a few bullets and made the
most of some late opportunities. We hung
in there and just found a way to win —
and I’m proud of them for that.”
The game was scoreless after one inning of play, but a wild play led to wilder
start to the top of the second. MHS starter Ty Phelps fanned Adam McKnight to
start the inning, but the third strike was
dropped and allowed McKinght to reach
base safely.
Phelps followed with back-to-back walk
and strikeout combos to load the bases
with two outs, then Phelps issued consecutive walks to Turner Hill and Austin
Hefter — which allowed both McKinght
and Brandon Neville to score for an early
2-0 advantage.
Phelps also issued four consecutive oneout walks in the fourth, which allowed
Isaac Danford to score for a 3-0 Marietta
advantage after three and a half innings of
play.
The Marauders started their rally in
the fifth after Chase Whitlatch singled,
stole second and advanced to third on an
overthrow. An error allowed Luke Musser
to reach safely while bringing Whitlatch
plateward, making it a 3-1 contest.
Musser eventually advanced to third on
a fielder’s choice that left Bradley Helton
at first, then Bartrum hit a ground ball to
short that resulted in a bad throw — allowing Musser to score for a 3-2 deficit
after five complete.
Damon Jones singled to start the bottom of the sixth, then Ray Johnson bunted
his way on and Whitlatch singled to load

the bases with nobody out. Musser followed by grounding into a fielder’s choice
that resulted in Jones being forced out at
home, leaving the bases loaded with one
away.
Michael Davis was walked one batter
later, bringing in Johnson with the gametying run at 3-all. Helton walked two batters later, which brought Whitlatch home
with the eventual game-winning run and
a 4-3 lead.
The Tigers put together a rally bid in
the seventh after Michael Ullman singled,
then Danford and Hill were both hit by
pitches to load the bases with one out.
Hefter followed by hitting a hard ground
ball at Meigs third baseman Taylor Rowe,
who threw home to Davis for a force out.
Davis then relayed the ball to Helton at
first base for the successful double-play,
ending the rally attempt and the game.
The Marauders outhit the guests by a
6-2 overall margin and did not commit
an error in the triumph, while the Tigers
committed three miscues in the contest.
Meigs stranded eight runners on base,
while Marietta left 14 on the bags —
which included bases-loaded scenarios at
the end of the second, fourth and sixth
frames.
Bartrum was the winning pitcher of
record after allowing zero runs, two hits
and four walks over 3.2 innings of relief
while striking out three. Phelps allowed
three runs, zero hits and 11 walks over
3.1 frames while fanning nine in the nodecision.
Zack Robinson suffered the loss after
surrendering four runs, six hits and three
walks over 5.1 innings while striking out
five. Danford walked one and struck out
one in two-thirds of an inning of relief.
Whitlatch led the hosts with three hits
and two runs scored, while Davis, Jones
and Johnson also provided a hit apiece to
the winning cause.
Josh Moretto had a double with one out
in the sixth and Ullman singled to start the
seventh inning for Marietta’s only safeties.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="257">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7681">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="8039">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="8038">
              <text>May 14, 2014</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="191">
      <name>allen</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="755">
      <name>simmons</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2972">
      <name>wikoff</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
