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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

INSIDE STORY

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Why Chinese play
their ‘Cards’... Page 4

Showers. High
near 80. Low
around 58 ... Page 2

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

SPORTS

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Local spring sports
action ... Page 6

Joanna Baughman, 77
Gladys Dials, 96
Carol A. Gerlach, 84
Eleanor H. Knight, 96
Nancy E. Kreisel, 73
Doris Ruth Lloyd, 61

Thomas E. Masters, 71
Patricia L. McCarty, 72
Lillie A. McGee, 56
James Harris Mills, 65
Donald G. Roush, 84
Gary L. Sergent, 59

50 cents daily

THURSDAY, MAY 29, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 86

Ohio AG shines light on Pohl cold case

Staff Reports
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — In May 1992,
Ronald Pohl, 57, decided to take
a hunting trip to Meigs County
in search of wild fowl.
An avid turkey hunter, Pohl’s
trip took a deadly turn when
a search party loping in the
woods off Price-Strong Road in
Salem Township discovered his
body on May 9, 1992.
Ronald’s son, Matthew Pohl,
said his father typically hunted in
the Dayton and Fairborn areas,

but that on this particular occasion he had made plans with his
brother Mike to hunt in Meigs
County.
“They went into the woods
together that morning, but
separated to hunt,” Matthew
said. “And that was the last
time my brother saw him.”
The case, previously pronounced cold, is being brought
back to the spotlight by Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine as
part of his Ohio Unsolved Homicides Initiative.
According to investigators,

Matthew was hunting on the
opposite side of the property
from his father when he heard a
gunshot in the distance between
10-10:30 a.m. About 15 minutes
later, he told investigators he
heard about three or four more
gunshots. After his father failed
to leave the area at noon as the
group had planned, Matthew
called for help after failing to locate his father.
Keith Woods, Meigs County
sheriff, served as an Ohio Division of Wildlife officer in the
county at the time of the murder.

He was part of the search party
that later discovered Ronald
Pohl. Upon closer inspection, he
and his party determined that
Ronald Pohl had been shot with
buckshot in the back at close
range.
Woods said this case has
haunted him for years, but he
hopes for answers.
“We just want to know what
happened and why, and we are
grateful for any information that
anyone can provide,” he said.
DeWine urged the public that
it’s never too late to tell authori-

ties what you know about any
unsolved homicides listed in the
Ohio Unsolved Homicides Initiative database. According to
DeWine, the database has more
than 1,850 unsolved homicides.
“There are too many families
with unanswered questions who
deserve to know what happened
to their loved ones,” he said.
Anyone with information
about the case of Ronald Pohl
are urged to contact the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Office at 740992-3371.

‘Cutest Kids Contest’
starts Sunday
OHIO VALLEY — The University of Rio Grande is
sponsoring a Cutest Kids Contest, starting June 1.
The competition is open to readers of the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register and The Daily
Sentinel in Pomeroy, which encompasses communities
within Gallia and Meigs counties in Ohio, and Mason
County in West Virginia.
Submissions may be made to mydailytribune.com,
mydailyregister.com and mydailysentinel.com starting
June 1. Voting begins June 15 and ends at 11:59 p.m. June
28 at each newspaper website.
There will be six categories with seven winners.
The categories are: Newborn (0-12 months)
Toddler (12-24 months)
2-3 years old
4-5 years old
6-8 years old
9-12 years old
There will be a grand prize winner as well.
Winners will be announced after the contest’s end date,
and the winner for each category will be featured in all
three papers and websites. The grand prize winner will
receive $100, and the winners of the six categories will
each receive a $50 prize.

Brigade of the
Walking the Path to Freedom American Revolution
Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Michael Gerlach tells a group of Middleport youth how the slaves used hollowed out trees and other places to hide
along the way.

Fort Randolph hosts special event

By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT —People interested in
the history of slavery as it existed in the
years long before the Civil War, and Meigs
County’s role in providing a path to freedom
on the Underground Railroad, won’t want to
miss a tour of that area Saturday afternoon.
Historian Michael Gerlach periodically
conducts tours of Middleport’s path used by
escaping slaves. It is located along the banks
of Leading Creek, which connects to the
Ohio River. It was a time when slavery was
a major concern in the nation and Middleport being a port to freedom was in a swirl
of events and activities geared to assisting
the escaping slaves. The tour and Gerlach’s
narration on events taking place at that time
will provide an historical perspective on that
period in history
Those interested in taking Saturday’s tour
are asked to gather in the lobby of Middleport Village Hall at 2 p.m. Gerlach suggested
wearing comfortable shoes since the tour involves a total of about a half-mile of walking.

Register Staff
PPRnews@civitasmedia.com

Submitted photo

While walking the path which slaves traveled in the pursuit of
freedom long before the Civil War, historian Michael Gerlach tells
the story of help they received from Middleport residents.

POINT PLEASANT —
The Brigade of the American Revolution will be
conducting a re-enactment
of soldier life during the
American Revolution at
Fort Randolph Saturday
and Sunday, June 6-7.
The event will run from
10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Sunday. The demonstrations of soldier life will
include: musket firings,
drilling, and uniform inspections. Other presentations will include: rifle
and muskets, linear infantry tactics, artillery with
canon firings and clothing
of the period. The ladies
of the Brigade will be demonstrating laundry and

sewing techniques of the
period.
The Brigade of the
American Revolution is an
international, non-profit
organization dedicated to
portraying the life and time
of those soldiers who took
part in the American Revolution.
There will be an entrance fee of $3 for adults
over the age of 16 and $1
for children between 10
and 16. Children younger
than 10 will be admitted
free. All proceeds go to the
Friends of Fort Randolph
to maintain the fort.
Fort Randolph is located
in Krodel Park just east of
Point Pleasant.
For more information,
contact Craig Hesson,
chesson1774@suddenlink.
net or 304-674-2141.

Dogs help calm witnesses in courtroom
MARION, Ohio (AP) — A new program puts specially trained service dogs
in the jury box to calm anxious witnesses
testifying in an Ohio courtroom.
The two pooches — 6-year-old Molly
B and 2-year-old Camry — are trained
to lie still on the floor in the witness
box to provide a more comforting environment for people testifying in the
family court in Marion County, north
of Columbus. Camry, a golden retriever/Labrador mix, will be a permanent
addition to the court.
Ellen O’Neill-Stephens, founder
of Courthouse Dogs Foundation and
Molly’s handler, told The Marion Star
(http://ohne.ws/SPad36 ) that the
courtroom is one of the first in the
nation to have such a facility dog. In
other jurisdictions, such dogs are with
prosecutors’ offices or legal agencies.
“The criminal justice system is a very
stressful process,” she said. “Scientific
research shows that dogs reduce stress
in humans. In particular, when a witness
has to describe a traumatic event in the
courtroom, many of them feel a great
deal of stress. When they’re feeling that
stress, it’s difficult for them to describe

“The judge needs to balance the needs of the
witness versus any potential prejudice toward
the defendant.”
— Ellen O’Neill-Stephens
Founder of Courthouse Dogs Foundation
it to the jury.”
Kathy Clark, program and grant administrator with Marion County Family
Court, said, “Animals lower stress levels. That’s demonstrated by lower heart
rates.”
O’Neill-Stephens and Clark last week
met with members of the legal community, mental health experts and community
leaders to talk about the canine program.
O’Neill-Stephens, a former prosecutor,
said the court will likely face concerns
from defense attorneys about alleged victims getting sympathetic treatment by
having a dog with them in the jury box.
“The judge needs to balance the needs
of the witness versus any potential preju-

dice toward the defendant,” she said.
The addition of Camry won’t cost
taxpayers a dime. The dog, his training
and necessary equipment, estimated at
$25,000, was provided free by Canine
Companions for Independence, a national nonprofit organization that provides
trained dogs to people with disabilities.
Clark said she will pay the day-to-day
costs for having Camry there. He’ll be
at the Marion County family court four
days a week and live with Clark’s family
the rest of the time.
Courthouse Dogs Foundation operates
out of Edmonds, Washington. The program has helped establish 65 facility dogs
in 25 states since it was founded in 2008.

AP Photo

A new program puts specially trained service dogs in the jury
box to calm anxious witnesses testifying in an Ohio courtroom. Camry, a 2-year-old golden retriever/Labrador mix, now
serves as a facility dog at Marion County Family Court in the
Marion County Building in Marion, Ohio.

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Community Calendar Meigs County Church Calendar
Birthdays
Revivals
POMEROY — Marjorie Reuter will observe her 90th
POMEROY — Revival services at
birthday on May 29. Cards may be sent to her at 138 the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, S.R. 143,
Beech Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Pomeroy, May 28-31, 7 p.m. June 1
service, 6:30 p.m. Evangelist Bill McCoy. Pastor Charles McKenzie can be
called for more information 992-2952.

Ohio Valley Forecast

Thursday: Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly
before 5 p.m. Some of the storms could produce heavy
rainfall. Cloudy, with a high near 80. Calm wind becoming northwest around 5 mph in the afternoon. Chance of
precipitation is 70 percent. New rainfall amounts between
a half and three quarters of an inch possible.
Thursday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1 a.m., then a slight chance of showers between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a low around
58. Light and variable wind. Chance of precipitation is 40
percent. New rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an
inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 83. North wind
3 to 6 mph.
Friday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 58.
Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 83.
Saturday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 57.
Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 87.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 64.
Monday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Partly sunny, with a high near 86. Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.
Monday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. Chance of
precipitation is 50 percent.
Tuesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 86. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 52.94
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.02
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 102.76
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.05
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.72
BorgWarner (NYSE) —62.63
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 13.55
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.430
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.54
Collins (NYSE) — 77.61
DuPont (NYSE) — 68.41
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.03
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.66
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 71.15
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 55.45
Kroger (NYSE) — 46.69
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 56.36
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 100.14
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.50
BBT (NYSE) — 38.13

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.49
Pepsico (NYSE) — 87.07
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.83
Rockwell (NYSE) — 121.14
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.27
Royal Dutch Shell — 78.15
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 38.24
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.53
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.28
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.53
Worthington (NYSE) — 40.27
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions May 28, 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.

YOU CAN SAVE
AN ADDITIONAL
$5 PER MONTH

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
throughout the week at the Mulberry
Community Center. Some of those
are as follows:

Special Singing
LONG BOTTOM — Faith Full
Gospel Church, Ohio 124 in Long

Meigs County Local Briefs
Holter Reunion
RACINE — The annual Holter family reunion will be
1 p.m. June 1 at the Karen Werry home on Court Street
Road at Morning Star near Racine. Descendants of both
male and female lines are encouraged to attend. Families
are asked to bring a covered dish. Barbeque chicken will
be provided. The reunion is especially significant as the
200th anniversary of the Battle of Baltimore from the War
of 1812 will occur in September. The founder of the family, George Holter Jr. was a soldier in that battle. Questions can be answered at 992-7874.
Relay for Life luminary orders
POMEROY — The last day to order luminaries for the
2014 Meigs County Relay for Life is May 31. They can
be dropped off at the Meigs County Health Department
before 4 p.m. May 30, or between 8 a.m. and noon June
2.
The Health Department is located at 112 E Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
Yard Sale
CHESTER — The Chester Courthouse and Museum
will have a yard sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. June 6 and June
7 at the courthouse. Clean items are needed to put into
the sale which will benefit the historical buildings.
Route 143 yard sale
HARRISONVILLE — The fifth annual Route 143 yard
sale, described as “21 miles of fun and treasures,” will
be 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, May 31, Scipio and Columbia Township Volunteer Fire Departments selling food,
even homemade ice cream along the way. Rest rooms
available. Call 740-742=2819 for a space to rent or other
information.
Rumpke Collection Schedule
POMEROY — Rumpke waste removal and recycling
collection service will be delayed one day during the
week because of Memorial Day. Regular collection will
resume the week of June 2.

COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — The state Ethics
Commission is investigating whether an Ohio State
University trustee who is
also a federal judge is violating ethics laws by teaching at the university’s law
school.
At issue is whether
the part-time classes that

trustee and judge Algenon
Marbley has taught since
2000 run afoul of laws preventing trustees from having an interest in contracts
approved by boards they
sit on.
Ohio
State,
which
brought the question to
the Ethics Commission
last year, maintains Mar-

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Kids fishing derby
POMEROY — The Meigs County Fish and Game Association will have its annual kids fishing derby 8 a.m. to noon June
14. Age for participation is 15 years of younger and children
must be accompanied by an adult. A rod and reel will be provided for each child who doesn’t have one to bring.. Since local
merchants help sponsor the event, there will be free food, drinks
and prizes. To reach the site, take Ohio 7 north from Pomeroy,
turn left on Texas Road and follow the derby signs. For more
information, call Dave Doerfer, 992-0026 or 416-9333.
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 mementos, are included. The
cost for the spiral-bound 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
duration 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.
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) 593-5273.

Ethics panel looks at Ohio State trustee’s roles

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Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11 a.m. TuesdayFriday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m. and 5-7
p.m. Tuesday and Thursday.

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We have the legal right of way.

bley meets a four-fold test
under state law allowing
the arrangement. That
includes Marbley’s background as a judge and past
partner in a large, national
law firm and the mentoring and nurturing opportunities he brings as one
of only a few black federal
judges in Ohio.
“Judge Marbley brings
distinctive talent and experience to the classroom,”
Christopher Culley, Ohio
State general counsel,
wrote in a November request to the ethics commission.
The university and
Marbley’s attorney, Larry
James, also argue that
the arrangement complies with the law because
Marbley was teaching the
classes a full seven years
before he was appointed
trustee in 2007 and because he never voted on
his compensation, which
was set before he became
trustee.
Marbley has disclosed
being an Ohio State trustee and law professor in
required federal filings,
which James also argues
puts him in compliance
with Ohio ethics laws.
Marbley notes that he
and the university selfreported the issue. He is
teaching for free during
the investigation.
“I’ve been providing the
service for seven years before I went onto the board,
and everyone knew it,” he
said.
The commission previ-

ously issued opinions that
said trustees at Kent State
and the University of Toledo were prohibited from
holding paid teaching positions. Those opinions were
advisory and not part of an
investigation.
Ohio State asked only
for a commission opinion,
but the panel launched an
investigation in February
because the potential conflict had already occurred.
“This question for us is
not about the quality of the
instruction but rather the
legality of the contract,”
said commission Director
Paul Nick.
Another issue for the
commission is a 2009 advisory opinion for federal
judges advising that judges
should not serve as trustees at public universities.
But James said that opinion, which is only a recommendation, is not within
the ethics commission’s
jurisdiction.
“Judge Marbley has not
engaged in any conduct
that is adverse to or in conflict with his sworn duties
as a United States Judge,”
James said in a March 14
letter to the commission.
The commission is also
investigating any potential
conflict of interest with the
university’s hiring of Marbley’s daughter-in-law while
he served as trustee. Marbley says he wasn’t aware
she’d been hired until after
she got the job.
Marbley was appointed
federal judge by President
Bill Clinton in 1997.

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The Daily Sentinel

Page 3

Dominion proposes
gas pipeline
from W.Va. to NC
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Dominion Resources Inc.
has proposed building a 450-mile pipeline to bring natural
gas from the Appalachian Basin to markets in Virginia and
North Carolina.
The proposed Dominion Southeast Reliability Project would run from an interconnection with a Dominion
Transmission Inc. pipeline in North Central West Virginia
through Virginia to Lumberton, North Carolina. Dominion
Transmission is Richmond-based Dominion Resource’s interstate gas transmission and storage subsidiary.
Dominion Resources spokesman Jim Norvelle told the
Richmond Times-Dispatch (http://bit.ly/1kmES2s ) that
the company hasn’t decided whether to build the pipeline.
A route for the pipeline hasn’t been identified. Norvelle
said the company is notifying land owners that it will begin surveying for a route as early as this summer.
Dominion Transmission would build the pipeline,
which could be put into service by the end of 2018.
Robert Orndorff, a representative with Dominion
Transmission, met with the Lewis County Commission
in West Virginia on Tuesday to inform the commissioners about the project, The Exponent Telegram (http://bit.
ly/1py3lBY) reported.
Orndorff said Dominion Transmission expects the pipeline to measure 42 inches in diameter.
“That is huge. That’s going to take a lot of gas out of
North Central West Virginia to power power plants and
other industries in North Carolina,” he said. “It’s actually
kind of when you look at it revolutionary, because of the
fact that no longer is the primary supply coming out of
the Gulf of Mexico. It’s coming out of North Central West
Virginia and Pennsylvania.”
Rick Webb, a senior scientist with the University of
Virginia’s Department of Environmental Science, is concerned about the pipeline’s impact on the environment.
“This cannot happen without long-term damage to the
ecologic and hydrologic integrity of the Allegheny Highlands, among the best and least altered natural landscapes
in the Eastern U.S.,” Webb told the Richmond Times-Dispatch, “and it will add to the factors that are driving environmentally irresponsible gas-drilling practices.”
If the pipeline is built, Orndorff said it would bring economic development to Lewis County.

AP Photo

President Barack Obama kisses author and poet Maya Angelou after awarding her the 2010 Medal of Freedom during
a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington back in 2011. Angelou, author of “I Know Why the
Caged Bird Sings,” has died, Wake Forest University said Wednesday. She was 86.

Angelou remembered for her universal appeal
NEW YORK (AP) — You didn’t
have to love books or share her
background or even know a lot
about Maya Angelou to feel that
she somehow knew a lot about
you.
You might have sensed you
were in a club that accepted everyone and that the reasons for
joining were as vast and complicated as the life and talents of the
author herself.
Perhaps it was the story of
Angelou, who died Wednesday
at age 86: A poor, black woman
from the segregated South who
somehow ascends to the worldwide stage. Or the people she befriended: Martin Luther King Jr.
and Malcolm X, Oprah Winfrey
and Toni Morrison, the Clintons
and Barack Obama. You might
have seen her read the inaugural
poem for Bill Clinton, caught one
of her interviews with Winfrey, remembered her from the television
series “Roots” or were assigned “I
Know Why the Caged Bird Sings”
in English class.
Maybe her speaking voice was
enough — deep, warm and understanding, like a family matriarch
or the Supreme Court justice of
your dreams; or her written voice,
lyrical and personal, inviting you
to share and relate to the most
hurtful memories, such as the

white girls who mocked Angelou’s
grandmother as they approached
the store where the author worked
as a child.
“Before the girls got to the
porch I heard their laughter crackling and popping like pine logs
in a cooking store,” she wrote in
“Caged Bird,” published in 1969.
“I suppose my lifelong paranoia
was born in those cold, molassesslow minutes.
“At first they pretended seriousness. Then one of them wrapped
her right arm in the crook of her
left, pushed out her mouth and
started to hum. I realized that she
was aping my grandmother.”
Angelou needed half a dozen
books just to get through her
first 40 years and even longtime
followers could find themselves
amazed at some new detail they
discovered. Did you know that
she and Quincy Jones co-wrote a
song for B.B. King, that Muhammad Ali dined at her house in
Ghana, that she performed at the
same nightclub as Phyllis Diller?
Have you seen that picture of her
dancing with Amiri Baraka, or
towering over Baraka and Morrison as the three arrived at James
Baldwin’s funeral?
Angelou worked not just outside the literary canon, but beyond it. Awards committees ig-

nored her until nearly the end, but
the public seemed to honor Angelou daily. You’d spot one of her
poems or sayings in a yearbook,
find yourself among the 5 million liking her Facebook page, or
learning that one of your friends
had read — and loved — “Caged
Bird,” too.
In every way, she seemed without limits. She could write, sing,
dance, compose, act and direct.
Depending on your age, or background, she was like a mother, a
sister, a close friend, a sage. You
may not have liked everything she
did, but it seemed impossible not
to at least admire one thing, and
for that to be enough to admire
her overall.
Her body had been weak for
years, but her spirit will live on. At
a gala poetry reading last month
at Lincoln Center, the actress
Rosie Perez smirked and strutted
as she reeled off the unstoppable
lines of Angelou’s “Still I Rise”:
Does my sassiness upset you?
Why are you beset with gloom?
‘Cause I walk like I’ve got oil
wells
Pumping in my living room.
Just like moons and like suns,
With the certainty of tides,
Just like hopes springing high,
Still I’ll rise.

Judges orders temporary
halt to Ohio executions
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Ohio executions
have been put on hold for
2 1/2 months after a federal judge said he wanted
to hear arguments over the
state’s new lethal injection
procedures.
The temporary order delays executions scheduled
for July and August while
attorneys prepare filings
about the state’s decision
to boost the dosages of its
lethal injection drugs.
The one-page order by
Columbus federal judge
Gregory Frost on Tuesday affects the state’s latest death penalty policy
change, which was announced in late April.
Ohio uses two drugs injected simultaneously in
executions. The policy
change considerably in-

creases the amount of the
sedative and raises the
amount of the painkiller.
The procedure update
followed the Jan. 16 execution of Dennis McGuire,
who repeatedly gasped during the record 26 minutes
it took him to die.
The state said in April
it was making the changes
“to allay any remaining
concerns” after McGuire’s
execution, though it stood
by the way McGuire was
put to death.
The Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction said its review of
McGuire’s execution determined he was asleep and
unconscious a few minutes
after the drugs were administered and his execution
was conducted in a constitutional manner.

Google to build prototype of truly driverless car
Book’s KBB.com.
A French company, Induct
Technology, has produced
a driverless shuttle, which
in February drove people
around a hospital campus
in South Carolina. But in
terms of a truly self-driving
car from a major company,
Google looks to be first.
The tech titan began
developing the prototype
more than a year ago after
it loaned some employees
its retrofitted Lexuses and
saw that some “would basically trust the technology
more than it was ready to
be trusted,” Urmson said.
Making a car that drives itself seemed more practical
than somehow ensuring that
people zoning out behind
the wheel could take over at
a moment’s notice.
The first 100 prototypes
will be built in the Detroit
area with the help of firms
that specialize in autos,
Google said. It would not
identify those firms or discuss the cost of each prototype.
This summer, Google
plans to send test prototypes
on closed courses, then later

AP Photo

This image provided by Google shows a very early version of Google’s prototype self-driving
car. The two-seater won’t be sold publicly, but Google officials on Tuesday said they hope by
this time next year, 100 prototypes will be on public roads.

this year on public streets.
Those test cars will have a
wheel and pedals because
under California law a test
driver must be able to take
immediate control.
By summer 2015, however, California’s Department
of Motor Vehicles must publish regulations allowing the

public to use truly driverless
cars. Big questions the DMV
is wrestling with include
who is liable if a driverless
car crashes and how the
state can be confident that
an automated car drives at
least as safely as a person.
That change in the law
would allow the 100 proto-

types that would be intended
for a public “pilot project”—
details to be determined —
to not have a steering wheel
or pedals.
Though next year is the
goal for the pilot project,
Urmson said public access
“won’t happen until we’re
confident in the safety.”

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car would then make turns
and react to other vehicles
and pedestrians based on
computer programs that predict what others might do,
and data from sensors including radar and cameras that
read in real time what other
objects are actually doing.
The route might be set
by typing a destination into
a map or using spoken commands, Chris Urmson, the
leader of Google’s self-driving car team, told reporters
Wednesday.
The car will be powered
by electricity and could
go about 100 miles before
charging. Its shape suggests
a rounded-out Volkswagen
Beetle — something that
might move people around
a corporate campus or congested downtown — with
headlights and sensors arrayed to resemble a friendly
face.
Major automakers have
steadily introduced technology that helps cars stay in
their lanes and avoid accidents. However, all those vehicles come with a steering
wheel and pedals — and the
expectation that a driver will
jump in should trouble arise.
Several companies have said
they expect by 2020 to market vehicles that can drive
themselves under certain
conditions.
“Nothing is going to
change overnight, but
(Google’s announcement) is
another sign of the drastic
shifts in automotive technology, business practices
and retailing we’re going to
witness,” said Karl Brauer, a
senior analyst at Kelley Blue

60507606

LOS ANGELES (AP) —
Google plans to build and
launch onto city streets a
small fleet of subcompact
cars that could operate without a person at the wheel.
Actually, the cars wouldn’t
even have a wheel. Or gas
and brake pedals. The company says the vehicles will
use sensors and computing power, with no human
needed.
Google Inc. hopes that by
this time next year, 100 of the
two-seaters will be on public
roads, following extensive
testing. The cars would not
be for sale and instead would
be provided to select operators for further tweaking and
have limitations such as a 25
mph top speed.
The announcement presents a challenge to automakers that have been more
cautious about introducing
fully automated driving and
to government regulators
who are scrambling to accommodate self-driving cars
on public roads. Other companies are working on the
technology but none as large
as Google has said it intends
to put such cars in the hands
of the public so soon.
To date, Google has driven hundreds of thousands
of miles on public roads and
freeways in Lexus SUVs and
Toyota Priuses outfitted with
special sensors and cameras.
But with a “safety driver” in
the front seat, those vehicles
were not truly self-driving.
Instead of the standard
controls, the prototypes
would have buttons to begin
and end the drive. Passengers
would set a destination. The

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�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Why Chinese play their ‘Cards’
By Ruth Marcus
I knew before arriving that Netflix’s “House of Cards” was an unexpected hit in Beijing. Still, it took
the ripped-from-the-airwaves coincidence of five members of the Chinese military indicted on charges of
cyber espionage to grasp more fully
the allure of this American political
drama for Chinese citizens and leaders alike.
You might not think a censorship
regime that recently yanked such
seemingly benign shows as “The
Good Wife” and “The Big Bang
Theory” would comfortably tolerate
“House of Cards,” especially with
its second-season pivot to a subplot
involving corrupt Chinese businessmen, Chinese hackers committing
industrial espionage, trade battles
with the United Sates and territorial
disputes with Japan.
“Mao is dead, and so is his China,”
Francis Underwood, the series’ relentlessly scheming main character,
lectures a Chinese billionaire in one
episode that aired undisturbed.
For Chinese authorities, the upside
of tolerating such effrontery is that it
buttresses a dark, skewed vision of
American politics.
To Chinese viewers, “House of
Cards” serves as a streaming video
CliffsNotes to the American political

system. The depiction of politics as
noble calling on “The West Wing” arrived before the Internet era, yet the
conspiratorial, manipulative worldview of “House of Cards” is a more
fitting match for this edgy moment in
U.S.-Sino relations. It is unsurprising
that the series, offered on the video
service Sohu, attracts an above-average proportion of government workers.
Chinese viewers — from conversations on this trip arranged by the
Committee of 100, a U.S. nonprofit
dedicated to mutual understanding
— seem happy to assume the worst
of U.S. politicians even as they marvel at the freedom of a system that
permits airing of such an unvarnished depiction of governmental
malfeasance. “House of Cards” helps
assuage their quiet anxieties about
U.S. superiority and their own systemic shortcomings.
Which explains the series’ usefulness to Chinese leaders: It helps level
the political playing field.
In part, I suspect they simply appreciate the Machiavellian tradecraft.
If President Obama’s joking reaction
to the series was to “wish things
were that ruthlessly efficient,” Chinese leaders may have watched and
thought: Hmmm, looks pretty good
to us. Among the show’s reported
fans is Wang Qishan, China’s corrup-

tion czar and one of its most powerful leaders. Wang, speaking to a party
gathering about the importance of
maintaining party discipline, cited
Underwood’s role as legislative whip,
according to the Hong Kong newspaper Phoenix Weekly.
But “House of Cards” also serves
as a valuable inoculation against Chinese citizens’ cynicism about their
own government. Listen to Chinese
officials, and there is a distinct pattern of pingpong rhetoric. You say Tiananmen Square, they toss back Abu
Ghraib. You invoke Liu Xiaobo, the
jailed the Nobel Peace Prize laureate,
they counter with Edward Snowden.
After all, both have been accused of
breaking their countries’ laws. You
say cyber espionage, they turn again
to Snowden and surveillance.
“House of Cards” offers a similar
opportunity for claimed equivalence,
perhaps more convincing because it
is produced by the adversary. If the
Chinese view their own leadership
as corrupt and their system rigged
— well, then, U.S. politicians are no
better. Thus China’s U.S. ambassador, Cui Tiankai, was only too happy
to observe that the show “embodies
some of the characteristics and corruption that is present in American
politics.”
What’s not for a Chinese bureaucrat to love?

Ignoring the path to recovery
By George Will
It is said that the problem with the younger generation — any younger
generation — is that it has
not read the minutes of the
last meeting.
Barack Obama, forever
young, has convenient
memory loss: It serves
his ideology. His amnesia
concerning the policies
that produced the robust
recovery from the more severe (measured by its 10.8
percent
unemployment
rate) recession of 198182 has produced policies
that have resulted in 0.1
percent economic growth
in 2014’s first quarter —
the 56th, 57th and 58th
months of the recovery
from the recession that began in December 2007.
June begins the sixth
year of the anemic recovery
from the 18-month recession. Even if what Obama’s

administration calls “historically severe” weather
— aka, winter — reduced
GDP growth by up to 1.4
percentage points, growth
of 1.5 percent would still
be grotesque.
America has a continental market, a reasonably
educated and remarkably
— considering the incentives for not working —
industrious
population,
an increasingly (because
of declining private-sector
unionization) flexible labor
market, an efficient financial system, extraordinary
research universities to
fuel innovation, and astonishing energy abundance.
Yet the recovery’s two best
growth years (2.5 percent
in 2010 and 2.8 percent in
2012) are satisfactory only
when compared to 2011
and 2013 (1.8 and 1.9, respectively).
The reason unemployment fell by four-tenths of

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a point (to 6.3 percent) in
April while growth stalled
is that 806,000 people left
the labor force. The labor
force participation rate fell
by four-tenths of a point to a
level reached in 1978, which
was during the Carter-era
stagflation and early in the
surge of women into the
workforce. There are about
14.5 million more Americans than before the recession but nearly 300,000
fewer jobs, and household
income remains below the
pre-recession peak.
Paul Volcker, whose
nomination to be chairman of the Federal Reserve
Board was Jimmy Carter’s
best presidential decision,
raised interest rates to put
the nation through a recession to extinguish the
inflation that, combined
with stagnant growth, ruined Carter’s presidency.
Then came the 1983-88
expansion, when growth
averaged 4.6 percent, including five quarters over
7 percent.
Ronald Reagan lightened
the weight of government
as measured by taxation
and regulation. Obama
has done the opposite.
According to the annual
“snapshot of the federal
regulatory state” compiled
by Clyde Wayne Crews Jr.
of the Competitive Enterprise Institute, four of the
five largest yearly totals
of pages in the Federal
Register — the record of
regulations — have occurred during the Obama
administration. The CEI’s
delightfully cheeky “unconstitutionality index,”
measuring Congress’ excessive delegation of its
lawmaking policy, was 51
in 2013. This means Congress passed 72 laws but
unelected bureaucrats issued 3,659 regulations.
The more than $1.1 trillion of student loan debt
— the fastest-growing debt
category, larger than credit
card or auto loan debt — is
restraining consumption,
as is the retirement of baby
boomers. In 2012, more

than 70 percent of college
graduates had student
loan debts averaging about
$30,000. This commencement season’s diploma
recipients are entering an
economy where more than
40 percent of recent college
graduates are either unemployed or in jobs that do not
require a college degree.
This is understandable,
given that 44 percent of the
job growth since the recession ended has been in food
services, retail clerking or
other low-wage jobs.
In April, the number of
persons under 25 in the
workforce declined by
484,000. Unsurprisingly,
almost one in three (31
percent) persons 18 to 34
are living with their parents, including 25 percent
who have jobs.
So, the rate of household
formation has, Neil Irwin
reports in The New York
Times, slowed from a yearly average of 1.35 million
in 2001-06 to 569,000 in
2007-13. And investment
in residential property is at
the lowest level (as a share
of the economy) since the
World War II. “If,” Irwin
writes, “building activity
returned merely to its postwar average proportion
of the economy, growth
would jump this year to a
booming, 1990s-like level
of 4 percent.”
However, a Wall Street
Journal headline announces that Washington has a
plan: “U.S. Backs Off Tight
Mortgage Rules.” It really
is true: Life is not one darn
thing after another, it is
the same darn thing over
and over.
There is, however, something new under the sun.
The Pew Research Center
reports that Americans age
25 to 32 — “millennials”
— constitute the first age
cohort since World War
II with higher unemployment or a greater portion
living in poverty than their
parents at this age.
But today’s millennials
have the consolation of having
the president they wanted.

Page 4
THURSDAY, MAY 29, 2014

Judge students
by their grades
By Esther Cepeda
If it’s true that America’s No. 1 driver of inequality is the successful completion of college,
as Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor David Autor and others have suggested,
then why is no one paying attention to student
efforts in the college success equation?
Autor recently told the MIT news service, reporting on his recent article about inequality in
the journal Science, “If you had to give a person
a single piece of economic advice, it would not
be: Act like Gatsby and try to get into the top 1
percent. It would be: Go get a college education
at a decent school.”
The so-called decent schools in this country
are often the ones that expect a lot from students: high grades and test scores to get in and
the determination to master high-level academic course work.
But our higher education system is inherently unequal in that even though there is much
focus on a graduate’s success — as measured
by employment in the field of study — there
is no spotlight on academic rigor or student
decisions such as degree selection, study time,
persistence and achievement. In other words, if
the student doesn’t thrive after graduating, it is
automatically the fault of the degree-granting
institution.
The Obama administration is trying to ensure that college is more accessible and offers
positive outcomes to a diverse population of
students. It wants to develop a rating system
that will help students and parents choose
schools based on how many of their students
graduate, how much debt they take on in the
process, and their incomes after graduation.
High-performing institutions would get more
federal student loan and grant money while
schools that underperform would get less.
Such a rating system, however, upends the
very notion of higher education by reducing its
evaluation to terms better suited to job training
programs.
How, exactly, does one fairly judge the financial efficacy of the undergraduate degree in history, literature, political science or philosophy
if in some cases it leads to a postgraduate degree in math, medicine or law while in others it
leads to employment at a fast-food restaurant?
More importantly, what is the role of student
efforts in these outcomes?
Since their 2011 report “Academically Adrift,”
sociologists Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa
have been beating the drum concerning lax educational efforts on the part of America’s colleges
and their students. Their research found low
academic rigor — and subsequently low student
effort — and rampant grade inflation.
About 32 percent of students each semester
do not take any courses with more than 40 pages
of reading assigned a week, and half don’t take
a single course in which they must write more
than 20 pages over the course of a semester. The
authors noted that students spend only about 12
to 14 hours a week studying, mostly in groups.
To put this number in perspective, they cited
surveys from the 1920s through the 1960s showing that full-time college students used to spend
nearly 40 hours a week in class and studying.
But no one seems to be listening to Arum and
Roksa. We freely criticize colleges for costing
too much and offering courses that don’t lead
directly to jobs, but no one seems to care how
much effort must be put into the task of completing a well-rounded education.
How much do we value academic rigor and
student effort in post-secondary education in
this country? From July 1, 2011, to June 30,
2012, our biggest national college funding program, Pell Grants, provided $33.6 billion to students — not a penny of which was disbursed
with an eye toward our only real measure of
student educational effort: grades.
Grades — a far better predictor of college
success than standardized test scores in mid- to
high-performing high schools — aren’t taken
into account in awarding Pell grants, and there
is no minimum grade-point average necessary to
keep receiving the awards throughout college.
We should consider a rating system in which
universities are compared fairly — with nonselective schools grouped together and highly
selective schools grouped with institutions
serving similar student bodies.
And it should not only quantify graduation
rates and post-graduate employment, but also
illustrate how hard students had to work to
earn their grades and, ultimately, their degree.

�Thursday, May 29, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
ter-in-law Sharon, also of
Chester;
grandchildren
Grady Knight and his wife,
Anamaria, and their children, Molly Knight Vanwagenen and her husband,
Brodie, and their children,
and Dr. Andrew Knight
and his wife, Cristine, and
their children.
Eleanor was a voracious
reader and an accomplished geneologist, tracing both branches of her
families throughout the
states and colonies into
Europe.
Funeral services will be 1
p.m. Sunday, June 1, 2014,
at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Burial will follow in the
family plot at Chester Cemetery. Visiting hours will be
6-8 p.m. Saturday at the funeral home.
An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

DONALD GARY ROUSH
PORTLAND, Ohio —
Donald Gary Roush, 84,
of Portland, passed away
Wednesday, May 28, 2014.
He was born April 28,
1930, in Portland, the son
of Byron and Esta (Johnson) Roush.
He was a retired U.S.
Marine Corps captain with
22 years of service. He
served in the Korean War,
Vietnam War and during
the Cuban Missile Crisis.
He was a supply supervisor with AEP Mountaineer
Power Plant. He enjoyed
fishing, hunting, woodworking and making furniture. He enjoyed playing
golf.
Survivors include his
wife of 62 years, Angie Cozart Roush, of Portland; son
Donald G. (Susan) Roush
Jr.; grandchildren Joshua
(Brittany) Roush, Ike (Mattie) Apperson, and Angie
Apperson; great-grandchild
Noah Apperson; sister Audrey (Tony) Williams.

Page 5

Death Notices

ELEANOR HEARING KNIGHT
CHESTER — Eleanor Hearing Knight, 96,
of Chester, passed away
Wednesday, May 28, 2014,
at her home. Eleanor was
born Oct. 10, 1917, the
daughter of Robert and Josephine Hearing.
Mrs. Knight was a longtime first-grade teacher in
the Eastern School District
and introduced hundreds
of students to the wonderful world of reading and
learning. She was a founding member of the Chester
Garden Club and in later
years worked tirelessly on
records and articles for the
Chester Courthouse organization.
Eleanor was preceded
in death by her husband,
Howard Knight; her son
Ralph Knight; and her
daughter Janet Knight
Pennell.
She is survived by her
son Charles and daugh-

The Daily Sentinel

He was preceded in
death by his parents, Byron
and Esta Roush, of Portland; daughter Lori Apperson; siblings Dwight (Evelyn) Roush, Harold (Elsie)
Roush, Bert (Jo) Roush,
Ivan (Lillian) Roush, William (Ihla) Roush, Robert
(Carrie) Roush, Kathryn
(Lester) Price, Maxine
(Henry) Deem, Hilda
(Gene) Davis, Irene (Bill)
Atkinson and Naoma Teaford.
Services will be 11 a.m.
Saturday, May 31, 2014, at
Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, W.Va. Burial will
be in Letart Falls Cemetery
in Racine, Ohio. Friends
may visit the family at the
funeral home from 6-8 p.m.
Friday, May 30, 2014, and
again one hour prior to services on Saturday.
Condolences may be
expressed to the family at
roush94@yahoo.com, or at
www.facebook.com/roushfuneralhome.

Obama’s speech
gets mixed
response overseas
LONDON (AP) — President Barack Obama’s speech
emphasizing soft power and alliances over military might
crystallized into a single speech what many experts said
Wednesday was an inevitable — and welcome — evolution of U.S. foreign policy.
The president who pulled U.S. troops from Iraq, avoided
direct confrontation in Syria and has tapered off the American military presence in Afghanistan seemed to be saying
that the U.S. had learned that it cannot impose its will on
the rest of the world, said David Livingstone, an expert in
international security at London’s Chatham House. He said
Obama’s words went against the “American instinct to go
in hard with the military first” when crisis erupts.
“America has to be in sympathy with the world, and its
leadership has been perceived to be unilateral,” he said after listening to Obama’s speech at West Point. He thought
the president should have made it clear that it is impossible to assure the safety of every American.
In the Gulf state of Qatar, Brookings Center director
Salman Shaikh saw the speech as a boost for consensus,
but he said broke no new ground for a president who has
distanced himself from the “interventionist wars” of his
predecessor, George W. Bush.
“He talked about partnerships, working multilaterally,
which is all to be welcomed,” Shaikh said, cautioning that
had to be balanced against “whether the U.S. is really willing to lead across the Middle East.”
Obama devoted his most muscular language to counterterrorism, particularly in Syria where Obama said extremists are spilling across borders and where a civil war
has killed more than 160,000 people. Without specifying,
Obama talked about more U.S. support for Syria’s moderate opposition fighting to oust President Bashar Assad.
Obama put off any hint of using force there or in Iran, where
he touted a possible agreement over its nuclear program.
“He was clear that this is his foreign policy legacy, he
hopes, when it comes to the Middle East,” Shaikh said,
adding that Obama was “relatively weak” when pressing
issues like human rights and democracy in the region.
Boaz Ganor, an Israeli counterterrorism expert, said
Obama’s speech revealed a lack of understanding of the
global threat of terrorism. He disagreed with Obama’s assertion that al-Qaida is less dangerous now.
“Maybe a 9/11 type of attack right now from a centralized al-Qaida in a lesser probability. But a decentralized
al-Qaida is even more dangerous than a centralized al-Qaida because these splinter groups, these embryonic new alQaida organizations will emerge and will no doubt down
the road try to hit the U.S. mainland and will inspire many
followers in the United States.”
He said there is “a big question” on whether the U.S. has
the determination to impose its will on enemies and a “small
question” about whether it has the capability to do so.
“You need to understand that if you are running away
from terrorism, terrorism will probably come after you
and chase you,” he said. “I would argue that the U.S. lost
Egypt, lost Libya and diluted their influence in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf countries. It seems that the villains of the
region have the upper hand, this is Iran and its affiliates,
and that is a very bad sign for the allies of the United
States around the world.”

BAUGHMAN
JOHNSTOWN, Ohio —
Joanna Baughman, 77, of
Johnstown, died Saturday
May 24, 2014, at her residence.
Funeral services will be
2 p.m. Thursday, May 29,
2014, at McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, in Gallipolis.
Burial will follow in Monroe Cemetery in Jackson,
Ohio. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 1
p.m. until the time of service. Condolences may be
sent to www.mccoymoore.
com.
DIALS
CANAL
WINCHESTER,
Ohio
—
Gladys Dials, 96, of Canal
Winchester, formerly of
Proctorville, Ohio, died
Tuesday, May 27, 2014 at
Altercare of Canal Winchester.
Funeral services will
be 11 a.m. Friday, May
30, 2014, at Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory in
Proctorville, by the Rev.
Roger Mooney. Burial will
follow in Woodmere Memorial Park in Huntington,
W.Va. Visitation will be 6-8
p.m. Thursday, May 29,
2014, at the funeral home.

GERLACH
LEON, W.Va. — Carol
Alison “Honey” (Minturn)
Gerlach, 84, of Leon, died
May 26, 2014, at Pleasant
Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
Services will be 2 p.m.
Thursday, May 29, 2014,
at Casto Funeral Home
Chapel, 157 Evans Road,
Evans, W.Va. Pastor Jeff
Patrick, Pastor Mike Lynn
and Monsignor William
R. Myers will officiate the
service. Burial will follow
in Roseberry Cemetery,
just off W.Va. 2 in Leon.
Visitation will be 5-8 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral
home. Email condolences
may be sent to: castofh@
gmail.com.
KREISEL
GALLOWAY, Ohio —
Nancy Elaine Kreisel, 73,
of Galloway, died Tuesday,
May 27, 2014.
Funeral services will be 1
p.m. Friday, May 30, 2014,
at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy
with her grandson Pastor
Shane Browning officiating. Burial will follow at
Gilmore Cemetery. Visiting hours will be 11 a.m. to
1 p.m. Friday at the funeral

home in Pomeroy. A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
MCCARTY
HILLIARD — Patricia
“Pat” L. McCarty, 72, of
Hilliard, died Monday, May
26, 2014, at Doctors West
Hospital in Columbus.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m. Saturday, May 31,
2014, at Chapman Funeral
Home in Winfield, W.Va.,
with Pastor Charles V. Williams officiating. Burial
will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery in Eleanor, W.Va.
Friends may visit with the
family from 6-8 p.m. Friday
at the funeral home. You
may share memories or
condolences with the family at www.chapmanfuneralhomes.com.
MCGEE
PORTLAND, Ohio —
Lillie A. McGee, 56, of
Portland, died Friday, May
23, 2014, at Charleston
Area Medical Center Memorial Hospital.
Graveside services will
be 11 a.m. Friday, May 30,
2014, at Browning Cemetery. Pastor Ryan Eaton will
be officiate. Arrangements
have been entrusted to the
Cremeens Funeral Home in

Racine. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
MILLS
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
— James Harris Mills, 65,
of Huntington, died Tuesday, May 27, 2014, at home.
Funeral services will be 2
p.m. Sunday, June 1, 2014,
at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory in Proctorville,
Ohio. Burial will follow in
Mt. Vernon Cemetery in
Wayne, W.Va. Proctorville
V.F.W. Post 6878 will conduct military graveside
rites. Visitation will be held
noon to 2 p.m. at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory.
SERGENT
HENDERSON, W.Va. —
Gary Lee Sergent, 59, of
Henderson, died Saturday,
May 24, 2014, at home after an illness.
A memorial service will
be 11 a.m. Friday, May 30,
2014, at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. with Pastor Carl
“Boxer” Swisher officiating. Private burial will be at
Concord Cemetery in Henderson. Online condolences
may be made at www.wilcoxenfuneralhome.com.

Identical twins offer up selves for space science
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) —
When astronaut Scott Kelly embarks
on a one-year space station stint next
spring, his twin brother will be offering
more than his usual moral support.
Retired astronaut Mark Kelly will
be joining in from Earth, undergoing
medical testing before, during and
after his brother’s American-recordsetting flight.
It’s part of an unprecedented study
of identical twins, courtesy of the Kellys and NASA. Researchers hope to
better understand the effects of prolonged weightlessness by comparing
the space twin with the ground twin.
The Earthbound Kelly draws the
line, though, at mimicking his brother’s extreme exercise in orbit or eating
“crappy space station food.”
“It’s not bad when you’re in
space,” Mark said. But he won’t be
carrying around “a can of Russian
lamb and potatoes when I’m out to
eat with my friends.”
As for matching his brother’s 1½
to 2 hours of daily exercise, Mark
replied with a mutinous chuckle,

“Sure, I’ll try. No problem.”
This is the genetic double, mind
you, of the 50-year-old astronaut who
has volunteered to spend an entire year
aboard the International Space Station
beginning next March, along with Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko,
54, a former paratrooper.
No American has come close to a
year; seven months is NASA’s max
for a single human mission. The Russians, on the other hand, are old hands
at long-duration spaceflight, claiming
title to a record-setting 14½-month
mission back in 1994-95.
“No second thoughts — I’m actually getting kind of excited about the
whole idea as we get closer,” Scott
said in a recent interview with The
Associated Press.
Reaction from others has varied from
“‘Oh, that would be really cool to be in
space for a year’ to ‘What, are you out of
your mind?’” he said with a laugh.
Scott knows what he’s getting
into: He spent five months on the
orbiting lab in 2010-2011. He began counting down the days on

Twitter in late March.
Eager to explore new medical territory, Scott offered to have a pressure
sensor drilled into his skull to study the
impaired vision experienced by some
long-term space fliers.
He’s also volunteered for spinal taps
in orbit. He’ll share quarters at one
point, after all, with an emergency
medical doctor-turned-NASA-astronaut. The space station crew typically
numbers six.
“As a test pilot, I like to push the envelope on things and, in this case, I feel
like I’m maybe trying to push the envelope on data collection as well,” explained Scott, a retired Navy captain.
But NASA scientists insist there’s
no compelling need for implants and
spinal taps. They admire his gung-ho
attitude, though, and marvel at their
good fortune in having a set of identical twins for comparison.
The Kellys represent a scientific gift,
said Craig Kundrot, deputy chief scientist for the human research program
at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in
Houston.

THURSDAY EVENING
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THURSDAY, MAY 29
7 PM

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Wheel of
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PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
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Edition

7 PM

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Game Night "Off With the Undateable Undateable Last Comic Standing
Top of Your Head" (N)
"Pilot" (N)
(N)
"Invitational 3" (N)
Game Night "Off With the Undateable Undateable Last Comic Standing
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"Pilot" (N)
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The Bachelorette Eric is pumped when he finds out that
Black Box "Forget Me" (N)
he scores the first romantic outing of the season.
National Geographic Bee Prohibition "A Nation of Hypocrites" Excitement
(N)
diminished into bitterness over the unintended
consequences of Prohibition. Pt. 3 of 3
The Bachelorette Eric is pumped when he finds out that
Black Box "Forget Me" (N)
he scores the first romantic outing of the season.
The Big Bang Mom
Two and a
The Millers Elementary "Tremors"
Theory
Half Men
Hell's Kitchen "10 Chefs
Gang Related "Sangre Por Eyewitness News at 10
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Sangre" (N)
2nd Opinion Law Works Death in Paradise Goodman Scott and Bailey Rachel and
"Teen
and the team must solve the Janet refuse to communicate
Depression"
mystery.
with each other.
The Big Bang Mom
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8 PM

8:30

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9:30

10 PM

10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother
18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
Courtside
Reds Weekly CupOfCoffee CupOfCoffee Reds Weekly Pre-game
MLB Baseball Cincinnati vs Arizona (L)
24 (FXSP) Icons (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
Inside (N)
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Baseball Tonight (L)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption NCAA Softball Division I Tournament Ken./L-Laf. (L)
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27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

30 (SPIKE)
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40 (DISC)
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52 (ANPL)
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62 (NGEO)
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72 (BET)
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74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

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

Sexting in Suburbia A mother is shocked when her
Dirty Teacher (‘13, Dra) Josie Davis. A high school student Ticket Out (‘10, Thril) Ray
daughter commits suicide and tries to find out why. TVPG learns her teacher is seducing her boyfriend. TV14
Liotta. TV14
The Middle Middle "TV
Stick It A woman is sent back to the world of
The Last Song A rebellious teen and her brother are
"The Bee"
or Not TV"
competitive gymnastics where she shakes things up. TV14 sent to spend the summer with their ailing father. TVPG
Cops "Coast Jail
Cops "Las
Cops "Mardi Cops
Cops "Street Impact Wrestling Watch high-risk athletic entertainment
to Coast"
Vegas Heat" Gras 2004"
Patrol"
featuring the most recognizable stars of wrestling.
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Sam &amp; Cat
Instant Mom See Dad Run Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Juvenile"
SVU "Lessons Learned"
SVU "Dreams Deferred"
SVU "Beautiful Frame"
SVU "Legitimate Rape"
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
(5:00) Sit.Room Crossfire
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
The Sixties (N)
The Sixties
Castle "Always Buy Retail" Castle
NBA Tip-Off
NBA Basketball Playoffs Oklahoma vs San Antonio (L)
(5:00) Die Hard: With a Vengeance A mad bomber holds
The Green Mile (1999, Drama) David Morse, Bonnie Hunt, Tom Hanks. Death row
New York City hostage while carrying out a vendetta ag... guards form a relationship with an inmate who possesses extraordinary powers. TV14
Bush "Fight of Flight"
Monsters/ Mysteries
Monsters/ Mysteries
Mountain Monsters
Mountain Monsters
The First 48 "Division/
The First 48 "Cut Down/ 9- The First 48 "Run and Gun/ First 48 "Killer Connection/ The Killer Speaks "Van
Loose Ends"
1-1"
Lonesome Highway"
Bloody Birthday" (N)
Brett Watkins: Hitman" (N)
North Woods Law
Woods Law "Uncuffed 2" OnTheHunt "Ice Out" (N)
Woods Law "Cheaters" (N) American River Renegades
Cadillac Records Tales of sex, racial issues and rock
Burlesque (‘10, Dra) Christina Aguilera, Cher. A small town girl
Burlesque
n' roll portray the lives of American music legends. TVMA falls in love with burlesque after starting a new job in Los Angeles. TV14 TV14
L.A. Hair "You're Fired"
L.A. Hair
L.A. Hair
L.A. Hair (N)
(:10) L.A. Hair
Sex &amp; City
Sex &amp; City
E! News
Divas "Digging a Hole"
The Kardashians
E! News
(:20) The Brady Bunch
Brady Bunch (:35) BradyB. (:10) BradyB. (:50) Hot In (:25) Hot in Cleveland
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Alaska State Troopers
Life Below Zero "Fire and Life Below Zero "Thin Ice" Life Below Zero "Return to The Savage Line "Buffalo
"Battling Demons"
Ice"
the Wild" (N)
Stampede" (N)
(5:30) FB Talk NHL Top 10 NHL Live!
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Montreal vs N.Y. Rangers (L)
Overtime
America's Pre-game (L)
UFC Tonight
UFC 1on1 (N) UFC FB (N) Skateboard Street League
MLB Whiparound (L)
Pawn "Off
Pawn "Help Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Big Rig
Big Rig
the Wall"
Wanted"
Bounty (N) Bounty (N)
(N)
"Pawn U"
(5:30) Atlanta Housewives Atlanta
Housewives Atlanta
Atlanta "Reunion Part 1"
Atlanta "Reunion Part 2"
TBA
106 &amp; Park (N)
Celebration of Gospel "2014"
The Pursuit of Happyness Will Smith. TVPG
Income Property
House
House Hunt. Rehab
Rehab
Fixer Upper
House Hunt. House (N)
(4:00) Pitch
The Chronicles of Riddick Vin Diesel. An escaped convict searches
Lockout A man must save the President's daughter
Black TVM
for the secrets of his past while on an intergalactic crusade. TV14
from an outer space prison to win his freedom. TV14

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

(5:45) Big Momma's House 2 An FBI agent Last Week

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The Normal Heart (‘14, Dra) Julia Roberts, Jonathan Groff,
Real Sports With Bryant
must impersonate his grandmother as he
Tonight With Gumbel
Matt Bomer. An outspoken gay activist tries to spread
poses as a computer hacker's nanny. TVPG John Oliver
awareness of AIDS/ HIV in 1980s New York City. TV14
(5:00)
(:50)
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (2012, Fantasy) Ian McKellan, Richard (:45) Max on
Two for the Money
Magic Mike Armitage, Martin Freeman. A young Hobbit and his dwarf friends go to regain their
Set
(‘05, Dra) Al Pacino. TVMA
TV14
mountain from a dragon. TVPG
Penny Dreadful
(:15)
The 13th Warrior (‘99, Act) Diane Venora,
Lawless (2012, Crime Story) Shia LaBeouf, Guy
Antonio Banderas. An Arabian helps a band of Vikings
Pearce, Tom Hardy. A new deputy and his men demand a "Resurrection"
fight off a monster that is terrorizing their village. TVMA
cut of a bootlegging gang's profits. TVMA

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

THURSDAY,
MAY 29, 2014

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Stars starting to line up for big summer of golf
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — Adam
Scott celebrated his rise to No. 1 in
the world by rallying to win at Colonial. On the other side of the Atlantic
Ocean, Rory McIlroy capped off a
busy week in the news by winning
for the first time this year at the European Tour’s biggest event in England.
In a golf world that has been
without Tiger Woods for the last
few months, it gave the sport some
life at just the right time.
Scott and McIlroy headline a
strong field at the Memorial that
includes nine of the top 12 players
in the world, most of whom have
never had a chance to share a winner’s handshake with tournament
host Jack Nicklaus behind the 18th
green at Muirfield Village.
The Memorial typically has one
of the best fields among PGA Tour
events, and it signals the start of
a big summer in golf — the U.S.
Open at Pinehurst No. 2 in two
weeks, a month ahead of the British

Open and the PGA Championship
right behind it.
Woods, a five-time winner of
the Memorial, last played March
9 at Doral. He is recovering from
back surgery and has not indicated when he will be able to return,
though it’s virtually certain he
won’t be at the U.S. Open.
Nicklaus said Woods called him
Wednesday morning to wish him
well and offer his regrets for not
playing, which Nicklaus said was a
“very, very nice call.”
“He was saying that he felt bad
about not being able to be here,”
Nicklaus said. “He said he’s doing
well, progressing well, and he’s
looking forward to getting back
into the game. He misses it. I just
pass that on.”
Golf had been missing some
excitement in his absence. It has
been a peculiar year in which
hardly any of the top players have
won — until last week.

In 28 events on the PGA Tour
this season, Scott was only the third
winner who was among the top 10
in the world. The others were Zach
Johnson (No. 9 at Kapalua) and
Matt Kuchar (No. 6 when he won
at Hilton Head).
Scott nearly missed the cut at
Colonial, and then closed strong on
the weekend. Not since Vijay Singh
in 2004 at the Canadian Open had
a player won the week after he became No. 1 in the world for the first
time in his career.
“It’s satisfying, absolutely,” Scott
said. “But I think all the things I did
leading up certainly helped put me
in the right mindset to play well last
week, and it took a couple of days
for it to show up really on the weekend. But that’s when it counts. …
Getting to No. 1 was such a journey
and so much work went into it. I
wasn’t going to settle for just staying there for a week.”
With his win, Scott is assured of

staying No. 1 when he gets to the
U.S. Open.
McIlroy was equally intriguing.
He started his week at Wentworth
by announcing that he had broken
off his engagement with tennis star
Caroline Wozniacki, right after the
wedding invitations had gone out in
the mail. McIlroy then birdied his
last two holes and won the BMW
PGA Championship.
It was an important win for the
former No. 1 and two-time major
champion. He had not beaten a
field that deep and strong since
Dubai at the end of 2012, the sensational year that took him to No.
1 and made it look as though he
would stay there.
Since then, he has gone
through an equipment change
and a management change. And
right when it looked as though
his game was trending in the
right direction, he went through
a public breakup of what had

been a very public relationship.
McIlroy declined to answer one
question about newspaper reports
that he split up with Wozniacki over
the phone saying that he was only
talking about his golf. And with
that win at Wentworth, golf became
a fun topic of conversation again.
He had squandered good chances
in Abu Dhabi and the Honda Classic, all while posting a string of top
10s. For him to win at Wentworth
with that much scrutiny on his personal life gave him a life.
“I think I showed quite a lot of
mental strength or focus or whatever you want to call it last week during the whole tournament,” he said.
“I think mentally, it gave me a lot
of confidence knowing that when
I did get myself into contention, I
could close it out, which I wasn’t
able to do at Honda.
“And yeah, it gives me a lot of
confidence going to the second half
of the season.”

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Wahama senior Wyatt Zuspan fires a ball to first base during the White Falcons’ victory over Trimble in Mason. Zuspan led WHS with two hits in the White Falcons’ regional loss to Buffalo on Tuesday.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Buffalo bounces White Falcons, 1-0

PPHS senior Evan Potter (5) swings at a pitch during a Big
Blacks game in Point Pleasant this season.

By Alex Hawley

Wildcats scratch
Point Pleasant, 10-0

BUFFALO, W.Va. — All it takes is one.
The Buffalo baseball team scored just
one run in Tuesday night’s Class A, Region IV semifinal in Putnam County, but it
was enough as the Bison shutout the visiting White Falcons to take the 1-0 win.
The Bison (18-11) pushed the lone run
across in the third inning when Nick Gunter scored on a wildpitch. Wahama (17-10)
failed to answer and Buffalo advanced to
the Region IV final.
Aaron Lewis earned the win for Buffalo
after striking out 14 in seven shutout innings, while surrendering three hits.
Wahama senior Hunter Bradley suffered
the loss after allowing just one unearned
run and three hits, while striking out five.
Wyatt Zuspan led Wahama with two hits
in three attempts.
The Bison will host Gilmer County for a
shot at the state tournament on Thursday.
The White Falcons had won four of
their last five games and they finish the
month of may with a record of 5-5. This
marks the final game in the Red and
White for seniors Kane Roush, Hunter
Bradley, Wyatt Zuspan, Wesley Harrison
and Jacob Bennett.

By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

NITRO, W.Va. — Sometimes you just wind up on
the wrong end of a great
performance.
The Nitro baseball team
out-hit Point Pleasant 11to-3 Tuesday night, and
the Wildcats took the 10-0
victory in the Class AAA
Region IV semifinal in
Kanawha County.
The Wildcats (24-8)
marked a run in the opening inning and added three
more in the bottom of the
second. Nitro scored once
in the third, twice in the
fourth and three times in
the bottom of the fifth to
seal the 10-0 mercy rule
victory.
Jacob Bradley earned
the victory for Nitro, allowing just three hits and
two walks in five shutout
innings. Bradley struck out
six in the win.
Point Pleasant (19-11)
starting pitcher Evan Potter suffered the loss, while
surrendering seven runs,
five earned, on seven hits
and three walks in four innings. Alex Somerville allowed three runs on four
hits and a walk in .1 innings
of relief. Potter struck out

four, while Somerville
fanned one.
The Big Blacks offense
was led by Trevor Porter
with a double, while Alex
Somerivlle and Gage Buskirk each had a single.
Tyler Barton, Matt Harrison and Matt Jewell each
had two hits to lead the
Wildcats, while Andrew
Stone, Kacey Williams,
Solomon Shamblin, Dylan
Slack and Eddie Flores
each had one hit.
Slack led NHS with three
RBIs on a homerun, while
Barton, Bradley, Flores,
Shamblin and Stone each
had one RBI. Harrison,
Shamblin and Barton each
scored twice, Slack, Jewell,
Jacob Williams and Dakota
Casto each had one run
scored, while Harrison and
Shamblin each had a stolen
base.
Nitro will travel to Hurricane on Thursday for the
Region IV final. The Wildcats missed the state tournament last season for the
first time since 2006.
This marks the final
game for PPHS seniors
Austen Toler, Evan Potter,
Brycen Reymond, Nick
Templeton, Levi Russell
and Alex Somerville.

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Wahama senior Hunter Bradley pitches during the White Falcons’
victory over Trimble in Mason. Bradley struck out five and allowed
just one unearned run in the White Falcons’ regional semifinal loss
to Buffalo on Tuesday.

Too soon to say if McIlroy will go public again

DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — Rory McIlroy hasn’t devoted too much thought
yet to how he’ll handle his next relationship after breaking up with tennis
star Caroline Wozniacki.
Asked Wednesday at the Memorial
Tournament if he intended to allow any
subsequent romances to play out in public, McIlroy smiled sheepishly as he said,
“I don’t know. It’s only been a week, so
I’m not thinking that far ahead.”
The answer broke up an uncomfortable moment for the Northern Ireland
star, who declined to discuss the details of the end of his engagement.
McIlroy, ranked sixth in the world,
revealed at a news conference last week
that he and Wozniacki, ranked 13th in
women’s tennis, had separated. They
had been planning their wedding.
Thursday, May 29
The 25-year-old McIlroy was asked
Track and Field
Division II regionals at Muskingum University, 4 p.m. if he second-guessed himself for revealing the breakup at a news conference.
“It’s one of those things that it was a
Friday, May 30
very public relationship,” he said. “And
Track and Field
I thought it was best that instead of
Division III regionals at Fairfield Union HS, 5 p.m.
letting it linger and (feeding) rumors,
just to have it right (out) there as soon
Saturday, May 31
as possible.”
Track and Field
Division II regionals at Muskingum University, 11:30
Wozniacki, the 2009 U.S. Open
a.m.
runner-up, lost in the first round at

OVP Sports Schedule

the French Open within a week of the
breakup.
McIlroy won the European Tour
event at Wentworth over the weekend.
He hopes to use this week’s Memorial Tournament as a springboard to the
U.S. Open two weeks later at Pinehurst.
The couple had frequently posted
pictures on social media of themselves
together, traveling around the world
while attending each other’s tournaments.
Without mentioning the relationship
in so many words, McIlroy said such
situations help people grow up.
“There’s been a few things that have
happened in my life in the last couple
of years that have been huge learning
processes, whether it be splitting with
a management company or new equipment or whatever else that it may be,”
he said. “Every time you have some
sort of adversity like that you learn
from it and you become more mature
and you make better decisions the next
time. And in that way I’m definitely
learning and I’m maturing.”
He added, “I’m pretty mature for a
25-year-old. If you were to get a few
of my friends up here talking to you,
they’d probably say the same thing.”

QUOTABLE: Host and tournament
founder Jack Nicklaus, asked his best
spot to sit and watch the action at Memorial Tournament: “My living room
with a television set.”
LATEST HONOREE: Each year
the Memorial Tournament recognizes
a premier player or official who has
made major contributions to the sport.
This year’s honoree is Annika Sorenstam, who won 87 times, including 72
LPGA Tour events and 10 major titles,
in her 16-year professional career.
Sorenstam, who had a bronze plaque
with her likeness and achievements
posted in a garden at the tournament,
said she was overwhelmed when she
got the phone call from Nicklaus.
“My kids took a photo of the little
plaque yesterday and it feels a little
bit unreal to see me there and with
them,” she said of her inclusion with
past honorees including Bobby Jones,
Walter Hagen, Sam Snead, Patty Berg,
Mickey Wright, Gary Player, Nancy
Lopez and Arnold Palmer. “I welcome
it. It gets me fired up to do more work
off the course, which I’m doing now as
far as giving back to the game.”
See MCILROY | 10

�Thursday, May 29, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 7

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

Sealed proposals for the Olive
Township Fire Hydrants
Project. Meigs County Ohio As
per specifications in bid packet will be received by the
Meigs County Commissioners
at their office at the Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until 11:00 A.M.., June 19,
2014 and then at 11:20 A.M. at
said office opened and read
aloud for the following: Installation of 4 new fire hydrants located along SR 681 in Olive
Township, Meigs County, OH.
THERE WILL BE A MANDATORY PRE-BID CONFERENCE AT THE MEIGS
COUNTY ANNEX BUILDING,
117 E. MEMORIAL DRIVE,
POMEROY, OH 45769 ON
JUNE 6, 2014 AT 10:00 A.M.

COUNTY : MEIGS

COUNTY : MEIGS

Professional Services

LEGALS
COUNTY : MEIGS

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

60508241

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,
Miscellaneous
Ohio EPA,
50 W. Town St.
P.O. Box 1049, Columbus,
Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-2129 email:
HClerk@epa.state.oh.us

Gary Stanley

740-591-8044
Please leave a message

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
LEGALS
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
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NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the Olive
Township Fire Hydrants
Project. Meigs County Ohio As
per specifications in bid packet will be received by the
Meigs County Commissioners
at their office at the Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until 11:00 A.M.., June 19,
2014 and then at 11:20 A.M. at
said office opened and read
aloud for the following: Installation of 4 new fire hydrants located along SR 681 in Olive
Township, Meigs County, OH.
THERE WILL BE A MANDATORY PRE-BID CONFERENCE AT THE MEIGS
COUNTY ANNEX BUILDING,
117 E. MEMORIAL DRIVE,
POMEROY, OH 45769 ON
JUNE 6, 2014 AT 10:00 A.M.

25

$

00

OFF SERVICE
MENTION CODE: MB

800-416-5406

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the Olive
Township Fire Hydrants
Project. Meigs County Ohio As
per specifications in bid packet will be received by the
Meigs County Commissioners
at their office at the Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until 11:00 A.M.., June 19,
2014 and then at 11:20 A.M. at
said office opened and read
aloud for the following: Installation of 4 new fire hydrants located along SR 681 in Olive
Township, Meigs County, OH.
THERE WILL BE A MANDATORY PRE-BID CONFERENCE AT THE MEIGS
COUNTY ANNEX BUILDING,
117 E. MEMORIAL DRIVE,
POMEROY, OH 45769 ON
JUNE 6, 2014 AT 10:00 A.M.
Specifications, and bid forms
may be secured at the office of
Meigs County Grants Office,
117, E. Memorial
Drive,
LEGALS
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769- Phone
# 740-992-7908 . A deposit of
0 dollars will be required for
each set of plans and specifications, check made payable to
- . The full amount will be returned within thirty (30) days
after receipt of bids.
Engineer s Estimate: $21,800
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in an
amount of 100% of the bid
amount with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioners or by certified check,
cashiers check, or letter of
credit upon a solvent bank in
the amount of not less than
10% of the bid amount in favor of the aforesaid Meigs
County Commissioners . Bid
Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of
the official or agent signing
the bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as Bid for Olive Township fire Hydrants Project and
mailed or delivered to:

Specifications, and bid forms
may be secured at the office of
Meigs County Commissioners
Meigs County Grants Office,
Courthouse
117, E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769- Phone
# 740-992-7908 . A deposit of
Attention of bidders is called to
0 dollars will be required Miscellaneous
for
all of the requirements coneach set of plans and specifications, check made payable to tained in this bid packet, particularly
the Federal
Labor or
Home to
Weekends.
800-648-9915
- Business
. The fullServices
amount will be reStandards
Provisions and DavREACH
2 MILLION
NEWSPAPER
www.boydandsons.com
turned
within
thirty (30)
days
Wages, various insurREADERS
one ad placement. is-Bacon
Help Wanted
after
receiptwith
of bids.
ance requirements, various
Dedicated lane I-80 corridor.
ONLY $295.00. Ohio’s best
equal opportunity provisions,
Engineer
$21,800
$1,000
min.
wkly. pay. Weekly
communitys Estimate:
newspapers.
Call and
the
requirement
for ahome
paytime. New trucks. Lease purchase
Mitch at AdOhio Statewide
Each bid must be accompan- ment bond and performance
for 100%
of the contract
or company
jobs available.
Limited
Classified
Network,
ied
by either
a bid614-486-6677,
bond in an bond
price.
openings available. Hirschbach
or E-MAIL
at: mcolton@adohio.
amount
of 100%
of the bid
bidder may withdraw
his
amount
with out
a surety
satis-at: No
888-474-0729
www.drive4hml.
net or check
our website
bid within thirty (30) days after
factory
to the aforesaid
com
www.adohio.net.
the actual date of the opening
Meigs
County
CommissionHelp Wanted
Business
Services
thereof.
The Meigs County
ers or by certified check,
AVERITT EXPRESS
NewthePay
REACH
OVER
1
MILLION
OHIO
Commissioners
reserve
cashiers check, or letter of
to reject
any or
all bids.
Increase
For Regional
Drivers!
40 to
ADULTS
witha one
ad placement.
credit
upon
solvent
bank in right
46 CPM + Fuel Bonus! Also, PostOnly
$995.00.
Askless
yourthan
local
the
amount
of not
10%
of theabout
bid amount
in faTraining Pay Increase for Students!
newspaper
our 2X2 Display
Mike Bartrum, President
vor
of theand
aforesaid
Meigs
(Depending
onCommissioners.
Domicile) Get
Network
our 2X4
Display Meigs
County
County
Commissioners
.
Bid
Home EVERY Week + Excellent
Network $1860 or Call Mitch at (05),29,(06),03
Bonds shall be accompanBenefits. CDL - A req. 888-362614-486-6677/E-mail
mcolton@
ied
by Proof of Authority
of
8608 Apply @ AverittCareers.
adohio.net.
or agent
check signing
out our
the
official or
com Equal Opportunity Employer
website:
www.adohio.net.
the
bond.
Education/Training

Bids shall be
sealed and
MEDICAL
BILLING
marked
as Bid for Olive TownTRAINEES NEEDED! Become
ship fire Hydrants Project and
a Medical
Office Assistant!
NO
mailed
or delivered
to:
EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Online

The Favorite Gift

49377MSL

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

Meigs
County
Commissioners
training
as SC Train
can get you job
Courthouse
ready! HS Diploma/GED &amp; PC/
Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
Internet needed!
1-888-528-5176

Help Wanted
Attention
of bidders is called to
Team, Solo,conRecent
allExperienced
of the requirements
Grad in
&amp; this
Student
Drivers needed
tained
bid packet,
particularly
to the Federal
for dedicated
run in Labor
your area!
Standards
Provisions
and DavAsk about our
sign-on bonus
and
is-Bacon
Wages,
various
guaranteed
hometime!
Callinsur866ance requirements, various
339-2179
equal
opportunity provisions,
Help
Wanted
and
the
requirement for a payDrivers:
CDL-A
DRIVERS
ment
bond and
performance
bond
for 100%
of the Respect
contract NEEDED.
TOTAL
price.
TOTAL Success. Start up to 38¢ /
No
bidder may withdraw his
mile, OTR &amp; Regional Runs, CDL
bid within thirty (30) days after
Grads
Welcome,
Trucks &amp;
the actual
date of700+
the opening
Growing!The888-928-6011
thereof.
Meigs Countywww.
Commissioners
Drive4Total.com reserve the
right
reject any or all bids.
HelptoWanted
Owner Operators CDL-A Up

to $200,000
a year.
Out 2 weeks.
Mike
Bartrum,
President
Home County
as manyCommissioners.
days as needed.
Meigs
Lease Purchase Available. Sign on
(05),29,(06),03

bonus. 855-803-2846
Help Wanted
Drivers-Company
MIDWEST
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&amp; 2-3 x’s during the week! Exclusive
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Top consistent miles &amp; consistent
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Help Wanted
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EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012
&amp; Newer equipment. 100% NO
touch. Butler Transport 1-800-5287825 www.butlertransport.com
Help Wanted
WERNER
NEEDS
DRIVER
TRAINEES! Drivers are IN
DEMAND! We need YOU! No
CDL? No problem! 16-Day CDL
training avail! Opportunity Awaits,
CALL TODAY! 1-866-203-8445
Help Wanted
Flatbed Drivers Starting Mileage
Pay up to .41 cpm, Health Ins.,
401K, $59 daily Per Diem pay ,

- Females, minorities, protected
veterans and individuals with
disabilities are encouraged to apply.
Help Wanted
CDL-A Drivers: Looking for
Higher Pay? New Century is Hiring
Exp. Company Drivers and Owner
Operators. Both Solo and Teams.
Competitive Pay Package. SignOn Incentive. Also looking for
experienced drivers to train. Call
(844) 794-8081 or apply online at
www.drivenctrans.com
Help Wanted
Regional Flatbed O/Os MI-INOH, $2,000 Sign-On Bonus,
$3500-$4000 week Average. Paid
Tolls/Scale Tickets. Free Trailers/
Plate Program. Comdata/DD
Weekly Settlements, CDL-A, 1 Yr.
Experience 888-888-7996
Help Wanted
DON’T MISS A PAYCHECK
FLATBEDDERS! $750 P/WK
GUARANTEE first 2 weeks.
Flatbed
experience
required.
10,000 miles/month average. Pets
allowed! CDL-A, 1-Year OTR
Required. 888.476.4860 www.
chiefcarriers.com
Misc.
VACATION CABINS FOR RENT
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Call Hugh
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RVs for Sale
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Specifications, and bid forms
may be secured at the office of
Meigs County Grants Office,
117, E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769- Phone
# 740-992-7908 . A deposit of
0 dollars will be required for
each set of plans and specifications, check made payable to
- . The full amount will be returned within thirty (30) days
after receipt of bids.
Engineer s Estimate: $21,800
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in an
amount of 100% of the bid
amount with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioners or by certified check,
cashiers check, or letter of
credit upon a solvent bank in
the amount of not less than
10% of the bid amount in favor of the aforesaid Meigs
County Commissioners . Bid
Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of
the official or agent signing
the bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as Bid for Olive Township fire Hydrants Project and
mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissioners
CourthouseLEGALS
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders is called to
all of the requirements contained in this bid packet, particularly to the Federal Labor
Standards Provisions and Davis-Bacon Wages, various insurance requirements, various
equal opportunity provisions,
and the requirement for a payment bond and performance
bond for 100% of the contract
price.
No bidder may withdraw his
bid within thirty (30) days after
the actual date of the opening
thereof. The Meigs County
Commissioners reserve the
right to reject any or all bids.
Mike Bartrum, President
Meigs County Commissioners.
(05),29,(06),03
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals will be received at the:
DIVISION OF MINERAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL
RESOURCES
2045 MORSE ROAD BUILDING H, THIRD FLOOR
COLUMBUS, OHIO 432296693
until JUNE 25, 2014 AT 1:30
P.M., and opened thereafter
for furnishing the materials and
performing the labor for the execution and construction of:
SOUTHERN/TEAFORD
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROJECT NUMBER MG-Sb74
in accordance with the plans
and specifications prepared by
the DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, DIVISION OF MINERAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT,
COLUMBUS, OHIO. PROPOSALS WILL BE OPENED
IN THE SECOND FLOOR
CONFERENCE ROOM OF
2045 (BUILDING H-2) OF THE
FOUNTAIN SQUARE OFFICES OF THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL
RESOURCES. The United
States Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement is supplying 100% of the
funds for this project. The construction completion date for
this project is November 28,
2014. THE ESTIMATE FOR
THIS PROJECT AS DETERMINED BY THE DIVISION OF
MINERAL RESOURCES
MANAGEMENT IS
$23,683.90.
A MANDATORY pre-bid meeting will be held on JUNE 12,
2014 AT 10:00 A.M., at the
project site. It is the intent of
the DMRM to commence the
pre-bid meeting at the designated time. Prior to commencement of the meeting, an
attendance sign-in form shall
be distributed among the contractors present. This form will
be collected by DMRM staff
when the pre-bid meeting begins. Only those contractors
signed in prior to collection of
the form who remain in attendance through the discussion of
the plans and detailed specifications shall be deemed
present for the purpose of determining eligibility for bid submission acceptance. Participation in the site viewing subsequent to the completion of
the discussion of the detailed
specifications will not be required in establishing attendance. NO PLANS OR SPECIFICATIONS WILL BE SOLD
AT THE PRE-BID MEETING.
Copies of the plans, specifications, and proposal forms will
be forwarded from the Division
of Mineral Resources Management, Department of Natural
Resources, upon receipt of a
check or money order in the
amount of $13.00 made payable to the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources
(ODNR) and mailed to ODNR,
Division of Mineral Resources Management, 2050
E. Wheeling Avenue, Cambridge, Ohio 43725 Attention: Dona St.Clair (Telephone Number: (740) 4399079). Plans and specifications become the property of
the prospective bidders and no
refunds will be made. A copy
of the plans and specifications
will be available for public review during normal business

�struction completion date for
this project is November 28,
2014. THE ESTIMATE FOR
THIS PROJECT AS DETERMINED BY THE DIVISION OF
MINERAL
RESOURCES
Page
8 The
Daily Sentinel
MANAGEMENT IS
$23,683.90.

www.mydailysentinel.com

A MANDATORY pre-bid meeting will be held on JUNE 12,
2014 AT 10:00 A.M., at the
project site. It is the intent of
the DMRM to commence the
pre-bid meeting at the designated time. Prior to commencement of the meeting, an
attendance sign-in form shall
Ladyamong
Raiders
basketball skills camp
be distributed
the conBIDWELL,
Ohio
The
tractors present.
This—
form
willRiver Valley girls basketball
be collected
staff the Lady Raiders Basketball
program
willbybeDMRM
hosting
when the pre-bid meeting beSkills
for contractors
all girls grades 3-8 from June 11-13 at
gins.Camp
Only those
in gymnasium.
prior to collection
of camp — which will be conthesigned
RVHS
The
the form
who
remain
in attendducted
by
RVHS
coach
Sarah
Evans-Moore, staff and
ance through the discussion of
players
— and
willdetailed
run inspecifictwo different sessions, based on
the plans
ations
shallGrades
be deemed
grade
level.
3-5 will have camp from 8 a.m. until
present for the purpose of de10:30
a.m.
and
grades
termining eligibility for bid6-8
sub-will run from 11 a.m. until
mission
1:30
p.m.acceptance.
The focal Participapoints of the camp include instruction
the site
viewing subtion
onin ball
handling,
passing, shooting form, offensive
sequent to the completion of
moves,
defense
rebounding. Each camper will rethe discussion ofand
the detailed
specifications
will not
be re- workout plan as part of the
ceive
a t-shirt and
personal
quired in establishing attendcamp
fee,
which
is
$50
per camper. A discount is also ofance. NO PLANS OR SPEfered
to any family
second camper. For more inforCIFICATIONS
WILLfor
BEaSOLD
AT THE
PRE-BID
MEETING.
mation,
contact
Coach
Evans-Moore at (740) 441-1616

Thursday, May 29, 2014

OVP Sports Briefs

or Copies
send email
sarah@evans-moore.com
of the to
plans,
specifica-

tions, and proposal forms will
be forwarded
from the
Division volleyball clinic
Gallia
Academy
of Mineral Resources ManageCENTENARY,
— The Gallia Academy volleyball
ment, DepartmentOhio
of Natural
Resources,
receipt of
a
program
will upon
be hosting
a two-day
mini clinic for girls encheck or money order in the
tering
grades
4-7 in
the payupcoming school year. The clinic
amount
of $13.00
made
the Ohio
Department
willable
runto from
9 a.m.
until 11 a.m. on Tuesday, June 10
of Natural Resources
(ODNR) and mailed to ODNR,
Division of Mineral Resources Management, 2050
E. Wheeling Avenue, Cambridge, Ohio 43725 Attention: Dona St.Clair (Telephone Number: (740) 4399079). Plans and specifications become
the property of
LEGALS
Notices
the prospective bidders and no
refunds will be made. A copy
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
of the plans and specifications
PUBLISHING CO.
will be available for public reRecommends that you do
view during normal business
Business with People you
hours at Division of Mineral
know, and NOT to send Money
Resources Management, 2050 through the Mail until you have
E. Wheeling Avenue, CamInvestigated the Offering.
bridge, Ohio 43725. For inPictures that have been
formation regarding the project
the primary contact person is
placed in ads at the
the Project Engineer, Brady
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
G. Johnson, P.E. Or in his abmust be picked within
sence you may contact the
30 days. Any pictures
Design Engineer, Peter G.
that are not picked up
Moran, P.E., or the Project
will be
discarded.
Officer, Scott Davies. They all
can be reached in the Athens
District Office (740) 592-3748.

through Wednesday, June 11 at the GAHS gymnasium.
The cost of the mini clinic is $20 per child, which is payable at the door when bringing you child to the clinic.
A guardian must accompany the child to pay and sign a
waiver before the child can participate. For more information, contact GAHS volleyball coach Janice Rosier at
(740) 441-5993 or by email at janice-rosier@att.net

10, at 1 p.m. The competitors will be divided into age
groups of 9-10, 11-12, 13-15 and 16-18 and there is a fee.
Awards will be presented to the top three golfers in each
age group. Spectators are allowed, while hole sponsors
and volunteers are needed. To enter please contact the
clubhouse at (740) 446-4653 or Ed Caudill at (740) 2455919 or (740) 645-4381.

SGHS boys basketball bingo games
MERCERVILLE, Ohio — South Gallia Boys Basketball Bingo Games, 5 p.m., Saturday, May 31 at South
Gallia High School. Game packet cost is $20. Children
under the age of 18 can play if accompanied by an adult.
Prizes include 31, Longaberger and business donations.
Paper cards will be used. Bring your own daubers or
buy one at the door. Refreshments will be available. Proceeds benefit the South Gallia boys basketball team. For
more information, call (304) 633-3016.

Wahama Athletic HOF basketball camp
MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama Athletic Hall of Fame
will be sponsoring a youth basketball camp for all boys
and girls entering grades 1 through 8 from June 11-13
at the high school gymnasium. The camp will be conducted by WHS boys basketball coach Ron Bradley and
will run in two different sessions, with grades 1-4 going
from 9 a.m. until noon and grades 5-8 will go from 1
p.m. until 4 p.m. Fundamentals and individual attention
will be emphasized at the camp, which costs $40 per
camper. Each camper will also receive a regulation size
basketball. For more information, contact Ron Bradley
at (304) 773-5539.

Kiwanis junior golf tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Cliffside Golf Club will
be hosting the sixth annual Kiwanis juniors at Cliffside
golf tournament for golfers ages 9-18 on Thursday, July

See SPORTS BRIEFS | 10

Classifieds - continued from page A7

Each proposal must be accompanied by a BID GUARANTY,
meeting the requirements of
Section 153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code.
CONTRACTORS ARE ADVISED THAT EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
CONDITIONS ARE APPLICABLE TO THIS PROPOSAL IN
ACCORDANCE WITH THE
PROVISIONS OF SECTIONS
153.59 AND 125.111 OF THE
OHIO REVISED CODE. THIS
PROJECT IS SUBJECT TO A
5% EDGE PARTICIPATION
GOAL IN ACCORDANCE
WITH THE PROVISIONS OF
O.R.C. SECTION 123.152
AND O.A.C. 123:2-16-08.
WAGE RATES ESTABLISHED IN ACCORDANCE
WITH SECTION 1513.18 AND
1513.37 OF THE REVISED
CODE ARE ALSO APPLICABLE TO THIS PROPOSAL.
CONTRACTORS ARE FURTHER ADVISED THAT, IF
AWARDED THE CONTRACT,
BOTH THE CONTRACTOR
AND ITS
SUBCONTRACTOR(S)
SHALL PERFORM NO SERVICES REQUESTED UNDER
THIS CONTRACT OUTSIDE
OF THE UNITED STATES IN
ACCORDANCE WITH EXECUTIVE ORDER 2011-12K.

The Director of Natural Resources reserves the right to
reject any or all bids, or to accept the bid which embraces
such combination alternate
proposals as may promote the
best interest of the State.
(05),29,(06),05

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
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.

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Miscellaneous

Big Moving Sale. 524 Cedar
Lane Farm. May 30th &amp; 31st.
9-?. Antique Toys, Furniture,
etc., 100's of other items including Tools, 2002 Ford F350
diesel, Allis Chalmers 7040,
great shape,many other Misc
items. From Garden Shed,
Barns, Summer Kitchen, Attic
&amp; other Outbuildings.
TAG SALE NOT AUCTION

Instructor Needed
Gallipolis Career College is
seeking an instructor for its
business administration program. A minimum of a master's
degree is required. Send resumes to director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu, or mail to
1176 Jackson Pike, Suite 312,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Instructor Needed
Gallipolis Career College is
seeking an instructor for its office and medical office administration programs. Applicants
must have experience in office
administrative applications including medical office, computerized medical manager, and
keyboarding skills. Send resumes to director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu, or mail to
1176 Jackson Pike, Suite 312,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
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.

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.

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Garage Sale - May 30, 31st &amp;
June 1st, 10am to 5pm Rain or
Shine @ 638 Jay Drive (Subdivision in back). Kids Clothes,
Scrubs Etc.
Garage Sale May 30th &amp; 31st,
at the Rodney Comm. Bldg, on
ST RT 850, 9-5. Lots of Misc.
Longaberger Baskets, Fenton
glass ect. Several Guns &amp;
some Ammo
Huge 6 Family Yard Sale,
Baby clothes, Women &amp; Mens
clothes, Lots of Misc items Fri
&amp; Sat May 30 &amp; 31 2720 Lincoln Ave
HUGE Yard Sale Rain or
Shine @ 444 Lariat Dr. May
29th &amp; 30th 8am to 5pm Drum
set, child's clothes, household,
Antiques, Iron Bed &amp; Lg Variety of items.
Yard Sale Rt. 2 Ripley Rd FriSat A lot of nice things
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

SALE
CARPET &amp; VINYL
$5.95 and Up
*While Supplies Last*
MOLLOHAN CARPET
740-446-7444
Yard Sale
1069 Georges Creek May
30th &amp; 31st 9am to ? Women's
up to 3x, Baby Clothes, housewares, home decor, lots of
misc.
2 FAMILY Yard Sale 37967
Rocksprings Rd, May 30 &amp; 31

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

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Auctions

SURPLUS AUCTION OHIO UNIVERSITY
Athens, OH
Saturday, May 31 – 9:00 a.m.

Ohio University surplus items will be sold at public auction. NOTE: Each quarter is a completely new batch of surplus items to be sold. All Items are Sold As Is – No Guarantee &amp; No
Returns. Sales Tax will be charged. If Tax Exempt – Must Provide Tax ID# Paperwork at Registration. Visit the OU WEB site for a complete &amp; specific listing and some photos: www.ohiou.
edu/surplus. Preview the week before – call 740-593-0463 from 8:00-3:30 Monday through
Friday for further information.
DIRECTIONS: Rt. 33/50 to Athens to Rt. 682 exit, go through light at Richland Avenue, turn
left at The Ridges and follow signs to Building 9. Technology equipment will be sold first beginning at 9:00 a.m. until finished. Two auction rings beginning at 11:00 until finished.
VEHICLES-Sold at NOON: 2007 Honda Civic Hybrid w/155,000 miles-min-bid $2500, 2007
Ford Freestar SE Van w/101,465 miles-min.bid $2800, 2006 Ford Focus w/106,000-mini.bid
$2000, 4-2006 Ford Econoline E350 Super Vans w/92,865 miles-min.bid $4800, w/96,000 milesmin.bid $4650, w/99,020 miles-min.bid $4700, w/105,000 miles-min.bid $4500, w/120,000
miles-min.bid $4800, 2-2006 Ford Freestar SE Van w/125,428 miles-min.bid $2600 &amp;w/101,018
miles-min.bid $2750, 2004 Chevrolet Impala w/106,500 miles-no min.bid, 2004 Ford Econoline
E350 Super Van w/91,500 miles-min.bid $3200, 2004 Ford Econoline E150 Van w/130,000 milesmin.bed $3000, 2002 Ford Focus w/52,358 miles-no min.bid, 2000 Chevy Lumina w/27,500
miles-no min.bid,
KITCHEN &amp;OTHER EQUIPMENT: True Stainless Steel Refrigerator, Skybox pop machine,
COMPUTERS &amp; TECHNOLOGY EQUIPMENT: lots of desktop &amp; laptop computers, and
printers, monitors, several copiers, fax machines, shredders, scanners, projectors, VCRs, audio
equipment, recorders, AV carts, several televisions, typewriters,
OFFICE &amp; HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS : lots of wood &amp; metal desks, large assortment
of wood tables, mailbox units, sections of chairs, dressers, lamps, many lateral &amp; vertical file
cabinets, bookshelves, shelving units, storage cabinets, lots of tables-some folding tables,
chalkboards, bulletin boards, white boards, metal racks, sign boards, metal sign stands, wood
podiums, Seville Lectern, lab tables/beds, wood bed frame set, 3-sets of mattresses,
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: paddle boats, kayak, ping pong tables, MGX Bike, punching bags,
big kickboxing bag, barbells, wheelchair, set of lockers, several rolls of carpet padding, rug, rolls
of wallpaper, roll of rubber mat, box of hard hats, aluminum folding ladder, semi-tractor trailer
full of HD shelving, lots of music stands, Pay Phone,
TERMS: Cash or check w/positive I.D., American Express, Master Card &amp; Visa Credit Cards
accepted. Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of funds available. Food will be
available. Not responsible for loss or accidents.

OWNER: Ohio University WEB: www. Ohiou.edu/surplus

Sheridan’s SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
AUCTIONEERS: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan,
Kerry Sheridan-Boyd &amp; Mike Boyd

Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com

PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

60509193

Management / Supervisory
Looking to hire an experienced person to supervise
three local restaurants in Mason &amp; Gallia Counties. Serious
applicants please send resume to : PO Box 928, Mason
WV 25260
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
2 Story - 6 Bdrm House - 30 x
40 barn with 2-16x40 leanto,
40x72 shop - 57 acres woods
&amp; pasture. $235,000.00 Home
located at 2265 Patriot Road,
between Cadmus and Patriot.
Brick Ranch, 52 acres +/-,
central air, fireplace, 2 BR 1
BA, Large kitchen, dining
room, living room, and family
room, utility room, possible 3rd
BR, well and city water, outbuilding and barn built 1980,
Longhollow Rd 9/10 mile off rt
2 call 937-748-2073 or 304674-1945
For Sale 1997 Clayton Mobile
Home 16 x 76 3 BR,
2 Bath on Rented lot 304-5932413
GREAT VALUE /CAPE COD
CORAL BRICK - 4 Bdrm 3bath 4.06 acre lot @ 115
Harrisburg Rd 45614 PRICE
REDUCED /MOTIVATED
SELLER Ph.304-812-5757 or
740-645-6198
HOUSE FOR SALE 3BR, 2BA,
2 CAR GARAGE, POLE
BARN, POND AND GAZEBO,
24X30 PICNIC SHELTER, 4.3
ACRES. CHESHIRE
740-367-7156
Nice 2 yr old 3-Bdrm &amp; 2 1/2
bath home / lg detached Garage $110,000.00 Seller pays
closing cost - 1-740-446-9966
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.
Land (Acreage)
LOT FOR SALE
3533 McComas Branch Rd
Milton
Great Location for Doublewide
Home Aeration Unit on site
1/2 acre m/l
Utilities Available
Assessed Value $20,900.00
Bargain Price
For Quick Sale
$2,500.00
304-295-9090
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.
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.

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
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
2-Story, 3- Bdrm Home with
Big Back Yard located 0n 3rd
Ave $550/mo. plus deposit
708-214-5829
Mobile Home for rent on Rt. 62
S. Appliances, Water &amp; Sanitation included. References &amp;
Deposit required. Call:
(304)675-7961
One Br house. Must See! Deposit &amp; References. $400.
Nancy 675-4024 or 675-0799
Homestead Realty Broker
Land (Acreage)
LOT FOR SALE
Whitten Estates, Milton
1.92 Acres
Great location for DW
Nice Area
Utilities Available
Assessed Value $26,700.00
Priced
For Quick Sale
$12,500.00
304-295-9090
Rentals
1 or 2 Bdrm Mobile Home in
Vinton - HUD is Okay, 740441-5150
3-Bdrm / 2 bath Mobile Home
$500/mo &amp; $500 deposit 740645-5975 or 740-367-0641
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Auto - Classic / Antiques
1948 WILLYS JEEP CJ2A,
4x4, All Original! Great Condition! Asking $9,000 740-4461272
RVs/Campers
Prime river lot for rent, beautiful beach, plenty of shade,
for info, call 740-992-5782
Trucks/SUVs/Vans
2011 Dark Green Jeep Grand
Cherokee Laredo, one owner,
50,000 miles, new tires, sunroof, cloth interior, $22,900
740-416-4517
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

ANNUITY.COM
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CANADA DRUG:
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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.
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
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1-800-734-5524
We will pick old Stove, Dryer,
&amp; Washers, also old cars and
scrap metal. Call 740-6694240 or 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

Please visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

Sealed proposals shall be delivered to the address given at
the top of Notice To Bidders.
No bidder may withdraw his
bid within sixty (60) days after
the actual date of the opening
thereof.

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

Yard Sale

�Thursday, May 29, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Page 9

The Daily Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

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

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

5/29

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�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May 29, 2014

McIlroy
From Page 6
The Swede retired from competitive play in 2008 to marry Mike
McGee — son of former PGA
Tour player Jerry McGee — and
raise children Ava and William.
They spend part of their year in
Lake Tahoe, Nevada. Sorenstam
has agreed to play in a celebrity
golf tournament nearby, playing
against men — just as she did
when she played in the Colonial in
2003.
Nicklaus, who worked with Sorenstam on the golf course design
for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de
Janeiro, wasn’t familiar with the
celebrity event or who would play
in it. But he knew who he’d pick
to win.
“She can still play. Don’t underestimate her,” he said. “She’ll be the
best player there.”
RIGHT-LEANING: No lefthander has won in the Memorial
Tournament’s 38 years.
A couple of notable non-righties
talk as if that’s about to change.
“I don’t have a good answer for
you why no left-handed player has
won here,” said Phil Mickelson,
who has withdrawn from the tournament as many times (2) as he’s
finished in the top five in 13 starts.

“I guess we haven’t had a great
number of good left-handed players on our tour until recently. Now
we’ve got some good ones. And I
think it’s just a matter of time.”
Bubba Watson said the numbers
favor right-handers.
“There’s more righties on tour
than lefties,” said Watson, never
in the top 20 in his eight trips to
Muirfield Village. “Golf just goes
in cycles. Maybe when one (lefty)
wins, then maybe it will just happen that way.”
CH-CH-CH-CHANGES: The
running joke is that Nicklaus can’t
wait to tinker with the layout at
Muirfield Village. Over the years,
there aren’t very many holes that
haven’t undergone a drastic transformation.
Yet there’s almost nothing new
about the course heading into the
opening round of the Memorial
Tournament.
After last year’s Memorial, Nicklaus lengthened the difficult, uphill, par-4 closing hole by 40 yards.
Many of the world’s top players
saw it for the first time in last fall’s
Presidents Cup competition.
“It’s amazing how they did the
change this year,” said defending
Memorial champion Matt Kuchar.
“You can’t even tell where the old

tee box was. There’s no outline of
where it used to be. It’s not just
grown over. It’s now part of a hillside slope.”
Almost nothing about the hole
was changed except for pushing
the tee back by 40 yards. As a result, most players must hit driver
instead of 3-wood while avoiding
the large tree just right of the landing area.
“There’ll be a lot more drivers
off the tee just because that tree
is 300 yards out now, and you’re
looking at 6, 5 or 4 irons into the
green for some guys,” Watson said.
TIGER TRACKS: Five-time
Memorial winner Tiger Woods is
still recovering from back surgery
and will miss the tournament for
the fourth time since 1997. He did
not play in 2006 after the death of
his father, Earl Woods, was battling
knee problems in 2008 and had leg
injuries throughout the summer of
2011 that sidelined him.
Woods called Nicklaus on
Wednesday morning to wish him
luck with the tournament and pass
along his regrets that he wasn’t
healthy enough to play this year.
“It was a very, very nice call,”
Nicklaus said. “He said he’s doing
well, progressing well, and he’s
looking forward to getting back

into the game. He misses it.”
Woods’ numbers at the tournament are incredible.
He has won more than $5 million in his 14 starts, an average of
$360,525 per start. In addition to
his victories in 1999-2001, 2009
and 2012, he’s also finished third
twice and fourth once. And he’s
never missed a cut.
Woods has banked $5,098 per
competitive hole — and $1,312
per stroke taken.
FAVORITE (AUSSIE) SON: Jason Day was born in Beaudesert,
Australia. Now he lives just a few
miles away from Muirfield Village,
where he’s a member.
He married an Ohio woman and
now finds himself considered a
local despite his hometown being
9,300 miles away.
“Oh, it’s huge,” he said of what it
would mean to win the Memorial.
“I play this course a lot and I practice out here pretty much every
day. I’ve become friends with a lot
of members here. My wife’s side of
the family only lives an hour away.
So we’re going to have a lot of people in town.”
Day is returning to action after
missing six weeks with a ligament
injury to his thumb. This will be
only his second tournament since

winning the WGC Match Play
Championship in February. He
had his left thumb put in a cast after finishing 20th at the Masters.
“I’m just excited that I can actually swing a club without pain,”
Day said. “I kind of forced myself
to play Augusta. It was sore then.
And that probably set me back two
to three weeks. When all’s said
and done, with Augusta mixed
in there, I’ve been out for three
months — and that’s a long time.”
DIVOTS: The field includes
seven of the top 10 players in the
world ranking, 16 of the top 25
and 54 of the top 100. … Fingers
crossed: The weather report at the
notoriously wet and windy Memorial is for calm, warm, sunny
weather all week. … Among those
in the 120-player field is Carlos Ortiz of Mexico, the leading
money-winner on the Web.com
Tour. He’ll be making his PGA
Tour debut. … Kuchar won by two
shots over Kevin Chappell a year
ago, with Kyle Stanley three more
shots back in third. … Past champions in the field include Kuchar,
Steve Stricker (2011), Justin Rose
(2010), K.J. Choi (2007), Carl Pettersson (2006), Ernie Els (2004),
Jim Furyk (2002) and Vijay Singh
(1997).

Sports Briefs
From Page 8
GAHS Athletic HOF meeting
CENTENARY, Ohio — Gallia Academy
is currently accepting nominations for the
GAHS Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2014
from now until Friday, July 18. Individuals
may obtain HOF application forms from the
school website. Boys applications will be accepted for any athlete who played prior to
the 1991-92 season, while the girls are accepting applications from any athlete who
played prior to the 1995-96 campaign. The
2014 HOF ceremonies will be held on Friday,
Oct. 3, before the start of the home football
contest against Belfry, with the awards banquet happening the following night at GAHS.
2014 URG soccer camps
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University
of Rio Grande soccer programs have announced their 2014 summer camp schedule.
A youth camp, for boys and girls age 4-11,
is set for June 2-5, from 6-8 p.m. each night.
Cost is $95 per camper.
Residential team camps for middle school
squads and for high school teams from West
Virginia are scheduled for June 8-12 and June
15-19. Cost is $305. The camps fall during
the three-week, out-of-season workout period
for prep programs from the Mountain State.
A team camp for girls’ high school squads

is planned for July 6-9, with a boys’ high
school team camp slated for July 13-17. Cost
for the girls’ camp is $270, while the boys’
camp has a fee of $305.
Fees for the residential camps include
lodging, meals, training sessions and tournament play.
Camp directors are URG men’s soccer
head coach Scott Morrissey, men’s assistant
coach Tony Daniels and Rio women’s soccer
head coach Callum Morris.
The camp brochure is available on the
men’s soccer link of the school’s athletic website, www.rioredstorm.com. Online registration and payment is available at www.rioredstormsoccercamps.com.
Registration forms should be mailed to
URG Lyne Center, P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande,
OH 45674. Checks should be made payable
to Scott Morrissey.
For more information, contact Morrissey
at (740) 245-7126, (740) 645-6438 or e-mail
scottm@rio.edu; Daniels at (740) 245-7493,
(740) 645-0377 or e-mail tdaniels@rio.edu;
or Morris at (740) 853-2639 or cmorris@
rio.edu.
URG men’s basketball
camp/shootouts
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University
of Rio Grande men’s basketball program
has announced its extensive summer

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

camp schedule for 2014.
The Little Storm Day Camp is scheduled
for June 9-11, from 9 a.m.-noon each day, at
the Lyne Center on the URG campus. The
camp is open to boys and girls, ages 6-9, and
the cost is $60.
The camp will focus on the fundamentals
of the game and will be conducted by Rio
Grande head coach Ken French, his staff and
current players.
There are also openings still available for a
handful of one-day shootouts.
A junior varsity only shootout is set for
Sunday, June 8, while coaches who would
like to bring both their varsity and junior varsity teams can do so during shootouts scheduled for June 6, 12, 13, 19 and 20. Cost is
$170 and teams will again receive at least
four games. Efforts will be made to avoid
conflicting game times.
All games for the team shootouts will
take place inside the Lyne Center, using
both the upper (Newt Oliver Arena) and
lower gyms. A coaches hospitality room will
also be available.
A Point Guard Camp for boys and girls
age 12-18 is set for Saturday, June 14, from
9 a.m.-1 p.m. Cost is $30.
There will also be a shooting camp for
both boys and girls, age 8-18, June 16-18,
from 9 a.m.-noon each day. Cost is $60 per
camper.
The crown jewel of the camp schedule
is the annual Hard Work Camp, which is
scheduled for Sunday, June 22-Friday, June
27. The individual camp is for boys only, age
10-16.
Cost is $200 for commuters and $285 for
overnight campers. Fees include lodging,
meals, awards, a reversible camp jersey and
a camp t-shirt.
The camp emphasizes offensive and defensive fundamentals, team play and work ethic.
It also features “The Triple”, the only tripleelimination tournament in the country, which
begins around noon on the 26th and concludes in the early morning hours of the 27th.

The awards ceremony, in which parents
are encouraged to attend, is scheduled for
Friday, June 27, from 9:30-11 a.m., and will
conclude the camp.
Online registration for all of the camps is
available through the men’s basketball link
on the school’s athletic website, www.rioredstorm.com. Registration forms are also available in the lobby of the Lyne Center during
regular business hours.
Registration forms should be mailed to
Rio Grande Men’s Basketball, P.O. Box 500,
Rio Grande, OH 45674. Checks should be
made payable to Big Red Basketball Camp.
For more information, contact French at
(740) 245-7294, 1-800-282-7201 (ext. 7294),
or send e-mail to kfrench@rio.edu.
2014 URG volleyball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University
of Rio Grande will host its 2014 Summer
Volleyball Camp, June 29-July 1, at the Lyne
Center on the URG campus.
The camp is open to girls in grades 6-12.
There will be two divisions for campers –
grade 6-8 and grade 9-12.
Campers will receive instruction in fundamentals and various drills from a staff that
will include a former All-American, as well
as All-Ohio and Player of the Year honorees
and NAIA national leaders in their area of
specialty.
Campers will also be divided into teams
for tournament play to conclude the camp.
Cost is $200 per camper, which includes
overnight lodging, meals and awards.
Registration forms and a camp schedule is
available on the volleyball link of the school’s
athletic website, www.rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms and a $100 deposit
should be mailed to Billina Donaldson, Volleyball Coach, P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande, OH
45674. Checks should be made payable to
Billina Donaldson Volleyball Camp.
For questions or concerns, call Donaldson
at (740) 988-6497 or send e-mail to billinad@rio.edu.

Friday, May 30th 2014
11:00AM - 1:00PM

@ our Pomeroy Retail Location

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.

Free food, great fun, and your
chance to win an awesome prize!

Dr. Vu completed his internship at BiCounty Community/Detroit
Riverview Hospital, Warren, Michigan, and his residency at
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!

Member FDIC
60505361

60508436

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