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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

WEATHER

Changing dynamics
on marriage... Page 4

Showers and
thunderstorms.
High near 84. Low
around 65... Page 2

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Local spring sports
action... Page 6

Olive Elizabeth Venz Miller
Dale Wendell Nibert, 86
William Lloyd Segraves, 76
Mary Elizabeth (Miller) Smith
50 cents daily

TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 88

Meigs’ first summer festival set for weekend

By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The kickoff to
Meigs County’s summer festival
season will come this weekend
with the Gold Wings and Ribs
Fest getting underway in downtown Pomeroy.
Early Friday, motorcycles will
roll into town for the FridaySaturday event that will feature
plenty of entertainment, contests
for both adults and children, vendors galore selling food and displaying their wares, all set up in
the parking area overlooking the
Ohio River.
The schedule calls for vendors
to be open on Friday for lunch at

11 a.m. and the artisans to have
their wares on display and be
ready for business at 3 p.m.
The kickoff to activities will
be 6 p.m. Friday when fire trucks
from across the area — with sirens blaring — parade through
town. Entertainment in the riverfront amphitheater will begin
with “Amix” at 7 p.m., followed
by the first contest, the BBQ
hog calling, open to anyone and
everyone, with the top caller to
receive a cash prize. The first
motorcycle light parade will take
place at 8 p.m. and at 9:10 Blitzkrieg will take the amphitheater
to round out the evening’s entertainment.
On Saturday, the annual art

show will be in Court Street
Park. Local storyteller Donna
Wilson is in charge. There will be
six categories on display and the
top winner in each category, as
judged by a panel of artists, will
receive a $50 cash prize. Questions concerning entries can be
directed to Wilson at 992-7830.
The categories are oils, acrylics,
watercolor, drawings, mix media, and photography.
They are to be brought to the
park between 9-9:35 a.m. Saturday. Each entry is to labeled as
to which category it is being entered and prepared for hanging
or display on an easel. There is a
limit if three entries per person.
The winners will be announced

at the festival stage at 4 p.m.
Saturday’s activities will kick
off at 10 a.m. with DJ Rockin’
Reggie spinning tunes on the
main stage to entertain the festival-goers, while the motorcyclists
go on a guided tour poker run to
see Meigs County sites. An open
mic to Coyote will begin at noon.
All the while, vendors from
around the state will be preparing barbecued ribs and wings to
feed the hungry and enter into
the Ohio’s Best Ribs and Ohio’s
Best Wings competition, which
takes place here every year, Winners will be announced at 5 p.m.
when the cyclists are back from
the county’s tour.
During the afternoon, there

will be several contests including
a balloon toss, a hula hoop contest, a cookie stacking contest,
a stick pony rodeo for the kids,
along with a pickle spittin’ contest in categories for both kids
and adults.
Evening entertainment in the
amphitheater will by Smokin’
Ham beginning at 6:30 p.m. and
Cross Road Station at 9:30 p.m.
The second motorcycle light
parade will be held between the
two performances. At that same
time there will be a teen karaoke
contest going on in Court Street
Park with cash prizes to the winners to round out the 10th annual Gold Wings and Ribs Fest.

Submitted photo

Scenic Ohio Board Chairman Gary Meisner, FASLA , ODOT District 180 Deputy Director T. Steve Williams, P.E. and assistant
director for transportation policy, and Chief Engineer James
A. Barna, P.E., left to right, display a Scenic Ohio Award plaque.

ODOT awards Meigs one of two
Scenic Ohio Award plaques
Submitted photos

Pictured (from left) are Brady Bissell, Karen Chan, and Casi Arnold during a scene from RCP’s world premiere production of “Shoelaces” by Nathan Jeffers.

New play by local playwright premiering here
Sentinel staff report

MIDDLEPORT — A new play by a local playwright will soon receive its world premiere with a
local community theater group.
River City Players (RCP) will present “Shoelaces,”
an original play written and directed by RCP member Nathan Jeffers. Performances will be at 7 p.m.
June 6 and June 7 at Middleport Village Hall, located
at 659 Pearl St. in Middleport. Tickets are $8 and
will be available at the door.
“I’m really excited about this show and the story
that is tells,” Jeffers said.
“Shoelaces” tells the story of a young man named
Eugene who moves into his grandparent’s old house
and soon finds out his aging grandmother, Ruby, has
been making trips back from the nursing home in the
middle of the night to spend time with his deceased
grandfather. He is forced to confront his repressed
emotions about his grandfather’s passing, his grandmother’s illness, as well as his relationships with his
mother and his boyfriend.
“This story is very relatable and I think everyone
will be able to identify in some way to the struggles
the characters are facing,” Jeffers added. “Everyone has
dealt with some kind of loss in their life and most have
probably struggled with a certain relationship they’ve
had, whether it was with a family member or a romantic relationship. But even when facing these heavy and Here, Karen Chan and Brady Bissell share a special moemotional times, the characters are also able to find a ment as their characters, Grandma and Eugene.
lot of humor, which is very true to real life. I think audiences from both younger and older generations will
really enjoy the fun of the humorous times and I hope Chan and Janis Carnahan.
Originally from Middleport, Jeffers is a 2010 gradthey’ll be able to take something away from the more
uate of Ohio University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts
serious moments the story touches on.”
Performing in the world premiere of “Shoe- degree in Playwriting. He currently lives in Athens
laces” will be Brady Bissell, Casi Arnold, Karen and is pursing a master’s degree in education.

MARIETTA — Two Ohio Department of Transportation District 10 projects, the State Route 664 relocation
near Old Man’s Cave, and State Route 124 relocation near
Long Bottom in Meigs County, recently received Scenic
Ohio Awards for protecting and enhancing the visual
quality and historical character of Ohio’s scenic resources.
“Southeast Ohio is nationally recognized for its scenic
beauty and we have a responsibility to help preserve the
attractive and natural quality of the area,” said District 10
Deputy Director Steve Williams.
The Hocking County SR 664 relocation enhances safety
and access to one of the state’s most recognized attractions, Old Man’s Cave.
According to Scenic Ohio, this project addressed, “Environmental and aesthetic concerns and the transportation and recreation needs of the public were met through improved parking
and access for emergency vehicles; greater compliance with ADA
requirements; new aesthetic elements; additional landscaping incorporating native species; and biofilter technologies.”
The Meigs County SR 124 project relocated 1.4 miles of
an Ohio River Scenic Byway out of the Ohio River flood
plain. This project was unique in that it had several environmental and cultural challenges, including protecting
“Devil’s Hole,” an historical Native American site, as well
as building a new scenic outlook and public fishing access.
Scenic Ohio is America’s longest standing advocate of
scenic highways and honors communities and entities
that are working to improve and protect visual, cultural
and historical character of Ohio’s scenic resources.

Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Whitney Thoene, chamber of commerce director, poses with
the goose which will be making its rounds to library branches
as a part getting a name.

Name this Chamber
Former Meigs County deputy in custody for fleeing, eluding of Commerce goose
By Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

COOLVILLE — A former Meigs
County deputy who had been facing
charges of theft of county property
is now facing additional fleeing and
eluding charges following a highspeed pursuit that occurred on Friday afternoon.
Meigs County Sheriff Keith Wood
said Monday that Robert Tate, of
Little Hocking, Ohio, was taken into
custody Friday after he fled Meigs
County and Athens County deputies
in the Coolville area.
Tate was reportedly fired from the
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office approximately five weeks ago and, ac-

cording to Wood, his office has been
attempting to acquire county equipment that Tate has been in possession of since the termination of his
employment.
After Tate refused to turn over the
equipment, the sheriff’s office reportedly filed theft charges against the
former deputy.
Meigs County and Athens County
deputies later attempted to meet
with Tate on Friday in Coolville, near
the Meigs-Athens county line; however, according to Wood, after the
suspect learned of his pending theft
charges, he jumped back into his vehicle and fled, leading deputies on a
high-speed pursuit through a residential area.

Assisting with the incident were
deputies with the Washington County Sheriff’s Office and troopers with
the Ohio State Highway Patrol.
Tate was reportedly taken into custody late on Friday afternoon. Further details regarding Tate’s arrest
have not yet been made available.
As of Monday afternoon, Tate was
reportedly awaiting transportation
to Athens County, where he is facing
charges of fleeing and eluding.
Wood reported that Tate was relieved of duty at the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office due to continued unsatisfactory work.
Further information in regard to
this case will be released as it is made
available by investigators.

POMEROY — As part of
its branding efforts, the chamber of commerce is partnering with the Meigs County
Library to hold a “Name the
Chamber Goose” contest for
area children this month.
The campaign will launch
Wednesday as a part of the library’s children’s summer reading kickoff program at 2 p.m.
at the Racine library branch.
There will be bounce houses,
face painting, snow cones, digging for treasure and more.
Children under the age of
12 will be able to enter by coloring a picture of the goose,
and submitting their suggestion for a name at the bottom
of the picture. The winner will

be chosen July 3 and the lucky
child will receive a prize.
The goose as well as the
coloring sheets will be at the
event, and coloring sheets will
be available at the libraries
through the month of June.
“It’s a great opportunity to
raise awareness for the chamber and its members,” said
Whitney Thoene, executive
director of the chamber, noting that the goose often visits
and promotes the businesses
of chamber members during
local events and activities.
Regular reports on how
the chamber goose is doing
will be available on the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce’s Facebook.

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Ohio Valley Forecast

Meigs County Community Calendar

Tuesday: Showers and thunderstorms before noon,
then showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm between
noon and 2 p.m., then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 2 p.m. High near 84. Southwest wind 5 to 9
mph. Chance of precipitation is 80 percent. New rainfall
amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except
higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Tuesday night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 65. Southwest
wind 3 to 8 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Wednesday: A chance of showers before 1 p.m., then a
chance of showers and thunderstorms between 1-5 p.m.,
then a chance of showers after 5 p.m. Partly sunny, with
a high near 86. Calm wind becoming south 5 to 7 mph in
the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Wednesday night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms, then showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm after midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around
64. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New rainfall
amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

June 4, 2014
RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education will meet in
special session on Wednesday, June
4, at 5 p.m. in the high school media
center.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 53.48
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 24.89
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 104.01
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.06
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 44.71
BorgWarner (NYSE) —63.31
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 13.93
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.430
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.34
Collins (NYSE) — 79.30
DuPont (NYSE) — 69.26
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.18
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.83
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 71.02
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 55.35
Kroger (NYSE) — 47.51
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 57.76
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 100.58
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.07
BBT (NYSE) — 38.08

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.37
Pepsico (NYSE) — 87.87
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.76
Rockwell (NYSE) — 122.66
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.27
Royal Dutch Shell — 78.72
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 39.36
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 76.76
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.32
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.34
Worthington (NYSE) — 40.15
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions June 2, 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.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes Tuesday through Saturday.
Annual local subscription price for The Pomeroy Daily Sentinel is $250.
Please call for more information on local pricing.
Full price single copy issues are $1 daily and $3 Saturday.

CONTACT US
EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-446-2342 Ext. 18
michaeljohnson
@civitasmedia.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER:
Jessica Chason
740-446-2342 Ext. 25
jchason@civitasmedia.com

June 5, 2014
CHESTER — Chester-Shade
Historical Association will have its
monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the
Chester Courthouse.
POMEROY —Return Jonathan

NEWSROOM:
740-992-2155
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
OBITUARIES:
740-992-2155

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

Buy Your
The Best Zero Turn Mower Built in the USA!
From

June 6, 2014
CHESTER — A community benefit will be held at Baum Lumber in
Chester to raise money for the medi-

Revival Service
RUTLAND — Revival services will be held at the Rose
of Sharon Holiness Chapel at Rutland, June 3-8, at 7 p.m.
each evening. The Rev. Ben Watts will be the speaker.
Pastor is Dewey King.
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

Square
Dance at Park
REEDSVILLE — A
square dance will be
7-10 p.m. Saturday at the
Forked Run State Park.
There will be a cake
walk, special drawings,
food and drinks. The
event is being sponsored
by Forked Run Friends.
For more information
call 740-667-6513.
Consumer
Confidence Reports
MIDDLEPORT — The
Village of Middleport has
mailed its 2013 public
consumer confidence report. Anyone not receiving one can pick one up
at the Public Works Office at village hall located
at 659 Pearl Street.

MHS Class Having
Fundraiser
POMEROY — In support of the class of 2017
a yard sale will be held at
Meigs High School from
8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Anyone
interested in reserving a
spot for yard sale items
should contact Samantha
Carroll
740-590-7796.
Cost is $5 for one table,
$8 for two. The sale will
be held in the student
parking lot. In the event
of rain it will be moved
to the school cafeteria.
Coon Hunters
Youth Day
POMEROY — The
Shade River Coon Hunters Youth Day will be
observed at noon June
7 at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. There will
be hunting, treeing and
bench show demonstrations, along with an archery trailer on site. For
more information contact Bill Spaun. 992-3992
or Tammy Cremeans,
992-3259 . The event is
sponsored by the Shade
River Coon Hunters and
the Ohio Division of Natural Resources.
Yard Sale
CHESTER — The
Chester Courthouse and
Museum will have a yard
sale June 6-7, 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. at the courthouse.
Clean items are needed
to put into the sale which
will benefit the historical
buildings.

204 Condor Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Senior Citizens Trip
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Council on
Aging is planning a all
trip to Niagara Falls and
Toronto, but the deadline
for signing up to attend is
May 27. The trip will be
by motor coach and the
four-night, five-day trip
will be from Sept. 22 to
Sept. 26. Included in the
price of $485 (per person
double occupancy) will be
motor coach transportation, eight meals, guided
tours of Niagara Falls and
Toronto, a journey to the
Falls on a Hornblower Niagara Cruise, gaming at
Fallsview Casino, a visit to
Niagara on the Lake and
Queen Victoria Park, and
a visit to Casa Loma, Canada’s most magnificent
castle. Payment of $75 is
required when signing up.
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

740-992-2975
740-508-1936

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Center. Some of those are as follows:
Meals at the Mulberry Country Kitchen — 11:30 a.m.12.30 p.m.
Free soup and roll Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday. Meal or salad buffet for $3 or meal of three
items Tuesday and Thursday; salad buffet on Wednesday.
Parish Shop — 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Monday-Friday.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.-noon Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11 a.m. Tuesday-Friday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m. and 5-7 p.m. Tuesday and
Thursday.

Meigs County Local Briefs

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service

Selling Gravely
For Over 37 Years

cal expenses of Amos Cross, a Viet
Nam veteran, and his wife Dee Dee.
It will begin at 11 a.m. and continue
into the afternoon. There will be
food, drinks, music, and raffles to include a 12 gauge Remington Turkey
Exp. and a patio set of table and two
padded chairs to be held on July 7.
The menu for Friday’s event consists
of hot dogs, homemade noodles, and
baked goods. Music will be provided
by G&amp;H D.J. and Karaoke Sound Co.
Free will donations will be accepted.

Meigs County Church Calendar

Church yard sales
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Fellowship Church
of the Nazarene will have
a yard sale Friday, 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. at the house beside the Tuppers Plains
BP gas station. It is
sponsored by the Ladies
Ministry of the church.
All proceeds go to the
church carpet fund.
RACINE — Morning
Star United Methodist
Church yard sale, 9 a.m.
to 2 p.m. at 46515 Morning Star Road, Racine.
SYRACUSE — The
Syracuse
Community
Church on Second Street
will have a craft and bake
sale along with serving
hot dogs at the church beginning at 10 a.m. Friday.

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

Meigs Chapter of the DAR will meeting at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
New officers will be installed by the
OSDAR chaplain Robin Rose. At 2
p.m. Jay Russell who specializes in
tombstone restoration reclamation
and monument preservation will
speak. The public is invited to attend.

and mementos, are included. The cost for the spiralbound and professionally
printed book is $20. Those
interested in getting a copy
are asked to contact Carol
Reed, 949-2910, or Sharon
Cottrill, 992-4275.
Health
Department Change
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department has extended
hours for public visits.
On the first Tuesday
of each month, the office will be open until 6
p.m. Services available
will include nursing (immunization clinic, etc.)
environmental
health
and vital statistics. The
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.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department will conduct an immunization
clinic Tuesday from 9-11
a.m.and 1-3 p.m. Children must be accompanied by a parent or
guardian and bring shot
records.

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�Tuesday, June 3, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 3

New pain management provider joins Holzer
GALLIPOLIS — Holzer officials said Dr. Kenneth Marshall,
pain management provider, has
recently joined Holzer Health System and will provide services at
the Athens and Jackson locations.
Marshall completed his medical education at the University of
Pennsylvania School Of Medicine
in Philadelphia. He completed an
internship and residency in Internal
Medicine at Presbyterian University
Hospital, University of Pittsburgh.
In addition, Marshall has completed
a residency in anesthesiology at the

Mercy Hospital of Pittsburgh, and
a fellowship in pain management
at Baptist Hospital, Bowman Gray
School of Medicine in WinstonSalem, N.C. Prior to joining Holzer,
Marshall was affiliated with a pain
management group providing hospital-based pain management services
in Athens and Logan, Ohio.
Pain management services exist
to assist patients who have chronic
(long-term) issues with pain including but not limited to back and
neck pain, pain from nerve injuries,
shingles, cancer pain, surgical inci-

sion pain, arthritis pain, neuropathic pain, soft tissue injury pain and
other conditions. Marshall utilizes
the following pain relief methods:
nerve blocks, injections with local anesthetics, steroids and neurolytics; radiofrequency therapy,
heating of nerve fibers; bier block,
intravenous regional block; Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation; behavioral medicine referrals;
physical therapy referrals; medical
management; spinal cord stimulators; and other modalities.
Patients are referred to Marshall

by their primary care or other treating physician. Marshall will work
closely with the patient and his/
her referring physician to create an
integrated care plan tailored to the
needs of the individual patient.
Marshall is board certified in
internal medicine and anesthesiology, with added qualifications
in pain medicine. He is a member
of the American Society of Anesthesiologist, Ohio Society of Anesthesiologists, and American Society of Regional Anesthesia and
Pain Medicine.
Dr. Kenneth Marshall

Obama: Power plant rule will shrink power prices
WASHINGTON (AP) —
In a sweeping initiative to
curb pollutants blamed for
global warming, the Obama
administration unveiled a
plan Monday aimed at cutting carbon dioxide emissions from power plants by
nearly a third by 2030. But it
delays the deadline for some
states to begin complying
until long after President
Barack Obama leaves office.
The 645-page plan, expected
to be finalized next year, is a
centerpiece of Obama’s efforts
to deal with climate change
and seeks to give the United
States more leverage to prod
other countries to act when
negotiations on a new international treaty resume next year.
Under the plan, carbon emissions are to be reduced 30 percent from 2005 levels, in what
would amount to one of the
most significant U.S. actions
on global warming.
Obama, in a conference
call hosted by the American
Lung Association, said the
plan would both shrink electricity prices and protect the
health of vulnerable Americans. He scolded critics who
he predicted would contend
anew that the limits would
crush jobs and damage the
economy.
“What we’ve seen every
time is that these claims are
debunked when you actually
give workers and businesses
the tools and the incentives they need to innovate,”
Obama said.
The proposal sets off a
complex regulatory process,
steeped in politics, in which
the 50 states will each determine how to meet customized targets set by the
Environmental Protection
Agency, then submit those
plans for approval.
“This is not just about
disappearing polar bears or
melting ice caps,” said EPA
Administrator Gina McCarthy. “This is about protecting
our health and our homes.
This is about protecting local
economies and jobs.”
Some states will be allowed to emit more pollutants and others less, leading
to an overall, nationwide reduction of 30 percent.
Many states that rely heavily on coal will be spared from
cutting a full 30 percent. West
Virginia, for example, must
reduce the pollution it puts
out per amount of power by
19 percent compared to the
rate in 2012. Ohio’s target is
28 percent less, while Kentucky and Wyoming will have
to find ways to make 18 percent and 19 percent cuts in
their electricity generation’s
efficiency.
On the other extreme,
New York has a 44 percent
target, EPA figures show. But
New York already has joined
with other Northeast states
to curb carbon dioxide from
power plants, reducing the
baseline figure from which
cuts must be made. States
like New York can get credit
for actions they’ve already
taken, lest they be punished
for taking early action.
Initially, Obama wanted
each state to submit its plan
by June 2016. But the draft
proposal shows states could
have until 2017 — and 2018,
if they join with other states.
That means even if the
rules survive legal and other
challenges, the dust won’t
likely settle on this transformation until well into the
next administration, raising
the possibility that political
dynamics in either Congress
or the White House could alter the rule’s course.
Although Obama doesn’t
need a vote in Congress to
approve his plans, lawmakers
in both the House and Senate have already vowed to try
to block them — including
Democratic Rep. Nick Rahall,
who faces a difficult re-election this year in coal-dependent West Virginia. Scuttling
the rules could be easier if
Republicans take the Senate
in November and then the

White House in 2016.
Another potential flash
point: The plan relies heavily on governors agreeing to
develop plans to meet the federal standard. If Republican
governors refuse to go along,
as was the case with Obama’s
expansion of Medicaid, the
EPA can create its own plan
for a state. But the specifics
of how EPA could force a
state to comply with that plan
remain murky.
S. William Becker, who
heads the National Association of Clean Air Agencies,
said it was good that the rule
will give states more time to
develop strategies and will
grant credit for previous
steps to cut emissions.
“Still, the regulatory and
resource challenges that lie
ahead are daunting,” Becker
said.
Power plants are the largest U.S. source of greenhouse
gases, accounting for about a
third of the annual emissions.
EPA data show power plants
have already reduced carbon
dioxide emissions by nearly
13 percent since 2005, meaning they are about halfway to
meeting the administration’s
goal.
The EPA projected that
carrying out the plan will cost
up to $8.8 billion annually in
2030, but the actual costs will
depend heavily on how states
choose to reach their targets.
The administration argued
that any costs to comply are
far outweighed by savings in
health expenses that the U.S.
will realize thanks to reductions in other pollutants such

as soot and smog that will
accompany a shift away from
dirtier fuels.
Environmental
groups
hailed the proposal, praising
both the climate effects and
the public health benefits
they said would follow. Former Vice President Al Gore,
a prominent environmental
advocate, called it “the most
important step taken to combat the climate crisis in our
country’s history.”
But energy advocates
sounded alarms, warning
of economic drag. Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., called the proposal “a dagger in the heart of
the American middle class.”
“If these rules are allowed
to go into effect, the administration for all intents and purposes is creating America’s
next energy crisis,” said Mike
Duncan of the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, which represents the
coal industry.
Options for states to meet
the targets include making
power plants more efficient,
reducing the frequency at
which coal-fired power plants
supply power to the grid,
and investing in more renewable, low-carbon sources
of energy. States could also
enhance programs aimed at
reducing demand by making
households and businesses
more energy-efficient. Each
of those categories will have
a separate target.
Coal once supplied about
half the nation’s electricity,
but has dropped to 40 percent amid a boom in natural

gas and renewable sources
such as wind and solar. Although the new emissions
cuts will further diminish
coal’s role, the EPA predicted
that it would remain a leading source of electricity in the

U.S., providing more than 30
percent of the projected supply.
Obama has already tackled the emissions from the
nation’s cars and trucks, announcing rules to reduce

carbon dioxide emissions by
doubling fuel economy. That
standard will reduce carbon
dioxide by more than 2 billion tons over the lives of
vehicles made in model years
2012-25.

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OPINION

Sending drones not divisions
By Eugene Robinson
In the post-Cold War era, it was possible to hold grand illusions and chase
utopian dreams. As President Obama
understands, and his foreign policy
critics fail to grasp, that time is past.
We live now in a post-post-Cold
War world. At West Point this week,
Obama attempted to sketch a different kind of U.S. leadership — less
messianic and martial, more cautious
and collaborative — designed to deal
with things as they are, not as we
might have hoped they would be.
After the fall of the Berlin Wall and
the dissolution of the Soviet Union, it
was possible to imagine what scholar
Francis Fukuyama called “the end of history.” Western-style free-market democracy had triumphed and would spread
inexorably around the globe. The ride
might be bumpy — we saw ethno-civil
war in the Balkans, genocide in Rwanda, terrorism in faraway places — but
there seemed no doubt where the world
was ultimately headed.
The 9/11 attacks proved reports of
history’s demise to be premature. In
response, George W. Bush pursued a
“freedom agenda” in keeping with the
post-Cold War mindset: Using military force, the United States attempted to install pro-Western democracies
in Afghanistan and Iraq. We ended up
with a corrupt regime in Kabul and a
sectarian regime in Baghdad, neither
of which is a reliable U.S. ally. Along
the way, we managed to make Iran, a
hostile adversary, more powerful and
secure than it was before we barged
into the neighborhood.
Everything about the post-post-

Cold War world — which dawned,
we can see in retrospect, on 9/11 — is
messy. Sweeping statements of principle do not translate easily into policy.
Look at the upheavals of the Arab
Spring. The Obama administration fully supported the right of the
Egyptian people to choose their own
leaders in free and fair elections —
unless those leaders belonged to the
Muslim Brotherhood, in which case
a coup to remove them could not
be called a coup. Regarding Syria,
Obama said categorically that dictator Bashar al-Assad had to go — but
did not want to give the anti-Assad
rebels heavy arms for fear they would
fall into the hands of terrorists.
It is easy to criticize these positions as situational or ad hoc. I believe that Obama’s “what coup?” policy in Egypt was questionable but that
his stay-out policy in Syria has been
prudent. But in both cases, I recognize that Obama cared less about
rhetorical consistency than about
trying to determine what is in the
best interests of the United States.
After a decade of war, polls show
virtually no appetite in this country
for foreign military adventure. The
political consensus that supports
the most extravagant level of defense spending in the world remains
intact, but the coffers no longer are
bottomless. No one doubts the United States will do whatever it must to
protect its vital interests — but the
definitions of “must” and “vital” may
have narrowed considerably.
History refuses to move in a
straight line. Hundreds of millions
of people are escaping from poverty

in Asia, Africa and Latin America,
and in the long run this will make the
world safer. Free markets have prevailed, mostly. But the inevitability of
Western-style democracy looks less
certain. China’s model of autocratic
capitalism with heavy state involvement is seen in some developing
countries as a plausible alternative.
Nationalism is a deep reservoir of
passion that bullies such as Vladimir
Putin can use to fuel their ambitions.
Religious strife between Sunni and
Shiite is being stoked and exploited
across the Middle East. Nucleararmed Pakistan is harboring what remains of the Taliban and often seems
on the verge of implosion.
The world economy is so interconnected that sanctions against,
say, Putin’s Russia may harm Angela
Merkel’s Germany. And the biggest
crisis the world faces — climate
change — requires a cooperative
global solution.
This is the panorama that Obama
faces. He is anything but an isolationist; to the contrary, he has shown that
he will use military force whenever
necessary and feasible. But he made
clear at West Point that his preference will be to send drones, not divisions — and that he will have to be
convinced that the use of force will
“not create more enemies than we
take off the battlefield.”
“To say that we have an interest in
pursuing peace and freedom beyond
our borders is not to say that every
problem has a military solution,” he
told the cadets. “Just because we
have the best hammer does not mean
that every problem is a nail.”

Eating Michelle Obama’s lunch
By Kathleen Parker
To hear tell, the mean
ol’ GOP is waging war
on Michelle Obama and,
brace yourself, America’s
children.
Got it?
The newest war on women/children relates to the first
lady’s well-intentioned but
disastrous school nutrition
program, otherwise known
as the Dumpster Derby.
First to good intentions:
Kudos to Obama for
recognizing and trying to
address childhood obesity.
If you think health care is
expensive now, wait until
these little human pillows
reach adulthood and then,
assuming their hearts hold
out, advanced age. Assuming, too, that our bottom-line

bureaucrats haven’t begun
recycling high-maintenance
humans by then. Might
want to keep an eye on the
Soylent Green market.
No, I’m not suggesting
death panels. I’m employing hyperbole in the service
of a point, the necessary
clarification of which highlights our mind-numbing
politics and our nation’s
diminishing sentience.
The first lady’s “Let’s
Move!” program and her
focus on whole foods (as
opposed to fast) and water
instead of sodas have been
welcome
developments.
Who better to bring needed attention to such issues?
Obama is merely expanding her maternal focus to
include all those public
school kids whose mothers

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apparently have forgotten
how to make a sandwich.
Or whose fathers have forgotten to say, “Get those
plugs out of your ears and
make friends with the lawn
mower” — or whatever its
urban comparable.
But, as is often the case
with mammoth federal programs, one size does not fit
all. Many school districts
have inadequate funding
to meet the new nutrition
standards and have had to
borrow from educational
programs, in some cases
shutting them down.
Moreover, the kids detest
the food and are tossing
their lunches, so to speak,
into the dumpster. Some
school districts report having to purchase or lease
more dumpsters to accommodate the extra garbage,
increasing their waste-collection costs as well.
These are but a few of
the stories I heard recently
when I spoke to about 1,000
members of the national
School Nutrition Association. There isn’t a more dedicated, decent, heroic group
of people in the association
encyclopedia. Not only are
they burdened with meeting
unfunded federal mandates,
but they have to hear the
gripes of America’s hungry
darlings. The association,
which initially supported the
new standards, has been lobbying for just the sort of bill
Republicans have produced.
This doesn’t mean that
the first lady’s program is
“gastro-fascism,” as one
writer put it, though I
rather like the term. Nor
is this a Republican war on
the first lady or the children
who refuse to eat food they
don’t like. I am not blind
to the brat factor here, but
nutritious food needn’t be
inedible. Also at play are
cultural differences. Apparently, children in the Southwest don’t like whole-wheat
tortillas and Southern kids
prefer their chicken fried.

I’m with the first lady all
the way on making modifications to lunches swimming in grease and overseasoned with sugar and
salt. But perhaps there’s a
middle ground that allows
a little local wiggle room.
Surely school nutritionists are capable of coming
up with healthier meals
that also taste good.
Alternatively — and this
is where I wish this debate were heading — Mrs.
Obama could suggest that
parents prepare their children’s meals.
What?! You’ve got to be
kidding! We’re too busy!!
Since when were we too
busy to scramble an egg
or toast a slice of bread?
Since the national narrative of women’s liberation concentrated on the
kitchen as metaphor for
home-bound drudgery and
oppression, that’s when.
On the upside, more men
are learning to cook, if my
home is an example.
When it comes to home
food preparation, the very
poor need extra help, obviously, but quality nutrition,
as most important things,
begins at home. And for a
majority of people, the cost
is not prohibitive. Using data
from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, a piece of toast
spread with peanut butter
and topped with sliced banana — a filling breakfast
loaded with protein, carbohydrates and potassium among
other nutrients — costs on
average about 50 cents.
We can’t all have a chef or
send our children to private
schools with meatier lunches, as the Obamas do. But
we can feed our children for
less trouble and money than
some think. Maybe the first
lady can modify her message
along with our menus: Cook
for your kids and they’ll grow
smart and strong.
Not to get too carried
away, but food, you know,
is love.

Page 4
TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2014

The changing
dynamics on marriage
By Dana Milbank
On a visit to New Mexico over Memorial Day
weekend, I dropped in on a college friend who’s
running for state treasurer. I expected his campaign would be a sleepy affair, all about pension
boards and rainy-day funds.
Instead, the race for the Democratic nomination was attracting front-page attention as the
candidates traded allegations over same-sex
marriage — an issue that has about as much relevance to being state treasurer of New Mexico
as a candidate’s position on North Korea.
Two weeks ago, my friend, Albuquerque lawyer John Wertheim, launched a barrage of TV
ads saying his opponent, former state Sen. Tim
Eichenberg, “sided with Republicans to prevent
equality for gay couples.”
The issue exploded, and Wertheim has become a minor celebrity in the gay and lesbian
community. “Whoa, this is good,” said gay-rights
lobbyist Linda Siegle, who with her partner was
one of the first same-sex couples to be married
in New Mexico. Gay New Mexicans are abuzz,
Siegle told me, even though “nobody really
knows what the treasurer does, anyway.”
Eichenberg says that he has always been for
marriage equality and that Wertheim’s accusation, based on a procedural vote in a legislative
committee four years ago, is a mischaracterization. He has fought back, attending a Memorial
Day dedication of a monument to lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender service members. But
he agrees that the issue has changed the race.
“When your opponent continues to hammer
this and misrepresent it the way he does, I think
people do take notice,” he told me. “I mean, he’s
on TV 20 times a day.”
We’ll know after Tuesday’s primary whether
the gambit worked, or whether Wertheim’s negative campaigning (which has been criticized by
newspapers and the state Democratic chairman)
produced a backlash. But whatever the outcome,
the race is another example of how dramatically
the calculations on the issue have changed in just
a couple of years.
Not long ago, supporting same-sex marriage
was a principled but perilous position, even for
Democrats, who stood to lose more moderate
voters than they gained in the gay community.
But rapidly shifting public opinion has turned
that calculation upside down. Not only do virtually all Democratic (and a good number of Republican) office seekers now bless gay marriage,
but many are taking the offensive on the issue as
opponents beat a hasty retreat.
The Human Rights Campaign has been tracking the swing: In Colorado, embattled Republican Rep. Mike Coffman, who opposed the repeal
of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” has announced his support for the Employment Non-Discrimination
Act; in New York, GOP Rep. Chris Gibson, being
challenged by an openly gay Democrat, became
a co-sponsor of ENDA; and in Illinois, former
Republican Rep. Robert Dold, who in 2011 said
he supported the Defense of Marriage Act, has
embraced marriage equality in an effort to win
back his seat.
Polls continue to show record levels of support for marriage equality — 59 percent to 34
percent in a March Washington Post-ABC News
survey, roughly the inverse of a decade earlier.
Since last year’s favorable Supreme Court
rulings, bans on same-sex marriage have been
struck down in 13 states, including Pennsylvania, where GOP Rep. Charlie Dent declared
recently that “life is too short” to stand in the
way of gay marriage. In Wisconsin, Gov. Scott
Walker, a prospective Republican presidential
candidate, softened his support for his state’s
marriage ban. Even Arkansas started issuing licenses for same-sex marriage.
The situation is similar in New Mexico,
where the Republican governor, Susana Martinez, abandoned her opposition to gay marriage
earlier this year, calling it “the law of the land.”
Amber Royster, executive director of Equality
New Mexico, told me that she doesn’t know of
a single Democratic office seeker who opposes
gay marriage, and “I don’t think you’ll find many
Republicans.”
By contrast, just five years ago, 10 of the 17
Democratic state senators joined with all 15
Republicans in voting down a bill giving legal
rights to domestic partners. As it happens, treasurer candidate Eichenberg was one of those in
support of the bill in 2009. But the next year, he
cast a vote that effectively killed a similar bill in
committee. Citing its possible costs, he joined
Republicans in a 5-4 vote to send the bill to another committee, where it faced certain death.
At the time, the New Mexico affiliate of Howard Dean-founded Democracy for America called
Eichenberg a “traitor to Democratic values.” But
it was a politically sound vote back then — before the politics of same-sex marriage changed
with unimaginable speed.

�Tuesday, June 3, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituary

Page 5

Death Notices

OLA LEONA ST. CLAIR
Gunner, and Jaylen; greatgreat-grandson Kade; sisters Alpha Bailey and Bessie Williams; and several
nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in
death by her parents; husband Avery St. Clair; sonin-law Jack Peavley; brothers-in-law Homer Bailey
and Windell Williams; and
great-grandson Dylan Randolph.
Funeral services will be 1
p.m. Tuesday, June 3, 2014,
at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Burial will follow in Wells
Cemetery. Visitation for
family and friends will be
4-7 p.m. Monday, June 2,
2014, and again two hours
prior to the funeral service
at the funeral home.
The family would like to
thank Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, O’Bleness
Emergency
Department
and Riverside Methodist
Hospital for all of their
care.
An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

POMEROY — Ola Leona St. Clair, 93, of Pomeroy, passed away Saturday,
May 31, 2014, at the Riverside Methodist Hospital in
Columbus. She was born
Aug. 12, 1920, to the late
Frankie and Emma (Saul)
Douglas. Mrs. St. Clair
worked as a housekeeper at
Ohio University for many
years. She was a member
of Carleton Church, Walkin Garden Club, Modern
Woodman and TOPS.
She is survived by her
children Carolyn (Chris)
Wilson, Gail (Myrtle) St.
Clair, Janet Peavley and
Nancy Burns; grandchildren Geoff (Erin) Cogar,
Jericia (John) Bentz, Darrick (Sierra) St. Clair,
Karen Randolph, Todd
(Jasmia) Wilson, Craig
Wilson, Kathy Pickens,
Vicky (Andy) Wilson,
Jay (Linda) Peavley, Jeff
(Christy) Peavley, Tim
(Kazue) Peavley, Kim
Peavley and Eric Milhoan;
great-grandchildren Owen,
Paisley, Autumn, David,
Gage, Breanna, Hunter,
Maja, Kathryn, Shane, Allyson, Easton, Jesse, Chad,
Jeremiah, Joshua, Sean,

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Funeral services will be
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2014, at Beale Chapel Church
in Apple Grove. Friends may
visit the family from 7-9 p.m.
Tuesday, June 3, 2014, at Deal
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., and one hour prior
to the service at the church on
Wednesday.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to
Beale Chapel Cemetery Fund,
26075 Huntington Road, Apple Grove, WV 25502; or the
charity of your choice.

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Extreme Weight Loss "Kathie and Josh" A mother and
son looking to change their lives for the better. (N)
Dweezil Zappa" (SF) (N)
NCIS "Homesick"
Person of Interest "The
NCIS: Los Angeles
"Unwritten Rule"
Crossing"
Riot "Tom Green and Andy I Wanna Marry Harry (N)
Eyewitness News at 10
Dick" (N)
D-Day 360 Recreating the
Hallowed Grounds
Objects and Memory An
battle that turned the tide of American military cemeteries exploration of the objects
the war.
outside of the U.S.
from national tragedies.
NCIS "Homesick"
NCIS: Los Angeles
Person of Interest "The
"Unwritten Rule"
Crossing"

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Access
Pre-game
SportsCenter
(1:00) ITF Tennis
Celeb Wife Swap "Gilbert
Gottfried/ Alan Thicke"
The Middle
The Middle

Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
MLB Baseball (L)
MLB Baseball San Francisco Giants at Cincinnati Reds Site: Great American Ball Park (L) Postgame
Beer Money
Inside (N)
NCAA Softball Division I Tournament Site: ASA Hall of Fame Stadium (L) SportsCenter
WNBA Basketball Los Angeles Sparks at Atlanta Dream (L) Inside
FIFA Soccer International Friendly (L)
Celeb Wife "Mick 'Mankind' True Tori "The Reunion: All Little Women: LA "Little
True Tori "The Reunion: All
Foley/Antonio Sabato Jr"
Questions Answered" (N)
Women, Big Drama" (N)
Questions Answered"
Miss Congeniality A tomboy FBI agent goes undercover in
17 Again A man wishes he had made different life
a beauty pageant to prevent a terrorist bombing. TV14
decisions and is given the chance to be 17 again. TVPG
(5:00)
Kick-Ass (‘10, Act) Clark
Ninja Assassin (‘09, Act) Sung Kang. A young ninja avenges the
Godzilla (‘98, Sci-Fi)
Duke, Aaron Johnson. TVMA
death of his friend by killing fellow ninjas from his clan. TVMA
Matthew Broderick. TV14
Webheads
Sam &amp; Cat
Thunder.
Hathaway
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law &amp; Order: SVU "Babes" Law&amp;O.:SVU "Persona"
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam House (N)
Modern Fam
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
CNN Special Report (N)
CNN Tonight
Castle
Castle "The Fifth Bullet"
Rizzoli "Killer in High Heels" Rizzoli &amp; Isles
Rizzoli &amp; Isles
(5:00)
Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The
Hitman Genetically bred for assassination, 47
300 (2006, Epic) Lena Headey,
Cradle of Life Angelina Jolie. TV14
becomes ensnared in a conspiracy by a woman. TVMA
Dominic West, Gerard Butler. TVMA
D. Catch "Against the Law" D. Catch "On the Rocks"
Catch "Falling Down" (N)
D. Catch "Lost at Sea" (N)
Siberian Cut (N)
S. Wars "The S. Wars "The Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Shipping
Shipping
French Job"
Shrining"
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
River Monsters
River Monsters
Mini Monsters
To Be Announced
Search for a Killer
Bad Girls Club
Bad Girls Club Seven 'bad' Bad Girls Club Seven 'bad' Bad Girls Club Seven 'bad' Tattoos After Tattoos After
girls live under one roof.
girls live under one roof.
girls live under one roof.
Dark
Dark
Law &amp; Order "Terminal"
Law &amp; Order "Thrill"
Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order
Kardashians Kardashians E! News (N)
Giuliana and Bill (N)
E! News
Divas "Wedding Mania"
(:20) Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Wicked Tuna "Sharks and
The Savage Line "Buffalo
Alaska State Troopers "DUI Alaska State Troopers
Wicked Tuna "The Mighty
Recreation"
Stampede"
on the 4th of July"
"Trail of Blood"
Bite"
(5:30) FB Talk Into the Blue Saltwater
Saltwater
Shark Hunters
Shark Hunters
Shark Hunters
America's Pre-game (L)
WPT Poker Alpha8
MLB 162 (N) BackShop (N) Pecos Lg
Pecos Lg (N) MLB Whiparound (L)
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Top Gear "American
Mountain Men "Winter's
"Stuff It"
"Tag Team"
Muscle" (N)
Wrath"
The Real Housewives
H.Wives "Choke-Lahoma"
Kandi's Wedding
The Real Housewives (N)
The People's Couch (N)
106 &amp; Park (N)
I Can Do Bad All by Myself (‘09, Com/Dra) Taraji P. Henson, Tyler Perry. TV14
Obsessed TV14
House
House
House
House Hunt. Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
FlipFlop (N) Flip or Flop
HouseH (N)
House (N)
(5:30) Star
Star Trek: Next Gen.
Wil Wheaton Heroes of Cosplay "Stan
Heroes of Cosplay "Ottawa Wil Wheaton Wil Wheaton
Trek: NG
"When the Bough Breaks"
Project
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Project (N)
Project

6

PM

6:30

Real Time With Bill Maher
(5:30) Bullet to the Head

(‘12, Act) Sung Kang,
Sylvester Stallone. TV14
(5:15)
The 13th
Warrior (‘99, Act) Antonio
Banderas. TVMA

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Red 2 (2013, Action) Helen Mirren, John Malkovich,
Game of Thrones "The
Silicon
Veep
Bruce Willis. A team of retired C.I.A operatives reunite to
Mountain and the Viper"
Valley
"Debate"
track down a missing nuclear device. TVPG
Die Another Day (‘02, Act) Halle Berry, Pierce
(:20)
Blue Streak (1999, Comedy) Luke Wilson, Peter
Brosnan. James Bond must uncover the connection
Greene, Martin Lawrence. A convict out on parole must
between a terrorist and a deceitful diamond broker. TV14
impersonate a detective in order to get his loot back. TVPG
Nurse J. "The Californica.
Diary of a Mad Black Woman (‘05, Dra) Steve Harris, Penny Dreadful
Lady With the "30 Minutes Kimberly Elise. Helen McCarthy must learn to stand on her "Demimonde"
Lamp"
own two feet after separating from her husband. TV14
or Less"

Dr. Ronald Jahner has
been recognized as a
National Board Certified Naturopathic
Physician (ANMA). He
specializes in natural
pain management.

60503230

�The Daily Sentinel

TUESDAY,
JUNE 3, 2014

SPORTS

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Matsuyama’s par holds off Na in Memorial playoff
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — Hideki
Matsuyama made two huge mistakes coming down the stretch —
and still walked away with a smile.
Matsuyama muscled his way into
a playoff with a clutch birdie on the
18th hole, then beat Kevin Na with
a par on the first playoff hole to win
the Memorial Tournament on Sunday.
It was a victory that could mark
the 22-year-old from Ehime, Japan,
as the next big thing in international
golf. He won in the elite event hosted and founded by Jack Nicklaus
and played on his Muirfield Village
layout. Nicklaus was also 22 when
he broke through as a pro.
“To win my first PGA Tour event
is enough, but to win it here at Mr.
Nicklaus’ course, it really gives me a
lot of confidence going (forward),”
Matsuyama said through an interpreter. “Hopefully I’ll be able to use
this week as a steppingstone to further my career.”

High drama unfolded over the last
five holes with Bubba Watson, who
won the Masters in April and should
be among the favorites at the U.S.
Open in 10 days, ahead of the pack.
Adam Scott, who won the Masters in 2013, was tied with Watson
for the lead before hitting into the
pond in front of the signature, par3 12th, making double bogey. He
made three more bogeys, costing
him a follow-up to his win last week
at Colonial.
Watson hit two wayward drives
— one at the par-4 14th and another
at the reachable par-5 15th — that
turned the tournament into a freefor-all. The first resulted in a bogey
that dropped him into a tie for the
lead.
The second all but doomed his
chances.
“(It was a) bad decision, trying
to be a hero,” he said of his hooked
rocket that ended up in the backyard of a million-dollar home that

backs up to the course.
The double bogey dropped him a
shot behind Na, who had completed
the day’s low round — an 8-under
64 — about two hours earlier. Na
had been relaxing in the clubhouse,
two shots out of the lead and behind some of the biggest stars in the
game.
Watson’s double opened the door
for Matsuyama, who led Na by two
strokes as he stepped to the 16th
tee, a 201-yard par-3 with a narrow
green on the other side of a large
lake.
“I knew the wind was coming
from the right,” Matsuyama said. “I
just hit a bad shot.”
His iron shot plunked into the
water a few feet short of the bank in
front of the green. He ended up with
a double-bogey and was suddenly
tied with the idle Na, who instantly
headed for the driving range.
Then Matsuyama’s second shot
to the 17th hole went through the

green and he made bogey.
But he came up big when he absolutely had to. His 313-yard drive on
the uphill finishing hole left him 165
yards to the treacherous back pin.
After he hit it, he tapped the ground
with the driver and the head broke
off. He just picked it up and stuffed
it in his bag.
His approach ended up 6 feet below the pin. When he drilled it into
the heart of the cup, he grabbed a
spot in the playoff.
Still, Watson hadn’t been eliminated. He also needed a birdie at
the 18th to join the fun. But his chip
from the fringe rolled well past.
In the playoff, Na promptly hit his
drive on 18 into the creek that runs
along the left side of the fairway.
“I overcompensated and pulled
it,” he said.
After a drop he hit an iron into
heavy rough right and short of the
green. From there he chipped on.
Meanwhile, Matsuyama, using

his 3-wood instead of a replacement
driver, hit into a bunker and then
hooked his second into deep rough
left of the green. But his flop shot
came to rest 10 feet from the hole
and he rolled in the speedy putt for
the win.
“He hit an unbelievable putt,” Na
said. “That was not an easy downhill-sloping putt.”
His first victory on American soil
followed Matsuyama’s five wins on
the Japan Golf Tour. He finished
in the top 10 of two majors a year
ago. He also gained valuable experience by playing Muirfield Village in
the Presidents Cup last fall, when
he was paired with Scott in four
matches.
Nicklaus was asked about his
tournament’s new champion.
“This young man’s going to win
a lot of golf tournaments,” he said.
“First one in the United States. Got
to start somewhere.”

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy’s Logan Allison (left) takes a handoff from Wes Jarrell (center) during the 4x100m relay semifinal
on Thursday at Muskingum University.

Blue Devils qualify for state in five events
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

River Valley’s Rachael Smith runs in the 100m dash at the Division II Region 7 championship on Thursday in New Concord.

Blue Angels advance
one to state meet
By Alex Hawley

NEW CONCORD, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
boys track and field team has earned five spots in
next week’s state meet.
GAHS as a team sixth was sixth in the Division II
Region 7 meet at Muskingum University and earned
two championships, one on Thursday and one on
Saturday.
Blue Devils junior Jacob Click took first in the
300m hurdles with a time of 38.91, while senior Logan Allison won the long jump with a leap of 22-9.
GAHS senior Winston Wade is also headed to Jesse
Owens Stadium as an individual after scoring a runner up finish in the 800m run with a time of 1:59.86.
Two Gallia Academy relay teams qualified for state,
the 4x400m relay team of Click, Blake Wilson, Griffon
McKinniss and Wade which took third (3:28.04), and
the 4x100m relay team of Wade Jarrell, Allison, Wes
Jarrell and Click which was fourth (44.06).
The 2014 Division II Region 7 boys Track and
Field championship was won by Sheridan with 58
points, followed by St. Clairsville with 54 and Cambridge with 51. GAHS was sixth with 42 points,
while River Valley tied with Morgan, McClain and
Rock Hill with three points.
Allison also scored in the 100m dash with a seventh place finish (11.44), while he was 10th in the
high jump (6-00). Quenton McKinniss was 11th
in the 110m hurdles (16.4) and 14th in the 300m
hurdles (44.62). The 4x800m relay team of Isaiah
Lester, Blake Wilson, Michael Edelmann and Winston Wade took eighth (8:30.52), adding one point
to the GAHS score.
RVHS freshman Andrew Moffett accounted for
all three of the Raiders points, finishing sixth in the
100m dash. Moffett finished 13th in the 400m dash
(54.14) and the 200m dash (23.94), while River Val-

Queen, who finished eighth
in the long jump (15-07.5).
Also competing for the
NEW CONCORD, Ohio Blue Angels were Madi Oil— And then there was one. er, who finished 11th in the
For the second consecu- 300m hurdles (51.29) and
tive year Hannah Watts Kathleen Allen finished
will be the Blue Angels 14th in the 100m hurdles
lone representative at the (17.44).
Division II state Track and
The Gallia Academy
Field Championship at Jes- 4x200m relay team of Madi
se Owens Stadium. Watts Oiler, Haleigh Caldwell,
earned the Region 7 cham- Taylor Queen and Hanpionship in the 800m run nah Watts finished 11th
Saturday at Muskingum (1:51.46), the 4x800m reUniversity, posting a time lay team of Madison Holof 2:13.89.
ley, Mesa Polcyn, Mary
Watts had the third best Watts and Hannah Watts
time in the 400m dash pre- was 12th (10:11.33), and
liminaries but did not run the 4x100m relay team of
in the finals on Saturday.
Queen, Haleigh Caldwell,
The Division II Region Jalea Caldwell and Kath7 girls team title was won leen Allen was 13th
by West Holmes with 98 (53.33).
points, followed by Indian
The Lady Raiders were
Valley (55) and Carrollton represented by Rachael
(39). Gallia Academy tied Smith, who was ninth in
with Philo and Sandy Val- the 100m dash (13.11)
ley for 17th place with 13 and 11th in the 200m dash
points, while River Valley (27.00).
failed to score.
Complete results of the
Gallia Academy’s other Division II Region 7 Track
Gallia Academy
three points came from and Field Championships
youth baseball camp
Mary Watts, who finished at Muskingum University
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia
seventh in the 3200m run can be found on the web at
Academy
baseball program will be host(12:10.07), and Taylor www.baumspage.com
ing a three-day youth baseball camp for
all kids entering grades 3-8 from Monday, June 9, through Wednesday, June
12, at Eastman Ball Field on the campus
of GAHS. The camp will run from 10
a.m. until noon each day, with instruction by GAHS coach Rich Corvin, his
staff and players focusing on the fundaFriday, June 6
mentals of hitting, fielding, throwing,
Track and Field
pitching, catching and base running.
OHSAA state meet at OSU, 9:30 a.m.
The cost of the camp is $50 per camper
or $40 apiece for two or more children
Saturday, June 7
from the same family. Each camper will
Track and Field
receive a camp t-shirt and other awards
OHSAA state meet at OSU, 9:30 a.m.
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Gallia Academy’s Jacob Click wins the 300m hurdles at
the Division II Region 7 Track and Field Championships in
New Concord.

ley’s 4x400m relay team of Mark Wray, Austin Hamilton, John Qualls and Moffett was 15th after failing
to post a time due to disqualification.
Complete results of the Division II Region 7 Track
and Field Championships at Muskingum University
can be found on the web at www.baumspage.com

OVP Sports Briefs

OVP Sports Schedule

will be presented, including prizes for
daily competitions and a ‘Camper of the
Week Award’ on the last day of camp.
Campers are asked to bring a baseball
glove, batting gloves, cleats and tennis
shoes, baseball pants/jogging pants/
shorts and a bat if so desired. For more
information, contact Rich Corvin at
(740) 645-4801.
Lady Raiders basketball
skills camp
BIDWELL, Ohio — The River Valley girls basketball program will be
hosting the Lady Raiders Basketball
Skills Camp for all girls grades 3-8 from
June 11-13 at the RVHS gymnasium.
The camp — which will be conducted

by RVHS coach Sarah Evans-Moore,
staff and players — will run in two different sessions, based on grade level.
Grades 3-5 will have camp from 8 a.m.
until 10:30 a.m. and grades 6-8 will run
from 11 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. The focal
points of the camp include instruction
on ball handling, passing, shooting
form, offensive moves, defense and
rebounding. Each camper will receive
a t-shirt and personal workout plan as
part of the camp fee, which is $50 per
camper. A discount is also offered to
any family for a second camper. For
more information, contact Coach Evans-Moore at (740) 441-1616 or send
email to sarah@evans-moore.com
See BRIEFS | 7

�Tuesday, June 3, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 7

Bulls’ Noah
Duncan, James set to break their Finals tie headlines NBA’s
all-defensive team

MIAMI (AP) — Over the last
10 seasons, only one NBA player
has been part of more wins than
LeBron James.
His name is Tim Duncan.
Their numbers over that decade
are incredibly similar. Duncan has
appeared in 622 regular-season
and playoff victories, James has
played in 621. Duncan is shooting
50.2 percent from the field, James
is shooting 50 percent. Duncan
has won two championships with
San Antonio during this 10-season stretch, James has two with
Miami.
Plus, when facing each other
in the NBA Finals, both has won
one, lost one.
Here comes the tiebreaker — a
Finals rematch that will have high
expectations.
Miami and San Antonio are the
league’s last two teams standing
for the second consecutive year,
their next chapter starting on the
Spurs’ home floor Thursday night.
The Heat won a wild series last
season for their second straight
championship, needing a frantic
rally to avoid elimination in Game
6 and then riding the strength of
a 37-point, 12-rebound effort from
James to top the Spurs in Game 7.
“I think our guys, they actually grew from the loss last year,”
Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said.
“I call it fortitude. I think they
showed an unbelievable amount
of fortitude. If I can compliment
my own team humbly, to have that
tough loss, especially the Game
6 and not have a pity party and
come back this year and get back
to the same position, I think that’s
fortitude.”
It’s the league’s first Finals rematch since Chicago and Utah
played in 1997 and 1998.
The teams have actually played
three times since last season’s
classic series ended, twice in the

Bill Ingram | Palm Beach Post | MCT photo

The Miami Heat’s LeBron James, right, is fouled by the San Antonio Spurs’
Tim Duncan after getting a lose ball with seconds left in a 95-88 Miami victory in Game 7 of the NBA Finals at the AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami,
Florida, on Thursday, June 20, 2013.

regular season, another being
a preseason meeting in Miami
where the Spurs acknowledged
that the pain of losing Game 7 on
that floor was still real.
Then again, it’s almost like they

wanted to feel that hurt at times.
Popovich showed the Spurs clips
of Games 6 and 7 early in training
camp this season, not so much to
open old wounds but rather speed
up the healing process.

NEW YORK (AP) — Chicago’s Joakim Noah and
Indiana’s Paul George received the most votes on
this year’s NBA all-defensive team, released Monday.
Less than two months after a landslide victory in
balloting for the league’s defensive player of the year,
Noah was the only player to receive more than 100
first-team votes and earn more than 200 points for
the team. Noah received 105 of 123 possible votes,
while George had 65 votes. The rest of the first team
consisted of Clippers guard Chris Paul, Oklahoma
City forward Serge Ibaka and Golden State swingman Andre Iguodala.
It’s the second consecutive year Noah was chosen
to the first team.
Four-time league MVP LeBron James and defensive player of the year runner-up Roy Hibbert were
both on the second team.
Noah dominated on the defensive end this season,
joining Andre Drummond of Detroit and Anthony
Davis of New Orleans as the only players in the
league to average at least 10.0 rebounds, 1.5 blocks
and 1.2 steals. Noah finished sixth in the league in
rebounding (11.3), 12th in blocks (1.51) and helped
the Bulls hold opponents to 43.0 percent field goal
shooting, the second-best mark in the league. He
also had 1.24 steals per game.
George, widely considered one of the league’s
best two-way players at age 24, finished fifth in the
league in steals (1.89) and was the only player in the
NBA to average at least 6.5 rebounds and 1.8 steals.
Paul received 64 first-team votes after winning his
sixth steals title (2.48). Ibaka made his presence felt
in the Western Conference finals. After getting beaten twice in San Antonio without him, the Thunder
won the next two games on their home court with
Ibaka. The Spurs eventually won the series 4-2.
Iguodala averaged 1.5 steals as the Warriors
jumped from No. 19 in defense in 2012-13 to 10th
this season. James and Iguodala each received 57
first-team votes but Iguodala had 14 more secondteam votes to edge out James for the final spot on
the first team.
Houston guard Patrick Beverley, Chicago guard
Jimmy Butler, San Antonio forward Kawhi Leonard
and Hibbert rounded out the second team.
Indiana and Chicago were the only teams with two
players on the list, which is selected by a panel of
123 sports writers and broadcasters in the U.S. and
Canada.

Briefs
From Page 6
Gallia Academy
volleyball clinic
CENTENARY, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy volleyball program will be hosting a two-day
mini clinic for girls entering
grades 4-7 in the upcoming
school year. The clinic will run
from 9 a.m. until 11 a.m. on Tuesday, June 10 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
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.
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 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) 245-5919
or (740) 645-4381.
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. Funda-

mentals 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.
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 threeweek, 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) 2457126, (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
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
triple-elimination 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, 1-800282-7201 (ext. 7294), or send email 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.
URG women’s
basketball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande’s 2014
Women’s Basketball Camp is
scheduled for July 6-9 at the Lyne
Center on the URG campus.
The overnight instructional
camp is open to girls in grades
4-12. Cost is $275 per camper,
which includes lodging, meals, a
certificate of participation and a
t-shirt.
Campers will also receive 24hour supervision from coaches
and counselors; lecture/discussion groups and film sessions;
daily instruction on shooting,
ball-handling, post play and defense; and use of the school’s
swimming pool.
There will also be a camp store
featuring drinks, snacks, pizza

and Rio Grande apparel for sale
each day.
Veteran Rio Grande women’s
basketball head coach David
Smalley, who ranks among the
top 10 coaches on the active
wins list with more than 400,
will be the camp director.
Online registration is available
through the women’s basketball link on the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms are available
in the lobby of the Lyne Center
during regular business hours.
Registration forms should be
mailed to David Smalley, Rio
Grande Women’s Basketball
Camp, P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande,
OH 45674. Checks should be
made payable to Women’s Basketball Camp.
For more information, contact Smalley at (740) 245-7491,
1-800-282-7201, or send e-mail
to dsmalley@rio.edu.
URG distance
running camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande Track
&amp; Field program will host its
2014 Distance Camp, July 6-10,
on the URG campus.
The objective of the camp is
to increase the standards and
knowledge of distance running
and to provide current knowledge in techniques that will result in life-long benefits.
Campers will hear from a number of guest speakers.
Long-time Rio Grande track
&amp; field/cross country head coach
Bob Willey will be the camp director. Willey has over 40 years
of coaching at the collegiate level
and has fostered a program of
more than 100 cross country/
track &amp; field All-Americans.
Cost is $250 per runner, which
includes room, meals and recreation facilities. A $25 discount is
available to members of a school
with five or more athletes attending. A $25 deposit is required
with the return of a camp application, with the balance payable
on the participant’s arrival at
camp.
On-site registration will take
place on Sunday, July 6, from
1-1:30 p.m., at Bob Evans Farm
Hall on the URG campus.
Registration forms and the
camp brochure are available on
the track &amp; field and cross country links of the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms and the
non-refundable deposit should
be mailed to URG Lyne Center,
P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande, OH
45674. Checks should be made
payable to Coach Bob Willey.
Deadline for early registration
is July 1.
For questions or concerns,
send e-mail to rwilley@rio.edu
or call (740) 245-7487.

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

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All real estate advertising in
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equal opportunity basis. To
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HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777. The toll-free telephone
number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

Home Improvements

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Miscellaneous

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

Behavioral Health Specialist
Wirt County Health Services
Association is seeking a full
time Licensed Independent
Clinical Social Worker (LICSW)
and/or PHD Licensed Clinical
Psychologist who will be responsible for counseling, assessment and coordination of
the Integrated Behavioral
Health and Substance Abuse
Services within a Primary Care
setting. Applicants should be
familiar with motivational interviewing, SBIRT and harm reduction methods. The applicant must be capable of performing brief assessments and
interventions as well as crisis
intervention. WCHSA is a
FQHC that is a fast paced, exciting environment with the opportunity to work with highly
talented individuals dedicated
to our organization’s mission at
Jackson and Wirt County Centers. Competitive salary, excellent benefits EOE.

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2 BR-$375, &amp; 1 BR-$325, plus
dep &amp; util, 3rd St, Racine,
OH, 740-247-4292
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
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sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
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304-882-3017
Pleasant Valley Apartments is
now taking applications for 2,
3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD Subsidized Apartments. Applications
are taken Monday through
Thursday 9:00 am-1:00pm. Office is located at 1151 Evergreen Drive, Point Pleasant,
WV. (304) 675-5806.

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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
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Drivers &amp; Delivery
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Please send resume to or
mail to below address
cdavis@wchsa.com
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HR Coordinator
WCHSA
P.O Box 609
Elizabeth, WV 26143
304-275-8780
Direct Care Staff needed for
Jackson/Gallipolis surrounding
areas.
Applications accepted Mon Fri, 9 am - 3 pm,
located at 257 E Main St.,
Jackson, OH
Phone 740-286-0400

Miscellaneous

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Tuesday, June 3, 2014

00

OFF SERVICE
MENTION CODE: MB

800-416-5406

Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency is seeking applications for full-time and part-time
Intake clerk for the Emergency
Heating and Cooling Assistance program. MUST have
excellent computer skills, good
math skills, organizational
skills, able to work with persons of socio-economic backgrounds and capable of working under stress. Must be a
high school graduate or equivalent and have valid drivers license. Send resume with
work history and background
to GMCAA, Attn. Sandra Edwards, Box 272, Cheshire,
Ohio 45620. Applications accepted through 6/9/14.
GMCAA EOE
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
Tig welder needed with 2
years' experience. Must be
able to interpret diagrams and
assembly of prints, use various small hand tools and
power tools. Works well with
others and under supervision.
Have basic mechanical ability.
Traveing required. Health insurance available after 90
days. Send resume and copy
of certificates to:
Steelial Construction and Metal Fabrication
70764 St. Rt. 124 Vinton, OH
45686
740-669-5300
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
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Accredited Member Accrediting Council
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1274B

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
2-Story, 3- Bdrm Home with
Big Back Yard located 0n 3rd
Ave $550/mo. plus deposit
708-214-5829
One Br house. Must See inside! appl. w/d hookup Deposit &amp; References. $400. Nancy
675-4024 or 675-0799
Homestead Realty Broker
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
Mobile Home, 2BR, 1BA, big
yard, newly remodeled, in
County. $350/MO plus Deposit &amp; all Utilities 740-256-6202
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
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w/power everything. SUPER
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Houses For Sale

Miscellaneous

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

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

For Sale 1997 Clayton Mobile
Home 16 x 76 3 BR,
2 Bath on Rented lot 304-5932413
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Harrisburg Rd 45614 PRICE
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SELLER Ph.304-812-5757 or
740-645-6198
HOUSE FOR SALE 3BR, 2BA,
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BARN, POND AND GAZEBO,
24X30 PICNIC SHELTER, 4.3
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We will pick old Stove, Dryer,
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Stereo/TV/Electronics
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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

�Tuesday, June 3, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel

Page 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

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By Chris Browne

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

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�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

In The Pits: Selfies can’t fix attendance woes
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) —
Kyle Larson lingered near his car
waiting for the race to begin at
Dover International Speedway
when British television presenter Cherry Healey joined him on
the concrete. Kneeling next to a
rear tire, Healey snapped a selfie
with NASCAR’s newest star.
Selfies are all the rage in every age group, and in NASCAR,
where fans can rub elbows with
their favorite driver minutes
before the start of the race, the
ability to snap a shot with the
stars is just another perk in the
fan-friendly sport.
A snapshot of attendance
shows a wider problem that social media can’t fix.
Dover had swaths of empty
seats on Sunday, continuing the
trend of declining attendance at
the Delaware race track that primarily serves Baltimore, Philadelphia, Richmond, Virginia, and
Washington. Longtime observers said the crowd was the smallest in years, something CEO De-

nis McGlynn seemed to hint was
coming in the pre-race driver
meeting.
McGlynn told the drivers that
fans simply can’t afford to attend races at Dover, and warned
“you’re going to see some holes
in the grandstands.”
McGlynn and his staff are targeting a younger audience, trying to build a new generation of
race fans, and offered kids 14 and
under a $10 ticket on Sunday. In
an effort to appeal to those kids,
who love Facebook and Instagram and Twitter and Snapchat,
McGlynn urged drivers to take a
moment and pose for selfies with
the new fans. Autographs mean
little to anyone but collectors and
the guy trying to make a buck, so
the selfie goes a long way.
Far enough to fix attendance
woes?
Hardly.
It still costs roughly $65 to
get in the gate at Dover, and
all those kids targeted with the
$10 seats can’t get them without

the purchase of an adult ticket,
too. Throw in parking, food and
drink — even if you bring your
own — and it’s a big spend.
At least half of Dover’s targeted audience could have attended
the race at Richmond in April. A
huge portion of the fans can go
to Pocono Raceway in Pennsylvania this Sunday. And the luckiest fans at Pocono can skip the
drivers and aim for selfies with
the grand marshals, actors Jonah
Hill and Channing Tatum.
NASCAR desperately wants to
appeal to East Coast fans, but it’s
a bloated market. There are too
many entertainment options already, and NASCAR is cramming
in four Sprint Cup races from April
26 through Aug. 3 in one region.
Some will argue attendance
doesn’t matter because the tracks
don’t need attendance revenue
like they did years ago. All tracks
receive a cut of the television
package, and the deal that begins
next year is worth $8.2 billion, so
there’s plenty of wealth to trickle

down to every facility.
“It’s a media-based revenue
now, that’s a fact,” said McGlynn. “But I’m not sure that’s a
desire for us. We still want those
people in the grandstands.”
Dover seats 113,000. Maybe it
will hit that number this year if
it combines attendance from Sunday’s race with its September race.
Empty seats are ugly. They
look bad for the race track, bad
to the sponsors and are bad for
the health of NASCAR, regardless of the TV deal.
Could tracks fill the seats by
lowering ticket prices? Probably.
But hotel prices remain an issue
in many markets, and the lodging costs are simply too high for
fans even if the tickets are free.
So, aside from giving each
driver a daily selfie minimum to
meet, what’s the solution?
There’s only one answer: blowing up the schedule.
Iowa Speedway desperately
wants a Sprint Cup race and
seems to have the fan base to de-

serve consideration, but it can’t
get on the 38-race schedule. Las
Vegas Motor Speedway wants a
second date, but can’t have one
unless track owner Bruton Smith
is willing to move a race at one of
his other tracks.
This isn’t pick-on-Dover day,
but when a track is struggling
to fill half the grandstands, it
shouldn’t get two races a year.
Atlanta is a big market and a
storied race track, but when attendance dwindled, it lost one of
its two races.
There’s no logic at all in having Dover and Pocono back-toback unless the marketing priority is the RV crowd that has the
free time to travel to consecutive
events.
NASCAR wants every race
to matter, for every win to be a
huge event. But there’s a winner
every week and if you missed it
this Sunday, you can catch it next
Sunday or the one after that.
Selfies can’t fix this. Something
far more drastic has to be done.

Proposed $40 million settlement set for players
By Tim Dahlberg
Associated Press

A $40 million settlement
has been completed that
will pay college football and
basketball players dating

to 2003 for the use of their
likenesses in NCAA-branded videogames.
The payouts could go to
more than 100,000 athletes,
including some current
players, who were either on

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college rosters or had their
images used in videogames
made by Electronic Arts
featuring college teams.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs
say it would be the first
time college athletes will be
paid for the commercial use
of their images.
Depending on how many
athletes apply for the settlement, the payments could
range from as little as $48
for each year an athlete was

on a roster to $951 for each
year the image of an athlete
was used in a videogame.
“We’re incredibly pleased
with the results of this
settlement and the opportunity to right a huge wrong
enacted by the NCAA and
EA against these players
and their rights of publicity,” said Steve Berman, one
of the lead attorneys in the
case. “We’ve fought against
intense legal hurdles since

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goes to trial June 9 in Oakland, California.
According to documents
filed with the court late Friday, attorneys for O’Bannon
and 20 other plaintiffs say
they have already run up legal fees exceeding $30 million and expenses of more
than $4 million in pressing
their case. They are seeking
an injunction that would
stop the NCAA from enforcing rules that prohibit
athletes from profiting from
their play in college.
O’Bannon, who led
UCLA to a national title
in 1995, is also part of the
group settling with EA
Sports and Collegiate Licensing Co. Also covered
by the settlement are suits
brought by former Arizona
State quarterback Sam
Keller, former West Virginia football player Shawne
Alston and former Rutgers
player Ryan Hart.

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filing this case in 2009 and
to see this case come to
fruition is a certain victory.”
The settlement is with
Electronic Arts and Collegiate Licensing Co., which
licenses and markets college sports, and does not include the NCAA. The case
against the NCAA is scheduled for trial early next year.
Plaintiffs in the case,
which dates to 2009, contend the NCAA conspired
with Electronic Arts and
Collegiate Licensing Co. to
illegally use their images in
videogames.
U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken still must approve the proposed settlement, which comes on the
eve of a major antitrust trial
against the NCAA that could
reshape the way college
sports operate. That case,
featuring former UCLA basketball star Ed O’Bannon
and others as lead plaintiffs,

60505392

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