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                  <text>Today in
history
OPINION s 4

Mostly cloudy.
High near 80.
Low around 55.

State,
national
sports

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 64, Volume 118

Thursday, July 24, 2014 s 50¢

Day two of Kimes trial sees eight witnesses
Trial currently set to be complete by Friday

By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Day two of
the Mary Kimes trial came to
an end Wednesday afternoon
with eight witnesses for the
state testifying in court over a
period of two days.
A grand jury indicted Kimes
in May 2013 on eight counts of
theft in office after rumors and
speculation spread regarding
missing funds from the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Office. Kimes
was employed as the sheriff’s
secretary under sheriffs Robert Beegle and Ralph Trussell

until summer 2012.
The trial was originally set
to begin Monday, but was
delayed due to a low number
of a potential jury pool. Jury
selection began 8:30 a.m.
Tuesday morning and ended
around 1:30 p.m. After selection, Kevin Saionzkowski,
auditor of State’s Office, and
Sgt. Rick Patterson, of the
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office
took the stand.
Saionzkowski, who also
serves as a certified fraud
examiner, said he was made
aware of potential theft from
the financial auditors of Meigs

County and reached out to
help. After looking at documents and invoices related
to the concealed weapons
account, background check
account and the sheriff’s
account, Saionzkowski created
a report for the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office.
Patterson testified about
the handling of money for
the purchase of a background
check or the carrying a concealed weapon license. For
both processes, the applicant
would bring in the application
and fees in cash, which would
then be sealed in an envelope

and placed in a lock box in the
second floor office. According
to Patterson, Kimes was the
only one with access to the
lock box, and would take the
money, count it and write a
receipt for the office. Patterson said he had no idea what
Kimes did with the money
afterwards, but that it was her
responsibility.
The second day of the trial
began with Detective Bryan
Lockhart, of the Washington
County Sheriff’s Office Major
Crimes Task Force, taking the
stand. Lockhart was first contacted by then-Sheriff Beegle
on May 24, 2012, after Beegle
began to suspect that Kimes
was using food purchased from
Powell’s grocery store for the

sheriff’s office for personal
use. Ohio Assistant Attorney
General Melissa A. Schiffel
played a 54-minute interview
from June 15, 2012, between
Lockhart, Washington County
Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Carrie
Smithburger and Kimes at her
residence.
During the interview,
Lockhart and Smithburger
told Kimes that the sheriff’s
account was missing $4,851,
the CCW account was missing
$3,398 and the web checks
account was missing $5,587.
According to testimony, while
Kimes insisted the money
was taken as a whole to the
auditor’s office and deposited
See TRIAL | 5

Meigs unveils
three-year
improvement plan
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — A
contract for the first of
11 projects scheduled
for completion this year
in a three-year improvement plan for Meigs
Local Schools was
awarded by the Board
of Education at Tuesday night’s meeting.
The contract for the
paving of parking lots
at all three schools
went to McGhee Paving at a cost of $88,983.
The work is expected
to be completed before
school starts the week
of Aug. 18. Included
is both parking lots at
the high school, the elementary school parking
lot and around the bus
garage, and the parking
areas around the intermediate school.
The chip that will be
removed from the current parking lots will
be retained for used to
improve the foundation
of the walking path that
leads from the middle
school to the high
school. Paving of the
stadium parking lot is
in Phase 2 of the plan
scheduled for 2015-16.
Other projects slated
for completion this
school year, several of
which are already under
way, include a ramp to
the back of the stadium
at a cost of $15,000; a

band concession stand
and locker room now
being designed by RVC
Architects in Athens
at an estimated cost of
between $175,000 and
$250,000; drainage and
stone for a new parking lot below the field
house at $19,850; Central Office Renovations
for the EMIS Assessment personnel (no
cost estimate listed);
interior lighting at the
high school and intermediate school at a cost
of $17,520; cafe table
replacement at both
the high and intermediate schools at a cost of
$67,631; Marcs Radios
and Panic Buzzer
installation at $8,900;
upgrade at HVAC controls at Central, field
house and bus garage
at $26,602; and the
transfer of all student
records to electronic
format, now out for bid,
at an estimated cost of
$41,942.
The board reviewed
federal and state grant
awards coming into the
district for the school
year. They included
Title I money of
$941,167; 21st Century
Community Learning Center, $550,000;
IDEA-B special education, $455,089; Elementary and Secondary
School Counseling,
See PLAN | 3

Big Bend Community Band in concert

Community Band in concert
By Jennifer Harrison
Special to the Sentinel

MIDDLEPORT — A band
concert, homemade ice cream
and fellowship with others is,
for most folks, a perfect way
to spend a summer evening.
Last Friday, the Big Bend
Community Band, under the
direction of Toney Dingess,
performed for the last time
until practice resumes in
November, while those attending snacked on homemade ice
cream, and pulled pork and
chicken sandwiches.
The band played several
numbers, including tunes
from the Broadway musical “Fiddler On The Roof,”

with the finale of the evening
being March Jubilee. The
crowd favorite seemed to be
“A Salute to Armed Forces,”
beginning with Taps, followed
by official songs from all
branches of the armed services, and concluding with audience recitation of the Pledge
of Allegiance and the National
Anthem.
The Big Bend Community
Band has been in existence
since 1992, having three different directors over that time
period, William Hall, Roger
Williams and Toney Dingess.
During Friday night’s concert, photos, posters and news
See CONCERT | 3

Trombonist Chuck McManus, during his concert solo.

Mason’s man named to hall of fame
By Mindy Kearns
Special to OVP

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Nation: 3
— SPORTS
College: 6
NFL: 6
Golf: 10
— FEATURES
Classified: 7
Television:8
Comics: 9

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MASON — Robert “Bob” Barnitz,
of Mason, was one of five men inducted Saturday into the West Virginia
Agriculture and Forestry Hall of Fame
at Jackson’s Mill.
President of Bob’s Market and
Greenhouses Inc., Barnitz touts the 20
acres that comprises the market and
greenhouses as “West Virginia’s biggest little farm.” Explaining that farming is defined as planting a seed and
growing a plant, Barnitz said in 2013
Bob’s Market produced 128 million
plug seedlings and had $17 million in
Submitted photo gross sales.
Bob and Corena Barnitz are pictured on a recent trip to The Greenbrier in White
Although Barnitz said he never
Sulphur Springs, W.Va. Bob’s Market and Greenhouses Inc. supplies flowers for the
landscaping at the famous resort.

See HALL | 3

�LOCAL/STATE

2 Thursday, July 24, 2014

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

ARLETTA JOAN VANOVER
MIDDLEPORT —
Arletta Joan Vanover, 75,
of Middleport, passed
away Tuesday, July 22,
2014, at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
She was born Aug. 1,
1938, in Stumptown,
W.Va., to the late Alva and
Hallie (Cotterill) Cross.
Arletta was a good Christian woman who attended
Ash Street Church and
Syracuse Community
Church. She loved the
Dan Hayman Show on
Sundays when she was
unable to attend church.
She is survived by
children Debbie Lowery,
of Middleport, and Earl
Pickens, of Middleport;
grandson Zachary Pickens; nieces Cindy Wolfe,

Connie Smith, Linda
McMillan and Sandy
Francis; and special friend
Betty Conkle.
She was preceded in
death by her parents;
sisters Velma Parsons and
Daisy Patterson; brothers
Virgil Cross and Ralph
Mcune; and son-in-law
Tom Lowery.
A funeral service will
be 7 p.m. Friday, July
25, 2014, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Middleport with Pastor Dan Hayman officiating. Visitation for family
and friends will be one
hour prior to the funeral
service.
An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)

BUCK
THURMAN, Ohio — Harry E. “Junie” Buck, 65,
of Thurman, died Tuesday, July 22, 2014, at Holzer
Medical Center.
Funeral service will be noon Friday, July 25, 2014,
at McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in Vinton with Pastor Bob Scott officiating. Visitation will be one hour
prior to service. In lieu of flowers, consider a donation
to Hope Intervention, P.O. Box 727, Gallipolis, OH
45631, to help support autism awareness.
HALE
William “Bill” Andrew Hale, 67, died Saturday, June
7, 2014, in Amite County, Miss. A memorial service
will be 2 p.m. Saturday, July 26, 2014, at Little Flock
Church, 1900 Borland Road, Route 1, Ray, Ohio, with
brothers Mike Fortner and Hank Forgey officiating.
Burial will follow at Vinton Memorial Park, with
military graveside services conducted by Wilkesville
Joseph Foreman Post 476 and Vinton American
Legion Post 161.
Memorial gifts will be accepted for Little Flock
Church by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in Vinton,
Ohio.
MANNON
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Earl Otis Mannon, 88,
of Proctorville, died Tuesday, July 22, 2014, at home.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Friday, July 25,
2014, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory in Proctorville, by Pastor Jack Rankin. Burial will follow in
Crown City Cemetery in Crown City, Ohio. Proctorville V.F.W. Post 6878 will conduct military graveside
rites. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Thursday, July 24,
2014, at the funeral home.

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.
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OSHA cites Ohio
Lowe’s for repeat
electrical hazards

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

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

OSHA initiated the
inspection in March 2014
ZANESVILLE, Ohio
after the store reported
— Popular home improve- a higher than average
ment chain Lowe’s Cos.
injury rate. Proposed penInc. has been cited for five alties total $53,240.
repeat and one serious safe“Lowe’s has a responsity violation for exposing
bility to train its managworkers to electrical hazers and workers nationards and failing to provide
wide to maintain safe
information on respiratory working conditions. In
protection to employees at
its Zanesville store.
See HAZARD | 5

MCT Regional News Service

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.

Attention: Denture Sufferers!
Are you tired of:

New doctors
Hassuna and
Chandra join
Holzer Health
GALLIPOLIS — Dr. Deena Hassuna, a rheumatologist, and Dr.
Rameesh Chandra, interventional
cardiologist, have joined Holzer
Health System as new physicians.
Dr. Hassuna completed her internal medicine residency at Wright
Hassuna
State University-Boonshoft School
of Medicine in Dayton, and her
rheumatology fellowship at SUNY
Downstate Health System in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Hassuna provides care for rheumatic diseases, including: rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, vasculitis,
scleroderma, inflammatory myopaChandra
thies, ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis, gout, osteoarthritis
and fibromyalgia.
Procedures that Hassuna performs include joint
injections and aspirations, tender point injections,
trigger point injections and infusion therapies.
She is board certified by the American Board of
Internal Medicine, and is seeing patients at Holzer, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
Dr. Chandra completed his residency in internal
medicine and fellowship in cardiovascular disease
at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in Bronx,
N.Y. He also completed a fellowship in interventional cardiology at Mt. Sinai Medical Center in
Miami Beach, Fla. Chandra is board certified in
internal medicine, cardiology, nuclear cardiology
and echocardiography.
Chandra offers many clinical and procedural
skills, including: management of cardiovascular
disorders and general medical problems, coronary
and peripheral angioplasty, diagnostic cardiac
catheterization, emergency bedside procedures
like cardioversions, tranvenous pacemakers, swan
ganz catheter placement, etc., performance and
interpretation of transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiograms, stress echocardiograms,
and nuclear stress tests.
Holzer is a multi-discipline health care system
of over 160 Board Certified Physicians providing care in more than thirty areas of expertise in
fifteen clinical locations throughout southeastern
Ohio and western West Virginia.
For a complete list of services, call
1-855-4-HOLZER or visit www.holzer.org.

Butter sculptures honor Ohio’s state history

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By Kathy Lynn Gray

MCT Regional News Service

Mini Dental Implants may be your solution!

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60519921

COLUMBUS — Butter sculptures galore await Ohioans as the
2014 Ohio State Fair opens its
gates for a 12-day run. There’s a
butter tomato, because Ohio is
one of the biggest producers of the
fruit. There’s a butter carnation,
the state flower, and a butter trillium, the state wildflower.
Also in butter are a cardinal, the
state bird, balancing on a buckeye
tree, and a buckeye with a grinning
face dangling below it.
And then there are the butter
versions of a ladybug, a black racer
snake, a spotted salamander and a
white-tailed deer, as well as a trilobite fossil, an arrow-head, a papaw
and an Adena pipe.
All of the 15 sculptures relate
to Ohio. Made of real butter and
displayed in a refrigerated case at
46 degrees, they were unveiled yesterday at the Ohio Expo Center’s
Dairy Building.

AP Photo

Kathryn Whinnery, 18, of Adena, Ohio, the Ohio State Fair Queen, takes a selfie Tuesday
in front of the butter cow at the Ohio State Fair in the Dairy Products Building. The dairy
board is encouraging fair goers to take selfies in front of the cow and post them.

“I’ve been lobbying for this for
years,” said a jubilant Bob Kling,
the chief sculptor for the butter
creations for 15 years. “There are a

HOME?

See BUTTER | 5

Come &amp; Get it!
at
The Meigs County
Council on Aging

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lot of interesting sculptural forms

60517221

60522194

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 24, 2014 3

Plan
From Page 1

$372,329; Carol M. White
Physical Education Program, $268,115; Title II-A
Improving Teacher Quality,
$187,339; Carl D. Perkins,
secondary, $67,816; Title
VI-B Rural and Low Income,
$32,705; Early Childhood
Education, (preschool program) $120,000; and One Net
Ohio Program, $7,200.
The board also re-entered
into a service contract with
the Meigs County General
Health District to provide 60
hours of IT support power at
the rate of $40 per hour.
As for personnel for the
school year, the following
people were hired: Amy Shipe
as a secretary at Meigs High

School, and Lana Noble as a
secretary at Meigs Intermediate School, both on one year
contracts; Scott Powell as an
eighth-grade assistant football
coach for the coming season;
and Joe Eddy as a seventhgrade assistant football coach.
Also hired were Richard
Borders as an autism teacher
at the high school, Elizabeth
Gysan as an ED teacher, Matt
Ashcreat as a special education teacher and Meghan Matthews as a special education
teacher — all on one year contracts. Brian Swann was hired
as a varsity assistant football
coach for the coming season.
An overnight field trip to the
Kountry Resort at Racine this
weekend was approved for the
football players.

Other action taken in preparation for the new school year
included setting rates for
personnel. This includes $80
a day for substitute teachers,
$60 a day for substitute bus
drivers, and $8.50 per hour
for all other substitutes. Parent/student handbooks for all
three schools as submitted by
the principals were approved.
Extended service time was
granted to vocational agriculture teachers Kevin Sheppard,
20 days, and Jennifer Dunn,
15 days.
During the meeting there
was a lengthy discussion
on the two Meigs Athletic
Booster groups. One has
been around for years and
operates as a volunteer organization that raises money

and dedicates it to providing supplemental services to
Meigs athletes. Tony Hawk is
the current president of that
group.
The other booster group
was recently incorporated
and operates under the title
of Meigs Athletic Boosters
Inc. Lisa Roush is president
of that group. At the school
board meeting, Roush gave
the group’s primary goal as
raising money to provide
scholarships. She retains all
records and money belonging
to the Meigs Athletic Boosters, of which she was president until the last election
of officers. Hawk requested
that the records and funds
be returned to the original
Boosters group.

Both Hawk and Roush made
presentations at the board
meeting in the hope that the
school board members would
make a decision as to which
group prevails. As explained
at the meeting the board of
education does not have the
authority to define the role
of a volunteer organization
as long as it is in compliance
with school policy.
While no action was taken
by the board, members did
encourage that they work
together for the benefit of
the players. Superintendent
Rusty Bookman confirmed
that the organization is not
board sponsored, therefore
the board of education cannot make a decision on the
matter.

Concert
From Page 1

clippings of the band’s activities, over
the past 22 years, were on display for
concertgoers to enjoy.
The community band will resume
practice in the fall, on Monday evenings
from 7-8:30 p.m. beginning Nov. 3. It
will be at the Riverbend Arts Council,
290 N. Second Ave. in Middleport.
Those interested in joining the band are
welcome to attend.
There were approximately 75 people in
attendance for the Friday night concert
and the evening concluded with a Chinese auction. All activities were sponsored by the Riverbend Arts Council.

Memorabilia
from 22
years of
Big Bend
Community
Band on
display
at the
Riverbend
Arts
Council.

Hall
From Page 1

dreamed his business
would grow as large as it
is today, he was “rooted”
as a young boy into the
produce and plant business. His father was a
truck farmer in Letart
Falls, Ohio, back in the
1920s, and was assisted
by his grandfathers on
both sides of the family.
The men would ship
their produce by rail or
on flatbed boats. After
losing 75 acres of potatoes during the Depression and drought years,
however, his father sold
the farm in 1939 and
bought a roadside market
in Pomeroy.
As a young man, Bob
Barnitz became involved
in his dad’s produce business. He would drive a
tractor-trailer to South
Carolina and back up the
eastern shore, selling the
fruits and vegetables at
retail and wholesale.
Barnitz graduated from
Pomeroy High School in
1950, and attended both
Ohio State and Ohio University before enlisting
in the U.S. Air Force in
1952. There he spent four
years, and attended college another year before
finally rejoining his dad
in the trucking business.

They expanded into West
Virginia, renting ground
to grow tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and cabbage.
Barnitz left the growing
business once again after
getting married in 1959.
He worked for Valley Bell
Dairy, and later for Goodyear in Apple Grove as a
lab technician.
By 1970, Barnitz had
dreams of getting away
from shift work, however,
and bought five acres of
land where the market in
Mason now sits.
“I had expectations of
growing enough produce
for the roadside market,”
Barnitz said, “and I had
two small greenhouses
to grow the seeds big
enough to plant in the
fields.”
Barnitz said he soon
found growing plants
inside was far superior to

outside growing because
there were no weeds, rain
or frost to deal with.
In 1976, Barnitz left the
plant. His wife, Corena,
had been overseeing the
market, as well as taking
care of the couple’s five
sons. Today, all five of
those sons are employed
at, and operating, the
business. Barnitz said
his sons are all owners
through estate planning.
Barnitz credits the
growth of his company
to three things: producing a top quality product,
giving good service to
customers, and having
integrity. He prides himself in that he still buys
watermelons and peaches
from the same family
today as he did in 1972.
Bob’s Market now has
retail sites in Mason and
Parkersburg; Belpre and
Gallipolis, Ohio; and

Atlanta and Pittsburgh.
Barnitz said the retail
markets account for only
25 percent of the gross
sales, however. Small
plants and plugs are the
main moneymaker for
the business, followed by
wholesale finished products, and then retail.
Barnitz is quick to

point out that the corporation did not grow to
what it is today by his
hands alone. He highly
credits his wife, sons, the
grandchildren and daughters-in-law who work at
the business, as well as
employees.
Employing about 180
during peak season from

January to June, Barnitz
stated, “We have had many,
many wonderful employees
through the years.”
Barnitz concluded he
loves what he does and
has never regretted going
into the business. At 82,
Barnitz can still be found
daily at the market or
greenhouses.

Five-Star Quality Care

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1st Wednesday thru October
Dave Diles Park 11-1
Delivery Available
591-6095 ~ 416-2247 ~ 444-9157
We Still Have
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Middleport Community Association

60517249

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Five-Star Recipient for
Hip Fracture Treatment in 2014
Five-Star Recipient for
Treatment of Respiratory Failure for

3 Years in a Row
2012 ~ 2013 ~ 2014

60520604

�E ditorial
DAILY SENTINEL

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014 s PAGE 4

EDITORIAL

It’s time to
privatize
mail service
Congress is once again engaged in a fight over
whether the U.S. Postal Service should deliver
mail on Saturdays. But all the wrangling just goes
to show that this should be a business decision,
not a political decision.
The Postal Service has been struggling for years
with high labor costs and declining first-class mail
volume as people increasingly rely on electronic/
social media communication and online bill payment services. First-class mail volume has declined
by 34 percent over the last 10 years, and is now
about what it was 30 years ago.
For the first quarter of the calendar year, USPS
posted a $1.9 billion loss, which marked the 20th
time in the last 22 quarters it has been in the red.
It has also failed to make required pre-payments
of roughly $5.5 billion to its retiree health care
system for several years running, and faces tens of
billions of dollars in additional unfunded liabilities
and deferred capital investments.
In addition, the USPS has maxed out its $15 billion borrowing limit from the U.S. Treasury.
The Postal Service has estimated that getting
rid of Saturday delivery would save about $2 billion a year. President Barack Obama called for an
end to Saturday delivery in his fiscal year 2015
budget proposal, but the idea has faced stiff resistance in Congress.
So should mail be delivered on Saturdays?
Should the Postal Service be allowed to branch
off into other lines of business to grow revenues,
as it has also proposed? What should the price of
stamps be?
There is no way to determine the answer to
these questions in such a politicized, monopolized
atmosphere with price controls and various other
congressional dictates. The only objective way to
find out would be to privatize the Postal Service
and let that question be answered by consumers’
demands and the companies able and willing to
supply them.
If businesses see a profitable opportunity to
deliver mail on Saturday, or any other day for that
matter, and consumers are willing to pay the price
to make it so, there is your answer. To determine
the solution any other way is to substitute arbitrary decisions and political calculations for sound
economics.

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THEIR VIEW

What’s up with Dayton’s new athletic logo?

By Amelia Robinson

The University of Dayton has
the right to change its logo anytime it dang well sees fit.
That said, what’s up with that
weird logo, UD?
The Catholic institution
unveiled the bizarre replacement
for the logo everyone seemed to
like on Friday at UD Arena.
Saying the response to the
new athletic department symbol
designed by 160over90 — the
Philly company also behind the
Atlantic 10’s logo — has not been
positive is an understatement.
Far be it from me to dis art, but
…
As a colleague pointed out, the
design bares a striking resemblance to the logo used by Piqua
High School — an “Indian” colored in using blue and red lines.
Surely it would have been easier
and cheaper to hire someone to
directly hijack Piqua’s logo if this
was going to be the outcome.
I would have done it for $11.73.
A Change.org petition has
already been started to persuade
the university to bring back the
“U.”
“We are ProUD. We are UD.
The update is welcome but please
represent the University as the logo
traditionally has,” the petition says.
The petitioner — someone
claiming to be from Cincinnati

and going by the handle ‘a motley
motley’ — even doctored up an
example of what the new D could
look like beside a U.
The new logo had several
MyDaytonDailyNews.com readers
and social media commenters crying out about disease.
“Flat out looks like ‘VD,’” a reader with the handle GodBlessAmerica said in a comment on an article
about the new logo. “Why didn’t
they run some ‘finalist’ logos past
Flyer Faithful to vote on? As John
McEnroe would say, ‘You can
NOT be serious!’ And as Mark
Twain would say, ‘The difference
between the right word [letter]
and the almost right word [letter]
is the difference between lightning
and the lightning bug.’ VD?”
No one can blame the university
for wanting to update its logo.
The last logo change happened
20 years ago — and change can be
a very good thing even though it is
not always embraced.
People — especially alumni —
take changes to a university’s identity extremely seriously.
I remember the uproar when
Ohio University started phasing out the cute Paw logo when
I was a co-ed there in the 1990s
and replacing it with the current
Attack Cat logo.
Wright State drew all sorts of
heat when it replaced its Viking
mascot with a wolf around the

same time my classmates and I
were chatting “Bobcat forever.
Attack Cat never.”
Change can be good, but change
for change’s sake is stupid. It
wastes time, energy and money.
Change should improve the message, not distract from it. The OU
Attack Cat, as much as I miss the
Paw, does convey a message. Only
the very, very, smart fear a cute paw.
I don’t necessarily see “VD”
when I look at the new logo, but I
definitely do not see UD.
Officials say the “D” is in a font
called Vitesse, the French word for
speed.
The “V” everyone is seeing isn’t
supposed to be a “V” at all. The
design to the left of the “D” is supposed to emphasize movement
and progress.
Movement and progress?
I suppose “movement and progress” is something every university
strives for, but I would not have
guessed that is what the design
aimed to emphasize. As a national
audience learned during March
Madness, the university is not called
Movement and Progress Dayton.
At first glance, I guessed the
design had something to do with
“wings” for Dayton Flyers.
I was wrong — and so is this
logo.
Amelia Robinson is a columnist for the Dayton
Daily News. This column was distributed by MCT
Information Services.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
July 24, the 205th day of
2014. There are 160 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On July 24, 1974,
the Supreme Court
unanimously ruled that
President Richard Nixon
had to turn over subpoenaed White House tape
recordings to the Watergate special prosecutor.
On this date:
In 1783, Latin American revolutionary Simon
Bolivar (see-MOHN’
boh-LEE’-vahr) was born
in Caracas, Venezuela.
In 1862, Martin
Van Buren, the eighth
president of the United
States, and the first to
have been born a U.S.
citizen, died at age 79 in
Kinderhook, New York,
the town where he was
born in 1782.
In 1866, Tennessee
became the first state
to be readmitted to the
Union after the Civil
War.

In 1911, Yale University history professor
Hiram Bingham III found
the “Lost City of the
Incas,” Machu Picchu, in
Peru.
In 1923, the Treaty of
Lausanne, which settled
the boundaries of modern Turkey, was concluded in Switzerland.
In 1937, the state
of Alabama dropped
charges against four of
the nine young black
men accused of raping
two white women in the
“Scottsboro Case.”
In 1952, President
Harry S. Truman
announced a settlement
in a 53-day steel strike.
In 1959, during a
visit to Moscow, Vice
President Richard Nixon
engaged in his famous
“Kitchen Debate” with
Soviet leader Nikita
Khrushchev.
In 1969, the Apollo
11 astronauts — two of
whom had been the first
men to set foot on the
moon — splashed down

safely in the Pacific.
In 1987, Hulda
Crooks, a 91-year-old
mountaineer from California, became the oldest woman to conquer
Mount Fuji, Japan’s highest peak.
In 1998, a gunman
burst into the U.S. Capitol, killing two police
officers before being
shot and captured. (The
shooter, Russell Eugene
Weston Jr., is being held
in a federal mental facility.)
In 2002, nine coal
miners became trapped
in a flooded tunnel of
the Quecreek Mine in
western Pennsylvania;
the story ended happily
77 hours later with the
rescue of all nine.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actor John Aniston is 81.
Political cartoonist Pat
Oliphant is 79. Comedian
Ruth Buzzi is 78. Actor
Mark Goddard is 78.
Actor Dan Hedaya is 74.
Actor Chris Sarandon is
72. Comedian Gallagher

is 68. Actor Robert Hays
is 67. Former Republican
national chairman Marc
Racicot is 66. Actor
Michael Richards is 65.
Actress Lynda Carter is
63. Movie director Gus
Van Sant is 62. Country
singer Pam Tillis is 57.
Actor Paul Ben-Victor is
52. Actor Kadeem Hardison is 49. Actress-singer
Kristin Chenoweth is 46.
Actress Laura Leighton is
46. Actor John P. Navin
Jr. is 46. Actress-singer
Jennifer Lopez is 45.
Basketball player-turnedactor Rick Fox is 45.
Actor Eric Szmanda is
39. Actress Rose Byrne is
35. Country singer Jerrod
Niemann is 35. Actress
Summer Glau is 33.
Actress Elisabeth Moss is
32. Actress Anna Paquin
is 32. Actress Megan Park
is 28. Actress Mara Wilson is 27. Rock singer Jay
McGuiness (The Wanted)
is 24. Actress Emily Bett
Rickards (TV: Arrow”) is
23. TV personality Bindi
Irwin is 16.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 24, 2014 5

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Thursday, July 24
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of
the Meigs County Republican
Party will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
the Carleton School in Syracuse. Everyone welcome.

Advisory Council for the Area
Agency on Aging will meet at
10 a.m. in the Buckeye HillsHVRDD Area Agency on Aging
Office in Marietta.

Sunday, July 27
Friday, July 25
MARIETTA — The Regional
PORTLAND —The descen-

dants of Jacob and Maude
Brewer Van Meter will be 1
p.m. at Portland Park. Take a
covered dish and a lawn chair.
Fun, games, photos and fellowship. This is a “Hat Reunion,”
so wear your favorite hat and
maybe win a prize.

Monday, July 28
POMEROY — The finance
committee for Pomeroy Village
Council will meet at 6 p.m. in
the village council room.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Veterans Service
Commission will meet at 9
a.m. in the office at 117 E.

Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
Wednesday, July 30
PORTLAND — Gertrude
Lehew will celebrate her 94th
birthday on July 30. Cards may
be sent to her at 53460 Baldknob Stiversville Road, Portland, OH 45770.

Trial

MEIGS COUNTY LOCAL BRIEFS

From Page 1

Road Closing
RACINE — Meigs
CR-124 (Tornado Road)
is closed and will remain
closed through Aug. 21
to allow the Ohio Department of Transportation
to complete a bridge
replacement 1.4 miles
west of U. S. 33. Recommended routes include

Bashan Road North to
U.S. 33 South to Tornado
Road for eastbound traffic, and U.S. 33 North to
Bashan Road South to
Tornado Road for westbound traffic.

have vacation Bible School,
July 28 through Aug. 1.
Theme is “Light Your
World.” Special guests will
be “Super Light and Not
so Bright Men.”
Noah &amp; the Ark Drama
POMEROY —The Noah
and the Ark 2014 live outdoor drama will be held

Vacation Bible School
RUTLAND — Rutland
Community Church will

on Aug. 1, 2, and 3, and
8,9,and 10 at the Hillside
Baptist Church on S.R. 143.
Free Community Dinner
MIDDLEPORT — A
free community dinner
will be served at 5 p.m.
Thursday at the Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 53.97
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 24.35
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) —
106.48
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.81
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —
45.98
BorgWarner (NYSE) —65.47
Century Alum (NASDAQ) —
18.59
Champion (NASDAQ) —
0.250
City Holding (NASDAQ) —
43.05
Collins (NYSE) — 77.49
DuPont (NYSE) — 65.37
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.46

Gen Electric (NYSE) —
25.91
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) —
64.60
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 59.00
Kroger (NYSE) — 50.17
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 57.54
Norfolk So (NYSE) —
106.84
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.55
BBT (NYSE) — 37.54
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.70
Pepsico (NYSE) — 90.82
Premier (NASDAQ) — 16.15
Rockwell (NYSE) — 122.64
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) —
14.31

Royal Dutch Shell — 82.49
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) —
38.49
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 76.99
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.23
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.60
Worthington (NYSE) —
42.10
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions July 23, 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.

Hazard
cords in lieu of fixed wiring, failing to guard live
In this case, multiple
parts of electrical equipstores across the country ment adequately against
accidental contact and
have been cited for similar hazards, but the chain not closing unused openhas failed to address them ings in electrical panels.
at all locations and create Repeat violations were
cited for failing to provide
a culture of safety for all
workers with information
workers,” said Deborah
on the voluntary use of
Zubaty, OSHA’s area
respiratory protection
director in Columbus.
and improperly handling
“Electrical safe work
practices and respiratory flammable liquid storage
protection are among the containers.
OSHA issues repeat
10 most frequently cited
violations if an employer
OSHA standards.”
was previously cited for
The repeat electrical
violations involve using

From Page 2

the same or a similar
violation of any standard,
regulation, rule or order
at any other facility in
federal enforcement
states within the last five
years. Lowe’s was cited
for similar violations at
home improvement stores
in New York, Kansas,
Texas, Louisiana and
Florida between 2009 and
2014.
A serious violation also
was cited for not installing and using electrical
equipment in accordance
with listed or labeled

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His favorite? The bullfrog, which is about the
size of a small sheep in its
butter form.
The most difficult,
Kling said, was the carnation, whose thin petals
tended to flop forward
during its creation. The
cardinal was challenging,
too, because it tended to
slide off the butter branch
on which it was perched.
Scott Higgins, president
of the American Dairy
Association Mideast, said
the sculptures ” epitomize
the spirit of Ohio.”
Five artists spent six days
slathering 2,033 pounds
of butter onto the frames
they’d spent months building out of hardware cloth,
rock lath and other products, Kling said.
The traditional full-size
sculptures of a Holstein
dairy cow and calf are the
easiest, because they’re
done every year. The first
cow made its appearance
at the fair in 1903.
Other featured creatures in butter have
included an ice-cream
cone, a Tonka truck, Neil
Armstrong, John Glenn,
Jack Nicklaus and Darth
Vader. Last year, the
founder of the All-Ohio
State Fair Youth Choir,
Glenville D. Thomas, was
the butter honoree.

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instructions. An OSHA
violation is serious if
death or serious physical
harm could result from a
hazard an employer knew
or should have known
exits.

into the three separate accounts, both the sergeant and
detective informed her that the money was never actually
deposited. They informed her that 12 receipts had been
ripped out of an account book, and that with no receipts,
the money can’t be tracked and that all of her deposits
and receipts matched every month except in late April —
particularly, April 27, 2012.
“Unless you start getting your memory back, you’re
going to jail,” Lockhart said in the interview. “That’s
what’s going to happen. I’ve been doing this for 11 years.
That’s what’s going to happen. Your explanation is not in
any way reasonable. It’s all you and it’s gone.”
Lockhart said he informed Kimes that she had purchased two vehicles in the time the money went missing,
and soon after went on vacation. Kimes claimed that the
family received money for taxes in December, that she
inherited money from her mother and that her husband’s
unemployment checks paid the bills. Throughout the
interview, the detectives told Kimes she could confess
and lessen her sentence, but the defendent continued to
say she had no idea where the money was.
Beegle, who served as sheriff from 2005-13, took the
stand and confirmed that Kimes was the only one with
access to the deposited cash and applications once the
envelopes were put in the drop box. He also discussed
an instance in which a citizen could not acquire a deed
because their money was never received, although the
receipt for the deed was dated April 27, 2012. Daniel
Leonard, who formerly served as a Meigs County deputy
sheriff, also testified that Kimes was the only one with
access to the lockbox, although he testified that he never
personally saw Kimes steal any money.
Peter Dague, a certified public accountant from Columbus, took the stand next. Dague reported that in April
2012 he came to Meigs County for a sheriff’s sale and
purchased property for $175, while paying a 10 percent
minimum, or $20, and gave it to the woman conducting
the sale. Dague could not remember the name of the
woman conducting the bidding.
The last two witnesses, Meigs County Auditor Mary
Byer Hill and Meigs County Treasurer Peggy Yost, discussed how money is handled from the sheriff’s office
to both the auditor’s and treasurer’s office in the courthouse. Hill confirmed that money in outside accounts,
all through Farmer’s Bank — one of which Kimes had
access to — does not go through the auditor’s office.
However, inside accounts, including the CCW account
and the web check account, do go through the auditor’s
office.
Day three of the trial will begin today at 8:45 a.m.

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 24, 2014 s PAGE 6

Hoyer, Manziel set to battle for Browns’ QB job
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — It’s
time for football, Johnny.
After months of having his
off-field behavior analyzed,
scrutinized and criticized,
Johnny Manziel will again be
the center of attention.
This time, though, it won’t
be for swigging champagne on
an inflatable swan, but during
his first NFL training camp as
he and Brian Hoyer battle for
the Browns’ starting quarterback job.
The Hoyer-Manziel showdown will dominate camp until
someone is named the winner,
and that decision from firstyear coach Mike Pettine will
not come until the third exhi-

bition game (Aug. 23).
Manziel earned his “Johnny
Football” nickname during a stellar career at Texas A&amp;M, where
his daring, dazzling scrambles
and improvisational skills made
him a college star. It’s probably
not going to be nearly as easy for
him at this level.
The Browns drafted Manziel in the first round, selecting him to hopefully end a
decade-plus problem at the
game’s most vital position. It
may be only a matter of time
before Manziel unseats Hoyer,
a career backup who started
three games last season before
tearing his right knee ligament.

Hoyer enters camp with
a slight lead in the starter’s
competition. It’s up to him to
keep it.
A lifelong Browns fan,
Hoyer, who has full medical
clearance, is determined to
hold off Manziel. The pressure
will be immense as every pass,
incompletion, interception and
touchdown will be viewed and
examined by media members
and thousands of fans, who
had to register online just to
be able to watch practices this
summer.
Cleveland fans appear divided over Hoyer, the hometown
hero, and Manziel, the funloving curiosity.

The Browns, too, will feel
some heat — from fans, TV
networks, advertisers — to
push Manziel along.
Let the duel begin.
Here are some other things
to watch as the Browns, who
haven’t won more than five
games since 2007, open a
highly anticipated camp:
GORDON GONE?: Pro
Bowl wide receiver Josh Gordon’s clouded situation has
cast a cloud over the Browns’
hopes. Gordon, who led the
league in yards receiving last
season, may be facing an
indefinite ban for violating
the NFL’s substance abuse
policy again. The 23-year-old

hasn’t helped his cause with
two recent arrests — one for
alleged DUI in North Carolina.
If Gordon is done for the season, the Browns may have to
drastically alter their offensive
scheme, and find some playmakers. Their receiving group
is thin.
PETTINE’S PATIENCE:
The team’s third coach in three
years, Pettine, who spent last
season as Buffalo’s defensive
coordinator, is doing all he can
to change Cleveland’s culture.
Pettine has come across as
pragmatic, insightful and passionate. Players seem to be
See BATTLE | 8

Reynolds homers
twice as Brewers
top the Reds 5-1
MILWAUKEE (AP)
— Mark Reynolds homered twice and the Milwaukee Brewers swept
the three-game series
from the Cincinnati
Reds with a 5-1 win on
Wednesday.
Kyle Lohse pitched
6 2-3 innings to hand
the Reds their sixth
straight loss since the
All-Star break.
Lohse (11-4) walked
two, struck out three
and allowed four hits,
the last to pinchhitter Donald Lutz who
doubled. Reliever Zach
Duke retired Billy Hamilton on a chopper back
to the mound to end
the seventh.
Reynolds connected
on a 1-1 pitch from
Reds starter Mike
Leake (7-9) for his 15th
home run of the season.
Rickie Weeks was on
with a double to start
the sixth.
Reynolds’ second
home run came off
reliever Jumbo Diaz in
the eighth.
The Reds trailed the
NL Central-leading
Brewers by 1 1/2 games
before the All-Star
break, but the loss
dropped them 5 1-2
games behind.
Lohse and Leake
were locked in a scoreless until the fifth

inning. The Reds
pushed across a run on
Hamilton’ sacrifice fly,
but the Brewers tied it
with a run scoring triple from Carlos Gomez
and then took the lead
when Gomez scored
on Ryan Braun’s infield
single.
Second baseman Skip
Schumaker ranged far
to his left and snared
Braun’s grounder deep
in the hole at second.
Braun beat the throw in
a close play as Gomez
raced home.
Right fielder Jay
Bruce made a diving
lunge for Gomez’ sinking liner and missed.
Lohse, on with a single,
barely beat the relay
throw home.
Leake allowed 11 hits
in six innings as the
Reds lost a season-high
nine road games.
Brewers reliever
Jeremy Jeffress, whose
contract was selected
from Triple-A Nashville, made his debut
for Milwaukee with a
1-2-3 ninth inning.
NOTES: Reds SS
Zack Cozart missed the
game. He left Tuesday’s
game after he was hit
by a pitch on the first
two fingers on his right
hand. Manager Bryan
Price said he could
pinch hit.

AP Photo

Cincinnati Bengals president Mike Brown is interviewed during the team’s pre training camp luncheon, Tuesday, July 22, in Cincinnati.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS
Southern Jr. High volleyball conditioning
RACINE, Ohio — The Southern junior high volleyball teams will begin conditioning from 9 a.m.
until 11 a.m. on Monday, July 28, at the elementary school gymnasium. For more information,
contact Alan Crisp at (740) 444-3309.
GAMS football practice starts Aug. 4
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Practice for the 2014
Gallia Academy Middle School football program
will begin at 3 p.m. Monday, Aug. 4, at Memorial
Field. There will be an informational meeting at
the beginning of practice and all athletes should
wear a t-shirt and cleats. For more information,
contact Steve Patterson at (740) 709-1490.
Football officials training classes to be offered
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Attention anyone
interested in becoming a football official, training classes will begin within the next few weeks.
Anyone interested should contact Kevin Durst at
(304) 593-2544 for more details.
2014 Gallia County Youth Football League
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia County Youth
Football League is having sign-ups now through
August 4. Parents can pick up forms at BCMR
next to the post office in Gallipolis or they can be
downloaded from www.facebook.com/GalliaCountyYFL the league facebook page. The annual camp
will be held August 4 and 5 at 4:30 p.m. at Memorial Field in Gallipolis. The camp is free and all
camp participants will receive a free t-shirt.
See BRIEFS | 10

Bengals’ season comes down to playoffs
CINCINNATI (AP) — Training
camp will be interesting with a few
new faces trying to win starting
spots. The regular season will be
a challenge with a much tougher
schedule.
None of it will be remembered if
the Bengals don’t do one thing.
The whole season comes down
to winning in the playoffs. Anything less will be an immense disappointment, one that will bring a
call for change to an organization
reluctant to do it.
“We have to win one in the playoffs,” owner Mike Brown said. “We
are fully aware that didn’t happen.
It sticks in our craw. First we have
to get the opportunity again. That
is a long, hard road.”
The Bengals have reached the
playoffs each of the past three
seasons behind quarterback Andy
Dalton, who had his worst games
under the postseason pressure.
The Bengals remain committed to
Dalton and are negotiating a longterm extension.
Dalton is one of only five NFL
quarterbacks to lead his team to
the playoffs in each of his first
three seasons as a starter. It’s that
0-3 playoff mark that hangs over

everything, including training
camp.
“For us, we’ve got to be playing
our best at the end of the season,”
Dalton said. “Obviously, this (past)
year we did some good things, but
then when it got to the playoff game,
I didn’t play my best, the team as a
whole, we didn’t play our best.
“We have to do whatever it takes
to be doing that toward the end of
the season. It starts now.”
The Bengals haven’t won a playoff game since the 1990 season,
which ties for the sixth-longest
streak of postseason futility in
league history. Coach Marvin
Lewis is 0-5 in the playoffs, but
got a one-year extension that runs
through the 2015 season.
Lewis’ way of addressing the
playoff futility is to try to avoid
talking about it, even while everyone else is.
“The postseason doesn’t matter
right now,” Lewis said. “It’s the
season that matters.”
Some things to watch during
Bengals camp as they get ready for
that season:
DALTON’S DEAL: The Bengals
hope to have an extension done
with Dalton before the start of the

season. He’s got one year left on
his current contract and the team
could use its franchise tag on him
for 2015, so the Bengals can keep
him around for two more seasons
even if they don’t reach agreement.
Colin Kaepernick’s six-year deal
with $61 million guaranteed seems
to be a measuring stick.
“Kaepernick’s a good player,”
Brown said. “He’s been successful.
And we tend to think that our deal
should be something in that range,
not way beyond it.”
THE INJURED GUYS: Cornerback Leon Hall is coming off a torn
Achilles tendon. Defensive tackle
Geno Atkins had a torn anterior
cruciate ligament. Both starters are
expected back during camp, bolstering a unit that finished No. 3 in
yards allowed last season. Coordinator Mike Zimmer left to become
the head coach in Minnesota, but
new coordinator Paul Guenther has
the core of the defense intact.
“That helps always,” Guenther
said. “Especially in football, knowing where guys are going to be. So
the continuity of having everybody
back except for a few guys really
helps out.”
See BENGALS | 8

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�SPORTS

8 Thursday, July 24, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Makeover complete, Steelers ready for resurgence
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The
faces Ike Taylor grew so accustomed to seeing line up alongside him over the past decade
have disappeared.
Ryan Clark? Gone. Ditto
Brett Keisel. And LaMarr
Woodley. Larry Foote too.
All Pittsburgh Steelers veterans with Super Bowl rings.
All now are a part of the
team’s past after another
offseason purge, part of the
inevitable churn from which no
franchise — not even the one
with more Lombardi Trophies
than any other — is immune.

Of the 90 players who will
report to Saint Vincent College
on Friday when the Steelers
open training camp, only seven
stood on the field in Tampa on
that cool February night five
years ago when Pittsburgh beat
the Arizona Cardinals for its
sixth championship.
The 34-year-old Taylor knows
he may be part of the next
wave out the door. He’s just trying to keep it propped open as
long as he can, even if it means
the longtime court jester has
suddenly become one of the defacto elder statesmen.

“There are a whole lot of
new faces,” the cornerback said
with a laugh. “That’s a good
and bad thing. It’s a good thing
that I am still here. I’ll give a
shout out to everybody who
left. But football is football.
Football, you have to understand as a player, is a business.”
And business wasn’t so hot
for the Steelers in 2013. Only a
resurgent 6-2 second half allowed
Pittsburgh to avoid its first
losing season since 2003. The
Steelers haven’t missed the playoffs three consecutive years this
millennium. To keep that streak

alive, they spent the long winter
and spring giving the defense a
needed jolt of speed and youth.
The early returns are promising. Cornerback William Gay
likened practice during organized team activities to a track
meet. One in which the defense
that finished 13th in the league
in yards allowed last year did
less chasing and more catching.
“These boys are running,’”
Taylor said. “When you look at
it on the field and you actually
play with them, you can see
that they are running.”
Perhaps, all the way back to

the postseason. Here’s what to
look for as Pittsburgh begins its
47th summer at Saint Vincent.
SLIM SHAZIER: Rookie
linebacker Ryan Shazier runs
like a safety and hits as if he’s
a linebacker. The Steelers can
deal with the 6-foot-1, 237-pound
Shazier’s relative lack of size if
it means he can move sideline
to sideline as quickly as he did
in three standout years at Ohio
State. On a defense where youngsters typically only start when
necessary, Shazier could be the
exception as the Steelers search
for someone to replace Foote.

Battle
From Page 6

buying in, but until the
Browns start winning
games, all the positive

talk is just talk. One of
Pettine’s early challenges will be managing the
hype around the HoyerManziel competition.

RUNNING AMOK:
Once they traded running back Trent Richardson last season, the
Browns’ running game

shifted into reverse.
Cleveland tied for 27th
overall in yards rushing,
a sad statistic for a franchise renowned for run-

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ning backs such as Hall
of Famers Jim Brown
and Leroy Kelly. New
offensive coordinator
Kyle Shanahan learned
the Xs and Os of a
sound running game
from his father, Mike,
who turned unknown
backs into Pro Bowlers
in Denver. With a new
zone-blocking scheme
and Pro Bowlers Joe
Thomas and Alex Mack
up front, the Browns
should open holes for
Ben Tate (free agent)
and rookie Terrance
West.
SACK ATTACK: Pettine wants an aggressive defense, and he’s
identified DE Jabaal
Sheard as a player who
could make a major
impact this season.
Sheard was moved to
outside linebacker last
season, and while he
did an admirable job in

coverage, he recorded
just 5½ sacks, a careerlow. The Browns are
expected to turn Sheard
loose and Cleveland’s
defensive front needs
more production from
Paul Kruger (4½ sacks)
and Barkevious Mingo
(five sacks). Sheard,
too, is in the final year
of his contract.
PRIMARY TARGET:
Gordon’s potential
suspension could make
things much tougher
on Pro Bowl TE Jordan
Cameron, who had a
breakout season with
80 catches for 917
yards and seven TDs
last year. Cameron is
in the final year of his
contract and would
like an extension, but
he’ll have a tough time
matching his ‘13 stats
without Gordon to
stretch the field and tie
up defenders.

Bengals
From Page 6

MORE PRESSURE: Guenther wants to use more
alignments up front and is looking for new ways to
get pressure on the quarterback, the two main changes he’s made in Zimmer’s defense. The four preseason
games will provide the first look at a unit that has
been the main reason for Cincinnati’s recent success.
FASTER OFFENSE: On the other side, new coordinator Hue Jackson wants the offense to get the snaps
off faster. Jackson, elevated when Jay Gruden got
the head coaching job in Washington, is pushing the
throttle.
“It’s still a work in progress, but I want it to be
as fast as our unit can go,” Jackson said. “I think it
gives us an advantage playing against some of these
defenses.
“We want to play as fast and furious as we can.
There won’t be a dull moment because we are going
to be a very aggressive unit.”
THE RBs: Second-year running back Giovani Bernard replaces BenJarvus Green-Ellis as the starter.
The Bengals drafted LSU’s Jeremy Hill in the second
round, looking to give them another powerful runner
who can catch the ball. Jackson is hoping to run the
ball more consistently this season, and a lot of focus
in camp will be on how the two young guys mesh.

Classifieds - continued from Page A7
Education
The VETERANS UPWARD
BOUND Mission: to Assist
and Support eligible Military
Veterans in their quests for
Higher Education / No Cost /
304-637-1257 /
www.vubwv.org
Help Wanted General
The Town of Mason is accepting applications for a Class I
Water Operator. Full-Time.
Applications can be picked up
at the the Town Hall.
Law Enforcement

The Town of Mason is
accepting applications
for the position of a full
time, WV certified police
chief for Mason, WV.
Applications may be
picked up during office
hours at the Mason
Town Hall at 656
Second Street Mason,
WV.
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Houses For Sale
2 bedroom house on 5th
street. 304-812-4350. Will
also rent $450 a month plus
utilities call 304-812-4350

Houses For Sale
3 bedroom, 1 bath single car
garage with house, huge 2 car
detached garage, sitting on 1/2
acre call 304-675-7770
4 bdrm, 3 1/2 bath, 3816 sq ft.,
4.65 acres, wraparound porch,
3 car detached garage, Located on Walnut Creek. Call
304-675-1216 or 304-5933634
4BR, located on East Bethel
RD. close to Hospital &amp; Stores,
$90,000, 740-446-7278 or 740645-2287
Letart area, 2012 Dbl-wide on
1+ Acre, 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba, Fireplace, Huge Island Kitchen,
New Carpet, 1,800 Sq. Ft+.
$74,900. 304-940-0223.
VERY NICE BRICK HOME,
CLOSE TO WALMART,
CORNER LOT, APPLIANCES,
CENTRAL AIR, AND SECURITY SYSTEM."$98,000.00,
PRICE NEGOTIABLE." CONTACT 740-446-7874.
Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Apartments/Townhouses

First Day
Camp Conley Area
1, 2, 3 &amp; 4 BRMS. Apt.
Electric &amp; Security Deposit
Accept Section 8 Vouchers
304-674-0023 or
304-444-4268
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Middleport, 2 room efficiency
apt. Also 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt,
no pets deposit and reference
required.(740) 992-0165.
New Haven, WV 1 bedroom
apt, no pet, deposit and reference. (740)992-0165
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Houses For Rent
2 Bdrm 1 Bath House in
Eureka across from the Dam.
$475/mo (deposit &amp; reference
required) Available Sept 1. Call
740-256-1159
3 Bdrm &amp; 3 bath Brick Home
3000 sq.ft located on Holcomb
Hill (Gallipolis) $850/mo &amp; deposit required call 740-6450974

Houses For Rent

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

3BR, Mobile Home in Cheshire
area, $500 month, $500 Deposit, No Pets, Plus Utilities
740-441-2707

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

OMAHA STEAKS:
ENJOY 100 percent guaranteed, delivered to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!
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FREE Burgers - The Family
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ORDER Today 1-800-7124684 Use code 48829ZYL or
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57

House for rent, 1 BR, garage,
in-town. Application/background check required. Call
446-3644
Rentals
3 Bdrm Mobile Home, In Harrisonville, W/D $500/mo plus
$500 , deposit Nice 740-7427010
3-Bdrm / 2 bath Mobile Home
$500/mo &amp; $500 deposit 740645-5975 or 740-367-0641
4 Bdrm Doublewide (Mason)
$500/mo &amp; $250 deposit Call
304-593-1547

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57

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Pets
Male Boxer Pups for Sale 740742-1044
Autos for Sale
1987 Honda GL 1200 Motorcyle in Perfect condition to give
away for good rider due to sudden accident contact fredmanjames1@gmail.com.
Miscellaneous
Finish Mower, 6ft, Good Condition, extra belt(new), $500 call
304-675-1746

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57
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

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, July 24, 2014 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green
7
2

6

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

By Hilary Price

4

7

5

5 6

3

9
3

8
9

8
4

9

8

6

3 7
2
4

1

Difficulty Level

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By Dave Green

�SPORTS

10 Thursday, July 24, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Broncos owner giving up control due to Alzheimer’s
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP)
— Denver Broncos owner Pat
Bowlen is giving up control of
the team because of Alzheimer’s disease.
The 70-year-old Bowlen will
no longer be a part of the club’s
daily operations, the Broncos
announced Wednesday. Team
President Joe Ellis is adding
the title of chief executive officer and will have final say on
all matters.
The Broncos say the ownership of the franchise is held in a
trust Bowlen set up more than
a decade ago in hopes that one
of his seven children will one
day run the team.
“As many in the Denver
community and around the
National Football League have
speculated, my husband, Pat,
has very bravely and quietly
battled Alzheimer’s disease
for the last few years. He has
elected to keep his condition
private because he has strongly
believed, and often said, ‘It’s
not about me,’” Annabel
Bowlen said in a statement
Wednesday.
“Pat has always wanted the
focus to be solely on the Denver Broncos and the great fans
who have supported this team
with such passion during his
30 years as owner. My family
is deeply saddened that Pat’s

health no longer allows him to
oversee the Broncos, which has
led to this public acknowledgment of such a personal health
condition,” she added.
“Alzheimer’s has taken so
much from Pat, but it will
never take away his love for the
Denver Broncos and his sincere
appreciation for the fans.”
The team issued a statement
offering “our full support,
compassion and respect to ‘Mr.
B,’ who has faced Alzheimer’s
disease with such dignity and
strength.”
Business is expected to go on
as usual at Broncos headquarters.
Bowlen had reduced his public appearances in recent years,
although he was still a fixture
at the team’s Dove Valley complex and at all of its games.
After acknowledging in 2009
that he suffered short-term
memory loss, he stepped back
from day-to-day operations in
2011 when he promoted Ellis
to president.
For the first time this offseason, Ellis represented the
Broncos at the annual owners
meetings.
Under Bowlen’s guidance,
the Broncos won six AFC titles
and two Super Bowls. At 307203-1, Bowlen and New York
Giants founder Tim Mara are

the only three-decade owners
in pro football history to win
60 percent of their games.
The Broncos’ 186 home victories are the most in the NFL
since he bought the team in
1984, when John Elway was his
quarterback, not his front office
chief, and the Broncos’ five
losing seasons during those
30 years are the fewest in the
league over that span.
Elway, now the team’s general manager, once said Bowlen’s
competitive nature as a triathlete when he was younger
translated into his business life
“and how he ran the Broncos.”
Bowlen was known as much
for his humility as his competitive fire, doing his best to stay
out of the spotlight even as he
built a winning culture and a
fan base that extends throughout the Rocky Mountain
region.
His style endeared him to
employees and players alike.
“Words can’t express the
love, respect &amp; gratitude I have
for Pat Bowlen. He set the standard for team ownership. Keep
Mr. B in your prayers,” former
Broncos receiver Ed McCaffrey
tweeted.
When Bowlen received the
Mizel Institute’s 2013 Community Enrichment Award,
Hall of Famer Shannon Sharpe

AP Photo | Ed Andrieski

This Jan. 5, 2011 file photo shows Denver Broncos owner Pat Bowlen talking about
Hall of Fame quarterback John Elway, who he named Executive V.P. of football
operations during a news conference at the team’s headquarters in Englewood,
Colo. Bowlen is giving up control of the team as he battles Alzheimer’s disease.
The team announced Wednesday that the 70-year-old Bowlen will no longer be a
part of the team’s daily operations.

said: “I would be hard-pressed
to believe that there’s an owner
that cares more about his city,
about his state, about his players than Mr. Bowlen does.”
Hall of Famer Gary Zimmerman said he realized Bowlen
was a different type of owner
when he signed up for a turkey
his first Thanksgiving in Denver, thinking it was all a joke.
“Then I come into the locker
room and there’s Pat sticking
turkeys into our lockers,” Zim-

merman recounted.
During Peyton Manning’s
whirlwind free agency tour
in 2012, Zimmerman said, he
knew any other teams pursuing
the four-time MVP were just
wasting their time.
“I knew he’d be a Bronco
before he did,” Zimmerman
said, “because once he visited
here and met with Mr. Bowlen,
I knew there was no way he
could go anywhere else.”

Briefs
From Page 6

5th and 6th grade in the
other. All coaches are
concussion trained and
certified and the league
will provide ll helmets,
pads and jerseys. All
league games will be
played on Saturdays at
Memorial Field.
The league employs
out of area officials and

Immediately following
the last day of camp the
league will hold its draft.
All students entering 3rd,
4th, 5th and 6th grades
are encouraged to attend.
The league will be split
into two inner leagues,
with 3rd and 4th grade
playing each in one and

is instructional and fun.
The team rosters are kept
between 14-18 players so
that every child plays in
the game. This is a strictly enforced league rule.
League fees are $30 per
person ($25 per person
if more than one family member) and they
include all regular season

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and tournament games.
There are also cheerleading singups for
girls entering grads
3-through-6 going on at
the camp.
For more information
visit www.facebook.com/
GalliaCountyYFL or call
Coach Chris Rathburn
(740) 645-2827, Coach
Mike Canaday (740) 4467538, or David Burnett at
(740) 208-0554.
URG softball camps
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande softball program
will conduct a pitching/
catching camp on Sunday,
July 27, at Rio Softball
Park on the URG campus.
The camp will run from
1-3 p.m. for players age
7-13 and from 3-5 p.m. for
players age 14-18 on both
dates. Cost is $30.
New Rio Grande softball head coach Amber
Bowman will direct the
camp, while RedStorm
players will also be assisting in the instruction.
Bowman was a fouryear starter at shortstop
for Rio from 2008-11. She
then spent two years as a
graduate assistant coach
for the RedStorm before
serving as an assistant
coach at the University
of Northwestern Ohio in
2014.
The pitching camp
will provide beginning
pitchers with a specific
fundamental basis. They
will leave with a daily

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Big Bend Youth Football
League Sign ups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
—
The BBYFL will be
Meigs Marauder Youth
holding sign ups every
Football Camp
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio Saturday in July from
— The 2014 Meigs Youth 11am to 1pm at the Middleport Stadium. Football
Football Camp will be
held on Saturday, August players and cheerleaders
from any school may sign
2, 2014 at Holzer Field,
up and you will be placed
Farmers Bank Stadium
on the team from your
on the campus of Meigs
school district. Ages are
from 3rd grade thru 6th
grade. Visit www.bigbendyouthfootball.com or
call Sarah (740)444-1606,
Tony (740)992-4067,
Angie (740)444-1177, or
Chris Hill (740)208-0455
for addition information.
Camp begins on July 28th.

**Due at Signing

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250 Columbus Rd., Athens 888-742-2395

High School. The camp
is for kids in grades 1-8
and begins at 9 a.m. and
will end at noon. Cost
of the camp is $20.The
camp will focus on attitude, effort, hard work,
team work, fundamentals,
technique, individual
drills and group drills.
Instruction will be provided by current Meigs
players and the coaching
staff. Also scheduled to
attend is Marshall and
New England Hall of
Famer, three-time Super
Bowl Champion Troy
Brown along with college football coaches and
players. Any child that
pre-registers by July 19th
will be guaranteed a camp
team shirt. Registrations
will be accepted after
the deadline and on the
day of the camp but they
will not be guaranteed a
camp t-shirt. Registration
on the day of the camp
is 8 a.m. Proceeds from
the camp will benefit the
Meigs High School Football program. For more
information call 740-6454479 or 740-416-5443.

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workout progression.
Advanced pitchers will
receive instruction on
spin pitching along with
advanced coaching on leg
drive and balance.
Parents and coaches are
welcome to attend any of
the sessions to observe
and ask questions.
Players MUST have a
completed Medical Consent Form, which is available from the Rio softball
webpage on the school’s
athletic website (www.
rioredstorm.com), before
being allowed to participate. Softballs will be provided, but players should
also bring appropriate
gear to the tryout.
Both an online registration form and a registration form which can be
printed and returned by
mail are also available on
the website,
Checks should be made
payable to Amber Bowman and mailed to 218
North College Avenue,
P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674.
For more information,
contact Bowman by
phone at (740) 245-7490
or by e-mail at abowman@rio.edu.

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60520960

PPHS youth baseball clinic
POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The Point
Pleasant Baseball Junior
Instructional Clinic will
be held at the PPHS baseball field from 9 a.m. until
1 p.m. on Wednesday,
July 30.
Instruction on the game
and fundamentals will
be taught by the Point
Pleasant baseball coaching staff and players. The
camp is for all kids ages
9-13 and costs $20 per
camper.
For more information,
contact PPHS baseball
coach Andrew Blain at
(304) 593-2540 or by email
at blain7@marshall.edu

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