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                  <text>Today in
history
OPINION s 4

Sunny. High
around 81.
Low near 58.

State,
national
sports

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 64, Volume 122

Thursday, July 31, 2014 s 50¢

Officer shooting case concludes

Court hands down 20-year prison sentence to Miller
By Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Following nearly two years
in the local court system,
the case against a Gallia
County man accused of
shooting and seriously
injuring a local police
officer has concluded.
During a hearing held
Monday, Cole Creighton
Miller, 30, of Gallipolis,
was sentenced to a total

of 20 years of imprisonment for his actions on
the morning of Sept.
24, 2012, that led to Ptl.
James Bartels of the Gallipolis Police Department
being shot and injured.
Appearing in court
on Monday were Jeff
Adkins, Gallia County
Prosecuting Attorney,
along with Miller and
his counsel Donald L.
Regensburger, of Columbus.

Common Pleas Judge
D. Dean Evans handed
down a sentence of 10
years for a charge of
felonious assault — for
Miller’s actions in injuring Bartels — a seven
year mandatory sentence
for a gun specification
attached to the first felonious assault charge, as
well as two three-year
sentences for two additional counts of felonious
assault for his actions in

attempting to harm two
additional peace officers
on the night of the shooting.
Evans further ordered
that the three-year sentences be served concurrently with each other
and consecutively with
the sentence imposed
for the first charge, for
a total of 20 years in
the Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction.

Following
the presumption
Monday’s hearthat multiple sening, Gallia
tences should be
County Assistant
served concurrently
Prosecuting
when arising from
Attorneys Eric
a single incident.
Mulford and
Even though the
Cole C. Miller
Britt Wiseman
recommended sen— who handled
tence included only
the prosecution in this
three years consecutive
case — commented in a
to the sentence imposed
joint statement, thanking for the assault on Ptl.
the court for imposing
Bartels, the 20-year
the longer sentence recsentence is the longest
ommended by the prosprison sentence imposed
ecution.
in this county for a
“We are pleased that
See MILLER | 2
the court deviated from

Vinton Bean
Changes ahead for school’s audits process
Dinner carries on
tradition Saturday
By April Jaynes

ajaynes@civitasmedia.com

Event is one of Ohio’s unique
memorials to soldiers of Civil War
By John Holcomb

For Ohio Valley Publishing

VINTON — The Vietnam Memorial Wall
recently displayed at the Bob Evans Farms in Rio
Grande is a traveling memorial to the fallen soldiers of the Vietnam War.
Though virtually unknown, a number of memorials exist in the United States that pay tribute to
the heroes of another war, one that was fought in
America and considered one of the bloodiest of all
wars — the American Civil War.
The states of Pennsylvania, Indiana and Ohio
all have something in common when it comes to
memorials honoring the soldiers who fought in the
American Civil War. These states have memorials
(which have been referred to as “living memorials” on occasion) in the form of annual events that
feature the soldier’s meal of beans.
Why memorials that feature a soldier’s meal of
beans? Simple. These events were all sponsored at
one time by Union veterans of the Civil War, and
these veterans prepared beans at these gatherings.
The old soldiers at Vinton (Gallia County) asked
See DINNER | 3
— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

See PROCESS | 5

‘Back-to-School Bash’ to bring in new year
By April Jaynes

— SPORTS
College: 6
Baseball: 6
Briefs: 10

ajaynes@civitasmedia.com

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CONVERSATION
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thoughts.

SUPPORT
&amp; GUIDANCE
in your time of sorrow

POINT PLEASANT — Mason
County families and students will gather to celebrate the start of the school
year on Friday evening outside Point
Pleasant Intermediate School.
Sponsored and coordinated by the
Mason County Family Resource NetFile photo
work’s Health and Wellness team, the
Students will be returning to school in Mason County in a matter of weeks. The Mason
county’s “Back-to-School Bash” will
County Family Resource Network’s Health and Wellness team will sponsor the county’s
feature free games and prizes, free hot “Back-to-School Bash” from 5-7 p.m. this Friday outside Point Pleasant Intermediate
School. The bash will feature free games and prizes, free hot dogs and drinks, informational

See BASH | 3 booths and music for not only junior high students like these pictured but kids of all ages.

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the details of your loved one’s final
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Serving Meigs County for over 20 years

60516087

— FEATURES
Classified: 7
Television:8
Comics: 9

Georgia Thornton, administrative assistant to the superintendent/curriculum director, presents the
Mason County Board of Education with upcoming changes to OEPA’s evaluation process.

POINT PLEASANT
— At a recent meeting of
the Mason County Board
of Education, an update
on this year’s Office of
Education Performance
Audits (OEPA) and
information about future
changes to OEPA’s evaluation process was given.
Georgia Thorton,
administrative assistant
to the superintendent/
curriculum director, presented the board with
an update on this year’s
results, as well as information about new polices
that OEPA will implement for the upcoming
school year evaluations
and next year’s results.
“We should be able to
get (this year’s) data back
sometime by the end of
September, and I will
be able to get that right
to you, and we can talk
about that,” she said.
OEPA recently
switched to an online system, which is the reason

�LOCAL

2 Thursday, July 31, 2014

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES
CHARLES W. FAULKNER
Ray Patterson; 25 grandchildren, 30 great-grandchildren; two great-greatgrandchildren; and many
nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in
death by his parents; his
wife Darlene; daughter
Shawnetta; grandson
Michael Young; three
brothers; and one sister.
Funeral services will
be 2 p.m. Sunday, Aug.
3, 2014, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Burial
will follow in Mound
Cemetery near Chester.
Visitation for family and
friends will be held two
hours prior to the funeral
service.
An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

POMEROY
— Denise “Dee
Dee” Nitz, 53,
of Pomeroy, died
Tuesday, July
29, 2014, at her
residence.
She was
born April 28, 1961, in
Pomeroy. She was the
daughter of Ellen Qualls
Meeks, of Columbus. She
was a 1979 graduate of
Meigs High School. She
attended Forked Run
Baptist Church. Dee Dee
loved spending time with
her grandchildren and
riding motorcycles with
her husband.
Besides her mother,
she is survived by her
husband Bobby Nitz,
of Pomeroy; two sons,
Trenton Qualls, of Rutland, and Justin Nitz, of
Pomeroy; daughter Tiffany Jenkins, of Middleport; nine grandchildren:
Destiny, Kadynce, Kiana,
Keaghan, Brylan, Brogan,

Chloe, Kolsyn and
Kendall; three sisters: Victoria Meeks,
of Columbus, Mary
Kay Blanks, of Middleport, and Hazel
Tolbert, of Wilmington, Del.; four brothers: Robert and Randolph
Qualls, of Middleport,
Paul R. Qualls, of Bidwell,
and James E. Qualls, of
Columbus; and several
nieces and nephews. She
was raised by her grandmother Mary Elizabeth
Qualls.
Services will be 1 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 2, 2014,
at Ewing Funeral Home
in Pomeroy, with Pastor Michael Thompson
officiating. Burial will be
in Minersville Cemetery.
Friends may call Ewing
Funeral Home between
6-8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 1,
2014.
You can sign the online
guestbook at www.ewingfuneralhome.net.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155

DEATH NOTICES

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.

BRASEL
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Roy G. “Gene” Brasel, 84,
died Tuesday, July 29, 2014.
A memorial service honoring his life will be 2 p.m.
Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2014, at Schoedinger Worthington
Chapel, 6699 N. High St., in Worthington, where his
family will receive friends from 1 p.m. until the time
of the service.

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

ADVERTISING:
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Sarah Thompson, Ext. 15
Brenda Davis, Ext. 16
NEWSROOM:
740-992-2155
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
OBITUARIES:
740-992-2155

Miller
From Page 1

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.

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scene, the suspect began firing shots
at the three officers.
Bartels was struck during the
incident, receiving a gunshot wound
in the arm from a 12-gauge shotgun,
and was rushed to the Holzer Medical
Center emergency room by a third
city police officer who had arrived on
scene after initial shots were fired.
He was later transported to Cabell
Huntington Hospital in Huntington,
W.Va., where he subsequently has
undergone extensive surgeries.
Following the shooting, Miller
reportedly exited his residence and
surrendered to the officers remaining
on scene.
During Monday’s hearing, the
court ordered that all evidence seized
in the case and currently in the possession of the Gallia County Sheriff,
prosecutor or Ohio Attorney General, be forfeited to the Gallia County
Sheriff’s Office for destruction.
The defendant was further ordered
to have no contact with the person
or property of Bartels, Schuldt or
Workman.
He was credited for 673 days
served, along with future custody
days while awaiting transportation to
the appropriate prison facility.
The defendant must also pay the
costs of prosecution and will be subject to a mandatory term of five years
of parole following his release from
prison.

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single incident in the past several
years, except, of course, for murder
and rape of children, which generally
receive indefinite life sentences,”
the statement reads. “The prison
sentence reflects the serious nature
of the crimes and the severity of the
harm cause to Ptl. Bartels.”
The journal entry, filed with the
Gallia County Clerk of Courts Office
on Tuesday following Monday’s
hearing and signed by Evans, states
that the court finds that “consecutive
sentences are necessary to protect
the public and punish the defendant”
and that “the harm was so great or
unusual that a single term does not
adequately reflect [the] seriousness
of the conduct.”
Miller, who was scheduled to
appear July 21 for a jury trial in
this case, entered a last-minute
plea agreement on the morning
of his trial, pleading guilty to the
three counts of felonious assault as
outlined in his indictment after he
knowingly caused or attempted to
cause physical harm to Bartels, Ptl.
Shallon Schuldt, and Gallia County
sheriff’s deputy Fred Workman on
Sept. 24, 2012.
The additional charges of attempted aggravated murder, obstructing

official business and resisting arrest
were dismissed by the state as part
of the plea of agreement as these
charges were allied offenses of the
other three counts of the indictment.
Miller, who has remained incarcerated in the Southeastern Regional
Jail in Nelsonville under a $1 million,
10 percent bond since his arrest on
the night of the incident, was previously found competent to stand trial
last year following a court-ordered
psychological evaluation. A second
evaluation was ordered late last year,
but the defense later advised the
court that the defendant no longer
desired to have this second evaluation performed.
The defendant was arrested during the early morning hours of Sept.
24, 2012, after he fired upon police
officers who had responded to his
McCormick Road residence in reference to a neighbor dispute.
Two city police officers, Bartels
and Schuldt, were requested to
respond to the scene by the only
sheriff’s deputy on duty that evening,
Workman, formerly of the Gallia
County Sheriff’s Office, who had
been en route to an active methamphetamine lab in the southern end of
the county when he was dispatched
to the Miller residence.
Upon the arrival of the city police
officers, Miller refused to exit his
home and, as Workman arrived on

granchildren Brooke
McCloud, of Belmont,
Darby Gilmore, of
Nashville, Lisa(George)
Hutchison, of Bolivar,
and Cristina (LeRoy)
Fry, of Charlestown, Ind.;
great-grandchildren Justin Springer and Bayley
McCloud, of Belmount,
and Kyndal Hutchison,
of Bolivar; brother Rollin (Nancy) Radford, of
Pomeroy; brother-in-law
George (Brenda) Glaze,
of Akron; and many
beloved nieces and nephews.
Bill’s family was able
to honor his last wishes
for a peaceful passing
with the kind and caring
support and assistance
from his niece Connie
Little and the Pleasant
Valley Hospice team.
A funeral service will
be 11 a.m. Friday, Aug.
1, 2014, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with pastors
Ronald Reed and Angel
Crowell officiating.
Visitation for family and
friends will be 7-9 p.m.
Thursday, July 31, 2014,
at the funeral home.
Military rites will be
presented by American
Legion-Drew Webster
Post 39, of Pomeroy.
An online registry
is available at Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Homes of Pomeroy and
Middleport.

60522656

CONTACT US

POMEROY —William
“Bill” Radford, 87 of
Pomeroy, passed away
Tuesday, July 29, 2014,
at his residence. He was
born Aug. 21, 1927,
to the late Homer and
Helen (Bailey) Radford
in the Rocksprings area
of Pomeroy, where he
spent his entire life.
Bill attended the
Pomeroy High School
(Class of 1945) and
served in the U.S. Army.
He retired as a letter
carrier from the Pomeroy Post Office after
30 years of service. He
was a lifetime member
of Rocksprings United
Methodist Church,
where he served in
many capacities. Bill
was also a proud member of the American
Legion-Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, and
Rocksprings Grange and
Hemlock Grove Grange.
As an avid fan of the
Meigs County Fair, Bill
served as president of
the fair board for many
years, and enjoyed displaying his antique tractors and garden produce
each year.
He is survived by his
wife of 66 years, Louise
Radford; children William (Carol) Radford,
of Columbus, Rebecca
(Robert) Bryte, of Marietta, and Mary (Roger)
Gilmore, of Pomeroy;

60522664

CHESTER — Charles
W. Faulkner, of Pomeroy,
(Chester area) passed
away Monday, July 28,
2014, at the home of his
son in Wichita, Kan. He
was born March 24, 1930,
to the late Wayne and
Cleo Faulkner in Wilmington, Ohio. Charles
was a loving father who
loved people and loved
to dance. Mr. Faulkner
served in the U.S. Navy
and later worked as an
auto mechanic.
He is survived by his
children Tammy Byington, Tony Faulkner, Terri
Young, Marty Faulkner,
Crystal Richmond, Charlene and Neil Anderson,
Melodie Bissell, Jeri and
David Gunn, Beverly and
Paul Voss, and Lori and

WILLIAM “BILL” RADFORD

DENISE “DEE DEE” NITZ

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�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Dinner

organized in Ohio and
elsewhere.
The second GAR post
to be organized in Gallia
County during the rebirth
ofthe GAR Order was
Corwin Post No. 259 in
Vinton. Corwin Post was
mustered in by comrade
“Vance” of Blessing Post
on Oct. 13, 1882. (Comrade “Vance” was probably Col. John L. Vance,
editor of the Gallipolis
Bulletin, and former
captain of Company B,
4th [West] Virginia Regiment. Vance was later a
welcome speaker at many
of the local GAR bean
dinners.
On the first anniversary
of Corwin Post in 1883,
the members of this post
conducted a soldier’s
campfire emphasizing the
soldier’s meal of beans
with the words: “Bill of
Fare: pork, hard-tack,
slap jack, beans.” (Gallipolis Journal, Oct.,
18, 1883.) This was the
documented beginning of
the annual Vinton bean
dinner.
The annual Vinton
bean dinner — slated for
Saturday, Aug. 2 — takes
place in the Vinton Community Park in Vinton
just off Ohio 160 along
the banks of Big Raccoon
Creek. The dinner is
sponsored by American
Legion-Vinton Post 161
and Auxiliary.
The annual Rio Grande
bean dinner — scheduled
for Aug. 9 — is conducted on the grounds of the
Bob Evans Shelter House
at the Bob Evans Farm in
Rio Grande on old U.S.
35. The shelter house is
at the far end of the field
across from the original
homestead, restaurant
and museum. The dinner
is sponsored by the Rio
Grande Memorial Association.
The Limerick bean dinner in Jackson County
— set for Aug. 16 — is
held on the grounds of
the Limerick Grange Hall

Photo courtesy of John Holcomb

Pictured is a medal commemorating the Union Veterans of the American Civil War issued during
Ohio’s bicentennial in 2003 and marking the 120th anniversary of the Vinton Civil War Bean Dinner.

in the village of Limerick
on Limerick Road off U.S.
35 north of Jackson. The
dinner is sponsored by
members and volunteers
of the Limerick Grange
No. 1917.
The New Castle bean
dinner in Coshocton
County — set for Aug. 17
— is held at the McElwee
Park in New Castle just
off Ohio 36 in northeastern Ohio. The dinner is
sponsored by Trustees of
New Castle Township.
The Celina Bean Bake
in Mercer County — slated for Sept. 1 — is conducted seven miles west
of Celina off Ohio 29,
three-fourth’s of a mile
north on Erastus Durbin
Road in northwestern
Ohio. The bean bake is
sponsored by the Eichar
DeCurtins Post 5713 of
the VFW.
The annual Wilkesville
bean dinner in Vinton
County — scheduled for
Sept. 6 — is conducted
on the grounds of the
Joseph Freeman Legion
Post just across the Meigs
County line off of Ohio
124 east of Wilkesville.
The dinner is sponsored
by the American LegionJoseph Freeman Post No.
476 and Auxiliary.
In general, good food,

refreshments, live music
and games await those
who attend these events.
Bean serving usually
starts around noon and
lasts several hours.
A parade precedes the
annual Vinton bean dinner, and those wishing to
participate in the parade
should gather at Vinton Elementary School
around 10:30 a.m. Watch
for posters and listen for

radio announcements for
more information concerning these events.
The public is welcome
and invited to attend
these events. By doing so,
they will help maintain
Ohio’s unique Civil War
legacy — its unbroken
link with the American
Civil War.
John Holcomb is a local historian
and member of American LegionVinton Post 161.

60519950

It was on this date that
they met in Columbus
to officially organize the
From Page 1
Order in Ohio. On that
occasion, 88 members
the community to remem- (delegates) were present
ber them by continuing
including Dr. W.W. Mills,
the annual bean dinner
from Gallipolis. A gentlein that community when
man listed as James A.
they were gone, events
Harper was also among
they first called “Campthe delegates. It is known
fires.”
a gentleman by this name
The people in Pennsyllived in Gallipolis.
vania conduct an annual
Mills was a former
event at McClure, Pa.,
surgeon in the 18th O.V.I.
known as the McClure
Regiment and the gentleBean Soup Festival for
man identified as James
the heroes of the Civil
A. Harper (if from GalWar. Indiana has the
lipolis) was the editor of
Fontanel Bean Festival
the Gallipolis Journal.
at Fontanet, Ind., for the
Harper was the former
same purpose. Ohio has
captain of Company
six (known) Civil War
K, 1st Regiment of the
bean dinners that honor
Reserve, Gallipolis, Gallia
those long-ago heroes.
County, Ohio. Harper is
Ohio’s memorial bean
also mentioned as having
dinners take place in the
been a 1st lieutenant in
following communities:
the Gallia Guards.
Vinton and Rio Grande
H.C. Jones (probably
(in Gallia County), WilHomer
C. Jones, from
kesville (in Vinton CounVinton
County)
was at
ty), Limerick (in Jackson
this
official
gathering
County), New Castle
as well, as was C. H.
(in Coshocton County)
Grosvenor, from Athens
and Celina (in Mercer
County, both of whom
County).
later attended many GAR
Due to the fact that
bean dinners, or political
five (if not all six) of
rallies in southeastern
Ohio’s Civil War bean
dinners were at one time Ohio. Unknowingly, these
gentlemen all played a
sponsored by members
of the Grand Army of the role in bringing about
today’s existing Civil War
Republic, a quick glance
bean dinners by helping
at the history of this
organization in Ohio is in establish the GAR organization in Ohio.
order. (The GAR was a
Mills and Harper would
Union veteran’s organizahave been members of
tion similar to today’s
Blackaller Post No. 134
American Legion, VFW,
GAR in Gallipolis, the
etc.)
only GAR post organized
Efforts to organize
in Gallia County at that
the GAR in Ohio began
time. Due to a great
in mid summer 1866.
decline in GAR memberGen. B.F. Potts, of Carship that began 1868, this
rollton, was appointed
provisional commander of post soon ceased to exist.
All signs indicate no new
the Department of Ohio
posts were organized in
GAR. Potts assigned
Gallia County until 1881
two aides, Capt. Henry
when Blessing Post No.
C. Howe, of Toledo, and
126 GAR was organized
Capt. B.F. Hawkes, of
in Gallipolis.
North Fairfield, to help
Between 1880-81,
muster in posts. By Jan.
the GAR experienced a
30,1867, these gentlemen had mustered in 135 rebirth in membership
GAR posts in the Buckeye and a significant numstate.
ber of new posts were

Thursday, July 31, 2014 3

Bash

them, in addition to celebrating the
start of the school year.
He said there will be about six to
From Page 1
eight different free games, such as
corn hole and ring toss, with a varidogs and drinks, informational
ety of different prizes for different
booths and music from 5-7 p.m.
age groups.
Greg Fowler, executive director
The event will also feature music
of Mason/Jackson Family Resource by DJ Rockin’ Reggie.
Network and president of the
Some of the various vendor
Mason County Board of Education, booths will feature information
said the event is designed to get
about topics such as early educastudents and families involved in
tion, tobacco prevention, health
the community and familiar with
care, the Rape Crisis Center and
the different programs available to other resources and programs for

Lunch Along the River

students and families.
“The youth in Point Pleasant and
Mason County don’t have a whole
lot to do, so it’s just another thing
— by coordinating with programs
— to give the youth something to
do and to give them and their families the opportunity to see what
programs are out there that they
may be able to use,” Fowler said.
The “Back-to-School Bash” will
take place outside Point Pleasant
Intermediate School, located on 1
Walden Roush Way, from 5-7 p.m.
Friday.

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I hope you enjoy heaven more than earth
I love you

Donna Weaver Isaac

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�E ditorial
DAILY SENTINEL

THURSDAY, JULY 31, 2014 s PAGE 4

EDITORIAL

Crunch time on
Iran nuke talks

Since the minute he set foot in the White
House, President Obama has pursued one
foreign policy objective with uncharacteristic
clarity and focus: avoiding war with Iran.
Whatever the merits of the goal, the
approach has actually been a narrow success.
Now, however, all the president’s work is in
danger of going down the drain.
The peril arises from the latest twist in
America’s long-running negotiations with Iran
over its nuclear program. Facing pressure
from the left and the right, the White House
has focused almost exclusively on multilateral
talks that rope in the United Nations Security
Council’s permanent five members, plus Germany.
That makes a certain amount of sense.
Republicans don’t want bilateral talks; Democrats don’t want the U.S. to go it alone; the
world’s major powers want a say, too. But
there was always serious concern about
whether Russia and China would ever really
side with the West over their sometimes hardto-manage allies in Tehran.
Surprisingly, that’s not why the nuclear
meetings almost fell apart. In a last-ditch
effort, negotiators have managed to extend
talks four months, resuming in September. It’s
a last gasp. Despite the extra time, Iran seems
completely intransigent on the key issue — its
number of uranium-enriching centrifuges.
All Iran’s negotiating partners, including
Russia and China, agree that Iran’s demands
on enrichment are unacceptable. They agree
that Iran should have no more than 10,000
so-called “separate work units” devoted to
enriching uranium. Supreme Leader Ayatollah
Khamenei just announced that only 190,000
will do, calling the massive number an “absolute need.”
It’s just the latest Iranian tactic to drag out
negotiations while keeping them on the brink of
collapse. The mullahs have been at it for about
a decade, and though they’ve had to suffer crippling economic sanctions, they’ve gradually
gained themselves some breathing room.
In the interest of keeping talks going, President Obama eased those sanctions last year.
According to one recent study, the change
produced more than an 8 percent swing in
Iran’s gross domestic product — from a drop
of more than 6 percent the prior fiscal year to
a 2 percent gain.
For most of Mr. Obama’s presidency, the
benefits of keeping an uneasy peace with Iran
outweighed the costs. Very few Americans
would have supported a war during Obama’s
first term, when our commitments in Iraq and
Afghanistan were still substantial. Today, voters aren’t isolationist, but they are now broadly turned off by our recent military conflicts
— and in no hurry to add new ones.
Nevertheless, America and its negotiating
partners are now in a position where all the
talk, sanctions and strategizing will amount
to nothing. The president’s approach bought
us to time to develop a new Mideast strategy.
Instead, the administration fell asleep at the
switch, and the Islamic State straddling Syria
and Iraq has changed the game.
Iran knows the geopolitical momentum is
in its favor. When talks hit a dead end in four
months, will the U.S. lead its partners in meting out consequences? That’s a question President Obama must be prepared to answer well.
Reprinted from the Milwaukee JournalSentinel.

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THEIR VIEW

Commentator’s thoughts on provocation

By Dr. Laura Finley

Here we go again. Another loudmouthed commentator perpetuating the storyline that somehow,
victims of domestic violence provoke their abusers.
This time, it was Steven A.
Smith on ESPN’s “First Look.” In a
two-minute diatribe, Smith at first
seem to recognize how appalling it
is that Baltimore Ravens running
back Ray Rice has been suspended
for only two games after violently
assaulting his then-fiancé (now
wife) in an elevator, punching her
in the face and knocking her out
completely. Rice was caught on
video dragging the unconscious
Palmer out of the elevator.
Then Smith negated everything
he said about how it is never OK
to hit a woman by proceeding to
spend the rest of his time soliloquizing about how women must
watch out so they don’t provoke
their men into “wrong actions.”
ESPN on Tuesday suspended
Smith for one week from “First
Look” and from the network’s
radio programming. He will
return Aug. 6. Smith has called his
remarks, “the most egregious mistake” of his career.
While he has already apologized to “any women who might
have misconstrued what I said,”
he had the nerve in his series of
Twitter posts to note that he was
“annoyed” that people expressed
outrage at his comments.
Really? Sorry, Mr. Smith, but it

seems that you said exactly what
you meant, so take ownership for
it. But of course he blames viewers
for the error, giving himself a pass
in the same way that he does for
abusers.
Further, it is not the first time
that Smith has made controversial
comments about domestic violence. When NFL receiver Chad
Johnson was arrested in 2012 for
head-butting his wife, Evelyn Losada, Smith pontificated that she
may have been over-dramatizing
the attack for publicity, noting he
was “sick and tired of men constantly being vilified and accused
of things.”
Surely there are times when
men are falsely accused, and that
is always a travesty. But to say
that men are constantly vilified is
such a huge over-dramatization on
Smith’s part, especially given the
fact that numerous studies have
found that while college and professional football players may not
perpetrate more domestic violence
assaults, they are significantly less
likely to be held accountable when
they do.
And what about the two-game
suspension for Rice? As Jane
McManus notes in an article on
ESPNW, “Commissioner Roger
Goodell has issued longer suspensions for pot smoking, taking
Adderall, DUI, illegal tattoos,
dogfighting and eating a protein
bar thought to be on the NFL’s
approved list.” The NFL claims
to be taking action on domestic

violence, with rookies attending
domestic violence training, but the
handling of Rice’s situation suggests that so much more is needed.
Another suggestion comes from
Steve Almond in a July 24 Daily
Beast article. Almond explains
that we worship the hyper-aggression that is football today and
applaud the most violent players.
So, while people may be outraged
at Rice’s actions, they will still
tune into the next game to cheer
loudly for the team. Almond
explains, “If you’re truly disgusted
by what Ray Rice did to his fiancé,
and by the NFL’s response, then
stop paying them to entertain
you.” That would send a powerful
message to the league.
As for Smith, it is clear that,
similar to other blowhards like
Don Imus and Rush Limbaugh,
he has made it his goal to be as
divisive as possible. In May, he
commented that NFL players
should not be punished for antigay tweets about player Michael
Sam, the first openly gay player in
the league, who kissed his partner
on air.
If we are truly outraged at
Smith’s combative and divisive
commentary, we should withdraw
our support for the shows on
which he appears, letting advertisers know that this is not the kind
of commentating viewers will
accept.
Dr. Laura Finley teaches in the Barry University
Department of Sociology &amp; Criminology and is
syndicated by PeaceVoice.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
July 31, the 212th day of
2014. There are 153 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On July 31, 1964, the
American space probe
Ranger 7 reached the
moon, transmitting
pictures back to Earth
before impacting the
lunar surface.
On this date:
In 1777, the Marquis
de Lafayette, a 19-yearold French nobleman,
was made a majorgeneral in the American
Continental Army.
In 1875, the 17th
president of the United
States, Andrew Johnson,
died in Carter County,
Tennessee, at age 66.
In 1919, Germany’s
Weimar Constitution was
adopted by the republic’s
National Assembly.
In 1930, the radio
character “The Shadow”

made his debut as narrator of the “Detective
Story Hour” on CBS
Radio.
In 1933, the radio
series “Jack Armstrong,
the All-American Boy,”
made its debut on CBS
radio station WBBM in
Chicago.
In 1942, Oxfam International had its beginnings as the Oxford Committee for Famine Relief
was founded in England.
In 1954, Pakistan’s
K2 was conquered as
two members of an Italian expedition, Achille
Compagnoni and Lino
Lacedelli, reached the
summit.
In 1964, country
singer-songwriter Jim
Reeves, 40, and his manager, Dean Manuel, were
killed when their private
plane crashed in bad
weather near Nashville.
In 1972, Democratic
vice-presidential candi-

date Thomas Eagleton
withdrew from the ticket
with George McGovern
following disclosures
that Eagleton had once
undergone psychiatric
treatment.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actor Don Murray is 85.
Jazz composer-musician
Kenny Burrell is 83.
Actor Geoffrey Lewis is
79. Actress France Nuyen
is 75. Actress Susan
Flannery is 75. Singer
Lobo is 71. Actress
Geraldine Chaplin is 70.
Former movie studio
executive Sherry Lansing
is 70. Singer Gary Lewis
is 69. Actor Lane Davies
is 64. International Tennis Hall of Famer Evonne
Goolagong Cawley is 63.
Actor Barry Van Dyke is
63. Actor Alan Autry is
62. Jazz composer-musician Michael Wolff is 62.
Actor James Read is 61.
Actor Michael Biehn is
58. Massachusetts Gov.

Deval Patrick is 58. Rock
singer-musician Daniel
Ash (Love and Rockets)
is 57. Entrepreneur Mark
Cuban is 56. Rock musician Bill Berry is 56.
Actor Wesley Snipes is
52. Country singer Chad
Brock is 51. Musician
Fatboy Slim is 51. Rock
musician Jim Corr is 50.
Author J.K. Rowling is
49. Actor Dean Cain is
48. Actor Ben Chaplin is
45. Actor Loren Dean is
45. Actress Eve Best is
43. Retired NFL quarterback Gus Frerotte is 43.
Actress Annie Parisse is
39. Actor Robert Telfer
is 37. Country singermusician Zac Brown
is 36. Actor-producerwriter B.J. Novak is 35.
Actor Eric Lively is 33.
Country singer Blaire
Stroud (3 of Hearts) is
31. Singer Shannon Curfman is 29. Actor Rico
Rodriguez is 16.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Process
From Page 1

for this year’s delay in
results, Thorton said.
One of the biggest upcoming changes in OEPA’s evaluation process is the change
in designations that schools
individually receive, Thorton said. The current designations are Success Schools,
Transition Schools, Focus
Schools, Support Schools
and Priority Schools.
A school’s designation is
determined once a year and
is based on prior school year
data, including WESTEST
2 results.
“For 2013/2014, the
Focus Schools are going
to remain the same, but
the rest of our schools may
or may not have a change
in their designation. For
2014-15, the focus schools
are going to remain focus
schools, but all schools will
now have a grade level. So
it’s going to be easier to
understand: A, B, C, D and
F,” she said. “They will also
still have a designation of
‘Focus School,’ at least until
2017. That won’t publicly
be announced. It will just be
reported to the feds. What
will be announced is the (letter) grade.”
Thorton said Focus
Schools are identified for a
period of three years, which
is why they will remain
the same next year. Beale
Elementary and Point Pleasant Intermediate School are
currently Focus Schools,
with Ashton Elementary,
New Haven Elementary
and Hannan High School
currently identified as Transition Schools. Point Pleasant Junior/Senior School
High School, Wahama High
School and Roosevelt Elementary are currently identified as Success Schools.
Leon Elementary was not
designated, due to “invalid
testing practice,” according
to OEPA’s website.
The new designations
to be implemented in the
2014/2015 evaluations are:
A — Distinctive Student
Proficiency; B — Commendable Student Proficiency;
C — Acceptable Student
Proficiency; D — Unacceptable Student Proficiency;
and F — Lowest Student
Proficiency.
“We’re going to look at
the bottom 25 percent of
our kids in every school,
and we’re going to accelerate them, quickly,” Thorton
said. “That’s why we don’t
have to have focus schools
as designations anymore. “
The new policy to be
implemented involves six
major characteristics, of
which Thorton listed for
board members. They
include: improving student
performance, clearly communicating the level of
school quality, focusing on

all schools, reviewing all
schools, emphasizing local
control and accountability
and differentiating between
supports, consequences and
rewards.
“We believe that even if
you’re a reward school, like
Roosevelt, we still have a
possibility of improvement,”
she said. “I think that what
we need to think about is
how we you going to define
excellence for our kids.”
Thorton also discussed
the changes in the way that
the evaluations will be conducted.
“We’re putting together
teams that are going to
go into our schools once
a month, and we’ll look at
their data with them and
discuss any problems or
issues that they had. Then
they will bring those kinds
of things up when they come
every month and talk to (the
board.) We’re also going to
look at their school’s strategic plans, and then anything
that OEPA finds, we’re definitely going to work with
them to fix,” she said. “One
of the biggest pieces that
you’re going to see — and I
think the teachers are going
to really like — is the movement toward school-based
professional learning. Who
else better to determine
— based on their needs —
what kinds of things they
need to learn about, but that
school? So that’s going to
be our big push. This will
probably be the last year we
have a county back-to-school
professional learning day,
set up at the central office.
It’s going to be handed over
to the schools, and they’re
going to be accountable.
We’re going to be able to
pick and choose what kinds
of things are going to work
for them and really work on
that.”
Thorton said differentiating support based on
specific school needs —and
successes — is what the
evaluations will primarily
emphasize.
“Some of our schools are
going to need very different
things. If we have a school
at C level and a few at A,
the Cs are probably going to
need a little bit more help,”
she said. “OEPA’s going
to give us our feedback.
They’re going to talk to us
about our strengths and
weaknesses. They’re also
really interested — and they
talked a lot to our principals
about this — in best practices, what kinds of things are
you doing that are excellent
that we can applaud you for
and actually talk about you
throughout the state. We do
really have some phenomenal things going on. I think
we’re used to OEPA being as
someone who slaps us, and
now they’re really trying to
change the face of that.”
Concerning the school
system assessment, if all

schools are at C-level grade,
the system will receive at full
approval. If one school falls
below a C-level grade, the
system will receive temporary approval status and the
opportunity to improve. If
the school does not improve,
the system will receive a
conditional spproval status,
Thorton said.
Additionally, a nonapprovable status can be
issued.
“Non-approvable status
basically is that there is
pervasive and consistent
poor performance, across
the school system, or conditions that threaten health,
safety, educational quality of
students or fiscal solvency.
So we have to balance our
budgets within the school
system. So, those things can
get you non-approval status,
and that’s why I know you
work so hard to keep your
budget balanced as a county
system.”
Thorton also said there
is the option for state
board to take action, which
can involve removing the
school’s principal or giving
the principal help, which it’s
usually somebody that the
state chooses.
“But the problem with
that is that the county ends
up having to pay the salary
for them (the principal’s
help,)” she said. “Those
have happened before.
They’ve happened in a county nearby — five at once,
so that’s out there. And the
principals understand that,
so that’s why they’re working really hard to make sure
everything stays as good as
it already is and just gets
better.”
Thorton said she expects
the Mason County system
to receive a full approval status and not have any major
problems.
“This year, another piece
that’s interesting in the policy is that this year, for the
first time, the county strategic plan will be brought to
(the school board) for your
consideration and approval.
We do not have a date for
that yet. Normally it’s Oct.
1, but because of our lateness on our test scores, it’s
probably going to be pushed
a little later than that. So
you’ll expect to see that
soon. We’ll be talking about
goals based around our data,
what your ideas of excellence are, and your expectations of what you think we
need to be doing,” Thorton
said.
Superintendent Suzanne
Dickens said the strategic
plans will be a collaborative
effort.
“We’ll bring my goals into
it, and your goals and their
goals into it. We’ll roll them
all together,” she said. “They
should look pretty similar.
We should all be working
towards the same thing.”

Thursday, July 31, 2014 5

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81/58

Thunderstorms developing in the afternoon.

80/59

Scattered thunderstorms possible.

Scattered thunderstorms. Highs in the
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Times of sun and
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8
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10
$4.59
$6.34
$8.55
$11.34
$15.21
$4.95

12
$5.49
$7.47
$10.30
$13.86
$19.03
$6.07

14
$6.82
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81/60

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81
79
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78
78
83
80
77
77
81

Lo Cond.
60 mst sunny
57 pt sunny
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59 sunny
57 pt sunny
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City
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77
Mt. Vernon
78
New Philadelphia 78
Newark
78
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83
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78
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80
Troy
80
Xenia
79
Youngstown
79

Lo Cond.
58 pt sunny
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60 mst sunny
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Hi
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87
74

Lo Cond.
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65 sunny
62 t-storm
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City
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94
90
88
84
80

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80 t-storm
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105
San Francisco 68
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84
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Washington, DC 89

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BBT (NYSE) — 37.64
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.57
Pepsico (NYSE) — 88.91
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.70
Rockwell (NYSE) — 113.33
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.23
Royal Dutch Shell — 80.47
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 39.43
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 74.78
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.28
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.14
Worthington (NYSE) — 39.89
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
July 30, 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.

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�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 31, 2014 s PAGE 6

Reds fall to Arizona 5-4, 2-10 since break
CINCINNATI (AP)
— Alfredo Simon hasn’t
won a game since his
first All-Star selection.
The rest of the Reds
aren’t doing much better,
either.
Paul Goldschmidt hit a
two-run homer that kept
Simon winless since the
All-Star game, and the
Arizona Diamondbacks
held on to beat Cincinnati 5-4 on Wednesday,
taking a series between
two teams struggling to
score runs.
Goldschmidt’s 19th
homer off Simon (12-6)
gave the Diamondbacks
two of three in the series.
Simon has gone 0-3 since
his first All-Star selection. Didi Gregorius
added a two-run homer
in the ninth.
“A lot of guys are
struggling right now,”
Simon said.
Most of them on
offense.
The Reds fell to 2-10
since the All-Star break.
Devin Mesoraco’s threerun homer in the ninth
off Addison Reed ended
a streak of 11 straight
games with three runs

AP Photo | Al Behrman

Cincinnati Reds’ Chris Heisey (28) is tagged out by Arizona Diamondbacks second baseman Aaron Hill trying to stretch a single into a
double in the third inning of a baseball game, Wednesday, July 30, in Cincinnati.

or fewer, Cincinnati’s
longest such stretch of
futility since 1967.
“You certainly feel like
the game got away from
us, just far enough for us
to not be able to come
back and win it,” manager Bryan Price said.

Left-hander Wade
Miley (7-7) gave up
seven hits and four walks
in 6 2-3 innings, improving to 4-1 in his past five
starts. Ryan Ludwick had
RBI double in the eighth
off Brad Ziegler. Reed
came on with two aboard

and got the last two outs
and gave up Mesoraco’s
homer before getting his
26th save in 31 chances.
Neither team did much
on offense throughout
the series, which opened
with Arizona’s 2-1 win
in 15 innings on Mon-

day. The Reds won the
second game 3-0, leaving
Arizona with a stretch
of only one run in 20
innings.
Both teams wasted
chances for early rallies
throughout the series.
The Reds did it again on

Wednesday, when Chris
Heisey was thrown out
at second while trying to
stretch a hit with none
out in the third. Ramon
Santiago was caught trying to steal third later in
the inning.
“Heisey was being
aggressive,” Price said.
“I’m not going to fault
him for that. We had a
sign mix-up with Santiago stealing third. We
wouldn’t want him stealing there. He thought
he was doing what we
wanted him to do.”
Notes: Cincinnati plays
four games at Miami
starting Thursday, with
Johnny Cueto (11-6)
making his first start
against the Marlins since
2012. Tom Koehler (7-7)
starts for Miami. … The
Reds have won their past
five games against the
Marlins. … It’s the first
time Arizona has won a
series at Great American
Ball Park since 2011. …
Simon struck out two,
giving him a career-high
84 for the season. He
fanned 83 with Baltimore
in 2011, the last time he
was a starter.

College sports
shows dip in
gender hiring
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — A report released
Wednesday on the NCAA and its member schools
shows fewer women holding jobs in college sports
and only a small improvement in racial diversity.
The report, released Wednesday by The Institute
for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, gave college
sports a B grade for racial hiring practices and a
C-plus for gender hiring. The racial score of 82.3
points in 2013 increased from 81 points in 2012,
while the gender score decreased from 81.3 points
in 2012 to 75.9 in 2013.
College sports has the lowest grade for racial hiring, and only ranks higher than the NFL for gender
hiring, among all college and professional leagues
in the study. The Institute also produces report
cards on the NBA, WNBA, Major League Baseball
and Major League Soccer.
“I think that this is an example of where college
sport has failed,” said TIDES director Richard
Lapchick, the primary author of the report. “It’s
unfortunate that it comes at a time when so much
is going on in college sports and so much change is
coming about. Of course, it calls into question the
people who are making those changes.”
The 2013 report card includes racial and gender
personnel data at the NCAA headquarters as well
as for university presidents, athletic directors, head
football coaches, football coordinators and faculty
athletic representatives at the 125 institutions in
the Division I Football Bowl Subdivision.
It covers the 2011-2012 and 2012 Some of the
most glaring gender deficiencies Lapchick noted
were in the key leadership positions inside conference offices and in university athletic departments.
All 11 FBS conference commissioner posts continue to be held by white men.
The number of female presidents at the 125 FBS
schools increased from 18 in 2012 to 19 in 2013,
and the number of female conference commissioners in Division I from six to seven.
The same was true among athletic directors,
where women showed small gains at the Division I
and Division II levels.
But among associate athletic directors, one of
the feeder jobs to athletic director, the numbers
remained mostly stagnant.
In Division I, women occupied 29.5 percent
(499) of associate athletic director jobs, 41.8 percent (125) in Division II and 51 percent (150) in
Division III in 2012-13. That was compared to 30
(464), 41.1 (116) and 48.9 percent (136), respectively, in 2011-12.
Women held only 38.7 percent of the head coaching jobs of women’s teams in Division I, and at
less than 40 percent across all three divisions combined. Women also held less than 50 percent of the
assistant coaching positions of women’s teams in
all divisions.
“The pipeline is almost wider than what the
pipeline is leading up to,” Lapchick said. “I think
the long-term effects are yet to be measured. But
it’s a concern to me that decisions being made on
college sports at this point are overwhelmingly
being made by white men.”

Marlin Levison | Minneapolis Star Tribune | MCT

Cleveland Indians starter Justin Masterson pitches against the Minnesota Twins at Target Field in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Sunday, July
21, 2013.

Indians trade Masterson to Cards
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Justin Masterson
began the season as the
Indians’ ace. He’ll end it
with a different team in
a different league.
The Indians traded
the disappointing Masterson on Wednesday to
the St. Louis Cardinals,
a deal that will allow
Cleveland to get something in return for the
right-hander who was
in his final year under
contract.
In exchange for Masterson, who was scheduled to come off the dis-

abled list later this week,
the Indians got outfielder
James Ramsey. A firstround pick by the Cardinals (No. 23 overall) in
2012, Ramsey has spent
this season at Double-A
Springfield, where he batted .300 with 13 homer
and 36 RBIs.
Masterson has underperformed this season.
He started Cleveland’s
opener but failed to live
up to expectations following a 14-10 season
and after he turned
down a contract extension from the club dur-

ing spring training.
Masterson is 4-6 with
a 5.51 ERA in 19 starts
this season and has
had a noticeable loss in
velocity. In five starts
before being placed
on the DL with right
knee inflammation, he
allowed 19 runs and 27
hits in 18 innings.
Masterson was
acquired by the Indians
at the trading deadline
in 2009 in the deal that
sent catcher Victor Martinez. Before Tuesday’s
series opener against
Seattle, Masterson said

he wouldn’t be surprised
if the Indians made any
moves but he was hoping to stay and help
them make a playoff
push.
The trade of Masterson could be followed
by other moves by the
Indians, who entered
Wednesday 6 1-2 games
behind first-place Detroit
in the AL Central and
in a scramble with five
other teams for the
league’s second wildcard spot.
Masterson went 48-61
with Cleveland.

�CLASSIFIED

Daily Sentinel

Professional Services

A Place to Call Home

60523012

FOSTER PARENTS NEEDED
IN YOUR COUNTY!!
Can be single or married
Call Oasis to help a child find
a place to call home.
TRAINING BEGINS Aug. 2
at Albany Training and financial
reimbursement is provided.

Call 740-698-0340 for more
information or to register for training.

LEGALS

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

60517845

Wanted

Gary Stanley

740-591-8044
Please leave a message

The Meigs Local Board of Education wishes to receive bids
for the following:
Bread/Bakery and Milk/Dairy
products.
All bids shall be received in,
and bid specifications may be
obtained from,
TREASURER'S OFFICE,
41765 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, on or before 10:00 A.M., Thursday, August 7, 2014.

All envelopes must be
CLEARLY MARKED according to the type of bid.

BUSINESS SERVICES
REACH 2 MILLION NEWSPAPER READERS with
one ad placement. ONLY $295.00. Ohio’s best community newspapers. Call Mitch at
AdOhio Statewide Classified Network, 614-486-6677, or E-MAIL at: mcolton@adohio.
net or check out our website at: www.adohio.net.
BUSINESS SERVICES
REACH OVER 1 MILLION OHIO ADULTS with one
ad placement. Only $995.00. Ask your local newspaper about our 2X2 Display Network
and our 2X4 Display Network $1860 or Call Mitch at 614-486-6677/E-mail mcolton@
adohio.net. or check out our website: www.adohio.net.
HELP WANTED
GORDON TRUCKING - CDL-A Truck Drivers Up to
$5,000 Sign On Bonus &amp; $.56 CPM! Solo &amp; Team Positions, Great Miles &amp; Time Off! No
East Coast. EOE Call 7 days/wk! 866-954-8836 GordonTrucking.com
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HELP WANTED
Drivers: CDL-A DRIVER PAY INCREASE. Exp.
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yr. NO CAP! Extra Pay for Hazmat! 888-928-6011 www.Drive4Total.com
HELP WANTED
“Partners in Excellence” OTR Drivers. APU
Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012 &amp; Newer equipment. 100% NO
touch. Butler Transport 1-800-528-7825 www.butlertransport.com
HELP WANTED
CDL-A DRIVERS Boyd Bros. offers: OTR or ask
about Regional Routes, Exp. Drivers avg. 54 cpm. Up to $5,000 Sign on Bonus. Apply
Today! 888-342-4221 DriveforBoyd.com
HELP WANTED
$2,500 Sign On Bonus &amp; $1,000 weekly pay.
2015 trucks. Dedicated run for Class A CDL drivers in MI, IN &amp; OH. Hirschbach 888-4740729 www.drive4hml.com
HELP WANTED
IT’S THE LONG HUAL! 3000+ miles per week.
Competitive pay. Late model equipment. Paid weekly. NO East Coast. Paid practical
miles. Call 800-645-3748
HELP WANTED
Our CDL-A DRIVERS take OUT &amp; BACK runs.
Home often. Dry vans. NO-Touch freight. Pro-Driver. Pro-Family. Summitt Trucking 866333-5333 www.summitt.com
HELP WANTED
AVERITT EXPRESS New Pay Increase For
Regional Drivers! 40 to 46 CPM + Fuel Bonus! Also, Post-Training Pay Increase for
Students! (Depending on Domicile) Get Home EVERY Week + Excellent Benefits. CDL - A
req. 888-602-7440 Apply @ AverittCareers.com Equal Opportunity Employer - Females,
minorities, protected veterans and individuals with disabilities are encouraged to apply.
HELP WANTED
DRIVERS! New Pay Package, Tractor Owner
Operators $1,500 Sign-On Bonus, Outbound Columbus, OH. Reimbursement Tolls,
Scales, 2,500-3,000 miles/week 888-888-7996
MISC.
Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just
real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free.
Call now: 1-877-485-6669
MISC.
HOMEOWNERS WANTED!!! Kayak Pools is
looking for demo home sites to display our maintenance-free pools. Save thousands of
$$$ with our Year-End Clearance Sale. CALL NOW! 800-315-2925 kayakpoolsmidwest.
com discount code: 897L314
VACATION CABINS FOR RENT IN CANADA. Fish
MISC.
for walleyes, perch, northerns. Boats, motors, gasoline included. Call Hugh 1-800426-2550 for free brochure. Website www.bestfishing.com
MISC.
SAWMILLS from only $4397.00- MAKE &amp; SAVE
MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock, ready to ship.
Free Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800-578-1363 Ext. 300N
MISC.
WANTED COMIC BOOKS: Pre-1975, sports, nonsports cards, original art &amp; movie memorabilia ESPECIALLY 1960’s Collector/Investor,
paying cash! Call MIKE: 800-273-0312 mikecarbo@gmail.com
RVS FOR SALE
2010 Park Model 12x38, 2 Bed, 1 Bath. Vinyl
siding, Shingle roof, Electric heat and air. ONLY $15,900. 1-800-686-1763
SALES
Thermal Tech Exteriors - Vinyl Siding,
Window &amp; Roofing Blowout Sale! FREE Estimates. All Credit Accepted. 99.00 per month,
no payments for 6 months. Call Today! 740-385-6511
TRAINING/EDUCATION
AIRLINE JOBS begin here-Get Trained as
FAA certified Aviation Technician. Housing/Financial aid for qualified students. Job
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Hands On Training Program. We Offer 6 National Certifications and Lifetime Job
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Werner Enterprises is HIRING! Dedicated,
Regional &amp; OTR opportunities! Need your CDL? 3 wk training available! Don’t wait, call
today to get started! 1-866-203-8445

60523220

Notices

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

The Meigs Local Board of Education reserves the right to reject any and all bids, and the
submitting of any bid shall impose no liability or obligation
upon the said Board.

Miscellaneous

Thursday, July 31, 2014 7

Mark E. Rhonemus,
Treasurer/CFO
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD OF
EDUCATION
41765 Pomeroy Pike
Pomeroy, OH 45769
PH(740) 992-5650
7/23, 7/31

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

Pomeroy Village will hold a
public auction on Saturday!
August 9th, 2014 at 12 noon
on the
following vehicles:
Vehicle #1
2005 Ford Crown Victoria,
white
110,201 miles
VIN# 2FAHP71W35X132887
Minimum Bid $600.00
Vehicle #2
2003 Ford Crown Victoria,
white
119,169 miles
VIN# 2FAFP71W83XI07181
Minimum Bid $1,000.00
Vehicle #3
1997 Chevy Blazer 4x4, white
115,165 miles
VIN# IGNDT13WIV2219969
Minimum Bid $1,000.00
Vehicle #4
2006 Ford Crown Victoria,
white
Unknown mileage
VIN# 2FAHP71W46X145701
Minimum Bid $500.00
Vehicle #5
2004 Dodge Durango 4x4,
silver
207,110 miles
VIN# ID4HB38N54F238690
Minimum Bid $1,000.00
Vehicle #6
2006 Chevy Impala, white
107,864 miles
VIN# 2GIWS551869417988
Minimum Bid $800.00
Vehicles sold in as is condition.
Can be viewed at Pomeroy
Municipal Building, 660 E.
Main
St., Suite A, Pomeroy, OH
45769 or contact Pomeroy Police Dept. 740-992-6411
(7) 30, 31, (8) 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8
Notices
ATTENTION: Blue Devils
CLASS OF 1974 Gallia
Academy Graduates! August
30th, 2014 @ French Art
Colony 5-10pm. Eat, Play
Cornhole, Reminisce. Music by
Sunny 93. BYOB and Lawn
Chair. $10.00 donation at door.
Contact 740-208-7113
GUN SHOW
CHILLICOTHE
Aug 16 &amp; 17
Ross Co. Fairgrounds
Adm$5 6' TBLS $35
740-667-0412
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

Home Improvements

Apartments/Townhouses

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

2 bedroom $375 and 1 bedroom $325 plus utilities plus
deposit 3rd Street Racine, OH
740-247-4292

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

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

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

Yard Sale
10265 ST RT 7 S, Gallipolis.
Fri Aug 1st &amp; Sat Aug 2nd.
OUR JUNK, MAY BE YOUR
TREASURE
3 Family Yard Sale - 33101
Johnson Rd. Furniture, Fiesta
wear, Brand name clothes,
hand gear, crafts, electronics
and more. Aug 1st &amp; 2nd from
9-5.
3 Family Yard Sale, clothes,
dishes, outside dr, knick
knacks, child's desk, jewelry,
Fri-Sat 8-5 196 Burdette addt.
5 family Yard Sale Aug 1st &amp;
2nd. Fairgrounds Rd. Pomeroy
OH, Behind Garage 8am-4pm.
Big Sale, lots of misc, Adams
Street Mason Friday 1st
Collectibles of a Lifetime part
4,Lamps,Glassware (fenton),
Furniture,Victorian Couch,
Chain Saw, Hurricane Lamps,
Banks,Gallipolis items Misc. &amp;
More. At 440 Adamsville Rd. 1
mile south of Bob Evans (Rio
Grande). Aug 1st &amp; Aug 2nd9am - 5pm.
Fair Haven U.M Church
(Kanauga) Yard Sale August
1st &amp; 2nd 8am to 12pm
Everything must go.
Fri &amp; Sat 229 Belle Rd. Furniture, Household items, Home
&amp; Garden, Lots of Misc.
Friday @ 586 University Ln. Pt
Pl, 8-4, Variety of Items
Garage Sale August 1st &amp; 2nd
Top Chester Hill on St 248 4th
House on left Browning's
Garage Sale July 31 &amp; August
1st &amp; 2nd @ 2 1/2 miles east
of Porter on 554. Nice clothes
for all hoodies,coats,household stuff &amp; Tanning Bed.
Garage Sale on Aug 1,2 at
1309 Bridgeman St. Syracuse.
Brand name clothes, household items, gas heater and
more!
Yard Sale 8 1-3; Lots of
Household items, furniture,
kids clothes, sew machines,
blue jean purses, lots more beside mason co fair 9 am
Yard Sale Aug 1st &amp; 2nd,
36505 Rocksprings Rd,
Pomeroy, Wolfe Residents. 8-1
Yard Sale Aug 1st &amp; 2nd, starting @9am, Womens, Mens &amp;
Girls (infant -3T) clothing &amp;
shoes, toys, books, Home Decor, Kitchen items (microwave,
mixers, elec. skillet, ect) 235
Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy

Full-Time Teller/Member Services Rep. Point Pleasant
Branch 2101 Jackson Ave. Pt.
Pleasant, Drop Off Resumes at
Local Office
Now Hiring at the Gallipolis
Quality Inn - Front Desk clerk,
Waitress and breakfast cook.
Apply in person at the front
desk. No Phone Calls please.
OFFICE CLEANER: PT position starts at $9.00 hr, perform
general housecleaning of business in Pomeroy, OH, hrs are
evenings, 3-6 hrs wk. More hrs
may become available in time
if desired. Valid drivers license,
reliable transportation &amp; phone
are required. Must have a
clean background &amp; pass a
drug test. Call ServiceMaster
at 740-592-2826 M-F, 9 am5 pm for an interview appt.
VACANCY: Information Technology Instructor of Interactive Media. Certifiable as Information Technology or Comprehensive Business Instructor. CONTACT: Gallia-JacksonVinton JVSD (740) 245-5334,
Ext. 256. EEO
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
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
VERY NICE BRICK HOME,
CLOSE TO WALMART,
CORNER LOT, APPLIANCES,
CENTRAL AIR, AND SECURITY SYSTEM."$98,000.00,
PRICE NEGOTIABLE." CONTACT 740-446-7874.

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2BR Apt, equipped Kit, LR,
Central Air, Dep &amp; Ref $500,
740-446-2801
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
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
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
Commercial
Commercial building for
sale/lease. Office/retail/storage. 1800sqft with 10ft ceilings. Off-street parking. 749
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
$499 per month. Call Wayne
404-456-3802
Houses For Rent
3BR, Mobile Home in Cheshire
area, $500 month, $500 Deposit, No Pets, Plus Utilities
740-441-2707
House for rent, 1 BR, garage,
in-town. Application/background check required. Call
446-3644
Very nice home for rent in
Middleport, good neighborhood. Newly remodeled. New
appliances, 4 Bedrooms, 2
bath. Large Kitchen. Sun
Room. Central Air &amp; Heat.
Nice outdoor spaces. No pets,
non smoking. Call 992-9784
or 740-591-2317 for more details.
Rentals
3-Bdrm / 2 bath Mobile Home
$500/mo &amp; $500 deposit 740645-5975 or 740-367-0641
2-Bdrm Mobile Home - Addiville School Dist. Deposit &amp;
References $425.00 call 740367-0632
4 Bdrm Doublewide (Mason)
$500/mo &amp; $250 deposit Call
304-593-1547
Mobile Home for Rent, 2BR,
2BA, nice, clean, No Pets,
$500 month, $500 Deposit
304-674-0123
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Autos for Sale
07 Scion XB, $4,200. blue, yellow, orange, black &amp; white, VW
Bugs, $2,300 to $3,900. 740446-7278
1987 Honda GL 1200 Motorcyle in Perfect condition to give
away for good rider due to sudden accident contact fredmanjames1@gmail.com.
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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57

�SPORTS

8 Thursday, July 31, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Indy officials seek new ways to attract fans
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
— Indianapolis Motor
Speedway president Doug
Boles keeps looking for
ways to fill seats.
He has a full weekend
of NASCAR and sports
car races leading up to
the Brickyard 400. He’s
kept motorcycles on the
summer schedule at Indy
and added road races and
vintage car races. He’s
hired headline bands for
concerts and camped
inside the historic venue.
But every year the challenge of keeping racing
fans engaged gets a little
tougher.
Race organizers
increasingly compete
against other sports and
children’s events while
trying to get the fan
dollars in a still tough
economy.
Boles is sticking to his
master plan.

“I think our focus last
year and more so this
year was how do we make
the fan experience really
great,” Boles said after
Sunday’s most recent
race, the Brickyard. “We
want to make sure it’s
a great experience, and
we believe that if we
can deliver that, we can
deliver on putting fans in
the seats.”
Even in the self-proclaimed racing capital of
the world and in a city
that seems to embrace
nearly every sporting
event in town, it’s tough.
Formula One pulled
Indy off its schedule
as attendance figures
dropped following the
2005 tire-marred debacle.
On Sunday, race organizers covered up some of
the expected empty seats
at the Brickyard but still
had tens of thousands

AP Photo | Tom Strattman

Kevin Harvick leads the field for the start of the Brickyard 400 auto race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Sunday, July 27.

empty. In two weeks,
MotoGP riders who have
frequently complained
about Indy’s road-course

surface will get their first
shot on the track’s new
road course configuration
in front of what they hope

THURSDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6
Euromaxx
Highlights

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

6 PM

CABLE

6:30

THURSDAY, JULY 31
7 PM

7:30

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

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

Hollywood Game Night
Hollywood Game Night
The Quest "The Quest
Begins" (P) (N)
Song of the Mountains
"Doyle Lawson and
Quicksilver"
The Quest "The Quest
Begins" (P) (N)
The Big Bang The Millers
Theory
Sleepy Hollow "Pilot"
Second
Law Works
Opinion
"Melanoma"
The Big Bang The Millers
Theory

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Welcome to Working the
Sweden (N) Engels (N)
Welcome to Working the
Sweden (N) Engels (N)
Rookie Blue "Deal With the
Devil" (N)
Last Tango in Halifax Celia
reluctantly introduces Alan
to her sister.
Rookie Blue "Deal With the
Devil" (N)
Big Brother (N)

10 PM

10:30

Last Comic Standing
"Finals Top 5 to 4" (N)
Last Comic Standing
"Finals Top 5 to 4" (N)
NY Med (N)
Tina Fey: The Mark Twain
Prize Friends and colleagues
pay tribute to Tina Fey.
NY Med (N)
Elementary "Ancient
History"
Eyewitness News at 10

Gang Related "La Luz
Verde" (N)
Midsomer Murders "Orchis Frankie Frankie is finally
Fatalis" 2/2
confronted by her stalker.
Big Brother (N)

9 PM

Elementary "Ancient
History"

9:30

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
24 (FXSP) Reds Weekly Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) SportsNation
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

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

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

MP
The Matrix Revolutions (‘03, Sci-Fi) Keanu Reeves. TV14
Manhattan
MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at Miami Marlins Site: Marlins Park -- Miami, Fla. (L)
Postgame
Reds Weekly
NFL Live
Soccer International Friendly Chivas vs. Bayern Munich (L) Baseball Tonight (L)
Calliendo
Football
Fitness CrossFit Games
Fitness CrossFit Games
Wife Swap "Envy/ Loudon" Project Runway "Road to
Project Runway "The
Project Runway "Unconventional Movie
@Amandadthe Runway"
Judges Decide"
Nite" (N)
eCadenet (N)
Mystery Girls
The Breakfast Club Five students with nothing in common
The Last Song (‘10, Dra) Miley Cyrus. A rebellious teen and her
are forced to spend a Saturday in detention together.
brother are sent to spend the summer with their ailing father. TVPG
Cops "Coast Jail
Cops
Cops
Cops "In
Cops "Odd Impact Wrestling Watch high-risk athletic entertainment
to Coast"
Denial #3"
Arrests"
featuring the most recognizable stars of wrestling.
iCarly
iCarly
iCarly
WitchWay
Henry Danger
Instant Mom See Dad Run Full House
Full House
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Baggage"
Law &amp; Order: SVU "Selfish" SVU "Justice Denied"
Rush "Learning to Fly" (N) Satisfaction (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
(5:00) Sit.Room Crossfire
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
The Sixties "1968"
The Sixties "1968"
Castle "The Double Down" Castle "Inventing the Girl" Castle "Fool Me Once"
Castle
Castle "Vampire Weekend"
(5:30) The Karate Kid Part II Miyagi returns to his homeland
Caddyshack A caddy enters a big play-off match to
Groundhog Day (‘93,
with Daniel to visit his dying father &amp; face old foes.
win a scholarship from a posh country club. TVMA
Com) Bill Murray. TVPG
Myth "Swinging Pirates"
To Be Announced
Myth "Commercial Myths" MythBust. "Road Rage" (N) To Be Announced
Storage
The First 48 "Who's
After the First 48 "Easy
Scared "Fulton County, GA:
Storage
The First 48 "Uncommon
Wars
Wars
Valor"
Knocking/ Payback" (N)
Money" (N)
Blood Orange" (N)
Bigfoot "Virgin Sasquatch" To Be Announced
Alaska "Hunt in the Clouds" Ice Lake Rebels (N)
Alaskan "Raised Wild" (N)
Preachers of L.A. "First
Bad Girls Club "Family
Burlesque (‘10, Dra) Christina Aguilera, Cher. A small town girl
Burlesque
Lady Face-Off" Pt. 2 of 2
Affairs"
falls in love with burlesque after starting a new job in Los Angeles. TV14 TV14
Law &amp; Order "Self-Defense" L.A. Hair
L.A. Hair
L.A. Hair (N)
(:05) L.A. Hair
Sex and the City
E! News (N)
A-List (N)
The Soup
E! News
The Kardashians
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Griffith (:50) Queens (:25) Queens "Head First"
King-Queens King-Queens
Survive the Tribe "Blood
Legend of
Doomsday Preppers "Be
Survive the Tribe
Legend of
Doomsday Preppers "To
Warriors"
Mick Dodge Mick Dodge Fail Is to Die"
the Prep" (N)
"Rainforest Masters" (N)
(5:30) FB Talk Football
Mecum Auctions "Collector Cars and More - Seattle"
Mecum "Houston" (N)
America's Pre-game (L)
Barr-Jack "Reno" Barrett-Jackson brings its renowned auction to Reno-Sparks Convention Center in Reno, Nev. (L)
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn "Colts Pawn "Mr. Pawn Stars (:05)
(:35)
Pawnog. (N) Pawnog. (N)
"Zzzzzz"
"Chumdae" and Vikings" Cool" (N)
(N)
Housewives "Fully Loaded" The Real Housewives
Don't Tardy Don't Tardy Tardy... (N) New Jersey Social (N)
Don't Tardy
106 &amp; Park (N)
The Cookout (‘04, Com) Tim Meadows, Ja Rule. TVPG
Stomp the Yard Columbus Short. TV14
House Hunt. House Hunt. Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
HouseH (N) House (N)
(5:30)
Pandorum Two astronauts awaken aboard a
Defiance "If You Could see Dominion "Ouroborus" (N) Spartacus: Blood and Sand
Her Through My Eyes" (N)
"Delicate Things" (N)
spacecraft with no memories of their former lives. TVMA

6 PM

PREMIUM

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

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Love Child In 2010, a South Korean couple Last Week
R.I.P.D. (‘13, Act) Ryan Reynolds. A cop
(:45) 2 Days:
addicted to an online game were charged Tonight With joins the Rest in Peace Department, a unit Sergey
with manslaughter.
John Oliver made up of undead police officers. TVPG
Kovalev
(5:00) Tales
(:45)
King Kong (2005, Action) Naomi Watts, Jack Black, Adrien Brody. An ambitious movie
From the
producer discovers a giant ape on a mysterious island. TV14
Hood TVMA
(:55)
Lord of War (‘05, Act) Bridget Moynahan,
The Longest Yard (2005, Comedy) Chris Rock, Burt
Nicolas Cage. An arms dealer struggles with the morality Reynolds, Adam Sandler. A former football star puts a
of his work while Interpol chases him down. TVMA
team of inmates together to play the prison guards. TV14

10 PM

will be a bigger crowd.
Even the track’s signature
event, the Indianapolis
500, has struggled to sell
out the estimated 225,000
seats.
While Indy ranks at or
near the top of the most
attended races in IndyCar, Cup and MotoGP,
Boles is convinced he
can win his race to bring
more fans to the track.
He points to the uptick
in infield ticket sales on
a rainy weekend even
though those tickets are
cheaper and allow children 12 and under to get
in for free with a paying
adult. The estimated
crowd was about 85,000.
Some argue that moving the Brickyard to
Indy’s road course would
help. A year ago, many
of those same people
thought the solution
would be making the
Brickyard a night race.
Boles doesn’t buy it.
“I think everyone
agrees that Indianapolis
Motor Speedway under
lights would be really
cool. But it’s hard to make
that case from a business
sense,” Boles said when
asked about adding lights
to the track. “It would
take an estimated $20 to
$25 million to do it and
that’s on the low end.
“Our brand is, especially with IndyCar and
NASCAR, on ovals, so I
think it would be difficult
to move it to the road
course, too,” he added.
Drivers don’t want to
see major changes, either.

10:30

The Leftovers "Gladys"
Laurie is put to the test in
the wake of a crime.
Pacific Rim (‘13, Act)
Charlie Hunnam, Rinko
Kikuchi, Idris Elba. TVMA
Ray Donovan "Gem and
Loan"

“You have to get it done
with a great racecar. You
do it on restarts. You have
to have good pit stops, pit
strategy,” five-time Brickyard winner Jeff Gordon
said. “The significance
of this win at this point
in the season, what it
does for you as a team,
confidence, positioning
yourself to try to go win
a championship, I don’t
know how you really rank
it. In my opinion, for me
personally, this is it. This
is as good as it gets.”
The key is making fans
feel the same way.
So Boles is looking
to add bigger concerts
and more races to Indy’s
already busy schedule. He
already has The Grand
Prix of Indianapolis, an
IndyCar road race, on
May 9 and the 500 on
May 24. He expects the
Brickyard to be back in
late July, hopes to have
a new deal for the 2015
MotoGP race finished by
the end of race weekend
and is considering adding
a September race.
But it’s only a start as
Boles tries to bring fans
back to the track that
once served as Indy’s biggest social club.
“The one place I was
really surprised about
was seeing how many
people were on the
infield mounds (for the
Brickyard),” he said. “We
put a lot of effort trying
to make those a better
viewing experience for
the fans and it seemed to
work.”

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BLONDIE

Thursday, July 31, 2014 9

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By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

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By Chris Browne

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

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�SPORTS

10 Thursday, July 31, 2014

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS
Stringers needed for 2014 football season
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Ohio Valley Publishing is
currently searching for two individuals that want to
be a part of the upcoming 2014 football season in an
extra capacity.
OVP is looking for a pair of hard-working, selfmotivated and football-knowledged people to help
cover and write football games in the tri-county
area.
The stringer job pays $20 per game for 10 games
a year. Anyone interested in covering football games
should send an email resume to Bryan Walters at
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
OVP currently has stringers for the football squads
at both Meigs and Wahama.
GAHS varsity golf tryouts
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Mandatory practice for the
Gallia Academy golf team begins at 9 a.m. Friday,
Aug. 1, at Cliffside Golf Club. There will be an informational meeting followed by 18 holes of play. Any
GAHS student-athlete entering grades 9-12 that wishes to qualify for the team must report to this practice.
For more information, contact GAHS golf coach Mark
Allen at (740) 645-3569.
Eastern Fall sports passes
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — Eastern High School’s
Fall Sports Passes go on sale Monday Aug 4th. They
may be purchased at the High School Office.

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GAHS Fall Sports practices beginning
CENTENARY, Ohio — All Gallia Academy studentathletes that plan to participate in a 2014 fall sport
must have a new physical on file at the high school to
try out. Players without a physical will not be permitted to participate. Please make sure that your student
has turned in their physical to the high school.
Volleyball
High School tryouts will run from 6-8 p.m. on
Monday, Aug. 4, at the high school gym. Junior High
tryouts go from 6-8 p.m. on Monday, Aug 4, at the
middle school gym.
Soccer
High school two-a-days begin Monday, Aug. 4, at
the soccer field. The first practice runs from 6-8 a.m.
and the second practice is from 6-8 p.m. Junior High
will begin practice from 6-8 p.m. on Monday, Aug. 4,
at the soccer fields.
Football
High School begins practice at 7:45 a.m. Friday,
Aug. 1, at the football locker room. Junior High
begins at 3 p.m. on Monday, Aug. 4, at the football
field.

(740) 985-3302

3rd and 4th grade playing each in one and 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 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 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) 446-7538, or
David Burnett at (740) 208-0554.

Meigs Marauder Youth Football Camp
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The 2014 Meigs Youth
Football Camp will be held on Saturday, August 2,
2014 at Holzer Field, Farmers Bank Stadium on the
campus of Meigs 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 footSouthern Jr. High volleyball conditioning
ball coaches and players. Any child that pre-registers
RACINE, Ohio — The Southern junior high volby July 19th will be guaranteed a camp team shirt.
leyball teams will begin conditioning from 9 a.m. until Registrations will be accepted after the deadline and
11 a.m. on Monday, July 28, at the elementary school on the day of the camp but they will not be guarangymnasium. For more information, contact Alan Crisp teed a camp t-shirt. Registration on the day of the
at (740) 444-3309.
camp is 8 a.m. Proceeds from the camp will benefit
the Meigs High School Football program. For more
information call 740-645-4479 or 740-416-5443.
2014 Gallia County Youth Football League
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia County Youth
Football League is having sign-ups now through
PPHS youth baseball clinic
August 4. Parents can pick up forms at BCMR next
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The Point Pleasant
to the post office in Gallipolis or they can be downBaseball Junior Instructional Clinic will be held at
loaded from www.facebook.com/GalliaCountyYFL the the PPHS baseball field from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. on
league facebook page. The annual camp will be held
Wednesday, July 30.
August 4 and 5 at 4:30 p.m. at Memorial Field in GalInstruction on the game and fundamentals will be
lipolis. The camp is free and all camp participants will taught by the Point Pleasant baseball coaching staff
and players. The camp is for all kids ages 9-13 and
receive a free t-shirt.
costs $20 per camper.
Immediately following the last day of camp the
For more information, contact PPHS baseball
league will hold its draft. All students entering 3rd,
coach Andrew Blain at (304) 593-2540 or by email at
4th, 5th and 6th grades are encouraged to attend.
The league will be split into two inner leagues, with blain7@marshall.edu

Ives to crew chief Earnhardt in 2015
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
(AP) — Hendrick Motorsports didn’t look far for

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Eastern to hold OHSAA meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — Eastern Local Students in grades 7-through-12 who want to play sports
during the 2014-2015 school year must attend an
OHSAA mandated preseason meeting with their parents on August 4th at 7 p.m. The meeting will take
place in Eastern High School’s Gym.

60520960

Five-Star Quality Care

Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s next
crew chief, choosing a
candidate already quite
familiar with the organization.
Greg Ives, the race
engineer for Jimmie
Johnson’s record run of
five consecutive championships, will return to
Hendrick next season as
crew chief for NASCAR’s
most popular driver. Ives
will replace Steve Letarte,
who is stepping down at
the end of the year for
an analyst job with NBC
Sports.
“Greg was our No. 1
choice,” team owner Rick
Hendrick said Wednesday. “This is a talented
guy who already has a
terrific rapport with Dale
Jr. and is a fit with the
organization.”
Ives worked under
Johnson crew chief Chad
Knaus from 2006 through
the 2012 season. He then
moved to JR Motorsports
for his first job as a crew
chief, in the Nationwide
Series with Regan Smith.

He was moved to
rookie Chase Elliott’s pit
box this year, and has
five wins as a crew chief.
Elliott is also the current
Nationwide Series points
leader.
Even though Ives was
no longer in the Hendrick
shop every day, JR Motorsports is co-owned by
Earnhardt and Hendrick
and relies heavily on
HMS resources.
“I know what Greg
is all about and really
respect him,” Earnhardt
said. “He’s a strong leader
with a cool personality,
and we’re both competitors who want to win.
It was important to find
someone who would fit
at Hendrick Motorsports
and inside our shop, and
he will for sure do that.
“We got the best guy
for the job, and I look forward to working with him
next year.”
Ives will once again
work closely with Knaus,
who like Ives left the
Hendrick organization

early in his career to get
crew chief experience
only to return when a
prime Sprint Cup Series
job opened. Johnson and
Earnhardt’s teams work
side-by-side out of the
same shop, so Ives and
Knaus will collaborate for
both teams and the organization.
“He and Chad had a
lot of success together,
and all of our crew chiefs
think the world of him
and what he’s accomplished,” Hendrick said.
“Greg’s proven that he
can win races, and he
has all the tools to do big
things.”
Ives, from Bark River,
Michigan, joined Hendrick Motorsports as a
mechanic in 2004. He
moved into an engineering role on the No. 48
team in 2006. In seven
years working with
Knaus, he contributed
to 42 wins, 113 top-five
finishes and 21 pole positions in the Sprint Cup
Series.

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�</text>
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