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                  <text>Today in
history
OPINION s 4

Scattered storms.
High near 80.
Low around 59.

State,
national
sports

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 128, Volume 64

Tuesday, August 12, 2014 s 50¢

Dilapidated properties
New Haven
takes on project

From left: Logan Litchfield, Gavin Proffitt, Mina Burleson,
Katie Ryan and Navaeh Robinson.

Burleson, Proffitt
named 2014 Little
Miss and Mister
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY
— Before the
crowds, rides and
spectacular food,
young boys and
girls gathered to
compete for Little
Miss and Mister
Meigs County
2014 at 10 a.m.
Monday on the
Hill Stage.
The event was
sponsored by
the Rutland Fire

By Mindy Kearns
Special to The Register

Submitted photo

The first of 10 properties declared as dilapidated in
New Haven was razed last week by town employees.
The project to eradicate New Haven of unsightly
houses and structures will be completed in phases,
according to Recorder Roberta Hysell, with the first
phase to include three structures.

NEW HAVEN — Officials
in New Haven have begun
work on a project to eradicate
the town of unsightly, dilapidated structures, according to
Recorder Roberta Hysell.
The first of 10 structures
targeted as dilapidated by the
mayor and council was razed

last week by town employees.
The house was located on Fifth
Street, the main thoroughfare
in town.
Hysell said the project will
be completed in phases, with
this first phase to include
three structures. In addition
to the Fifth Street house that
was already demolished, Phase
I will raze buildings on Sixth
and Seventh streets.
Mayor Charles Yonker said
in a previous council meeting
that he is working with two
foundations in an attempt to
See PROPERTIES | 3

From left: last year’s Meigs County
Little Mister Landon Hensley, 2014
Meigs County Little Mister Gavin
Proffitt, 2014 Meigs County Little
Miss Mina Burleson and 2013
Meigs County Little Miss Lindsay
See LITTLE | 3 Krawsczyn.

Photos by Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

The court listens as last year’s Meigs County Fair queen, Sarah Lawrence, speaks about her experiences over the last year.
Melanie Stethem won overall Best of Show with her submission
in the “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” category, and took
home first place within that category.

Patterson crowned Fair Queen

Winners of fair
flower show listed

Beeler, Fitzgerald
are livestock
prince, princess

By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

By Lindsay Kriz

POMEROY — At least 50 arrangements made it
to the Flower Show judging Monday afternoon at
the 2014 Meigs County Fair.
Hannah Crane, 7, took home first place and Best
See FLOWER | 3
— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
NASCAR: 6
Briefs: 10
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Cloudy
weather threatened rain,
but not a drop poured
on the race track Sunday
during the Meigs County
Junior Fair Parade and
opening ceremonies.
Following the ceremonies, the 2013 Meigs
County Junior Fair
Queen Sarah Lawrence
gave a speech about
her experience over the
past year, and helped to
crown each of the winning candidates.
Steven Fitzgerald was
crowned first as Livestock Prince. He is from
Long Bottom and is the
son of Shawn and Kimberlee Fitzgerald. He has
been a member of 4-Fun

Pictured, from left, are Home National Bank President Roma Sayre and 2014 Meigs County Fair Queen
Shawnella Patterson.

4-H Club for five years
and attends Eastern
Elementary School. He is
exhibiting poultry at the
Meigs County Fair this
year. His hobbies/activities include baseball,
football, basketball, 4-H,
hunting, fishing, camp-

ing, Boy Scouts and taking care of his chickens.
Gabrielle Beeler was
crowned as Livestock
Princess. She is from
Long Bottom and is the
daughter of Brian and
Mischelle Beeler. She has
been a member of Bleed-

in’ Green 4-H Club for
seven years and attends
Eastern Elementary
School. Gabrielle is president of her 4-H club and
will be showing market
and breeding rabbits this
See QUEEN | 3

Homes
White Schwarzel &amp; Ewing Funeral Homse

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60523390

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

OBITUARIES
tion will be from noon until time of services Tuesday
at Willis Funeral Home.

JANIS LEE HENDRIX
MIDDLEPORT —
Janis Lee Hendrix, 69, of
Middleport, died Sunday,
Aug. 10, 2014, at Overbrook Rehabilitation Center in Middleport after an
extended illness.
She was born April
2, 1945, in Milwaukee,
the daughter of the late
Everett and Olga Bohn
McNamer.
She is survived by
her husband, David T.
Hendrix Sr., of Middleport; three sons, Scott
(Theresa) Hendrix, Dave
Jr. (Dawn) and Todd
(Linda); one daughter,
Joby Hendrix; three
grandchildren, Samantha,
Zack and Mathew; three
brothers, William (Patricia) McNamer, Dennis

GARNES
GALLIPOLIS — Madonna Mae Garnes, 77, of Gallipolis, died Sunday, Aug. 10, 2014, at Abbyshire Place
in Bidwell.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 14,
2014, at Providence Baptist Church in Bidwell, with
the Rev. Edward Buffington and the Rev. Calvin Minnis, officiating. Burial will follow in Providence Baptist
Church Cemetery. Friends and family may call McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Wetherholt chapel, in Gallipolis
between 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2014.

CARTE
BIDWELL — David Carte, 55, of Bidwell, died
Monday, Aug. 11, 2014, at Abbyshire Place. Funeral
arrangements will be announced later by Cremeens
Funeral Chapel.

HATCHER
LEON, W.Va. — Angela “Angie” Dawn Hatcher, 36,
of Leon, died Saturday, Aug. 9, 2014, at Cabell Huntington Hospital.
A funeral service will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 12,
2014, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant
CAULLEY
with Pastor Johnny Hayman and the Rev. Pete Cobb
ROSEMOUNT, Ohio — Denise Lynn Woolum Caul- officiating. Burial will follow at Pine Grove Cemetery
ley, 53 of Rosemount, died Saturday, Aug. 9, 2014.
in Leon. Visitation will be two hours prior to the serServices will be 2 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2014, at vice Tuesday, at the funeral home.
D.W. Swick Funeral Home in New Boston. Interment
will follow at Gallia Cemetery. Visitation will be noon
JORDAN
to 2 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2014, at the funeral
POINT PLEASANT — William “Bill” Jordan, 76, of
home.
Point Pleasant, died Saturday, Aug. 9, 2014, at Pleasant Valley Hospital’s emergency room. Visitation for
FERGUSON
Bill will be from 5-7 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2014,
GALLIPOLIS — Guy Thomas Ferguson, 33, of Gal- at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home. Funeral services will
lipolis, died Thursday, Aug. 7, 2014 at Holzer Medical be 1 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 14, 2014, officiated by the
Center’s emergency room.
Rev. Dwight Baker. Burial will follow at Forest Hills
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2014, at
Cemetery.
Willis Funeral Home with Chaplain Bob Hood officiating. Burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery. VisitaSee NOTICES | 5

FRANCIS DELBERT LIGHTFOOT
MIDDLEPORT —
Francis Delbert Lightfoot,
92, of Middleport, passed
away Monday, Aug. 11,
2014, at Overbrook Nursing Center. He was born
April 10, 1922, in Meigs
County, son of the late
Dallas Lightfoot and
Edith Hysell Lightfoot.
Mr. Lightfoot was a
World War II army veteran who served with the
808th Tank Destroyer
Division.
He is survived by
his children and their
spouses, John and Sue
Lightfoot, of Middleport, Barbara and Max
Grueser, of Shade, Ohio,
and Tanya and Roger
Barnhouse, of Jackson,
Ohio; nine grandchildren;
three great-grandchildren;
and his sister, Genevieve
Burdette.

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In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by his wife, Clara
Custer Lightfoot; and
brothers and sisters Della
Overturf, Emmett Lightfoot, Everett Lightfoot
and Ethel Wood.
Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Thursday, Aug.
14, 2014, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Pastor
Chris Neece officiating.
Burial will follow at Rocksprings Cemetery, where
military funeral honors
will be presented by the
Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 9926. Visiting hours
will be 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Thursday at the funeral
home in Pomeroy.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.
com.

60521970

EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-446-2342 Ext. 18
michaeljohnson
@civitasmedia.com

(Mary) McNamer and
Roger (Mildred) McNamer; a special cousin,
Barbara Powell; godmother Gerry Roberts;
and numerous family and
friends.
A celebration of Janis’s
life will be 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014, at
Mike and Debbie Kauff’s
house, 30540 Nichols
Road, Middleport. Take
Route 7 to Leading
Creek Road, go three
miles and turn right on
Nichols Road. Everyone
is welcome. Arrangements handled by Ewing
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Friends may sign
the online guestbook at
ewingfuneralhome.net.

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60524596

60523384

BAILEY
PROCTORVILLE — Kenny Ray Bailey, 64, of Proctorville, Ohio, passed away Friday, August 8, 2014 at
The Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House, Huntington, WV.
Funeral service will be conducted at 1 p.m. Tuesday,
August 12, 2014, by Pastor Jeff Black at Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will
follow in Highland Memorial Gardens, South Point,
Ohio. Proctorville V.F.W. Post 6878 will conduct
military graveside rites. Visitation will be held one
hour prior to the service at the funeral home. In lieu
of flowers memorial donations may be made to Little
Victories.

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�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Properties

the “Abandoned and Dilapidated
Property Workshop” on Aug.
19. The workshop is being held
in Point Pleasant by the West
Virginia Region II Planning and
Development Council.
According to a letter sent by
Region II to local municipalities, the goal of the workshop is
to “build capacity within local
units of government, non-profits

From Page 1

get funding for the project. Hysell
said the town is hoping to get a
grant for reimbursement of the
work already completed.
Hysell stated representatives
from the town will be attending

Tuesday, August 12, 2014 3

and the general public on the
subject of addressing problems
with abandoned and dilapidated
properties.” It will be led by presenters from the West Virginia
Brownfields Assistance Center
BAD Buildings, who will provide
information on how to begin dealing with the problem, various programs, and available funding.

Flower
From Page 1

in Flower Show in the junior division. Her piece is titled “White
Rabbit,” based on the song of the
same name, and included mums,
alstroemeria, mullein and cattails.
Natalie Davis, 9, took home
first place as well and reserved
Best in Flower Show in the junior
division. Her piece is titled “99
Red Balloons,” based on the song
of the same name, and included
carnations, alstroemeria and dill.
Shelia Curtis won first place
and reserve Best of Show in
her category, “Blue Sky Smiling
at Me.” Her piece is made of
contrived magnolia flowers and
leaves, along with wisteria vine
and silver Christmas balls.
Shirley Hamm was awarded
second place in the Red Wine
Category and won the overall Creativity Award for her piece, which
includes amaranthus, fantail willow and miscanthus grass.
Melanie Stethem won overall
Best of Show with her submission in the “Lucy in the Sky with
Diamonds” category, and took
home first place within that category. She said her piece is meant
to look psychedelic.

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Pictured, from left, are Meigs County Fair Queen Pageant first
runner-up Mallory McIntyre, 2013 Meigs County Fair Queen Sarah
Lawrence, and 2014 Meigs County Fair Queen Shawnella Patterson.
AT LEFT, Hannah Crane, 7, took home first place and Best in Flower Show in the junior
division. AT RIGHT, Shelia Curtis won first place and reserve Best of Show in her category,
“Blue Sky Smiling At Me.”

Queen
From Page 1

year at the Meigs County Fair. Her hobbies/activities
include cheerleading, shopping, a member of Sacred
Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy, and playing with
her rabbits. Gabrielle has enjoyed representing Meigs
County as the 2013 Meigs County Fair Rabbit Princess.
Lastly, Shawnella Patterson was crowned 2014
Meigs County Fair queen. She is from Rutland and
is the daughter of Raymond and Lori Patterson. She
is a member of the Redneck 4-H club. Patterson has
been involved in 4-H for 13 years and is currently her
club’s president. Shawnella attends Ohio University.
Her hobbies/activities include running, playing piano,
drawing and painting. She is a member of Middleport
Church of Christ.
The three events Sunday evening helped open up
the rest of the fair, which will run through Saturday,
Aug.
16. protection is
Your

AT LEFT, Natalie Davis, 9, took home first place as well and reserved Best in Flower
Show in the junior division. AT RIGHT, Shirley Hamm was awarded second place in
the Red Wine Category and won the overall Creativity Award for her piece, which
includes amaranthus, fantail willow and miscanthus grass.

personal.

Little
From Page 1

Department Ladies Auxiliary.
Mina Deirdre Burleson was crowned

Little Miss Meigs County 2014. The
first runner-up was Katie Ryan, and second runner-up was Nevaeh Robinson.
Two competed for Little Mr. Meigs
County 2014, with Gavin Proffitt crowned, and Logan Litchfield
announced as first runner-up.

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�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Don’t cry for
Argentina
on default
Argentina defaulted on its debt — again — after
a grace period ended July 30. One would think
that, at some point, the fiscally troubled South
American nation would learn how to live within
its means, but its government officials continue to
point the finger at everyone but themselves.
Reneging on sovereign debts is nothing new
for Argentina. In fact, its current default on $29
billion of debt marks the eighth time the nation
has entered into default. The previous default, in
2001, involved about $100 billion in debt and was
the largest sovereign default in history.
Debt restructuring deals were reached in 2005
and 2010 with most creditors, who accepted
reductions of up to 70 percent of what they were
owed, but some hedge fund creditors did not agree
to the terms, and these “holdouts” are seeking full
repayment of the bonds they hold.
Argentina has been paying down the restructured debt, but cannot afford to pay the full
amount owed the holdouts. A judge ruled that,
under the terms of the bond sale, all debtors must
be treated equally, so the country can’t pay down
the restructured debt while stiffing the holdouts.
Naturally, Argentina President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner and Cabinet Chief Jorge Capitanich blamed everyone else, including the judge,
the arbitrator, the holdout hedge funds — which
they colorfully termed “vulture funds” — for their
government’s profligate spending and unsustainable borrowing.
Such fiscal irresponsibility has significant
adverse effects on the public at large. Argentinians
have had to endure high inflation and currency
devaluations as a result. One woman interviewed
for a recent BBC News article related how she
had planned to buy a house around the time of the
2001 default. “When we finally had the money,
because of devaluation, we could only buy a car for
the same quantity of money we had for a house,”
she said.
Cheerleaders for Keynesian economics, like
economist and columnist Paul Krugman, and
American politicians from both parties who want
an ever-increasing pot of money with which to
find creative and self-serving uses, like to loudly
proclaim that “debt does not matter.” That is, of
course, until it does — and the illusion comes
crashing down. “There ain’t no such thing as a free
lunch,” economist Milton Friedman liked to say.
The official U.S. national debt stands at $17.6
trillion. That is up more than $10 trillion over the
past decade. Add in all the “off-book” unfunded
liabilities the government faces, such as Social
Security and Medicare deficits, and the actual
national debt is more than $200 trillion.
Make no mistake: An Argentina-like debt crisis
could happen here, too. There was a time when no
one thought a large, thriving, industrial city like
Detroit would ever go bankrupt. Unlike Detroit,
the U.S. government, with the aid of the Federal
Reserve, can print more money to devalue the dollar and pay off its debts — which makes it even
more dangerous to citizens’ pocketbooks. It is
time to get real about the debt problem.
Reprinted from the Orange County (Calif.) Register.

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THEIR VIEW

US being led by a callow president
By Rich Lowry

King Features columnist

“Stop just hatin’ all the time.”
If you haven’t been following the
news, you might not know whether this bon mot was uttered by a
character on the ABC Family show
“Pretty Little Liars” or by the
president of the United States.
Of course, it was the leader of the
free world at a Kansas City, Mo.,
rally last week, imploring congressional Republicans to start cooperating with him. The line struck a
characteristically — and tellingly
— juvenile and plaintive note.
How many books and articles
have been written by conservatives
seeking to divine the philosophical
beliefs and psychological motivations lurking beneath the president’s smooth exterior?
It’s certainly true that the president is much further left than he’d
ever admit, but the deepest truth
about Obama is that there is no
depth. He’s smart without being
wise. He’s glib without being
eloquent. He’s a celebrity without
being interesting. He’s callow.
It’s a trope on the right to say
that Obama has quit, that he’s not
interested in the job anymore.
It isn’t true. If you are smug and
unwilling to bend from your (erroneous) presumptions of how the
world works, this is what presidential leadership looks like.
Obama is incapable of the unexpected gesture or surprising departure. He evidently has no conception of the national interest larger

than his ideology or immediate
political interests. In terms of his
sensibility, he’s about what you’d
get if you took the average writer
for The New Yorker and made him
president of the United States.
The notion that Obama might
be a grand historical figure was
always an illusion, although at the
beginning his rousing words lent
it some superficial support. Once
the magic wore off, it became clear
he’s not really an orator. His greatest rhetorical skill turns out to be
mockery.
The man who once promised to
transcend political divisions is an
expert at the stinging partisan jab.
What Winston Churchill was to
thundering statements of resolve,
he is to snotty put-downs.
During the 2012 campaign, he
hit Republican nominee Mitt Romney with relish over his promise to
cut funding for public television:
“Elmo, you better make a run for
it.” He has called the Ryan budget
a “meanwich.” He has made the
Republican reaction to his lawlessness an ongoing joke.
His natural venue is the fundraiser or campaign rally, any
gathering of adoring partisans
who don’t need convincing that
he’s the greatest wit since Oscar
Wilde. They soak up his faux
folksy, g-droppin’ assurances that
he’s working for ordinary “folks,”
and laugh at anything they suspect
might be one of his brilliant barbs.
Not since Thomas Jefferson took
snide swipes at the Federalists …

The president’s constant complaints about everyone else in
Washington playing politics while
he high-mindedly devotes himself
to substance have all the maturity
of Holden Caulfield’s plaints about
“phonies.” Please, grow up.
Ever since he lost the House in
2010 and could no longer operate
on the basis of sheer brute force,
the president has relied almost
entirely on tactical cleverness. It
has been impressive on its own
terms, whether it involves the
invention of the “war on women”
in 2012 or the double-dog dare to
Republicans to impeach him now.
But this is basically all he’s got
— besides his infamous “pen and
phone.” He has already expanded
the powers of the office beyond
their legitimate bounds and may
well take another quantum leap
with an executive amnesty. But
rarely has the presidency felt so
small, at the same time discontents at home and chaos abroad
loom so large.
Chris Cillizza wrote a post for
The Washington Post the other
day titled, “It’s virtually impossible
to be a successful modern president.” This echoes analysis from
the late 1970s that America had
become ungovernable. It hadn’t. It
just had puny presidents not up to
the challenges of the day.
It’s not “hatin’” to expect something better — or at the very least
a little less pettiness.
Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail:
comments.lowry@nationalreview.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday,
August 12, the 224th day
of 2014. There are 141
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Aug. 12, 1939, the
classic MGM movie musical “The Wizard of Oz,”
starring Judy Garland, had
its world premiere at the
Strand Theater in Oconomowoc, Wis., three days
before opening in Hollywood. (Oconomowoc was
apparently chosen to test
the film’s appeal to Middle
Americans.)
On this date:
In 1813, Austria declared
war on France.
In 1867, President
Andrew Johnson sparked
a move to impeach him as
he defied Congress by suspending Secretary of War
Edwin M. Stanton.
In 1898, fighting in the
Spanish-American War
came to an end.

In 1902, International
Harvester Co. was formed
by a merger of McCormick
Harvesting Machine Co.,
Deering Harvester Co. and
several other manufacturers.
In 1912, comedy producer Mack Sennett founded
the Keystone Pictures Studio in Edendale, Calif.
In 1914, Britain and
France declared war on
Austria-Hungary.
In 1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt nominated
Hugo Black to the U.S.
Supreme Court.
In 1944, during World
War II, Joseph P. Kennedy
Jr., eldest son of Joseph
and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, was killed with his copilot when their explosivesladen Navy plane blew up
over England.
In 1953, the Soviet
Union conducted a secret
test of its first hydrogen
bomb.
In 1960, the first balloon

communications satellite — the Echo 1 — was
launched by the United
States from Cape Canaveral.
In 1962, one day after
launching Andrian Nikolayev into orbit, the Soviet
Union also sent up cosmonaut Pavel Popovich; both
men landed safely Aug. 15.
In 1964, author Ian
Fleming, 56, the creator of
James Bond, died in Canterbury, Kent, England.
In 1978, Pope Paul VI,
who had died August 6 at
age 80, was buried in St.
Peter’s Basilica.
In 1985, the world’s
worst single-aircraft disaster occurred as a crippled
Japan Air Lines Boeing
747 on a domestic flight
crashed into a mountain,
killing 520 people. (Four
people survived.)
Today’s Birthdays: Former Sen. Dale Bumpers,
D-Ark., is 89. Actor George

Hamilton is 75. Actress
Dana Ivey is 73. Actress
Jennifer Warren is 73.
Rock singer-musician Mark
Knopfler (Dire Straits)
is 65. Actor Jim Beaver
is 64. Singer Kid Creole
is 64. Jazz musician Pat
Metheny is 60. Actor Sam
J. Jones is 60. Actor Bruce
Greenwood is 58. Country
singer Danny Shirley is
58. Pop musician Roy Hay
(Culture Club) is 53. Rapper Sir Mix-A-Lot is 51.
Actor Peter Krause is 49.
Actor Brent Sexton is 47.
International Tennis Hall of
Famer Pete Sampras is 43.
Actor-comedian Michael
Ian Black is 43. Actress
Yvette Nicole Brown is 43.
Actress Rebecca Gayheart
is 43. Actor Casey Affleck
is 39. Rock musician Bill
Uechi (Save Ferris) is 39.
Actress Maggie Lawson
is 34. Actress Dominique
Swain is 34. Actress Imani
Hakim is 21.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 12, 2014 5

DEATH NOTICES
MARGIASSO
JACKSON, Ohio — Michael Paul Margiasso, 53,
Jackson, died Thursday, Aug. 7, 2014, at his residence.
There are no calling hours or funeral services. Cremation services are by Cremeens Funeral Homes Inc.

2014, at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, please make donations to the Emogene Dolin Hospice House, 3100 Staunton Road, Huntington, WV 25701.
NORMAN
CHARLESTON, W.Va — Ronald Paul Norman Sr.,
77, of Charleston, died Saturday, Aug. 9, 2014.
Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 14, 2014, at
the Kanawha Baptist Temple, 1 Mountain Baptist Road
in Charleston. Burial will follow in Kanawha Baptist
Temple Cemetery. Visitation will be one hour prior to
time of service at the church. Arrangements have been
entrusted to Casto Funeral Home in Evans, W.Va.

MOORE
BIDWELL — James C. Moore, 70, of Bidwell, died
Saturday, Aug. 9, 2014. At his request, there will be no
services or visitation. Burial will be at the convenience
of the family. Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant is
serving the family.

Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Monday
between 6-8 p.m.
STEPHENS
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Louise Stephens, 89, of
Chesapeake, died Sunday, Aug. 10, 2014, at home.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory in Proctorville,
Ohio, is in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete at this time.

WATSON
CROWN CITY, Ohio — Steven Thomas Watson, 57,
of Crown City, died Friday, Aug. 8, 2014, at St. Mary’s
MUSGRAVE
Medical Center in Huntington, W.Va.
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — William T. Musgrave, 89,
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Friday, Aug. 15, 2014,
of Willow Wood, died Sunday, Aug. 10, 2014, at EmoROCKHOLD
at Willis Funeral Home with Dale Sanders officiating.
gene Dolin Hospice House in Huntington, W.VA.
LITTLE HOCKING — Matthew Rockhold, 46, of
Burial will follow in Victory Cemetery. Visiting hours
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. Little Hocking, died Saturday, Aug. 9, 2014, at Marietta will be 5-7:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 14, 2014, at Willis
13, 2014, at Phillips Funeral Home, 1004 S. SevMemorial Hospital.
Funeral Home. A Masonic service will be conducted by
enth St., Ironton, with the Rev. James Cremeans
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2014,
Ohio Valley Masonic Lodge at 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
officiating. Burial will follow in Myrtle Ridge Cem- at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville, with
In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation in
etery. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 12, Bobby Blanc officiating. Burial will be in the Coolville
Steve’s name to the American Cancer Society.

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Tuesday, Aug. 12
BEDFORD —The Bedford Township Trustees
will hold their regular
monthly meeting at 7
p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY —The
regular meeting of the
Meigs County Board of
Elections will be 8:30
a.m. in the meeting room
at the Meigs County
Board of Elections at the
Meigs County Annex
on Mulberry Heights in
Pomeroy.
POMEROY — Pastor
Floyd Ross will be celebrating his 80th birthday
on Aug. 12. Cards may be
sent to 37690 Peach Fork
Road, Route 2, Pomeroy,

OH 45769.
SALISBURY TWP. —
The Salisbury Township
Trustees will have their
regular meeting at 5 p.m.
at the home of Manning
Roush.

at the courthouse in
Pomeroy. This meeting is
to consider the protests
filed against petitions
for the candidacy in the
Meigs County Commisioners race.
POMEROY — The
Thursday, Aug. 14
Pomeroy High School
POMEROY —The
Class of 1959 will be havGJMV Solid Waste Man- ing their ‘Third Friday
agement District Board
Lunch’ at Fox Pizza at
of Directors will meet
noon. Join the group for
Thursday, Aug. 14 at 3:30 some good food and betp.m. at the district office. ter company.
POMEROY — Yard
Friday, Aug. 15
sale at Laurel Cliff Free
POMEROY — A speMethodist Church. Procial meeting of the Meigs ceeds will benefit the
County Board of Elecchurch’s mission project.
tions will be 9 a.m. in the Call 740-992-4152 for
Meigs County Courtroom more information.

Sunday, Aug. 17
MIDDLEPORT —
“Great Gospel Sing,”
6 p.m., Middleport
Nazarene Church. fea-

turing John and Velma
Dolly, Brian and Family
Connections, Angela
Gibson, Jerry and Diane
Frederick. Benefit sing

is for the Fall harvest
Gospel Sing at the civic
center in Rutland on
Oct. 16-19. Call 740985-3495.

For the best local weather coverage, visit www.mydailysentinel.com

MEIGS COUNTY LOCAL BRIEFS
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.
Key dates for Southern Local Schools
RACINE — The following are key

dates for Southern Local. Aug. 19 —
Staff only noon to 7 p.m. Includes open
house from 4-7 p.m. Dinner for staff
(pizza and salad) will be provided at 3
p.m.; Aug. 20 — Staff only 7:45 a.m.-2:45
p.m., breakfast will be provided by Bob
Crum of the Horace Mann Agency. Lunch
will be catered by Barb Arnold; Aug. 21
— First day for Southern Local students.
Bedford Township trustees
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford
Township Board of Trustees will conduct their regular monthly meeting at 7
p.m. Aug. 12 at the town hall.

LOCAL STOCKS
Royal Dutch Shell — 80.53
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
— 37.62
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 74.36
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.25
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.18
Worthington (NYSE) —
39.78
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes
of transactions Aug. 11,
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.

Gen Electric (NYSE) —
25.79
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
— 61.87
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 56.32
Kroger (NYSE) — 50.25
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 62.52
Norfolk So (NYSE) —
102.84
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.41
BBT (NYSE) — 36.20
Peoples (NASDAQ) —
23.28
Pepsico (NYSE) — 91.79
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.99
Rockwell (NYSE) — 113.73
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
— 14.59

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Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 12, 2014 s PAGE 6

Allmendinger takes Watkins Glen
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (AP)
— AJ Allmendinger’s journey is
almost complete.
With a new contract, sponsor
extensions and a solid one-car
team at JTG Daugherty Racing,
Allmendinger became a winner
in Sprint Cup for the first time
on a somber Sunday, outdueling
Marcos Ambrose in the final
two laps at Watkins Glen International.
“I dreamed about this
moment and I’m not going to
forget it,” said Allmendinger,
making his 213th Cup start. “It’s
just a dream come true.”
The day began on a solemn
AP Photo | Derik Hamilton
note
when three-time Cup
AJ Allmendinger waves the checkered flag as he celebrates in Victory Lane after
champion
Tony Stewart pulled
winning a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race at Watkins Glen International,
Sunday, Aug. 10, in Watkins Glen, N.Y.
out of the race 12 hours after

he struck and killed 20-year-old
sprint car driver Kevin Ward
Jr. in a race after Ward climbed
from his car on a small dirt
track in nearby Canandaigua.
Allmendinger offered his
condolences to the Ward family
after he won, saying, “We’re a
community here, we’re thinking
about you.”
“It’s a tough time for everybody,” Allmendinger said. “This
NASCAR community, as a whole,
we’re a family. When anything like
that happens, it’s something that
you don’t get time to erase and
forget about. Our thoughts and
prayers go to the Ward family and
what happened.
“And it also goes to Tony. It’s
not like he’s sitting there and

forgetting about it.”
In a statement released during
the race by a spokesman, Stewart said: “There aren’t words
to describe the sadness I feel
about the accident that took the
life of Kevin Ward Jr. It’s a very
emotional time for all involved,
and it is the reason I’ve decided
not to participate in today’s race
at Watkins Glen. My thoughts
and prayers are with his family,
friends and everyone affected by
this tragedy.”
Regan Smith drove Stewart’s
car and finished 37th after having to start from the back of the
43-car field and getting caught
in a late accident.
See ALLMENDINGER | 10

Meyer: Buckeyes
much improved
so far in practice
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Asked a question about lofty preseason
rankings and high
expectations, Ohio State
coach Urban Meyer jokingly threatened to pull the
reporter’s season credentials.
Laughing, he said he
only wanted to discuss the
first game against Navy on
Aug. 30.
But then he confirmed
that even he is impressed
with what he’s seen so far
out of the Buckeyes.
“If you had to say what’s
the difference between this
team and last year’s team,
we’re faster,” he said. “It
does have the feel of a very
good team.”
The Buckeyes are
seven practices into their
preseason camp. Yes, the
offensive line and pass
defense are still a concern.
Star quarterback Braxton
Miller is still taking days
off because of soreness
in his throwing arm after
shoulder surgery last
spring. And Ezekiel Elliott,
the first choice to replace
brutish tailback Carlos
Hyde, is out for a few days
after minor surgery on his
left wrist.
But, by and large, Meyer
is enthused and encouraged as Ohio State heads
into the brunt of its camp.
“This next week is real
hard,” he said. “There’s
a lot of practices in the
next five or six days.
That’s when the home
sickness sets in, and you
start feeling real sorry for
each other, and you start
finding out what kind of
team you have. At the end
of next week, I will know
what kind of a team we
have.
“This will be the toughest week that they have all
year.”
Miller was held out of a
scrimmage on Saturday to
save the wear and tear on

his right shoulder.
He said the week ahead
would mean long days —
and rapid improvement.
“You just have to go out
there like you’re ready for a
game,” he said. “You have
to have a mentality, too.
You want to go out there
and get yourself better and
your teammates, too.”
With the senior signalcaller watching from the
side, the Buckeyes have
relied on sophomore Cardale Jones and freshmen
J.T. Barrett and Stephen
Collier getting most of the
snaps.
Elliott fell on the ball
awkwardly during a sevenon-seven drill and injured
his wrist. It’s wrapped in
an elastic bandage and he’s
unlikely to join the action
on the field until perhaps
Thursday.
“It’s definitely tough to
go and see my brothers
battle without me,” he
said. “I’m just going to
be there. I’m out there,
helping as much as I can,
coaching them up as much
as I can.”
The Buckeyes are also
without sophomore running back Warren Ball, who
injured his foot last week.
The only healthy veterans
at the position are Rod
Smith and Bri’onte Dunn.
Meanwhile, the offensive line — where four of
the five starters are gone
— is taking shape.
“Everyone’s getting better,” guard Pat Elflein said.
“Coach (Ed) Warinner
is pushing us really hard.
We’re a motivated group,
too. We want to get better
and we’re ready to go.”
People are even feeling good about the pass
defense — which was
completely dismantled and
then rebuilt after allowing 35 points a game as
the Buckeyes lost two of
their last three games last
season.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Aug. 13
Golf
Eastern, Southern, Wahama at Waterford Invitational, 8 a.m.
Thursday, Aug. 14
Golf
South Gallia/Southern at Miller, 4:30
River Valley at Elks Invitational, TBA
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 9 a.m.
Waterford/Federal Hocking at Eastern, 4 p.m.

AP Photo | Empire Super Sprints, Inc.

This July 5, 2014 photo provided by Empire Super Sprints, Inc., shows sprint car driver Kevin Ward Jr., in the vicotry lane with his car at
the Fulton Speedway in Fulton, N.Y. Ward was killed Saturday at the Canandaigua Motorsports Park in Central Square, N.Y., when the car
being driven by Tony Stewart struck the 20-year-old who had climbed from his crashed car and was on the darkened dirt track trying to
confront Stewart following a bump with Stewart one lap earlier.

Crash inquiry focuses on lighting, track
By Dan Gelston

sadness I feel about the accident that
took the life of Kevin Ward Jr.,” Stewart said in a statement.
The collision was as common as
There was no immediate decision if
any in racing. Kevin Ward Jr.’s car
Stewart would drive in this weekend’s
spun twice like a top, wheels hugging NASCAR race at Michigan Internathe wall, before it plopped backward
tional Speedway.
on the dimly lit dirt track.
Stewart “will have as much time
In a sport steeped with bravado,
as he needs to make that decision,”
what happened next was another
spokesman Mike Arning said Monfamiliar, but treacherous, move: Wear- day. “It is still an emotional time
ing a black firesuit and black helmet, for all involved, Tony included. He
the 20-year-old Ward unbuckled him- is grieving, and grief doesn’t have a
self, climbed out of the winged car
timetable.”
into the night and defiantly walked
Arning said Stewart’s extra-curonto the track at Canandaigua Motor- ricular racing plans are on hold until
sports Park.
further notice.
He gestured, making his disgust
Plymouth Speedway in Warsaw,
evident with the driver who triggered Indiana, said on its website that Stewthe wreck with a bump: three-time
art would no longer compete in SatNASCAR champion Tony Stewart,
urday’s race. Canandaigua Speedway
who continues to race in sprint cars
promoter Jeremie Corcoran said Monon dirt tracks. Many NASCAR drivday the track has canceled Wednesers, including Stewart, got their start day’s event to give “my family, staff,
on the short ovals.
fans, and racing teams time to grieve
Ward, a relative unknown compared and process all that has occurred.”
to NASCAR’s noted swashbuckler,
Authorities questioned the 43-yearwas nearly hit by another passing car old Stewart once on Saturday night
as he pointed with his right arm in
and went to Watkins Glen to talk to
Stewart’s direction. As he confronted him again Sunday. They described
Stewart in his passing car, disaster
him as “visibly shaken” after the crash
struck.
and said he was cooperative.
Ward was standing to the right of
On Sunday, Ontario County Sheriff
Stewart’s familiar No. 14 car, which
Philip Povero said that investigators
seemed to fishtail from the rear and
also don’t have any evidence at this
hit him. According to video and
point in the investigation to support
witness accounts, Ward was sucked
criminal intent. But he also said that
underneath the car and hurtled
criminal charges have not been ruled
through the air before landing on his out.
back as fans looked on in horror.
Povero said on Monday there were
Ward was killed. Stewart, considno plans “at this time” to talk to Stewered one of the most proficient drivart again. There is no timetable as to
ers in racing, dropped out of Sunday’s when the investigation will conclude
NASCAR race at Watkins Glen, hours or autopsy results will be finished, he
after Saturday’s crash. And the sport
said.
was left reeling from a tragedy that
The crash raised several questions:
could have ripple effects from the big- Will Ward’s death cause drivers to
gest stock car series down to weekthink twice about on-track confrontanight dirt track racing.
tions? Did Stewart try and send his
“There aren’t words to describe the own message by buzzing Ward, only

Associated Press

to have his risky move turn fatal? Or
did Ward simply take his life into his
own hands by stepping into traffic in
a black firesuit on a dark track?
The only one who may have that
answer is Stewart.
David Weinsten, a former state and
federal prosecutor in Miami who is
now in private practice, said it would
be difficult to prove criminal intent.
“I think even with the video, it’s
going to be tough to prove that
this was more than just an accident
and that it was even culpable negligence, which he should’ve known
or should’ve believed that by getting
close to this guy, that it was going to
cause the accident,” he said.
The sheriff renewed a plea for
spectators to turn over photos and
videos of the crash. Investigators
were reconstructing the accident and
looking into everything from the dim
lighting on a portion of the track to
how muddy it was, as well as if Ward’s
dark firesuit played a role in his death,
given the conditions.
Driver Cory Sparks, a friend of
Ward’s, was a few cars back when
Ward was killed.
“The timing was unsafe,” he said of
Ward’s decision to get out of his car to
confront Stewart. “When your adrenaline is going, and you’re taken out of a
race, your emotions flare.”
It’s often just a part of racing.
Drivers from mild-mannered Jeff
Gordon to Danica Patrick have
erupted in anger on the track at
another driver. The confrontations are part of the sport’s allure:
Fans love it and cheer wildly from
the stands. Stewart, who has a
reputation for being a hothead
nicknamed “Smoke,” once wound
up like a pitcher and tossed his
helmet like a fastball at Matt
Kenseth’s windshield.
See CRASH | 10

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 12, 2014 7

The Steelers a
mixed bag in
preseason opener

AP Photo | Charles Krupa

Former NBA Commissioner David Stern speaks during his induction to the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., Friday, Aug. 8.

Mourning thanks doctors, donor
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) —
Alonzo Mourning first thanked all
of the usual people when he was
inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame: His
coaches, his teachers, and the foster mother who raised him.
Then he turned to those who
made it possible for his unique
journey to the sport’s highest
honor.
With one of the doctors who
performed his kidney transplant in
attendance, the former Georgetown
and Miami Heat star discussed
the disease that threatened his life
and almost ended his career. He
also thanked out his cousin-turnedkidney donor, Jason Cooper.
“There was such purpose to my
life at that point and I never doubted — no matter how long the odds
— that it was possible,” Mourning
said during Friday night’s induction ceremony. “I just thought,
‘This is much bigger than me.’ I
had a goal set to win a championship that was denied when I got
kidney disease.”
Mourning returned to win the
2006 NBA title with the Heat and
complete a career that led him
to the Springfield shrine. He was
inducted in a class that also included former NBA commissioner
David Stern, NCAA championshipwinning coaches Nolan Richardson
and Gary Williams and six-time
NBA All-Star Mitch Richmond.
The women’s teams from
Immaculata College that won three
straight national championships

(1972-74) were also honored, along
with Lithuania star Sarunas Marciulionis. The Immaculata teams
included Marianne Stanley, Theresa Grentz and Rene Portland.
Former Indiana Pacers coach
Bob “Slick” Leonard, the late Nat
“Sweetwater” Clifton of the New
York Knicks and the late Guy Rodgers of Temple rounded out the
class.
Stern was honored for his three
decades of leadership that transformed the league from struggling
teams and tape-delayed finals to an
international juggernaut. His introductory video included praise from
NBA stars like Michael Jordan,
Bill Russell and Magic Johnson but
also from Nelson Mandela.
“Everything we do is always
about the game,” Stern said, asking the entire crowd to stand so
he could thank the former players,
fans and family members who
made the league’s success possible.
“The reason I’m here is because of
thousands of people over the years
who have done so much.”
Stern had five current Hall of
Famers welcome him into the Hall,
from Russell, the former Celtics
star, to former deputy commissioner Russ Granik — a group that
represented his wide-ranging influence as he rose from working at his
father’s deli to the pinnacle of the
sport.
“Under his leadership, the NBA
rose to terrific heights, on and off
the court,” Richmond said in his
acceptance speech.

Stern’s induction capped a festive night at Symphony Hall in
downtown Springfield, across the
highway from the museum that
commemorates the city’s claim as
the sport’s birthplace.
Williams, who led Maryland to
11 consecutive NCAA tournament
appearances and the 2002 title,
said enshrinement in the hall was
“as big a thrill as you can get as a
coach.” Then came Arkansas’ Richardson, who celebrated his induction with a revival-style speech
peppered with swipes at referees
and jokes about God and the devil
playing basketball.
Richardson recounted a playing
career in which he went from 21
points per game to 14 and belatedly realized it was more important to win. Thanking his teachers
and coaches and family, he said,
“You have to have a team to reach
a dream.”
“This isn’t talking about a
national championship team,” he
said. “This is about the team that
helped raise Nolan Sam Richardson
Jr.”
Leonard, the winningest coach
in ABA history, followed with a
contrasting style, accenting his
quiet tone with a Southern drawl
and guessing that he was one of
the oldest inductees in the Hall’s
history.
“For me, it took a while,” Leonard, 82, said, “but I’m going out in
style.”

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Dri Archer’s first touch in
the NFL showed why the Pittsburgh Steelers took the
quick running back in the third round of this year’s
draft.
It also proved symbolic of how far Archer — and
his team — have to go with a month until the regular
season.
Archer’s 46-yard catch-and-run provided the lone
offensive highlight during the first string’s brief night
of work in a 20-16 exhibition loss to the New York
Giants on Saturday. The 5-foot-8 Archer lined up as
one of five wide receivers on Pittsburgh’s first possession, took a screen pass from Ben Roethlisberger and
darted deep inside Giants territory.
“It was an open space,” Archer said. “My teammates
knew and blocked well and it was a great play.”
The only thing Archer didn’t do was make it to the
end zone. The player who posted the fastest time at the
scouting combine was tracked down at the New York 14.
Consider it Archer’s “Welcome to the NFL” moment.
“Yeah I know I should (score), but everything happens for a reason,” Archer said. “The (Giants) played
their defense well and they had a great angle and
made a great stop.”
The Steelers failed to turn the big play into a touchdown, instead settling for the first of Shaun Suisham’s
three field goals. While Roethlisberger quickly headed
to the sideline to trade his helmet for a baseball cap,
some of the other starters saw extended play.
Second-year wide receiver Markus Wheaton — trying to hold off a crowded field for the right to start
alongside Pro Bowler Antonio Brown — hauled in a
28-yard pass from backup quarterback Bruce Gradkowski. The drive ended with a missed field goal,
though Gradkowski was encouraged by the way the
youngsters threw themselves into the fray.
“We need them to continue to step up and make
plays and understand that we don’t wait on you;
you’ve got to come up and play with the big boys
now,” Gradkowski said.
There were some issues on both sides of the ball.
The offense converted just 2 of 14 third downs while
the first-string defense allowed New York running
back Rashad Jennings to bolt 73 yards for a touchdown. Not a dazzling start for a unit that gave up 11
plays of 50 yards or more last season.
“I didn’t get it done, just put it that way,” defensive
lineman Cameron Heyward said. “I put a lot of pressure on myself and I messed up first team. I have to
learn from this and it won’t happen again.”
Coach Mike Tomlin kept the defensive starters
on the field for another two series, with promising
results. Second-year linebacker Jarvis Jones sacked
Eli Manning on New York’s next possession, matching
the former first-round pick’s entire sack total from his
rookie season.
Jones wasn’t the only linebacker to make an impact.
Undrafted rookie free agent Howard Jones scored
Pittsburgh’s lone touchdown when he scooped up
a New York fumble and zipped 28 yards to give the
Steelers the lead in the fourth quarter.
While Jones isn’t in the mix to crack a starting
group that includes Jarvis Jones and Lawrence
Timmons, his heady play is the one that will certainly do him favors as he tries to land a spot on
the 53-man roster.

AP SPORTS BRIEFS
Bengals sign QB Tyler Wilson
CINCINNATI (AP) — The
Bengals signed free-agent
quarterback Tyler Wilson on
Saturday, two days after second-string quarterback Jason
Campbell bruised his passing
elbow.
The Bengals needed someone to throw in training camp
and the preseason games
because rookie AJ McCarron
has been sidelined by a sore
passing shoulder. Andy Dalton
played briefly in the preseason
opener against the Chiefs and
is expected to get a lot more
time next Saturday against the
Jets at Paul Brown Stadium.
Wilson was Oakland’s fourthround pick in 2013, when he
was on the practice squad most
of the season. Tennessee signed
him late off the Raiders’ prac-

tice squad late in the season
and waived him last week.
Self: Wiggins wants
to be traded to Minnesota
OVERLAND PARK, Kan.
(AP) — Andrew Wiggins told
Kansas coach Bill Self that he
wants to be traded from Cleveland to Minnesota because the
No. 1 overall pick believes it
will be better for his long-term
future.
Wiggins joined his former
coach as a guest instructor at
Self’s basketball camp in suburban Kansas City on Sunday.
And while Wiggins declined to
speak to the few reporters at
Shawnee Mission West High
School, Self said the rookie
wants to carve out his own
legacy in the NBA.
Earlier this week, The Asso-

ciated Press and several other
outlets reported a deal has
been reached to send Wiggins,
Anthony Bennett and a firstround pick to Minnesota for
All-Star forward Kevin Love,
who will join LeBron James
and Kyrie Irving to form a new
“Big 3” in Cleveland.

with the Cavs since re-signing
with them last month as a free
agent.
On Oct. 12, James and the
Cavs will play the Heat in Rio
De Janiero. James won two
NBA titles and went to the
NBA Finals four straight seasons with the Heat.
The Cavs will also play in
Cincinnati on Oct. 15 against
Indiana and against Chicago in
Columbus on Oct. 20 on Ohio
State’s campus.

Sunday to lead Taney Youth
Baseball Association Little
League of Philadelphia to an
8-0 victory over a squad from
Delaware in the Mid-Atlantic
Regional championship game
Sunday.
Davis, who struck out six,
will become only the 18th girl
to play in 68 years in the Little
LeBron, Cavs open
League World Series, joining
preseason at home
Emma March of the Canada
CLEVELAND (AP) — LeBRegion Champions from South
ron James will play his first
Vancouver Little League, Britpreseason game with the Cavaish Columbia.
liers at home before he faces his Pa. Little League pitcher
But Davis told The Philadelformer team, the Miami Heat,
wants more girls to play
phia
Inquirer that she thinks
in Brazil.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) —
more girls should join boys’
The Cavs will open their
Mo’Ne Davis may be the first
teams so it could be “a tradiexhibition season Oct. 5
American girl heading to play
tion” rather than something
against Maccabi Tel Aviv, the
in the Little League World
Israeli club formerly led by new Series in a decade, but she only unusual.
The series starts Thursday in
Cleveland coach David Blatt.
wishes she had more company.
It will be James’ first game
Davis pitched a three-hitter
Williamsport.

Mostly positive reviews for new tablets
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) —
Adjusting to new technology just
isn’t easy for some people, even in
the NFL where everyone is trying
to find that winning edge.
Even in a pouring rain, Titans
assistant coach Louie Cioffi flipped
through soggy black-and-white
printouts reviewing the opening
series with his defensive backs. A
couple times players shielded assistant coaches with towels to study
photos of the Green Bay Packers.
So much for the NFL’s new tablets only a few steps away.
Teams wrapped up the first full

preseason test of the new Surface
tablet from Microsoft for NFL
sidelines with mostly good reviews
and some glitches to fix. And yes,
they were designed with a protective case to survive rugged weather
conditions.
Titans coach Ken Whisenhunt
said Sunday he only heard positive
feedback on the tablets and the
photos available, especially upstairs
in the coaching booth. He thinks
the key now is only getting accustomed to using the tablet.
“One of the concerns that you
had was the rain and how that

would affect that, but it didn’t
affect it last night,” Whisenhunt
said. “And the players seemed to
like it too. I mean the ability to
zoom in and out to see those looks
is a pretty neat thing. I think as
the preseason progresses we’ll get
more involved with those because
it is a tremendous tool.”
The tablets also come with one
very big difference from the blackand-white photos.
“It’s color,” Washington quarterback Robert Griffin III said, laughing. “We went from black-and-white
to color.”

AP Photo | Mark Zaleski

In this Aug. 9, 2014 photo, Green Bay Packers wide receivers
coach Edgar Bennett uses a computer pad in a rainstorm during
a preseason NFL football game against the Tennessee Titans
in Nashville, Tenn. The tablets, designed to survive all sorts of
weather, are equipped to look at still photos of game action.

�CLASSIFIED

8 Tuesday, August 12, 2014

LEGALS

Notices

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

Sealed proposals for the
County Paving Project –
ROUND 28 will be received by
the Meigs County Commissioners at their office at The
Meigs County Courthouse, 100
E. Second Street, Suite 301,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until
11:10 A.M., August 21, 2014,
and then at 11:10 A.M. at said
office opened and read aloud.
Resurfacing portions of CR
25A Charles Chancey Drive,
CR 10 Carpenter Hill RD, CR
32 Eagle Ridge RD, and CR
18 Kingsbury RD. The engineer’s estimate for this project is
$531,611.00
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS PROJECT.
COPIES OF SECTION
153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
Bid documents may be secured at the office of The
Meigs County Engineer, 34110
Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769; Phone Number
740-992-2911 for a $10.00
non-refundable fee.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the
full amount of the bid with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioner or by certified check,
cashiers check, or irrevocable
letter of credit upon a solvent
bank in the amount of not less
than 10% of the bid amount in
the favor of the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioner.
Bid bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the
official or agent signing the
bond.
Bidders must be prequalified.
Prequalification shall be in accordance with 102.01 of the
Ohio Department of Transportation Construction and Material Specifications.

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.

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.

Miscellaneous

Bids shall be sealed and
marked as Bid for: County
Paving Project – Round 28 and
mailed or delivered to:

We will pick up old Stove, Dryer, &amp; Washers, also old cars
and scrap metal. Call 740-6694240 or 614-989-7341

Meigs County Commissioners
The Meigs County Courthouse
100 E. Second Street, Suite
301
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
8/5, 8/12

Home Improvements

Wanted

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.
Professional Services

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

740-591-8044

Help Wanted General

Miscellaneous

Southwestern Community Action Council, Inc. is NOW HIRING a Teacher Assistant for
Mason County. Visit
www.scacwv.org for current
job postings and application information! EOE

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Welders Wanted–full-time
positions available. Apply in
person at 2150 Eastern
Avenue, Gallipolis, Oh

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend
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 quest for
Higher Education / No Cost /
304-637-1257 /
www.vubwv.org

60517849

Miscellaneous

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

Miscellaneous

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

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Tuesday, August 12, 2014 9

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Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

8/12

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Manziel, Hoyer to work with 1st team

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 hardworking, self-motivated and footballknowledged people to help cover and

BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
The Cleveland Browns’
quarterback derby is heading
down the homestretch.
Coach Mike Pettine said
Sunday he plans to name his
starting quarterback shortly
after the team’s Aug. 18 preseason game in Washington.
The winner of the competition between Brian Hoyer

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.

and rookie Johnny Manziel
will start Cleveland’s third
preseason contest — Aug.
23 at home against the Rams
— and sit out its final game
Aug. 28 against Chicago.
“I wouldn’t say it’s 1,000
percent etched in stone, but
I would like it decided before
the third preseason game,” Pettine said. “If we have a starter

that gets a lot of time in that
game, then has all the practice
time after that, we feel like he’ll
be ready to go for the opener
(Sept. 7 in Pittsburgh).”
Hoyer tops the Browns’
official depth chart, but he
will split first-team snaps
with 2012 Heisman Trophy
winner Manziel at training
camp this week.

60526116

Allmendinger

We Need Volunteers
The newly formed group Meigs Volunteer Program (MVP)
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60523696

60526109
60423165

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An expert road racer from his days in open-wheel,
Allmendinger beat the best in Ambrose, who has been
dominant in NASCAR’s top two series at The Glen, also
From Page 6
winning four straight Nationwide events.
Ambrose was going for a weekend sweep after capturing
It was the second straight time Stewart missed the race the Zippo 200 on Saturday.
at The Glen, where he has a NASCAR-record five victories.
“I’m thrilled for AJ,” said Ambrose, who drove for JTG
Last year, he broke his leg in a sprint car accident in Iowa
Daugherty before Allmendinger.
days before the Cup race and missed the rest of the season.
The victory made JTG Daugherty Racing eligible for the
Allmendinger’s life changed two years ago in the hours
Chase for the Sprint Cup title, and Allmendinger isn’t planbefore the July race at Daytona International Speedway.
ning on stopping there.
NASCAR officials had just kicked him out of the track,
“It’s huge to be in the Chase,” he said. “I didn’t want to
suspending Allmendinger indefinitely for failing a random just say, ‘Just be there.’ We want to make some noise. To
drug test.
be able to say we’re a Chase team, we’re working hard and
The failed drug test sidelined him for more than three
trying to get it back. When it comes to the Chase with the
months and cost him his job with Penske Racing. It also
new format, it doesn’t mean we can’t get hot early. You
spurred much soul searching, and after a handful of one-off
don’t have to be amazing for 10 races.”
Cup rides he eventually landed a full-time Cup ride last
Allmendinger held off Ambrose through the first two
August with JTG Daugherty Racing.
turns on the final restart and opened a lead after both cars
To break through the way Allmendinger did only added
bumped and won going away.
to the lore of this race, which has been decided four
“I try to get better every day. I’m still not where I want
straight times by fender-banging dashes to the checkered
to be,” Allmendinger said. “I wouldn’t want to go back and
flag. Ambrose won two of those and Kyle Busch the other.
change the process. I wouldn’t change a thing about this.”
There were three restarts in the decisive closing laps.
Allmendinger got the jump on Ambrose in the first one
with nine laps to go, but Jimmie Johnson was bumped in
the first turn and his No. 48 spun around, collecting two
other cars and precipitating a caution.
The race restarted again with five laps left and both
Ambrose and Allmendinger were side-by-side through the
esses, banging against each other before Ambrose took the
lead in the chicane as he’s done so many times in the past,
We’ve Got
dirt flying as both cars hit the grass.
Money to Lend!
Allmendinger wasn’t done, regaining the lead on the
next lap as he out-braked the Australian into Turn 1 before
a crash involving Denny Hamlin caused another red flag
with four laps left.
The 90-lap race on the 2.45-mile layout was red-flagged
for 1 hour, 21 minutes just past the midpoint after a violent
crash involving Ryan Newman and Michael McDowell that
involved three other cars.
Newman’s Chevrolet spun hard into the Armco barrier
lining the track, ripping a big hole in the barrier’s metal.
The car then spun around twice and went back across the
racing surface, collecting McDowell in his No. 95, which
incurred heavy damage in the rear. Newman, McDowell
and Alex Bowman were treated in the infield care center
Whether you prefer a desktop or mobile
and released.
experience, our new responsive website
Allmendinger gained the lead on Lap 64 after pit stops,
design means we keep you current with
with Kurt Busch and Ambrose close behind.
reliable reporting and entertaining coverage
Ambrose outbraked Busch into Turn 1 for second two
to spark your interest 24 hours a day,
laps later and set his sights on Allmendinger, who had a
7 days a week.
2-second lead that was wiped out by the late stoppages.
Jeff Gordon started from the pole and led the first 29
!n"e#$c"%w&amp;"'%on.&amp;ne%comm(n&amp;"y%mem*e#s
laps, holding Ambrose at bay. But Gordon’s engine died on
through our enhanced comment portal or
lap 50 as he lost all power and couldn’t get it refired, spoilshare an item of interest via social media
ing a promising day.

60523724

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60525459

Ward,” witness Michael
Messerly said. “And the
next thing I could see, I
From Page 6
didn’t see Ward any more.
It just seemed like he was
“I’ve seen it many times
suddenly gone.”
in NASCAR, where a driver
The crash also raised
will confront the other one, questions about whether
and a lot of times they’ll try Stewart will continue with
to speed past them. And
his hobby of racing on small
that’s what it appeared to
tracks on the side of the
me as if what Tony Stewart big-money NASCAR races.
did, he tried to speed past
He has long defended his
participation in racing on
tracks like the one where
the crash happened, even as
accidents and injury have
put his day job in NASCAR
at risk.
Saturday’s crash came
almost exactly a year after
Stewart suffered a compound fracture to his right
leg in a sprint car race in
Iowa. The injury cost him
the second half of the NASCAR season and sidelined
him during the Chase for
the Sprint Cup Championship. Stewart only returned
to sprint track racing last
month.
The crash site is the same
track where Stewart was
involved in a July 2013 accident that seriously injured a
19-year-old driver. He later
took responsibility for his
car making contact with
another and triggering the
15-car accident that left Alysha Ruggles with a compression fracture in her back.
“Everybody has hobbies,”
he said last month, adding
that “there are a lot of other
things I could be doing that
are a lot more dangerous
and a lot bigger waste of
time with my time off do
than doing that.”

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