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                  <text>Today in
history
OPINION s A5

Partly sunny.
High around 86.
Low near 68.

State,
national
sports

WEATHER s A5

SPORTS s B1

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 132, Volume 64

Tuesday, August 19, 2014 s 50¢

New bus routes
In this second race during the Southern Valley Colt Circuit
racing program at the Meigs County Fair, Alex Hawk and
Hunter Myers battle early for the lead. Myers went on to break
the fairground track record at “The Rock” in Rocksprings.

Meigs County
Fair harness
racing track
record broken
By Scott Wolfe

For the Daily Sentinel

ROCKSPRINGS — A
beautiful sunny day and
cooler temperatures
greeted the crowd in
attendance last Thursday for the Harness
Racing program sanctioned by the Southern
Valley Colt Circuit at
the Meigs County Fair.
Eleven races headlined the program,
including a new track
record set by Friskie’s
Angel. John Ryan
Melsheimer dominated
the day with three wins
as a driver.
As the day progressed, the on-track
action heated up and so
did the late afternoon
temperature. That,
however, didn’t deter
the large crowd on
hand. Many folks simply enjoyed the close
racing, while the more
daring ventured into
the pari-mutuel betting — it’s second year
available at the track.
Announcer Chris
Patterson, circuit
announcer, added his
usual entertaining twist
in calling the event
at the “Rock” as the
hairpin half-mile oval

is known in regional
racing circles. The first
race saw Sondrio with
Jonas Hershberger in
the sulky claim the
Southern Local Schools
blanket in a race that
was fun and exciting
until Sondrio broke
away for a healthy win.
The second race was
a high-speed race for
the money. Friskie’s
Angel and driver John
Ryan Melsheimer
battled Friskie Six and
driver Hunter Myers
in what tied the track
record with a 2:02 time
for Friskie’s Angel’s
4th straight win in
Ohio. In the race for
3-year-old colts, it was
originally announced
that the time had tied
the record set by Terry
Van Rhoden several
years ago. After some
research, circuit officials found that the
previous record time
was 2:02:1 thus a new
track record was set by
Friskie Six and Hunter
Myers.
Sixteen-year-old Skyler Bennett was recognized as the youngest
driver and Don Spencer, formerly of Pomeroy, was recognized for
See RECORD | A2

Local school buses see
changes in some morning

Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

MEIGS COUNTY
— The following are
bus route times for the
20014-15 school year.
All bus routes will

start about the same
time as last year. Some
bus routes have changed
(Theresa Marcinko, Lee
Swain and Tom Pullins
routes have changed
somewhat). Have your
children at the bus stop

early and at a safe location. Call your bus driver
for additional information.
Tammy Adams (Bus
15): Tammy will begin
her route in Long Bottom at the intersection
of 248 and Sand Hill
Road at 6:35 a.m. She
will drive state route
124, Curtis Hollow Road,
124 to Reedsville, and
onto Hocking Port, back

ABOVE, pictured are the children who received computers Monday. Also pictured are the
volunteers who helped with the program. BELOW, Iva Sisson, left, helps parents fill out the
proper paperwork before receiving their new computers.

Computers For Students
helps deliver 32 computers
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

— SPORTS
NASCAR: B1
Buckeyes: B1
Sports Calendar: B2
— FEATURES
Television: A5
Classified: B4
Comics: B5

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

See BUS | A2

Vaccination
operations
may be
extended

By Lindsay Kriz
— NEWS
Obituaries: A2
Meigs Fair: A4
Weather: A5

to Eden Ridge Road
to State Route 681 to
Tuppers Plains and Kennedy Lane.
Theresa Marcinko
(Bus 1):
The route will begin
on County Road 28 at
the top of Keno Hill at
approximately 6:35 a.m.
She will drive to a turnaround at the Red Brush

POMEROY — The
parents and students
sat and waited patiently
under the gazebo of the
Pomeroy Parking Lot.
Then, at 1 p.m. Iva
Sisson and her husband, Bob, along with
Stuart Johnson, executive director of Connect
Ohio, and Lyndsey
Kleven, public relations
specialist for Connect
Ohio, began passing out
the PC desktops that
would go to the homes

Stuart Johnson, executive director of Connect Ohio, helps to
hand out computer equipment to a parent.

of students in Meigs
County who were without one in their homes.
Connect Ohio also
formed the Connect

Appalachia Broadband
Initiative, or CABI, to
help those in need of
technology in the area.
See COMPUTERS | A5

COLUMBUS — The Ohio
Departments of Health and
Natural Resources, in partnership with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and
local health departments will
begin fall oral rabies vaccination operations this month
in 14 northeast and eastern
Ohio counties.
Weather permitting, baiting will begin Aug. 20 and
will cover 4,158-square miles
of the state’s northeastern
and eastern border. Bait distribution should be complete
by Sept. 19.
Rabies is a viral disease
that affects mammals, including people. It is almost
always fatal. Rabies vaccine
baiting operations are intended to immunize raccoons
that are at greatest risk of
being exposed to raccoon
rabies coming into the state.
This will then create an
“immune barrier” along the
Ohio state line that can prevent the spread of raccoonrabies variant into the rest of
the state.
As in past years, bait
distribution with the oral
rabies vaccine Raboral
V-RG will take place in all
of Ashtabula, Columbiana,
Jefferson, Mahoning and
Trumbull counties and parts
of Belmont, Carroll, Harrison and Monroe counties. In
addition, for the third year in
a row, a new oral rabies vaccine called ONRAB will be
field tested in parts of Lake,
Portage, Geauga, Summit
and Cuyahoga counties as
part of a national trial involving five states.
Baits will be distributed
by various methods in each
county, including fixed-wing
aircraft, helicopter and vehicles staffed by USDA and
local health departments.
Residents in the areas to be
baited should be aware of
See VACCINATION | A5

Think Grande
rio.edu
800.282.7201

60524728

�LOCAL

A2 Tuesday, August 19, 2014

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
BEAVER
GALLIPOLIS — David L. Beaver, 68, of Jackson,
formerly of Gallipolis, passed away Monday, Aug. 18,
2014, at his residence.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 21, 2014,
at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Mark Beaver
officiating. Burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery.
Friends may call the funeral home between 5-9 p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2014. There will be a Masonic
service at 9 p.m.

HAROLD “SMOKEY” DARST
one sister, Delilah Cox,
of Gallipolis; three grandsons, David Webb, Caden
Caldwell and Rees Wyant;
and one granddaughter
Constance Wyant.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Wednesday, Aug.
20, 2014, at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Burial will be in Danville
Cemetery in Danville.
Friends may call then
funeral home Wednesday
between 11 a.m. and 1
p.m.

DINGESS
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — Lucille Dingess, 90, of
Willow Wood, died Sunday, Aug. 17, 2014 at Mayfair Village Nursing Care Center in Columbus. Hall
Funeral Home and Crematory in Proctorville, Ohio,
is in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.
FOX
ALBANY, Ohio — Shelby Fox, 54, of Albany, died
Friday, Aug. 15, 2014, at her residence.
There will be no visitation or funeral services.
A memorial service will be held at a later date.
Arrangements are by White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home in Coolville.

Bus
From Page A1

Record

The Summary:
Horse/Driver/Trainer/Owner/
Owner’s Hometown
Race One
From Page A1
Southern Local Schools
Blanket
his 50th year of driving
1 Mile Trot/Two Year Old Colts
horses.
1) Sondrio/Jonas Hershberger/
Spencer celebrated in fine Eric Nesselroad, trainer/Owner,
style as he claimed the very Fred C. Polk, Zanesville, Ohio
popular win amid cheers
2) Go Duke Go/Vicki Frye/Vicki
Frye, trainer/ Owner Vicki Frye
from the crowd in the third
3) Kaptain Tommy/David Myers/
race. Spencer’s victory
brought the crowd to its feet David Myers, trainer/Owners,
Blane A. Maddox, Marietta, Edward
as the veteran driver was
Patterson, Galloway; Douglas A.
able to pull off the win at his Wall, Hawkinsville, GA.
old stomping grounds in the Purse: $5,000; Time: 1:03:2
sulky of Belle N Dunn.
Race Two
Much of the racing was
General Tire Sales
close to the finish. Race Five 1 Mile Pace/3-year Old Fillies
1) Friskie’s Angel/John Ryan
was the closest of the day
Melsheimer/John Ryan
in a near-photo finish with
Governor Victory narrowly Melsheimer, trainer/ Owners,
Dm Stables, LLC, Naples, Florida;
defeating A Brilliant Idea.
William J. Refenacht, Archbold,
The win went to Charlie
OH; Joyce A. McClelland,
Schoonover, who was
Zanesville.
involved with many of the
2) Friskie Six/Hunter Myers/
horses racing in Thursday’s Larry Six, trainer/Owner, Larry Six,
event. Schoonover served in Washington Court House, Ohio
capacity of driver, trainer, or 3) Come Along Sadie/Alex Hawk/
Jason Borowski, trainer/ Owners,
owner.
Larry A. Hines, Guysville, OH;
Schoonover and Jonas
Jason Borowski, Galloway, OH
Hershberger each won two
4) Taaylor/Ryan Holton/Sam
events as drivers, while John Moore, trainer/Owner, Samuel
Ryan Melsheimer won three. Moore, Washington Court House,
Lydia Edwards, the Horse Ohio
Princess, doubled as the out- Purse: $4,823; Time: 2:02:0 Tied
Track Record
rider for the event. Joining
Edwards in victory lane pho- Race Three
tos was Shawnella Patterson Middleport-Pomeroy Lions
Club
the recently crowned 2014
1 Mile Trot/Three Year-old Fillies
Meigs County Fair queen.
1) Belle N Dunn/Don Spencer/
Shawnella is the daughter
Don Spencer, trainer/Owner, R.
of Raymond and Lori PatLewis Hauber, Jewett, Ohio
terson.
2) Misty/Charlie Schoonover/
Eric Nesselroad, trainer/Owner,
Gene Wiley served as
Samuel C. Clark, Beverly, OH
head judge; Rod Newhart,
Clerk; Steve Swatzel, Speed 3) Hooray Ross/Charlie
Superintendent; Finish Pho- Schoonover/ Charlie Schoonover,
trainer/ Owner Shelly L. Bucher,
tos by Linscott Photo; and
Athens, Ohio
Winners photos by Ted and 4) NA NA NA/Skyler Bennett/
Gloria Adams. Programs
Ty Van Rhoden, trainer/ Larry L.
were again sold and printed Cleland, Bainbridge, OH
by The Quality Print Shop.
Purse: $2,662; Time: 2:13:3

Civitas Media, LLC

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Telephone: 740-992-2155

60523384

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Annual local subscription price for The Pomeroy Daily Sentinel is $250.
Please call for more information on local pricing.
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ADVERTISING:
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Sarah Thompson, Ext. 15
Brenda Davis, Ext. 16

PUTZ
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Marilyn Ruth Putz,
84, of Huntington, died Sunday, Aug. 17, 2014, at
Woodland Retirement Community Health Care in
Huntington. Private burial will be at Kirkland Memorial Cemetery in Point Pleasant. Sign the family
guestbook at www.klingelcarpenter.com.

Race Four
Quality Print Shop
1 Mile Pace/Two Year-old Colts and
Geldings
1) Western Wayne/ Jonas
Hershberger/ Eric Nesselroad,
trainer/ Owner, Eddie Stewart,
Beverly,OH; Eric Nesselroad,
Stockport, OH
2) Tossie’s Flash/ Bill Long, Jr./ Ed
Davis, trainer/ David Seif, Waverly,
Ohio
3) Dream’s Oakie/ Charlie
Schoonover/ Charlie Schoonover,
trainer/ Al Childs, Athens, Ohio.
Purse: $4,450; Time 2:05:3
Race Five
Anderson-McDaniel Funeral
Home
1 Mile Trot/Three Year-old Colts
and Geldings
1) Governor Victory/Charlie
Schoonover/ Steven Swatzel,
trainer/ Owner, Michael S. Swatzel,
Little Hocking, OH
2) A Brillian Idea/ Jonas
Hershberger/ Eric Nesselroad,
trainer/ Owner, Gene R. Turner,
Vienna, WV
3) Recon One Hundred/Hunter
Myers/Eric Nesselroad, trainer/
Owner, Fred C. Polk, Zanesville, OH
Purse: $4,500; Time 2:06:0
Race Six
The Daily Sentinel
Free For All-1 Mile Pace
1) Ivory Collection/Hunter Myers/
Larry Six, trainer/Jesse A. Bolen,
Sabina, OH; Larry Six, Washington
Court House, OH
2) Laugh Away/Alex Hawk/ Ty Van
Rhoden,trainer/ Owner Mike R.
Brown, Bowling Green, OH; Angela
C. Perry, Athens, OH
3) Hoosier Shooter/Ryan Holton/
Caleb Uhrig, trainer/ Owner, Todd
A. Uhrig, Frankfort, OH
4) Summerwinds Atlast/
Charlie Schoonover/ Charline
Schoonover, trainer/ Owner, Al
Childs, Athens, OH
5) Uptown Dreamer/Mike Myers/
Michael Myers, trainer/Michael P.
Myers, Williamsport, OH/Lessee
6) Meah’s Tornado/ Mike
Spearman/ Paul Johnson, trainer/
Owner, Paul Johnson, Ashland, KY
Purse: $1,400; Time: 2:04:02
Race Seven
Middleport-Pomeroy Lions
Club
1 Mile Trot/Three Year-old Fillies
4) Holly’s GG/Ryan Holton/
Richard Householder, trainer/
Owner, Ryan and Richard
Householder, Junction City, OH
2) Just Trouble/ Bryan Weaver/
Bryan Weaver, trainer/ Owner,
Donna Jean Anderson, Stoutsville,
OH
3) Trulee Grateful/David Myers/
Doris Crandell, trainer/Owner,
Doris L. Crandell, Thornville, OH
4) Baywood Super/Bill Long, Jr./

Ed Davis, trainer/ Owner David D.
Seif, Waverly, OH
Purse: $2,662; Time: 2:07:1
Race Eight
Fraternal Order of Eagle, Aerie
2171
1 Mile Pace/Three Year Old Colts
and Geldings
1) Feeling Good/Charlie
Schoonover/ Charlie Schoonover,
trainer/Al Childs, Owner; Athens,
OH
2) Dusty Power/Barney Dillon/
Barney Dillon, trainer/ Owner
Donna A. Weber, Jerusalem, OH;
Barney Dillon, Jerusalem, OH
3) Parker’s Passion/David Myers/
Bill Burger, trainer/ Owner, Marty
A. McClain, Canal Winchester, OH
Purse:$4,550; Time: 2:04:0
Race Nine
Shade River Ag Service
1 Mile Trot/Free for All
1) Ritz Tracker/David Myers/ Doris
Crandell, trainer/ Owner, Doris L.
Crandell, Thornville,OH
2) Bible Study/Hunter Myers/
Charlie schoonover, trainer/
Owner,Karen L Brite, Stockport,
OH
3) All About Harold/Don Spencer/
Steven Swatzel, trainer/Owner,
Michael S. Swatzel, Little Hocking,
OH
Purse: $1,400; Time: 2:07:2
Race 10
McDonald’s Of Pomeroy
1 Mile Pace/Two Year-old Fillies
1) Feeling Wild/John Ryan
Melsheimer/ John Ryan
Melsheimer, trainer/Owner,Joyce
A McClelland, Zanesville, OH
2)Annie In The Oaks/ Charlie
Schoonover/ Eric Nesselroad,
trainer/ Owner, Karen A.
McGraw, Pickerington,OH; Joe D.
Nesselroad, Chandlersville, OH
Purse: $4,475; Time: 2:08:0
Race 11
In Memory of Janet Warner
1 Mile Trot/Two Year-old Fillies
1) I’m Chiptastic/John Ryan
Melsheimer/ John Ryan
Melsheimer, trainer/ Mel Rose
Stable, Hopewell,OH; David L.
Pierce, Houston, TX
2) Talissa/ Jonas Hershberger/
Eric Nesselroad, trainer/ Owner,
Fred C. Polk
3) Little Casino/Ty Van
Rhoden/ Duane Lowe, trainer/
Owner,Duane M. Lowe, Malta,OH
4) JJ’s Trottintoy/ Mike Sowers/
Mike Sowers, trainer/ Owner,
Michael D. Sowers, McArther, OH
5) Lins Yankee/Mike Spearman/
Mike Spearman, trainer/Owner,
Jeffrey S. Hayes, San Diego,
California; Michael H. Spearman,
Mount Vernon, OH
6) Baywood Kelly/Bill Long, Jr./ Ed
Davis, trainer/OWner, David D. Seif,
Waverly, OH
Purse: $5,200; Time: 2:12:0

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

Call Us
Today!

OBITUARIES:
740-992-2155

Proud to Serve
Meigs, Mason &amp;
Gallia Counties
Portable Toilet Rental &amp; Septic Tank Cleaning
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60526116

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.

Fairplain Tractor Sales, INC.

MCCLASKEY
WELLSTON — Joyce McClaskey, 67, Wellston,
died Sunday, Aug. 17, 2014, in Select Specialty Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. Funeral arrangements will
be announced later by Huntley-Cremeens Funeral
Home in Wellston.

GREGORY
RIFE
GALLIPOLIS — William Forrest “Red” Gregory,
GALLIPOLIS — Herbert R. Rife, 85 of Gallipolis,
83, of Gallipolis, died Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014, at the
died Sunday, Aug. 17, 2014, at St. Mary’s Medical
home of his daughter Billie in Letart, W.Wa.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2014, Center.
Arrangements are pending and will be announced
at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor David Henson
officiating. Burial will follow in Memorial Burial Park later by Willis Funeral Home.

Church on Lyons Den Road. She will continue back
North on County Road to Reibel Road. From Reibel
Road she will continue to Oak Hill Road, then to
White’s Lane, Scout Camp Road, to students in Chester on State Route 248 and the Chester Township
Garage. She will then turn around and go back to Summer Road, then Bahr Road and finally to Eastern.
Shelly Caldwell (Bus 12): Shelly’s Route will begin
about 6:35 a.m. at Number Nine Road and St. Route
681. She wil travel Hudson Valley Road, Little Forest,
Number Nine and Bridle Trail and then travel back to
State Route 681 to Tuppers Plains.
Ed Holter (Bus 16): Ed’s Route will begin on Wickham Road at approximately 6:45 a.m. He will pick up
students on Skinner Run Road, West Shade Road,
Burke Road, Flatwoods Road, Old Forest Road, Texas
Road to State Route 7.
Becky Maxson (Bus 17): Becky’ route will begin
at 6:35 a.m. on Lickskillet Road. She will pick up
students on Osborne Road, Smith Baker Road, Joppa
Road, Coolville Road, Lydia Road, Rice Run Road,
Headley Road, Pine Tree Drive, Limberer Ridge and
Success Road to State Route 7.
Connie Osborne (Bus 21): Connie’s route will begin
at the Lauer residence on Sumner Road at 6:40 a.m.
She will then travel to Keebaugh-Follrod Road, Cherry
Ridge Road, Miller Road, Silver Ridge, Myers Road,
Christy Road, East Shade Road, Owl Hollow Road,
Arbaugh Addition in Tuppers Plains and Hickory Lake
Road.
Tom Pullins (Bus 4): Tom’s route will begin at 6:35
a.m. at Bashan on County Road 28, then continue to
Bush Road, Rainbow Ridge, Hensley, Road, Holter
Road, Eagle Ridge, State Route 7 from Memorial Gardens to Chester, Baer Road, New Hope and Showalter.
Carolyn Ritchie (Bus 18): Carolyn’s route will begin
at 6:30 a.m. on State Route 681 West of Alfred. She
will then pick up students on Douglas Road, Elk Run
Road, Carr Road, Woods Road, Alfred Road, Kaylor
Road, Main Street Tuppers Plains, State Route 7 to the
Meigs County Line and Vanderholf Road.
Lesa Sidwell (Bus 11): Lesa’s route will begin at
6:35 a.m. on Sand Ridge Road. She will proceed to
pick up students on Pine Grove Road, Vinegar Street,
Pomeroy, Pike, Whipple Road, Flatwoods Road to Five
Points, Township Road 1064 and 1066, Lakewood
Road, Baum Addition and Sumner Road to Stethem
Road.
Lee Swain (Bus 22): Lee’s route will begin at 6:35
a.m. on Bigley Bridge. He will then pick up students
on Dewitts Run Road, Smith Ridge Road, Long Run
Road, Mount Olive, State Route 248 to Chester Township Garage Locust Grove, Riggs Crest Road and
Bar-30 road, next to the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Office.

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

MAYSE
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Bonnie Mayse, 90, of
Proctorville, died Sunday, Aug. 17, 2014, at home.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory in Proctorville
is in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete
at this time.

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Hogg &amp; Zuspan Material Co.
304-675-8989
304-773-5554
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Mon-Fri 8-5; Sat 8-12
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60526872

Hours: Monday – Friday 8-5, Saturday 8-12, Sunday Appts. Only

Contact us today to make an appointment

*while supplies last*

I-77 Exit 138/Rt. 62 South
Ripley, WV 25271
Work: 304-372- 9875
Cell: 304-532-7216

60520956

Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
Racine

60511541

RUTLAND — Harold
“Smokey” Darst, 73, of
Rutland, died Sunday,
Aug. 17, 2014, at Houston Nursing Home in
Hamden, Ohio.
Born Jan. 29, 1941, in
Pomeroy, he was the son
of the late Carol Edmund
and Bonita Keller Darst.
He is survived by
a daughter, Loretta
Caldwell, of Vinton; a son,
Marty Wyant, of Albany,
Ohio; two brothers,
Sampson Darst, of Rutland, and Danny Darst;

in Wheelersburg. Friends may call the funeral home
between 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2014. There will
be military graveside rites conducted at the cemetery.

740-949-2300
Middleport

Adam McDaniel &amp;

Pomeroy

740-992-5141 James Anderson Directors 740-992-5444

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 19, 2014 A3

CANCER
CARE
at Pleasant Valley Hospital

JUST GOT
B TTER.
Patients receiving cancer care in the Point Pleasant area have
long been able to depend on Pleasant Valley Hospital (PVH) for
high-quality cancer services. And now, PVH’s partnership with
Cabell Huntington Hospital and Marshall Health is proving that
cancer care can be better, by working together.

Introducing…
MOHAMAD
KHASAWNEH, MD
Medical Oncologist/Hematologist
Edwards Comprehensive Cancer Center

&amp;

TONI
PACIOLES, MD

Medical Oncologist/Hematologist
Edwards Comprehensive Cancer Center

Pleasant Valley Hospital is pleased to welcome Mohamad Khasawneh,
MD and Toni Pacioles, MD, fellowship-trained medical oncologists and
hematologists from the Edwards Comprehensive Cancer Center at
Cabell Huntington Hospital. Dr. Khasawneh and Dr. Pacioles are now
seeing patients with all types of cancers at PVH.
Their regular presence at PVH now provides cancer patients in the Point Pleasant
area with quicker and more direct access to comprehensive and highly specialized
care, state-of-the-art therapies and leading-edge clinical trials.

60528807

For more information or to schedule
an appointment, call 304.675.1759.
'''� &amp;����(��"��*�'''���'�"�#�����"�

�LOCAL

A4 Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Cow Paddy Bingo a success
Proceeds go towards Champion Alley in Ridenour Family Livestock Arena
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The
concept is simple:
wherever Fred the
cow plops its waste
in the Bingo square
determines a winner.
The name is Cow
Paddy Bingo. According to former Meigs
County Queen Sarah
Lawrence, participants can buy a square
or two for $10 each,
or three for $25. The
event, thanks to the
Junior Fair Board, was pion Alley, where
animals are kept in
a success. Proceeds
went toward Chamthe Ridenour Family

MEIGS FAIR GRANGE RESULTS
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

Meigs County Fair Results
Department 13 GRANGE
Lot 1 — Grange Exhibit — Sr 1st Place:
Star Grange, Bidwell; 2nd Place: Hemlock
Grange, Pomeroy; 3rd: Racine Grange,
Racine.
Lot 2 — Grange Exhibit — Jr 1st Place:
Meigs County Youth Grange

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.
Meigs High School Open House Aug. 19
POMEROY — Meigs High School will have parent/teacher conferences, freshmen orientation and
an open house from 3-6 p.m. Aug. 19. No scheduled
appointment is required. Students and parents will
be able to take a tour of the school, meet teachers
and receive their class schedules. Refreshments will
be served. For more information, contact Meigs
High School at (740) 992-2158.
Benefit For Classmate
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport High School
Class of 1964 has established a benefit fund for a
classmate, William Neutzling, who is confined to the
Cleveland Clinic, where he is expected to undergo
heart and lung surgery. An account has been established at Farmers Bank in his name and contributions can be taken in or mailed to the bank.
Cancer Awareness 7 Card Poker Run
LANGSVILLE —The second annual Ann Morris Cancer Awareness 7 Card Poker Run will take
place Sept. 6-7. Signups on Saturday will be at The
Corner Deli in Langsville. Sign up between 9 a.m.
and 11 a.m. All bikes will be out at 11 a.m. The final
stop will be at Rutland Fireman’s Park in Rutland.
On Sunday, there will be a Biker Sunday Service at
1o a.m. Participants can sign up between 11 a.m.
and noon, and the last bike will ride out at noon.

ABOVE, guests waited patiently for nearly 30 minutes before Fred
finally did his business. AT LEFT, From left: Cindy Hawley, Sarah
Lawrence, Lacey Hupp and Fred the cow.

Livestock Arena.
Once Fred did his
business, no win-

the names of participants placed in a
box. Bruce and Cindy

Hawley’s names were
drawn, and the couple
received $420.

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Family Reunion
DEEM FAMILY REUNION
The Deem family reunion will be
Sunday, Aug. 24 at the Union Hall
Local, 956 E. Front St., in Logan.
For additional information, contract Jimmy Deem at 740-949-2388
or Carol Deem Willman at 412-6140379 or 724-941-1342.
Gallia County Gospel Sing
GALLIPOLIS — The 25th annual Gallia County Gospel Sing will
be Aug. 22-23 at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds. Gates open
5-10 p.m. both nights, with more
than 15 gospel groups featured to
sing. There is no admission charge,
but a free-will offering will be
taken to cover costs of the event.
Concessions and camping spaces
available. Bring a comfortable lawn
chair and enjoy the music. The
event will go on rain or shine. Call
(740) 645-8562 for more information about location or camping.
Tuesday, Aug. 19
POMEROY — Meigs High
School will have parent/teacher
conferences, freshmen orientation
and an open house from 3-6 p.m.

Aug. 19. No scheduled appointment is required. Students and
parents will be able to take a tour
of the school, meet teachers and
receive their class schedules.
Refreshments will be served. For
more information, contact Meigs
High School at (740) 992-2158.

kids. The event will have Smokedaholics barbecue, along with
delicious desserts, including ice
cream. Ice cream flavors include
black walnut, chocolate, vanilla,
strawberry, lemon, butter pecan,
pineapple, blueberry, cherry vanilla
and peaches ‘n cream.

Friday, Aug. 22
MIDDLEPORT —The doors to
the Free Community Dinner at the
Middleport Church of Christ Family Life Center will open at 4:30
p.m., with the meal served at 5
p.m. This month’s menu is cheesy
baked ziti, salad, bread and cupcakes. Everyone is welcome.
MIDDLEPORT — There will
be a free movie beginning at 6:30
p.m. at the Middleport Village Hall.
The movie is titled “Heaven is for
Real,” a true story about a 4-year
old son of a small-town Nebraska
pastor who experienced heaven
during emergency surgery.

Saturday, Aug. 30
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
presents “Who’s Your Mudder?”
5K Mud Run at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. The registration
fee is $50. Registration begins at
7:30 a.m. and the race begins at 9
a.m. Half the proceeds benefit the
Meigs County Grandstand. Call
(740) 992-5005 with any questions.

Sunday, Sept. 7
REEDSVILLE — Reedsville will
have its annual community picnic
at the Bellville Locks and Dam in
Reedsville. The picnic will start at
Saturday, Aug. 23
LONG BOTTOM — The Bashan 1 p.m. Join neighbors and friends
for a free meal and drinks. There
Volunteer Fire Department Ice
will also be music by the Crossroad
Cream Social will start at 1 p.m.
Messengers.
Sparky the Dog will be there for

Choral Union rehearsals begin Sept. 8
HUNTINGTON,
W.Va. — If you’re interested in being a part of
a choral ensemble that
combines talented students with enthusiastic,
choral music-loving
members of the greater
Huntington community,
Marshall University
Choral Union Conductor Robert Wray knows
the place for you.
Open to any interested community
members, Marshall University’s Choral Union
will conduct its first

rehearsal of Handel’s
“Messiah” at 7 p.m.
Sept. 8 in room 150 of
Smith Music Hall on
Marshall’s Huntington
campus.
Following about a
dozen Monday rehearsals, the group will
perform with Marshall
University’s orchestra
at 7:30 p.m. and 3 p.m.
Dec. 4, and Sunday,
Dec. 7, respectively, at
Fifth Avenue Baptist
Church in downtown
Huntington.
“‘Messiah’ is arguably

the most well-known
large work for a chorus and orchestra,”
Wray said. “It’s a great
opportunity as a conductor to be able to
perform these types of
works.”
Wray said this work
of Handel tells the
story of Jesus Christ,
from Isaiah’s prophecy of salvation to the
acclamation of the
Messiah. It was first
performed in London in
the 18th century.
There are no mem-

bership fees to be a
part of the group, but
members are responsible for the purchase
of their own music.
For more information
about joining the Marshall University Choral
Union, contact Wray by
phone at 304-696-2399
or by e-mail at wrayr@
marshall.edu.
To stay up to date
on rehearsals, visit the
group’s Facebook page
at www.facebook.com/
MUchoralunion.

‘Tech Up’ helps students with technology
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— “Tech Up,” a program designed to help
nontraditional students
succeed at Marshall
University by being

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 51.47
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.42
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 106.26
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.13
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 47.50
BorgWarner (NYSE) —62.42
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 21.60
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.295
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.10
Collins (NYSE) — 75.31
DuPont (NYSE) — 65.87
US Bank (NYSE) — 41.72
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.07
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 62.73
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 57.23
Kroger (NYSE) — 50.19
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 62.64
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 106.03
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.33

ner claimed the
square, so one was
drawn instead from

BBT (NYSE) — 36.66
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.42
Pepsico (NYSE) — 92.15
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.32
Rockwell (NYSE) — 115.67
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.90
Royal Dutch Shell — 80.57
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 35.16
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 74.49
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.18
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.79
Worthington (NYSE) — 41.49
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Aug. 18, 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.

technologically up to
speed by the time they
take their first course,
is being offered at MU
for the second consecutive year.
Steve Hensley, dean
of student affairs at
Marshall, said many
of MU’s students, particularly those who
have been out of school
for a few years, are not
as tech-savvy as they
would like — or need
— to be.
“Tech Up is designed
for students of the generation before technology was an everyday
part of our lives,” Hensley said. “Sometimes,
students who are a little
older come back to
school and have good
learning abilities and
they’re going to be great
students, but they don’t
have the technology
expertise in negotiating
the electronic environment we find in many

classes.”
Many people, Hensley
said, don’t know the
basics simply because
they never had to use
computers before in
their everyday lives.
“Sometimes it’s as
simple as using e-mail,
and Blackboard (a
global technology company used for online
course delivery at Marshall) e-mail is a step
beyond that,” Hensley
said. “So, we start with
the very basic levels of
how to access Marshall
e-mail and the Marshall
web page and we go
from there. We kind of
give students a short
course in utilizing technology.”
Last year, about 25
students attended the
Tech Up sessions, Hensley said.
“The students who
participated reported
that they learned a
lot and they felt very

confident in their ability to do what they do
online,” Hensley said.
“For one thing, the
classes are conducted in
a computer lab; it’s not
just talking to people,
it’s them actually doing
it themselves. And,
our computing people
enjoy helping people get
teched up.”
IT (Information
Technology) personnel
will conduct the “Tech
Up” sessions. They are
scheduled from 3-4:30
p.m. Aug. 21 (during
the Week of Welcome),
in Drinko Library 138;
and, from 5-6:30 p.m.
Aug. 27 (during the
first week of classes),
also in Drinko 138.
To reserve a space,
students may call the
Office of Student Affairs
at (304) 696-6422, or
e-mail studentaffairs@
marshall.edu.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 19, 2014 A5

TODAY IN HISTORY...

Vaccination
From Page A1

low-flying aircraft and
should keep children
and pets away from the
baits. Dogs, in particular,
are attracted to the baits
and will occasionally eat
them. The baits are not
harmful to pets.
Keep the following
information in mind:
�Adem�m^Wj�j^[�XW_ji�
look like. The coated
sachet, which will be
distributed by aircraft, is
about the size of a ketchup packet. It is white
and rolled in a brown
fishmeal glaze. In urban
areas, where baits will be
distributed by vehicle,
the sachet will be inside
a hard, brown fishmeal
block, about 2-by-2-inch
square. The ONRAB
blister pack, which will
be distributed by aircraft
and by vehicle in Lake,

Computers
From Page A1

Students ranged from the
junior high to high school
levels, and Sisson emphasized
how important the computers
would be for each child’s academic future.
“The only criteria is that
they don’t have a computer at
home, and that they want to
do better in school to make
life better for them than what
they’ve got right now,” she
said.
Sisson also emphasized that
the computers were strictly to
be used for academic purposes.
“If we find out through the
schools that (the students) are
not doing their homework in a
tiny manner and things get left
behind, they’ll lose their computer,” she said. “Schools will
let us know if they get behind,
if homework isn’t done, and
they will eventually be called
into the office. And that’s when
we’ll find out and there’ll be
repercussions for it.”
Johnson said he and his
group, Connect Ohio, do the
easy part by simply collecting
computers and refurbishing
what they can. He said that
Sisson is the one who has the
difficult task.
“(She gets) computers
donated here locally and from
the Community Computer
Alliance in Columbus, (in)
which she got 14 computers,”
he said.
In total, 32 of the 34 computers set to be given way
were collected.
Meigs County Commissioner Randy Smith said that
on behalf of the commissioners, he was thankful for people
like Iva Sisson.
“(She) just sat in her house
one day, came up with this
idea and decided to find a way
to get a computer in the homes
of all the kids in the county,” he
said. “She’s been very passionate the whole time and very
determined. She just said she
was going to do it regardless of
who was going to help her.”

a musical revue by Irving Berlin featuring Army recruits
from Camp Upton in Yaphank,
N.Y., opened on Broadway.
In 1934, a plebiscite in Germany approved the vesting of
sole executive power in Adolf
Hitler.
In 1936, the first of a series
of show trials orchestrated by
Soviet leader Josef Stalin began
in Moscow as 16 defendants
faced charges of conspiring
against the government (all
were convicted and executed).
In 1942, during World War
II, about 6,000 Canadian and
British soldiers launched a
disastrous raid against the
Germans at Dieppe, France,
suffering more than 50-percent
casualties.
In 1955, severe flooding in
the northeastern U.S. claimed

some 200 lives.
In 1964, The Beatles opened
their first full-fledged U.S. tour
as they performed at San Francisco’s Cow Palace.
In 1974, U.S. Ambassador
Rodger P. Davies was fatally
wounded by a bullet that penetrated the American embassy
in Nicosia, Cyprus, during a
protest by Greek Cypriots.
In 1976, President Gerald
R. Ford won the Republican
presidential nomination at the
party’s convention in Kansas
City.
Today’s Birthdays: Actor
L.Q. Jones is 87. Actress Debra
Paget is 81. USTA Eastern
Tennis Hall of Famer Renee
Richards is 80. Former MLB
All-Star Bobby Richardson is
79. Actress Diana Muldaur
is 76. Rock musician Ginger

Portage, Geauga, Summit, and Cuyahoga counties only, is about 1-by-2
inches and has a darkgreen coloring and sweetsmelling waxy coating.
�?dijhkYj�Y^_bZh[d�je�
leave the baits alone.
�J^[�XW_ji�Wh[�dej�
harmful to pets. Once
your area is baited, keep
dogs and cats inside or
on leashes for up to five
days. Most baits disappear within 24 hours;
however, it is important
raccoons have every
opportunity to eat them.
�:e�dej�Wjj[cfj�je�
take bait away from your
pet; you may be bitten.
�7doed[�^WdZb_d]�
baits should wear gloves.
If baits are found in areas
frequented by pets or
children, toss them into
deeper cover. Damaged
baits can be disposed of
in the trash.
�?\�W�f[hied�_i�[nfei[Z�
to the vaccine (liquid)
within the bait, thor-

oughly wash any areas of
the skin that came into
contact with the vaccine
with soap and water.
�?\�iec[ed[�^Wi�X[[d�
exposed to the vaccine
or has questions about
the baiting, call the
ORV Information line
at 888-RABIES1 (7224371) or your local health
department.
During 2013, 10 animals were confirmed to
be infected with raccoonrabies variant virus in
Ohio, including four
raccoons from Mahoning
County and three raccoons and three cats from
Trumbull County. So
far in 2014, one raccoon
in Mahoning County
has tested positive for
raccoon-rabies variant.
Details of rabies cases
are available on the ODH
website.
The rabies virus is
found in the saliva of
affected animals, most
often raccoons, skunks

Sisson personally thanked
all those who helped in the process, including her husband,
Kleven, Johnson and Paul
Reed, president of Farmer’s
Bank, who was unable to
attend.
A recycle drive for electronics will take place at the Sternwheel Festival in Marietta on

Sept. 5-7. Any technology but
televisions will be accepted.
Also, a CABI Fund Benefit
Concern featuring Jonathan
Edwards, McGuffey Lane and
Grassinine will take place Oct.
11 at 6 p.m. All proceeds benefit CABI. For more information call 740-753-1924.

Southern Local Wellness Center

Healthcare for All Ages
M-F
7:30am - 4pm
(while school
is in session)

Phone: (740) 949-2348 • Fax: (740) 949-2536
s 7E CAN ADJUST FEES BASED ON FAMILY SIZE �
INCOME �IF QUALIlED
s 3LIDING FEE SCALE
s -OST INSURANCE � (-/�S ACCEPTED
s /HIO -EDICAID APPROVED

Welcoming
students,
staff &amp; community

Operated by Wirt County Health Services Association, Inc.

60523748

60523720

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60523442

Baker (Cream, Blind Faith) is
75. Singer Johnny Nash is 74.
Actress Jill St. John is 74. Actor
and former U.S. senator Fred
Thompson is 72. Singer Billy J.
Kramer is 71. Country singersongwriter Eddy Raven is 70.
Rock singer Ian Gillan (Deep
Purple) is 69. Former President
Bill Clinton is 68. Tipper Gore,
wife of former Vice President
Al Gore, is 66. Actor Jim Carter
is 66. Actor Gerald McRaney is
66. Rock musician John Deacon
(Queen) is 63. Actor-director
Jonathan Frakes is 62. Political consultant Mary Matalin
is 61. Actor Peter Gallagher
is 59. Actor Adam Arkin is
58. Singer-songwriter Gary
Chapman is 57. Actor Martin
Donovan is 57. Pro Football
Hall-of-Famer Anthony Munoz
is 56. Rhythm-and-blues singer

and bats, and is spread
when saliva from an
infected animal gets into
a wound or mucous membrane (such as the eye
or mouth). Animal bites
are the most common
route of exposure. Bats,
raccoons and skunks pose
the greatest risk of rabies
in Ohio. To protect your
family against this stilldeadly disease:
�7le_Z�YedjWYj�m_j^�
wild animals and animals
you do not know.
�LWYY_dWj[�oekh�f[ji�
against rabies and keep
them current on their
shots.
�?\�X_jj[d"�YWbb�oekh�
doctor. If your pet has
contact with a wild animal, call your veterinarian.
�Fej[dj_Wb�hWX_[i�
exposures should also be
reported to your LHD.
Ohio’s partners in the
multistate baiting are
Pennsylvania and West
Virginia, and the three-

Ivan Neville is 55. Actor Eric
Lutes is 52. Actor John Stamos
is 51. Actress Kyra Sedgwick
is 49. Actor Kevin Dillon is 49.
Country singer Lee Ann Womack is 48. TV reporter Tabitha
Soren is 47. Country singersongwriter Mark McGuinn is
46. Actor Matthew Perry is 45.
Country singer Clay Walker
is 45. Rapper Fat Joe is 44.
Olympic gold medal tennis
player Mary Joe Fernandez is
43. Actress Tracie Thoms is 39.
Country singer Rissi Palmer is
33. Actress Erika Christensen
is 32. Pop singer Missy Higgins
is 31. Actress Tammin Sursok
(TV: “Pretty Little Liars”) is 31.
Country singer Karli Osborn
is 30. Olympic silver medal
snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis
is 29. Actor J. Evan Bonifant is
29. Rapper Romeo is 25.

state effort will involve
distribution of about 1.2
million baits and cover
more than 30,000 square
miles by fixed wing
aircraft, helicopter, and

ground/vehicle baiting.
ODH has participated in
the program since 1997
and almost 14 million
baits have been distributed in Ohio over that time.

60524628

Attention: Denture Sufferers!
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r�MPPTF�êUUJOH�EFOUVSFT�UIBU�BSF�VOTUBCMF�BOE�NPWF�BU�KVTU�UIF�XSPOH�UJNF
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r�TPSF�TQPUT�CFDBVTF�ZPVS�EFOUVSFT�NPWF�BSPVOE�FYDFTTJWFMZ�PO�ZPVS�HVNT
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DPNGPSU�BOE�DPOêEFODF�
1MFBTF�DBMM�PVS����IPVS�IPUMJOF�BU�(740) 590-7220�UP�SFDFJWF�B�GSFF�SFQPSU�BOE�HJѫ�DFSUJêDBUF�

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

60525949

Today is Tuesday, August 19,
the 231st day of 2014. There
are 134 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On August 19, A.D. 14,
Caesar Augustus, Rome’s first
emperor, died at age 76 after a
reign lasting four decades; he
was succeeded by his stepson
Tiberius.
On this date:
In 1812, the USS Constitution defeated the British frigate HMS Guerriere off Nova
Scotia during the War of 1812,
earning the nickname “Old
Ironsides.”
In 1814, during the War of
1812, British forces landed at
Benedict, Maryland, with the
objective of capturing Washington, D.C.
In 1918, “Yip! Yip! Yaphank,”

�A6 Tuesday, August 19, 2014

LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Belpre

In an emergency, making sure your loved ones
have a full recovery depends on getting them
to the highest-quality care quickly. Fortunately,
Memorial Health System has conveniently
located ERs near you. Our expert team works
together to provide comprehensive care for
everything from heart attack to stroke to trauma.
We’re the choice that makes you a hero in anyone’s
eyes.

60523708

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 19, 2014 s Page B1

Gordon races first win at Mich. since 2001

Stephen M. Dowell | Orlando Sentinel | MCT

Jeff Gordon gets into his car during Sprint Cup practice at Daytona International
Speedway on Thursday, July 3, 2014, in Daytona Beach, Fla.

BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) —
It had been 13 years since Jeff
Gordon’s last victory at Michigan — which came during the
same season as his most recent
championship on NASCAR’s
top series.
One of those droughts is
finally over. Can the 43-year-old
driver end the other as well?
“Certainly things are going
well — there’s no doubt about
that,” Gordon said. “I’m as
shocked as anybody else.”
Gordon raced to his third
Sprint Cup victory of the year,
holding off Kevin Harvick on
Sunday for his first win at
Michigan International Speedway since 2001.
Gordon broke the track
qualifying record Friday when

he took the pole at 206.558
mph. He followed that up with
his third Cup victory at MIS —
and took over the points lead
from Hendrick Motorsports
teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr.
After a series of cautions,
Gordon came off the final
restart well and led with 16
laps remaining. He fought off
a challenge from Joey Logano
and maintained a comfortable
margin over Harvick, winning
the 400-mile race by 1.412 seconds in his No. 24 Chevrolet.
“Joey, as we rolled up to
some of the restarts — not
that last one, but some of the
other ones — as guys were
starting to sort of anticipate
it, he was slowing down, and
when he slowed down, every-

body got bottled up, and then
he’d take off,” Gordon said.
“That last one, I thought he
had a good start, but I had a
good one, too.”
Harvick was second, followed by Logano, Paul Menard
and Earnhardt.
Gordon completed a sweep
at MIS for Hendrick. Jimmie
Johnson won the June race on
the two-mile oval.
“I think all of our teams are
running well, but this is a big,
big win,” owner Rick Hendrick
said. “It’s great to see Jeff so
happy. He’s like a little kid
again, so I think it’s going to
be really, really important for
the momentum he’s carrying
right now into the Chase.”
See GORDON | B3

Buckeyes blow
up secondary,
completely rebuild
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Urban Meyer
wasn’t just unhappy
with his pass defense
after last season.
So upset was he that
he destroyed it, hired
a new coach to oversee
what was left and then
they rebuilt it from the
ground up.
“It’s an acknowledgment of things not done
well,” veteran safeties
coach Kerry Coombs
said.
As a result, there are
a lot of people keeping
a close watch on the
defensive backfield in
particular as No. 5 Ohio
State goes through its
paces in preparation
for the Aug. 30 opener
against Navy in Baltimore.
“We were kind of
leaky in the pass game,”
linebacker Joshua Perry
said. “We were giving
up a lot of stuff underneath and that kind of
hurt us. The leadership
was pretty good but
toward the end of the
year you saw a lot of
guys starting to fizzle
a little bit. And that’s a
tough thing.”
Now new co-defensive coordinator Chris

Ash is praising the commitment and work ethic
of a secondary that will
rely on man-to-man,
face-to-face coverage
this year.
Safety Tyvis Powell says things have
changed for the better
from a year ago.
“I definitely see a
huge difference from
last year to this year,
even going against our
offense,” he said, referring to the Buckeyes’
high-scoring attack.
“They don’t really do
too many things against
us passing.”
Ash, formerly on staff
at Arkansas and before
that Wisconsin, recognizes that his first job
was to burn everything
down and start over.
“I met with coach
Meyer. His vision of
what he wanted his
defense to look like
meshed with what I’ve
done and I knew it
was going to be a good
thing from the start
after talking to him,” he
said.
Over the last three
Ohio State games last
season — a closer-thanSee BUCKEYES | B3

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Aug. 19
Volleyball
South Gallia at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Alexander at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Ohio Valley Christian at Fairland, 6 p.m.
Golf
Miller/Federal Hocking at Wahama, 4 p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 20
Golf
South Gallia/Trimble at Waterford, 4:30
Thursday, Aug. 21
Volleyball
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5:15
Belpre at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Golf
Gallia Academy vs. Logan, 4 p.m.
Southern at Eastern, 4 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Alexander, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 22
Volleyball
Parkersburg Christian/Covenant at Ohio Valley
Christian, 6:30
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 7 p.m.

Joe Burbank | Orlando Sentinel | MCT

Florida State Seminoles coach Jimbo Fisher lifts the BCS trophy with quarterback Jameis Winston looking on at the end of the BCS
Championship game against the Auburn Tigers at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., on Monday, Jan. 6, 2014.

Seminoles No. 1 in preseason poll
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

The Associated Press preseason Top 25 is out. Take a
look at how the ballots break
down, and find out what to
watch for when the college
football season begins this
month:
‘NOLES NATION DOMINATION
Finish No. 1. Start No. 1.
Even Bobby Bowden’s best
Florida State teams never
did that.
Jimbo Fisher’s Seminoles
will. Jameis Winston and the
defending national champions are preseason No. 1 for
the sixth time.
In two of the previous five
seasons Florida State started
No. 1, the ‘Noles went on
to finish No. 1, including a
wire-to-wire title in 1999.
But they never did start the
following year top-ranked.
OK, the 2000 Seminoles
were preseason No. 2,
and after Bowden, the
Hall of Fame coach whom
Fisher replaced, won his first
national championship in
1993, Florida State started
1995 ranked No. 3.
Fisher’s Seminoles have a
long way to go to compare
to Florida State’s unprecedented run of national championship contention, a string
of 14 straight seasons during
which the ‘Noles finished
the season ranked in the top
five of the AP rankings.
Still, make no mistake:
Florida State 2.0 is built to
last.
“We’re the secondwinningest team in the
country the last four years,

the winningest team the last
two years and have had the
most NFL players,” Fisher
said. “We’ve recruited well,
too. Recruited a lot of great
young players we’ve been
able to mentor and develop
as we go, so we’re very comfortable with the guys who
are replacing the guys that
left.”
The Seminoles were an
overwhelming choice as No.
1, receiving 57 of 60 firstplace votes from the media
panel. No. 2 Alabama, No. 2
Oregon and No. 4 Oklahoma
got one first-place vote each.
Ohio State is No. 5 and
Auburn, which lost the final
BCS national championship game to the Seminoles
34-31, is No. 6.
Last season was a good
reminder that preseason
rankings can look pretty silly
by the end of the season.
Four teams that finished in
final top 10 last season (No.
2 Auburn, No. 3 Michigan
State, No. 5 Missouri and
No. 10 UCF) were unranked
to start the season. Throw
in No. 13 Baylor, No. 20 Arizona State and No. 23 Duke,
and seven of the teams that
either won or played for
the championship in the
six conferences with BCS
automatic-qualifying status
began 2013 unranked.
The Bowl Championship
Series is gone now, replaced
by the College Football
Playoff. The top four teams
will be placed into national
semifinals to be played on
New Year’s Day and advance
to the championship game
about a week and half later.
Expect surprises, though

coming up with a scenario
in which Florida State is not
part of college football’s first
final four is difficult.
Winston will make a
run at his second Heisman
behind an offensive line that
returns four starters. There’s
turnover at receiver and running back but still plenty left
of four- and five-star talent
left behind.
Same goes on defense,
where sophomore safety
Jalen Ramsey and defensive
end Mario Edwards step
into leadership roles.
Florida State is the hunted
again. Fisher wants them to
still act like hunters.
“We better have that attitude. It’s got to be your attitude every year,” said Fisher,
starting his fifth season as
Florida State coach. “We call
it an attitude of domination.
You can never be satisfied.”
Florida State starts its season with a rebuilding Oklahoma State team at AT&amp;T
Stadium in Arlington, Texas,
which, coincidentally, is also
the site of the first College
Football Playoff national
championship game.
CONFERENCE CALL
Do not think for a second
that the end of the Southeastern Conference’s streak
of national championships
means the SEC is slipping.
The SEC begins the 2014
season with eight ranked
teams, matching its own
record for most teams from
one conference in the preseason poll, set in 2011.
After Alabama and
Auburn, South Carolina is
No. 9, Georgia is 12, LSU is
13, Mississippi is 18, Texas

A&amp;M is 21 and Missouri
is 24.
The Pac-12, which gave
the SEC a good run as the
nation’s best conference last
year, has six ranked teams
— No. 7 UCLA, No. 11
Stanford, No. 15 Southern
California, No. 19 Arizona
State and No. 25 Washington — the most ever for the
league in the preseason.
FROM THE ARCHIVES
— No. 7 UCLA has its
best preseason ranking since
1998, when the Bruins were
also seventh.
— No. 8 Michigan State
has its best preseason ranking since 1967, when the
Spartans were No. 3.
— No. 10 Baylor is
ranked in the preseason for
the first time since 1986 and
has its best preseason rankings since 1957, when the
Bears were No. 7.
— No. 25 Washington,
with new coach Chris Petersen, formerly of Boise State,
is making its first preseason
appearance since 2003.
START TO FINISH
Since the AP preseason
poll debuted in 1950, Florida
State in ‘99 and Southern
California in 2004 are the
only teams to start and end
the season No. 1 in the AP
poll. Eight other preseason
No. 1s have also won the
national championship.
STREAKS
— Ohio State has been
ranked in 26 straight preseason polls, the nation’s
longest current streak.
— Alabama has been
ranked in the top five in six
straight preseason polls, the
nation’s longest current streak.

�SPORTS

B2 Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Coaches tab Rio men’s soccer as favorite

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS
Time change for GAHS Jamboree Game
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Gallia Academy
High School will be hosting its 2014 Jamboree Game at 7 p.m. Friday night when it welcomes Wheelersburg to Memorial Field. The
Jamboree Game is the final tuneup before
the start of the regular season and was originally scheduled for 7:30 p.m.

By Randy Payton

of the league’s five coaches.
Coaches were not permitted to vote for their own
squad.
Rio Grande returns a
number of players from last
year’s squad, which won
the Mid-South Conference
tournament championship
and advanced to the Elite
Eight of the NAIA national
tournament, including
junior forward Luiz Filho

Special to OVP

BEREA, Ky. — The
University of Rio Grande
men’s soccer team leads
the way on the 2014 Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference preseason
coaches’ poll released on
Thursday.
The RedStorm received
three first-place votes and
15 points in the balloting

(Sao Paulo, Brazil).
Point Park University,
which lost to Rio Grande
in the opening round of
last year’s national tourney,
finished just behind the
RedStorm in the balloting
with the remaining two
first-place votes and 14
points.
Rounding out the balloting was Asbury University
(10 pts.), Bresica Univer-

sity (7) and Cincinnati
Christian University (4).
The 2014 men’s soccer
season begins later this
month. The KIAC Tournament, which will also
include Talladega (AL)
University, will take place
in November.
Rio Grande will kickoff
its 2014 schedule at St.
Xavier (IL) on Friday, Aug.
22.

Rio volleyball
picked 6th by
Red men’s cross country picked 2nd in poll
KIAC coaches
By Randy Payton

By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

BEREA, Ky. —
The University of
Rio Grande volleyball
team has been selected to finish sixth in
the 2014 Kentucky
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
preseason coaches’
poll released on
Thursday.
The RedStorm
picked up 66 points
in the balloting of the
league’s 11 coaches.
Coaches were not
permitted to vote for
their own squad.
Rio Grande returns
a handful of players
from last year’s team,
which finished 14-16.
Among those back
for head coach Billina Donaldson are
sophomores Kayla
Riley (Marion, OH)
and Autumn Snider
(Marion, OH), both
of whom were named
to the All-Mid-South
Conference second
team a year ago.
Asbury University,
which won both the
league’s 2013 regular
season and tournament championships,
was picked as the top

team after collecting
10 first-place votes
and 100 points. Point
Park University was
selected in the second position with 78
points, while Indiana
University-Kokomo
received the other
first place vote and
tied for third with
Indiana UniversitySoutheast in the poll
with 75 points.
Indiana UniversityEast was fifth in the
poll with 67 points,
finishing just ahead
of Rio Grande. Carlow University (45
points), Cincinnati
Christian University
(42), Midway College (25), Brescia
University (22) and
Alice Lloyd College
(10 points) completed the list.
The 2014 volleyball season begins
later this month and
will conclude with
the conference tournament November
14-15.
Rio Grande opens
its regular season
schedule on Friday,
Aug. 22, when it
hosts the Aces In
August Classic at the
Newt Oliver Arena.

mitted to vote for their own squad.
Rio Grande, which will once again
be under the director of veteran head
BEREA, Ky. — The University of
coach Bob Willey, will open its schedRio Grande men’s cross country team
ule at home on September 27 when
was tabbed to finish second in the
it hosts the annual Patty Forgey Invi2014 Kentucky Intercollegiate Athtational.
letic Conference preseason coaches’
Indiana University-East grabbed
poll released Thursday.
three
first place votes and 56 total
The RedStorm garnered four firstpoints
to edge Rio for the top spot
place votes - more than any other
in
the
poll,
while Asbury University
team in the league - but totaled 53
picked
up
one
first-place nod and 49
points in the balloting of the league’s
nine coaches. Coaches were not per- points for third place.

Special to OVP

Brescia University grabbed the final
first-place vote and tallied 48 points
for fourth place, while Point Park
University rounded out the top five
with 39. Indiana University-Kokomo
(30) was sixth in the voting and was
followed by Cincinnati Christian University (23), Carlow University (14)
and Alice Lloyd College (12).
The 2014 cross country season will
begin in late August and will conclude with the KIAC Championship
on November 8th.

Rio women’s soccer picked third in poll
By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

BEREA, Ky. — The
University of Rio Grande
women’s soccer team was
picked to finish third in the
2014 Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
preseason coaches’ poll
released on Thursday.
The RedStorm collected
one first-place vote and 23

points in the balloting of
the league’s seven coaches.
Coaches were not permitted
to vote for their own squad.
Rio Grande lost just
one senior from last year’s
squad, which finished 10-8
for the program’s first-ever
winning season. The list of
returnees includes junior
forward Kasey Crow (Chillicothe, OH), who became
the program’s all-time lead-

ing scorer last season.
Asbury University was
tabbed as the league’s
favorite, receiving 27
points and three first-place
votes, while Point Park
University had 24 points
and two first-place votes to
edge Rio for second place.
Carlow University (22)
finished just behind the RedStorm in fourth place, with
Cincinnati Christian Univer-

sity (14), Brescia University
(9) and Midway College (7)
rounding out the list.
The 2014 women’s soccer season begins later this
month. The KIAC Tournament will take place in
November.
Rio Grande opens its
regular season schedule on
Saturday, Aug. 30, when
Milligan (Tenn.) visits
Evan E. Davis Field.

Rio places fifth in women’s XCC poll
By Randy Payton

league’s 10 coaches. Coaches were not permitted to vote
for their own squad.
Rio Grande, which will once again be under the direcBEREA, Ky. — The University of Rio Grande women’s tor of veteran head coach Bob Willey, will open its schedcross country team has been picked to finish fifth in the
ule at home on September 27 when it hosts the annual
2014 Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference prePatty Forgey Invitational.
season coaches’ poll released Thursday.
Brescia University, which won the 2013 KIAC crown,
www.mydailysentinel.com
The RedStorm received 44 points in the balloting of
collected six first place votes and 78 total points to
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�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 19, 2014 B3

Manfred given mandate to manage MLB changes
BALTIMORE (AP) —
Kenesaw Mountain Landis is
remembered for throwing out
the Black Sox, Ford Frick for an
asterisk, and Bowie Kuhn for
squabbles with players and owners.
A. Bartlett Giamatti ran Pete
Rose out of baseball, Fay Vincent
suspended George Steinbrenner,
and Bud Selig presided over the
cancellation of a World Series,
supersized Steroids Era sluggers,
increasingly strong drug-testing
agreements, and instant replay
to aid umpires.
Minutes after he was elected
baseball’s 10th commissioner,
Rob Manfred didn’t want to
discuss what great issues he
expects to take on when he succeeds Selig on Jan. 25.
“I really don’t want to get too
deeply today into agendas,” he
said Thursday after winning a
three-way race.
Others speculated the length
of games will be a top priority.
Some pitchers step on and off
the rubber so much you’d think
they were on a StairMaster,
and hitters move in and out
of the batter’s box as if they
were rhythm gymnasts. All the
pausing and preening — along
with the expanded use of relief
pitchers — has led to the average time of a nine-inning game
expanding 30 minutes since
1981 to 3:03.
“That’s going to be toward the
top of his list, I would think,”
San Francisco Giants President
Larry Baer said. “I’m not going
to comment specifically on pitch
clock. I think that’s one of several ideas. Every candidate talked
about it, and every owner wants
it. Obviously, there will need to
be player input.”
Since taking over following

Kevin Richardson | Baltimore Sun | MCT

Rob Manfred, chosen to be the next MLB commissioner, listens to Bud Selig speak at the Hyatt Regency in Baltimore on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2014. Manfred was chosen
to be the next MLB commissioner, replacing Selig when he retires in January.

Vincent’s forced resignation in
1992, Selig mostly built consensus before announcing decisions.
That deliberate decision-making
ended public bickering among
owners but also led to lengthy
discussions prior to changes.
Several issues remain unresolved and could be passed along
to Manfred, who under the Major
League Constitution will receive
a term of at least three years.
— The Oakland Athletics’
hope to build a ballpark in San
Jose, California — territory
of the San Francisco Giants
— remains stalled in a study
committee that was appointed
in March 2009. San Jose filed

Gordon

recovered, finishing 38th.
Brad Keselowski rubbed
against the wall with
From Page B1
about 32 laps remaining and finished eighth,
Logano was second to
remaining winless at this
Gordon in qualifying. He
track in his home state.
led 86 laps and Gordon
Johnson overcame some
was in front for 68.
problems of his own to
“We can win a chamfinish ninth, his first toppionship. I really feel we
10 showing in six races.
can do that. That’s the
Jeff Burton was 37th
message I want to put
after replacing Tony
out there,” Logano said.
Stewart in the No. 14
“We’ve got to find a little
car. Stewart skipped his
bit more speed to keep up second straight Cup race
with one car today — 24
after he struck and killed
car was the best, only
a driver at a dirt-track race
because he was good on
in New York last weekend.
the long run. We weren’t
Hendrick and Stewartas good on the long run.
Haas Racing are alliance
There were eight cauteams. Hendrick said he
tions, including a fairly
hasn’t talked to Stewart,
early one when Danica
but he’s been in touch
Patrick’s car spun and Jus- with Eddie Jarvis, Stewtin Allgaier crashed into
art’s longtime business
her. Nine cars were caught manager.
up in that incident, includ“I think they’re making
ing Matt Kenseth’s No. 20 the best of the situation
Toyota.
that they’re in,” Hendrick
Kenseth never really
said. “Tony’s got a lot of

good folks around him.”
Gordon won for the 91st
time on the Cup circuit,
and this is his first threewin season since 2011. He
took over the lead in the
standings by three points
over Earnhardt.
Gordon also won this
season at Kansas and
Indianapolis.
“As a driver, especially
somebody that’s been
getting beat up over the

From Page B1

expected 42-41 victory at rival Michigan, a 34-24 loss
to Michigan State in the Big Ten championship and a
40-35 setback to Clemson in the Orange Bowl — the
Buckeyes’ defense was lit up for 38.3 points and 539
yards per game. Within those numbers, opponents
passed for four touchdowns and 378 yards per game.
No wonder Meyer was so angry.
This spring, the Buckeyes are putting their cornerbacks right in the grills of the receivers on the
line. There’ll be no more allowing a 10-yard gap to
the wide-out, as was the case against Clemson. That
strategy helped turn the Tigers’ Sammy Watkins into
a legend with 16 catches for 227 yards.
Truth is, Watkins had freedom to run. The Buckeyes
back there didn’t.
Ohio State has simplified the defensive playbook,
allowing the players to rely more on in instinct than
following a series of checks.
“You just use your keys and go,” safety Vonn Bell
said. “You stick your feet on the ground, and go play
ball. That’s what I like.”
The cornerbacks, in particular, will be tested.
“I would say it’s challenging and demanding physically,” Coombs said. “It will require more guys to play
the position because of the wear and tear during the
course of the game of lining up right on top of a wide
receiver.”
Ash believes the dramatic changes will lead to good
things.
“We’ve seen a ton of improvement,” he said. “The
guys have bought in; they bought in early, which was
kind of a surprise. If I told them to go jump in a lake
right now, they’d do it. They just want to be successful.”

lifetime ban — filed in 1997 —
has never been decided on.
The 55-year-old Manfred, who
has worked for MLB in roles
with ever-increasing authority
since 1998, dealt with two of
baseball’s more difficult issues in
recent years: efforts to force out
then-owner Frank McCourt during the Dodgers’ bankruptcy proceedings in 2012, and the MLB’s
Biogenesis drug investigation
last year that led to the suspensions of Alex Rodriguez, Ryan
Braun and a dozen others.
He probably can’t predict
upcoming controversies. Could
new NBA Commissioner Adam
Silver have foreseen the need

years about restarts, it’s
pretty nice to have the last
two wins come down to
restarts.”
Assuming they attempt
to qualify for the final
three races of the regularseason, the 12 drivers
with victories this season
have all wrapped up spots
in the Chase for the Sprint
Cup.
Kenseth remains the top
driver without a victory

to ban Los Angeles Clippers
owner Donald Sterling for life
for making derogatory remarks
about blacks? Could NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell have
anticipated the New Orleans
Saints bounty scandal?
Manfred also will have to lead
baseball as a chief executive officer in age in which technology is
disrupting established models at
a rapid rate.
”The job is much more complicated,” Baer said. “Now you’re
in a 500-channel universe and
you’re on the Internet and you’re
communicating to people that
are walking down the street consuming baseball.”

Larson ended up 43rd.
Bowyer finished sixth
but sounded concerned
about his situation.
“We’re behind, there’s no
question. We just did what
we needed to do today,”
he said. “Right now, everything has to be perfect to
get a decent finish and
today everything was perfect. This is a tricky part of
the season. Everybody is
pushing hard.”

in the standings, but he
dropped to fifth place. If
the regular season ended
now, the last four drivers
in the Chase would be
Kenseth, Ryan Newman,
Clint Bowyer and Greg
Biffle.
Bowyer and Biffle
both moved ahead of
rookie Kyle Larson,
whose car caught fire
against the wall just
before the halfway point.

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an antitrust suit against Major
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of Appeals to reverse.
— The Mid-Atlantic Sports
Network, controlled by the Baltimore Orioles, obtained a temporary restraining order in its fight
with the Washington Nationals,
who want a higher broadcast
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— The Los Angeles Dodgers
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13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m.
Edition

7

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7:30

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8:30

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9:30

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10:30

Food Fighters "Courtney
Talent "Quarter Finals 4" Judging is turned over to the
Anderson- Sanford" (N)
American viewing audience as the last twelve perform. (N)
Food Fighters "Courtney
Talent "Quarter Finals 4" Judging is turned over to the
Anderson- Sanford" (N)
American viewing audience as the last twelve perform. (N)
EM: Weight Loss For the first time ever one participant
20/20: From Hell (N)
will be kicked out of Chris Powell's program. (N)
Great Performances "Sting: The Last Ship" Enjoy an
Food and Family A look at
intimate evening of music and storytelling with Sting.
promoting well-being by
eating with family.
EM: Weight Loss For the first time ever one participant
20/20: From Hell (N)
will be kicked out of Chris Powell's program. (N)
NCIS "Alibi"
NCIS: Los Angeles
Person of Interest "Death
"Windfall"
Benefit"
Family Guy Brooklyn
New Girl
The Mindy
Eyewitness News at 10
Nine-Nine
"Big News" Project
Time Team America (N)
Time Team America "The Frontline "The Retirement
Bones of Badger Hole" (N) Gamble"
NCIS "Alibi"

8

PM

NCIS: Los Angeles
"Windfall"

8:30

9

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9:30

Person of Interest "Death
Benefit"

10

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10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Anger Management ('03, Com) Adam Sandler. TV14 Manhattan
Insider (N)
Access
Beer Money Pre-game
MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at St. Louis Cardinals Site: Busch Stadium (L)
SportsCenter
Number (N) Baseball Little League World Series Elimination Game (L) 30Shorts (N) /(:50) Baseball Tonight (L)
Softball Junior League World Series
Streetball City Slam
Streetball City Slam
Calliendo
Numbers Lie
Raising Asia Raising Asia Dance Moms "Kiss or Get Dance Moms "3 Soloists,
Dance Moms "AbbyRaising Asia Asia "Hit the
Off the Pot"
One Star"
Phobic" (N)
Road" (N)
Chasing Life "Finding
Pretty Liars "A Dark Ali"
Liar "No One Here Can Love Young and Mystery Girls Liar "No One Here Can Love
Chemo"
Ali's motives are questioned. or Understand Me" (N)
Hungry
"Bag Ladies" or Understand Me"
(5:00)
Jaws: The
Jaws (1975, Horror) Richard Dreyfuss, Robert Shaw, Roy Scheider. A great white (:05)
Jaws 2 ('78,
Revenge TV14
shark attacks and terrorizes the residents of a Long Island beach town. TV14
Hor) Roy Scheider. TV14
iCarly
Sam &amp; Cat
Sam &amp; Cat
SpongeBob Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law &amp; Order: SVU "Caged" SVU "Choreographed"
SVU "Secrets Exhumed"
Royal Pains (N)
Covert Affairs (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Sullivan (N) The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
The Sixties
The Sixties
Castle "Cuffed"
Castle
Rizzoli "It Takes a Village" Rizzoli "Phoenix Rising" (N) Perception "Dirty" (N)
Goodfellas (1990, Crime Story) Joe Pesci, Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta. A tough
4th and Loud "Under
4th and Loud "Under
New York mobster becomes a target of the government and the mafia. TVM
Pressure" (N)
Pressure"
Bering Sea Gold
Sea Gold "The Thaw"
Rush "Parker's Tale" (N)
Deadliest Catch (N)
Gold Rush (N)
Storage
Storage
Married to
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Married to
Cement
Wars
Wars
the Job
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
the Job (N) Heads
Jaws Strikes Back
Great White Matrix
Alien Sharks: Abyss
Shark of Darkness: Wrath of Submarine
Bad Girls Club "Insults and Bad Girls Club "Easy Come, Bad Girls Club "Smell Ya
Sisterhood of Hip Hop "Rap Sisterhood of Hip Hop "Rap
Injuries"
Easy Go"
Later!" (N)
Battles" (N)
Battles"
Law &amp; Order "Wager"
Law &amp; Order "Sanctuary" Law &amp; Order "Nurture"
Law &amp; Order "Doubles"
Law &amp; Order "Old Friends"
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
Napoleon Dynamite ('04, Com) Jon Heder. TVPG
Botched "Silicone Valley"
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Candid Camera (N)
Hot/ Cleve. King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens
Kentucky Justice "Cocaine Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers "In Wicked Tuna: North vs.
Kingpin"
"Shotgun Standoff"
"Justice Below Zero"
the Line of Duty" (N)
South "Yankee Invasion"
Pro FB Talk NASCAR (N) The Second Summer Youth Olympic Games
Adventure Spartan Race
Fantasy Draft Spec.
America's Pre-game (L)
FoxFootball Kickoff (N)
MLB 162 (N) Epic (N)
UEFA Soccer Champions League Arsenal vs. Besiktas
Modern Marvels "World's Pawn "Hole Pawn Stars Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
(:05)
(:35)
Strongest III"
in One"
Cars
Cars
Cars (N)
Cars (N)
CountCars
CountCars
Below Deck
Housewives/NewJersey
Housewives "All Apologies" Below Deck (N)
The Singles Project (N)
106 &amp; Park (N)
Why Did I Get Married Too? ('10, Com) Sharon Leal, Tyler Perry, Janet Jackson. TV14
Apollo Live (N)
Caribbean
Caribbean
House
House Hunt. Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop House Hunt. House (N)
Face Off "American
Face Off "Ancient Aliens" Face Off "Twisted Trees"
Face Off "Animal
Wizard Wars "SpamGangster"
Attraction" (N)
tastic!" (N)

6
(HBO)

6:30

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6
Global 3000

6
(WGN)

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Tomorrow Never Dies ('98, Act) Michelle Yeoh,
Pierce Brosnan. Agent 007 teams up with a Chinese agent
to stop a crazed media baron from starting a war. TV14
(:15)
Red 2 (2013, Action) Helen Mirren, John
Malkovich, Bruce Willis. A team of retired C.I.A operatives
reunite to track down a missing nuclear device. TVPG
(:55)
Silver Linings Playbook ('12, Dra) Bradley
Cooper. A former teacher moves back in with his parents
after spending time in a mental hospital. TVMA

8

PM

8:30

The Leftovers "Cairo"

9

PM

9:30

Real Sports With Bryant
Gumbel (N)

Swordfish (2001, Thriller) Hugh Jackman, Halle
Berry, John Travolta. A hacker is hired to break into a
government system and steal billions of dollars. TVMA
Masters of Sex "Blackbird" Ray Donovan "Viagra"
(:15)

10

PM

10:30

Hard Knocks '14 "Training
Camp With the Atlanta
Falcons"
The Knick
(:50)
The
Purge Ethan
"Mr. Paris
Shoes"
Hawke. TV14
Masters of Sex "Blackbird"

�NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the
Chester Township Road 94
East Shade Road Slip Repair
CLASSIFIED
will be received by mail to the
Chester Township Trustees, P.
O Box 46, Chester, Ohio
45720 until September 8,
2014, or received by delivery
to the Chester Township
Townhall, 45444 State Route
248, Chester, Ohio 45720
between 7:00 P.M.- 7:30 P.M.,
September 9, 2014, and then
at 7:30 P.M. at said office
opened and read aloud.

B4 Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Slip repair along 215 L. F. of
Chester Township Road 94
East Shade Road by driving
piling. The engineer s estimate
for this project is $44,044.00

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the
Chester Township Road 94
East Shade Road Slip Repair
will be received by mail to the
Chester Township Trustees, P.
O Box 46, Chester, Ohio
45720 until September 8,
2014, or received by delivery
to the Chester Township
Townhall, 45444 State Route
248, Chester, Ohio 45720
between 7:00 P.M.- 7:30 P.M.,
September 9, 2014, and then
at 7:30 P.M. at said office
opened and read aloud.
Slip repair along 215 L. F. of
Chester Township Road 94
East Shade Road by driving
piling. The engineer s estimate
for this project is $44,044.00

Professional Services

LEGALS

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

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the
Chester Township Road 94
East Shade Road Slip Repair
will be received by mail to the
Chester Township Trustees, P.
O Box 46, Chester, Ohio
45720 until September 8,
2014, or received by delivery
to the Chester Township
Townhall, 45444 State Route
248, Chester, Ohio 45720
between 7:00 P.M.- 7:30 P.M.,
September 9, 2014, and then
at 7:30 P.M. at said office
opened and read aloud.

Gary Stanley

740-591-8044
60517849

Please leave a message
LEGALS
Syracuse Village is accepting
applications for Chief of Police
until 4PM September 4. 15-20
hours negotiable per week,
salary based upon education &amp;
experience. Applications available at Village Hall, 2581 Third
Street. Call 992-7777 for more
information.(08),17,19,21,24,2
6,28,31 (09),02.

Slip repair along 215 L. F. of
Chester Township Road 94
East Shade Road by driving
piling. The engineer s estimate
for this project is $44,044.00
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
Miscellaneous
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.

DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS
PROJECT.
LEGALS
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 Chester Township Trustees 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
Chester Township Trustees.
Bid bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the
official or agent signing the
bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as Bid for: Chester
Township Road 94 East Shade
Road Slip Repair and be received by mail by September
8, 2014 :

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE
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.

Are You Still Paying Too Much
Each bid must be accompanFor Your Medications?
ied by either a bid bond in the

Chester Township Trustees
P. O. Box 46
Chester, Ohio 45720
or delivered between 7:00
P.M.- 7:30 P.M., September 9,
2014 to:

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Bids shall be sealed and
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Call Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398
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ceived by mail by September
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Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid
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Chester Township Trustees
P. O. Box 46
Chester, Ohio 45720
or delivered between 7:00
P.M.- 7:30 P.M., September 9,
2014 to:

Family Value Combo
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2 (5 oz.) Filet Mignons
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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 Chester Township Trustees 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
Chester Township Trustees.
Bid bonds shall be accompanied by ProofLEGALS
of Authority of the
official or agent signing the
bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as Bid for: Chester
Township Road 94 East Shade
Road Slip Repair and be received by mail by September
8, 2014 :
Chester Township Trustees
P. O. Box 46
Chester, Ohio 45720
or delivered between 7:00
P.M.- 7:30 P.M., September 9,
2014 to:
Chester Township Trustees
Chester Township Townhall
45444 State Route 248
Chester, Ohio 45720(08),19
Notices
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.

per week

*with $99 customer
lation e and
purchase of alarm instal
monitoring charg
services.

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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

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

Direct supervision employees
to oversee male youth in a
staff secure residential environment. Must pass physical
training requirement, background check and drug screen.
Pay based on experience.
Call 740-379-9083
between 9-3 M-F
Experienced Machinist needed
to run CNC, manual lathes,
mills etc, able to write G codes
and conversational programs,
must be able to work from Cad
drawings, work primarily with
stainless steel, delrin and UHMW. Send resumes to Steelial Construction 70764 St. Rt.
124 Vinton, OH 45686
Now accepting applications for
Full Time Sales Professionals
at Thomas Do It Center, Gallipolis location. Excessive
schedule restrictions will not be
granted, some evenings and
weekends will be required.
Must pass drug and background screening. Sales experience and background in
building materials/construction
a plus. Apply within, see Autumn. No phone calls, please.
VACANCY: H.S. English Instructor. Valid Ohio license or
licensable. Integrated
Language Arts preferred.
CONTACT: Gallia-JacksonVinton JVSD
(740) 245-5334, Ext. 256. EEO
PT/FT
Position available for
Clinical Assistant
Applications may be picked up
M-F 8-4
@ PVH STE. 112
304-675-1244
Seeking LSWs, LCDCs, Casemanagers and CDCAs for AoD
Agency 740-441-9800
Welders Wanted–full-time
positions available. Apply in
person at 2150 Eastern
Avenue, Gallipolis, Oh

2 Bedroom 1 1/2 bath mobile
home, appl. incl. washer &amp; dryer, New Haven $450 per
month call 888-392-7245 ext.2
2 BR &amp; 1 Bath - In Bidwell$600/mo +$600 Deposit 740339-3224
Two houses for rent. Call
Nancy at 675-4024 or 6750799 Homestead Realty
Broker

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Spyware &amp; Viruses
Mobile Device Training

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OFF SERVICE
MENTION CODE: MB

800-416-5406

Automotive
Set of 4 Michelin 275-70 18"
tires with 930 miles on them,
$500. Syracuse Village
992-7777
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Professional Services
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)

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Garden &amp; Produce
Pick Your Own canning Tomatoes &amp; Peppers. $6 bucket.
Bring your own containers or
buy our boxes for $1 each.
Patriot Produce, 62 Village St.
Patriot, OH 45658. Watch for
canning Tomato signs, across
from Patriot Metals, CLOSED
SUNDAY'S
Furniture &amp; Accessories
Beautiful Blue Sectional Couch
w/Queen Hide a Bed, 2 Recliners, contains Telephone,
Vibrate &amp; Heat $500/OBO
740-534-2838
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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

Cemetery Plots

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

1-Bdrm - 1bath Utilities included except Phone &amp; internet Appliances provided $600
deposit - $600/monthly. NO
SMOKING &amp; NO PETS, Centenary Road - Seen by appointment 740-446-2804 ask
for jennifer
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2-Bdrm - 1 bath,Utilities included except Elec,Phone &amp;
internet. Appliances provided
$600 deposit &amp; $600/monthly
NO SMOKING / NO PETS
Centenary Road, Seen by Appointment 740-446-2804 ask
for Jennifer
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

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Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

www.mydailysentinel.com

We’ll Repair
Your Computer
Through The
Internet!

3-cushion Brown Leather Sofa
good condition 5 years oldbought at Lifestyle Furniture
$250. call 304-675-5596

Rentals
3 - Bdrm Mobile Home $500
deposit &amp; $500/mo. Call 740245-9374

Business &amp; Trade School

Apartments/Townhouses

Is Credit Card Debt
driving you batty?

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

Houses For Sale
Miscellaneous

Commercial

Help Wanted General

3 plots behind Beale Chapel
Methodist Church Cementary
call 330-426-2766 or 330-8811481

monitoring

4 (4 oz.) Omaha Steaks Burgers
4 (3 oz.) Gourmet Jumbo Franks
4 Stuffed Baked Potatoes

Education

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, August 19, 2014 B5

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

3
1 8

By Hilary Price

6
2 3
7
4 2
1
5
8 1

1 5
6
8/19

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

8/19

8
2
4
3
9
5
1
6
7

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3
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3
5
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2

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3
8
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By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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6
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9
5

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

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RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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2014 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

By Dave Green

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�SPORTS

B6 Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Daily Sentinel

NCAA’s strongest argument might be cap limit
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) —
The NCAA’s best argument
against the Ed O’Bannon ruling may be the financial limits
imposed by U.S. District Judge
Claudia Wilken — the same
ones the NCAA lauded in her
decision.
Less than two weeks after the
court decision opened the door
for college athletes to receive
a small portion of the millions
of dollars they help generate,
several attorneys told The
Associated Press they believe
the NCAA should now attack
that cap. Wilken ruled Aug. 8
that the NCAA violated antitrust law by restricting schools
from providing money beyond
current scholarship limits to
athletes.
She said schools should be
allowed to put up to $5,000 per
year of competition into a trust
fund for football players and
men’s basketball players, money
that could be collected once
they are finished with school.
Legal experts question how
she reached that number and
wonder whether it will hold up
on appeal.

“The cap is inconsistent
with a judicial decision that the
restraint (of trade) is unreasonable,” said Robert McTamaney,
an antitrust lawyer with the
firm of Carter, Ledyard &amp; Milburn. “If the restraint is unreasonable out it goes, there’s no
partial remedy under the Sherman Act and, frankly, judges
aren’t supposed to construct
one. Either it’s good or it’s not.”
Within an hour of the ruling,
NCAA chief legal officer Donald Remy issued a statement
noting that the governing body
disagreed with the ruling but
supported the cap. The NCAA,
which faces a Wednesday deadline to appeal the decision,
declined to comment Monday.
Wilken said she set the
$5,000 annual threshold to balance the NCAA’s fears about
huge payments to players.
“The number is immaterial, it’s the concept,” said Jim
Ryan, an attorney at Cullen and
Dykman. “It does seem rather
arbitrary. Why isn’t it $3,000
or $10,000? She pulled the
$5,000 somewhat out of the air,
so it could be $3,000, it could

be $10,000, what’s a few thousand?”
In October 2011, the NCAA
Board of Directors approved
a $2,000 annual stipend for
athletes, legislation that was
shelved when more than 125
schools signed on to an override measure. The five richest
conferences are attempting to
bring back the stipend now that
they have been given autonomy
over some of the trickiest issues
in college sports.
McTamaney believes if the
stipend were already in place
and Wilken applied the same
logic to the O’Bannon case, the
NCAA might have already won
in court.
Instead, the NCAA is headed
back to a playing field where it
has traditionally been successful.
According to a study released
last month by Illinois professor
Michael LeRoy, athletes suing
the NCAA won 49 percent of
the initial cases but the NCAA
won 71 percent of the appeal in
the second and third rounds.
This time, the governing
body’s lawyers face a vastly

different obstacle. The appeal,
promised by NCAA President
Mark Emmert, will be heard
by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court,
a venue that has a reputation
for siding with labor. Remy
has repeatedly said the NCAA
will take this case to the U.S.
Supreme Court if necessary.
If the ruling stands, some
worry it could ruin non-revenue
sports and others believe the
NCAA could face additional litigation from female athletes who
could argue they are not being
compensated equally in violation of Title IX laws.
Still, NCAA critics contend
Wilken’s decision didn’t go far
enough in compensating players
for the merchandise and video
games that have produced millions in revenue for the NCAA
and its members but not for
the athletes themselves. Joseph
Farelli, an attorney with Pitta &amp;
Giblin who specializes in labor
law, argues there should be no
cap at all. He’s not alone.
“I think how the court framed
its injunction, exposed itself to
some vulnerability,” said Jeffrey Shinder, managing partner

of Constantine Cannon and a
self-described NCAA critic who
declined to go into specifics
because he didn’t want to give
the NCAA any advice.
Even NCAA supporters
understand the rationale that if
antitrust laws were broken, the
players’ options should not be
limited.
But they’re urging the NCAA
attorneys to question Wilken’s
reasoning in setting the cap and
continue to argue that college
sports will be damaged if players are paid.
“I think the key to this case
is whether these restraints are
reasonable or not. I personally
think that they are,” McTamaney said. “If the athletes turn
out to be compensated for their
performances, the fan perception and alumni perception, I
think, would be dramatically
different. I think their support
of the schools would decline
significantly. And all of that sort
of comes full circle, because if
the restraints are substantial
to keeping the fiction of the
student-athlete, then they are
reasonable.”

Dalton perfect, Jets rally to beat Bengals

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led the Bengals to a pair
of touchdowns and a field
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monitorin

g starting

around

sive series Saturday night
before the New York
Jets’ reserves rallied for a
25-17 preseason victory.
“He continues to play
the way we think Andy
should play all the time,”
coach Marvin Lewis said.
“It doesn’t surprise me.
It’s the way he practices
every day. He doesn’t
need to be flashy. He just
needs to be accurate. He
just needs to handle the
offense. He does that very
well.”
It was Dalton’s first
game at Paul Brown Stadium since his turnoverfilled 27-10 loss to San
Diego in the opening
round of the playoffs.

Also, it was his first
home game since he
signed a six-year contract
extension that showed
Cincinnati’s commitment.
Couldn’t have gone any
better.
“That’s about as good
as it gets in the preseason, I guess,” Dalton
said. “I just felt good out
there.”
The fourth-year quarterback went 8 for 8 for 144
yards, one touchdown and
a perfect passer rating of
158.3. The Bengals (0-2)
rolled up 173 yards while
he was in the game, pulling ahead 17-3.
With their starters on
the field, the Jets (2-0)

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had another bad day at
Paul Brown. They got
drubbed 49-9 in Cincinnati midway through last
season — Dalton threw
a career-high five touchdown passes in that one.
Their injury-depleted
secondary made it easy
for Dalton on Saturday
night.
“Dalton looked like a
million-dollar quarterback
tonight,” Jets coach Rex
Ryan said.
In an experiment, the
Jets moved safety Antonio Allen to cornerback
and had him cover A.J.
Green.
It didn’t go well at all —
Green caught three passes
for 69 yards, including
a 35-yard catch after he
pulled away from Allen
down the sideline.
Dalton threw a 43-yard
touchdown pass to
Mohamed Sanu on the
opening series, fitting a
long throw in-between
double coverage.
“I just had to put my
hands out,” Sanu said. “It
was all Andy on that one.”
The Bengals went nohuddle with Dalton in
the game, part of new
offensive coordinator
Hue Jackson’s attempt
to speed things up. They
looked comfortable at the
new pace.
“You want to see that
every time out,” Lewis
said. “Andy looked very
sharp.”
Geno Smith played
the first half, staying in
with the starters after
Cincinnati substituted
on defense in the second
quarter. Smith was 10
of 13 for 98 yards and a
passer rating of 65.5. He
also ran four times for 20
yards, including a 1-yard
touchdown.
Smith had his worst day
as a rookie at Paul Brown
last season, throwing two
interceptions that were
returned for touchdowns.
Michael Vick took over
in the second half and
threw a 17-yard touchdown pass. He went 5
of 9 for 70 yards and
scrambled twice for 16
yards. Rookie Ikemefuna
Enemkpali blocked Kevin
Huber’s punt out of the
end zone for a safety.
The Jets had seven
penalties for personal
fouls, unsportsmanlike
conduct and unnecessary
roughness. Offensive
tackle Breno Giacomini
got two of them — one
for shoving cornerback
Terence Newman after his
interception, another for
a roll block. Guard Brian
Winters also got flagged
for two.

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