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                  <text>Today in
history
FEATURES s A4

Mostly sunny.
High around 85.
Low near 61.

State,
national
sports

WEATHER s A5

SPORTS s B1

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 136, Volume 64

Middleport
Police investigate
meth, arson
and theft cases
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT
— Three separate
incidents involving
police assistance have
occurred recently in
Middleport, according
to a news release.
The first incident
took place Aug. 13
when Howard Cecil, of
254 Mill St., Middleport, reported that his
home had been broken
into and approximately
20-25 military bayonets
had been stolen. On
Aug. 16, officers investigating the burglary
located the stolen items
at a campsite in the
woods in the dead end
area of North Fourth
Street in Middleport.
Officers arrested Josh
Cremeans, of Middleport, and charged
him with burglary in
connection with the
incident.
On Aug. 19, Meigs
County Sheriff’s Office
deputies and Middleport police responded
to a Broadway Street
incident in Middleport
in reference to a possible methamphetamine
lab. Suspected chemicals and equipment
used to produce meth
were found in the

garage at the residence.
Deputies arrested Joey
Kimes, 25, of Middleport, and charged him
with illegal assembly.
On Aug. 20, the Middleport Police Department responded to a
call about the building
that formerly housed
Vaughan’s Grocery
Store to investigate a
report from a neighbor
that juveniles were seen
entering the building.
As previously reported
in The Daily Sentinel,
upon arrival, officers
determined that there
was smoke coming
from the building and
contacted the Middleport Fire Department.
After the fire was extinguished by Middleport,
Pomeroy and Rutland
fire departments, it was
determined that several
small fires had been set
inside the building.
Charges against several juveniles are pending in Meigs Juvenile
Court in reference to
this incident.
The departments
thanked the concern
citizen for calling, and
said the situation could
have become much
worse without their
concerned emergency
call.

Syracuse council
accepts police
chief ’s resignation

Tuesday, August 26, 2014 s 50¢

New Naylors Run
66-year-old local
park revamped
and rededicated
POMEROY — Naylors
Run Memorial Playground, originally incorporated Jan. 30, 1948,
honored four World War
II veterans who gave
their lives during times
of conflict: Howard
Crary, Rodney Hines,
Charles Hunnel and Phillip Killinger.
The memorial stone
located at the playground
was originally unveiled
by their parents.
The park concept
started as a result of Jack
Dobson, a resident of
the area, almost hitting
a young a boy with his
car. The boy was playing football in the street,
according a press release.
After the incident,
Dobson talked to his
neighbor, Clair Karr, and
after discussion the two
determined that the children in the area should
have a safe place to play.
A neighborhood meeting was called, and the
duo’s ideas took a form
of action in the purchase
of valley property up for
tax sale. Five lots were
purchased, and work on
the park began.
The park contained a
memorial stone, two slides
and swings purchased
from proceeds of cake
raffles, ice cream socials
and mini-train rides. In
August 1949, enough
money ($169.51) was
raised to install a concrete
basketball/skating area.

From left, Bill Young and Collen Young display newspaper clippings about the rededication of Naylors
Run Memorial Playground.

On Aug. 16, 2014,
exactly two years after
the planning of rededication and refurbishing
began and 960 work
hours put in, the playground was rededicated.

Sponsors for the remodel
and rededication are King
Builders Supply, Valley Lumber and Dettwiller. After the
flag was raised, food, including hot dogs, was cooked by
Josephine Hill.

Participants thanked
Collen Young, Eagle
Scout, and the crew for
undertaking all of the
repainting, rebuilding
of the teeter totters and
sprucing up the park.

By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

SYRACUSE — At the recent Syracuse Council
meeting, council members discussed and approved
the Aug. 8 resignation of former Police Chief
Garry Freed.
Freed left a note stating that he turned in all gear
in his possession and signed over everything in his
responsibility in the safe to Sergeant Smith. Police
hours and the budget were discussed extensively.
Chief Bill Roush arrived during the discussion. Pickens motioned to advertise for the position of police
chief, 15-20 hours negotiable, pay commensurate
with experience. Rathburn seconded and all agreed.
Cottrill was directed to advertise in The Daily Sentinel and other media, and notify local PDs as well as
any online job posting sites that are low or no cost.
See RESIGNATION | A5
— NEWS
Obituaries: A2
Opinion: A4
Weather: A5

From left, Wayne Thomas, with the Legion Post, and Collen Young. Thomas helped with the flag ceremony during the re-dedication.

— SPORTS
Cross Country: B1
Briefs: B2
NBA: B4

Heat to continue over Ohio Valley

— FEATURES
Classified: B3
Television: 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.

Staff report
GDTnews@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — AccuWeather
meteorologists say an arm of hot
and humid air from the South will
extend across the lower Midwest
into midweek. The heat will settle
over the Ohio Valley on Tuesday.
Much of the South Central
states have been broiling in a late-

summer heat wave since last week,
where the combination of high
temperatures, excessive humidity, sunshine and other conditions
resulted in temperatures above 110
degrees on multiple days.
The air began to surge northward this past weekend over part
of the upper Mississippi Valley.
In the northern states, a heat
wave is loosely defined as three

consecutive days where temperatures reach 90 degrees or higher.
Folks in Gallia, Meigs and Mason
counties experience high temperatures
ranging from 86 to 91 degrees for the
remainder of this week, while much
cooler air will continue to press eastward across northern Ohio and all points
northward and will cut the heat off.
See HEAT | A5

�LOCAL

A2 Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES

DOMESTIC ARTS FAIR RESULTS

FLORA M. BAILEY
ATHENS — Flora M.
Bailey, 73, of Pomeroy,
passed away Thursday
Aug. 21, 2014, at The
Ohio State University
Medical Center in Columbus.
Born June 22, 1941, in
Albany, Ohio, she was the
daughter of the late Loren
“Abe” and Edna Mae
Cooper Lee, and stepmother Mildred Donohue
Lee. She was a homemaker and seamstress.
She is survived by
children William (Shane)
Donohue, of Pomeroy;
Katrina (Jeff) Smith, of
London, Ohio, Lorena
(Bruce) Brickles, of
Wilmington, Ohio, Barbara (Frank) Sciacca, of
Jasper, Mo., and Michael
Donohue, of Athens; 10
grandchildren; 10 great-

WALLACE (WALLY) DAVIS

grandchildren; and nine
brothers and sisters.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by husbands
Laurence A. Donohue
in 1983 and Lawrence
“Larry” Bailey in 2013;
and three siblings.
Services will be 1 p.m.
Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2014,
at Bigony-Jordan Funeral
Home, with Pastor Rod
Walker officiating. Burial
will be in Athens Memory
Gardens. Visitation was
4-8 p.m. Monday at the
funeral home. Visitation
will also take place one
hour prior to services
Tuesday at the funeral
home.
You may sign her register book at bigonyjordanfuneralhome.com.

EMOGENE SMITH CAROTHERS
GALLIPOLIS — Emogene Smith Carothers,
formerly of Cleveland and
Cadiz, passed from this
life Saturday, Aug. 23,
2014, at Holzer Assisted
Living in Gallipolis.
Emogene is survived by
her daughters Martella
(Herbert) Short, Chester
and Rebecca Avino, of
West Seneca, N.Y.; sister
Carol (Mike) Slovinsky, of Berkley Springs,
W.Va.; grandchildren
Amber (Pete) Johnson,
of Racine, Daniel (Lisa)
Short, of Pomeroy,
Nichlos and Gabereille
Avino, of West Seneca;
and several nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded in
death by her husbands
Frank F. Smith Jr. and
David J. Carothers; sons
Franklin, Robert and Dale
Smith; daughter Marsha
Jeffery; sister Dorothy
Steel; and brothers Landon Phillips, Fred and Rick

Berryman.
The family of Emogene
would like to say a special
thanks to the staff at Holzer Assisted Living for
the wonderful, loving care
they provided. In lieu of
flowers donations may be
made in Emogene’s name
to Holzer Assisted Living
for the activities program.
Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Saturday, Aug.
30, 2014, at Johnson
Romito Funeral Home in
Twinsburg, Ohio. Burial
will follow at Crown Hill
Cemetery. Visitation
for family and friends
will be two hours prior
to the funeral service.
Local arrangements were
handled by Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy.
An online registry is
available at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Homes
- Pomeroy and Middleport.

FAIR SHEEP RESULTS
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

Department V — Sheep
Class 506 — New Hampshire
Lot 6 — Ewe — Lamb
1st Place: Rachel Kesterson
Class 509 — Suffolk
Lot 6 — Ewe — Lamb
Class 511 — any recognized breed
1st Place: Rachel Kesterson
Lot 6 — Ewe — Lamb
1st Place: Courtnee Williams; 2nd Place: Zachary Williams,
Langsville; 3rd Place: Edward J. Werry, Chester.

SYRACUSE — Wallace “Wally” Davis, 59,
of Phoenix, passed away
Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2014.
He was born Nov. 1,
1954.
He is survived by his
wife, Jean Davis, of Phoenix; mother Nan Davis,
of Syracuse; two brothers, Johnny Davis and
Stan (Alaine) Davis, of
Syracuse; nephew Casey
Davis, of Cincinnati; and

two nieces, Ashley and
Cassidy Davis, of Cedartown, Ga.
He was preceded in
death by his father, John
Davis.
Wally had many friends
in Georgia and never forgot their love and goodness to him. He will be
sadly missed by all.
Arrangements will be
made at a later date.

MIDDLEPORT —
Shirley Ann Tyree, of
Middleport, passed away
Sunday, Aug. 24, 2014, at
her residence.
She was born Sept. 11,
1951, in Mason, W.Va.,
to the late Burwell and
Lucy (Adkins) McKinney.
Shirley was a dispatcher
for the Middleport Police
Department for many
years and worked at Overbrook Nursing Home.
She is survived by
her children, Heath
(Michelle) Richmond and
Nakuma (Nancy) Tyree;
grandchildren Natasha,
Tiaira, Tasia, Sean, Alexis, Taliah and Jordyn; four
great-grandchildren and
one on the way; brother
Darrell McKinney; special

friend Linda Ihle; and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in
death by her parents;
her sister Betty Batey;
and her brothers Samuel
Eugene McKinney and
William McKinney.
Funeral services will be
noon Wednesday, Aug.
27, 2014, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Burial will
follow at Riverview Cemetery. Visitation for family
and friends will be two
hours prior to the funeral
service.
An online registry is
available at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Homes
- Pomeroy and Middleport.

DEATH NOTICES
IRWIN
CHILLICOTHE — C. Ray Irwin, 76, of Chillicothe,
died Saturday, Aug. 23, 2014, at his residence.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Friday, Aug. 29,
2014, at Fawcett, Oliver, Glass and Palmer Funeral
Home in Chillicothe, with pastors Steven Schmidt
and Andrew Shearer officiating. Burial with military
honors by the Ross County Veterans Honor Guard
will follow in Grandview Cemetery. The family will
receive friends at the funeral home from 5-8 p.m.
Thursday.
NANCE
POINT PLEASANT — Zayden Michael Lee
Nance, of Point Pleasant, son of Nikki McDonald
and Michael Nance Jr., was stillborn Thursday, Aug.
21, 2014, in the Pleasant Valley Hospital. He was the
maternal grandson of Doyle and Joyce McDonald and
Edna Bonecutter; and paternal grandson of Tina Salyers and the late Mike Nance Sr. There will be private
graveside services at the Ridgelawn Cemetery. Please
visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail condolences.

See ARTS | A5

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Tuesday, Aug. 26
MIDDLEPORT — The
next Middleport Community Association Meeting
is 9 a.m. at Village Hall.

Everyone is welcome.
POMEROY — St. Paul
United Methodist Church
will have a free community
dinner from 4:30-6:30 p.m.

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Department IX — Domestic Arts
Class 901 — Children’s clothing
Lot 2 — Sleep wear
1st Place: Harvest Lechler, Rutland
Lot 7 — Jacket or coat
1st Place: Pat Wolf, Pomeroy (Also received Best of
Show)
Class 902 — Adult clothing
Lot 9 — Skirt, split skirt, slacks, tr.
1st Place: Shirley Hamm, Racine
Lot 11 — Dress
1st Place: Pat Wolf, Pomeroy
Lot 15 — Blouse
1st Place: Shirley Hamm, Racine (Also received Best
of Show); 2nd Place: Pat Wolf, Pomeroy.
Lot 16 — Any apron
1st Place: Shirley Hamm, Racine; 2nd Place: Paula
Wood, Long Bottom.
Lot 17 — Homemade purse or bag
1st Place: Pat Wolf, Pomeroy
Lot 19 — Christmas Stocking
1st Place: Paula Wood, Long Bottom; 2nd Place: Opal
Dyer, Bidwell.
Class 904 — Fashion Accessories
Lot 21 — Hat
1st Place: Paula Wood, Long Bottom
Lot 22 — Scarf
1st Place: Paula Wood, Long Bottom; 2nd Place: Pat
Wolf, Pomeroy; 3rd Place: Sue Tuttle, Chester.
Class 905 — Crochet
Lot 23 — Adult Sweater
1st Place: Sue Tuttle, Chester
Lot 26 — Crocheted Toy
1st Place: Paula Wood, Long Bottom
Lot 27 — Shawl or Lap Robe
1st Place: Sue Tuttle, Chester
Lot 28 — Doily 14” or under
1st Place: Maxine Dyer, Bidwell; 2nd Place: Opal Dyer,
Bidwell.
Lot 29 — Dolly over 14”
1st Place: Maxine Dyer, Bidwell; 2nd Place: Opal Dyer,
Bidwell.
Lot 31 — Pot Holder
1st Place: Opal Dyer, Bidwell; 2nd Place: Maxine Dyer,
Bidwell; 3rd Place: Sue Tuttle, Chester.
Lot 33 — Any crochet item
1st Place: Paula Wood, Long Bottom (Also received
Best of Show), 2nd Place: Mary Ann Shoults, Racine;
3rd Place: Opal Dyer, Bidwell.
Class 907 — Afghans
Lot 37 — Crocheted Ripple
1st Place: 1st Place: Elizabeth Harris, Pomeroy; 2nd
Place: Maxine Dyer, Bidwell.
Lot 38 — Crocheted Granny Square
1st Place: Brandi Durst, Reedsville; 2nd Place: Opal
Dyer, Bidwell.
Lot 39 — Any variation of Granny Square
1st Place: Elizabeth Harris, Pomeroy
Lot 41 — Any shell or variation
1st Place: Sue Tuttle, Chester
Lot 43 — Crochete Baby Afghan
1st Place: Ha Yost, Racine; 2nd Place: Opal Dyer,
Bidwell; 3rd Place: Maxine Dyer, Bidwell.
Lot 44 — Knitted afghan
1st Place: PAt Wolf, Pomeroy
Lot 46 — Afghan
1st Place: Eastern Quilters &amp; Crafters, Long Bottom;
2nd Place: Mary Ann Shoults, Racine; 3rd Place:
Elizabeth Harris, Pomeroy.
Class 908 — Quilts
Lot 47 — Applique
1st Place: Eastern Quilters &amp; Crafters, Long Bottom
Lot 48 — Floss Embroidery
1st Place: Mary D. King, Pomeroy
Lot 51 — Machine quilted
1st Place: Linda Rathburn, Pomeroy; 2nd Place: Paula
Wood, Long Bottom.

SHIRLEY ANN TYREE

ATTENTION!

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

Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

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servation District’s monthly
board meeting is 11:30 a.m.
at the Meigs SWCD office
Wednesday, Aug. 27
POMEROY — There will in Pomeroy.
be a free community dinner,
Saturday, Aug. 30
sponsored by New BeginPOMEROY — The
nings United Methodist
Meigs County Chamber of
Church, from 5-6:30 p.m.
Commerce presents “Who’s
at Mulberry Community
Center. Menu includes hot Your Mudder?” 5K Mud
Run at the Meigs County
dogs, baked beans, salad
Fairgrounds. The registraand dessert. Public weltion fee is $50. Registration
come. For more informabegins at 7:30 a.m. and the
tion, call Alice Wamsley at
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the proceeds benefit the
Meigs County Grandstand.
Thursday, Aug. 28
Call (740) 992-5005 with
POMEROY — The
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Everyone welcome.

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�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 26, 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;

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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

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an appointment, call 304.675.1759.
'''� &amp;����(��"��*�'''���'�"�#�����"�

�E ditorial
A4 Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Google ‘Fourth
Amendment’;
Don’t be evil!
Ten years ago this week, Google Inc. went
public. An initial $10,000 investment in
the Internet search giant would be worth
$139,458 (and some change) today.
But Google’s story is about much more than
its IPO. The Silicon Valley company started
in 1998 by Larry Page and Sergey Brin —
who met at Stanford three years earlier —
over the past decade has become a cultural
phenomenon.
Indeed, so dominant is Google’s search
engine, processing a billion queries per day,
that the company name has morphed into a
verb, defined by Merriam Webster as “to use
the Google search engine to obtain information on the World Wide Web.”
Then there’s Google’s Mountain View headquarters, a sprawling 26-acre campus known
as the Googleplex, which has been visited by
notable figures ranging from Lady Gaga to
President Obama.
Among the campus amenities enjoyed by
Googlers — as Google employees are known
— are more than 25 cafeterias, more than 100
micro-kitchens, a bowling alley, a climbing
wall, seven fitness centers and a beach volleyball court.
But it’s not all play and no work for the
more than 50,000 Googlers worldwide. Since
the company joined the Nasdaq, it has grown
its product line to include Gmail, Google
Earth, YouTube (which it acquired in 2006),
Google Street View, Google AdSense and
Android (Google’s mobile operating system).
In recent years, the tech giant has branched
out beyond strictly online products with such
hardware as Google Glass, a wearable technology with an optical head-mounted display,
Google Chromecast, a digital media player,
and the Google Self-Driving Car.
Google also has invested in such start-ups
as DocuSign, the digital signature company,
and Uber, the mobile-app ridesharing service.
Yet, while Google is indisputably one of Silicon Valley’s greatest success stories, growing
into the Golden State’s sixth-largest company
on the 2014 Fortune 500 list, certain of its
business practices give us pause.
None more so than reports, published
last summer in the Washington Post and
elsewhere, that both the National Security
Agency and the FBI were tapping directly
into Google’s servers, extracting audio and
video chats, photographs, emails and connection logs.
Google strenuously denied that it played a
part in the government’s secret surveillance
of the American people, which we think an
obvious violation of the Fourth Amendment’s
guarantee against unreasonable searches and
seizures.
But Google’s declaration that the company
“care’s deeply about the security of our users’
data” is belied by reports that the Internet
giant has had a partnership with NSA for at
least four years.
And the fact that NSA went to court in
2012 to block the release of documents revealing the extent of its collaboration with Google
suggests that NSA’s access to Gmail and other
user accounts might have been more extensive than Google acknowledges.
In the prospectus Google circulated in
advance of its 2004 IPO, Mssrs. Page and
Brin expressed the company’s guiding philosophy: “Don’t be evil.” Ten years later, we
imagine that many of Google’s hundreds of
millions of users would like the company to
recommit itself to that principle.

The Daily Sentinel
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor
should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject
to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be
in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities.
“Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

THEIR VIEW

Justice may not bring peace to Ferguson

The chant “No justice,
peaceful protesters), but at
no peace” is an apt rallythe end of the day, they are
ing cry for Ferguson, Mo.,
simply attempting to restore
where protesters don’t
order.
truly want justice and there
Initially, we were told the
has been no peace.
police were “provoking”
What justice demands in
otherwise civil protesters
the case of the shooting of Rich
with their military posture.
18-year-old Michael Brown Lowry
When, in response to this
by Officer Darren Wilson
King Features criticism, the cops backed
in disputed circumstances Columnist
off almost entirely, looters
is a full and fair delibransacked local businesses at
erative process that goes
will and even firebombed the
wherever the evidence leads. But
Domino’s Pizza.
is anyone marching so that Wilson
Perhaps they took the “no
can go free if the facts don’t suppeace” thing too seriously.
port charging him?
One night, MSNBC anchor
No, the demand is for him to be
Chris Hayes got to briefly feel
arrested immediately and to be
what it’s like to be a cop or an
prosecuted no matter what. This
innocent business owner in Ferguis noxious. Just because there is a
son when a couple of rocks were
mob on the streets, as well as on
pointlessly thrown at him while
the Internet and TV, braying for a
he was on the air. Hayes brushed
rush to judgment doesn’t mean we the whole thing off as people being
need mob justice.
very angry.
Ferguson has been angry and
Yes, but why are they angry at
grieving, and the rallies and prayer Hayes? His ready explanation for
vigils during daytime hours are
the rock-throwing recalls the old
natural and commendable. The
saw about how a liberal is someconfrontations with the police, the one who won’t take his own side
rock-throwing and gunshots, the
in a fight.
looting and Molotov cocktails, are
To their credit, the overwhelmnot. They are self-indulgent, selfing majority of the protesters are
destructive and (given the fate of a peaceful, and many of them have
few businesses set on fire) literally tried to restrain a lawless fringe.
self-immolating.
But one of the reasons we have
There has been an effort to
police is to control such a fringe.
shift moral responsibility for this
It took about a week of looting
mayhem from the protesters to
before people began to seriously
the police. There is no doubt that
wonder what was accomplished by
the police have acted appallingly
milling around on the streets and
at times (there is never any justisidewalks at night and yelling at
fication for pointing weapons at
cops anyway.

You get the feeling that the
enormous emotional investment
in Ferguson from almost everyone
on the left reflects a nostalgia for
the truly heroic phase of the civilrights movement.
They (most of them, at least)
can never be Freedom Riders,
but they can write blog posts
complaining that the police gear
in Ferguson looks scary. They can
never register voters in the Jim
Crow South, but they can tweet
pictures of tear-gas canisters going
off. They can never march over the
Edmund Pettus Bridge circa 1965,
but they can do some cable hits.
Ferguson is all they’ve got, so
it must be spun up into a national
crisis — our Gaza, our apartheid
— to increase the moral drama.
The whole world is supposed to
be watching. Presumably, though,
the world has better things to
do than watch what are, in the
scheme of things (and up to this
point), relatively minor clashes
between police and a handful of
protesters.
Even if Officer Wilson executed
Michael Brown in cold blood, he
would be one murderously bad
cop, not an indictment of the
entire American system of justice.
If he acted in legitimate selfdefense, on the other hand, he
shouldn’t be jailed or charged.
That would be justice, but given
what we’ve seen from Ferguson so
far, it would not bring peace.
Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail:
comments.lowry@nationalreview.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday, Aug.
26, the 238th day of
2014. There are 127 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlights in
History:
On Aug. 26, 1964,
President Lyndon B.
Johnson was nominated
for a term of office in his
own right at the Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City,
New Jersey. The Kinks’
single “You Really Got
Me” was released in the
United States by Reprise
Records, three weeks
after its British release.
On this date:
In 1789, France’s
National Assembly
adopted its Declaration
of the Rights of Man and
of the Citizen.
In 1883, the island volcano Krakatoa began cataclysmic eruptions, leading
to a massive explosion

the following day.
In 1920, the 19th
Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution, guaranteeing American women’s
right to vote, was certified in effect by Secretary
of State Bainbridge Colby.
In 1939, the first televised major league baseball games were shown
on experimental station
W2XBS: a double-header
between the Cincinnati
Reds and the Brooklyn
Dodgers at Ebbets Field.
(The Reds won the first
game, 5-2, the Dodgers
the second, 6-1.)
In 1944, French Gen.
Charles de Gaulle braved
the threat of German
snipers as he led a victory march in Paris, which
had just been liberated
by the Allies from Nazi
occupation.
In 1958, Alaskans
went to the polls to over-

whelmingly vote in favor
of statehood.
In 1968, the Democratic National Convention
opened in Chicago.
In 1972, the summer
Olympics games opened
in Munich, West Germany.
In 1974, Charles Lindbergh — the first man to
fly solo, non-stop across
the Atlantic — died at his
home in Hawaii at age 72.
Today’s Birthdays:
Former Washington Post
Executive Editor Benjamin C. Bradlee is 93.
Actress Francine York is
78. Former Homeland
Security Secretary Tom
Ridge is 69. Rhythmand-blues singer Valerie Simpson is 68. Pop
singer Bob Cowsill is 65.
Broadcast journalist Bill
Whitaker is 63. Actor
Brett Cullen is 58. NBA
coach Stan Van Gundy
is 55. Jazz musician

Branford Marsalis is 54.
Country musician Jimmy
Olander (Diamond Rio)
is 53. Actor Chris Burke
is 49. Actress-singer Shirley Manson (Garbage)
is 48. Rock musician
Dan Vickrey (Counting
Crowes) is 48. TV writeractress Riley Weston is
48. Rock musician Adrian Young (No Doubt)
is 45. Actress Melissa
McCarthy is 44. Latin
pop singer Thalia is 43.
Rock singer-musician
Tyler Connolly (Theory
of a Deadman) is 39.
Actor Mike Colter is 38.
Actor Macaulay Culkin
is 34. Actor Chris Pine is
34. Country singer Brian
Kelley (Florida Georgia
Line) is 29. Rhythm-andblues singer Cassie Ventura is 28. Actor Dylan
O’Brien (TV: “Teen
Wolf”) is 23. Actress
Keke Palmer is 21.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 26, 2014 A5

Resignation

FAIR AMATEUR PAINTING RESULTS

From Page A1
1st Place: Karen Werry,
Racine; 2nd Place: Shirley
Hamm, Racine.
Department X — Amateur
Lot 16 — Animal study
Painting
1st Place: Shirley Hamm,
Class 1 — Junior Painting
Racine; 2nd Place: Sharon
Lot 6 — Animal Study
Dean, Racine.
1st Place: Hannah Crane,
Lot 17 — Floral Study
Pomeroy
1st Place: Shirley Hamm,
Lot 7 — Floral Study
Racine; 2nd Place: Sharon
1st Place: Natalie Davis,
Dean, Racine.
Middleport
Lot 18 — Picture from life
Lot 8 — Picture from life
1st Place: Shirley Hamm,
1st Place: Landan Davis,
Racine; 2nd Place: Peggy
Middleport; 2nd Place:
Crane, Rutland.
Natalie Davis, Middleport.
Lot 19 — Landscape
Lot 9 — Landscape
1st Place: Sharon Dean,
1st Place: Ruby Lechler,
Racine; 2nd Place: Shirley
Rutland
Hamm, Racine; 3rd Place:
Lot 10 — Animal Study
Robin Manuel, Racine.
1st Place: Opal H. Huggins, Lot 20 — Animal Study
Rutland
1st Place: Shirley Hamm,
Lot 13 — Pencil, pen or
Racine
crayon
Lot 21 — Floral Study
1st Place: Vivian R. Huggins, 1st Place: Peggy Crane,
Rutland; 2nd Place:
Rutland; 2nd Place: Shirley
Madison R. Klein, Racine;
Hamm, Racine.
3rd Place: Ruby Lechler,
Lot 22 — Picture from life
Rutland.
1st Place: Sharon Dean,
Class 2 — Adult painting
Racine (Also received
Lot 15 — Landscape
Reserve Best of Show);
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

2nd Place: Shirley Hamm,
Racine; 3rd Place: Karen
Werry, Racine.
Lot 23 — Landscape
1st Place: Peggy Crane,
Rutland; 2nd Place: Shirley
Hamm, Racine.
Lot 24 — Animal study
1st Place: Shirley Hamm,
Racine
Lot 25 — Floral Study
1st Place: Shirley Hamm,
Racine
Lot 26 — Picture from life
1st Place: Shirley Hamm,
Racine
Lot 27 — Pencil pen or
crayon
1st Place: Kassandra
Lodwick, Pomeroy (Also
received Best of Show);
2nd Place: Ryan Mees,
Portland; 3rd Place:
Shannon M. Brown, Racine.
Class 3 — Adult Painting —
Experienced
Lot 41 — Pencil, pen or
crayon
1st Place: Danny Carter,
Vinton

Heat

been scattered through the season. As
of Aug. 24, two major cities — Indianapolis and Pittsburgh — had not hit
From Page A1
90 this summer.
A spell of very warm weather will
The heat is hitting at a time when
also
occur in the East at midweek.
college and some high school and
Temperatures
in some neighborhoods
elementary school students are back in
from
Washington,
D.C., to Boston
the classroom. The pattern will offer a
could
reach
the
90-degree
mark.
chance for those who have time off to
While
the
region
received
a break
enjoy some extended summer weather,
from
rainfall
at
the
start
of
the
week,
of which has been rather limited this
the
risk
will
increase
from
northwest
season.
to southeast during the middle part of
Temperatures have averaged below
this week.
normal from St. Louis and Chicago
Showers and thunderstorms associto Detroit, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh
ated
with a press of cooler air will
since June 1.
mark
an end to the heat and humidThe temperature has approached 90
ity
over
much of the region Tuesday
degrees on only a handful of days this
through Thursday.
summer, the majority of which have

Arts

Lot 67 — Needlepoint
1st Place: Vivian R. Huggins,
Rutland
Lot 70 — Embroidered pillow
From Page A2
case
1st Place: Mary D. King,
Lot 52 — Child’s or crib
Pomeroy; 2nd Place:
1st Place: Mary D. King,
Pomeroy; 2nd Place: Eastern Harvest Lechler, Rutland
Lot 75 — Patchwork cushion
Quilters &amp; Crafters, Long
Bottom; 3rd Place: Karen L. 1st Place: Shirley Hamm,
Racine
Roush, Tuppers Plains.
Lot 76 — Embroidered table
Lot 55 — Patchwork
1st Place: Eastern Quilters &amp; cloth
1st Place: Mary D. King,
Crafters, Long Bottom
Pomeroy
Lot 57 — Wall Hanging
1st Place: Paula Wood, Long Lot 77 — Any stuffed toy
1st Place: Vivian R. Huggins,
Bottom
Rutland
Lot 59 — Quilt made by a
Class 911 — Dolls
group
1st Place: Eastern Quilters &amp; Lot 79 — Cloth doll
Crafters, Long Bottom (Also 1st Place: Pat Wolf, Pomeroy
(Also received Best of Show;
received Best of Show)
2nd Place: Shirley Hamm.
Lot 60 — Any other not
Racine; 3rd Place: Eastern
specified
Quilters &amp; Crafters, Long
1st Place: Eastern Quilters
Bottom.
&amp; Crafters, Long Bottom;
Lot 83 — Handmade
2nd Place: Stacie Pullins,
ornaments
Long Bottom; 3rd Place:
1st Place: Paula Wood, Long
Kassandra Lodwick,
Bottom; 2nd Place: Hannah
Pomeroy.
Crane, Pomeroy
Class 909 — Rugs
Lot 84 — Tree skirt
Lot 64 — any other rug
1st Place: Opal Dyer, Bidwell
1st Place: Karen L. Roush,
Lot 85 — Holiday Wall
Tuppers Plains (Also
Decoration — Inside
received Best of Show)
1st Place: Opal Dyer, Bidwell
Class 910 — Needle Craft
Class 913 — other crafts
Lot 66 — Colored
embroidery
Lot 87 — Article by any new
1st Place: Harvest Lechler,
handcraft
Rutland
1st Place: Paula Wood, Long

Bottom; 2nd Place: Joyce E.
Manuel, Racine; 3rd Place:
Ruby Lechler, Rutland.
Lot 88 — Handmade jewelry
1st Place: Harvest Lechler,
Rutland; 2nd Place: Robin
Manuel, Racine.
Lot 89 — Plastic canvas
1st Place: Opal Dyer, Bidwell
Class 915 — Angels
Lot 96 — Any other
1st Place: Paula Wood, Long
Bottom
Class 917 — Scrap art
Lot 102 — Made from
leftovers
1st Place: Robert Bailey,
Long Bottom; 2nd Place:
Paula Wood, Long Bottom.
Lot 104 — Any item not
listed
1st Place: Shirley Hamm,
Racine; 2nd Place: Robert
Bailey, Long Bottom.
Class 919 — Woodworking
Lot 109 — Under 12”
1st Place: Eastern Quilters &amp;
Crafters, Long Bottom; 2nd
Place: Pat Wolf, Pomeroy.
Lot 110 — Not over 36”
1st Place: Eastern Quilters &amp;
Crafters, Long Bottom; 2nd
Place: Pat Wolf, Pomeroy.
Lot 112 — Any
1st Place: Carol A. Carter,
Vinton (Also received Best
of Show); 2nd Place: Danny
Carter, Vinton; 3rd Place:
Rachel Kesterson.

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Roush notified council that the fire
department had received a training and
equipment grant through the EMS. The
award amount is $1,000. Another grant
application was discussed for 19 MARCS
radios at no cost to the village if received.
All of the departments countywide are
going together to apply. Roush asked for
permission to apply. Smith motioned to
give the fire department approval to participate in the group application. Pickens
seconded and all agreed.
Pickens noted that the fire department wanted to thank the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Department for donating a
mobile MARCS radio. Pickens motioned
to approve for the donated radio to be
programmed and installed at a cost of no
more than $1,200 at Miller Communications. Smith seconded and all agreed.
Roush explained the Firehouse Subs grant
application in more detail, and said it is for
full SCUBA gear diving sets.The grant cap
is $20,000.
Training was discussed. Pickens is
already a certified diver, so it would create
a dive team of five people. Smith noted
that there is no fire department dive team
in the county. Pickens said the nearest
dive team is Cottageville, W. Va. The West
Virginia/Ohio ownership of the river was
discussed. Smith motioned to apply for the
Firehouse Subs grant. Pickens seconded
and all agreed.
Pickens motioned to enter executive session to discuss the employment of a public
employee. Council entered executive session at 8:27 p.m. Council left executive
session at 8:32 p.m. Johnson appointed
Timothy Lavender as a funior firefighter
to the fire department. Rathburn motioned
to approve the appointment. Pickens seconded.
Councilwoman Wendy Egan noted that
the pool manager and assistant manager
are no longer with the pool. Ben Jacks,
who has worked as a lifeguard for the pool
for several years, was promoted to manager. Egan sad that she could not say enough
good things about the job he did and noted
that he did very well during the short time
he was in the management position.
“A disgruntled former employee of the
pool distributed a letter to village employees complaining about village officials, particularly me,” Egan said. “I want to state
on the record that I welcome any questions
or concerns, to be addressed in the proper
forum, a meeting of village council. The

pool management was replaced after multiple repeated management failures, and
after extraordinary effort on my part, and
on the parts of other village officials, to
assist and to train the management team.
A list of management failures is available.”
Rathburn motioned to retroactively
approve free admission for the final day
of the pool. Pickens seconded, and all
members voted in favor. Egan motioned to
refund the $100 deposit to Kristin Johnson
and reduce the cost of the Chester Ball
Association party by two-thirds due to
algae problems. Rathburn seconded and
all agreed. Concessions were discussed.
Egan motioned to donate to the Southern
Athletic Boosters what they can sell, and
anything the boosters can’t take, sell at 50
percent of cost, then donate the remainder
to the senior center as of Sept. 1 and have
Fields transport the donation to the senior
center. Rathburn seconded and all agreed.
Grants administrator Fred Hoffman also
presented his report to council, and after
discussion, Egan motioned to pass the
Resolution of Authorization 8-14-14-1 for
OPWC funding. Rathburn seconded and
all voted in favor. Egan then motioned to
pass the ODNR Resolution of Authorization 8-14-14-2. Rathburn seconded and all
approved. Lastly, Rathburn motioned to
pass Resolution 8-14-14-3, which states
the priority of improvement of streets and
alleys in the village. Egan seconded and all
agreed.
Crystal Cottrill noted that the Summer
Youth Program did not end when the
pool closed and the remaining program
employee would be available to organize
the archives building. After brief discussion, Rathburn motioned to approve the
purchase of shelves and banker boxes,
along with up to $200 in case of other necessary expenditures for the organization
of the archives building. Egan seconded
and all approved. Johnson wants Cottrill to
contact SC Solutions to get a quote from
Troy Stein for electronic documentation.
Rathburn motioned to request the
amended certificate for the $10K grant
FD. Pickens seconded and all approved.
Appropriations were discussed. It was
agreed that Fund 2053 not be appropriated
at this time. Rathburn motioned to appropriate the $10K grant in the Fire Fund.
Pickens seconded and all approved.
Council members present were: Wendy
Egan, Eber Pickens, Jr., Rhonda Rathburn,
and Sandi Smith. Other Village officials and
employees present were: Grants Administrator Fred Hoffman and Fiscal Officer
Crystal Cottrill. Mayor Eric Cunningham
and Council member Katelyn Roberts were
absent due to family commitments.

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

�LOCAL

A6 Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Daily Sentinel

FAIR DAIRY CATTLE FAIR RESULTS

Department III Dairy Cattle
Class 301 — Holsteins
Lot 4 — Winter Heifer Calf

1st Place: Brook Hollow Farms,
West Salem (Also Grand Jr.
Champion)
Lot 12 — Junior Three Year Old Cow
1st Place: Brook Hollow Farms,
West Salem (Also Sr. Grand

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60526109
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Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

LOCAL STOCKS

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Champion)
Lot 19 — Aged Dry Cow
1st Place: Allison Barber (Also Sr.
Reserve Champion)
Class 302 — Guernseys
Lot 12 — Junior Three Year Old Cow
1st Place: Risen Son Farm,
Reedsville (Also Grand Champion)
Class 304 — Brown Swiss
Lot 5 — Fall Heifer Calf
1st Place: Brook Hollow Farms,
West Salem (Also Jr. Grand
Champion)
Lot 8 — Winter Yearling Heifer
1st Place: Coltin Parker (Also Jr.
Reserve Champion)
Class 306 — Jerseys
Lot 1 — Bull Calf
1st Place: Audrionna Pullins, Long
Bottom
Lot 3 — Spring Heifer Calf

1st Place: Roger Nease, Racine
(Also Jr. Grand Champion)
Lot 4 — Winter Heifer Calf
1st Place: Roger Nease, Racine
(Also Jr Grand Champion)
Lot 7 — Spring Yearling Heifer
1st Place: Annie F. McGrath, Albany
Lot 8 — Winter Yearling Heifer
1st Place: Roger Nease, Racine
Lot 10 — Junior Two Year Old
1st and 2nd Place: Margaret
Parker, Pomeroy; 3rd Place: Laura
Pullins, Long Bottom
Lot 11 — Senior Two Year Old
1st Place: Audrionna Pullins,
Long Bottom (Also Sr. Reserve
Champion)
Lot 15 — Five Year Old Cow
1st Place: Roger Nease, Racine
(Also Sr. Grand Champion)
Lot 16 — Aged cow

1st Place: Laura Pullins, Long
Bottom
Lot 19 — Aged Dry Cow
1st Place: Laura Pullins, Long
Bottom; 2nd Place: Roger Nease,
Racine.
Lot 20 — Best three females
1st Place: Laura Pullins, Long
Bottom (also Grand Reserve); 2nd
Place: Roger Nease, Racine.
Lot 21 — Dam and daughter
1st Place: Laura Pullins, Long
Bottom
Lot 23 — Herd — Four Females
1st Place: Laura Pullins, Long
Bottom (Also Grand Reserve); 2nd
Place: Roger Nease, Racine.
Lot 25 — Junior Best of Three
Females
1st Place: Roger Nease, Racine
(Also Grand)

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AEP (NYSE) — 52.95
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.50
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) —
108.00
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.38
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —
49.10
BorgWarner (NYSE)
—62.41
Century Alum (NASDAQ)
— 23.29
Champion (NASDAQ) —
0.290
City Holding (NASDAQ)
— 42.35
Collins (NYSE) — 77.03
DuPont (NYSE) — 66.15
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.25
Gen Electric (NYSE) —
26.20
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
— 63.83
JP Morgan (NYSE) —
59.34
Kroger (NYSE) — 50.13
Ltd Brands (NYSE) —
63.85
Norfolk So (NYSE) —
105.55
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.43
BBT (NYSE) — 37.40
Peoples (NASDAQ) —
24.39
Pepsico (NYSE) — 93.19
Premier (NASDAQ) —
14.86
Rockwell (NYSE) — 117.35
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
— 15.04
Royal Dutch Shell — 79.47
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
— 33.43
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.69
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.31
WesBanco (NYSE) — 31.41
Worthington (NYSE) —
40.67
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes
of transactions Aug. 25,
2014, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

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�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 26, 2014 s Page B1

Marauders take second at Golden Rocket Invite
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

WELLSTON, Ohio — A trio
of top-10 finishes lead the Meigs
boys cross country team to a
second place finish, Saturday at
Wellston’s Golden Rocket Invitational in Jackson County.
Athens won the boys team
competition with a total of 28,
followed by Meigs with 44 and
Waverly with 74. Alexander (123)
with fourth, Trimble (124) was
fifth, Vinton County (128) was
sixth and Fairland (218) rounded
out the seven team field. Athens
junior Walker Hauschild had
the low time (17:46.5), followed
by Waverly’s Hunter Hoover
Photo by Paul Boggs
Meigs sophomore Jared Kennedy took seventh in the Golden (17:51.9).
The Marauders were paced
Rocket Invitational on Saturday in Wellston.

by Jacob Swindell, who finished
fourth with a time of 18:58.6,
followed by sixth place finisher
Dillon Mahr (19:54.9) and seventh place finisher Jared Kennedy
(19:55.8). The fourth MHS scorer
was Nate Hoover (20:25.7), who
finished 13th, while Mitchell Howard (20:42.2) was 16th and rounded out the Marauder total. The tiebreaking runners were Tyler Fields
(20:46.2), who finished 18th overall, and Tyler Williams (20:55.9),
who was 19th overall. A total of 84
runners finished the 5k course.
The girls team competition was
won by Athens with a total of
24, followed by Alexander (96),
Waverly (107) and Vinton County
(108). Meigs (111) was fifth, Oak
Hill (155) took sixth, Jackson
(163) was seventh, Wellston (189)

was eighth and Southeastern
(217) rounded out the nine team
field. Jackson senior Elyse Black
was first of the 90 competitors
with a time of 20:10.4, followed by
Athens’ Madison Yerke (20:37.7).
Sophomore Gracie Hoffman led
Meigs with a 23:44 pace, good
enough for 15th place. MHS junior
Lara Perrin (23:54.9) was 18th,
Haley Kennedy (25:12.1) finished
26th, Madison Stewart (27:11.6)
was 38th, and Sadie Fox (29:50.2)
came in 55th. The tiebreaking runners for the Lady Marauders were
70th place finisher Caitlyn Rest
(32:27.8) and 78th place finisher
Haiden English (34:01.2).
Complete results of the Golden
Rocket Invitational can be found
on the web at www.baumspage.
com

Lady Eagles
win Broughton
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

MARIETTA, Ohio —
A good way to start the
new year.
The Eastern girls
cross country team
came away with top
honors Saturday at the
15th annual Elizabeth
S. Broughton Memorial
Invitational as the Lady
Eagles got the best of
eight other teams at the
Broughton Nature Area
in Washington County.
Eastern posted a winning team tally of 47
points, which ended up
being nine points better
than the rest of the girls
competition. Caldwell
was the overall runnerup with 56 points,
while Fort Frye came
away with third place
honors with a tally of
78 points.
The Lady Eagles had
four runners finish in
the top 12 as a total of
75 females took part
in the event. All seven
EHS ladies also finished the top 32 spots
overall.
Katie Saling of
Caldwell won the girls
individual title with a
time of 21:04.10, while
Mary Kate McElroy of
FFHS was the runnerup with a mark of
21:32.80.
Asia Michael paced
EHS by placing third
overall with a time
of 22:17.30, followed

by Laura Pullins
(22:41.20) and Taylor
Palmer (22:59.40) with
respective finishes of
sixth and eighth.
Jessica Cook
(23:50.50) and Kaitlyn Hawk (25:21.40)
rounded out the Lady
Eagles’ team score with
respective placements
of 12th and 22nd. Brittany Long (25:43.40)
and Taylor Palmer
(26:24.80) were also
28th and 32nd overall
in the girls competition.
Marietta came away
with the boys team title
after scoring 59 points,
followed by runner-up
Williamstown with 77
points. Caldwell placed
third out of nine teams
with 90 points.
Jon Anderson of
Fort Frye won the individual title with a time
of 17:30.10, while Brent
Ash of Warren was the
overall runner-up with a
mark of 18:04.40.
Tyson Long led EHS
— which did not have
enough competitors for
a team score — with a
14th place finish and a
time of 19:48.60. Brock
Smith was next with
a mark of 22:09.80 for
36th place out of 90
individuals.
Complete results of
the 2014 Elizabeth S.
Broughton Memorial
Invitational at Broughton Nature Area are
available on the web at
baumspage.com

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Aug. 26
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5:15
Grace at Ohio Valley Christian, 5:30
River Valley at Vinton County, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 6 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at Teays Valley Christian, 5:30
Gallia Academy at South Point, 6 p.m.
Grace at Ohio Valley Christian, 5 p.m.
Golf
South Gallia at Belpre, 4:30
Point Pleasant at River Valley, 4:30
Southern at Wahama, 4:30
Wednesday, Aug. 27
Golf
Eastern at Waterford, 4 p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 28
Volleyball
South Gallia at Southern, 6 p.m.
Athens at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 6 p.m.
See SCHEDULE | B4

Charles Trainor Jr. | Miami Herald | MCT

Ohio State head coach Urban Meyer in the third quarter against Clemson in the Discover Orange Bowl at Sun Life Stadium in Miami
Gardens, Fla., on Friday, Jan. 3, 2014.

Meyer not kidding; says Buckeyes good
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — A week after the
loss of three-year starting quarterback Braxton
Miller, Ohio State coach
Urban Meyer is going
through final preparations for the Buckeyes’
opener on Saturday
against Navy.
He says his team is
ready.
“Oh, yeah. If you have
good players, a good
team (then you’re excited),” he said, pausing
before joking, “I’ll fake it
sometimes, if you don’t
have a good team.
“But I can tell you this:
I think we got a good
team.”
Meyer disclosed that
Miller, a two-time Big
Ten player of the year
and on the short list of
Heisman Trophy frontrunners, will have surgery on the torn labrum
in his right (throwing)
shoulder on Tuesday.
Dr. James Andrews,
renowned for his work
with athletes, will perform the operation.
Normally, this would
be a week of celebration
for Miller, who was hurt
a week ago in practice.
He was voted a team captain, along with tight end
Jeff Heuerman, defensive
lineman Michael Ben-

nett and two unrelated
players named Grant
— defensive back Doran
Grant and linebacker
Curtis Grant.
Instead, Miller will
miss Saturday’s game
while recovering from
the surgery taking place
in Gulf Breeze, Florida.
He is not expected to
return to the field until
next August.
J.T. Barrett, a redshirt
freshman who has never
taken a collegiate snap,
will start in his place. He
will be backed by redshirt sophomore Cardale
Jones, who has thrown a
total of two passes in his
Ohio State career.
Both may see action,
although Barrett has a
slight edge.
“It was thrust upon us
pretty quickly because in
my heart I thought Braxton would be ready to go.
I didn’t envision this,”
Meyer said. “I thought,
man, this would be a
really close battle for the
backup spot. J.T. is the
starting quarterback, but
there’s not a big separation.”
The Buckeyes still have
several other spots up for
grabs.
Meyer said Billy Price,
Joel Hale and Antonio
Underwood were fight-

ing for the starting job at
left guard, the one starting cornerback would be
either Gareon Conley or
Eli Apple and that Jacoby
Boren and Alabama
transfer Chad Lindsay
continue to challenge
for the starting center
spot. In addition, there
are six players in the
wide-receiver derby but
only three will start the
game at M&amp;T Stadium
in Baltimore on Saturday
afternoon.
A lot of the talk after
Monday’s practice dealt
with Barrett and picking
up the slack for the loss
of Miller.
Taylor Decker, the only
returning starter on the
line at left tackle, likes
what he’s seen so far
out of Barrett. But also
recognizes that the rest
of the team must bear
a little bit more of the
burden with such a new
player at the controls.
“He’s been taking the
reins of the offense,”
Decker said. “He’s
stepped up, he’s voiced
up and he’s kind of taken
control. That’s good to
see that he’s not going
to back down from it.
Him being a young guy
and not have a lot of
experience, we just have
to make him look better.

The line has to play that
much harder protecting
and the receivers have to
make plays until he gets
comfortable.”
Wide receiver Evan
Spencer believes that
many won’t be able to
notice a substantial difference on Saturday.
Barrett’s last complete
season was as a junior
at Rider High School
in Wichita Falls, Texas,
three years ago.
“We’re running the
same offense (as last
year),” he said. “There’s
only so many ways to
scheme up things. He’s
very mobile, and he can
make all of throws on
the field. It’s going to be
different, but at the same
time when you see us
out there this week a lot
of stuff will look pretty
similar.”
Meyer — this time he
wasn’t kidding — said
he was enthused about
where the Buckeyes are
mentally and physically
with the start of the season looming.
“I like where we’re at,
especially after today’s
practice, and I like how
they responded to Braxton’s injury,” he said.
“So I think we’re pretty
ready.”

�SPORTS

B2 Tuesday, August 26, 2014

US basketball decides bigger is better with roster

OVP
SPORTS BRIEFS

NEW YORK (AP) — A
desire for a bigger look
made Andre Drummond
necessary. The belief in
Derrick Rose’s health
made Damian Lillard
expendable.
Those were conclusions
made by U.S. team officials
when they selected the 12
players who would travel
to Spain for the FIBA
World Cup of Basketball.
After years of ignoring
size concerns by fielding
teams with the best wing
players in the world, the
Americans decided this
time around that bigger
was better.
That meant keeping all
the big men left on their
roster, with Drummond
joining New Orleans
All-Star Anthony Davis,
Sacramento’s DeMarcus
Cousins, Brooklyn’s Mason
Plumlee and Denver’s Kenneth Faried.
“Just based on how we’re
constructed, we thought
the insurance of having
another big — I don’t want
people telling us later, ‘you
should’ve, you could’ve,’”
USA Basketball chairman
Jerry Colangelo told The
Associated Press in a
phone interview.
“We didn’t have to do
that. We don’t need to face
that, because we’ve got
some legitimate bigs that
we think collectively can
be very effective.”
The rest of the roster
is: Golden State’s Stephen
Curry and Klay Thompson, Houston’s James

Meet the
Marauders Night
ROCKSPRINGS,
Ohio — The Meigs Athletic Boosters will host
a Meet the Marauders
Night for all fall sports
on Wednesday, Aug.
27, at Farmers Bank
Stadium, Holzer Field
on the campus of Meigs
High School. The event,
which begins at 7 p.m.,
is open to the public.
URG softball hosting
Meet the RedStorm Day
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande softball team
will be hosting a “Meet
the RedStorm” Day and
a free clinic for area
youth on Sunday, September 7, at Rio Softball
Park.
The team will conduct
an open practice for the
public from 1-2 p.m. A
clinic, open to girls age
5-12, will follow from
2-4 p.m.
The RedStorm will
also be hosting an Alumni Game on Sunday, September 14, at 1 p.m., at
Rio Softball Park.
All former players are
encouraged to participate.
For more information
on either event, contact
head coach Amber Bowman at (740) 323-6222
or send an email to
abowman@rio.edu

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Harden, Cleveland’s Kyrie
Irving, Sacramento’s Rudy
Gay and Toronto’s DeMar
DeRozan.
Lillard, Portland’s AllStar point guard, was cut
along with swingmen
Chandler Parsons of Dallas, Kyle Korver of Atlanta
and Gordon Hayward of
Utah. Colangelo said Lillard was a victim of too
many players at his position and handled the news
gracefully.
“He took it, I mean he
was a real pro,” Colangelo
said. “He saw it, he understood … he just handed it
extremely well.”
The Americans had to
be certain Rose could handle the workload after the
Chicago Bulls star missed
most of the last two seasons after a pair of knee
surgeries. He sat out a
couple of practices and an
exhibition game because
of soreness, but was back
for Friday’s 112-86 victory
over Puerto Rico.
“We feel comfortable
with Rose based on what
he’s communicating
with us, what the doctor,
therapists around him are
telling us, and more importantly what he has shown
us,” Colangelo said. “So
yeah, that was a decision
we were willing to make.”
The Americans left later
Saturday for Spain, where
they were to play a final
AP Photo | John Locher
exhibition game against
Cleveland Cavaliers’ Kyrie Irving, left, goes up for a shot against Denver Nuggets’ Kenneth Faried
Slovenia before the tourna- during the USA Basketball Showcase game Friday, Aug. 1, 2014, in Las Vegas.
ment starts next Saturday.
The final rosters aren’t
unveil a different look, perwith what he called a
on the final squad.
due until the day before
“physical
specimen.”
They
announced
the
haps even play two of them
and U.S. team officials had
“Here’s
a
6-11,
7-footer,
roster
a
few
hours
after
the
together.
previously said they might
280-pound
athlete,
young,
game,
with
Drummond’s
“If we choose to show
take more than 12 on the
inclusion perhaps the big- still learning the game.
our bigs, we can. You can’t
trip.
We want to just be sure,”
do that if you don’t have
But coach Mike Krzyze- gest surprise.
The Detroit Pistons cen- Colangelo said. “And it’s
them with you,” Colangelo
wski said after the game
pretty tough to leave that
they would trim the roster ter played in only one of
said.
before leaving, with Colan- the three exhibition games, kind of an athlete behind,
“This is a situation
especially when we believe where we’ve decided that
gelo saying they thought it sitting out Friday night.
he will be a big part of the here’s an opportunity
was unfair to make players But Colangelo said the
travel who wouldn’t end up Americans were intrigued future without question for to give our opposition
USA Basketball at 21 years
a whole new look, if we
of age.”
choose to do it. In the
And especially when
past, we didn’t have the
the Americans could
bigs to be able to do that,
see a Spain frontline of
and that’s the key.
Marc Gasol, Pau Gasol
The newly formed group Meigs Volunteer Program (MVP)
“We’re very, very strong
is looking for people age 16 &amp; up. You could:
and Serge Ibaka in the
• Deliver Business Lunches
gold-medal game on Sept. on the perimeter, we’ve
• Assist at the wellness center
been saying that. Yes,
14. Colangelo said the
• Crochet/knit scarves for children
that’s the style of choice,
Americans
didn’t
have
any
• Quilting/sewing
predicated on the talent.
particular
team
in
mind
• Seniors in school
But coach is excited about
when carrying more bigs
Contact Diana Coates @ 740-992-2161
Monday - Thursday: 8-4:30 • Friday: 8-4
than usual, just a desire to the possibilities.”

We Need Volunteers

60523696

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JEFFREY J WARNER LUTCF
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740-992-5141 James Anderson Directors 740-992-5444

Get Medicare Ready!
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740-612-9093
Monday – Friday,
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LEGALS

Professional Services

Lost &amp; Found

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.
THE LEBANON TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES WILL HOLD
THEIR REGULAR MONTHLY
MEETING FRIDAY, AUGUST
29TH AT 6PM. THE MEETING WILL BE HELD AT THE
TOWNSHIP GARAGE.
08/26/14

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

740-591-8044
60517849

Please leave a message

Missing Pretty White Cat from
English Road area, Reward
may be offered call 304-6751975
Notices
ATTENTION: Blue Devils
CLASS OF 1974-CLASS
REUNION for Gallia Academy
Graduates and Teachers!
August 30th, 2014 @ French
Art Colony 5-10pm. Eat, Play
Cornhole, Reminisce. Music by
Sunny 93. BYOB and Lawn
Chair. $10.00 donation at the
door.
Contact 740-208-7113

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Help Wanted General

GUN SHOW

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

Customer Service/Data Entry
Position-Full Time.
Organizational Skills required
call 740-441-1564

MARIETTA
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922 Front St
Sept 13 &amp; 14
Adm $5
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Home Improvements
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Money To Lend

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
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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.

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
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Tuesday, August 26, 2014 B3

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Attention: Theda, 117 West 2nd St.,
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MENTION CODE: MB

800-416-5406

NOTICE OF LIEN SALE
The personal property and contents of the
following storage units will be auctioned for sale
to satisfy the lien.
The sale will be held at the Manley’s Self
Storage Facility, 99 Beech Street, Middleport,
OH, on Sept. 13, 2014 at 9:00 a.m.
#5: STEPHANIE LYONS
28885 SR 7, MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760

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
FULL TIME RESIDENTIAL
CONSTRUCTION POSITION
AVAILABLE. SEND RESUME
TO 38712 HORNER HILL
ROAD, POMEROY, OH 45769
IMMEDIATE OPENING
FOR OFFICE SECRETARY
The City of Gallipolis is seeking qualified applicants for the
position of Office Secretary for
the Maintenance Garage. This
position is responsible for secretarial and clerical work in the
City Maintenance Garage.
Work requires responsibility for
the application of clerical and
typing general reports and correspondence, statistical data
and inventory activities. High
School Diploma or GED Equivalent required. Applicants
must demonstrate advanced
proficiency with computer programs such as Microsoft Word
and Excel. Two years of experience in general office work or
any equivalent combination of
related education and experience. Knowledge of construction field is a plus.
Salary range dependent upon
experience and qualifications;
excellent benefits. This position is Monday through Friday,
7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Applications are available at
the Office of the City Manager,
333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
OH 45631. Applications must
be returned to the Office of the
City Manager by 4:00 p.m., Friday, August 29, 2014. The City
of Gallipolis is an Equal Opportunity Employer. (08),26,27,28
Opening for Full-Time Fiscal
Officer
The Village of Pomeroy is
seeking qualified applicants for
a Full-Time position as Fiscal
Officer. This individual is required to perform in a competent and timely manner and to
comply with all accounting,
payroll, record keeping and reporting requirement related to
the Fiscal Officer s duties in
Village Government. Salary
based upon qualifications.
Resume are to be mailed to
the Village of Pomeroy, 600 E.
Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. Attn: Mayor Jackie
Welker, or drop off in person.
All applications must be
submitted by September 5th,
2014.
(08),26,27,28,29,(09),02,03,04.
PT/FT
Position available for
Clinical Assistant
Applications may be picked up
M-F 8-4
@ PVH STE. 112
304-675-1244
Southwestern community Action
council, Inc. is NOW HIRING a
Teacher Assistant for Mason
County. Visit
www.scacwv.org for current
job postings and application information! EOE
Welders Wanted–full-time
positions available. Apply in
person at 2150 Eastern
Avenue, Gallipolis, Oh

#8: ASHLEE SMITH
NO ADDRESS
#6: DONALD BOLIN
COOK RD., CHESHIRE, OH 45631

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

Medical / Health

60529704

Dr. Randall Hawkins is now
taking new patients. 2520 Valley Drive Suite 212 Pt. Pleasant WV. (304)675-7700

�SPORTS

B4 Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Lovefest: Kevin Love traded to Cavs, joins LeBron
CLEVELAND (AP) — Olympic champions together, Kevin
Love and LeBron James spent
the last 30 days waiting to
become teammates again.
Cleveland has craved a championship for 50 years.
One drought over. One to go.
On the first day they were able
to complete the long-discussed
blockbuster trade, the Minnesota Timberwolves sent Love
to the Cavaliers, who capped a
spectacular summer on Saturday
by acquiring the All-Star power
forward as another running mate
for James to make them instant
title contenders.
James didn’t waste any time in
making Love feel at home.
“Welcome to the Land (at)
kevinlove!” the four-time league
MVP posted on his Twitter
account.
Yes, Cleveland, a city without
a major sports championship
since 1964, has another new
superstar.
The Timberwolves receive a
bountiful return for parting with
Love, the disgruntled face of
their franchise. They acquired
No. 1 overall draft choice
Andrew Wiggins and former
top pick Anthony Bennett from
the Cavs and veteran forward

Thaddeus Young from the Philadelphia 76ers in the three-team
deal.
“When it boils down to it,
Kevin over his six years, he
kept on saying ‘I want to win.
I want to win,’” Timberwolves
President Flip Saunders said.
“Unfortunately over these last
years, both him and the team
haven’t been able to do that.
He felt it was best for him to go
elsewhere.
“I was happy we were able to
work with him and (agent) Jeff
Schwartz and put him in a situation that he’s going to have the
ability to do that and we’re going
to have the ability for us to have
an identity of where our team is
at and continue to grow.”
The Sixers received a 2015
first-round draft choice from
Cleveland — ironically, one
of the ones the Cavs got from
Miami for James in 2010 — and
guard Alexey Shved and forward
Luc Mbah a Moute from the
Timberwolves, who also receive
a trade exception worth about
$6.3 million.
The Cavs and Timberwolves
had discussed a trade involving
Love for months, long before
James decided to end his magnificent run with the Heat and

come back home to Ohio. The
deal dragged through the summer, first because of Cleveland’s
unwillingness to include Wiggins, and then due to a rarely
used league rule that prohibited
it from being completed until 30
days after Wiggins signed his
rookie contract.
That bit of fine print in the
collective bargaining agreement
triggered an agonizing wait in
both cities, more so in championship-starved Cleveland where
generations of fans have longed
for the Cavs, Indians or Browns
to win it all.
But once the teams completed
a conference call with the league
on Saturday, there was nothing to prevent the planet’s best
player from aligning with the
league’s best power forward.
Add in All-Star point guard
Kyrie Irving and James is the
ringleader of a trio as potentially devastating as the one with
Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh
he broke up last month.
“Kevin joining the Cavaliers
represents a very special and
unique opportunity for our
team,” Cavs general manager
David Griffin said. “At only 25,
Kevin has already firmly established himself as one the NBA’s

elite players and his talent, versatility and fit are major parts of
our team’s vision for success.”
Love’s arrival caps a stunning
two-month turnaround for the
Cavs, who won just 33 games
last season and haven’t been to
the playoffs since James left in
2010.
Cleveland locked up Irving,
last year’s All-Star Game MVP,
to a maximum contract extension on the first day of free
agency and then James rocked
the league by announcing his
return to bring a title to Northeast Ohio. Beyond that, Cleveland signed free agents Shawn
Marion, Mike Miller and James
Jones, veteran players with NBA
titles on their resumes.
Love is the biggest piece. He’s
coming off of his best season,
averaging career highs in points
(26.1) and assists (4.4) while
grabbing 12.5 rebounds per
game and shooting 37.6 percent
on 3-pointers.
“Welcome to Cleveland Wes,”
Irving tweeted at Love, alluding
to a Sprite ad campaign the two
players starred in where Love
played a character called “Uncle
Wes.”
Despite his play, the Wolves
finished 40-42, well out of the

playoff chase in the demanding
Western Conference, and he
made it clear to the organization
that he would opt out of his contract next summer and look for a
contender.
“I want to personally thank
Kevin Love for his six seasons
with the Wolves,” Timberwolves
owner Glen Taylor. “On the
floor, Kevin has worked hard
to make himself a great player
in the NBA. He also made it a
priority to give back to the community … we wish him nothing
but the best in Cleveland.”
The Cavs were initially reluctant to deal Wiggins, the superathletic small forward who spent
one year at Kansas. The Timberwolves entertained offers from
several other teams for Love,
who can opt out of his contract
next summer. But they stayed
patient, and Cavs owner Dan
Gilbert and Taylor agreed last
month in Las Vegas that Wiggins
had to be included.
Adding Wiggins, Bennett and
Young, an underrated seven-year
veteran who will start in Love’s
spot, along with first-round draft
pick Zach LaVine transforms the
Wolves into a far more dynamic
team around pass-happy point
guard Ricky Rubio.

It’s about time to answer the Rose question
By Mike Schmidt

days to comment on the 25th
anniversary of Pete Rose’s
banishment from baseball.
I received numerous phone
Seems like only yesterrequests over the last few
day, rather than 15 years
For the Associated Press

ago, when I met Pete in
Milwaukee for his famous
“confession” talk with Commissioner Selig.
Following Pete’s apolo-

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

6 PM

6:30

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

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Nightly
Business
Report (N)
ABC World
News
CBS Evening
News
Two and a
Half Men
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Business
Report (N)
CBS Evening
News

Eyewitness
News at 6
10TV News
at 6 p.m.
Modern
Family
BBC World
News:
America
13 News at
6:00 p.m.

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

6 PM

CABLE

6:30

getic admittance to gambling
after 14 years of denial,
Commissioner Selig seemed
in a cooperative and forgiving mood, actually helping
TUESDAY, AUGUST 26

7 PM

7:30

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

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

Food Fighters "Jon
Coombs" (N)
Food Fighters "Jon
Coombs" (N)
Bachelor in Paradise (N)

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

America-Talent "Semi Finals 1" Twelve of the Top 24 acts
perform live for the chance to win the $1 million prize. (N)
America-Talent "Semi Finals 1" Twelve of the Top 24 acts
perform live for the chance to win the $1 million prize. (N)
20/20: From Hell (N)

Elvis, Aloha From Hawaii Elvis performs
ADD and Loving It Patrick McKenna talks
his hits at the Honolulu International Center to researchers, doctors and specialists to
Arena in Hawaii.
find the truth about ADD.
Bachelor in Paradise (N)
20/20: From Hell (N)
NCIS "Honor Thy Father"

NCIS: Los Angeles "Three
Hearts"
Fam.G "Life Brooklyn 99 New Girl
Mindy "Girl
of Brian"
"Unsolvable" "Dance"
Next Door"
Time Team America "Lost Time Team America "The
Civil War Prison" (N)
Lost Pueblo Village" (N)
NCIS "Honor Thy Father"

8 PM

8:30

NCIS: Los Angeles "Three
Hearts"

9 PM

9:30

Person of Interest "Beta"
Eyewitness News at 10
Frontline "A Death in St.
Augustine" Investigates a
deputy sheriff's death.
Person of Interest "Beta"

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
24 (FXSP) (5:30) Football Pre-game
25 (ESPN) (1:00) ITF Tennis U.S. Open
26 (ESPN2) SportsCenter
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

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

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Rules of Eng Rules of Eng
MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati Reds Site: Great American Ball Park (L)
Postgame
Insider
ITF Tennis U.S. Open First Round Site: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center -- Flushing Meadows, N.Y. (L)
SEC Now
Streetball City Slam
Streetball
Streetball
Baseball Tonight (L)
Raising Asia To Be
Dance Moms "AbbyDance Moms "Chloe Gets Raising Asia Raising Asia
Dance Moms "3 Soloists,
Announced One Star"
Phobic"
Revenge" (N)
(N)
(N)
Pretty Little Liars "A Dark Liar "No One Here Can Love Pretty Little Liars "Taking Young and Young and Pretty Little Liars "Taking
Ali"
or Understand Me"
This One to the Grave" (N) Hungry
Hungry
This One to the Grave"
Cops
Jail
Cops "In
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Mardi Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast
Jacksonville" to Coast"
to Coast"
Gras 2004" to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
iCarly
Sam &amp; Cat
Sam &amp; Cat
SpongeBob Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law &amp; Order: SVU "Harm" Law&amp;O.:SVU "Svengali"
SVU "Undercover Blue"
Royal P "A Bigger Boat" (N) Covert Affairs (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Mom
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Sullivan/Son The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Castle "Secret Santa"
Castle "Significant Others" Rizzoli "Phoenix Rising"
Rizzoli &amp; Isles (N)
Rizzoli "We Are Family"
Air Force One (1997, Action) Gary Oldman, Glenn Close, Harrison Ford. The
4th and Loud
4th and Loud (N)
president fends off deadly terrorists who are holding his plane and family hostage. TVMA
Yukon "Tough Choices"
Yukon Men "Fresh Blood" Alaska: Stories (N)
Yukon Men "Wild Lives"
Ice Lake "Winter Is Coming"
Storage W. Storage
Married to
Married to
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Married to
Cement
"San Burrito" Wars
the Job
the Job
Wars
Wars
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
the Job (N) Heads (N)
North America "Revealed" NorthA. "Born to Be Wild" NorthA. "No Place to Hide" Madagascar Madagascar had the most unique creatures.
Bad Girls Club "Easy Come, Bad Girls Club "Smell Ya
Bad Girls Club "Reunion
Sisterhood of Hip Hop
Bad Girls Club "Reunion
Easy Go"
Later!"
Part One" (N)
"Love or Hip Hop" (N)
Part One"
Law &amp; Order "Privileged" Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order "Bad Faith"
Law &amp; Order "Purple Heart" Law &amp; Order "Switch"
Sex &amp; City
Sex &amp; City
E! News (N)
Fashion Police (N)
Fashion Police
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Candid Camera
Hot/ Cleve. King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens
Wicked Tuna: North vs.
Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers "In Alaska State Troopers "Too Wicked Tuna N vs S
South "Yankee Invasion"
"Loaded for Bear"
the Line of Duty"
Drunk to Drive" (N)
"Southern Discomfort"
(5:30) FB Talk Football
2nd Youth Oly. Games Diving (M), Beach Volleyball
Shark Hunters
Shark Hunters
America's Pre-game (L)
MLB 162 (N) Pre-game
MLB Baseball Minnesota Twins at Kansas City Royals Site: Kauffman Stadium (L)
Counting
Counting
Counting
CountCars
CountCars
Counting
Counting
Counting
(:05)
(:35)
CountCars
CountCars
Cars
Cars
Cars
"Quadzilla" "Van-Tastic" Cars
Cars (N)
Cars (N)
Housewives "All Apologies" H.Wives "Reunion Part 1" Housewives/NewJersey
Below Deck (N)
The Singles Project (N)
106 &amp; Park (N)
Crazy Sexy Cool: The TLC Story (‘13, Bio) Rochelle Aytes. TV14
Apollo Live (N)
House Hunt. House Hunt. House Hunt. House Hunt. Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop HouseH (N) House
Face Off "Ancient Aliens" Face Off "Twisted Trees"
Face Off "Animal
Face Off "Wizard of
Wizard Wars "Puppy Love"
Attraction"
Wonderland" (N)
(N)

6 PM

PREMIUM

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

6:30

7 PM

7:30

(:15) Baggage Claim (2013, Comedy) Taye Diggs, Paula

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Hard Knocks '14 "Training
Camp With the Atlanta
Patton. With her younger sister's wedding fast
approaching, a flight attendant must find a fiancé. TVPG
Falcons"
(:15)
Dawn of the Dead (‘04, Hor) Ving Rhames,
Red 2 (2013, Action) Helen Mirren, John Malkovich, The Knick "The Busy Flea"
Sarah Polley. Survivors of a worldwide plague take refuge Bruce Willis. A team of retired C.I.A operatives reunite to Algernon has a frustrating
from flesh-hungry zombies in a shopping mall. TVM
track down a missing nuclear device. TVPG
day at work.
Masters of Sex "Asterion"
(5:45)
The Butler (‘13, Dra) Oprah Winfrey, Forest Masters of Sex "Asterion" Ray Donovan "Walk This
Way"
Whitaker. A man served eight United States presidents as a
domestic servant in the White House. TVPG

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Cemetery Plots
3 plots behind Beale Chapel
Methodist Church Cementary
call 330-426-2766 or 330-8811481
Houses For Sale
3 BEDROOM BRICK, 1 1/2
BATHS, LARGE FAMILY
ROOM, SECURITY SYSTEM.
1 CAR GARAGE AND FULL
BASEMENT CLOSE TO GALLIPOLIS WALMART. ASKING
$93,000. CONTACT 446-7874,
TO MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE

The Leftovers "The Garveys Katt Williams: Priceless:
at Their Best"
Afterlife

Houses For Sale
5 rooms 1 Bath fixer upper,
natural gas heat, as is 1 acre
+/- $24,000 neg call for appt.
740-578-1017 or 937-7184757
Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
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

Apartments/Townhouses
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Commercial
Commercial building for
sale/lease. Office/retail/storage. 1800sqft with 10ft ceilings. Off-street parking. 749
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
$499 per month. Call Wayne
404-456-3802

Houses For Rent

to map out an itinerary for
Pete’s possible reinstatement.
Over the following few
months, things went sour,
as did the commissioner’s
attitude.
Pete’s penchant for bad
decisions and relationships,
plus a need for money,
caused a premature book
release in New York, which
conflicted with the Hall of
Fame election news conference. This was a direct hit
to baseball and couldn’t have
come at a worse time for
Pete.
Commissioner Selig never
returned to this issue with
the same attitude he had that

Schedule
From Page B1

Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Parkersburg Christian, 6:30
Boys Soccer
Athens at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Girls Soccer
Sherman at Point Pleasant, 6:30
Golf
Meigs at River Valley, 4:30
Southern at Federal Hocking, 4:30
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 4 p.m.
Miller/Trimble at Eastern, 4 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 29
Football
Pike Eastern at Hannan, 7:30
River at Eastern, 7:30
Notre Dame at Southern, 7:30
Sciotoville East at South Gallia, 7:30
Coal Grove at Meigs, 7:30
Gallia Academy at Athens, 7:30
River Valley at Rock Hill, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Lincoln County, 7:30
Wahama at Ravenswood, 7:30
Saturday, Aug. 30
Volleyball
Eastern at Athens Inv. 11 a.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy, Meigs at Vinton County, 9 a.m.
Southern, Eastern at Warren, 10 a.m.
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Ohio Valley Christian, 10 a.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at South Charleston, 6 p.m.
Miscellaneous

2 Bedroom, House for Rent,
Non Smoker, No Pets, Davis
Rd. 740-256-1634

Manufactured Homes
Used single wides
3 to choose from
starting at $1500.
freedomhomesohio.com

Sales
Call

ATVs/Dune Buggies
207 Kawasaki 250 Bayou (4wheeler) low hours, Excellent
condition, Garage Kept.
$1,200. Call 740-388-0236
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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

Two houses for rent. Call
Nancy at 675-4024 or 6750799 Homestead Realty
Broker

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

day in Milwaukee, and the
Rose case file hasn’t been
opened since.
This anniversary does
bring light to some points
relevant for discussion,
possibly for the final time.
Pete is 73 years old and
getting close to the age
where it will be hard for
him to enjoy the fruits of
baseball’s forgiveness, if it
ever happens.
Yes, Pete finally admitted
to betting on the Reds. But
never bet on them to lose
a game, so forget the idea
that he may have altered
the outcome of a game with
managerial decisions.

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Tuesday, August 26, 2014 B5

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HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

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By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

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PARDON MY PLANET
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�LOCAL

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60529556

B6 Tuesday, August 26, 2014

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>tyree</name>
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