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                  <text>Today in
history
FEATURES s 4

Scattered storms.
High around 86.
Low near 64.

Local
sports
action

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 140, Volume 64

Tuesday, September 2, 2014 s 50¢

Baker agrees to help
Will help organize finances, organization
will help village prepare for upcoming audits
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Sue Baker, second from left, speaks to Pomeroy Village Council members about
the 2012-2013 Pomeroy fiscal years that must be organized in order to be
audited in December.

POMEROY — Sue Baker
has been appointed by the
Pomeroy Village Council to
prepare financial records for
the 2012-2013 fiscal years, so
they may be properly audited

in the next few months.
The condition of the financial records is the reason the
former fiscal officer, Sonya
Wolfe, was fired and Baker was
hired, Mayor Jackie Welker
said.
Baker, Pomeroy’s temporary
fiscal officer, said the audits

are not due until December,
but that currently the village’s
records are not auditable,
meaning they need to be
reviewed and organized.
“If they declare you inauditable [sic], it means you get
See HELP | 5

Body found
on Ohio River
near Portland
One in custody at this time
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

PORTLAND —Meigs County Sheriff Keith
Wood reports that deputies from the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office discovered an unidentified body
along the shore of the Ohio River near Portland
around 11 a.m. Saturday.
Deputies, investigators from the Ohio Bureau
of Investigation and Identification, Meigs County
Coroner’s Office and West Virginia authorities
were on the scene.
Authorities have a person of interest in custody
at this time in West Virginia.
Further details will be released as they become
available.
The mural seen in this photo was made possible by Rana Bartee, and it and others like it will soon be placed on the walls around the park.

Recent Sonshine O’Brien Mini Park opening delayed
meeting sees
many donations
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — The collection of school supplies for the third-grade
class of Southern Elementary was front and
center of the Sonshine
Circle’s recent meeting.
Everything from
pencils to notebooks
was donated by the
Sonshine Circle members. There were 258

pencils, 75 notebooks,
77 erasers, 10 scissors,
35 boxes of crayons
and 20 miscellaneous
office supply pieces.
The items were counted
by the receiving class,
whose teacher is Rachel
Hupp, who was on hand
to receive the supplies.
The meeting was
hosted by Letha Proffitt
and Mabel Brace.
See MEETING | 5

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Soccer: 6
Briefs: 7
Buckeyes: 10
— FEATURES
Television: 7
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

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

POMEROY — The O’Brien
Mini Park has been open for weeks
now, but an official ceremony for
the opening of the park has been
pushed back to October.
According to Imagine Pomeroy
“Queen” Paige Cleek, the group
had to wait for a debit card to
arrive so the group can order the
light fixtures and electric plugs
to be put in under the red-roofed
area. Murals made by Rana Bartee
will also be mounted on the walls
surrounding the park, and one is
currently located under the redroof area, although it has not been
mounted yet.
The group is also about to send
out its first order of bricks to the
engraving company, who provide
the bricks and ship them free of
charge to Pomeroy. Brick orders
are still being taken and a second
order will eventually be sent to the
engravers. Each brick has three
lines and 26 characters each, and
is $50. Bricks may be purchased at
Front Paige Outfitters and Clark’s
Jewelry Store.
However, while the official opening of the park has been pushed
back, the park itself is still open to
the public and has been used frequently, Cleek said.
“All feedback has been positive,”
Cleek said. “People take picnics in
there, or meditate. It’s really positive.”
Cleek said there haven’t been any

Pictured is the new picnic area located in the O’Brien Mini Park. Paige Cleek, Imagine
Pomeroy “Queen,” has said she and other members have received only positive feedback
about the new space.

vandalism issues yet either, as the
park gates are open 24/7 except
during private events, which are
booked in advance.
“I’d like to think if you have a
nice and well taken care of place,
people respect it — and they
have,” she said.
Imagine Pomeroy President
Jackie Welker said he wanted
to thank Rana and her husband,
Brandon Bartee, both of Imagine
Pomeroy, for their work, and said

he’s excited for citizens to use the
park for years to come.
“The O’Brien (Mini Park) is a
wonderful example of what dedicated and motivated citizens can
create when they work together,”
he said.
Brandon said that everything
related to the park is going well,
albeit a little longer than expected.
“We plan to open it with a bang,
and people have reason to be excited,” he said.

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR

BONNETT
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. — Kathryn Marie
(McCauley) Bonnett 81, of Parkersburg, formerly
of Ravenswood, W.Va., died Saturday, Aug. 30,
2014, at the Willows Center in Parkersburg following a brief illness.
Service will be 2 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2014, at
Casto Funeral Home chapel in Ravenswood with
Pastor Allen Stewart officiating. Burial will follow
in Jackson County Memory Gardens in Cottageville, W.Va. Visitation will be from 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home.

Tuesday, Sept. 2
RACINE — Racine Area Community Organization (RACO) will
conduct its annual benefit Basket
Games at Syracuse Community
Center, starting at 6 p.m. Doors
will open at 5 p.m. There will be
20 games for $20, special games,
advanced ticket drawing, and coverall. All proceeds go into Star Mill
Park. Syracuse Community Center
volunteers will serve refreshments.
For tickets or information, call
Kathryn Hart at 949-2656. Tickets
also available from Bev at 949-3900
or Alice at 949-2286.
RUTLAND TWP. — Rutland
Township Trustees will meet at
7:30 a.m. This is a change due to
the Labor Day holiday.
POMEROY — The regular
monthly meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Elections has
been moved to 8:30 a.m. in the
Meigs County Board of Elections
meeting room at the Meigs County
Annex on Mulberry Heights in
Pomeroy.

GAUSELMAN
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Opal Lee Martin
Gauselman, 68, died Saturday Aug. 30, 2014, at
her home in Nashville, Tenn.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept.
4, 2014, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
with the Rev. Berkley Saunders officiating. Burial
will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery in Mercerville.
Friends may call the funeral home Thursday one
hour prior to services.
MAYNARD
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Clevis Maynard, 86,
of Proctorville, died Friday, Aug. 29, 2014, at St.
Mary’s Medical Center.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday, Sept.
2, 2014, at Hall Funeral Home in Proctorville,
with Pastors Don Napier and Leo Maynard officiating. Visitation will be one hour prior to service
time. Burial will follow at Miller Memorial Gardens Cemetery in Miller, Ohio.

MEIGS COUNTY LOCAL BRIEFS
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.

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.
Meigs County TB Clinic
closed Monday
POMEROY — The
TB Clinic will be closed
Monday, Sept.1, so no
skin tests will given on
Friday, Aug. 29.

Board of Elections
meeting change
POMEROY — The
regular monthly
meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Elections has been moved
to Tuesday, Sept. 2,
Legal, Title Office closings
2014 at 8:30 a.m. in the
in September
Meigs County Board of
POMEROY —The
Elections meeting room
Meigs County Title
at the Meigs County
Office will be closed
Annex on Mulberry
Tuesday Sept. 9 for
Heights in Pomeroy.
passport training and
Thursday, Sept. 18 for
Reedsville annual
a title seminar. The
community picnic
Legal Office will be
REEDSVILLE —
closed Tuesday Sept.
Reedsville
will be
9 for Passport training
having
its
annual
comas well.
munity picnic Sept.
7. The picnic will be
Benefit For Classmate
at the Bellville Locks
MIDDLEPORT —
and Dam in Reedsville.
The Middleport High
The picnic will start at
School Class of 1964
has established a bene- 1 p.m. Come join your
fit fund for a classmate, neighbors and friends
for a free meal and
William Neutzling,
drinks. There will also
who is confined to
be music by the Crossthe Cleveland Clinic,
where he is expected to road Messengers.

have it delivered to your home or
business. A $6 donation is appreciated. The menu will be chicken and
noodles, green beans, rolls, cake
and pop/water. For delivery call
591-6095 or 416-2247 before 11
a.m. Wednesday.

Saturday, Sept. 6
Star Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet. Potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting at 7:30 p.m. All members and
interested persons are invited and
urged to attend.

Thursday, Sept. 4
RACINE — Susan G. Koman/
Think Pink Program will host
a health day from 9:30 a.m. to
3:30 p.m. at Racine First Baptist
Church. OSU van will be present
and provide mammograms by
appointment. For a mammogram
appointment, Carolyn Grueser 9925469 or 992-3853. Other health
screenings will be performed and
are free of charge. Other health
screenings are open to both men
and women.
POMEROY — Eastern Local
Board of Education will have a
special meeting at 6:30 p.m. at
the Meigs County District Public
Library. The purpose is to discuss
procedure for acceptance of a resignation.
Wednesday, Sept. 3
CHILLICOTHE — The SouthSCIPIO TOWNSHIP — The
ern Ohio Council of Governments
Scipio Township Trustees will hold (SOCOG) will hold its next board
their regular monthly meeting at
meeting at 10 a.m. in Room A of
7 p.m. at the Harrisonville Fire
the Ross County Service Center at
House.
475 Western Avenue, Chillicothe.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP — The Board meetings usually are held
Chester Garden Club will celebrate the first Thursday of the month.
75 years with an open meeting
For more information, call 740-775and guest evening at the Pomeroy
5030, ext. 103.
Library Social Room from 7-8:30
p.m. An OAGC scenic tour of IreFriday, Sept. 5
land will be presented by Shelia
POMEROY — Meigs County
Curtis, a regional director. Refresh- Pomona Grange will meet at 7:30
ments and door prizes will be
p.m. at Star Grange Hall. All family
given.
activity, art and photography conMIDDLEPORT — Lunch Along tests will be judged. Fifth-degree
the River will be at the depot in
will be conferred. Star Grange will
Dave Diles Park in Middleport on
serve refreshments following the
Wednesday, Sept. 3rd, or you may meeting.

Sunday, Sept. 7
REEDSVILLE — Reedsville will
have its annual community picnic
at the Bellville Locks and Dam in
Reedsville. The picnic will start at
1 p.m. Join neighbors and friends
for a free meal and drinks. There
will also be music by the Crossroad
Messengers.
REEDSVILLE — The Fellowship Church of the Nazarene will
be hosting Revival services Sept.
7-10, 7 p.m. nightly. The Rev. Ron
Roth, of Springfield, Mo., will be
the evangelist. Dayspring, of Parkersburg, W.Va., will provide special
singing each night. The church
is located on Ohio 124 between
Reedsville and Long Bottom.
Everyone is welcome.
TUPPERS PLAINS — A free
Ice Cream Social will be held 5-7
p.m. at St. Paul U.M. Church on
St. Rt. 7 in Tuppers Plains. Bob
Grossnickle will be there with his
keyboard. Everyone is welcome,
bring a lawn chair.
Tuesday, Sept. 9
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township Trustees will have
their regular monthly meeting at 7
p.m. at the Town Hall.
Saturday, Sept. 20
RUTLAND —The 19th annual
St. Jude Saddle Up Trail Ride will
be at noon. There will be a 50/50
drawing, saddle raffles and door
prizes. Food will be served. For
more information call 740-742-2849.

Randa Wagner | Civitas Media

Corn growing in a field in Crawford County in late August.

Corn price,
quantity worrisome
By Gary Brock

some corn at well under
$4 a bushel. That meant he
lost money compared to the
COLUMBUS — For Ohio cost of producing that corn.
corn growers, their future
“But this is the life we
rides on two numbers —
choose,” he reflected. “No
the price of corn per bushel, one is making us do this.”
and how many bushels they He, like many other growsell. That may seem like
ers, feels that things will
Agribusiness 101, but in
be alright for now. But the
2014, those numbers are
future is murky.
worrying corn growers as
Last Thursday, according
never before.
to the Chicago Board of
Corn grower Dan Yoder,
Trade, a bushel of corn was
of Mechanicsburg, is one of selling for about $3.56.
those growers. Attending a
“For corn growers right
recent state Corn Growers
now, the price is the biggest
Association event, he stood issue,” said Dr. Matt Roboutside a large barn listenerts, Agriculture Economist
ing to the talk from fellow
specializing in marketing
farmers about the price
Photo by Greene County Dailies
of corn. He had just sold
Measuringprotection
the height of corn in Greene
See CORN | 5 Your
is County in early July.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes Tuesday through Saturday.
Annual local subscription price for The Pomeroy Daily Sentinel is $250.
Please call for more information on local pricing.
Full price single copy issues are $1 daily and $3 Saturday.

CONTACT US
EDITOR:
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740-446-2342 Ext. 18
michaeljohnson
@civitasmedia.com
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Jessica Chason
740-446-2342 Ext. 25
jchason@civitasmedia.com

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NEWSROOM:
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OBITUARIES:
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�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 2, 2014 3

Ohio Democrats try to rally with labor
By Dan Sewell

after a series of political missteps in an already uphill race
against Republican Gov. John
CINCINNATI — The Demo- Kasich.
cratic lieutenant governor
Neuhardt paraphrased Mark
candidate said Monday the
Twain as she dismissed suggesbeleaguered top of the Ohio
tions the race is too far gone
ticket isn’t throwing in the
with barely two months left
towel, as candidates tried to
before Election Day.
rally base supporters at Labor
“The reports of our demise
Day events.
are
greatly exaggerated,” she
Sharen Neuhardt campaigned
said.
“We’re going to run a
at the annual AFL-CIO Labor
great
campaign, and we’re
Day picnic at Coney Island
going
to be getting out the
near Cincinnati, where thouvote,
and
for that we’re going
sands flocked around grill pits
to
be
relying
on all good Demofor large arrays of hot dogs,
crats, all the labor folks here;
bratwurst, chicken and more
on a muggy day along the Ohio the people who know what’s
really at stake.”
River. Gubernatorial nominee
Labor Day is considered the
Ed FitzGerald planned to take
part in events in Cleveland and unofficial start of the stretch
drive to November elections,
Toledo, as the holiday found
him trying to regain his footing and she said there is still time

Associated Press

Ohio lawmaker
seeks video in
Wal-Mart shooting
By Dan Sewell
Associated Press

CINCINNATI — The president of Ohio’s legislative black caucus wants the state attorney
general to release surveillance video of the fatal
police shooting of a young black man in a suburban Dayton Walmart store.
State Rep. Alicia Reece, D-Cincinnati, said on
her website that she has written to Republican
Attorney General Mike DeWine expressing deep
concern that information isn’t being released in
a way that inspires confidence, especially in the
African-American community. In stressing the
need to make information public, she referenced
the violent unrest in Ferguson, Mo., after the
recent fatal shooting of a black 18-year-old by
police and the riots that erupted in Cincinnati in
2001 after an officer shot and killed a young black
man.
“These events must be treated with utmost
care, with transparency and fairness to the victims,” Reece said. She said that as vice mayor of
Cincinnati, she dealt with the aftermath of the
2001 police shooting and that Cincinnati now has
a model for better police-community relations.
“Transparency and early release of information
is the only way to keep confidence in the process,” Reece wrote. “As long as our local, city and
state officials use outdated strategies of dealing
with people and the common methods of delay,
there will be no confidence that justice is being
served.”
A message from The Associated Press seeking
comment was left Monday for DeWine’s office.
An attorney representing the family of John
Crawford III says Walmart surveillance video
of the shooting shows it was unjustified. Police
responded Aug. 5 to a call about a man with a gun
in the store; they said Crawford refused orders to
put down an air rifle.
A special grand jury will meet Sept. 22 to consider charges in the case. DeWine has said releasing the surveillance video could raise issues of a
tainted jury pool if the case results in a trial.
“I think that it is playing with dynamite, frankly,
to release that tape at this point,” DeWine recently told the Dayton Daily News. “And I think the
dynamite simply is that it blows up and you can’t
get a fair trial. That’s what we worry about.”
Crawford’s parents want a federal investigation
and have met with U.S. Attorney Carter Stewart.
Family attorney Michael Wright said Stewart
assured them Thursday that the Justice Department is monitoring and assisting Ohio’s investigation and will independently determine the merits
of any potential federal prosecution.
Hundreds of people turned out for separate
weekend rallies outside the Beavercreek Walmart
store. On Sunday, people rallied to show support
for Beavercreek police. On Saturday, demonstrators urged police to release the tape. Organizers
of the Saturday rally said the Rev. Al Sharpton
plans to come to the area in a few weeks to speak
about the shooting.

to build Democratic support.
FitzGerald, after disclosures
such as that he lacked a permanent driver’s license for years,
has seen an exodus of top
campaign staffers and said he’ll
divert significant amounts of
campaign funds to Democratic
get-out-the-vote efforts.
“The voters in Ohio are
going to start paying attention
to this race,” she said, saying
the campaign will contend
that Kasich “has never worked
for the working people of this
state” and will remind them of
Kasich’s push for restrictions
on public union collective bargaining that was rejected by
voters early in his term.
Kasich and Lt. Gov. Mary
Taylor issued a statement Monday recognizing “the hardwork-

ing men and women of our
state and nation” on Labor Day.
A state Republican spokesman said most Ohioans want to
continue the state’s comeback
under Kasich, and that Republicans will keep working to
promote his message and voter
turnout.
“With Governor Kasich
leading our ticket, the Democratic ticket imploding, and
(President Barack) Obama at
near-record low approval ratings, the outlook is positive for
Republicans,” spokesman Chris
Schrimpf said. “That being
said, we aren’t taking anything
for granted.”
Pete McLinden, executive
secretary-treasurer of the Cincinnati AFL-CIO, said people
knew FitzGerald was facing a

challenge, but local activists
remain enthused about two
Cincinnati area statewide candidates: David Pepper, running
for attorney general, and state
Rep. Connie Pillich, running
for state treasurer.
“It’s tough trying to beat an
incumbent governor,” McLinden said.
University of Cincinnati
professor Daniel Langmeyer,
active in the American Association of University Professors,
said he thought Kasich was
beatable, “but not by this candidate.” He said Kasich certainly
had few friends among union
members at Monday’s picnic.
“I’m sorry that the Democratic candidate has so much
baggage,” Langmeyer said. “It’s
a pity.”

Americans detained in N.Korea call for help
By Eric Talmadge
Associated Press

PYONGYANG, North
Korea — North Korea
gave foreign media
access on Monday to
three detained Americans who said they
have been able to contact their families and
— watched by officials
as they spoke — called
for Washington to send
a high-ranking representative to negotiate
for their freedom.
Jeffrey Fowle and
Mathew Miller said
they expect to face trial
within a month. But
they said they do not
know what punishment
they could face or what
t he specific charges
against them are. Kenneth Bae, who already
is serving a 15-year
term, said his health
has deteriorated at the
labor camp where he
works eight hours a
day.
The three were
allowed to speak briefly
with The Associated Press at a meeting
center in Pyongyang.
North Korean officials
were present during the
interviews, conducted
separately and in different rooms, but did not
censor the questions
that were asked. The
three said they did not
know they were going
to be interviewed until
immediately beforehand.
All said they believe
the only solution to
their situation is for a
U.S. representative to
come to North Korea to
make a direct appeal.
That has often been
North Korea’s bargaining chip in the past,
when senior statesmen
including former President Bill Clinton made
trips to Pyongyang to
secure the release of
detainees.
North Korea says
Fowle and Miller committed hostile acts
which violated their
status as tourists. It has

announced that authorities are preparing for
the trial, but has not
announced the date.
Fowle arrived in
North Korea on April
29. He is suspected
of leaving a Bible in
a nightclub in the
northern port city of
Chongjin. Christian
proselytizing is considered a crime in North
Korea. Fowle, 56, lives
in Miamisburg, Ohio,
where he works in a
city streets department.
He has a wife and three
children aged 9, 10,
and 12.
“Within a month I
could be sharing a jail
cell with Ken Bae,” he
said, adding that he
hasn’t spoken with his
family for three weeks.
“I’m desperate to get
back to them.”
North Korea says
Miller, 24, entered the
country on April 10
with a tourist visa, but
tore it up at the airport
and shouted that he
wanted to seek asylum.
Miller refused to comment on whether he
was seeking asylum.
Bae, a 46-year-old
Korean-American missionary, has been held
since November 2012.
He was moved from a
work camp to a hospital because of failing
health and weight loss
but last month was
sent back to the work
camp outside of Pyongyang, where he said
he does farm-related
labor. He said he has
lost 15 pounds (6.8
kilograms) and has
severe back pain, along
with a sleep disorder.
His family has said
his health problems
include diabetes, an
enlarged heart, liver

problems and back
pain.
“The only hope
that I have is to have
someone from the U.S.
come,” he said. “But so
far, the latest I’ve heard
is that there has been
no response yet. So I
believe that officials
here are waiting for
that.”
Bae said he did not
realize before the trial
that he was violating
North Korean law,
but refused to go into
details.
He said the lead up
to his trial lasted about
four months, but the
trial itself only took
about an hour. He said
he elected not to have
a defense attorney
because “at that point
there was no sense
of me to get a lawyer because the only
chance I had was to ask
for mercy.”
“It was very quick,”
he said.
The U.S. has repeatedly offered to send its
envoy for North Korean
human rights issues,
Robert King, to Pyongyang to seek a pardon
for Bae and other U.S.
detainees, but without
success. Washington
has no diplomatic ties
with North Korea and
no embassy in Pyongyang. Instead, the
Swedish Embassy takes
responsibility for U.S.
consular affairs.
Fowle and Miller said
they have met with the
Swedish ambassador
and have been allowed
to make phone calls to
their relatives.
North Korea had
made Fowle and Miller
available to local staff
of The Associated
Press previously. That

they were allowed to
meet the AP again
and be interviewed by
an American reporter
indicates North Korea’s
desire to resolve the
issue through some
sort of contact with
Washington.
All three detainees
appeared to speak
freely but cautiously on
Monday.
Bae seemed healthy
but appeared to have
significant back pain
when he tried to sit
down.
Fowle appeared to
be in good health. He
smiled at times, but
also said he was scared
and desperate. Miller
looked very anxious
and spoke quietly. He
was thin and pale,
and was dressed all in
black.
Though a small number of U.S. citizens visit
North Korea each year
as tourists, the State
Department strongly
advises against it. After
Miller’s detention,
Washington updated its
travel warning to note
that over the past 18
months, “North Korea
detained several U.S.
citizens who were part
of organized tours.”
North Korea has been
strongly pushing tourism lately in an effort to
bring in foreign cash.
But despite its efforts
it remains highly sensitive to any actions it
considers political and
is particularly wary of
anything it deems to be
Christian proselytizing.
In March, North
Korea deported an
Australian missionary
detained for spreading
Christianity after he
apologized and requested forgiveness.

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US Bank (NYSE) — 42.28
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.98
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 63.56
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 59.45
Kroger (NYSE) — 50.98
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 63.85
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 107.00
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.36

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Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.97
Pepsico (NYSE) — 92.49
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.26
Rockwell (NYSE) — 116.61
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.88
Royal Dutch Shell — 80.97
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 34.80
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.50
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.15
WesBanco (NYSE) — 31.05
Worthington (NYSE) — 40.44
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�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Labor costs
weighing down
Postal Service
There is even more bad financial news for the
U.S. Postal Service, according to a report released
last week by the agency’s Office of Inspector General.
In addition to sharply declining mail volume and
significant required payments for retiree health
care, the USPS is struggling with high workers’
compensation costs.
The OIG’s report noted that, while the Postal
Service since 2008 has cut its workforce by about
172,000 employees — a 19 percent reduction —
its workers’ compensation costs have increased
35 percent. The Postal Service’s average workers’
compensation cost per employee work hour in
fiscal year 2013 was $1.16 — nearly 60 percent
higher than the private-sector rate of 73 cents.
The cost increases have been driven by an aging
workforce, which is more prone to injury, a reduction in light-duty or limited-duty positions and
cost-of-living increases. The report also remarked
that, while the number of new workers’ compensation claims has dropped over the past few years,
the number of fraudulent cases has increased. It
cited several examples of fraud cases.
“One employee claimed she could not handle 10
pounds of weight and needed assistance with such
activities as bathing, driving, laundry and going
to the store,” the OIG related. “However, the
employee was observed at the gym participating in
an exercise class, which involved the use of weight
training exercises with a barbell, exercising on a
treadmill and a stair machine.”
The OIG estimated that the Postal Service could
save $477 million per year by emulating practices
utilized by private-sector businesses and state
agencies, including capping the duration and
amount of benefits, allowing the agency to settle
or buy out cases, requiring injured employees to
use a preferred network of physicians and use
generic drugs, when available.
While the postal unions claim that the Postal
Service’s financial problems are chiefly due to
a 2006 law that requires it to prepay its retiree
health care obligations to the tune of about $5.5
billion a year (despite the fact that the USPS has
defaulted on these payments repeatedly in recent
years and is still losing billions of dollars), the
OIG’s latest report underscores that labor costs,
along with the shift to digital communication, are
driving the Postal Service’s financial problems.
Based on the most recent annual financial
reports, the Postal Service spends 78 percent of
its total operating expenses on labor costs, such as
wages and benefits (76 percent if you ignore the
retiree health care payment). Compare that with
the 59 percent rate at UPS, which is unionized, or
the 39 percent rate of FedEx, which is nonunion.
Moreover, various studies have shown that
Postal Service employees earn 20 percent to 30
percent more than their private-sector counterparts. This is on top of benefits that exceed not
only those in the private sector, but even those for
other federal workers.
To be sure, relieving the Postal Service of rules
that tie its hands and drive up its costs would be a
step in the right direction. An even better reform
would be to relieve it of its monopoly over firstclass mail and allow competition to determine the
best ways of delivering the mail.
Reprinted from the Orange County (Calif.) Register.

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

Pork poison goes oink

By Glenn Mollette

I grew up on bacon, sausage
and pork chops. We raised hogs.
We butchered at least one a year.
There is nothing like a big skillet
of fried bacon and sausage in the
morning with hot biscuits, scrambled eggs and gravy. Unfortunately
this lifestyle of sumptuous dining
has its health risks over the long
haul. I essentially gave up these
breakfast choices several years
ago. I can certainly remember
those good old days of mommy’s
cooking and fine dining.
Pork tastes good but the long
term impact on our arteries will
eventually kill us. An old fellow
who lived over in the next “holler”
from us ate mostly pork and died
at a young age. Right before he
passed away his wife thought his
last word uttered was oink.
The last death rattling gasps
of many Kentuckians have been
heard in recent months. Unemployment benefits, food stamps,

free meals and more have been cut
by Congress. This couldn’t happen
at a worse time for the mountains.
These cuts coupled with zero jobs
to be found spells economic disaster for the region.
For years Congressman Hal Rogers, backed with government dollars and labeled “Prince of Pork”
has kept the bacon rolling into
East, Kentucky. Today, there simply isn’t enough government bacon
to alleviate the financial distress.
During the previous years all
seemed well and good. Depend on
coal and the government will help
in hard times. For years this formula worked okay. It doesn’t work
anymore.
Rogers and Mitch McConnell
should have spent the last twenty
years helping East Kentucky diversify. I’m not patting any Democrats
on the back either. None of them
have really cared about the future
of the mountains. McConnell
could gain a position of promi-

nence in the Senate that ought to
be helpful to Kentuckians, if he
will.
Central Kentucky and Southern
Indiana have both been economically revolutionized with Toyota
plants. Bowling Green has a Corvette plant. Chattanooga is rolling
Volkswagens off the assembly line.
It is reprehensible that East, Kentucky has little to nothing to show
for all the billions of dollars that
have poured out of our mountains
and the literal raping of our land.
The cries of, “Coal is all we
have,” are sad. Coal is all we have
because all anyone wanted to see
was the present. We cared nothing
about the future. Government pork
has been a temporary meal that
only fattened us for the kill.
The future is here. The last
sound we are hearing as people
have to pack up and leave or
starve is “oink.”
Glenn Mollette is an American columnist and
author. He is from Martin County, Ky.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday,
Sept. 2, the 245th day of
2014. There are 120 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Sept. 2, 1945,
Japan formally surrendered in ceremonies
aboard the USS Missouri
in Tokyo Bay, ending
World War II.
On this date:
In 1666, the Great Fire
of London broke out.
In 1789, the United
States Treasury Department was established.
In 1864, during the
Civil War, Union Gen.
William T. Sherman’s
forces occupied Atlanta.
In 1901, Vice President
Theodore Roosevelt
offered the advice,
“Speak softly and carry a
big stick” in a speech at
the Minnesota State Fair.
In 1924, the Rudolf Friml
operetta “Rose Marie”
opened on Broadway.
In 1935, a Labor Day
hurricane slammed into
the Florida Keys, claiming more than 400 lives.
In 1944, during World
War II, Navy pilot Lt.
(jg) George Herbert
Walker Bush was shot
down by Japanese forces
as he completed a bombing run over the Bonin
Islands. (Bush was rescued by the crew of the

submarine USS Finback;
his two crew members,
however, died.)
In 1945, Ho Chi Minh
declared Vietnam an
independent republic. (Ho
died on this date in 1969.)
In 1964, one of America’s most decorated military heroes of World War
I, Medal of Honor recipient Alvin C. York, died in
Nashville at age 76.
In 1972, Dave Wottle
of the United States won
the men’s 800-meter race
at the Munich Summer
Olympics.
In 1986, a judge in Los
Angeles sentenced Cathy
Evelyn Smith to three
years in prison for involuntary manslaughter for
her role in the 1982 drug
overdose death of comedian John Belushi. (Smith
served 18 months.)
In 1998, a Swissair
MD-11 jetliner crashed
off Nova Scotia, killing
all 229 people aboard.
Ten years ago: President George W. Bush summoned the nation toward
victory over terrorism
and economic security at
home as he accepted his
party’s nomination for a
second term at the Republican National Convention
in New York. A military
jury at Camp Pendleton,
Calif., convicted Marine
Sgt. Gary Pittman of der-

eliction of duty and abuse
of prisoners at a makeshift
detention camp in Iraq;
Pittman was sentenced to
60 days of hard labor and
demoted to private. A jury
at Fort Lewis, Wash., convicted a National Guardsman of trying to help alQaida; Specialist Ryan G.
Anderson was sentenced
to life in prison.
Five years ago: Pfizer
agreed to pay a record
$2.3 billion settlement
for illegal drug promotion. A Taliban suicide
bomber attacked officials
leaving a mosque in
Afghanistan, killing the
country’s deputy intelligence chief and 23 others. Gunmen killed 17
people at a drug rehabilitation center in Ciudad
Juarez, Mexico. A magnitude-7.0 earthquake
rocked Indonesia, killing
dozens of people.
Today’s Birthdays:
Dancer-actress Marge
Champion is 95. Former
Sen. Alan K. Simpson,
R-Wyo., is 83. Actor-comedian Chuck McCann is
80. Former United States
Olympic Committee
Chairman Peter Ueberroth
is 77. Actor Derek Fowlds
(TV: “Yes, Minister”) is
77. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Sam Gooden
(The Impressions) is 75.
Singer Jimmy Clanton

is 74. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Rosalind Ashford
(Martha &amp; the Vandellas)
is 71. Singer Joe Simon
is 71. Pro and College
Football Hall of Famer
Terry Bradshaw is 66.
Basketball Hall of Famer
Nate Archibald is 66.
Actor Mark Harmon is 63.
Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C.,
is 63. International Tennis
Hall of Famer Jimmy Connors is 62. Actress Linda
Purl is 59. Rock musician
Jerry Augustyniak (10,000
Maniacs) is 56. Country
musician Paul Deakin
(The Mavericks) is 55.
Pro Football Hall of Famer
Eric Dickerson is 54.
Actor Keanu Reeves is 50.
International Boxing Hall
of Famer Lennox Lewis is
49. Actress Salma Hayek
is 48. Actor Tuc Watkins
is 48. Actress Kristen
Cloke is 46. Actress Cynthia Watros is 46. Rhythmand-blues singer K-Ci is
45. Actor-comedian Katt
Williams is 41. Actor
Michael Lombardi is 40.
Actress Tiffany Hines is
37. Rock musician Sam
Rivers (Limp Bizkit) is
37. Actor Jonathan Kite is
35. Actress Allison Miller
is 29. Rock musician Spencer Smith (Panic! at the
Disco) is 27. Electronic
music DJ/producer Zedd
is 25.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Meeting

the Park Parade float prizes
and to donate $250 for milk
for Southern’s Kindergarten
From Page 1
children.
The next noodle making
Over 90 cards of encourdates will be Sept. 22 and
agement were signed by
Sept. 24.
each member present and
The group is also making
sent out.
plans to host a dinner for
Various thank you notes
local veterans at the Racine
were read to the group
American Legion on Nov 6.
and leader Kathryn Hart
The door prizes were won
thanked everyone who
by Lillian Hayman and Mary
helped with the dinner for
Ball.
Edna Knopp’s family.
Those attending other
Other decisions made
than mentioned above were;
by the group were to make
Louise Frank, Hazel McKthe monthly donation to
elvey, Marilyn Cooper, EveMCCOA, to donate $200 to lyn Foreman, Wilma Smith,
help a local girl scout who
Ann Zirkle, Jackie White,
has developing a handicap
Ruth Frank, Jan McKee,
ramp at Forked Run State
Denise Holman, Betty ProfPark, to donate $200 to a
fitt, Blondena Rainer, Edie
local benefit for a person
Hubbard, Mabel Brace,
who has cancer, to donate
Ruth Simpson and Kathy
$100 to sponsor the Party in McDanie

Corn

news is that this $3.50
is on more bushels. “So
even though prices are
From Page 2
lower they are selling
more bushels, so that is
with Ohio State Univer- somewhat of a consolasity Extension. “(Last
tion prize. Significantly
year’s) record yield has more bushels.”
put a lot of pressure on
Is there concern about
the price, and the effect making it through the
on profit.”
next winter? “RealistiHe said prices are
cally, making it through
now a lot lower than
the 2014-15 season,
expected, and that has
farmers will be OK.
corn growers wondering There have been enough
about their revenue and profits over the last
profits going forward.
four years, it certainly
Roberts was asked if
won’t be a great year
corn growers are losing profitability-wise, but it
money when they sell
should be fine.”
at, for example, $3.50 a
He said the real
bushel.
worry is what happens
Earlier in 2014,
if Ohio corn growers
Roberts conducted an
have another good
online grain marketing
crop in 2015. “So we
course, and as part of
come into 2015 with
that he surveyed prolow prices and then we
ducers on their total
have a good crop. Then
cost of production
what happens to prices
and “what I got was
and then what happens
between $2.70 a bushel to profitability? That
and $5.20 a bushel.
is what I am worried
Total cost of producabout, honestly,” he
tion. So yes, at $3.50,
said.
most producers would
Does he have a prediclose money at $3.50.”
tion for the 2014 yield?
But, he said the good “We will definitely set

Tuesday, September 2, 2014 5

Help
From Page 1

some time to get your stuff
together,” she said to council
members Thursday night. “It
doesn’t mean you’re bankrupt. It means records are
not in place to be audited.”
Baker offered to do the
job for the village for a
lesser amount than an outof-county auditor, who she
said would charge the village an exorbitant amount
to recreate the village’s 2013
fiscal year for about $15,000,
which is a village expense.
“I think you can find
somebody who can do it for
$10,000 to $15,000, but you
have that option,” she said.
“It’s a really complex job that
needs to be done precisely

a new yield record in
Ohio. It has been cool,
but historically cool
summers are the ones
that turn out the best
yield. I think the only
thing that has held the
yield back has been the
extreme wetness early
on. I suspect we are
going to see tremendously … very good
yields here in Ohio,” he
said.
But that will be for
most farmers, so prices
will be low. “The ideal
is that you (an individual farmer) have lots and
lots of bushels and no
one else does. And that
there is lots and lots of
demand. Then there are
lots of bushels and high
prices. The reality is
that that doesn’t always
happen.”
The good news has
been that as per bushel
prices have dropped,
sales have increased, he
said. Where is the additional corn purchased
coming from? “As we
have seen the prices
drop, we have seen
more and corn going

to the rules by someone who
does know and can know
procedure. It should be an
important position.”
Council made a motion
and all voted in favor to
have Baker work as the village’s auditor for 25 hours
per week. Her job will be to
create an amount of what
the village has spent and can
spend since the beginning
of 2012 through 2013. Baker
said the amount is most
likely going to be technically incorrect, but will be
as close to correct as possible. After creating audits
for both years, Baker will
present the village with their
actual 2014 balances, which
Welker said should be under
budget.
Mike Proffitt said this will
hopefully be a reward for the
end of the 2014 fiscal year.

back into feed rations.
Exports have continued
to recover from 2012.
As prices have gotten
lover, consumption has
started to turn around,”
he said.
“Feed, ethanol,
exports… with a drop
in prices… all of those
consumptions are going
back up,” he said.
He said storage
should not be problem over winter, but
“at harvest, storage is
going to be very, very
tight because there is
going to be so much
harvested. I think these
is going to be a lot of
storage pressure.”
What will farmers do?
“There will be some
corn left in the field,
delayed harvest, some
outdoor storage, some
farmers may store outside on corn piles - but
this is nothing that
hasn’t been done before
in high crop years,” he
pointed out.
“We are expecting a
very good harvest this
year,” said Tadd Nicholson, Executive Director

“We want to look at the
end of the year and say,
‘Hey, what a nice Christmas
present it is to come through
this year without problems,”
he said. “Problems don’t
exist for us as far as budgetary issues, and I think at the
end of the year we’ll find
that we’re on track.”
Welker expressed his gratitude for Baker’s assistance.
“We’re not understanding our fiscal accounting is
in question since 2012,” he
said. “We have the utmost
confidence in her correcting
these problems and moving
forward.”
Baker said she was looking
forward to getting to work.
“I like puzzles and this
is a major puzzle, and I’m
gratified that you asked me,”
Baker said.

of the Ohio Corn Growers Association. But he
cautioned that it may be
too soon to speculate if
the yield will break any
records.
He said what has been
most interesting for
corn growers has been
the fact that “we have
had multiple years of
strong production in a
row, so we have piles of
corn to sell.” He said
that is why the prices
have fallen.
Fayette County corn
grower Ron Rockhold,
a member of the Southwest Ohio Corn Growers Association, agreed
that there will be a big
corn crop this year, but
low prices to go along
with it.
“I think we will
have some problems
at harvest,” he said.
“First with moisture,
then with storage.” He
agreed that storing all
the corn produced this
year might be difficult
in many parts of Ohio.
But he doesn’t think
that will be the case as
much in Fayette County.

“We have an advantage here. We have
120,000 bushels a day
going to the ethanol
plant in Bloomingburg
at harvest,” he pointed
out.
In late August, the
USDA predicted nationwide the corn yield per
acre average would be
about 167 bushels. In
Ohio, Rockhold said,
that prediction is a little
higher - 170 bushels.
Rockhold farms about
500 acres, and he agrees
that if there are record
yields in 2015, “It will
be nearly impossible to
make money on corn
next year” because the
prices will fall so low.
However, he also sees
the same upside as Dr.
Roberts.
“I think we will have
a very good crop this
year. And our salvation
will be that we will have
a lot of corn to sell and
we will sell it, and will
generate a lot of dollars.”
Gary Brock can be reached at 937382-2574 or by Twitter at GBrock4

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

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Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 2, 2014 s Page 6

Rio men’s soccer blanks Taylor, stays perfect
By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

Submitted photo by URG Athletics

Rio Grande’s Cesar Lopez (2) fends off Taylor University’s Griffin Gardner for
control of the ball during the first half of Saturday night’s match at Evan E.
Davis Field. The seventh-ranked RedStorm improved to 3-0 on the season with
a 2-0 win.

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Two
first half goals and a strong
defensive effort proved to be
a winning combination, as the
University of Rio Grande men’s
soccer team remained unbeaten with a 2-0 win over Taylor
University, Saturday night, in
the home opener at Evan E.
Davis Field.
The RedStorm, ranked No.
7 nationally, improved to 3-0
with the victory. All three wins
have been by shutout.
Rio Grande outshot the Trojans, 23-2, and did not allow

the visitors to put a shot on
goal.
Sophomore forward Pau
Rodriguez (Barcelona, Spain)
got the RedStorm on the board
with an unassisted marker
at the 25:26 mark of the first
period and freshman forward
Tyler Martin (Columbus, OH)
tacked on another score just
under 17 minutes later thanks
to an assist by sophomore
forward Willian Paulino (Sao
Paulo, Brazil).
Senior goalie Jon Dodson
(Tiffin, OH) recorded his third
clean sheet in as many outings
for Rio, while Michael Williams had five saves in a route-

going performance in net for
Taylor.
Rio Grande returns to action
on Friday night when it hosts
the RedStorm Soccer Classic.
Rio will face the University
of Mobile in the 7 p.m. finale
after fourth-ranked Ashford
(Iowa) and Davenport (Mich.)
battle in the 4 p.m. opener.
On Saturday, Mobile and
Davenport will meet in the 4
p.m. game and the RedStorm
will face Ashford in a top 10
battle at 7 p.m. The Saints
ended Rio’s 2013 season in the
quarterfinal round of the NAIA
national tournament.

River Valley
fends off
Redmen, 26-18
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

PEDRO, Ohio — It
took four quarters,
but River Valley
kicked off a new era
of football in style
Friday night following a 26-18 victory
over host Rock Hill
in a Week 1 nonconference matchup in
Lawrence County.
The visiting Raiders (1-0) — beginning
their first season as
members of the TriValley Conference
Ohio Division —
faced a familiar foe
in the Redmen (0-1),
as both teams were
members of the Ohio
Valley Conference
prior to this season.
RVHS had also lost
five straight contests
and had only once
beaten Rock Hill since
joining the OVC back
in 2002.
River Valley
stormed out to an
early lead after Sam
Payne scored on a
45-yard scamper, giving the guests a 7-0
lead after one quarter
of play.
RHHS, however,
answered with a
35-yard scoring pass
from Gabe Marzicola
to Drew McClaskey
— allowing the hosts
to pull to within 7-6
early in the second
canto. Chance Blankenship added a
66-yard TD run for
the Redmen, allowing
them to secure a 12-7
lead at the half.
The Raiders took
the lead for good in
the third quarter after
Josh Campbell plowed
his way into the endzone from a yard out,
giving the Silver and
Black a 14-12 cushion
entering the finale.
Campbell added a
one-yard scoring run
early in the fourth
to increase the lead
to 20-12, but Jordan
Blagg countered with
a three-yard run to
allow Rock Hill to
close back to within
20-18 midway in the
fourth.
Campbell’s third TD
run of the night —
from three yards out
— ultimately sealed
the deal for the Raiders, allowing them to
pick up the program’s
first road win since
a 13-12 victory in

Week 1 of the 2012
campaign. It was also
River Valley’s first
win at RHHS since
the turn of the millennium.
Friday night also
served as the third
time in four years that
RVHS coach Jerrod
Sparling’s squad started the season with
a win. RVHS is now
10-5 in season openers since the 2000
campaign, including
wins in five of the last
six.
River Valley rushed
52 times for 284 yards
and threw for another
116 for a total of 400
yards of total offense,
while the Redmen
mustered just 185
yards on 28 carries
and another 81 yards
through the air for
274 total yards of
offense.
RVHS claimed a
22-7 overall edge in
first downs and both
team turned the ball
over twice in the contest.
Sam Payne finished
the night with 132
yards and a touchdown on 21 carries,
followed by Justin
Arrowood with 120
rushing yards on 20
totes. Campbell finished the night with
four carries for 11
yards, including the
three rushing scores.
Dayton Hardway
completed 9-of-17
passes for 116 yards,
throwing zero touchdowns and one interception. Kirk Morrow
hauled in four passes
for 49 yards, while
Tyler Twyman caught
two passes for 56
yards.
Mark Wray and
Josh Campbell led the
defense with six tackles apiece, followed by
Brody Moles with five
tackles and a sack.
George Williams also
picked off a pass in
the triumph.
River Valley makes
its home debut Friday
night when Southeastern comes to Bidwell
for a Week 2 matchup
at 7:30 p.m.
Editor’s Note: The
statistical information
from Friday night’s
River Valley-Rock Hill
football contest was
not received until after
the deadline for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel
sports edition.

Photo by Stacie Pullins

Members of the Eastern girls cross country team pose for a picture after winning the Senic Hills Invitational at Warren High School. Pictured
from left to right are Brittany Long, Jessica Cook, Kaitlyn Hawk, Taylor Parker, head coach Josh Fogle, Asia Michael and Laura Pullins.

Lady Eagles win Scenic Hills Invite
By Bryan Walters

respective placements of fourth
and seventh.
Brittany Long rounded out the
VINCENT, Ohio — The Eastern winning tally with a time of 23:45
girls cross country team came away for 12th place. Taylor Parker was
with another team title for the
also 15th overall with a time of
second straight weekend after win- 24:54.
ning the 2014 Scenic Hills Lions
Kenzie Baker paced RVHS with a
Invitational championship Saturday fifth-place effort of 22:37, followed
at Warren High School in Washing- by Leanne Hively in 24th place
ton County.
with a mark of 26:19. Ramsey
The Lady Eagles were 36 points Warren (28:51), Hannah Nutter
better than the entire field as the
(29:43) and Natosha Ranking
Green and Gold posted a winning
(35:07) also respectively placed
team score of 26 points. Marietta
33rd, 34th and 41st for the Lady
and Warren tied for second in the
Raiders.
girls race with 62 points, but MHS
Lauren Lavender (31:10) and
finished ahead of the hosts due to
Sailer Warden (34:18) had respecthe placements of each team’s sixth tive efforts of 37th and 40th overall
runner.
for the Lady Tornadoes.
Magnolia (102) and River ValMarietta came away with the
ley (113) rounded out the top five boys title after posting a winning
spots, while Belpre, Southern and
score of 38 points. Warren was
Meadowbrook also competed indi- second with 46, followed by River
vidually without enough runners
Valley (66), Meadowbrook (106)
for a team score.
and Southern (118) in the top five.
Laura Pullins led the Lady
Belpre, Eastern, Magnolia and
Eagles and the entire 42-person
Waterford also competed individufield by winning the girls title in
ally without enough runners for a
a time of 20:30. Teammate Asia
team score.
Michael was the runner-up with a
Sam Goodman of Warren was
mark of 21:04, while Jessica Cook
the individual boys champion in
(22:28) and Kaitlyn Hawk (22:56) the 60-person race with a winning
each earned top-10 finishes with
time of 16:53. Cray Sistrunk of Bel-

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

pre was the overall runner-up with
a mark of 17:12.
Jacob Kemper paced the Raiders
with an eighth place time of 18:32,
followed closely by Ethan Hersman
in ninth place with a mark of 18:36.
Kyle Randolph (19:16), Nathaniel
Abbott (20:36) and George Rickett
(20:40) rounded out the team tally
with respective finishes of 16th,
25th and 26th.
Garrett Young (21:09) and Ben
Moody (21:22) also placed 29th
and 31st overall for RVHS, respectively.
Larry Dunn paced the Tornadoes
with a 20th place time of 19:34, followed by Joseph Morris (20:12) in
24th place and Dimitrious Lamm
(22:26) in 41st place.
Jonah Hoback (23:14) and Conner Wolfe (23:31) rounded out the
Southern’s tally by finishing 45th
and 47th. Ryan McCabe (24:19)
was also 50th overall for SHS.
Tyson Long led EHS with a 14th
place time of 19:01, followed by
Brock Smith in 28th place with a
mark of 20:49.
Complete results of the 2014
Scenic Hills Lions Invitational at
Warren High School are available
on the web at baumspage.com

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Sept. 2
Volleyball
Meigs at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian/Poca at Cross Lanes Christian, 5:30
Golf
Warren/Chesapeake at Gallia Academy, 4 p.m.
Belpre/Miller at South Gallia, 4:30
Cross Country
Southern, River Valley, Meigs at Gallia Academy
Coaches Corner, 4 p.m.
Boys Soccer

Belpre at Point Pleasant, 6:30
Ohio Valley Christian at Cross Lanes Christian, 4
p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 3
Volleyball
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Golf
Wahama at Southern, 4:30
River Valley at South Point, 4:30

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 2, 2014 7

Rio suffers a winless weekend
By Randy Payton

McKenzie Mason had 11 kills,
while Ericka Ham and Lauren
Gregory added 10 kills each for
MARION, Ind. — After getting Marian. The winning effort also
a win earlier in the week to get
included 23 assists from Maddie
back to the .500 mark, the Univer- Heidenreich, 18 assists from Julie
sity of Rio Grande volleyball team Hoying and 19 digs from Taylor
suffered losses in each of their
Greenan.
four outings over the weekend at
Friday’s finale saw the Redthe IWU Labor Day Challenge
Storm rally from an early deficit
hosted by Indiana Wesleyan Uni- only to fall in the fifth and decidversity.
ing set as St. Francis posted a
The RedStorm dropped a 3-1
25-18, 25-20, 21-25, 16-25, 15-5
decision to Marian (Ind.) and
triumph.
fell 3-2 at the hands of St. Francis
Rio Grande had just 10 more
(Ind.) on Friday, before dropping
kills (42) than it did attack errors
consecutive 3-0 tallies to host
(32) and finished the match with
Indiana Wesleyan and Bethel
just a .057 attack percentage.
(Ind.).
Briley finished with 31 assists
Rio’s run in the two-day event
and
13 digs, while Brown had
started well with a 25-23 opening34
digs
and Phillips recorded 10
set win over Marian, but the
kills.
Knights roared back to take the
Senior outside hitter Betsy
match with wins of 25-19, 25-14
Schramm
(Marietta, OH) and
and 25-18.
junior
defensive
specialist/setter
Sophomore right-side hitter/
Dani
Brannon
contributed
13 and
middle blocker Autumn Snider
11 digs, respectively, in a losing
(Marion, OH) led the RedStorm
cause, while freshman right-side
along the net with eight kills,
hitter Aleah Pelphrey (Piketon,
while junior middle blocker Alex
OH) had two solo blocks and two
Phillips (Williamsport, OH) had
block assists.
one solo block and six block
Things didn’t go any better for
assists.
Rio
in Saturday’s opener against
Sophomore setter/outside hitter
20th-ranked
Indiana Wesleyan,
Kayla Briley (Marion, OH) added
28 assists and sophomore outside with the host Wildcats cruising to
a 25-17, 25-19, 25-13 victory.
hitter/defensive specialist ChanThe RedStorm again had just
dler Brown (Beaver, OH) finished
with 27 digs in a losing cause.
25 kills compared to 17 attack

Special to OVP

errors (.073), while IWU tallied a
.282 attack percentage as a result
of 41 kills and just 12 errors.
Brown had 21 digs and Briley
an equal number of assists in the
loss, while Brannon added 13 digs
and Phillips had eight kills.
Freshman outside hitter Madison Wilson (Groveport, OH) had
two solo blocks for the RedStorm.
Katey Holler had 24 assists
and three service aces for Indiana
Wesleyan, while Alijah Mulitauopele had 11 kills and Kelly Cypher
had 13 digs.
The Wildcats also got 12 assists
from Emily Workman and 11 digs
from Morgan Miller in the win.
Head coach Billina Donaldson’s
squad closed out the classic with
a 26-24, 25-17, 25-16 setback
against Bethel.
Briley had 23 assists to lead
Rio, while Brown and Schramm
added 20 and 16 digs, respectively, and Phillips had seven kills.
Aubrey Husak led Bethel with
11 kills, while Sami Leach had 31
assists, Amanda Moyer had 17
digs and Haley Brown finished
with three block assists.
Rio Grande (3-7) will return to
action on Friday at rival Shawnee
State University. The RedStorm
will face the host Bears at 5 p.m.
before squaring off with Montreat
(N.C.) College at 7 p.m.

Submitted photo by URG Athletics

Rio Grande’s Courtney Young (11) keeps the ball away from Milligan
College’s Olivia Collier during Saturday afternoon’s match at Evan
E. Davis Field. Young scored the game’s lone goal in the RedStorm’s
1-0 season-opening victory.

RedStorm
women’s soccer
opens with win
By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

Marauders, Blue Angels finish fourth
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

McARTHUR, Ohio
— It was a good day
of work for the Athens
cross country program
Saturday as both teams
came away with the
championships at the
2014 Vinton County
Invitational held at Vinton County High School.
The Bulldogs won the
boys crown by 37 points
and the Lady Bulldogs won
the girls title by 68 points
in their respective races.
The AHS boys posted a
team score of 42 points and
the girls finished the day
with 29 points.
Rock Hill was second
in the boys event with a
team tally of 79 points,
followed by Waverly in
third place with 81 points.
Meigs (90) and Gallia
Academy (105) rounded
out the top five spots in
the nine team field.
Seth Miller and Brendon McCormick — both
of Rock Hill — finished
1-2 in the boys competition with respective individual times of 17:20.2
and 17:46.8. There were
a total of 108 runners in
the boys event.
Jacob Swindell paced
MHS with a sixth-place
time of 18:36.1, followed by Dillon Mahr

(20:05.0) and Nate
Hoover (20:15.4) with
18th and 19th place
efforts. Tyler Fields
(20:55.4) and Jared Kennedy (21:00.3) rounded
out the team tally with
respective finishes of
25th and 26th.
James Parsons
(21:02.3) and Tyler Williams (21:03.2) were
also 27th and 28th for
the Marauders.
Kyle Greenlee led
GAHS with a ninth-place
effort of 19:32.7, followed by Caleb Greenlee (19:37.0) in 10th
and Kaleb Crisenberry
(20:04.6) in 17th place.
Cade Mason (21:12.7)
and Devon Barnes
(22:05.0) rounded out
the Blue Devil scoring
with respective finishes
of 31st and 43rd.
Kobe Cochran
(22:32.8) and Ezra Blain
(22:57.9) were also 48th
and 53rd overall for the
Blue Devils.
Alexander was second
to Athens in the girls
event with 97 points, followed by Waverly in third
place with 115 points.
GAHS (121) and Vinton
County (134) rounded
out the top five team
scores, while Meigs finished seventh out of 10
teams with 158 points.

Elyse Black of Jackson beat out 102 other
competitors to win the
girls race with a time of
19:55.4. Allyson Malone
of Alexander was the
overall runner-up with a
mark of 20:19.0.
Mary Watts paced the
Blue Angels with a fifthplace time of 21:45.7,
followed by Mesa Polcyn
with an eighth-place
effort of 22:02.9. Cassidy Starnes (25:55.8)
was 39th, Hayley Petrie
(28:02.6) placed 53rd
and Akeisha Saunders
(28:30.4) was 60th to
round out the team tally.
Nacoma Smith
(28:35.5) and Elizabeth
Evans (29:37.8) also finished 61st and 69th for

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande
women’s soccer team opened its season in successful
fashion, outlasting Milligan (Tenn.) College, 1-0, Saturday afternoon at a sweltering Evan E. Davis Field.
The short-handed RedStorm, who had four players
miss the game due to injury - including junior forward
Kasey Crow (Chillicothe, OH), the program’s all-time
leading scorer - managed a flukish first half goal by
junior forward Courtney Young (Okeana, OH) and
made the score stand up.
Young’s marker came at the 28:08 mark of the initial
stanza when she fired what appeared to be a routine
shot toward the net from 35 yards out. Somehow,
though, the ball got through the hands of Milligan
goal keeper Charlotte Stephens and into the goal.
Young’s shot was one of only seven in the contest five of which were on goal - for Rio Grande.
Milligan finished with a 12-7 edge in total shots.
Senior goal keeper Allison Keeney (Cincinnati, OH)
stopped four shots - including three in the second
half - for the RedStorm, while Stephens also had four
saves in a losing cause for the Buffaloes.
Rio Grande will return to action next weekend, traveling to New York for the Daemen College Classic.
The RedStorm will meet host Daemen College on
Friday afternoon before tangling with the University
of Maine-Fort Kent on Saturday.

GAHS, respectively.
Gracie Hoffman led
the Lady Marauders
with a 13th place time
of 22:57.8, followed by
Haley Kennedy (25:43.6)
in 36th place and Madison Stewart (26:28.9) in
42nd place. Cheyenne
Gorslene (28:20.5) and
Caitlyn Rest (29:20.0)
rounded out the team
tally with finishes of
59th and 64th.
Ariann Sizemore
(29:20.0) and Sadie Fox
(29:55.0) were also 68th
and 70th, respectively,
for Meigs.
Complete results of
the 2014 Vinton County
Invitational are available
on the web at baumspage.com

TUESDAY EVENING
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America-Talent Judging is turned over to the American
viewing audience as twelve of the Top 24 perform. (N)
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Extreme Weight Loss
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18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Little Fish"
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25 (ESPN) (11:00) ITF Tennis U.S. Open
26 (ESPN2) SportsCenter

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

27 (LIFE)
29

Wahama HOF ceremony/banquet
MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama Athletic Hall of
Fame will be inducting five new members at its annual
banquet on Saturday, Sept. 204. John Barnitz, Roger
Dingey, James Dudding, Mark Mitchell and Dwight
“Keith” Sayre will enter the collection of exceptional
former White Falcon athletes, coaches and boosters.
Anyone wishing to attend the induction ceremony
can contact Kenny Greene at (304) 882-2389 before
September 10.
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,
Sept. 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, Sept. 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
Cato leads Marshall, 42-27 over Miami (Ohio)
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) — Rakeem Cato threw three
touchdowns— all in the first half— and ran for one
more to lead Marshall to a 42-27 victory over Miami
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Castle
Castle "Nanny McDead"
Rizzoli &amp; Isles
Rizzoli &amp; Isles (N)
Legends "Pilot"
(4:30)
Aliens ('86, Sci-Fi) Michael
Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines A deadly robot arrives to kill
4th and Loud "The Fall
Biehn, Sigourney Weaver. TVMA
the teens who are destined to save the world from machines. TVM
Guy" (N)
Yukon "Season of Change" Yukon Men "Wild Lives"
Alaska: Stories (N)
Yukon Men (N)
Ice Lake Rebels (N)
S. Wars "War S. Wars "All Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Married to
Cement
on the Shore" Guns to Port" Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars (N)
the Job (N) Heads (N)
(4:00) To Be Announced
Wild Appalachia
Turtleman's Kentucky
Yellowstone: Battle for Life
Bad Girls Club "Smell Ya
Bad Girls Club "Reunion
Bad Girls Club "Reunion
Sisterhood "Mo' Managers, Bad Girls Club "Reunion
Later!"
Part One" 1/2
Part 2" Pt. 2 of 2 (N)
Mo' Problems" (N)
Part 2" Pt. 2 of 2
Law &amp; Order "Deceit"
Law &amp; Order "Atonement" Law &amp; Order "Slave"
Law &amp; Order "Girlfriends" Law &amp; Order "Pro Se"
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
Never Been Kissed Drew Barrymore. TVPG
(:25) Divas
#Rich Kids
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Hillbillies
Hillbillies
Candid Camera (N)
Hot/ Cleve. King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens
Wicked Tuna N vs S
Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers "Too Alaska State Troopers "Cut Wicked Tuna: North vs.
"Southern Discomfort"
"Meth Dealer Manhunt"
Drunk to Drive"
in the Gut" (N)
South "Bluefin or Bust"
(5:30) FB Talk Football
Mecum "Indianapolis"
IndyCar Auto Racing MAVTV 500 Site: Auto Club Speedway
IndyCar (N)
America's Pre-game (L)
MLB 162 (N) Mission Oct. Big Sticks
NFL Films (N) The Big Catch
MLB Whiparound (L)
Pawn Stars Pawn "Rock Houdini The tales of Harry Houdini as he emerges as
Houdini The tales of Harry Houdini:
Houdini Pt. 1
Bottom"
America's first world-renowned superstar. Pt. 1 of 2
bonafide superstar. Pt. 2 of 2 (N)
of 2
H.Wives "Reunion Part 1" H.Wives "Reunion Part 2" Housewives/NewJersey
Below Deck (N)
The Singles Project (N)
Frankie&amp;
Frankie&amp;
Sparkle (2012, Drama) Carmen Ejogo, Whitney Houston, Jordin Sparks. TVPG
KColeBTL (N) Keyshia Cole
House
House
House
House Hunt. Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop HouseH (N) House (N)
Face Off "Twisted Trees"
Face Off "Animal
Face Off "Wizard of
Face Off "Judge Match" (N) Wizard Wars "Rated
Attraction"
Wonderland"
Arrrgh!" (N)

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

Beautiful Creatures ('13, Dra) Alice Englert,
2 Guns (2013, Action) Mark Wahlberg, Paula Patton,
Alden Ehrenreich. A young man and a mysterious girl
Denzel Washington. After a bank robbery, two men find
discover dark secrets about their respective families. TVPG themselves in the middle of a corruption scheme. TV14
(5:45)
The Internship Two salesmen
(:50) Rush (2013, Action) Chris Hemsworth, Olivia Wilde, Daniel Bruhl.
land internships after their careers are
The 1970s rivalry between Formula One racers James Hunt and Niki
destroyed by the digital world. TVPG
Lauda. TV14
(:15)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower ('12, Dra)
Masters of Sex "Mirror,
Inside the NFL Exclusive
NFL highlights of the week's
Emma Watson, Logan Lerman. An outsider gets a look into Mirror"
games.
the real world with the help of two popular students. TVPG
(5:45)

10

PM

10:30

Hard Knocks '14 "Training
Camp With the Atlanta
Falcons"
The Knick
(:50) Fast and
Furious 6
"Mr. Paris
Shoes"
TVPG
60 Minutes Sports

�CLASSIFIED

8 Tuesday, September 2, 2014

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Notices

Notices

Help Wanted General

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.

GUN SHOW

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.

Opening for Full-Time Fiscal
Officer

MARIETTA
Washington Co Fairgrounds
922 Front St
Sept 13 &amp; 14
Adm $5
6' TBLS $35
740-667-0412

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
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know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
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Gary Stanley

740-591-8044
60517849

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Business &amp; Trade School

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
2-Story, 3- Bdrm Home with
Big Back Yard located @ 641
3rd Ave $550/mo. plus deposit
THERE WILL BE AN OPEN
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Gallipolis,Oh 740-367-0547
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740)446-3570

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Jet Aeration Motors
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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
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Cemetery Plots

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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)

Help Wanted General
Court Appointed Special Advocates seeking motivated
qualified Program Director with
a desire to work within the Social Service field of abused and
neglected children. Grant writing skills a plus. Bachelor's
degree required. Up to 30
hours per week. Equal Opportunity Employer Send Resume
to 111 North Church Street
Suite 2
Ripley, WV 25271
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.
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Pomeroy, OH 45769

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Apartments/Townhouses

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AC, W/D hook-up
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apartment. New Range &amp; Refrig. provided. Water &amp;
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washer/dryer included. NO
PETS 740-591-5174
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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(08),26,27,28,29,(09),02,03,04.

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The Village of Pomeroy is
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the Fiscal Officer s duties in
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Tuesday, September 2, 2014 9

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10 Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Daily Sentinel

No. 5 Ohio State pulls away to beat Navy 34-17
BALTIMORE (AP) —
There might come a time
when Ohio State coach
Urban Meyer expands
his offensive playbook to
include various long passes, reverses and bootlegs.
Until his young quarterback gains confidence
and his line grows up, the
No. 5 Buckeyes will likely
count on the kind of conservative game plan that
proved good enough to
beat Navy 34-17 Saturday.
Redshirt freshman
J.T. Barrett threw for
226 yards and two
touchdowns in his college debut as Ohio State
earned its 25th consecutive regular-season victory.
“The best thing about
this game,” Meyer said,
“is we won it and it’s in
our rearview mirror.”
Elevated into a starting
role after senior Braxton
Miller injured his right
shoulder two weeks ago,
Barrett went 12 for 15
— including an 80-yard
TD pass to Devin Smith

that put the Buckeyes up
20-14 with 4:10 left in the
third quarter.
“I thought J.T. did OK,”
Meyer said. “He was
good. I never felt he was
rattled.”
Ohio State (1-0) managed only two field goals
in the first half. Although
Barrett threw an illadvised interception, he
wasn’t entirely to blame
for the poor showing.
“We wanted to open it
up a little bit more in the
first half but we didn’t.
It wasn’t because of him;
it was because of our
offensive line,” Meyer
said. “There’s a standard
set for offensive line play
for many, many years. It
didn’t resemble an offensive line at Ohio State the
first two quarters.”
Ohio State won despite
allowing the Midshipmen
(0-1) to gain 370 yards on
the ground, including 118
by Ryan Williams-Jenkins.
But a Navy fumble
turned into an OSU
touchdown and a blown

coverage assignment by
the Midshipmen led to
the pivotal 80-yard score.
“We had some uncharacteristic mistakes that
we don’t normally have,
and against a team like
Ohio State you can’t do
that,” Navy coach Ken
Niumatalolo said. “We
knew coming into the
game we had to play perfect and couldn’t make
turnovers or give up any
big plays.”
Barrett became the
second freshman since
1950 to start a season
opener at quarterback for
Ohio State. He ran nine
times for 50 yards, did
not throw downfield often
and relied heavily on a
ground game that finally
wore down the Midshipmen in the fourth quarter.
“It was better at the
end than the start,” Barrett said.
After Navy closed
to 20-17 with 13:54
remaining, the Buckeyes launched a 10-play
drive that featured just

one pass. Ezekiel Elliott
converted a fourth-and-1
from the Navy 45 and
Barrett threw a 19-yard
completion before Elliott
ran in from the 10.
Barrett’s 9-yard touchdown pass to Mike
Thomas made it 34-17
with 2:09 left, and Meyer
could finally breathe easy.
“We have nine new
starters on offense,” he
said. “That’s not a normal
transition.”
Navy held a 7-6 lead
and was driving on the
opening series of the
second half when Joey
Bosa hit Keenan Reynolds as the quarterback
was tossing a pitch to
Demond Brown. The ball
got loose, and Darron Lee
took it 61 yards the other
way for a touchdown.
The Midshipmen
responded immediately.
Williams-Jenkins ran 67
yards to the Ohio State
17, and Reynolds scored
from the 1 to put Navy up
14-13. That gave Reynolds a touchdown in nine

straight games, tying the
school record.
The momentum turned
when Smith got behind
the Navy defense on the
right side, broke a tackle
and scored on the longest
touchdown against the
Midshipmen since an
87-yarder by Tulane in
November 2004.
Navy drove to the Ohio
State 18 on the final possession of the first half
before Nick Sloan missed
a 36-yard field goal, keeping the Buckeyes’ deficit
at 7-6.
Throwing mostly short,
safe passes, Barrett went
8 for 11 for 96 yards and
an interception before
halftime.
Barrett’s first play at
Ohio State was a pass
completion for 14 yards.
Although he appeared
comfortable in the nohuddle offense, the Buckeyes quickly punted.
Ohio State’s next possession began with four
straight runs, followed by
a sack. A shovel pass on

a third-and-21 gained 16
yards to set up a 46-yard
field goal by freshman
Sean Nuernberger.
Navy answered with an
11-play drive, 10 of them
runs, capped by a 1-yard
touchdown sweep by
DeBrandon Sanders.
Midway through the
second quarter, Barrett
went 4 for 4 for 54 yards
to bring the Buckeyes to
the Navy 8. But he hurried a first-down pass and
was intercepted by Parrish Gaines.
“After the interception, I was like, ‘J.T., you
knew you shouldn’t have
thrown it.’ And I still
threw it,” Barrett said.
Barrett’s inexperience
showed again on the next
series, when Ohio State
had to settle for a field
goal. On a third-and-2
from the Navy 4, Barrett
rolled right and pitched
too late to Elliott, who
was smothered for a
7-yard loss.

Brown among Ali Humanitarian Award winners
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) —
Muhammad Ali is honoring
another iconic athlete who
became a forceful voice for civil
rights — Jim Brown.
The NFL Hall of Fame running back will receive a lifetime
humanitarian achievement
award bearing the boxing
great’s name, the Muhammad
Ali Center announced Thursday. Brown headlines this
year’s lineup of Ali Humanitarian Award winners that include
actress Susan Sarandon.
The awards, which debuted
last year, promote achievements for social justice.
Like Ali, Brown, who was
at the top of his sport in the
1960s, became an outspoken
civil-rights advocate.
Brown, an actor whose
credits include his role in “The
Dirty Dozen,” started the
Amer-I-Can program, which
teaches life management and
self-improvement skills to help
uplift neighborhoods and communities.
“He’s been a great supporter
in his community and the community at large in stemming

gang violence and teaching
young men what it means … to
be good citizens,” Ali Center
President and CEO Donald
Lassere said of Brown.
Decades ago, Brown spoke
out in support of Ali’s refusal
to enter the military during the
Vietnam War as a conscientious
objector.
Ali’s decision resulted in a
draft-evasion conviction and
he was stripped of his heavyweight boxing crown. Ali’s
legal fight ended in 1971, when
the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
in his favor.
The Ali Awards ceremony is
set for Sept. 27 in Louisville,
Ali’s hometown. The three-time
heavyweight boxing champion,
who is battling Parkinson’s
disease, plans to attend the
ceremony, as well as a Sept. 20
benefit concert in Louisville
featuring Grammy-winning
singer Bruno Mars.
Sarandon, an Academy
Award winner, will receive
the Ali Humanitarian Award
for Global Citizenship, the Ali
Center said. Sarandon will be
recognized for her role as an

Phil Masturzo | Akron Beacon Journal | MCT

Cleveland Browns Hall of Fame running back Jim Brown, center, is introduced during a ceremony honoring black Ohio
sports legends at halftime of the game between the Cleveland Cavaliers and Toronto Raptors at Quicken Loans Arena in
Cleveland, Ohio, Tuesday, January 19, 2010. Former Ohio State wide receiver Cris Carter stands on the left, and former
Cavaliers player Campy Russell on the right.

ambassador for UNICEF and
her efforts in support of Haiti
and the Amazon.
Grammy Award-winning hiphop artist Common was named
winner of the Ali Humanitar-

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ian Award for Education. He
launched a philanthropic effort
that seeks to empower urban
youth by mentoring them in
character development, creative expression and healthy

racked up 124-passing
yards and two touchdowns in the first quarFrom Page 7
ter. A 1-yard TD pass to
Frohnapfel — set up by
(Ohio) in a season open- Devon Johnson’s 55-yard
er on Saturday.
run — at the start of the
Cato threw an 11-yard second put the Thunderpass to Eric Frohnapfel
ing Herd up 21-0.
Johnson ran for 151
for the first score and

yards and two touchdowns.
The RedHawks’
Andrew Hendrix hit
Rokeem Williams with a
40-yard TD pass, closing
the gap to 35-27 late in
the fourth until Cato’s
2-yard run with 2:01 left
to play sealed it.

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living. Entrepreneur Mick
Ebeling was chosen as the
Ali Humanitarian of the Year
Award winner for his efforts
to provide prosthetic limbs for
war victims in Sudan.

Cato now has 33 consecutive games with a
TD pass, just five shy of
the NCAA record currently held by Russell
Wilson of the Seattle
Seahawks.
Yazdani’s FG lifts Ohio
past Kent State, 17-14
KENT, Ohio (AP) —
Josiah Yazdani kicked
a 44-yard field goal as
time expired, lifting
Ohio past Kent State
17-14 in the Mid-American Conference opener
for both teams Saturday
night.
Derrius Vick was 18
of 24 for 262 yards with
two touchdowns for
the Bobcats, with both
going to Landon Smith
in the first half.
Kent State trailed 14-7
for much of the game,
but stayed in reach as
Ohio fumbled on their
first four possessions in
the second half.
After a Dorian Brown
fumble, Colin Reardon
led the Golden Flashes
on an 11-play 78 yard
drive, capped by a
25-yard touchdown pass
to Chris Humphrey with
4:05 left.
The Bobcats responded as A.J. Ouellette had
all six of his rushes for
29 yards on the final
drive. Vick added a key
third-down conversion
with a 7-yard run to get
inside the 30, setting up
Yazdani’s game-winner
three plays later.

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