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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

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INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

‘Heat days’ become
more common for
schools.... Page 2

Mostly sunny. High
near 77. Low around
53......... Page 2

Late goal lifts Rio
men past IWU....
Page 6

Amy Doris Cadle, 84
Sally Caldwell, 66
Ralph Cardwell, Jr., 35
Genevieve Carney, 79
Laura Lou Fannin, 91

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 141

Janet A. Kemper, 72
Wanda Louise Smith, 88
Margaret A. Welch, 94
Clyde ‘Paul’ Wood, 84
John Paul Woodall, 56
Echo Wright, newborn
50 cents daily

Mitchell pleads guilty in 2009 bank robbery
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Just shy of four
years after the crime, the man
accused in the 2009 robbery
of the Farmers Bank Branch in
Tuppers Plains entered a guilty
plea in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Sean Bradford Mitchell, 45,
formerly of Athens, entered a
guilty plea to one count each of
aggravated robbery (first degree
felony), robbery (second degree
felony), theft (fourth degree
felony) and kidnapping (first
degree felony).
Judge Michael Ward, sitting
by assignment, accepted the plea
on Thursday — the same day he
was scheduled to stand trial for
his crimes.

According to court documents
from Thursday’s hearing, both the
defense and prosecution agreed
that the four counts should merge
for sentencing purposes.
Sentencing is scheduled for
2:30 p.m. on Sept. 11.
According to the plea agreement, the state will recommend a
four-year sentence to run consecutive to a case involving Mitchell in Mississippi. The defense,
represented by Public Defender
Herman Carson, will argue for
a lesser sentence and credit for
time served in Mississippi.
Jessica Staley spoke on behalf
of the employees of the bank at
the hearing and Paul Reed spoke
on behalf of the bank. It was
noted that the employees do not
agree with the plea agreement
and feel that Mitchell should re-

ceive the maximum sentence.
Mitchell has been incarcerated
in Mississippi since his arrest in
Nov. 2009 on one count of aggravated robbery in Ocean Springs,
Mississippi. Mitchell was convicted on that charge and is not
scheduled to to be released until
Nov. 2017 according to the Mississippi Department of Corrections website.
Mitchell was indicted in Meigs
County on Dec. 2009.
Meigs County Prosecutor Colleen Williams said that bringing
Mitchell to Meigs County on the
charges required extradition paper work and a warrant from the
governor of Mississippi. Due to
a change in that office, the paperwork had to be completed
twice, one under the former
governor and again with the
current governor.

Mitchell was transported to
Meigs County in July by Meigs
County Sheriff Keith Wood and
Major Scott Trussell.
At the time of the offense, first
degree felonies carried a maximum sentence of 10 years (it is
now 11 years), a felony of the
second degree carries a maximum sentence of eight years and
a felony of the fourth degree carries a maximum sentence of 18
months in prison.
According to reports by The
Daily Sentinel in 2009, Mitchell
was arrested in Ocean Springs,
Miss., in Nov. 2009, for allegedly
robbing the Merchants and Marine Bank there.
During questioning in Mississippi,
Mitchell
allegedly
confessed to the local robbery,
admitting he carried a rock in

a grocery bag into the Farmers
Bank office and told tellers it was
an explosive device.
Mitchell is not the only person
currently in custody for allegedly robbing the Farmers Bank
branch in Tuppers Plains.
Chad Rennicker is also in custody awaiting trial in the May
2013 robbery of the same bank.
Rennicker has been charged with
one count of aggravated robbery
and six counts of kidnapping.
Rennicker is scheduled for a
pre-trial hearing in Meigs County Common Pleas Court at 11:30
a.m. on Sept. 9, and a trial date
of Sept. 25.
Rennicker is currently housed
in the Washington County Jail
in Marietta, while Mitchell is in
the Southeast Regional Jail in
Nelsonville.

Commissioners act
on service contract
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The Meigs County Board of County
Commissioners in a brief session Thursday passed a resolution authorizing the Meigs County Family and Children
First Council to enter into a personal services contract with
Leslie Brooke Pauley to serve as the agency’s coordinator.
The contract will become effect on Sept. 3.
It was noted that Pauley was recommended by a subcommittee of the Family and Children First Council and
approved by the full membership on Aug. 26.
In other action, the Commissioners approved an advance in transfer of $1,820 from the County into the
Grants Office of the Community Action Agency. The
money is for a CHIP program relating to home repairs.
President Tim Ihle, Mike Bartrum and Randy Smith,
commissioners, were all present for the meeting and indicated that they would be participating in the groundbreaking ceremony for the new Holzer Emergency Facility which was to take place the following morning.

Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

The Comfort Club is the place for Parish volunteers who love to sew. Here from the left, Jackie Frost, Barbara
Gheen, Joanne Vaughan, Patty Nutter and Dolores Will, standing, work on comforters for those in need of
something to keep them warm.

Something for everyone in Parish programs
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The Meigs
Cooperative Parish continues
to provide a variety of services
to the community in the way of
assisting those in need, as well
as providing a place for volunteers to serve, to join others for
lunch, to exercise, to meet for
health recovery assistance or
to just spend some quiet time
when life gets hectic.
“If you are short on funds,
don’t want to cook or just want
to spend time with your friends,
join us for lunch on Tuesdays and
Thursdays from 11:30 to 1 p.m.,”
is the invitation from Linda Lukasik, a Parish volunteer. “Free
all-you-can-eat soup, roll and
beverage. Full meals available for
a small donation. Food can be
eaten in the dining room or can
be ordered as take-out,” she said.

“We’re here and we want to help.”
Of the other programs operating in the Mulberry Community
Center, there is the Parish Shop
which provides gently used clothing and household items at low
prices. New items are being added to the shop inventory all the
time. It is open Monday through
Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m
More help is always needed in
the Comfort Club room where
those who love to sew come and
help make lap and bed-size quilts
to be given to patients in nursing
homes and hospitals, to veterans
and to disaster and fire victims,
or to others with special needs.
The Comfort Club meets on
Wednesdays, 9 a.m. to noon.
One of the most important of
the Parish programs is the food
pantry which provides food for
low income families who meet
the 130 percent of poverty
guidelines. It is open Tuesday

through Friday, 9 to 11 a.m. for
those in need.
There is a program called Celebrate Recovery for those “battling
life’s hurts, habits and hang-ups.”
The program is geared to give
support and education in a group
setting on Mondays, 7 to 9 p.m.
Believing that physical conditioning can be fun, there are two
exercise programs going on at the
Community Center. Shape-up is
an exercise program for women
meeting on Tuesday and Thursday from 9 to 11 a.m. and 5 to 7
p.m. Zumba classes are offered at
6:30 p.m. on Tuesdays with the
only charge being a food donation
for the Parish to use in feeding
those whose cupboards are bare.
There is always a need for volunteers to assist in carrying out
the various programs, said Lukasik, who spoke of the satisfaction
which comes from giving the gift
of time and service to help others.

Volunteers needed for
Seniors in Schools program
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Volunteers are being recruited for the
Seniors in Schools program of the Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) which is being revived this year by
Katie Alexander, RSVP director.
Alexander who is employed by the Corporation for Ohio
Appalachian Development (COAD) for the RSVP work is
in the process of reactivating the program which was discontinued last year due to federal and state funding cuts.
The program takes senior volunteers into third-grade
classrooms at all the county’s schools to teach children
about Meigs County history through songs, readings,
games and crafts.
Alexander said she has several experienced volunteers
ready to begin the program this year, but not enough to
cover all of the classes. “Volunteers are not required to
have a strong knowledge of local history,” she said, adding that, “they can learn along with the kids.”
The materials used in the program are already
prepared.
Alexander said that all that is required is an interest in
local history and working with children, and the ability to
commit to one hour a week for three or four months. She
said she understands there has to be some flexibility in
the schedules because of unexpected happenings an said
that isn’t a problem. Mileage reimbursement is available.
Plans call for the program to start just as soon as volunteers are in place.
For more information or to volunteer your services contact Alexander at her office located in the Senior Citizens
Center.

Ohio EPA grants loan to Tupper Plains water system
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS — Ohio
EPA has issued a $123,574 lowinterest loan to the Tuppers
Plains/Chester Water District
to help replace the existing
waterline and booster station
at Ohio 681. The project is
expected to provide a safe, reliable and adequate supply of
water to 13,580 people.
As part of the loan from Ohio’s
Water Supply Revolving Loan

Account (WSRLA), the village
qualifies for $99,140.20 at a
below-market interest rate of 2
percent and $24,433.80 in principal forgiveness (which does not
need to be repaid). This should
save an estimated $89,000 over
the 30-year life of the loan when
compared to the market rate. A
$185,000 grant from the Appalachian Regional Commission will
pay for the remaining costs of
the $308,574 project.
The current booster station is
housed in an underground steel

vault, which is in poor condition
from severe corrosion. It will be
replaced by an above-grade station. In addition, the existing waterline will be replaced because it
operates at capacity and is insufficient to meet future needs.
Started in 1998, the Ohio
Water Supply Revolving Loan
Account has provided more
than $1 billion in loans with
below-market interest rates for
compliance-related
improvements to public water systems.
The program has saved public

water systems more than $243
million in interest. Additionally, the WSRLA can provide
technical assistance to public
water systems in a variety of
areas from the planning, design
and construction of improvements to enhancing the technical, managerial and financial
capacity of these systems.
This state revolving loan fund
is partially supported by federal
grants and designed to last indefinitely through repayment of
loans and investments in bonds.

The loan program is jointly managed by Ohio EPA’s Division of
Environmental and Financial Assistance and Division of Drinking and Ground Waters, with
assistance from the Ohio Water
Development Authority. Ohio
EPA is responsible for program
development and implementation, individual project coordination, and environmental reviews
of projects seeking funds. The
Ohio Water Development Authority provides financial management of the fund.

�Page 2 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Meigs Local Briefs

Meigs County Community Calendar

Car, Truck and Motorcycle Show Benefit
POMEROY — The Home National Bank is sponsoring
a car, truck and motorcycle show on the Pomeroy Parking
lot Saturday to raise money for the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center Meals on Wheels program. Registration
will be held from 9 a.m. to noon with a trophy awards ceremony at 3:30 p.m. Chicken noodle dinners, pizzas, and
hot dogs and hamburgers will be for sale during the event.

Tuesday, Sept. 3
SYRACUSE — The Racine Area
Community Organization will be
holding their fall Basket Bingo
games at 6 p.m. at Syracuse Community. Doors will open at 5 p.m. There
will be 20 games for $20, advanced
ticket drawing, raffles, 50/50, special games, and refreshments will be
served by the community center volunteers. All proceeds from the event
will benefit Star Mill Park. Tickets
available from Bev Cummins, Joyce
Sisson, Alice Wolfe and Kathryn
Hart. For information, call Hart at
949-2656.
POMEROY — Drew Webster Auxiliary Post 39 will meet at 1 p.m. at
the Legion Hall.
ALFRED — Orange Township
Trustees will meet at 7:30p.m. at the
township building on SR 681.

Reception Planned
SYRACUSE — Syracuse Postmaster John Henderson
will be honored at a reception to be held from 12 - 2 p.m.
on Saturday, Sept. 7, at Syracuse Community Center. Refreshments will be served. Everyone is welcome.
Southern Open House
RACINE — Open house for elementary and high school
students is scheduled for 4-7 p.m. on Sept. 3.
Pre-School Orientation will be during the regular
school day Friday, Sept. 6. Students and parents can come
to meet the preschool staff at this time in preparation for
Pre-School which begins Sept. 9.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department
will conduct as childhood and adolescent immunization
clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays, at the
Meigs County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial Drive
in Pomeroy. Please bring children’s shot records. Children
must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. Please
bring medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards, if
applicable. A donation is appreciated, but not required.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY — County Road 46, Success Road,
will be closed for approximately one week beginning
Sept. 3. County forces will be replacing a bridge at a site
1/2 mile east of Ohio 7.
MEIGS COUNTY — The westbound lane of Ohio 124
(located at the 63.91 mile marker, about 1.5 miles north
of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will be maintained by traffic signals
and concrete barriers. Weather permitting, both lanes of
Ohio 124 will be open Nov. 1, 2013.

Church Calendar
Homecoming
REEDSVILLE — The Eden United Brethren Church, located on 2 miles north of Reedsville on Ohio 124 between
Reedsville and Hockingport, will be held Sept. 15 with a
carry-in dinner at 12:30 p.m. Afternoon service, 2 p.m.
with special singing and speaker Pastor Peter Martindale.
Yard sale
RUTLAND —The Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
will host an indoor yard sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Sept.
5-7. Lunch will also be served.
Harvest Festival
PINE GROVE — The annual Harvest Festival will be
held on Sunday, Sept. 8, at St. John Lutheran Church on
Pine Grove Road. Worship will begin at 11 a.m. with potluck at 12:15 p.m. In the afternoon a community service
project will be carried out in celebration of the 25th anniversary of ELCA, God’s Love Our Hands.
Meigs Co-operative Parish events/service projects
POMEROY — The Meigs Co-operative Parish hosts a
variety of events and service projects available throughout the week at the Mulberry Community Center. Some
of those are as follows,
Meals at the Mulberry Community Center — 11:30
a.m.-1 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday.
Parish Shop — 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Monday-Friday and 9
a.m.-1 p.m., Saturday.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.-noon, Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11 a.m., Tuesday-Friday.
Celebrate Recovery — 7-9 p.m., Monday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m., Tuesday and Thursday.
Zumba — 6:30 p.m., Tuesday.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 77. Northwest wind 5 to 8 mph.
Tuesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 53.
Calm wind.
Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 81. Light and
variable wind.
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 55.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 55.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 78.
Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 56.
Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 83.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 58.
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 84.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 61.
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 87.

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Wednesday, Sept. 4
CHESTER — The Chester Garden
Club will hold its annual open meeting at 7:30 p.m. at Chester Methodist Church. Guests are invited. There
will be door prizes and refreshments.
HARRISONVILLE — The Scipio
Township Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at
the Harrisonville Fire House.
Thursday, Sept. 5
CHESTER — Chester-Shade Historical Association will meet at 7
p.m. at the Courthouse.
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its next board
meeting at 10 a.m. in Room A of the
Ross County Service Center at 475
Western Avenue, Chillicothe, Ohio,
45601. Board meetings usually are
held the first Thursday of the month.
For more information, call 740-7755030, ext. 103.

Friday, Sept. 6
MARIETTA — The Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development District Executive Committee
will meet at 11:30 a.m. at 1400 Pike
Street in Marietta. For more information contact Jenny Myers at (740)
376-1026.
SALEM CENTER — Meigs County Pomona Grange will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Star Grange Hall. All contests — Family Activities, Art, Photography and Junior will be judged at
that time. All members are urged to
attend.
Saturday, Sept. 7
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange
#778 and Star Junior Grange #878
will meet with potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. followed by meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Plans for Chicken BBQ to be held on
Sunday October 6 will be made. All
members and interested persons are
invited and urged to attend.
Sunday, Sept. 8
REEDSVILLE — The Reedsville
Neighborhood Community Picnic
will be held at the Belleville Locks
and Dam Shelter House. The Belleville Locks and Dam is located on
State Route 124 in Reedville Ohio.
There will be a free dinner and drinks
provided. Along with music provided
by George Hall. The picnic starts at
1 p.m. Everyone is invited to attend
this free event. Come out and enjoy
great food, great music with your
neighbors.
Monday, Sept. 9
POMEROY — Meigs County Republican Executive Committee regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. at the Courthouse. Countdown to election day
project underway.
POMEROY — Meigs County Ag-

ricultural Society will meet at 7:30
pm at the fairgrounds.
Tuesday, Sept. 10
TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
Board will have their regular meeting at 5 p.m. at the TPRSD office.
Thursday, Sept 12
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge
453 monthly meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
the hall. Refreshments served after
the meeting.
Friday, Sept. 13
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Community Association will be
showing their September free movie
at 7 p.m. in the Middleport Village
Hall community room. Light refreshments will be available as well as
comfortable seating. Improvements
have been done to greatly improve
the acoustics in the former gym.
Copyright license prevents MCA
from being allowed to announce the
name of the movie but we can tell
you that it’s about the early years of a
NFL player and his adoptive family.
Saturday, Sept. 21
POMEROY — The Veterans Memorial Hospital employees will have
their annual reunion from 1 to 3 p.m.
at the Meigs Community Center.
Joyce Redman and Barbara Fry are in
charge of this year’s reunion.
Friday, Sept. 27
MIDDLEPORT — Health Recovery Services will be hosting an open
house in honor of National Recovery
Month. The open house will take
place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. with
door prizes, food and fun. Health
Recovery Services is located at 138
North Second Avenue in Middleport.

‘Heat days’ become more
common for sweaty schools
CHICAGO (AP) — When city
students arrived for the first day of
school under the blazing temperatures of a Midwest heat wave, staff
greeted them with some unusual
school supplies: water bottles, fans
and wet towels to drape around
their necks.
What they couldn’t always offer
was air conditioning.
“It’s kind of hard to focus because
everyone was sweating,” said Deniyah Jones, a 12-year-old 7th-grader
at Nash Elementary School on Chicago’s West Side, which has just a few
window units for the entire fortresslike brick and stone building.
This year’s late August heat exposed a tug-of-war in school districts that are under pressure to start
school earlier than ever but are unable to pay to equip aging buildings
with air conditioning. Parents who
worry hot classrooms are a disadvantage for their kids are issuing an ultimatum: Make classes cooler or start
the year later.
“Thinking about air conditioning
— we can’t even afford new textbooks,” said Bement Community
Unit School District Superintendent
Sheila Greenwood, who oversees a
tiny district of 380 students about 20
miles southwest of Champaign, Ill.
Many people can recall school days
spent inside ancient, brick-construction buildings that on sweltering
days seemed as hot as pizza ovens.
But hot classrooms are becoming a
bigger problem for schools than in
years past, and increasingly, getting a
“heat day” is as common for students
as a “snow day.”
As temperatures soared past 90
last week, some Midwest schools
gave students extra water and bathroom breaks or canceled after-school
activities. Districts from St. Joseph,
Mo., and Frankfort, Ind., sent kids
home early. In Fargo, N.D., five
schools got the week off, and schools
in Minneapolis closed down, too.
“I was up on the third floor and it
was 93.8 degrees in the classroom
and the kids hadn’t been there in
hours,” said Matt Patton, superintendent of a one-school district in Baxter, Iowa. “You put 20 bodies in there
and it will go up to at least 95 and
you can imagine all the sweat on the
desks and textbooks.”
For years, schools have been moving to start the year in late or midAugust rather than just after Labor
Day, when it is typically cooler.
Part of the reason is that schools
need more training days for standardized testing and new academic
standards. Holiday breaks have also
grown longer, and administrators
say the only direction they can go is
back into August.
In Chicago, starting a week earlier is part of Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s
strategy to improve education in
the nation’s third-largest school district by getting students in school
longer. Air conditioning isn’t part
of that plan.

“The last estimate was over a billion dollars,” said Becky Carroll, a
spokeswoman for Chicago’s district
of 700 schools. “Those aren’t dollars
we have.”
The concerns go beyond comfort.
Excessive heat makes the body work
harder to maintain the ideal 98.6
temperature, and that can cause
people to feel sluggish. Some worry
that makes it hard to learn. Sweating
helps cool things down, but children
sweat less than adults, so heat can affect them more quickly.
“I was speaking with teachers
yesterday and they said there were
students who had to leave early, students with bloody noses, students
(who) had fainting spells or fell
asleep in the classroom,” said Chicago state Rep. La Shawn Ford, who
received a number of complaints after the start of school. “It’s just not a
learning environment.”
Some studies have also shown that
students in classrooms with air conditioning do better on achievement
tests than those in classroom that
don’t. Vic Zimmerman, the school
superintendent in the central Illinois
community of Monticello, said there
is simply no point in keeping kids in
class. Some of his district’s students
were given Popsicles just to get them
through morning reading time.
“They become a little bit lethargic,” he said.
Parents are beginning to push
back. Sioux City, Iowa, schools decided to move the start of school a week
later next year after getting an earful,
school board president Mike Krysl
said. And a parent group in North
Dakota is looking to launch a ballot
measure requiring schools to start
after Labor Day, said Jeff Schatz, the
Fargo school superintendent.
Those measures haven’t always
been successful elsewhere.
In Iowa, lawmakers enacted legislation that requires school districts
wait until September to open. But
the law allows districts to obtain a
waiver to start early, and all but 10
of the state’s 346 school districts did
just that. Indiana lawmakers have
tried unsuccessfully for years to push
the start of the school year back to
after Labor Day, but have run into
resistance from schools who have
scheduling concerns and local officials who think the state shouldn’t
control the school calendar.
Even in places that have decided to
install air conditioning, the process
is anything but quick. In St. Joseph,
Mo., roughly two thirds of the district schools lack air conditioning,
though many will get it in the next
two years after the community approved a plan that includes $5 million
for air conditioning.
“There was some pushback from
people who were saying ‘When we
were kids we went to school without air conditioning, why can’t these
kids?’” said Barbara Moore, the
school board president at the time.

Prosecutor
learns from
Ohio case based
on old DNA
CLEVELAND (AP) — A
prosecutor in Ohio’s largest county says a recent
acquittal in 1993 rape case
illustrates some of the challenges authorities may face
while pursuing more cases
based on testing of DNA
from old rape kits.
Cleveland police have
sent state labs about 4,000
rape kits for testing, and
suburbs have added more.
The trial earlier this month
in Cuyahoga County was
the first based on DNA
from a kit that hadn’t been
tested in almost 20 years,
one newspaper reported.
The alleged victim, now
60, testified about being
raped by a man who hit her
with pepper spray, struck her
with a brick and strangled
her with a sock. Evidence
presented by the prosecution showed with scientific
certainty that the defendant’s DNA was found inside
the woman, but that genetic
evidence didn’t necessarily
prove there was a crime.
Assistant County Prosecutor Brian McDonough
said he was disappointed
the jury found the defendant, a 43-year-old man,
not guilty of rape and kidnapping but wouldn’t be deterred as he pursues more
cases on DNA evidence.
“I will never be afraid to
take a case to trial,” he said.
“Each victim deserves her
day in court.”
McDonough talked with
jurors after their decision
and said they struggled
with the idea that the pair
could have had consensual
sex and the lack of other evidence — such as the brick
or the sock — to prove a
crime was committed.
“We are stuck with what
we have from back then”
when it comes to evidence,
McDonough said.
Better evidence collection and casework might
help he said. He also plans
to ask more questions during jury selection, given
that potential panel members might have biases or
misconceptions that affect
their perspectives. He’s also
considering more expert
testimony to clarify complex issues in rape cases.
The defendant’s attorney,
Michael O’Shea, maintained
his client was innocent. He
said that the prosecution
did what it could and that
he hopes the county works
to get justice for victims
whose cases haven’t been
resolved for decades.

�Tuesday, September 3, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obama
overrules
new
team
Head of Southern
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — For the last 20
years, Albert Mohler has led the flagship school
of the Southern Baptist Convention, restoring
it to more conservative principals even though
it meant purging faculty who were out of step
with his beliefs.
He expressed satisfaction with the transformation as he recently welcomed a new
crop of students to the Louisville campus of
stately brick buildings and perfectly manicured lawns. Donations, enrollment and the
school’s budget have grown dramatically
since Mohler took the helm, and there’s no
sign of him leaving.
“I’m going to do it until they pry my cold,
dead fingers,” he said, making light of his two
decades at the school. “There’s a right time for
everything. But I’m 53 and I fully intend to be
here for my adult life. I’m not going anywhere
else. This is where the Lord’s called me and
planted me.”
Mohler took over as president of Southern
Baptist Theological Seminary in 1993, when he
was just 33. He is married and has two children.
When he speaks, it’s often rapid fire, with vigor and emotion. He talks about the seminary’s
current prosperity as a sign of God’s blessing on
the institution because it rejected liberal trends
in society. He returned it to more conservative
social ideas, such as the submission of women
to their husbands, and a more strict interpretation of the Bible, such as the literal belief in
Adam and Eve.
Mohler has risen to become an intellectual
leader among conservative evangelicals and a
well-known personality through his blog, books
and television appearances.
But his personal growth and the seminary’s is
in contrast to the Southern Baptist denomination as a whole. Although still the nation’s largest Protestant denomination, with a declared
membership of 16 million people, the SBC does
not wield the same political influence it did
when President George W. Bush addressed the
group’s annual meetings.
And while the SBC’s return to a conservative
theology at first coincided with growth, in 2012
the denomination saw its sixth straight year of
declining membership.
When Mohler took over as president, the
massive upheaval known as the conservative
resurgence was well under way in the SBC, but
even 14 years later, Southern still employed professors who held theological positions Mohler
and others considered to be wrong.
For instance, some professors believed parts
of the Bible were metaphorical, according to
Nancy Ammerman, professor of sociology of
religion at Boston University and author of
“Baptist Battles.” They might believe that God
created the Earth but used evolutionary mechanisms to explain it. They didn’t believe the sixday creation in Genesis literally referred to six,
24-hour days, she said.
One of the biggest conflicts was the role of
women, both in the church and at home. The
conservatives believe women should submit to
their husbands and not teach men in the church
or become pastors.
Bill Leonard, a professor of church history
and Baptist studies at Wake Forest University,
taught at Southern until 1992. He was Mohler’s
church history teacher at Southern.
Leonard said he knew he would be forced out
after conservatives became a majority of the
board of trustees in 1991, so he left on his own
accord.
“It’s less painful now,” he said. “I would never
have gotten to Wake Forest, which is the joy of
my life, if I hadn’t been forced to leave. But it
was painful at the time, extremely painful, because we loved that place.”
Leonard said Southern is doing quite well,
but he attributes much of the success to
Mohler’s strong personality and ability to recruit students and donors.
“While Southern Seminary seems healthy
and thriving, the denomination that supports it
is not,” he said. “That’s the gorilla in the sanctuary.”
During Mohler’s tenure, enrollment has
grown to 4,366 last year from less than 3,000.
The seminary’s budget has more than doubled,
from $16 million when he took over to $38 million. The seminary’s endowment has risen from
$50 million to $83 million. New buildings have
been built on campus and others have been
renovated.
Mohler recognizes both the SBC and the
seminary are no longer within the mainstream
on many issues, perhaps most notably on gay
rights. While not addressing any one issue directly, Mohler called on students to stand for
what they believe is right.
The temptation is to stay silent, to avoid offending some in society, he said.
“To fail to say something, or to be silent in a
time of trouble, is sin,” he said at a recent convocation on campus.
In an interview, Mohler acknowledged the
personal toll that accompanied the seminary’s
transformation. Professors had to find new jobs
and families had to move, but he’s at peace with
the overhaul.
“I know that it was right, and there’s no regret in doing what I know was right,” he said.
“But there is a sober reality and recognition
that the personal costs were very high.”

“While I believe I
have the authority
to carry out this
military action without
specific congressional
authorization, I know
that the country will be
stronger if we take this
course, and our actions
will be even more
effective.”

— President Barack Obama
Hagel were only informed about
the decision later that night during
phone calls from the president.
“All power flows from and into
the White House,” said Aaron David
Miller, a former adviser to Democratic and Republican administrations and current vice president at
the Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars. “He’s relied, not
surprisingly, on a very close circle of
trusted advisers. He really is a controlling foreign policy president.”
When the national security team
gathered Saturday morning to discuss the decision, administration officials say there was pushback from
some advisers, though they refused
to say who was leading that effort.
And at least publicly, the team now
appears to be following the orders of
the commander in chief.
Kerry, the most recognizable face
on Obama’s team to most of the public, was dispatched to all five Sunday
talk shows to defend the president’s
decision. Kerry and Hagel will also
testify Tuesday before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee — a
committee they each served on during their years in the Senate— as the
administration tries to rally votes on
Capitol Hill.
The officials and others close to
the deliberations requested anonymity because they were not authorized
to publicly discuss the internal deliberations.
As the White House appeared to
be nearing imminent military action against Syria, Kerry was among
those pressing for the most aggressive response. Even before being
tapped to lead the State Department,
the former Massachusetts senator
had been pushing for stronger ac-

tion against Syria. He has advocated
sending more and better assistance
to the opposition and has backed robust, though limited, military action
to punish the regime and force Assad
to change his calculation for continuing the conflict that has left more
than 100,000 people dead.
People close to Kerry say he was
emotionally affected by the images
coming out of Syria following the
chemical weapons attack, particularly those of dead and injured children.
He channeled that emotion into two
powerful speeches, including one on
Friday that appeared to be a prelude
to a military strike.
“History would judge us all extraordinarily harshly if we turned a
blind eye to a dictator’s wanton use of
weapons of mass destruction against
all warnings,” said Kerry, reflecting
what aides said was his strong belief
that action was a moral imperative.
Kerry made similar arguments
during his turn on the Sunday talk
shows, but emphasized that he supported the president’s decision to
seek congressional approval.
Hagel, the former Republican senator now running the Pentagon, spent
most of the Syria debate weighing in
from Asia, where he was on a nineday trip. While he declared during
the trip that the military was “ready
to go” if Obama gave the orders to
strike Syria, he also appeared to be
focused on the risks of acting without international backing. And like
others in the Pentagon, including
Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin
Dempsey, he seemed to be considering the unknowable next steps after a
limited military strike, particularly if
it roiled adversaries elsewhere in the
Middle East.
Rice and Power kept the lowest
profiles of the new foreign policy
team during the Syria debate, both
choosing to make their only public
comments on Twitter. But their
140-character statements backed
up their reputations as supporters
of intervention for humanitarian
purposes.
Rice, who served as the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations
before moving to the White House
earlier this year, wrote that those responsible for the chemical weapons
attack “will be held accountable.”
And Power, who now holds the U.N.
post, wrote of the “haunting images
of entire families dead in their beds”
following the Aug. 21 chemical weapons attack.
“Verdict is clear,” she wrote.
“Assad has used CW’s against civilians in violation of international
norm.”

Regulate Pot? Uruguay’s been there, with whisky
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) — The government of Uruguay makes
Scotch whisky. It also
makes and sells rum, vodka
and cognac, and has done
so for nearly a century.
Many people consider this
sideline of the state to be
an historical accident — a
wasteful and even eccentric contradiction.
But President Jose Mujica says Uruguay’s long
experience at the center of
the nation’s liquor business
makes it more than capable
of dominating another substance: marijuana.
Final Senate approval of
Uruguay’s marijuana law is
expected by late September, and the government
plans to license growers,
sellers and users as quickly
as possible thereafter to
protect them from criminal
drug traffickers, ruling party Sen. Lucia Topolansky,
who is also Uruguay’s first
lady, told The Associated
Press in an interview.
The law specifically
creates a legal marijuana
monopoly, making the government alone responsible
for importing, producing,
obtaining, storing, commercializing, and distributing a drug still considered
illegal around the world.
A state entity will license
producers and control
marijuana’s
distribution
and sale through the same
neighborhood pharmacies
that sell prescription medicines and toothpaste. Purchases by licensed users
will be limited to 40 grams
(1.4 ounces) a month. Potgrowing cooperatives will
be encouraged, using government-approved seeds,
and people registered with
the state will be able to
grow up to six plants at
home for personal use, as
long as they harvest no
more than 480 grams (17
ounces) a year.
The project passed the
House by just one vote,
and while the ruling Broad
Front coalition has an eas-

ier majority in the Senate,
Mujica has been campaigning actively for its passage,
reminding
Uruguayans
that their government has
been controlling the market for addictive substances ever since the beginning
of the 20th century, when
President Jose Batlle y
Ordonez wanted the state
to monopolize alcohol production.
“Don Jose Batlle y Ordonez had courage,” Mujica said in one of his folksy
nationwide radio talks,
which sound much like the
“fireside chats” that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt used to broadcast
to Americans. “The state
grabbed it and made a monopoly of alcohol, because
it couldn’t stop the booze,
and he said “at least don’t
poison the people — the
booze should be good.”
Batlle y Ordonez was
ahead of his time in promoting social change in
Latin America, from the
separation of church and
state to the eight-hour
workday and maternity
leave. And he had several

goals for alcohol: He wanted the whisky to generate
government revenues and
guarantee a profit stream
for farmers, funding the
production of a national
fuel so that Uruguay’s cars
and trucks wouldn’t need
imported gasoline.
Uruguay wasn’t alone in
that fight: In 1925 Henry
Ford was promoting alcohol as the fuel of the future,
and it was being blended
with gasoline from France
to the Philippines. But like
many other countries, Uruguay never achieved this
energy
independence.
Oil companies won an
intense global campaign
to focus on fossil fuels, a
trend that held until Brazil started using alcohol
blends in the 1980s.
Batlle y Ordonez died
in 1929 without seeing
his dreams realized, but
his spirit as a statesman
inspired Uruguay’s congress two years later to
create Ancap, a state fuel
and hard-liquor monopoly
that still refines imported
oil and distills liquor at
side-by-side plants in

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Montevideo today.
Ancap’s whisky sales
peaked at 332,000 liters
(88,000 gallons) a year in
1970, but then it began
bleeding money. In 1996,
it lost its monopoly on
distilled spirits. By 2002,
President Jorge Batlle
— the grand-nephew of
Batlle y Ordonez — decided to create a new, privately administered Ancap
subsidiary to manage the
state-held company, making it nimble enough to
cut costs. Now it has 60
employees and generates
nearly $1 million a year in
profits, without any state
subsidies.
Topolansky agrees that
whisky-making is a good
model for the marijuana
project.
“Back then people were
making wood alcohol and
other very toxic blends. So
the government said ‘the
people are going to keep
drinking, but we have to
offer a quality product, that
doesn’t carry dangerous
side-effects.’ And the state
took over production,” Topolansky explained.

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WASHINGTON (AP) — For President Barack Obama’s new foreign
policy advisers, the first test of their
willingness to undertake military action wound up being a stark lesson
in the president’s ability to overrule
them all.
Obama’s abrupt decision to seek
congressional approval before striking Syria also overshadowed what
had been a surprising level of consensus among the second-term team
members about how to respond to
a deadly chemical weapons attack
against civilians in Syria.
People close to the deliberations
say Secretary of State John Kerry,
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, national security adviser Susan Rice
and U.N. Ambassador Samantha
Power largely agreed about the need
to use force to punish Syrian President Bashar Assad. While there were
some differing views about the speed
and the scope of an attack, there
were no splintered factions the way
there had been during first-term debates over taking action in Libya or
launching the raid that killed Osama
bin Laden.
The advisers, two of whom are
former senators, were also willing
to proceed without congressional
authorization. But on Friday night,
after a week spent speeding toward
military action, the president made
a stunning turnabout and decided he
wanted approval from lawmakers before carrying out an attack.
“While I believe I have the authority to carry out this military action
without specific congressional authorization, I know that the country will be stronger if we take this
course, and our actions will be even
more effective,” Obama said as he announced the decision Saturday. “We
should have this debate.”
The way the president arrived at
his decision highlights what has been
a source of criticism among Washington’s foreign policy thinkers: a
president who has centralized decision-making within the White House
and at times marginalized the State
Department and Pentagon.
As Obama grappled with putting
military action to a vote in Congress,
he didn’t consult his foreign policy
team. Instead, he sought out Denis
McDonough, a longtime adviser who
now serves as his chief of staff. And
most of the administration’s foreign
policy leadership was absent from
the Oval Office meeting Friday night
when the president informed several
advisers about his decision to seek
congressional approval.
Rice, a member of the White House
staff, was in the room. But Kerry and

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
Tuesday, September 3, 2013

A Labor Day salute to the staff at Rio ‘Credibility’
Paul R. Sebastian, Ph.D.

While teaching at the University
of Rio Grande, I wrote this piece to
honor the staff there. Today, as Professor Emeritus of Management,
I try to contribute wherever I can.
This tribute is really applicable to
any organization. I hope to point out
that every employee is important and
a valuable member of the team; every worker makes a difference. When
one person is absent or does not do
his/her job and does not do the best
s/he can, the entire organization suffers. As in football, one missed block
and the quarterback is sacked.
Labor Day is all about the tremendous dignity of the worker and his/
her work. This great dignity of the
person has its origin in the different
faiths. Based upon this concept, they
have had a great influence upon business practice especially in regard to
ethics, social responsibility, social
justice and legislation against abuses
in the workplace … slavery, childlabor, unsafe and inhumane working
conditions, unjust wages and more.
For example, John Wesley pricked
the conscience of 19th Century Britain. Two of his disciples, William Wilberforce and Lord Shaftesbury were
reformers in the British Parliament.
Leo XIII’s 1891 papal encyclical “Rerum Novarum on the Condition of
Labor” had a world-wide impact and
continues as part of the social teachings of the Church which is updated
as new problems, controversies and
issues come up.
Jews, Muslims and Christians believe that even the lowest paid worker has this great dignity because s/
he was created by God according to
His image and likeness. Christians
add that Christ as God suffered and
died to save each one of us and draw
inspiration from His words, “Whatever you do to the least of mine, you
do it unto Me”. As I understand it,
the Hindus use the word “Namaste”
as a greeting, which means welcome
and/or “I acknowledge the divine in
you”. Secular humanists in their own
way also believe in the dignity of the
person.
Work in itself has great dignity, according to the Christian view, because
man (in a generic sense) uses work to
participate with God in creation which
is ongoing … to construct buildings
and to create goods and services and
works of art. Martin Luther preached
that even the most menial work should
be done for the glory of God. This conviction led to the Protestant work ethic
which some scholars say was a major
factor in the economic development of
the West after the Reformation. Ignatius Loyola, advocated a similar work
ethic (“Ad majorem Dei gloriam”) as
the part of the Catholic Counterreformation. The second papal encyclical of

John Paul II, “Laborem Exercens”, was
devoted to the Theology of Work.
On Labor Day, I sometimes reflect
upon the tremendous dignity of each
worker and his/her importance to the
organization … each making a very
important contribution according to
his/her education, skills and abilities.
From time to time, I like to say to the
custodian in our building, “Thank
you for keeping our place clean. It
would be a real dump without you.”
Then I was thinking that we, the line
faculty, tend to take our support staff
for granted, and they deserve our appreciation. We couldn’t do without
them. Thus, I would like to thank
each member of Rio’s staff for helping us to perform our mission.
I thank the secretaries for making our jobs so much easier and
more efficient with their typing, filing, help with scheduling, reminders, assisting students, organizing,
handling the many forms and a
myriad of other jobs.
I thank our landscaping people for
making our campus beautiful and enjoyable to walk through.
I thank the maintenance people for
keeping the buildings and equipment
in repair.
I thank the cafeteria and food court
people for the fine meals and snacks
they serve us.
I thank the housekeeping people
for keeping our classrooms, offices
and other facilities clean … making
Rio a nicer place in which to work.
I thank the campus security staff
for keeping our campus safe and
helping us in many other ways.
I thank the fitness, health services
and counseling center staff for maintaining our emotional and physical
well being.
I thank the admissions people,
upon whom our jobs and livelihood
depend.
I thank the continuing and economic education people for their outreach to the community.
I thank the switchboard operators
who direct outside phone calls to the
right people.
I thank the Crossroads people for
helping to turn lives around.
I thank the financial aid people
who help to make it possible for
many students to attend college who
otherwise could not.
I thank the multi-ethnic affairs
staff for maintaining our international students and promoting diversity
and its understanding.
I thank the post office people for
helping us to send out and receive
packages and mail from within and
outside the university.
I thank the alumni relations and
the institutional advancement people
who bring donations that improve
the university and keep it afloat.
I thank the coaches and others

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involved in extracurricular activities who supplement our teaching
of values and skills so indispensable
to the professional formation of our
students plus the athletic events, recreation, theater, art exhibits and concerts that enrich our lives.
I thank the housing people for
maintaining decent places for our
students to reside.
I thank the print shop people who
print our handouts and fliers.
I thank the purchasing, accounting
and finance affairs staff who control
our costs and keep us solvent.
I thank the C.A.R.S. people who
advise and counsel our students to
plan their careers.
I thank the human resources people who help us hire new employees
and maintain the current members of
our team … benefits, labor relations
and orientation.
I thank the campus computing
M.I.S. people for keeping our information technology system up to date
and working as it gives us timely information.
I thank the records people who collect our grades and give them to the
students and us for advising.
I thank the librarians who help us
teach students to do research and
write decent papers. I thank the
people at the learning center and the
media center who supplement and
assist us in our teaching. The professors can’t do it alone.
I thank the bookstore people who
provide us with our texts and supplies for our courses. I thank the university relations people for helping to
get the word out about our wonderful community college and university
that has done so much for our students and for the surrounding community — with the sky as the limit to
our potential.
I thank the Title III people who
are helping to improve our advising,
increase retention and provide additional training of our employees.
I thank the Madog Center for
Welsh Studies people who are making us and the surrounding community aware of this area’s rich heritage.
I thank the other administrators
who coordinate our work activities
and help us all to work together as
a team.
I know I’ve forgotten somebody,
and I thank them, too.
I thank all staff people because we
front line faculty couldn’t do our jobs
without them. That means we need
each other as we strive for a better
college and university through which
to serve our students. That makes us
all together — faculty, staff and students — an interdependent campus
community.

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respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
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peaceably to assemble, and to
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is obsolete
Winslow Myers

Lord have mercy, a half-century beyond the Cuban Missile Crisis and almost as many years beyond Vietnam, our
erstwhile leaders are still mouthing stale clichés about
“credibility.” Remember Dean Rusk saying we went
eyeball to eyeball with the Soviets and they blinked? Of
course the world almost ended, but never mind.
And to go back a little further into the too-soon-forgotten past, some historians surmise that Truman dropped
nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki not to force
an already forthcoming Japanese surrender, but to make
ourselves more threateningly credible to the expansionist
Soviets as the World War II wound down.
Credibility was the main motif of Secretary of State Kerry’s statement rationalizing possible military action against
Syria. If we’re going to kill a few thousand non-combatants
in the next few days or weeks, and it looks increasingly as
if we are, could we not do it for some better reason than
maintaining to the world, as if the world cared, that we are
not a pitiful helpless giant?
What is it with my country? It is particularly painful
to hear these valorous-sounding, but actually exhausted,
toothless locutions from John Kerry, who began his political career with electrifyingly refreshing congressional
testimony opposing the Vietnam War, a war pursued on
the basis that if we did not maintain a credible presence
in Southeast Asia, country after country would fall to the
Commies, ultimately the Chinese Commies. Meanwhile
the historical record of a thousand years showed that China had been Vietnam’s mortal enemy. Never mind.
Only a day before Secretary Kerry’s rationalizations,
we listened to our first black president commemorate the
50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs
and Freedom. The truth-force of Martin Luther King Jr.
seemed to hover above Barack Obama like a tired and
angry ghost, because any person with half a brain could
feel the cognitive dissonance between the president’s
mealy-mouthed obeisance to the mythology of King’s
non-violence, and the hellish violence soon to be visited
upon Damascus from our cruise missiles. Mr. Obama, Mr.
Kerry, surely you cannot have forgotten how steadfastly
Reverend King stood against militarism, how he made
the connection between inequality at home and the waste
of foreign adventures.
Our missiles will unleash stupid violence. Unnecessary
violence. Hypocritical violence.
Stupid violence because it extends yet further the hatred that so many in the Middle East must feel for our
crudely righteous meddling.
Unnecessary violence, because the resolution of the
civil war in Syria will not come one whit closer on account of our missiles—even if we kill Assad. There are
now too many conflicts folded into the Syrian tangle,
the Shia-Sunni conflict, the Iran-Israeli conflict, even the
proxy Russian-American conflict.
Hypocritical violence, in view of the U.S. military’s own
indiscriminate use of depleted uranium in the Iraq war—
and our government’s eagerness to look the other way
when Saddam, back when he was our ally, gassed Kurds
and Iranians.
Hypocritical violence also because we Americans rationalize our looking to violence as the “solution” to conflict
by hiding behind the fig-leaf that gas is so much worse
than our other well-trod paths of war-making. It is not gas
that is uniquely horrific. It is war itself.
All this being so, there is zero loss of credibility in
admitting that there is no military solution to this war,
which the world already knows.

The Daily Sentinel
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Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Tuesday, September 3, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
Wanda Louise Smith

Wanda Louise Smith, 88, of Ravenswood, W.Va., passed
away August 30, 2013, in CAMC, Memorial Division.
She was born November 26, 1924, in St. Albans, W.Va.,
a daughter of the late Lloyd Martin and Jessie Luenah
(Hart) Withrow. Her husband, Benny Morris Smith, son,
Cecil Thomas Smith, three sisters and two brothers also
preceded her in death.
She was a former department store clerk and manager
and was a member of the St. Albans Church of Christ.
Survivors include her son, Timothy M. Smith of Sissonville; daughter, Brenda L. Smith of Pomeroy, Ohio;
sisters, Mary “Dody” Holstein of Melbourne, Fl., and
Pat Preice of Redding, Ca.; seven grandchildren, and 16
great-grandchildren.
A funeral service will be conducted at 7 p.m., Tuesday, September 3, 2013, at Casto Funeral Home Chapel,
Ravenswood, W.Va. Visitation will be one hour prior
to time of service. Committal service will be 1 p.m.
Wednesday, September 4, 2013, at Cunningham Memorial Park, St. Albans.

Email condolences may be sent to: castofh@gmail.
com.

Sally Aileen Caldwell

Sally Aileen Caldwell, 66, of Racine, Ohio, went to be
with the Lord on Friday, August 30, 2013, at St. Mary’s
Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
She was born December 9, 1946, in Horace Cave,
Ohio, daughter of the late Roland and Audrey Torrence
of Tuppers Plains, Ohio. She was a loving mother, grandmother and wife, and she loved spending time with her
grandchildren, being outdoors and going to sporting
events. She was also a retired employee of the Southern
Local School District, where she worked as a kindergarten aide.
She is survived by her husband of 47 years, Jim
Caldwell; two sons, Jimmy (Christina) Caldwell of Letart Falls, and Jeff (Alisa) Caldwell of Racine; a daughter, Jodi Fisher of Racine; five very loved grandchildren,
Jesse, Xander, Katie, Ella and Connor. She is also survived by a brother-in-law, Howard (Marvene) Caldwell;

two special nephews, Troy Guthrie of Long Bottom and
Howie Caldwell of Tuppers Plains; several other nieces
and nephews; two sisters, Kathleen (Carl) Morris of Racine, and Marlene (Shepp) Shepperd; and two brothers,
Jimmy (Mary Ann) Torrence of Indiana and Paul Torrence of Florida.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death
by a brother, Jack Torrence; a sister, Darlene “Cookie”
Cassidy; an infant brother, Gene Torrence, and a special
niece, Tara Guthrie.
Services will be held at 1 p.m., Wednesday, September
4, 2013, at Racine First Baptist Church, Racine, Ohio,
with Pastor Ryan Eaton officiating. Burial will be in the
Tuppers Plains Christian Cemetery.
Friends may call from 5-9 p.m., Tuesday, at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, Ohio, and one hour prior to the
service on Wednesday at the church.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to Racine
First Baptist Outreach Center or Southern High School
Boys Basketball, C/O Ewing Funeral Home, 106 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, OH 45769.

Death Notices
Cadle

Carney

Amy Doris Cadle, 84, of
Leon, W.Va., died Friday,
August 30, 2013, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
A funeral service will be
held at 11 a.m., Tuesday,
September 3, 2013, at the
Leon United Methodist
Church, with Minister
Johnny Hayman officiating. Burial will follow in
the Leon Cemetery. Visitation will be Monday from
6 to 7:30 p.m., at Wilcoxen
Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.

Genevieve Marlene Carney, 79, of Evans, W.Va.,
died August 31, 2013, in
CAMC Memorial Division.
A funeral service will be
held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, September 4, 2013,
at Casto Funeral Home
Chapel, Evans. Burial will
follow in Jackson County
Memory Gardens, Cottageville, W.Va. Visitation
will be from 5 p.m. until
8 p.m. Tuesday, at the funeral home.

Cardwell

Laura Lou Fannin, 91,
Wellston, died Monday,
September 2, 2013, at the
Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday,
September 3, 2013, in the

Ralph E. Cardwell Jr.,
35, Wellston, died Friday,
August 30, 2013, at his residence. Funeral arrangements will be announced
by the Huntley-Cremeens
Funeral Home, Wellston.

Fannin

Huntley-Cremeens Funeral
Home, Wellston. Burial
will be in the Radcliff Cemetery in Vinton County.
Friends may call one hour
prior to the service at the
funeral home.

Kemper

Janet A. Kemper, 72,
Glenwood, West Virginia,
and formerly of Bidwell,
Ohio, died Saturday, August 31, 2013, in Cabell
Huntington Hospital, Huntington, West Virginia.
Funeral services will
be conducted at 3 p.m.
Wednesday, September 4,
2013, in the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt
Chapel, Gallipolis with
Pastor Mark Mayes, officiating. Burial will follow in
Ball’s Chapel Church Cemetery, Ashton, West Vir-

ginia. Friends and family
may call Wednesday at the
funeral home from 1 p.m.
until the time of service.

Welch

Margaret A. Welch, 94,
of Cutler, Ohio, died Saturday, August 31, 2013, at
her home with her daughter and son at her side.
Services will be held at
11 a.m., Thursday, September 5, 2013, at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home,
Coolville, Ohio, with Rev.
Jack Berry officiating.
Burial will be in the Mt.
Liberty Church Cemetery.
Friends may call from 5-8
p.m. on Wednesday, at the
funeral home.

Wood

Clyde “Paul” Wood, 84,

Crown City, died at 7:45
a.m. Sunday, September 1,
2013, at his home.
Funeral services will be
conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday, September 5, 2013, in
the Cremeens Funeral Chapel with Richard Unroe officiating. Interment will be
in the Victory Cemetery in
Guyan Township. Friends
may call from 6-8 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral
chapel.
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made in
Paul’s memory to Holzer
Hospice, 100 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.

Woodall

John Paul “Hook” Woodall, 56, of Crown City,
Ohio, died at his residence
Saturday, August 31, 2013.
Services will be 7:30

p.m. Wednesday, September 4, 2013, at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor
Joe “Skeeter” Woodall officiating. Friends may call
from 6 p.m. until the time
of service on Wednesday
at the funeral home. Burial
will be in Mound Hill Cemetery at 11 a.m. on Thursday, September 5, 2013.

Wright

Echo Lynn Wright,
daughter of Victoria Gamble and Calvin Franklin
Wright, Jr., was stillborn
on August 28, 2013, at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Arrangements will be announced at a later date at
the convenience of the family. Willis Funeral Home is
assisting the family.

Study: Slave’s stay
Verizon buying Vodafone’s wireless stake inspired ‘Uncle
Tom’s Cabin’
NEW YORK (AP) — Verizon
will own its wireless business
outright after agreeing to a
$130 billion deal to buy the 45
percent stake of Verizon Wireless owned by British cellphone
carrier Vodafone.
The buyout, the second-largest
acquisition deal on record, would
give Vodafone PLC additional
cash to pursue its expansion ambitions in Europe. Those ambitions include its push to buy up
other cellphone providers and to
expand into the lucrative world of
mobile services.
The deal announced Monday
would also give Verizon Communications Inc., the opportunity to
boost its quarterly earnings, as it
would no longer have to share a
portion of proceeds from the nation’s No. 1 wireless carrier with
Vodafone.
Verizon expects the deal to
boost its earnings per share by
10 percent once the deal closes. It
also boosted its dividend.
The deal still has requires approval by regulators and shareholders of both companies. It is
expected to close in the first quarter of 2014.
It isn’t expected to have much
of an effect on Verizon consumers or on the company’s
operations. Vodafone had little
influence on Verizon Wireless’
day-to-day operations, and the
two companies have kept out of
each other’s territory.
The Verizon-Vodafone partnership started in 2000, when what
was then Bell Atlantic combined
its East Coast wireless network
with Vodafone’s operations on
the West Coast. Vodafone had entered the U.S. market a year earlier by outbidding Bell Atlantic to
buy AirTouch Communications
Inc. of San Francisco.
While Vodafone and Verizon
have prospered by building the
infrastructure to make cellphone
calls, much of the growth in today’s market is in providing services that can be used on smartphones over high-speed wireless
connections, said Victor Basta,
managing director at Magister
Advisors.
It’s as if the tarmac of the highway has been laid, and now the
real action is in the billboards on
the side of the road.
“While Vodafone has been
pursuing its current strategy, operators have become locked in a
galactic fight with online brands
such as Google, Facebook, and
eBay for mindshare,” Basta said.
“For these online leaders, winning on the mobile device is not

a luxury, it is essential to their
own success. The mobile screen
is now the main screen in most
Western markets.”
The windfall from the buyout
will give Vodafone, already one of
the world’s largest cellphone companies, substantial funds to buy
other providers — or pay down
its debt. Last year, Vodafone
spent $1.6 billion in buying up UK
telecoms group Cable &amp; Wireless
Worldwide and is pushing ahead
with a $10.2 billion takeover bid
for Germany’s biggest cable operator, Kabel Deutschland.
The Kabel deal will help Vodafone expand its foothold in Europe and gain 32.4 million mobile,
5 million broadband and 7.6 million direct TV customers in Germany. It has 19.2 million mobile
customers in the UK, and it has
been under intense competition.
“The proceeds from the sale,
if not passed on in forms of
dividends, could improve Vodafone’s debt position following
the recent Cable &amp; Wireless and
Kabel Deutschland deals, and
provides Vodafone some leeway
to further expand its network
presence in Europe,” said Ronald Klingebiel, telecommunications specialist at Warwick Business School.
“Such moves provide the capacity and level of integration necessary for competing effectively in a
future pan-European market.”
The only question is whether
Vodafone has waited too long to
move on and to pick up companies that do things like provide
mobile phone payments, advertising and security, Basta said.
“Vodafone’s DNA, and indeed
where it has created most value,
has been in its role as a savvy
operator across markets,” Basta
said. “This creates a risk that
Vodafone will become the largest
‘digital drug mule’ in the world
— carrying other vendors’ valuable content for a fraction of the
upside. Vodafone must evolve and quickly.”
Verizon needed the profits that
the 45 percent stake Vodafone
held. Plus it couldn’t afford to
wait too much longer. The sums
involved in the deal are so huge
that Verizon feared that fears of
pressure on interest rates inspired
by U.S. economic recovery could
make a purchase more expensive.
Verizon has had a long-standing
interest in buying out its partner,
but the two companies hadn’t
agreed on a price until now. Analysts said Verizon wanted to pay
around $100 billion for Vodafone’s
stake, while reports suggested

that Vodafone was pressing for
the $130 billion it is in line to get.
The largest deal on record
is Vodafone’s $172 billion
acquisition of Mannesmann AG
in 2000, according to research
firm Dealogic.
Vodafone has long wanted to
get a divorce from Verizon. Published reports say earlier talks on
a sale broke down over price and
tax concerns.
The sale will also allow Verizon
to expand abroad — as Vodafone
could nix expansion under
the terms of now defunct joint
venture.
Verizon faces risks in the purchase, as the U.S. wireless market
is also facing growing competition in a saturated market. No. 4
T-Mobile US Inc., for instance, is
making a resurgence after shattering industry conventions.
Verizon will pay $58.9 million
in cash and $60.2 billion in stock.
It will also issue $5 billion in senior notes payable to Vodafone
and sell its 23.1 percent minority
stake in Vodafone Omnitel N.V. to
Vodafone for $3.5 billion. The remaining $2.5 billion will be paid
in other ways.
The deal comes amid a changing telecommunications landscape in the U.S. The wireless
business has been lucrative for
Verizon Communications as traditional landline services decline.
But the company faces growing
competition in a saturated market. No. 4 T-Mobile US Inc., for
instance, is making a resurgence
after shattering industry conventions, including two-year service
contracts.
In the April-to-June quarter, Verizon Wireless added 941,000 devices to its contract-based plans,
exceeding analyst estimates and
continuing a strong run. It boosted service revenue by 8.3 percent
from a year ago. Its closest rival,
AT&amp;T, is seeing revenue increases of around 4 percent.
But almost all of Verizon’s gains
on the wireless side resulted from
customers upgrading to higherpriced plans or adding more
devices to their existing plans,
rather than an influx of new
customers.
Meanwhile, No. 3 wireless
company Sprint Corp. received
a $21.6 billion investment from
SoftBank Corp. in July, giving
the Japanese investment firm
a 78 percent stake. T-Mobile
grew larger through a merger
with smaller rival MetroPCS on
April 30.
Separately, Verizon raised its
quarterly dividend by a penny
and a half to 53 cents. That makes
its annual dividend $2.12 from
$2.06.

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — A Clemson University
professor is convinced that Harriet Beecher Stowe might
not have written “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” if it were not for
a fugitive South Carolina slave she harbored for a night
before starting the history-making novel.
The book, which fueled the abolitionist cause and
helped put the nation on the path toward the Civil War,
was published in 1852 after being serialized the previous
year. It became a bestselling book of the 19th century,
second only to the Bible.
Stowe mentions harboring the slave in her Maine home
in a late 1850 letter to her sister. She writes that “he was
a genuine article from the ‘Ole Carling State.’” While it is
well-known to historians that Stowe harbored a slave, neither her letter nor her later writings mention his name.
Susanna Ashton, a professor of American literature at
Clemson, says her research has convinced her the slave
Stowe harbored was John Andrew Jackson. He was born
a slave on a Sumter County, S.C., plantation and escaped
in 1847, fleeing to Charleston and then stowing away between bales of cotton on a ship heading north.
Ashton’s conclusions appear in this summer’s edition of
“Common-Place,” the journal of the Massachusetts-based
American Antiquarian Society.
After fleeing, Jackson settled in Salem, Mass. But when
the Fugitive Slave Act was passed in 1850 by Congress
— meaning even slaves who had escaped from the South
could be returned to their owners — Jackson headed
north through Maine to Canada.
Jackson later learned to read and write, went to Europe
and his book “The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina” was published in in England in 1862. After the Civil
War, Jackson made a living as a writer and lecturer.
In his book, Jackson recalls the encounter with Stowe,
mentioning her by name.
“She took me in and fed me, and gave me some clothes
and five dollars. She also inspected my back, which is covered with scars which I shall carry with me to the grave.
She listened with great interest to my story,” he wrote.
In Stowe’s letter to her sister, the original of which is
in the Beineke Library at Yale University, Stowe notes the
effect that night had on her family.
“There hasn’t been anybody in our house (who) got
waited on so abundantly and willingly for ever so long.
These negroes possess some mysterious power of pleasing children for they hung around him and seemed never
tired of hearing him talk and sing,” she wrote.
In a recent interview, Ashton said: “Was it Jackson who
was hidden by Stowe as a fugitive in Brunswick Maine?
I’m 99.9 percent sure. That seems absolutely true. I
think he was an inspiration for the novel. I think his pain
touched her and helped her to act.”
Ashton said after “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” was published, a
lot of blacks and former slaves wanted to meet Stowe and
sought her endorsement.
“She was one of the biggest celebrities in the United
States and had huge political and cultural clout,” Ashton
said. “It was only when I looked at the dates more closely
I said wait a minute, Jackson met her before she wrote
‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin.’ That’s how the remarkable nature of
this encounter began to unfold for me.”
Stowe would later say she had a vision in a church in
Brunswick — the pew is marked — where she imagined the ending of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” and went home
to write.
Ashton suggests Stowe never mentioned Jackson in her
later writing because she would have had to admit she
violated the Fugitive Slave Act.
Katherine Kane, executive director of the Harriett
Beecher Stowe Center in Hartford, Conn., pointed out
that critics have said Stowe, as a northerner, was writing
about a section of the country where she had little firsthand experience.

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 3, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Kyle Busch wins Atlanta, locks up Chase spot
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) — Kyle
Busch’s pit crew got his car running like he wanted, then got
him on the track ahead of everyone else.
The volatile driver took it from
there, locking up a spot in the
Chase for the Sprint Cup championship that slipped away last year.
Busch held off hard-charging
Joey Logano at Atlanta Motor
Speedway on Sunday night for
his fourth Cup victory of the
year, giving him plenty of momentum heading to the playoffs.
A year ago, he didn’t even

make the 12-car field — a bitter
disappointment for a driver of
his talent.
“It’s a whole different situation than 365 days ago,” Busch
said. “We needed to prove to ourselves that we’re a championship
contender.”
Busch spit out some salty
complaints over his radio in the
early going, the No. 18 Toyota
not performing like he wanted.
The crew kept making adjustments until the driver liked the
way it handled.
Then, after a rapid-fire series of

caution flags near the end, Busch
emerged from the pits with the
lead. He comfortably beat Logano
to the line by 0.740 seconds.
“My boys on pit road,” Busch
said. “They’re amazing. I would
do anything for them.”
The 28-year-old is undoubtedly
one of the most gifted drivers in
NASCAR, earning his 16th win
of the year in the top three series.
He also has nine victories in Nationwide and three in trucks.
Overall, this was his 121st career victory in those series, 28 of
them in Cup.

But Busch is still seeking the
prize he really wants — a Cup
title.
“The championship is number
one on anybody’s list,” he said.
“You want to be the best in your
realm of racing. I’m a NASCAR
driver. I want to win a championship. I’ve yet to collect the
big prize. One of these days it
will happen. Maybe it’ll be 2013.
Hopefully, it is.”
Martin Truex Jr., racing with a
broken right wrist, was third on
the 1.54-mile trioval, followed by
Kurt Busch and Ryan Newman.

The rest of the top 10: Jeff
Gordon, Juan Pablo Montoya,
Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kevin Harvick and Brian Vickers.
Kyle Busch was among four
more drivers locking up their
spot in the Chase heading to
Richmond next weekend, where
the 12-car field will be set for the
playoff. He was joined by Harvick,
Carl Edwards and Kasey Kahne.
Points leader Jimmie Johnson,
Clint Bowyer and Matt Kenseth had already claimed playoff
See BUSCH | 8

Submitted photo

Pictured above is the 2013 Eastern girls cross country team. The
Lady Eagles won the Scenic Hills Lions Invitational Saturday at
Warren High School. Pictured from left are Laura Pullins, Asia
Michael, Keri Lawrence, Taylor Palmer and Kourtney Lawrence.

Lady Eagles
win Scenic Hills
Lions Invite
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

VINCENT, Ohio —Pure
domination.
The Eastern cross country team finished with four
runners in the top five Saturday at the Warren Scenic
Hills Lions Invitation in
Washington County.
The Lady Eagles took
the top spot with a score
of 28, followed by Marietta
with 47 points and Warren with 57. East Fairmont
was fourth with 104 points,
Magnolia was fifth with 140
points, while River Valley

was sixth with 141 points.
Belpre,
Meadowbrook,
Jackson, Southern and Waterford each had runners
compete but they did not
have enough for a team
score.65 runners competed
in the girls competition.
Eastern junior Asia Michael finished with the
best time of the day with
a 21:13, while fellow Lady
Eagles junior Taylor Palmer was second with a time
of 21:14. Keri Lawrence
was fourth overall with a
time of 22:37, while Laura
See INVITE | 8

Submitted photo | URG Athletics

Indiana Wesleyan goal keeper Zach Hammon battles Rio Grande’s Maxi Viera, center, and Romaine Terzian (23) to
prevent a goal off of a corner kick during the first half of Friday night’s game at Evan E. Davis Field. The RedStorm
scored with just over two minutes to play for a 1-0 win over the visiting Wildcats.

Late goal lifts Rio men past IWU
Randy Payton
Special to OVP

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Luiz
Filho scored off a feed from
teammate Logan Gumbert with
just over two minutes to play
giving the University of Rio
Grande a hard-fought 1-0 win
over Indiana Wesleyan University, Friday night, at muggy Evan
E. Davis Field.
The RedStorm, ranked No. 9 in
the NAIA preseason coaches poll,
improved to 2-0 with the win.
Indiana Wesleyan, which received votes in the preseason poll,
slipped to 1-1 with the loss.
Filho, a sophomore forward
from Sao Paulo, Brazil found the
back of the net with 2:09 left in
the contest for the game’s lone
marker.
Gumbert, a junior defender

from Anderson, Ohio, fired a pass
from the right middle which senior midfielder Maxi Viera (Montevideo, Uruguay) wisely elected
to slip past him, allowing Filho who had slipped behind a Wildcat
defender - to receive the ball and
fire the game-winning shot.
“Overall, I was pleased,” said
Rio Grande head coach Scott
Morrissey. “At halftime, we made
a couple of adjustments and in
the second half we really stopped
them. I don’t think they had a
scoring opportunity.”
In fact, Rio Grande enjoyed a
14-1 edge in shots for the game,
including an 8-0 advantage in the
second half.
The Wildcats’ one shot in the
match came midway through the
first half when Taylor Lehman hit
the left post.
Five of the RedStorm’s total

shots were on goal, but none got
past IWU keeper Zach Hammon
until Filho’s game-winner in the
closing moments.
“We had clear-cut opportunities
at different stages of the match,
but we weren’t very good in the
final third of the field,” Morrissey
said. “I was encouraged with
what I saw, though, particularly
with some of the new guys. We
certainly have things to work on,
but I think it’s beginning to come
together pretty nicely for us.”
Junior keeper Jon Dodson (Tiffin, OH) earned his second career
shutout in net for the RedStorm.
Hammon had four saves in the
loss for the Wildcats.
Rio Grande returns to action
next Friday against Davenport
(Mich.) University in the first
round of the Indiana Wesleyan
Classic. Kickoff is set for 4:30 p.m.

OVP Sports Schedule Rio Grande women’s soccer nips Point Park
Tuesday, Sept. 3
Volleyball
Meigs at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Rock Hill at River Valley, 5:30
Cross Country
Meigs, River Valley, Southern at Gallia Academy 5 p.m.
Golf
Chesapeake at Gallia Academy, 4 p.m.
Meigs at Meigs County Golf Course, 4 p.m.
Point Pleasant, Fairland at River Valley, 4 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 7 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Belpre, 6 p.m.
College Volleyball
Shawnee State at URG, 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 4
Volleyball
Miller at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Golf
River Valley, Coal Grove at Rock Hill, 4 p.m.
Meigs girls at Wellston, 4 p.m.
College Volleyball
WVU Tech at URG, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 5
Volleyball
Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 5:30
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Waterford at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Ironton St. Joe, 5:30
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5:30
Southern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Golf
SEOAL at Gallia Academy, 4 p.m.
TVC Ohio at Meigs, 4:30
Eastern, Waterford at South Gallia, 4:30
Wahama, Belpre at Southern, 4:30
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Athens, 5:30
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Williamstown, 5 p.m.

RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
Courtney Young’s breakaway goal at the 62:47
mark of the second half
snapped a scoreless tie and
lifted the University of Rio
Grande to a 1-0 win over
Point Park (Pa.) University, Saturday evening, in
women’s soccer action at
Evan E. Davis Field.
The RedStorm, who
were playing their home
opener, evened their record at 1-1 with the victory.
Point Park slipped to 0-1
with the loss.
Young, a sophomore forward from Okeana, Ohio,
slipped behind the Point
Park defense to field a ball
headed forward by senior de-

fender Mary Beth Schramm
(Marietta, OH) and beat Pioneer goal keeper Mackenzie
Pinto for what proved to be
the game’s lone goal.
“Obviously, after the
Mount Vernon result (a 4-1
loss in Tuesday’s season
opener), we had to make
sure that the girls came out
and played today,” said Rio
Grande head coach Callum
Morris. “We looked very
dangerous in patches and
had some chances to score,
which we didn’t have the
other day. We made a couple of adjustments at halftime and were finally able to
capitalize in the second half.
Mary made a nice flick of
the ball forward and Courtney was able to finish.”

In addition to each other, the two squads battled
fatigue throughout the contest as a result of hot and
humid playing conditions
and shots were at a premium. Both teams finished
with eight.
Neither keeper was
forced to make a stop in
the opening stanza, but
Rio junior net-minder
Allison Keeney (Cincinnati, OH) turned away five
shots on goal in the second
half among the seven tries
the Pioneers had after the
intermission.
Pinto finished with one
save in a losing cause for
Point Park.
“It got a bit nervy there

at the end, but it was a very
solid 1-0 win for us,” Morris
said. “It was nice to see the
girls last the entire 90 minutes. Hopefully, this will give
us something to build on.”
The RedStorm return
to action next weekend
when they host the Marge
Evans Classic on Friday
and Saturday.
Friday’s game against
Union (Ky.) College will
kickoff at approximately 7
p.m. following the 5 p.m.
opener between Davenport
(Mich.) and Mount Vernon
Nazarene, while Saturday’s
game against Davenport
gets underway at 5 p.m.
after Mount Vernon and
Union meet at 3 p.m.

OVP Sports Briefs
Trent Roush wins
Riverside Club Championship
MASON, W.Va. — Behind a solid
4-under par effort over the weekend,
Trent Roush bested the field by a
half-dozen strokes and came away
with the 2013 Riverside Club Championship Sunday at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason County.
Roush — who shot rounds of 67
and 69 on Saturday and Sunday —
posted a winning two-day tally of
136, which was six shots ahead of
the runner-up trio of John Ridenour
(71-71), Sterling Shields (71-71)
and Opie Lucas (67-75). Jason King

rounded out the top-five of the championship flight with a tally of 143 after rounds of 71 and 72.
In the first flight, Bryan Cromley
posted consecutive efforts of 82 to
post a winning score of 164 — which
was one shot better than runner-up
Justin Arnold (82-83) and his 165.
James MacKnight (86-87) was third
with a 173, followed by Brent Fields
(82-93) with a 175 and Mike Sigler
(88-88) with a 176.
A total of 30 players were divided
into two flights (championship and
first), according to their 2013 handicaps for two days of play.

Woods, Roush net
aces at Riverside
MASON, W.Va. — Tom Woods of
Racine and Mitch Roush of Mason
respectively landed the 11th and
12th aces of the 2013 season at Riverside Golf Course in Mason County.
Woods netted the 11th hole-in-one
of the year Thursday evening with a
pitching wedge on the 119-yard 14th
hole. The shot was witnessed by Ron
Quillen, Ron Spencer and Tony Deem.
Roush — a co-owner of Riverside
Golf Course — sank his fourth career
See BRIEFS | 8

�Professional Services

Building / Construction / Skilled

Medical / Health

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

Pleasant Valley Log
Homes &amp; Construction

Full-time/Part-time
LPN’s &amp; CNA’s

60431236

• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured • Experienced
• References Available
Gary Stanley

Experienced Preferred
But Training Available.
Interested Candidates can
Call 304-273-9482 or
come in and fill out an
application.
Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood, WV 26164

Building log &amp;
conventional homes at
affordable prices
www.pvloghomes.com

740-591-8044
Please leave a message

740-547-7924
We also build
garages &amp; pole barns60440830
Miscellaneous

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NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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)

EMPLOYMENT

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Truck Driver Needed - Henderson WV based - CDL License
&amp; 2 yrs experience MVR required. Call 304-675-7434
Help Wanted General

4-FAMILY 3.4mi out Jerry's
Run onto Hobert Dr, Apple
Grove. Sept 3 &amp; 4. 9-6
5- family Yard Sale - Sept 5 &amp;
6 @ 1111 Ohio Ave across
from First baptist church Lawn
Furniture,recliners,longaberger,oak shelves,pictures,clothing etc.

Maintenance Person wanted at
the Gallipolis Quality Inn.
Some experience required,
References a must. Apply in
person, NO Phone calls
please.
Medical / Health
Dr. Randall Hawkins is now
taking new patients. 2520 Valley drive Suite 212 Pt. Pleasant WV. (304)675-7700

888-781-3386

2500 Off Service

$

EDUCATION
Child / Elderly Care
Healthcare needed urgently for
a 73yr old man ,no qualification required, We offer ($590
per week). please contact to
schedule interview :
ban1972lol@gmail.com

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

Business &amp; Trade School

Mention Code: MB

REAL ESTATE SALES

Help Wanted General

Career Opportunity

SAVINGS!CLUB
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und

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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
CALL About our RENTAL
SPECIAL
Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2 &amp; 3
BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets Ph: 304-6740023 or 304-444-4268

Upstairs Apartment @ 238 1st
Ave - Kitchen with Stove &amp; refrigerator. One or two people $550/mo plus utilities, deposit
&amp; reference NO PETS 4464926
Houses For Rent
4BR, 2 miles west of Holzer's,
Gallipolis, $850 per month, NO
PETS 740-441-7979
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals

Collectibles Sets of china, baskets, good linens, old belt buckles,
razors, sets of flatware, old jewelry, anvil, oil lamps, crocks, pink &amp;
green def, glassware, rolls of material, blue fruit jars, stone jars, carnival
pitcher, wooden bucket, marbles, good early coffee tea kettle, rolling
pins, Royal Albert China, Mother of Pearl Opera Binoculars, small trunk
with tray, milk can, cookware, cross-cut saw and much more.
Tools Sears Craftsman 10in Radial Arm Saw, yard tools and much more.
Furniture China Cabinet, wash stand, desks, Rocker’s Chairs, 3 Pc
B.R. Suit, Mahogany Slant Front Desk, 1940s White Cabinet, Cherry
Open Front China Cab., with much more.

Terms: Cash or Check with ID
Food Available
Auctioneer Note: Much more items will be at auction than listed above.
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:

ANIMALS

Pets
Free to a Good Home - Kittens - Call 256-6038
GIVEAWAY - 3 - 3 month old
Kittens to a Good Home (Inside Only) Liter trained call
446-3897 or 446-1282

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66

AGRICULTURE

Owner: Dana Jones

AUTOMOTIVE

RICKY PEASRON, JR. #1955
304-773-5447 or 304-593-5118

For pics and more info visit www.auctionzip.com

Call

RESORT PROPERTY

60446583

AMERICA’S!DIABETIC!

starting aro

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
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renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

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740)446-3570

Located at The Auction Center, Rt. 62 North Mason, WV.
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monitoring

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$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

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@ 5:30 P.M.

!!!!YOU!MAY!QUALIFY!FOR"
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deposit Ph: 740-339-3063

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Large Auction

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740-992-2218

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446-1599.

Auctions

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supplies with li"le to no cost to you.

Apartments/Townhouses

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

60446596

ARE YOU A DIABETIC?

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

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

Sales/Marketing Representative
Applicant must be energetic and enthusiastic. This position requires an individual that possesses both Internet
Marketing Skills and face-to-face sales skills. The successful applicant will be self-motivated with a desire to
make things happen.
Please apply by mailing your resume to:
P.O. Box 807 Gallipolis, OH 45631

Call Now For Immediate Help

CREDIT CARD RELIEF

877-465-0321

Notices

Professional Services

We’ll Repair Your Computer
Through The Internet!

✔ WE CAN SAVE YOU THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS

We’re here to help you Monday - Friday from 9am-9pm EST
Not available in all states

FOUND Large toolbox near
Darwin Watched fly out of a
truck. Email description to
sauberk@gmail.com

SERVICES

Call Now and Ask How!

✔ WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY

for your FREE consultation CALL

mo.

55.75 acres of Land located on
Lower 9 Mile off Crab Creek
Rd. asking $60k. 304-5763129

Money To Lend

Lost &amp; Found

For 3 months.

Over $10,000 in credit card bills?
Can’t make the minimum payments?

Not a high-priced consolidation loan or one of those
consumer credit counseling programs

PREMIUM MOVIE
CHANNELS*

Land (Acreage)

FINANCIAL SERVICES

Yard Sale

Make the Switch to Dish
Today and Save up to 50%

You can save up to 90% when you fill your
prescriptions at our Canadian and
International Pharmacy Service.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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.

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE
Our

The Daily Sentinel s Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

60443267

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

�Page 8 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Invite

Busch

From Page 6

From Page 6

Pullins was fifth with a time of 22:37. Rounding out the
EHS total with a time of 24:28 was Kourtney Lawrence,
who finished 20th overall.
Leanne Hively led the Lady Raiders with a time of
23:59, good enough for 13th place overall. Kasey Eblin
was 41st, with a time of 27:10, Ramsey Warren was 49th
with a time of 28:48, Morgan Greenlee was 56th with a
time of 30:49, while the RVHS score was rounded out by
Kayla Browning who was 58th with a time of 30:49.
Southern’s lone competitor was Joyce Weddle, who finished 18th with a time of 24:26.
Warren took first place in the boys competition with
26 points, while Marietta was second with 48 points.
River Valley took third place with 75 points, Southern
was fourth with 99, while Jackson rounded out the field
with 118 points. Magnolia, Meadowbrook, Belpre, Eastern and Waterford each had runners compete but did not
have enough for a team score.
Warren’s Parker Blain was first overall with a time of
17:20, while Sam Goodman was runner-up with a time of
17:54. There were 60 competitors in the boys race.
River Valley was led by sophomore Jacob Kemper,
who finished 11th overall with a time of 19:39. Kyle
Randolph was 19th with a time of 20:35, Ethan Hersman was 20th with a time of 20:42, Austin Hamilton
was 31st with a time of 21:50, and rounding out the
RVHS total was Garrett Young who finished 36th with
a time of 22:30. Ben Moody also ran for the Raiders,
finishing 57th with a time of 25:39, but did not add to
the team total.
Bradley McCoy led the Tornadoes, finishing 10th with
a time of 19:35, followed by 28th place finisher Joseph
Morris with a time of 21:33. Lucas Hunter was 43th
overall for SHS with a time of 23:42, while 45th place finisher Dimitrus Lamm finished with a time of 23:52, and
rounding out the SHS total was 47th place finisher Chris
Yearter with a time of 24:02. Jacob Weddle, who finished
50th with a time of 24:30, ran but did not contribute to
the team total.
Eastern’s Tyson Long was was 12th overall with a time
of 19:43, while Brock Smith was 32nd overall with a time
of 21:51.
Complete results of the Warren Scenic Hills Lions Invitational can be found
on the web at www.runwv.com.

berths before Atlanta.
That means the final five
will be determined at Richmond.
Logano is one of the top
contenders for those remaining spots, going into
Richmond eighth in the
points and also holding a
victory as a wild-card backstop. He had the fastest
car on the track at the end
of the race, but ran out of
time to run down Busch.
“It’s just frustrating,”
Logano said. “But in the
grand scheme of things, it’s
a big points day for us to
get into the Chase going to
Richmond. This helps us a
lot. A win would’ve helped
a lot more.”
Bowyer was dominant
through the middle of the
race, leading 48 laps, but
he radioed his crew that
that something didn’t seem
right in his No. 15 car. On
Lap 193, those fears became reality when smoke

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

started pouring from the
back of his Toyota going
into Turn 1. He managed
to creep back around to
pit road, but he headed
straight for the garage, any
hope of winning the race
snuffed out.
“I don’t think they wanted to believe me,” Bowyer
said about his crew. “But I
was pretty sure what I was
hearing.”
At least Bowyer won’t
have to worry about the
poor finish — he wound up
39th — costing him a spot
in the Chase.
That wasn’t the case for
defending Cup champion
Brad Keselowski.
Winless for the year
and on the Chase bubble,
he took over the lead and
looked as if he had a shot at
a much-needed victory. But
his engine dropped a couple of cylinders and began
dropping back, finally sputtering to a stop 18 laps from
the finish. He finished 35th

and will go to Richmond
knowing he likely needs a
victory to even have a shot
at taking a second straight
title. He slipped to 15th in
the standings, 28 points behind 10th-place Kurt Busch.
“There’s
just
some
things you can’t control,”
Keselowski said. “I guess
we’ll look at the positive.
We were leading the race
when it broke. We were
doing all the right things.
We just didn’t put all the
pieces together.”
Truex made it through
the grueling race, which
lasted some four hours,
even though his cast was
in the tatters at the end.
“It hurts like hell when
you’re steering the car,”
he said.
After a pre-determined
yellow flag came out on
Lap 25 so NASCAR officials could check tire
wear, Gordon had trouble
getting up to speed on the
restart.

That set off a chain-reaction series of collisions behind the No. 24 car, which
resulted in Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kahne
smashing his radiator and
smoking badly. Another
Hendricks car, driven by
Johnson, also sustained
damage, as did Mark
Martin and Jeff Burton.
Kahne limped straight to
the garage for repairs and
finished 36th, while the
other battered cars spent
extended time on pit road.
But Kahne locked up at
least a wild card because
he has two victories on
the year.
Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
started at the front after
claiming the first pole position of his career, but
Montoya sped right on by
the rookie when the green
flag came out. Montoya
was the strongest car in
the early laps, while Stenhouse quickly slid back in
the field.

Briefs
From Page 6
ace on Saturday by using a wedge on
the 130-yard 14th hole. The 12th ace
of the year was witnessed by Trent
Roush, Scott Hussell and Jay Harris.
Foxy Grant Memorial
Golf Scramble
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Kiwanis Club of Gallipolis will be
sponsoring the first annual Foxy

Grant Memorial Golf Scramble
on Saturday, Sept. 14, at Cliffside
Golf Course.
The event, in honor of former 40year Kiwanian Charles “Foxy” Grant,
will be a four-player blind draw tournament that will start at 8:30 a.m. Seniors over 60 will play from the black
tees and ladies will play from either the
red or black tees, whichever is closer.
Cash prizes will be awarded to the
winning teams, and individual skill

prizes and lunch are included in the
entry fee with an optional skins game
on the side. There are separate entry
fees for members and non-members
at Cliffside.
Proceeds will benefit the youth
programs of Kiwanis in Gallipolis.
Sign-up sheets are available in the
Cliffside clubhouse, or contact Ed
Caudill at (740) 645-4381 or the
Cliffside clubhouse at (740) 4464653 for more information.

Boats &amp; Marinas

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

1988 21ft Shamrock Center
Console, inboard, single Ford
351 cubic inch, water cooled,
gas engine, recent complete
overhaul, $12,000 cost. Deluxe equipped for large Lake
or Gulf usage, $35,000 replacement value, $14,000 insured value, New Magic tilt
Trailer $4,000, asking
$10,000 for all, will consider
offer, interested parties only,
call 740-654-3813 for details
&amp; full description.

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MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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CALL for FREE copy of our
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FOR SALE: Handmade
wooden 2/pc gun cabinet.
Holds 8. 304-675-3864

UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION:
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FREE TOWING
24 hr. Response - Tax
Deduction
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888-928-2362
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

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

Entertainment

TUESDAY EVENING
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8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

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Show (N)
(:35) Jimmy
Kimmel (N)
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"The Canister"
(:35) David
Letterman (N)
(:35) Tonight
Show (N)
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Street
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11:30

Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage (N)
Storage (N)
Barter Kings (N)
Barter Kings "Tradecation"
(6:00) ! !! Hard to Kill
! !!! The Departed (2006, Thriller) Matt Damon, Jack Nicholson, Leonardo DiCaprio. Working for the
! !!
(‘90, Act) TVMA
State Police and the Irish Mafia, two men go undercover to get evidence. R
S.W.A.T.
To Be
River Monsters: Unhooked
River Monsters "Top 10
! African Cats (‘11, Doc) Samuel L.
! African Cats (‘11, Doc)
Jackson. TVG
Announced
"Flesh Ripper" TV14
Samuel L. Jackson. TVG
Special" TVPG
! !! Why Did I Get Married? (‘07, Com/Dra) Tyler Perry. TV14
The Game
Game (SF) (N) The Game
Sunday Best
(6:45) Wives NJ (:45) Wives NJ
Interior Therapy With Jeff
Interior Therapy "Who's on
Million Dollar List "Third
Property "Big Tamra's OC
"First Look"
Lewis "Tough Girls" TVPG
First?" (N) TVPG
Degree Burn" TV14
in Texas" (N)
Wedding
Reba
Reba
! !! Twister (‘96, Act) Helen Hunt. TV14
Cops: Reload Cops: Reload Cops:Reload
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
The Colbert
The Daily
Workaholics
Tosh.O
Tosh.O
Tosh.O
Tosh.O (N)
Brickleberry
The Daily
The Colbert
Report
Show
(N)
Show (N)
Report (N)
Amish Mafia "Prodigal Son"
Amish Mafia "Paradise"
Amish "Brother's Keeper" (N) Tickle
Porter (N)
Amish "Brother's Keeper"
A.N.T. Farm
Good Luck
! !!! Toy Story (‘95, Ani) Tom Hanks.
Jessie
Austin and
Good Luck
Dog With a
Jessie
TVG
"infANT"
Charlie
Ally
Charlie
Blog
E! News TVG
Bikini
Divas "Feuding Funkadactyls" Total Divas "Diva Las Vegas" ChelseaLately E! News
ITF Tennis U.S. Open Round of 16 and Women's Quarterfinals Site: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center (L) TVG
SportsCenter
NFL Live (N)
Hey Rookie, Welcome
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
Olbermann (L)
The Vineyard "Secret's Out"
The 700 Club TVPG
(6:00) ! So Undercover (‘12, ! !! The Last Song (‘10, Dra) Greg Kinnear, Miley Cyrus.
Act) Miley Cyrus. TVPG
A rebellious teen spends the summer with her father. TVPG
(N) TV14
Chopped "Chop on Through"
Chopped "Grilltastic!" TVG
Chopped "Breakfast, Lunch
Chopped "Sports Stars" (N)
Cutthroat Kitchen "Let Them
TVG
and Dinner!" TVG
TVG
Eat Cupcakes" TVG
Two and a
Two and a
! !!! Blow (‘01, Dra) Rachel Griffiths, Johnny Depp. The true story of
! !!! Blow (‘01, Dra) Johnny Depp. TVMA
George Jung, who lived the high life by trafficking cocaine in the '70s. TVMA
Half Men
Half Men
House
House
Property
Property
Property "Split Property
House
House
Power Broker "Signed,
Hunters Int'l
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Virgins
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Sealed, Delivered"
Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting "The Top Gear TVPG
The Fugawis
We're The
Pawn Stars
Pwn Star "Old
"Soap Box"
"Van Haulin"
Car Hoarder"
"The Fug Life" Fugawis
Man's Booty"
Dance Moms "Diva Las
Dance Moms "Do-Si-Do and Abby's Competition "Make It Diva "MerDiva "Atlanta
Double Divas Diva "Atlanta
Vegas" TVPG
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Makeover" (N) Is Burning" (N)
Is Burning"
Teen Mom 2
Teen Mom 2
Catfish
Catfish
Nikki &amp; Sara Catfish
Sam &amp; Cat
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Full House
Full House
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The Nanny
The Nanny
Friends
(:35) Friends
Ink Master "Baby BeatInk Master "Animal Instinct"
Ink Master "Monumental
Ink Master "Baby Don't Go"
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Down" TV14
TV14
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TV14
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Face Off "Subterranean
Heroes of Cosplay "Anime
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TV14
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Seinfeld "The Family Guy
Family Guy
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! !!!! Intolerance (1916, Drama) Mae Marsh, Fred Turner, Lillian Gish. Four tales spanning different
! !!! Way
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Down East
Little Couple
Little Couple
Who Are "Cindy Crawford"
Who Are "Trisha Yearwood"
Little (SP) (N) Little Couple
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Castle "A Dance With Death" Rizzoli "Built for Speed"
Rizzoli &amp; Isles (N)
Cold Justice (N)
Rizzoli &amp; Isles
Johnny Test
Teen Titans
Uncle
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Family Guy
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Go! (N)
Grandpa
Time
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Man v. Food
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Airport (N)
Airport 24/7 Bizarre Foods "Savannah"
Bizarre Foods "Portland"
Griffith "The
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Raymond "The Raymond "The Loves Ray
Loves Ray
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Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
Covert Affairs "I've Been
Suits "Endgame" (N) TV14
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"Resilience" TV14
"Transitions" TV14
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T.I. and Tiny
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MLB Baseball Chicago White Sox vs. New York Yankees Site: Yankee Stadium (L) TVG
WGN News at Nine
Funniest Home Videos

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

Hard Knocks TVMA
Real Sports With Bryant
! !! Contraband (‘12, Act) Mark Wahlberg. A smuggler
! Anna Karenina (‘12, Dra)
protects his brother from a drug lord. TV14
Keira Knightley. TV14
Gumbel TVG
(5:50) ! !!! The Game
! Chasing Mavericks (‘12, Dra) Gerard Butler. A surfer
! !! Mr. and Mrs. Smith (‘05, Act) Angelina Jolie, Brad
(‘97, Act) TVMA
seeks the help of a local to tackle big waves. TVPG
Pitt. Married assassins become each other's target. TVPG
! !! Die Another Day (‘02, Act) Pierce Brosnan. Bond
(:15) ! !! Bulletproof Monk (‘03, Act) Chow Yun-Fat. A
Web Therapy
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circles the world in his quest to find a traitor. TV14
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(N)
Sunset Strip

�Tuesday, September 3, 2013

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2013

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

The Daily Sentinel s Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT
Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
Sept. 3, 2013:
This year you might internalize more,
yet you will be less critical. Others easily pick up on your compassion, which is
clear and expressive. Be careful about
how you handle your internalized feelings; they need to be released in some
form for your own sake. If you are
single, you will attract several people.
The person who comes forward might
be emotionally unavailable. Check him
or her out carefully. If you are attached,
schedule several weekends away as a
couple and see what that does for your
relationship. Have more old-fashioned
dates together. LEO understands you
very well and tends to look at you in a
positive light.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
++++ You will find that a sense of
calmness takes over. Getting a project
off the ground will be a snap compared
to your other recent efforts. Others
might be more willing to express their
feelings. Don’t forget to buy a card for a
loved one! Tonight: Don’t feel restricted
by the day.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++ Pressure has been high, and
it will continue to be so. Someone’s
efforts might touch you so deeply that
you will want to express your appreciation. Choose an action rather than a
thank-you card to get your message
across. Touch base with a family member. Tonight: Relax.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
+++++ You tend to be very playful
in general, and today it might be difficult
to contain yourself. Use some of your
spontaneity and creativity in a brainstorming session. A loved one will let
you know how much he or she appreciates your efforts. Tonight: So what if it
is Tuesday night?
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
+++ Curb a tendency to be possessive. It seems as if you will do
everything you can in order to draw
someone toward you. In a sense, that
person might feel manipulated by you.
Recognize that you can’t control anyone. Perhaps the best bet is to let go.
Tonight: Happiest at home.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
+++++ You might want to try a
new approach or do something differently. You might be able to make
a difference, as you feel much better
about yourself than you have in a while.
Lighten up. A gesture will mean a lot,
both to the receiver and to the giver.

Tonight: All smiles.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
++ You might want to pull back and
take a closer look at what is going on
with your feelings and with someone
else’s response. You could discover
that a situation is far more intense than
you originally might have thought. Take
on the role of the observer. Tonight:
Kick back.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
+++++ You can’t help but smile
as you observe friends and loved
ones, and see how committed and
concerned they are about someone’s
problem. You recognize and appreciate
that quality in others. Make an effort to
let them know how you feel. Tonight:
Make it your treat.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
++++ You know what you want,
and you know what you need. At this
point, you might be holding a lot back.
Someone’s cold response could justify
your reservations. Keep in mind that
you were the one who initiated the
interaction. Tonight: In the limelight.
Others will follow!
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
+++++ Reach out for more information. If need be, find an expert to
clear up some confusion that surrounds
a professional matter. Remember that
this person’s opinion is just that — an
opinion. It would be wise to get feedback from others, too. Tonight: Hang
with your friends.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
++++ You make a good impression, no matter where you are. Others
admire your dignity and strong sense of
direction. A partner might share much
more than he or she normally does.
Encourage this type of vulnerability,
and listen to what he or she says.
Tonight: Dinner out.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
++++ You might want to listen
to the feedback you’ll be getting
from loved ones. You could be more
involved than you realize. Others
demand center stage. While your opinions are valued, it might not be to the
extent that you would like. Tonight: Go
along with someone’s plans.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
+++ Continue the intense schedule
you have created for yourself, and complete as much as you can — you will
be a lot happier as a result. Weigh the
pros and cons of a situation. A partner
or an associate might try to distract
you. Give in. You will enjoy the break.
Tonight: Stay calm.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Rick Wood | Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | MCT photo

Cincinnati Reds Mat Latos pitches in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Miller
Park in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Wednesday, Aug. 8, 2012.

60437206

Reds hit Wainwright hard
again, beat Cards 7-2
CINCINNATI (AP) — Shin-Soo Choo
and Joey Votto homered as Cincinnati
roughed up Adam Wainwright for the second start in a row Monday, leading Mat Latos and the Reds to a 7-2 victory over the
St. Louis Cardinals in the opener of a fourgame series between the NL Central rivals.
Latos (14-5) gave up four hits, including
a pair of singles and a sacrifice fly by Matt
Holliday, in his first complete game of the
season and the fourth of his career.
The third-place Reds are trying to break
the Cardinals’ season-long dominance. St.
Louis has won the last seven series between the teams. The Cardinals are 10-6
against Cincinnati this year.
The Cardinals took two of three in St.
Louis last week, the only loss coming when
the Reds tagged Wainwright (15-9) for
nine runs in a career-low two innings. They
had his number again on Monday, piling up
six runs and 10 hits in six innings.
It’s an important series for Cincinnati,
which now trails the Cardinals by 2½
games. St. Louis opened the day tied with
Pittsburgh for first place. The Reds maintain a comfortable lead for the final NL
wild-card spot.
The last time the Cardinals visited
Great American Ball park, they won by
scores of 13-3 and 15-2 during a one-sided
series that left the Reds embarrassed. This
one started much better for them.
Wainwright fell to 5-9 career against
Cincinnati. In his last two starts against
the Reds, the right-hander has given up 18
hits and 15 runs in only eight innings. He’s
1-3 in four starts against Cincinnati this
season with a 7.77 ERA.

Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina came
out of the game in the fifth inning because
of a sore left wrist. He was activated off
the 15-day disabled list on Aug. 15 after
missing 14 games with a sore right knee.
The Reds quickly got to Wainwright.
Choo opened the first with a single and
scored on Ryan Ludwick’s two-out single.
Ludwick missed more than three months
with torn cartilage in his right shoulder,
but the left fielder is starting to get his
swing back in shape. Ludwick has driven
in a run in each of his last four games.
Zack Cozart singled home a run in the
second, and Choo’s two-run homer made
it 4-0. Choo leads all major league leadoff
hitters with 19 homers. He has three homers during a six-game hitting streak, which
includes four multihit games.
Votto hit an up-and-away 1-2 pitch to
the opposite field in left for his 21st homer
in the fourth inning.
NOTES: Cardinals RF Carlos Beltran’s
back was still sore on Monday, prompting
manager Mike Matheny to keep him out
of the starting lineup for a second straight
day as a precaution. “Instead of trying to
push him through, we’ve tried to pay attention to how he feels,” Matheny said. “That
should pay dividends in the long run.” …
St. Louis 1B Matt Adams extended his
slump to 0 for 14. … The Reds called up
OF Billy Hamilton and INF Neftali Soto
and activated C Corky Miller off the 15day DL before the game. … Homer Bailey
(9-10) tries to extend his winning streak
— 4-0 in his last six starts — against
the Cardinals’ Michael Wacha (2-0), who
makes his fifth career start.

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