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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Mostly
sunny. High
80, low 54

OVP
Top 5:
Defenders

OPINION s 4A

WEATHER s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 103, Volume 70

Wednesday, June 29, 2016 s 50¢

Latest jobless rates for Meigs, Gallia
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — Jobless
rates in Meigs and Gallia
counties improved and held
steady, respectively, in the
month of May.
Unemployment numbers
for May included Meigs
County at 7.7 percent,
down from April’s 7.8
percent, which means the
jobless rate has dropped for
three consecutive months.
Meigs was ranked fourth
out of 88 counties in terms
of unemployment. Gallia
File photo
Red’s Auto workers inspect the bottom of a vehicle. The U.S. unemployment rate for May County was at 6.3 percent
was 4.7 percent, down from 5.0 percent in April and down from 5.5 percent in May 2015. unemployment in May, which

BY THE NUMBERS
Jobless rates in Meigs and Gallia counties improved and held
steady, respectively, in the month of May.

was unchanged from April
and down from March’s 7.6
percent, ranking it at 15 out
of 88 counties, according to
the latest statistics from the
Ohio Department of Job and
Family Services.
Monroe County once
again had the highest
unemployment rate in the
state in May at 10.8 percent,
while the lowest belonged
to Mercer County at 2.9
percent.

Across the river in Mason
County, W.Va., the jobless
rate also continued to drop
to 6.7 percent in May,
down from April’s 7 percent
and March’s 8.1 percent
unemployment rate.
Ohio’s unemployment
rate was 5.1 percent in May,
down from 5.2 percent in
April. Ohio’s nonagricultural
wage and salary employment
See RATES | 3A

Vietnam vets
sought for
Honor Flight
Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY —
Having provided thousands of World War II
and Korean War veterans with a day of celebration, Honor Flight
Columbus is seeking
applications from those
who served in the U.S.
military during the
Vietnam War years —
Feb. 28, 1961, to May
7, 1975.
The ﬁrst ﬂight of this
transition into a new
era of heroes will be
on Oct. 22 for Purple
Heart recipients. This is
the last ﬂight for 2016.
Veterans who have been
awarded the Purple
Heart medal should
apply soon for this oneday trip to Washington,
D.C.
Beginning in April
2017, all Vietnam era
veterans who apply will
be included on regular
ﬂights.
“The mission of our
many volunteers is to
honor our senior veterans with a trip to the
nation’s capital to visit
their war memorials at
no cost to them,” said
Jim Downing, Honor
Flight Columbus president.
Since 2007, the nonproﬁt group has taken
more than 4,400 World
War II and Korean veterans on this trip of celebration and reﬂection.

“The mission of our
many volunteers is
to honor our senior
veterans with a
trip to the nation’s
capital to visit their
war memorials at
no cost to them.”
— Jim Downing
Honor Flight Columbus
president
Courtesy photos

“It is our goal to transition veterans of wars
by the sequence of the
conﬂicts. Accordingly,
WWII veterans will
continue to have top
priority, with Korean
veterans next, followed
by Vietnam veterans as
we schedule ﬂights. In
addition, we put terminally ill veterans from
any era at the head of
the line,” Downing said.
“The trip is free to
veterans of these three
war periods. They
are accompanied by
experienced volunteer
guardians who pay their
own way. Flights are on
chartered Southwest
Airlines 737 aircraft and
we travel in modern
motor coaches when in
Washington.”
“Thanks to the generosity and support
of individual donors,
companies and civic

4-H Advisors Elizabeth and Sarah Lawrence are pictured Gage Smith and Michelle Stumbo, Meigs 4-H Extension Educator. The three
joined Smith in Columbus for his award presentation.

See FLIGHT | 3A

Historical society plans upcoming events

Meigs youth receives state 4-H award
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — The 2016 Ohio
4-H Achievement Awards
were presented recently at the
Nationwide and Ohio Farm Bureau
4-H Center in Columbus, and 2015
Southern graduate Gage Smith
was recognized.
The evening was hosted by the
Ohio 4-H Foundation, and Smith
was presented with the Gardening
and Horticulture Achievement
Award, sponsored by The James
and Helen Dusthimer Family.
The Foundation was founded
in 1945 as part of The Ohio State
University Development Fund,
Gage Smith is pictured with Ohio 4-H Foundation members. From left to right: Helen
and is governed by a volunteer
Dusthimer, sponsor; Cindy Rasmussen, Ohio 4-H Foundation Board president; Gage Smith,
Gardening and Horticulture Achievement Award recipient; Dr. Tom Archer, Ohio 4-H State

See AWARD | 3A director; James Dusthimer, sponsor

Contributed Article

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Opinion: 4A
Weather: 6A
— SPORTS
Top 5: 1B
Schedule: 1B
— FEATURES
Television: 5A
Classified: 3-4B
Comics: 5B

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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share your thoughts.

POMEROY — The Meigs County Historical Society and Museum
is pleased to offer the newest Cat’s
Meow featuring county history – a
beautiful nighttime scene of the
Bridge of Honor.
Pre-orders can be picked up at
the museum during regular hours,
and there are still some left to purchase. Hurry to claim yours before
supply runs out; Bridge of Honor
Cat’s Meows are $20 when picked
up or $25 if shipped. The Museum
plans to debut another Cat’s Meow
of the Skate-A-Way in the near
future.
Those planning a visit to the

Museum will be able to enjoy
the current display: Past Classes
and Fashions, Featuring Meigs
County’s Past and Present Schools.
This display will remain through
summer, with changes made that
will remove some of the more delicate items and replace them with
artifacts pertaining to fair-related
groups and activities.
On July 9 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
the Museum is hosting David VanMeter, an 18th-century colonialstyle surveyor. VanMeter will set
up equipment and demonstrate its
use, while surveying the Museum’s
property and creating maps.
In addition to surveying, VanMeter’s wife Janet will also be present

displaying weaving and needlework, as well as native quill work.
The Museum will be closed during the week of the Meigs County
Fair, (Aug. 14-20), however, you
can still get your daily dose of history by visiting the historic, nearly
200 year old, Foster-Jenkinson
Cabin on the fairgrounds each day
from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Gift shop items and memberships will be available for purchase,
and historic artifacts and a special
exhibit featuring Mr. Whiskers will
be on display. Kids’ activities will
be available each day,and admission to the cabin, and any activities, are free to all fair-goers.
Submitted by Calee Pickens

�LOCAL/STATE/NATION

2A Wednesday, June 29, 2016

OBITUARIES
ROY LEO HOLTER

GLENNA MAE (CREMEANS) FETTY
Dickson, Tenn.; brothers
Victor Cremeans, of New
Haven, and Gary Cremeans, of Rutland; sisters
Zelma Kaylor, of New
Haven, JoAnn Smith,
of Syracuse, Leaoma
Woodyard, of Mississippi,
Karen Gilkey, of Middleport, and Alice Kennedy,
of Rutland; seven grandchildren; and several
great-grandchildren and
great-great-grandchildren.
Service will be 1 p.m.
Friday, July 1, 2016, at
Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, W.Va., with Rodney Walker ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow at Miles
Cemetery in Rutland.
Visitation will be 11 a .m.
to 1 p.m. Friday at the
funeral home.
Arrangements provided
by Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason. Condolences may be shared
with the family at foglesongfuneralhome.com.

retiring in 1986.
From an early age Roy
was very involved in
church and his community.
He was an elder at the
Pomeroy Trinity Church
and a member the Meigs
County “Ikes,” Farm
Bureau, Grange, Meigs
County Fair Board and an
advisor for the Flatwoods
and Better Livestock
Dairy 4-H clubs. He was a
life member of the Ewing
Chapter of SAR, The Ohio
and American Holstein
Association, Meigs County
Historical Society and
Chester Shade Historical
Association.
Roy bowled in a league
and for the Rockspings
Grange state championship winning team. He
loved to play horseshoes
and, with Patricia, spent
many years square dancing with their friends in
the Belles and Beaus Western Square Dance Club.
Roy was an avid fan of
Eastern and Meigs high
school sports as well as his
Ohio State University and
he showed his enthusiasm
by cheering for all of his
teams at many games.
Roy loved to travel and,
along with Patricia, made
several trips abroad and
visited all 50 of the United
States. He also hunted
locally and made hunting
trips with his buddies to
several western states.
In lieu of ﬂowers, the
family requests donations
be made to the Chester
Shade Historical Association, Box 5, Chester, OH
45720.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Friday, July 1, 2016,
with Pastor Randy Smith
ofﬁciating, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Burial will follow at Chester Cemetery.
Visiting hours will be
5-8 p.m. Thursday at the
funeral home.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.
com.

AKERS
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Melissa Dawn Akers,
50, of Point Pleasant, died Monday, June 27, 2016,
at her home. A graveside service and burial will be 1
p.m. Friday, July 1, 2016, at Kirkland Memorial Gardens in Point Pleasant. Vistation will be 10 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. Friday at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant.

GRIMM
LETART, W.Va. — George Leonard Grimm, 88, of
Letart, died Monday, June 27, 2016, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. A funeral service will be 1 p.m. Wednesday,
June 29, 2016, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will follow at Letart Evergreen
Cemetery in Letart. Visitation is two hours prior to
the funeral service Wednesday at the funeral home.

DETAMORE
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Mary Emily Detamore,
71, of Proctorville, passed away Monday, June 27,
2016. Funeral service will be 1 p.m. Friday, July 1,
2016, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Thursday at the
funeral home.

LANG
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Christopher Robert
“Robbie” Lang, 36, of Lawrence County, Ohio, died
June 26, 2016 at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, WV. Private family services will be held. Hall
Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is assisting the family with arrangements.

POMEROY — Roy Leo
Holter was born Feb. 6,
1928, and died June 27,
2016, at the age of 88.
He was born to Homer
Ross and Ada Leora
Frecker Holter at Morning
Star, Racine. He was their
only child but was “Uncle
Roy” to a host of nieces
and nephews, cousins and
friends.
After attending school
at Morning Star, Pleasant
View and Racine, he graduated from Pomeroy High
School in 1946 and then
from Ohio State University School of Agriculture
in 1950.
Roy raised his children
with the life values he
was taught — hard work,
strong ethics and the
importance of a good
education. He and his
life partner, Patricia Ann
Thompson met at 4-H
camp and later eloped and
married on Christmas Day
1949.
Their children, Ann
Holter
Fox (Richard)
LONNIE RAYMON LEMASTER
Munafo, Roy Lee Holter
(deceased), Alan (Kaye)
POMEROY — Lonnie
and won. He had many
Holter, Jan Holter (Greg)
Raymon LeMaster, 47,
other health issues that
of Pomeroy, passed away he had overcome as well. Davis and Ed (Jan) Holter
June 21, 2016, at the
Everyone who knew him always respected and
Arbor’s of Pomeroy on
said he had beautiful eyes loved their father for his
tolerance, ambitiousness
Rocksprings Road.
and a terriﬁc smile.
and high expectations for
He was born Sept. 23,
Lonnie is survived by
himself and his family.
1968, in Athens, son of
his parents; his brother
Roy is survived by his
Bonnie Dearing and Ed
and sister-in-law, Tim and
wife, Patricia Thompson
LeMaster.
Sondra LeMaster; and
Lonnie graduated from nieces and nephew Heath- Holter; his four children;
10 grandchildren; and 10
Meigs High School in
er, Casey and Trevor.
great-grandchildren.
1986. He was the ball
He was preceded in
Roy started Holter Holboy for the 84-85 teams.
death by his step-father
stein Farms in 1946 with
Lonnie loved to ride his
Walter Dearing.
his parents. He later was
four-wheeler with his dog
Funeral services will
excited to be joined by
and riding pal, Lucky.
His dog, Little Kita, kept be 11 a.m. Saturday, July both of his sons and their
families. The registered
him company for 12 years 2, 2016, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home Holstein dairy farm operain the house. His fourin Pomeroy. Burial will
tions meant many long
wheeler was the love of
follow at Meigs Memory
work days, few vacations
his life.
Gardens. Visiting hours
and much hard work for
He played pool and
was a regular at Whaley’s will be 6-8 p.m. Friday at the whole family. Roy
the funeral home.
remained involved in the
store. Everyone who
A special thanks to the still-growing farm operaknew him loved him. He
tions until his death.
never met a stranger and Arbor’s of Pomeroy for
their wonderful care.
In addition to being a
he would give you the
A registry is available
full-time farmer, he spent
shirt off his back or anyat www.andersonmcdan- 32 years as a rural U.S.
thing else he had.
mail carrier in Pomeroy,
iel.com.
Lonnie battled cancer

FAIRVIEW, Tenn. —
Glenna Mae (Cremeans)
Fetty, 89, of Fairview, formerly of Rutland, passed
away June 25, 2016,
at Claibourne-Hughes
Nursing Home in Franklin, Tenn., following an
extended illness.
She was born Sept.
29, 1926, in Guyandotte,
W.Va., a daughter of the
late June and Ivy Tabitha
(Stewart) Cremeans.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her husband,
Richard Lee Fetty Sr.;
brothers J.J. Cremeans,
Jim Cremeans and Roy
Cremeans; and sister
Phyllis Spangler.
She was a homemaker
and enjoyed yard sales.
She was a Christian by
faith.
Survivors include sons
Larry Fetty, of Fairview,
and Richard “Dick” Fetty
Jr., of Rutland; daughter Sheila Chandler, of

DEATH NOTICES

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Glenn hopes
airport named for
him inspires kids
By Julie Carr Smyth

not just that, though,”
he said. “One of the
things that I think is
COLUMBUS — The
most important about
airport where astronaut
something like this, other
John Glenn ogled planes
than just honoring me, is
as a kid, came and went
the fact that it may draw
to two wars, boarded his attention for some of our
ﬁrst commercial jet and
young people and develop
piloted a private aircraft
their interest in knowing
until age 90 has now been
that they, in their time,
named in his honor.
can do as many new
The former U.S.
things as have been done
senator, 94, said during
a ceremony Tuesday that in aviation and in ﬂying
in the past.”
he hopes changing Port
Glenn was joined at
Columbus’ name to John
Glenn Columbus Interna- the event by his wife of
tional Airport will inspire 73 years, Annie, their
children and a host of digyoungsters to pursue
science, engineering and nitaries.
Susan Tomasky, the
their own round of innoboard chairwoman of the
vation.
Columbus Regional Air“It is a great honor
port Authority, said the
to me to have this ﬁeld
with my name on it. It’s
airport has a rich history.

Associated Press

Daily Sentinel

‘Little guy’
contractors still
angry at Trump
By Bernard Condon
AP Business Writer

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — The contractor who
provided the onion domes for the Taj Mahal casino had to eat $2 million in losses. The contractor
who supplied the Carrara marble from Italy ended
up ﬁling for personal bankruptcy. The contractor
who put in the bathroom partitions had to lay off
his brother.
A quarter of a century has passed since Donald
Trump refused to pay in full 253 contractors who
help build his Taj in Atlantic City. But for many of
them, it could have happened yesterday.
“We got next to nothing,” says Michael
MacLeod, whose 40-person studio made the giant
elephant statues at the casino’s entrance. “I took a
big hit.”
After the Taj opened in April 1990, the selfanointed “King of Debt” owed $70 million to
contractors employing thousands who built the
domes and minarets, put up the glass and drywall,
laid the pipes and installed everything from chandeliers to bathroom ﬁxtures. A year later, when
the casino collapsed into bankruptcy, those owed
the most got only 33 cents in cash for each dollar
owed, with promises of another 50 cents later. It
took years to get the rest, assuming the companies
survived long enough to collect.
Trump spokeswoman Hope Hicks and Trump
attorney Alan Garten did not respond to a list of
questions about the candidate’s Taj dealings.
Marty Rosenberg, former vice president of
Atlantic Plate Glass, says the way Trump handled
the contractors shows the candidate is shrewd and
clever, but Trump won’t get his vote.
“If ethics or morality has nothing to do with
business,” Rosenberg says, “he’s a very good businessman.”
For the contractors, the ﬁrst signs of trouble
came in February 1990. Regular checks for work
completed stopped arriving in the mail.
Rosenberg, who was owed $1.1 million for
installing ﬂoor-to-ceiling curtain walls of glass,
picked up the phone in his Atlantic City ofﬁce and
called one of Trump’s men overseeing construction.
“I’ll check it out, Marty, and call you right back,”
the man said. A day later, he got his answer: The
money’s coming in two weeks.
The check never came.
Five hundred miles away, in Ashtabula, Ohio,
Robert Morrison of the Molded Fiber Glass Co.
was pressing his workers to ﬁnish the domes, minarets and other faux Moorish ornaments in time
for an April 2 opening — and worrying about who
was going to pay for it all. An invoice sent weeks
earlier for $1.4 million still hadn’t been paid.
Many contractors didn’t know what to think.
Trump said he needed to complete audits ﬁrst to
make sure they weren’t overcharging; he denied
he was in ﬁnancial trouble. “I have a tremendous
amount of cash,” he told the Washington Post that
March. Desperate for money to pay workers and
suppliers, some contractors became easy targets
for a new Trump offer: Agree to less than they
billed, and he’d pay the lower amounts immediately.
One of the hardest hit was marble supplier John
Millar, who was owed $3.9 million.
As he was walking into a meeting with contractors to share strategies, landscaper Herman Caucci asked him what he planned to do: Stick it out,
or take cash at a discount?
“I don’t know, Herman, I need the money,”
Caucci recalls Millar responding before the March
1990 meeting. “We could lose everything.”
Court documents suggest he got about 30
cents on the dollar over the next year. Millar is
deceased. His family wouldn’t comment.
The stress was also building at Hastings Pavement, a company supplying paving stones.
Mario Paone, president of Hastings, rarely lost
his temper. But he had received only $100,000 of
the $1.3 million he had billed Trump.
He exploded one day just as his son, Philip
Paone, then 24, walked up to his ofﬁce door.
“I want my money!” Philip recalls his father
screaming into the phone to Trump. “Pay me my
money!”
Documents ﬁled with regulators suggest Trump
gave Paone about a third of what he was owed
over the next year.
Trump managed to open the Boardwalk casino
on April 2, 1990, and continued to dismiss rumors
that he was in ﬁnancial trouble, but the truth soon
came out.
Over his protests, regulators unsealed a devastating report in August written by Trump’s own
accountants that showed he had been burning
through cash in his personal accounts so fast in
the spring that he would have had nothing by end
of the year if he didn’t take drastic action. The
next year, the Trump Taj ﬁled for bankruptcy.
When the casino emerged from Chapter 11,
Trump got a contract to manage it. Others caught
up in the Taj turmoil didn’t fare as well.
Marble man Millar had to lay off workers, shut
down his business Avalon Commercial, close
many of his retail stores and borrow from friends
to make ends meet, according to court documents
and Millar’s lawyers and former employees. In
1996, he ﬁled for personal bankruptcy.
Morrison’s Molded Fiber Glass joined with 47
others in a negotiated settlement with Trump for
cash equal to 33 cents of each dollar owed, plus 50
cents in convertible bonds, according to a book by
Morrison published in 1994. Strapped for money,
some contractors sold the bonds immediately, getting a fraction of what they were worth at maturity.

�LOCAL/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 29, 2016 3A

Feds urge consumers to act quickly on Ikea recall
By Paul Holston
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Ikea is recalling
29 million chests and dressers that can
easily tip over and trap children underneath. Six children have been killed and
three dozen others injured in the past
27 years, and federal safety ofﬁcials
on Tuesday urged consumers to take
immediate action.
The Swedish retailer announced the
recall Tuesday, saying the furniture can
pose “a tip-over and entrapment hazard
that can result in death or injuries to
children” if it is not properly anchored
to a wall.
“We are announcing this U.S. recall
today given the recent tragic death of
a third child,” Ikea said in a statement
Tuesday. “It is clear that there are
still unsecured products in customers’
homes, and we believe that taking further action is the right thing to do.”
At a news conference, the Consumer
Product Safety Commission underscored the risk with a live demonstration of chests tipping over.
“Consumers need to act immediately
because it’s a very present hazard, especially if you have kids in your home,”
CPSC Chairman Elliot Kaye said in an
interview.
Kaye said consumers “need to either
get their anchor kit from Ikea for free
and install it on their furniture, take
it back to the store for a full refund or
have Ikea come and pick it up from

From Page 1A

increased 9,200 over the
month, from a revised
5,477,600 in April to
5,486,800 in May.
The number of workers
unemployed in Ohio in
May was 300,000, down
2,000 from 302,000 in
April. The number of
unemployed has increased
by 18,000 in the past 12
months from 282,000.
The May unemployment
rate for Ohio was 0.2
percentage points higher
than the May 2015 rate of
4.9 percent.
The U.S.
unemployment rate for
May was 4.7 percent,

Award
From Page 1A

Board, comprised of business and industry leaders,
OSU Extension personnel, and 4-H youth representatives from around
the state. The nonproﬁt
organization solicits and
receives nearly $1.1 million annually to beneﬁt
the Youth Development
Program. It also recognizes the contributions
made by 4-H members
and adult volunteers.
Smith has participated
in gardening and
horticulture projects as
a ﬁve-year 4-H member,
and is currently enrolled
at Ohio State ATI,
majoring in agribusiness.
He has been active in
the Meigs County Junior
Fair and was the 2015

down from 5.0 percent in
April and down from 5.5
percent in May 2015.
Ohio’s nonagricultural
wage and salary
employment increased
9,200 over the month,
from a revised 5,477,600
in April to 5,486,800
in May, according to
the latest business
establishment survey
conducted by the U.S.
Department of Labor
(Bureau of Labor
Statistics) in cooperation
with ODJFS.
Goods-producing
industries, at 900,400,
lost 4,600 jobs over the
month in manufacturing
(-3,100), construction
(-1,300), and mining
and logging (-200). The
private service-providing

sector, at 3,817,400,
added 14,700 jobs.
Employment gains in
educational and health
services (+7,900), leisure
and hospitality (+3,900),
other services (+2,500),
trade, transportation,
and utilities (+800),
and ﬁnancial activities
(+300) exceeded losses
in information (-400)
and professional and
business services
(-300). Government
employment, at 769,000,
decreased 900 as losses in
local government (-4,700)
surpassed gains in state
(+3,100) and federal
(+700) government.
From May 2015 to May
2016, nonagricultural
wage and salary
employment grew

to owners of its Malm chests and dressers
“I expect the rest of the furniture
industry to do the same,” said Kaye.
after reports of children’s deaths.
Kaye said IKEA is now working with
ONLINE: Ikea recall information: http://www.ikea.com/
CPSC to bring safer designs to the mar- us/en/about_ikea/newsitem/062816-recall-chestkets so that furniture is more stable.
and-dressers

70,900. Employment
in goods-producing
industries decreased
400. Manufacturing
employment decreased
4,800 as losses in durable
goods (-11,500) exceeded
gains in nondurable
goods (+6,700). Mining
and logging lost 3,000
jobs over the year.
Construction added
7,400 jobs. The private

service-providing sector
added 70,400 jobs. Gains
in educational and health
services (+29,800), leisure
and hospitality (+17,600),
trade, transportation,
and utilities (+10,800),
ﬁnancial activities
(+8,900), other services
(+7,500), and information
(+200) outweighed
losses in professional and
business services (-4,400).

Government employment
increased 900 as gains in
state (+6,200) and federal
(+1,100) government
offset losses in local
government (-6,400).
Information for this article provided
by WorkForce West Virginia and
ODJFS.
Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@
civitasmedia.com or on Twitter @
BSergentWrites.

ABOUT OHIO 4-H
Ohio 4-H is the youth development program of Ohio
State University Extension, with more than 285,000
young Ohioans participating in 4-H clubs, groups and
special interest programs. For more information about
the 4-H program in Meigs County, contact Michelle
Stumbo, 4-H Extension Educator, at 740-992-6696 or
Stumbo.5@osu.edu.

Scholarship winner and
fair king.
Smith is spending his
summer as acting clerk
for the Meigs County
Commissioners before
returning to OSU in the fall.
He, along with other
4-H Achievement Award
winners, will attend the
National 4-H Congress in

Atlanta this November
with other youth from
across the country.
Smith said he is pleased
to be presented with the
award and is looking
forward to attending the
Congress this fall.

41865 Pomeroy Pike • Pomeroy, Ohio • 740-992-0540
WE PROMOTE THE WELL-BEING
OF OUR PATIENTS AND THE QUALITY OF LIFE
IN THEIR COMMUNITIES

Kristi Finlaw,
Nurse Practitioner

Christa Simmons,
Nurse Practitioner

Reach Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155,
Ext. 2551

Nick Gatzulis, D.D.S.

Brittane Britton, D.D.S
Cassie Russell,
Dental Hygienist

Ashley Shepard,
Dental Hygienist

OUR VISION
A community where everyone enjoys
a healthy body, mind,&amp; spirit

Flight
From Page 1A

organizations who sponsor ﬂights, we can again
ﬂy about 500 senior
veterans next year,” said
Downing. “The sooner
we get an application, the
sooner the veteran can
enjoy the trip to see the
monuments. Our goal is
to honor as many of these
selﬂess men and women
as we can.”
Applications and
detailed information
about the program are
available at www.HonorFlightColumbus.Org or
by calling the ofﬁce at
614-284-4987.

Carolyn Kaster | AP

Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) Chairman Elliot Kaye watches a demonstration of
how an Ikea dresser can tip and fall on a child during a news conference at the National Press Club in
Washington on Tuesday. Ikea is recalling 29 million chests and dressers after six children were killed
when the furniture toppled over and fell on them.

OUR MISSION
To provide access to affordable,
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For additional information on our services, please feel free
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their homes for free.”
The recall, which only applies to customers in the U.S. and Canada, is for
several types of Ikea chests and dressers, including the Malm line. Ikea said
the units under the recall are children’s
chests and drawers taller than 23.5
inches and adult chests and dressers
taller than 29.5 inches.
The recalled units were sold at Ikea
stores “at various times through June
2016,” the company said.
All of the children killed were 3 years
old or younger, the CPSC said. One
child was killed about 27 years ago. The
other deaths were more recent, between
2002 and 2016. The CPSC said it
received 36 reports of children who
were injured.
Ikea said that anyone who owns one
of those chests and dressers and has not
attached them to a wall should remove
it out of reach from children. Ikea is
offering free kits to attach the chests
and dressers to a wall.
Customers who don’t want to keep
the recalled furniture can ask for a
refund. Ikea said it will give a full
refund to owners of recalled chests and
dressers made between 2002 and 2016.
For recalled units made before 2002,
customers can receive a store credit for
half the original price.
Ikea USA president Lars Petersson said
that the chests and dressers were sold
with instructions saying that they had
to be mounted to walls. Last year, the
company offered free wall-mounting kits

�E ditorial
4A Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

The Civil War
didn’t end
slavery after all
The American prison system is a massive — if
invisible — part of our economy and social fabric.
Slavery has been abolished in the United States
since 1865, when the 13th Amendment was passed in the ashes of the
Civil War.
Well, almost abolished. Actually, the
amendment included a caveat: “except
as punishment for a crime.” Since
then, prison and forced labor have
always gone together.
In fact, with over 2 million people
Lauren
behind bars in this country, the AmeriKaraffa
can prison system is a massive —
Contributing
albeit largely invisible — part of our
Columnist
economy and social fabric.
Recent years have seen a rise in
both private prisons and the use of prison labor by
private, for-proﬁt corporations. This has created perverse incentives to imprison people and exploit them
for cheap labor — often at 50 cents an hour or less.
Corporations such as Microsoft, Target, Revlon,
and Boeing have all made products with prison labor.
With over a third of home appliances and 30 percent
of speakers and headphones made using prison labor,
it’s likely most American households own inmatemade products.
Even Whole Foods, a famed destination for ethical
consumers, was forced to stop selling certain artisanal cheeses last year when those “artisans” were
revealed to be prisoners who made a base wage of 60
cents a day.
We won’t even get into what Whole Foods —
sometimes called “Whole Paycheck” — was charging
consumers for prisoner-made products, which also
included organic milk and tilapia.
The problem is making its way into popular culture as well. A season three episode of the Netﬂix
prison dramedy Orange Is the New Black, for example, illustrated a similar scam.
In the episode, a thrilling new job opportunity is
marketed to the inmates. Most are beside themselves
at the idea of working for $1 an hour — well above
the compensation offered for any other job in the
prison. A scheme is hatched to trick the women into
clamoring for the job in a fake competition.
The episode closes with a scene showing the
chosen women as their new job is revealed to them.
They walk into a warehouse. The lights click on, and
the viewer ﬁrst sees the shock and disappointment
on their faces. Then the camera turns to show rows
and rows of sewing machines and a corporate logo
overhead.
They’d competed to work in a sweatshop.
Real-life prisoners are starting to organize against
this kind of abuse. This April, prisoners in Texas
held a coordinated work stoppage with the help of
the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee —
an arm of the global IWW union.
The striking inmates refused to do work assigned
to them by Texas Correctional Industries, an arm
of the state Department of Justice that uses inmate
labor to make everything from personal care items to
toilets. Incarcerated workers there are paid as little
as 17 cents an hour, even as phone calls can cost $1 a
minute and medical care requires a $100 copay.
Another union-coordinated strike is underway
at several Alabama prisons, where inmates labor in
deplorable conditions even as they generate proﬁts
for private industries. Unions and rights groups are
gearing up for a national strike this September to
derail this exploitative system.
Those most directly and negatively affected, the
prisoners and their families, need and deserve our
support. But the rest of us need to ﬁnish the work of
the Civil War and end forced labor in our country for
good.
Lauren Karaffa is a New Economy Maryland fellow at the Institute for
Policy Studies.

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THEIR VIEW

One big factor favors Trump

Keep in mind, Trump
The historic shakeup of
made the decision on the
the Republican Party conPost after the Post published
tinues after voters in the
this headline with an InterGOP primaries rejected
net story: “Donald Trump
the establishment favorites
suggests President Obama
and gave Donald Trump
was involved with Orlando
the nomination, which
shooting.” Basically admitwill be made ofﬁcial at the Gary
Republican National ConAbernathy ting its own shark-jumping,
about 90 minutes later the
vention in July.
Staff
Post revised the headline to
George Will, the longColumnist
say, “Donald Trump seems to
time conservative columconnect President Obama to
nist who spent months
Orlando shooting.” Not much betbelittling Trump and even sugter, and no more accurate.
gested that convention delegates
In a statement blasting Trump
should ignore the voters, last week
for his decision on the Post, the
said he had left the Republican
AP said, “The Associated Press
Party. Good move. Bill Kristol,
Mitt Romney and others who have Media Editors joins other major
news leadership organizations in
thrown temper tantrums over the
condemning this affront to the
voters’ choice should consider
democratic process and the very
the same, if they can’t accept the
principles on which our nation was
results.
founded. We urge the Republican
The reaction of many in the
Party and its presumptive presiRepublican establishment is not
surprising. But of even more inter- dential nominee to abandon these
sanctions and allow full access to
est is the complete abandonment
of even the pretense of journalistic all media outlets to protect the
public’s right to know.”
integrity by most of the leading
It’s not a good idea to ban media
establishment media organizations
even if you don’t like what they
in regard to coverage of Trump.
The Washington Post, New York write, and no matter how unfair
they may be. But believe it or not,
Times, USA Today and all three
Donald Trump is not the ﬁrst canof the formerly “major” news netdidate to retaliate against certain
works – NBC, CBS and ABC – as
well as countless others have virtu- news organizations. The AP’s
high-minded sentiments would
ally dropped all efforts to at least
be more sympathetic if they were
appear unbiased and have made
applied equally.
the denigration of Trump an open
In the waning days of the 2008
and unapologetic initiative. Their
campaign, Barack Obama kicked
utter rejection of fairness and balthree reporters off his plane for
ance could not be more obvious if
the duration of the campaign after
they were intentionally spooﬁng
their newspapers – the New York
journalistic behavior.
Just do a Google search of presi- Post, Dallas Morning News and
Washington Times – endorsed
dential campaign coverage. You
John McCain for president.
have to scroll through quite a few
Remember the outrage over that?
pages to ﬁnd headlines that are
No, you probably don’t.
even slightly fair or favorable to
More recently – in June 2015,
Trump.
as reported by the Boston Globe
Even the Associated Press,
– the Hillary Clinton campaign
which long was the epitome of
“banned a representative from the
straight, down the middle of the
national print pool from attending
road reporting, decided to jump
any of her events in New Hampon the bandwagon to “condemn”
shire, a development that will
Trump for banning the Washingmake coverage for her trip to New
ton Post (and others from time to
Hampshire spotty for some of the
time) from covering his campaign
country’s largest print outlets.”
events.

Remember the indignation
expressed against Clinton across
media outlets over that move?
Remember the Associated Press
Media Editors condemning Hillary? You can be forgiven if you
missed it.
Hillary Clinton is, of course, the
least accessible candidate for president in modern history. While her
campaign may not be pulling press
credentials, what good are press
credentials if the candidate almost
never talks to the media? By contrast, Donald Trump is probably
the most accessible candidate in
history. But Trump is the target.
It is still more likely than not
that Donald Trump will be elected
president. Why? Because we are
going through a political earthquake, not just in the U.S., but
globally as well, as evidenced by
the “Brexit” vote in the United
Kingdom a few days ago where the
people went against the wishes of
the establishment over issues that
largely dovetail in the U.S. with
the Trump campaign.
No matter who they show leading right now, polls in June or July
or even August mean nothing for
a vote taking place in November.
But one consistent item on the
question of “change” that is buried
in virtually all the polls demonstrates why Trump has the upper
hand.
A perfect example is a recent
CBS poll of battleground states,
where 51 percent described Clinton as being prepared to be president, while 38 percent said Trump
was prepared. But 65 percent said
Trump would bring change, with
just 33 percent saying the same of
Clinton.
This year, despite Hillary’s allies
in the media, despite the GOP’s
establishment wing, and despite
Trump’s own penchant for selfinﬂicted wounds, the candidate of
change will win, because people
are in the mood for upheaval.
Reach Gary Abernathy at 937-393-3456 or on
Twitter @abernathygary. Gary Abernathy is
publisher of The Times-Gazette in Hillsboro,
Ohio, a Civitas Media newspaper.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
June 29, the 181st day of
2016. There are 185 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On June 29, 1956,
actress Marilyn Monroe married playwright
Arthur Miller in a civil
ceremony in White Plains,
New York. (The couple
also wed in a Jewish ceremony on July 1; the marriage lasted 4 1/2 years).
On this date:
In 1767, Britain

approved the Townshend Revenue Act, which
imposed import duties
on glass, paint, oil, lead,
paper and tea shipped to
the American colonies.
(Colonists bitterly protested, prompting Parliament to repeal the duties
— except for tea.)
Today’s Birthdays:
Movie producer Robert
Evans is 86. Songwriter
L. Russell Brown is 76.
Singer-songwriter Garland Jeffreys is 73. Actor
Gary Busey is 72. Come-

dian Richard Lewis is 69.
Actor-turned-politicianturned-radio personality
Fred Grandy is 68. Rock
musician Ian Paice (Deep
Purple) is 68. Singer
Don Dokken (Dokken)
is 63. Rock singer Colin
Hay (Men At Work)
is 63. Actress Maria
Conchita Alonso is 59.
Actress Sharon Lawrence
is 55. Actress Amanda
Donohoe is 54. Actress
Judith Hoag is 53. Violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter
is 53. Rhythm-and-blues

singer Stedman Pearson
(Five Star) is 52. Actress
Kathleen Wilhoite is 52.
Producer-writer Matthew
Weiner is 51. Musician
Dale Baker is 50. Actress
Melora Hardin is 49. Rap
DJ Shadow is 44. Actress
Zuleikha Robinson is 39.
Country musician Todd
Sansom (Marshall Dyllon)
is 38. Singer Nicole Scherzinger is 38. Comedianwriter Colin Jost (johst)
is 34. Actress Lily Rabe is
34. Rhythm-and-blues singer Aundrea Fimbres is 33.

�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 29, 2016 5A

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Daily
Sentinel appreciates your input
to the community calendar. To
make sure items can receive
proper attention, all information should be received by the
newspaper at least ﬁve business days prior to an event.
All coming events print on a
space-available basis and in
chronological order. Events can
be emailed to:TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.
Wednesday, June 29
MIDDLEPORT — American Red Cross blood drive, 9
a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Middleport
Church of Christ, 437 Main

St., Middleport. Walk-ins welcome or schedule an appointment at 1-800-REDCROSS or
online at www.redcrossblood.
com.
RACINE — Southern Local
School District special board
meeting at 8 a.m. at the Southern Local District Ofﬁce.
Thursday, June 29
LEBANON TOWNSHIP —
Lebanon Township Trustee
monthly meeting 6 p.m. at the
township garage, )rescheduled
from June 28).
Friday, July 1
HEMLOCK GROVE —

Meigs County Pomona Grange
will meet at Hemlock Grove
Grange at 7:30 p.m. Election of
ofﬁcers will be held.

County Health Department
will be closed in observance
of Independence Day. Normal
business hours resume at 8
a.m. July 5.

regular meeting at 6 p.m. at the
Racine Village Hall.

Saturday, July 9
SALEM CENTER — Star
Saturday, July 2
Grange 778 and Star Junior
RACINE — 50th wedding
Tuesday, July 5
Grange 878 will meet (instead
OLIVE TOWNSHIP — Olive of July 2), beginning with a
anniversary celebration for PasTownship Trustees regular
tor Arland and Martha King,
potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.,
4-6 p.m., Bethany United Meth- meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the
followed by the meeting at 7:30
township building on Joppa
odist Church.
p.m. Election of ofﬁcers will be
Road.
ORANGE TOWNSHIP —
conducted.
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
Orange Township Trustees
— Rutland Township Trustee
regular monthly meeting at 8
Monday, July 11
regular meeting at 7:30 a.m.
a.m. at the township building
POMEROY — The Meigs
instead of July 4 due to the
on SR681.
County
Agricultural Society
holiday.
regular
monthly
meeting at
Monday, July 4
SUTTON TOWNSHIP —
7:30
p.m.
at
the
fairgrounds.
POMEROY — The Meigs
TSutton Township Trustees

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

OHIO STATE BRIEFS

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will only list event
information that is open to the public and will be
printed on a space-available basis.

Terror suspect ordered to
undergo evaluation

Authorities: Leaders of drug
trafficking ring sentenced

CLEVELAND (AP) — A federal judge has
ordered a man charged with soliciting people to kill
members of the military to undergo a psychiatric
evaluation to determine if he’s competent to stand
trial.
Cleveland.com reports that U.S. District Judge
Dan Polster ordered the evaluation Monday after
25-year-old Terrence McNeil appeared to laugh
when the judge told him he could face life in prison
if convicted of solicitation of a crime of violence and
threatening military personnel.
Authorities say McNeil posted online names and
addresses of more than 100 military personnel and
asked people to kill them on behalf of the Islamic
State terrorist group. He was indicted in December.
The website reports that McNeil’s attorney told
the judge during Monday’s hearing that a previous
psychiatric examination had found McNeil to be
competent.

CIRCLEVILLE (AP) — Eleven people identiﬁed by
authorities as leaders of a drug trafﬁcking organization
in central Ohio have all now been sentenced to prison.
Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said in a release
Monday that an investigation into the Circleville-area
ring by state and local authorities led to indictments of
11 people identiﬁed as leaders and 61 others on drug
charges in March 2015. The ﬁnal sentencing was this
month, with most of the leaders sentenced to 11 years
in prison.
Many of the other defendants were drug users, rather
than trafﬁckers, and received lighter sentences.
Investigators say the ring transported heroin and
cocaine from Columbus and distributed it in Circleville
from August 2010 to December 2014. Authorities estimate those supervising the group made about $40,000
per month in drug sales.

Portland Road closing
for bridge replacement
PORTLAND — Meigs County Road 35, Portland
Road, will be closed between T-29 (Stiversville Road)
and T-136 (Grimm Road) from Monday, June 27 to
Friday, September 9 to allow for a bridge replacement.

New Beginnings UMC
farwell for current pastor
POMEROY — New Beginnings United Methodist
Church in Pomeroy will say farewell to their pastor,
Rev. Alethea Botts on Sunday, July 10 at 10 a.m. A
farewell service with Holy Communion is planned
with light refreshment to follow at 11:30 a.m. Pastor
Alethea and her husband Tommy arrived in Pomeroy in February 2014 and together they have been
a strong spiritual presence in Pomeroy and the surrounding areas. They will be greatly missed when
they leave to accept her new appointment to serve a
congregation in the Columbus area. The pubic is welcome to attend the farewell.

BMV starts accepting
credit cards for driver fees

HAMILTON (AP) — The last of four men has
pleaded guilty in the shooting death of a teen during
COLUMBUS (AP) — The Ohio Bureau of Motor a botched drug robbery attempt in southwest Ohio.
Vehicles says its deputy registrars will soon accept
West Chester police say 18-year-old Tyler Kassow
credit cards as payment, after years of people
died after being shot in January.
requesting that as an option.
Police say two men with ski masks forced their
By the end of the week, Ohioans at any of the 190 way into the home and scufﬂed with Kassow, who
deputy registrar sites should be able to use credit
was shot once in the head. Two other men were
cards as payment for driver’s license and vehicle reg- waiting in a car nearby.
istration renewals and other transactions. Until now,
Twenty-year-old Jibril Willingham pleaded guilty
only checks and cash had been accepted.
on Monday to aggravated robbery. His defense attorThe BMV originally had hoped to get the system
ney, David Washington, says Willingham never went
in place by late last year, but it took time to work
into the home.
out details with credit card companies.
Twenty-year-old Demarcus Staley pleaded guilty last
BMV spokeswoman Lindsey Bohrer says a few
week and was sentenced to 21 years to life in prison.
sites began offering the credit card option in a pilot
Rodney Foster and Justin Koch, both 19, previprogram last week and have received lots of positive ously pleaded guilty and were sentenced to 15 years
customer feedback.
to life.

Children’s Summer
Food Service Program
POMEROY — The Meigs Local School District is
participating in the Summer Food Service Program.
Meals will be provided to all children without charge
and there will be no discrimination in the course of
the meal service. Meals are the same for all children
regardless of race, color, national origin, sex, age or
disability, and will be provided at the sites and times
as follows: Tuppers Plains Ball Fields, 49999 Arpaugh
Rd. Reedsville, Mondays and Thursdays 10:45 – 11:30
a.m.; Star Mill Park, Racine, Mondays and Thursdays
12:15-1 p.m.; Hope Baptist Church, 570 Grant St.
Middleport, Tuesdays, 10:30-11 a.m.; Emi’s Place
Park, 326 E Main St. Pomeroy, Tuesdays 12:15-1
p.m.; Meigs Elementary, 36871 SR 124, Middleport,
every other Wednesday beginning June 15, 11 a.m.noon. For more information about the local programs,
contact Chrissy Musser, food service director, Meigs
Local School District at 740-992-6171.

Summer Feeding and
Reading program
POMEROY —Children ages 3-18 are invited to
Mulberry Community Center in Pomeroy to pick
up a free peanut butter and jelly sack lunch (other
options available for those with peanut allergies) or
stay and enjoy a story every Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday through Aug. 11 from noon to 1 p.m. (This
program is not part of the Children’s Summer Food
Service program).

Carleton College Scholarship
application deadline June 30
SYRACUSE — Applications for the 2016-2017 Carleton College Scholarships for Higher Education are
available for legal residents of the Village of Syracuse
and may be pick up at 1402 Dusky St. in Syracuse and
returned by June 30. Legal residents of Syracuse can
qualify for a scholarship award for a maximum of two
years. For more information contact Gordon Fisher at
740-992-2836.

Scholarship application
deadline July 1
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County 2016 graduates enrolled in 4-H, FFA, Boy or Girl Scouts and
attending college this fall are eligible to apply for the
Harry Leland “Pete” Parker Memorial scholarship.
This $500 scholarship is awarded during youth award
activities at the Meigs County Fair. The emphasis for
this scholarship is on youth activities and Civic and
Community Service Contributions. The applications
are due by July 1. For information or to obtain an
application, call 740-992-2264 or go online at meigs.
osu.edu, 4-H Youth Development. Information is also
available on Facebook at Harry Leland “Pete” Parker
Memorial Scholarship.

WEDNESDAY EVENING
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6 PM

6:30

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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
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Swimming Olympic Trials (L) The Night Shift "Getting
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The Middle The
Modern
Black "The
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Family
Leftovers"
SuperNature: Wild "Defying Nova "Making North
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America: Origins"
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The Night Shift "Hot in the
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Gravity" Explore the basic
America: Origins"
"The First 8 Weeks" (N)
principles of flight. (N)
Criminal Minds "Hostage" American Gothic "Jack-inBig Brother (N)
the Pulpit" (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Constantine (‘05, Sci-Fi) Rachel Weisz, Keanu Reeves. TV14
Interest "Flesh and Blood" P. Interest
18 (WGN) BlueB. "Protest Too Much"
The Dan Patrick Show (N) Penguins (N) Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pit./Sea. (L)
24 (ROOT) In Depth (N) Surfing Titans of Mavericks
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
SportsCenter
NCAA Baseball Division I Tournament Site: TD Ameritrade Park (L)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption MLB Baseball New York Mets at Washington Nationals Site: Nationals Park (L)
Baseball Tonight (L)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

One for the Money (2012, Comedy) Jason O'Mara,
Ghosts of Girlfriends Past (2009, Romance) Jennifer
Fun With Dick and
Daniel Sunjata, Katherine Heigl. TVPG
Garner, Michael Douglas, Matthew McConaughey. TV14
Jane Jim Carrey. TV14
Big Daddy (1999, Comedy) Joey Lauren Adams, Jon Young and Baby Daddy
Zookeeper (2011, Comedy) Rosario Dawson, Leslie
Stewart, Adam Sandler. TVPG
Bibb, Kevin James. TVPG
Hungry (N) (N)
X2: X-Men United (2003, Sci-Fi) Hugh Jackman, Ian McKellen, Patrick Stewart. A
Wrath of the Titans (2011, Action) Liam Neeson,
diabolical government official launches a secret operation to annihilate all mutants. TV14 Rosamund Pike, Sam Worthington. TVPG
H.Danger
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
Nicky
GShakers
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Taboo" SVU "Manipulated"
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Gone" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Class"
Royal Pains (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinf. 1/2
Seinf. 2/2
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Castle "Last Call"
Castle "Nikki Heat"
Castle "Poof! You're Dead" Castle "Knockdown"
Major Crimes "N.S.F.W."
(4:00)
National Lampoon's Vegas Vacation (‘97, Comedy)
National Lampoon's Vacation (‘83, Com) Beverly National
National ... Beverly D'Angelo, Randy Quaid, Chevy Chase. TVPG
D'Angelo, Anthony Michael Hall, Chevy Chase. TVMA
Lampoon's...
Air Jaws: Night Stalker
Shallow Water Invasion
Wrath of a Great (N)
Deadliest Sharks (N)
Sharks vs. Dolphins (N)
The First 48 "Birthday Girl" Duck
(:05) Duck
(:05) Duck
Duck
Duck Dyn.
Duck
Duck
Duck Dyn.
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
"Pie Hard"
"Pit Perfect" Dynasty
Treehouse Masters
Treehs. "Treehive Beehive" Treehs. "Meditating Maple" Treehouse "Twin Fix"
Treeh. "High Noon Saloon"
(5:30) Tia and Tia and Tamera
Douglas
Guess
Douglas
Douglas
Douglas
Douglas
Douglas
Tamera
"Twinventors"
Family Gold Family Gold Family Gold Family Gold Family Gold Family G (N) Who? TV14
Law &amp; Order "Swept Away" Law &amp; Order "Bronx Cheer" Law &amp; Order "Ego"
Law &amp; Order "White Lie"
Law &amp; Order "Whiplash"
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
The Kardashians
EJ NYC (N)
The Kardashians
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
G. Lopez
G. Lopez
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Alaska State Troopers
Underworld, Inc. "Pirates" Underworld, Inc. "Car
Underworld, Inc. "Shadow Underworld, Inc. "Illegal
"Drunk and Dangerous"
Jackers"
Kings and Queens" (N)
Gambling"
NASCAR America (L)
Swimming Olympic Trials
NASCAR Throwback (N)
NASCAR Throwback
Speak for Yourself
MLB Whiparound (L)
UFC Tonight (N)
Ultimate Fighter 23
Ultimate Fighter 23 (N)
American Pickers "Lead of American Pickers "Mad as American Pickers "Let It
American Pickers "On the Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
a Lifetime"
a Picker"
Go"
Road Again"
(N)
(N)
Wives "Unhappy Holidays" The Real Housewives
New York City Social (N)
Wives "Steel Calzones" (N) Wives "Steel Calzones"
(5:00)
Soul Men (‘08, Com) Samuel L. Jackson. TVMA BETX Celebrity BBall
Music Moguls
FinFabulous FinFabulous
Buying "Alisha and Kim"
Buying and Selling
Property Brothers
Brother vs. Brother (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00)
Friday the 13th
Freddy vs. Jason (2003, Horror) Ken Kirzinger,
Friday the 13th (2009, Horror) Danielle Panabaker,
Jared Padalecki. TVMA
Monica Keena, Robert Englund. TVM
Amanda Righetti, Jared Padalecki. TVMA

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Vice
Everest (‘15,
Veep
Ted 2 (2015, Comedy) Mark Wahlberg, Jessica Barth, Any Given
400 (HBO) Adv) Jason Clarke, Jake
"InauguraWednesday Inherent Vice
Seth MacFarlane. Ted must prove that he's a person in a
tion"
(N)
Gyllenhaal. TV14
court of law in order to gain custody of his baby. TVMA
TVMA
(:20) Kill the Messenger (‘14, True) Ray Liotta, Jeremy
(:15)
Focus (‘15, Com/Dra) Margot Robbie, Will Smith. Outcast "A Wrath Unseen"
450 (MAX) Renner. A journalist uncovers information about the CIA's Things get complicated for a skilled con man when his
role in the crack epidemic in America. TVMA
beautiful former protégé resurfaces. TVMA
(4:15)
Zodiac (‘07, Meet the Hitlers (‘14, Doc) This feature
The Gift (‘00, Thriller) Giovanni Ribisi, Keanu Reeves, Roadies "Life
500 (SHOW) Dra) Robert Downey Jr., Jake documentary explores the lives of people
Cate Blanchett. A woman with ESP attempts to solve the Is a Carnival"
Gyllenhaal. TVMA
who share the surname 'Hitler.' TV14
disappearance of a young woman in Georgia. TVM
(4:55)

www.mydailysentinel.com

Last of 4 men pleads guilty in
botched drug robbery killing

�NATION

6A Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Supreme Court leans left in term unsettled by Scalia’s death
By Mark Sherman

Nathan Lambrecht | The Monitor via AP

Lucy Ceballos, center, and Isabella Soto, left, members of the
National Institute for Reproductive Health, celebrate the U.S.
Supreme Court ruling against Texas’ abortion restrictions in
front of Whole Woman’s Health Monday in McAllen, Texas. Whole
Woman’s Health is a abortion provider that stayed open despite
the restrictions as many other providers closed over the past two
years.

Scalia’s empty chair
remained in the courtroom for a month beyond
his death, through ceremonies at the court
and the pageantry and
solemnity of his funeral
Mass at the Basilica of

the National Shrine of the
Immaculate Conception
in Washington. When the
court eventually removed
the chair from the bench,
it symbolized the loss of
a ﬁfth, majority-making
vote for conservatives on
cases that split the court
along ideological lines.
Before late June, Justice Samuel Alito had
only once in a decade on
the court read his dissent
from the bench, a practice
generally reserved for
important cases about
which a justice feels
strongly.
Alito announced his
dissents in the afﬁrmative
action and abortion cases
on the last two days the
justices met to issue decisions. Both times, Justice
Anthony Kennedy joined
with the more liberal justices to form a majority.
Alito’s upset with the
outcome of cases continued even as the court
issued a ﬁnal set of orders
on Tuesday. He wrote a
stinging 15-page dissent

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) - 68.64
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 20.23
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Gen Electric (NYSE) - 29.94
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OVBC (NASDAQ) - 21.84

BBT (NYSE) - 34.12
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Pepsico (NYSE) - 102.14
Premier (NASDAQ) - 16.68
Rockwell (NYSE) - 109.86
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 11.45
Royal Dutch Shell - 52.25
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 12.97
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 71.51
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 9.37
WesBanco (NYSE) - 29.53
Worthington (NYSE) - 36.26
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
June 28, 2016, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

62°

74°

73°

Mostly sunny and pleasant today. Clear and
cool tonight. High 80° / Low 54°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

85°
70°
85°
64°
102° in 1934
47° in 1915

Precipitation

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.01
7.25
3.65
26.89
21.84

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:06 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
2:22 a.m.
3:45 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

Jul 4

First

Jul 11

Full

Jul 19

Last

Jul 26

SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for ﬁsh and game.

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
7:54a
8:43a
9:33a
10:24a
11:18a
12:15p
12:45a

Minor
1:40a
2:29a
3:18a
4:10a
5:04a
6:00a
6:58a

0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
8:21p
9:11p
10:01p
10:53p
11:48p
12:43p
1:12p

Minor
2:07p
2:57p
3:47p
4:39p
5:33p
6:29p
7:26p

WEATHER HISTORY
Some gardens in the Reno, Nev., area
ran out of luck on June 29, 1963,
when temperatures dropped to 32
degrees -- the latest freeze on record
there.

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Low

Moderate

High

High

Lucasville
79/52
Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
12.92
15.75
20.88
12.35
13.36
24.75
12.05
26.36
34.33
12.17
20.90
34.00
22.40

Portsmouth
79/53

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.20
-0.36
-0.55
-0.56
+0.58
-0.27
-0.17
-1.58
-0.70
+0.04
-4.50
-0.80
-7.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Logan
77/51

SUNDAY

81°
58°
More clouds than sun;
showers at night

Some sun

86°
65°

86°
71°

An afternoon
Clouds and sunshine
thunderstorm possible

Marietta
78/52

Murray City
77/51
Belpre
79/52

Athens
78/51

St. Marys
79/53

Parkersburg
78/54

Coolville
78/52

Elizabeth
79/54

Spencer
79/56

Buffalo
79/55
Milton
80/56

St. Albans
80/56

Huntington
78/57

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
80/58
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
71/55
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
89/63
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
80/55

Ashland
79/56
Grayson
80/56

pected, the court still will
be short-handed when
the justices re-convene
for the start of their new
term on the ﬁrst Monday
in October. Depending
on the election results, a
new justice may not be
conﬁrmed until sometime
next year.
The Senate’s refusal
to act on Obama’s nomination of Judge Merrick
Garland only heightens
the role the presidential and congressional
elections will play in
determining the composition of the court.
Scalia’s seat is the first
of several that probably
will come open in the
next few years. Ginsburg is 83, Kennedy will
turn 80 next month and
Justice Stephen Breyer’s
78th birthday is in
August. Thomas, who
was 43 when he joined
the court, will turn 70
during the next president’s term.
Shapiro said the justended term might have
marked “the end of an
era.” But at least until a
ninth justice is conﬁrmed,
and as the term’s biggest
cases showed, Kennedy
remains the court’s pivotal vote. His majority opinion for a divided court in
the University of Texas
admissions case was the
ﬁrst time he’d voted to
uphold an afﬁrmative
action plan in 28 years on
the court.
Roberts announced
the term’s ﬁnal case
Monday, a unanimous
decision overturning
former Virginia Gov. Bob
McDonnell’s corruption
conviction.
He offered a ﬁnal nod
to Scalia, noting that his
opinion relied in part
on an earlier opinion
“authored by our late colleague, Justice Scalia.”

MONDAY

83°
58°

Wilkesville
78/52
POMEROY
Jackson
79/53
79/53
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
80/53
79/53
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
77/55
GALLIPOLIS
80/54
80/54
78/54

South Shore Greenup
80/55
78/53

45

Partly sunny and
beautiful

McArthur
78/51

Very High

Primary: grasses, pine, other
Mold: 2833
Moderate

Chillicothe
78/53

SATURDAY

85°
62°

Adelphi
78/51

Waverly
78/51

Pollen: 29

Low

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

Pleasant with plenty
of sunshine

0

Primary: cladosporium
Thu.
6:07 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
3:02 a.m.
4:53 p.m.

THURSDAY

84°
57°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

to an order denying a religious liberty claim from
pharmacists in Washington state who object to
having to dispense emergency contraception.
“If this is a sign of how
religious liberty claims
will be treated in the
years ahead, those who
value religious freedom
have cause for great concern,” he wrote.
Operating with eight
justices, the court was
unable to decide four
cases at all, including a
test of Obama’s plan to
help millions of people
living in the United
States illegally and a
challenge to the ﬁnances
of public-sector labor
unions. Both cases would
have been decisive conservative victories, even
as the tie over immigration effectively killed the
president’s plan.
In one other case,
involving the Obama
health care law, the
justices produced a
unanimous opinion that
decided nothing. The
case dealt with religious
objections to the law’s
requirement that women
covered by employer
health plans have access
to cost-free birth control.
The justices ordered
lower courts around the
country to search for a
compromise that would
address the objections
without impeding access
to contraception.
“However you feel
about the merits of a particular case, you should
want the court to be able
to do its job and declare
what the law is, especially
in cases of such profound
national importance,”
said Elizabeth Wydra,
president of the liberal
Constitutional Accountability Center.
Barring the unex-

Clendenin
80/54
Charleston
78/55

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

Winnipeg
78/50
Billings
87/61

Minneapolis
81/64
Chicago
78/59

Denver
88/60

Kansas City
80/64

Montreal
70/61
Toronto
78/55
New York
Detroit 83/68
81/56
Washington
84/68

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
92/69/t
69/56/c
91/70/pc
80/66/pc
84/63/pc
87/61/t
99/67/s
79/66/c
78/55/pc
89/66/pc
83/57/t
78/59/s
78/56/s
77/56/s
78/55/pc
97/76/pc
88/60/t
80/65/c
81/56/s
87/75/pc
92/74/pc
78/57/pc
80/64/t
107/86/t
91/71/s
89/63/pc
80/62/s
90/77/t
81/64/pc
86/61/s
88/76/t
83/68/pc
92/70/pc
92/74/t
85/66/pc
105/87/t
77/55/pc
74/60/t
89/67/pc
86/65/pc
83/67/pc
98/69/pc
71/55/s
80/58/s
84/68/pc

Hi/Lo/W
91/67/t
62/53/sh
87/71/t
80/68/pc
86/66/s
87/60/pc
98/64/t
81/66/s
82/57/s
87/67/t
68/51/t
81/61/pc
81/59/s
83/63/s
82/58/s
98/77/s
74/56/t
83/61/t
84/61/s
86/75/pc
94/76/pc
81/63/s
84/64/t
108/85/s
92/74/pc
83/62/pc
83/64/s
91/78/pc
76/55/t
87/64/s
92/78/c
85/70/s
93/72/pc
93/76/t
87/68/s
103/84/t
82/60/s
81/58/s
86/67/t
83/69/t
87/69/pc
90/69/t
73/55/s
76/56/s
86/71/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
91/70

High
Low

El Paso
92/72
Chihuahua
84/64

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

111° in Needles, CA
32° in Dillon, CO

Global
Houston
92/74
Monterrey
95/73

High
121° in Mitribah, Kuwait
Low -3° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
90/77

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

60647073

unexpected majority to
uphold race-conscious
college admissions poliWASHINGTON — Jus- cies. Another major goal
tice Antonin Scalia’s sud- of conservatives, to rein
den death transformed
in the power of labor
the Supreme Court’s
unions, was unattainterm, shifted power to its able at the court without
liberal wing and started
Scalia.
a transition that will be
Chief Justice John Robgreatly affected by who
erts was among several
wins the presidency.
justices who said they
It was a term unusual
spent more time searchin other ways, too. Justice ing for common ground
Clarence Thomas broke a after the loss of their larg10-year silence following er-than-life colleague. The
his good friend’s death
court produced a raft of
to ask questions during
decisions with little or no
an oral argument. Sendissent that also did not
ate Republicans shunned result in major changes
any action on President
to the law. Justice Ruth
Barack Obama’s nomiBader Ginsburg remarked
nee to restore the court
that eight was not a good
to its full nine-member
number for a group that
strength. And four cases
is used to being nine.
ended in 4-4 ties.
“The Supreme Court
Major decisions
term that ended yesterunderscoring abortion
day was more liberal than
rights and constraining
many had predicted and
corruption prosecutions
stranger than anyone
of public ofﬁcials would
could have anticipated,”
have come out the same
Steven Shapiro, the
way had Scalia remained American Civil Liberties
Union’s national legal
on the court. But his
director, said Tuesday.
death led directly to an

Associated Press

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Summitt,
winningest
coach, has
died at 64
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) —
Pat Summitt, the winningest coach
in Division I college basketball history who lifted the women’s game
to national prominence during her
38-year career at Tennessee, died
Tuesday. She was 64.
With an icy glare on the sidelines, Summitt led the Lady Vols
to eight national championships
and prominence on a campus
steeped in the traditions of the
football-rich south until she retired
in 2012.
Her son, Tyler Summitt, issued
a statement Tuesday morning
saying his mother died peacefully
at Sherrill Hill Senior Living in
Knoxville surrounded by those
who loved her most.
“Since 2011, my mother has
battled her toughest opponent,
early onset dementia, ‘Alzheimer’s
Type,’ and she did so with bravely
ﬁerce determination just as she
did with every opponent she ever
faced,” Tyler Summitt said. “Even
though it’s incredibly difﬁcult to
come to terms that she is no longer with us, we can all ﬁnd peace
in knowing she no longer carries
the heavy burden of this disease.”
Summitt helped grow college
women’s basketball as her Lady
Vols dominated the sport in the
late 1980s and 1990s, winning six
titles in 12 years. Tennessee — the
only school she coached — won
NCAA titles in 1987, 1989, 1991,
1996-98 and 2007-08. Summitt
had a career record of 1,098-208
in 38 seasons, plus 18 NCAA Final
Four appearances.
She announced in 2011 at age
59 that she’d been diagnosed with
early onset dementia. She coached
one more season before stepping
down. At her retirement, Summitt’s eight national titles ranked
behind the 10 won by former
UCLA men’s coach John Wooden.
UConn coach Geno Auriemma
passed Summitt after she retired.
When she stepped down, Summitt called her coaching career a
“great ride.”
President Barack Obama issued
a statement in which he cited
Summitt’s victories and championships while noting “her legacy,
however, is measured much more
by the generations of young
women and men who admired
See SUMMITT | 6B

OVP SPORTS
SCHEDULE
Thursday, June 30
American Legion Baseball
Pomeroy Post 39 at Beverly, 6
p.m.
Sunday, July 3
American Legion Baseball
Waverly at Pomeroy Post 39
(DH), 11 a.m.
Wednesday, July 6
American Legion Baseball
Lancaster at Pomeroy Post 39,
6 p.m.
Friday, July 8
American Legion Baseball
Beverly at Pomeroy Post 39, 6
p.m.
Thursday, July 14
American Legion Baseball
Athens at Pomeroy Post 39, 6
p.m.
Tuesday, July 19
American Legion Baseball
Pomeroy Post 39 at Jackson, 6
p.m.
Thursday, July 21
American Legion Baseball
Jackson at Pomeroy Post 39, 6
p.m.

Wednesday, June 29, 2016 s Section B

OVP Top 5 of 2015-16

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Pictured above are members of the 2015-16 OCSAA State Champion Ohio Valley Christian boys basketball team. Standing in the front row, from left, are
head coach Steve Rice, Justin Sizemore, Justin Beaver, Elijah McDonald, Marshall Hood, Michael Gruber, Bryce Gruber and assistant coach Chris Ellcessor.
Standing in the back are Austin Ragan, Andrew Sims, Josh McDonald and Dillon Ragan.

No. 4: Defenders win OCSAA basketball title
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — They didn’t win
either of their two games against county
teams this year, but no program in
Gallia County — or the Ohio Valley
Publishing area for that matter — had
a better basketball season than the
Defenders.
The Ohio Valley Christian boys basketball team captured the program’s ﬁrst
state championship since 2004 while
also adding its ﬁrst-ever Ohio Christian
Schools Athletic Association banner
in boys competition this past winter,
capping a remarkable campaign that
resulted in a 22-6 overall record.
The Defenders won their second
straight Kingsway Tournament crown
while opening the season with six
straight wins, then dropped four consecutive decisions to ﬁnd themselves
just a handful of games over .500 in the
opening month of the season.
OVCS, however, put together wins
in 13 of their next 14 outings — which
included a memorable 77-66 overtime
victory over visiting Wellston on February 8 — while improving to 19-5 overall.
The Defenders — who dropped
a 55-46 decision to River Valley on
December 19 in Bidwell — suffered
their ﬁnal setback of the year following
a 56-41 outcome at home against South
Gallia. SGHS, coincidentally, defeated
OVCS, RVHS and Gallia Academy in
basketball this winter, which technically
made the Rebels the kings of Gallia
County in the regular season.
The postseason, however, proved
much different for the Defenders as the
Blue and White won three of their four
tournament contests by 20-or-more
points — including both Final Four contests held at Ohio Christian University
in Circleville.
The lone postseason scare came from
New Hope Christian as OVCS avenged
one of its regular season setbacks with
a 60-55 win in the OCSAA southeast
regional ﬁnal in Circleville.
That victory allowed Ohio Valley
Christian to advance to its fourth consecutive OCSAA Final Four, but the
Defenders had yet to play in a state ﬁnal
game after ﬁnishing third last year and
fourth the previous two campaigns.
OVCS had little trouble in its state
semiﬁnal contest against Bellefontaine
Calvary Christian after delivering a
61-39 victory, then the Defenders led
all but 30 seconds of the championship
game against Dayton Temple Christian
en route to a 49-28 triumph.
A large reason for Ohio Valley
Christian’s success came down to
the play of four-year starter Marshall Hood, a 6-foot-5 senior who
posted averages of 18.2 points, 10.8

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

OVCS senior Marshall Hood splits a pair of Wellston defenders for an easy bucket during a February 8
regular season contest in Gallipolis, Ohio.

rebounds and 3.9 blocks per game.
Hood had double-double efforts in
all four tournament games, as well as
the contests against OHSAA programs
such as South Gallia, River Valley and
Wellston.
It was those kind of efforts — which
included 27 points and 13 rebounds
against the Golden Rockets — that catapulted Hood into being named not only
the most valuable player of the state
tournament, but also the player of the
year in the OVP area.
The 2016 OCSAA state title also came
25 years after Ohio Valley Christian won
its ﬁrst state championship in basketball
as members of the WVCEA. It was the
third state title overall in the history of
the boys basketball program.
The Defenders’ ﬁnal victory of the
season also happened in convincing
fashion as OVCS knocked off Chicago’s
New Jerusalem Baptist by a 75-54 mark.
Besides Hood — the only Defender
on the 2015-16 roster to compete in all
four state tournaments — OVCS will be

losing Andrew Sims, Dillon Ragan and
Justin Sizemore to graduation.
Eligible to return for the Defenders
next season are Elijah McDonald, Austin
Ragan, Michael Gruber, Justin Beaver,
Josh McDonald and Bryce Gruber.
Three of the team’s top ﬁve scorers will
also be returning to defend the title.
They might not be the powerhouse
teams you see winning state titles in
the OHSAA or the WVSSAC, but the
Defenders weren’t afraid to play bigger
schools or better programs. They also
weren’t afraid of taking losses, knowing
the whole time that the better competition would only beneﬁt them down the
road.
Those competitive choices ultimately
proved to be beneﬁcial, particularly
when Ohio Valley Christian was holding
a rather large trophy over its head.
No other basketball team, outside of
the OVCS boys, in the tri-county area —
boys or girls — advanced to the regional
level of the postseason.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

2B Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Gallia Academy football golf
scramble to be held July 16
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The annual Gallia Academy
football golf scramble will be held Saturday, July 16 at
Cliffside Golf Course.
Registration will begin at 7:30 a.m. and the scramble will start at 8:30 a.m.
The format will be bring your own team.
The team will be four players with only one handicap under-10 and a team handicap of 40-or-greater.
There will be two divisions to choose from.
The blue division is a competitive division that will
be playing for cash prizes.
The white division is a fun division with no handicap requirements and winners will be drawn at random.
Food and beverages will be provided.
The deadline for registering is Sunday, July 10.
To register or for questions please call (740) 2561897 or (740) 446-8791.

Kiwanis Juniors golf
tournament is July 14
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —The Cliffside Golf Club
will be hosting the seventh annual Kiwanis Juniors
at Cliffside golf tournament for junior golfers on
Thursday, July 14, starting at 10 a.m. Registration

will be from 9 a.m. until 9:45.
This is an individual stroke play tournament open
to golfers age 9(or under)-to-18 years old. The participants will be divided into four divisions, 10-under,
11-12, 13-15, and 16-18.
Entry fee is $20 for players 12-under, and $30 for
players 13-18. Clubhouse certiﬁcates and individual
awards will be presented to the top-three places in
each division.
Cart and meal passes will be available for spectators
for $15 to follow kids 13-over and $10 to follow kids
12-under, so that they may follow the tournament and
eat with the kids.
To enter please contact the Cliffside clubhouse
at 740-446-4653, or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919 or
740-645-4381, or by email at rbncaudill@yahoo.com.
Please leave player’s name, age as of July 14, 2016 and
school they are currently attending.

Tri-County Junior Golf
schedule is released
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The schedule for the
2016 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf League
has been released.
The tour ofﬁcially began on Monday, June 13, at
the Hidden Valley Golf Course in Point Pleasant. Age
groups for both young ladies and young men are 10
and under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments, courses and dates of
play are as follows: Wednesday, July 6, at Cliffside

URG CAMP ANNOUNCEMENTS
Contributed Article

Veteran Rio Grande women’s
basketball head coach David
RIO GRANDE — The Universi- Smalley, who ranks among the top
ty of Rio Grande Athletic Depart- 10 coaches on the active wins list
ment has announced its 2016
with more than 450, will be the
Summer Camp schedule. Camps
camp director.
will be conducted throughout July
Online registration is available
on the URG campus.
through the women’s basketball
link on the school’s athletic webWOMEN’S BASKETBALL
site, www.rioredstorm.com.
The University of Rio Grande’s
Registration forms are alsoavail2016 Women’s Basketball Camp
able in the lobby of the Lyne Cenis scheduled for July 10-13 at the
ter during regular business hours.
Lyne Center on the URG campus.
Registration forms should be
The overnight instructional
mailed to David Smalley, Rio
camp is open to girls in grades
Grande Women’s Basketball
4-12.
Camp, P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande,
Cost is $285 per camper, which OH 45674.
includes lodging, meals, a certiﬁChecks should be made payable
cate of participation and a t-shirt. to Women’s Basketball Camp.
Campers will also receive
For more information, contact
24-hour supervision from coaches Smalley at 740-245-7491, 1-800and counselors; lecture/discussion 282-7201, or e-mail dsmalley@
groups and ﬁlm sessions; daily
rio.edu
instruction on shooting, ballhandling, post play and defense;
MEN’S AND WOMEN’S SOCCER
and use of the school’s swimming
The University of Rio Grande
pool.
soccer programs have announced
There will also be a camp store their 2016 summer camp schedfeaturing drinks, snacks, pizza
ule.
and Rio Grande apparel for sale
A team camp for girls’ high
school squads is planned for July
each day.

10-13, with a boys’ high school
team camp slated for July 17-21.
Cost for the girls’ camp is $270,
while the boys’ camp has a fee of
$305.
Fees for the residential camps
include lodging, meals, training
sessions and tournament play.
Camp directors are URG men’s
soccer head coach Scott Morrissey and women’s soccer head
coach Tony Daniels.
The camp brochure is available on both the men’s soccer
and women’s soccer links of the
school’s athletic website, www.
rioredstorm.com.
Online registration and payment is available at www.rioredstormsoccercamps.com
Registration forms should be
mailed to URG Lyne Center, P.O.
Box 500, Rio Grande, OH 45674.
Checks should be made payable
to Scott Morrissey.
For more information, contact
Morrissey at 740-245-7126, 740645-6438 or e-mail scottm@rio.
edu; or Daniels at 740-245-7493,
740-645-0377 or e-mail tdaniels@
rio.edu

Durant, Anthony lead USA hoops
NEW YORK (AP) —
The U.S. has selected its
12-player basketball roster, led by Kevin Durant
and Carmelo Anthony,
with the goal of winning
the Americans’ third
straight Olympic gold
medal.
Durant and Anthony
are the only players with
Olympic experience
after a number of stars,
including LeBron James,
decided to skip Rio.
Also chosen Monday
for the team were: Gold-

en State’s Klay Thompson, Draymond Green
and Harrison Barnes;
Toronto’s Kyle Lowry
and DeMar DeRozan;
Cleveland’s Kyrie Irving;
Indiana’s Paul George;
Chicago’s Jimmy Butler;
Sacramento’s DeMarcus
Cousins and the Clippers’ DeAndre Jordan.
“We’re very, very positive about the talent level
and then the individual
strengths of this team,”
USA Basketball chairman Jerry Colangelo

AFRICAN
PENGUINS
are coming to the

Pomeroy Public Library!
Friday, July 1st @ 2 pm

Everyone Welcome!
2016 Children’s Summer
Reading Program

740-992-5813
www.meigslibrary.org

60665283

said. “We’re long, we’re
athletic. I think we have
some terriﬁc defenders as
well as terriﬁc shooters
and the versatility is over
the top.”
Irving was the MVP
of the 2014 Basketball
World Cup on a U.S.
team that included
Thompson, Cousins and
DeRozan and easily won
gold.
The Americans should
roll into Rio as the favorites. Yet they won’t look
as imposing as expected
after the withdrawals
of NBA MVP Stephen
Curry and All-Stars
such as Russell Westbrook, Chris Paul and
James Harden.
Colangelo said having a national team
pool, which he began
in 2005, always has the
Americans ready for
player losses. There
were 31 players in this
year’s and he had to
go deep into it — and
eventually even beyond
it — to ﬁnd 12 as the
usual factors that can
knock players out were

joined by the Zika virus
and other concerns in
Brazil.
“Prior to this year, in
the past we dealt with
things like free agency,
injuries, personal issues
that might prevent
someone from moving
forward. This year it
was exacerbated by circumstances beyond anyone’s control, and that
was the reality, the speculation and the circumstance in Rio,” Colangelo said. “So somewhat
more challenging, but at
the end of the day, and
this is important: This
is not about who isn’t
here, this is about who
is here.”
That includes Anthony, who becomes the
ﬁrst U.S. men’s basketball player to appear
in four Olympics, and
Durant, who set a U.S.
record by averaging 19.5
points in London.
“Carmelo and Durant
serve as both individuals
who have been there,
done that and won gold
medals,” Colangelo said.

MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION
LUNCH ALONG THE RIVER
July 13th-August 3rd-September 7th,
11-1 Delivery Available
740-591-6095 or 740-416-2247
Dave Diles Park
WE HAVE CAT'S MEOWS OF MIDDLEPORT LANDMARKS!
THESE MAKE GREAT GIFTS!
Library-Post Office-Pool
Middleport High/Jr. High-Meigs High School
$20@
740-992-5877
60664284

Golf Course in Gallipolis; and Monday, July 11, at
Meigs County Golf Course in Pomeroy.
The fee for each tournament is $10 per player. A
small lunch is included with the fee and will be served
at the conclusion of play each week. Registration
begins at 8:30 a.m. with play starting at 9 a.m. Please
contact Jeff Slone at 740-256-6160, Jan Haddox at
304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing 304-675-6135 if you
can contribute or have questions concerning the tour.

Eastern golf
scramble set
POMEROY, Ohio — The Eastern golf team will
hold a golf scramble on Saturday, July 30, at the Meigs
County Golf Course. The format will be a four-man
scramble with a 9 a.m. shotgun start, with a limit of
10 teams allowed in the event.
Registration is scheduled for 8 a.m. on the day
of the event and the cost is $40 per player, which
includes 18 holes of golf, a cart and lunch.
There will be a skins game ($20 per team) and mulligans are available for $10 each. There will also be
prizes for closest to the pin, longest drive, and hitting
the green on par 3s to double your money.
Again, the ﬁeld is limited to the ﬁrst 10 teams
to register and pay. Contact EHS golf coach Nick
Dettwiller for more information or to register at 740416-0344 or by email at nickdettwiller@gmail.com
All proceeds from the tournament will go directly to
the boys and girls golf teams at Eastern High School.

Vintage Smoke
recaptures glory
days with victory
SONOMA, Calif.
(AP) — Tony Stewart
sat slumped on the stairs
inside his team transporter
a year ago reﬂecting on the
worst slump of his NASCAR career.
He had a migraine that
day at Sonoma Raceway
and spoke softly about his
plight. Stewart didn’t know
what to do to return to his
glory days. He had no idea
how to adapt to NASCAR’s
rules package and seemed
thoroughly defeated.
Asked that day about
his conﬁdence, he meekly
admitted he was suffering.
“What’s that? I should
Google that and see if I
can ﬁnd the meaning of
that word,” Stewart said. “I
don’t have any conﬁdence.”
That shell of Stewart
was nowhere to be found at
Sonoma over the weekend,
where Smoke was in vintage form. He was cranky,
candid and comical. All the
ingredients that make him
competitive.
So when Denny Hamlin
slipped by him in the seventh turn of the ﬁnal lap in
Sunday’s race on the road
course where Stewart has
been such a force for so
many years, no one doubted
that this throwback version
of the three-time champ
would bullishly try to seize
the lead and the win.
He made his move in
tricky turn 11, where Hamlin overshot the corner
and left enough room for
Stewart to squeeze inside.
Stewart then ran him up
the track and into the wall
as he charged toward the
ﬁnish line and his ﬁrst
checkered ﬂag in three
years.
Stewart’s peers pumped
their ﬁsts out their windows to applaud him.
Some ran to his car, or met
him in victory lane. Crew
members lined the wall
to high-ﬁve him as he celebrated. It was a show of
support not often seen in
NASCAR, maybe not since
the late Dale Earnhardt’s
win in the 1998 Daytona
500.
Even Hamlin, who had
just given the race away,
went to congratulate his
former teammate and onetime mentor.
“Tony has been ultrafair to me. He’s treated
me really well my entire
career,” Hamlin said. “It’s
not like I gave him one by
any means. He gave us an
opportunity to move him,

we did, and then we got it
back.”
It was an important win
for Stewart, who is retiring
at the end of the year, and
for NASCAR, which needs
its biggest stars in the spotlight. The win will earn
Stewart a spot in the championship ﬁeld should he
crack the top-30 in points,
and he’s currently 32nd in
the standings but only nine
points back.
More important than
making the Chase, though,
is that it showed Stewart is
still the same guy he was
before three years of injuries, on-track mediocrity
and personal perils. He
struggled mightily after
breaking his leg in a 2013
crash, then was emotionally devastated after accidentally striking and killing
driver Kevin Ward during
a New York sprint car race
in 2014. He’s facing a civil
suit ﬁled by the driver’s
family.
He announced last year
that 2016 would be his
ﬁnal season as a NASCAR
driver, and there have been
times some have wondered
why he even bothered.
He broke his back a week
before the season opened
and missed the ﬁrst eight
races before returning for a
farewell tour that had been
kind of meh until the last
two weeks.
But Stewart is ﬁnally
comfortable again in his
car and is adjusting to a
ﬁrst-year crew chief. His
performance has picked up
of late, and with it came
the ﬁery side of Stewart
that has been missing for
so long. He was once again
the closest thing to A.J.
Foyt, his childhood hero,
that this generation has
ever seen.
No one thought there
would ever be another
Foyt, but Stewart proved
them wrong. But there
won’t ever be another
Stewart, not in this politically correct day and age
of not upsetting the apple
cart or the sponsors who
pay the bills.
Playing it safe never
appealed to Stewart, and
he never backed down to
corporate pressure. There’s
been no ﬁne big enough to
make Stewart play Mr. Nice
Guy, and NASCAR popped
him for $35,000 days before
his return to the car this
year for criticizing what he
felt was a lack of attention
to a safety issue.

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

Notices

Contractors

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - Garages Complete Remodeling
SHOP &amp; COMPARE
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-1671
740-416-0480

60663465

Help Wanted General

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.
Wanted

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute
OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

$$$$$$$$$

Help Wanted General

Miscellaneous

Help Wanted
Equipment Operator
Proficient with Excavators
and Dozers
Pay negotiable with
experience.
Five years experience
preferred
Contact 740-388-0079
8:00AM to 4:00 PM

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

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

Business &amp; Trade School

HELP WANTED
Full Time Bus Driver needed
at the Meigs County Board of
Developmental Disabilities.
Must have valid operatorҋs
license and CDL with School
Bus Endorsement. Substitutes
also needed – teacher,
assistant, cook, van driverqualifications vary depending
on substitute position.

Apartments/Townhouses
1 Bedroom apartment
ph# 740-446-0390

EEO

Apartments for Rent:

Yard Sale
Garage Sale
July 1-July 2nd
8am-5pm
119 Timonthy Dr off of 850
2 tractors and alot of
equipment and misc. items
Yard Sale
Fri July 1
8:00am-4:00pm
Tedora Ave
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Child/Elderly Care
WANTED: Someone to sit with
elderly lady in Bidwell,OH
Call Kevin (740) 645-9602

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE

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

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

Sale Carpet
5.95 yard free estimates.
Mollohan Carpet 317 St Rt 7 N
Gallipolis, Oh 740-446-7444

Miscellaneous

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

Send resume to: MCBDD
P.O. Box 307/1310 Carleton
Street
Syracuse, Ohio 45779

Miscellaneous

$$$$$$$$$

Wednesday, June 29, 2016 3B

Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications for
2, 3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD
Subsidized Apartments.
Applications are taken
Monday through Thursday
9:00 am-11:30 am. Office is
located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806.

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
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Rentals
Office Building For Rent
across from Gallia County
Courthouse
$325.00 month/ deposit
call 740-256-6190
Pets
5 Puppies Free to Good
Homes
Small Chihuahua/Poodle Mix
Call Between 4PM and 7PM
(304) 675-1680

Home Improvements

BASEMENT WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call 24 HRS 740-446-0870.
Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

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Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.

Finding Senior Housing can be
complex, but it doesn’t have to be.

60583312

Lost &amp; Found
MISSING BIRD POSSIBLY
STOLEN: Large Brilliant
Green/Blue/Red Macaw
Has ID Ring on Leg
Cash Reward for Return or
Info Leading to Return
Please Call: (740) 256-1971
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE, OHIO
LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the Mayor,
2581 Third Street, Syracuse, Ohio 45779, until 6:00 P.M. local
time on Tuesday, July 5, 2016, for furnishing all labor, materials
and equipment necessary to complete the project known as
“Syracuse Street Improvements 2016” and at said time and
place, proposals shall be publicly opened and read aloud.
Contract documents, bid sheets, specifications, and other
pertinent information can be obtained at the office of the Fiscal
Officer, 2581 Third Street, Syracuse, Ohio 45779, between 8 AM
and 4 PM on week days beginning June 15, 2016.
Each bidder is required to furnish with its proposal a Bid
Guaranty and Contract Bond in accordance with Section 153.54
of the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security furnished in Bond form,
shall be issued by a Surety Company or Corporation licensed in
the State of Ohio to provide said surety.
Each proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties
submitting the proposal and all persons interested therein. Each
bidder must submit evidence of its experiences on projects of
similar size and complexity. The owner intends and requires that
this project be completed no later than September 30, 2016.
All contractors and subcontractors involved with the project will
to the extent practicable use Ohio products, materials, services,
and labor in the implementation of their project. Additionally,
contractor compliance with the equal employment opportunity
requirements of Ohio Administrative Code Chapter 123 is
required. Bidders must comply with the prevailing wage rates on
Public Improvements in Meigs County and the Village of
Syracuse, Ohio as determined by the Ohio Department of Commerce, Bureau of Wage and Hour Administration, 614.644.2239.
Domestic steel use requirements as specified in section 153.011
of the Ohio Revised Code apply to this project.
Copies of section 153.011 of the Ohio Revised Code can be
obtained from the office of the Ohio facilities construction
commission.
The Village of Syracuse reserves the right to waive irregularities
and to reject any and all bids.
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6B Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Post 39 American Legion loses at Lancaster
By Paul Boggs

relief pitcher Braden Heston
loaded the bases with the tying
run on deck.
LANCASTER — It was
But Heston, in his only
Lancaster’s Beavers Field, but
inning of action, recorded his
the Pomeroy Post 39 American third and ﬁnal strikeout to end
Legion baseball team left a lot the game.
of ducks on the pond.
While the Pomeroy post
That’s because Post 39
pounded out a dozen hits, and
stranded a staggering 15 basreached base via four Lancasterunners, and allowed a pair
er errors, it only accounted for
of multiple-run innings on
two runs while stranding an
Monday, en route to suffering a astonishing 15.
7-2 8th District Legion League
Post 39 left two runners on
loss at Lancaster.
in the ﬁrst, third, fourth, sixth
With the defeat, in fact, Post
and eighth innings — while
39 — after blanking Parkersleaving one aboard in the ﬁfth
burg Post 15 in its seasonand seventh, before the bases
opening tilt on June 5 — has
loaded in the ninth.
now lost its last 10.
Pomeroy also made a pair of
Monday’s loss left Pomeroy
momentum-killing
base-runwith an 0-3 mark in the 8th
ning
mistakes,
losing
the lead
District Legion League, having
runner
for
the
second
out in
also lost at Athens and against
the
third
—
and
for
the
initial
Jackson.
out
in
the
seventh.
Lancaster scored two earned
Both runners were tagged
runs on three hits in the
out between third and home,
second inning, but Post 39
trimmed the deﬁcit to 2-1 with as the inability to tie the game
an unearned run in the fourth. at 2-2 in the seventh set up the
ﬁve-run ﬁve-hit Lancaster outThe score remained the
burst in the bottom half.
same until the bottom of the
As Post 39 pitcher Cameron
seventh, when Lancaster let
Mattox
worked strong into
loose for ﬁve consecutive
the
seventh,
Lancaster led off
singles to center-ﬁeld to lead
with ﬁve consecutive singles
off the frame — resulting in
to center-ﬁeld — capped off by
four earned runs and a 6-1
a two-run baseknock by Derek
advantage.
Post 39’s only error led to an Short.
At that point, Cameron Richunearned run, and the seventh
mond relieved Mattox, as he
point for Post 11, as Pomeroy
hit Isaac Smith with a pitch —
posted a run on three hits in
before Brice Deible reached on
the ninth to make it 7-2.
the error to make it 7-1.
It even got a bit interesting
in the ninth, as a two-out walk
Mattox ofﬁcially pitched six
to Trey Pickens by Lancaster
full frames, allowing all seven
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Summitt
From Page 1B

Pat’s intense competitiveness and character, and
as a result found in them-

selves the conﬁdence to
practice hard, play harder,
and live with courage on
and off the court.”
Obama added that
“her Hall of Fame career
would tell the story of the

runs on 15 hits and a secondinning walk to Short.
He struck out two, while
Richmond faced eight batters
in his two innings of work, giving up back-to-back inﬁeld hits
to lead off the eighth.
Speaking of eight, Post 11
starting pitcher Anthony Selhorst went that many strong,
allowing the lone unearned run
along with nine hits.
Selhorst struck out six,
despite hitting Jesse Morris
with a pitch in the sixth while
walking Mattox to lead off the
eighth.
In an overall cleanly-played
contest, both starters retired
the sides in order only once.
Kaleb Hill had four hits to
pace Post 39, and reached base
in all ﬁve of his at-bats.
Clayton Wood and Blake
Johnson added two hits apiece,
as Richmond’s RBI-single
scored Wood in the ninth.
With Post 39 trailing 2-0,
Kaileb Sheets doubled down
the right-ﬁeld line with one out
in the third.
But when Wood reached
base on an inﬁeld hit on a
bunt, Sheets was tagged out
between third and home.
In both the ﬁrst and third
stanzas, Pomeroy left runners
on the corners, then scored
once before stranding two
more apiece in the fourth and
sixth.
Post 39 got its initial run when
Dylan Smith reached on a leadoff
error, then crossed on a two-out
RBI-single by Wes Clark.

historic progress toward
equality in American
athletics that she helped
advance.”
“Pat started playing
college hoops before Title
IX and started coaching

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Pomeroy Post 39 shortstop Dylan Smith fires a throw to first base during the
team’s American Legion baseball game at Lancaster on Monday.

Hill had an inﬁeld hit deep
in the hole in the ﬁfth, but was
left stranded at second — just
as he was in the seventh.
Wood reached on a leadoff
error and Hill singled to right
center, but Wood — on a deliberate double-steal set — was
tracked down and tagged out
in trying to take home.
In the eighth, Mattox walked
to lead off and Morris singled
to right, but they were left
stranded at third and second
respectively.
Lancaster scored its open-

before the NCAA recognized women’s basketball
as a sport,” Obama said.
“When she took the helm
at Tennessee as a 22-yearold, she had to wash her
players’ uniforms; by the
time Pat stepped down
as the Lady Vols’ head
coach, her teams wore
eight championship rings
and had cut down nets in
sold-out stadiums.”
Summitt was a tough
taskmaster with a frosty
glower that could strike
the fear of failure in her
players. She punished
one team that stayed up
partying before an early
morning practice by
running them until they
vomited. She even placed
garbage cans in the gym
so they’d have somewhere
to be sick.
Nevertheless, she
enjoyed such an intimate
relationship with her players that they called her
“Pat.”
Summitt never had a
losing record and her
teams made the NCAA
Tournament every season. She began her coaching career at Tennessee in
the 1974-75 season, when
her team ﬁnished 16-8.
With a 75-54 victory
against Purdue on March
22, 2005, she earned her
880th victory, moving
her past North Carolina’s
Dean Smith as the all-

ing two runs in the second —
when Jack Young doubled and
Short walked.
They scored their respective
runs off back-to-back RBI-singles by Heston and Smith.
Post 11, with the victory,
raised its record to 8-20 — and
1-3 in the league.
Post 39 returns to the road
with a non-league bout at Beverly on Thursday.
First pitch is set for 6 p.m.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2106

time winningest coach
in NCAA history. She
earned her 1,000th career
win with a 73-43 victory
against Georgia on Feb.
5, 2009.
Summitt won 16 Southeastern Conference regular season titles, as well
as 16 conference tournament titles. She was an
eight-time SEC coach of
the year and seven-time
NCAA coach of the year.
She also coached the U.S.
women’s Olympic team to
the 1984 gold medal.
In 2006, Tennessee
made Summitt the ﬁrst
millionaire coach in
women’s basketball with
a contract paying $1.125
million. She was paid
$1.5 million in the ﬁnal
year of the six-year contract in 2011-12.
Summitt’s greatest
adversary on the court
was Auriemma. The two
teams played 22 times
from 1995-2007. Summitt
ended the series after the
2007 season.
“Pat’s vision for the
game of women’s basketball and her relentless
drive pushed the game
to a new level and made
it possible for the rest of
us to accomplish what
we did,” Auriemma said
at the time of her retirement.
In 1999, Summitt was
inducted as part of the

inaugural class of the
Women’s Basketball Hall
of Fame. She made the
Naismith Basketball Hall
of Fame a year later.
She also received the
Presidential Medal of
Freedom, the nation’s
highest civilian honor.
But it was only in 2012
when being honored with
the Arthur Ashe Courage Award that Summitt
shared she had six miscarriages before giving
birth to her son, Tyler.
She was born June 14,
1952, in Henrietta, Tennessee, and graduated
from Cheatham County
Central High School just
west of Nashville. She
played college basketball
at the University of Tennessee at Martin where
she received her bachelor’s degree in physical
education. She was the
co-captain of the 1976
U.S. Olympic team, which
won the silver medal.
After playing at UT
Martin, she was hired as
a graduate assistant at
Tennessee and took over
when the previous head
coach left.
Summitt started a
foundation in her name to
ﬁght Alzheimer’s in 2011
that has raised millions of
dollars.
Summitt has two courts
used by NCAA Division
I basketball teams named
in her honor: “Pat Head
Summitt Court” at the
University of TennesseeMartin, and “The Summitt” at the University
of Tennessee-Knoxville.
She also has two streets
named after her: “Pat
Summitt Street” on the
University of TennesseeKnoxville campus and
“Pat Head Summitt
Avenue” on the University of Tennessee-Martin
campus.

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