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                  <text>Agency
receives
honor

Partly
sunny. High
84, low 61

Cincinnati
beats
Cubs 9-1

BUSINESS s 3A

WEATHER s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 117, Volume 69

Thursday, July 23, 2015 s 50¢

Marauders at band camp

District
seeks to
‘catch’
recyclers
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

$576,225 was paid out in 1863 dollars
and included payment for 2,500 horses stolen by the raiders. There were a
total of 4375 claims ﬁles, $428,168 for
Confederate damages and $148,057
for Union damages.
Haas shared more information
about “Ohio Numbers,” including
total enlistments, casualties, generals,
ﬂags and Medal of Honor recipients.
“Numbers are contentious,” Haas
said. “It is difﬁcult to get an entirely
accurate total of many things associated with the Civil War when there

OHIO VALLEY — Residents in the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Joint
Solid Waste Management
District may ﬁnd themselves “caught” recycling
at a single stream drop-off
sites in 2015.
These recyclers have a
chance to win a gift card
on site from Subway,
Walmart or other local
merchants if they are
spotted by a district representative.
The single-stream
recycling program began
in January 2014 and
has recycled nearly 2.5
million pounds in the
ﬁrst year of operation.
Since GJMV’s move to
single-stream recycling,
efforts have increased by
11 percent over the past
year According to Director Terri Marchi, the
percentage increase was
arrived at by comparing
January-June 2014 numbers to January-June 2015
ﬁgures.
With single-stream
recycling, approved
recycling materials may
be placed into a single
container rather than
the previous method in
which items had to be
sorted before going into
the receptacles. Advanced
equipment and technology are used to sort the
items by type at a recycling facilities.
This convenient method of recycling has been
credited with the increase
in collected materials,
and according to Marchi,
the response from the
public has been extremely
positive.
“We increased the
number of sites and containers from our initial
offering,” Marchi said.
“GJMV is trying to make
recycling as easy and
convenient as possible for
residents.”
The program is funded
by GJMV, which has
partnered with Rumpke,
a trash removal and disposal company. Currently,
there are 28 sites and 49
containers throughout
the four counties being
served.
GJMV has worked with
commissioners in all four
counties and provided
each township in the
county with information
to pass on to residents in
their continued efforts to
communicate their recycling efforts.
The program accepts
plastic bottles and jugs,
glass bottles and jars,
cartons, metal cans, paper
and cardboard. Materials
accepted include: metal
cans, cardboard, paper and
paper products, cartons,
glass bottles and jars, and
plastic bottles numbered
1-7. Beverage bottles, milk
jugs, shampoo bottles, and
laundry detergent bottles.
Materials accepted in the

See NUMBERS | 6A

See CATCH | 6A

Photos by Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

While she wasn’t able to march Wednesday, Chelsie Knopp, a senior trumpet player, knew she would be back out on the blacktop soon. Her father, Chuck, said
Wednesday was an off day for Knopp, who is currently completing chemotherapy.

Meigs band makes
musical memories
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The
heat of the black pavement thumps with the
sound of feet as band
members belt hits, perform marching drills
while the color guard
waves life-size “pencils”
made with tape and
swimming foam noodles.
It’s band camp week
for the Meigs Marauder
Band as they continue to
put their show together,
“School of Rock,” for the
upcoming season. The
show will comprise of
four songs: “Bohemian
Rhapsody” by Queen,
“School’s Out” by Alice
Cooper, “Dream On” by
Aerosmith and a Queen
medley.
According to Meigs
Marauder Band Director
Toney Dingess, this year
there are 66 horns on

the ﬁeld, 10 battery (or
marching percussion),
17 color guard and ﬁve
in the pit (stationary percussion), along with one
ﬁeld commander, adding
up to 99 marching members.
In order for the band
to have health and success, the Band Boosters
aid the kids throughout
the day by providing a
tent for water breaks,
along with lunch and
dinner during band camp
(where they feed about
a total of 150 people),
snacks and a nurse in
case of injuries. The
boosters are also preparing for the band booth
that will be present at
the Meigs County Fair in
a few short weeks.
It was under the cool
shade of the Band Boosters tent that one of the
band members watched

from the sideline for the
day. Chelsie Knopp, a
senior trumpet player,
was recently diagnosed
with pilocytic astrocytoma, which is a benign
cancerous tumor about
the size of a ﬁnger that
was discovered about
halfway down her spine.
According to Chelsie’s
father, Chuck, Chelsie

was diagnosed in March
and began chemotherapy
treatments in April, with
treatments hopefully
wrapping up in about a
year.
“She has done a
remarkable job ever
since going through it,
and coming out (of it),”
Chuck said. He also
praised his daughter for

her activities, including
marching band, working at the London Pool
in Syracuse. Chelsie is
interested in nursing and
hopes to attend Kent
State when she graduates.
She said of all her high
school experiences, she
will miss band the most.
See BAND | 6A

Civil War ‘by the numbers’

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Opinion: 4A
Weather: 6A

By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

— SPORTS
Baseball: 1B
Golf: 1B
Briefs: 1B
— FEATURES
Television: 2A
Classifieds: 3-4B
Comics: 5B

Tubas march during “School’s Out.” The band continued to perfect drill already learned as well as
learning new sets of drill.

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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share your thoughts.

PORTLAND — Numbers are an
important part of historical facts,
and John Haas, manuscript curator
for Ohio History Connection, was
on hand Sunday after the Bufﬁngton
Island Battleﬁeld Memorial Service
to share some “Civil War Ohio Numbers.”
Morgan’s Raid, for which the battleﬁeld is remembered, necessitated a
Morgan’s Raid Claim Commission
to process claims for damages and
theft of civilian property. A total of

�LOCAL

2A Thursday, July 23, 2015

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
EAKINS
POMEROY, Ohio — Mickey Edward Eakins, 45, of
Cheshire, Ohio, died Tuesday, July 21, 2015, at the
Holzer Emergency Room in Pomeroy.
A memorial service will be held at a later date.
Arrangements are under the direction of Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
GALYEN
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Patricia Rosann Galyen, 76,
of Gallipolis, died Saturday July 18, 2015, at Holzer
Medical Center.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Saturday, July 25,
2015, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home with
Pastor Todd Hines ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends may call the funeral
home between 5-7 p.m. Friday, July 24, 2015.
LONG
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Tina Mae Hammond Long,
55, of Gallipolis, passed away Sunday, July 19, 2015,
in St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
According to her wishes, cremation services are

under the direction of McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis. Memorial services will
be 1 p.m. Saturday, July 25, 2015, at Cheshire Baptist
Church, Cheshire, Ohio, with Pastor Jon Mollohan,
ofﬁciating.
In lieu of ﬂowers, the family requests donation
made to: Tina Long Memorial Fund, c/o McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, P.O. Box
536, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
MCGUIRE
BIDWELL, Ohio — Mary Jane McGuire, 59, of
Bidwell and formerly of Ewington, died Monday, July
20, 2015, after an extended illness.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Friday, July 24, 2015,
at His Way Community Church (former Vinton Baptist Church), Main Street, Vinton, with Pastor Dave
Greer, ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may call the church between 11 a.m.
and 1 p.m. Friday. The McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton Chapel, is handling arrangements.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
THURSDAY, JULY 23

Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.

POMEROY — The Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
Board of Supervisors will hold
their regular monthly meeting at
11:30 a.m. at the district ofﬁce.
The ofﬁce is located at 113 E.

SYRACUSE — The Ladies of
the Meigs County Republican Party
will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Carlton
School in Syracuse. Everyone is welcome.

FRIDAY, JULY 24
RUTLAND — The Rutland Township regular meeting for August has
been moved to July 24 at 7:30 a.m.

Dr. Robyn Pape (formerly Dr. Robyn Sargent)
of Drs. Quinn, Foster &amp; Associates
is pleased to announce
the opening of
Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)

Meigs Clinic

Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

comprehensive
eyecare

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

treatment &amp; management
of eye disease
contact lens services

Farm Bureau
offers interactive
ag experiences
Staff Report

COLUMBUS — Family fun and a connection
to rural Ohio are just two of the many reasons for
visitors to stop by the “Land and Living” exhibit
at the Ohio State Fair.
The state fair runs from July 29 to Aug. 9.
Sponsored by Ohio Farm Bureau Federation and
Nationwide, the exhibit demonstrates agriculture’s
link to everyday life.
Visitors to the exhibit, located in the Nationwide/Donahey Ag &amp; Hort building, can participate in a variety of interactive activities such as
playing with local rescue dogs, planting sunﬂower
seeds and learning about aquaponics. Children can
take a ride through the OFBF Country Cruise on
pedal tractors or combines, while parents enjoy
learning about Ohio’s crops, animals and other
important areas of Ohio agriculture. Families can
also have a commemorative picture taken.
The Land and Living Exhibit will feature many
exhibits including the Land and Living stage that
will feature demonstrations including agriscience
experiments, modern wool spinning, visits from
Columbus Zoo animals and much more. Squash
carver Gus Smithhisler will be back again this year
to carve two giant squash weighing more than 600
pounds each and a 40-pound block of cheese July
29, Aug. 1 and Aug. 3. A joint Ohio House and
Senate Ag Committee Hearing will be held Aug. 4.
Making its debut at the Land and Living exhibit
this year is the OFBF Canstruction display. The
display will be a tractor and combine made from
canned food. The Canstruction exhibit is made
possible entirely from Ohio food processors who
donated the canned food, with help from Ohio
farmers and Nationwide Insurance. After the fair,
all canned food will be donated to Mid-Ohio Foodbank.
“The Land and Living exhibit and Ohio State
Fair showcase the beauty of agriculture in our
great state,” said OFBF intern Maggie Dean.
“With so many fun activities, the Land and Living
exhibit is exciting and educational for all ages.”
The Land and Living exhibit is supported by
Nationwide Insurance, Ohio Soybean Council,
Ohio Corn Marketing Program and the Ohio
Expositions Commision. Last year the exhibit
attracted an estimated 300,000 state fair visitors.
The Land and Living exhibit is located east of
the giant slide and across from the south entrance
to the midway. There is no additional charge for
visiting the building or any of its displays.

quality eyewear

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@civitasmedia.com

443 General Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio
(former ofﬁce of Dr. Jim Schmoll)

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH

Call (740) 691-5008

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

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60594493

THURSDAY EVENING
3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

6

PM

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur "All
About D.W./
Blockheads"
Eyewitness
News at 6
10TV News
at 6 p.m.
Two and a
Half Men
BBC World
News:
America
13 News at
6:00 p.m.

6

PM

6:30
NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
SciGirls
"Digging
Archaeology"
ABC World
News
CBS Evening
News
Two and a
Half Men
Nightly
Business
Report (N)
CBS Evening
News

6:30

THURSDAY, JULY 23
7

PM

7:30

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

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

Fighters "This Cheerleader's
Got Game" (N)
Fighters "This Cheerleader's
Got Game" (N)
The Astronaut Wives Club
"In the Blind" (N)
Song of the Mountains A
performance by bluegrass
band, Blue Highway.
The Astronaut Wives Club
"In the Blind" (N)
The Big Bang Mom
Theory
BOOM! "It's the Blueberry
Slushy Bomb!" (N)
Shetland "Red Bones - Part
Two" Inspector Perez must
apprehend the suspect. 2/2
The Big Bang Mom
Theory

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

Big Brother

29

(FAM)

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

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

PM

10:30

9

PM

Under the Dome "Caged"
(N)

9:30

Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother Met Mother
18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Washington Nationals at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park (L)
24 (ROOT) Driven
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
SportsCenter "My Wish"
Human (N) In the Spotlight (N)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption Pan American Games -- Toronto, Ont. (L)
27 (LIFE)

10

Dateline NBC Featuring quality investigative features,
breaking news coverage and newsmaker profiles.
Dateline NBC Featuring quality investigative features,
breaking news coverage and newsmaker profiles.
Mistresses "The Best Laid Rookie Blue "A Real
Plans" (N)
Gentleman" (N)
Justice: What's the Right Masterpiece "Endeavour:
Thing to Do? "A Lesson in Neverland" Morse and
Thursday band together.
Lying/ A Deal is a Deal"
Mistresses "The Best Laid Rookie Blue "A Real
Plans" (N)
Gentleman" (N)
Big Brother
Under the Dome "Caged"
(N)
Wayward Pines "Cycle" (SF) Eyewitness News at 10
(N)
Lewis "Life Born of Fire"

10

PM

10:30

Met Mother Met Mother
Postgame
Pirates Ball
Baseball Tonight (L)

Hoarders: Family Secrets
Hoarders "Terry/ Adelle"
Hoarders "Verna/ Joanne" Hoarders: Family Secrets
Living with the Enemy "Put
"Michelle/ Mary"
"Doris and T'resa" (N)
a Ring on It" (N)
Boy-World
Boy Meets
13 Going on 30 Thirteen-year-old Jenna wishes away
What a Girl Wants An American teenager's reunion
her youth and wakes up as a 30-year-old woman. TVPG
with her British father threatens his political career. TVPG
World
"Cyrano"
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Shooter (2007, Action) Michael Peña, Danny Glover, Mark Wahlberg. A sniper
Lip Sync
who was abandoned behind enemy lines is called back to service. TV14
Battle
Battle
Battle (N)
Battle
Thunder
Thunder
WitchWay
Talia (N)
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
Law&amp;O: SVU "Wannabe"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Shattered" SVU "Merchandise"
Complications "Fever" (N) Graceland "Pinon Tree" (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
The Seventies (N)
The Seventies
Castle "Hunt"
Castle "Scared to Death"
Bad Boys II (2003, Action) Will Smith, Jordi Mollà, Martin Lawrence. TVM
(5:30) Get Smart An inept spy battles an evil organization
Erin Brockovich ('00, True) Aaron Eckhart, Julia Roberts. A legal assistant tries to
with the help of his intelligent female partner. TV14
bring down a company that is poisoning a city's water supply. TV14
Naked "Jungle Love"
Naked "Surthrive"
Naked and Afraid XL
Naked and Afraid XL
Naked "Colombia" (N)
Beyond Scared Straight
Scared Straight "Hampton Beyond Scared Straight
Scared "Dougherty County, American Takedown
"Lake County, FL"
Roads Regional Jail, VA" (N)
GA: Weekend Worriers" (N) "Sexual Assault" (N)
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Woods Law "Takedown"
North Woods Law
OnTheHunt "Distress Call"
Botched "Knuckles and
Botched "The Pec
Botched "Attack of the
Botched "Say Yes to the
Snapped "Adrienne
Knockers"
Whisperer"
3,000cc Implants"
Breasts"
Hickson"
Braxton Family Values
Braxton Family Values
Braxton "One Wild Ride"
Braxton Family Values (N) ATL "Confidential" (N)
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
Stewarts (N) Divas (N)
(:25) Gilligan's Island
Gilligan
(:35) Gilligan (:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "Blabbermouths" Loves Ray
Jim Gaffigan
(5:00) The 2000s: A New
Life Below Zero: Ice
Life Below Zero "Breaking Port Protection "Between Yukon River Run "Profit or
Reality "Boom and Bust"
Breakers "No Mercy"
Point" (N)
Water and Wolves"
Peril"
NASCAR Whelen Series
NASCAR (N)
Cycling Tour de France Stage 18 Gap - Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Whiparound (L)
MLB Best (N) MLB Epic (N) Tiger's Six-Peat (N)
G. Norman: Shark
Mountain Men "This Is the Mountain Men "Best Laid Mountain Men "Deadly
Mountain Men
(:05) Alone "Rain of Terror"
End"
Plans"
Ascent"
"Snowblind" (N)
(N)
Manzo'd
Manzo'd
Wives NJ "The Last Supper" Housewives/NewJersey
WivesNJ "Country Clubbed" Housewives/NewJersey
(:55) Fresh P. Fresh Prince Nelly "Rehearsal Tour-ture" NBA Players Association Awards
The Game
FrankieNef.
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
H.Hunt (N)
Hunt Vintage
Roboshark ('15, Sci-Fi) Nigel Barber. An alien space probe WWE Smackdown! WWE superstars do battle in
Dominion "The Narrow
elaborate, long-running rivalries. (N)
Gate" (N)
is devoured by a great white shark in the Pacific. TV14

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

The Devil Wears Prada ('06, Com) Meryl Streep. A The Brink
Ballers
400 (HBO) woman with journalistic ambitions works for an overly
"Machete
demanding fashion magazine editor. TVPG
Charge"
(5:40)
Staying Alive
(:20)
The Fabulous Baker Boys ('89, Dra) Jeff Bridges.
450 (MAX) ('83, Dra) Cynthia Rhodes,
The popularity of a lounge act is shaken by the addition of
John Travolta. TVPG
a feisty and sexy new singer. TVMA
(:15) Public Enemy "Live
(:15)
Begin Again ('14, Com/Dra) Mark Ruffalo,
500 (SHOW) From Metropolis Studios"
Keira Knightley. Things pick up for a recently-dumped
singer when she meets a disgraced record producer. TVMA

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Draft Day ('14, Spt) Jennifer Garner, Tom Welling,
Kevin Costner. The general manager of the Cleveland
Browns trades for the number one pick on Draft Day. TV14
(:15)
Evolution ('01, Sci-Fi) Julianne Moore, David
Duchovny. After a meteor carrying aliens crashes on Earth,
a team of misfits sets out to stop them. TV14
Masters of Sex "Three's a Ray Donovan "Ding"
Crowd"

60596839

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�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 23, 2015 3A

Holter joins Southeastern
Equipment Company
Contributed article

CAMBRIDGE, Ohio
— Ofﬁcials with Southeastern Equipment Co.
Inc. said Chris Holter
has joined the company
as outside sales representative at the Gallipolis
branch.
His primary responsibility is selling the
equipment lines that the
branch represents, which
include CASE, Kobelco
and Gradall.
“We are happy to
welcome Chris to Southeastern,” says Charlie
Patterson, president of
Southeastern Equipment.
“His previous experience
provides an excellent
background for the position. We look forward to
seeing the contributions
he’ll be making.”

Prior to joining Southeastern,
Holter was a farm
manager in West
Virginia, and his
duties included
overseeing the
Holter
care of farm
animals, building maintenance, and
machinery operation.
During college, he was
involved in retail sales.
Holter attended The
Ohio State University,
where he earned a bachelor’s degree in agricultural business. Holter currently resides in Racine,
Ohio, and enjoys hunting
and ﬁshing in his free
time.
Southeastern Equipment has been selling,
servicing and renting
heavy machinery since
1957. The company

has 20 locations
throughout Ohio,
Michigan, Kentucky and Indiana.
Manufacturers represented by Southeastern Equipment Company
include: CASE
Construction, Kobelco,
Bomag, Gradall, Kubota
Construction, Hyundai
Construction, Etnyre,
Vacall, Terex, Schwarze,
Alamo Industrial, Eager
Beaver Trailers, Superior
Broom, Midland Machinery, DuraPatcher, Fecon,
Genie, Skytrak, JLG, Sullair, and a wide variety
of companies that manufacture heavy equipment
attachments.
For more information,
visit their website www.
southeasternequip.com.

Triad Engineering celebrates
40 years of business success
For Ohio Valley Publishing

other business sectors.
This year also marks another mileATHENS — Triad Engineering Inc.
stone for the company — its 20th year
on July 15 kicked off a year-long recog- as an employee-owned ﬁrm. Triad’s
nition of providing 40 years of engineer- Employee Stock Ownership Plan proing and design solutions for its clients, vides every employee with a vested
partners and communities.
ownership interest in the company. TriFounded in Morgantown, W.Va., in
ad’s ESOP program has created employJuly 1975 as a geotechnical engineeree loyalty and longevity — ensuring the
ing consultant, Triad has grown from
ﬁrm’s projects are managed by employa three-man start-up to a strong and
ees dedicated to professionalism and
diverse regional ﬁrm with nearly 200
quality — complementing Triad’s hisemployees and seven ofﬁce locations
tory and experience in the mid-Atlantic
across the mid-Atlantic region. Today,
region.
the ﬁrm provides geotechnical, civil
Triad is considered one of the region’s
and mining engineering, environmental top partners for many architectural,
consulting, land surveying, drilling,
engineering and construction ﬁrms.
construction monitoring and materials
Triad’s 40th anniversary plans include
testing to a wide range of clients in edu- retrospective pieces, employee and hiscation, energy, government, health care, torical project highlights, and recogniland development, transportation and
tion of clients and regional partners.

Courtesy photo

Donald Vaughan, left, accepts the MAX Premier Agency Award from Phil Blount, MAX regional
sales manager.

Vaughan Ins. earns award
Staff Report

POMEROY, Ohio — The Vaughan
Agency LLC of Pomeroy has earned
the highest award from insurance carrier MutualAid eXchange (MAX).
The MAX Premier Agency designation recognizes the Vaughan Agency’s
commitment to MAX’s fair, faithful
and socially responsible insurance
coverage and business practices.
“MAX is a company built on faith,
strong values and service to others.
That’s the kind of independent agents
we look for and we’re proud to recognize the Vaughan Agency for being
among the best of these,” said David
Wine, CEO of MAX.
Donald E. Vaughan Sr., is agency
principal and Ashlee (Vaughan)
Enslen is the key MAX representative
at the 15-year-old agency.
“MAX has helped us differentiate
ourselves from the competition,”
Vaughan said. “MAX is like ﬁnding a
friend who believes what you believe,
is concerned about the world around
them and at the end of the day offers
a needed product at a reasonable rate.
When our clients call MAX, they’re
well pleased with the service they
receive.”
To earn the award, Vaughan
Insurance met several criteria

including:Commitment to the MAX
values of treating others as you would
like to be treated;
Faith in a higher power;
Doing good in the world;
Support for MAX’s Mutual Aid
Ministries program that provides
emergency grants to faith communities, families and individuals who are
facing extreme ﬁnancial hardships;
Ambitious sales and retention targets.
“At the Vaughan Agency, our core
values are to treat everyone with
respect, to always do what’s best for
our clients, to be a great place to work
and to give back to the community,”
Enslen said. “We greatly appreciate
the partnership we have with MAX
who shares these same values.”
Vaughan and Enslen are active in
their community, serving in key roles
with their chamber of commerce,
Rotary Club, preschool, council on
aging and their church.
The Vaughan Agency LLC is located at 505 Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
MAX is headquartered at 4400 College Boulevard, Suite 250, Overland
Park, KS 66211. Phone: 877-9716300. To learn more about MAX and
Mutual Aid Ministries, visit www.
MAXInsurance.com.

Ohio Valley Bank announces cash dividend on Tuesday
Contributed article

GALLIPOLIS — Ohio
Valley Banc Corp.’s
Board of Directors on
Tuesday declared a cash
dividend of $0.21 per
common share payable
on Aug. 10, to shareholders of record on July 31,
2015.

This marks the 23rd
consecutive quarter in
which the company has
delivered a $0.21 per
common share regular
dividend payout.
“In September, Ohio
Valley Bank, OVBC’s lead
subsidiary, will celebrate
143 years in business. We
are thankful to our share-

holders and appreciative
of the support this American company has received
for more than a century,”
OVBC President and
CEO Tom Wiseman said.
“Despite rising regulatory
obstacles, including coming government-mandated
regulation that will make
closing a mortgage a lon-

Higher minimum-wage
proposals gain momentum
By Lisa Leff
and David Klepper

wage to $15 an hour, or
would be phased in over
about $31,200 a year. On three years in New York City
Associated Press
Tuesday, Los Angeles
and over six years elsewhere.
County, the nation’s most
Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s
SAN FRANCISCO —
populous county, voted to administration has the
The push for a higher
craft a law to do the same ﬁnal say, and Cuomo has
minimum wage gained
over ﬁve years.
signaled his support. New
momentum on both sides
In New York, the state
York would become the
of the country Wednesday, Wage Board endorsed a pro- ﬁrst state to take such a
with New York embracing
posal to set a $15 minimum step for a speciﬁc industry.
an eventual $15 an hour for wage for workers at fast-food The state minimum wage
the state’s 200,000 fast-food restaurants with 30 or more is now $8.75 and is set to
workers and the huge Uni- locations. The increase
rise to $9 at year’s end.
versity of California system
announcing the same raise
for its employees.
“How we support our
workers and their families
impacts Californians who
might never set foot on
one of our campuses,”
said UC President Janet
Napolitano, who oversees
10 campuses, including
UCLA and Berkeley. “It’s
the right thing to do.”
The University of
California becomes the
nation’s largest public
DIABETES OR
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committed to our mission
to place community ﬁrst
and remain an independent community bank.”
Ohio Valley Banc
Corp., based in Gallipolis, owns two subsidiaries: Ohio Valley Bank

and Loan Central. Ohio
Valley Bank is an FDICinsured bank operating
14 ofﬁces in Ohio and
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�E ditorial
4A Thursday, July 23, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Iran deal a good
starting point
By Wim Laven
Guest Columnist

President Obama said: “If 99 percent of the
world community and the majority of nuclear
experts look at this thing and they say this will
prevent Iran from getting a nuclear bomb, and you
are arguing either that it does not or that even if
it does, it’s temporary, then you should have some
alternative.”
He is right, there are ultimately two approaches
to resolving problems, as Obama said, “… diplomatically, through a negotiation, or it’s resolved
through force. Through war[!] Those are the
options.” This reality is worthy of further exploration.
As a peace professional who has worked in conﬂicts from small claims court to Sri Lanka, and as
a doctoral researcher in Conﬂict Transformation, I
can agree with the president—as a starting point.
“Diplomacy or war” is an oversimpliﬁed way
of describing the Thomas Killman conﬂict mode
instrument. This scale assesses behavior according to how assertive and cooperative parties are.
War is the ultimate in assertiveness combined
with the complete absence of cooperation.
Received wisdom assumes that war is how we win.
Indeed, abject surrender is the ultimate in cooperation, but that is transmogriﬁed into aggressive
vengeance over time — it is the manifestation of
social passive-aggressive behavior. This seesaw
produces a terrible dynamic of destructive conﬂict
re-ignition.
In the context of the Iran deal, the game-changing opportunity now exists. The cycle of endless
enmiﬁcation and hostile expectation is not necessarily over, but it is interrupted. The question now
is, for how long? The longer it is broken, the more
chance we, and Iranians, have to begin to act like
mature civilizations rather than behave endlessly
adolescent.
Trust is a big component of conﬂict and resolution. As a practitioner, I’ve become quite accustomed to telling parties, “Trust is built when we
make and keep agreements.” Sometimes parties
change their minds, sometimes they cannot live up
to their promises, but generally speaking they will
follow through on their agreements. As a scientist,
however, I can say that there is ample evidence
supporting the claim that parties are less likely
to back out of agreements from which they have
something to gain.
The Iran deal is good diplomacy because it
meets the interests of both sides; collaboration —
“win-win” — is better than compromise because
nothing is sacriﬁced except ego. Getting to winwin usually takes more work and it means letting
go of puerile attachment to humiliating the opponent.
Iran wants the sanctions removed; the P5+1
want to block a pathway to nuclear proliferation.
The agreement does both and includes transparency, rules on enrichment, the removal of sanctions, and the agreement to address “past issues of
concern.”
This is mutual gain and is thus a great beginning. The removal of sanctions will need to be followed by improved trade relations and increased
cooperation or the agreement will lack durability.
This can be a serious challenge; war proﬁteers
and other political interests will try to undermine
the success of this agreement — but I will remain
hopeful, not because of faith but as a matter of
science; this is agreement is technically sound. If
people understand that and reward elected ofﬁcials who support the deal, it will provide what we
need and what Iran needs and will thus produce
a healthier security environment at home and
abroad.
Wim Laven, syndicated by PeaceVoice, is a doctoral candidate in
International Conflict Management at Kennesaw State University and
teaches courses in conflict resolution.

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

THEIR VIEW

Correcting unfair sentencing laws

that it wasn’t the life for
In becoming the ﬁrst
him, and he became the only
president ever to visit a
person in an eight-man meth
prison with his trip to the
operation to voluntarily leave
medium-security El Reno
the conspiracy. After another
Federal Correctional Instisix months went by, DEA,
tution near Oklahoma City,
FBI and ATF agents arrested
President Barack Obama
the conspirators — but not
has signaled that he’s seri- John
the boyfriend or Mark —
ous about pushing prison
Kiriakou
reform before he leaves
Contributing and charged them with multiple counts of conspiring to
ofﬁce.
Columnist
manufacture and distribute
Together with his recent
meth.
move to commute the
As the conspirators negotiated
sentences for 46 drug offenders,
plea deals, they began informing
Obama is doing more than his
on each other, and on Mark. He
predecessors. But it’s not good
was arrested and charged a year
enough.
later.
After I blew the whistle on the
Against his better judgment,
CIA’s torture program, I agreed to
a plea deal that sent me to a feder- Mark went to trial. He thought
al prison for 23 months. Like most that once he was able to explain
American prisons, mine was full of to a jury that he had walked away
from the conspiracy, that he meant
nonviolent drug offenders — peono harm to anyone, and that he
ple who had made a mistake, in
did not want a life of drugs, jurors
some cases many years ago — or
would understand and would be
who had supposedly been caught
lenient.
up in drug rings.
Not surprisingly, he was quickly
These people had never physically hurt anyone. Many had never found guilty. With enhancements
for failure to accept responsibilcommitted a crime before, but
ity, having a “leadership” role as
our nation’s sentencing laws are
the informants had testiﬁed, and
so tough that many are spending
an upgrade for the total amount
decades locked up.
One example is my friend Mark. of meth produced, Mark received
three life sentences without
He’s 45 years old and from the
parole. On appeal, his sentence
south side of Philadelphia.
was reduced to 30 years. Mark has
A few years after Mark graduﬁnished 14 years of his sentence.
ated from high school, his mothWith good time credit, he has 12
er’s boyfriend introduced him to
methamphetamine manufacturing. years to go. He’ll be in his late 50s
when he’s released for a nonviolent
The guy taught Mark, who has
crime he committed when barely
never used drugs, how to make
high-quality meth, which a gang in out of his teens.
A major Washington, D.C., law
Philadelphia bought.
ﬁrm has taken up Mark’s case, and
Six months later, Mark decided

his attorneys believe that he has
a good chance of having his sentence commuted. Even his prosecutor has written a letter of support saying that Mark’s sentence
was not justice, and that he should
not have received more than 10
years. But mandatory minimum
sentencing, imposed by Congress,
gave him 30 years.
It would be wonderful for
Obama to commute Mark’s sentence — and the sentences of
other federal prisoners like him. I
believe that will happen.
But freeing these wrongly
incarcerated people won’t end the
practice of imposing what in many
cases amounts to lifelong sentences for ﬁrst-time, non-violent
drug offenders. Congress must
take action to change mandatory
minimum sentencing laws now.
U.S. prisons are bursting at the
seams because of Congress’s supposedly tough attitude toward
drugs. This country now has 5 percent of the world’s population and
25 percent of the world’s prison
population. Half of those prisoners
are drug offenders.
American taxpayers and our
society can’t afford to lock up so
many nonviolent offenders for
such long periods. It isn’t “justice”
and it doesn’t make the country
any safer. Commuting sentences
is a good start. But only Congress
can correct America’s unfair sentencing laws.
OtherWords columnist John Kiriakou is an
associate fellow at the Institute for Policy
Studies. He’s a former CIA counterterrorism
officer and former senior investigator for the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
July 23, the 204th day of
2015. There are 161 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On July 23, 1945,
French Marshal Henri
Petain (ahn-REE’ payTAN’), who had headed
the pro-Axis Vichy (veeshee) government during
World War II, went on
trial, charged with treason. (He was convicted
and condemned to death,
but the sentence was
commuted to life in prison. On this date in 1951,
Petain died in prison.)
On this date:
In 1885, Ulysses S.
Grant, the 18th president
of the United States, died
in Mount McGregor, N.Y.,
at age 63.
In 1886, a legend was
born as Steve Brodie

claimed to have made a
daredevil plunge from
the Brooklyn Bridge into
New York’s East River.
(However, there are
doubts about whether the
dive actually took place.)
In 1914, AustriaHungary presented a list
of demands to Serbia following the killing of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by
a Serb assassin; Serbia’s
refusal to agree to the
entire ultimatum led to
the outbreak of World
War I.
In 1952, Egyptian military ofﬁcers led by Gamal
Abdel Nasser launched a
successful coup against
King Farouk I.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actress Gloria DeHaven
is 90. Concert pianist
Leon Fleisher (FLY’-shur)
is 87. Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy

is 79. Actor Ronny Cox
is 77. Radio personality
Don Imus is 75. Actor
Larry Manetti is 72.
Country singer Tony Joe
White is 72. Rock singer
David Essex is 68. Singersongwriter John Hall
is 67. Actress Belinda
Montgomery is 65. Rock
musician Blair Thornton
(Bachman Turner Overdrive) is 65. Actress Edie
McClurg is 64. Actresswriter Lydia Cornell is
62. Actor Woody Harrelson is 54. Rock musician
Martin Gore (Depeche
Mode) is 54. Actor Eriq
Lasalle is 53. Rock musician Yuval Gabay is 52.
Rock musician Slash is
50. Actor Juan Pope is
48. Rock musician Nick
Menza is 47. Modelactress Stephanie Seymour is 47. Actress Charisma Carpenter is 45.

Rhythm-and-blues singer
Sam Watters is 45. Country singer Alison Krauss
is 44. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Dalvin DeGrate is
44. Rock musician Chad
Gracey (Live) is 44.
Actor-comedian Marlon
Wayans is 43. Country
singer Shannon Brown
is 42. Actress Kathryn
Hahn is 42. Retired MLB
All-Star Nomar Garciaparra is 42. Former White
House intern Monica
Lewinsky is 42. Actress
Stephanie March is 41.
Country musician David
Pichette (Emerson Drive)
is 38. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Michelle Williams
is 35. Actor Paul Wesley is 33. Actor Daniel
Radcliffe is 26. Country
musician Neil Perry is
25. Country singer Danielle Bradbery (TV: “The
Voice”) is 19.

�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 23, 2015 5A

DeWine, 44 AGs push for call-blocking technology
Staff Report

In the letter, the attorneys
general state: “Every year,
COLUMBUS — Ohio Attor- our ofﬁces are ﬂooded with
ney General Mike DeWine on
consumer complaints pleading
Wednesday joined 44 other
for a solution to stop intrusive
attorneys general in calling on
robocalls. Your organizations
ﬁve major phone companies to are now poised to offer your
offer call-blocking technology
customers the help they need.
to their customers.
We urge you to act without
In a joint letter to the chief
delay.”
executives of AT&amp;T, Sprint,
Previously, phone carriers
Verizon, T-Mobile, and Centuclaimed
they were restricted
ryLink, the attorneys general
from
offering
such services.
said new clariﬁcation to a FedAt
a
July
2013
hearing before
eral Communications Commisa
Senate
subcommittee,
represion rule allows telecommunisentatives
from
the
US
Telecom
cation service providers to offer
Association and CTIA testiﬁed
customers the ability to block
unwanted calls and veriﬁes that that “legal barriers prevent
carriers from implementing
federal law does not prohibit
offering such services.
advanced call-blocking technol-

ogy to reduce the number of
unwanted telemarketing calls.”
Last September, 39 attorneys
general, including DeWine,
called on the FCC to allow
phone companies to utilize
call-blocking technologies.
The FCC chairman endorsed
the request in late May and
the FCC voted to pass the rule
clariﬁcation on June 18.
Call-blocking options already
exist for Voice over Internet
Protocol (VoIP) phone service
(NoMoRobo.com) and Android
cell phones (Call Control). In
their letter, the attorneys general urge the phone companies
to implement and to inform
consumers of these options.

“Illegal and unwanted telemarketing calls are a serious
problem in Ohio,” DeWine
said. “Consumers ask us every
day how they can stop these
calls, and call-blocking technology is an important part of
the solution. We are encouraging phone carriers to give
consumers the option to use
call-blocking technology to stop
unwanted calls.”
In 2014, the Ohio Attorney
General’s Consumer Protection
Section received more than
1,400 complaints about Do Not
Call problems.
The attorneys general of the
following states and district
signed the letter: Alabama,

Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut,
Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii,
Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Kansas, Kentucky, Maine,
Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri,
Montana, Nebraska, Nevada,
New Hampshire, New Mexico,
New York, North Carolina,
North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island,
South Carolina, South Dakota,
Tennessee, Utah, Vermont,
Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.
A copy of the letter is available on the Ohio Attorney General’s website.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Ex-Gov. Ted Stickland to visit
MIDDLEPORT — Former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland,
candidate for U.S. Senate, will be on hand for a donationonly fundraiser for the Strickland for Senate campaign.
The Meigs County Democratic Party will host the event
on July 25 from 6-8 p.m. at Riverbend Arts, 290 N. Second St. Activities include entertainment by the Gilmores
and hot dogs, potato chips, desert and drinks.

85th birthday card shower
COOLVILLE —Bob White will be turning 85 on
July 26. Cards may be sent to 44107 Carr Road,
Coolville, OH 45723.

95th birthday card shower
PORTLAND — Gertie Lehew will celebrate her
95th birthday on July 30. Cards may be sent to 53460
Bald Knob Road, Portland, OH 45770.

Zion Church of Christ
Vacation Bible School
Eli Lucero/Herald Journal via AP

Joshua B. Van Natter stands outside a military recruiting center on Tuesday in Logan, Utah. Gun-toting citizens are showing up at
military recruiting centers around the country, saying they plan to protect recruiters following last week’s killing of four Marines
and a sailor in Chattanooga, Tenn.

Armed citizens guard recruiters
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins carry an openly displayed

RUTLAND — “Mega Sports” is the theme of Vacation Bible School at Zion Church of Christ, located on
Rt 143 (37420 Zion Rd), July 22-24. Students from
nursery through high school are invited to attend.
They will learn about and participate in baseball, ﬂag
football, basketball and cheerleading. Soccer is also
offered for the younger children. Practice and pizza
will be Saturday and the program on Sunday. There
will be a daily give-away and all participants will
receive a T-shirt with the Bible School logo. on it.

they appreciated the vol“They’re sitting
handgun or riﬂe.
unteers but thought pro- ducks,” Rhodes said.
The men sat in lawn
fessional security guards “They’d be better off if
COLUMBUS — Gunchairs, occasionally dipwould be better.
they were walking down
toting citizens are showing ping into a cooler for
“They could just go
the streets of Baghdad,
MIDDLEPORT — Digital Works will be holding
up at military recruiting
bottles of water, or stood crazy with the shootbecause at least in Bagha public job fair from 10 a.m. to noon July 28. Job
centers around the counaround talking. Some
ing. You just don’t know dad, they could move.
opportunities will be presented, as well as information
try, saying they plan to
people came by to thank their state of mind,” said Here, they’re stationary.”
on the Digital works training program. Job and Family
protect recruiters followthem; others didn’t seem Kimm McLaughlin, 44,
Capt. Jim Stenger, a
Services will be present to discuss available funding
ing last week’s killing of
aware of their presence
of nearby Grove City.
Marine Corps public
resource to help jump start your new career. Available
four Marines and a sailor
in the large plaza.
On Tuesday, the
affairs ofﬁcer for the
positions include client services and technical support
in Chattanooga, Tenn.
Franklin County Sher- founder and president
recruiting district that
agents with opportunity for advancement. The job fair
The citizens, some
iff Zach Scott said that as of Oath Keepers, a Las
includes parts of seven
will be held at Digital Works, 349 North Second Street,
of them private militia
long as the owner of the Vegas-based Constitution Midwestern states, said
Middleport. For more information contact Sonya
members, said they’re
plaza didn’t ask them to activist group made up of he hopes the gun-toting
Wolfe, Digital Works facilitator, at 740-742-1004 or
supporting the recruitleave, the men were not
current and former vet740-444-9010. Also visit www.digitalworksjobs.com.
civilians will go home.
ers, who by military
violating any laws. Scott erans and ﬁrst responddirective are not armed. has instructed deputies
ers such as paramedics,
“We’re here to serve
to check on recruiting
issued a national call
The Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services,
and protect,” Clint
centers, but not the volto members to guard
Janney said Tuesday,
Child Support Enforcement Agency (CSEA), in conjunction
unteer guards.
centers. Many were
wearing a Taurus 9mm
Employees of a medical already guarding centers
with the Meigs County Sheriff ’s Office, will be conducting child
handgun as he stood in a supply center next door
in Tennessee, Arkansas
support warrant round-ups in 2015. If you believe you have
parking lot across from a to the recruiting center
and Oklahoma, president
an outstanding CSEA bench warrant for non-payment of child
recruiting center on the
said they understood the Stewart Rhodes said.
west side of Columbus.
support, failure to appear or contempt of court, please contact
volunteers’ intentions
Rhodes said it’s
“What the government
but weren’t thrilled about “absolutely insane” that
the Meigs County Child Support Enforcement Agency at 992won’t do, we will do.”
their presence. Customrecruiters aren’t allowed
2117, ext. 159 by July 31, 2015. Failure to make satisfactory
Similar posts have
ers leaving the store said to be armed.
been set up outside
arrangements with the CSEA by this date may lead to your
recruitment centers in
arrest.
several cities around
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militia. He was joined by
on hand to answer any questions about the training and to discuss funding
four other members of
opportunities. The orientations will be held at the Ohio Means Jobs-Meigs
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County ofﬁce, located at 150 Mill Street, Middleport, Ohio. The orientation
the militia, some of whom
sessions are August 4 and August 11, 2015 starting at 6:00pm.
Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid prescription
arrived Tuesday and
is required for all prescription medication orders.
others who’d been there
For more information about the training or to sign up for one of the orientations,
Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
since Friday. In Ohio and
contact Chris Shank at 992-2117, ext. 102
many states, it is legal to
Associated Press

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832.60 Paying Too Much
For Your Medications?
75.56

60593637

TM

60554222

60597721

�LOCAL

6A Thursday, July 23, 2015

From Page 1A

“I’ll miss (performing
at) football games and
marching out on the
ﬁeld,” she said.
Chuck said that Chelsie has recently been
able to march with the
rest of the band, but
needed a break Wednesday.
“It’s just a little hiccup
in the road,” he said.
As Chelsie watched
from under a tent used
for water breaks for
the campers, other students reminisced about
their favorite aspects of
marching band. Hope
Diehl, a 10th grade
clarinet player, said
this is her second year
of marching band and
added that she’s excited
to perform this year’s
show because of how it
varies from past shows.
“It’s different in that
it’s really getting out

Catch

guard, which she decided to do during eighth
grade.
“I really watched the
ﬂag girls a lot, and that’s
what I ended up doing,”
she said. “I’ll miss my
friends the most, the
socialization aspects,
and Mr. Dingess, too.”
Meadows agreed that
the socialization was
one of the best parts of
marching band.
“For our school, (99
members is) one-ﬁfth
of our school, and that’s
crazy,” he said. “People
are just different (from
the norm), and that’s
nice.”
When the Marauder
band is not practicing,
they will be performing at football games,
competing in weekend
competitions, and, they
hope, making it to the
Ohio Music Education
Association state championships in November.

there this time,” she
said. “We’re putting
ourselves more out there
drill-wise, and really getting creative with what
we’re doing this year.”
Devon Bufﬁngton, a
senior alto sax player,
said he also liked the
drill, and said this year’s
has been more fun than
past year’s. He said his
favorite part of the show
is the medley.
Cory Scarberry, a
senior pit member, said
that when he graduates
he’s going to miss his
friends and band.
“It’s just basically
changed my life,” he
said.
Seniors Miranda Gillilan and Jaxon Meadows shared the same
sentiment, with Gillilan
saying that choosing to
join marching band was
one of the best decisions she’d ever made.
While Meadows plays
mellophone (marching
French horn), Gillilan
is involved in the color

From Page 1A

program include: metal
cans, cardboard, paper
and paper products, cartons, glass bottles and
jars, and plastic bottles
numbered 1-7. Plastic
beverage, milk, shampoo
and laundry detergent
bottles and jugs that
have a larger base and
neck than mouth are also
accepted.
In the district’s program, there are types
of plastics that are not
accepted for recycling,
and those include children’s toys, outdoor furniture and water piping.
Ceramic items, window

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

62°

79°

77°

HEALTH TODAY
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.

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.11
7.96
3.19
33.59
25.15

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:22 a.m.
8:48 p.m.
1:28 p.m.
12:18 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Jul 23

Jul 31

Last

New

Aug 6 Aug 14

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

Today
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Minor
12:00p
12:22a
1:05a
1:49a
2:34a
3:22a
4:11a

Major
6:11p
6:56p
7:41p
8:27p
9:14p
10:03p
10:54p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Lucasville
84/60

Primary: pine, other
Mold: 1834
Moderate

High

Very High

Portsmouth
84/62

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Minor
---12:45p
1:29p
2:14p
3:01p
3:49p
4:39p

WEATHER HISTORY
On July 23, 1979, heavy rain pushed
the Reedy River out of its banks
at Greenville, S.C. Thunderstorms
dumped 2.00 inches of rain on Johnstown, Pa., in just one hour.

300

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone
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
13.07
16.38
22.01
13.12
12.82
24.78
12.37
26.43
35.69
12.83
23.00
34.90
22.80

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.42
none
+0.70
+0.75
-0.02
+0.29
+0.22
-0.28
-0.08
-0.06
+1.30
+0.10
-0.50

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

92°
68°

Mostly sunny, hot and
more humid

Some sun, humid; a
stray p.m. t-storm

Partly sunny with a
t-storm possible

Mostly sunny with a
t-storm possible

Marietta
82/62

Murray City
82/59
Belpre
83/61

Athens
82/58

St. Marys
83/62

Elizabeth
84/61

Spencer
83/61

Buffalo
84/62
Milton
84/62

Clendenin
84/61

St. Albans
84/62

Huntington
81/61

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
77/57
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
70/59
10s
0s
Los Angeles
-0s
79/63
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

91°
66°
Some sun with a
thunderstorm possible

Today

Parkersburg
82/62

Coolville
83/61

Ironton
83/62

Ashland
82/61
Grayson
83/62

WEDNESDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Logan
82/59

Wilkesville
82/61
POMEROY
Jackson
84/61
83/60
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
85/62
84/60
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
82/61
GALLIPOLIS
84/61
85/61
83/62

South Shore Greenup
83/62
83/61

41

TUESDAY

87°
66°

McArthur
82/60

Waverly
83/60

Pollen: 4

0 50 100 150 200

SOLUNAR TABLE
Major
5:49a
6:33a
7:17a
8:02a
8:48a
9:35a
10:25a

Chillicothe
83/61

MONDAY

92°
70°

Adelphi
82/59

1

Low

MOON PHASES

Sunshine and nice

SUNDAY

91°
67°

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

Primary: cladosporium

Fri.
6:22 a.m.
8:47 p.m.
2:25 p.m.
12:50 a.m.

SATURDAY

Partly sunny and pleasant today. Mainly clear
tonight. High 84° / Low 61°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

82°
64°
86°
66°
101° in 1934
51° in 1944

FRIDAY

87°
64°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Lorna Hart can be reached at 740992-2155 EXT. 2551

the Union in defending Cincinnati.
Reported causalities were 35,000:
11,000 killed in combat, 19,000 died
From Page 1A
of disease, 3,000 were POWs and the
remainder died in accidents not related
are so many factors to consider, many
to combat. Thirty-thousand soldiers
sources of information and records have were permanently disabled. As an aside,
been lost over time.”
there were no causalities among the
Ohio had between 303,000 and
15,000 Squirrel Hunters.
346,000 enlistments during the Civil
There were 229 generals from Ohio
War; most historians consider 320,000 and include Ulysses S. Grant, William
to be a substantiated total. This made
Tecumseh Sherman and Gen. James
Ohio third in the nation in enlistment
Birdseye McPherson. One-hundred
numbers, behind New York and Pennﬁfty of the 229 were given the honor
sylvania, and No. 1 in per capital enlist- because of meritorious service during
ments.
the war.
Haas explained the reason for the
Ohio had the most Civil War battle
wide disparity between the two ﬁgures ﬂags, with more than 250. Many of
and why 320,000 is most likely closer to them are lost to history.
the correct amount. The Ohio Roster of
There were 144 Ohioans who
Civil War enlistments is widely used to received the Medal of Honor. All 22
determine numbers, but some enlisted
men who took part in what has become
more than one time, and each enlistknown as the Great Locomotive Chase,
ment was recorded as a new one. Four
a military raid in northern Georgia durthousand U.S. Navy gunboat troops
ing the American Civil War, were from
were not listed in the roster, along with Ohio. All but two were among the recipU.S. Army regulars from Ohio who
ients. It is unknown why the remaining
enlisted in other states. The roster does two did not receive the honor.
not include U.S. Colored Troops totalThese numbers give a glimpse into
ing 5,000 or the Squirrel Hunters who
Ohio’s place in the Civil War.
numbered 15,000. The Hunters were
Lorna Hart can be reached at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2551
civilian men from Ohio who assisted

BBT (NYSE) —41.60
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.78
Pepsico (NYSE) — 97.17
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.51
Rockwell (NYSE) — 120.30
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 19.02
Royal Dutch Shell — 56.16
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 21.96
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 73.16
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 10.39
WesBanco (NYSE) — 35.32
Worthington (NYSE) — 27.43
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
July 22, 2015, 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

nology at recycling plants.
“Plastic bags hamper
our efforts at recycling by
breaking expensive equipment at recycling facilities,” Machi said. “We
would like everyone to be
aware of this when they
recycle.”
There are also locally
owned recycling facilities for metal, such as
Manley’s Recycling in
Middleport, a family
owned business that pays
for recyclable metals.
For more information on the GJMV Solid
Waste District’s recycling
program, visit www.
gjmvrecycle.com or call
1-800-544-1853.

Numbers

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 55.21
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.07
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 116.98
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.53
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 51.41
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 51.55
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.11
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.350
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 51.36
Collins (NYSE) —87.72
DuPont (NYSE) — 58.90
US Bank (NYSE) — 45.95
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.62
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 58.61
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 70.06
Kroger (NYSE) — 39.01
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 83.87
Norfolk So (NYSE) —85.37
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.00

glass, metal hangers,
electronics and car parts
are also not accepted at
the single-stream facilities. When these items
are put into the bins,
they must be sorted upon
delivery to the recycling
plants and disposed of at
that time. This costs the
district time and money
that could have been used
for materials that can be
recycled.
Recyclers are encouraged to ﬂatten cardboard
boxes and empty materials from garbage bags
before placing them in
bins. Flattened boxes take
up less space in containers than empty unﬂattened ones.
According to Marchi,
plastic bags clog the tech-

Charleston
83/61

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
85/63

Billings
82/58

Minneapolis
84/69

Montreal
75/57

Detroit
83/64

Toronto
New York
79/54
84/69

Chicago
82/64

Washington
86/70

Kansas City
85/71

Denver
93/61

Fri.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
92/66/pc 92/64/pc
Anchorage
69/57/pc 73/58/pc
Atlanta
85/71/t
88/72/t
Atlantic City
82/66/s 83/70/s
Baltimore
85/62/s 86/64/s
Billings
82/58/t 86/59/s
Boise
87/60/pc 89/62/s
Boston
81/65/s 77/63/pc
Charleston, WV 83/61/pc 85/63/s
Charlotte
89/69/t 89/68/pc
Cheyenne
87/58/s 85/59/s
Chicago
82/64/s 85/68/s
Cincinnati
82/63/pc 85/64/s
Cleveland
80/62/s 82/64/s
Columbus
80/62/pc 83/65/s
Dallas
99/80/s 99/81/s
Denver
93/61/s 91/59/pc
Des Moines
85/69/pc 90/75/pc
Detroit
83/64/pc 86/66/s
Honolulu
89/77/pc 89/77/pc
Houston
97/78/s 97/77/s
Indianapolis
80/63/pc 84/63/s
Kansas City
85/71/pc 92/76/pc
Las Vegas
98/74/s 99/73/s
Little Rock
95/76/t 96/77/pc
Los Angeles
79/63/pc 80/63/pc
Louisville
81/66/r 88/67/s
Miami
92/79/t
92/78/t
Minneapolis
84/69/s
87/70/t
Nashville
86/70/t 88/68/s
New Orleans
94/78/pc 94/79/pc
New York City
84/69/s 85/69/s
Oklahoma City
97/75/pc 97/74/s
Orlando
93/76/t
90/74/t
Philadelphia
86/68/s 87/68/s
Phoenix
103/83/pc 104/83/pc
Pittsburgh
80/61/s 82/62/s
Portland, ME
78/59/pc 75/58/sh
Raleigh
82/68/t 86/65/pc
Richmond
83/66/s 87/65/pc
St. Louis
85/69/pc 88/73/pc
Salt Lake City
88/65/pc 87/65/s
San Francisco
70/59/pc 71/59/pc
Seattle
77/57/pc 71/59/c
Washington, DC
86/70/s 89/72/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
96/74

High
Low

Atlanta
85/71

Global

Houston
97/78

Chihuahua
88/64
Monterrey
100/72

GOALS

102° in Needles, CA
37° in Angel Fire, NM

High
119° in Basrah, Iraq
Low -6° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
92/79

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

Band

Daily Sentinel

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

Find us online, anytime at: www.mydailysentinel.com

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

River Valley Middle
School football
BIDWELL, Ohio — River Valley will start its
middle school football on Monday, August 10,
from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at RVMS. Students must
have an up to date physical in order to participate.

Mason County
senior sports passes
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Mason County
Board of Education is offering sports passes for
senior citizens over the age of 65. The pass is $25
and is good for all home sporting events for the
2015-16 season. Passes are available at the Mason
County School Board ofﬁce Monday-Thursday
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

GAJHS Football
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Gallia Academy Jr. High
Football will hold a helmet ﬁtting on Friday, July 24
at 11:00 a.m. at Memorial Field. All players planning on participating need to be there. The Gallia
Academy Jr. High Football Camp will be held on
Monday, July 27, Tuesday, July 28, and Thursday,
July 30 from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. at Memorial Field.

GAHS Athletic Hall of Fame
Accepting Nominations

Thursday, July 23, 2015 s Section B

Frazier doubles home 2

Reds beat Cubs 9-1 in doubleheader opener
CINCINNATI (AP) — Even after
a win, the Reds still come away
wondering: What’s going to happen
next?
Todd Frazier extended his postderby surge with three more hits on
Wednesday, and Mike Leake was
solid in what might have been his
ﬁnal start in Cincinnati, leading the
Reds to a 9-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs in the opening game of a
day-night doubleheader.
Leake (8-5) allowed four hits
in eight innings, including Kyle
Schwarber’s RBI single. During
the game, he thought about how it
could be his ﬁnal start for the Reds
with the non-waiver trade deadline
approaching.
“Yeah, I was,” Leake said. “Each
one from here on could be. It’s very
ironic that the ﬁrst one and the
last one could be against the same
team.”
Leake made his debut against the
Pirates in 2010 and has dominated
John Minchillo | AP them lately. The right-hander retired
Chicago Cubs’ Kyle Schwarber (12) slides safely into second against Cincinnati Reds the last 16 batters he faced on
second baseman Brandon Phillips (4) in the first inning in the first game of a baseball
doubleheader in Cincinnati on Wednesday. The Reds won 9-1.

See REDS | 6B

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
High School Athletic Hall of Fame is currently
accepting nominations for the 2015 Athletic Hall
of Fame class. This will be the 14th class of to
enter the GAHS hall of fame. Nominations may be
made for male athletes in the graduating class of
1994 or before and female athletes in the graduating class of 1997 or before. Nomination forms may
be acquired from the Gallipolis City School website or gahssports.com. Deadline for nomination
entries is July 25, 2015. Completed forms may
be sent to Hilliard Lyons c/o Lori Young, PO Box
1151, Gallipolis, Ohio or delivered to the ofﬁce at
352 Second Avenue.

GAHS youth track camp
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
track and ﬁeld program will be hosting a track
camp July 21 through August 8 to all kids in
grades 1-6. The cost is $25 per kid and you must
sign a waiver form upon arrival. Camp will be
every Tuesday and Thursday from 6:15 p.m. until
7:15 p.m. at the new Gallia Academy High School
track complex. The camp staff will be working
with kids on the basics of track and ﬁeld. The
main focus will be on long jump; instructed by
Capital University Stand out and former state
champion and school record holder Logan Allison.
Sprint mechanics, pace work for distance events
and basic techniques in the shot put and high
jump for the older kids. Events may vary based on
participation. At the end of the camp, there will
be a small meet so that the the kids can display
the skills they have been working on. Free t-shirts
will be provided to the ﬁrst 25 campers, so please
include shirt size. Make check payable to GAHS
Athletic Boosters and mail to Paul Close, 132 Pine
Street. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
See BRIEFS | 6B

Tri-State Junior
Golf Tour continues
Staff report

board, ﬁring a 90.
Colby Hill won Flight
ASHLAND, Ky. —
1 of the 13-15 division
The fourth week of the by shooting an 80.
2015 Tri-State Junior
Logan Reed ﬁnished in
Golf Tour is in the
second (82). Brynden
books after Monday’s
Roark (89) took third
round at the Bellefonte
place, while Jake DamCountry Club in Boyd
ron (90) ﬁnished in
County. The 16-to-18
fourth. Nicholas James
and 13-to-15 divisions
and Grifﬁn Keeton tied
played 18-hole rounds
for ﬁfth, which each
and ages 12 and under
player shooting a 98.
played nine holes.
Jordan Tieman shot a Abigayle Crites (93)
topped the Girls divi78, which was enough
sion.
to win Flight 1 of the
The 10-to-12 divi16-to-18 division.
sion was won by Logan
Second place went to
Liles, who ﬁred a 42.
Spencer Moore (80)
Cameron Phillips won
and Logan Sheets
the 7-to-9 division for
ﬁnished right behind
the second straight
him in third (81). Ben
week with a 42. The
Wilson came in fourth
6-and-under division
(82) and there was a
was won by Brayden
tie for ﬁfth between
Taae Hamid Trace Wil- Martin with a 63, folson (85). Chris Walker lowed by Colin Martin
topped the Flight 2
(64).

Tom Lynn | AP

Kyle Lohse of the Milwaukee Brewers’ pitches to Jason Kipinis of the Cleveland Indians’ during the first inning Wednesday, in Milwaukee.
The Indians won 7-5.

Brantley homers,Indians top Brewers
By Genaro C. Armas

to give the Indians the lead for
good.
The bullpen backed Brantley’s
MILWAUKEE — Michael Brant- big day at the plate, limiting the
ley homered, doubled and drove
Brewers until the ninth.
in four runs, and Cleveland closer
The Brewers had other chances
Cody Allen withstood a rocky
against the bullpen.
ninth to help the Indians hold on
With Cleveland leading by two,
for a 7-5 win over the Milwaukee
Bryan Shaw allowed Scooter GenBrewers on Wednesday.
nett to reach on an inﬁeld single to
Allen entered the game with a
lead off the eighth before getting
three-run lead. But a string of 5
Ryan Braun to ﬂy out and Gerardo
1-3 scoreless innings for the bullParra to bounce into an inningpen ended with Adam Lind’s RBI
ending double play.
double with one out in the ninth.
It was in stark contrast to the
A single for Aramis Ramirez put
early
innings for the Brewers, who
runners on ﬁrst and third before
got
to
Cleveland starter Cody
Khris Davis hit into a game-ending
Anderson
for 10 hits and four runs
double play started by third basein
2
2-3
innings.
It was the worst
man Giovanny Urshela.
game
in
ﬁve
major
league starts for
Allen pumped his ﬁst on the
the
rookie,
who
saw
his ERA rise
mound after picking up his 20th
from
0.89
to
1.91.
save. Austin Adams (1-0) threw 1
Lind hit his 16th homer, a two1-3 innings of scoreless relief.
run
shot, to help build a 3-1 lead in
Cleveland snapped an eight-game
the
ﬁrst
for Milwaukee.
losing streak dating to 2001 in the
But the top of the Indians’ order
interleague series with the Brewgot to Lohse. Jason Kipnis, Franers.
cisco Lindor and Brantley comStruggling Milwaukee starter
bined to go 6 of 8 with a walk over
Kyle Lohse (5-11) allowed 10 hits
the ﬁrst ﬁve innings.
and ﬁve runs in ﬁve innings.
Lohse’s era rose to 6.29, and he
Brantley hit a three-run shot in
the third to tie the game at 4, then has allowed 23 homers, seconddelivered an RBI single in the ﬁfth most in the NL.

AP Sports Writer

TRAINER’S ROOM
Indians: Nick Swisher, who has
been on the disabled list since
June 14 with left knee inﬂammation, is scheduled to play the outﬁeld again Thursday at Double-A
Akron. Manager Terry Francona
said Swisher was moving well
during a minor league rehab
assignment.
Brewers: RHP Wily Peralta (left
oblique) was scheduled to rejoin
the team on the upcoming road
trip to Arizona. Manager Craig
Counsell said it was unclear yet
whether Peralta would get another
rehab start in the minors before
going back in the rotation. Peralta
has been sidelined since May 23.
UP NEXT
Indians: Trevor Bauer (8-6)
makes the ﬁrst home start for
Cleveland since the All-Star break
in the opener of a four-game series
Thursday against the White Sox.
Bauer is 2-0 with a 1.33 ERA this
season against Chicago.
Brewers: Mike Fiers (5-7) is 2-0
with a 2.18 ERA in 33 innings
over his last ﬁve starts. He’ll open
a four-game series at Arizona on
Thursday.

�SPORTS

2B Thursday, July 23, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Some Big 12 issues to ponder while waiting for season
DALLAS (AP) — TCU has
gone from Big 12 newcomer to
preseason favorite after only
three seasons, eight-time champion Oklahoma has an unprecedented title drought for coach
Bob Stoops and West Virginia
ﬁnally feels experienced in the
conference.
Texas Tech coach Kliff
Kingsbury still has to settle
on a starting quarterback, the
position he played for the Red
Raiders, former Oklahoma
State quarterback Mike Gundy
had an early unveiling of his
new starter and 24th-year
Kansas State coach Bill Snyder
has seven quarterbacks on his
roster.
While Baylor goes for a third
consecutive Big 12 title, Iowa
State didn’t win a conference
game last season. David Beaty
makes his head coaching debut
at Kansas and Charlie Strong
wants a winning record after a
6-7 start to his Texas tenure.
With Big 12 media days complete and preseason practice

only a couple of weeks away,
a few things to ponder while
waiting for the ﬁrst games
Sept. 3:

among the league’s athletic
directors, but no mandates
even though each team’s nonconference games affect the
strength of schedule for every
other Big 12 squad.
“I don’t think it means that
everybody has to play three top
20 teams in their preseason,”
Bowlsby said. “I also think it
doesn’t mean that everybody
has to play three that are FCS
or in the bottom of FBS. So I
think there’s a happy medium
there.”

Strong said. “They were given
plenty of opportunities to do
what was asked of them.”

QBs NORTH OF RED
RIVER: Oklahoma State took
the redshirt off highly touted
freshman quarterback Mason
ARE YOU EXPERIENCED? Rudolph in the 11th game last
OUTSIDE THE LEAGUE:
Dana Holgorsen, whose 2011 season, then he helped direct
Baylor, Kansas State and
debut at West Virginia came
a big comeback in the regularOklahoma State are the Big
a year before the Mountainseason Bedlam ﬁnale for an
12 teams that won’t play a
eers joined the Big 12, said
overtime win at Oklahoma that
non-conference game against
he has potentially the best
got the Cowboys eligible for a
a team from another of the
depth of any team he has been bowl game they won.
Power Five conferences.
involved with in more than
Rudolph still hasn’t played
Texas plays its opener at
two decades coaching.
a home game for Oklahoma
Notre Dame and has a home
Nine offensive and 10
State, which opens the season
game against California, while
defensive starters are among
at Central Michigan.
TCU starts the season at Min44 returning lettermen.
Stoops, whose Sooners have
nesota.
STRONG INFLUENCE: In
“A lot of the guys that are
gone consecutive seasons with“We’re actually working on
his ﬁrst season, Charlie Strong on our team right now are
out a Big 12 title for the ﬁrst
our schedule to maybe make
dismissed or suspended several guys that have been there and time in his 16 seasons, disputes
it look better to the public and Texas players for disciplindone that, understand what
those who assume transfer
help us, if it does come down to ary reasons. Now he’s excited
the Big 12 is all about, under- Baker Mayﬁeld is already
that, but I’ve never met a good about the goal to build a team
stand the style of ball, under- the starting quarterback
loss or met a bad win,” said
— “You just have to get every- stand the personnel,” he said. over returning junior starter
Baylor coach Art Briles, whose one on board,” he said.
“We’re in a totally different
Trevor Knight. Stoops instead
team shared the Big 12 title
The Longhorns won the
position than we have been in describes a tight battle.
with TCU last season after win- league’s last national champion- the past.”
“I know it’s popular for everyning it outright in 2013.
ship a decade ago, but their last
WVU is 11-16 in Big 12
one to act like a certain guy
Big 12 Commissioner Bob
Big 12 title was in 2009.
games since entering the
has already got the job,” Stoops
Bowlsby said there are ongoing
“So much was made last
league after consecutive Big
said. “That couldn’t be further
discussions about scheduling
season about the suspensions,” East titles.
from the truth.”

Shark wrestler: ‘Not a scratch on me’

By John Pye

“It was so close. I’m
doing OK, though,” he
said. “I haven’t got a
Mick Fanning sat
scratch on me. Just more
up on a high stool,
of an emotional, mental
straight backed and good sort of trauma right now.
humored, recounting the
“To walk away from a
story he will be telling for shark attack with not a
the rest of his days, about scratch on you — it is a
how he fought off a shark miracle really.”
with his bare hands durFanning was competing a surﬁng competition
ing against fellow Aussie
in South Africa.
Julian Wilson in the ﬁnal
It sounds like the plot
of the JBay Open, the
of a movie, but this threeWorld Surf League event
time world champion is
at Jeffreys Bay on South
no ﬁctional Crocodile
Dundee-style Aussie. He’s Africa’s east coast, when
he was bumped off his
the real thing: his sharkboard by a shark.
wrestling exploits were
In video of the event
broadcast live.
posted
on the World
The 34-year-old FanSurf
League
website,
ning arrived back in
Australia on Tuesday and Fanning could be seen
scanning the water
appeared at a news conbefore a big ﬁn emerged
ference in Sydney before
heading home to the Gold behind him. He turned
to deal with the shark,
Coast, the burgeoning
and then lost his board
city surrounding Surfers
as a wave rolled in and
Paradise beach.

Associated Press

“I’VE NEVER BEEN ONE TO
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TRAINING | MEDICAL/DENTAL/VISION | 401(K)

his interaction with the
shark.
Fanning said he could
sense the shark looming
behind him, and turned
to see it just as contact
was made.
“I thought, ‘Let’s see
what happens.’ Like
anything, you want to
go down ﬁghting,” he
said. “I don’t know why
it didn’t bite. I was on
top of it, trying to put my
board between us. It was
just ﬂight or ﬁght, I just
ran on instinct. Once my
board was gone, I thought
that was it. I was just
waiting for it to come and
take a leg or two. I guess
I’m lucky it wasn’t my
time.”
Fanning said he didn’t
know when, but he deﬁnitely planned to return
to surﬁng, and to JBay, an
area he considers among
the three most beautiful
places in the world.
Wilson, who lives on
the Sunshine Coast, further up the Queensland
state coastline from
where Fanning lives,
has been nominated for
a bravery award by the
state premier Annastacia
Palaszczuk.
Fanning agreed Wilson’s support, and the
quick reaction of the
rescue boats and other
watercraft, helped him
out of danger.
“He just gave all regard
up for himself, and came
for me,” Fanning said.
“He was so brave … like a
warrior. Thanks bud.”

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Becky Hammon already
made history when she became the ﬁrst female head
coach in NBA summer league.
Leading the San Antonio Spurs to the Las Vegas
Summer League championship just made the experience that much sweeter.
Hammon coached the Spurs to a 93-90 victory
over the Phoenix Suns in the title game on Monday
night.
“It was a grind,” Hammon said. “They’ve been
together for 17 days. They really started to jell the
last two or three games. They listened and they
played really hard for me. I just really appreciate their
attentiveness and alertness. They were tired but they
fought through.”
The Spurs participated in both the Orlando and
Las Vegas summer leagues, but Hammon served as
the head coach only in the higher proﬁle Vegas event.
The Spurs lost the opener to the New York Knicks,
and then reeled off six straight victories.
Jonathon Simmons scored 23 points and took
home MVP honors for the championship game. Treveon Graham added 22 points for the Spurs.
“It’s amazing. It was a humbling experience,” Simmons told NBATV of playing for Hammon. “For
all of us. I really love her and I’ve only known her a
couple days. She’s a real cool coach. She’s a player
coach. That’s something we all like.”
Last year the Spurs made Hammon the ﬁrst female fulltime assistant coach in league history. Earlier this summer they told her she would lead the team in Las Vegas.
“She’s a ﬁrecracker, she takes no prisoners, she’s
got a great personality,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich
said during a visit to Minnesota in the regular season. “She knows her stuff. She’s competitive.”
The Spurs have worked hard not to make too much
of their hiring of Hammon. Popovich has said time
and again that she was hired because of her coaching
acumen and not because the team was looking to
help a woman break the glass ceiling.
“I don’t know if her perspective is unique. It’s
women instead of men, but it’s the same game,”
Popovich said. “Becky knows what to do on a pickand-roll just as much as what Tony Parker knows. So
I don’t think it’s unique at all.”

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he disappeared from
view.
Wilson was paddling
toward Fanning and later
said that he believed if he
could get there with his
board, he’d at least have
a weapon to distract the
shark, which he estimated
was at least twice the size
of his mate and childhood
hero.
Fanning said at ﬁrst he
tried to swim away but
then decided to defend
himself, and turned
to punch the shark in
the back. He was next
seen furiously swimming toward a personal
watercraft, where he was
helped out of the water
and back to shore.
He recounted the
events to fans gathered
around him on the beach,
and only later, when the
adrenalin subsided, did
the tears kick in as he
realized how close he had
come to serious injury or
death.
On a ﬂight from Port
Elizabeth to Johannesburg, a woman sitting
beside him pointed to the
report in a newspaper
and asked if the story was
about him. Then he got
emotional again.
He said he felt so
“insigniﬁcant” compared
with the size and speed of
the shark, but didn’t hold
any grudges against the
apex predator because
he knew “we are in their
domain.”
“Thanks for not eating
me,” he said, joking about

Hammon, Spurs
take Vegas
championship

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p
lished in a newspaper of general circulation in Meigs
County two times on July 23,
2015 and July 30, 2015 and
will also be posted at the
Meigs County Annex building
and Courthouse bulletin
boards.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in an
amount of 100% of the bid
amount with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs
County or by certified check,
cashiers check or letter of
credit upon a solvent bank in
an amount of not less than
10% of the bid amount in favor
of the aforesaid Meigs County.
Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the
official or agent signing the
bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as "BID FOR CDBG
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE
STREET RESURFACING
PROJECT" and mailed or delivered to: Meigs County Commissioners Office, Courthouse,
100 E. Second Street Ste. 301,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY

Attention of bidders is called to
all of the requirements contained in the bid packet, various insurance requirements,
federal prevailing wage requirements, various equal opportunity provisions, and the
requirement for a payment
bond and performance bond of
100% of the contract price.
No bidder may withdraw his

MOTOR ROUTE
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Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
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s Must be 18 years of age
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license, dependable vehicle
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OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
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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

$$$$$$$$$

60583312

LEGALS
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the CDBG Bedford Township Street
Resurfacing Project will be received by the Meigs County
Commissioners at their office,
Courthouse, 100 E. Second
Street Ste. 301, Pomeroy, OH
45769 until 11:00 AM
Thursday, August 6, 2015, and
then at 11:15AM at said office
opened and read aloud.
Plans, Specifications, and
Bid/Contract Forms may be secured at the office of the Meigs
County Commissioners, Courthouse,100 E. Second Street
Ste. 301, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
All bidders must furnish, as a
part of their bid, all materials,
tools, labor, and equipment.
This bid notice shall be pub-

LEGALS
bid within thirty (30) days after
the actual date of the opening
thereof. Meigs County reserves the right to waive any
informalities or reject any or all
bids.
Meigs County adheres to all
state policies pertaining to
Handicapped Accessibility and
Equal Employment Opportunities.
7/23, 7/30

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the CDBG Middleport Village Street
Resurfacing Project will be received by the Meigs County
Commissioners at their office,
Courthouse, 100 E. Second
Street Ste. 301, Pomeroy, OH
45769 until 11:00 AM
Thursday, August 6, 2015, and
then at 11:15AM at said office
opened and read aloud.
Plans, Specifications, and
Bid/Contract Forms may be secured at the office of the Meigs
County Commissioners, Courthouse,100 E. Second Street
Ste. 301, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
All bidders must furnish, as a
part of their bid, all materials,
tools, labor, and equipment.
This bid notice shall be published in a newspaper of general circulation in Meigs
County two times on July 23,

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Thursday, July 23, 2015 3B

LEGALS
y
y
2015 and July 30, 2015 and
will also be posted at the
Meigs County Annex building
and Courthouse bulletin
boards.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in an
amount of 100% of the bid
amount with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs
County or by certified check,
cashiers check or letter of
credit upon a solvent bank in
an amount of not less than
10% of the bid amount in favor
of the aforesaid Meigs County.
Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the
official or agent signing the
bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as "BID FOR CDBG
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE
STREET RESURFACING
PROJECT" and mailed or de-

LEGALS

LEGALS

livered to: Meigs County Commissioners Office, Courthouse,
100 E. Second Street Ste. 301,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.

state policies pertaining to
Handicapped Accessibility and
Equal Employment Opportunities.

Attention of bidders is called to
all of the requirements contained in the bid packet, various insurance requirements,
federal prevailing wage requirements, various equal opportunity provisions, and the
requirement for a payment
bond and performance bond of
100% of the contract price.

7-23, 7-30/15

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.

No bidder may withdraw his
bid within thirty (30) days after
the actual date of the opening
thereof. Meigs County reserves the right to waive any
informalities or reject any or all
bids.

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.

Meigs County adheres to all
Miscellaneous

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�CLASSIFIEDS

4B Thursday, July 23, 2015

Yard Sale

Want To Buy

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214 Magnolia Drive
Behind Dominoes Pizza
Thursday - Friday
9am- ?
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
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Guarantee. Local References.
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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.
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learn if the mortgage broker or
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Company)

Help Wanted General
NOW HIRING
Part time janitor in Point Pleasant. Wed &amp; Fri 6:30 pm8:30pm. Must pass drug
screen and background check.
Call Tammy: 304-346-1675.
Patton Building Services is an
Equal Opportunity Employer.
SECRETARY POSITION
NEEDED
Send Resume to:
PO Box Holder
PO Box 994
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Taylormade Countertops and
Custom Cabinets are looking
for an experienced cabinet
builder. If you are looking for
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some experience in wood
working then please call Phil at
740-379-2267.
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
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Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

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Gallipolis. 446-2842

STATEWIDE ADS

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Daily Sentinel

Manufactured Homes

STATEWIDE ADS

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SOCIAL SECURITY
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Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
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Help Wanted General

Laborer Needed for Kyger Creek Power Plant (Cheshire, OH)
Veolia North America, the Nationҋs leader in the contract operation, maintenance, and management of commercial, industrial,
municipal, and wastewater treatment is seeking a Laborer to
work at Kyger Creek Power Plant in Cheshire, OH.
High School Diploma or GED and a valid driverҋs license
required. Ability to work in a variety conditions both inside and
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and pre-employment physical. High school diploma or GED and
valid driverҋs license required.
Apply online at www.veolianorthameria.com/careers ID# 55713
or fax to 606-325-8475. AA/EEO.

TRADE IN
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LENDERS AVAILABLE
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Help Wanted General

Employment Opportunity
Civitas Media is looking for a Customer Service Specialist. This
is full time salary position, with Benefits include Health insurance,
401K, vacation, etc. If interested-send resume to Julia Schultz at
jschultz@civitasmedia.com.
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compensation and opportunities for advancement to motivated
individuals.
 Prior customer service experience preferred
 Self-motivated and able to work independently
 Excellent communication skills
 Professional, articulate voice
 Ability to multi-task in several computer applications while
holding a conversation with a customer
 Type 30 words per minute
 Enjoy working in a fast-paced environment while maintaining a
professional attitude
 Answer customer inquiries and provide appropriate technical
and/or product related information
 Contact customers to follow up on customer issues or order
information
 Independently resolve customer support issues and escalate
when necessary
 Document all contacts, actions, and responses in customer
database
 Maintain working knowledge of products and services
 Strong mathematical skills
 Excellent written and verbal communication skills
 Strong organizational, problem solving and analytical skills
 Commitment to excellence and high standards with close
attention to detail
 Ability to work independently and as a part of a team
 Ability to work well under pressure and diffuse difficult situations
 Ability to handle multiple projects
Civitas Media has publications in NC, SC, TN, KY, VA, WV, OH,
IL, MO, GA, OK, IN and PA.
EOE

Sales / Business Development

Sales / Business Development

Cemetery Plots
3 burial plots and 1 vault for
sale in Meigs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
352-633-0451

TV SIMPLY COSTS LESS!

For Sale By Owner
Mobile home and 19 storage
units next to Walmart in Mason, WV. Storage units are all
full and will make the mortgage payment. $130,000; obo.
740-992-3961.

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

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Smart Pack

$

Hopper offer not available
with this package.

Everyday Price

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%

�&lt;RX�FDQ�6$9(�XS�WR�����FRPSDUHG�WR�86�3KDUPDF\�SULFHV�

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OVER

240
CHANNELS

84

OVER

12-MONTH SPECIAL

290

39

$

CHANNELS

All offers require 24-month commitment and credit qualification. Early Termination Fee applies.

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THE BEST TV ENTERTAINMENT AVAILABLE

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Offer valid for new customers
RQ�\RXU�À�UVW�RUGHU�RQO\�DQG�
cannot be combined with any
other offer.

Middleport Area
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments
no pets. Deposit and
Reference required
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PLUS
MANY
MORE

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no pets deposit
and reference required
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ADDITIONAL PROMOTIONAL OFFERS

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One Bedroom Apartment, furnished, very clean. No Pets.
Non-smoker. 304-675-1386
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
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list for HUD
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elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
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Air, Laundry Rm, Water Pd.
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614-595-7773
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house, basement, garage. No
pets. Deposit. $700. 304-5504286

PASS TIME
IN LINE.
READ THE
NEWSPAPER.

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Sides $6,000. Call 740-3792879 - 740-709-9529

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

for 3 months.

™

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on premium channel availability.

Instantly skip commercials.

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Joey, $7; Super Joey, $10.

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DR_16461_10x4.5

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, July 23, 2015 5B

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Hilary Price

1

5

9

3
4

6

5

6
7

9
8
2

4
1

5 8 3

7/23

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

7/23

6
5
1
8
3
4
7
2
9

7
4
2
9
1
5
8
3
6

3
9
8
6
7
2
5
4
1

Everyday price $34.99/mo. All offers require
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8
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FOR 12
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6
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4
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19

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3
7
6
8
2
9
5

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

PROMOTIONAL PRICES
START AS LOW AS

2
3
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8
7
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By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

9
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1
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7

DENNIS THE MENACE

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Difficulty Level

THE LOCKHORNS

Hank Ketcham’s

1
7
6
4
5
9
3
8
2

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

3
9

4 5 8

1
7

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

By Dave Green

TV SIMPLY COSTS LESS!

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DR_16461_3x3.5

�SPORTS

6B Thursday, July 23, 2015

Daily Sentinel

2015 Meigs Marauder Southern Basketball
Youth Football Camp Golf Scramble

Briefs
From Page 1B

Youth football signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — Local youth
football signups will be held every Saturday in July from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
the Middleport Stadium. Kids will be
placed on a team by the school they
attend, cost is $35 and all equipment is
provided by the league. Area commissioners are Tye Schwall (Gallipolis),
Eber Pickens (Southern), Pat Newland
(Eastern), Bill Milliron (Meigs) and
Dave Barr (Wahama). For addition
information please contact Sarah at
(740) 444-1606 or Tony at (740) 9924067.

scramble format with a blind draw and
will also have a shotgun start of 8:30
a.m. The cost is $50 per Cliffside member and $60 per non-member, and all
MASON, W.Va. — The Southern girls proceeds beneﬁt Lions projects. Prizes
POMEROY, Ohio — The 2015
will be awarded to ﬁrst, second and
Meigs Marauder Youth Football Camp basketball program will be hosting a
third place teams, and there will also be
beneﬁt
golf
scramble
at
the
Riverside
will be held on Saturday, Aug. 1, at
skill prizes awarded. Anyone interested
Golf
Club
on
Saturday
August
29,
at
Holzer Field, Farmers Bank Stadium
can sign up at Cliffside Golf Course or
9
a.m.
The
cost
is
$60
per
player
with
at Meigs High School. The camp is
contact Rick Howell at 740-446-4624
skill
prizes
on
every
hole
and
food
and
open to students in grades 1-8 and a
for more information.
beverages
served
throughout
the
round.
child in any school district can attend.
Prizes
will
be
awarded
to
the
top
three
Camp Fee is $20 per camper. If you
teams. For more information contact
register before July 19, you are guarLady Tornadoes head coach Kent
anteed a camp t-shirt. Register the
day of the camp begins at 8 a.m., and Wolfe at (740)949-4222 ext. 1212 or at
(740)444-9334.
the camp will be from 9 a.m. until 1
p.m. For more information or to regMIDDLEPORT, Ohio — Baseball
ister, call Tonya at 740-645-4479, foland softball signups will be held on the
low the camp on Facebook at “Meigs
Saturday, July 25 from 11 a.m. until 4
Youth Football Camp”.
p.m. at the Middleport ball ﬁelds for the
Middleport Fall League. It will be for
boys and girls from the age of 7 through
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipo18. You can come as an individual or
lis Lions Club will be holding its 17th
as a team. For any information, contact
annual golf outing on Saturday, July
Dave at 740-590-0438, Jackie 740-41625, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallia
County. The event will be a four-man
1261, or Pat at 740-590-4941.

Middleport Fall
Ball signups

Gallipolis Lions
Golf Outing

60576582

Reds

Check out the ﬁve-day forecast
on the weather page or online at

Mydailytribune.com
Mydailyregister.com
Mydailysentinel.com
brought to you by

Let’s Talk
About Your

GOALS

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

loaded in the seventh off
Yoervis Medina as the Reds
pulled away.
From Page 1B
Schwarber, who grew up
in nearby Middletown, Ohio,
Wednesday, extending his
hit a tying two-run homer in
streak of success against
the ninth on Tuesday night
Chicago.
and a solo homer in the 13th
He hasn’t lost to the Cubs inning for a 5-4 win. He
since April 21, 2012, going became the ﬁrst Cubs rookie
5-0 in his last nine starts
to hit two homers in the
against them with a 2.68
ninth inning or later.
ERA.
Schwarber was behind
“Pretty much all of my
the plate for the ﬁrst game
pitches were working pretty of the doubleheader, which
well,” Leake said.
started only 12 hours after
Frazier won the All-Star
he caught all 13 innings.
Home Run Derby at Great
He had a pair of singles and
American Ball Park, then
drove in a run, leaving him 7
went into an 0-for-10 slump. for 14 in the series with ﬁve
After getting a day off last
RBIs and a stolen base.
Sunday, the third baseman
Hendricks entered the
is 6 for 12 with a homer and game on his best stretch of
six RBIs.
the season, allowing only
Joey Votto added a solo
one earned run in his last
homer off Kyle Hendricks
four starts. He gave up a pair
(4-5), who gave up four runs of inﬁeld singles to open
while facing nine batters in
the ﬁrst, and Votto walked
the ﬁrst inning. Billy Hamto load the bases. Frazier’s
ilton singled with the bases opposite-ﬁeld double drove

in two, and Eugenio Suarez
followed with another double on Hendrick’s 16th pitch
of the game for a 4-0 lead.
“Just putting the ball in
play,” manager Bryan Price
said. “Two balls were put
in play for inﬁeld hits, then
there’s a walk and a soft hit
by Frazier.”
OUTTA HERE
Cubs manager Joe Maddon was ejected in the fourth
inning by ﬁrst base umpire
Adam Hamari for arguing
a balk call. It was his third
ejection of the season.
STREAKS
Brandon Phillips extended his hitting streak to ﬁve
games. … Hamilton’s RBIs
were his ﬁrst since June
23. … Anthony Rizzo went
0 for 4, leaving him hitless in his last 13 at-bats.
Rizzo, who also was in the
All-Star Home Run Derby,
is 3 for 25 since.

60596655

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