<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2549" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/2549?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T07:24:22+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="12455">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/f788b9172d141ec5b70fedb835805cb3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>529d7187778394be1b1f6c7a5e24dfaf</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9117">
                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Introducing
the antique
nurse.... Page 2

Mostly sunny.
High of 81. Low
of 60... Page 3

Berry happy
to return to
Reds.... Page 8

Donavan J. Baker, 73
Charles (Charlie) W.
Entsminger, 90
Thelma Jane ‘Susie’ Garlic, 88
50 cents daily

THURSDAY, JULY 25, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 119

Southern Local approves new OAPSE contract
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education approved a new threeyear negotiated agreement
with OAPSE (Ohio Associ-

ation of Public School Employees) during this week’s
board meeting.
According to Superintendent Tony Deem, the
three-year agreement provides a structure for pay
increases, as well as chang-

es to hours worked.
Employees covered under the new agreement will
receive a .50 cent increase
in the first year, .32 cent
increase in the second year
and a .20 cent increase in
the third year. There will

also be .50 cent per hour
increase for extra trips.
Changes
to
hours
worked under the new
agreement will be for the
cooks and secretaries.
Cooks will now work seven
hours per day, with secre-

taries working eight hours
on an 11 month contract.
Deem added that the
changes to the hours for
the cooks was needed to
accommodate more students in the cafeteria, with
the change for the secretar-

ies due to the elimination
of the Superintendent’s
secretary.
Other terms of the agreement include changes to
the mail order prescripSee CONTRACT |‌ 3

Charlene Hoeflich| Sentinel

Fair board member Kenny Buckley speaks on 150th observance events.

Buckley speaks on
upcoming 150th event
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich| Sentinel

These 22 collectible dolls, donated to the Mulberry Community Parish Shop, are now on sale.

Collectible dolls added to Parish shelves
POMEROY — Twenty-two dolls of
collectible quality, valued from $30
to $200 each, have been donated to
the Meigs Cooperative Parish in the
Mulberry Community Center and are
now for sale.
The name of the donor of the dolls
was not released, The collection in
which each doll is different, is valued
at over $1,200, according to information from Internet research on each doll
done by Parish personnel. The collection consists of one doll of each kind
and each is marked with the name of
the artist and the estimated value.
All funds raised from the sale of the
dolls will go into the maintenance of the
Center and for the various programs of
assisting those less fortunate with food
and other necessities.
The artists whose dolls went on sale
today in the Parish Shop includes those
of Lee Middleton, Katie Smith-Fitzpatrick, Linda Murray, Kymberli Durdon,
Anna Barten and others.

POMEROY — With the Meigs County Fair observing
its 150th year, Kenny Buckley, a longtime member of the
Meigs County Fair Board, spoke on the fair’s history at
Tuesday’s luncheon meeting of the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce at the Wildhorse Cafe.
He said that while the first fair was held in 1851,
there were several years when the country was at war
that fairs were not held which makes this the 150th
year of having fairs.
Over the years, according to Buckley, the fairs were
held in different locations, Middleport, Chester, Racine,
See FAIR ‌| 3

Kim Imboden displays a doll in a christening outfit , one of the 22 donated to the Parish shop.

Civil War exhibit open for viewing
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — A display
at the Meigs Museum annex in commemoration
of the 150th anniversary
of the Civil War which
opened Sunday in conjunction with the Buffington
Island observance will remain in place for viewing
by the public for the remainder of this year.
Margaret Parker, president of the Meigs County
Historical Society, noted
that additional items will
be added to the collection
as they are discovered or
contributed by the public.
Included in the display
are the encapsulated voting ballots of soldiers from
Meigs County dated Nov. 4,
1864 when President Abraham Lincoln was seeking a
second term. The package
containing the ballots was
found in a storage room at
the Meigs County Board of
Elections several years ago
and given to the Historical
Society for safe keeping. A
few weeks ago there was a
ceremonial opening of the
package and display of the

Todd Burge will conduct a workshop on Saturday.

Blues School for Kids
to be held Saturday
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

Charlene Hoeflich| Sentinel

Jessica Finnearty of Logan examines a bayonet which is in the Meigs Museum’s Civil War exhibit. The tag reads “We seek the sword for union and peace. Co. M. 1st Regiment, Va. Cavalry.”

ballots cast 149 years ago.
The exhibit also includes
pictures and other artifacts
from that time period including rosters of Meigs
County soldiers, a bayonet,
a diary of a Meigs County
man, Civil War letters home,

a couple of Currier and Ives
paintings of Civil War battles, a Union flag found on
a battle field, and a coin carried by one of the soldiers as
he went into battle.
Next week a cannon ball
will be moved into the ex-

hibit along with some shells
gathered up from battlefields.
Anyone with Civil War
items to contribute to the display on a loan or permanent
basis is asked to take it the
museum or to contact Parker
for further information.

POMEROY — The Blues School for Kids returns for a
sixth year at this weekend’s Big Bend Blues Bash.
Under the direction of musician and songwriter Todd
Burge, kids ages 2-12 will have the opportunity to learn
music and be entertained.
The Blues School, which begins at 1 p.m., is a free songwriting and performing workshop conducted by Todd
Burge, a full-time performing country folk songwriter
from Parkersburg, West Virginia.
The kids coming to the Blues School will write a blues
song and learn to play it on harmonicas. Following a free
luncheon in the park, they will have practice and then perform on the main stage at the Big Bend Blues Bash.
Burge has played everything from Alternative/Punk
Rock to Bluegrass, performing over 100 shows per year
in venues as diverse as CBGB’s with his band 63 Eyes, to
See BLUES ‌| 3

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Notes from the antique nurse

Meigs County Local Briefs

TB Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Tuberculosis Clinic recently received
an ample supply of Tubersol used for skin testing.
The office is conducting
tests Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday and Friday
from 8 a.m.-noon and 1-4
p.m. The office is open on
Thursday, but tests are not
given. Any organization
wanting an outside clinic
should contact the office at
992-3722.
Basket game
fundraiser
SYRACUSE —Basket
games at Syracuse Community Center, Thursday,
July 25. Doors open 5 p.m.,
games begin at 6 p.m. Advance tickets available at
The Fabric Shop in Pomeroy. Hosted by River City
Players to benefit performing arts opportunities.
Summer Craft Expo
RACINE — A Summer
craft expo and Christmas
in July will be held from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday,
July 27, at Kountry Resort
Campground. Admission is
free. Activities will include
a craft show, kids Olympics (11 a.m.), Christmas
cookie bake off (4 p.m.),
the cloggers (6 p.m.) and a
hayride (8 p.m.)
Legion changes
meeting time
POMEROY — Drew
Webster Post 39 of the
American Legion will
change its meeting time
from 7 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
starting on Aug. 6.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct as
childhood and adolescent
immunization clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on
Tuesdays, at the Meigs
County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial

Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring children’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent
or legal guardian. Please
bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but not
required.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY —
Meigs County Road 10
(Carpenter Hill Road) will
be closed for approximately one month beginning
July 29. County forces will
be replacing a culvert with
a new bridge on County
Road 10 at a site approximately 2,000 feet north of
County Road 17 (Cotterill
Road).
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 325 will be closed
right before the junction
of Metheny Fairplay Road
due to a culvert replacement project. The road
will be closed beginning
Thursday, July 11 through
August 16. ODOT’s official
detour is Ohio 124 to Ohio
160 back to Ohio 325.
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 143 (located just 0.25
miles south of State Farm
Road) will be reduced to
one lane to allow for a
bridge replacement project. During construction
there will be a 10’ width
restriction. Traffic will be
maintained with a portable
traffic light. Weather permitting, both lanes of Ohio
143 will be open September 1, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The westbound lane of
Ohio 124 (located at the
63.91 mile marker, about
1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic
signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting,
both lanes of Ohio 124 will
be open November, 1 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 124 (located 0.4
miles north of Williams
Run Road) will be reduced
to one lane to allow for a
bridge replacement project. Traffic will be maintained by traffic signals and
concrete barriers. Weather
permitting, both lanes of
Ohio 124 will reopen August 31, 2013.

BBT (NYSE) — 35.68
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.32
Pepsico (NYSE) — 85.64
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.38
Rockwell (NYSE) — 92.02
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 17.00
Royal Dutch Shell — 68.55
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.12
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 78.23
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 7.12
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.15
Worthington (NYSE) — 35.83
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for July
24, 2013, 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.

Vacation Bible
Schools
ANTIQUITY —The Antiquity Baptist Church will
have Bible School from
July 29 to Aug. 2. Classes
on the theme of “Kingdom
Chronicles” will be held
from 6 to 8 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT — The
First Baptist Church of
Middleport, 211 S. Sixth
Ave., will be holding Vacation Bible School beginning Monday, July 29
through Thursday, August
1, with a pool party being

BUNDLE &amp; SAVE!
ON DIGITAL SERVICES
FOR YOUR HOME

DIGITAL TV
HIGH-SPEED INTERNET
DIGITAL PHONE
Offers may be available now in your area from Acceller, Inc. for these top service providers:

*

BUNDLES STARTING AS LOW AS

$89/mo.

no perfume,
Our trainalways wear a
ing was a
girdle (didn’t
three -year
matter if you
diploma prowere a size 6
gram … that
or 14 … and
was all year evbelieve
me
ery year times
there were no
three!
The
overweight
year I went
student nurses
into training,
in our school!)
our hospital
lf you were a
had decided
few pounds up,
the students
you were put
would not be
on a diet and
used as reguhad to lose two Sharon McNabb lar
staffing
pounds a week
during
the
(or convince
junior
and
them you were
senior years,
trying!) or you were cam- so even though, there was
pused (which meant you an Registered Nurse (RN)
couldn’t leave the hospital on the floor during those
block, except for classes). last months, we did run
We all “weighed in” every the floor and took the heat
week with our health di- or praise for our work and
rector making our charts. leadership.
We also had to participate
From the very beginin fitness classes twice a ning, we heard about
week, despite the fact we “ethical conscience” which
walked up and down 8-10 is a system of principles
blocks of hills to the Uni- governing the conduct of
versity of Tennessee cam- a nurse. It deals with the
pus for classes.
relationship of a nurse to
Every school is differ- the patient, the patient’s
ent, I know, but I felt one family, associates and felimportant (maybe not low nurses, and society
written) objective for our at large. The “EC” was
leaders was to turn their instilled in our souls, as
small town bumpkins into we thought about the
walking, talking proper ramifications of errors not
young ladies. In addition reported and of horror
to the classes all day, we stories, when you made a
were sent downtown to a mistake and did not hastily
modeling class, where we report and correct it.
were taught how to walk,
Everyone makes mishow to talk, how to sit, takes because we are not
how to get in and out of a perfect … and if you have
car or seat, what utensils ever worked with someone
to use at the table, how to who acted or claimed to
apply make-up and do our know it all … my advice?
hair, among other things. Run, they’re trouble! As
It wasn’t a long class … nurses, new or antique,
but it’s effect was everlast- we must keep our minds
ing! Looking back, I see it open for learning from our
heightened our confidence patients, families, doctors
and self esteem and this and every other source
was good.
available to us. Living
Our class started out means learning, until the
with 42, and we gradu- day we give up this life!
ated 17 (which included
Nurse’s training, in the
two transfers from another first year, meant learning
school). The schedule was each department and all
rigorous, and I remember aspects of your hospital.
going to a high school So we worked in Central
in my starched uniform Supply, folding/wrapping
(with hem 13 inches from trays, sterilizing and autothe floor) as part of our claving items; in Physical
hospital’s
recruitment Therapy, we served the
program and telling those special assistant to the
young ladies they had to PT: in Dietary, we set up
be in shape and healthy … trays for the patients and
because no one wanted to delivered them on carts to
see an out-of-shape or sick the floors. Working in Cennurse. After all, we were tral Supply those first few
the caregivers and role days (prior to the mindmodels.
boggling anatomy classes)

helped us to keep our cool
and our seat, when we
were on the floor orientation and the staff nurse
requested we go to the CS
for Fallopian tubes.
Looking back, I’m not
sure how there were
enough hours in the day to
do all we were expected to
do. I do know no one had
any trouble sleeping and
lights out at nine (except
nights before tests) was
no problem. All was quiet
on the floor, and if you did
wake, the only sound you
might hear was a siren as
an ambulance pulled into
the Emergency Department or the housemother
checking rooms. At 5:30
a.m., it was a different story … the dead came alive
as 30-40 alarms went off!
As the pressure built
with increased responsibilities, we helped each other
to “hang in there”. I called
home several times crying,
“I can’t take it anymore,
come and get me.” Mother
would ask me to give it one
more day and if I still felt the
same, she would come for
me. Everyone would rally
around, encouraging, sympathizing and begging you
to stay … and you stayed.
We learned from the upper classmen how to get
around some of the rules,
and we bent them almost
to the breaking point at
times. One thing we did
was send a note with our
uniforms to the laundry
saying “please hem one
inch” … so by the senior
year, we were in style with
our uniforms, just at the
knee or above.
Now, I’m not sure why we
weren’t reprimanded about
this, unless the instructors
realized how important it
was for us to have a little
power to flaunt.
When graduation came
around, we all swore we
would keep in touch. We
cried as each went their own
way. In the 49 years, since
that big day, I have only seen
four or five of those girls.
Our lives moved on … families were established, and
we each went on to make
our mark on this earth.
Armed with our knowledge
and precious memories, we
moved through the years to
this point.
Been there, done that,
and I sincerely hope I have
made it all better!

Meigs County Church Calendar

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 46.38
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 19.84
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 86.43
Big Lots (NYSE) — 36.09
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 51.12
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 92.17
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.23
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.22
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 45.48
Collins (NYSE) — 71.11
DuPont (NYSE) — 57.38
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.54
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.62
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 55.86
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 56.63
Kroger (NYSE) — 39.13
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 52.64
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 74.66
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.60

Greetings,
The antique nurse, mom
and grandmother is on
board again with articles
of faith, precious memories and laughter. My
nursing days are over, my
husband has retired, my
daughters are married
and I have three wonderful
grandchildren. You cannot
be more blessed than that!
Time, according to the
dictionary, is term, age,
duration, interim, period,
tempo, interval, space,
spell and season. Any way
you say it, the meaning is
clear. Time is fleeting and
everchanging. As I finish
this sentence, I can’t grab
back the seconds it took to
write … for time has already claimed that interval of activity.
I had a lot of fun creating
articles for the “Update”
for the Holzer Health Systems when I was nursing,
and I am looking forward
to tickling your funnybone,
as well as creating a “little
tear” now and then.
God Bless,
Sharon McNabb
***
My daughter bought me
a totebag last year, which
proclaimed the person carrying it was an “Antique
Nurse … been there, done
that and made it all better!” It made me laugh until it hit me I really am an
antique nurse!
Memories came rushing
forward when I thought
of those first few months
of training … away from
home, scared, yet excited,
feeling grown up, proud
to be in the company of
so many real nurses and
a whole bunch of “wanna
be’s”.
Everything was a big
deal. The uniform rules
were: clean, fresh from
the laundry, the hem was
to be 13 inches from the
floor. This was darling on
a 4 foot 11 inch gal, as the
hem was just at the knee
or above, which was the
fashion of the day. It was
not becoming on a 5 foot
5 inch skinny frame gal
who looked a little like a
pink and white peppermint stick! Shoes had to
be polished and sparkling.
Of course, the hose were
white and no runs. Hair off
the collar, minimal makeup, clear or light pink nail
polish with nails cut short,

For first 12 months

FIND OUT MORE BY CALLING TOLL-FREE

1-866-636-5984
By Acceller, Inc., an authorized retailer.

*Geographic and service restrictions apply to all services. Call to see if you qualify.

held on Friday, August 2
for the attendees. VBS is
for children of preschool
age through the 8th grade.
This year’s theme is Jesus
Loves Me. There will be
lessons about Jesus, music,
games, and snacks each
evening from 6 to 8 p.m.
Registration will be held on
Monday or the first night
that your child can attend.
A fun VBS Kickoff will be
held the afternoon of Sunday, July 28, following the
morning worship service.
Bouncies and games will
be in the church yard. All
kids that would like to attend VBS are invited to the
Kickoff. Children under 12
should be accompanied by
an adult. Bring your lawn
chairs.
POMEROY — Hysell
Run Community Church,
Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy, will be holding an all
day Bible school event
from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
on Saturday, Aug. 3, for
ages 4-12. Crafts, games,
Bible lessons, and snacks
will be throughout the day.
An inflatable bounce station and water slide will
round out the day. Lunch
will be provided. For more
information call 992-7036

or 742-3171.
Church Day Camp
RACINE — Amazing
Grace Day Camp is being
hosted by St. John Lutheran Church from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m., Aug. 5-9. The church
is located at 33441 Pine
Grove Road, Racine. It is
for youth kindergarten to
eighth grade. Registration
is required, but there is no
fee. Enjoy a church camp
experience without leaving
home. Trained professional camp counselors will
lead Bible study, songs,
games, skits and crafts.
Lunch and two snacks will
be provided. The theme is
Faith Alive.
For more information
and registration call Louise Michael at (740) 9854237. Please register by
Aug. 1.
Missionary Service
HARRISIONVILLE —
A missionary service will
be held at the Harrisonville Community Church,
S.R. 684, at 7 p.m. Friday.
Speaker will be Samuel
Davis, missionary worker
from Mexico. The public
is invited. Pastor of the
church is Theron Durham.

Steven Miller, M.D.

Board Certiﬁed Orthopedic Surgeon
Specializes in the treatment of bone &amp; joint
disorders, injuries, fractures and arthritis. Dr. Miller
also treats sports injuries, children’s injuries, work
related injuries and some nerve compression
conditions such as carpal tunnel syndrome.
Parkersburg Orthopedic Associates

1-304-485-8040

www.orthodoc.ddos.org/drmiller

60431441

Stover Reunion
RACINE — The 77th annual reunion of the Stover
will be held Saturday, Aug.
3 at the Racine Methodist Church, in the shelter
house if it’s nice weather, in
the church fellowship room
if it rains. A potluck dinner
will be served at noon with
a program to follow.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Community Dinner
MIDDLEPORT — A
community dinner will be
held with serving beginning at 5 p.m. on Friday,
July 26 at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family
Life Center. The menu will
include sloppy joes, tossed
salad, macaroni and cheese
and dessert. Everyone is
welcome.
Ice Cream Social
COOLVILLE — An ice
cream social will be held
beginning at 4 p.m. on
Saturday, July 27, at North
Bethel United Methodist
Church on Old Route 7
south of Coolville. Home
made ice cream will be
served along with hot
dogs, sloppy joes baked
beans, slaw chips, pie, and
cake. Gospel music featuring Day Spring of Athens
and Jim Blair and Friends
of Marietta will be from
6:30-8:30 p.m.
Church Picnic
SYRACUSE — Ash
Street Church in Middleport will hold a church
picnic beginning at 5:30
p.m. on Saturday, July 27,
at the Syracuse park shelter behind the pool/ball
field. Swimming will then
take place at the pool from
6:30-8:30 p.m. Everyone is
invited.
Benefit sing
CHESTER —A Fall Harvest Gospel Sing will be
held at the Chester Nazarene Church, 6 p.m. on
Sunday, July 28. Singers
will be Martie Short, The
Dollys, and Brian and Family Connections. It will be
a song and praise service.

�Thursday, July 25, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituary

Meigs County Community Calendar
Thursday, July 25
WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid
Waste Management District Policy
Committee will meet at 3:30 p.m.
at the district office, 1056 S. New
Hampshire Avenue, Wellston, Ohio.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Soil and Water Conservation District
Board of Supervisors will meet at 11
a.m. at the district office located at
113 East Memorial Drive, Suite D.
RACINE — The Southern Local
Board of Education will hold a special meeting at 7:30 a.m. in the Elementary Library to discuss a renewal
levy and any other business that may
be brought before the board.
Saturday, July 27
CHESTER — The Chester Township Trustees will have a special
meeting at 9 a.m. at the town hall.

Charles (Charlie) W. Entsminger

Carolyn Weddle at (740) 533-9376.

RACINE — The Circle Family Reunion will be held at Carmel Church
with dinner beginning at noon.

Wednesday, July 31
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Eastern Local Board of Education will
meet at 6:30 p.m. for their regular
July meeting. The meeting will be
held in the Eastern Elementary library conference room.

Monday, July 29
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission will
meet at 9 a.m. at 117 East Memorial
Drive.

Friday, Aug. 2
POMEROY — Meigs County
P.E.R.I. will meet at 1 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community Center. Shane
Olson from Humana will be our guest
speaker. Members need to attend to
hear about any changes.

Tuesday, July 30
JACKSON — PERI District 7 (Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Pike,
Ross, Scioto, and Vinton counties)
will have the annual district meeting
at the Jackson County Extension Office off Ohio 93 at 17 Standpipe Road
in Jackson. Registration is at 10 a.m.
and the presentation by OPERS on
health care begins at 10:30 a.m. All
PERI members are welcome to attend. For further information contact

Tuesday, Aug. 13
TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
Board will have their regular meeting at 5 p.m. at the TPRSD office.

By George! Britain’s little prince gets a name
LONDON (AP) — The little
prince has a name: George Alexander Louis.
The announcement Wednesday
that Prince William and his wife,
Kate, had selected a moniker steeped
in British history came as royal officials suggested the new parents are
seeking quiet time away from the
flashbulbs and frenzy that accompanied the birth of their first child.
While the news put to rest intense
curiosity over what name the couple
would choose, the timing and interest around it show how the 2-day-old
future heir is already on his way to
a lifetime of fanfare and public glare.
Kensington Palace on Wednesday
said William and Kate were “delighted to announce” their son’s name,
adding that baby will be known as
“His Royal Highness Prince George
of Cambridge.”
The name George — borne by six
previous kings — befits the boy now
third in line to the British throne and
was a favorite among British book-

not hidebound by George. The first
name of George VI was actually Albert, but he picked his fourth name
to use as sovereign in honor of his
father, George V.
Palace officials say William and
Kate are spending “private and quiet
time for them to get to know their
son.” Some of their discussions may
revolve around figuring out how to
shield him from intense public and
media interest.
The young prince’s relationship
with the media, at least, appeared to
have gotten off to a good start — a
good sign for a royal family that has
had tense moments with the press.
The baby slept through his first
photo op Tuesday outside London’s
St. Mary’s Hospital, while his parents beamed as they chatted easily
with reporters.
“I thought, is this an Oscar-winning
Baker
performance?” said Ingrid Seward,
Donavan J. Baker, 73, of Patriot, died Tuesday evening,
editor-in-chief of Majesty magazine. July 23, 2013, at Kings Daughters Medical Center in Ash“But I think they were so genuinely land, Ky.
overjoyed that they wanted to show
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m., Sunday July 28, 2013,
off the baby.”
at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home with Pastor
Larry Haley officiating. Burial will follow in Olive Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Saturday at the
funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the
American heart Association in Donavan’s memory.
As for this year’s programming, he
Garlic
said the demo derby discontinued
Thelma Jane “Susie” Garlic, 88, of Gallipolis, died
last year will be back this year, that
pari-mutuel betting will be offered Tuesday, July 23, 2013, at Holzer Senior Care Center.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday, July
again this year at Thursday’s racing
event, and that there will be a fire- 27, 2013, at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home with
Pastor Jim Lusher officiating. Burial will follow in the
works display on Saturday night.
Buckley also noted other changes Crown City Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
that have taken place for this year’s home from 11 a.m. on Saturday until time of service.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the Arevent, along with new activities
which have been added to the sched- thritis Foundation in her memory.
ule. In conclusion he described his
work as a member of the fair board
as “my way of giving back.”

makers. It was the name chosen for
his reign by Queen Elizabeth II’s father, George VI, who rallied the nation during World War II.
Alexander is a name shared by
three medieval Scottish kings, and
the name Louis could be a tribute
to Lord Louis Mountbatten, uncle to
the queen’s husband, Philip, and the
last British Viceroy of India before
that nation gained its independence
in 1947. William’s father, Prince
Charles, was close to Mountbatten,
who was assassinated by the Irish
Republican Army in 1979.
The announcement of the name,
just two days after the baby’s birth,
was quick by royal standards. Elizabeth and Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, took a month before settling
on the name Charles for the Prince
of Wales. Charles and his then-wife,
Princess Diana, took a week before
settling on William’s four names.
While it is normally the case that
a king rules under his given name,
precedent shows that the prince is

Death Notices

Fair
From Page 1
and even the Rock Springs Hotel.
Then in 1868 the current site at Rock
Springs was purchased and in 1890
the grandstand designed to flow with
the curve of the race track was built.
Later it was listed on the National
Register of Historic Places, and has
since been refurbished and reinforced to secure and make safe the
unique structure.
Buckley said the Fair Board property consists of 160 acres and that

the county garage and dog pound are
located on that property. The budget
for a fair is about $200,000, he noted.
He talked about the junior fair,
the importance to youth by helping
them to become responsible and in
gain leadership skills, and of the fair
board’s role in offering them opportunities for participating in the fair
programming.
He thanked supporters of the fair,
especially the corporate sponsors
who contribute greatly to the cost of
putting on the fair.

Blues

Ohio Valley Forecast

From Page 1
the The Country Music Hall of Fame
and the Kennedy Center. He is a repeat guest on NPR’s Mountain Stage
and has been called the “dean of WV
songwriters”, by the show’s host,
Larry Groce. Burge has performed

Burge has the ability to twist his
catchy tunes into something we can
all relate to. Burge also hosts his own
radio show and podcast, Songwriter
Night with Todd Burge. He resides
with his wife Lisa and two young
children, Sophia, 7, and William, 9,
in Parkersburg W.Va.

and toured with Tim O’Brien, Kathy
Mattea, Lucinda Williams, Bela
Fleck, Mike Seeger, Larry Groce,
Ricky Skaggs and many others.
His high energy shows are packed
with songs and stories of bizarre
characters and critters, from dogs
to sharks to humans and beyond.

Contract
tion drug plan to make it
the same as the teacher’s
union;
reimbursement
of up to $57 for FBI/BCI
background checks when
required.
In personnel matters,
the resignations of Ryan
Lemley and Jennifer Holt
were accepted as submitted. Lemley’s resignation
was effective July 10, while
Holt’s resignation is effective Aug. 1. Both are due
to other employment.
Lemley addressed the
board during Monday’s
meeting, thanking them
for their support throughout his time at Southern.
Courtney Lively was
hired as an intervention
teacher on a one year contract; John Combs was
hired as a high school
social studies teacher on
a one year contract; and
Sandra Largent Mayes was
hired as a high school English teacher on a one year
contract.
Andrea Cline was hired
as a guidance counselor on
a one year contract. She
was also authorized 20 extended days to begin the
2013-14 school year.
Edward Baker was hired
on a two year purchased
services agreement in the
amount of $33,475 annually.
Vicki Northup was ap-

proved for 30 additional
work days at her hourly
rate. She will now work under a 240 day contract.
Kathy Miller was hired
on a supplemental contract as transportation coordinator. The action was
approved by a 4-1 vote,
with board member Peggy
Gibbs voting no.
Supplemental contracts
were approved as follows, John Combs, head
baseball; Brian Weaver,
assistant football; Brent
Smith, assistant football;
Jason Circle, junior high
football; Joe Roderus, assistant junior high football;
Alan Crisp, seventh and
eighth grade volleyball;
Amy Roush, elementary
yearbook, variety show,
and district newsletter;
Joe Cornell, cross country,
website, Science Olympiad; Mindy Patterson,
10th grade advisor; Chris
Carroll, junior varsity volleyball; Larry Smith, vocational bus route; Diane
Dunfee, home economics
(10 days); Jenna Gilliam,
vocational agriculture (40
days); Beth Bay, assistant
girls basketball, junior high
track assistant; Megan Edwards, junior high track;
Matthew Dill, volunteer
football.
A resolution to obtain
figures for the possible renewal levy was approved,
with a special meeting

scheduled for Thursday
morning on the matter.
In other business, a three
year maintenance service
agreement was approved
with CASTO Technical at
a rate of $29,610.
An agreement was approved with CompManagement to participate in
the 2014 Group Rating
Program for workers’ compensation and unemployment compensation.
A transfer of $75,630
was approved for the metal
roof. Work will begin in approximately two weeks.
Board member Paul
Harris was selected a the
delegate to OSBA Capital
Conference in November,
with Dennie Hill as the alternate.
A total of 38 open enrollment students were
approved for the 2013-14
school year.
Per Ohio Department
of Education policy lunch

prices were increased in
the amount of .05 cents.
The cost at the high school
will be $2.45, with the cost
at the elementary school
$2.10. Breakfast will be
free for all students.
A resolution for four
waiver days on Sept. 3,
Nov. 27, Jan. 2, and June
2 was approved. The days
must now be approved by
the state.
Raises were approved
at the same percentage
for the exempted staff as
were given to the bargaining units except for Superintendent, Treasure and
building principals.
The building principals
will receive a one-time, 2.5
percent stipend in lieu of
the raise received by other
staff.
The next regular board
meeting will be held at
8 p.m. on Aug. 26 in the
Southern Elementary Library.

Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 81.
North wind 3 to 6 mph.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around
60. Northeast wind 3 to 5 mph.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82. Light
and variable wind.
Friday Night: A chance of showers, mainly after
2am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 61. Calm wind.
Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Saturday: A chance of showers, mainly after 1 p.m.
Mostly sunny, with a high near 81. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Saturday Night: A chance of showers. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around 61. Chance of precipitation
is 50 percent.
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 80.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around
58.
Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.
Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around
60.

Every Life Celebrated with a
Century of Service

Since 1913

Funeral Home
Celebrating 100 Years of Serving
Meigs County
740-992-2121
Kevin Schwarzel

119 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2020
SL-400208.000 • PB-100643-000

Rick Price, Owner

SEE US FOR PAYDAY LOANS!!

Mike Putman

Owners
60431490

From Page 1

Charles (Charlie) W. Entsminger, 90, of Charleston,
died on July 23, 2013, after a long illness.
Charlie was raised in Middleport, Ohio, and moved
to Charleston in 1941. He
served during World War II
in the U.S. Army Air Forces.
He was employed by C &amp; P
Telephone Company for 40
years. In 2009, he was inducted into the University of
Charleston Hall of Fame in
recognition for his service as
Head Softball Coach and for
his many years of loyal support of the school’s athletic
programs. He was an elder
at Kanawha United Presbyterian Church. He faithfully served in the local community as a member of the
Charleston Optimist Club, as a Red Cross volunteer, as an
elementary school tutor, as a Senior Olympics organizer,
and as a Charleston Sternwheel Regatta board member.
Charlie was also an avid and accomplished tennis player.
Charlie is predeceased by his parents, David and Garnet Entsminger; his brother, Kenneth Entsminger; and
his sister, Ruth Zahn.
Charlie is survived by his wife, Margery, and by his children, Kurt Entsminger of Charleston, Lynn Lutes of Big
Canoe, Georgia, Gale Carignan of Naples, Florida, Kim
Luiggi of Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Jill Bauer of
Richmond, Kentucky. He is also survived by nine grandchildren, Elizabeth Rubis, Nathan Entsminger, Chase
Entsminger, Christie Wilkins, Deidre Abrons, Courtney
Deaton, Carrie Parsons, Christine Luiggi, and Kendall Olson, and by seven great-grandchildren, Rex, Genevieve,
Alyssa, Jasmine, Kennedy, Lily, JT, and Oscar.
A memorial service followed by a reception will be held
at 1 p.m. on Saturday, July 27, at Kanawha United Presbyterian Church, 1009 Virginia Street East, Charleston
25301 with Pastor Patterson Lyles officiating.
The family requests that, in lieu of flowers, donations
be made to Kanawha United Presbyterian Church.
Online guestbook may be accessed at www.wilsonfuneralandcremation.com.
Wilson Funeral Home, Charleston is in charge of the
arrangements.

60431252

�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Beatles tribute band
comes together on Broadway
Mark Kennedy
AP Drama Writer

NEW YORK — Reuven Gershon and James
Fox have some insanely
daunting shoes to fill: Every night, they’re asked
to impersonate John and
Paul on Broadway.
Yes, that John and Paul.
Gershon and Fox portray, respectively, John
Lennon and Paul McCartney in a Fab Four
cover band that has taken
its concert show, “Let It
Be,” from London’s West
End to New York.
Over two hours, the
duo — Fox is from Cardiff, Wales, and Gershon
is from Birmingham,
England — help bang out
some 40 classic Beatles
songs, from “She Loves
You” to “While My Guitar
Gently Weeps.”
“We have very important jobs because these
people will never get to
see the Beatles. This is
the closest they’ll come,
so the representation has
to be pretty accurate. It’s
a big responsibility,” says
Fox. “It’s everyone’s musical Bible, isn’t it?”
They’re helping quench
an unquenchable thirst
for Beatles music that
stretches from the Las Vegas home of the Cirque du
Soleil show “Love” to fake
Beatles bands crisscrossing the nation prompting
complaints they’re just doing glorified karaoke.
Both men, part of a 10man contingent cast for
Broadway, are singer-songwriters in their 30s with
a background in theater
who originated their iconic
roles in London, even if
the program or show never
actually identifies them
as George, John, Paul or
Ringo. Each can sing and
play piano, guitar and bass.
“What you have to be
good at is being able to
replicate what they did,”
says Gershon, who performs as Frank Sinatra and
Dean Martin for birthday
celebrations and weddings
and has played Buddy Holly in the musical “Buddy”
in the West End. “It never ends. There’s always
more you can do.”

LEGAL SHADOW
As if to add to the pressure, Fox and Gershon are
also playing McCartney
and Lennon during a lawsuit.
The producers of “Let
It Be” are being sued for
copyright
infringement
by the Rain Corp., which
produces the rival touring show “Rain: A Tribute
to the Beatles.” The Rain
Corp. claims it laid the
foundation for the new production as a “joint author”
but hasn’t been compensated or credited.
In its lawsuit, the Rain
Corp., which brought its
show to Broadway in 2010,
claims it taught the new
group the ropes — the dialogue, the look of the show,
staging, the song list and
even the blocking.
Fox and Gershon acknowledge meeting and
working with Rain Corp.
veterans for their show but
insist their work stands on
its own. “Anybody that imitates the Beatles in some
respects is doing a similar
thing,” says Fox.
The two are scrambling
to finish their work —
“I Am the Walrus” and
“Penny Lane” still must
be placed in the lineup —
and are worrying about
that, not the lawsuit. “It
will affect us if it makes the
show close and we’re out
of work,” says Gershon,
somewhat grimly.
Neither show has the
rights to tell a behind-thescenes band story. What
they’ve done is licensed
Lennon-McCartney songs
— augmented by no more
than two George Harrison
tunes per show — from
Sony/ATV, the Beatles’
publishing company. They
play their set of songs
chronologically.
“We tell the story
through music and costume changes,” says Jeff
Parry, a producer long associated with “Rain” who
now produces “Let It Be.”
”It’s the story, but not the
‘Jersey Boys’ version.”
Parry says the new show
differs from “Rain” in that
it was built for a West End
theater not a tour, has
younger performers than
in “Rain” and starts the
show at Liverpool’s Cavern Club, whereas the rival
show begins in 1964 with

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

Our main number is
(740) 992-2155.

Department extensions are:

News

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Sarah Hawley, Ext. 13

Advertising

Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
Class./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Circulation

Circulation Manager: David Killgallon, 740-446-2342, Ext. 25

General
Information
E-mail:

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com
(USPS 436-840)

Ohio Valley Newspapers
Published Tuesday through Friday,

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Ohio Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route

4 weeks . . . . . . . . . . . .$11.30
12 weeks ..........................$33.20
26 weeks ..........................$65.65
52 weeks . . . . . . . . . .$128.85
Daily . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50¢
Subscribers should remit in advance direct to The Daily Sentinel. No subscription by mail
permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

Mail Subscription

Inside Meigs County
12 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . .$35.26
26 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . .$70.70
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$140.11
Outside Meigs County
12 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . .$56.55
26 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$113.60
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$227.21

the Beatles’ appearance on
“The Ed Sullivan Show.”
‘IT’S RELENTLESS’
Fox and Gershon have
come to Broadway from
very different places.
For Gershon, “the Beatles were my boyhood
favorite band and John
Lennon was my boyhood
favorite pop star.” Fox, instead, grew up a huge Billy
Joel fan and got into the
Beatles only after becoming familiar with McCartney’s solo career.
Gershon, who had already been a Lennon impersonator as part of the
band The Counterfeit
Beatles, auditioned when
his agent found out about
“Let It Be.” He is making
his Broadway debut as part
of two five-person casts.
(Yes, there is a fifth Beatle:
He plays keyboard.)
Fox, who represented the
U.K. at the Eurovision Song
Contest in 2004 and has
had two top-20 U.K. singles, returns to Broadway
after playing the Piano Man
in the Joel musical “Movin’
Out.” He got the new job
after buying a cheap wig
and submitting a video of
himself singing “Yesterday.”
“I didn’t expect to hear
back,” he says sheepishly.
Parry, the producer, says
he and his team looked
for musicians with energy.
“You have to close your
eyes and hear it. We don’t
go for looks. To be quite
honest, we don’t cast for
that. It’s really about being
able to play and sing like
the Beatles,” he says.
As if to prove his point,
Fox admits that when
he takes off his wig and
greets fans outside the
stage door at the St.
James Theatre when the
show is over, people don’t
recognize him. They’re expecting McCartney.
What fans do recognize
are the songs — an astounding collection of universally
cheered music that’s in the
DNA of virtually every pop
and rock band.
“With some shows,
they’ll have a few big
numbers and you’ll have
peaks and troughs. This
just goes from one hit to
another hit to another,”
says Fox. “It’s relentless,
which is great for us.”

Page 4
Thursday, July 25, 2013

Fears over Zimmerman
verdict riots prove overblown
Jesse Washington
AP National Writer

The predictions were dire: Black people would burn and loot America’s cities if George Zimmerman was found not
guilty. White people everywhere would
be attacked in revenge for the killing of
Trayvon Martin.
Judging from water-cooler conversations, social media and viral emails, many
people took these warnings seriously —
yet they proved to be largely wrong.
Community leaders and scholars say
the overwhelmingly peaceful response
to the Zimmerman verdict reflects
increased opportunities for AfricanAmericans, the powerful image of a
black president voicing frustration with
the verdict, and the modern ability to
create change through activism and social media rather than a brick.
“There was the assumption that black
people, Latino people, inner-city people
are inherently violent, and that’s the farthest thing from the truth,” says Kevin
Powell, whose BK Nation advocacy group
helped organize peaceful marches involving thousands of people in New York City.
“They need to stop racially stereotyping
people,” Powell says. “It’s the same thing
George Zimmerman was engaging in. To
automatically assume an explosion from
the Zimmerman verdict — I don’t think
they understand black people.”
The talk of violence originated long before the verdict with some conservative
commentators, who said riots should be
blamed on liberals who distorted facts to
make Zimmerman look guilty. “Media’s
dishonest motives in Trayvon Martin case
could end in riots,” read one headline on
Glenn Beck’s website.
Speculation intensified when news
broke that Florida police were preparing
for possible unrest. Pundits highlighted
dozens of tweets from average citizens
threatening violence if Zimmerman was
acquitted. Reminders circulated about a
handful of “this is for Trayvon” assaults
by black people when the case first
gained national notice.
“I fully expect organized race rioting
to begin in every major city to dwarf
the Rodney King and the Martin Luther
King riots,” wrote former police officer Paul Huebl. “If you live in a large
city be prepared to evacuate or put up
a fight to win. You will need firearms,
fire suppression equipment along with
lots of food and water.”
In the week after the verdict, amid
peaceful protests involving tens of thousands of people across the country, there
was some violence.
In Oakland, protesters broke windows,
vandalized a police car and started street
fires. In Los Angeles, people splintered off
two peaceful protests to smash windows,
set fires, attack pedestrians, and assault
police with rocks and bottles. About 50
teenagers took the subway to Hollywood

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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.

to rob pedestrians; 12 were arrested.
Individual attacks were reported in
Mississippi, Milwaukee and Baltimore,
where black people were accused of assaulting two white people and a Hispanic in Martin’s name.
Overall, the response to the Zimmerman
verdict was nothing like the massive 1992
Los Angeles uprising that killed 53 people, injured more than 2,000 and caused
$1 billion in damage after police officers
were acquitted in the Rodney King beating. And there was no comparison with
the 1960s riots that struck cities across
the country in response to oppression of
African-Americans and the assassination
of Martin Luther King.
The ’60s riots sprang from a sense of
deep frustration that progress was being
thwarted, says Max Krochmal, a history
professor at Texas Christian University.
“They saw the limits to what they could
achieve,” Krochmal says.
President Barack Obama, who spoke
emotionally after the verdict about the
frustrations many African-Americans
felt over the verdict, is a reminder that
limits have been lifted.
“In the ’60s, there was just a lot of anger with the way things were. There was
a hopelessness. When King was killed,
that was the worst. It was like killing the
hope,” says the Rev. Herbert Daughtry,
82, who leads The House of the Lord
Church in New York.
“Maybe the anger is not there like it was
before,” says Daughtry, who organized
several peaceful rallies after the verdict.
He added that Obama’s statement
helped keep things calm. The president
told people that “I feel pain, I’ve been
through the same thing, I’m not distant
to the pain you feel,” Daughtry says.
“I’ve got a man in the White House who
knows that pain.”
For many, social media has been a constructive outlet for that pain.
“I definitely think that social media
has helped to defuse anything that happens out on the streets,” Powell says.
“Because people are able to use their
voices. They can be heard.”
“Imagine if there was no Twitter and
Facebook and this verdict came down,” he
says. “Where would people go?”
“People are using social media to vent,”
Powell continues. “That’s where all the energy is being placed. It’s easy — people
can click a button and say exactly what
they want — like boycott Florida.”
John Baick, a history professor at
Western New England University, says
the Zimmerman trial is another skirmish in the battles over the direction of
American culture.
“Use of the word ‘riot’ is talking about
race without talking about race,” Baick
says. “It’s like, look at ‘them.’”
“The word riot says so much about
fears, about assumptions,” he says.
“It’s deep in our culture that we are
afraid of ‘them.’”

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Thursday, July 25, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, July 25, 2013

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday,
July 25, 2013:
This year you are unusually intuitive, especially when it comes to others, their finances and their bottom
lines. You will see what a change this
knowledge can make in your daily life.
You are willing to reveal your feelings more than ever before. If you are
single, your desirability is unquestionable, but your choices might need
some work. Figure out what type of
bond you desire. If you are attached,
do not take things so personally. Both
of you will be happier as a result.
PISCES knows how to reel you in!
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH Your need to express your
ire might be strong, but allow yourself
to be guided by your sensitivity. If you
lash out, someone might find it a lot
harder to understand where you are
coming from. Appeal to others with
logic and caring. Tonight: Catch up on
sleep.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHH Zero in on what is possible.
Remain creative, and be open to a different thought process and new kinds
of ideas. You even might want to give
a strange idea some serious consideration. Communication will be active
among friends. Tonight: Where your
loved ones are.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH You will understand where
a boss is coming from, but you might
wonder if the direction in which he
or she wants to proceed is the best,
financially. You could gain someone’s
confidence because of how you handle controversial situations. Tonight:
Burn the midnight oil.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Your imagination seems
limitless to many. Your ability to
detach is equally as strong. You
have determination and energy on
your side. Go with your emotional,
knee-jerk response. Make a point
of recognizing the recent changes a
partner has made. Tonight: Go with
spontaneity.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Deal with a situation directly, and know full well what is needed.
Your direct approach and willingness
to move into a new realm could be
bolstered by a loved one who keeps
encouraging you. Listen to feedback,
and integrate what you hear. Tonight:
Visit over dinner.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

HHHH You might wonder what
is going on with a loved one. Your
curiosity will make you want to live life
similarly to how this person does, and
you’ll appreciate yourself more as a
result. Listen to news with a sense of
what can happen. Tonight: Favorite
people, favorite place.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Pace yourself — you have a
lot of ground to cover. You might want
to flex and take your time, as you
could see a better solution because
of a recent discussion with a friend.
Know that you can improve a project
by opening it up to feedback. Tonight:
Happily head home.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH Your vision of possibilities allows for greater receptivity and
success. Others also seek you out
to share their thoughts and ideas,
as they want your feedback. Still, it
would be wise to factor in a touch of
diplomacy. Follow your sixth sense.
Tonight: Choose what makes you
happiest.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH The more you deal with a
specific partner or loved one, the luckier you will become. It’s as if you have
a rabbit’s foot tucked away in your
back pocket. You will benefit from any
activity involving this person. Profound
changes are being made. Tonight: Try
to make it early.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH You might have difficulty
verbalizing a vision involving a project. Even if someone says that he or
she understands, that might not be
the case. Defer to others, yet stay on
top of communication. Ask a question, even if it makes you feel stupid.
Tonight: At a favorite haunt.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH Be aware of what you are
doing with your checkbook. The damages could be far greater than you
had anticipated. Know when to say
“no.” At this point, you are capable of
pulling white rabbits out of black hats.
Tonight: Indulge a friend or loved one;
it does not have to cost.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHHH You are right where you
need to be, and others find you with
ease. Many friends will express a
great deal of respect for you and your
thoughts. Follow your intuition, especially regarding a matter at a distance.
Your personality melts boundaries.
Tonight: You can have it all.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Financial pointers

How to help kids prepare
for expecting parents
for college life

&amp;RXSOHV�H[SHFWLQJ�WKHLU�ÀUVW�FKLOG�RIWHQ�ÀQG�WKDW�WKH�PRQWKV�
OHDGLQJ�XS�WR�WKH�ELUWK�RI�WKH�EDE\�DUH�DQ�H[FLWLQJ�WLPH�
ÀOOHG�ZLWK�DQWLFLSDWLRQ��%XW�WKRVH�PRQWKV�DUH�DOVR�D�WLPH�
IRU�H[SHFWDQW�SDUHQWV�WR�PDNH�VRPH�LPSRUWDQW�GHFLVLRQV�
UHJDUGLQJ�WKHLU�ÀQDQFHV�
5DLVLQJ�D�FKLOG�LV�DQ�H[SHQVLYH�HQGHDYRU��RQH�WKDW�FRXSOHV�
PXVW�VWDUW�SUHSDULQJ�IRU�WKH�PRPHQW�WKH\�OHDUQ�D�EDE\�LV�RQ�
WKH�ZD\��LI�QRW�HDUOLHU��([SHFWLQJ�SDUHQWV�OLNHO\�NQRZ�WKHLU�
OLYHV�DUH�DERXW�WR�FKDQJH��DQG�WKRVH�FKDQJHV�PXVW�H[WHQG�WR�
WKHLU�ÀQDQFHV��7KH�IROORZLQJ�DUH�D�IHZ�ÀQDQFLDO�SRLQWHUV�IRU�
SDUHQWV�WR�EH�

��������������������������������

0DQ\�FRXSOHV�KDYH�K\SRWKHWLFDO�GLVFXVVLRQV�UHJDUGLQJ�
FKLOGUHQ�DQG�WKHLU�ÀQDQFHV��EXW�XQWLO�WKH\�UHFHLYH�WKH�QHZV�
WKDW�D�EDE\�LV�RQ�WKH�ZD\��WKRVH�FRQYHUVDWLRQV�KDYH�D�ZD\�
RI�EHLQJ�SXW�RQ�WKH�EDFN�EXUQHU��1RZ�WKDW�D�EDE\�LV�RQ�
WKH�ZD\��FRXSOHV�QHHG�WR�UHYLVLW�WKRVH�GLVFXVVLRQV��DQG�
GHWHUPLQLQJ�KRZ�PXFK�LQFRPH�WKH\�QHHG�LV�D�JUHDW�SODFH�WR�
VWDUW��7KH�GXDO�LQFRPH�KRXVHKROG�KDV�EHFRPH�WKH�QRUP�LQ�
WKH���VW�FHQWXU\��ZKHQ�WKH�FRVW�RI�OLYLQJ�KDV�VN\URFNHWHG��
%XW�FRXSOHV�PXVW�GHWHUPLQH�LI�LW·V�LQ�WKH�IDPLO\·V�EHVW�
LQWHUHVW�IRU�ERWK�SDUHQWV�WR�NHHS�ZRUNLQJ�RQFH�WKHLU�FKLOG�
LV�ERUQ��7KH�FRVW�RI�FKLOGFDUH�LV�FRQVLGHUDEOH��DQG�LW�PD\�
EH�LQ�D�IDPLO\·V�EHVW�LQWHUHVW�IRU�MXVW�RQH�SDUHQW�WR�ZRUN�
XQWLO�WKH�FKLOG�UHDFKHV�VFKRRO�DJH��&amp;RQVLGHU�\RXU�WRWDO�
LQFRPH�DV�ZHOO�DV�\RXU�ÀQDQFLDO�REOLJDWLRQV� L�H���PRUWJDJH��
FDU�SD\PHQWV��HWF� �DQG�WKHQ�VKRS�DURXQG�IRU�WKH�FRVW�RI�
FKLOGFDUH��,I�LW�PDNHV�PRUH�VHQVH�WR�EHFRPH�D�VLQJOH�
LQFRPH�KRXVHKROG��HYHQ�LI�LW·V�MXVW�IRU�D�IHZ�\HDUV��WKHQ�\RX�
ZLOO�KDYH�DQRWKHU�LPSRUWDQW�GHFLVLRQ�WR�PDNH�

������������������������������

&amp;RXSOHV�ZKR�KDYH�GHFLGHG�WKDW�LW·V�LQ�WKHLU�EHVW�LQWHUHVWV�
WR�EHFRPH�D�VLQJOH�LQFRPH�KRXVHKROG�RQFH�WKHLU�FKLOG�LV�
ERUQ�PXVW�GHFLGH�ZKR�ZLOO�EH�VWD\LQJ�KRPH�DQG�ZKR�ZLOO�
FRQWLQXH�ZRUNLQJ��,W·V�HDV\�WR�VD\�WKH�SDUHQW�ZKR�LV�HDUQLQJ�
WKH�PRVW�VKRXOG�FRQWLQXH�ZRUNLQJ��EXW�WKDW�GHFLVLRQ�LV�QRW�
VR�EODFN�DQG�ZKLWH��&amp;RQVLGHU�WKH�FRVW�RI�KHDOWKFDUH�RIIHUHG�
E\�HDFK�RI�\RXU�HPSOR\HUV��6RPH�KHDOWKFDUH�SODQV�DUH�
VLJQLÀFDQWO\�PRUH�DIIRUGDEOH�WKDQ�RWKHUV��DQG�WKLV�PLJKW�
ZHLJK�KHDYLO\�RQ�\RXU�GHFLVLRQ��HVSHFLDOO\�LI�ERWK�SDUHQWV�
DUH�HDUQLQJ�UHODWLYHO\�VLPLODU�LQFRPHV��$QRWKHU�WKLQJ�WR�
FRQVLGHU�LV�HDFK�RI�\RXU�RSSRUWXQLWLHV�IRU�DGYDQFHPHQW�
DW�\RXU�FXUUHQW�FRPSDQ\�DQG�ZLWKLQ�\RXU�ÀHOG��(DUQLQJ�
SRWHQWLDO�VKRXOG�IDFWRU�KHDYLO\�LQWR�WKH�GHFLVLRQ�DV�WR�ZKLFK�
SDUHQW�ZLOO�FRQWLQXH�ZRUNLQJ��HVSHFLDOO\�LI�\RX�SODQ�WR�KDYH�
DQRWKHU�FKLOG�GRZQ�WKH�URDG��7KH�FRQYHUVDWLRQ�DV�WR�ZKR�
ZLOO�FRQWLQXH�ZRUNLQJ�VKRXOG�EH�WUHDWHG�GHOLFDWHO\�

������������������������ ��

&amp;RXSOHV�ZKR�DUH�H[SHFWLQJ�D�FKLOG�RIWHQ�IHHO�WKLV�LV�D�JUHDW�
WLPH�WR�DEDQGRQ�DSDUWPHQW�OLYLQJ�DQG�EX\�D�KRPH�RI�WKHLU�
RZQ��%XW�FKDQFHV�DUH�\RX�FDQ�FRPIRUWDEO\�PDQDJH�WR�OLYH�
LQ�\RXU�DSDUWPHQW�IRU�D�IHZ�PRUH�\HDUV�DIWHU�\RXU�FKLOG�LV�
ERUQ��7KRVH�H[WUD�\HDUV�RI�DSDUWPHQW�OLYLQJ�FDQ�JLYH�\RX�
WKH�FKDQFH�WR�VDYH�PRUH�PRQH\�VR�\RX�FDQ�DIIRUG�D�QLFHU�
KRPH�LQ�D�EHWWHU�QHLJKERUKRRG�WKDW�ERDVWV�EHWWHU�VFKRROV��
2U�DSDUWPHQW�OLYLQJ�IRU�D�IHZ�PRUH�\HDUV�PD\�JLYH�\RX�
PRUH�WLPH�WR�VDYH�DQG�SODFH�D�ODUJHU�GRZQ�SD\PHQW�RQ�\RXU�
KRPH�GRZQ�WKH�URDG��7KH�ODUJHU�WKH�LQLWLDO�GRZQ�SD\PHQW��

WKH�ORZHU�\RXU�PRQWKO\�PRUWJDJH�SD\PHQW��VR�LW�PLJKW�EH�
LQ�\RXU�EHVW�LQWHUHVW�WR�VTXLUUHO�DZD\�D�IHZ�PRUH�GROODUV�
EHIRUH�\RX�JR�KRXVH�KXQWLQJ�

(VWDEOLVK�D�ÀQDQFLDO�VDIHW\�QHW�

0DQ\�ÀQDQFLDO�DGYLVRUV�VXJJHVW�ERWK�VLQJOHV�DQG�FRXSOHV�
KDYH�EHWZHHQ�WKUHH�WR�VL[�PRQWKV·�LQFRPH�VDYHG�LQ�
FDVH�RI�HPHUJHQF\��VXFK�DV�D�OD\RII�RU�DQ�DFFLGHQW�WKDW�
SUHYHQWV�\RX�IURP�ZRUNLQJ��7KLV�LV�HVSHFLDOO\�LPSRUWDQW�
IRU�H[SHFWLQJ�FRXSOHV��ZKR�ZLOO�VRRQ�KDYH�DQ�DGGLWLRQDO�
PRXWK�WR�IHHG��7KLV�VDIHW\�QHW�VKRXOG�EH�ELJ�HQRXJK�VR�\RX�
FDQ�FRPIRUWDEO\�SD\�DOO�RI�\RXU�ELOOV��LQFOXGLQJ�WKRVH�IRU�
KRXVLQJ��WUDQVSRUWDWLRQ�DQG�IRRG��IRU�WKUHH�WR�VL[�PRQWKV��,I�
VDYLQJ�WKDW�DPRXQW�RI�PRQH\�LV�QRW�UHDOLVWLF��VDYH�DV�PXFK�
DV�SRVVLEOH�DQG�FRQWLQXH�WR�GR�VR�RQFH�\RXU�FKLOG�LV�ERUQ�
/LIH�LQVXUDQFH�LV�SHUKDSV�WKH�PRVW�LPSRUWDQW�SXUFKDVH�
H[SHFWDQW�FRXSOHV�FDQ�PDNH�RQFH�WKH\�OHDUQ�D�EDE\�LV�RQ�
WKH�ZD\��,W·V�XQGHUVWDQGDEOH�LI�\RXQJ�FRXSOHV�ZLWKRXW�
FKLOGUHQ�KDYH�QR�OLIH�LQVXUDQFH��EXW�WKDW�FKLOG�RQ�WKH�ZD\�
ZLOO�EH�UHO\LQJ�RQ�KLV�RU�KHU�SDUHQWV�IRU�ÀQDQFLDO�VXSSRUW�IRU�
DW�OHDVW�WKH�QH[W����\HDUV��/LIH�LQVXUDQFH�HQVXUHV�\RX�FDQ�
SURYLGH�WKDW�VXSSRUW�HYHQ�LI�VRPHWKLQJ�KDSSHQV�WR�ERWK�\RX�
DQG�\RXU�VSRXVH�
7KH�PRQWKV�OHDGLQJ�XS�WR�WKH�ELUWK�RI�D�FKLOG�LV�DQ�H[FLWLQJ�
WLPH�IRU�WKH�H[SHFWLQJ�SDUHQWV��EXW�LW·V�DOVR�D�WLPH�WR�PDNH�
VRPH�LPSRUWDQW�ÀQDQFLDO�GHFLVLRQV�

How to alleviate a

sibling rivalry

$IWHU�PRUH�WKDQ����\HDUV�RI�VKULQNLQJ�KRXVHKROGV��
HYLGHQFH�IURP�WKH������8QLWHG�6WDWHV�&amp;HQVXV�LQGLFDWHG�
WKDW�WKH�QXPEHU�RI�SHRSOH�OLYLQJ�XQGHU�RQH�URRI�KDV�RQFH�
DJDLQ�VWDUWHG�WR�JURZ��7KH�FKDQJLQJ�HFRQRP\�DQG�KLJK�
XQHPSOR\PHQW�UDWHV�KDYH�GULYHQ�PDQ\�SHRSOH�WR�RQFH�DJDLQ�
MRLQ�WRJHWKHU�DQG�OLYH�XQGHU�RQH�URRI��)XUWKHUPRUH��DGXOW�
FKLOGUHQ�ZKR�KDG�SUHYLRXVO\�PRYHG�RXW�RI�WKHLU�SDUHQWV·�
KRPHV�DUH�LQFUHDVLQJO\�PRYLQJ�EDFN�LQ�MXVW�WR�PDNH�HQGV�
PHHW�

7KLV�FRKDELWDWLRQ�FRXOG�OHDG�WR�VRPH�FRQÁLFWV�DORQJ�WKH�ZD\��
HVSHFLDOO\�DPRQJ�VLEOLQJV�ZKR�IDFHG�RII�DJDLQVW�HDFK�RWKHU�
ZKLOH�JURZLQJ�XS��6LEOLQJ�ULYDOU\�LV�D�FRPPRQ�RFFXUUHQFH�
DPRQJ�EURWKHUV�DQG�VLVWHUV��EXW�WKHUH�DUH�ZD\V�WR�NHHS�LW�LQ�
FKHFN�

��������� ������ � ���

3XUFKDVH�OLIH�LQVXUDQFH�

6RPH�VLEOLQJV�JURZ�XS�DV�EHVW�IULHQGV�ZKLOH�RWKHUV�
VHHPLQJO\�QHYHU�VWRS�ÀJKWLQJ��7KHUH�DUH�D�QXPEHU�RI�
UHDVRQV�ZK\�WKH\�PD\�JHW�LQWR�DUJXPHQWV�ZLWK�HDFK�RWKHU��
,Q�PDQ\�FDVHV��EURWKHUV�DQG�VLVWHUV�ÀJKW�RXW�RI�MHDORXV\�
RU�WR�FRPSHWH�IRU�D�SDUHQW·V�DWWHQWLRQ��$FFRUGLQJ�WR�
.LGV+HDOWK�RUJ��KHUH�DUH�VRPH�UHDVRQV�D�VLEOLQJ�ULYDOU\�PD\�
GHYHORS�

�

DQ\�RI�WKLV�\HDU·V�KLJK�VFKRRO�
JUDGXDWHV�ZLOO�EH�OHDYLQJ�
KRPH�IRU�D�FROOHJH�FDPSXV�
LQ�WKH�IDOO��6XFK�D�GHSDUWXUH�LV�RIWHQ�
ELWWHUVZHHW�IRU�NLGV�DQG�SDUHQWV�DOLNH��
&lt;RXQJ�PHQ�DQG�ZRPHQ�W\SLFDOO\�
ORRN�IRUZDUG�WR�WKH�IUHHGRP�DQG�
LQGHSHQGHQFH�WKDW�FROOHJH�OLIH�FDQ�
SURYLGH��EXW�WKRVH�VDPH�PHQ�DQG�
ZRPHQ�NQRZ�WKH\�ZLOO�PLVV�WKH�
IDPLOLDULW\�RI�KRPH�DV�ZHOO��3DUHQWV��
WRR��KDYH�PL[HG�HPRWLRQV�ZKHQ�NLGV�
KHDG�WR�FROOHJH��DV�WKHLU�VDGQHVV�RYHU�
D�FKLOG�OHDYLQJ�KRPH�LV�PHW�ZLWK�WKH�
SULGH�WKH\�IHHO�WKDW�WKH�FKLOG�WKH\�
UDLVHG�LV�VHWWLQJ�RXW�WR�PDNH�WKHLU�RZQ�
ZD\�LQ�WKH�ZRUOG�
)HZ�PRPHQWV�LQ�OLIH�LQYROYH�VXFK�
VLJQLÀFDQW�FKDQJH�DV�WKH�PRPHQW�
ZKHQ�D�\RXQJ�PDQ�RU�ZRPDQ�ÀUVW�
DUULYHV�RQ�D�FROOHJH�FDPSXV��)LUVW�\HDU�
FROOHJH�VWXGHQWV�RIWHQ�GRQ·W�NQRZ�
ZKDW�WR�H[SHFW�RQFH�WKH\�DUULYH�RQ�
FDPSXV��EXW�WKHUH�DUH�VWHSV�SDUHQWV�
FDQ�WDNH�WR�KHOS�WKHLU�NLGV�SUHSDUH�IRU�
FROOHJH�OLIH�
������ ���������
���� � �������������

2QH�RI�WKH�WKLQJV�PDQ\�FROOHJH�NLGV�ÀQG�
RQFH�WKH\�DUULYH�RQ�FDPSXV�LV�WKDW�WKHLU�
OLIH�LV�VXGGHQO\�PXFK�OHVV�VWUXFWXUHG�DQG�
WKHLU�DPRXQW�RI�GRZQWLPH�KDV�LQFUHDVHG�
FRQVLGHUDEO\��8QOLNH�KLJK�VFKRRO��ZKLFK�
Expecting parents must make several NHHSV�PDQ\�NLGV�LQ�FODVV�RU�LQYROYHG�LQ�
important financial decisions in the months H[WUDFXUULFXODU�DFWLYLWLHV�IURP�WKH�HDUO\�
leading up to the birth of their child. PRUQLQJ�WKURXJK�WKH�ODWH�DIWHUQRRQ��FROOHJH�
DIIRUGV�VWXGHQWV�PXFK�PRUH�IUHH�WLPH��ZKLFK�

LV�WKHLUV�WR�XVH�DV�WKH\�VHH�ÀW��6RPH�NLGV�
GLYH�ULJKW�LQWR�RQ�FDPSXV�DFWLYLWLHV��ZKLOH�
RWKHUV�VWUXJJOH�WR�XVH�WKHLU�IUHH�WLPH�WR�WKHLU�
DGYDQWDJH��
3DUHQWV�FDQ�WHDFK�WLPH�PDQDJHPHQW�VNLOOV�
VXFK�DV�KRZ�WR�HVWDEOLVK�D�VFKHGXOH�VR�DOO�
RI�WKDW�IUHH�WLPH�GRHV�QRW�JR�WR�ZDVWH��7KLV�
VFKHGXOH�FDQ�EH�DGMXVWHG�RQ�D�ZHHNO\�EDVLV�
GHSHQGLQJ�RQ�FRXUVHZRUN�RU�H[WUDFXUULFXODU�
DFWLYLWLHV��2QFH�NLGV�OHDUQ�WR�PDQDJH�WKHLU�
WLPH�HIIHFWLYHO\��LQFOXGLQJ�XVLQJ�EUHDNV�
EHWZHHQ�FODVVHV�WR�UHYLHZ�QRWHV�IURP�D�
UHFHQW�OHFWXUH�RU�XSFRPLQJ�FODVV��WKH\·UH�
OLNHO\�WR�JHW�WKH�PRVW�RXW�RI�WKHPVHOYHV�
DFDGHPLFDOO\�DQG�ÀQG�WKH\�KDYH�PRUH�WLPH�
WR�SXUVXH�H[WUDFXUULFXODU�DFWLYLWLHV�DV�ZHOO

'LVFXVV�ÀQDQFHV�DQG�HVWDEOLVK�
D�ÀQDQFLDO�DUUDQJHPHQW�

0DQ\�FROOHJH�IUHVKPHQ�VWUXJJOH�WR�PDQDJH�
WKHLU�PRQH\��6RPH�PLJKW�QHYHU�KDYH�KDG�D�
MRE�GXULQJ�KLJK�VFKRRO�ZKLOH�RWKHUV�ZKR�GLG�
ZRUN�RQO\�GLG�VR�WR�HDUQ�VSHQGLQJ�PRQH\��
%XW�PDQ\�FROOHJH�VWXGHQWV�QHHG�PRUH�WKDQ�
VSHQGLQJ�PRQH\�RQFH�WKH\�UHDFK�FDPSXV��
5LVLQJ�WXLWLRQ�FRVWV�KDYH�PDGH�LW�GLIÀFXOW��LI�
QRW�LPSRVVLEOH��IRU�SDUHQWV�WR�EDQNUROO�WKHLU�
NLGV·�HYHU\GD\�H[SHQVHV��$V�D�UHVXOW��PDQ\�
FROOHJH�VWXGHQWV�ÀQG�WKHPVHOYHV�IRUFHG�WR�
PDQDJH�WKHLU�RZQ�PRQH\�IRU�WKH�ÀUVW�WLPH�
LQ�WKHLU�OLYHV��3DUHQWV�FDQ�WHDFK�VLPSOH�
ÀQDQFLDO�OHVVRQV��VXFK�DV�WKH�EHQHÀWV�RI�
EX\LQJ�JURFHULHV�DV�RSSRVHG�WR�GLQLQJ�RXW�RU�
RUGHULQJ�LQ�HDFK�QLJKW��
&amp;ROOHJH�LV�DOVR�ZKHUH�PDQ\�\RXQJ�PHQ�DQG�
ZRPHQ�ÀUVW�VLJQ�XS�IRU�D�FUHGLW�FDUG��3DUHQWV�
FDQ�WHDFK�WKHLU�NLGV�WKH�EDVLFV�RI�PDQDJLQJ�
FUHGLW��VXFK�DV�WKH�EHQHÀW�RI�SD\LQJ�RII�D�

60433693

EDODQFH�EHIRUH�LQWHUHVW�UDWHV�NLFN�LQ�DQG�WKH�
QHJDWLYH�UDPLÀFDWLRQV�RI�PLVVLQJ�SD\PHQWV��
3DUHQWV�ZKR�FDQ�DIIRUG�WR�SURYLGH�ÀQDQFLDO�
VXSSRUW�IRU�WKHLU�FKLOGUHQ�HQUROOHG�LQ�FROOHJH�
VKRXOG�UHDFK�D�ÀQDQFLDO�DJUHHPHQW�ZLWK�WKHLU�
FKLOGUHQ�EHIRUH�WKH\�DUH�RII�WR�FROOHJH��0DNH�
VXUH�NLGV�NQRZ�\RXU�ÀQDQFLDO�VXSSRUW�GRHV�
QRW�PHDQ�WKH\�KDYH�XQOLPLWHG�DFFHVV�WR�\RXU�
IXQGV��DQG�PDNH�LW�NQRZQ�WKDW�VXFK�VXSSRUW�
ZLOO�QRW�FRQWLQXH�LI�NLGV�DUHQ·W�SHUIRUPLQJ�
ZHOO�LQ�WKH�FODVVURRP�

���������� �������������
DQ\�URRPPDWHV�EHIRUH�WKH�
����� ������ ������

3DUW�RI�WKH�WUHSLGDWLRQ�PDQ\�NLGV�KDYH�ZKHQ�
OHDYLQJ�IRU�FROOHJH�FRQFHUQV�KRZ�WKH\�PD\�
RU�PD\�QRW�GHYHORS�D�UHODWLRQVKLS�ZLWK�
WKHLU�QHZ�URRPPDWH��0DQ\�VFKRROV�DVVLJQ�
URRPPDWHV�PRQWKV�LQ�DGYDQFH�RI�WKH�VFKRRO�
\HDU��JLYLQJ�NLGV�DPSOH�WLPH�WR�PDNH�FRQWDFW�
DQG�PDNH�DUUDQJHPHQWV�DERXW�ZKRP�LV�JRLQJ�
WR�EULQJ�FHUWDLQ�LWHPV��VXFK�DV�D�WHOHYLVLRQ�
RU�FRIIHH�SRW�RU�HYHQ�IXUQLWXUH�LI�WKH�URRP�
FDQ�ÀW�DQ\��3DUHQWV�VKRXOG�HQFRXUDJH�VXFK�
FRQWDFW�VR�NLGV�FDQ�JHW�D�IHHO�RI�ZKR�WKH\�
ZLOO�EH�OLYLQJ�ZLWK�DQG�OD\�WKH�JURXQGZRUN�
IRU�D�IULHQGVKLS�EHIRUH�WKH\�HYHQ�VWHS�IRRW�RQ�
FDPSXV��7KH�IHHOLQJ�RI�NQRZLQJ�VRPHRQH�RQ�
FDPSXV�FDQ�JUHDWO\�UHGXFH�WKH�DQ[LHW\�PDQ\�
NLGV�IHHO�ZKHQ�WKH\�DUULYH�DW�VFKRRO�IRU�WKHLU�
IUHVKPHQ�RULHQWDWLRQ�
7KH�GD\�D�VWXGHQW�OHDYHV�IRU�FROOHJH�LV�D�
VLJQLÀFDQW�GD\�IRU�SDUHQWV�DQG�VWXGHQWV�
DOLNH��3DUHQWV�FDQ�WDNH�D�QXPEHU�RI�VWHSV�WR�
PDNH�WKH�WUDQVLWLRQ�WR�FROOHJH�HDVLHU�IRU�WKHLU�
FROOHJH�ERXQG�VRQ�RU�GDXJKWHU�

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

������� �������(YHU\�FKLOG�KDV�KLV�RU�KHU�RZQ�
SHUVRQDOLW\�DQG�WHPSHUDPHQW��7KLV�GRHVQ·W�
DOZD\V�PDWFK�XS�ZLWK�WKH�WHPSHUDPHQW�
RI�D�VLEOLQJ��,I�RQH�FKLOG�LV�HDV\JRLQJ�DQG�
DGYHQWXURXV�DQG�WKH�RWKHU�FKLOG�LV�VK\�DQG�
FOLQJ\��WKLV�FDQ�FDXVH�D�ULIW�LQ�WKHLU�DELOLW\�WR�
SOD\�ZHOO�WRJHWKHU�

VLEOLQJ�ULYDOULHV�

'RQ·W�SOD\�IDYRULWHV��1HYHU�VKRZ�RU�WHOO�RQH�FKLOG�WKDW�
KH�RU�VKH�LV�D�IDYRULWH�RYHU�WKH�RWKHU��7KLV�FDQ�FDXVH�D�
OLIHORQJ�UHVHQWPHQW�DPRQJ�VLEOLQJV�DQG�HYHQ�FRPSURPLVH�
SDUHQWV·UHODWLRQVKLS�ZLWK�WKHLU�FKLOGUHQ��3DUHQWV�VKRXOG�GR�
WKHLU�EHVW�WR�VKDUH�HTXDO�WLPH�ZLWK�DOO�FKLOGUHQ�DQG�DYRLG�
IDYRULQJ�DQ\�RI�WKH�NLGV�

����������� ����7U\�QRW�WR�JHW�LQYROYHG�LQ�GLVDJUHHPHQWV�
EHWZHHQ�FKLOGUHQ��3DUHQWV�VKRXOG�WU\�WR�UHPDLQ�QHXWUDO��
RQO\�LQWHUYHQLQJ�LI�WKHUH�LV�D�FKDQFH�RI�GDQJHU�RU�SK\VLFDO�
ÀJKWLQJ��%\�FRPLQJ�WR�WKH�UHVFXH�RI�D�SDUWLFXODU�FKLOG��
SDUHQWV�PD\�PDNH�LW�VHHP�OLNH�RQH�LV�SURWHFWHG�DQG�
H[DFHUEDWH�WKH�ULYDOU\�SUREOHP�

������ ������� ����������6LEOLQJV�DUH�WKHLU�RZQ�
LQVWLJDWRUV��DQG�LW�WDNHV�PRUH�WKDQ�RQH�SHUVRQ�WR�JHW�LQWR�D�
ÀJKW��,QVWHDG�RI�SRLQWLQJ�EODPH��ÀJXUH�RXW�ZKDW�FRQVLVWHQWO\�
FDXVHV�DUJXPHQWV�DQG�WU\�WR�DYRLG�WKRVH�VLWXDWLRQV�

��� ������������������� ���:KHQ�SDUHQWV�PXVW�VWHS�LQ��
LW·V�LPSRUWDQW�QRW�WR�GROH�RXW�WKH�SXQLVKPHQWV�DQG�WDNH�RYHU��
,W�LV�LPSHUDWLYH�WR�FRDFK�FKLOGUHQ�WKURXJK�DQ�DUJXPHQW�DQG�
KHOS�WKHP�ÀQG�WKHLU�RZQ�VROXWLRQV��2WKHUZLVH�WKH�NLGV�FRXOG�
DOZD\V�UXQ�WR�WKHLU�SDUHQWV�WR�VHUYH�DV�UHIHUHHV��3DUHQWV�
VKRXOG�KHOS�WKHLU�FKLOGUHQ�GHYHORS�WKH�VNLOOV�WKH\�QHHG�WR�EH�
DEOH�WR�VXFFHVVIXOO\�ZRUN�WKURXJK�GLIÀFXOWLHV�RQ�WKHLU�RZQ�

�����$JH�FDQ�IDFWRU�LQ�WR�KRZ�VLEOLQJV�JHW�
DORQJ��$�FKLOG�ZKR�LV�VHYHQ�\HDUV�ROG�DQG�D�
FKLOG�ZKR�LV�WKUHH�\HDUV�ROG�KDYH�YHU\�GLIIHUHQW�
LQWHUHVWV�DQG�OHYHOV�RI�GHYHORSPHQW��7KH\�PD\�
QRW�EH�DEOH�WR�VKDUH�WKH�VDPH�WR\V��DQG�KDYLQJ�
IXQ�WRJHWKHU�RQ�DQ�LQWHOOHFWXDO�OHYHO�LV�QRW�
HDVLO\�DFKLHYHG��7KLV�FDQ�FDXVH�ELFNHULQJ�DQG�
XVXDOO\�ÀJKWV�ZKHQ�WKH�\RXQJHU�VLEOLQJ�ZDQWV�WR�
HPXODWH�WKH�ROGHU�RQH�
������ ���� ���$�FKLOG�PD\�KDYH�D�
GHYHORSPHQWDO�GHOD\�RU�LOOQHVV�WKDW�UHTXLUHV�
H[WUD�DWWHQWLRQ�IURP�0RP�DQG�'DG��2WKHU�
VLEOLQJV�PD\�EH�MHDORXV�RI�WKH�H[WUD�DWWHQWLRQ�
WKHLU�EURWKHU�RU�VLVWHU�FRXOG�EH�UHFHLYLQJ��HYHQ�LI�
WKH�DWWHQWLRQ�LV�MXVWLÀHG�

��������� ������� ���&amp;KLOGUHQ�RIWHQ�WDNH�WKHLU�
FXHV�IURP�0RP�DQG�'DG��,I�SDUHQWV�DUH�XQDEOH�
WR�UHVROYH�WKHLU�GLIIHUHQFHV�DPLFDEO\�DQG�WHQG�
WR�EORZ�WKLQJV�RXW�RI�SURSRUWLRQ��VLEOLQJV�PD\�
IHHO�OLNH�WKLV�LV�WKH�ULJKW�ZD\�WR�KDQGOH�WKHLU�
SUREOHPV�DV�ZHOO�

6WRSSLQJ�WKH�ÀJKWLQJ

&amp;RQVWDQW�ELFNHULQJ�DQG�\HOOLQJ�FDQ�WDNH�LWV�WROO�
RQ�WKH�KRXVHKROG��OHDGLQJ�WR�D�PRUH�VWUHVVIXO�
HQYLURQPHQW��7KHUHIRUH��SDUHQWV�DUH�RIWHQ�HDJHU�
WR�SXW�DQ�HQG�WR�WKH�GLVDJUHHPHQWV�DV�VRRQ�DV�
SRVVLEOH��&amp;HUWDLQ�VWUDWHJLHV�FDQ�KHOS�UHOLHYH�

Parents can employ a host of strategies to ensure
their children get along swimmingly and put to bed
any sibling rivalry that might exist.

60433679

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

�The Daily Sentinel

THURSDAY,
JULY 25, 2013

Sports

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Chicago council approves $500M renovations
CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago’s City Council gave final approval Wednesday to
a $500 million renovation of
historic Wrigley Field that includes its first massive Jumbotron, improved facilities
for the players in the bowels
of the 99-year-old ballpark
and a hotel across the street.
Under the plan, the Chicago Cubs would erect a
5,700-square-foot electronic
Jumbotron in left field above
the ivy-covered outfield walls
that is roughly three times
as large as the iconic manual
scoreboard in center field, as
well as another large advertising sign in right field.
The Cubs, which waited
decades to install lights at
Wrigley, have been pushing

for renovations since the
Ricketts family bought the
team in 2009. After an effort
to get public help for the project failed, the Cubs said the
team would fund the entire
renovation — but it needed
the signs and the advertising
revenue they would generate
to help pay for it.
The City Council’s voice
vote in favor of the plan
came a day after the council’s zoning committee
signed off on the deal with
the blessing of the alderman whose ward includes
the ballpark. Alderman Tom
Tunney’s support was considered crucial to the project
that Mayor Rahm Emanuel
wants approved. Tunney
initially said the signs would

harm the quality of life in
the neighborhood around
Wrigley, but he signed off
on the deal after winning
concessions from the Cubs.
Among them was an agreement not to erect any outfield signs in addition to the
Jumbotron and right field
sign and to indefinitely postpone a proposed bridge over
the adjoining Clark Street.
Still looming is whether
the Jumbotron and right
field sign will disrupt the
views of the rooftops that
surround two sides of the
ballpark. The owners of the
rooftops, who have a contract with the Cubs to share
a chunk of their revenue with
the team, have said repeatedly that they might file suit

if the Cubs put up anything
that cuts into their views.
The signs have easily
been the most contentious
part of the project because
erecting them could trigger lawsuits from the rooftop owners and change the
look of the ballpark that has
become beloved as a link to
baseball’s history.
During public hearings,
many fans told city officials
that it was time for the ballpark to change. They said
if the team was to continue
to attract fans, particularly
younger ones, it had to include the Jumbotron and
other amenities that are
common in every other
See CHICAGO |‌ 9

Gary W. Green | Orlando Sentinel | MCT photo

Bud Selig talks about the rain delay in Game 5 of the World Series between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Tampa Bay Rays
at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, Pa., Monday, Oct. 27, 2008.

Bud Selig proud
of baseball’s
anti-drug effort
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Commissioner Bud Selig defended baseball’s fight against performance-enhancing
drugs on Wednesday, declining to discuss the recent
suspension of Brewers outfielder Ryan Braun or whether
other stars will also face penalties.
Braun was suspended for the rest of the season Monday,
a total of 65 games, for violating baseball’s anti-drug policy.
He is the first player to be punished as part of an investigation of the now-closed Biogenesis Clinic, which is believed
to have provided performance-enhancing drugs to as many
as 20 other players; a list that is believed to include injured
New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez.
Selig said he could not discuss the ongoing investigation.
“Any comment from me is inappropriate, “Selig said.
“People have been thorough. I said last week the process
would be comprehensive, thorough, fair and we have
spent thousands of hours doing these things. I appreciate
all the players who have been complimentary of the process. We’re doing this in a very a disciplined, thorough,
fair and sensitive matter.”
Selig said he was proud of baseball’s drug testing program. Since the program was first implemented in 2004,
32 major league players have been suspended for using
banned substances. Three were suspended a second time.
In addition, 47 minor league players or players formerly
in the major leagues have been suspended, including six
repeat offenders.
“It took a long time,” Selig said. “I said we would aggressively enforce that program. Obviously if you have a
tough testing program, you have to do that. Given the
whole history and what we’ve accomplished; having the
first testing program in baseball history — baseball didn’t
have a drug testing program at any time in the ’80s when,
and I will say this very candidly, we had a very serious
cocaine problem. There were the Pittsburgh drug trials,
29 players were convicted, four went to jail and the union
still wouldn’t agree to a program.
“So I’m proud of what we’ve done, we will continue to
enforce the program.”
Selig, whose family owned the Brewers from 1970
until 2005, was at Miller Park to take part in a youth
baseball program.

No starting QB yet for
Okla.; Texas has answer
DALLAS (AP) — Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops
was quick to point out
there still is no final decision on who will be the
starting quarterback for
the Sooners this season.
It has been quite a while
since that has even been a
question for Stoops.
Texas coach Mack Brown,
meanwhile, finally got a
break at Big 12 football media days from having to answer who will be his starter.
The Longhorns have junior
David Ash, whose 18 starts
are the most among current
league quarterbacks.
“David has grown up. He’s
learned a lot,” Brown said
Tuesday. “He is much more
confident than at any time.”
Landry Jones is gone after starting 50 games for
Oklahoma the past four
seasons, during which the
successor to Heisman Trophy winner Sam Bradford
won 39 games and became
the Big 12’s career passing
leader (16,646 yards).
While many people assume that the Oklahoma
starter will be Blake Bell, the
junior who has run for 24 career touchdowns in primarily short-yardage situations,
Stoops said sophomore Kendal Thompson and redshirt
freshman Trevor Knight are
also competing for the job.
Stoops also said the 6-foot6, 263-pound quarterback
known for “Belldozer” pack-

ages can throw the ball too.
“We have a history in my
going on 15 years of having
guys in quarterbacks that are
really excellent throwers, and
Blake fits that mold,” said
Stoops, whose Sooners last
season won a share of their
eighth Big 12 title.
After Colt McCoy led
Texas to the BCS national
championship game in 2009,
Garrett Gilbert struggled the
following season when the
Longhorns had their only
losing season under Brown.
So in 2011 the question was
whether Gilbert would be
able to keep his job over thenfreshmen Ash or Case McCoy, the two the coach was
choosing between a year ago.
In a game he wasn’t even
sure he would start, Ash
capped his sophomore season last December by helping lead the Longhorns to a
31-27 comeback victory over
Oregon State in the Alamo
Bowl. Ash threw for 188
yards and two touchdowns
after halftime, including a 36yard TD pass with less than
2 1/2 minutes left after Texas
converted fourth-and-1.
“I thought his comeback in
the Alamo Bowl really, really
helped him with our team,
with his confidence,” Brown
said. “And I think it helps
him nationally, and I think
he’ll have a big year.”
With co-offensive coor-

José M. Osorio | Chicago Tribune | MCT photo

The Cincinnati Reds Brandon Phillips (4) runs past third base coach Mark Berry to score in the fourth inning against
the Chicago Cubs. The Reds defeated the Cubs, 1-0, at Wrigley Field in Chicago, Ill., Sunday, April 15, 2007.

Reds coach Berry thrilled to be back from cancer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —
Reds third base coach Mark
Berry moves through Cincinnati’s clubhouse with a water
bottle in hand pretty much all
the time. Since undergoing two
grueling months of chemotherapy and radiation this spring
for throat cancer, the salivary
glands no longer function in the
left side of his mouth and he
needs constant hydration.
Berry is back in the coaching
box at last, after assuring manager Dusty Baker he had regained
enough strength to return to the
job he has held for 10 years.
Monday night’s 11-0 victory
at San Francisco marked Berry’s 2013 season debut coaching third, and he worked both
games of a traditional doubleheader Tuesday against the
reigning World Series champion
Giants. He promised Baker he

would check in between games
to report how he was feeling.
Berry can’t quite believe he’s back.
“It means a lot just being
back with the team in familiar territory for me,” he said
Tuesday. “It makes you feel like
you’re part of the game again.
It’s been four months since I
coached third base. You forget how quick the game really
is until you’re coaching third
base. Watching from home or
TV or watching from the dugout, the game seems really slow
and easy. But once you get out
to third base, the first couple innings I was like, ‘Wow, this is
moving pretty quick.’ I’m just
glad to get through that first
night. The team made it a lot
easier on me by the home runs
and really the easy decisions, so
I was thankful for that.”
On Sunday, with the Reds

ready to leave on an 11-game
West Coast trip, Berry told
Baker he was finally ready. The
coach had always targeted the
All-Star break on his calendar
for when he might be back, but
wanted a couple of extra days
going through pregame work
with the team to make sure he
had his timing and felt sharp.
The Reds had 32 hits in Berry’s first two games back, wins of
11-0 and 9-3 against the Giants.
“Mark’s over there at third, I
guess everybody is inspired to
hit,” said pitcher Tony Cingrani,
the winner of Tuesday’s first game.
Berry received radiation five
days a week for seven weeks,
along with weekly chemo sessions. He has gained back 16
pounds of the 41 he lost during
treatment, despite his taste buds
See REDS ‌| 9

OVP Sports Briefs
Wahama varsity
football helmet fitting
MASON, W.Va. — Wahama High School will
hold a helmet fitting and
equipment distribution
for its varsity players at 5
p.m. on Tuesday, July 30
at the high school athletic
building. A parents meeting will follow at 6 p.m.
SG Jr. High
football helmet fitting
MERCERVILLE, Ohio
— South Gallia will be
holding a junior high
football helmet fitting at
4 p.m. Monday, August
5, at South Gallia High/
Middle School. There will
also be a parents meeting
that night at 7 p.m.

River Valley Jr.
High Helmet Fitting
BIDWELL, Ohio —
There will be football
helmet fitting on Monday,
August 5 at 6 p.m. at River Valley Middle School
for all seventh and eighth
See ANSWER |‌ 9 grade students who plan

to play football this Fall.
All students must have
a a physical to play. For
additional
information
email David Moore at gl_
dmoore@seovec.org
Chester Bowhunters
to hold Archery tourney
CHESTER, Ohio —
The Chester Bowhunters
invite all area youth and
their families to the 2013
NASP/Youth Open 3-D
archery tournament on
Sunday, July 28. Signups
start at 11 a.m. at the club
on Pomeroy Pike, with
the first scoring arrow to
be released at noon.
Shooting times will run
from noon until 4 p.m. to
allow plenty of time for
an enjoyable experience.
All participants must be
accompanied by an adult.
A lunch will be provided
for the participants.
Classes are as follows:
NASP grade school, NASP
middle school, NASP
high school, pee-wee age
5 and under, cub age 5-12,

and youth open age 12-15
. Open-class participants
may use any compound
or recurve with no limitations on accessories.
NASP class participants
must use NASP approved
equipment.
For more information,
contact club president
Jon Smith at (740) 5164103.
MYL Fall Ball signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
— The Middleport Youth
League will be having
Fall Baseball and Softball sign-ups for boys and
girls from the ages of 5
through 16 from noon
until 4 p.m. on Saturday,
July 27, at the Middleport
Ball Fields.
You can come as a team
or sign up individually.
If there is enough interest for a 17-18 league, the
MYL will have a league for
them also. For more information, contact Dave at
(740) 590-0438 or Jackie
at (740) 416-1261.

Big Bend Youth
Football League
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio —
The Big Bend Youth Football League will be having
football and cheerleading
signups from 11 a.m. until
1 p.m. every Saturday in
July at the Middleport Veterans Memorial Stadium.
Signups are for all interested kids in grades
3-6, and second graders
may sign up if they meet a
50-pound minimal weight
requirement. There is also
a signup fee.
For more information,
visit facebook @BBYFL
or call Sarah (444-1606),
Tony (416-3774), Chrissy
(992-4067), Angie (4441177) or Jim Porter (4162636).
Gallia Academy
all-comer meet
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be hosting an
all-comer track meet that
See BRIEFS ‌| 9

�Thursday, July 25, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

AP Sports Briefs
Rodriguez reports to Yanks’ minor
league complex
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Alex Rodriguez
reported back to the New York Yankees’
minor league complex Wednesday, three
days after he was diagnosed with a
strained left quadriceps on the final day
of his injury rehabilitation assignment.
Rodriguez, under investigation by Major League Baseball for his reported ties
to a clinic accused of distributing banned
performance-enhancing drugs, spent a
little over four hours at the complex.
“I feel great. That’s all I’m going to
say,” he said when he left, rolling down
a window of the SUV he was in. Then he
rolled up the window, gave a thumbs up
as it closed and then departed.
The third baseman, who turns 38 on
Saturday, had been recovering from hip
surgery in January. He hit .250 (8 for 40)
with two homers and eight RBIs in 13
minor league games before the leg injury.
New York said A-Rod was being sent
to Tampa for “for rest and treatment.”
The Yankees have not said whether they
intend to send him on another rehab assignment.
South Carolina looking
into Clowney contact
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina’s athletic compliance department is
looking into contact between defensive
end Jadeveon Clowney and rap mogul
turned sports agency head, Jay-Z.
Spokesman Steve Fink said Wednesday the department was aware of reports
about conversations between Jay-Z and
Clowney, the 6-foot-6, 274-pound lineman who’s considered the top pick in
next year’s NFL draft.
Athletes are permitted under NCAA
rules to talk with agents, just not reach
agreements about future representation.
Athletes cannot accept benefits from
agents or their representatives while in
college.
Clowney had 13 sacks last season. He
was the Southeastern Conference defensive player of the year and finished sixth
in Heisman Trophy balloting. Clowney
won an ESPY award last week for his signature hit in the Outback Bowl when he
dislodged the helmet of Michigan runner
Vincent Smith.

NFL, players union
continue HGH talks
WASHINGTON (AP) — The NFL and
players union are meeting Wednesday in
an attempt to reach agreement on testing
procedures for human growth hormone
as early as the upcoming season.
Both sides already have closed in on
conducting a population study that has
been a key demand by the players before
HGH testing is implemented.
The labor agreement that ended the
NFL lockout in 2011 requires the league
gain union approval before testing players for HGH. The union says it favors
testing, but has reservations about the
appeals process. The union also has concerns about the way discipline will be
handed out, and wants to collectively
bargain that issue.
An email obtained by The Associated
Press from the NFL Players Association
on Monday indicated that the league and
the NFLPA have jointly hired a doctor
to conduct a study on NFL players to
determine an accurate threshold for a
positive HGH test. The email was sent
by the union to players, in part to explain
that the study requires them to have
blood drawn during their physical when
training camp begins. The email said the
blood samples will only be used for the
study, which would mean further blood
tests for players once an overall agreement is reached.
Supplemental HGH is a banned substance that is hard to detect and used
by athletes for what are believed to be a
variety of benefits, whether real or only
perceived — such as increasing speed
and improving vision.
Among the health problems connected
to HGH are diabetes, cardiac dysfunction
and arthritis.
Attention shifts to alternate
site for NFL stadium
ATLANTA (AP) — Attention is shifting to a second site for a stadium that
would be the new home for the Atlanta
Falcons.
A deadline to buy two churches on
the stadium’s preferred site is just over a
week away, and no deal with the congregations has been reached.

Phil Masturzo | Akron Beacon Journal | MCT photo

Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Mike Brown, left, hugs Dan Gilbert at center court
on being named NBA’s Coach of the Year before the start of Game 2 of the NBA firstround playoffs against the Detroit Pistons at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland,
Ohio, Tuesday, April 21, 2009.

NBA summer of reunions
for coaches and players
LAS VEGAS (AP) — When Mike
Brown first got into coaching in the
early 1990s, veteran Bernie Bickerstaff would pull him aside for little
chats on climbing the ladder in the
NBA. One lesson stood out more
than any other.
“He told me, ‘Young buck, don’t
ever burn any bridges in this business
or in life,’” Brown said. “It was an easy
piece of advice for me to follow because that’s how I’m built. You appreciate any opportunity that you are given
in life and try to make the most of it.”
That approach paid off in a big way
for Brown this summer. He made those
comments while standing outside of
the Cleveland Cavaliers summer league

team locker room at the Thomas and
Mack Center, dressed in a polo shirt
with the Cavaliers logo on the left
breast. Three years after being fired by
the Cavaliers, Brown was rehired to run
the show for a second time in Cleveland.
“It was weird for a while,” Brown
said of wearing the wine and gold
colors again. “But it was a seamless
transition for myself and my family.
It almost, to a certain degree after
we got over the initial shock of it, it
almost felt like we never really left. It
was almost like we went on vacation
or something like that for a little bit.”
He’s not the only one. Many have
learned this summer that you can go
home again.

Reds
From Page 8
being gone. He lost some
hair on the back of his
head, but it’s hardly noticeable below his red cap, and
whiskers on the left side of
his face are beginning to
re-emerge.
He knows he will feel
better some days than
others.
“I think the time was
about
right,”
Berry
said. “I didn’t want to
come back too soon, it
wouldn’t be fair to the
team, it wouldn’t fair to
the players, myself, nobody. It’s been about two
months. Looking at that
part of it, to how I felt
back then, wow, it came
quick. The way I was
feeling two months ago I
would have never dreamt
that I would be here right

Chicago
now doing this.”
The 50-year-old Berry
has been with the organization as a player,
minor league manager
and coach for 30 years.
He was diagnosed during spring training with
cancer of his tonsils and
neck lymph nodes.
Bench coach Chris
Speier filled in coaching third during Berry’s
absence, while Miguel
Cairo served as interim
bench coach for Baker.
Baker, who has had his
own medical scares as recently as late last season
with a mini-stroke and irregular heartbeat, didn’t
ask Berry each day how
he felt. Baker observed
for himself.
“Even when he did tell
me he was ready I still

gave him a week,” Baker
said. “It’s the same way
with players. But he was
over there paying attention the whole time, he
was looking at my signs.
… It’s great (to have him
back).”
Berry said he used
“very little” chewing tobacco during a minor
league playing career
and never was a heavy
drinker.
“What caused it, there’s
no telling,” he said.
Berry
thanks
his
younger sister, Michele,
for pushing him to seek
additional medical evaluation after two blood
biopsies done during
spring training in Arizona came back negative.
His sister went through
this same thing 15 years

terback play in the Big 12
last year was phenomenal,
and it’s always going to be
phenomenal. It’s just going
to be with newer people.”
After going to three consecutive bowl games for the
first time in school history,
Baylor will be breaking in a
new starter after the graduation of Nick Florence, who
led the Big 12 in total offense
last season after Robert Griffin III won the Heisman for
the Bears the previous year.
Playing behind those two,
junior Bryce Petty has played
only 11 games and completed 10 of 14 passes.
Regardless of what happens, there will be golden
moments for the Bears in
their final season at Floyd
Casey Stadium. They will
wear shiny gold helmets for
many games this season,
among many different uniform combinations.
“To me, that’s what it’s
all about. You got style,
you got attitude, you got
effort. You have an image,”
coach Art Briles said. “And
our image is we’re going to

play fast, we’re going to be
fearless, and we’re not going to worry about what
other people think because
we know who we are and
we know what we’re going
to do. So the new uniforms
and all that stuff, it’s tied
in with presenting the image that we are at Baylor,
and that’s being really good
football players, really
good students, at a really
good university.”
Iowa State does return
a starting quarterback,
though sophomore Sam
Richardson didn’t take over
until the final three games
last season, when he threw
eight touchdowns with only
one interception.
What the Cyclones will really miss are Jake Knott and
A.J. Klein, the standout linebackers who had been such a
force in the Big 12.
“You don’t replace those
guys. You don’t replace them
from a leadership position.
You don’t replace them from
what they’ve meant to our
era of Iowa State football,”
coach Paul Rhoads said.

ago and is now cancerfree. Berry returned to
Cincinnati for a more
extensive biopsy of the
tumor on his left tonsil,
and that revealed the
Stage II cancer.
While he still will undergo a Pet Scan on Sept.
4 to determine whether

the cancer is completely
gone and he is in remission, Berry is optimistic
the roughest part of this
ordeal is behind him.
“I think I’ve knocked
it out,” he said. “In my
heart I feel that way. I’ve
been blessed to have the
career I’ve had.”

From Page 8
Major League stadium. The
back-and-forth became so
heated that at one point,
the team’s chairman, Tom
Ricketts, floated the idea of
moving the team to another
location where it could get
the amenities it needs to
compete with other teams.

Answer
From Page 8
dinator and former quarterback Major Applewhite
now coaching quarterbacks, and Ash described
by Brown as “in command”
after throwing for 2,699
yards with 19 touchdowns
and eight interceptions last
season, the Longhorns are
planning to go with a faster
tempo on offense.
Brown believes that
change will be more beneficial to the defense, which
will now see each week in
practice what it will face in
most Big 12 games.
West Virginia is going
into its second Big 12 season without Geno Smith,
who went to the NFL
as the leading passer in
Mountaineers history.
“Geno is going to be a
great pro. We don’t try to
compare him to anybody
on our staff or any of that,
but we’re in the same situation as, I think, seven or
eight other Big 12 schools
right now,” coach Dana
Holgorsen said. “The quar-

From Page 8
will be open to all ages and is scheduled
for 11 a.m. Saturday, August 10, with
registration beginning at 9 a.m.
There is a fee for competitors and spectators and volunteers are still needed. Heats
will be combined if needed, but winners will
be determined by age groups. Competitors
must check in with the clerk at the second
call prior to their event start.
Competitors must have your own implements for shot and discus and must have

experience throwing the discus or on the
pole vault. We will not allow the novice
vaulters or disc thrower to throw or jump
for safety reasons. Parents please supervise
your kids, you are the coach for the day and
please ensure they make it to their events
on time.
We will not enforce limits on the number
of events you may enter, but please monitor
number for the smaller kids.To volunteer,
for more information or if you have any
questions please call (740) 645-7316 or
email ff1023@att.net

60434785

Briefs

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

60435986

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

Professional Services

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

60431228

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

740-591-8044
Please leave a message
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Miscellaneous

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE
Are You Still Paying Too Much
For Your Medications?

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

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

rice
Our P

Celecoxib*
$58.00

Generic equivalent
of CelebrexTM.
Generic price for
200mg x 100
compared to

Celebrex $437.58
TM

Typical US brand price
for 200mg x 100

Get An Extra $10 Off
&amp; Free Shipping On
Your 1st Order!

Promotiona
Packages l
starting at
only ...

Call the number below and save an
additional $10 plus get free shipping
on your ﬁrst prescription order with
Canada Drug Center. Expires March
31, 2013. Oﬀer is valid for prescription
orders only and can not be used in
conjunction with any other oﬀers.

Order Now! 1-800-341-2398
Use code 10FREE to receive
this special offer.

Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid
prescription is required for all prescription medication orders.

Call Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398
Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and
accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.

BURIED
in CREDIT
CARDDEBT?

for 12 month

s

1-888-721-0871

Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0113
*Oﬀer subject to change based on premium channel availablity

Solutions For:

Slow Computers • E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
Spyware &amp; Viruses • Bad Internet Connections

Affordable Rates
For Home
&amp; Business
Call Now For Immediate Help

888-781-3386

CREDIT CARD RELIEF

877-465-0321

25

$

Most Insurances Accepted

M-W-F
9-5

Sameday
Care

1-304-273-5321

316 St. Ravenswood, WV

LEGALS

REQUEST FOR STATEMENTS OF PROFESSIONAL
QUALIFICATIONS
The Village of Racine located
in Meigs County, Ohio invites
engineering firms to submit
statements of professional
qualifications. Firms responding will have the opportunity, if
selected, to receive a commission for the Racine Phase 11
Water line Replacement
Project. The following is a list
of information that should be
included in your statement of
qualifications, along with a preliminary project description.
Interested firms should provide
the names of firm owners, experience of current employees,
number of years in business,
ANNOUNCEMENTS
the types of service offered,
background on key technical
personnel, experience on similar projects, current projects
Notices
and their location, a summary
of the firm’s ability to adhere to
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
a budget. Each firm should
PUBLISHING CO.
also include a list of all water
Recommends that you do
projects the firm is or has
Business with People you
worked on during the last fiveknow, and NOT to send Money
years, including ongoing
through the Mail until you have
projects. The submittal shall
Investigated the Offering.
not exceed 20-pages.
The proposed project involves
the design and all associated
Auctions
work for the Racine Phase 11
Water Line Replacement
Project and other utility worked
as deemed necessary by the
Village of Racine. Professional
services includes, but is not
limited to preliminary planning,
design and construction services of improvements to the
Racine water system.
It is the intention of the Village
of Racine to review and rate
statements of qualifications.
The
Village may
opt Auction
to con- Center Rt. 62 N. Mason, WV
Located
at the
duct interviews to aid in the sethe estate of the late Douglas, Halsey
lectionSelling
process.
Your statement of qualifications should be deliveredSell
to the
at 12 PM
following address
no later
than
Auto’s,
4 Wheelers
&amp; Mowers
4:00 p.m. on August 6, 2013.
2005 Audi 54 – ASL V8 4.2 loaded, 84,000 miles. 2007 Ford
Statements received after this
Expedition
deadline
willEddie
not beBauer
con- Edition, leather, loaded, 4 wd. V8, 94,000
sidered.
miles. 2012 Artic Cat HD x 700 Prowler, only 359 Miles. These 3
Statements of qualifications
should be transmitteditems
to: sold with reserve.
Name:
J.
Scott
Hill
or
David
Bombardier 4 wheeler, Power Trac. Pt, 422, 4 wd. Hydro with
Spencer
loader,
bladeClerk
&amp; mower.
Articulated steering 22 HP Gas, Hosquarna
Title:
Mayor
Treasurer
Address:
Main48”
Street
R 322405
T AWD.
Deck, only 5 hours craftsman &amp; Toro Push
PO Box 399 Mowers Triton ATV alum. Utility trailer
Racine, Ohio 45771
Phone: (740)949-2296
Modern Furn. &amp; Appl.
Fax: (740)949-2466
7/25,
Broy8/1
Hill Sofa, Poster craftmatic bed, Amish built 4 pc. Queen size

***CORRECTION***
SATURDAY, JULY 27, 2013
@ 10:00 A.M.

We’ll Repair Your Computer
Through The Internet!

✔ WE CAN HELP YOU AVOID BANKRUPTCY

ALL NEW PATIENTS RECIEVE
A FREE MASSAGE

REQUEST FOR STATEMENTS OF PROFESSIONAL
QUALIFICATIONS
The Village of Racine located
in Meigs County, Ohio invites
engineering firms to submit
statements of professional
qualifications. Firms responding will have the opportunity, if
selected, to receive a commission for the Racine Phase 11
Water line Replacement
Project. The following is a list
of information that should be
included in your statement of
qualifications, along with a preliminary project description.
Interested firms should provide
the names of firm owners, experience of current employees,
number of years in business,
the types of service offered,
background on key technical
personnel, experience on similar projects, current projects
and their location, a summary
of the firm’s ability to adhere to
a budget. Each firm should
also include a list of all water
projects the firm is or has
worked on during the last fiveyears, including ongoing
projects. The
submittal shall
LEGALS
not exceed 20-pages.
The proposed project involves
the design and all associated
work for the Racine Phase 11
Water Line Replacement
Project and other utility worked
as deemed necessary by the
Village of Racine. Professional
services includes, but is not
limited to preliminary planning,
design and construction services of improvements to the
Racine water system.
It is the intention of the Village
of Racine to review and rate
statements of qualifications.
The Village may opt to conduct interviews to aid in the selection process.
Your statement of qualifications should be delivered to the
following address no later than
4:00 p.m. on August 6, 2013.
Statements received after this
deadline will not be considered.
Statements of qualifications
should be transmitted to:
Name: J. Scott Hill or David
Spencer
Title: Mayor Clerk Treasurer
Address: 405 Main Street
PO Box 399
Racine, Ohio 45771
Phone: (740)949-2296
Fax: (740)949-2466
7/25, 8/1

ESTATE AUCTION

Fix Your
Computer Now!

✔ WE CAN SAVE YOU THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS

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

mo.

Call Now and Ask How!

✔ WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY

for your FREE consultation CALL

PREMIUM MOVIE
CHANNELS*

For 3 months.

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

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

Dr. Kelly K. Jones D.C

Full-time/Part-time
LPN’s &amp; CNA’s

60436025

"A Place to Call Home"
FOSTER PARENTS
NEEDED
IN YOUR COUNTY!!!
$25-$45 a day for the care
of a child in your home.
Can be single or married
Call Oasis to help a child
ﬁnd a place to call home.
TRAINING BEGINS
August 3 at Albany.
Call 740-698-0340 for
more information or to
register for training.

Ravenswood Chiropractic Center

Help Wanted General

Auctions
SERVICES

Miscellaneous

Medical / Health

EMPLOYMENT

60432536

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Thursday, July 25, 2013

00 Off Service
Mention Code: MB

Sleigh Oak BR Suit, beautiful Cherry Poster BR Suit with 2pc. H.
boy. Must See. 4 pc Wicker Set, Cedar Chest, Wall. Bookcase, Oak
Bookcase, Gun Cab Corner Oak Entertainment Center, Oak Flat Top
Desk with Claw &amp; Ball Feet. Pub Table &amp; Chairs, Barstools Patio Furn,
Like new Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer, small upright freezer, cedar chest,
&amp; more.
Antique Furniture &amp; Collectibles
Lg. Brass Ship light by Wallace &amp; Tiernon,Oak Farm Table with rope
twist legs, 3pc Poster BR Suit, Oak Secretary, Oak library table,
Mah. Game Table, Mag. DR. Suit with shelf back chairs &amp; corner
cabinet, Cherry Table &amp; Chair’s, King Tut Bowling Game out of old
bar, Brass Candy Kettle, Adv. Box Shorts with Geippers, Pink Deep
Dishes, oil lamps &amp; more.

Your insurance may pay for your diabetic
supplies with li�le to no cost to you.
Call NOW to make sure
you are ge�ing
the best deal on your
Diabetic Supplies!
����YOU�MAY�QUALIFY�FOR�
• A glucose meter upgrade
• Free prescription delivery
• Great deals on products
&amp; services
• And FREE gi�s

AMERICA’S�DIABETIC�

SAVINGS�CLUB
CALL�NOW!�����-���-����

monitoring

starting aro

und

per week

*with $99 customer
ation e and
purchase of alarm install
monitoring charg
services.

Call Today, Protect Tomorrow!

1-888-718-8142

Mon-Fri 8am - 11pm • Sat 9am - 8pm • Sun 10am - 6pm EST

Household &amp; Tools
Set of Ping Golf Clubs, books, 2 nice ﬂoor model gas or propane
heaters, Deer plot camera, snap on inspection visual camera for
engine, porter cable plate joiner, hand tools, sprayer for 4 wheeler,
back pack sprayer, nails, bolts etc... deer stand, power washer, sharp
ﬂoor model AC, Dyson Ball Sweeper, 3 Tippman Paint Ball Guns,
cookware, small coal stove, pig roasting box, heavy ceramic grill

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. #66
Ricky Pearson Jr. #1955

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.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
SERVICES
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
OH
Evans
Jackson,
800-537-9528

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

EMPLOYMENT
Clerical
OPTOMETRIC ASSISTANT
NEEDED ASAP
Part-time, 20-25 hours a week.
Computer experience required.
Starting pay $8hr. Please send
resume to PO Box 177, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550. Deadline is Aug 15, 2013.
Education
Mason County Schools in
Point Pleasant WV has a position for a Culinary Arts – Restaurant Management Teacher
(ProStart) posted. Interested
parties can view the qualifications and complete job description on our website
http://www.edline.net/pages/m
cboewv/ or 304 675 4540 Personnel Department , all applications must be received prior
to 3:30PM on July 24. As required by federal law and regulations, the Mason County
Board of Education does not
discriminate on the basis of
race, color, national origin, sex,
age, disability or retaliation in
employment or in its educational programs and activities
Help Wanted General
INSTRUCTORS
MATH &amp; ACCOUNTING.
A MASTER'S DEGREE
in each subject area is required.
Email cover letter and
resume to
director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu

The Meigs Co. General Health
District, An equal opportunity
employer, is seeking a full-time
Public Health Emergency Preparedness- Grant Coordinator.
Bachelor's degree preferred,
but equivocal experience will
be considered. IT experience,
valid Driver's License required.
Must submit to background
check, Entire Job description
may be found at www.meigshealth.com. Submit
resume,civil service application, three letters of reference
electronically to
meigcohd@odh.ohio.gov by or
before 4pm on July 26th.
Installation / Maintenace / Repair
Service/Technician-Repair/Install Hot Tubs, requires general Electrical &amp; Plumbing knowledge, hourly wage + commission. Baum Lumber, Chester,
Ohio 740-985-3301
EDUCATION
Business &amp; Trade School

Terms: Cash or Bank Letter of Credit Guarantee your check
Adm. Joyce Erickson
Auctionzip.com for more details
60436595

ARE YOU A DIABETIC?

Notices

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

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

�Thursday, July 25, 2013

NASCAR back at
dirt track for first
time since 1970

NFL players, coaches feel pinch
Barry Wilner

Looking perplexed, Tom Coughlin stood on the field watching a
minicamp practice. No pads, no
real blocking, no power football for
the New York Giants, as mandated
by the labor agreement between the
league and the players.
It’s difficult enough when the
players can hit each other to evaluate whether NFL wannabes have
what it takes, or if veterans still
can carry the load pro football demands. Now, with lots of offseason
availabilities but virtually no contact allowed, followed by training
camps in which two-a-days are
outlawed unless one practice is a
walk-through, the appraisal process won’t get much easier.
“Well, it is pro football. It is the
way it is today,” Coughlin says.
Success has to be built, he says,
by “doing a good job with our
evaluations — bringing the right
people in here and getting them integrated into our offense, defense
and special teams, the way we do
things, what our expectation levels are, what our values are. And
the more we can be with them and
around them, then the better you
are going to feel about it.”
Coaches and players will be
around each other plenty over the
next month, whether it’s in training camps or at exhibition games,
or back at the home facilities when
teams that go away early in camp return as the regular season approaches. Tons of classroom study is ahead,
even for teams whose offensive and
defensive schemes have been established for years. Lots of breakout
sessions with position coaches, too.
Enough video watching to, well,
make your eyes spin.
And not all that much time on the
practice fields.
No contact or pads are allowed
during the first three days of camp,
with the reporting date limited to
physical exams, meetings and classroom work. Running and conditioning is allowed.
Throughout training camp, play-

The Associated Press

Time to attach the mud flaps.
NASCAR is set for an off-road detour through the dirt.
The Truck Series is headed for the Eldora Speedway halfmile dirt track for a one-night only special designed to reconnect NASCAR with its early roots and give fans raised on asphalt and stock cars a taste of the wild races run in the dust.
The last time one of NASCAR’s top touring series competed on dirt was Sept. 30, 1970, when Richard Petty won
a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (called the Grand National
Division at that time) race at the North Carolina State Fairgrounds in Raleigh.
The dirt drought ends when the trucks race Wednesday
night at Tony Stewart-owned Eldora in Rossburg, Ohio.
Stewart, still a regular on the weeknight racing circuit, has naturally become a big booster of NASCAR’s
return to dirt. Most of the field drove their first Eldora
laps at Tuesday’s practice.
“It’s a neat facility,” Stewart said. “It’s well lit, it’s a wide
racetrack, it gives you a lot of options of where you can go
and what you can do. I think it gives those guys an opportunity. The practice day on Tuesday should help a lot of those
teams be able to get acclimated before they come back to the
track on Wednesday.”
Eldora’s grandstands are sold out for the 9:30 p.m.
ET race, even as some of the series’ biggest winners,
like Kyle Busch, are sitting out. Ryan Newman and
Dave Blaney are the only Cup drivers in the field. The
race will feature a handful of so-called ringers, such
as Scott Bloomquist, a member of the National Dirt
Track Hall of Fame with more than 500 victories in a
lengthy career. The 49-year-old Bloomquist is set to
make his NASCAR debut driving the No. 51 Toyota
for Kyle Busch Motorsports.
“It’s going to be something different I’m sure, but it’s a
race car and I’ve driven a lot of race cars,” he said. “Never a
truck, but it’s still a race car.”
The race also gets a twist on qualifying. There are five,
eight-lap qualifying events and a 15-lap last-chance race to
come up with the 30 competitors (regularly 36 in the series)
who will start the 150-lap Mudsummer Classic. Because
there is no pit road, the race is broken into three segments
of 60, 50 and 40 laps.
Trucks driver James Buescher raved about Eldora after he
tested there.
“It was a lot more fun than I expected it to be,” he
said. “It’s definitely going to be interesting when we get
30 trucks on the track at the same time in tight quarters
like that. It’s going to be an action-packed race. I just
hope there’s not too many cautions.”

Condominiums
3 bdrm. condo w/ finished
basement. Gallipolis Ferry on
river, Cntrl A/C. $700 mo. $700
S.D. No Pets. 740-446-3481
Houses For Sale
4-Bdrm and 2-baths, Located
by TimberRidge Lake, 2000 sq
ft. asking price is $120k. Ph :
740-256-1534.
FOR SALE
5RMS incl 2BR house. Completely renovated. In Bellemead Addition. 304-675-1602.
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 Bdrm 2nd floor Apt. Air, W/D
hook-up No Utilities, Pets $500
mo. $500 deposit. 740-3393063
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.

Apartments/Townhouses

Apartments/Townhouses

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2-Bdrm Apt $375mo &amp; 3-Bdrm
Apt. $425mo, Both plus utilities &amp; Deposit. 3rd street (Racine) 740-247-4292
238 1st Ave. Upstairs Apt.
Stove &amp; refrigerator, furnished.
One or two people. No Pets,
$550 mt, + deposit &amp; recommendations 740-446-4926
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Middleport - 1 &amp; 2 Bdrm Apts.
some with utilities Pd. Deposit
&amp; reference, NO PETS, 740992-0165.

ers can’t be on the field for more
than four hours per day; only one
practice a day can be in pads and
is restricted to three hours or less,
followed by a three-hour break; and
players get one day off per week.
That all makes for a safer game,
but how can newcomers make a
sharp impact?
Denver running back Montee Ball
felt he already did so even without a
ball in his hands.
“I made sure to leave a little
impression on the conditioning
test …” the record-setting secondround draft pick from Wisconsin
said. “I just want them to remember that I came in working since
Day 1, and I really attacked the
playbook since Day 1. I made a lot
of progress with it.”
Ball will get a shot at being a
starter for the Broncos after veteran
Willis McGahee was cut. It’s much
more difficult for lower draft picks or
rookie free agents to get long looks
these days, though it does happen.
Alfred Morris came out of Florida
Atlantic of the not-so-mighty Sun
Belt Conference as a sixth-round
pick last year. He ran around, over
and through just about everyone but
Mike Shanahan last spring and summer in Washington, and the Redskins not only kept him, they started
him. Morris rushed for 1,613 yards
and 13 touchdowns and helped the
Skins make the playoffs.
“Alfred’s a beast,” Redskins offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan
says. “I think one guy or about three
guys all year tackled him on the first
tackle. That guy runs as hard as anyone I’ve ever seen. Most of his yards
came on outside zone, not the zone
read, so Alfred is as good of a back
as I’ve ever had. He’s the real deal.”
But discovering the real deal is
even more of a chore with practice
time in pads and scrimmaging so
limited compared to before 2011.
The players association insisted on
the cutbacks during CBA negotiations, and with player safety a major
issue, the NFL agreed.
Doug Casa, professor of kinesiology at the University of Connecticut
and the lead researcher for the Ko-

The Associated Press

Dan Gelston

REAL ESTATE SALES

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

www.mydailysentinel.com

Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2 &amp; 3
BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets
304-674-0023
304-444-4268
MUST SEE: Lg 3 BR, 2 full
bath apt. 2000sq ft. Over Huttons Car Wash. 750 per mo.
Includes gas, water &amp; trash.
304-372-6094.
Houses For Rent
1BR, No pets, Syracuse Oh.
350mo, 350 dep. 304-6755332, 740-591-0265
2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331
House for Rent:112 Vinton
Crt, Gallia 3BR, 1BTH, Carport, Cntrl heat &amp; air. W/D,
Range, Frige incl. $500mo,
$300dep. No pets. Ref &amp; Sec
ck req. 304-675-6453

Houses For Rent
Very nice 1 BR home in
Pomeroy, great neighborhood,
large yard, ideal for 1 or 2
people, new appliances. No indoor pets. Non smoking. 740992-9784
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

rey Stringer Institute, already has
seen many health benefits resulting
from the 2011 CBA.
A leader in heat illness detection
and prevention, Casa advised the
league and the players’ union on establishing practice guidelines during
the hottest time of the year.
“For certain, 2011 was the first
real opportunity to make changes
since Korey,” he said, referring
to Vikings offensive tackle Korey
Stringer dying from complications
due to heat stroke on Aug. 1, 2001
during training camp. At 27, he was
the first professional football player
to die from the illness. “After the
CBA, when they overhauled the heat
guidelines, did away with two-a-day
practices, modified some heat treatment recommendations, it created a
safer environment.”
Even as coaches praise such developments, they also bemoan all those
snaps and blocks and tackles that
have disappeared.
“It’s cut down on the opportunities to see them in those situations,”
says Browns first-year head coach
Rob Chudzinski, a long-time offensive assistant in the league. “By the
same token I think the preseason
games are so important as well in
that process, but you do … only get
them so many times in pads and hitting anyway. It puts a premium on
the reps that they do get.”
But the coaches also recognize everyone plays by the same
set of rules.
“It’s a level playing field, so
there’s no difference between our
team and every other team,” Jets
coach Rex Ryan says. “But there
are other things that you do. I think
having opportunity days where
maybe at the end of practice you
put the ball down and you let the
young guys go at it. You’re going
to see them in preseason games as
well. That’s why those games are
critical, (as well as) the green-andwhite scrimmage. Even if we have
to create our own live scrimmage
situations, they’ll have the opportunity to show what they can do.”
They’d better do so quickly.

ANIMALS

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

Pets

Miscellaneous

FREE TO GOOD HOME
2 fem kittens, 8 wks. Blackish
grey &amp; Blk w/white paws &amp;
face. 304-675-1310
AGRICULTURE

Rentals
14 x 60 2 Bdrm M.H with Garage. 3 miles N. of Gallipolis of
Rt 7. $45mo and $400 Deposit.
740-367-7760
3 Bdrm Trailer - 41098 Baker
Road Pomeroy, Oh 45769 - No
Pets - No utilities Pd. - $450mo
and $450 deposit. On dead
end road in country. 740- 4162960
Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY

Garden &amp; Produce
MAYES FARM STAND
Saturdays:Senior Citizen Day
w/5% disc. Open daily 9-6. Accepting WV Frmrs Vouchers.
Thank you,
Mayes Family
AUTOMOTIVE
Boats &amp; Marinas

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

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

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

1972 AMF Slick Craft 21.5 ft.
302 IB runs good, very sound
classic boat $2,500 or consider Trade for Good 4/WD
truck. 740-696-1241
AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

Entertainment

THURSDAY PRIMETIME
6

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10

(WBNS)

11

(WVAH)

12

(WPBY)

13

(WOWK)

18
24
25
26
27
29
30
31
34
35
37
38
39
40
42
52
57
58
60
61
62
64
65
67
68
72
73
74
400
450
500

(WGN)
(FXSP)
(ESPN)
(ESPN2)
(LIFE)
(FAM)
(SPIKE)
(NICK)
(USA)
(TBS)
(CNN)
(TNT)
(AMC)
(DISC)
(A&amp;E)
(ANPL)
(OXY)
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
(NGEO)
(NBCSN)
(SPEED)
(HIST)
(BRAVO)
(BET)
(HGTV)
(SYFY)
(HBO)
(MAX)
(SHOW)

PM

6:30

THURSDAY, JULY 25
7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

11

PM

11:30

Jeopardy!
WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
The Winner Is "Million
The Winner Is "Million
Game Night "Saturday
WSAZ News (:35) Tonight
News
Fortune
Dollar Surprise"
Dollar Shock" (N)
Night Reunion" (N)
Tonight
Show (N)
Jeopardy!
WTAP News NBC Nightly Wheel of
The Winner Is "Million
The Winner Is "Million
Game Night "Saturday
WTAP News (:35) Tonight
at Six
News
Fortune
Dollar Surprise"
Dollar Shock" (N)
Night Reunion" (N)
at 11
Show (N)
Wipeout "Cat-Face-Shirt" Motive "Out of the Past" Rookie Blue "Skeletons"
ABC 6 News ABC World Entertainm- Access
ABC 6 News (:35) Jimmy
ent Tonight Hollywood (N)
at 6 p.m.
News
(N)
(N)
at 11
Kimmel Live
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
Tavis Smiley Inside E
Euromaxx
Song of Mountain "David Wild! "Secrets of Giant
Linus Pauling: The
Highlights
Business
Holt &amp; The Lightning Bolts" Sharks"
Originals
(N)
Street
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm- Wipeout "Cat-Face-Shirt" Motive "Out of the Past" Rookie Blue "Skeletons"
Eyewitness (:35) Jimmy
ent Tonight (N)
News at 6
News
(N)
(N)
News 11
Kimmel Live
The Big
Big Brother "Eviction
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
Two and a
Elementary "Flight Risk"
10TV News (:35) David
HD
News
Fortune
Bang Theory Half Men
Show" (N)
HD
Letterman
Two and a
Two and a
The Big
Hell's Kitchen Chef Ramsay announces the final two
The Big
Eyewitness News
Simps. "Lisa Everybody
Bang Theory Half Men
Half Men
Bang Theory chefs who will prepare their final menus. (N)
Goes Gaga" Loves Ray
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
BBC News
Doctors on Law Works Dirk Gently Dirk is hired to Death/Paradise A concert Charlie Rose (N)
America
Business
Call
guard a valuable robot.
ends with a public murder.
The Big
Big Brother "Eviction
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
Two and a
Elementary "Flight Risk"
13 News
(:35) David
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition
Bang Theory Half Men
Show" (N)
Letterman
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother Met Mother Lead-Off
MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs vs. Arizona Diamondbacks (L)
UFC 141 "Lesnar vs. Overeem"
Weekly
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Cincinnati vs L.A. Dodgers (L)
SportsCenter
X Games Preview
Baseball Tonight (L)
SportsCenter
Horn (N)
Interrupt (N) Coaches
CFL Football Edmonton Eskimos vs. Montreal Alouettes (L)
NFL Live (L)
Coaches
Wife Swap
W. Swap "Meeks/ Hoover" Runway "Sky's the Limit" Project Runway "Million Dollar Runway" Supermarket "Cakes"
Diva
The Vineyard
Melissa
Harry Potter &amp; the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 Harry discovers the Deathly Hallows, the most powerful objec... The 700 Club
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Impact Wrestling (N)
Ink Mstr "Thrills for Grills"
SpongeBob SpongeBob Sam &amp; Cat
Hathaway
Big Time Rush (N)
Full House
Full House
The Nanny The Nanny Friends 1/2 Friends 2/2
(5:00) �� The 40-Year-Old Virgin Steve Carell.
Summer Camp (N)
Burn Notice (N)
Graceland (N)
Summer Camp
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy BigBang
BigBang
Sullivan (N) BigBang
Conan (N)
(5:00) The Situation Room OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
(5:30) ��� Mission: Impossible II Tom Cruise.
The Hero "Sacrifice"
�� Mission: Impossible III ('06, Act) Tom Cruise.
The Hero
(4:30) ��� Blood Diamond
��� Demolition Man ('93, Sci-Fi) Wesley Snipes, Sylvester Stallone. Showville
Small Town Small Town
Airplane Repo
Repo "Spies in the Night" PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
PWars (N)
Airplane Repo
PropWars
PropWars
The First 48
The First 48
Beyond Scared Straight
Beyond Scared Straight
Gangster Girl (N)
Beyond Scared Straight
River Monsters: Lost
River Monsters
River Monsters
To Be Announced
Man-Eating Super Snake River Monsters
(5:00) �� Ocean's Thirteen
��� Murder by Numbers ('02, Thril) Ryan Gosling, Sandra Bullock. I'm Havi "Alyssa/ Jenine" �� Ocean's Thirteen
Roseanne
Roseanne
Weddings
Weddings
L.A. Hair "Career Suicide" L.A. Hair (N)
Sanya's Glam (N)
Weddings
Sanya's
(5:00) �� Summer Catch E! News
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
Co-ed Nightmares (N)
C. Lately
E! News
(:25) M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Queens
Queens
Queens
(:35) Queens
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero
Life Below 0 "Checkmate" Life Below 0 "The Chase" Life Below Zero
Life Below 0 "The Chase"
Crossover
Crossover
Prem.World The Grid (N) FIVB Beach Volleyball World Series (L)
FIVB Volleyball World League
The Grid
NASCAR Race Hub (N)
Pass Time
Pass Time
ARCA Auto Racing
Motorcycle Racing
Car Warriors "Challenger"
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
God, Guns
God, Guns
(5:45) Million (:45) Housewives NJ
(:45) Housewives NJ
(:45) The Real Housewives (:45) The Real Housewives (:45) H.Wives Watch (N)
Property
106 &amp; Park: BET's Top 10 Live (N)
�� Lakeview Terrace ('08, Thril) Patrick Wilson, Samuel L. Jackson. �� Civil Brand ('02, Dra) Mos Def, Lisa Raye.
Love It or List It
House
House Hunt. Rehab
Rehab
Renovation Raiders (N)
HouseH (N) House (N)
theHouse
House
��� Batman Returns ('92, Act) Danny DeVito, Michelle Pfeiffer, Michael Keaton. �� Batman and Robin ('97, Act) Chris O'Donnell, George Clooney.
��� Cowboys and Aliens ('11, Act) Daniel Craig.
The Newsroom
�� Magic Mike ('12, Dra) Channing Tatum.
Real Sex
(5:40) �� Rock of Ages Tom Cruise.
(:45) �� He Got Game ('98, Dra) Ray Allen, Denzel Washington.
��� Snow White and the Huntsman
(:55) Beware of Mr. Baker Bob Adcock.
The Three Musketeers ('11, Act) Logan Lerman.
(:25) �� Judge Dredd
Polyamory
Therapy

�Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, July 25, 2013

fever
Visit our website to
show off your auto racing
knowledge &amp; sprint
to the cup for great
weekly prizes!

It’s Always On At B-Dubs!

SHOP ONLINE

OVER 300 NEW AND USED VEHICLES
ON DISPLAY

60393405

214 Upper River Rd Gallipolis OH

740-446-7891
Mon-Thurs 11am-12am
Fri-Sat 11am-2am
Sun 11am-12am

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="272">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="8602">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="9119">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="9118">
              <text>July 25, 2013</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="214">
      <name>baker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3320">
      <name>entsminger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2280">
      <name>garlic</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
