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                  <text>Protecting
jobs from
unfair trade.

Mostly sunny.
High of 66.
Low around 41.

Marauders
take second at
Meigs Relays.

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 67, Volume 65

Tuesday, April 28, 2015 s 50¢

Meigs student honored by Berea College
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

BEREA, Ky. — Haiden
English was honored
recently by Berea College
as a Carter G. Woodson
Legacy Scholar for accomplishments in academics,
service and leadership.
English attends Meigs
High School.
According to Carl Thomas, coordinator of minority
services and associate director of admissions, the award
honors the late Dr. Carter
G. Woodson, an alumnus of
Berea College. A respected
Courtesy photo historian, Woodson is
Haiden English was honored recently by Berea College as a Carter G. Woodson Legacy Scholar known worldwide as “the
for accomplishments in academics, service and leadership.
father of Black history.”

“This award is named
in his honor as a means of
recognizing African-American high school juniors
who have demonstrated
outstanding character,
academic achievement and
leadership-as exemplified in
the life of Woodson and the
legacy of Berea College,”
Thomas said.
Thomas adds that the
event is one of several
activities in collaboration
with Berea College’s Carter
G. Woodson Center for
Interracial Education, that
pay tribute to Woodson and
the history, heritage and
contributions of African
Americans.
English said she was

grateful for the opportunity.
“Mr. Kennedy, MHS guidance counselor, nominated
me for this award and I
am honored,” she said. “I
enjoyed the tour of the college and was considering
going to college there.”
Berea College, the South’s
first interracial and coeducational college, focuses
on learning, work experience and service. Berea
guarantees a no-tuition
promise to every admitted
student, admitting only
academically promising
students, primarily from
Appalachia, who have limited economic resources.
See STUDENT | 5

Pomeroy plans
Beautificatin Day
By Lorna Hart

lhart@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — After a brutal Ohio Valley winter, a bit of spring cleaning is needed to ready the
village for Mother’s Day shoppers and upcoming
events.
The Pomeroy Merchants Association has
announced plans for Beautification Day on May 2
from 8 a.m. to noon. Volunteers are needed to help
with mulch, river rock, trash pick up and numerous other tasks.
This is a good opportunity to lend a hand and
take pride in the beautiful village of Pomeroy. The
association is encouraging families, individual,
businesses, churches and civic groups to come out
and lend a hand. Volunteers are asked to go the
Pomeroy parking lot gazebo, where they will be
assigned tasks.
For more information, call Brian Howard at 740525-5764 or email at brian.howard@fbsc.com.
Reach Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 ext. 2551

Grade Teacher Carissa Bailey reads to her second grade class, all engaged and ready to learn!

Courtesy Photo

‘Right to Read’ Week
By Lorna Hart

of reading material.
Students also have their own
Meigs County Library cards,
RACINE — As part of
and they are encouraged to
Southern Local Elementary
come into the any branch of the
School’s “Right to Read” initia- Meigs Library and explore their
tive, a librarian from the Meigs selections first hand.
County Library visits the school
According to media specialtwice a month with books from ists, the more opportunities
the library.
students are given to read the
At the beginning of the year, more likely they will become
parents of students in kinderlive long readers.
garten through third grade were
Southern Local encourages
asked to sign permission forms all students to continue to readallowing their child to be given ing during summer break. The
library cards. This allowed
library has summer reading
those students to check out
programs available.
books during the library’s visits.
For more information, visit
Giving students an opportuthe Meigs County Public
nity to choose books that may
Library or call 740-992-5813.
not be in the school library proReach Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 ext. 2551
vides them with a wider range

lhart@civitasmedia.com

Summer in downtown Pomeroy.

Courtesy photo

Group gets records; lawsuit dismissed

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

By Ann Sanner
Associated Press

— SPORTS
Softball: 6
Track: 6
— FEATURES
Classified: 8
Comics: 9
Television: 10

Lorna Hart | Daily Sentinel

This Reading Tree encourages students to “branch
out” with their reading.

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share your thoughts.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Ohio
Supreme Court dismissed a public
records dispute on Monday after
an abortion rights group said it
had received the information it
was seeking from the state’s health
department.
The NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio
Foundation had asked the court
in December to order the Ohio
Department of Health to release
public records detailing certain

communication between the state
health officials and leaders of Ohio
Right to Life, an anti-abortion
organization.
The court had referred the case
to mediation in January, where the
two sides recently resolved issues
over the public records request.
NARAL received the records in
late March and asked the court to
dismiss the case last week.
Kellie Copeland, executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio,
said the organization was disappointed it had to go to the state’s

high court to get the information.
“Public records requests should
be filled when they meet the criteria,” Copeland told The Associated
Press on Monday. “Hopefully, this
won’t be necessary again.”
Health department spokeswoman Michelle LoParo declined
to comment on the lawsuit’s dismissal.
At issue in the case was a public records request that NARAL
had made in late October seeking a year’s worth of landline and
See GROUP | 5

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, April 28, 2015

OBITUARY

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
LILA B. WINTERS

MARIETTA, Ohio —
Lila B. Winters, 92, of
Parkersburg, W.Va. passed
away Sunday, April 26,
2015, at the Marietta
Care Center.
She was born Oct. 3,
1922, in Reedsville, Ohio,
the daughter of the late
Ernest and Bertha Betzing Bahr.
She is survived by a
daughter and son-in-law
Cheryl and Alan Sparks,
of Parkersburg; two
granddaughters, Teresa
R. Sparks, of Colorado,
and Cassandra D. Forshey, of Parkersburg; one
great-granddaughter,
Madison A. Forshey, of
Parkersburg; a sister, Evelyn Well, of Pomeroy; and
several nieces, nephews,
special church friends and
two care givers.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by six brothers,
Kyle, Clayton, Norman,
Victor, Henry and Vernon; and a sister, Mildred
Lipsey.
Visitation will be 5-7
p.m. Wednesday, April
29, 2015, at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home
in Coolville, Ohio. Graveside services will follow
in Silver Ridge Cemetery
with Dr. Damon Rhodes
officiating.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can made to
Wood County Habitat For
Humanity, P.O. Box 462,
Parkersburg, WV 26102;
or to Habitat For Humanity of Southeast Ohio,
525 W. Union St., Athens,
OH 45701.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Southern Fitness Center
to open house May 7
RACINE — Southern superintendent Tony Deem
noted that the new Southern Fitness Center will have
an open house May 7 during parent-teacher conferences, from 4-7 p.m. Staff and students can workout
in the facility for free, while community members of
Southern Local: residents-only, must pay a one-time
annual fee of $100. It was noted that this was less that
$10 per month. New football locker rooms, a junior
high locker room, a community meeting center and
fitness room are all part of the facility which is housed
in the newly renovated FFA shop. Dressing rooms
for officials are also in-house. Tickets for football
games will also be sold out of this building. “We are
looking forward to the open house and grand opening,” Deem said. “The fitness center has been closed
since construction on the new high school began. Our
community is ready to get back into shape, and we
are anxious to accommodate them with a first-class
facility. We thank everyone for being patient. It will be
worth the wait.”

Eblin Card Shower
MIDDLEPORT — Wendell Eblin will celebrate
his 83rd birthday April 26. Cards may be sent to 809
South Second Street Middleport, OH 45760.

Family and Children First
Council meetings announced
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Family and
Children First Council will be holding regular business meetings at 9 a.m. on the third Thursday of the
following months: January, March, May, July, September and November. The council will hold these meetings at the Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services, located at 175 Race St., Middleport. For
more information, contact Brooke Pauley, coordinator
at 740-992-2117, ext. 104.

Shade River Lodge
awarding two scholarships
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge 453 will be
awarding two $250 scholarships to certain graduating seniors again this year. Those eligible to apply are
graduating seniors from Eastern High School and the
children or grandchildren of members of Shade River
Lodge. Each candidate’s application must be postmarked prior to April 27 to be qualified. For information, contact the student counselor at Eastern High
School or call Delmar Pullins at 740-985-3669.

BAKER
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — Louise Anderson Baker,
89, of Ripley, W.Va., died April 26, 2015, in Overbrook Center, Middleport.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday, April 30, 2015,
at Casto Funeral Home Chapel, Evans, W.Va., with
the Rev. Herman Robinson and Pastor Matthew Ash
officiating. Burial will follow in Blaine Memorial
Cemetery, Cottageville, W.Va. Visitation will be from
11 a.m. until time of service Thursday at the funeral
home.
BAINTER
GALLIPOLIS — Paul Jason “P.J.” Bainter, 38,
of Gallipolis, died Saturday, April 25, 2015, at his
residence.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday April
29, 2015, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home with
Mark Kinney officiating. Burial will follow in Macedonia Cemetery. Friends may call the funeral home
Wednesday between noon and 2 p.m.

Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio, is in charge of arrangements which are incomplete.
RICHMOND
WHEELERSBURG, Ohio — Arnold David Richmond, 72, Wheelersburg, died Friday, April 24,
2015, in Perry Township.
Cremation services have been entrusted to Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Gallipolis.
ROBERTSON
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Juanita M. Robertson,
80, of Huntington, died Sunday, April 26, 2015, at
The Heritage Center, Huntington.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio, is in charge of arrangements which are incomplete.

SAUNDERS
BIDWELL, Ohio — William L. ‘Bill’ Saunders,
90, of Bidwell, died Sunday, April 26, 2015, at Four
EARLS
Winds Community in Jackson.
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Emma Elaine Earls,
Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Friday May
77, of Proctorville, died Sunday, April 26, 2015, at
1, 2015, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
home.
with Pastor Stan Howard officiating. Burial will
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery, where military
in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.
funeral honors will be presented by the U.S. Army
and the Gallia County Veterans Funeral Detail.
HARPER
Friends may call the funeral home between 5-7
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Lillian I. Harper, 89,
of Proctorville, died Saturday, April 25, 2015, at The p.m. Thursday, concluding with Masonic services
Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House, Huntington, by Centerville Lodge 371 at 7 p.m.
W.Va. Private family graveside service will be held
SHAVER
at Rome Cemetery, Proctorville, by Pastor Don Irby.
GALLIPOLIS — Norma J. “Jeannie” Shaver, 64,
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
of Gallipolis, passed away Sunday, April 26, 2015, at
in charge of arrangements.
Abbyshire Place.
Arrangements will be announced later by Willis
JONES
Funeral Home.
JACKSON, Ohio — John Paul Jones, 89, of Jackson, died Saturday, April 25, 2015, at his home.
SHIVELY
Friends may call Lewis &amp; Gillum Funeral Home of
POINT PLEASANT — Elaine Shively, 93, of
Jackson between 4-8 p.m. Tuesday, April 28, 2015.
Point
Pleasant, died at PVH Nursing &amp; Rehab CenA prayer service will follow at 8 p.m. with Father
ter on April 25, 2015.
Thomas Hamm, of St. Louis Catholic Church, offiFuneral services will be held Tuesday, April 28,
ciating. Burial will be at a later date at the conve2015, at 2 p.m., at Deal Funeral Home in Point
nience of the family.
Pleasant, with Pastor Boxer Swisher officiating.
Burial will follow in Suncrest Cemetery in Point
PERRY
CROWN CITY, Ohio — Emery Allen Perry, 21, of Pleasant. Friends may visit the family from 1-2 p.m.
Crown City, died Monday, April 27, 2015, at home. at the funeral home prior to the service on Tuesday.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TUESDAY, APRIL 28

Committee, which also serves as
the RTPO Policy Committee, will
POMEROY — The Meigs
meet at 11:30 a.m. at 1400 Pike
County Health Department will
St. in Marietta. If you have any
conduct an immunization clinic
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 questions regarding this meeting,
contact Jenny Myers at 740-376E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
1026.
Bring child(ren)’s shot records.
Children must be accompanied
SATURDAY, MAY 2
by a parent/legal guardian. A
MEIGS COUNTY — The
$10 donation is appreciated for
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
immunization administration;
Breakfast will be from 7-10:30
however, no one will be denied
a.m. There will be pancakes,
services because of an inability
sausage, gravy and biscuits. The
to pay an administration fee for
price for adults is $5, the price for
state-funded childhood vaccines.
children under 12 is $2. Proceeds
Bring medical cards and/or combenefit the Meigs Mulberry Commercial insurance cards, if applimunity Center. The breakfast will
cable. Zostavax (shingles) vaccine also be at the center, which is
is also available. Call for eligibility located at 260 Mulberry Ave. in
determination.
Pomeroy.
POMEROY — RACO Food
FRIDAY, MAY 1
Drive will be 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
MARIETTA — The Buckeye
Dollar General Parking Lot in
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Racine. RACO will be collecting
Development District Executive
non-perishable food items, paper

products, personal hygiene products and monetary donations. All
collections will be given to Meigs
Cooperative Parish Food Pantry.
For information, contact Kathryn
Hart at 740-949-2656.

MONDAY, MAY 4

RIO GRANDE — The local
Cadot-Blessing Camp #126 of
the Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil War will have the next
bimonthly meeting at 1 p.m. The
meeting will be held at the Craft
Barn of the Bob Evans Farms in
Rio Grande. The Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War is a
Congressionally Chartered organization founded for charitable,
fraternal, patriotic and educational purposes and is the sole
heir to the Grand Army of the
Republic (GAR). Any person with
Civil War ancestry is encouraged
to pay the ultimate honor to that
ancestor by joining our ranks.

Meigs Attendance Initiative Week 11

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Courtesy photo

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

Meigs High School and local businesses have joined together in an effort to encourage students to attend school. All students who
attain perfect attendance each week for the remainder of the school year will have their name placed into a weekly drawing. The
winner of each drawing will receive a prize that has been donated by a local businesses. The businesses featured for the week of April
6 were Front Paige Outfitters and McClure’s Restaurant. Andrew Johnson, pictured, was the recipient of a $10 gift certificate from
Front Paige Outfitters and a $10 gift certificate from McClure’s Restaurant in Pomeroy. Presenting the award is Meigs High School
network systems instructor Scott Brinker.

�LOCAL/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 28, 2015 3

Botulism cases
source likely
was potato salad
LANCASTER (AP) — Health officials say the
likely source of the botulism outbreak that killed
one person and sickened many others at an Ohio
church potluck dinner was home-canned potatoes
used in a potato salad.
The Ohio Department of Health said Monday
that testing has narrowed the source to potato
salad served at the April 19 potluck at Cross
Pointe Free Will Baptist Church in Lancaster,
which is southeast of Columbus.
A 55-year-old woman died, and officials have
confirmed 20 other botulism cases, along with 10
suspected cases. A dozen people are still in the
hospital. Patients have been treated with a botulism antitoxin provided by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
Botulism is a rare but serious illness caused by
a nerve toxin that is produced by certain kinds of
bacteria.
Kevin Wolf | AP, Human Rights Campaign

Dayton plans
commemoration of
peace agreement
DAYTON (AP) —
Local leaders in Dayton
are planning events
this year to mark the
20th anniversary of
an international peace
agreement on Bosnia
that was hammered out
in Ohio.
The Dayton peace
accords negotiated
in November 1995 at
Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base highlight
an achievement that
shouldn’t be forgotten,
City Commissioner
Matt Joseph told the
Dayton Daily News.
Local events tied to
the anniversary will be
more of a commemoration than a celebration,
he said.
The agreement ended
the war in Bosnia and
outlined a framework
for peace in Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
Details are still being
worked out, the newspaper said, but the
mayor of Sarajevo in
Bosnia-Herzegovina has

been invited.
Donna Schlagheck,
professor and chairwoman of Wright State
University’s Political
Science Department,
said the agreement gave
Dayton name recognition in Europe.
“You travel in Europe
anywhere today, and
you say you’re from
Dayton, and they
know,” she said.
Many bars and restaurants in Sarajevo are
named after Dayton
and the talks have led
to lasting friendships
between people from
both cities, said John
McCance, owner of
McCance Consulting
Group and a co-chair
of the local organizing
group.
“We as a community
and as a region have
always been innovators,
and this is just another
example of how Dayton
has left a mark on the
world,” he said.

Chad Griffin, Human Rights Campaign President, and Jim Obergefell, right, are photographed outside the headquarters of the Human
Rights Campaign on Monday in Washington. Obergefell is the named plaintiff in the marriage equality case before the Supreme Court.

Gay marriage arguments at Supreme Court
By Mark Sherman

accompanied by an equally fast shift
in public opinion.
Now that everyone else has
WASHINGTON — Tuesday is
weighed in through mountains of
a potential watershed moment for
legal briefs, the justices get to say, or
America’s gay and lesbian couples.
at least hint, what they will decide.
After rapid changes that have made
On Tuesday, five lawyers will present
same-sex marriage legal in all but 14 arguments over 2½ hours to help the
states, the Supreme Court will hear
court conclude whether, on this quesarguments over whether it should be tion, the 14 remaining states must
the law of the land.
join the rest of the country.
All eyes will be on the justices for
The main thrust of the states’ case
any signals that they are prepared
is to reframe the debate.
to rule that the Constitution forbids
“This case is not about the best
states from defining marriage as the marriage definition. It is about the
union of a man and a woman. On the fundamental question regarding how
sidewalk outside, people have been
our democracy resolves such debates
waiting in line since Friday for prized about social policy: Who decides, the
seats for the historic arguments.
people of each state or the federal
The cases before the court come
judiciary?” John Bursch, representing
from Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and
Michigan, wrote in his main brief to
Tennessee, all of which had their
the court.
marriage bans upheld by the fedOther arguments by the states and
eral appeals court in Cincinnati in
more than five dozen briefs by their
November. That is the only federal
defenders warn the justices of harms
appeals court that has ruled in favor
that could result “if you remove the
of the states since the Supreme Court man-woman definition and replace it
in 2013 struck down part of the fedwith the genderless any-two-persons
eral anti-gay marriage law.
definition,” said Gene Schaerr, a
The first state to allow gay and
Washington lawyer.
lesbian couples to marry was
The push for same-sex marriage
Massachusetts, in 2004. Even as
comes down to fairness, said Mary
recently as October, barely a third of Bonauto, who will argue on behalf of
the states permitted it. Now, samethe plaintiffs. The people who have
sex couples can marry in 36 states
brought their cases to the Supreme
and the District of Columbia, a draCourt are “real people who are deepmatic change in the law that has been ly committed to each other. Yet they
Associated Press

are foreclosed from making that commitment simply because of who they
are,” she told reporters last week.
Arguments made by Bonauto,
other lawyers for same-sex couples
and more than six dozen supporting
briefs have strong echoes of the 1967
Loving v. Virginia case, in which the
Supreme Court struck down state
bans on interracial marriage. In that
case, the justices were unanimous
that those bans violated the constitutional rights of interracial couples.
No one expects unanimity this
time. But many believe the justices
will take the final step toward what
gay rights supporters call marriage
equality, in part because they allowed
orders in favor of same-sex couples
to take effect even as the issue made
its way through the federal court
system.
That was action through inaction,
as other judges played a major role
over the years. Only 11 states have
granted marriage rights to same-sex
couples through the ballot or the legislature. Court rulings are responsible
for all the others.
Forty-three years ago, the Supreme
Court swept away the appeal of
two men who wanted to marry in
Minnesota in just one sentence: The
court dismissed the case of Baker v.
Nelson because the justices concluded there was no “substantial federal
question” to decide in 1972.

Search warrants: Accused Ohio terror suspect hid identity
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

with his brother online about
supporting terrorism, the warrants show.
COLUMBUS — An accused
Mohamud, of Columbus, has
Ohio terrorist misled authorities pleaded not guilty to federal
about his identity and tried to
charges of supporting terrorism,
have his slain brother’s Facebook supporting a terrorist group and
martyrdom photo deleted to
making a false statement involvavoid police scrutiny, according ing international terrorism.
to newly unsealed search warProsecutors said he lied to an
rants.
Ohio FBI agent by saying he had
Abdirahman Sheik Mohamud been in Istanbul when he was
also trained two “associates” in
really in Syria.
Ohio on how to shoot guns after
Mohamud, 23, is accused of
he allegedly trained with terror- receiving terrorism training on
ists in Syria and communicated weapons, combat and tactics in
Associated Press

Syria, then returning to the U.S.
with plans to attack a military
base or a prison.
Mohamud, a U.S. citizen originally from Somalia, wanted to “kill
three or four American soldiers
execution style,” according to an
indictment earlier this month
A message seeking comment
was left Monday with Mohamud’s attorney, who has said he’s
sifting through a thousand pages
of government documents related to the case. Sam Shamansky
has called the indictment a
“cherry-picked” document as

significant for what it didn’t say
as what it did. He’s described
Mohamud as “a normal 23-yearold kid.”
Mohamud’s brother, Abdifatah
Aden, also from Ohio, was killed
in battle in Syria in June 2014,
according to the government.
He had fought with Jabhat alNusrah, a State Department-designated terrorist group, according to his brother’s indictment.
Events leading to Mohamud’s
arrest began around September
2013 when he communicated
online with his brother about

plans to travel to Syria to fight,
the indictment said. They later
talked about ways Mohamud
could support him financially,
according to the government.
Shortly before leaving for
Turkey on his way to Syria in
mid-April 2014, Mohamud
texted his brother a picture of a
computer tablet he had bought,
according to a Jan. 30 document
filed as part of a search warrant
request. The government said
the brother planned to use the
tablet to raise money for his terrorist fighting.
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60554222

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Daily Sentinel

YOUR VIEW

More participation
needed for Day of Prayer
Dear editor,
While reading today’s Tribune, I counted 126
places of worship in Gallia County.
Coming soon, our nation will call for a Day of
Prayer. The past few years in our country, we have
gathered on the courthouse lawn to participate in
this great event. Our attendance has been poor to
say the least.
Leading up to Easter, the Lenten services at
Grace United Methodist were attended by a very
good number of people. Several different churches
working together was gratifying. However, on the
lawn of the courthouse the people might count
50 or 60. If only the ministers would attend we
would have doubled that number. I have spoken to
a couple of the ministers that participated in the
Lenten services and asked them to help in getting
more people to join us in prayer.
Please don’t judge me writing this request. You
see, I am a sinner and believe our country could
use extra help.
There is an old song about a little spark getting
a fire going. Are you that spark or is it maybe me?
There is another song about a light on a hill. I
served in the U.S. Navy during the Korean War
and have witnessed seeing that light. If you have
ever been in total darkness, imagine this. You are
on a ship at sea. You haven’t seen land for weeks.
How dark can it get when you are in the middle of
the ocean at night?
Then early one morning you see lights of some
village, you know not where. Could you or I be
that light for lost sailors or sinners?
Come and join me May 7 on the World Day of
Prayer.

Guy Guinther

Gallipolis, Ohio

THEIR VIEW

Pilots deserve
more money for the
stressful job they do
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and
national interest from
Ohio newspapers:

women in the cockpit
worry not just about
wing icing, but also how
to pay their heating bills.

The (Toledo)
Blade, April 24
No offense to cab
drivers, but airline pilots
should earn more than
they do. Right now,
many don’t.
Uber drivers in New
York City make $90,000
a year, while first-year
pilots for regional carriers earn an average of
$22,400. A pilot with a
family could be on food
stamps or working two
jobs. A once-glamorous
profession, commercial
aviation has been battered by terrorism, poor
management, and cost
cutting.
After losing billions
of dollars in the decade
after 9/11, the fortunes of
U.S. airlines are improving. They collected $7.3
billion in profit last year,
thanks to lower fuel
costs. Instead of giving
passengers more snacks,
they should invest in
their safety with better
pay for pilots.
Pilot compensation has
declined 10 percent since
2000, even as the training required of pilots has
increased, along with
its cost. The Federal
Aviation Administration
now requires pilots on
commercial airliners to
have 1,500 hours of flying experience, up from
250. The cost of obtaining those hours, plus a
four-year aviation degree,
exceeds $100,000.
While seasoned captains at major airlines
earn more than that,
more than half of the
flights in the United
States are through
regional carriers. With
their comparably dismal
pay, a lot of men and

The (Cleveland)
Plain Dealer, April 24
Should the man who
tried to assassinate President Ronald Reagan in
1981 — and who fired
the bullet that eventually
killed Reagan’s press secretary, Jim Brady — be
released? A federal court
hearing began April 22
in Washington, D.C., to
decide the fate of John
W. Hinckley Jr., now 59.
The court has already
granted Hinckley 17 days
a month with his mother
in her gated community
overlooking a golf course
in Virginia…
The Washington Post
reports that among 35
conditions sought by
prosecutors in case Hinckley is released are creation
of a Plan B should family
members not be able to
care for Hinckley; more
structure and accountability in Hinckley’s treatment plan; and that he
wear a monitoring ankle
bracelet…
Yet, as prosecutors
note, Hinckley is not
just any citizen. He is
the attempted assassin
of a president. He shot
four people, wounding
one critically. Regardless of what his doctors
think or the conditions
the prosecutor seeks,
is he one mental snap
away from a return of
dangerous psychosis and
aggression? Or, is his
notoriety unfairly impeding his ability to return
to a semi-normal life as
allowed under his not
guilty by reason of insanity verdict, now that
experts attest the psychosis that drove his actions
in 1981 has receded? …

THEIR VIEW

Protecting jobs from unfair trade

At forums I’ve held
about the devastating effects
across the state, Ohioans
of NAFTA on his entire
have made clear their opincommunity. The number of
ions on unfair foreign trade
jobs at his GM Powertrain
deals. This week I echoed
Foundry has dwindled from
your voices loud and clear
more than 5,000 to just 1,000
in Washington: the last
today, with more potenSherrod
thing we need is another
tial layoffs to come in the
NAFTA.
Brown
next few years. He writes,
Contributing “NAFTA wasn’t good for
Ohioans have felt the
painful effects of these bad Columnist
our community and foundry,
deals for years. This month
because our iron casting
I was in Dayton and met
business went to Mexico.”
with Jimmy, who worked at AppleWe should not be fast tracking
ton Paper for 45 years. He was
another bad trade deal that will
one of 400 workers laid off due to
only fast track more jobs overseas.
unfair trade in 2012.
That’s why I voted against fast
George, from Warren, Ohio,
track authority for the Trans-Pacifwrote to me about the factory cloic Partnership, or TPP. We must
sures that have affected his whole
also improve the fast track profamily — his wife lost her job at
cess, which could be used to pass
GE in Ravenna when that plant
trade deals that affect more than
closed; his brother-in-law lost his
60 percent of the world’s GDP and
job at Ohio Lamp in Warren when
millions of American jobs.
that plant closed; and George’s
TPP still doesn’t go far enough
own plant, WCI Steel, has closed
to level the playing field for
its doors.
American companies and AmeriGary in Continental, Ohio wrote can workers. It would even leave

the door open for China to join
the deal at a later date without
so much as a vote in Congress.
Without strong rules on who can
join the TPP, we might as well be
talking about the China Free Trade
Agreement.
We have seen what happens
when we make trade deals with
countries who don’t follow the
same labor, health, and safety rules
that we do in this country: we get
a flood of imports, our trade deficit goes up, wages go down, and
factories shutter.
We owe it to Gary and George
and Jimmy to take a long, hard
look at this deal, and we owe it to
Ohio’s working families to do more
than rubber stamp a trade agreement that will shut down production in Bucyrus and move it to Beijing. That’s why I’m saying “no” to
more bad trade deals that amount
to nothing more than corporate
handouts and worker sellouts.
Sen. Sherrod Brown represents Ohio in the U.S.
Senate in Washington, D.C.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday, April
28, the 118th day of 2015.
There are 247 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On April 28, 1945, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and his mistress, Clara
Petacci, were executed
by Italian partisans as
they attempted to flee the
country.
On this date:
In 1758, the fifth president of the United States,
James Monroe, was born in
Westmoreland County, Va.
In 1788, Maryland
became the seventh state
to ratify the Constitution
of the United States.
In 1789, there was a
mutiny on the HMS Bounty as rebelling crew members of the British ship,
led by Fletcher Christian,
set the captain, William
Bligh, and 18 others adrift
in a launch in the South
Pacific. (Bligh and most of
the men with him reached
Timor in 47 days.)
In 1817, the United
States and Britain signed
the Rush-Bagot Treaty,
which limited the number
of naval vessels allowed in
the Great Lakes.
In 1918, Gavrilo Princip, the assassin of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of
Austria and the archduke’s

wife, Sophie, died in
prison of tuberculosis.
In 1925, the International Exposition of
Modern Industrial and
Decorative Arts, which
gave rise to the term “Art
Deco,” began a six-month
run in Paris.
In 1940, Glenn Miller
and his Orchestra recorded “Pennsylvania 6-5000”
for RCA Victor.
In 1952, war with
Japan officially ended
as a treaty signed in San
Francisco the year before
took effect. Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower resigned
as Supreme Allied commander in Europe; he was
succeeded by Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway.
In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson ordered
U.S. Marines to the
Dominican Republic to
protect American citizens
and interests in the face of
a civil war. Barbra Streisand’s first TV special,
“My Name Is Barbra,”
aired on CBS.
In 1974, a federal jury
in New York acquitted
former Attorney General
John Mitchell and former
Commerce Secretary
Maurice H. Stans of charges in connection with a
secret $200,000 contribution to President Richard
Nixon’s re-election cam-

paign from financier Robert Vesco.
In 1988, a flight attendant was killed and more
than 60 persons injured
when part of the roof of
an Aloha Airlines Boeing
737 tore off during a flight
from Hilo to Honolulu.
In 1990, the musical “A
Chorus Line” closed after
6,137 performances on
Broadway.
Ten years ago: A military jury at Fort Bragg,
N.C., condemned Army
Sgt. Hasan Akbar to death
for the 2003 murders of
two officers in Kuwait.
(Akbar is appealing his
sentence.) More than 100
volunteers joined police
in Duluth, Ga., in searching for Jennifer Wilbanks,
a bride-to-be who had
vanished two days earlier.
(Wilbanks turned up in
Albuquerque, N.M., having run away on her own.)
Five years ago: Coast
Guard Rear Adm. Mary
Landry said a massive oil
spill in the Gulf of Mexico
was worse than officials
had believed, and that the
federal government was
offering to help industry
giant BP contain the
slick threatening the U.S.
shoreline. British Prime
Minister Gordon Brown
committed a gaffe during
his country’s short elec-

tion campaign when an
open microphone caught
him slamming a voter he’d
been trying to win over.
(Brown personally apologized to Gillian Duffy
for calling her a “bigoted
woman” over the issue of
immigration.)
Today’s Birthdays:
Pulitzer Prize-winning
author Harper Lee is 89.
Former Secretary of State
James A. Baker III is 85.
Actor Frank Vincent is
78. Actress-singer AnnMargret is 74. Actor Paul
Guilfoyle is 66. Former
“Tonight Show” host Jay
Leno is 65. Rock musician Chuck Leavell is 63.
Actress Mary McDonnell
is 62. Rock singer-musician Kim Gordon (Sonic
Youth) is 62. Actress
Nancy Lee Grahn (TV:
“General Hospital”) is 59.
Supreme Court Justice
Elena Kagan is 55. Rapper
Too Short is 49. Actress
Simbi Khali is 44. Actress
Bridget Moynahan is 44.
Actor Chris Young is 44.
Rapper Big Gipp is 42.
Actor Jorge Garcia is 42.
Actress Elisabeth Rohm is
42. Actress Penelope Cruz
is 41. Actor Nate Richert
is 37. Actress Jessica Alba
is 34. Actor Harry Shum
Jr. is 33. Actress Jenna
Ushkowitz is 29. Actress
Aleisha Allen is 24.

�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 28, 2015 5

Woman mentored ‘little sister’ for 13 years
“Having a one-on-one mentoring relationship is important
to me,” said Brosmer, a 39-year
teacher at Bishop Watterson
High School who is married
with no children of her own.
“Bigs,” as they are called, are
asked to supplement — not
supplant — parents.
Scott has an older brother,
Del-Vaunte, who was matched
with a big — Michael Johnson
of Columbus, who mentored
him for eight years.
Their mother, single parent
Connie Sylvester, has been
thrilled with the results.
Del-Vaunte graduated in
international studies from
Bowling Green State University
in 2014, and Daijah will head
to North Carolina A&amp;T State
University in the fall.
“The bigs have been that
significant other to Del-Vaunte
and Daijah,” Sylvester said.

dren in mentoring relationships.
The length and depth of the
COLUMBUS — Amid much relationship earned Brosmer
laughter, story after story
recognition recently as Ohio
tumbled out as Katie Brosmer
Big Sister of the Year, awarded
and Daijah Scott looked back
by a state association that
on their 13-year friendship:
considers nominees from 27
The time Scott took 45 min- agencies.
utes eating an ice-cream cone,
“(Brosmer) really exemplifies
had her first reluctant experiwhat it is to … step out of that
ence driving a car or played a
model of just being focused
cringe-worthy trumpet solo.
on herself and looking for an
With the banter free and
opportunity to enrich someone
easy, the two giggled like
else’s life,” said Elizabeth Marschoolgirls.
tinez, chief operating officer
One of them is Scott, a
of Big Brothers Big Sisters of
17-year-old senior at St. Francis Central Ohio.
DeSales High School.
“She has gone above and
Brosmer, 63, could be her
beyond.”
grandmother.
Brosmer, of the Clintonville
Instead, she has served as
neighborhood, has taken part
her “Big Sister” since 2002
in the program for 31 years.
through the Big Brothers Big
Before being matched with
Sisters program — in which
Scott, she had two previous
“Little Sisters.”
adults are matched with chil-

Associated Press

Group
From Page 1

cellphone records from
the health department
reflecting communication with specific Ohio
Right to Life numbers. It
also asked for two years
of emails between any
department employee
and any individual with
an email address ending
in “ohiolife.org” relating
to regulating abortion
facilities.

The department
declined the request,
saying in part that it
was “overly broad” and
lacked enough information to allow the agency
to identify such records
based on how they were
organized.
NARAL filed its lawsuit in late December
claiming the department
was improperly withholding the records.
Copeland had said
at the time the group
wanted to know who has
access to state officials’

Student
From Page 1

All students must work 10 hours weekly, earning money for their housing,
meals and books. Graduates from Berea
go on to distinguish themselves and the
College in many fields, including sci-

TODAY
8 AM

decision-making process
as they regulate women’s
health.
The records request
was made as abortion
rights advocates had
continued to criticize a
2013 change in Ohio law
banning publicly funded
hospitals from having
patient-transfer agreements with abortion providers. Such agreements
are required for clinics to
be licensed, amounting
to what abortion rights
groups say is a de facto
restriction on abortion.

AEP (NYSE) — 57.71
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 26.15
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 127.58
Big Lots (NYSE) — 46.62
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 44.98
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 61.23
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 13.40
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.260
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.90
Collins (NYSE) —98.37
DuPont (NYSE) — 74.81
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.56
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.88
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 57.50
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 62.34
Kroger (NYSE) — 70.55
Ltd Brands (NYSE) —90.34
Norfolk So (NYSE) —104.50
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.10

EXTENDED FORECAST
WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

70°
49°

WEATHER

38°

58°

58°

Mostly sunny today. Partly cloudy tonight. High
66° / Low 41°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

59°
38°
71°
48°
92° in 1915
31° in 1926

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
7.38
3.08
19.15
13.02

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:35 a.m.
8:18 p.m.
3:24 p.m.
3:45 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

MOON PHASES
Full

Last

New

May 3 May 11 May 18 May 25

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

Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Major
8:25a
9:03a
9:40a
10:18a
10:58a
11:42a
12:05a

Minor
2:14a
2:52a
3:29a
4:07a
4:47a
5:30a
6:17a

Major
8:46p
9:24p
10:01p
10:40p
11:21p
---12:29p

Minor
2:35p
3:13p
3:51p
4:29p
5:10p
5:53p
6:41p

WEATHER HISTORY
State College, Pa., was buried by 20
inches of snow on April 28, 1928. The
train from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia
was blocked for two days.

Adelphi
63/39
Chillicothe
63/42

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Primary: oak, mulberry, ash
Mold: 157

Lucasville
64/42
Portsmouth
64/42

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
12.44
17.70
22.29
12.12
12.94
26.08
12.31
29.56
37.28
12.76
27.80
36.50
28.40

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.17
-0.49
-0.85
-0.85
-0.39
+0.11
+0.30
+0.17
-0.18
+0.07
-0.10
-0.20
-1.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Cloudy, a shower
possible; cooler

Logan
63/39

BBT (NYSE) —37.60
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.60
Pepsico (NYSE) — 94.49
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.80
Rockwell (NYSE) — 114.84
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 20.18
Royal Dutch Shell — 63.09
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 39.46
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 79.37
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 10.51
WesBanco (NYSE) — 31.81
Worthington (NYSE) — 27.28
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
April 27, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

SATURDAY

67°
44°
Clouds and sunshine

Partly sunny and
warm; a p.m. shower

78°
57°
Warm with clouds
and sun

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
64/43
Belpre
64/41

Athens
63/39

St. Marys
65/43

Parkersburg
64/42

Coolville
63/42

Elizabeth
65/43

Spencer
64/43

Buffalo
64/42
Milton
64/43

St. Albans
66/44

Huntington
64/42

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
59/46
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
66/50
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
86/62
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

76°
50°

Partly sunny and
pleasant

Murray City
63/39

Ironton
65/44

Ashland
65/43
Grayson
65/45

SUNDAY

71°
48°

Wilkesville
64/40
POMEROY
Jackson
65/42
64/40
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
65/42
65/41
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
62/42
GALLIPOLIS
66/41
65/42
64/41

South Shore Greenup
65/44
63/41

40

FRIDAY

62°
43°

McArthur
64/39

Waverly
64/44

Pollen: 211

0 50 100 150 200

First

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

0

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
6:34 a.m.
8:19 p.m.
4:19 p.m.
4:15 a.m.

Times of clouds and
sun

tion,” Copeland said.
LoParo declined to
comment on the nature
and length of the phone
calls.

LOCAL STOCKS

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555 or on
Twitter @JournalistKriz.

8 PM

phone calls between the
agency and Ohio Right
to Life.
“I think that we will be
pursing more informa-

Copeland said the
group was still going
through the records. She
questioned the hour-plus
length of some of the

ence, arts, education, government and
social services.
For anyone interested in obtaining
more information about Berea College,
please contact the Admissions Office at
Berea College (800) 326-5948 or http://
www.berea.edu/admissions.

2 PM

Brosmer, also laughing, said:
“Oh, it was painful. But now
you’re a beautiful trumpet
player.”
Scott doesn’t remember a
time when she didn’t have
Brosmer in her life.
“I feel like I can talk to Katie
about anything — just all of
the little life challenges,” Scott
said. “She’s always there to
catch me when I fall.”
Their most treasured experiences have involved the expansive kitchen where Brosmer
has a wooden block imprinted
with designs to be pressed into
dough to make springerle —
German biscuits traditionally
baked at Christmastime.
She inherited the block from
her grandparents, who began
making springerle in 1913.
Each year, whoever does the
baking inscribes the year on
the back of the board.

“They were my support. Katie
held one arm and Mike the
other arm. They both held me
up.”
Brosmer and Scott have
shared much through the years.
At their first meeting, when
they went to get ice cream,
the 5-year-old Daijah took 45
minutes to eat a junior cone,
“while mine was gone in five
minutes,” Brosmer recalled,
“and she’s just licking away,
licking away.”
From there, the relationship included track meets,
homework sessions and band
concerts — not to mention an
infamous rendition of Jingle
Bells at Brosmer’s house not
long after Daijah began playing
trumpet in the sixth grade.
“She was like ‘You did good,’
but I knew I did horrible,” said
Scott, laughing. “But she still
listened and sat through it.”

Clendenin
67/41
Charleston
65/42

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
64/38
Montreal
62/42

Billings
72/45

Minneapolis
68/45

Detroit
63/41
Chicago
58/36

Denver
60/39

El Paso
70/48
Chihuahua
68/41

Toronto
64/39

New York
66/53
Washington
69/53

Kansas City
67/44

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
72/48/s
52/38/s
63/52/r
66/50/s
72/51/pc
80/48/s
73/43/pc
56/44/pc
68/47/sh
61/50/r
71/44/s
60/37/pc
66/44/pc
59/44/s
66/45/s
72/48/s
72/44/s
71/44/pc
66/44/pc
83/71/pc
75/53/s
63/41/pc
68/46/pc
93/67/s
71/47/pc
86/65/s
68/47/pc
86/73/t
68/39/s
64/47/sh
69/56/pc
71/52/s
70/46/s
85/66/t
74/52/s
95/69/s
69/47/s
59/42/pc
63/49/r
74/50/sh
69/48/pc
78/53/s
66/50/pc
59/46/sh
75/56/pc

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

95° in Tamiami, FL
16° in Eureka, NV

Global

Houston
71/50

GOALS

Today

Hi/Lo/W
64/44/pc
50/37/s
69/53/t
61/48/s
69/46/s
72/45/s
80/49/s
61/47/pc
65/42/s
68/50/s
57/35/pc
58/36/s
62/42/s
56/39/s
63/41/s
61/47/c
60/39/pc
72/48/s
63/41/s
82/71/pc
71/50/c
62/43/s
67/44/pc
87/65/s
57/46/r
86/62/s
66/48/pc
90/77/s
68/45/pc
68/49/pc
81/56/t
66/53/pc
63/44/c
80/70/t
69/50/s
91/69/s
65/42/s
61/43/pc
67/47/s
69/47/s
65/48/pc
72/49/s
66/50/pc
59/46/pc
69/53/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
Atlanta
69/53

Monterrey
77/57

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

High
114° in Jacobabad, Pakistan
Low -45° in Summit Station, Greenland

Miami
90/77

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

By Ken Gordon

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Meigs rallies
past Lady
Warriors, 3-2
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — All’s well that
end’s well.
Alliyah Pullins provided a sacrifice fly to
deep centerfield in the bottom of the seventh, which ultimately allowed the Meigs
softball team to rally for its eighth straight
victory Saturday following a 3-2 decision
over visiting Warren in a non-conference
matchup in Meigs County.
The Lady Marauders (10-2) trailed 2-0
after two innings of play, but the hosts
gradually whittled away at the Lady Warriors after producing five of their six hits
after the fourth frame.
MHS had three hits in the fifth, but
ultimately left the bases loaded and still
trailed 2-0 through five complete. A pair of
Warren errors allowed Meigs to get in the
scoring column in the sixth, making it a
2-1 deficit.
WHS stranded two runners in the seventh, then Katie Gilkey started the bottom
half of the inning with a single. Gilkey
scored the tying run one batter later when
Devyn Oliver delivered a double, making it
a 2-all contest.
With one out and runners at second and
third, Pullins lifted a fly ball to straightaway center — which was deep enough
to allow Oliver to tag and score the gamewinning run.
Warren outhit the hosts by a 7-6 margin
and committed all three errors in the contest. The Lady Marauders stranded eight
runners on base, while WHS left six on the
bags.
Destinee Blackwell was the winning
pitcher of record after allowing two earned
runs, seven hits and two walks over seven
innings while striking out three. Schetter
suffered the loss after surrendering three
runs (two earned), six hits and one walk
over 6.2 frames while fanning zero.
Gilkey led Meigs with two hits, followed
Oliver, Brook Andrus, Danielle Morris
and Morgan Lodwick with a safety apiece.
Oliver, Pullins and Morris each drove in
an RBI, while Oliver, Pullins and Gilkey
crossed home plate once apiece.
Williams and Hukill paced Warren with
two hits apiece. Schetter and Grayson each
scored a run in the setback.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, April 28
Baseball
Marietta at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Alexander, 5 p.m.
Trimble at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg South,
5:30
Gallia Academy at Athens, 5 p.m.
Softball
Point Pleasant at Lincoln County, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Athens, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Alexander, 5 p.m.
Trimble at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Wahama, Southern, Eastern at Meigs,
4:30
Hannan at Huntington, 4 p.m.
South Gallia at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Tennis
Gallia Academy at Logan, 4:30
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, April 29
Baseball
Miller at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Trimble at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Belpre at Southern, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Vinton County, 5 p.m.
Spring Valley at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 5 p.m.
Softball
Miller at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Trimble at Wahama, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Vinton County, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
Belpre at Southern, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 6 p.m.
Tennis
Point Pleasant at Huntington St. Joe, 5
p.m.

Tuesday, April 28, 2015 s Page 6

Lady Tornadoes win fifth straight
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE, Ohio —You won’t
lose if the other team doesn’t
score.
The Southern softball team
claimed its third shutout win of
the season Saturday, topping TriValley Conference Hocking Division guest Federal Hocking 10-0
in five innings, at Star Mill Park.
Southern (9-1, 8-1 TVC Hocking) scored for the first time in
the second inning when Grace
Wolfe drove in Savannah Bailey.
Macie Michael singled and was
driven in by Haley Hill, while Ali
Deem singled home Michael to
push the SHS lead to 3-0 through
two innings.
After a pair of quick outs in
the bottom of the third, the Lady
Tornadoes added two more runs
to push the advantage to 5-0.
Southern posted five runs in the
bottom of the fifth, capped off by
a two-run single by Cierra Turley
that forced the mercy rule.
Turley was the winning pitcher
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
of
record, allowing just four hits
Southern junior Ali Deem fires to first base during the
Lady Tornadoes loss to Eastern on April 15, at Star Mill and two walks, while striking out
Park.
seven in three innings. Autumn

Porter pitched the final two
innings for SHS and she allowed
just one hit and one walk, while
striking out two. Washburn suffered the setback for Federal
Hocking (3-9, 3-7).
Southern’s offense was led
by Paige VanMeter with three
hits, an RBI and a run scored,
while Caitlyn Holter added three
hits. Deem singled twice, drove
in three runs and scored once,
Haley Hill singled twice, drove in
a run and scored twice, Michael
singled twice, scored twice and
stole a base, while Hannah Hill
singled twice and scored once.
Wolfe singled once, scored
twice and drove in a run, Turley
singled and had two RBI, while
Bailey scored once.
Washburn led the Lady Lancers with two singles, while
Tabler, Mayle and Tritipo each
singled once.
The Lady Tornadoes also
defeated FHHS on April 6, by a
15-2 count in Stewart. Southern
returns to action on Tuesday
when Wahama visits Racine.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

Marauders take second at Meigs Relays
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio —
The River Valley boys and
girls track and field teams
both claimed first place
Friday evening at the Meigs
Relays.
The Lady Raiders posted
a total of 56, while Meigs
was second with a score of
31 and Wahama claimed
third with eight.
River Valley’s high jump
team of Ramsey Warren
and Gabby Adkins took
first with a combined mark
of 8-10, while Brianna
McGuire and Hannah Nutter won the discus throw
(178-9) and the shotput
(59-4).
The RVHS team of
Abby Campbell, Leanne
Hively, Maggie Campbell
and Kenzie Baker claimed
first in the 4x1600m realy
(26:23.31), the team of
Carli Dillon, Rachael
Smith, Warren and Bailey Hollingsworth won
the 800m sprint medley
(2:02.33), the team of
Cheyenne Huffman, Alyssa
Lollathin, Karly Williamson
and Hively was first in the
shuttle hurdles (1:28.35),
while the team of Maggie
Campbell, Sarah Moffett,
Hollingsworth and Baker
claimed first in the 2400m
distance medley (8:00.24).
River Valley’s team of
Hively, Hollingsworth,
Abby Campbell and Baker
won the 4x400m relay
(6:09.08), the team of
Smith, Dillon, Hannah Nutter and Warren won the
4x100m relay, while the
team of Abby Campbell,
Smith, Maggie Campbell and Baker won the
4000m distance medley
(15:39.84).
The Lady Marauders
won two events, the pole
vault team of Kelsey Hudson and Sydney Kennedy
claimed first with a combined height of 13-6, while
the 1600m sprint medley
team of Olivia Davis, Haiden English, Gracie Hoffman
and Haley Kennedy won
with a time of 5:05.57.
The lone top-finish for
the Lady White Falcons
was in the long jump by
the team of Lexi Roush and
Kaleigh Stewart (26-6.5).
The Raiders won the
boys team competition with
a total of 52, while the host
Marauders with second

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Meigs senior Haley Kennedy hands off to sophomore Gracie Hoffman during the 800m sprint medley at the
Meigs Relays, Friday in Rocksprings.

with 49 and Wahama was
third with three.
The RVHS shotput team
of Jesse Hawks and Anthony
Harmon claimed first with a
combined distance of 69-11,
the 4x1600m relay team of
Kyle Randolph, Jacob Kemper, Chance Gillman and
Ethan Hersman was first
with a time of 20:01.5, while
the 800m sprint medley
team of Mark Wray, Garrek Gee, John Qualls and
Andrew Moffett was first
with a time of 1:40.10.
River Valley’s team of
Hersman, Qualls, Hollis
Morrison and Kemper was

first in the 2400m distance
medley (6:30.4), the team
of Josh Campbell, Wray,
Gee and Moffett was first in
the 4x100m relay (46.73),
the quartet of Campbell,
Morrison, Moffett and
Gillman won 1600m sprint
medley (4:14.88), while the
team of Hersman, Wray,
Randolph and Kemper won
the 4000m distance medley
(12:18.7) and the team of
Hersman, Wray, Qualls and
Moffett won the 4x400m
relay (3:42.04).
The Marauders team
of Jared Kennedy, Devon
Hawley, Colton Lilly and

Bailey Caruthers won
the shuttle hurdles relay
(1:11.44), while Carauthers
and Kennedy claimed first
in the pole vault (17-00).
Carauthers and Lilly won
the high jump (11-4),
Michael Davis and Steven
Laudermilt won the long
jump (35-3), while Colton
Atkinson and Trevor Smith
combined to win the discus
throw (195-5).
Complete results of the Meigs Relays
can be found on the web at www.
runwv.com
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Warriors mercy
Meigs, 12-2
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS,
Ohio — The Meigs
baseball team had its
three-game win streak
come to a halt Saturday
afternoon during a 12-2
setback to visiting Warren in a non-conference
matchup in Meigs
County.
The host Marauders
(6-7) never led in the
contest and were never
closer than a 3-2 deficit
after an inning of play.
The Warriors followed
with three runs in the
second, another in the
fourth and plated five
more runs in the sixth
to wrap up the mercy
rule decision.
WHS outhit the hosts
by a 9-5 overall margin
and Meigs committed
the only error of the
contest. The second
scheduled game of the
doubleheader was lost
due to weather.
Chase Whitlatch took
the loss after allowingt

six runs (four earned),
four hits and two walks
over three innings while
striking out two. Kidder picked up the win
after surrendering two
earned runs, five hits
and three walks over six
frames while fanning
five.
Ray Johnson singled
and Cody Bartrum
walked in the bottom
of the first, then both
came around to score
on a two-out double by
Layne Acree. Cameron
Mattox also had two
hits to lead Meigs in the
setback.
Kidder, Estes and
Schaffer led Warren
with two hits apiece.
Kidder also drove in
five RBIs with a pair
of homers and scored
three runs, while Estes
scored three times
and drove in two runs.
Schaffer also scored
three runs for the
guests.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.xq

Southern sweeps
Lancers, 6-1
By Alex Hawley

Tuesday, April 28, 2015 7

Blue Angels hold off Belpre, 6-3
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CENTENARY, Ohio — Make it
back-to-back wins.
The Gallia Academy softball
team earned its second straight victory on Saturday morning, defeating non-conference guest Belpre
6-3 in Gallia County.
The Lady Golden Eagles (8-6)
struck first as Sydney Hall singled
home Madison Harman in the top
of the second inning. Belpre added
another run in the top of the third
when Kylan Dennison doubled and
scored on an error.
Gallia Academy (5-10) stormed
into the lead in the bottom of the
third when senior Chelsy Slone
tripled home Paxton Roberts and
Kendra Barnes, and then scored on
a double by Makenzie Barr.
The Blue Angels pushed their
lead to 6-2 in the bottom of the
sixth when Jenna Meadows
doubled home Barr, and Madison
Burns doubled home Jess Harold
and Shelby Long. Kaity Hager
doubled home Taylor Law for Belpre in the top of the seventh, but
back-to-back flyouts gave GAHS
the 6-3 victory.
Harold earned the win in the
circle for Gallia Academy, allowing
three unearned runs on five hits
and two walks in a complete game
effort. Harman suffered the loss
for Belpre, surrendering six earned
runs on 10 hits and three walks in
a complete game. Both pitchers
struck out two batters each.
The Blue Angel offense was led
by Barr with two doubles, an RBI
and a run scored, while Burns
doubled, singled and drove in two

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior Makenzie Barr connects with a pitch during the Blue Angels loss to
Portsmouth, on April 21 in Centenary.

runs. Slone hit a triple, scored a
run and drove in two runs, Meadows doubled and drove in a run,
while Long, Barnes and Roberts
each singled and scored once. Kimberly Edelmann singled once, while
Harold scored a run in the win.
The Lady Golden Eagles were
led by Kaity Hager with a double
and an RBI, while Dennison doubled and scored once. Hall singled
and drove in a run, Katie Osborne

and Lauryn Simmons both singled,
while Harman and Law both
scored a run. Harman had the only
stolen base in the game.
Gallia Academy committed six
errors and left four runners on
base, while Belpre left seven on
base, without committing an error.
The Blue Angels return to action
on Tuesday at Athens.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE, Ohio — The Southern baseball team
allowed just one hit Saturday, en route to a 6-1 victory over non-conference guest Federal Hocking,
at Star Mill Park.
The Lancers (1-9, 1-9 TVC Hocking) broke the
scoreless tie in the top of the fourth inning when
A.J. Cobb singled and scored. Southern (7-7, 4-5)
answered in the bottom of the fourth when Trey
Pickens singled and scored on a single by Garrett
Wolfe.
The Tornadoes posted five runs on four hits and
two errors in the bottom of the fifth inning, which
was highlighted by a two-run Blake Johnson double. The Lancers were held hitless over the final
two innings and SHS claimed the 6-1 win.
Wolfe earned the pitching victory for Southern,
allowing one unearned run on one hit and three
walks, while striking out three in six innings. Pickens threw one inning in relief, striking out a batter
and walking one. Cobb suffered the loss for FHHS,
allowing six runs, three earned, on seven hits and
two walks, while striking out seven in 5.1 innings.
The Purple and Gold offense was led by Wolfe
with three singles and two RBI, while Johnson had
a double, two RBI, a run scored and a stolen base.
Pickens singled, scored once and drove in a run,
Clayton Wood and Bradley McCoy both singled,
scored once and stole a base, while Logan Dunn
added a single. Jack Lemley scored a run and stole
a base, while Kevin Perry scored once in the win.
Federal Hocking’s offense was led by Cobb with
a single and a run scored.
The Tornadoes finished with one error and six
runners left on base, while FHHS had three errors
and three runners left on base.
Southern also defeated the Lancers on April
6, by a 12-3 count in Stewart. The Tornadoes
return to the diamond on Tuesday when they host
Wahama.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Football Golf
Scramble
MASON, W.Va. —
Marauders head coach
Mike Bartrum will be
hosting a golf scramble
to benefit Meigs Football on Saturday, May
30, 2015, at Riverside
Golf Club. It will be a
9:00 am shotgun start.
Format will be bring
your own team with a
total team handicap of
at least 40. Only one
player may be under an
eight handicap. Cost
is $240 per team with
optional mulligan, skins
and cash game. The top
teams will receive club

house credit along with
other individual skill
prizes. Food and beverages provided. To enter
at team please contact
Tonya Cox (740) 6454479 or Riverside (304)
773-5354.

Coach-pitch
tourney
POMEROY, Ohio —
The Pomeroy Youth
League will be having
a 7-8 year-old coachpitch tournament for
boys on Friday, May 1,
through Sunday, May 3.
For more information,
contact Ken at 740-4168901.

Vegas sets up ‘concentric’ security for fight
LAS VEGAS (AP) —
Manny Pacquiao and Floyd
Mayweather hadn’t even
decided how much it would
cost home viewers to watch
their fight when the head of
the Nevada Athletic Commission started planning
security for their big bout.
Five times in the 10
weeks since the two welterweights set a date for their
long-awaited fight, commission chief Francisco Aguilar
has convened state, federal
and local police, fire, tourism and fight officials for
one thing: to keep hundreds
of thousands of people outside the ring safe.
Boxing, particularly in
big matches like this one,
poses a special challenge to
Las Vegas officials.
“We’re not preparing
for a fight night. We’re
preparing for a fight week,”
Deputy Las Vegas Police
Chief Gary Schofield said,
pointing to a series of
events, including Friday’s
weigh-in at the MGM
Grand hotel. As a security
and crowd-control measure,
advance tickets ($10 face
value) will be required for
the first time.
He described a security
plan of concentric circles.
The Athletic Commission
handles security inside the
ring. The hotel and police
have responsibility for the
arena and hotel, which is
Las Vegas’ biggest, with
5,005 rooms.
Police, along with state
and federal agencies, are
in charge outside — “all
the way out to the airport,
Interstate 15 and the neighborhoods,” Schofield said.
“The overall goal is to
maintain the integrity of
the event,” Aguilar said.
“Las Vegas is a brand. To
protect the brand, you have
to protect the event.”
Fight nights haven’t
always gone so smoothly.
In 1993, “Fan Man”
James Miller guided his
powered parachute to
land next to a Caesars
Palace outdoor ring where
Evander Holyfield and Riddick Bowe were brawling.
Ringside fans and security

www.mydailysentinel.com

pummeled Miller, who was
arrested for the stunt.
In 1996, rapper Tupac
Shakur was killed in a driveby shooting after Mike
Tyson knocked out Bruce
Seldon at the MGM.
In 1997, bedlam erupted
inside and outside the

ring when Tyson was disqualified for biting Evander
Holyfield’s ears. Thousands
of people stampeded
through the MGM Grand
hotel lobby.
Last year, a scuffle in the
elbow-to-elbow crowd leaving a Mayweather-Marcos

Maidana fight — and a
loud noise that officials
blame on a partition falling
to the floor, not a gunshot
— spurred a panicked stampede in a food court area
outside the arena. Officials
said about 50 people were
treated for minor injuries.

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LEGALS
PROBATE COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF: THELMA MORGAN, AKA, THELMA DORIS
MORGAN
CASE NO. 20071032
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
THELMA MORGAN, AKA,
THELMA DORIS MORGAN
DECEASED, OF ROUTE 2
ALBANY, OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY PROBATE
COURT, CASE NUMBER
20071032
A HEARING WILL BE HELD
ON MAY 22ND, 2015 AT 1:30
PM
04/28,05/05,05/12/15
Notices
GUN SHOW
CHILLICOTHE
May 9 &amp; 10
Ross Co. Fairgrounds
Adm$5 6 Tbls $35
740-667-0412
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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.

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complain of discrimination call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777. The toll-free telephone
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Help Wanted General
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, April 28, 2015 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

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10 Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Wahama wins 5th straight
By Bryan Walters

up the 9-1 outcome.
Wahama outhit the
guests by a 10-3 overall
MASON, W.Va. — Bet- margin and both teams
ter late than never.
committed two errors
The Wahama baseball
apiece in the game. The
team picked up its fifth
Yellow Jackets (4-7)
straight victory with
stranded seven runners
nine unanswered runs
on base, while the hosts
Saturday during a 9-1
left four on the bags.
decision over visiting
Garrett Miller was the
Williamstown in a nonwinning pitcher of record
conference matchup at
after allowing one earned
J.C. Cook Field in Mason run, two hits and two
County.
walks over four innings
The White Falcons
while striking out six.
(11-3) trailed 1-0 after
Nick Bailes took the loss
one inning of play, but
after surrendering nine
the hosts responded with earned runs, 10 hits and
three runs in their half of two walks over 5.1 frames
the third — which ultiwhile fanning five.
mately led to a permanent
Sheets led the White
advantage. Kaileb Sheets Falcons with four hits,
tied the game with an
three RBIs and three
RBI-double, then Mason
runs scored, followed by
Hicks produced a twoKearns and Hicks with
RBI single that plated
two safeties apiece. HoffSheets and Ricky Kearns man and Jared Oliver also
for a 3-1 cushion.
had a hit each.
WHS tacked on two
Hicks and Hoffman
more runs in the fifth
both drove in two RBIs,
after a two-RBI double by while Kearns scored
Philip Hoffman made a it twice for the victors, who
a 5-1 contest, then Sheets have now won 10 of their
capped a four-run sixth
last 12 overall.
with a two-run homer to
Mason Adkins had a
centerfield — wrapping
led the game off with a

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Wahama head baseball coach Tom Cullen, left, talks with senior
Garrett Miller (15) in between innings of a TVC Hocking baseball
contest Friday, April 24, at J.C. Cook Field in Mason, W.Va.

single and later scored
on a single by Reece
Westfall, making it a 1-0
contest. Adkota Watson

also had a single for Williamstown.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Cavs move on, maybe without Love, Smith
CLEVELAND (AP) — The Cavaliers are bruised, not beaten or broken.
Their playoff run ambles on amid
uncertainty and a heaping dose of
anxiety.
Cleveland completed a four-game
sweep in Boston on Sunday, dispatching the scrappy Celtics 101-93 in a
Game 4 that at times looked more
MMA than NBA.
And now that they’ve advanced,
the Cavaliers are not only waiting to
see who they’ll play next but whether
they’ll have starters Kevin Love or J.R.
Smith for their second-round series.
“There’s a lot of things up in the
air with our team right now,” said
LeBron James, who has never lost a
first round matchup in 10 trips to the
playoffs.
“It’s next man up, depending on
what goes on with our team. That’s
two big pieces, obviously, but next

man up,” he said. “No excuses.”
Love dislocated his left shoulder in
the first quarter, hurting it when he
got tangled while chasing a loose ball
with Celtics forward Kelly Olynyk,
who clamped down on Love’s arm and
pulled so hard it popped out of the
shoulder joint.
“A bush-league play,” Love said following the game, his arm cradled in
a sling. “I have no doubt in my mind
that he did that on purpose.”
The Cavaliers won’t know how long
Love, in his first playoffs as a pro, will
be sidelined until an MRI is taken. The
team is expected to provide a medical
update on Monday. If Love’s labrum
isn’t torn, he could return within a few
weeks, but there’s a chance he will be
limited by the injury throughout the
remainder of the postseason.
Love said he hoped the league’s ruling would be “swift and just.”

Smith, too, is facing disciplinary
action after he was ejected for swinging a clenched fist and smacking Boston’s Jae Crowder in the jaw. Crowder
crumpled to the floor, sustaining a
sprained left knee ligament.
Smith, who came over from New
York in a trade, will likely be suspended, inflicting a blow to Cleveland’s
depth against either Milwaukee or
Chicago. The Bulls can wrap up that
series at home on Monday night.
While he was remorseful following the game, Smith, who has been
suspended in the past, has placed the
Cavs in a bad spot.
“This is a situation that I put my
teammates in, and it’s a selfish act
because I don’t want anything that
we do collectively to be taken away
by one individual, whether it’s me or
anybody else,” said Smith, who was
assessed a flagrant 2 foul.

TUESDAY EVENING
6
(WSAZ)
(WTAP)
(WSYX)
(WOUB)
(WCHS)
(WBNS)
(WVAH)
(WPBY)
(WOWK)

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur
"Based on a
True Story"
Eyewitness
News at 6
10TV News
at 6 p.m.
Two and a
Half Men
BBC World
News:
America
13 News at
6:00 p.m.

6
(WGN)
(FXSP)
(ESPN)
(ESPN2)
(LIFE)
(FAM)
(SPIKE)
(NICK)
(USA)
(TBS)
(CNN)
(TNT)
(AMC)
(DISC)
(A&amp;E)
(ANPL)
(OXY)
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
(NGEO)
(NBCSN)
(FS1)
(HIST)
(BRAVO)
(BET)
(HGTV)
(SYFY)

PM

PM

6:30

TUESDAY, APRIL 28
7

PM

7:30

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Newswatch

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
ABC World Judge Judy EntertainmNews
ent Tonight
Wheel of
CBS Evening Jeopardy!
News
Fortune
Two and a
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Half Men
Theory
Theory
Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inBusiness
depth analysis of current
Report (N)
events.
CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

The Voice "Live Top 8
Eliminations" (N)
The Voice "Live Top 8
Eliminations" (N)
Dancing With Stars "10th
Anniversary Special" (N)
The Day the '60s Died May
1970, four students were
shot dead at Kent State. (N)
Dancing With Stars "10th
Anniversary Special" (N)
NCIS "Troll" (N)

Undateable One Big
Chicago Fire "We Called
(N)
Happy (N)
Her Jellybean" 1/3 (N)
Undateable One Big
Chicago Fire "We Called
(N)
Happy (N)
Her Jellybean" 1/3 (N)
Agents of SHIELD "The
20/20 "Captive: A Journey
Dirty Half Dozen" (N)
of Survival and Hope" (N)
American Experience "Last Days in Vietnam" Unlikely
heroes attempt to save as many South Vietnamese as
possible at the war's end. (N)
Agents of SHIELD "The
20/20 "Captive: A Journey
Dirty Half Dozen" (N)
of Survival and Hope" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "You'll Person of Interest
Do" (N)
"Asylum" (N)
Hell's Kitchen "Nine Chefs New Girl (N) Weird Loners Eyewitness News at 10
Compete" (N)
(N)
The Day the '60s Died May American Experience "Last Days in Vietnam" Unlikely
1970, four students were
heroes attempt to save as many South Vietnamese as
shot dead at Kent State. (N) possible at the war's end. (N)
NCIS "Troll" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "You'll Person of Interest
Do" (N)
"Asylum" (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Insider (N)
Pre-game
SportsCenter
Around Horn Interruption
Dance Moms "Hollywood,
Round Two"
Boy Meets
Boy-World
World
"Cult Fiction"
Bar Rescue "Hole in None"

Funniest Home Videos
John Q ('02, Dra) Gabriela Oltean, Denzel Washington. TV14
Salem
MLB Baseball Milwaukee Brewers at Cincinnati Reds Site: Great American Ball Park (L) Postgame
Game 365
Draft "Pro Days" (N)
SportsCenter Special
SportsCenter Special (N)
Draft Academy "Pro Days"
SportsCenter
SportsC. "GMs Roundtable" SportsCenter Special
Baseball Tonight (L)
Dance Moms "Maddie vs. Dance Moms: Chat "Video Dance Moms "Showdown Terra Little Terra Little
Kalani"
Killed the ALDC Star" (N)
in Pittsburgh, Part 1" 1/2 (N) Family
Family
Mirror Mirror Lily Collins. A princess enlists the help of
Casper A paranormal expert and his daughter move
seven rebels to regain control of her kingdom. TVPG
into a house that is inhabited by four ghosts. TVPG
Bar Rescue "To Protect and Bar Rescue "Loose Lips
Bar Rescue "Lagers and
Bar Rescue "Irish Eyes
to (Over) Serve"
Loose Tips"
Liars"
Aren't Smiling"
Thunder
Thunder
MakePop (N) L.Time (N)
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Younger
Fresh Prince
SVU "Inconceivable"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Unorthodox" NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs (L)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Family (N)
The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Special Report (N)
CNN Tonight
Castle
Castle "Last Call"
NBA Basketball Playoffs (L)
NBA Basket.
The Godfather II (1974, Drama) Robert De Niro, Robert Duvall, Al Pacino. A Mafia chief's life is contrasted with flashbacks of The
his father's early days. TV14
Godfather II
Deadliest Catch "A Brotherhood Tested"
Catch "Prodigal Son" (N)
Deadliest Catch (N)
Sons of Winter (N)
Married at First Sight
Married at First Sight "The Married:LoveUnlocked
Married at First Sight
Married at First Sight
"Honeymoons"
Holidays"
"Your Place or Mine" (N)
"Happy New Year" (N)
"Happy New Year"
To Be Announced
OnTheHunt "Throttle Out" North Woods Law
North Woods Law
River Monsters
(5:30) Total
Forgetting Sarah Marshall ('08, Com) Jason Segel. After a musician Funny Girls "Fake Drake" Snapped: Killer "Diane
Divas
(N)
Zamora and David Graham"
is dumped by his actress girlfriend, he travels to Hawaii to heal. TVMA
LawOrder "Vaya Con Dios" Law &amp; Order "Endurance" Law&amp;O. "Turnstile Justice" Law &amp; Order "Dissonance" Law &amp; Order "Standoff"
Kardash "Special Delivery" E! News (N)
Botched "Boob-Watch"
Botched (N)
Good Work (N)
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Younger (N) Younger
Building Wild "Collector's Mick Dodge MickDodge: Mick Dodge Mick Dodge Life Below Zero "Ready or Life Below Zero "Armed for
Cabin"
"Forest Gold" FootNotes
(N)
(N)
Not"
Winter"
Pro FB Talk Boxing Premier Champions
Boxing Premier Champions
Men/Blazers
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Whiparound (L)
MLB Best (N) Garbage
Notorious
Notorious
FS 1 on 1
FS 1 on 1 (N)
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting Cars "Count's Car Counting
Counting
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Show"
Cars
Cars
Housewives "The B is Back" The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives
Wives "The Art of Being a Cougar" (N)
Newlywed
(5:30) Black Coffee Ashanna Bri. TVPG
Welcome Home, Roscoe Jenkins ('08, Com) Martin Lawrence. TV14 Single Ladies "Gone"
Caribbean
Caribbean
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop FlipFlop (N) Flip or Flop H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:30)
Saw IV ('07, Hor) Costas
Underworld ('03, Fant) Kate Beckinsale. A beautiful vampire
Haunting "Australia Pioneer
Mandylor, Tobin Bell. TVMA
warrior is torn when she falls in love with a werewolf. TVM
Village" (N)

6

PM

(5:45) Real

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014, Adventure) Ian
Game of Thrones "High
Sparrow" In Braavos, Arya
McKellen, Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman. The X-Men send Wolverine
(HBO) Time With
sees the many-faced God.
Bill Maher
back in time to find their younger selves and alter history. TV14
(5:50)
Private Parts Radio star Howard (:45)
Miami Vice (2006, Action) Jamie Foxx, Li Gong, Colin Farrell.
(MAX) Stern developed an off-the-wall style when Two agents work undercover transporting drugs to seek out a group of
he arrived in Washington. TVM
murderers. TVMA
(5:15) Hellion (2014,
Kobe Bryant's Muse A look at the
HAPPYish
Nurse Jackie HAPPYish
"Godfathe(SHOW) Thriller) Juliette Lewis, Josh challenges facing one of the most successful
ring"
Wiggins, Aaron Paul. TVMA figures in professional sports. TVPG
(:45)

10

PM

10:30

Silicon
Veep "New
"Runaway
Hampshire"
Devaluation"
The Secret Life of
Walter Mitty ('13, Adv) Ben
Stiller. TVPG
Nurse Jackie HAPPYish
"Godfathering"

Zayat takes aim
at Ky. Derby
with three horses
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Ahmed Zayat can’t
contain his enthusiasm at having three horses
running in thea Kentucky Derby. The fast-talking
Egyptian businessman is alternately nervous,
hopeful and tickled pink.
“Hyper” is how trainer Bob Baffert describes his
client, whose American Pharoah is expected to be
the early favorite for Saturday’s 141st Run for the
Roses.
Listening to Zayat’s bubbly chatter, there’s no
hint of the run of bad luck he’s endured at the
Derby. Three times his horses have finished second behind long shots.
In 2009, 50-1 Mine That Bird sneaked up along
the rail and beat Pioneerof the Nile. In 2011,
Nehro was defeated by 20-1 Animal Kingdom. A
year later, 15-1 I’ll Have Another beat Bodemeister.
Baffert can count two of those losses among his
Derby defeats, having trained Pioneerof the Nile
and Bodemeister.
“Luckily they run the Derby every year,” he said.
Zayat had a double-dose of bad luck in 2010. His
early Derby favorite Eskendereya was withdrawn
days before the race with a leg injury and he filed
for bankruptcy protection to keep his racing operation afloat after a bank claimed he defaulted on
$34 million in loans.
Baffert has won the race three times, but not
since 2002. He’s been training for Zayat since
2007, becoming close friends while enduring the
sport’s ups and downs together. They exchange
calls or text messages “like 10 times a day,” Zayat
said.
“We know the game. It changes every second
and every time he calls me my heart sinks for 30
seconds,” the owner said, knowing it could be bad
news about his horses.
Zayat took his first crack at the Derby in 2008,
when Z Fortune finished 10th and Z Humor was
14th.
Now 52, he retired 10 years ago, having sold his
beer distributorship to Heineken for $280 million
and plowed the proceeds into buying more horses.
His love of the sport is a family affair, with Justin,
one of his four children, acting as racing manager
for Zayat Stables.
“He has a lot of passion,” Baffert said. “The clients that have a lot of passion, those are the best
clients because they really want to do well. They
invest a lot of time along with money. It’s like
owning their own team. They’re very competitive,
which is good. It’s a trainer’s dream to have clients
like that.”
The sport has taught the ultra-competitive Zayat
a tough lesson: You may win at a 25 percent clip,
but 75 percent of the time you’re going to lose.
“The first orientation is getting adjusted to being
competitive and yet needing to turn the page and
move on.”
Baffert is in the unusual position of training
the probable favorite and second choice this year.
He’s got American Pharoah for Zayat, who lives in
Teaneck, New Jersey, and undefeated Dortmund
for India-born owner Kaleem Shah.
“Hope for a dead-heat,” the white-haired trainer
joked.

Arrest warrant
sought for champ in
hit-and-run crash
ALBUQUERQUE,
N.M. (AP) — UFC light
heavyweight champion Jon
“Bones” Jones ran from
a crash that hospitalized
a pregnant woman but
quickly came back to grab
“a large handful of cash”
from the car, witnesses
told police.
According to police,
the accident occurred in
southeastern Albuquerque
just before noon Sunday
when the driver of a rented
SUV ran a red light. The
driver, whom an off-duty
officer identified as Jones,
ran from the scene but then
returned for the cash before
fleeing again, police said.
“Witnesses stated he
shoved the cash into his
pants and ran north,” the
report said.
Albuquerque police were
seeking an arrest warrant
for Jones on Monday, saying he would likely face a
felony charge of leaving the
scene of an accident since
the woman broke her arm
in the crash.
Police said they have
been unable to reach Jones
or his lawyer.
Officers found a pipe
with marijuana in the SUV
as well as MMA and rental
car documents in Jones’
name, according to the
police report.

His agent, Malki Kawa,
did not immediately
respond to an email from
The Associated Press.
Jones (21-1) is scheduled to defend his title
against Anthony “Rumble”
Johnson at UFC 187 in Las
Vegas on May 23, headlining one of the promotion’s
biggest shows of the year.
“We are in the process
of gathering facts and will
reserve further comment
until more information is
available,” the UFC said in
a statement.
Although he is widely
considered the world’s best
pound-for-pound mixed
martial artist, Jones has
endured legal problems
and questionable behavior
as champion.
Jones was arrested in
2012 after crashing his
Bentley into a telephone
pole in Binghamton, New
York. He had his driver’s
license suspended after
being charged with DWI,
but did no jail time.
Last August, Jones and
challenger Daniel Cormier
were involved in a brawl
in the lobby of the MGM
Grand casino while appearing at a promotional event.
Jones was fined $50,000
and ordered to do community service by the Nevada
Athletic Commission.

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