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                  <text>On this
day in
history …

Sunny. High
of 68. Low
near 43.

South Gallia
falls to
Green, 5-2.

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 75, Volume 65

Meigs deputy
indicted
by grand jury
Accused of misconduct, theft
By Lorna Hart

lhart@civitasmedia.com

MEIGS COUNTY — An indictment was brought
Tuesday against Meigs County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Brody Davis by the Athens County Grand Jury.
Following the indictment, Davis was taken into custody by Athens County sheriff’s deputies.
The office of Sheriff Keith Wood recently received
a citizen’s complaint against Davis, who is from
the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office. The purported
offense occurred in Athens County. The complaint
alleges misconduct and theft against Davis.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Colleen Williams was informed of the allegations. An outside
agency will investigate the criminal allegations.
An internal investigation will be conducted by the
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office.
Davis was placed on administrative leave pending
the investigation.
No more information was available at press time,
but stay tuned to The Daily Sentinel for more information as it becomes available.
Reach Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 ext. 2551

Free summer
meals for youth
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY —
For many kids, summertime means food,
friends and fun.
For families who
count on school breakfast and lunch, however,
the summer months can
be stressful and family
food budgets have to be
stretched even further.
Summer is also a critical time for kids and
teens’ academic and
physical development,
but they can lose out on
several months of learning and physical activity
that they would normally get at school. In
response, the Southeast
Ohio Foodbank and

Kitchen, a division of
Hocking Athens Perry
Community Action,
will be providing free
lunch in Athens, Gallia,
Lawrence, Hocking and
Perry counties.
According to Payne,
while Meigs County
doesn’t have any open
sites through the Southeast Ohio Foodbank
and Kitchen, Meigs
families can travel to
surrounding counties.
Visit www.fns.usda.gov/
summerfoodrocks to
find other open summer
feeding sites happening
specifically in Meigs
County.
Starting June 8,
kids and teens can

Wednesday, May 13, 2015 s 50¢

Gardeners exchange plants
By Lorna Hart

lhart@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — It was a beautiful day at Dave Diles Park for the
Meigs Master Gardeners’ plant
exchange.
Many different types of plants
were brought to the exchange.
Among them were antique lilacs,
daffodils, herbs, cannas, iris and
daisies.
Master Gardener Rick Werner
presented an informative program
on transplanting.
Werner illustrated how to estimate the size and depth of the
hole required for the transplant to
thrive. After the plant is placed, he
suggested mixing fertilizer into the
See GARDENERS | 5 A variety of plants were available at the exchange.

Lorna Hart | Daily Sentinel

Vets receive Legionnaire trophies
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The following
received Legionnaire trophies at
the recent Legionnaire dinner,
which honors veterans of the Drew
Webster Post 39 American Legion
group.
The trophies were honorary, and
celebrated past Legionnaire awards
given to veterans both living and
those who have passed on.
Those who won and were
present are Mick Williams, who
received his trophy 1958, 1985 and
2004, Ken Harris, who received his
in 1968, Joe Struble, who received
his in 1990, George Harris Jr., who
received his in 2007, Jack Lewis,
Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel who received his in 2008, Norman
From left: Bruce May, Ken Harris, Joe Struble, Mick Williams, Bill Spaun, Steve Van Meter, Price Jr., who received his in 2009,
Norm Price, George Harris Jr. and Jack Lewis. Not pictured are San Van Matre, Tom
Anderson, Jay Lance and Don Hunnell.

See VETS | 5

Meigs County Dogs of the Week

See MEALS | 5

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Softball: 6
Baseball: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Comics: 9
Classifieds: 10

Courtesy photos

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook or twitter to
share your thoughts.

ABOVE, One-year-old beagle males Mike and Ike, who both came to
the shelter together, are both looking for a forever home. Adoption
fees are $50, which include vaccinations and rabies and tags. AT
LEFT, Trixie is a sweetheart girl. She is a little shy at first but once
she gets to know you she doesn’t want to leave your side. She
ended up at the shelter after her previous owner lost his home.
She is 5 years old. Lab/cur mix. Featured animals are available
for adoption as potential companions to a loving home. For more
information about a potential pet adoption, contact the Meigs
County Dog Pound at (740) 992-3779.

Want To Reach Over 10,000 Households in Southeast Ohio?
Advertise In Next Month’s Issue Of Rural Life Today!

Rural Life Today
Serving the Agricultural Community in 66 Ohio Counties
60583590

To advertise, contact your local Newspaper
Sales Representatives or call (937) 538-4667
740-446-2342  740-992-2155  304-675-1333

�LOCAL

2 Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Rio Grande opens Jackson Center

DEATH NOTICES

By Eric McKinney

of a $243,000
Southeast Region
Industry Workforce
RIO GRANDE — The UniverAlliance Partnersity of Rio Grande has extended
ship Grant awarded
its on-site academic offerings into by the Ohio DepartJackson County with the Universi- ment of Job and
ty of Rio Grande Jackson Center. Family Services
The new center, located at
and the Governor’s
14761 State Route 93, Suite 1,
Office of Workforce
will offer courses beginning with Transformation. The
the Summer 1 term on June 1.
pilot initiative fosters the
The center’s summer hours are 9 development of career pathways
a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
to help unemployed and underThursday.
employed Ohioans find work and
“Rio Grande has a long, sucbuild careers in growing induscessful history of serving the
tries, while aligning education
students and businesses of Jackand training programs with the
son County,” Jackson Center
needs of business.
Director Robyn Blache said. “The
The program is funded from
new Jackson Center will serve to the U.S. Department of Labor and
strengthen those existing bonds
matching funds from the Goverand partnerships, as well as devel- nor’s Office of Health Transformaop new alliances that will further tion Innovation Fund. Ohio was
benefit our communities.”
one of 15 states to receive funds.
Blache was hired in March to
Rio Grande received the grant
lead Rio’s Jackson efforts. She
through the Appalachian Ohio
has a Masters of Jurisprudence in Health Professions Pathways
Health Law from Loyola UniverSoutheast Alliance. The partnersity Chicago, a Bachelor of Arts
ship also includes Jackson County
in English from Ohio State UniJob and Family Services, Buckversity and several certificates,
eye Hills Career Center, ABLE,
including Certified Healthcare
Adena Health System, Holzer
Compliance and Certified Profes- Health System, Vinton County
sional Code.
JFS, Gallia County JFS and Meigs
Among the academic programs County JFS.
available at the Jackson Center
The Southeast Alliance was
is a new Medical Coding boot
awarded the grant for its strategy
focusing on healthcare. The stratcamp where participants can sit
egy leverages career pathways
for their American Academy of
Professional Coding certification in both patient care and health
information technology to creafterwards. The 10-week hybrid
ate new baccalaureate, associate
program requires students parand certificate programs, develop
ticipate on-site twice a week for
three hours with additional online boot camps for exam preparation,
launch a local industry networkresponsibilities.
The Jackson Center and Medi- ing chapter, and fill out gaps in
cal Coding program are the result existing health pathways.

BAILEY
COOLVILLE, Ohio — Nelljean Bailey, 82, of
Coolville, died Tuesday, May 12, 2015, at her residence.
Arrangements will be announced later by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville.

For the OVP News

MORRIS
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Kimberly Jean Morris,
45 of Proctorville, passed away Sunday, May 10, 2015,
at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral service will be 11 a.m. Friday, May 15,
2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial
Gardens, Barboursville, W.Va. Visitation will be 6-8
p.m. Thursday, May 14, 2015, at the funeral home.
ROMINE
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — Tommy Romine, 59, of
Middleport, passed away Tuesday, May 12, 2015, at
Holzer Meigs Emergency Department. Arrangements
will be announced by Cremeens-King Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.
SIMPKINS
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Betty Louise Simpkins, 78, of Gallipolis Ferry, died Monday, May 11,
2015, at the Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Thursday, May 14,
2015, at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
with Charlie Dabney and Tony Stover officiating.
Burial will follow at Mount Carmel Cemetery, Gallipolis Ferry. Friends may visit the family between 6-8
p.m. Wednesday, May 13, 2015, at the funeral home.
TATTERSON
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — William Richard
Tatterson, 66, of Gallipolis Ferry, passed away Monday, May 11, 2015, at his home, with his family by his
side.
Bill’s life will be remembered with a gathering of
family and friends between 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, May
13, 2015, at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home. There
will be a graveside service at 11 a.m. Thursday, May
14, 2015, at Kirkland Memorial Gardens, with Pastor
Bob Patterson officiating. Burial will follow.
WERRY
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Donna Jane Werry, 70, Gallipolis, passed away Monday, May 11, 2015, at Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Graveside services will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday, May
14, 2015, at Vinton Memorial Park, Vinton, with Pastor Bob Fulton officiating. Friends and family may
call McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel,
420 First Ave, Gallipolis, between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Thursday.

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Local Briefs will only
list event information that is free and open to the
public.

River City Players Auditions
MIDDLEPORT — River City Players will conduct auditions for “The Addams Family” from 2-4
p.m. May 16 and 2-4 p.m. May 17 at the RCP Building at 99 Mill St. Those wishing to audition should
have a short song selection prepared. Performances
will be August 7-8. For more information about
available roles, visit RCP’s Facebook page.

Call us at:

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The Mysteries of Laura (N) Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
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Nature "Animal Childhood" Nova "Lethal Seas"
Young animals as they
Scientists seek solutions to
prepare to leave home. (N) rising ocean acidity. (N)
The Middle Goldberg (N) Modern
Black-ish (N)
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Family (N)
Survivor: World "My Word CSI: Cyber "Bit by Bit" (N)
Is My Bond" (N)
American Idol The moment you have been waiting for is
finally here, the next 'American Idol' is crowned. (N)
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Young animals as they
Scientists seek solutions to
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Survivor: World "My Word CSI: Cyber "Bit by Bit" (N)
Is My Bond" (N)

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The Casual Vacancy Pt. 2 of Silicon
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Valley

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8:30

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This Is Where I Leave You Four combative (:45) 1stLook
"Entourage"
siblings spend a week together following
(N)
the death of their father. TVMA
(5:40)
A History of
(:20)
The Insider (1999, Suspense) Russell Crowe, Christopher Plummer, Al
Pacino. A former tobacco scientist decides to risk everything to reveal deadly industry
(MAX) Violence ('05, Thril) Viggo
Mortensen. TVMA
secrets. TVMA
(5:45)
Bridget Jones's Diary A woman Nurse Jackie Penny Dreadful "Verbis
HAPPYish
Inside
"Coop Out" Diablo"
Comedy
(SHOW) decides to keep a diary about her dating,
drinking, dieting and revelations. TV14
(HBO)

10

PM

10:30

Chicago P.D. "Push the Pain
Away" (N)
Chicago P.D. "Push the Pain
Away" (N)
Nashville "Before You Go
Make Sure You Know" (N)
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Vertical City"
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Make Sure You Know" (N)
CSI: Cyber "Family Secrets"
(SF) (N)
(:05) Eyewitness News at
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Vertical City"
CSI: Cyber "Family Secrets"
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Funniest Home Videos
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Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother
Weekly (N) Pre-game
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MLB Baseball New York Mets at Chicago Cubs Site: Wrigley Field -- Chicago, Ill. (L)
Around Horn Interruption Grantland Basketball
MLS Soccer Orlando City SC at Washington D.C. United (L) E:60 Reports
Terra Little Terra Little Terra Little TerraFamily Terra Little Terra Little Terra Little Terra Little Little Women: NY "The
Family
Family
Family
"Work It!"
Family
Family
Family (N)
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Vagina Monologues" (N)
Boy Meets
Freak Out
Boy Meets
Baby Daddy Young and Young and Kung Fu Panda A bumbling panda's dreams of being a
World
World
Hungry
Hungry (N) warrior may come true when a villain comes to town. TVPG (N)
Cops "Coast Jail
Cops "In
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops
Cops "Coast
to Coast"
Jacksonville" to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
Thunder
Thunder
SpongeBob SpongeBob Full House
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NCIS "Up in Smoke" 1/2
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Mad Men "Smoke Gets in (:05) Mad Men "Ladies
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Your Eyes"
Room"
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Amsterdam"
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S. Wars "The Storage W. Storage
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Botched "Mo' Steroids Mo'
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Hitch
Problems"
Elites Project Elites (N)
client, a professional date doctor falls for a journalist. TV14
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6

Veep

“The Jackson
County Department
of Job and Family Services staff are looking
forward to collaborating with the University of Rio Grande
on this exceptional
opportunity within our
community,” Director
Tammy Osborne-Smith
said. “The agency is delighted
to invest in a partnership that
will support the development of
highly skilled occupations for the
citizens of Jackson County and
the surrounding region.”
Medical coding professionals
are in high demand throughout
the country, with employment
opportunities in healthcare billing, revenue cycle and compliance. Blache said Rio’s goal is to
take the summer boot camp program and develop it into a 1-year
certificate program.
“Aligning state education and
training programs with the needs
of business is one of our primary,
ongoing goals,” Ohio Department of Job and Family Services
Director Cynthia C. Dungy said.
“These regional training programs will combine classroom
instruction, on-the-job training,
internships and co-ops to bridge
the gap between Ohioans looking
for work and businesses looking
to hire.”
For more information, including
a complete schedule of summer
courses available at the Jackson
Center, contact Blache at 740-5773555 or rblache@rio.edu.
Eric McKinney is director of marketing and
communications at the University of Rio
Grande and Rio Grande Community College.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

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Let's Be Cops ('14,
Act/Com) Damon Wayans Jr.,
Jake Johnson. TVMA
Shallow Hal ('01, Com)
Jack Black, Jason Alexander,
Gwyneth Paltrow. TVPG
Brad Williams: Fun Size

Scholarship Apps Available
MEIGS COUNTY — Applications for the Meigs
United Methodist Cooperative Parish Scholarship
are available at participating churches in the Meigs
area. Applicants must meet eligibility requirements,
including attendance at a participating church
that is affiliated with the MCP. The church that is
participating must have made their current year’s
donation to the scholarship endowment by May
29. Applicants must complete the written application, be at least a second-year college student, have
a minimum 2.5 grade point average and be a full
time student. For more information, call the Meigs
United Methodist Co-op at 740-992-7400.

Buckeye Hills meeting
POMEROY — The Buckeye Hills Regional Transportation Planning Organization will introduce the
Comprehensive Regional Transportation Plan at
regional meetings across the eight-county region in
May. The meetings are free and open to the public.
No RSVP is necessary. If you have any questions
regarding this meeting, contact Karen Pawloski,
transportation planning manager, at 740-376-7658.
The Meigs County meeting will be 1:30-4:30 p.m.
May 27 at the Meigs County Library, 216 W. Main
St., Pomeroy.

Alumni association offers
$500 scholarships
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Olive Orange Alumni
Association of Tuppers Plains is offering two $500
scholarships for soon-to-be Eastern High School
graduates. Contact Ms. Roush at Eastern Local
High School, 740-985-3329.

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Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 13, 2015 3

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Community
Calendar will only list event information that is free and open to the public.

THURSDAY, MAY 14

POMEROY — The Alpha Iota Masters meeting will be at 11:30 a.m. at the
New Beginnings Methodist Church.
RACINE —Meigs County EMS/911
is sponsoring a Public Safety Day Picnic
at the Kountry Resort Campground at
6 p.m. The picnic is a celebration of
the efforts of the public safety community. All police, firefighters, volunteer
squads, dispatcher, deputies, EMT’s and
paramedics all invited. Bring a covered
dish. For more information, call 740992-6618.
MIDDLEPORT — A revival will
be conducted at the Old Bethel Free
Will Baptist Church, located on Ohio 7
below Middleport. Services begin at 6

p.m., with Evangelist Norman Taylor
speaking. There will be special singing
and everyone is welcome. Clyde Ferrell
is the church pastor. For more information call 740-992-2933.

FRIDAY, MAY 15

MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport
Community Association is having
another “cleanup downtown day.” Meet
at the bank park (corner of 2nd and
Mill streets) at 10 a.m. Any and all help
will be appreciated. This is a chance to
volunteer your assistance to beautify
your Village. Bring your garden tools
and join us.
POMEROY — There will be a special
meeting of the Meigs County Board of
Elections at 1 p.m. at the Meigs County
Annex building 2nd floor meeting
room, 117 E. Memorial Drive Pomeroy.
POMEROY — The Pomeroy High

School Class of 1959 will be holding their third Friday lunch again at
Fox Pizza at noon. Hope to see you
there.
MARIETTA — The Buckeye Hills
Regional Transportation Planning
Organization Technical Advisory and
Citizens Advisory Committees will
meet from 10 a.m. to noon at 1400 Pike
St., Marietta. If you have any questions
regarding this meeting, contact Karen
Pawloski, transportation planning manager, at 740-376-7658.

MONDAY, MAY 18

POMEROY — The Veterans Service
Commission will have their end-ofthe-month meeting at 9 a.m. at 117 E.
Memorial Drive, Ste. 3.

THURSDAY, MAY 21

POMEROY — The Meigs County

Another deadly quake spreads fear, misery
By Binaj Gurubacharya
and Katy Daigle
Associated Press

Retired Teachers will meet at noon at
the Meigs County Senior Citizens building for a lunch and program. The speaker will be Middleport Mayor Michael
Gerlach, local historian, on “Meigs
County River History.” Call 992-3214
by May 19 with the number attending.
Guests are welcome.

FRIDAY, MAY 29

MARIETTA — The Regional Advisory Council for the Area Agency
on Aging will meet at 10 a.m. in the
Buckeye Hills-HVRDD Area Agency on
Aging office in Marietta.

SUNDAY, MAY 31

ALFRED — Alfred United Methodist
Church having a Hymn Sing at 6 p.m.
Contact Gene Goodman at 740-7422690 for more info.

Become youth
fishing instructor
Staff Report

KATHMANDU, Nepal — A new
earthquake killed dozens of people
Tuesday and spread more fear
and misery in Nepal, which is still
struggling to recover from a devastating quake nearly three weeks
ago that left more than 8,000 dead.
A U.S. Marine Corps helicopter
carrying six Marines and two Nepalese soldiers was reported missing
while delivering disaster aid in
northeastern Nepal, U.S. officials
said, although there have been no
indications the aircraft crashed.
Tuesday’s magnitude-7.3 quake,
centered midway between Kathmandu and Mount Everest, struck
hardest in the foothills of the
Himalayas, triggering some landslides, but it also shook the capital
badly, sending thousands of terrified people into the streets.
Nepal’s Parliament was in session when the quake hit, and
frightened lawmakers ran for the
exits as the building shook and the
lights flickered out.
At least 37 people were killed
in the quake and more than 1,100
were injured, according to the
Home Ministry. But that toll was
expected to rise as reports began
reaching Kathmandu of people in
isolated Himalayan towns and villages being buried under rubble,

Bernat Amangue | AP

A family gathers on the ground level of their house to rest for the night in Kathmandu,
Nepal, on Tuesday. A new earthquake Tuesday spread more fear and misery in Nepal, which
is still struggling to recover from a devastating quake nearly three weeks ago that left
thousands dead.

according to the U.N.’s Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs.
Tremors radiated across parts of
Asia. In neighboring India, at least
16 people were confirmed dead
after rooftops or walls collapsed
onto them, according to India’s
Home Ministry. Chinese media
reported one death in Tibet.
The magnitude-7.8 earthquake
that hit April 25 killed more than
8,150 and flattened entire villages,
leaving hundreds of thousands
homeless in the country’s worst-

recorded quake since 1934. The
U.S. Geological Survey said Tuesday’s earthquake was the largest
aftershock to date of that destructive quake.
Tuesday’s temblor was deeper,
however, coming from a depth of
18.5 kilometers (11.5 miles) versus
the earlier one at 15 kilometers
(9.3 miles). Shallow earthquakes
tend to cause more damage.
At least three people were rescued
Tuesday in Kathmandu, while another nine pulled to safety in the district
of Dolkha, the government said.

ATHENS — Any adult, group, or conservation
club who has a sincere interest in taking kids
fishing should consider becoming a certified Passport to Fishing instructor, according to the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources.
A Passport certification course is being offered
May 27 at the Deerassic Education Center in
Cambridge. Passport to Fishing is a one-day
instructor training program that qualifies individuals to become Division of Wildlife certified
fishing instructors, similar to a hunter education
instructor. This workshop will take place from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. at 14250 Cadiz Road, Cambridge. It
is free, but pre-registration is required by May 21.
People will be required to participate in a background check.
Passport to Fishing was developed by the U.S.
Fish &amp; Wildlife Service and adopted by the Recreational Boating and Fishing Foundation. Workshops teach volunteers the basics of fishing and
how to run a four-station fishing program with a
fishing event. These instructors then go back to
their communities, with a written curriculum and
training aids, to teach kids and beginning anglers
the basics of fishing.
By becoming a certified instructor, you will not
only be able to help in reconnecting students with
the outdoors, but you will also have the skills and
resources to help you do it in a more successful
way. Resources available include grants, equipment, publications and brochures, and training.
For more information or to register for a workshop, please call Chelsea Herrick at 740-589-9942.
For additional class information, visit wildohio.
gov.

Ohio settles lawsuit involving dropped Medicaid recipients
COLUMBUS (AP)
— About 154,000 Ohio
residents will have their
Medicaid health benefits
restored and their eligibility for the program
rechecked as part of a
settlement reached in a
lawsuit against the state,
the state’s Department of
Medicaid said Tuesday.
The agreement comes in
a case involving how Ohio
officials “re-determine”
the eligibility of recipients
in the federal-state health
program for the poor and
disabled.
In March, the Legal Aid

Society of Columbus sued
the state’s Medicaid director on behalf of several people and two nonprofits in
central Ohio: the Community Refugee and Immigration Services and Community Development for All
People. They claimed that
some individuals’ Medicaid
benefits were terminated
or put at risk after Ohio
failed to follow federal law
and Medicaid regulations
during the review process.
Among other issues, the
legal group had argued
that Ohio failed to conduct
certain Medicaid renewal

procedures and did not
adequately notify recipients as to why coverage
was being terminated and
how to appeal.
Federal law requires
states to “re-determine”
annually whether recipients
remain eligible for Medicaid. Beneficiaries have
their eligibility reviewed the
same month they enrolled
the previous year.
State figures show that
153,743 beneficiaries lost
Medicaid coverage during the first three months
of the year because they
failed to respond to Medic-

aid renewal packets.
The settlement agreement restores the health
benefits of those terminated from the program
in January, February and
March. Individuals will
be informed no later than
June 1 that their coverage
is being reinstated. They
can then use the letter as
proof of their Medicaid
eligibility to health care

providers. Ohio Medicaid
will have until Aug. 1 to
put them back on the program, and beneficiaries
will then have their eligibility checked again.
The agreement does not
apply to certain residents
who submitted renewal
information to the state
and were found ineligible
for the program.
A spokesman for the

Ohio Department of Medicaid said the settlement
allows Ohio to continue
the monthly eligibility
checks as required by federal law.
“We’re happy to have
been able to work through
these issues in an expedient manner and reach
an agreement with the
plaintiffs,” Ohio Medicaid
spokesman Sam Rossi said.

AD SIZES:

(ALL SHOWN ACTUAL SIZE)

3X5

60576582

2X3
2X2

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

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THIS SPACE.

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�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Senate treaty
power no more
By Robert Romano
Guest columnist

The Senate is systematically ceding its constitutional power to ratify treaties by a two-thirds
majority.
In a 98 to 1 vote, the Senate voted for legislation
that will allow a deal that effectively could end
economic sanctions against Iran and allow Tehran
to acquire nuclear weapons with which to threaten
the region and U.S. national security.
Oh sure, members will pretend they are gaining
a say in “overseeing” the deal. For example, here
was a statement from Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas):
“Ultimately, I voted yes on final passage because
it may delay, slightly, President Obama’s ability to
lift the Iran sanctions and it ensures we will have
a Congressional debate on the merits of the Iran
deal.”
It won’t delay anything. And the “debate”
allowed for will not subject Obama’s deal to a
two-thirds Senate ratification — it does the opposite. Meaning, to block the treaty will require a
two-thirds vote when, originally, it would have
required a two-thirds vote to ratify the treaty.
All the bill allows is for Congress to block
Obama’s Iran treaty, but only if Obama signs the
bill and, in the process, rejects his own negotiations. Why would he do that?
Obama would veto such legislation. In the mean
time, 150 House Democrats have already signaled
they will be voting to sustain any such presidential
veto.
This, just a short month after Senate Republicans wrote a letter to the mullahs in Tehran that
it is the Senate, not the president, who approves
treaties.
The sole no vote was Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.),
who had penned that letter.
“The continued evisceration of the treaty advice
and consent process by this Senate is particularly
alarming as this vote creates a clear pathway for
Iran to achieve its nuclear dream. I expected better,” said Americans for Limited Government
President Rick Manning.
He added, “At least Tom Cotton did not bow to
the pressure to sanction Obama’s ill-founded policies.”
Now, this week, the Senate will take up fast
track legislation authorizing the president to negotiate the Trans-Pacific Partnership between the
U.S. and Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada,
Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand,
Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam.
Like the Iran deal, it will never be submitted to
the Senate for two-thirds majority treaty ratification.
Instead, Congress will expedite its process by
allowing simple majority votes in both houses to
ratify it. A so-called executive-legislative branch
agreement — never considered under the Constitution — it is a pure fabrication of the modern
administrative state begun in 1974.
According to Article II, Section 2 of the U.S.
Constitution, “[The president] shall have Power,
by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate,
to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur…”
With the Iran treaty cave and fast track this
week, the Senate has effectively taken an eraser to
our governing document.
Robert Romano is the senior editor of Americans for Limited
Government.

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

THEIR VIEW

Too much blood on our hands

The United States must
Zubair Ur Rehman, whose
accept responsibility for the
grandmother was killed by
damage its military actions
a U.S. drone strike in Pakihave caused and recognize
stan, told five members of
there are alternatives for the
Congress in 2103:“I no lonfuture.
ger love blue skies. In fact,
In the nearly decade and
I like gray skies; the drones
a half since the Sept. 11,
cannot fly when the skies
Jared
2001, attacks, the United
are gray.”
Keyel
States has invaded Afghani- Contributing
Physicians for Social
stan and Iraq, carried
Responsibility, the AmeriColumnist
out bombing campaigns
can affiliate of Nobel Peace
throughout the Middle East,
Prize-winning International
and launched special operations
Physicians for Prevention of Nuclestrikes throughout the world.
ar War, recently released a report
These policies are non-partisan.
that estimates at least 1.3 million
Many military actions begun
people have died as a result of the
under George W. Bush have
U.S. invasions and occupations of
continued and intensified under
Iraq and Afghanistan and the vioBarack Obama. The CIA-led drone lent spillover into Pakistan. U.S.
wars in Pakistan, Somalia and
policies have not brought stability
Yemen are a key component of
to countries such as Afghanistan
Mr. Obama’s administration and
or Yemen and, as the rise of the
the use of U.S. Special Forces has
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria has
exploded in recent years, deployshown, U.S. military actions have
ing to 134 countries in 2013.
fanned the flames of terrorism, not
The consequences of these
extinguished them.
actions are immense. In the words
There is no doubt that many
of 13-year-old Yemeni, MohamAmericans believe our military
med Tuaiman, U.S. drone strikes
interventions are undertaken to
have “turned our area into hell and help others around the world.
continuous horror, day and night,
Unfortunately, the reality is far
we even dream of them in our
different. From Afghanistan to
sleep.” Mohammed, like his father
Libya, our military intervenand brother, was later killed by an
tions have left broken lives
American drone. Fourteen-year-old and nations in ruins. It may be

surprising to some Americans,
but a 2013 Gallup poll of 65
countries saw the United States
at the top of the list of greatest
threats to world peace.
We as Americans need to take
that perception seriously and
accept responsibility for the enormous human suffering our wars
and interventions have caused.
Most Americans have a genuine
desire to help and not hurt others
around the world. We can work to
alleviate the injury we have already
caused by providing more support
for emergency humanitarian aid
and refugee protection and resettlement, more funding to allow
the societies we have torn apart
to rebuild themselves, and by
engaged, multilateral, diplomacy
to try to end ongoing violence.
We need to push our government, no matter which party is
currently in power, to live up to
our obligations under international
law and end the pervasive use of
military force. We have relied on
military means too widely and too
belligerently and it is time to chart
a different course.
Jared Keyel has a background in international
relations and Middle Eastern affairs and
currently works with refugees, asylum-seekers
and immigrants in Chicago. He is syndicated
through PeaceVoice.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
May 13, the 133rd day of
2015. There are 232 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On May 13, 1940, in
his first speech as British
prime minister, Winston
Churchill told Parliament, “I would say to the
House, as I said to those
who have joined this government: I have nothing
to offer but blood, toil,
tears and sweat.”
On this date:
In 1607, English colonists arrived by ship at
the site of what became
the Jamestown settlement in Virginia (the
colonists went ashore the
next day).
In 1846, the United
States declared that
a state of war already
existed with Mexico.
In 1918, the first U.S.
airmail stamps, featuring a picture of a Curtiss
JN-4 biplane, were issued
to the public. (On a
few of the stamps, the
biplane was inadvertently

printed upside-down,
making the “Inverted
Jenny” collector’s items.)
In 1935, T.E. Lawrence
was critically injured in
a motorcycle accident in
Dorset, England; he died
six days later.
In 1954, President
Dwight D. Eisenhower
signed the St. Lawrence
Seaway Development
Act. The musical play
“The Pajama Game”
opened on Broadway.
In 1958, Vice President
Richard Nixon and his
wife, Pat, were spat upon
and their limousine battered by rocks thrown by
anti-U.S. demonstrators
in Caracas, Venezuela.
In 1968, a one-day
general strike took place
in France in support of
student protesters.
In 1973, in tennis’ first
so-called “Battle of the
Sexes,” Bobby Riggs
defeated Margaret Court
6-2, 6-1 in Ramona, Calif.
(Billie Jean King soundly
defeated Riggs at the
Houston Astrodome in
September.)

In 1981, Pope John Paul
II was shot and seriously
wounded in St. Peter’s
Square by Turkish assailant Mehmet Ali Agca.
In 1985, a confrontation between Philadelphia authorities and the
radical group MOVE
ended as police dropped
a bomb onto the group’s
row house; 11 people
died in the resulting fire
that destroyed 61 homes.
In 1994, President
Bill Clinton nominated
federal appeals Judge
Stephen G. Breyer to the
U.S. Supreme Court to
replace retiring Justice
Harry A. Blackmun.
In 2000, explosions at
a fireworks warehouse
in the Netherlands killed
23 people and injured
nearly 1,000 others. (A
suspect was found guilty
of causing the blasts, but
his conviction was overturned.)
Today’s Birthdays:
Actor Buck Taylor is 77.
Actor Harvey Keitel is
76. Author Charles Baxter is 68. Actor Franklyn

Ajaye is 66. Actress Zoe
Wanamaker is 66. Singer
Stevie Wonder is 65.
Actress Leslie Winston
(TV: “The Waltons”) is
59. Producer-writer Alan
Ball is 58. Basketball Hall
of Famer Dennis Rodman
is 54. Actor-comedian
Stephen Colbert is 51.
Rock musician John
Richardson (The Gin
Blossoms) is 51. Actor
Tom Verica is 51. Country singer Lari White is
50. Singer Darius Rucker
(Hootie and the Blowfish) is 49. Actress Susan
Floyd is 47. Contemporary Christian musician
Andy Williams (Casting
Crowns) is 43. Actress
Samantha Morton is 38.
Rock musician Mickey
Madden (Maroon 5) is
36. Actor Iwan Rheon is
30. Actress-writer-director Lena Dunham is 29.
Actor Robert Pattinson is
29. Actress Candice Accola is 28. Actor Hunter
Parrish is 28. Folk-rock
musician Wylie Gelber
(Dawes) is 27. Actress
Debby Ryan is 22.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 13, 2015 5

Gardeners
From Page 1

soil to be put around
the plant. He and other
Master Garden Club
members highly recommenced a slow release
fertilizer.
The next step is to
place the soil and fertilizer mix around the
plant and gently press
to eliminate air pockets. He recommended
placing the soil that
was removed back into
the hole, as opposed to
using purchased soil, as
a better way to promote
root growth.
The plant should then
be well watered, and
transplant solution may
be used to lessen the
shock to the plant.
Once a plant has been
removed from the soil, it
needs to be replanted as
soon as possible.
“Hot sunny days are
not the best day to
transplant,” Werner
said. “It is stressful for
the plants, and they take
longer to recover.”
Werner will be pre-

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Pictured in this photo are: Dennis Gilmore, Barbara Smith, Mike Gilmore, Rick Gilmore, Joann Vaughan,
Judy Jewell, Steve Jewell, Tom Weeks, Barbara Weeks, Dave Casci Sr., Ron Casci, Peggy Girolami, Davis
Girolami, D. Steven Davis and George Harris Jr., respectively.

accepting on his behalf;
Leonard Jewell, who
originally received his
From Page 1
awards in 1960, 1975 and
1999, with his son, Steve
Bill Spaun, who received
Jewell, accepting on his
his in 2010, Steve Van
behalf;
Meter, who received his in
Raymond Jewell, who
2012 and Bruce May, who originally received his
received his in 2013.
award in 1969, with his
Those who are deceased wife, Judy Jewell, acceptbut received trophies for
ing on his behalf;
past awards are: Bill RadJames Gilmore, who
ford, who received his in
originally received his
2011, with his wife, Louise award in 1994, with his
Radford, and son Bill
son, Dennis Gilmore,
Radford accepting on his
accepting on his behalf;
behalf;
Elza Gilmore, who
John Weeks, who origireceived his awards in
nally received his awards
1959, 1962 and 1982, with
in 1992 and 2006, with his sons Rick and Mike Gilmwife, Barbara Weeks, and
ore accepting on his behalf;
son John Weeks accepting
George Harris Sr., who
on his behalf;
received his award in 1995,
Robert Vaughan, who
with his son, Tom Harris,
originally received his
accepting on his behalf;
award in 1979, with his
Paul Casci, who received
wife, Joann Vaughan,
his awards in 1956 and

Meals
From Page 1

visit one of the 17 Summer Meal sites
across Southeast Ohio and get a free,
healthy meal that follows USDA nutrition guidelines. Many summer meals
sites offer fun learning and recreational
activities so kids and teens can eat a
healthy meal while staying active and
spending time with friends.
Summer meals programs help families
save money and stretch their food bud-

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

50°

61°

64°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.02
0.08
1.74
19.42
15.12

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:18 a.m.
8:32 p.m.
3:26 a.m.
3:36 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

MOON PHASES
New

First

Full

May 18 May 25 Jun 2

Jun 9

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

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

Major
8:19a
9:07a
9:54a
10:43a
11:35a
12:03a
1:00a

Minor
2:06a
2:53a
3:40a
4:29a
5:21a
6:16a
7:14a

Major
8:46p
9:33p
10:21p
11:10p
---12:58p
1:28p

Minor
2:33p
3:20p
4:08p
4:57p
5:49p
6:44p
7:42p

WEATHER HISTORY
The only documented hail-induced
fatality in the nation in the 20th century occurred May 13, 1930. A farmer
was struck down by hailstones when
he was caught in a field 36 miles
northwest of Lubbock, Texas.

Partly sunny and nice

Mostly cloudy with a
shower or t-storm

Adelphi
65/40
Chillicothe
66/45

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Moderate

High

Very High

Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Lucasville
68/44

Primary: mulberry/hickory/oak
Mold: 1909

Portsmouth
71/46

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

Primary pollutant: Particulates

500

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 13.10 -0.15
Marietta
34 15.67 +0.19
Parkersburg
36 21.15 +0.04
Belleville
35 12.36 +0.06
Racine
41 13.11 -0.07
Point Pleasant
40 25.43 +0.36
Gallipolis
50 13.10 +0.23
Huntington
50 26.23 +0.02
Ashland
52 35.63 none
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.20 -0.04
Portsmouth
50 17.00 +0.20
Maysville
50 34.40 none
Meldahl Dam
51 15.70 +0.30
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Reach Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 ext. 2551.

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

78°
63°

Ashland
72/46
Grayson
72/47

MONDAY

80°
63°

TUESDAY

85°
63°

74°
51°

A t-storm in spots in Warm and humid with Clouds and sun with a
Mostly cloudy, a
the afternoon
periods of sun
thunderstorm
t-storm; not as warm

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
67/42

Murray City
65/40
Belpre
67/41

Athens
65/39

St. Marys
67/42

Parkersburg
67/41

Coolville
66/40

Elizabeth
68/43

Spencer
68/43

Buffalo
71/44

Ironton
72/45

Milton
72/45

Clendenin
72/40

St. Albans
73/46

Huntington
71/45

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
58/47
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
64/54
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
70/57
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Garderners is to be
announced.
For more information,
contact Alice Wamsley
at 740-992-2938.

BBT (NYSE) —39.12
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 22.97
Pepsico (NYSE) — 96.20
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.71
Rockwell (NYSE) — 121.66
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 22.16
Royal Dutch Shell — 63.64
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.24
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 78.96
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 11.15
WesBanco (NYSE) — 31.76
Worthington (NYSE) — 27.07
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
May 12, 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.

Wilkesville
67/40
POMEROY
Jackson
68/41
68/42
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
68/42
68/43
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
65/45
GALLIPOLIS
68/43
69/42
68/43

South Shore Greenup
72/46
70/45

54

Logan
65/39

McArthur
66/40

Waverly
67/44

Pollen: 426

0 50 100 150 200

Last

77°
61°

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

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

Low

FRIDAY

75°
56°

0

Primary: ascospores, torula
Thu.
6:17 a.m.
8:33 p.m.
4:03 a.m.
4:45 p.m.

THURSDAY

Mostly sunny today. Mainly clear and chilly
tonight. High 68° / Low 43°

senting “Cooking with
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables” at a meeting of the
River Bend Arts Council
in July.
The next meeting
of the Meigs Master

AEP (NYSE) — 54.95
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.21
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 125.02
Big Lots (NYSE) — 48.00
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 45.40
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 60.94
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 14.16
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.260
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.04
Collins (NYSE) —96.46
DuPont (NYSE) — 74.85
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.90
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 27.03
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 56.18
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 65.36
Kroger (NYSE) — 71.34
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 88.01
Norfolk So (NYSE) —99.04
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.75

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

76°
62°
74°
52°
90° in 1956
34° in 1913

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 9922155 EXT. 2555 or on Twitter @
JournalistKriz.

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

2 PM

Lorna Hart | Daily Sentinel

Master Garden Club members and guests making their
selections.

LOCAL STOCKS

gets because the meals are free and paid
for by the USDA. There are no income
requirements or registration. Any child
under the age of 18 may come to eat.
Summertime should be a stress-free
time full of food, friends and fun. Free
summer meals can help. Last year, the
SE Ohio Foodbank &amp; Kitchen delivered
over 73,000 summer meals. Spread the
word: families can go to www.hapcap.
org/summerfeeding or call 1-740-3856813 to find a site and learn more.

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

1990, with his sons David
and Ronnie Casci accepting
on his behalf;
Guido Girolami, who
received his award in 1961,
with his son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Davis, accepting on his
behalf; and,
George Horak, who
received his awards in
1983 and 1996, with his
son-and-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Adam Smith,
accepting on his behalf.
Those still alive but not
present were Don Hunnell,
who received his awards
in 1964 and in 1973; Tom
Anderson, who received
his award in 2002; Sam
Van Matre, who received
his award in 2014; and
Irving “Jay” Lance, who is
this year’s recipient.

Charleston
71/44

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
55/42
Montreal
62/38

Billings
68/46
Minneapolis
65/52
Chicago
56/42

Denver
64/45

Toronto
59/35
New York
67/50

Detroit
62/41

Washington
72/52

Kansas City
69/54

Today

Hi/Lo/W
68/49/r
58/44/s
84/63/s
68/47/s
70/46/s
68/46/t
67/47/c
64/47/pc
71/44/s
82/55/s
63/41/pc
56/42/s
70/47/s
56/41/pc
64/42/s
72/65/r
64/45/t
71/54/s
62/41/s
82/70/pc
80/71/t
66/48/s
69/54/s
84/61/s
76/62/pc
70/57/pc
76/54/s
87/77/pc
65/52/pc
81/54/s
88/71/t
67/50/s
65/61/r
91/71/t
69/48/s
91/69/s
60/40/pc
63/40/pc
80/54/s
76/51/s
74/58/s
72/55/s
64/54/pc
58/47/sh
72/52/s

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
74/50/pc
57/44/pc
83/66/pc
66/51/s
71/49/s
66/47/pc
72/47/t
65/49/s
79/57/pc
80/60/pc
68/44/s
67/55/c
74/61/pc
68/53/c
72/55/pc
82/67/t
72/46/s
65/56/r
65/51/c
82/70/s
84/72/t
72/61/pc
71/60/t
76/54/pc
82/67/t
66/55/sh
80/66/pc
86/77/pc
58/54/r
83/64/pc
86/73/c
71/54/s
80/64/t
89/72/t
72/52/s
89/64/pc
71/52/pc
67/42/s
75/55/s
74/53/s
73/65/t
73/52/pc
63/52/sh
69/49/t
74/56/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
84/63

El Paso
80/60

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
Low

95° in Bainbridge, GA
22° in Cedar Point, UT

Global
Chihuahua
84/55

High
117° in Atar, Mauritania
Low -30° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
80/71
Monterrey
82/70

GOALS

Miami
87/77

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

Vets

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

RedStorm
rains
on SE Univ.
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The University of Rio Grande jumped to an eight-run
fourth inning lead and never looked back,
cruising to a 10-4 win over Southeastern
(Fla.) University in the NAIA Baseball
National Championship Opening Round at
Embry-Riddle University’s Sliwa Stadium.
The RedStorm, seeded fifth in the fivetime double-elimination Embry-Riddle
Bracket, won for the 13th straight time to
improve to 33-20.
Head coach Brad Warnimont’s club will
face top-seeded Auburn University-Montgomery in the final game of the tourney’s
opening day, Tuesday at 6 p.m.
The No. 4 seed Fire slipped to 38-20
loss and will play in an elimination contest
against either No. 2 seed Embry-Riddle or
third-seeded Bryan (Tenn.) on Wednesday
at 10 a.m.
Rio Grande sandwiched three-run uprisings in the second and fourth innings
around a two-run third inning to take an
8-0 lead.
Senior Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) had a run-scoring single in the
three-run second, before a two-run double
by senior Kyle Findley (Cincinnati, OH) in
the third made it 5-0.
Junior Kirk Yates belted a three-run
home run in the fourth which extended the
lead to 8-0.
Southeastern got on the board with a
fourth inning run, but Rio answered in the
top of the fifth when senior Malduino Gonzalez led off with a double and scored on a
one-out, ground-rule double by sophomore
Carlos Flores (Guayanilla, Puerto Rico) to
push the lead back to 9-1.
The Fire drew to within 9-4 after scratching out three runs against Rio Grande sophomore starter Trent Downs (Chillicothe,
OH) in the home half of the seventh inning,
but the RedStorm set the final score on a
run-scoring hit by Findley in the eighth.
Findley and Yates both finished with
two hits and three RBI, while Flores and
Tamane both had two hits and one run batted in. Gonzalez and freshman Cody Blackburn (Amanda, OH) also had two hits each
in the winning effort.
Downs allowed nine hits and the four
runs — three earned — while walking one
and striking out six for his sixth win in
seven decisions.
Luiz Diaz was 3-for-3 in the loss for
Southeastern, while Sean Anderson and
Stetson McCollin both had two hits and a
run batted in.
Patrick Kinney started and took the loss
for the Fire, allowing five hits, four walks
and seven runs over 3-1/3 innings.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, May 13
Baseball
River Valley at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 6 p.m.
Hannan-CC-Wahama winners at Wahama,
6 p.m.
Softball
Gallia Academy at Warren, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
SEOAL meet at Jackson, 4 p.m.
Thursday, May 14
Baseball
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 6 p.m.
Hannan-CC at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Softball
SG-Green winner at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Waterford-Miller winner at Southern, 5
p.m.
Point Pleasant at Logan, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Track and Field
Point Pleasant at Cabell Midland, 4 p.m.
Friday, May 15
Baseball
Hannan-CC at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Softball
Crooksville at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Oak Hill-Southeastern winner at Meigs,
5 p.m.
Track and Field
Wahama, Hannan at Parkersburg, 4:30

Wednesday, May 13, 2015 s Page 6

South Gallia falls to Green
By Donald Lambert

The Black and Red generated
more offense in the sixth after
Poling was plated on an error.
MERCERVILLE, Ohio —
The Lady Rebels closed within
The South Galia softball team
one after the sixth inning. Howwas eliminated from the 2015
ever, the Bobcats sealed the
postseason with a 5-2 loss to
deal in the seventh inning with
Green on Monday night in a
an RBI-single from Sausbury
Division IV sectional semifinal and an RBI-double from Johnin Gallia County.
son to give Green the victory.
The Lady Rebels (4-17)
Johnson took the win for the
started their offense in the first Bobcats after allowing five hits,
with Sara Bailey and Ciara
two runs, six walks and four
Small getting walked and Cait- strikeouts. Vanscoy was handed
lyn Vanscoy reaching first on
the loss after allowing seven
an error. South Gallia wasn’t
hits, five runs, three walks and
able to capitalize and the game 11 strikeouts.
remained scoreless.
Vanscoy led the Lady Rebels
The Bobcats (5-16) struck
with two hits, followed by Baifirst in the first inning off a
ley with one hit and one RBI.
single from Bradley. A few bat- Bradley led Green with three
ters later, Johnson singled and hits and two RBIs. South Gallia
plated Bradley to give Green
left 10 batters on base, while
the early 1-0 lead.
Green left seven on the bags.
In the second inning, the Lady
The Lady Rebels did not take
Rebels found an offensive rhythm part in the district tournament
after a single from Kylie Haislop.
in 2014. The last tournament
After Mikayla Poling and Bailey
they took part in was 2013,
were walked, Haislop made it
where they lost in the sectional
home after Shelby Sanders was
final to Eastern. South Gallia
walked. After getting three straight beat Green in their previous
SGHS players out, the game was
tournament meeting in 2010 at
tied 1-all after two innings.
home 7-3. The Black and Red
The game was suspended for
are 4-6 in district tournaments
a rain delay in the third inning.
since 2009.
When play resumed, Green’s
South Gallia lost three
batters got hot with an RBIstraight games and 10 of their
double from Bradley, which
Donald Lambert | OVP Sports
last 11 to end this season.
South Gallia junior Caitlyn Vanscoy (7) recorded 10 strikeouts plated Cline and Hall. The
in Monday night’s Division IV sectional semifinal tournament visitors were up 3-1 after three
Donald Lambert can be reached at 740game against Green in Mercerville, Ohio.
446-2342, ext. 2106
innings.
elambert@civitasmedia.com

Sand Sharks bite Rio Grande softball
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

HARDEEVILLE, S.C. —
Kristy Cook tossed a twohit shutout and Mariaha
Sanborn clubbed a two-out,
three-run home run in the
first inning to give South
Carolina-Beaufort an early
lead and fuel an eventual
8-0 win over the University
of Rio Grande in the winner’s bracket final of the
NAIA National Softball
Championship Opening
Round’s USC-Beaufort
Bracket at the Richard Gray
Sports Complex.
The host Sand Sharks,
who are ranked 16th
nationally and seeded
second in the bracket,
improved to 42-12 and
advanced to Wednesday
afternoon title game.
The RedStorm, the No. 4
seed in the bracket, slipped
to 32-15 and dropped into
the loser’s bracket final
against either No. 1 seed
Campbellsville or No. 3
seed Indiana Wesleyan,
Tuesday, at 5 p.m.
Rio Grande was shutout
for just the second time
this season and the first
time since a 4-0 loss to
Asbury University in the
home opener on March 12.
Cook, who was The
Sun Conference Pitcher of
the Year, retired the final
13 batters she faced and
allowed just three baserunners altogether - singles
to senior Jessi Robinson
(Wilmington, OH) in the
first and third innings and
a third inning walk to freshman Gabby Gregg (Ashville, OH).
Cook finished with eight
strikeouts en route to her
26th win in 30 outings.
The Sand Sharks got all
of the runs it would need
against Rio sophomore
starter Jenna Jones (Lancaster, OH) in the first
when Maddie Byrd reached
on a two-out single, moved
to second when Taylor
Triplett was hit by a pitch
and Sanborn followed with
a three-run home run to
left-center.

Photo courtesy of URG

Rio Grande senior Jessi Robinson had both of the RedStorm’s hits in Tuesday’s 8-0 loss to South CarolinaBeaufort in the winner’s bracket final of the NAIA National Softball Championship Opening Round’s USCBeaufort bracket.

That’s how things stayed
until the fifth when USCB’s
Shelby Zipperer was hit by
a pitch, moved to third on
a pair of groundouts and
scored on a passed ball
while Sanborn was drawing
a walk.
The Sand Sharks finished
off the win by adding three
more runs in the sixth
inning and another marker

in the seventh.
Zipperer and Byrd were
both hit by pitches with the
bases loaded and an RBI
fielder’s choice grounder
off the bat of Triplett
accounted for the sixth
inning runs, while a throwing error plated the game’s
final run.
Sanborn and Marissa
Becker added two hits each

in the winning effort.
Jones slipped to 15-7 on
the season, allowing seven
hits and seven runs — four
earned — with two walks
and four hit batsmen over
5-1/3 innings. She struck
out three.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the University
of Rio Grande.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

URG softball stuns No. 7 Campbellsville
By Randy Payton

necessary, would be played
Wednesday at 3 p.m.
Campbellsville, which
HARDEEVILLE, S.C.
was ranked No. 7 in the
— Fourth-seeded Univerlatest NAIA coaches’ poll,
sity of Rio Grande rallied
slipped to 34-9 with the
for three runs with two
loss. The Tigers will meet
outs in the seventh inning Indiana Wesleyan in an
and stunned top-seeded
elimination game on TuesCampbellsville University, day at 2 p.m.
4-3, in the NAIA Softball
The Campbellsville-IWU
National Championship
winner will then face the
Opening Round’s USCRio-USCB loser in another
Beaufort Bracket, Monday elimination contest on
afternoon, at the Richard
Tuesday, at 5 p.m.
Gray Sports Complex.
Rio Grande’s win was
The RedStorm improved just the ninth in 48 tries
to 32-14 with the win and by a No. 4 seed since the
advanced to Tuesday’s 11
tourney adopted its Opena.m. winner’s bracket final ing Round format of 10,
against regional host and
four-team regional sites in
No. 2 seed USC-Beaufort, 2013.
which edged third-seeded
Campbellsville’s No. 7
Indiana Wesleyan Univerranking also represents the
sity, 1-0, in Monday’s open- highest-ranked opponent
ing game.
beaten by a Rio Grande
Tuesday’s winner
team in the program’s hisadvances to the regional
tory.
title game on Wednesday
Rio Grande rattled off
at noon and would have to five consecutive hits with
be beaten twice. The sectwo outs in the final frame
ond championship final, if against Mid-South Confer-

For Ohio Valley Publishing

ence Pitcher of the Year
Victoria Decker, with freshman Tayler Arndt’s (Clyde,
OH) two-run single tying
the game and junior Ariel
Roder’s (Parma Heights,
OH) RBI single plating the
go-ahead run.
Each team scored a run
in the first before Campbellsville broke on top,
3-1, thanks to back-to-back
run-scoring singles in the
second inning off the bats
of Rebecca Miller and Brianna Scott.
The Tigers had numerous chances to break the
game open, but stranded
11 runners as Rio Grande
sophomore starter Jenna
Jones (15-6) repeatedly
worked out of jams.
Jones scattered seven
hits in a complete game
effort, but walked four and
hit three batters to help
fuel the Tigers’ scoring
chances. Campbellsville
left the bases loaded in the
second, third and sixth
innings and stranded 11

runners altogether.
Arndt went 2-for-4
with three RBI, while
sophomore Brittany Walk
finished 3-for-4 and senior
Jessi Robinson (Wilmington, OH) added two hits in
the winning effort for Rio
Grande.
Mid-South Conference
Freshman of the Year
Jacqueline Roof was 2-for3 and scored twice for
Campbellsville, the MSC
regular season champion,
while Miller added two
hits and an RBI in a losing
cause.
Decker, who allowed
more than three runs in
an outing for just the third
time this season, suffered
just her fourth loss in 22
decisions. She allowed a
season-high 11 hits, while
walking one and striking
out three.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Investigator finds evidence against Brady
NEW YORK (AP) — The lawyer
who investigated the New England
Patriots insisted Tuesday that he
found direct, not just circumstantial, evidence to show quarterback
Tom Brady knew team employees
were deflating footballs.
Miffed by criticism from Brady’s
agent, Ted Wells decided to take
the unusual step of holding a conference call with reporters, a day
after the NFL suspended the Super
Bowl MVP for the season’s first
four games based on the report.
Wells said his findings would
have been strong enough to convince a jury under the “preponderance of evidence” standard, which
is used in many civil cases.
Wells released his report last
Wednesday, asserting it was “more
probable than not” that Brady “was
at least generally aware” of plans
by two team employees to prepare
the balls to his liking, below the
league-mandated minimum of 12.5

pounds per square inch.
His voice frequently rising Tuesday, Wells testily rebutted assertions from Don Yee, Brady’s agent,
questioning Wells’ independence
because his firm does other business with the NFL.
“What drove the decision in
this report is one thing: It was the
evidence,” Wells said. “I could not
ethically ignore the import and relevancy of those text messages and
the other evidence.”
Wells specifically mentioned two
series of text exchanges between
officials’ locker room attendant Jim
McNally and equipment assistant
John Jastremski. In one, McNally
referred to himself as “the Deflator” and joked about going to
ESPN. In another, Jastremski mentioned speaking to Brady the previous night, saying the quarterback
knew McNally was stressed out by
needing to deflate the balls.
“That is not circumstantial evi-

dence,” Wells said. “That is two of
the participants in a scheme discussing what has taken place.”
On Thursday, Yee had called
Wells’ report “a significant and terrible disappointment,” suggesting
that it “reached a conclusion first,
and then determined so-called
facts later.”
Along with denying any bias,
Wells derided the idea that the
NFL wanted the investigation
to implicate a quarterback he
described as “one of the most popular, iconic players in the league.”
“That does not make sense,” Wells
said. “It’s a ridiculous allegation.”
Wells has conducted several
other high-profile sports investigations in recent years, including the
NFL report on the Miami Dolphins
bullying scandal. To Yee’s assertion
that he omitted key statements
from Brady, Wells challenged the
agent to release his full transcript
of the interview.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015 7

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Meigs 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) 645-4479 or Riverside (304)
773-5354.

Chancey Charity
Golf Scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The first annual Chancey
Charity Golf Scramble will be held on Saturday,
May 16, at Riverside Golf Course in Mason
County. The event will be a four-man scramble
with an 8:30 a.m. shotgun start, and each team
should have a combined handicap of 4o-plus —
with one member of the team allowed to be under
a 10 handicap. The cost per person is $65 apiece,
which includes golf, cart, lunch and beverages.
Each participant will also be awarded one mulligan with the entry fee. Prizes will go to the top
three finishing teams and all proceeds will benefit
the local area food banks. There will also be a
skins game at a cost of $20 per team. For more
information, contact Mike Chancey at 740-5918644.

Lady Raiders
Basketball Camp
BIDWELL, Ohio — The River Valley girls
basketball program will be holding its 2015 Lady
Raiders Basketball Camp for girls in grades K-8
from 9 a.m. until noon on Monday, June 8 though
Wednesday, June 10. RVHS head coach Sarah
Evans-Moore will be hosting the camp along with
the River Valley assistant coaches and players.
Coach Evans-Moore is a former college basketball
player at Stanford University and former Head
Coach of the Marshall University Thundering
Herd women’s basketball team. She led Marshall
University to a Southern Conference Championship and an NCAA Tournament appearance.
Campers will receive a t-shirt and quality instruction in the areas of ball handling, passing, proper
shooting form, offensive moves, defense and
rebounding. Call to reserve your spot and there is
a cost for the camp. All questions can be directed
to Sarah Evans-Moore at 740-441-1616 or sarah@
evans-moore.com

NASCAR’s All-Star race proves to be a dud in recent years
CONCORD, N.C. (AP)
— The lore of NASCAR’s
annual All-Star race has
been building since 1987,
when Dale Earnhardt’s
“pass in the grass” gave
him the victory.
That exciting third
installment of the AllStar race was followed by
plenty of stellar finishes
— Rusty Wallace’s 1989
victory over a spinning
Darrell Waltrip in a race
dubbed “The Tide Slide,”
or Davey Allison’s 1992
door-to-door battle with
Kyle Petty that sent Allison to the hospital after
he took the checkered
flag on “One Hot Night.”
But the reality is those
kinds of finishes don’t
happen very often anymore.
In fact, the All-Star
race has been a bit of a
dud for almost 10 years
now.
There’s been a handful of highlights, mainly
involving Kyle Busch,
and mostly for the offtrack drama created by
on-track incidents.
Busch and big brother
Kurt wrecked each other
in 2007 racing for position, and it triggered
a feud that still isn’t
completely healed. They
went six months without
speaking, finally breaking the ice when their
grandmother requested
a peace agreement for
Thanksgiving dinner.
In 2010, Kyle Busch
tried to pass teammate
Denny Hamlin for the
lead when Hamlin threw
a block that sent Busch
into the wall. A livid
Busch radioed his team
he was “going to kill”
Hamlin after the race.

“I had this race won! It
was won!” he screamed.
Aside from that kind
of drama, only the most
rabid fans can remember
many of the ho-hum finishes of the last decade.
Jimmie Johnson has won
four of the last 12, Kurt
Busch and Kevin Harvick
both have victories in
that same stretch, and all
three should be among
the most dominant drivers in Saturday night’s
running at Charlotte
Motor Speedway.
So what’s the problem
with the All-Star race?
For starters, there’s
nothing really “all-star”
about the event. This
year’s running is a 110lap affair with probably
20 drivers competing
— a little less than half
the regular, 43-car field
running what’s in essence
just a shortened version
of any other race on a
mile-and-a-half track.
Sure, the event is
divided into segments
and concludes with a
10-lap sprint to the finish
for the $1 million prize.
Only problem? Time
and time again the current rules package has
shown that, barring a
late caution or fluke finish, the driver that wins
the restart will win the
race. Clean air means
everything in NASCAR,
and 10 laps just aren’t
enough for a driver to
chase down the leader.
Oh, and that part about
laying it all out on the
line for the chance to
win the big prize? Well,
$1 million doesn’t mean
the same to today’s crop
of drivers as it did when
the race debuted in 1985.

Drivers aren’t racing anymore to buy groceries or
tires or to pay the travel
to the next week’s race.
A lack of true rivalries
in the sport leaves little
incentive for a driver to
take many risks for a $1
million prize, a payout
the team owner is taking
at least 40 percent from.
Nobody wants to tear
up equipment or wreck
someone in a meaningless race.
Some suggestions to
improve the race:
— Put more money on
the line. Dangle a prize
out there that might
actually entice a driver.
Charlotte Motor Speedway President Marcus
Smith firmly believes the
$1 million to the winner
— the highest payout in
any NASCAR event — is
still a meaningful payday. But as he was surrounded last week by the
money in neatly wrapped
bundles, Smith admitted
he’d double the prize to
$2 million if NASCAR
ran the race with no rules
for car setups.
— Smith’s idea of not
using a rule package is
actually a strong draw for
the competitors and fans.
It would put some ingenuity and creativity into
car design and setup,
and for one race legalize
any attempts to, ahem,
cheat and get outside of

NASCAR’s current box.
currently lacks.
When Smith ran the idea
— If nothing else
past Chad Knaus, the
works, dangle some sort
six-time championship
of postseason incentive to
winning crew chief suggested keeping the decision secret until 48 hours
before the track opened.
Giving them too much
notice would give too
much creative time.
— Scrap the Showdown, the race where
drivers can transfer into
the main event. Turn it
into heat races, which
have proved to be wildly
popular among fans when
used in the Truck Series
at Eldora Speedway.
— Drop the pole-sitter
to the rear of the field. If
that driver comes back to
win, the payout increases
to $5 million.
— Move the track
around to different venues. There would be far
more contact if the race
was run on a short track
or road course, but passing is difficult on the
intermediate tracks, and
contact is at a minimum
when there’s nothing significant on the line.
— Open the gates to
the public, no admission
charged. It’s risky for the
promoter, but they could
ban coolers this one
race and try to recoup
some of the losses at
the concession stands.
A full track would give
the event an energy it

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8 Wednesday, May 13, 2015

MLB pumps up ball security
NEW YORK (AP) —
Major League Baseball
pumped up security for its
game balls this season in the
wake of the Tom Brady flap.
Starting this year, an
MLB representative
watches the baseballs while
a clubhouse assistant carries them from the umpires’
room to the field.
And if the supply runs
low during the game, an
MLB security person is now
sent to retrieve more from
the umps’ room.
In the past, a ball boy
or ball girl did those jobs
alone.
“We can’t deflate ‘em,”
Yankees pitcher CC
Sabathia said Sunday. “It’s
precautionary, I guess.”
MLB said many changes
in the policy for ball security
and storage were discussed
by equipment managers
last December at the winter
meetings, before Brady and
the New England Patriots
were accused of deflating
footballs in the AFC championship game.
MLB said it was aware of
the Patriots’ situation as it
put the new procedures in
effect.
Brady was suspended for
four games by the NFL on

Monday for his role in the
scandal. The Patriots were
fined $1 million and also
lost two future draft picks.
“Obviously, there’s not
as much that you can do
to baseballs,” Los Angeles
Angels pitcher C.J. Wilson
said . “I mean, you can’t
change the density of the
baseball at any point —
unless you dunk them in
water. Then they’re going to
be 9 ounces, and everyone’s
going to blow their arms
out.”
Game balls weigh
between 5 ounces and 5
1/4.
“If you’re playing on turf
and a guy hits a screaming
one-hopper to the shortstop, it’s going to have a
huge scuff on it. Certain
pitchers can create an
advantage with that, so
that’s why they throw those
baseballs out,” Wilson said.
Hoping to avoid a seamy
situation, MLB sent a
memo to all 30 teams
before opening day with a
nine-step procedure on ball
handling. Along with the
policy on storage — around
70 degrees, about 50 percent humidity — there were
guidelines on chain of command.

Home teams store the
new balls during the season,
and the umpires’ clubhouse
attendants usually rub up
about eight dozen for each
game.
When they’re taken to the
field, an MLB authenticator
follows them. That person is
a current or former member
of law enforcement hired
by an outside company to
document balls and other
game-used items, often to
be sold or given to charities.
If the ball supply is
running out, a Resident
Security Agent gets more.
The RSAs also have police
backgrounds and are hired
by MLB.
The plate umpire keeps
several new balls in a pouch.
When he needs more, he
signals to the ball boys and
ball girls. The ump puts
each one in play, occasionally tossing out a ball before
it ever gets into the game.
“I’d say a ball averages
only two pitches, and not
too many things can happen
when you foul a pitch into
the stands,” Wilson said.
AP Baseball Writer Howie Rumberg
contributed to this report.

Derby trainer Todd Pletcher
takes pass on Preakness
NEW YORK (AP) — The Preakness
is out for trainer Todd Pletcher.
Pletcher said Tuesday he will not
enter any of the four horses he was
considering for Saturday’s Preakness at
Pimlico Race Course.
Materiality is expected to run next
in the Belmont Stakes on June 6 after
finishing sixth in the Kentucky Derby
despite a troubled trip.
Pletcher’s other Preakness possibilities were Derby 10th-place finisher
Carpe Diem; Competitive Edge; and
Stanford.
With the decision, the Preakness
could be left with seven starters, the
smallest field since 1986. Derby winner American Pharoah, and secondand third-place finishers Firing Line
and Dortmund top the lineup. Others
include Danzig Moon, Divining Rod,
Bodhisattva and Tale of Verve.
“It came down to we just felt two
weeks was a little bit risky,” Pletcher
said, adding that Carpe Diem also

would likely return for the Belmont.
“We felt five weeks to the Belmont
would be an advantage for him (Materiality). He’s been at Belmont since two
days after the Derby and has been training well.”
The post-position draw for the Preakness is Wednesday.
Javier Castellano, who rode Materiality in the Derby, picks up the mount on
Divining Rod.
In other Preakness news:
— American Pharoah and Dortmund galloped 1 1/2 miles at Churchill
Downs. Said trainer Bob Baffert:
“American Pharoah, he is something
to see out there. He just floats over the
track. Dortmund looked like a happy
horse out there today.” The colts are set
to ship to Pimlico on Wednesday.
—Firing Line galloped 1 1/2 miles at
Churchill and also is scheduled to arrive
Wednesday.
Associated Press freelancer Mike Farrell in Baltimore
contributed to this report.

Daily Sentinel

Fowler’s game catching up
to the quality of the person
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) — Rickie Fowler walked into
a restaurant wearing a beanie pulled
down over his ears. The look was
not unusual for someone his age.
It was the location. He was in the
tropical warmth of Hawaii.
All eyes were on him — especially the young people — when he
removed his cap and all that hair
spilled out. After dinner, he stopped
by to chat with a PGA Tour rules
official and was introduced to the
others at the table, including a teenage girl. Too shy to ask for a photo,
the girl tweeted about her chance
meeting. Moments later, her eyes
widened as she stared at her phone.
Fowler had replied to her tweet.
He had another fan for life. There
are countless others.
Gestures like that have endeared
Fowler to so many fans even as he
was accumulating so few victories.
Winning was a long time coming
for the 26-year-old Californian, and
he bagged a big one last week at
The Players Championship. It was
his second PGA Tour win in 137
starts as a pro, so there is still some
catching up to do. The manner in
which he won — no one had ever
gone birdie-eagle-birdie-birdie over
the final four holes on the TPC Sawgrass — will make one victory feel
like five. It brought instant credibility when he sorely needed it.
“It’s only going to help move me
forward,” Fowler said after his playoff win over Kevin Kisner and Sergio Garcia. “This will definitely give
me momentum going into the U.S.
Open and making me feel confident
about being in this situation and
taking care of business.”
But that’s Rickie Fowler on the
golf course.
He’s been a superstar off the
course for the last six years, and
there was nothing overrated about
that.
“Fun, energetic, a great talent.
He’s got a loving side, a caring
side,” said Bubba Watson, who
found a loyal friend in Fowler. “He’s
got every quality you’d want. You
can say any nice word, and he is
truly that person. And very few
people go through life like that.”
Fowler was blessed with so many
ingredients for stardom.
His amateur career included a 3-1
record on one of the best U.S. Walker Cup teams in recent years (six
players from that 2007 team have
won on the PGA Tour). His lost in
a playoff in his second PGA Tour
event as a pro, easily got his card
through Q-school and became the
only American to play in the Ryder
Cup as a rookie.
And he had style.
His endorsement with Puma

made him a colorful figure —
orange on Sunday — with those
flat-bill hats. They became as
popular as the swoosh, filling a void
when Tiger Woods was missing
chunks of time. Fowler brought an
X Games personality to the buttondown sport of golf with his background riding motorbikes.
“I think being in those situations, where I grew up racing dirt
bikes and being in a little bit more
extreme situations, being up in the
air and doing stuff that players don’t
normally do, in a way makes me feel
more comfortable in some of the
situations as far as being in contention,” he once said. “Just because
I’ve probably scared myself a little
bit more than is possible on a golf
course.”
For all his thrill seeking on a
motorcycle when he was a kid, there
was always a softer side to Fowler.
His father, Rod, who raced motorcycles as a pro before Rickie was
born, described an upbringing
where the glass was half full even
if it was bone dry. When his son
began to take golf seriously, they
talked about only the good shots he
hit. There was no need to remind
him of the others.
His father also detected early that
his son was a people pleaser.
“When he was about 5, we’d go up
to the mountains and ride and he
was always worried about the cops,”
Rod Fowler said late last year. “I
used to tell him, ‘Don’t worry about
the cops. That’s on me. You’ve got
Dad with you.’ But he never wanted
to get in trouble. If anything, he
would keep me in line.”
And maybe that’s why the magazine survey of anonymous players
stung so much.
Fowler and Ian Poulter each
received 24 percent of the vote as
the most overrated player on the
PGA Tour. Neither is true. If anything, Poulter is an overachiever.
Poulter also has a polarizing personality, which surely contributed to
the number of votes.
Fowler is immensely popular
with his peers, not to mention the
fans. PGA Tour players have a jealous streak in them, and it probably
didn’t help that Fowler was billed
as a rising star with two victories
worldwide. Never mind that he beat
Rory McIlroy in both of them.
Fowler is No. 9 in the world, still
miles behind McIlroy in every category (majors, wins, world ranking).
But this will help. He is The Players
champion and the fans’ choice. It’s a
good combination to have.

Mayweather-Pacquiao sets PPV mark with 4.4 million buys
LAS VEGAS (AP) —
Floyd Mayweather Jr. and
Manny Pacquiao proved
a box office smash, even
if their welterweight title
fight didn’t live up to the
hype.
The May 2 fight obliterated the pay-per-view
record, with 4.4 million
buys generating more
than $400 million in rev-

enue. With a live gate of
nearly $72 million and
other revenue, the bout
grossed more than $600
million and likely made
Mayweather more than
$200 million.
Showtime and HBO
officials reported the
whopping PPV figures
Tuesday, saying the fight
broke the previous record

of 2.48 million buys generated by Mayweather’s
2007 fight with Oscar De
La Hoya by nearly 2 million buys.
It also nearly tripled
the record $150 million in
pay-per-view revenue generated by Mayweather vs.
Canelo Alvarez in 2013.
“We did not anticipate
this number of buys,”
said Mark Taffet, who
heads PPV operations
for HBO. “It reinforces
the notion that when you
give the fans the fights
they demand, they always
respond.”
Mayweather was the
big winner both in the
fight and at the bank. He
was guaranteed 60 percent of the net revenue
to the promotion, while

Pacquiao’s camp got the
remaining 40 percent.
The total figures to be
around $400 million after
satellite TV and cable
systems take their cut,
meaning Mayweather
— who is his own promoter — could walk away
with $240 million for his
night’s work. Pacquiao
would share in the other
$160 million with promoter Bob Arum.
The Nevada Athletic
Commission says the live
gate for the fight was a
record $72,198,500, far
eclipsing the previous
mark of $20 million set by
Mayweather and Alvarez.
The fight also did another
$50 million or so in foreign sales, sponsorships
and related income.

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It also sold 46,000
closed circuit seats at
various MGM Grand
operated hotels in the
Las Vegas area at $150
a ticket, and was sold to
more than 5,000 bars,
restaurants and other
businesses throughout
the United States.
However, the fight had
some technical problems
for last-minute buyers and
was seen for free by thousands on services like
Twitter’s Periscope and
Meerkat, which stream
video to the Internet.
“To do almost twice
what the prior record was
and nearly triple the previous high water mark for
revenue is really something,” Stephen Espinoza,
executive VP and GM of
Showtime Sports said.
“I thought we would be
doing very well if we got
to 3 million buys, which
would have broken the
record by 20 percent.”

Mayweather won the
fight by unanimous decision, and it was later
revealed that Pacquiao
had injured his shoulder
in training. That has
led to a number of lawsuits filed on behalf of
people who bought the
PPV, claiming they were
defrauded out of their
money because the injury
was not revealed.
Taffet said the strong
interest in boxing continued with Saturday’s fight
between Canelo Alvarez
and James Kirkland in
Houston. The fight,
which drew more than
30,000 people to Minute
Maid Park, was watched
by an average 2.1 million viewers on HBO, the
highest rating for a fight
on the network in nine
years.
“We’re in a period of
tremendous viewership
for the sport,” he said.

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, May 13, 2015 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

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2 bdrm mobile home on farm.
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$550 month. 740-446-4474
Farmhouse 3-BR, 2 car garage, Rocksprings Pomeroy,
OH. NO SMOKING, References.740-412-1000
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm.
house close to Holzer, 107 Colonial Dr. Gallipolis, OH. No
pets. Deposit, references.
$1000.00 mo. 740-446-4116 or
740-709-1804
Sales
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Available
740)446-3570

Call

Miscellaneous
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,
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Help Wanted General
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Truck Driver Wanted,
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CDL, good driving record, mail
résumé with 3 work references to: Driver, P.O. Box
1016, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
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Upstairs Apt. on Viand St.
$400.00 plus deposit.
Call for details 304-812-4350

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For Sale
2005 Honda Accord LX
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304-541-8798

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Mechanic Wanted with
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experience required.
Send résumé to:
Mechanic, P.O. Box 1016,
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2 &amp; 3 BR apts
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Please stop by for an application at 333 Page St., Middleport, OH. OBC is an Equal Opportunity Employer and a Participant of the Drug Free Workplace Program.

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