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                  <text>Pip &amp;
Hud’s cuts
ribbon.

Storms
possible. High
of 93. Low of 67.

Coaches,
locals part of
BACF Classic.

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 93, Volume 69

Meigs talks
Reading
Challenge

Thursday, June 11, 2015 s 50¢

‘Human billboard’

By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The Meigs Local School Board meeting
Tuesday began with Intermediate Principal Irene Murphy
updating the board on the Meigs Primary and Meigs Intermediate Summer Reading Challenge.
Some creative plans have been made to encourage
students in kindergarten through ﬁfth grades to continue
reading throughout the summer. Meigs Parent Teacher
Organization provided books for students to take home
for summer reading. Teachers are posting pictures of
themselves reading their favorite books in their favorite
reading places to show their students they are reading this
summer as well.
A Meigs public librarian will bring books to the school
for students to checkout on June 17, July 1, July 15, July
29 and Aug. 12 from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Free lunches
are provided on these dates to parents and their children
who check out books. At the end of the Reading Challenge, those students who have met their goals will be
invited to a pool party at Syracuse.
Next up was Athletic Director Ron Hill, who brought
information before the board regarding the amount Meigs
has paid ofﬁcials for athletic events in the past. According
to his ﬁndings, Meigs currently budgets less than other
schools in the area for the same ofﬁcials. The amounts
ofﬁcials are requesting and being given by other schools
in the area may put Meigs at a disadvantage in regards to
ensuring quality ofﬁcials for Meigs athletic events. Hill
recommended the amount be increased.
The board agreed to include the increased amount in
the budget proposal for admission prices/ofﬁcials pay for
athletic events for the 2015-2016 school year. The proposal
was approved later in the meeting.
On the recommendation of Jeff Bissel, the board
approved a donation of a 1998 Chevrolet Malibu by Kenneth Cook to the auto tech program.
The following were approved for one year contracts:
Kelly Drummer, language arts teacher at Meigs Middle
School; Amy Bufﬁngton, elementary school nurse; Tracy
Stone, ﬁfth-grade teacher; Kelly Lambert approved as
secretary at Meigs Intermediate School. Ryan Eaton was
approved as school service coordinator under the 21st
Century Grant at Meigs Elementary based upon available
funding from the grant.
Contracts approved for the 2015-16 school year are as
follows: J. Scott Cleland, girls varsity basketball coach; and
Jennifer Henson, Denise Arnold, Stacie Scarberry, Donna
Wolfe, Judy McCarthy, Joyce Hill, Betty Ann Wolfe, Kathy
Hudson, Penny Ramsburg and Chris Saber as resident
educator mentors.
The board also accepted the resignation of Mackenzie
Brink as a Meigs Middle School teacher effective June 1,
as well as two overnight ﬁeld trips, one for ﬁve Meigs FFA
students going to FFA Camp this summer and another for
three Meigs High School students attending a SkillsUSA
Leadership Camp at Hocking College in July.
In other business, Meigs Local School District and the
University of Rio Grande entered into a contractual agreement for Nursing Clinical Experiences July 1 through June
30, 2016.
Wright Specialty Insurance, represented by a local agent
from Reed and Baur Insurance Agency in Pomeroy, was
approved to provide the 2015-16 school property,casualty,
liability and auto insurance for the district.
The board moved to executive session for the purpose
of discussing hiring and compensation of personnel and
the disposition and sale of property.
The next scheduled meeting of the Meigs Local School
Board will be 7 p.m. June 30 at the administrative ofﬁce
on41765 Pomeroy Pike.
Lorna Hart can be reached at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2551

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
NBA: 6
Football: 6
Briefs: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 5
Classified: 7-8
Comics: 9

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

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Off-the-clock employees created a “human billboard” Wednesday afternoon to raise awareness to the community about their desire to
negotiate when they will receive their pay raises.

Employees raise concerns over wage negotiations
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Off-the-clock
Overbrook Rehabilitation Center
employees took to Pomeroy Parking Lot late Wednesday afternoon
to bring awareness to their con-

cerns regarding wage increases.
Carol Walters, coordinator for
Ohio Healthcare Service Employees International Union District
1199 and spokesperson for the
group, said employees decided to
do a “human billboard” because

employees are negotiating with
Overbrook regarding their pay
raise. Walters explained that the
current contract for employees
expires June 30.
On July 1, employees will receive
See BILLBOARD | 5

Shooting leads to marijuana arrest
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

LANGSVILLE — Two
men were arrested and
another taken to a hospital after a shooting
investigation led sheriff’s
deputies to a marijuana
operation in rural Meigs
County.
According to the
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce, deputies received
information from 911
dispatchers at 11:29 p.m
Sunday regarding a Gene
A. Arms Jr., of Wellston.
Arms allegedly told
ofﬁcers he was en route
to O’Bleness Memorial

Hospital
in Athens
after his
hand had
allegedly
been shot
off by Tyler
Meyers
Myers, of
Langsville.
Both Ohio
State Highway Patrol was
able to locate Arms in
Athens County, and he
was later transferred to
Grant Hospital in Columbus.
As of Wednesday afternoon, Arms remained at
Grant Hospital.
After receiving the
information from Arms,

deputies
went to
Meyers’
house,
where they
discovered
Meyers
Johnston
and Darrin
Johnston,
of Vinton, allegedly
attempting to load marijuana and other items
into a box trailer. The
men were immediately
arrested and transported
to Middleport Jail.
Deputies were also able
to conﬁrm that Arms
had been shot at the
home of Amber Helm
in Langsville due to the

presence of blood on the
ground outside leading
to the front door. Helm
allegedly told police the
shooting happened in her
bedroom, where a ﬁght
between Arms and Meyers began. Though no
name was given, deputies
said Helm told them one
of the two had a handgun and Arms was shot
in the hand as the two
men struggled with the
weapon. After conﬁrming
that Meyers had shot the
unidentiﬁed man’s hand,
ofﬁcers also charged Meyers with felonious assault.
See ARREST | 5

Kickin’ Summer Bash begins Friday
Staff Report

able to the kids from 4-8 p.m. free
of charge thanks to JD Drilling of
POMEROY — The Kickin’ Summer Racine. Friday evening bands include
Bash committee is inviting everyone out K.L.A.S.I.C. Heat 6 to 8:30 p.m. folfor the sixth annual festival held from
lowed by Marauder from 9-11:30 p.m.
the Ohio Pomeroy Levee on Friday and
Saturday’s lineup promises a full
Saturday.
schedule of activities with the inﬂatables
The festival main events will be
being ready for activity from noon to 8
focused along the river’s amphitheater
p.m. sponsored by Ohio Valley Bank.
and will provide food and entertainRockin’ Reggie, sponsored by Fox’s
ment.
Pizza, will be spinning the tunes and
Friday evening, from 4-8 p.m., the
playing games to provide entertainment
“Cruise In” sponsored by Mark Porter
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the upper
takes place on the lower area of the riv- stage area.
erfront parking lot. Everyone is invited
The “Anything That Floats” race is set
to come and either share their prize pos- to begin at the Pomeroy Levee at noon.
session or vote for their favorite vehicle. Participants of at least a two-person
The Cruise In welcomes all trucks, cars team must wear life jackets and build
and motorcycles. Prizes will be given, in their ﬂoat. The purse for this event is
addition to trophies for the winners of
$250 sponsored by Simmons-Musser &amp;
the event. There is no entry fee.
Warner Insurance with ﬁrst place, $125;
The bounce inﬂatables will be availsecond place, $75; and third place, $50.

At noon the decorated bicycle parade
starts at Court Street. Bicycles must be
decorated and ready to compete for the
$100 purse. There are two age categories; 2 to 6 sponsored by Little, Sheets
&amp; Warner, and 7 &amp; older sponsored by
the Vaughan Agency will pay out for
ﬁrst place $25; second place $15 and
third place $10 for each age category.
Beginning at 1 p.m., the pet contest
begins in which owners must dress their
pet in summer attire to enter. There are
three categories; Most Talented, Best
Dressed and Best Pet Owner Look-aLike. The purse for this event is $300.
Each category will pay out $100 for ﬁrst
place; $50 for second place; and $25 for
third place. Pawpaw’s Dawgie Spa will
have a special basket to award to the
People’s Choice.
See BASH | 5

�LOCAL

2 Thursday, June 11, 2015

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
ANDREWS
DELAWARE, Ohio — Howard Raymond “Ray”
Andrews Jr., 84, of Delaware, Ohio, died Wednesday,
March 25, 2015, in Willow Brook at Delaware Run,
Delaware.
A graveside service and burial will be 3 p.m. Saturday, June 13, 2015, at Kirkland Memorial Gardens in
Point Pleasant, W.Va. Local arrangements are under
the direction of Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant.
BRAGG
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. — Betty Jean Bragg, 63,
of Coolville, Ohio, died Wednesday, June 10, 2015, at
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.

Arrangements will be announced later by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville.
CONGER
POMEROY, Ohio — Opal Watson Conger, 75, of
Pomeroy, passed away at 10 a.m. Monday, June 8,
2015, at her residence.
There will be no calling hours or funeral services.
A memorial graveside service will be conducted in
the Beach Grove Cemetery at the convenience of the
family. Cremeens-King Funeral Home of Pomeroy is
entrusted with Opal’s arrangements.
LYONS
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Willie Lyons, 88, of Hun-

tington, passed away Sunday, May 31, 2015, at Huntington Health and Rehabilitation Center, Huntington.
There will be no services. Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in charge of arrangements.
WHITTINGTON
RUTLAND, Ohio — Charles Whittington, 52, of
Rutland, passed away at 9:10 a.m. Saturday, June 6,
2015, in the James Cancer Center in Columbus, Ohio.
In keeping with his wishes, there will be no calling
hours or funeral services. Cremation services have
been entrusted to Cremeens-King Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.

Belles and Beaus
club hosts graduation
Staff Report

on several dance moves
by state dance inspector
CHESHIRE — Belles
Etta McCormick before
and Beaus Western
being passed with “ﬂying
Square Dance Club
colors.”
recently held a graduation
A formal graduation
ceremony for their recent with candle lighting and
graduates at the Gavin
explanation of the rules
Employees Clubhouse
and obligations of being
with 69 people attending. a Western Square Dancer
was presented by the
Dancers were tested

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155

members for the newly
graduated dancers.
Several dance games
were enjoyed by all the
dancers. The men danced
especially well with their
“rag mop” ladies. The
biggest challenge was for
male dancers adorning
ladies hats and ladies
modeling men’s hats to
dance in opposite roles.
Roger Steele, of Southside, W.Va., was recognized for his continued
support and guidance
to the Belles and Beaus
Club.
Following the graduation activities, a potluck
meal was served.
The club conducts
workshops 7-9 p.m. every

Courtesy photo

Belles and Beaus Western Square Dance Club graduates: Dick Baker,Rio Grande, Shirley Ball,Pt.
Pleasant, Nan Heiskell,Cheshire, Wilma Payne,Gay, WV., Paula Wood,Longbottom, Sue Tuttle, Chester,
Jennetta Gill, Jackson and Pam and Dennie Boger, Athens.

Monday at the Gavin
Employees Clubhouse.
A Western Square
dance is held the second
Saturday of each month
from 7:30-10 p.m. A meal
is available at the same

location and all Western
square dancers are welcome to attend.
Classes for new square
dancers begins in September and is open to
anyone wishing to exer-

cise in a fun way and
meet new people. Everyone is welcome to join.
For information contact
304-675-3275, 740-4464213, 740-592-5668 or
740-992-7561.

Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

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

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

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

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

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Landaker Road Closure

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

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

Cemetery Grave Marking

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

MOVING SALE

Thursday-June 12 &amp; Friday-June 13
9am-No early sales

Vacation Bible School at
Bradford Church of Christ

‘Alaska Adventures’

Flatwoods Road in Pomeroy
2 miles from Taz/Twin Oaks

Look for Signs

someone who has? Randy Sanders, retired from
the ODNR Division of Wildlife and editor of “A
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County Township Road 256, Guide to Ohio Streams,” will be speaking about
his Alaskan hunting experiences at 7 p.m. ThursLandaker Road, will be closed between Mohler Road and
Vance Road beginning June 15. This closing will allow coun- day, June 11 at OSU South Centers, 1864 Shyville
ty forces to replace a bridge in Bedford Township located
Road, Piketon, in the Endeavor Center, Room 160.
1/10 mile northwest of T-238, Mohler Road. The road will
This presentation will be part of the regularly
remain closed for approximately 3 weeks or until July 6.
scheduled Southern Ohio Forestland Association
(OhioSofa.org) meeting. The presentation is free
and open to anyone interested in the great outdoors. A potluck meal precedes the meeting beginning at 6:15 pm.
CHESTER — The Ewing Chapter of the Sons of
American Revolutionary War Soldiers will have a ceremony to mark the grave of Revolutionary War soldier
Jacob Cowdery, an ancestor of Keith Cowdery and
Mary Cowdery, at Cowdery Cemetery in Keno June
20 at 2:00 p.m. The cemetery is located four miles
from Chester Court House and interested parties may
BRADFORD — Everest: Conquering Challenges
gather at the courthouse at 1:30 p.m. to go as a group. with God’s Mighty Power, is the theme of Bradford

PIKETON – Always wanted to go hunting in
Alaska or just like to hear about the adventures of

Church of Christ’s Vacation Bible School June 15-18.
VBS is held from 9-11:30 a.m. with classes for preschool through middle school students. Transportation is available if needed. For more information contact 740-992-5844.

60589075

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
THURS., JUNE 11

Sponsored
by:
Sponsored by Sponsor
The University of Rio Grande

WELLSTON — The
GJMV Solid Waste Management District Board of
Directors will meet at 3:30
p.m. at the district ofﬁce in
Wellston, located at 1056 S.
New Hampshire Avenue.

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REEDSVILLE —Beth-

el Worship Center, located at 39782 State Route
7, will host Good Gospel
Singing from 4-8 p.m.
Featured singers are
Rick and Ginny Towe,
Mike Cadle, John and
Velma Dolly, Jerry and
Diana Frederick, Brian
and Family Connections
and Angela Gibson and

PHOTO SUBMISSIONS: JUNE 1ST – JUNE 13TH
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60585698

Others. Concessions
are available. For more
information call 740508-6782.
POMEROY — The
Annual Kids Fishing
Derby will start at 8
a.m. The event is being
held by the Meigs
County Fish &amp; Game
Association. Anyone 15
years or younger must
be accompanied by
an adult. One rod and
reel per child. Bait can
only be night crawlers
and chicken liver. No
minnows or live bait.
There will be free food,
free drinks and prizes.
Local merchants helped
sponsor the event.
To get to the Derby
location, from Pomeroy, take State Route
7 north, turn left on
Texas Road and follow
the Derby signs.

60588520

LETART FALLS—
The regular meeting of
Letart Township Trustees will be held June
15 at 5:00 p.m. in the
Letart Township Building.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 11, 2015 3

Lead your ideal life Pip &amp; Hud’s officially cuts ribbon
without going broke
By Michelle Miller

pops, coffee, popcorn, some
different options for the customers to help offset the slow
=7BB?FEB?I�Å�BeYWb�
time.”
business owners Robbie and
Choosing a location for
Tessa Pugh ofﬁcially cut
the new shop was not easy,
the ribbon Tuesday on their according to Pugh. Due to
newest venture, Pip &amp; Hud’s, the number of events that
a frozen yogurt and gourmet jWa[�fbWY[�_d�=Wbb_feb_i�9_jo�
popcorn shop in downtown Park, they knew opening
=Wbb_feb_i$
the shop downtown would
Originally, the Pughs pur- be beneﬁcial. The existing
sued other owners of existbuildings, however, did not
ing yogurt shops in an effort have the electrical capacity to
to convince them to open a
handle the needs of a yogurt
beYWj_ed�_d�=Wbb_feb_i$�M^[d� and gourmet popcorn shop.
that proved unsuccessful,
Fortunately, a new building
Robbie and Tessa, who also being constructed by Randy
own Silver Screen VII and
Breech and Jim Blair did
Rocket VII, decided to move offer that option. Between
forward with opening the
the new building and support
business themselves, with a from the Downtown Revitallittle twist.
ization Project, Pip &amp; Hud’s
“We didn’t want to just
opened its doors on April 2,
have yogurt and that be the
2015, and has been going
end of it. I feel like yogurt
strong ever since.
shops in general struggle
“It’s been a bigger project
in the off-season months
and a lot busier than we ever
because of their limited
would have thought, which
options for their customers,” is a good problem to have,”
Robbie Pugh said. “So, our
Pugh said.
idea was to incorporate cake
One thing the Pughs have

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Brad Berger is a managing
partner and owner of
Cornerstone Financial Strategies
LLC in Tacoma, Wash.

Michelle Miller is executive director
of the Gallia County Chamber of
Commerce.

“I’VE NEVER BEEN ONE TO
SETTLE FOR AVERAGE.”

Matheny hired at
French City Homes

VAN REGIONAL &amp; OVER-THE-ROAD
TANKER INTERMODAL DEDICATED
COMPANY DRIVERS OWNER-OPERATORS
TEAM AND SOLO WORK AVAILABLE

EOE M/F/D/V

OHIO VALLEY
— It’s human to feel
envious when a neighbor drives up in an
expensive new car or
posts photos online of
a two-week European
vacation.
But when you let that
envy drive your decisions about spending
money, you could be
headed for ﬁnancial
trouble — the same
kind of trouble the
seemingly afﬂuent
neighbor already may
be facing.
“Too many people
get caught up in accumulating things and
projecting an image
of success,” says Brad
Berger, author of the
book “Stop Trying to
Keep Up With the Joneses – They’re Broke
Anyway.”
“Often they make
decisions based on how
other people lead their
lives and the image
those people project.
But in many cases, the
people you think have
money because of the
cars they drive, the
homes they live in or
the vacations they take,
may be barely scraping
by.”
Such people create
an illusion of wealth
because they live
extravagantly today,
but lack any coherent
plan for tomorrow, says
Berger, who also is a
managing partner and
owner of Cornerstone
Financial Strategies in
Tacoma, Wash.
They let someone
else’s values, rather
than theirs, determine
their ﬁnancial choices.
“The secret to success is determining
what you — not someone else — want to
achieve and then ﬁguring out what it’s going
to take to achieve that,”
Berger says. “Living in
alignment with your
values doesn’t automatically bring on the good
life, but it becomes the
foundation that guides
future decisions about
what you want to pursue.”
Berger says people’s
needs and concerns
are too individual for
one-size-ﬁts-all ﬁnancial advice. Instead, he
says, you should strive
to live your ideal life
through a ﬁnancial
planning process that:
�7b_]di�oekh�ÒdWdcial choices with your
goals and values. “It
is important to understand what drives your
decisions,” Berger says.
“I regularly double
check to make sure
any action I am about
to take is in alignment
with what is important
to me. In other words, I
ask whether my action
is in keeping with my
values or takes me further away from them.”
�=[ji�oekh�[dj_h[�
ﬁnancial house in
order. Not only do you
want that ﬁnancial
house in order, you
want to keep it that
way forever. That’s easy
to say, but more difﬁcult to do. Part of this
means focusing on your
values and setting goals
based on them. But it
also involves planning
and ﬁguring out what
the best investment
strategies would be.
And then it’s important
to regularly monitor
what you’ve done to see
if adjustments need to
be made.
�=_l[i�oek�YedÒ-

dence. You want to
feel that, no matter
what happens in the
markets, the economy
or the world, you will
be on track toward
your goals. Financial
planning isn’t just
about investing in the
stock market, Berger
says. You also need to
manage risks, plan for
retirement, develop a
comprehensive tax plan
and put in place a plan
to take care of your
family after you are
gone.
�&lt;h[[i�kf�c[djWb�
and physical space and
time. Ideally, your plan
will give you the peace
of mind to stop focusing so much on money
and what it can buy,
and instead home in on
the things in your life
that are more important. “I have learned
that the accumulation
of shiny objects does
not lead to happiness,”
Berger says.
Even when you ﬁnish
setting up your ﬁnancial plan, you aren’t
ﬁnished.
“Financial planning
is not a destination;
it’s a journey,” Berger
says. “I’m constantly
monitoring and tweaking my own plan. As I
accomplish goals, I regularly add new ones. I
adjust to changes in the
market and to estate
laws and taxes.
“The plan evolves
as my family needs
change. There is always
some way to improve
it.”

TRAINING | MEDICAL/DENTAL/VISION | 401(K)

schneiderjobs.com/newjobs
800-44-PRIDE
60588513

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60588512

www.IrishisanAttitude.com • 800/245-8387
Courtesy photo

Sheila Matheny, a 2013 graduate of Gallipolis Career College, has been
hired as office manager at French City Homes in Gallipolis. With an
associate degree in accounting, Matheny resides in Leon, W.Va., with her
husband Garry. For information about classes or programs offered by
GCC, call 740-446-4367 or visit the website at gallipoliscareercollege.edu.

PATRIOTIC PET
Contest

Submit photo for Cash Prizes.
Send to home@homenatlbank.com
Pictures will be placed on
facebook page on June 20
when voting begins

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 53.89
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.97
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 127.62
Big Lots (NYSE) — 46.68
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 45.93
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 60.96
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 11.60
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.430
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.26
Collins (NYSE) —94.06
DuPont (NYSE) — 69.69
US Bank (NYSE) — 44.81
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 27.63
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 54.70
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 68.26
Kroger (NYSE) — 71.29
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 84.74
Norfolk So (NYSE) —90.54
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.84

BBT (NYSE) —41.16
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.12
Pepsico (NYSE) — 93.69
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.50
Rockwell (NYSE) — 126.70
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 18.10
Royal Dutch Shell — 59.13
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 29.73
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 72.93
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 11.27
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.39
Worthington (NYSE) — 28.03
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
June 10, 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.

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60589522

For Ohio Valley Publishing

including self-serve frozen
yogurt, gourmet popcorn
made on site, smoothies,
milkshakes, cake pops
from Dixie Walker Cakes
and coffee products utilizing Silver Bridge Coffee.
At their ribbon cutting
and grand opening, they
unveiled their gourmet
popcorn tins now on sale.
One of the tins features a
bWdZiYWf[�mhWf�e\�=Wbb_felis City Park. In addition,
the Pughs announced the
expansion of Pip &amp; Hud’s
to include a party room,
which will be opening
soon.
For more information
about Pip &amp; Hud’s, follow
them on Facebook or visit
www.pipandhuds.com. They
are located in downtown
=Wbb_feb_i�ed�I[YedZ�7l[dk[�
WYheii�\hec�=Wbb_feb_i�9_jo�
Park.

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60576582

By Ginny Grimsley

always been adamant about
is the recognition of the
importance of their staff.
“The employees are always
the lifeblood of the business
and they’re the face of the
business,” Pugh said.
When they ﬁrst opened,
they initially planned to not
hire additional employees
and, instead, give their current employees more opportunities at both the cinema
and the frozen yogurt shop.
“A lot of our employees
work both places and they
obviously do a great job. I
wouldn’t know what to do
without them,” Pugh said.
As business at the frozen
yogurt shop grew, it became
apparent, however, they
would need more help. After
just one week, the Pughs
added four more employees
to help with the load.
Pip &amp; Hud’s, named
after the Pughs’ children,
Piper and Hudson, offers
a variety of products,

Check out the ﬁve-day forecast
on the weather page or online at
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�E ditorial
4 Thursday, June 11, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Obama and
Osama: Here
lies the truth
By Ibrahim S. Bahati
Guest Columnist

Since Osama bin Laden’s death on May 2, 2011,
the ofﬁcial account of the Navy SEALs’ raid has
been challenged, most recently and cogently by
journalist Seymour Hersh, alleging that “Washington’s ofﬁcial account of the hunt for Bin Laden and
the raid that led to his death was a lie.”
In fact, there have been more “conspiracy-factual
theories” about this event than there are on Illuminati.
Was OBL there? Was he even alive then? Is he still?
Indeed, mere days after the 9/11/01 attacks,
on Sept. 18, 2001, George Monbiot wrote in
the Guardian that “If Osama bin Laden did not
exist, it would be necessary to invent him” since
“his usefulness to Western governments lies in
the power to terrify,” enabling the continuous
unleashing of billions of dollars in military spending — on any given day, all year, the Pentagon
spends almost $2 billion. No wonder the ghost
of Osama rises from Pakistan, from Sudan, from
Afghanistan, or from the open ocean. A lie to gin
up demand for obscene proﬁts and power? That is
easy to believe. The truth? That is tougher to ﬁnd.
Origins
Since the collapse of the Soviet Era in 1990,
America found itself with all its threats seemingly
neutralized. War, however, is always a great business venture, not only for nation-states but for all
manner of military contracting corporations, the
gateway to amass proﬁts at rates no legitimate
business can produce. Enemies are required —
real, imaginary, or manufactured. In 1995, Ray
Moseley wrote in the Chicago Tribune: Could it be
that NATO discovered the Islamic threat because,
after the demise of communism it desperately
needed a new threat to survive as an organization?
Controversial lies in plain sight?
If the Pakistanis were left out of the operation as
Obama alleged, where does this leave us with the
notions by Pakistani Ex-Spy Chief General Asad Durrani that “ISI probably knew of the al-Qaeda chief’s
whereabouts until his death”? The U.S. has underwritten ISI by the billions for decades. When will the
U.S. taxpayer start to wonder about the value of this?
And most interestingly, why has there come
no vivid clinical information (rather than verbal
claims) about Osama’s DNA, his death-in-combat
pictures and his burial. Obama asserted that
Osama was given a proper Muslim burial. Says
who? Says which Muslim authority? Which Imam
was present? Where is it written that proper
Islamic burial takes place at sea? Nowhere! It is
as if we have settled for a reality that might have
scored as a poor episode of 24.
Now what?
Separating fact from ﬁction is an endless labor.
Leaks by Edward Snowden that the NSA actually
forced Google and Samsung to allow a Trojan horse
to surveil Americans and international citizens
shows the ongoing erosion of civil liberties. People
are no longer citizens of their nations but instead
are often “persons of interest” for entirely legal conduct. Are we an autocracy or a democracy?
Dictatorial regimes like Saudi Arabia have been
massively supported under the banner of “ally”
despite their bad record on human rights and governance issues. In fact, today’s war on terrorism has
played the total replica of the much worse unending, unﬁnished Cold War. We support state terrorists in the name of opposing non-state terrorists.
Whether events surrounding Osama’s death
were a spoof or as SEAL Team 6 claimed, questions continue and the U.S. seems arrogantly
proud of its “global manhunting machine.”
Osama’s ghost has not rested. Hersh notes,
“Obama today is not facing re-election as he was
in the spring of 2011. His principled stand on
behalf of the proposed nuclear agreement with
Iran says much, as does his decision to operate
without the support of the conservative Republicans in Congress. High-level lying nevertheless
remains the modus operandi of U.S. policy, along
with secret prisons, drone attacks, Special Forces
night raids, bypassing the chain of command, and
cutting out those who might say no.”
In 1969, Hersh was the young investigative journalist who broke the story of the My Lai massacre
in Vietnam after the Army covered it up and lied
consistently about it; he is still on point today.
Whatever happened to Osama bin Laden, his
ghost may be found in the spirit of ISIS and all
other U.S. enemies, real and imaginary, urging the
U.S. empire to crack its hull on the rocks of war
and militarism and join him in a watery, bloody
grave.
Will we let bin Laden’s ghost have the last
laugh?
Ibrahim Bahati, Kampala, Uganda, is syndicated by PeaceVoice and is
a communications expert and 2014 co-presenter on “Conceptualizing
Violence and Leveraging Skype to Promote World Peace,” 5th Annual
Global Education Conference.

THEIR VIEW

Who is in the GOP race for president?

Associated Press

The Republican presidential ﬁeld:
Who’s in, who’s almost in, and who’s
still waiting for the right moment.

IN THE RACE:

White House campaign May 5 in the
hometown he shares with former
President Bill Clinton — Hope, Ark.
“Power, money and political inﬂuence
have left a lot of Americans behind,”
he said.

ly-voting states and building a political
organization to prepare for a campaign.

ALMOST THERE:

Bobby Jindal
The governor of Louisiana took his
latest step toward running for president
on Wednesday, when his chief political
adviser said Jindal will make a “major
announcement” on the 2016 race on
June 24 in New Orleans. “Economic
collapse is much closer to the door than
people realize, our culture is decaying
at a rapid rate and our standing in a
dangerous world is at an all-time low,”
Jindal said in May.

Ted Cruz
The ﬁrst major Republican to get
into the race, the Texas senator kicked
off his campaign March 23 at Liberty
University in Lynchburg, Virginia. “I
believe in you. I believe in the power of
millions of courageous conservatives
rising up to re-ignite the promise of
America,” he said.

Rick Santorum
The runner-up to Mitt Romney
in 2012, Santorum began his return
engagement to presidential politics
May 27 in his western Pennsylvania
hometown of Cabot. “The last race,
we changed the debate. This race, with
your help and God’s grace, we can
change this nation,” he said.

Rand Paul
The Kentucky senator launched his
campaign April 7 in Louisville, where
he told a hotel ballroom full of supporters, “I have a message, a message that
is loud and clear and does not mince
words: We have come to take our country back.”

George Pataki
A former three-term governor of
New York, who previously considered
presidential campaigns in 2008 and
2012, Pataki got his campaign started
on May 28 in Exeter, New Hampshire.
“While I saw the horrors of Sept.
11 ﬁrsthand, in the days, weeks and
months that followed, I also saw the
strength of America on display. … I
completely reject the idea that we can
only come together in adversity.”

WAITING FOR
THEIR MOMENT:

Lindsey Graham
After all but conﬁrming the week
before that he was in, the senior senator from South Carolina made it ofﬁcial
Monday with a speech in his hometown of Central, S.C., that cast the foreign threats to America in dark terms.
“Simply put, radical Islam is running
wild. They have more safe havens,
more money, more weapons and more
capability to strike our homeland than
any time since 9/11. They are large,
they are rich, and they’re entrenched.”

John Kasich
The former congressman and current
Ohio governor is hinting to donors and
voters he’s likely to get into the race.
His political organization, New Day for
America, recently announced his plans
to travel to Iowa later this month.

Marco Rubio
In a speech April 13 in Miami, the
senator from Florida called his candidacy for president a way for the country
to break free of ideas “stuck in the 20th
century.” He said, “This election is not
just about what laws we are going to
pass. It is a generational choice about
what kind of country we will be.”
Carly Fiorina
The former tech executive chose
social media and a nationally broadcast
morning TV network show to launch
her campaign on May 4, and she quickly went after Democratic front-runner
Hillary Rodham Clinton. “I have a lot of
admiration for Hillary Clinton, but she
clearly is not trustworthy,” she said.
Ben Carson
The retired pediatric neurosurgeon
got into the race the same day as Fiorina with an announcement speech in
his native Detroit. “It’s time for people
to rise up and take the government
back. The political class won’t like me
saying things like that. The political
class comes from both parties.”
Mike Huckabee
The former Arkansas governor and
runner-up in the 2008 GOP presidential primaries kicked off his second

Rick Perry
The former Texas governor
announced his 2016 presidential bid on
Thursday at an airﬁeld outside Dallas,
surrounded by prominent veterans —
including the widow of Chris Kyle of
“American Sniper” fame. “I have been
tested. I have led the most successful
state in America.”
Jeb Bush
Advisers to the former Florida governor conﬁrmed Thursday that he will
formally enter the race on June 15 in
Miami. He has spent much of the past
six months raising money, touring ear-

Chris Christie
He says he hasn’t decided whether
he’s running yet, but the New Jersey
governor looks an awful lot like a candidate, making frequent trips to earlyvoting states, delivering a series of
policy speeches and raising money for
a political action committee and super
PAC created by his backers.

Donald Trump
The real estate mogul and reality
television star has launched a presidential exploratory committee and is still
debating on whether to get into the
race. Never short of self-conﬁdence, he
said last month he’d be a force to reckon with in the GOP debates. “Selﬁshly,
the networks would put me on because
I get great ratings,” Trump said.
Scott Walker
The Wisconsin governor says he will
announce his decision after signing
the state budget, which is expected to
pass the Republican-controlled state
Legislature in late June. Walker has
already created a nonproﬁt group, Our
American Revival, to help promote his
expected candidacy, and a super PAC
led by his close advisers is also up and
running.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday, June
11, the 162nd day of 2015.
There are 203 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlights in
History:
On June 11, 1919, Sir
Barton won the Belmont
Stakes, becoming horse
racing’s ﬁrst Triple Crown
winner.
On this date:
In 1509, England’s King
Henry VIII married his
ﬁrst wife, Catherine of
Aragon.
In 1770, Captain James

Cook, commander of the
British ship Endeavour,
discovered the Great Barrier Reef off Australia by
running onto it.
In 1938, Johnny Vander
Meer pitched the ﬁrst of
two consecutive no-hitters
as he led the Cincinnati
Reds to a 3-0 victory over
the Boston Bees. (Four
days later, Vander Meer
refused to give up a hit
to the Brooklyn Dodgers,
who lost, 6-0.)
Today’s Birthdays: U.S.
Rep. Charles B. Rangel,

D-N.Y., is 85. Actor Gene
Wilder is 82. Comedian
Johnny Brown is 78. International Motorsports Hall
of Famer Jackie Stewart is
76. Singer Joey Dee is 75.
Actress Adrienne Barbeau
is 70. Rock musician Frank
Beard (ZZ Top) is 66. Animal rights activist Ingrid
Newkirk is 66. Rock singer
Donnie Van Zant is 63.
Actor Peter Bergman is 62.
Pro Football Hall of Famer
Joe Montana is 59. Actor
Hugh Laurie is 56. TV personality Mehmet Oz, M.D.,

is 55. Singer Gioia Bruno
(Expose) is 52. Rock musician Dan Lavery (Tonic)
is 49. Country singersongwriter Bruce Robison
is 49. Actress Clare Carey
is 48. Actor Peter Dinklage
is 46. Country musician
Smilin’ Jay McDowell is
46. Actor Lenny Jacobson
is 41. Rock musician Tai
Anderson (Third Day) is
39. Actor Joshua Jackson
is 37. Christian rock musician Ryan Shrout is 35.
Actor Shia LaBeouf is 29.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Billboard
From Page 1

a 25-cent increase in pay.
The next wage increase will
be a 20-cent increase, but
this will only be given on
an employee’s anniversary,

which is 22 months for some
Overbook employees.
“We’re trying to leverage
to get the raises up front earlier and (not make) people
who make minimum wage
have to wait 22 months to
get it,” she said. “It’s not that
big of a raise as it is.”
Walters gave an example

Thursday, June 11, 2015 5

next year as well.
According to Walters
housekeeping, laundry,
dietary and state-tested
nursing assistants are the
ones who are most affected
by the potential 22-month
anniversary pay raise.
“These are people who
take care of our loved ones

of an employee whose anniversary falls in May 2015.
The anonymous employee
would receive the 25-cent
raise July 1, but would not
be eligible for the 20-cent
raise until May 2017
because of their 22-month
anniversary date, even if
the raise kicked in July 1 of

in this community and
they’re only going to make
$8.10, they’re going to go,”
she said, but added that she
was hopeful. “We’ve done
some actions (in the past)
and we always came through
and I believe we will again.”
Walters said that negotiations would begin again

Thursday morning at 10 a.m.
She said Overbrook Rehabilitation Center has been part
of a union since 1995.
No Overbook ofﬁcials
were available for comment
at time of press Wednesday.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

THURSDAY EVENING
6 PM

BROADCAST

Arrest

WSAZ News
(WSAZ)
3
WTAP News
(WTAP)
at Six
ABC 6 News
(WSYX)
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur

3
4

From Page 1

6

During their investigation, deputies reported smelling
marijuana inside the home and discovered a room that
had been converted into a growth area for the plant.
Deputies secured the room and obtained search warrants
for the homes of Helm and Meyers. Bureau of Criminal
Investigation &amp; Identiﬁcation employees were called to
process the crime scene, and as a result discovered grow
equipment, vehicles and an unspeciﬁed large sum of
cash. All of the items were seized in the search.
The investigation is ongoing and more charges are
pending, sheriff’s ofﬁcials said.

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

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.

7 PM

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
SciGirls
"Puppet
Power"
ABC World
News
CBS Evening
News
Two and a
Half Men
Nightly
Business
Report (N)
CBS Evening
News

6 PM

CABLE

THURSDAY, JUNE 11

6:30

7 PM

18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
24 (ROOT) The Dan Patrick Show (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption

Bash

27 (LIFE)

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

68°

87°

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.

(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
0.70
1.45
21.13
19.53

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:03 a.m.
8:53 p.m.
2:41 a.m.
3:41 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Jun 16 Jun 24

Full

Jul 1

Last

Jul 8

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

Major
8:01a
8:48a
9:35a
10:24a
11:14a
12:07p
12:35a

Minor
1:48a
2:35a
3:22a
4:10a
5:01a
5:54a
6:48a

Major
8:27p
9:15p
10:02p
10:51p
11:42p
12:34p
1:01p

Minor
2:14p
3:01p
3:49p
4:37p
5:28p
6:21p
7:15p

WEATHER HISTORY
On June 11, 1972, Baltimore, Md.,
had its latest ever low in the 40s, and
Pittsburgh, Pa., had a frosty low of
34 degrees.

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

6 PM

PREMIUM

Low

Moderate

High

High

FRIDAY

91°
69°

85°
68°

An afternoon
thunderstorm in the
area

Partly sunny and
humid with a t-storm

Chillicothe
91/70

Lucasville
93/68
Very High

Portsmouth
93/68

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

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.62
-0.74
+0.41
+0.43
-0.31
+0.09
+0.27
+0.06
-0.01
-0.08
+1.00
+0.10
+0.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

9 PM

8 PM

8:30

9:30

9 PM

10 PM

10:30

10:30

Charlie's Angels (2000, Action) Cameron Diaz,
Lucy Liu, Drew Barrymore. Three female detectives use
their skills and sex appeal to retrieve stolen software. TV14
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 (‘12,
Fant) Robert Pattinson. The Cullens and the wolves come
together to protect Renesmee from the Volturi. TV14

SUNDAY

MONDAY

86°
68°

Bad Words (‘14,
Com) Kathryn Hahn, Jason
Bateman. TVMA
Penny Dreadful "Glorious
Horrors"

TUESDAY

86°
69°

10:30

WEDNESDAY

87°
67°

86°
67°

Some sun with a
Clouds and sun with a A couple of afternoon
Mostly cloudy, a
thunderstorm; humid
t-storm; humid
thunderstorms
t-storm or two; humid

Marietta
90/66
Belpre
92/67

Athens
90/65

St. Marys
91/66

Parkersburg
90/66

Coolville
91/66

Elizabeth
93/66

Spencer
92/67

Buffalo
93/67
Milton
94/67

Clendenin
94/67

St. Albans
94/68

Huntington
92/66

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
90s
Seattle
75/52
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
San Francisco
0s
74/56
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
77/63
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

10 PM

Game of Thrones

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
93/67

Ashland
93/67
Grayson
93/68

9:30
Silicon
Valley

(:20)

Wilkesville
91/65
POMEROY
Jackson
93/66
92/66
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
93/67
93/66
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
91/70
GALLIPOLIS
93/67
93/67
92/67

South Shore Greenup
93/67
92/67

85

Level
12.65
15.50
21.77
12.88
12.94
25.09
13.23
25.79
35.05
12.90
17.20
34.50
15.30

8:30

Murray City
90/65

McArthur
91/66

Waverly
92/69

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Logan
90/65

Adelphi
90/65

AIR QUALITY

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

7:30

SATURDAY

Very High

300

7 PM

EXTENDED FORECAST

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

6:30

Up in the Air A businessman takes
a new employee across the country to show
her the life he loves. TVMA
(:15)
Vampire Academy (‘14, Act/Com) Danila
500 (SHOW) Kozlovskiy, Zoey Deutch. A human-vampire hybrid trains to
be a guardian for a line of peaceful, mortal vampires. TV14

Primary: grass, other, tree
Mold: 2878
Moderate

8 PM

(4:45)

Pollen: 50

10 PM

Aquarius "Home Is Where Hannibal "Primevera" (N)
You're Happy" (N)
Dateline NBC
Aquarius "Home Is Where Hannibal "Primevera" (N)
You're Happy" (N)
Jimmy
NBA
NBA Basketball Playoffs Golden State Warriors at
Kimmel (N) Countdwn (L) Cleveland Cavaliers Final Game 4 (L)
Justice "The Moral Side of The Jewel in the Crown
Song of the Mountains
"Beachley and Scott"
Murder" A look at choosing "The Moghul Room"
to kill.
Jimmy
NBA
NBA Basketball Playoffs Golden State Warriors at
Kimmel (N) Countdwn (L) Cleveland Cavaliers Final Game 4 (L)
The Big Bang The Odd
Mom
M&amp;M "Mike Elementary "Terra
Theory
Couple
Check"
Pericolosa"
Bones "The Next in the
Wayward Pines "The Truth" Eyewitness News at 10
Last" (SF) (N)
(N)
Doctors on Call Viewers call Heart 411 Watch the latest on non-invasive Classical
to have their health
surgery and new life-saving treatments for Rewind (My
Music)
questions answered.
heart disease.
The Big Bang The Odd
Mom
M&amp;M "Mike Elementary "Terra
Theory
Couple
Check"
Pericolosa"

7:30

450 (MAX) Norbit TV14

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

9:30

Dateline NBC

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame "2015 Induction Ceremony" The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Veep
400 (HBO) marks 30 years of inductions with musical performances.

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

0 50 100 150 200

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

42

9 PM

Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother
UFC 154 George St. Pierre takes on Carlos Condit in Montreal.
UFC Unleashed
NCAA Track &amp; Field Division I Championship (L)
E:60
NFL Live
Battlefrog College (N)
Fitness 2014 CrossFit Games Baseball Tonight (L)
Hoarders: Family Secrets
Smile "I'm a Witch" (N)
Hoarders "Adella/ Teri"
Hoarders "Where Are They Hoarders: Family Secrets
"Joyce and Kimberly"
"Michelle and Yama" (N)
Now?" (N)
Boy Meets
Varsity Blues A Texas high school football team is led
Grease (‘78, Mus) John Travolta. A leather-jacketed boy and a
by a back-up quarterback and an iconic coach. TVMA
goody-two-shoes girl fall in and out of love in the 1950s. TVPG
World
Friday the 13th, Part 5: A New Beginning Jason has left the
Friday the 13th, Part 6: Jason Lives Jason comes back to
Friday the 13th, Part
camp behind, &amp; now begins his killing spree at a halfway house. life &amp; returns to his favorite hunting ground, Forest Green. 7: The New Blood TVM
Thunder
H.Danger
100 Things SpongeBob Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
Law&amp;O: SVU "Underbelly" SVU "Choreographed"
SVU "Scheherezade"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Outsider"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Loophole"
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
The Seventies (N)
The Seventies
Castle
Castle "Deep in Death"
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring Elijah Wood. TV14
(4:30)
Mad Max:
The Green Mile (1999, Drama) David Morse, Bonnie Hunt, Tom Hanks. Death row guards form a relationship
Beyond Thunderdome TV14 with an inmate who possesses extraordinary powers. TV14
(5:00) Naked and Afraid
Naked &amp; Afraid "Malaysia" Naked &amp; Afraid "Louisana" Naked and Afraid
Naked &amp; Afraid "Yucatan"
The First 48 "Coma/
The First 48 "Last Words/
The First 48 "Blood Feud" The First 48 "Red Brick/ Last The First 48 "Shattered
Disappeared"
Nowhere to Hide"
Kiss"
Glass"
Tanked "Sweet Memories" Tanked! "The Pirate Queen" Tanked!
Tanked!
Insane Pools DeepEnd
Snapped "Kimberly Michaud Snapped: Killer "Miranda
Snapped "Chie CogginsSnapped "Amber Trudell" Snapped "Tracey Richter" A
and Jimmie Dale Kelley"
and Elytte Barbour"
Johnson and Scott Barker"
mother kills a home intruder.
Braxton Family Values
Braxton "Ms. E-mergency" Braxton "No Time to Panic" Braxton Family Values (N) ATL "Turnt Up Truce" (N)
(4:30) He's Just Not That ... E! News (N)
Botched "House of Horrors" Botched
#RichKids "#RingOnIt"
#RichKids
(5:50) Dukes "High Octane" Gilligan
(:35) Gilligan (:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Everybody Loves Ray Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Life Below Zero "No Easy Dead End Express "Alaskan Life Below Zero "No Easy Life Below Zero "Bent and Dead End Express "Outlaws
Out"
Madness"
Out"
Broken" (N)
and Frostbite" (N)
(5:30) FB Talk NASCAR
NASCAR
NASCAR
AMA Motocross
Nitro Circus Nitro Circus Nitro (N)
Nitro (N)
World Cup Today (L)
FIFA Soccer World Cup Ivory Coast vs. Thailand (L)
FIFA Soccer World Cup Canada vs. New Zealand (L)
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn "Dam Pawn "Chum Pawn Stars Pawn "Pawn Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (:05) Lost in Transmission
"Field Trip" Good Time" of All Fears"
of the Jedi" (N)
"Convertible Comeback" (N)
(N)
Odd Mom Out "Wheels Up" The Real Housewives
Kandi's Ski Trip
Kandi's Ski Trip
Social "Kandi's Ski Trip" (N)
(5:30)
Video Girl (‘11, Dra) Meagan Good. TV14
The Brothers (‘01, Com) D.L. Hughley, Morris Chestnut. TV14
FrankieNef.
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
WWE Smackdown! WWE superstars do battle in
Jurassic Park III A wealthy couple trick a scientist
Defiance Seven unique alien
into visiting an island populated by dinosaurs. TV14
elaborate, long-running rivalries. (N)
races arrive on Earth.

1

Low

Fri.
6:03 a.m.
8:54 p.m.
3:19 a.m.
4:48 p.m.

(AMC)

40 (DISC)

Primary: basidiospores

MOON PHASES
New

39

86°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

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

A shower or thunderstorm in spots today and
tonight. High 93° / Low 67°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

86°
57°
82°
60°
98° in 1914
40° in 1977

30 (SPIKE)

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

(FAM)

8:30

Charleston
92/67

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
78/54

Billings
76/56

Montreal
74/58

Minneapolis
65/55
Chicago
77/64

Toronto
77/55
Detroit
80/64

Washington
95/76

Kansas City
87/65

Denver
72/50

New York
90/71

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
84/60/pc
60/48/pc
85/70/t
77/71/t
94/70/pc
76/56/s
91/60/s
88/62/pc
92/67/pc
89/68/t
65/49/t
77/64/t
91/68/pc
79/66/pc
90/69/pc
93/72/pc
72/50/t
85/62/t
80/64/pc
87/72/pc
93/75/t
91/70/pc
87/65/t
95/77/pc
92/73/t
77/63/pc
93/72/pc
88/79/t
65/55/r
91/70/t
86/74/t
90/71/pc
93/71/pc
89/72/t
94/73/t
99/78/s
88/68/pc
83/60/t
89/71/s
94/72/pc
93/76/pc
77/60/t
74/56/pc
75/52/s
95/76/pc

Hi/Lo/W
81/62/pc
63/49/pc
83/70/t
83/71/pc
92/72/pc
83/58/s
87/56/s
82/64/pc
89/68/pc
89/70/pc
64/47/c
82/59/t
87/72/t
88/69/t
88/72/t
92/72/pc
64/49/t
75/59/t
87/66/t
87/72/pc
88/74/t
87/70/t
75/64/t
99/80/pc
90/75/t
78/64/pc
88/73/t
89/79/t
73/54/pc
86/70/t
81/75/t
85/71/pc
87/69/t
92/73/pc
94/73/pc
103/81/s
88/70/t
81/57/pc
90/73/pc
92/74/pc
90/73/t
84/59/pc
77/56/pc
69/52/s
94/76/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
85/70

El Paso
97/72

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

100° in Vernon, TX
38° in Lake Yellowstone, WY

Global
High
121° in Basrah, Iraq
Low -15° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
93/75
Chihuahua
97/66

Monterrey
95/73

GOALS

Miami
88/79

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

TODAY

29

8 PM

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

6:30

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

for the kids, the Safety Pup,
the county Hummer, ﬁre
trucks and much more.
From Page 1
Entertainment on Saturday includes the Riverside
The kids’ talent contest,
Cloggers taking the stage
“We Got Talent II at 2 p.m., from 3 to 4:15 p.m., sponis being sponsored by PDK
sored by People’s Bank.
Construction. The purse is
The popular game show
$100 with ﬁrst place $50;
“Let’s Make a Deal,” in
second place $25; third
which participants can win
place $15; and fourth place
items, sponsored by Home
$10. At dusk the lighted
pleasure boaters make their National Bank and Steve
Story Law, begins at 4:30
way circling the amphithep.m. Bring some unusual
ater in their own parade.
The parade sponsor is Farm- stuff with you. The Zoot
ers Bank with a $200 purse; Suit Magician, sponsored
by McDonald’s of Pomeroy
ﬁrst place $100; second
and Hoon Inc., will take
place $50; third place $25
the stage from 5 to 6 p.m.
and People’s Choice $25.
South of the River Band will
Wolfe Mountain Enterentertain us from 7-9 p.m.
tainment will delight the
and Todd Berry closing the
little ones with Muppet
festival from 9:15-11:30 p.m.
Characters, one of the
Kickin’ Summer Bash is
Disney princesses and the
still lookin for vendors. For
Fairy Godmother by strolling around to meet the kids. questions, contact the tourThe Zoot Suit Magician will ism ofﬁce at 740-992-2239
also be among festival goers or Brenda Roush at 740-5910530. Set-up fees are minialong with free face paintmal for the two-day event.
ing, free ﬁngerprinting IDs

7:30

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 11, 2015 s Page 6

Cavs survive Warriors comeback, win Game 3

CLEVELAND (AP) — LeBron
James is doing more than ever.
With the Cavaliers missing two AllStars, he has no choice.
“I’m so outside the box right
now,” he said.
And two wins from a championship — one like no other.
Pushed by a crowd howling
to see Cleveland’s 51-year title
drought end, James scored 40
points, his new sidekick Matthew
Dellavedova added 20 and the Cavaliers survived Golden State’s furious fourth-quarter comeback led by
Stephen Curry for a 96-91 win over
the Warriors on Tuesday night to
take a 2-1 lead in the NBA Finals.
James added 12 rebounds and
eight assists in 46 minutes, his
third stellar performance in his ﬁfth
straight ﬁnals. The Cavs, who won
AP photo
Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) shoots over Golden State Game 2 at Golden State for their
Warriors forward David Lee (10) during the first half of Game 3 of basket- ﬁrst ever ﬁnals win, got their ﬁrst
at Quicken Loans Arena, which
ball’s NBA Finals in Cleveland, Tuesday.

shook from start to ﬁnish. They’ll
have a chance to take a commanding 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven
series in Game 4 on Thursday
night.
Through three games, James has
played 142 of 154 possible minutes,
scored 123 points and taken 107
shots. With Kyrie Irving and Kevin
Love out with injuries, it’s all on
James to deliver. So far, he has.
“I’m just trying to do whatever
it takes to help our team win,” he
said. “It’s the ﬁnals, and it’s whatever it takes. This is a totally different challenge.”
Cleveland nearly threw Game 3
away. The Cavs, who led 92-83 with
51 seconds left, had to withstand a
scoring ﬂurry by Curry.
The league’s MVP ﬁnally found
his shooting touch in the fourth
quarter, scoring 17 points as the
Warriors, who trailed by 20 in the
third, refused to go away. Golden

State got a huge lift from reserve
David Lee, but they rode Curry,
who made ﬁve 3-pointers — his
last with 18.9 seconds to pull the
Warriors within 94-91.
Cleveland then caught a break
when referee Danny Crawford blew
an inadvertent whistle with 17.5
seconds to go after Golden State
appeared to force a turnover. The
ofﬁcials, who have come under
scrutiny for several missed calls in
the series, then reviewed the play
and it was clear that Klay Thompson was out of bounds when he
made contact with the ball that Dellavedova was holding in his hands.
James was fouled and made two
free throws with 16.8 seconds left.
On Golden State’s last possession,
Andre Iguodala appeared to get
fouled on a 3-point attempt and the
Cavs pulled down the rebound to
close out a win that nearly slipped
away.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

GAHS Blue Angel
Volleyball Camp
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
Blue Angels volleyball teams will be holding
a volleyball camp for girls entering grades 3-7
next year. The camp will begin on Monday, June
22, through Wednesday, June 24, from 2 p.m.
until 5 p.m. in the Gallia Academy High School
Gymnasium. Players will practice volleyball
skills, work on volleyball fundamentals, and
play volleyball games. The camp will conclude
on Wednesday with athletes participating in
game play from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.; parents and
spectators are welcome. The cost is $50 per
athlete, and each athlete will receive a camp
T-shirt. Registrations may be picked up at the
GAHS Ofﬁce Monday-Friday, 8-3 and from some
local businesses. Players may also register on
Monday, June 22 beginning at 1:30 p.m. outside
of the GAHS Gymnasium. Athletes who come
without a parent need to have the liability form
signed by a parent in order to participate. For
more information, contact head volleyball coach
Janice Rosier at 740-441-5993.

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

The Point Pleasant football program will be represented at the 2015 BACF Ohio-West Virginia Football Classic this Friday night at Don
Drumm Stadium in Marietta, Ohio. Standing from left are Dylan Lunsford, Cody Marcum, Noah Morgan, PPHS head coach Dave Darst,
PPHS assistant coach Terry Rollins, Aden Yates, Brian Gibbs and Gage Buskirk. Also participating for PPHS but not pictured are Chase
Moses and Jon Peterson.

Point coaches, 13 locals part of BACF
By Bryan Walters

Blue Angels Basketball
Exposure Camp
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
girls basketball team will be hosting an exposure
camp on July 20, at GAHS. The goal of this camp
is to give the student-athlete an opportunity to be
seen for a chance to play on the college level. This
event is for female athletes to showcase their talents against top competition while being viewed
by scouting services and college coaches. The cost
of the camp will be $150.00 per camper and is
for girls entering grades 10-12 and any unsigned
seniors. Check in will begin at 9 a.m. with games
starting at 11. The deadline to register is July 6.
For more information and to apply contact Blue
Angels head coach Joe Justice by email at joe.justice@gck12.oh.us

Eastern Golf Scramble
POMEROY, Ohio — The Eastern golf programs will be holding a four-man scramble on
Saturday, July 18, at the Meigs County Golf
Course. The 18-hole event will have a 9 a.m.
shotgun start, with registration starting at 8
a.m. that morning. The cost is $40 per player,
which includes 18 holes, cart and lunch. There
will also be prizes for closest to the pin, longest
drive and other feats, as well as a skins game
and mulligans available for an additional fee.
The ﬁeld is limited to the ﬁrst 10 teams to register and pay. For more information, contact
Nick Dettwiller at 740-416-0344 or by email at
nickdettwiller@gmail.com

Southern Youth
Football Camp
RACINE, Ohio — The Southern football program will be holding its 2015 Southern Youth
Football Camp from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Tuesday, July 21, through Thursday, July 23, at Roger
Lee Adams Field in Meigs County. The cost is
$25 for any camperin grades 3-8 and a t-shirt will
be given to all who register before May 27. The
camp will be conducted by Southern coaches and
players. Checks should made payable to Southern
Athletic Boosters, courtesy of Kyle Wickline, 920
Elm Street, Racine, Ohio 45771. The makeup date
will be Friday, July 24.

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

MARIETTA, Ohio — They
may be the new kids on the
block, but this won’t be their ﬁrst
time around on the gridiron.
In its ﬁrst year of eligibility, the
Point Pleasant football program
will have a signiﬁcant impact on
the ﬁnal outcome of the 2015
Battle Against Cystic Fibrosis
Football Classic being held Friday
at Don Drumm Stadium on the
campus of Marietta College.
Both PPHS and Wahama
became eligible this year for
inclusion into this event, which
is currently headed into its
22nd annual contest between
some of the best players in the
Parkersburg-Marietta region in a
West Virginia versus Ohio based
format.
Gilmer County and Roane
County joined the Big Blacks
and White Falcons as ﬁrst-year
eligibles, while Athens and Nelsonville-York are also ﬁrst-time
participants on the Ohio side.
Point Pleasant, however, will
have the most representation of
any school participating in the
annual contest. Besides having a
game-high eight players involved,
the entire Mountain State coaching staff will consist of Dave
Darst and his assistants from
PPHS.
“We are honored that the West
Virginia side of this event wanted
us to do this. When we, meaning
the staff, got together to discuss
this, we decided that this was a
good opportunity for us to coach
together at something worthwhile. We did not want to pass
up a chance like this.
“You get to coach some of the
best players in West Virginia,
and that was really exciting to
us. Plus, we get a chance to work
with some of our graduated players one more time … and that’s
kind of a thrill too.”
The eight familiar faces that

Eastern senior Christian Speelman (11) picks up yardage while being dragged down by a
Miller defender during a Week 2 football game at East Shade River Stadium in Tuppers
Plains, Ohio.

Darst is bringing with him to
Ohio’s ﬁrst city have served as
cornerstones in the PPHS program over the last four years. The
Big Blacks have currently made
seven consecutive postseason
trips in football and own a statebest 23-game regular season winning streak headed into the 2015
campaign.
Recent graduates Aden Yates,
Jon Peterson, Brian Gibbs,
Cody Marcum, Noah Morgan,
Dylan Lunsford and Chase
Moses will strap on the PPHS
helmet one more time for Coach
Darst, which should make
things a little more comfortable

for both parties involved.
“These eight seniors are part
of the winningest four-year class
we’ve ever had at Point Pleasant,
and honestly they are really good
leaders,” Darst said. “For me, I
have my quarterback and some
very familiar pieces in other
places. That will deﬁnitely help
us coaches get our offense and
defense in before the game.”
Wahama’s Demitrius Serevicz
was also selected to participate
for the West Virginia squad, but
will not be able to play due to
recovering from a torn meniscus
during wrestling season.
See BACF | 10

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Help Wanted General

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
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independent contractor under
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s Be your own boss
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WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
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apply in person at
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Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

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Notices
Are you 55 or older and
unemployed?
Are you wanting
to learn new skills to be more
employable?
Would you like to improve your
computer skills for work or
personal use?
There will be a free information session about Mature
Services Employment &amp; Training Solutions and training
opportunities in Gallia and
Meigs County on Tuesday,
June 16th from 2 – 3 pm.
The meeting will be at the
Gallia County Council on Aging
located at 1167 State Route
160 Jackson Pike Rd,
Gallipolis.
For more information please
call the Portsmouth office at
1- 866-734-2301.
www.matureservices.org
Mature Services, Inc. is an
equal opportunity employer
and service provider.
Jones Tree Service:
Complete Tree Care,
Stump Grinding
740-367-0266
740-339-3366
Insured
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.
Miscellaneous
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
work? Denied benefits? We
Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing!
Contact Bill Gordon &amp; Associates at 1-800-509-2201 to
start your application today!
Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
for Seniors. Bathroom falls
can be fatal.Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic
Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In.
Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors.
American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-596-9892 for
$750 Off.
Got Knee Pain? Back Pain?
Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost
to you. Medicare Patients Call
Health Hotline Now! 1- 800430-1045

60583312

LEGALS
Accepting sealed bids with
“Reserve” for 1998 Ford Cutaway Van (EMS truck) with 7.3
diesel and 1970 John Deer
4020 tractor. Mail bid to Bedford Township, 42774 Helwig
Ridge Road, Shade, OH 45776
by Jun 9. Contact: John Dean
740-416-3294, Tim Hall 740416-4448, or Shawn Hawley
740-591-2666.
05/26,06/02, 6/09/15

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Got an older car, boat or
RV? Do the humane thing.
Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1- 800-610-7614

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that
on Saturday, June 13, 2015, at
10:00 a.m., a public sale will
be held at 211 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769. The
Farmers Bank and Savings
Company is selling for cash in
hand or certified check the following collateral:
2007 Chevy Cobalt VIN:
1G1AL15FX77343035
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral prior to
sale. Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”,
with no expressed or implied
warranty given.
For further information, or for
an appointment to inspect collateral, prior to sale date contract Randy Hays at 740-9924048.

Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your
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months.) FREE Premium
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Medical Guardian-Top-rated
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no activation fees, no commitment, a 2nd waterproof alert
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8 Thursday, June 11, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Will USOC stick with Boston, give up, or pick another?
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. (AP) — The leaders of
the U.S. Olympic movement
will soon choose one of three
roads to take on their increasingly tumultuous path toward a
bid for the 2024 Olympics.
Stick with Boston, pull the
plug or look elsewhere — probably to Los Angeles.
Each choice is fraught with
political challenges and potential roadblocks, any of which
could end in another humiliating American bid. It could also
squander the political ground
CEO Scott Blackmun and
chairman Larry Probst have
regained in the six years since
the USOC hit its previous low
after Chicago’s last-place bid
for the 2016 Games.
Since announcing Boston
as the candidate in January,
Blackmun has stayed steadfast,
insisting the USOC is behind
the city despite poor polling
numbers, an aggressive group
of protesters, shake-ups in
Boston’s leadership team and
the steady stream of negative
Olympic news that hits almost
daily.
“We are 100 percent behind
Boston’s bid to host the 2024
Olympic and Paralympic
Games,” Blackmun said in an
oft-repeated statement. “Boston can deliver a great games.
There is no truth whatsoever to
the rumor that we have asked
them to stand down, or that
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we are considering going to
another city.”
But his is not the only voice
in the USOC boardroom, where
the 16 members will convene
June 30 to take their next
deﬁning step in a domestic
selection process that must be
ﬁnalized by Sept. 15. Board
member Angela Ruggiero’s suggestion last month at a Boston
city council meeting that the
city’s bid was not a sure thing
may have been ill-conceived but
it almost certainly didn’t come
out of the blue.
Which is the best option?
Consider the risks and beneﬁts
of each choice:
LOOK ELSEWHERE
THE SITUATION
As a two-time Olympics
host, Los Angeles is the most
logical choice. Some venues
are already in place. Trafﬁc,
for better or worse, is not as
big an issue as it would be in
Boston. They would need some
new infrastructure and, yes,
even in breezy la-la land, there
will be some public opposition.
But the city that’s looking to
bring the NFL back is not one
that would shy away from the
limelight, or the criticism that
comes with an Olympic bid.
HOW IT COULD PLAY OUT
If this is the direction the
USOC goes, the board needs to
be on the phone with this city’s
Rentals

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biggest players — mayor Eric
Garcetti and superagent-power
broker Casey Wasserman —
within hours after adjourning
on the 30th. It’s a delicate
balancing act. If it comes out
before June 30 that the USOC
is having conversations with
Los Angeles — and Blackmun
insists that’s not the case — the
Boston bid is dead.
END GAME
USOC leadership votes to
sever ties with Boston and
consider other options. All of
that plays out behind closed
doors, and maybe isn’t even
announced directly after the
June 30 meeting. A week or
two after the meeting, a deal
with Los Angeles is announced
in time to get everything pointed to making the IOC’s Sept.
15 deadline.

EDITOR TO DIRECT
COMMUNITY NEWS
OPERATIONS: If the
opportunity to serve as
editor of a weekly newspaper in the eastern portion of West Virginia interests you, now is the

HOW IT COULD PLAY OUT
An awkward phone call with
IOC president Thomas Bach,
some tense negotiations to
sever ties with Boston 2024,
then, at some point, a news
conference to announce the bid
is over and the USOC will start
looking at future Olympics.
END GAME
The USOC sets itself back
at least a decade in the bidding game by withdrawing
completely, whether by pulling
the plug now or waiting for a
referendum that loses. Making
it worse is the slap in the face
to Bach, who unveiled his new
Agenda 2020 bidding measures
in hopes of getting more countries involved.

RISK RATING
Sure, they’ll lose some face,
but this is as close to a safe bet
as the USOC can get. A willing
partner that has done it before
and swoops in to save the day
for the U.S. bid could score well RISK RATING
among IOC leaders, too.
These are the sort of decisions that cost people jobs. But
if they’re convinced they’re
PULL THE PLUG
going to lose the referendum
THE SITUATION
anyway.
USOC leaders could decide
it’s all just too messy. Boston
has already set a November
STAY WITH BOSTON
2016 referendum, at which
THE SITUATION
voters will say ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to
Leaders vow full support of

Boston, and say that with more
than a year to explain how an
Olympics can help the city,
they’re conﬁdent the referendum will turn out ﬁne. This
is the path of least resistance
because it gives them time and
is still something they could
back away from.
HOW IT COULD PLAY OUT
It gives them another three
months to monitor the poll
numbers and if they’re still
weak come September, pulling the plug would still be an
option. But ﬁnding a second
city to plug in by the IOC’s
Sept. 15 deadline becomes
more difﬁcult the longer they
wait.
END GAME
Best-case scenario is the bid
makes it to the starting line
in September, then the ﬁnish
line in 2017, then competes
against Rome, Paris and a few
others. The way things have
gone so far, Boston would be
an underdog in that scenario,
though getting to the ﬁnalist
stage might feel like a victory
of sorts.
RISK RATING
Pushes the uncertainty into
the future and leaves everyone
open to looking really bad. But
also buys more time to make
their case with the city’s people
and maybe even get a win.

STATEWIDE ADS

Miscellaneous

time to contact The
Pendleton Times. The
family-owned newspaper is looking for an editor to direct its community news operation
and serve as a strong
voice for community development and improvement. Salary for the position is negotiable. Interested applicants should
email resumes to John
McCoy at
brookwood@hughes.net
.

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Daily Sentinel

More turmoil for FIFA and World Cup bidding contests
SAMARA, RUSSIA (AP) —
On another day of turmoil for
FIFA and the World Cup, the
bidding contest for the 2026
tournament was put on hold.
FIFA secretary general
Jerome Valcke said Wednesday it would be “nonsense” to
begin the next bidding process
on schedule this week amid the
American investigation into
soccer corruption.
Valcke, speaking at a news
conference in Russia hosted by
organizers of the 2018 tournament, also defended his role in
a $10 million bribery scandal
linked to the 2010 World Cup.
“I will answer all the questions. I have nothing to hide,”
Valcke said.
While Valcke spoke in Samara, his staff in Zurich gave more

evidence to Swiss authorities
for a separate investigation into
the 2018 and 2022 World Cup
bid contests won by Russia and
Qatar, respectively.
“FIFA handed over seized IT
data,” the Swiss attorney general’s ofﬁce said in a statement.
Two weeks ago it raided
FIFA ofﬁces and opened “criminal proceedings against persons unknown on suspicion of
criminal mismanagement and
of money laundering.”
The storm unleashed by
separate U.S. and Swiss federal investigations has already
further sullied FIFA’s image
and led to the announced resignation of its president, Sepp
Blatter. He is not a suspect for
Swiss authorities but is a target
of the American case.

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trio of players participating on the Ohio squad,
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a pair to reinforce the
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gram of local interest in
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regards to this annual fun- Neece and Michael Davis,
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The favorite to succeed
Blatter, former protege turned
adversary Michel Platini,
criticized soccer’s governing
body later Wednesday while
also welcoming a delay in 2026
business.
“Today there is no leadership
at FIFA so it’s normal that it’s
been suspended,” the UEFA
president and former France
great said at a news conference
in Paris which overlapped with
Valcke’s in Russia.
The United States is among
the expected contenders in the
May 2017 vote.
FIFA also said Wednesday its
executive committee will meet
to choose an election date in a
special session next month —
possibly July 24 in St. Petersburg, where Swiss and Ameri-

60588517

authorities did not identify
which one. The Federal Criminal Court will rule on whether
he will remain in custody,
authorities said Wednesday in
a statement.
Although Blatter was not
named in a 164-page indictment — which alleged $150
million in bribes linked mostly
to non-FIFA tournaments in
North and South America —
ofﬁcials familiar with the case
have said he is a target.
Valcke, however, has been
scrutinized for his direct links
to payments totaling $10 million from FIFA accounts which
the U.S. Department of Justice
says were bribes to FIFA executive committee members to
vote for South Africa as 2010
World Cup host.

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and Brent Welch strap
it up one more time as
Eagles. The Ohio squad
will be coached by Trimble’s Phil Faires.
West Virginia leads the
alltime series by a 13-8
count, but Ohio won
last year’s contest by an
18-13 margin at Stadium
Field in Parkersburg. The
series is split at 3-3 over
the last six years as well.
Regardless of which
team wins Friday night,
Darst noted that even the
losing team comes away
with a great sense of dignity and pride in being
part of something better.
He’s also hoping that
some of the local football
fanatics will come out

60588514

can investigators won’t get the
chance to ask questions. The
209 FIFA member federations
will vote in Zurich for a new
president four months after a
deadline set for would-be candidates to apply.
Blatter’s prolonged departure
is “not doing himself and the
whole of football a favor,” said
Wolfgang Niersbach of Germany, who is on the executive
committee.
FIFA has been in crisis since
the U.S. Department of Justice
indicted 14 people on corruption charges ahead of Blatter’s
re-election at the FIFA congress two weeks ago. Seven of
them were arrested in Zurich
and face extradition.
One of the seven has
appealed for bail, but Swiss

and be part of this special
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“That’s the real gem
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the money that is raised
goes to a good cause, to
help in the research of
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“We’re hoping that our
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players involved, will
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Call (800) 794-7974 24-hrs. and leave your name and address (only).

60588510

Conley, OL-DL
Parkersburg South: Brendan
Schwendeman, RB-DB; Alex
Townsend, WR-DB
W.Va. head coach: David
Darst, Point Pleasant
OHIO
Meigs: Michael Davis, RB;
Daylen Neece. OL; Brad
Harless, OL
Eastern: Christian Speelman,
WR; Brent Welch, OL
Trimble: Terry Simerly, WR;
Austin Downs, WR; Caullin
Lunsford, FB; Micah Couch,
OL; Tanner Koons, OL
Belpre: Manney Tullius, RB
Federal Hocking: Ivan
Santiago, RB
Nelsonville-York: Jeremy
Warren, WR; Dakota Mays,
TE; Jay Elliott, OL
Athens: Bryce Graves, RB;
Troy Stadler, RB
Warren: Jared Isner, RB;
Brandon Pahl, OL; Cole Wigal,
WR-K
Marietta: Grant Lehman,
TE; Garrett Davis, RB; Evan
Rhodes, OL
Fort Frye: Terren Huck, QB;
Brandon Close, RB; Levi
Baker, OL
Frontier: Mitchell Reynolds,
QB; Rodney Barnes, RB; Lane
Curtis, OL
Caldwell: Jamieson Ackley,
OL; Christian Guy, OL; Tanner
Baker, TE
Monroe Central: Zach Jorris,
WR; Levi Brown, RB; Gavin
Morton, WR
Morgan: Logan Meadows,
WR; Michael Apperson, RB;
Kade Mayle, OL
River: Brok Cross, WR; Cole
Islay, RB
Beallsville: Mikey Palmer, WR
Ohio head coach: Phil Faires,
Trimble
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

60588519

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