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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM OR WWW.MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

New to Medicare?

CALL TO SPEAK TO A LICENSED
HUMANA SALES AGENT TODAY
1-800-421-7865
TTY: 711
8 a.m. to 8 p.m., 7 days a week

Y0040_GHHHS8FEN_14 Accepted

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Pomeroy creamery
teams with OSU
students... Page C1

Mostly cloudy. High
around 83. Low
near 63...Page A2

State, national
sports... Page B1

John D. Brooks, 77
Allison Lee, 37
Lillian F. Stalnaker
Gaylen R. Swanson Sr., 68
Dale L. Van Meter, 94

$2.00

SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

Vol. 48, No. 29

Miller scheduled to appear before jury Monday
Defendant withdraws insanity plea
By Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — A jury trial
against a man accused of shoot-

ing and seriously injuring an officer with the Gallipolis Police
Department in the line of duty in
2012 is scheduled to begin Monday in the Common Pleas Court

of Gallia County.
According to information filed
with the Gallia County Clerk of
Courts on Friday, Cole C. Miller,
30, of Gallipolis, has withdrawn

his previously entered pleas of
not guilty by reason of insanity
and has entered a general plea
of not guilty to all counts of the
indictment. Miller appeared in
open court with his retained
counsel Donald Regensburger, of
the Samuel Shamansky law firm

of Columbus, on Thursday. He
will appear Monday morning for
a previously scheduled jury trial.
Miller stands accused of attempted aggravated murder,
three counts of felonious assault,
See MILLER | A6

Three arrested following
task force investigation
By Amber Gillenwater

drug trafficking
and a probation
violation following
GALLIPOLIS —
an investigation by
Indictments were rethe Gallia-Meigs
cently handed down
Major
Crimes
in the Common Pleas Waugh
Task Force.
Court of Gallia Coun“I was really
ty against three indiglad the task
viduals who have been
force was able to
charged following an
help us with this
ongoing investigation
case,” Browning
of the illegal purchase
said, while reand sale of illicit drugs
porting that the
in the region by the
majority of the
Gallia-Meigs Major Blankenship
recent breaking
Crimes Task Force.
and
enterings
Gallia County Sherand burglaries
iff Joe Browning rein Gallia County
ported on Friday that
are tied directly
Kisha Waugh, 25, of
to the purchase
Clay Lick Road, Paand sale of drugs.
triot, was arrested
“I want to let
on Wednesday by the
the public know
Gallipolis Police De- Delahoussaye that we are workpartment on a warrant
ing on these cases
on indictment. As of Friday, and they are working their
he was being held in the Gal- way through the court syslia County Jail.
tem,” Browning stated.
Waugh is reportedly facing
See TASK | A6
charges of drug possession,
agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

Submitted photos

ABOVE, Mother Leslie Flemming, priest of St. Peter’s, left, and Deacon
Carolyn Cogar, right, are pictured at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church on Second Avenue in Gallipolis. AT RIGHT, the Rt. Rev. Thomas E. Breidenthal
ordains Carolyn Cogar to the Sacred Order of Deacons on June 7 at the
Christ Church Cathedral in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Local woman completes journey to become deacon
By Melissa Blank

Special to the Sunday Times-Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS — After more
than three years of training and
preparation, local resident Carolyn Cogar has recently completed
requirements to become a deacon
in the Episcopal Church.
Cogar, of Gallipolis, attended
training at Proctor Camp in London, Ohio, through the Episcopal
Diocese of Southern Ohio.
From 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. for nearly
every weekend the past three
years, Cogar said she and her

classmates studied theology, ethics, Christian history, human development, and classes based on
understanding human emotions.
But, Cogar explained, even
with the long class hours, homework and commute, she said her
experience was a great one because many of the students were
in a similar situation as her — balancing church, home and school.
“When I began the class, no
one really knew what to expect,”
Cogar said.
“We started with four or five
students, but it eventually grew to

more than a dozen,” she added. “We
quickly became like a family and relied on each other for support.
“It was a learn-by-doing approach,” Cogar said, laughing.
“Especially the sermons.”
Before beginning her journey to
become a deacon, which is a position she will hold without compensation, Cogar had to be approved by her peers at her home
church, St. Peter’s in Gallipolis,
as well as the regional bishop and
commission.
See DEACON | A3

Holzer and Humana partner for
Accountable Care Agreement
By April Jaynes

ajaynes@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS —Medicare Advantage members are expected to experience an increase in coordinated care and
preventive services with Holzer Health Systems recent
agreement with Humana Inc.
The Accountable Care Agreement is designed to provide value-based incentives and more cost effective, quality care to Humana’s nearly 10,000 Medicare Advantage
members within Holzer’s service area in southeast Ohio
and western West Virginia.
“What we’re trying to do is we want to partner with
good provider organizations because, first and foremost,
we want to make sure that we create better outcomes for
our members and the patients,” Humana Ohio Senior
Products President Larry Costello said. “So we put these

POMEROY — Repairs to the Pomeroy Parking Lot are
scheduled to begin within the next 12 to 24 months, according to Mayor Jackie Welker and Village Administrator Paul Hellman.
Part of the upper lot near the gazebo has been marked
with yellow caution tape due to deterioration. Welker
said the main causes of the wall deterioration appear to

The Upper Lot currently has two parking spots off limits to

See PARKING | A3 citizens.

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�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page A2 LîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, July 20, 2014

%9:@î,2==6Jî�@C642DE

Gallia County Community Calendar

Today: A chance of showers, with thunderstorms also
possible after 7 a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 83.
Light south wind. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Tonight: A slight chance of showers before 1 a.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Monday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms after
3 p.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 87. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 65. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.

Card showers
GALLIPOLIS — Grace Shafer will
celebrate her 94th birthday on July
20. Cards may be sent to her in care
of Judy Wolford, 13888 St. Rte. 7
South, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
GALLIPOLIS — Eva Mooney will
celebrate her 90th birthday on July
22. cards may be sent to her at The
Arbors, 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

"@42=î)E@4&lt;D
AEP (NYSE) — 53.39
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.36
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 106.56
Big Lots (NYSE) — 44.10
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.76
BorgWarner (NYSE) —65.18
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 17.89
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.250
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.29
Collins (NYSE) — 79.77
DuPont (NYSE) — 65.55
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.17
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.46
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 67.30
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 58.23
Kroger (NYSE) — 49.60
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 57.71
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 106.18
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.60
BBT (NYSE) — 38.90

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.95
Pepsico (NYSE) — 90.09
Premier (NASDAQ) — 16.10
Rockwell (NYSE) — 122.50
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.12
Royal Dutch Shell — 82.23
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 38.60
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.09
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.28
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.57
Worthington (NYSE) — 42.24
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions July 18, 2014, 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.

Events
Monday, July 21
GALLIPOLIS — “Look Good,
Feel Better,” sponsored by the American Cancer Society, will be 1 p.m. at
the Cancer Resource Center in the
Holzer Center for Cancer Care, 170
Jackson Pike. Call 1-800-227-2345 or
740-441-3909 for an appointment before 10 a.m. Monday.
GALLIPOLIS — The monthly
meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction
and Mental Health Services has been
cancelled. The board typically meets
on the third Monday of each month

at 7 p.m. at the Board Office (53
Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis).
GALLIPOLIS — American Legion
Lafayette Post #27 regular meeting,
7:30 p.m., at the legion post on Bob
McCormick Road.
Tuesday, July 22
GALLIPOLIS — Stroke Survivors’
Support Group, lunch at noon, meeting 12:30-2 p.m., Gallia County Senior Resource Center.
Friday, Aug. 1
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County Commissioners will conduct a public hearing at 10 a.m. to review a resolution for the one-fourth percent sales
tax renewal for the continued operation of the countywide 911 system.
Monday, Aug. 4
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia
County Commissioners will conduct a public hearing at 10:30 a.m.
to review a resolution for the onefourth percent sales tax renewal
for the continued operation of the

Telephone: 740-446-2342
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CONTACT US
NEWSROOM:
Amber Gillenwater
740-446-2342 Ext. 31

CIRCULATION MANAGER:
Jessica Chason
740-446-2342 Ext. 25
jchason@civitasmedia.com

CLASSIFIEDS:
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ADVERTISING:
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740-992-2155 Ext. 11, 29

SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES:
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OBITUARIES:
740-446-2342

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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.

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Thursday, Aug. 14
GALLIPOLIS — Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District Board
meeting, 8 a.m., C.H. McKenzie Agricultural Center. Those who would
like to be on the agenda should call
the SWCD office and ask for Nick
Mills at 446-6173.

Tuesday, July 22
POMEROY — Mina Swisher will be 100 years old on
July 22. Cards can be sent to her at 258 West Main Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45679.
POMEROY — Bedford Township trustees will hold a
special meeting regarding fire levy services on July 22 at
7 p.m. at the town hall.

Republican Party will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the
Carleton School in Syracuse. Everyone is welcome to attend.
Friday, July 25
MARIETTA — The Regional Advisory Council for the
Area Agency on Aging will meet on Friday, July 25 at 10
a.m. in the Buckeye Hills-HVRDD Area Agency on Aging
Office in Marietta, Ohio.

County sets
public hearing for
sales tax renewal
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Commissioners will conduct two
public hearings for the
purpose of reviewing a
resolution for the onefourth percent sales tax
renewal for the continued
operation of the countywide 911 system. Both
public hearings will be in
Room 1292 in the Gallia
County Courthouse. The
first public hearing will
be 10 a.m. Aug. 1; the
second public hearing
will be 10:30 a.m. Aug. 4.

Jackson Pike work
under way until July 25
GALLIPOLIS — Road
construction has started
on Jackson Pike and will
continue until 6 p.m. July
25. The road will be milled
and resurfaced, with 1-2
lanes of traffic being maintained at all times, according to Gallia County Engineer Brett Boothe. Also,
Ward Road will be closed
between Van Zant Road
and Morgan Lane starting
at 6 a.m. July 14 until 4
p.m. July 18, weather permitting, for bridge replacement. Motorists are asked
to use other county roads
as a detour.

In Loving Memory

Mary L Syrus
July 5, 1935 – July 21, 2007
Mom, you were a blessing each and every day.
Loved and Missed by
Rick Syrus, Andy, Randy and Deanna Syrus,
Rob, Cathy and Chad Syrus

Ohio 218 closure
CROWN CITY — The
Ohio Department of Transportation officials say Ohio
218 will be closed 0.74
miles south of Perkins
Road until July 24 for a
culvert replacement project. The official ODOT detour is Ohio 218 to Ohio 7
to Ohio 553 back to Ohio
218.
‘Look Good, Feel Better’ cancer group meets
GALLIPOLIS — “Look
Good, Feel Better,” sponsored by the American
Cancer Society, will be 1
p.m. July 21 at the Cancer
Resource Center in the
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care, 170 Jackson Pike.
This free program is for
women with cancer who
are dealing with radiation
and/or chemotherapy treatments. They will be given
advice on how to care for
their skin and other helpful
tips to give them self confidence. Call 1-800-227-2345
or 740-441-3909 for an appointment before 10 a.m.
Monday.

Monthly drug,
mental health board
meeting canceled
GALLIPOLIS — The
July 21 meeting of the
G a l l i a -J a c k s o n - M e i g s
Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental
Health Services has been
cancelled. The board typically meets on the third
Monday of each month at
7 p.m. at the Board Office (53 Shawnee Lane,
Gallipolis).
Classic car
show and fish fry
WILKESVILLE — A
Classic Car Show and
Fish Fry sponsored by the
Wilkesville Fireman’s Association will be July 26.
Registration will be from
11 a.m.-2 p.m. and trophies will be awarded at
4 p.m. The categories are:
antique, custom, classic
cars and trucks, as well as
antique farm tractors. All
proceeds go to benefit the
Wilkesville Volunteer Fire
Department. For more information, call (740) 6698900.

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Wednesday, Aug. 13
GALLIPOLIS — A program about
preventing microbial contamination
on fruit and vegetable farms will be 6-9
p.m. at the Gallia County Extension
Office, 111 Jackson Pike Gallipolis.
Food safety and good agricultural practices, or GAPS, for fruit and vegetable
production will be the focus. Ohio
State University Extension educators
will present the three-hour program.

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(USPS 436-840)

EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-446-2342 Ext. 18
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

Tuesday, Aug. 5
BIDWELL — Holzer Clinic and
Holzer Medical Center retirees will
meet for lunch at noon at the Wounded Goose, Bidwell.

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�Sunday, July 20, 2014

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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î�

Small-business man, farmer in Kasich ad also exec
By Julie Carr Smyth
Associated Press

COLUMBUS — The farmer featured in radio ads
for Gov. John Kasich airing across rural Ohio is not
just a small-business man.
Paulding County soybean farmer Terry McClure

also sits on the board of Nationwide, one of the
world’s largest insurance companies, and formerly
chaired the boards of agribusiness specialty lines affiliated with the company that generated close to $1
billion a year in premiums.
See AD | A5

Deacon
From Page A1
“I was hesitant at first when Mother Leslie asked me to do it,” Cogar
said, “But I thought about it and
eventually felt like I was called to do
it. It was not a decision I took lightly. I had tremendous support from
friends, family and the church.”
Although Cogar, who retired from
Gallia County Local Schools more
than 15 years ago as a music teacher,
has not officially been assigned a
church by the Diocese, she is currently serving at St. Peter’s, where she
has been a member for many years.
As a deacon, Cogar will be responsible for assisting the priest during
services and being involved in the development of programs to expand the

church’s reach into the community.
“Want to encourage our congregation to become more active in the
community and world,” Cogar said.
“We want them to think outside of
the pew.”
During her education, Cogar was
required to complete two years of
field experience, which she did at
Grace Episcopal Church in Pomeroy.
At Grace, she participated in a nursing home ministry at Rock Springs
Rehabilitation Center and plans to
continue that ministry, and has hopes
to expand it here in Gallia County.
Another project Cogar hopes to
cultivate is Park Church, a service
held the first Sunday of each summer
month in Gallipolis City Park. The
service, a shortened version of the

regular Episcopal service, begins at 1
p.m. with communion provided.
“We hope to use this as a way to
bring our service to more people,”
she said. “We want to reach people
who may feel intimidated to walk
into an unfamiliar church and experience an Episcopal service, which is
really quite beautiful and moving.”
One of the church’s biggest projects is Loaves and Fishes, a monthly
community meal that is funded and
hosted by St. Peter’s.
Cogar explained that several local
churches provide additional food and
manpower, and an average of 300
meals is served every month.
“We’re doing a lot now,” she said.
“But I think there is always room to
do more.”

Agreement
From Page A1
ACAs together to create an integrated health care system
where all the pieces work together, and if we do that the member will get a better outcome and also a better experience and
better quality, and it will be more cost effective in the end.”
The agreement is designed to create more personalized
care and utilize other tools such as predictive analytics and
chronic care, disease management and wellness programs.
“Through these value-based incentive programs, we
tie the incentives to preventive care, disease management programs — and making sure there’s good access
to care like physician’s offices, specialists and things like
that — because those are the things that create the better
outcome and they’re also the things that create a better
patient experience for our members,” Costello said.
The ACAs utilize measures that are defined by the
National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) and
Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) for services such as diabetes care and treatment,
breast cancer screenings, colorectal cancer screenings
and high-risk medication.
“This is a shift toward a system that focuses more on
quality,” Humana Media Relations Manager Jeff Blunt
said. “They set up sort of these ‘best practices’ or ‘tried
and true ways’ to manage patients. The way the incentives are structured, they’re built around those HEDIS
measures, so it’s kind of interesting how those measures
are arrived at and the providers at the doctor’s hospital
can actually earn extra money by hitting those measures.”
Humana is headquartered in Louisville, Ky. The corporation has a 25-year history with ACAs, with more than
one million members that are cared for by 33,000 primary
care physicians through more than 900 ACAs across 40
states and Puerto Rico.

Parking
From Page A1
be a change in water levels and mine
drainage flowing from the hillside down
to the Ohio River, causing a double effect,
according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, who will be completing the project.
The project is $2 million, with the village
being liable for 35 percent, or $700,000.
The out-of-pocket charge for the village is
5 percent, or $100,000. The village council is currently looking into grant money
opportunities for the cost and the possibility of in-kind labor opportunities. If the
grant opportunities fall through, the council will discuss a tax bond levy.
Hellman said the life expectancy of the
structure is about to expire as well, which
presents another factor. Margaret Parker,
president of the Meigs County Historical Society, said the records that could be
found showed the walls were build sometime before Jan. 3, 1936 as part of a Work

Progress Administration project, with
part of the wall collapsing at some time
and eventually being rebuilt.
To gauge when the project could be
done, Welker and Hellman contacted the
Corps, who assessed the condition of the
parking lots and said that they had about
four to five more years of use. They recommended the caution tape around two parking lot spots. Hellman said the Corps also
recommended building a dyke along this
expanse to filter out all sedimentation.
“It’s a big gravel upside-down U,” Hellman said. “Water comes up, sedimentation
comes up. Water comes in, after a while
the water comes out and the sedimentation stays and will eventually settle.”
While the Corps gave a 12- to 24-month
time frame in which the project will start,
there is no specific date set yet as they have
other projects to complete, Welker said.
Representatives from the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers could not be reached
The gazebo area is also marked with caution tape, although it is still in use by many.
as of press time.

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�OPINION

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Page A4
SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

United Way redirects
to help children
from cradle to career
Ours is a culture of growing dependence, with politicians
delighting in promises of free food, government incomes,
housing and health care.
While some individuals cannot do for themselves, and
must depend on the collective, the most fortunate among
us provide for themselves and others. For people of able
bodies and minds, success entails education, health and
self-sufficiency.
Those are characteristics the United Way plans to instill
in young people, even more than it has in the past. The
nonprofit’s new shift is in the direction of helping people
“from cradle to career.”
The new emphasis results from an eight-month-long process of “community conservations,” in which small focus
groups tried to determine what’s right and wrong in region.
Those findings were combined with the United Way’s Quality of Life Indicators report to determine how the organization could best serve the community.
The United Way already has a program called Success by
6, which strives to improve literacy and education for young
children. The Dolly Parton Imagination Library gives books
to children up to age 5. The ability to read is almost essential
to a successful productive life in the United States.
More children-focused programs will be launched as part
of the new focus, including one called Decade of Difference.
Wood hopes it will help people ages 16 through 26 form
vocations that benefit society.
It is always good to see charities direct more of their resources toward our youths. As the old Jesuit maxim goes,
“give me a child for his first seven years and I’ll give you
the man.”
Even more, it’s great to see organizations placing an emphasis on productivity and self-sufficiency.
Our culture abounds with bandage solutions to serious problems. We have soup kitchens, food pantries, food
stamps and an assortment of other programs that feed hungry people who cannot afford food.
Hospitals and clinics have long provided health care to
those who can’t afford it. We have homeless shelters and
government housing. We have detox facilities for alcoholics
and addicts, even those who are destitute on the streets.
What we too often lack are charitable solutions that work
to eradicate the roots of human suffering.
When too many people are unemployed, underemployed,
uninsured or on the streets, it means too many people lack
education, health and any reasonable means to achieve selfsufficiency.
Typically, adult problems are grounded in childhood
problems. Children who wind up on the wrong path may be
prone to stay on that path.
The United Way, a priceless asset to this community,
is wise to place an even greater emphasis on showing our
youths the ingredients of success. Happiness isn’t dependence on others. It’s knowledge, health and the freedom of
self-sufficiency.
Reprinted from the Colorado Springs (Colo.) Gazette.

Sunday Times-Sentinel
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An understanding of innocence
By Daris Howard
Isaac’s oldest sons had been shot
by the Germans. His wife and younger children had gathered with others
in a church for safety, only to have
the Germans block the doors and
burn the church down.
Isaac joined the war with revenge
being his only desire. But after the
Allies had taken Berlin, he came
across a 4-year-old German girl who
was starving. Without thinking, he
had pulled his revolver and nearly
shot her when she attempted to steal
food from him. But then he found a
small bit of compassion in his heart,
and not only let her go, but shared
what little he had.
He never expected to see her
again, but the next day she came.
He could see in her face how hungry
she was, but his rations were barely
enough for himself. He struggled
with thoughts that it was those like
her that had killed his family. But
then, in the next instant, he could
see in her his own small daughter
who had died in the fire.
Finally, after the battle had raged
in his heart for some time, he divided
his food and held out half of it to her.
She cautiously crept closer. Once she
reached him, she took the food and
darted away.
Each evening after that, she grew
more confident and would come
closer. Soon she didn’t flee so quickly. Then, one day, before their usual
meal time, he heard a cry and turned

to see her running toward him. Two
men were chasing her with less than
honorable intent. Isaac had grown accustomed to the horrors and ravishes
of war, even of the very young, but
this still sickened him. Even though
the men were on the same side of the
war as he was, Isaac felt anger swell
in him. The girl ran behind Isaac and
hugged his waist in fear. Isaac pulled
his gun and faced the men. The men
could see the angered expression on
his face and quickly backed away.
The girl still held onto him, her
face buried against him. Then Isaac
did something he thought he could
never do; he leaned down and
hugged this little girl. That night, as
he shared his food with her, she did
not flee away, but stayed close. After
they had eaten, Isaac did the best he
could to help her understand that he
would walk her safely home.
When they arrived at the place
where she indicated she lived, Isaac
saw it was nothing but a bombed out
building. He looked for an adult, and
finally found an old woman. Through
her broken French, and his limited
German, he was able to learn about
the little girl. Isaac found out that her
name was Alexandra, and that she
had no family. Her father, a German
soldier, had been killed while fighting. The rest of her family were killed
as the battle moved into Berlin.
Isaac suddenly felt a surge of anger.
What if the girl’s father had been part
of those who had killed his family?
Then another thought came. What

if, as he himself had been fighting,
he had been the one who had killed
her father or others of her family? He
started to think about how Alexandra had done nothing wrong. There
were many on both sides who didn’t
want to fight but had no choice. It is
usually the innocent who pay the biggest price in any conflict.
The old lady watched Alexandra
and could see the trust she had in
Isaac. “Do you have family?” the lady
asked him.
“They were all killed by the Germans,” Isaac said quietly. “One was a
daughter Alexandra’s age.”
The lady was silent for a moment,
and when she spoke, she spoke with
great empathy. “You have lost your
family, and so has she. Perhaps she
was brought to you, and you to her,
because you need each other so that
you can both have a family once
more.”
As Isaac considered this, the lady
spoke again. “I cannot take care of
her. If she stays here, she will most
likely die.”
Isaac wondered if he could find
the forgiveness in his heart to raise a
child of the enemy that had killed his
family. And if he did, could he love
her as his own daughter?
As he looked at Alexandra, and she
looked up at him with her trusting
big blue eyes, he determined it would
be worth it to try.
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Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting
the free exercise thereof; or
abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the
right of the people peaceably to
assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of
grievances.
The First Amendment
to the U.S. Constitution

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

Today is Sunday, July 20, the 201st day of 2014.
There are 164 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlights in History:
On July 20, 1944, an attempt by a group of German officials to assassinate Adolf Hitler with a bomb
failed as the explosion only wounded the Nazi leader.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt was nominated for a
fourth term of office at the Democratic convention
in Chicago.
On this date:
In 1861, the Congress of the Confederate States
convened in Richmond, Virginia.
In 1871, British Columbia entered Confederation
as a Canadian province.
In 1917, the World War I draft lottery went into
operation.
In 1923, Mexican revolutionary leader Pancho
Villa was assassinated.
In 1954, the Geneva Accords divided Vietnam into
northern and southern entities.
In 1968, the first International Special Olympics
Summer Games, organized by Eunice Kennedy
Shriver, were held at Soldier Field in Chicago.
In 1969, astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin
“Buzz” Aldrin became the first men to walk on the
moon after reaching the surface in their Apollo 11
lunar module.
In 1974, Turkish forces invaded Cyprus after a
coup by supporters of union with Greece.
In 1976, America’s Viking 1 robot spacecraft made
a successful, first-ever landing on Mars.
In 1989, Burmese activist Aung San Suu Kyi (soo
chee) was placed under house arrest by the military
government of Myanmar.
In 1999, after 38 years at the bottom of the Atlantic, astronaut Gus Grissom’s Liberty Bell 7 Mercury
capsule was lifted to the surface.
In 2012, a gunman opened fire inside a crowded
movie theater in Aurora, Colo., during a midnight
showing of “The Dark Knight Rises,” killing 12 people. (Suspect James Eagen Holmes has pleaded not
guilty by reason of insanity to more than 160 counts
of murder and attempted murder.)

Ten years ago: Former national security adviser Sandy Berger quit as an informal adviser to
Democrat John Kerry’s presidential campaign after
disclosure of a criminal investigation into whether
he’d mishandled classified terrorism documents.
Iraqi militants freed a Filipino truck driver after the
Philippines government gave in to their demands
to withdraw troops from Iraq. The head of slain
American hostage Paul M. Johnson Jr. was found in
a raid in Saudi Arabia. The U.N. General Assembly
demanded that Israel tear down the barrier it was
building to seal off the West Bank; Israel vowed to
continue construction.
Five years ago: A roadside bomb killed four
American troops in eastern Afghanistan. The astronauts aboard the shuttle-station complex celebrated
the 40th anniversary of man’s first moon landing
with their own spacewalk.
Today’s Birthdays: Actress-singer Sally Ann
Howes is 84. Author Cormac McCarthy is 81. Rockabilly singer Sleepy LaBeef is 79. Senator Barbara
A. Mikulski, D-Md., is 78. Actress Diana Rigg is 76.
Artist Judy Chicago is 75. Rock musician John Lodge
(The Moody Blues) is 71. Country singer T.G. Sheppard is 70. Singer Kim Carnes is 69. Rock musician
Carlos Santana is 67. Rock musician Paul Cook (The
Sex Pistols, Man Raze) is 58. Actress Donna Dixon
is 57. Rock musician Mick McNeil (Simple Minds)
is 56. Country singer Radney Foster is 55. Actor
Frank Whaley is 51. Rock singer Chris Cornell is 50.
Rock musician Stone Gossard (Pearl Jam) is 48. Actor Reed Diamond is 47. Actor Josh Holloway is 45.
Singer Vitamin C is 45. Actor Omar Epps is 41. Actor Simon Rex is 40. Actress Judy Greer is 39. Actor
Charlie Korsmo is 36. Singer Elliott Yamin (American Idol) is 36. Supermodel Gisele Bundchen is 34.
Rock musician Mike Kennerty (The All-American
Rejects) is 34. Actor Percy Daggs III is 32. Actor
John Francis Daley is 29. Country singer Hannah
Blaylock (Edens Edge) is 28. Country singer-ballroom dancer Julianne Hough is 26. Actress Billi
Bruno is 18.

�Sunday, July 20, 2014

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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î��

Should online accounts
die when you die?

Obituaries
GAYLEN RALPH SWANSON SR.

LILLIAN FERN “JO” STALNAKER
Lillian Fern Stalnaker,
known by most as “Jo,” of
Punta Gorda, FlA., died
Wednesday, May 28, 2014,
in an automobile accident.
She was a longtime resident of Meigs County and
was employed as a nurse at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She was preceded in
death by her former husband, Harley Stalnaker.
She has two sisters:
Betty Smith of Navarna,
Ohio, and Aggie Stack, of
Macksburg Ohio, and Jacksonville Fla.
She is survived by two
sons, Bruce Stalnaker and
his wife, Linda, of Port
Charlotte, Fla.; two grandchildren, Mark (wife Mie)
of Anaheim, Calif., and
Julie Borges (husband Bri-

an) of Waddell, Ariz.; five
grandchildren: David, Daniel, Reagan, Jordan and Lillian Marie; and Terry Stalnaker ( wife Jackie) and
two
step-grandchildren,
Roger Davis Jr. and Robert
Davis; and Michele Huff
(husband Doug); and three
stepgreat-grandchildren,
Jade, Alyssa and Wyatt.
Jo loved Ohio and especially Pomeroy. She
spoke often of friends in
the area and kept in touch
with someone almost daily.
She talked of the trips and
tours that she got to take
with many of her friends
and that made her happy.
We will miss you MOM.
Thanks for being a good
friend to so many and a loving mother. Rest in peace.

Death Notices
BROOKS
JACKSON — John D.
Brooks, 77 of Jackson, and
formerly of Reedsville, died
Thursday, July 17, 2014,
at Holzer Medical Center
in Gallipolis. A memorial
service will be conducted
at the convenience of the
family. Cremation arrangements have been entrusted

to Cremeens-King Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.
LEE
MARIETTA — Allison
Lee, 37, of Marietta, died
unexpectedly Friday, July
28, 2014. Arrangements
will be announced later by
Cremeens-King
Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.

RUTLAND — Gaylen
Ralph Swanson Sr., 68,
of Rutland, passed away
Thursday, July 17, 2014.
He was born May 23, 1946,
in Warren, Ohio, the son of
the late Jack Eldon Swanson and Bertha Evelyn
Faye Swanson.
He is survived by his children Gaylen R. Jr. (Julie)
Swanson, Leonard (Tanisha) Swanson and Richard
Swanson; nine grandchildren; and stepchildren
Harry (Paula) Wainscott,
Michael (Michelle) Wainscott and Jackie Warfield.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by one brother and
three sisters.
Funeral services will be
noon Tuesday, July 22, 2014,
at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy
with Pastor John Swanson
officiating. Burial will follow
at the Morris family cemetery. Visiting hours will be
10 a.m. to noon Tuesday at
the funeral home.
A registry is available at
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Homes — Pomeroy and
Middleport.

THE REV. DALE L. VAN METER
SHARON, Mass. — The
Rev. Dale L. Van Meter,
94, retired social worker,
teacher and minister, died
peacefully Friday, June 27,
2014, in his home following a brief illness.
Born in Ohio, he is the
son of the late Carl and
Laura Van Meter. He had
lived a diverse full life, and
will be greatly missed by
many.
He was the devoted husband to the late Elizabeth
L. Van Meter; loving father
of Julia Wood and Donald
Andrews of Sharon, Amelia
Lydon of Norton, and the
late Laura E. Van Meter;
and brother of Delbert Van

Meter, Norman Van Meter
and the late Francis Van
Meter.
He was also a proud
grandfather of Hannah
Wood Sykes, Dale Wood,
Nicholas Lydon and Kevin
Lydon. He is also survived
by six great-grandchildren
and many nieces and nephews.
Funeral services celebrating his life were Tuesday,
July 1, 2014, at St. John’s
Episcopal Church in Sharon.
Donation may be made
in his memory to the Dana
Faber Cancer Institute,
P.O. Box 849168, Boston,
MA.

State says Ohio measles outbreak could be at end
COLUMBUS (AP) — Ohio’s measles epidemic appears to be winding
down, according to the Ohio Health
Department, as cases of mumps, while
slowing, continue to infect people.
The last confirmed case of measles
was in Holmes County on June 30,
which epidemiologist Brian Fowler
says puts the outbreak’s unofficial end
at July 21 and the official end at Aug.
11, or the conclusion of two 21-day in-

cubation periods.
Measles In Ohio leveled off at 368
reported cases with 10 people hospitalized in nine counties — mostly in the
state’s Amish country — The Columbus Dispatch reported Friday.
The outbreak started among Amish
in Knox County who had traveled to
the Philippines, which has had a measles epidemic.
Measles symptoms usually appear

seven to 21 days after exposure and can
include a fever followed by a cough, a
runny nose and a rash on the face that
spreads down the neck and body over
several days. People with measles are
also often sensitive to light and must
stay in dark rooms.
Measles are at a two-decade high in
the United States, driven by outbreaks
among unvaccinated populations of
Amish in Ohio.

By Anne Flaherty
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Should your emails, web albums and
other online accounts die when you do? Or should you be
able to pass them down to a family member much as you
would a house or a box of letters?
A leading group of lawyers says that families should immediately get access to everything online unless otherwise
specified in a will. They are urging state lawmakers to enact
their proposal so loved ones don’t get shut out as American
lives move increasingly online.
“Our email accounts are our filing cabinets these days,”
said Suzanne Brown Walsh, a Cummings &amp; Lockwood attorney who led the effort. But “if you need access to an email
account, in most states you wouldn’t get it.”
The Uniform Law Commission, whose members are appointed by state governments to help standardize state
laws, on Wednesday endorsed the plan for “digital assets.” It
would give loved ones access to — but not control of — the
deceased’s digital accounts unless a will says otherwise.
To become law, the legislation would have to be adopted
by each state’s legislature. It would trump “terms of service”
agreements by tech companies that prohibit people from accessing an account that isn’t theirs.
“This is something most people don’t think of until they
are faced with it. They have no idea what is about to be lost,”
said Karen Williams of Beaverton, Oregon, who sued Facebook for access to her 22-year-old son Loren’s account after
he died in a 2005 motorcycle accident.
Facebook and other tech companies have been reluctant
to hand over their customers’ private data, and many people
say they wouldn’t want their families to have unfettered access to their life online. But when confronted with death,
families say they need access to settle financial details or
simply for sentimental reasons.
What’s more, certain online accounts can be worth real
money, such as a popular cooking blog or a gaming avatar
that has acquired certain status online.
Privacy activists are skeptical of the proposal. Ginger McCall, associate director of the Electronic Privacy Information
Center in Washington, said a judge’s approval should be
needed for access, to protect the privacy of both the owners
of accounts and the people who communicate with them.
“The digital world is a different world” from offline, McCall said. “No one would keep 10 years of every communication they ever had with dozens or even hundreds of other
people under their bed.”
Many people assume they can decide what happens by
sharing certain passwords with a trusted family member, or
even making those passwords part of their will. But in addition to potentially exposing passwords when a will becomes
public record, anti-hacking laws and the terms of service
agreements prohibit that.
Several tech providers have come up with their own solutions. Facebook, for example, will “memorialize” accounts
by allowing already confirmed friends to continue to view
photos and old posts. Google, which runs Gmail, YouTube
and Picasa Web Albums, offers its own version: If people
don’t log on after a while, their accounts can be deleted or
shared with a designated person. Yahoo users agree when
signing up that their accounts expire when they do.

Ad
From Page A3
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ed FitzGerald’s campaign
says McClure’s extensive business
interests aren’t those of the average Ohioan portrayed in the ad.
“It’s not that he’s not a farmer.
I’m sure he is a farmer,” said Lauren Hitt, a spokeswoman for the
FitzGerald campaign. “But it’s
another example of how disconnected Gov. Kasich is that he sees
this as a typical example of an
everyday Ohioan. It’s another example of how out of touch he is.”
According to an online biography, McClure is president of
McClure Farms LLC, a producer
of corn, soybeans and wheat,
and maintains swine operations.
A former president of the Ohio

Farm Bureau Federation, he was
elected to the board of Nationwide — which has a history of
partnering with farmers — in
2004.
McClure chaired the boards of
the Farmland Mutual Insurance
and Nationwide Agribusiness Insurance companies from 2006 to
2009. The latter recently marked
$1 billion in annual premium
collections. Records show he’s
donated about $7,000 to Republican candidates in recent years.
Kasich’s campaign defends
selecting McClure for the ads,
which focus on his support
for the 2011 repeal of Ohio’s
estate tax. McClure says in
the ad that the move allowed
farmers to invest more in their
businesses and churches and

keep their family farms.
“It’s unbelievable that Ed
FitzGerald and his allies are so
opposed to tax cuts for Ohioans
that they’d stoop to attacking a
5th-generation farmer from one
of Ohio’s smallest counties who
has spent his life maintaining
and growing his family’s farm,”
said Connie Wehrkamp, the campaign’s spokeswoman. “Getting
rid of the death tax is something
that’s been talked about since the
1970s and Governor Kasich delivered.”
A message was left for McClure on Friday at the Ohio Soybean Council, of which he is a
board member.
Democrats criticized the estate tax’s repeal as benefiting the
very wealthy at the expense of

budget-strapped cities that relied
on the tax to fund certain critical services, such as salt trucks.
FitzGerald, the Cuyahoga County executive in Cleveland, has
made Kasich’s cuts to the state
local government fund a key
campaign issue.
Roger Geiger, executive director of National Federation of Independent Business/Ohio, which
represents small businesses, took
issue with Democrats’ estate tax
argument.
“The fact that local governments were balancing their budgets on the hope that business
owners, farmers and others in
their community would die during a given budget cycle was irresponsible fiscal policy at best,”
he said.

Huron County Commissioner
Tom Dunlap said he was offended by such a suggestion.
“To say that local government
officials were hoping members
of their community would die
is disgusting, inflammatory
rhetoric meant to distract from
the fact that Governor Kasich’s
funding cuts are responsible for
police, firefighters and teachers
losing their jobs,” he said.
The Kasich campaign identified other farmers who shared
McClure’s views on the estate
tax, including Putnam County
turkey farmer Bernie Kahle.
Kahle said the tax would have
cost the next generation at his
six-person operation $700,000,
which would “surely force” its
dissolution.

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�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page A6 LîSunday Times Sentinel

Entry forms available for Little
Miss/Mr. Gallia County contest
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis Lions
Club will once again sponsor the Little
Miss/Little Mr. Gallia County contest at
this year’s Gallia County Fair.
The Gallipolis Lions Club has traditionally sponsored this event since 1958.
It will be conducted at 6:30 p.m. July 28
on the main stage of the fairgrounds.
Contestants must be 6 or 7 years old,
be a resident of Gallia County and be preregistered with the Gallipolis Lions Club.
Entry forms may be obtained at Ohio
Valley Bank, 420 Third Ave., Gallipolis;

Peoples Bank, 349 Third Ave., Gallipolis;
or Gallia County Convention and Visitor’s Bureau, 441 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Entry forms may be completed and returned to the aforementioned locations or
mailed to the Gallipolis Lions Club, P.O.
Box 436, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Ollie Paxton, chairman of the Little
Miss/Mister contest, said entry forms
must be received by July 23. All entrants
should report to the back of the stage at 6
p.m. the night of the contest.

Sunday, July 20, 2014

#6:8Dî�@F?EJî"@42=î�C:67D
Bible School Begins
Monday
RUTLAND — The
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church will have Bible
School, July 21 to 25. 6
to 8:30 p.m. Theme will
be “Gateway to Gallilee.”
Eight bicycles to giveaway
on Friday night for perfect
attendance. For more information call 742-2790.
Tea Party meeting
POMEROY —The Meigs
County Tea Party will meet
at 7:30 p.m. July 22 at the

Meigs Senior Citizens Center, 112 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. An open forum
will be held to discuss current events. Also to be
discussed will be Vacation
Liberty School and participation in the Meigs County
Fair. Tom Gannaway will
present constitutional tidbits. From 7-7:15 p.m. at
each meetiong there is a
voluntary time of prayer.
Snacks and beverages are
served. The Tea Party is a
nonpartisan conservative
group. Everyone is wel-

come to attend.
Benefit for classmate
MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport High School
Class of 1964 has established a benefit fund
for a classmate, William
Neutzling, who is confined
to the Cleveland Clinic,
where he is expected to
undergo heart and lung
surgery. An account has
been established at Farmers Bank in his name and
contributions can be taken
in or mailed to the bank.

Miller
From Page A1

Gallipolis police officers were requested to respond to the scene
until the only Gallia County sheriff’s deputy on duty that night
could arrive on scene. The deputy had been dispatched to assist
other deputies who had earlier
been sent to the scene of an active methamphetamine lab in the
southern portion of the county.
As the deputy on call quickly
traveled northward back toward
McCormick Road, two city police officers responded to the
Miller residence.
Upon their arrival, Miller allegedly refused to exit his residence and, as the sheriff’s deputy arrived on scene, the suspect
reportedly fired shots at the two
city officers and the deputy lo-

one count of obstructing official
business and one count of resisting arrest.
The defendant was arrested
during the early morning hours
of Sept. 24, 2012, after he fired
upon police officers who had responded to his McCormick Road
residence in reference to a neighbor dispute.
Reportedly, Miller had confronted his neighbor and, prior
to the arrival of the officers,
had shot a car belonging to that
neighbor.
Miller’s residence lies just outside of the Gallipolis city limits,
but on the night of the incident,

cated outside the home.
Patrolman Jamie Bartels of the
police department was wounded
during the incident, receiving a
gun shot wound to the arm, and
was rushed to the Holzer Medical Center emergency room by
a fellow officer who had arrived
on scene after initial shots were
fired.
Following the shooting, Miller
exited his residence and surrendered to the officers remaining
on scene and was taken into custody.
Bartels was later transported
to Cabell Huntington Hospital in
Huntington, W.Va., where he has
subsequently undergone extensive surgeries.
Miller, who has remained in

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Also recently arrested on warrants
and indictments were Shawn Delahoussaye, 30, of Gallipolis, who is facing charges of heroin possession and
trafficking heroin, and Shasta Blankenship, 34, of Gallipolis, who is facing a
felony charge of drug possession.
Browning further reported that
the charges against these suspects —
and specifically Waugh’s indictment
— were filed following investigations
that were aided in large part by tips

custody at the Southeastern Regional Jail in Nelsonville under
a $1 million, 10 percent bond
throughout court proceedings,
entered his not guilty plea by
reason of insanity and was reportedly found competent to
stand trial last year following a
court-ordered evaluation by the
Forensic Diagnostic Center of
District Nine.
A second evaluation of the defendant was reportedly ordered
to be completed in December
to determine whether the defendant, at the time of the incident,
knew the wrongfulness of his actions. However, in an entry filed
in May, the defense advised the
court that the defendant no longer desired to have a second psy-

provided by the public.
“These calls to our tip-line are paying off, and we are forwarding information as we receive it to the task
force,” Browning stated.
The formation of the Major Crimes
Task Force of Gallia and Meigs Counties, which is part of the Ohio Attorney General’s Ohio Organized Crime
Investigations Commission, was announced this past December.
The task force is comprised of
agents and authorities with not only
the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office,

chological evaluation performed.
A final deadline for any negotiated plea agreement that could
have been filed in this case was
set for June 30.
During Thursday’s hearing,
according to an entry filed and
signed by the defense and the
defendant, as well as by Gallia
County Assistant Prosecutor
Britt Wiseman and Judge D.
Dean Evans, the court permitted the defendant to withdraw
his previously entered pleas of
not guilty by reason of insanity,
leaving his plea of not guilty on
all counts.
This case was continued for
trial on Monday, July 21 in the
common pleas courtroom.

but also the Meigs County Sheriff’s
Office, Gallipolis Police Department,
Middleport Police Department and
the offices of Meigs County Prosecutor Colleen Williams and Gallia
County Prosecutor Jeff Adkins.
Further information on the cases
against Waugh, Delahoussaye and
Blankenship will be released as it
made available by officials.
Information can be left anonymously for investigators with the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office through
their tip line at (740) 446-6555.

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B1

Beer served at Pro Football Hall of Fame game
CANTON, Ohio (AP) — Beer will be
served to the public for the first time at
the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s annual
enshrinement festival this year to boost
revenue and enhance the ceremony and
preseason game.
The ceremony honoring the class of
2014 takes place Aug. 2, followed by a
preseason game between the New York
Giants and Buffalo Bills the following day.
“Done responsibly, alcohol has been
part of (pro) sporting events forever,” said
Joe Horrigan, communications and exhibits vice president for the Canton facility.
The beer will be sold by the can but served
in plastic cups, Dave Motts, the hall’s senior
vice president of corporate and community
engagement, told The Repository (http://
bit.ly/Uf6GLP ) for a story Thursday.
Motts said fans in the past have been surprised beer wasn’t available, since it’s staple
of many pro sporting events. He called it a

trial run, with temporary tents for sales as
well as “hawkers.” No wine or liquor will be
available. Officials will cut off sales before
the conclusion of both events.
In the past, alcohol was available in
private suites behind the stadium scoreboard, Motts said. Beer is also sold in
public areas along the midway outside the
hall. Beer and wine have also been made
available in the press box if requested by
an NFL team owner, Motts said.
Canton City Schools, which owns Fawcett Stadium, granted permission for the
sales as part of its long relationship with
the Hall of Fame.
Ohio High School Athletic Association rules prohibit alcohol and tobacco
products at sporting contests held by
member schools, but the regulations
don’t apply to venues when non-high
Paul Tople | Akron Beacon Journal | MCT
school events are involved, said OHSAA Enshrinee Willie Roaf speaks on stage during the 2012 Pro Football Hall of Fame Enshrinement
at Fawcett Stadium on Saturday, August 4, 2012, in Canton, Ohio.
spokesman Tim Stried.

Marlin Levison | Minneapolis Star Tribune | MCT

The Minnesota Timberwolves’ Kevin Love slams home two of
his game-high 36 points against the Cleveland Cavaliers at
the Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Friday, December 7, 2012. The Timberwolves won, 91-73.

Phil Masturzo | Akron Beacon Journal | MCT

Cleveland Browns head coach Mike Pettine (left) stands with first round draft choices Justin Gilbert, Johnny Manziel, and GM Ray Farmer during their first news conference with the local media at the team’s headquarters on
Friday, May 9, in Berea, Ohio.

Wiggins and Cavs NFL preseason watch: New coaches, star rookies
are hounded by
Love trade rumors
LAS VEGAS (AP) —
Andrew Wiggins came
to summer league to get
an early education on the
NBA game, from playing
against better competition
to learning about what his
new coach with the Cleveland Cavaliers will demand
of him as a pro.
The 19-year-old Canadian
is also receiving a crash course
in the NBA rumor mill.
Since he arrived in Las
Vegas and found out LeBron
James was coming to Cleveland with him, Wiggins has
heard his name brought up
in possible trade scenarios
as the Cavaliers pursue
Minnesota All-Star Kevin
Love. They continued on
Thursday, with several outlets reporting that the Cavaliers have decided to make
the No. 1 overall pick available, a prerequisite from the
Timberwolves to get any
deal for Love done.
But two people familiar
with the situation told The

Associated Press that the
Cavaliers’ position has remained unchanged and that
no offer including Wiggins
has been made to Minnesota. The people requested
anonymity because neither
team was publicly commenting on trade talks.
“Rumors are rumors.
That’s why they call them
rumors,” Cavs coach David
Blatt said. “Sooner or later
in one’s career, you’re going
to have to deal with it. If
he has to deal with it now,
then so be it. It’s summer
league. He’s learning everything as he goes along.”
Wiggins scored 21 points
in 31 minutes on Thursday
night in a loss to the Houston Rockets. He showcased
his superior athleticism by
creating mismatches and
getting to the free throw
line at will, making 15 of 20
free throws and getting one
jaw-dropping, chase-down
block in transition.
See RUMORS | B2

Mace takes over
Riverside Seniors lead
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. — Mitch Mace of Point Pleasant has
taken over the lead at the 2014 Riverside Senior Men’s
Golf League being held every Tuesday at Riverside Golf
Club in Mason County.
Through 16 weeks, Mace has a total of 157 points —
which puts him 1.5 points ahead of previous leader Mick
Winebrenner (155.5). Carl Cline currently sits in third
with 151.0 points.
A total of 67 players took part in Tuesday’s round,
which made 17 points available with 16 foursomes and
one three-man team.
The quartet of Bill Nease, Dave Bodkin, John Bumgarner and Albert Durst posted the low score of the day
after firing a 12-under par round of 58. Four teams tied
for second place with matching efforts of 8-under par 62.
The closest to the pin winners were Delson Keidaisch on
the ninth hole and Rod Karr on No. 14. The current top10 standings are as follows: Mitch Mace (157.0), Mick
Winebrenner (155.5), Carl Cline (151.0), Dale Miller
(149.0), Chet Thomas (147.0), Bill Yoho (145.5), Albert
Durst (139.5), Charlie Hargraves (138.0), Paul Maynard
(137.0) and Fred Pyles (134.0).

NEW YORK (AP) — It’s time to
climb out of the pool, put down that
frosty drink, discard the shades and
fire up the high-definition TV.
The NFL is back.
Some training camps open this
weekend, and the first preseason
game is Aug. 3, at the Pro Football
Hall of Fame. If it seems like the
Texans just ended the draft by taking Mr. Irrelevant (defensive back
Lonnie Ballentine of Memphis),
well, it was only two months ago.
Players, coaches and front office
staffs got some down time, albeit
less than in past years, and with the
Bills and Giants headed to the Hall
of Fame game, their break was even
shorter.
“You’ve got to be very smart this
time of year with how you’re conducting yourself, what you’re doing,” Giants coach Tom Coughlin
said. “You can never lose sight of
the prize.”
Certainly, a Vince Lombardi Trophy is hard to see through the haze of
summertime heat and humidity. Even
opening day is still a long way off, but
the preseason will be here soon.
Here are some things to watch
for during the NFL preseason:
KEEPING COOL: While the
2011 collective bargaining agreement has placed limitations on the
length and frequency of practices,
Mother Nature doesn’t care. From
Berea, Ohio to Bourbonnais, Illinois, and from Renton, Washington
to Richmond, Virginia, there is no
hiding from the heat.
NFL teams have become more
cognizant of that, and incidents
of heat-related illnesses at training
camps are rare. Thankfully, there
has been nothing approaching the
tragedy of Korey Stringer, who died
of heat stroke in 2001.
“When athletes do intense exercise in the heat, the risk of exertional heat stroke is ever-present,”
says Dr. Douglas J. Casa, CEO of

the Korey Stringer Institute at the
University of Connecticut. ” The
NFL has taken some important
strides to make players stay safe.”
RULES CHANGES: A few alterations will be noticeable, and
fans will have to look hard for the
others.
Extra-point kicks in the first two
exhibition games (three for the
Bills and Giants) will come from
the 15-yard line. Commissioner
Roger Goodell has suggested that
conversions need more excitement.
But even from that distance, fewer
than 10 percent of kicks fail.
The goalposts NFL kickers
are trying to put the ball through
will be extended another 5 feet in
height, making it easier to judge
what’s good and what misses.
When there’s a loose ball in the
field of play, the recovery now can
undergo video review. Also, when
the referee uses review, there will
be consultation with the league’s officiating department in New York.
The ref still has final say.
The clock won’t stop momentarily after a sack outside of two
minutes remaining in a half. And,
to Saints tight end Jimmy Graham’s
chagrin, no more dunking over the
crossbar to celebrate a touchdown.
ALREADY FAMOUS ROOKIES: With LeBron James’ return,
Johnny Football might not be the
top star in Cleveland, but Manziel
will still get plenty of attention for
what he does on and off the field
this summer.
Jadeveon Clowney, when he recovers from hernia surgery, will
dominate the headlines in Houston. So much is expected of the top
overall pick that if he doesn’t look
like a star in the preseason, the critics will be chirping.
Whether or not Michael Sam
makes the Rams final roster, becoming the first openly gay player
in the NFL, will remain a hot topic.

THE INJURY BUG: Long before
the first whistle sounds in training
camp, three premier linebackers
are gone for 2014. Dallas lost Sean
Lee to a torn ACL suffered during 11 on 11, non-contact drills.
Buffalo’s Kiko Alonso wrecked his
knee while working out back home
in Oregon. Atlanta’s Sean Weatherspoon tore his Achilles’ tendon
while under the supervision of
team trainers.
The one clear goal in training
camp is to escape it without any
major injuries.
“I think there is a fine line between making sure the team is
ready to play the season, both from
a contact standpoint and also from
a health standpoint, so we’ll keep a
good gauge on that,” said Texans
coach Bill O’Brien.
NEW BOSSES: O’Brien is one
of seven new head coaches in the
league. His task might be the most
difficult, taking a team that lost its
final 14 games in 2013 and straightening it out. He’s also got a potential holdout by his top veteran, receiver Andre Johnson.
Then again, all of the new coaches have mighty challenges, or else
their new teams would not have
made changes.
Jay Gruden is in Washington
needing to find a way to keep QB
Robert Griffin III healthy. Mike
Zimmer can’t be sure who he can
rely on in Minnesota other than
star running back Adrian Peterson.
Mike Pettine has the Johnny
Football festival in Cleveland; Lovie
Smith has a drastically altered roster in Tampa; and Jim Caldwell inherits a team in need of discipline
in Detroit.
Ken Whisenhunt, who helped
turn Arizona into a Super Bowl
team, landed in Tennessee and
might have the best shot at fast improvement if he can get the offense
to click. That’s his specialty.

LeBron James undecided on jersey No. 6 or 23
CLEVELAND (AP) —
LeBron James has to make
another big decision.
The NBA superstar
turned to social media
Friday to help him choose
which number he’ll wear
next season with the Cavaliers. James wrote “6 or
23….” on his Twitter account and posted photos
on Instagram of him wearing No. 6 and No. 23 wine
and gold Cavs jerseys.

James wore No. 6 during his four seasons with
Miami and also on the U.S.
Olympic team. He used
No. 23 in high school and
during seven seasons in
Cleveland.
James has had the topselling jersey in the NBA
six times during his career.
His return to Cleveland
has given the city a boost,
and the Cavs quickly sold
out their seasons tickets

in the hours after his announcement. James signed
a two-year, $42.1 million
contract last week.
The 29-year-old will
be welcomed back to his
hometown of Akron on
Aug. 8, his family’s foundation announced Friday.
The “Welcome Home LeBron Community Rally” will
be held at InfoCision Stadium on the University of
Akron’s campus. The rally,

following James’ annual
“Wheels for Education”
event, will be James’ first
public appearance since he
chose to re-sign with the
Cavaliers over the Heat.
James recently returned
from Brazil, where he
watched the World Cup final between Germany and
Argentina. He’s scheduled
to take a Nike-sponsored
trip to China in the next
few weeks.

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Page B2 LîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, July 20, 2014

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BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
(AP) — CBS won’t dictate
to its announcers whether
or not to use the nickname
of Washington’s NFL franchise during televised
games this season.
CBS
Sports
chairman Sean McManus said
Thursday he hasn’t told
on-air talent such as Jim
Nantz and Phil Simms
what to say regarding the
controversy surround the
Redskins’ name.
“We don’t tell our announcers what to say about
any topic,” McManus
told the summer TV critics’ meeting. “That is true
about team names also. We
haven’t made any specific
plans as far as the name.
We’re looking at it, but
right now we don’t have
any change in our plan.”
NFL
Commissioner
Roger Goodell added, “We
don’t dictate to our broadcast partners how they
cover the game. That’s
their decision.”
Washington owner Dan
Snyder has vowed not to
change the name, but is

facing unprecedented opposition from those who
consider it a racial slur.
CBS is launching Thursday night coverage of NFL
games this fall in a oneyear agreement with the
league. CBS will air eight
games that also will be simulcast on NFL Network,
which will televise eight
games in the run-up to the
playoffs. The mix of games
will include 14 on Thursday nights and two lateseason games on Saturday.
The schedule kicks off
Sept. 11 with Pittsburgh at
Baltimore.
The full slate of 16 regular-season games will be
produced by CBS with its
lead broadcasters and production team, including
Nantz and Simms, on all
Thursday night games.
NFL Network hosts and
analysts will be featured
in the pregame, halftime
and postgame shows along
with CBS Sports announcers.
McManus said the coverage will feature a super
high-definition
camera

suspended on a wire over
the sideline and goal lines
and at least one player
from each team will be
miked for quick turnaround video on a big play
or touchdown. A former
NFL referee will work as a
rules analyst in the booth,
and the games will get a
new graphics package and
theme music.
Goodell was asked about
the NFL returning to Los
Angeles, which has been
without a team since the
1990s, when the Rams and
Raiders departed.
He said the key was
having a stadium that can
be competitive with the
league’s newer stadiums,
including the latest in Santa Clara, California.
“We would like to do
that here,” Goodell said.
“Opportunities are starting to develop.”
Robert Kraft, owner of
the New England Patriots and chairman of the
league’s broadcast committee, said the league’s owners are concerned about
not having a team in Los

George Bridges | MCT

Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder listens to Marty Schottenheimer, who was named
head coach and director of football operations at a news conference held Thursday, January
4, 2001, in Ashburn, Virginia.

Angeles, the nation’s second-largest market.
“A whole generation of
fans have grown up without a team to root for,”
he said. “We want young
people to be branded to a
team. We want to have at

least one if not two teams
in downtown Los Angeles.
The most important thing
is to have the right facility.
If you don’t have something really compelling,
then you won’t have people
here all the time.”

The NFL will play three
regular-season games in
London, where it has been
well received in the past.
“I would also believe we
should have a franchise in
London before the decade
is out,” Kraft said.

"2HJ6C�î�=:AA6CDîD2=6î4@F=5î&gt;:DDî�F8FDEî5625=:?6
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A
lawyer for the man offering to
buy the Los Angeles Clippers for
$2 billion told a judge Friday that
Donald Sterling’s stalling tactics
are threatening to doom the sale
by pushing it past a contractual
deadline.
At a hearing to set parameters
for the rest of a probate trial, attorney Adam Streisand implored
the judge to make a swift decision
when hearings conclude July 28.
He said the final deadline for
closing the deal with former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer was
extended by a month, but “the
deal ends on Aug. 15.”
A month later, the NBA can
seize the team and sell it at auc-

tion, Streisand said.
Sterling has vowed he’ll never
sell the team and is suing to block
his wife’s single-handed deal to do
so after the NBA banned him for
life for making racist statements.
He has denied he is a racist from
the witness stand.
Streisand said a ruling in favor
of Shelly Sterling would set off
lengthy appeals that also could
stop the sale. Outside court, he
said Donald Sterling’s refusal to
sell the team is “a suicide mission
by a madman.”
In spite of the looming deadlines, Sterling’s attorney, Gary
Ruttenberg, who weighed in by
phone, asked to further delay
proceedings, insisting, “This case

has been railroaded on a bullet
train.”
Superior Court Judge Michael
Levanas disagreed and said the
schedule was clear from the beginning. When Ruttenberg asked
for time to obtain review of that
ruling from an appellate court, the
judge said curtly, “That’s denied.”
Levanas also barred Sterling’s
lawyers from calling opposing
counsel to the witness stand. He
also rejected a bid to strike the
testimony and reports of two doctors who found the 80-year-old
has Alzheimer’s disease and is incapable of acting as administrator
of the family trust that owns the
Clippers. Their finding is what
opened the door for Shelly Ster-

ling to broker the team’s sale.
Three days of hearings, at
which Donald and Shelly Sterling
may return to the witness stand,
begin Monday.
Attorney Pierce O’Donnell,
who represents Shelly Sterling,
told reporters her legal team
has decided against challenging
Donald Sterling’s competency in
court because it would lead to “a
battle of the experts” that would
prolong the trial.
Streisand said Donald Sterling
is motivated by ego in stalling the
sale, despite the incredible value
he’d get for the team.
Attorney Bert Fields, who
cross-examined Sterling, said he
revealed himself as “a mean, nas-

ty man who doesn’t give a damn
about his own family. For his ego,
he’s willing to give up benefits to
his children and grandchildren
from this sale.”
Outside court, Donald Sterling’s lawyer, Bobby Samini,
echoed his client’s wishes. “We’re
going to do everything in our
power to stop the team from being sold,” he said.
He said Donald Sterling’s plan
“was never to sell the team” and
he could get more than the offered $2 billion for it.
“It’s not about his ego,” Samini said. “He’s made it clear he
believes his privacy rights were
violated and what the league did
wasn’t legal.”

Rumors

We’re Moving!

coach Mike Brown.
That all changed when
James decided last week to
leave the Miami Heat and
return to Cleveland, where
the Akron native played
for the first seven seasons
of his career. James’ signing changed Love’s mind
about going to Cleveland
and the Cavaliers again
started conversations with
the Wolves.
General manager David
Griffin, Blatt and owner
Dan Gilbert have to this
point refused to include
Wiggins in any offer.
That has been a dealbreaker for the Wolves,
who want Wiggins to headline any package that the
Cavs would offer.
It’s not known if James
would prefer the Cavs to
hold onto Wiggins in any
deal for Love, his U.S.

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Olympic teammate. But
what’s certain is that the
Cavaliers will take James’
feelings into consideration
before making any move.
The four-time MVP is
hugely influential, and his
return to the Cavaliers has
restored hope in a franchise that has been down
and out since he left for
Miami in 2010.
Wiggins has yet to sign
his rookie contract, which
has led to speculation that
the Cavaliers were stalling
on that front to make it
easier to execute a trade.
The minute Wiggins does
sign the deal, he cannot be
traded for 30 days under
league rules.
But keeping him unsigned also gives the Cavaliers more flexibility to
pursue free agents. They
have already agreed to

terms with veteran shooters Mike Miller and James
Jones, and have reached
out to Ray Allen as well.
The
Timberwolves,
meanwhile, have made it
clear that without Wiggins
— or an attractive deal
from another team like
Golden State — they are
content to start the season
with Love on the roster
and see if they can make
enough improvement next
season to convince him to
stay in Minnesota.
NOTES: Andrew Wiggins and Anthony Bennett were held out of the
Cleveland Cavaliers’ summer league finale against
the Miami Heat on Friday
night.
The Cavaliers said both
players — the No. 1 picks
in the last two NBA drafts
— would warm up and

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were dressed, but that both
had already given the team
all it needed to see in four
previous games in Las Vegas.
Friday’s game was the
summer finale for both the
Cavaliers and Heat. Wiggins averaged 15.5 points
and Bennett averaged 13.3.
Several outlets reported
Thursday that the Cavaliers had decided to make
Wiggins available in trade
talks with Minnesota for
Kevin Love. But two people familiar with the situation told The Associated
Press that the Cavaliers’
position has remained
unchanged and that no offer including Wiggins has
been made. The people
requested anonymity because neither team was
publicly commenting on
trade talks.

Walker - Jackson Ohio
1477 Mayhew Road | Jackson, Ohio 45640

walker-cat.com

60505695

Several fans made remarks during the game
about the Cavaliers getting
Love, but Wiggins was
unfazed. He was unavailable to reporters after the
game, but Blatt said he
felt no need to talk to him
about the speculation.
“What you’ve got to like
about the kid is that it
doesn’t make a difference
if it’s the fourth game of
summer league in seven
or eight days, or if people
are keying on him or the
crowd has funny things to
say to him,” Blatt said. “He

goes out there and really
plays and has a nice calm
about him and a real good
demeanor. Andrew’s going
to be a high-level player.
It’s good to see.”
The
Cavaliers
and
Timberwolves have been
engaged in discussions
since before the draft for
Love, who can opt out of
his contract next summer.
That stipulation gives
Love tremendous influence on where he ends up,
and he initially balked at
joining a Cavaliers team
that appeared to be in rebuilding mode after missing the playoffs and firing

60519384

From Page B1

60514459

Diamonds - N- Gold

418 Silver Bridge Plaza
740-446-3484

60521637

�Sunday, July 20, 2014

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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î�

%,&amp;î)A@CEDî�C:67D
GAMS football practice starts Aug. 4
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Practice for the 2014 Gallia
Academy Middle School football program will begin at 3
p.m. Monday, Aug. 4, at Memorial Field. There will be an
informational meeting at the beginning of practice and all
athletes should wear a t-shirt and cleats. For more information, contact Steve Patterson at (740) 709-1490.
Football officials training classes to be offered
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Attention anyone interested in becoming a football official, training classes
will begin within the next few weeks. Anyone interested
should contact Kevin Durst at (304) 593-2544 for more
details.
2014 Gallia County Youth Football League
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia County Youth Football League is having sign-ups now through August 4.
Parents can pick up forms at BCMR next to the post office in Gallipolis or they can be downloaded from www.
facebook.com/GalliaCountyYFL the league facebook
page. The annual camp will be held August 4 and 5 at
4:30 p.m. at Memorial Field in Gallipolis. The camp is
free and all camp participants will receive a free t-shirt.
Immediately following the last day of camp the league
will hold its draft. All students entering 3rd, 4th, 5th and
6th grades are encouraged to attend.
The league will be split into two inner leagues, with
3rd and 4th grade playing each in one and 5th and 6th
grade in the other. All coaches are concussion trained
and certified and the league will provide ll helmets, pads
and jerseys. All league games will be played on Saturdays
at Memorial Field.
The league employs out of area officials and is instructional and fun. The team rosters are kept between 14-18
players so that every child plays in the game. This is a
strictly enforced league rule.
League fees are $30 per person ($25 per person if more
than one family member) and they include all regular season and tournament games.
There are also cheerleading singups for girls entering
grads 3-through-6 going on at the camp.
For more information visit www.facebook.com/Gal-

liaCountyYFL or call Coach Chris Rathburn (740) 6452827, Coach Mike Canaday (740) 446-7538, or David
Burnett at (740) 208-0554.
URG softball camps
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande
softball program will conduct a pitching/catching camp
on Sunday, July 27, at Rio Softball Park on the URG campus.
The camp will run from 1-3 p.m. for players age 7-13
and from 3-5 p.m. for players age 14-18 on both dates.
Cost is $30.
New Rio Grande softball head coach Amber Bowman
will direct the camp, while RedStorm players will also be
assisting in the instruction.
Bowman was a four-year starter at shortstop for Rio from
2008-11. She then spent two years as a graduate assistant
coach for the RedStorm before serving as an assistant coach
at the University of Northwestern Ohio in 2014.
The pitching camp will provide beginning pitchers
with a specific fundamental basis. They will leave with
a daily workout progression. Advanced pitchers will receive instruction on spin pitching along with advanced
coaching on leg drive and balance.
Parents and coaches are welcome to attend any of the
sessions to observe and ask questions.
Players MUST have a completed Medical Consent
Form, which is available from the Rio softball webpage
on the school’s athletic website (www.rioredstorm.com),
before being allowed to participate. Softballs will be provided, but players should also bring appropriate gear to
the tryout.
Both an online registration form and a registration
form which can be printed and returned by mail are also
available on the website,
Checks should be made payable to Amber Bowman
and mailed to 218 North College Avenue, P.O. Box 500,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
For more information, contact Bowman by phone at
(740) 245-7490 or by e-mail at abowman@rio.edu.
Meigs Marauder Youth Football Camp
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The 2014 Meigs Youth Foot-

ball Camp will be held on Saturday, August 2, 2014 at
Holzer Field, Farmers Bank Stadium on the campus of
Meigs High School. The camp is for kids in grades 1-8
and begins at 9 a.m. and will end at noon. Cost of the
camp is $20.The camp will focus on attitude, effort, hard
work, team work, fundamentals, technique, individual
drills and group drills. Instruction will be provided by
current Meigs players and the coaching staff. Also scheduled to attend is Marshall and New England Hall of Famer, three-time Super Bowl Champion Troy Brown along
with college football coaches and players. Any child that
pre-registers by July 19th will be guaranteed a camp team
shirt. Registrations will be accepted after the deadline
and on the day of the camp but they will not be guaranteed a camp t-shirt. Registration on the day of the camp
is 8 a.m. Proceeds from the camp will benefit the Meigs
High School Football program. For more information call
740-645-4479 or 740-416-5443.
Big Bend Youth Football League Sign ups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The BBYFL will be holding
sign ups every Saturday in July from 11am to 1pm at the
Middleport Stadium. Football players and cheerleaders
from any school may sign up and you will be placed on
the team from your school district. Ages are from 3rd
grade thru 6th grade. Visit www.bigbendyouthfootball.
com or call Sarah (740)444-1606, Tony (740)992-4067,
Angie (740)444-1177, or Chris Hill (740)208-0455 for
addition information. Camp begins on July 28th.
PPHS youth baseball clinic
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The Point Pleasant
Baseball Junior Instructional Clinic will be held at the
PPHS baseball field from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. on Wednesday, July 30.
Instruction on the game and fundamentals will be
taught by the Point Pleasant baseball coaching staff and
players. The camp is for all kids ages 9-13 and costs $20
per camper.
For more information, contact PPHS baseball coach
Andrew Blain at (304) 593-2540 or by email at blain7@
marshall.edu

���î$@CE9î&amp;C6D62D@?î�2ADF=6D
AFC North preseason capsules, which
include camp dates and analysis on the
upcoming 2014 seasons for the Cincinnati
Bengals, Cleveland Browns, Baltimore
Ravens and Pittsburgh Steelers.
CINCINNATI BENGALS (11-5)
OPEN CAMP: July 24, Cincinnati.
LAST YEAR: Won AFC North and
made playoffs for third year in row,
only to lose opening game once again.
Haven’t won playoff game since 1990
season, streak of futility tied for sixth
longest in NFL history. Coach Marvin
Lewis got one-year extension through
2015. Andy Dalton had best regular
season, becoming only fifth starting

QB during Super Bowl era to reach
playoffs each of first three seasons.
IMPORTANT ADDITIONS: Hue
Jackson promoted to offensive coordinator, Paul Guenther promoted to
defensive coordinator; S Danieal Manning; OT Marshall Newhouse; CB Darqueze Dennard; RB Jeremy Hill.
IMPORTANT LOSSES: Defensive
coordinator Mike Zimmer, offensive coordinator Jay Gruden; DE Michael Johnson; OT Anthony Collins; C Kyle Cook.
CAMP NEEDS: Focus will be on
several injured players’ recoveries. DT
Geno Atkins tore ACL on Oct. 31 and
couldn’t participate in June minicamp.
CB Leon Hall is ahead of schedule

(torn Achilles tendon). Punter Kevin
Huber returns from broken jaw and
cracked neck vertebra. Hill, secondround pick from LSU, will challenge
BenJarvus Green-Ellis for starting job.
C Russell Bodine, fourth-round pick,
will get chance to take over for Kyle
Cook. Jackson is installing more uptempo approach.
EXPECTATIONS: No mystery here:

Bengals have to not only reach playoffs
but win at least one game to consider
season a success. With two new coordinators, lots of attention on whether
either unit drops off. Zimmer known
for excellent in-game adjustments; can
Guenther do same? Also pivotal year
for Dalton, who fell apart in playoff
losses.
See CAPSULES | B6

We are pleased to introduce
Dr. Theresa Simon, Internal Medicine.
She is now accepting new patients over the age of 18
in the Morad-Hughes Health Center,
located on the campus of Jackson General Hospital,
by appointment only.
If you don't currently have a family physician
and would like to get established as a patient,
please call (304)373-1578.
www.jghwv.com
60516162

New Home. New Beginning. Life is Great!
You want to keep it that way.

To protect the investment you have made in your home you need to find a competitively priced homeowners insurance policy that provides replacement cost coverage for your house and personal property.
While anyone can legally own a home without it, your friendly neighborhood mortgage lender will no
doubt require this coverage for self-protection. The proper home insurance coverage involves:
s Buying the right type of policy.
s Having the proper levels of protection within that policy including special provisions for jewelry,
your computer equipment, and other particularly valuable possessions.
s Having adequate liability coverage to protect you and your family.

Remember, We Are on Your Side.

Jeff Warner Agency
Nationwide Insurance
113 West 2nd Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-5479 • Fax – 740-992-6911
Warnerj1@nationwide.com • mailto:Warnerj1@nationwide.com

60519949

60519908

�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page B4 LîSunday Times Sentinel

Notices

*******************
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

Complete Tree Care
4OP s 4RIM s (AULING
3TUMP 'RINDING s "UCKET 4RUCK

740-612-5128

60519266

)NSURED s &amp;2%% %34)-!4%3
�� 9EARS %XPERIENCE

Professional Services

ROCKY FORK REPAIR
Specializing in
Tractor &amp; Farm Equipment
New Honda Engines Sales
Small Engine • Air Tools
Air Compressors
Mon-Wed 7am-5pm
Thurs 7am-12pm
Fri 7am-4pm
Sat by chance; Sun Closed

60515303

301 Maple Grove Rd
Gallipolis, OH 45631
John Troyer, Owner

All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Fair Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise
“any preference, limitation or
discrimination based on race,
color, religion, sex, handicap,
familial status or national origin, or an intention to make
any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal custodians,
pregnant women and people
securing custody of children
under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that
all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis. To
complain of discrimination call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777. The toll-free telephone
number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

60517845

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal
• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured
• Experienced
• References Available
Gary Stanley

740-591-8044
Please leave a message

Miscellaneous
1- family lot (4 - burial plots) at
Mound Hill in the Holzer Edition. Priced to Sale Call 4463292
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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.

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

Education
The VETERANS UPWARD
BOUND Mission: to Assist
and Support eligible Military
Veterans in their quests for
Higher Education / No Cost /
304-637-1257 /
www.vubwv.org
Help Wanted General
Drivers: Short Haul &amp; Regional Openings!
Excellent Pay, Benefit Package! *100% PAID Health &amp;
Dental Ins! *Quarterly &amp; Annual Safety Bonus!
*Quarterly Service Bonus!
Class-A CDL, Hazmat,
Tanker End, 1yr Driving Exp.
Req.
MARTIN TRANSPORT 1-855259-9360

Houses For Sale

Advantage Skilled
Care, LLC
is looking for
Per Diem, Employees
in the following positions for
patients in the
Gallia County area:
RN'S, PTA's &amp;
Speech Therapists.
Please contact our
main office located at:
1656 Coles Boulevard,
Portsmouth, OH 45662
PHONE: 800-636-2330
FAX: 740-354-4432
Resumes may also
be sent to:
lmcquithy@advantageskilledcare.com

VERY NICE BRICK HOME,
CLOSE TO WALMART,
CORNER LOT, APPLIANCES,
CENTRAL AIR, AND SECURITY SYSTEM."$98,000.00,
PRICE NEGOTIABLE." CONTACT 740-446-7874.

DRIVERS: Money &amp;
Miles...New Excellent Pay
Package, 100% Hands OFF
Freight, Great Home time,
Monthly bonus, 1yr. OTR exp.,
No Hazmat 877-704-3773
Drivers: Short Haul&amp; Regional Openings!
Excellent Pay, Benefit Package! *100% PAID Health &amp;
Dental Ins! *Quarterly &amp; Annual Safety Bonus!
*Quarterly Service bonus!
Class-A CDL, Hazmat,
Tanker End, 1 yr Driving
Exp. Req. MARTIN TRANSPORT 1-855-259-9360
The Meigs County Board of
Health is seeking a part-time
Health Commissioner. Applicants must be a licensed physician, dentist, veterinarian, podiatrist or chiropractor or hold a
Master's Degree in public
health or a health related field.
See www.meigs-health.com for
duties.
Submit resumes and three professional references electronically to
meigcohd@odh.ohio.gov by or
before 4PM on July 28th.
The Town of Mason is accepting applications for a Class I
Water Operator. Full-Time.
Applications can be picked up
at the the Town Hall.
For Sale By Owner
Doublewide for Sale - 3 Bdrm,
2bath, $18,500 (Gallipolis)
740-645-6595 or 740-2566692

Houses For Rent

2 bedroom house on 5th
street. 304-812-4350. Will
also rent $450 a month plus
utilities call 304-812-4350
2 Story Modular Home 3BR,
$86,000. 304-675-3151
3 bedroom, 1 bath single car
garage with house, huge 2 car
detached garage, sitting on 1/2
acre call 304-675-7770
4BR, located on East Bethel
RD. close to Hospital &amp; Stores,
$90,000, 740-446-7278 or 740645-2287
Letart area, 2012 Dbl-wide on
1+ Acre, 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba, Fireplace, Huge Island Kitchen,
New Carpet, 1,800 Sq. Ft+.
$74,900. 304-940-0223.

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Land (Acreage)
10.4 acres of land in New
Haven, WV, located on Gun
Club Rd., 1.5 mi. Rt 62. 713" of
road frontage, city water available, electric service nearby.
Home building and/or trailer
site near road, remaining land
is hill side. Great for deer
hunting. $29,000; Phone: 304488-7525
Lots
Gallia Co. New tracts-10 acres
on Kings Chapel or 9 acres on
Wells Run-$16,900, Jesse
Creek 8 acres $11,500 or
SR325 13 acres $19,900!
Meigs Co. Danville 13 acres or
Reedsville 12 acres $20,900
more @ www.brunerland.com
or call 740-441-1492, we
gladly finance!
LOT FOR SALE
Whitten Estates, Milton
1.92 Acres
Great location for DW
Nice Area
Utilities Available
Assessed Value $26,700.00
Priced
For Quick Sale
$12,500.00
304-295-9090
Apartments/Townhouses

Livestock
Three cows, 1 Calf and 1 Bull
for sale. Call 304-743-5969
Pets
FOR SALE 2-very small 4yr
old male-Chihuahua fixed
$50.00 each. Also to
GIVEAWAY, 2-Cats 1-male &amp;
1-female fixed. Call 740-5082795
FREE White Cat with 1-white
kitten 3mo. call 740-416-0120
Male Boxer Pups for Sale 740742-1044
Farm Equipment
Good Used Disc Mower for
Sale 7 ft. New Holland $2,500
Call 740-256-6864
Autos for Sale
1987 Honda GL 1200 Motorcyle in Perfect condition to give
away for good rider due to sudden accident contact fredmanjames1@gmail.com.
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

First Day
Camp Conley Area
1, 2, 3 &amp; 4 BRMS. Apt.
Electric &amp; Security Deposit
Accept Section 8 Vouchers
304-674-0023 or
304-444-4268
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

OMAHA STEAKS:
ENJOY 100 percent guaranteed, delivered to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!
SAVE 74 percent PLUS 4
FREE Burgers - The Family
Value Combo - ONLY $39.99.
ORDER Today 1-800-7124684 Use code 48829ZYL or
www.OmahaSteaks.com/fvmb
57
Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Help Wanted General

Houses For Sale

Ohio Valley Home Health

FORECLOSURE
Property to be sold at Trustee’s Sale
Mason County Court House
Point Pleasant West Virginia
July 25, 2014 @ 10:00am

HIRING
Part Time/Per Diem
Speech Language Pathologist
Competitive wages, benefits &amp; company car.
Qualifications:
s 3,0 n /HIO ,ICENSED
s %XCELLENT $OCUMENTATION � #LINICAL 3KILLS
s %XCELLENT /RGANIZATION � 4IME -ANAGEMENT 3KILLS
s !BLE TO WORK INDEPENDENTLY
For more information please call April Burgett, RN,
!DMINISTRATOR AT ��� ��� ���� OR APPLY AT
���� *ACKSON 0IKE 'ALLIPOLIS /HIO OR
email resume to: aburgett@ovhh.org

60519194

Call

Spacious 2 Bedroom Apartment, Gallipolis,OH washer,
dryer &amp; w/s/g incl.$575/mo NO
PETS 740-591-5174

Houses For Sale
2 bdrm, 1 bath, fixer upper,
front porch, basement, new
furnace, near town, 10 minutes
from Holzer. For information
call 815-939-7523.

House for rent, 1 BR, garage,
in-town. Application/background check required. Call
446-3644

Auctions

LARGE AUCTION

2208 Jefferson Avenue,
Point Pleasant WV

SATURDAY, JULY 26, 2014 @ 5:30 P.M.
Auction House Rt. 62 North, Mason, WV

Large Auction selling tools, glassware, collectibles
and much, much more.
See Wednesday’s paper for full listing.

2 BDRM, 1 bath, Porch,
Approx 952 Sq. Ft. +/Property to be sold
“As Is”, “Where Is”.
Questions, call Paul @
888-376-3192 ext 8

Don’t miss out on
this opportunity!

60521684

RICKY’S
TREE SERVICE

Help Wanted General

60520074

Business Consulting

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Auctioneer Note: Evening Auction
Terms: Cash or Check w/ID
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118 • www.auctionzip.com for pictures

�Sunday, July 20, 2014

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î��

�@C&gt;6Cî$�"6CD�î&amp;2:?&lt;:==6CDî62DJîE@î86EîFAîE@î
By Jim Litke

Associated Press

Dozens of former players
joining a lawsuit against
the NFL say teams kept
handing out powerful painkillers and other drugs with
few — if any— safeguards
as recently as 2012. That
extends by four years the
time frame for similar
claims made in the original
complaint and could open
the door to a criminal investigation.
“On flights home, the
routine was the same everywhere,” said Brett Romberg, who played center in
Jacksonville (2003-05), St.
Louis (2006-08) and Atlanta (2009 and 2011). “The
trainers walked up and
down the aisle and you’d
hold up your hand with a
number of fingers to show
how many pills you wanted.
No discussions, no questions. You just take what
they hand you and believe
me, you’ll take anything to
dull the pain.”
With the federal Drug
Enforcement Administration beginning to look into
accusations contained in
the lawsuit — filed in May
and covering the years
1968-2008 — the new allegations could dramatically
expand the investigation’s
scope, legal experts said.
Any violation of federal
drug laws after 2009 would
not be subject to the fiveyear statute of limitations.
“Then it’s no longer just
about money. Then it’s
potentially about criminal
conduct and that’s a completely different ballpark,”
said Steven Feldman, a former assistant U.S. Attorney
for New York’s southern
district.
“And all you need is one
(criminal) act within the last
five years to reach back and
say, ‘The same group of doctors and trainers were there
and’ … if you have enough of
them doing the same thing
in different locker rooms,
well, it’s hard to defend as a
one-off,” he added.
The NFL is not aware of
“any DEA subpoenas or investigations into club practices,” spokesman Greg
Aiello wrote in an email

Friday. “There has been a
league-wide reporting system in place (to track controlled substances and prescriptions issued by team
doctors) since 1973 for
compliance with DEA and
state law requirements.”
The DEA declined comment, citing the agency’s
policy against discussing
potential investigations. But
law enforcement sources,
speaking on condition of anonymity because they were
not authorized to speak
publicly, confirmed that the
agency was looking into allegations in the lawsuit.
The lawsuit on behalf
of 500 former players was
filed in U.S. District Court
in northern California and
amended two weeks later to
add another 250. The nine
named plaintiffs include
current ESPN analyst Marcellus Wiley, Chicago Bears
quarterback Jim McMahon
and Hall of Fame defensive
lineman Richard Dent.
It contends the NFL
and its teams, physicians
and trainers acted without
regard for players’ health,
withholding information
about injuries while routinely — and often illegally
— providing them with prescription painkillers such as
Vicodin and Percocet, and
anti-inflammatories such as
Toradol, to mask pain and
minimize lost playing time.
Lead plaintiffs’ attorney
Steve Silverman said this
week that 500 more players
have since joined the lawsuit, which is seeking class
certification. The latest
group includes dozens who
played in the NFL between
2009 and 2012 and told
lawyers in interviews that
little had changed about
how some teams handled
the drugs. The Associated
Press interviewed three of
those players.
Romberg described the
Jaguars as “very liberal” in
doling out painkillers and
called the Rams’ training
room a “huge free-for-all.”
He said there were some
changes in the clubhouse
between his two seasons in
Atlanta.
“In 2011, you had to see
the doctor first. … You’d
still get your Molotov cock-

tail, but they were tighter
about documenting it,”
Romberg said.
Roscoe Parrish played
wide receiver in Buffalo
from 2005-11, then on the
practice squads in San Diego, Oakland and Tampa
Bay, in 2012.
“I had knee problems in
2010, so I started getting,
I’m not sure, I think they
were Vicodins, in a small
white envelope. I played
that game without pain, so
it became routine,” he said.
“I never saw a bottle.
They were always in envelopes,” Parrish said. “I
got accustomed to (Buffalo trainer) Bud Carpenter
giving me painkillers and
didn’t educate myself. All I
cared about was playing.”
The Bills declined a request to speak to Carpenter, but said in an email
response: “Bud Carpenter
strongly disagrees with
Roscoe Parrish’s accusation.”
Patrick Cobbs, who
joined New England in
2006 as an undrafted free
agent and then caught on
as running back in Miami
through 2010, said he started taking painkillers to deal
with hip and rib injuries in
2007-08.
“It seemed like the norm
then. Now, you know what
that’s done to you and it
seems so wrong,” Cobbs
said.
Six of the plaintiffs in
the painkillers lawsuit, including McMahon and Van
Horne, were also parties
to the concussion-related
class-action lawsuit last year
against the NFL. A federal
judge granted preliminary
approval to a settlement
nearly two weeks ago
The former players in
the painkillers lawsuit have
reported a range of debilitating effects, from chronic
muscle and bone ailments
to permanent nerve and
organ damage to addiction.
The players contend those
health problems came from
drug use, but many of the
conditions haven’t been definitively linked to painkillers.
Romberg, 34, had three
stints inserted during heart
surgery just a year after re-

tiring, and said his doctors
asked how the team never
noticed the heart problems
during physicals.

the Sugar Bowl last January.
After getting his new
assignment, Allen got a
congratulatory call from
former NFL referee Jerry
Markbreit that also included a blunt reminder.
“He said, ‘I really enjoyed your work the Rose
Bowl in 2012,’ and he said,
‘But kid, every game is the
Rose Bowl in the NFL’,”
Allen said. “And he’s right.
So that’s the perspective
that you have to understand as you go into this.”
Allen said the biggest
adjustments for him on the
NFL level will be the extra
administrative duties and
increased time commitment.
NFL referee Walt Coleman, the league’s senior
game official entering his
26th season, agreed that
the biggest challenge for
Allen won’t be what happens after kickoff.
“All the things you have
to deal with, the TV stuff,
the security stuff and dealing with the crew and all
the places you’re going,”
Coleman said. “He’ll be
fine, but it’s a challenge. I
would have hated to think
that I came into the National Football League as a
referee. I was just happy I
came in as a line judge and
was above to survive that
first year, because things
happen really fast.”
During a session with
officials Friday afternoon,
Blandino reviewed new
rules and points of emphasis for the upcoming season, using video examples.
Among them:
— Officials can now review recovery of a loose
ball, something not allowed
in the past. One of the examples used was the NFC
championship game when
San Francisco linebacker
NaVorro Bowman stripped
the ball from a Seattle receiver and clearly cradled
the ball on the ground inside the 49ers 5-yard line.
But officials didn’t see that

I look at the warning labels
now and a few of them say
‘if you have heart issues,
don’t take them.’”

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opened its doors and we have been met with great community
support. As our way of showing thanks, we are offering our
exceptional services and quality merchandise packages at an
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providing "Care you can Trust, Service you can Afford."
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This funeral service includes:
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Embalming, dressing, casketing, and cosmetology
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Use of our chapel, or your church for visitation the night before the service
Ceremony in our chapel, or your church
Use of the hearse and Flower Vehicle to cemetery
Visitor Register Book, and memorial Folders of your choice
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$�"î@S4:2=îZ5@F3=6îC@@&lt;:6[î
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IRVING, Texas (AP)
— Brad Allen is one of 13
first-year NFL officials this
season. Making his debut
at football’s highest level
unique is also being one
the league’s three first-year
referees.
“They’re referring to me
as a double rookie,” Allen
said Friday night at the
NFL officiating clinic.
After being a referee in
the Atlantic Coast Conference the past nine seasons,
Allen will be the first official since Tommy Bell in
1962 to make his NFL debut as a referee leading his
own crew.
“He’s worked at the top
college level, he’s worked
the biggest games, he’s
worked bowl games, he’s
worked
championship
games,” said Dean Blandino, NFL vice president of
officiating.
“And the difference between NFL officiating and
college officiating, it’s getting closer from a rules
standpoint. … And we’ve
surrounded him with a veteran crew.”
Allen was preparing to
be an umpire this season
after being in the NFL’s
officiating
development
program last year. That
plan changed with the departure of veteran referee
Mike Carey, who hired last
month by CBS to provide
rules analysis, interpretation and explanations of
rules during broadcasts.
The other first-year referees are Craig Wrolstad,
who is going into his 12th
NFL season, and fifth-year
official Rob Torbert.
All the NFL officials are
at a Dallas-Fort Worth hotel this weekend for their
annual clinic in advance of
the season. Taking part are
all 119 officials and participants in this year development program, including
two women.
Among the games Allen
worked during his time on
the collegiate level were
the 2012 Rose Bowl and

“It could be an anomaly,”
Romberg said, “and I don’t
know if there’s any correlation. But a lot of pills I took,

Jay Cremeens, Nathan King; Funeral Directors
Payment Plans available for Pre-Arrangement Only
We also assist in Transferring of
already made Pre-Arrangement
and Medicaid Spend Downs
and also Assignments of Insurance policies

before the ball wound up in
a pileup and Seattle came
out of that with the ball.
See ROOKIE | B6

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Ninja War "Venice Beach Finals" 'American Ninja Warrior'
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10 PM

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Chicago P.D.
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"Topsy"
Like Me"
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The Final Cut With support Last Tango in Halifax
M'piece "Endeavour: Neverland" Morse
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Salem "Departures"
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World Poker Tour
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Baseball Tonight
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(5:00) Missing at 17 (‘13,
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Old Man and the Key" (N)
Dra) Tricia O'Kelley. TV14
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Stick It A woman is sent back to the world of
The Blind Side (2009, Sport) Tim McGraw, Quinton Aaron, Sandra Bullock. An
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Bar Rescue "Two Flew Over Bar Rescue "Scoreboard to Bar Rescue "Muscle
Bar Rescue "Grown Some
Frankenfood Frankenfood
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Death"
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Sam &amp; Cat
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Hathaway
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
2 Fast 2 Furious (‘03, Act) Paul Walker. TV14
Fast Five (2011, Action) Paul Walker, Dwayne Johnson, Vin Diesel. TVPG
Daddy's Little Girls (‘07, Rom) Gabrielle Union. TVPG Madea's Big Happy Family (‘11, Dra) Tyler Perry. TV14
(:15) Madea Goes to Jail
CNN Newsroom
CNN Special Report
The Hunt With John Walsh The Hunt John Walsh (N)
Death Row Stories (N)
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The Dark Knight (‘08, Act) Heath Ledger, Christian Bale. TV14
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Eagle Eye (‘08, Act) Billy Bob
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Lucas Black. An American
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Bug Life"
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Sex and the City Sarah Jessica Parker. TVMA The Kardashians
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How to Survive the End of End of the World "Micro
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Alien III (‘92, Sci-Fi) Sigourney Weaver. Ripley continues to be
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(5:40) Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters
The Great Gatsby (2013, Drama) Carey Mulligan, Joel Edgerton,
Percy &amp; his friends must recover the Golden Leonardo DiCaprio. A man becomes obsessed and drawn into the world
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Ray Donovan "Uber Ray"
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�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page B6 LîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Capsules
From Page B3
PITTSBURGH STEELERS (8-8)
OPEN CAMP: July 25, Latrobe, Pennsylvania.
LAST YEAR: Limped to 2-6 start on way to second straight
.500 finish. Offensive line took two months to recover from loss
of center Maurkice Pouncey (knee) in opener. Defense spent
eight games getting pushed around, finishing outside top 10 in
yards allowed for first time in more than a decade. RB Le’Veon

Bell proved durable after some early injures, Antonio Brown
developed elite wide receiver, catching 110 passes.
IMPORTANT ADDITIONS: WRs Lance Moore and WR
Martavis Bryant; DT Cam Thomas; RB LeGarrette Blount; S
Mike Mitchell; LB Ryan Shazier; DE Stephon Tulloch; RB/WR
Dri Archer; offensive line coach Mike Munchak.
IMPORTANT LOSSES: WRs Emmanuel Sanders and Jerricho Cotchery; RB Jonathan Dwyer; LB Larry Foote; S Ryan
Clark; running backs coach Kirby Wilson.

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Weddings"
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John
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Root of All Evil"
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Sleeping With the Enemy A woman tries to escape her
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106 &amp; Park (N)
The Janky Promoters (‘09, Cri) Mike Epps, Young Jeezy, Ice Cube. TVMA
Dance Flick Shoshana Bush. TV14
Love It or List It, Too
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
House Hunt. House
(4:30) Vikingdom (‘14, Act) Spartacus: Blood and Sand (:05) Spartac "Sacramentum (:10) Spartacus: Blood and (:15) Spartacus: Blood and
Dominic Purcell.
"The Red Serpent"
Gladiatorum"
Sand "Legends"
Sand "The Thing in the Pit"

6 PM
(5:00) Epic

6:30
(:45) Last

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Taken 2 (2012, Action) Famke Janssen, Maggie The Newburgh Sting A shocking look at
True Blood
Colin Farrell. Week
Grace, Liam Neeson. A retired CIA agent and his wife are the FBI's role in the arrests of four Muslim "Return to
Tonight
TVPG
taken hostage while in Istanbul. TV14
men in Newburgh, New York. (N)
Oz"
(5:30)
The Heat Sandra Bullock. An FBI
Man of Steel (2013, Action) Amy Adams, Michael Shannon, Henry
The Hangover Part III
agent is sent to Boston to track down a
Cavill. An alien raised as a human confronts members of his race who
(‘13, Com) Zach Galifianakis,
drug lord with the help of a local cop. TV14 have come to claim Earth. TV14
Bradley Cooper. TVMA
(5:50) A Case of You A writer tries to
(:25)
Legally Blonde When a sorority Masters of Sex "Kyrie
Ray Donovan "Uber Ray"
impress a girl he met online, but gets in a
girl is dumped by her boyfriend, she decides Eleison"
mess when she falls for him. TVMA
to follow him to law school. TV14
(:20)

CAMP NEEDS: Youth movement almost over, it’s time to
find out if kids can play. Biggest battles figure to be at receiver —
6-foot-4 rookie Bryant will battle second-year wideout Markus
Wheaton for No. 2 spot. Questions remain on defensive line.
Thomas will try to unseat Steve McLendon. Pittsburgh bet big
on OLB Jason Worilds, signing him to transitional tag while
cutting LaMarr Woodley. Worilds (hamstring) missed almost
all offseason activities and minicamp.
EXPECTATIONS: Steelers haven’t missed playoffs three
straight years since 1998-2000. They’ve retooled around quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, who believes offense will be as explosive as any in his 10 NFL years. Pittsburgh flourished after
coordinator Todd Haley gave Roethlisberger more freedom in
no-huddle. Expect those powers to be expanded during camp.
Young defense adds Shazier, first-round pick expected to play
right away alongside veteran ILB Lawrence Timmons.
BALTIMORE RAVENS (8-8)
OPEN CAMP: July 22, Owings Mills, Maryland.
LAST YEAR: Coming off Super Bowl win, Ravens lost many
key players to retirement or free agency. They dropped six of
first 10 games before winning four in row. Then they lost final
two and missed postseason for first time in six years
IMPORTANT ADDITIONS: Offensive coordinator Gary
Kubiak; WR Steve Smith; TE Owen Daniels; LB C.J. Mosley; C
Jeremy Zuttah; S Darian Stewart.
IMPORTANT LOSSES: DL Arthur Jones; OT Michael
Oher; CB Corey Graham; S James Ihedigbo.
CAMP NEEDS: Ravens need right tackle after losing inconsistent Oher. Ricky Wagner stands atop depth chart, which
might not be good enough for team with playoff aspirations.
GM Ozzie Newsome may also be on lookout for secondary
help.
EXPECTATIONS: Despite being relatively young, Ravens
have high hopes of getting back to postseason. QB Joe Flacco,
RB Ray Rice and WRs Smith and Jacoby Jones have plenty
of experience. But starting safeties might end up being rookie
Terrence Brooks and second-year man Matt Elam. Still, Baltimore fully expects to compete for AFC North crown and intends to play deep into January.
CLEVELAND BROWNS (4-12)
OPEN CAMP: July 26, Berea, Ohio.
LAST YEAR: Browns dropped 10 of last 11 for sixth straight
season of at least 11 losses. Coach Rob Chudzinski was fired
immediately, front office was dismissed in February. Cleveland
started 3-2, but QB Brian Hoyer’s season-ending knee injury
sent team into spiral. Positives were six Pro Bowlers, and WR
Josh Gordon led league in yards receiving.
IMPORTANT ADDITIONS: Coach Mike Pettine; offensive
coordinator Kyle Shanahan; QB Johnny Manziel; RBs Ben Tate
and Terrance West; WRs Miles Austin, Nate Burleson and Andrew Hawkins; LB Karlos Dansby; Ss Donte Whitner and Justin Gilbert; OLs Paul McQuistan and Joe Bitonio; TE Jim Dray.
IMPORTANT LOSSES: LBs D’Qwell Jackson and Quentin
Groves; S T.J. Ward; WRs Greg Little and Davone Bess; QBs
Brandon Weeden and Jason Campbell; G Shawn Lauvao.
CAMP NEEDS: Hoyer will try to hold off Manziel, a firstround pick, for starting job. Hoyer left spring minicamp with
lead, but Pettine warned his advantage wasn’t “insurmountable” for Johnny Football. Browns still awaiting clarity from
league on Gordon, who could be facing one-year ban for substance abuse. Hard to imagine Cleveland’s offense without him.
EXPECTATIONS: Pettine has to prevent first camp from
turning into circus. Wildly popular Manziel will draw big
crowds and constant questions about QB competition. If Gordon is suspended, Browns have to hope Austin can return to
form with Dallas before assorted leg injuries.

Rookie
From Page B5
— Roll-up blocks from
the side of a player will be
categorized as clipping and
be penalized 15 yards. In
the past, only blocks from
behind that rolled up on
the back of a defender were
considered penalties.
— For the standing rule
that pass interference applies more than 1 yard beyond the line of scrimmage,
Blandino told officials, “a
yard is a yard” and to call it
tight.
— There were several
clips shown of defenders
grabbing jerseys of receivers while running down
the field before the ball was
in the air. Teams are being reminded of defensive
holding, with plans to more
closely enforce that foul.

60518706

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

ALONG THE RIVER

SUNDAY,
JULY 20, 2014

C1

Providing solutions
Real-world project in
Pomeroy caps off senior year
By Candi Clevenger

Special to the Times-Sentinel

POMEROY — Snowville
Creamery, a sustainable
dairy in Meigs County, had
a problem.
Due to rapidly expanding operations, the plant’s
wastewater system was
quickly approaching the
maximum limit of their
EPA-permit for spray irrigation to nearby cattlegrazing pastures. But
thanks to the help of four
Ohio State University engineering students, the
creamery is in the midst of
implementing a conservation plan that will save up
to 23,500 gallons of water
per week.
Snowville, led by CEO
and founder Warren Taylor, is one of 24 companies that found solutions
to problems, or avoided a
wrong solution, by sponsoring projects in OSU’s
College of Engineering’s
Multidisciplinary
Capstone Design Program this
past year.
As part of the college’s
focus on experiential
learning, all undergraduate engineering students
must complete a one- or
two-semester long capstone design project prior
to graduation. More than
100 students — including engineering, business,
industrial design and humanities majors — chose
to participate in the Multidisciplinary Capstone Design Program in 2013-14,
rather than a departmentspecific capstone project.
The projects — which
range from new product
development to manufacturing process improvement — benefit students
by providing real-world
experience with engineering project management,
industry interaction and
teamwork.
The feedback received
from industry sponsors
and alumni alike has been
glowing.
“Sponsors tell us that our
program is unique in the

nation, providing students
with the rare combination
of a multidisciplinary experience and a year-long industry-sponsored project,”
said program coordinator
Bob Rhoads. “They find so
much value that more than
half of our industry sponsors are repeat participants
for multiple years. Two
of them, John Deere and
Honda, have participated
every year since the program launched in 2009.”
Sponsors also rave about
the close interaction they
have with students. Companies dedicate an engineer to mentor students
for three to four hours per
week, which includes a
weekly teleconference or
site visit.
Taylor was intrigued by
the Multidisciplinary Capstone Program following
a unique interaction he
had with recent graduate
Emmy Schroder (2014,
food, agricultural and biological engineering).
“I met Warren in high
school, actually, when he
was selling his milk at
Whole Foods. I talked to
him about milk processing,
the nutrient depletion in
regular processed milk and
all sorts of things,” Schroder said. “He inspired me
go into food, agricultural
and biological engineering
and figure out how we can
fix the sustainable food
system.”
The two reconnected after Schroder emailed Taylor last fall to thank him for
inspiring her future career
choice. When the capstone
project came up, Taylor —
an Ohio State alum (1974,
dairy technology) who
believes strongly in the
importance of students interacting with businesses
— quickly offered his support.
“He pretty much jumped
on it right away,” Schroder
said. “He said, ‘I need to
work on my wastewater reduction system and I think
I could put together a great
project for you to be the
driver on.’”

What the creamery
needed, Taylor said, was a
plan to cut the volume of
wastewater it disposed of
each day by half, while also
reducing the concentration of organic waste and
suspended solids in that
water. A high volume of organic waste in the stream
causes increased oxygen
demands for aerobic micro-organisms, which can
rob other organisms of oxygen needed for survival.
Suspended solids — small
particles that don’t readily
dissolve — are the most
concentrated source of organic material.
Schroder and teammates Amanda Peterson
(biological engineering),
Anna Ameser (mechanical
engineering) and Emily
Mendell (agribusiness) eagerly agreed to tackle the
project.
Taylor thought that a
water conservation system he devised 20 years
prior for a large, industrial
plant could be adapted
to the creamery with the
students’ help. But first
the team had to submeter
every water source in the
plant to determine exactly
how much water was being
used in each area.
After crunching the
data, the students discovered a surprising opportunity for significant water
savings. The raw milk separator, which divides skim
milk from straight cream,
used 1,300 gallons of water each time it was turned
on. Using just 30 feet of
sanitary piping, a pump
and recirculation valving,
a recirculation loop was
installed to eliminate the
majority of that water from
being wasted during startup and shutdown. That
change alone saved more
than 4,000 gallons of water
a week.
The team also redesigned the facility’s cleanin-place (CIP) automated
chemical flushing system
to incorporate tanks and
enable rinse water reuse.
The third major piece of

Submitted photos

Emmy Schroder and teammates Amanda Peterson, Anna Ameser and Emily Mendell eagerly
agreed to help Snowville Creamery implement a conservation plan that will save the dairy
23,500 gallons of water per week.

Snowville Creamery, led by CEO and founder Warren Taylor, is one of 24 companies that found
solutions to problems, or avoided a wrong solution, by sponsoring projects in The Ohio State
University College of Engineering’s Multidisciplinary Capstone Design Program this past year.

the project involved figuring out where to segregate
water with high levels of
organic waste and suspended solids so that the
nutrient-rich water could
be fed to the cows instead
of causing potential soil
problems.
Throughout the project,
the student-team was also
heavily involved in updating the plant’s AutoCAD
schematics and drawings.
“I
was
completely
bowled over by the volume
and quality of work that
the group did. Each one of
those four young women

were outstanding,” Taylor
said. “We gave them a lot
of information to chew on.
Well, they really learned
it, understood it and then
produced excellent documents to support the project. They were way ahead
of where I was when I was
a senior in college.”
The team projected that
the new plan would save
23,500 gallons of water
per week and more than
$8,000 per year. But the
experience, Taylor attested, was priceless.
“We’ve set the foundation for the long-term

future of this facility by
reducing our water usage,
amount of wastewater and
wastewater strength to
the same levels we were
at years ago when we were
putting much less milk
through the plant than we
are today,” he said. “I love
what Ohio State is doing
with this capstone program and I can’t wait to get
started for next year.”
Candi Clevinger is marketing and
communications coordinator for
The Ohio State University’s College
of Engineering.

Ohio U. seniors win fourth national assistive design competition
By Adrienne Cornwall

Special to the Times-Sentinel

ATHENS — For the fourth
time in six years, an Ohio University mechanical engineering
senior design team has won first
prize in the Ability One Design Challenge, a competition
to design devices or systems to
increase employment opportunities for workers with disabilities.
The win brings total prize winnings by mechanical engineering
design teams in recent years to
more than $100,000.
As part of their year-long senior design course, Team Flower
Power — seniors Marissa Singley, Scott Kostohryz, Nick Reed,
Cody Petitt and Eric Hamann —
designed a machine to clean primary art materials for employees
at ATCO, a local work-training
facility for workers with developmental disabilities. The invention, which ultimately supports
the development of artwork for
Passion Works Studio in Athens,
removes ink from used lithographic printing plates using a
cylindrical brush powered by an
electric motor and liquid cleanser that is recycled through the
system via a pump.
In addition to receiving the
first-place Best Overall Design
trophy, the team and their home
department were each awarded
$10,000. The team’s coach, Department of Mechanical Engineering Chair and Robe Professor Greg Kremer, and the team’s
nonprofit partner, Passion Works
Studio/ATCO, were each awarded $5,000. Passion Works Studio/
ATCO also received $1,000 in
training vouchers from competition sponsor SourceAmerica,
a national nonprofit network of

Photo courtesy of SourceAmerica

SourceAmerica President and CEO Bob Chamberlin, Ohio University team members Marissa Singley and Nick Reed, U.S. Rep. Steve Stivers, R-Ohio, OU
team member Scott Kostohyrz and OU team coach Dr. Greg Kremer are pictured following the OU Russ College of Engineering team’s second consecutive first-place finish in the AbilityOne Design Challenge. The challenge is an annual competition to develop assistive workplace devices for individuals
with disabilities. Not pictured are team members Cody Petitt and Eric Hamann, who were out of the country and unable to attend.

agencies providing employment
opportunities for nearly 125,000
people with disabilities.
Rep. Steve Stivers, R-Ohio,
presented Kostohryz, Reed and
Singley with their trophy in
Washington, D.C., at a congressional reception. These team and
Kremer spent several days in the
capitol meeting with senators
and congressmen, and participating in SourceAmerica’s Grassroots Advocacy Conference.
Kremer, architect of the “Designing to Make a Difference”
capstone course, cited the project as a great example of the
power of student design projects

to make a difference in a community’s unique culture.
“Team Flower Power did a
great job of working directly with
Passion Works to understand
what was preventing individuals
with disabilities from participating in the plate-cleaning task,
and then created a system that
addressed those barriers,” he
said. “And the team learned a lot
about themselves and the design
process along the way — a real
win-win.”
The new cleaning machine
has created six part-time jobs for
ATCO employees, who had been
prohibited from performing the

previous manual cleaning process due to safety regulations,
but now work in pairs to operate the cleaning machine. The
machine also increases efficiency
of production of the signature
passion flower sculptures and
related art work sold by Passion
Works.
“The commitment and ingenuity of these students shifted the
workplace focus beyond accommodating disability to where it
truly belongs — on advancing
workers’ contributions,” said
SourceAmerica President and
CEO Bob Chamberlin. “Ohio
University’s robust tradition of

community collaboration exemplifies the substantive and longterm economic and individual
impact that community partnerships create.”
Team member Kostohryz, an
Athens native, said the experience helped him gain a new outlook on life.
“It was such an honor to be
recognized, but I don’t think we
were the only winners here,” he
said. “The winners were all of
the non-profits and people with
disabilities who were positively
impacted by all of the teams who
entered the competition.”

�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page C2 LîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, July 20, 2014

River City
Players’ showtime
MIDDLEPORT — The
River City Players are well
into rehearsals for their
upcoming musical comedy,
“The Drowsy Chaperone,”
to be performed Aug. 8-9
in the gymnasium at Meigs
High School at Meigs High
School.
Tickets are now on
sale at the Fabric Shop in
Pomeroy.
This show is described
as being one which, played
by Casi Arnold, is a mousy
agoraphobic
Broadway
fanatic seeking to cure
his “non-specific sadness”
who listens to a recording
of a fictional 1928 musical comedy, “The Drowsy
Chaperone.” As he listens
to this rare recording, he is
transported into the musical.
The setting is in his dingy apartment and as the
story progresses it is transformed into an impressive
Broadway scene.
The plot of the “show
within a show” centers

on Janet Van De Graaff
(Emma Perrin), a showgirl who plans to give
up her career in order to
marry Robert Martin (Ben
Roach) an oil tycoon. She
is the star of Feldzieg’s Follies, and a lot of money is
riding on her name to sell
the show.
The ensuing plot incorporates mistaken identities, dream sequences,
spit takes, an unflappable
English butler (Gary Walker); an absent-minded
dowager (Linda Warner);
Feldzeig (Roger Gilmore), a sleazy vaudeville
producer; Kitty (Jessica
Walker) a ditzy ehorine;
gangsters (Brian Howard and Jaxon Meadows)
disguised as pastry chefs;
Adolpho (Mike Kennedy),
a bumbling Latin lover;
George (Nathan Jeffers),
the best man; Trix the
Aviatrix (Renee Stewart); the building superintendent (Sam McCall);
Janet’s “Drowsy” (i.e.

A reheasal scene from the River City Players’ new show, “The Drowsy Chaperone.”

“Tipsy” Chaperone (Janis
Carnahan), played in the
show-within-a-show by a
blowzy Grande Dame of

the Stage, specializing in
“rousing anthems” and
not above upstaging the
occasional co-star.

Eastern student
scores high in archery

By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

Modern Woodmen of America make donation
The local chapter of Modern
Woodmen of America made
a $2,500 donation to The
Outreach Center for its roof
repairs. The donation was a
match contribution to what
the Outreach Center was
able to raise through various
other fundraisers. Pictured,
from left, are Dale Colburn,
chapter coordinatorl; Rebecca
Evans, financial representative; and Gary Fenderbosch, of
the Outreach Center. Modern
Woodmen is a tax-exempt
fraternal benefit society. The
membership organization
sells life insurance, annuity
and investment products not
to benefit stockholders but to
improve the quality of life of
its stakeholders – members,
their families and their communities. They accomplish this
through social, charitable and
volunteer activities.
Submitted photo

":=:2î�233:EEîC6E:C6Dî2ñ6Cî
nounced by G. Annette Hope, plant
manager.
Babbitt joined OVEC in 1994 as a
laborer in the Labor Department. In
2000, she transferred to the mainte-

Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $00$272.50, Heifers, $190-$250; 425-525
pounds, Steers, $200-$260, Heifers,
$190-$240; 550-625 pounds, Steers,
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650-725 pounds, Steers, $175$230, Heifers, $170-$215; 750-850
pounds, Steers, $175-$197.50, Heifers, $150-$170.
Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed, $100-$140;
Medium/Lean, $90-$99; Thin/Light,

îJ62CD

nance department as a maintenance
helper. During that same year, she advanced to a maintenance mechanic-C.
Babbitt and her husband, Lawrence (Red), reside in Gallipolis.

":G6DE@4&lt;î(6A@CE
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers,
Inc., livestock report of sales from July
16, 2014.

Meadows, Elena Musser,
Linda Myers, Lynn Werner, Dave Hopkins and
Maryiln Spencer.

�&gt;&gt;:8C2E:@?î
E@ADî(24:?6î
�C2?86î286?52

REEDSVILLE — Easter Swain, a student in the Eastern school district, earned a sixth-place award with the
Appalachian Archery Conference League.
She has a league average of 266.75 out of a possible 300
score for 2014. The league has 16 schools in Ohio and
West Virginia that participates in N.A.S.P. National
“Archery in the Schools” program holds tournaments
from January to May. She competed against all fourthand fifth-grade girls. Awards were given to the top 12
highest averages.
Easter is the first to receive this award with the Appalachian Archery Conference League from Eastern elementary and high schools.
She is the daughter of Jay and Robin Swain of ReedsEaster Swain
ville.

CHESHIRE — Lilia M. Babbitt, a
maintenance mechanic-C at the Ohio
Valley Electric Corp.’s Kyger Creek
Plant, retired July 1 with 20 years
of service with the company, as an-

Staff, reporters, wedding guests are performed
by Lara Perrin, Don Erwin, Diana Bissell, Lisa

$77.50-$89; Bulls, $84.50-$140.
Back to the Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $1,025-$1,060;
Bred Cows, $1,075; Bulls, $1,250;
Goats, $58-$105; Hogs, $84-dn;
Lambs, $130.
Upcoming Specials
7/23/14 — next sale, 10 a.m.
Direct sales and free on-farm
visits.
Contact Dewayne at (740) 339-0241,
Stacy at (304) 634-0224, Luke at (740)
645-3697, or Michael at (304) 634-3792,
or visit the website at www.uproducers.com.

Have story suggestions?
Call us anytime at: 740.446.2342 or 740.992.2155

RACINE — The ongoing immigration problem in the United States and the apparent lack of
consensus on what to do about it was the main
topic of discussion at a recent meeting of Racine
Grange members.
It was noted in the discussion that, despite
more deportation than ever, according to the
White House, the flood of people coming across
the border has not eased.
According to a report on the meeting, members expressed concern about one congressional
plan “that would not first close the U. S. borders
before dealing with legalizing immigrants.”
According to that report, members expressed
disagreement with that plan and in response
approved a resolution to be sent to Rep. Bill
Johnson and Ohio’s two senators asking that “no
reform of immigration be considered until the
borders are fully closed.”
Continuing on that theme, it was noted that
members fear a burden on the finances of the
United States with allowing illegal immigrants
to remain in the country. A second resolution
was then passed to oppose “any financial benefits being given to illegal aliens since it rewards
their breaking of law and puts a strain on the
U.S. finances.”
It was reported at the meeting that the Grange
secretary has referred the current problem of Racine Grange’ s tax exempt status to Rep. Johnson. According to a Keith D. Ashley’s report,
many Granges are dealing with the problem
which implies that the Internal Revenue Service
may have targeted Granges along with the Tea
Parties in abuse.” It was noted that the Ohio
State Grange master is also sending letters to
the entire Ohio Congressional delegation on this
very issue.
In other business the community service
chairman noted that she had acquired a supply
of mittens, gloves and hats to be donated to the
Ohio State Grange’s project.
Annual inspection was conducted by Opal
Dyer, Meigs County Junior Deputy Master.
Members conferred the second degree. Star
Grange members were guests for the meeting
and joined Racine for a covered dish dinner.;
It was noted that Olivia Yost will be attending
the Ohio State Junior Grange Camp near Zanesville. Mary Kay Host and John Easterday were
reported ill.

�@C6&gt;2?î8C25F2E6D
7C@&gt;î#2CD92==î+?:G6CD:EJ
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

HUNTINGTON — Hannah Elizabeth Foreman graduated from Marshall University on May 10, 2014.
She is the daughter of David and
Beth Foreman and sister of Benjamin
Foreman of New Haven. She is the
granddaughter of Dean and Ramona
Knight of New Haven, and Joe and
Evelyn Foreman of Portland.
She earned a Bachelor of Science in
Forensic Chemistry with a minor in Biology and Integrated Science and Technology. She was a member of the National Society of Collegiate Scholars and
Alpha Chi Sigma-Chemistry Fraternity.
She made the Dean’s List every
semester, and graduate with Cum
Laude honors. In the fall, she will be
attending graduate school at Marshall University to study Analytical
Chemistry.

�Sunday, July 20, 2014

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

BLONDIE

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î�

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

By Hilary Price

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8

5

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�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page C4 LîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, July 20, 2014

)2=:D3FCJ� @9?D@?îH655:?8
Rick and Patrice Johnson are blessed to announce the engagement
and upcoming marriage of their daughter
Lindsey Ann to Garrison
Wade Salisbury. Garrison is the son of Polly
and David Clay and
Dennis Salisbury. The
union of their children
will take place Aug.
9, 2014, at Elizabeth
Chapel Church.

Olivia Searls and Alex Hawley

�2H=6J�)62C=Dî
6?8286&gt;6?E
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Searls, of Racine, are
pleased to announce the engagement of their
daughter Olivia Searls to Alex Hawley, son of
Tom and Pauletta Hawley, of Pomeroy, and Sam
Hawley of Racine. The future bride attends Ohio
University working toward her bachelor’s degree
in early childhood education. The future groom
is employed as a sports writer for Ohio Valley
Publishing in Gallipolis. A November 2014 wedding is planned.

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Forty people attend 51st Davis reunion
GALLIPOLS — The
51st reunion of the descendants of Jacob N. M.
and Maggie Sluyter Davis
met July 6 at Christ United
Methodist Church, with 40
in attendance.
Randall Davis gave the
grace before the carry-in
meal. Rich Thomas, president, conducted a short
meeting after lunch. The
minutes of the last reunion
were read by secretary Lillian Thomas. Pat Davis
shared news of the Mer-

edith Davis family for the
past year. A correspondence from Linda Davis
Chase giving news of the
Bill and Linda Chase family was read. Bree Ramey
also had a brief bio of Tim,
Bree and Jonathan Ramey;
Julie Neal; and Michael
and Kathleen Langona.
Twelve births were reported: Avery Elizabeth
born to Eddie and Cindy
Church on April 3, 2014;
Charlie Belle Castro Wilbert Church’s great-grand-

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daughter was born on
March 19, 2014; Liam born
to Kristina Sawtell on May
18, 2014; Sydney Leigh
born to James and Myra
Thomas on June 18, 2014;
Kayson Joe born to Jacob
and Katelon Houck on Feb.
12, 2013; Judson Todd
born to Todd and Kara
Ragan on Nov. 10, 2013;
Kayce Lynn Koren born to
Dennis Houck and Nicole
Johnson on Dec. 29, 2013;
Elouise Kay to James and
Robin Gruber on May 8,
2014; Dustin Corbin Dean
born to Dustin and Edwina
(Hineman) Carhart on May
15, 2014; Autumn Grace
born to Alison and Zack
Propps on Nov. 9, 2012;

Brook Jay born to Alison
and Jack Propps on Dec.
20, 2013; Brinley Boston
Chase born to Ben Chase
and Shawnee on May 16,
2014. Three marriages:
Daniel Ours to Morgan
Matthews on Feb. 1, 2014;
Davidi Houck to Stephanie
Facemire on July 13, 2013;
Levi Stroop to Kanoa Facemire on July 2, 2014. One
death: Bryan R. Workman
on April 10, 2014.
The officers elected for
the upcoming year were:
Sabrina Rife, president;
Bree Ramey, vice president; and Lilliam Thomas,
secretary.
The next reunion will be
held Sunday, July 5, 2015.

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60519924

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