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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Longtime member
honored at Grange
meeting.... Page 2

Partly sunny. High
near 91. Low around
69.... Page 2

All-OVC Baseball
Teams.... Page 6

James E. Barton, 79
Vaughnie ‘Bonnie’
A. Godfrey, 82
Janet Sue Hatfield, 72

Cynthia Ann Laudermilt, 58
Alice Lemley, 96
Kay Frances Pullins, 72
Gloria Smith, 75

50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 102

Four arraigned on methamphetamine charges
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The four people charged in connection with
the large methamphetamine
lab last week on Portland Road
were arraigned in Meigs County
Court on Tuesday.
Aimee L. Young, 40, Glenn
F. “Buddy” Young Jr., 48, and
Tommy D. Boso, 52, all of Portland, and Timothy L. Ball, 46, of
Racine, made their initial court
appearances before Judge Steve
Story on Tuesday afternoon.

Story read the charges against
each individual and explained the
possible penalties of the charges.
Ball is charged with illegal
manufacture of methamphetamine, a felony of the second
degree, and obstructing justice,
a felony of the third degree. Attorney Charles Knight was appointed to represent Ball.
Glenn Young Jr. is charged
with illegal manufacture of methamphetamine, a felony of the second degree, possession of drugs,
a felony of the fourth degree, and
having a weapon under disabil-

ity, a felony of the third degree.
Attorney Denise Bunce was appointed to represent Young.
Boso is charged with illegal
manufacture of methamphetamine, a felony of the second
degree, and obstructing justice,
a felony of the third degree. Attorney Josh Price was appointed
to represent Boso.
Aimee Young is charged
with illegal manufacture of
methamphetamine, a felony of
the second degree. Attorney
Trenton Cleland was appointed
to represent Young.

Deputies from the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Office located a methamphetamine lab
at 53555 Portland Road while
assisting the Adult Parole Authority on a probation home
visit for Glenn Young when a
one pot reactionary vessel was
seen through the window.
All four individuals were arrested at the residence. Glenn
Young, Aimee Young and Boso
reside at the residence, while
Ball has a listed address of Racine. According to Deputy Bill
Gilkey, Boso is a tenant at the

Summertime Fun

address, with the Youngs also
living there.
At the residence, deputies
located four one-pot reactionary vessels and 19 generators.
Also located were precursors
for the production of methamphetamine, firearms and drug
paraphernalia. All the items were
seized by the deputies.
Bond for each person was
set at $20,000 with 10 percent
permitted. A preliminary hearing in each case is scheduled for
11:30 a.m. on June 27 in Meigs
County Court.

Witnesses subpoenaed
for upcoming Moffett trial
Beth Sergent

bsergent@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT — Several witnesses have been
subpoenaed by the defense team organized to represent
former Point Pleasant Intermediate School Principal
Cameron Moffett who is going to trial next month on a
charge of child abuse causing risk of injury.
Moffett, 46, Point Pleasant, who was recently indicted
by a grand jury on the charge, has been granted a bench
trial which is slated to begin at 9:30 a.m., July 23 in Mason County Circuit Court. A bench trial is a legal proceeding where a case is tried in front of and solely by a judge
rather than a jury. Bench trials can be requested in both
criminal and civil cases. Moffett, and his Attorney James
Lees, appeared earlier this month before Judge David W.
Nibert for a pretrial hearing.
According to the latest case filings in the office of Circuit
Clerk Bill Withers, Lees requested the following people be
served with a subpoena to possibly testify at the trial: Stephanie Morrow, Carrie Burns, Jami Cochran, Annette Cook,
Jill Smith, Elizabeth Kapp, John Morrison and Jack Parsons.
Cochran, Kapp and Cook, all personnel with Mason
County Schools, testified at Moffett’s preliminary hearing
last year. Morrow, Burns and Smith are also personnel with
Mason County Schools. Morrison is an investigator with the
West Virginia Department of Education, Parsons is with the
West Virginia Department of Health and Human Services.
As previously reported, Moffett’s case divided the community in 2012 when a video taken from a school bus
showed Moffett allegedly attempting to remove a then
11-year old male student from the bus. Moffett detractors
said he used excessive force, Moffett supporters said he
handled the situation correctly given the circumstance
and a student Moffett’s attorney described as “unruly” at
his preliminary hearing.
Moffett remains free on bond. He is employed by the
Mason County Board of Education, not in a classroom
but as a director/coordinator (supportive services), according to the West Virginia Department of Education’s
listing of staff and employees for Mason County Schools

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Young and old a like enjoyed a day at the pool as temperatures continue to be in the 80s and 90s through out the past
few days. Swimmers took advantage of the warm weather, splashing in the kiddie pool, going down the double slide,
and jumping from the diving boards. The London Pool in Syracuse is open noon-7 p.m. on Sunday-Thursday, noon-6
p.m. on Friday and Saturday, and offers night swimming on Monday and Tuesday from 8:30-10:30 p.m. The pool will
be closed on July 4. According to pool manager Shawn Hawley, swimming lessons are also planned for later in the
summer. Open dates are still available for pool parties and can be booked by calling (740) 992-5418.

Mullen recognized
for long service

Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Howard B. Mullen was recently presented a plaque of
appreciation for his 60 years of dedication, service and
friendship by the Pomeroy Fire Department. Mullen,
who has lived in the same house on Mulberry Avenue
in Pomeroy his entire lifetime, joined the fire department in November 1952. Today he remains a member of
the department but describes himself as a “light duty
man.” He is the oldest member of the fire department.

Bank collects books for ‘Take a Book, Leave a Book’ station
RIO GRANDE — Farmers Bank employees at
the Gallia County office
offered a helping hand to
a local free book lending
library by collecting new
and used books to donate.
From May 15 through
June 19 they collected
over 250 books to benefit
the Rio Grande “Take a
Book, Leave a Book” station. One by one, the donations added up.
“Countless people came

in our office to donate
books of their own so kids
and adults can enjoy reading them for free,” Missy
Mayes, Farmers Bank
Gallipolis Employee, said.
“I was extremely touched
by this project and the
generous people who
helped us reach our goal.
Being an avid reader myself, I’m happy I can pass
along books I’ve enjoyed
to people who will hopefully enjoy them, too.”

Farmers Bank would
like to extend a warm
thank you to everyone
who donated.
The “Take a Book,
Leave a Book” station was
constructed by Phyllis
Brandeberry and Delbert
Russ after Rio Grande’s
Library Book Mobile
stopped running through
the county. The station is
located in front of the Village of Rio Grande Fire
Station on Lewis Avenue.

Farmers Bank in Gallia
County recently lended
a hand to the recently
constructed “Take a
Book, Leave a Book”
lending library in Rio
Grande. Pictured are,
from left: Patrick Saunders, Phyllis Brandeberry, Tracy Pickett, Carol
Hager, Delbert Russ and
Jamie Denney.
Submitted photo

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Camp Heritage offers Meigs County Community Calendar
hunter education camp
ATHENS — Camp Heritage, Inc, in conjunction with
the Athens Fish and Game Club and the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife, is hosting the annual Hunter Education Camp the weekend of
July 12-14, 2013. The camp is held for youth ages 9-15
who have not successfully completed a hunter education
course. Pre-registration is required and is limited to the
first 50 campers.
During the three-day camp each participant, under full
supervision, will shoot .22 rifles, shotguns, muzzleloaders, and archery equipment. They will also learn wilderness survival skills, first aid, and hunter ethics. This is
a sleepover event, and participants will be accomodated
with cabins provided by the camp. The particpants will
be grouped by gender for sleeping. Adult staff will also be
camping overnight.
Please note this is for youth who have not already successfully completed a hunter education course. There is
no charge for participants, as the weekend is grant funded and operated by Division of Wildlife staff, members
of the Athens Fish &amp; Game Club, certified instructors,
and local sportsmen and sportswomen. Upon successful
completion of the course (pass test with a score of 80% or
better) participants will be issued an official certification
card necessary for all first time license purchases.
The Camp Heritage facility is located at 600 Robinette
Ridge Road, New Marshfield, Ohio. For more information
or to register for the workshop, please contact Tara Riley
at 740-591-9650, or check out the Camp Heritage website
at http://athensfishandgame.org/camp-heritage.html.

Local makes dean list

Wednesday, June 26
POMEROY — The
American Red Cross will
hold a blood drive from
1-6 p.m. at the Mulberry
Community Center on
Mulberry Avenue. Walkins welcome or schedule your appointment
at 1-800-REDCROSS or
online at www.RedCrossBlood.org (enter sponsor
code: MeigsCommunity).
POMEROY — A community dinner will be
held at the New Beginnings United Methodist
Church, Pomeroy, 4:30 to
6 p.m. Menu will be ham
loaf, macaroni and cheese,
mixed vegetables and dessert. The public is invited.

Thursday, June 27
RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education will meet in special
session on at 7:30 a.m.
in the elementary library.
The purpose of the meeting is to approve appropriations and any other
business that may become
of the board.
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party will
hold their regular meeting
at 6:30 p.m. at Carleton
School. Please bring raffle
tickets and money. The
raffle drawing will be held
and refreshments served.
All women are welcome.

BOURBONNAIS, Ill. — Chaz Hutchison of Syracuse
was named to the dean’s list at Olivet Nazarene University for the spring 2013 semester.
To qualify for inclusion on the dean’s list, a student
must have been enrolled as a full-time undergraduate student and must have attained a semester grade point average of 3.50 or higher on a 4.00 grading scale.
Olivet Nazarene University is an accredited Christian, liberal arts university offering more than 100 areas of undergraduate and graduate study, including the Doctor of EduFriday, June 28
cation in ethical leadership. Olivet has one main campus in
POMEROY — The JackBourbonnais, Ill. - just 50 miles south of Chicago; three sites: son County, W.Va. Senior
Rolling Meadows and Oak Brook, Ill., and Hong Kong; and Choir will present a conmore than 100 School of Graduate and Continuing Studies
learning locations throughout Chicagoland and the Midwest.
From Oxford to Tokyo, hundreds of Olivet students also experience the global classroom each year, whether through
study abroad opportunities or worldwide mission trips.

cert at 7 p.m., at the Forest Run United Methodist Church. The public is
invited. Southern gospel
music, Gaither style, will
be featured.
MIDDLEPORT — A
free community dinner
will be served beginning
at 5 p.m. at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family
Life Center. The menu will
include johnny marzetti,
salad, rolls and sherbet.
There will also be a free
clothing giveaway.

Saturday, June 29
POMEROY — A candle
light vigil and balloon
release will be held from
7-9 p.m. on the Pomeroy
Parking Lot. The event is
being held in memory of
those lost to drug abuse
and in honor of those in
recovery. The event is
organized by R.A.C.E.
(Recovering
Addicts
Community Educators).
Sunday, June 30
REEDSVILLE — BiramHayman Reunion, 1 p.m. at
Shelter House 2 at Forked
Run State Park.
CHESHIRE — Bradbury-Jenkins reunion, 1
p.m., Old Kyger Baptist
Church located on Old
Kyger Church Road off of
Stingy Creek Road. A potluck meal will be served.
HENDERSON — Descendants of Sam and Melvina Birchfield will hold a
reunion at the Henderson
Community Center in
Henderson, W.Va. Friends
and family are welcome. A

basket dinner will be held
at noon.
CHESHIRE — The
family of Otto and Phyllis
Mulford will hold a family reunion Sunday, June
30, from 1 to 4 p.m. at
the Gavin Clubhouse in
Cheshire. Family members
of Harvey and Emma Margaret Mulford are also invited to attend. Those who
plan to attend are asked to
contact Janice at 740-9925207.
RACINE — The Neville
T. and Martha Rose family
reunion will be held at 1
p.m. at the home of Karen
Holter Werry on Court
Street Road (Morning Star
Area). BBQ chicken and
pork roast will be provided. All family and friends
are invited. Contact Karen
at (740) 416-7285 for more
information.
Monday, July 1
SYRACUSE — The Sutton Township Trustees will
meet at 7 p.m. at Syracuse
Village Hall.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Cancer Initiative Inc. (MCCI) will
meet at noon in the conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department. New members are
welcome. For more information contact Courtney
Midkiff at (740) 992-6626,
Monday through Friday
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Republican
Party Executive Committee
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
court house. The meeting

will be concerning July 4.
Wednesday, July 3
MIDDLEPORT — The
American Red Cross will
hold a blood drive from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ
on Main Street in Middleport. Walk-ins welcome or
schedule your appointment
at 1-800-REDCROSS or
online at www.RedCrossBlood.org (enter sponsor
code: MCofC). Presenting
donors will receive a free
Red Cross Baseball Hat,
while supplies last.
HARRISONVILLE
— The Scipio Township
Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting
at 7 p.m. at the Harrisonville Fire House.
Tuesday, July 9
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer Board will have
their regular meeting at 5
p.m. at the TPRSD office.
Birthdays
Saturday, June 29
SYRACUSE — Virginia
Bailey Hedrick will observe her 91st birthday on
June 29. Cards may be sent
to her at P. O. Box 424,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779
Tuesday, July 2
REEDSVILLE — Faye
Watson will observe her
90th birthday on Tuesday,
July 2. Cards may be sentto her at 50051 SR 681,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
She can be telephoned at
667-0795.

Meigs Local Briefs

Chester-Shade
yard sale
CHESTER — A yard
sale will be held from 9
Wednesday: A slight chance of showers and thunder- a.m. to 4 p.m. on Thursday
storms after 10am. Partly sunny, with a high near 91. at the Chester Courthouse
Southwest wind 5 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is by the Chester-Shade Historical Association.
20 percent.
Wednesday Night: A chance of showers and thunderBoard of Elections
storms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 69. Chance of
Office closed
precipitation is 30 percent.
POMEROY
—The
Thursday: Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly
Meigs
County
Board
of
after 4pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 88. Chance of
Elections will be closed
precipitation is 60 percent.
Thursday Night: Showers and thunderstorms likely. from 2 p.m. on Tuesday,
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 68. Chance of precipita- June 25 until Friday, June
28 at 8:30 a.m. so staff can
tion is 60 percent.
Friday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Part- attend a conference for
ly sunny, with a high near 84. Chance of precipitation is training.
40 percent.
Vacation Bible School
Friday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
COOLVILLE — Whites
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 65. Chance of precipitaChapel Wesleyan Church
tion is 40 percent.
Saturday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. in Coolville will have Bible
Partly sunny, with a high near 84. Chance of precipitation School, June 24-26 from
6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Theme
is 30 percent.
Saturday Night: A chance of showers and thunder- will be HayDay. The kickstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 64. Chance of off party will be at the
church on Sunday, June
precipitation is 30 percent.
23, 6 p.m. For more information call Bonnie Putman
at 667-6343.
RACINE — Morning
Star United Methodist
Church will hold Vacation
Bible School from 6:30-8
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.91
AEP (NYSE) — 43.91
p.m., June 25-27. a final
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 18.80
Pepsico (NYSE) — 80.04
practice and cook out will
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 82.84
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.06
Big Lots (NYSE) — 31.75
be held at 6:30 p.m. on SatRockwell (NYSE) — 83.27
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 45.62
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.89
urday, June 29. The VBS
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 83.03
Royal Dutch Shell — 62.98
program will be held at 10
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.20
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.30
a.m. on Sunday, June 30.
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.25
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 74.37

Ohio Valley Forecast

Local stocks
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 38.97
Collins (NYSE) — 61.74
DuPont (NYSE) — 52.88
US Bank (NYSE) — 35.94
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.11
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 51.54
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 52.08
Kroger (NYSE) — 34.51
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 49.73
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 72.50
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 21.60
BBT (NYSE) — 33.83

Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.72
WesBanco (NYSE) — 26.00
Worthington (NYSE) — 32.10
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for June 25, 2013, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Joining Parkersburg
Orthopedic Associates

Steven Miller, M.D.

Board Certiﬁed Orthopedic Surgeon
Specializes in the treatment of bone and joint disorders, injuries,
fractures and arthritis. Dr. Miller also treats sports injuries,
children’s injuries, work-related injuries and some nervecompression conditions such as carpal tunnel syndrome.
To schedule an appointment: (304)

485-8040

www.orthodoc.aaos.org/drmiller

For more information contact Randy at (770) 4023961 or Patrece at (740)
416-9282.
Revival
KANAUGA
—Silver
Memorial Freewill Baptist
Church in Kanauga will
hold a revival at 7 p.m.,
June 24-29. Everyone
welcome.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct as
childhood and adolescent
immunization clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on
Tuesdays, at the Meigs
County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring children’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent
or legal guardian. Please
bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but
not required.
July 4th activities
MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Fourth of July
celebration will be held
on Thursday, July 4, with
events beginning at 4
p.m., and concluding at 10

p.m. with fireworks. Donations are currently being
accepted by the Middleport Community Association to help expand the
fireworks display.
WILKESVILLE — The
annual Fourth of July parade in Wilkesville will be
held at 11 a.m. on July 4.
Registration is free and begins at 10 a.m. Prizes will
be awarded for various parade categories. For more
information call 669-5646.
Consumer Confidence
Report
MIDDLEPORT — The
Village of Middleport has
mailed its 2012 Consumer
Confidence Report. Anyone not receiving one may
pick it up as the Public
Works office located at 659
Pearl Street in Middleport.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 143 (located just
0.25 miles south of State
Farm Road) will be reduced to one lane to allow
for a bridge replacement
project. During construction there will be a 10’
width restriction. Traffic
will be maintained with
a portable traffic light.
Weather permitting, both

lanes of Ohio 143 will be
open September 1, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The westbound lane of
Ohio 124 (located at the
63.91 mile marker, about
1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic
signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting, both lanes of Ohio
124 will be open November, 1 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 124 (located 0.4
miles north of Williams
Run Road) will be reduced
to one lane to allow for a
bridge replacement project. Traffic will be maintained by traffic signals
and concrete barriers.
Weather permitting, both
lanes of Ohio 124 will reopen August 31, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The bridge on Township
Road 447, Beech Grove
Road, located approximately 500 feet west of
Township Road 9, Romine
Road, will be closed beginning Monday, June 3. This
closing is necessary in order to replace the existing
bridge. The project will be
completed in approximately one month.

Longtime member honored at Grange meeting
POMEROY — A seal for 65
years of membership in the Grange
was presented to Rosalie Story at
a recent meeting of the Hemlock
Grange held at the hall.
During the meeting conducted
by Story, a report was given on
the yard and bake sale and also
on serving food at two auctions,
all of which turned out profitable
for the organization. Visitors at
the meeting were members of
Racine Grange.
The July meeting of Hemlock
Grange was changed to July 1
since the Pomona Grange meeting
will be held at the Hemlock hall

on July 5. It was announced that
a chicken and noodle dinner will
precede the July meeting. Adell
White, family activities chairman,
gave a report on projects for the
fair booth and contest judging.
A thank you card was read from
Janice Weber. Roy Grueser was
reported ill.
In lieu of a program from Racine, Story had a reading “All I Really Need to Know.”
At an earlier meeting reports
on projects of support for others
were given. Collections included
pop tabs, 45 pounds, eye glasses

and cases, 113, used hearing aid
batteries, 408, Campbell soup
labels, 106, and used batteries,
1,173. Collecting the items is an
on-going project for the Grange.
Janice Weber, deaf chairman,
presented a program on hearing.
She noted that permanent hearing
loss can occur when people
are exposed to certain sounds,
like gunshots and power tools,
without appropriate protection.
She stressed the importance
of immediate action to prevent
permanent hearing damage, and
distributed papers on hearing loss
and ways to prevent it.

60422766

YOU’RE BUSY.

Middleport Community Association
Announces their July 4th
Cornhole Tournament
Dave Diles Park

WE’RE READY.

Call 740-992-3381 today.

TEAM TOURNAMENT- 5pm $5.00 @ for 2 person team
1st $40.00 per team 2nd $30.00 per team
3rd 20.00 per team 4th 10.00 per team

119 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
60427388

Contact Brian Howard @ 740-525-5764 or brian.howard@fbsc.com
to pre-register or sign up that day!

60422631

740-992-2020

60428606

Rick Price, Owner

SINGLES TOURNAMENT- 7pm $10.00 @
1st $40.00 2nd $30.00 3rd $20.00 4th $10.00

�Wednesday, June 26, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obama aims to tackle
South
Africa:
Mandela
pollution, climate change
WASHINGTON (AP) —
President Barack Obama
declared the debate over
climate change and its
causes obsolete Tuesday as
he announced a wide-ranging plan to tackle pollution
and prepare communities
for global warming.
In a major speech at
Georgetown
University,
Obama warned Americans
of the deep and disastrous
effects of climate change,
urging them to take action
before it’s too late.
“As a president, as a father and as an American,
I’m here to say we need to
act,” Obama said.
Obama announced he
was directing his administration to launch the firstever federal regulations on
heat-trapping gases emitted by new and existing
power plants — “to put an
end to the limitless dumping of carbon pollution.”
Other aspects of the plan
will boost renewable energy production on federal
lands, increase efficiency
standards and prepare
communities to deal with
higher temperatures.
Even before Obama unveiled his plan Tuesday,
Republican critics in Congress were lambasting it
as a job-killer that would
threaten the economic recovery. Obama dismissed
those critics, noting the
same arguments have been
used in the past when the
U.S. has taken other steps
to protect the environment.
“That’s what they said
every time,” Obama said.
“And every time, they’ve
been wrong.”
Obama also offered a
rare insight into his administration’s
deliberations
on Keystone XL, an oil
pipeline whose potential
approval has sparked an
intense fight between environmental activists and
energy producers.
The White House has
insisted the State Department is making the decision independently, but
Obama said Tuesday he’s
instructing the department to approve it only if
the project won’t increase
overall, net emissions of
greenhouse gases.
“Allowing the Keystone
pipeline to be built
requires a finding that
doing so would be in
our nation’s interests,”
Obama
said.
“Our
national interest would be
served only if this project
does not significantly

exacerbate the problem of
carbon pollution.”
A top aide to House
Speaker John Boehner said
the remarks indicated that
the pipeline should be approved.
“The standard the president set today should
lead to speedy approval
of the Keystone pipeline,”
Boehner spokesman Brendan Buck said.
Still, environmentalist
took heart in Obama’s remarks, noting it was the
first time the administration had directly linked
approval of the pipeline
to its effect on pollution.
The White House has previously resisted efforts by
environmental groups to
link the Keystone project
to broader effort curb carbon pollution from power
plants.
Obama touted America’s
strengths — research,
technology and innovation
— as factors that make
the U.S. uniquely poised
to take on the challenges
of global warming. He
mocked those who deny
that humans are contributing to the warming of
the planet, adding that he
“doesn’t have much patience” for anybody who
refuses to acknowledge the
problem.
“We don’t have time for
a meeting of the flat-earth
society,” Obama said.
Obama’s
far-reaching
plan marks the president’s
most prominent effort yet
to deliver on a major priority he laid out in his first
presidential campaign and
recommitted to at the start
of his second term: to fight
climate change in the U.S.
and abroad and prepare
American communities for
its effects. Environmental
activists have been irked
that Obama’s high-minded
goals never materialized
into a comprehensive plan.
By expanding permitting
on public lands, Obama
hopes to generate enough
electricity from renewable
energy projects such as
wind and solar to power
the equivalent of 6 million
homes by 2020, effectively
doubling the electric capacity federal lands now
produce. He also set a goal
to install 100 megawatts of
energy-producing capacity
at federal housing projects
by the end of the decade.
Obama also announced
$8 billion in federal loan
guarantees to spur investment in technologies that
can keep carbon dioxide

produced by power plants
from being released into
the atmosphere.
But the linchpin of
Obama’s plan is the controls on new and existing
power plants. Forty percent of U.S. carbon dioxide
emissions, and one-third of
greenhouse gases overall,
come from electric power
plants, according to the federal Energy Information Administration. The Obama
administration already has
proposed controls on new
plants, but those controls
have been delayed and not
yet finalized.
Tuesday’s
announcement came just weeks after
Obama’s nominee to head
the Environmental Protection Agency, Gina McCarthy, assured senators
during her confirmation
process that the EPA was
“not currently” developing
any regulations on existing
sources of greenhouse gases. McCarthy said if EPA
were to look at such regulations, it would allow states,
the public and others to
“offer meaningful input on
potential approaches.”
Republicans quickly dismissed Obama’s plan, calling it a “war on coal” and
a “war on jobs,” reflecting
the opposition to climate
legislation on Capitol Hill
that prompted a frustrated
Obama to sidestep lawmakers and take action himself.
“It’s tantamount to kicking the ladder out from
beneath the feet of many
Americans struggling in
today’s economy,” Senate
Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell, R-Ky., said on
the floor of the Senate.
Environmental groups
offered a mix of praise and
wariness that Obama would
follow through on the ambitious goals he laid out. Bill
Snape of the Center for Biological Diversity described
it as too little, too late.
“What he’s proposing isn’t
big enough, doesn’t move
fast enough, to match the
terrifying magnitude of the
climate crisis,” Snape said.
Others hailed the plan,
galvanized by the fact that
Obama was taking action
on his own after Congress’
reluctance to tackle the issue using legislation.
“The president nailed
it: this can’t wait,” said
Frances Beinecke, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council.
“We will cut this carbon
pollution today so our
children don’t inherit climate chaos tomorrow.”

Tsunami may have hit
East Coast earlier in June
PROVIDENCE,
R.I.
(AP) — A storm that blew
through earlier this month
might have spurred a rare
phenomenon for the East
Coast: a tsunami.
Tsunami-like conditions
were observed June 13 at
more than 30 tide gages
along the East Coast, Bermuda and Puerto Rico, the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
said. The highest peak
amplitude was recorded
in Newport, R.I, where it
reached just under a foot
above sea level. Gages in
Kiptopeke, Va., and Atlantic City, N.J., recorded
similar peaks, according
to NOAA.
“From North Carolina
up through Massachusetts,
we can find that signal,
even though it’s very small,
which tells us there was
something going on,” Mike
Angove, head of NOAA’s
tsunami program, said
Tuesday. “We’re trying to

piece this back together.”
A strong storm moved
through the region and
offshore that day, and scientists were trying to determine if it played a role.
Angove stopped short of
saying it was a tsunami, but
acknowledged it had specific characteristics of one.
Brian
Coen
was
spearfishing at Barnegat
Inlet in Ocean County,
N.J., around 3:30 p.m. on
June 13, when he saw a
strong outrush of water as
the tide went out, according to a description provided by NOAA. He said
it carried divers over submerged rocks that serve as
a breakwater. The rocks,
normally three to four feet
deep, eventually were exposed, he said.
Then, according to
NOAA, Coen saw an approximately 6-foot wave
come in. It carried the divers back over the breakwater and also swept three

people off rocks that are
usually five to six feet above
sea level. Two of them needed medical attention.
Chuck Ebersole, steward
at Wickford Yacht Club in
North Kingstown, R.I., said
he saw a strong current of
about 7 knots, or 8 miles
per hour, going out through
a channel into Narragansett
Bay. Normally, he said, the
current is 1 to 2 miles per
hour. The current was so
strong that one large boat
pulled its cleat out of the
dock, he said.
After a while, the current reversed at the same
speed, he said. A nearby
gage recorded that the sea
level changed by 1.3 feet.
Angove said it is a specific feature of tsunamis
for water to be drawn out
to sea and then rapidly
rush back in, and the water
speeds Ebersole reported
in Rhode Island indicated
something other than a
storm surge.

family gathers at rural home
JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Members of Nelson Mandela’s family and
tribal elders gathered Tuesday at the
former president’s rural hometown in
eastern South Africa, as concern grew
for the leader who spent a third day in
critical condition in a hospital, local
media reported.
The office of President Jacob Zuma
said Mandela’s condition remained
unchanged after reporting late Sunday that his health had deteriorated
to critical, alarming many South Africans as well as people around the
world who regard the former president as a symbol of sacrifice and reconciliation.
Mandela’s family members held a
meeting at his home in Qunu village in
the Eastern Cape province, 600 miles
(1,000 kilometers) south of Johannesburg, where the anti-apartheid leader
grew up. No details on what was discussed in the meeting were announced.
Those at the gathering included Mandela’s grandsons Mandla and Ndaba
Mandela, according to press reports.
The Mail &amp; Guardian, a South
African newspaper, reported on its
website that some elders in the area
were only told of the meeting shortly
before it started.
“Many of us in the village were
not aware and we were only told this
morning, so a number of Mandela
elders still need to be transported to
Qunu for the meeting,” the newspaper quoted Silumko Mandela, a relative, as saying earlier in the day.
A military helicopter was also seen
hovering over the Mandela home,
reported the online edition of City
Press, a South African newspaper.
As on previous days, other family
members were seen visiting the hospital in Pretoria where the Nobel Peace
Prize laureate is being treated. South
Africa’s defense minister and an Anglican archbishop also visited the facility.
Dozens of doves were released on
Tuesday outside the hospital, which
has attracted well-wishers who have
gathered outside to leave messages of
support for Mandela.
“In terms of releasing these doves,
we’re simply saying it symbolizes how
he has set free us as South Africans,”
said Kelvin Hugo, who arrived with
the birds. “He set us free in the ca-

pacity not only of social freedom or
economic freedom but he’s given us
an opportunity to have freedom of
speech, freedom of movement, freedom of association.”
Mandela, who spent 27 years in
prison during white racist rule and
became South Africa’s first black
president in all-race elections in
1994, was taken to the hospital on
June 8 to be treated for what the
government described as a recurring
lung infection. Zuma’s office said
doctors were doing their best to ensure his recovery and comfort.
“We must support him and support his family,” Zuma said in a
statement. “We must demonstrate
our love and appreciation for his
leadership during the struggle for
liberation and in our first few years
of freedom and democracy by living
out his legacy and promoting unity,
non-racialism, non-sexism and prosperity in our country.”
The president asked that the legacy of Mandela, also known by his
clan name Madiba, be celebrated on
July 18, his 95th birthday. In recent
years, organizers have sought to turn
the day into an international event in
which participants do something to
honor Mandela’s values for 67 minutes, noting that he spent 67 years
as a human rights lawyer, a prisoner,
a peacemaker and a democratically
elected president.
“We must all be planning what to
do next month in marking our 67
minutes of doing good for humanity
as called upon by Madiba to do so,
when he launched the International
Mandela Day campaign,” Zuma said.
“Let us make it the biggest Mandela
Day ever on the 18th of July, focusing
on doing good all over the country.”
South Africa’s foreign minister,
Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, said people should honor Mandela but not
dwell excessively on his illness.
“We continue to wish the father of
our nation well,” she said. “We are
realistic about his age. We are also
consciously aware of the fact that the
doctors are saying he remains critical. But I am sure he would be very
disappointed, if he hears that because he’s very sick, life has stopped
in South Africa.”

Texas prepares to execute 500th inmate
HUNTSVILLE, Texas
(AP) — Jim Willett remembers the night of Dec.
6, 1982, when he was assigned to guard a mortuary
van that had arrived at the
death house at the Huntsville prison.
“I remember thinking:
We’re really going to do
this. This is really going to
happen,” says Willett, who
was a captain for the Texas
Department of Corrections.
When the van pulled
away early the next morning, it carried to a nearby
funeral home the body
of convicted killer Charlie Brooks, who had just
become the first Texas
prisoner executed since a
Supreme Court ruling six
years earlier allowed the
death penalty to resume in
the United States.
What was unusual then
has become rote. On
Wednesday, barring a reprieve, Kimberly McCarthy will become the 500th
convicted killer in Texas to
receive a lethal injection.
The number far outpaces
the execution total in any
other state. But it also reflects the reality of capital
punishment in the United
States today: While some
states have halted the practice in recent years because
of concern about wrongful
convictions,
executions
continue at a steady pace
in many others.
The death penalty is on
the books in 32 states. On
average, Texas executes an
inmate about every three
weeks.
Still, even as McCarthy prepares to die at the
Huntsville Unit, it’s clear
that Texas, too, has been

affected by the debate over
capital punishment. In recent years, state lawmakers have provided more
sentencing options for
juries and courts have narrowed the cases in which
the death penalty can be
applied. In guaranteeing
DNA testing for inmates
and providing for sentences of life without parole,
Texas could well be on a
slower track to execute its
next 500 inmates.
“It’s a very fragile system” as attitudes change,
said Mark White, who was
Texas attorney general
when Brooks was executed
and then presided over 19
executions as governor
from 1983 to 1987.
“There’s a big difference
between fair and harsh. …
I think you have (Texas)
getting a reputation for
being bloodthirsty, and
that’s not good.”
Texas has accounted for
nearly 40 percent of the
more than 1,300 executions
carried out since murderer
Gary Gilmore went before
a Utah firing squad in 1977
and became the first U.S.
inmate executed following the Supreme Court’s
clarification of death pen-

alty laws. (Texas had more
than 300 executions before
the pause.) Virginia is a
distant second, nearly 400
executions behind. Texas’
standing stems both from
its size, with the nation’s
second largest population,
and its tradition of tough
justice for killers.
Still awaiting punishment in Texas are 282 convicted murderers.
Some may be spared. Supreme Court rulings have
now excluded mentally impaired people or those who
were under 18 at the time
of their crime. Legal battles
continue over the lethal
drugs used in the process,
mental competence of inmates, professional competence of defense lawyers
and sufficiency of evidence
in light of DNA forensics
technology.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry,
who has presided over more
than half of the state’s executions, said that the recent
changes have helped make
Texas’ system fairer. In addition to the new sentencing
options, he signed bills to
allow post-conviction DNA
testing for inmates and establish minimum qualifications for court-appointed
defense attorneys.

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Opinion

Page 4
Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Comments surprised investors
Coding camps for
kids rise in popularity
Christopher S. Rugaber
AP Economics Writer

Christina A. Cassidy
The Associated Press

ATLANTA — The video
game Jacob Asofsky is creating is simple: “Someone
who is trying to take over
the world and you try to
stop them.”
The 12-year-old from
Florida is spending two
weeks at a summer camp
in a program that teaches
programming skills to
young people.
“It’s about having fun,
but it also gives them the
tools to be able to do this
at home because they don’t
have this in school,” said
Taylor Jones, director of
the iD Tech Camp at Atlanta’s Emory University.
So-called coding camps
for children are becoming
more popular amid a growing effort to expand access
to computer programming
and inspire more youths to
seek computer science degrees and careers in technology. Their rise underscores a seeming mismatch
in the U.S. economy:
people like Facebook CEO
Mark Zuckerberg and Tumblr founder David Karp illustrate the opportunities
programming skills can
create, yet universities are
not graduating enough
code-savvy students to
meet employers’ demands.
The iD Tech Camps,
which have grown from
200 students in 1999 to
28,000 enrolled this year
in courses at dozens of
locations nationwide, use
interest in gaming to build
bridges to computer programming and hopefully
careers in Web developing,
film animation and app
creation for smart phones.
Courses start at $829 for
a one-week course during
the day with overnight students paying $1,348.
On a recent weekday,
Asofsky was attending an
iD Tech Camp on the campus with some 95 other
youths under the age of
17. He was using the gaming software RPG Maker
to create a video game in

which the main character
travels around the world,
buys animals and armor
and interacts with others
along the way.
“I have to say the interface of actually making a
game is just as fun as playing a game,” Asofsky said.
“It’s a lot like playing a
game inside a game.”
Early courses for children
starting at age 7 use the
photo and illustration software Adobe Photoshop and
the gaming software Multimedia Fusion to create a
simple arcade-style game.
“We sit down and talk
about what makes games
fun,” said instructor Melissa
Andrews, who was working
with the youngest group of
campers. “We get it down to
the basics so they can make
their own game.”
Courses for older children include designing
apps, creating sophisticated, 3-D, first-person
shooter games using the
Unreal Developer’s Kit —
also known as UDK — and
learning programming languages like Java and C++.
The idea is to build selfconfidence and spark interest in learning how computers work, all to perhaps
plant the seed of a future
career in programming.
There will be 1.4 million
computing jobs by 2020
but only 400,000 computer
science students by that
time, according to Code.
org, a nonprofit with a list
of who’s who in the tech
world on its advisory board
including Twitter creator
Jack Dorsey and Dropbox
CEO Drew Houston.
And the jobs pay well.
The median annual wage
for a computer programmer, for instance, was
$71,380 in 2010, according to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. Meanwhile, jobs
for network and computer
systems administrators are
growing at double the national average, with a median annual salary of $69,160.
Yet high schools and universities seem to be out of
step with the job market.
Nine out of 10 high schools
don’t offer computer programming classes and the

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number of students graduating from college with a
computer science degree
is down from a decade ago,
according to Code.org.
Earlier this year, President Barack Obama said
programming should be
a required course in high
school, similar to foreign
languages.
“Given how pervasive
computers and the Internet
is now and how integral it is
into our economy and how
fascinated kids are with it,
I want to make sure they
know how to actually produce stuff using computers
and not just simply consume stuff,” Obama said
during a Google+ Hangout.
Yale Oseroff’s high
school back in Virginia
doesn’t offer programming
classes. The 17-year-old is
spending his fourth year
at an iD Tech Camp working through C++, a popular
programming
language
used for systems and application software, for drivers
to communicate between
an operating system and
devices like printers and to
create some video games.
“I’m learning (computer) networking, which is
what I want to do in college,” he said, as he worked
on developing a program
to capture usernames and
passwords and store them
in a database.
On the Georgia Tech
campus, the Institute for
Computing Education offers a variety of camps clustered into elementary, middle and high school groups.
Courses include making
apps with App Inventor,
creating moving sculptures
with the WeDo Robotics
systems that uses rotational
motion and creating animations using Alice software.
Barbara Ericson, director of computer outreach at the Institute for
Computing Education at
Georgia Tech, said people
sometimes ask: why not
wait until children are older to start teaching them
how to program?
“Anything over the age
of 7 is capable, they are
capable of learning reasoning,” she said.

WASHINGTON — Stock and bond
prices are sinking because investors were
caught off guard and alarmed by the Federal Reserve’s signal that long-term interest rates are headed higher.
That’s the view that emerges from an
Associated Press survey of economists
late last week. A majority of the more than
two dozen economists polled support the
Fed’s plan to start slowing its bond purchases later this year if the U.S. economy
continues to strengthen. Higher long-term
rates will likely result.
But in the short run, traders fear that
higher rates could slow growth and that
the Fed might be moving too fast to slow
its stimulus, according to many of the
economists. Some also think investors
perceived a shift in the Fed’s timetable for
curtailing its low-rate policies.
The Fed has been buying $85 billion
a month in bonds to try to push down
long-term borrowing rates to spur
spending. On Wednesday, Chairman
Ben Bernanke said the Fed will likely
slow its bond-buying program later this
year and end it next year because the
economy is improving. That signal came
earlier than some expected.
The Fed has also said it plans to keep
its benchmark short-term rate near zero
at least until the unemployment rate
reaches 6.5 percent. It’s now 7.6 percent.
On Wednesday, it forecast that unemployment could reach 6.5 percent as early as the
end of next year — sooner than previously
forecast — and that the economy will grow
faster than they thought three months ago.
Bernanke has cautioned that 6.5 percent
unemployment is a threshold, not a trigger, for any short-term rate increase. Still,
some investors now fear the short-term
rate could rise by late next year or in early
2015, sooner than many had assumed.
“It was a big change in tone and messaging,” said Mark Zandi, an economist at
Moody’s Analytics. “Judging by investors’
reaction, it was too big a change. The lesson
for (the Fed) is to move more incrementally
with regard to their communications.”
On Monday, one Fed member agreed
that the Fed could be clearer about its
efforts to help the economy. Narayana
Kocherlakota, president of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, said he
thought the Fed should clarify that it will
continue to provide stimulus even as the
economy moves closer to healthy levels.
Kocherlakota said in a statement that
he thinks the Fed should continue to
buy long-term bonds at least until unemployment falls below 7 percent. And
he thinks it should keep its short-term
rate near zero at least until unemployment reaches 5.5 percent, rather than
the Fed’s 6.5 percent threshold.
Kocherlakota is not a voting member of
the Fed’s policy committee this year.
Despite the plunge in financial mar-

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kets, most economists surveyed by the AP
think the Fed got the overall policy right:
That the economy should soon be healthy
enough to manage without ultra-low longterm rates. The economy has grown at a
consistent, if modest, annual pace of about
2 percent the past three years. Employers
have added an average of about 180,000
jobs a month over that time, enough to
slowly reduce unemployment.
That suggests that the extraordinary
support the Fed has provided since the
depths of the recession began may soon
no longer be necessary, economists said.
At the same time, Bernanke has stressed
that if the economy weakens, the Fed
won’t hesitate to step up its bond purchases again.
“The rise in interest rates signals a
strengthening economy,” said Jerry Webman, chief economist at OppenheimerFunds, said. “If it stays on track … there
would be no reason to maintain an aggressive policy that was designed to deal with
a substantially weaker economy.”
Some economists argued that continuing the $85-billion-a-month in bond purchases much longer risked inflating dangerous bubbles in stocks, real estate or
other assets. As rates have sunk and bond
yields have dwindled, many investors have
moved money into riskier assets in search
of higher returns.
Some said they also feared that maintaining the Fed’s pace of bond purchases
would trigger higher inflation later.
That’s because the Fed creates money
to pay for its bond-buying program. Too
much money pouring into the economy
can inflate prices.
“It is important to act sooner rather
than later to head off financial excess and
the risk of future inflation,” said John Ryding, an economist at RDQ Economics.
Still, Michael Hanson, U.S. economist
at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, noted
that Bernanke hasn’t signaled he’s alarmed
about possible high inflation or asset bubbles. Rather, Bernanke stressed at a news
conference Wednesday that the risks of an
economic slowdown have declined since
fall. He said the economic fundamentals
“look a little better.”
“I’m skeptical that they would tell us
that they’re more optimistic while in reality they’re actually more worried about
bubbles,” Hanson said.
The inflation gauge the Fed monitors
most closely has risen only 1 percent in
the past 12 months. That’s well below the
Fed’s target rate of 2 percent. When inflation falls too low, the Fed normally keeps
rates low to try to boost prices.
As a result, some economists surveyed
by the AP faulted Bernanke for signaling a
likely end to ultra-low rates.
“There is no evidence of inflation anywhere,” said Dean Baker, co-director
at the Center for Economic Policy and
Research. “It is actually falling, not rising. … This is definitely a wrong-headed
move by the Fed.”

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�Wednesday, June 26, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

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Obituaries
of the GenAmerica Financial Advisory Council; 20-year
seat on the Board of Directors of Medical Benefits Mutual (MedBen) and a member of the GenAmerica Financial (MetLife) Hall of Fame — the highest honor the
company bestows on its agents for his consistent success
and contributions to the life insurance industry. Jim was
a member of the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA), and the President of the NFLPA —
Columbus Chapter. He served on the inaugural board of
Licking County Hospice, and was a member of Moundbuilders Country Club; Granville Rotary; Newark Elks
Club; the Denison Big Red Touchdown Club; the Marshall University “Big Green” Club; the Ohio State University President’s Club and he was an Ohio Commodore, an
honor bestowed by Governor James Rhodes. His most esteemed membership may have been his association with
his Naples, FL “PIP Club” (Previously Important People)
— a group of retired business owners who gather daily to
praise free enterprise, the American way of life and commiserate about liberals, and those “who had never met a
payroll”. He loved everybody, but nobody was safe from
his sense of humor and practical jokes.
Jim found tremendous strength throughout his life
in his relationship with God. He was a member of the
First Presbyterian Church of Granville, First Presbyterian
Church of Naples, and past member of Central College
Presbyterian Church in Westerville, where he and his
wife, Kay, became close friends with the Reverend Richard Ellsworth, who, along with family, was by his side in
the last days of his life.
Jim is survived by his loving wife, Kay (Eaton) Barton;
children, Brooke (Jerome) Datz, Beth (Richard) Eckels,
Ben (Jennifer Young) Barton; bonus children, Emily
(James) Sandul and Max (Nikki) Eaton; grandchildren
James V. Datz, Hannah R. Datz, Bailey E. Blanchard,
Benton L. Blanchard, Alex Eckels, Charles T. Barton, Lilly J. Barton, Jackson Sandul, Joey Sandul and Madeline
K. Eaton; former wife, Sue B. Barton. Also surviving: sister, Annabelle Butler; brother, Robert Barton.
He was preceded in death by brothers, Russell and
Charles; and sisters, Clara Oates Manley, Mildred Garvin,
Chloe Hill, Edna Poskon and Margaret Swift; and numerous nieces and nephews.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests contributions to
the Licking County Salvation Army — Honoring Licking
County Veterans, Hospice of Central Ohio and the Granville Athletic Boosters.
Online condolences may be expressed at www.mcpeekhoekstra.com.

Janet Sue Hatfield

Janet Sue Hatfield, 72, of Athens, Ohio, passed away
Sunday, June 23, 2013, at her residence.
She was born July 22, 1941, in Parkersburg, W.Va., daughter of the late Harold and Appalene Rexroad Roberts.
She is survived by a daughter, Terri Ruble; a granddaughter, Meggan Lanham; a grandson, Chase Lanham;

Death Notices
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to
Southside Baptist Church,
2007 Boydton Plank Road,
Petersburg, Va. 23805.

Laudermilt

Cynthia Ann Laudermilt, 58, of Mason, W.Va.,
died Monday, June 24,
2013, at Pleasant Valley
Nursing Home in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
There will be a one-day
service at the FoglesongRoush Funeral Home on
Thursday, June 27 with

visitation from 11 a.m. to
1 p.m., service will begin
at 1 p.m. Father David
Schmitt and Pastor Jason
Simpkins will be officiating, and burial will be in
the Sunrise Cemetery in
New Haven, W.Va.

Pullins

Kay Frances Pullins, 72,
of Coolville, Ohio, died
Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at
her residence.
Arrangements will be
announced later by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home.

Arnold-Edmonds family holds reunion
HARRISONVILLE — The Arnold-Edmonds family reunion was held June 5 and
6 in Harrisonville.
This annual event celebrates the family
of Mary Irene Edmonds-Arnold, Roy
Edmonds, and Raymond Arnold. Hosting
this year’s reunion were Bob and Bonnie
Arnold at the Scipio Township Fire
Department.
All six children of Mrs. EdmondsArnold were in attendance with their
families: John and Ethel Edmonds from
Huntington, WV; Walter and Bonnie
Edmonds of Duncanville, TX; Dan and
Pat Arnold of Harrisonville, OH: Anna
(Arnold) Bennett and Charles Bennett
from Asheville, North Carolina; Betty
(Arnold) Barrier from Ashville, North

Carolina; and Bob and Bonnie Arnold
of Harrisonville, OH. In addition, nine
grandchildren and great grandchildren
attended with their families: Doug and
Sherry (Arnold) Shamblin; Angela (Edmonds) Maynard and Jeff Maynard and
their children, Jennifer and Brandt; Jeff
Arnold and his children, Zane and Zack.
Special recognition was given to Sherry
Shamblin, who recently graduated from
Ohio University with a Ph.D. in Counselor Education. Family memorabilia was
displayed and reminiscences were shared.
Angela Edmonds was the winner of the
“Biblical Fathers” game and the “Down on
the Farm” scramble game.
Next year’s event is scheduled for July
in Asheville, N.C.

Army to cut brigades at 10 bases
WASHINGTON (AP) —
In a massive restructuring,
the U.S. Army is slashing
the number of active duty
combat brigades from 45 to
33, and shifting thousands
of soldiers out of bases
around the country as it
moves forward with a longtime plan to cut the size of
the service by 80,000.
Officials say the sweeping changes would eliminate brigades at 10 Army
bases in the U.S. by 2017,
including in Texas, Kentucky, Georgia, Colorado,
North Carolina, New York,
Kansas and Washington.
The Army will also cut
thousands of other jobs
across the service, including soldiers in units that
support the brigades, and
two brigades in Germany
have already been scheduled for elimination.
Officials provided details
on the plans on condition
of anonymity because they
were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly. An

announcement is expected
Tuesday afternoon. The
Army is being reduced in
size from a high of about
570,000 during the peak
of the Iraq war to 490,000
as part of efforts to cut the
budget and reflect the country’s military needs as the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan end. Additional reductions could be required if
Congress allows automatic
budget cuts to continue
into next year.
While the cuts may have
less impact at some of the
Army’s larger bases such
as Fort Hood in Texas and
Fort Bragg in North Carolina, they could be more
painful for communities
around some of the smaller
installations such as Fort
Knox, where currently only
one brigade is based.
The other seven U.S. bases that will lose a brigade
are: Fort Bliss in Texas, Fort
Campbell in Kentucky, Fort
Carson in Colorado, Fort
Drum in New York, Fort Ri-

ley in Kansas, Fort Stewart
in Georgia, and Joint Base
Lewis-McChord in Washington. Soldiers in the deactivated brigades would be
transferred to other units.
The overall cut in size
has been known for more
than a year, and Army leaders have been working on
how to manage the reduction, conducting local community meetings across
the country and releasing
an extensive study on the
issue earlier this year.

Alice V. (Thompson) Lemley

Alice Lemley passed away the 24th of June at Birchhaven Village Nursing home in Findlay, Ohio. She was 96
years old. Alice was born April 19, 1917, to James and
Pearlie Thompson in Gallia County.
She was preceded in death by her two brothers, James
A. and Robert Thompson. Also, four sisters, Audrey,
Laura, Mary, and Ida. She is survived by one sister, Lois
Rawlins of Toledo, Ohio.
Alice made her home in Fostoria, Ohio for many years
working and retiring form Findlay’s RCA plant.
Alice is survived by three children, Robert Lemley of
Newark, Ohio, and Sue Vogel and Mary Fortner both of
Fostoria. She was preceded in death by children, James
E. Lemley and Colleen Greene; daughter-in-law, Hilda
Lemley; grandchildren, Carol Toops and Mitchell Sprow.
Alice has 14 grandchildren, 30 great-grandchildren,
26 great-great-grandchildren and three great-great-greatgrandchildren.
Graveside funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. on
Wednesday, June 26, 2013, at Gravel Hill Cemetery with
Pastor Brenda Barnhart officiating. Visiting hours will be
held from noon to 1:45 p.m. on Wednesday at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport.
A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Gloria Smith

Gloria Smith, 75, of Middleport, passed away on Monday, June 24, 2013, at the Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis. She was born on February 19, 1938, in New Haven,
W.Va., to the late George and Ellma (Fields) Goodnite.
She worked at Crow’s Steakhouse in Pomeroy for many
years.
She is survived by her husband Paul Smith; sister-inlaws, Penny, Bonnie and Donna Smith; and several nieces
and nephews.
She is preceded in death by her parents; brothers, Glen
Goodnite, Dale Goodnite, and Donald Goodnite; and sister, Gertrude Rizer.
Mrs. Smith’s request was to be cremated. Services will
be held by the family at a later date.
Arrangements are under the direction of the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport.
An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Ohio launches online degree
programs in engineering
ATHENS — Ohio University’s Fritz J. and Dolores
H. Russ College of Engineering and Technology will
offer current professionals
Master of Science in Electrical Engineering (MSEE)
and Master of Science in
Civil Engineering (MSCE)
degrees in fall 2013 in a fully
online learning environment. Designed with experienced engineering professionals in mind, the online
programs offer convenient,
flexible courses that can be
completed in as few as two
years while program participants continue to work.
“Students can get an advanced degree without disrupting their lifestyle by taking this online in their own
time,” said R. Guy Riefler,
associate professor and online MSCE program director at the Russ College.
OHIO’s MSCE program offers three distinct
specialization options in
Environmental Engineering, Structural Engineering and Transportation
Engineering. The MSEE
program offers a unique
concentration in Electronic Navigation Systems,
which prepares grads to
design and test precision
navigation systems and
intelligent transportation
systems for air, water and
ground applications.
“We believe that we have
designed an engaging curriculum that is extremely wellsuited for engineering professionals seeking to expand
their technical knowledge,”
said Douglas Lawrence,
Russ College professor and
program director for the online MSEE program. “In particular, the Electronic Navigation Systems track within
the program leverages the
distinctive expertise of the
faculty and technical staff
affiliated with our Avionics
Engineering Center.”
The advanced graduate-

level online curricula for
these programs focus on
helping experienced engineers expand their technical
expertise by working with
world-class researchers and
state-of-the-art technologies.
These programs join the
successful online Master of
Engineering Management
degree program launched by
the Russ College in 2011, expanding OHIO’s leadership
in online higher education
for engineers.
The MSEE program applies mathematical and
scientific principles to the
design, development, integration and evaluation of
electrical and electronic
systems. Students complete a non-thesis program
of study consisting of technical courses that cover
complex topics, including
electronic navigation systems, computer engineering, novel nano-optoelectronic devices and systems
and signal processing. The
program accepts students
with a bachelor’s degree
in electrical engineering,
computer
engineering
or related areas from an
ABET-accredited program,
and it is designed to be
completed in two years.
The MSCE program of-

fers in-depth study in a
range of civil infrastructure
applications so graduates
can research, design, develop and test engineering
solutions that address forces
such as globalization, sustainability requirements and
emerging technology. The
program accepts students
with a bachelor’s degree in
civil engineering or a related
area from an ABET-accredited program. The program
is designed to be completed
in less than two years with
continuous study.
Individuals who did not
graduate from an ABETaccredited program must
submit a GRE with Quantitative Reasoning score
in the top 25th percentile.
Students may choose to
begin in the fall, spring or
summer term.
For more information
about curriculum, program
requirements or Ohio University’s Master of Science
in Electrical Engineering
or Master of Science in
Civil Engineering programs, go to http://engineering.online.ohio.edu/
lp-msee-short/, http://engineering.online.ohio.edu/
lp-msce-short/ or contact
a school representative at
1-877-273-1291.

Riverwalk Dental
For general dentistry and implant needs —
accepting new patients and emergencies.
R. Craig Mathews, DDS
530A West Union St.
Athens, Ohio 45701

Call 740-592-1483 or 1-800-923-7329
for appointment

60428054

Godfrey

Vaughnie “Bonnie” A.
Godfrey, 82, of Prince
George, Va., died Sunday,
June 23, 2013.
The family will receive
friends from 6-8 p.m. on
Friday, June 28, 2013, at
the Petersburg Chapel of
J.T. Morriss and Son Funeral Home. A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m.
on Saturday, June 29 at the
funeral home, with Pastor
Arthur Lands, officiating.
Interment will be private.

a great-grandson, Jackson Lanham; and a sister and
brother-in-law, Jean and Earl Porter.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death
by her husband, Howard Hatfield; two daughters, Susan
Ruble and Tammy Ruble.
A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m., Friday, June
28, 2013, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville,
Ohio, with Edsel Hart officiating.
There will be no visitation.
You can sign the online guest book at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.

60425114

James E. Barton

A funeral service for James E. Barton, 79, Granville,
Ohio/Naples, Fl., will be held at 3 p.m. on Friday, June
28, at Swasey Chapel, Denison University with a Celebration of Life following at 5 p.m. at Moundbuilders Country Club. Separate calling hours will be at Moundbuilders Country Club, 125 N. 33rd St., Newark on Thursday,
June 27, 2013, from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
Jim was born June 12, 1934 in Finleyville, Pennsylvania, the youngest of ten children of Charles T. Barton
and Clara Diehl Barton. He was raised in Mason, West
Virginia; graduated from Wahama High School in 1952
(Wahama Sports Hall of Fame), and received his Bachelor of Arts degree (1956) and his Masters Degree from
Marshall University, where he attended on both basketball and football scholarships.
After college he went on to serve two years in the
United States Navy, serving stateside on the Bainbridge
and Little Creek Naval Bases, where he continued to play
organized football and basketball. After his service in the
Navy, Jim was offered a contract to play professional football with the Baltimore Colts, and as he describes, he was
the last player cut by Coach Weeb Eubank, who became
a good friend over the years. He was eventually signed to
play by Lamar Hunt, owner of the Dallas Texans in the
American Football League. He was later traded to the
Denver Broncos, and finished his playing career in Denver in 1963. He spent two additional years as a scout for
the San Diego Chargers under Head Coach Sid Gilman.
Before his playing career ended, Jim had entered the
insurance business on a part time basis to make sure he
had a career after football, and it was this decision that
would bring him to Central Ohio. He started in the group
health insurance business as an employee of the General
American Life Insurance Company, and through a series
of mutual contacts ended up living in Worthington, Ohio
and working with the Glenn M. Erskine Company in
Pataskala. In 1973 he ventured out on his own, moved
to Granville, Ohio and started Advanced Employee Benefits, Inc., which eventually became Jim Barton &amp; Associates, Inc. in 1979. Jim’s successes in the life insurance
business are many, but his grandest accomplishments
came in seeing the people he employed and mentored
achieve levels of success they never thought possible.
One of Jim’s proudest gestures was spearheading the
Tribute to Licking County World War II Veterans in 2006,
and later a separate celebration “Honoring All Licking
County Veterans” in 2011. Both events were amazing examples of the lengths he would go to ensure our veterans
would always know how much they are appreciated, and
that Freedom is Never Free.
Jim was a member of the Licking County Life Underwriters; the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors; a 45-year member of the Million Dollar
Round Table (MDRT); Association of Advanced Life Underwriters (AALU), Twenty-Five Million Dollar Forum
(now the International Forum); President and Chairman

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 26, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Blackhawks celebrate another Stanley Cup
CHICAGO (AP) — The victorious Chicago Blackhawks
brought the Stanley Cup home
Tuesday and proceeded to take
it on a pub crawl, with scores of
ecstatic fans flocking to taverns
and restaurants in hopes of catching a glimpse of their beloved
players and the sacred trophy
awarded to the NHL champion.
Many fans, bleary eyed from
staying up the night before to
watch Game 6, looked to the
skies for TV news helicopters
that would alert them they were
on the right track. Others set

themselves up at bars, hoping
the rumors from friends or Twitter might turn out to be true.
“We’ve been packed since 7
this morning.” said Brad Tice,
general manager of The Pony on
Chicago’s North Side. “In 2010
(the last time the Blackhawks
won the cup) it came here, and
players hang out here and live in
the neighborhood, so everyone is
hoping it will show up.”
In suburban Oak Brook, fans
descended on a restaurant said
to be a favorite spot of Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville.

By midafternoon, the cup hadn’t
shown up at either spot.
The trophy that turns into
a drinking buddy once it is
awarded to the National Hockey
League champions had already
put in a pretty full day. Though
it hadn’t made it to the runway
of a strip club or the bottom of a
swimming pool — just two of the
many players have taken it over
the years — it did get in an early
morning limousine ride.
After the plane trip from Boston following the Blackhawks’
3-2 series-clinching win over the

Bruins, the players were greeted
at the tarmac at O’Hare International Airport with a water cannon salute from about a dozen
fire trucks and police cars, all
with their lights flashing.
Veteran forward Michal Handzus was the first player to emerge
from the aircraft shortly after 4
a.m., hoisting the 35-pound cup
above his head with both hands
and shaking it several times.
Guests, police officers and firemen cheered at the bottom of the
stairs. Players, coaches and team
officials mingled with the crowd

for about 10 minutes before
heading for the city to continue
the party that began in Chicago
shortly after the team stunned
Boston by scoring twice in a
17-second span during the final
1:16 of the game.
There was a stop at a Harry
Caray’s restaurant in Rosemont
— the same first stop the Blackhawks made after winning the
championship in 2010. There
were more than 1,000 fans waiting, and players took turns hoisting the cup over their heads to
screams of excitement.

Kent Sanborn photo | southernohiosportsphotos.com

River Valley senior Jo Loyd leads away from first base during an Ohio Valley Conference baseball game against Rock
Hill in Pedro, Ohio.

Raiders land 3
on All-OVC team
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

The River Valley baseball team had three players
selected to the All-Ohio
Valley Conference baseball
teams for the 2013 season,
as voted on by the coaches
within the league.
The Raiders had one
first team selection and
two honorable mention
choices after completing
the campaign with a 6-17
overall mark and a 2-8 record within the OVC.
Junior Nick Jeffers was
the first team choice for
RVHS, while senior Jo
Loyd and junior Trey Farley were each selected as
honorable mention representatives. Jeffers was an
All-OVC honorable mention choice last season,
while Farley and Loyd each
earned their first All-OVC
honors in baseball.
League champion Rock
Hill led the way with seven
choices, which included
coach of the year honors for
Redmen frontman Barry
Litteral. Fairland was next
with five choices, followed
by Coal Grove, South Point

and Chesapeake with four
selections apiece.
The OVC does not select
a player of the year or most
valuable player. There were
a total of 12 repeat selections to the All-OVC baseball squad from a year ago.
2013 All-OVC Baseball Team
First Team
Nick Jeffers*, River Valley Jr.
Evan Morris*, Rock Hill Sr.
Austin Kidd, Rock Hill Sr.
Laden Delawder, Rock Hill Sr.
Jonathan Joseph, Rock Hill Jr.
Josh Ross*, Fairland Sr.
Matt Aliff*, Fairland Sr.
Kyle Raines**, Fairland Sr.
Jacob Pierce*, Coal Grove So.
Jesse Rigsby, Coal Grove So.
Brandon Boggs**, South Point Jr.
Alex Whitt**, South Point So.
Joe Bias, Chesapeake So.
Blake Lester**, Chesapeake So.
Honorable Mention
Joseph Loyd, River Valley Sr.
Trey Farley, River Valley Jr.
Jordan Hairston, Rock Hill Jr.
Aaron Dalton, Rock Hill Jr.
Kyle Sowards, Fairland Jr.
Dylan Murphy, Fairland So.
Conor Markins*, Coal Grove Jr.
Mason Nance, Coal Grove Jr.
Austin Majher, South Point Sr.
Jesse Lien*, South Point Sr.
Mikey Walters*, Chesapeake Sr.
Jacob Henson, Chesapeake So.
Coach of the Year:
Barry Litteral, Rock Hill
* — indicates All-OVC honorable mention
choice in 2012.
** — indicates All-OVC first team choice
in 2012.

OVP Sports Briefs
Wahama HOF nominations
MASON, W.Va. — A reminder that nominations for the
2013 Wahama High School Athletic Hall of Fame will conclude on Monday, July 1. Potential candidates, including
athletes, former coaches or WHS athletic boosters, will be
considered for induction provided they are nominated on
the nomination form that can be obtained from any Hall of
Fame Board of Trustee member or by visiting the Wahama
High School web site and visiting the sports or forms link.
The completed nomination forms may be submitted
prior to the July 1 deadline to any WHS Athletic Hall
of Fame Board of Trustee member or by mail to Kenny
Greene, P.O. Box 131, 84 Greenfield Drive, Hartford, WV
25247; Ralph Sayre, P.O. Box 475, 124 Howard Street,
New Haven, WV 25265; or Gary Clark, P.O. Box 704 New
Haven, WV 25265.
The Wahama Athletic Hall of Fame Board of Trustees
will be conducting a meeting on Tuesday, July 2 at 6 p.m.
at the Riverside Golf Course to begin the 2013 selection
process. All Board of Trustee members as well as anyone
wishing to participate in the Hall of Fame procedures are
urged to attend.
Gallia Academy all-comer meets
CENTENARY, Ohio — Gallia Academy High School
will be hosting two all-comer track meets. These meets will
be open to all ages and the first meet will be Saturday, July
13, with registration beginning at 9 a.m. and events starting at 11 a.m. There is also a meet scheduled for August
10 at 11a.m. There is a fee for competitors and spectators
and volunteers are still needed. Heats will be combined
if needed, but winners will be determined by age groups.
See BRIEFS ‌| 8

Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Southern senior Kody Wolfe, seated front and center, sits atop the podium while watching the conclusion of the Division II cross country championship race held at National Trail Raceway in Hebron, Ohio.

OVP Story #4: State Qualifiers
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

The fifth-best story of the 201213 school year in the Ohio Valley
Publishing area revolved around
the athletes that came close to fulfilling a dream.
Today, the fourth-best story of
the year will focus solely on the
young men and women that made
the dream a reality.
A total of 57 individuals and
seven teams from the Gallia, Mason and Meigs County areas participated in state competitions of
some sort this past year, and a
handful of those results led to a
few stories that you will be reading
about a little later on this week.
But in actuality, just reaching
a state tournament is an accomplishment in itself. Participating
at that level simply proves that one
individual or one team can call itself one of the best in the state for
that season. After reaching a state
tournament, the final results are
only for bragging rights.
Playoffs for football could be considered a regional event, but not
every team has the luxury of having an opportunity to play in the
postseason. Even though they start
with regional contests, gridiron
teams qualify for the state playoffs
— which makes them more state
qualifiers than anything else.
This past fall, the OVP area
had three football teams qualify
for the postseason. Wahama won
the Class A championship in
West Virginia, while Point PleasSee QUALIFIERS ‌| 8

Mike Brace | photo

Gallia Academy junior quarterback Wade Jarrell (13) runs away from the Licking
Heights defense during a Week 2 game at Memorial Field in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Oregon about to learn its fate from NCAA
EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — The Oregon Ducks are about to hear the
NCAA’s decision on possible recruiting violations.
The NCAA’s Division I Committee
on Infractions will release a public
report on the findings of its investigation and any possible sanctions
against Oregon’s football program
Wednesday morning.
The NCAA has been looking into
payments Oregon made to recruiting
services, including $25,000 to Willie
Lyles and Houston-based Complete
Scouting Services in 2011. Lyles had
a connection with an Oregon recruit.
In April, Oregon released documents acknowledging at least one
major NCAA violation in connection
with recruiting. It also proposed a
self-imposed two-year probation with
the loss of one scholarship in each of
the next three years.

While acknowledging violations
from 2008-11, Oregon’s report did
not find any unethical conduct or
lack of institutional control, typically
one of the most severe charges the
NCAA can bring after an investigation of rules violations.
The case headed to the infractions
committee after Oregon and the
NCAA failed to reach an agreement
on the matter.
Former Ducks coach Chip Kelly
was reportedly among those who
appeared before the infractions committee in April.
Mark Helfrich, the Ducks’ former
offensive coordinator, took over as
head coach following the departure
of Kelly, who went to the NFL’s Philadelphia Eagles.
Kelly was head coach at Oregon
for the past four seasons, leading the
Ducks to a 46-7 record with appear-

ances in four straight BCS bowl games
— including a bid for the national
championship against Auburn in 2011.
The Ducks finished 12-1 last season, capped by a victory over Kansas
State in the Fiesta Bowl.
Oregon was previously penalized by
the NCAA in 2004 for a major violation
involving the improper recruitment of
a junior college player by an assistant
coach. The university was put on probation for two years and the unidentified assistant coach was suspended
without pay for a week and restricted
from some recruiting activities.
The Ducks remained eligible for
postseason play and did not lose any
scholarships because of that violation, which occurred in 2003. The
case was resolved without a formal
hearing after the NCAA’s governing
body agreed with the university’s
proposed penalties.

�Wednesday, June 26, 2013

ANNOUNCEMENTS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

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LEGALS

EMPLOYMENT

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accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
19-00255.000
The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 305
Elm Street, Racine, OH 45771.
We’ll Repair
Your Computer
CURRENT
OWNER: Kevin L.
Layne.
Through
The Internet!
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
Solutions AT:
For: $22,000.00. The real esSlow Computers • E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
tate
cannot be sold for less
Over $10,000 in credit card bills?
Spyware &amp; Viruses • Bad Internet Connections
than 2/3rds the appraised
Can’t make the minimum payments?
value. The appraisal does not
Affordable
✔ WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY
include
an interiorRates
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of anyFor
structures,
if any, on the
Home
✔ WE CAN SAVE YOU THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS
real estate.
✔ WE CAN HELP YOU AVOID BANKRUPTCY
&amp; Business
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
Not a high-priced consolidation loan or one of those
down on day
of sale, balCall Now only)
For Immediate
Help
consumer credit counseling programs
ance (cash or certified check
CREDIT CARD RELIEF
only) due on confirmation of
for your FREE consultation CALL
sale. ORC 2327.02(C) re877-465-0321
Off successful
Servicebidders to
00quires
$
We’re here to help you Monday - Friday from 9am-9pm EST
Code: MB
payMention
recording
fees and associNot available in all states
ated costs to the Sheriff.
ALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
Douglas W. Little, LITTLE,
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211213 E. Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(6)12, 19, 26

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25

SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
13 CV 021, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF, VS. KEVIN L.
LAYNE, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO.
By virtue of an Order of Sale
issued out of said Court in the
above action, Keith O. Wood,
the Sheriff of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to sell at public action on the front steps of
the Meigs County Courthouse
in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio, on Friday, July 12, 2013,
at 10:00 a.m., the following
lands and tenements:
Situated in LEGALS
the Village of Racine, County of Meigs, State of
Ohio, and in Section No. 16,
Town No. 2 and Range No. 12,
beginning at the Southeast
corner of a 17/100 acre tract of
land now or formerly owned by
Florence A. Hartley, being on
the North side of Elm Street
(Buffington Island Road);
thence with said North line of
Elm Street to the Southwest
corner of a tract of land now or
formerly owned by Garrett
Circle; thence with the Circle
West line to the Southeast
corner of the lot now or
formerly owned by Stella
Weaver; thence with the Stella
Weaver South line to the
Northeast corner of the lot now
or formerly owned by S. M.
and J. W. Cross; thence with
the East line of S. M. and J. W.
Cross and Florence A. Hartley
lots to the place of beginning,
containing 55/100 acre, more
or less.
Excepting therefrom the oil,
gas and other minerals, the
same having been reserved by
the State of Ohio.
Reference Deed: Volume 306,
Page 387, Meigs County Official Records.
AUDITORʼS PARCEL NO.:
19-00255.000
The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 305
Elm Street, Racine, OH 45771.
CURRENT OWNER: Kevin L.
Layne.
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
AT: $22,000.00. The real estate cannot be sold for less
than 2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal does not
include an interior examination
of any structures, if any, on the
real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
only) down on day of sale, balance (cash or certified check
only) due on confirmation of
sale. ORC 2327.02(C) requires successful bidders to
pay recording fees and associated costs to the Sheriff.
ALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
Douglas W. Little, LITTLE,
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211213 E. Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(6)12, 19, 26
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Lost &amp; Found
Lost 2 male copper nose
beagles (Brown &amp; White) Lost
in the 141 / VFW area. Call
740-379-2311.
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.

Notices

Management / Supervisory

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.

WANTED:
Direct supervision employees
to oversee male youth in a
staff secure residential environment. Must pass physical
training requirement, background check and drug screening. Pay based on experience.
Call 740-379-9083, Monday
through Friday from 9:00AM to
3:00PM to request an application.

AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Yard Sale
2-Family Yard Sale June 28 &amp;
29th @ the Rodney Community Center 9am to 5pm
Yard Sale, 2006 Mt. Vernon.
Wed. 6-26, 8am-?
-Tons of clothes, househould
items, books, etc.
SERVICES
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Repairs
Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
FINANCIAL SERVICES

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

Call NOW to make sure
you are ge�ing
the best deal on your
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Mon-Fri 8am - 11pm • Sat 9am - 8pm • Sun 10am - 6pm EST

EDUCATION
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

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

REAL ESTATE SALES

Help Wanted General

3.53 acres w/3BR, 2BA,
Double Wide, permanent
foundation, black top driveway.
8x24 sun porch, 8x16 covered
back deck, 24x24 detached
vinyl siding garage, 30x24 pole
barn, w/small lean to. Evenings 740-446-6689 or 740-4417488

Houses For Sale
INSTRUCTORS
MATH &amp; ACCOUNTING.
A MASTER'S DEGREE
in each subject area is required.
Email cover letter and
resume to
director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Licensed Practical Nurse
For full-time work in a 114-bed
long-term care State facility.
Must have current WV LPN license. Applicants may apply
online www.personnel.wv.gov
or at Lakin Hospital, 11522
Ohio River Road, West
Columbia, WV, Tuesdays &amp;
Thursdays, 10am to 2pm.
Lakin Hospital is an EEO/AA
employer. Pre-employment
criminal background check and
drug/alcohol testing are conducted. Employees may be
subject to streamline or
secondhand smoke.

Program Coordinator
Your insurance may pay for your diabetic
supplies with li�le to no cost to you.

Pleasant Valley Hospital is in
need of a full-time WV licensed LPN for a subspecialty
physician office. Ideal candidate should be a hard-working,
self motivated, and professional individual eager to work at a
busy pace. Prior experience in
a physician office or hospital
related area is preferred. Excellent benefits.
Send resumes to: Pleasant
Valley Hospital, c/o Human
Resources, 2520 Valley Dr.,
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, fax to
(304) 675-6975, or apply online at www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/F/D/V

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted General

ARE YOU A DIABETIC?

Medical / Health
Overbrook Center is currently
accepting applications for
STATE TESTED Nursing Assistants. Part Time positions
for all shifts are available. Interested applicants can pick up
an application or contact Susie
Drehel, RN, Staff Development Coordinator @ 740-9926472 M-F 8a-4:30p at 333
Page St., Middleport, OH. EOE
&amp; a participant of the
Drug-Free Workplace Program.

The Program Coordinator for sexual assault
outreach service to Meigs and Perry counties will
establish outreach, advocacy and support services
for victims and survivors of sexual assault in those
counties. Establish relationships with already existing
agencies to facilitate effective and efﬁcient response
services that respect victim's rights, raise community
awareness and ensure proper resource and referral
services. Bachelor's Degree, Licensure and/or at
least three years of experience in a related ﬁeld.
For more information and how to apply go to:
https://www.ohiouniversityjobs.com/postings/6640
Ohio University is committed to creating a respectful
and inclusive educational and workplace environment.
Ohio University is an equal access/equal opportunity
60428425
and afﬁrmative action institution.

REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

2 Room efficiency Apartment
in County setting, 7 miles from
Gallipolis on Rt 7 South. All
Electric, Utilities NOT included.
$300/mo, Dep &amp; 1st mo. Rent
&amp; References required. Call
740-446-4514
3 BR-home in town. Applications available at Wiseman
Real Estate. Call 446-3644 for
more info.
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Beautiful - 1400 sq ft. 2 bdrm.
apt. Gallipolis, w/d &amp; d -washer $700.00/mo. Parking, No
pets 740-591-5174
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
Furnished - 2bdrm. Apt.
$450.00/mo. Incl. w/s/g Racine,Ohio No Pets 740-5915174

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Qualifiers
From Page 6
ant made its fifth straight
playoff run in its first
season at the Class AAA
level. PPHS — a Class AA
runner-up the year before
— lost its opening round
game at Morgantown, but
still made a successful
leap up this fall.
Gallia Academy notched
its 10th playoff appearance
in school history this year
and landed both the program’s first playoff berth
and victory since 2006
before running into Dayton Thurgood Marshall in
Week 12. The Blue Devils
are 6-10 alltime in the football playoffs.
As previously mentioned, Ohio Valley Christian went to state in both
boys and girls basketball
and in soccer. Only the
Lady Defenders advanced
to the state final. The Eastern girls basketball team
also made their first-ever
appearance at the OHSAA

state championships this
past winter.
There were over 100
athletes involved with
those seven squads collectively, which in itself
means that a lot of young
men and women were
part of a something that
only special groups accomplish together.
Individual
qualifiers,
however, don’t have many
people to fall back on —
unless you run relays during track and field season.
Track and field ended
up producing the largest amount of qualifiers
from the area, as the tricounty area mustered a
total of 37 state qualifiers
between Ohio and West
Virginia. Wrestling was
collectively next with 18
state qualifiers, while golf
and swimming each had
one state participant.
There were two cross
country qualifiers as well,
and both went on to compete in the state track meet

six months later.
Southern senior and
Ohio University signee
Kody Wolfe was ninth in
the Division III state cross
country meet and also competed in the 3200m run at
state, while Point Pleasant
senior and Marshall University signee Andrea Porter took part in the Class
AAA cross country meet
and also scored the Lady
Knights’ only point at the
state track meet by finishing sixth in the 800m run.
Both Wolfe and Porter leave their respective
schools with just about every record in long-distance
running events.
Point Pleasant led the
area with 17 state representatives in track and field,
followed by Wahama with
11, Eastern with seven, and
both Gallia Academy and
Southern with one apiece.
Besides Porter, PPHS
was also represented at
the state track meet by
Cody Mitchell, Tannor

Hill, Marquez Griffin,
Ryan Bonecutter, Caleb
Riffle, Christian Pyles,
Nick Hatfield, Zach Canterbury, Chase Walton,
Andrew
Williamson,
Whitney Layton, Brooke
Grimm, Carlee Dabney,
Cassie Jordan, Kennedy
Young and Allison Smith.
Wahama was represented at the state track meet
by Kelsey Zuspan, Karson
Tolliver, Kelsey Taylor,
Olivia Hill, Justin Tillis,
Jacob Ortiz, Zack Killingsworth, Johnnie Ohlinger,
Michael Hendricks, Anthony Howard and Ian Kapp.
Eastern took Maddie
Rigsby, Taylor Palmer, Keri
Lawrence, Asia Michael,
Cassidy Cleland, Jenna
Burdette and Savannah
Hawley to the Division III
state meet in Ohio, while
Wolfe was the lone male
to qualify for the OHSAA
state track meet.
Gallia Academy junior
Hannah Watts was the
lone point-scorer at the

Ohio meet after finishing
seventh in the 400m dash
in Division II. It was the
17th straight postseason
that GAHS scored at least
one point at the OHSAA
state championships in
track and field.
West Virginia produced
17 of the 18 state qualifiers in wrestling, with
Gallia Academy sophomore Cole Tawney being
the lone representative at
the OHSAA tournament.
Tawney placed fifth in his
first-ever state tournament
appearance, which made
him the youngest grappler
to ever earn a podium finish in school history.
Point Pleasant was the
three-time reigning champions in Class AA coming into the 2012-13 campaign, but the Big Blacks
still had a dozen wrestlers
qualify for state — despite
moving up to the Class
AAA level.
Those state qualifiers
included Trevor Hill, Noah

Searls, John Raike, Guy
Fisher, Brycen Reymond,
Josh Hudson, Jacob Starcher, Jacob Duncan, Micah
Powell, Caleb Leslie, Steven
Porter and Austin Rutter.
Wahama sent Kane
Roush, Crandale Neal, Demetrius Serevicz, Randall
Robie and Colton Neal
to the Class A state tournament, and the White
Falcons had four podium
(top-6) finishes while also
setting a school record for
team points scored at a
state meet with 67 markers.
Gallia Academy senior
Rob Canady wrapped up
a brilliant golf career by
qualifying for his second
straight state tournament, while River Valley junior Trenton Wolfe
earned his second-ever
podium finish in swimming by placing sixth in
the 200m freestyle event.
With that many statecaliber efforts, it truly was
a remarkable year athletically for the OVP area.

Briefs
From Page 6
Competitors must check in with
the clerk at the second call prior
to their event start. Competitors
must have your own implements
for shot and discus and must have
experience throwing the discus
or on the pole vault. We will not
allow the novice vaulters or disc
thrower to throw or jump for safety reasons. Parents please supervise your kids, you are the coach
for the day and please ensure they
make it to their events on time.
We will not enforce limits on the
number of events you may enter,
but please monitor number for
the smaller kids.To volunteer, for
more information or if you have
any questions please call (740)
645-7316 or email ff1023@att.net
O.O. McIntyre Park
coed softball
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
O.O. McIntyre Park District
is now accepting registrations
for the Coed Softball League.
There is a limit of eight teams
for the league, with a format that
will consist of six men and four
women per squad. Games will be
played on Tuesday and/or Thurs-

Apartments/Townhouses
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 BR apts,
some with utilities pd, no pets,
dep &amp; ref, 740-992-0165
Nice 2 Bdrm Apartment for
Rent on State Route 588 $525mo. plus Sec.Dep, Water
&amp; Garbage,No Pets Ph : 419359-1768
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.
Commercial
Office Space for Rent: 257
Third Avenue, Gallipolis. Available Immediately Approx 545
sq. ft. $400 plus UTS and
$400 deposit. Contact the CVB
at 61 Court Street, Gallipolis or
(740) 446-6882.

day evenings beginning July 2.
There is an entry fee for each
team and the deadline for registration is Monday, July 1. For
more information, contact Mark
Danner at (740) 446-4612, extension 255.
Kiwanis junior golf
tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Cliffside Golf Club will be hosting the fifth annual Kiwanis juniors at Cliffside golf tournament
for golfers ages 9-18 on Thursday, July 11, at 1 p.m. The competitors will be divided into age
groups of 9-10, 11-12, -13-15 and
16-18 and there is a fee. Awards
will be presented to the top three
golfers in each age group. Spectators are allowed, while hole
sponsors and volunteers are
needed. To enter please contact
the clubhouse at (740) 446-4653
or Ed Caudill at (740) 245-5919
or (740) 645-4381.
2013 Capehart Tri-County
Junior Golf League
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
— The 2013 Frank Capehart
Tri-County junior golf league

Houses For Rent
1BR, No pets, Syracuse Oh.
350mo, 350 dep. 304-6755332, 740-591-0265
2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331
2BR, house for Rent in
Kanauga, $500/month,
$500/Deposit. plus utilities, No
Pets 740-441-2707

has begun. Play is open to boys
and girls for the following age
groups: 10-under, 11-12, 13-14,
15-16 and 17-18. Registration
for play is between 8:30 a.m.
and 8:50 a.m. and play begins at
9 a.m. There is a fee but lunch
is included. The golf league will
play on June 27 at Riverside
Golf Club and the final week will
be July 1 at Hidden Valley Golf
Course. For additional information contact Jeff Slone (740)
256-6160, Jan Haddox (304)
675-3388 or Bob Blessing (304)
675-6135.
URG women’s
basketball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio – The
University of Rio Grande women’s basketball program will conduct its 2013 overnight instructional camp, July 7-10, on the
URG campus. The camp, which
will utilize both the Newt Oliver
Arena and the auxiliary gymnasium in the Lyne Center, is open
to girls in grades 4-12.
Campers will be under 24hour supervision of the Rio
Grande coaching staff and a
talented group of counselors

Rentals

Pets

Garage apt for rent: Nice and
clean, 1BR Non-smoking, ref,
dep, no pets. 304-675-5162

FREE: to good home. 6 fluffy
kittens. 2 calico, 2 black, 2
white &amp; black. Litter trained.
304-675-8901

Call

FOR RENT: 3BR 1BA house.
Lg. fenced back yard. Attached garage. 750 mo. + dep.
304-892-4325, 304-531-1197

RESORT PROPERTY

MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

ANIMALS

Alexander Spartans Golf
Scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The 22nd
annual Alexander Spartans Golf
Scramble will be held at 8 a.m.
Saturday, July 20, at the Riverside Golf Club in Mason County.
All proceeds will benefit the Alexander High School Boys Basketball Program.
There is an entry fee per golfer
(includes Green Fee, Cart, Food,
Beverages, and Prizes). Teams
consist of 4 people (form your
own team and 40 handicap minimum). First-place receives $500
per team, second-place receives
$300 per team and third place
receives $100 per team.
To register or if additional information is needed, please contact
Jim Kearns at jkearns@alexanderschools.org or (740) 591-8153
or Jordan Hill at jhill@alexanderschools.org or (740) 416-0728.
Entry fees may be paid at the
golf course on the day of the
event or mailed to Alexander
Boys Basketball c/o Jim Kearns,
11474 Pleasanton Road, Athens, OH 45701.

AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

Concrete &amp; Masonry

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE
Miscellaneous

All types Masonry, brick, block,
stone, concrete, Free Estimate, 304-593-9143 or 304-6746051

Want To Buy

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

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

SNODGRASS UPHOLSTERY,
we help you to recover you
investments. Racine, OH
740-949-2202

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

AUTOMOTIVE

Sales

at 740-245-7491 or 1-800-2827201, ext. 7491.

Miscellaneous

AGRICULTURE

Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

comprised of college and high
school coaches and players. Certified athletic trainers will also
be on site. Campers will receive
daily instruction in three specific areas – shooting, post play
and defense. Daily schedules
will include evaluation of shooting form, individual and group
shooting drills, instruction in
post moves, instruction of post
defense and rebounding and daily drills on team and individual
defensive techniques.
A number of individual and
team awards will also be presented on the final day of the camp.
There is a fee involved, which
includes lodging, meals, a camp tshirt, a certificate of participation
and use of the Lyne Center swimming pool. A camp store will also
be available throughout the week,
allowing campers the opportunity
to purchase drinks, snacks, pizza
and Rio Grande apparel.
To register, or for more information, visit the women’s
basketball page at www.rioredstorm.com, e-mail Rio Grande
head coach David Smalley at
dsmalley@rio.edu, or contact
the basketball office by phone

Boats &amp; Marinas
FOR SALE: Bass Tracker Pro
Team 185 Silver Ann Edition
w/75hp Mercury Mtr, Fish Finder, Trolling Mtr, Ex Cond
$9500. Call 9-6 740-446-9340
Pontoon boat, like new, 21', 90
HP, cover, trailer &amp; other
amenities. 740-416-0203 or
740-992-7214

Upholstery

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

Entertainment

WEDNESDAY PRIMETIME
6

3

(WSAZ)

4

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6

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72
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PM

6:30

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26
7

PM

7:30

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8:30

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PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

11

PM

11:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Boston Bruins vs. Chicago Blackhawks Final Game WSAZ News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
News
Fortune
7 Site: United Center -- Chicago, Ill. (if necessary) (L)
Tonight
Show (N)
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at Six
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Fortune
7 Site: United Center -- Chicago, Ill. (if necessary) (L)
at 11
Show (N)
Middle "The Family Tools Modern
ABC 6 News ABC World Entertainm- Access
Live Parents ABC's the Lookout
ABC 6 News (:35) Jimmy
ent Tonight Hollywood Bachelor"
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at 6 p.m.
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"Yard Sale" (F) (N)
at 11 p.m.
Kimmel (N)
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Nature "Black Mamba"
Nova "Earth From Space" Enjoy a spectacular new
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News at 6
News
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Nature "Black Mamba"
Nova "Earth From Space" Enjoy a spectacular new
Charlie Rose (N)
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Business
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Funniest Home Videos
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MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs vs. Milwaukee Brewers Site: Miller Park (L)
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Boxing Golden Boy Gomez vs. Lane
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NCAA Baseball Division I Tournament World Series Site: TD Ameritrade Park (L)
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Fight Masters (N)
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NCIS "Dog Tags"
NCIS "Recruited"
Royal Pains (N)
Necessary Roughness (N) NCIS: LA "Tin Soldiers"
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Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy BigBang
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(5:00) The Situation Room OutFront
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(:45) Gigolos

�Wednesday, June 26, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for
Wednesday, June 26, 2013:
This year you approach your
life with unusual seriousness and
dedication. You are unlikely to take
wild risks. If you are single, misunderstandings could become commonplace. In starting a relationship,
you will note this tendency. Give
others the benefit of the doubt. If you
are attached, you might have more
disagreements than ever before.
Assess the issues and get past them.
Do not blow situations out of proportion. Maintain a sense of humor.
AQUARIUS sees the other side.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHH Strap on your seat belt. You
are about to enter a three-week period of chaos. Do not sign anything that
involves your home or domestic life
through mid-July. Opportunities will
reappear shortly afterward. Tonight:
Chat with a dear friend.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHH Just when you start to
think you have it all together, you
might discover that you don’t. A
challenging person could push you
to the point where you have an
issue. Communication is highlighted.
Tonight: Work on an important project
till the wee hours.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Recent events might propel
you to take another look, especially as
you encounter a standstill. You never
anticipate a snafu, but in the next few
weeks you could have more than your
fair share of them. Use good sense
with your finances. Tonight: Let your
mind drift.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Honor a change. You can’t
get away from the feeling that you are
about to enter a new phase of life.
First, test out and share any details,
especially in areas involving your
goals. Refuse to stand on ceremony
with others for the next few weeks.
Tonight: Be with a favorite person.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH You might want to defer
to others as tension builds. One way
to avoid a misunderstanding is to let
someone else run the show. Just the
same, you might have an issue with
maintaining clarity. Tonight: Test out
an idea with a trusted adviser before
you share it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

HHHH Emphasize networking and
communication, as interactions might
not be going smoothly. The good
news is that you’ll be able to find out
what the cause is. Use this knowledge to make corrections. Tap into
your imagination to create more of
what you want. Tonight: Play it easy.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHHH Allow your ingenuity
to carry you through an awkward
moment or two. Stay open to the possibilities, and you’ll see what goes
on behind the scenes. What you do
with that information is your call. You
might not have the control you desire.
Tonight: Take a midweek break.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH Communicate with a family
member rather than stand on ceremony with this person. Pressure builds to
an unprecedented level if you ignore
a domestic matter. Let your creativity
and intellect merge. As a result, you’ll
find the answers quickly. Tonight:
Head on home.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHH You might be more verbal
than you realize. Your focus remains
on a key relationship, even if you
are out socializing and networking.
Confusion surrounds your home or a
domestic issue. Make sure that everyone’s watch is set to the same time
zone! Tonight: Make it easy.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH You might want to hold
off on making any big purchases or
signing any agreements for a while.
This might be hard to sit on, but if
you don’t, the chance of something
backfiring is high. More will come out
about this situation later, if you just
wait. Tonight: Treat a friend to dinner.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHHH You beam, despite having a lot of responsibility on your
plate. These extra tasks actually are
a reward for being very present in a
situation and making good decisions.
Understand that there are limits to
your energy. Save time for yourself,
too. Tonight: Try being a bit lazy.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH Your sensitivity and ability to observe will merge. You might
not want to spill the beans, and that
would be a wise decision. A new
friend would like some extra attention.
Be careful with relationships like this,
as others are more on edge than normal. Tonight: Go with the moment.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

NFL rookies warned about hard knocks off the field
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — The money
can disappear, the fame can vanish.
This week, NFL rookies are being
reminded that the game’s hardest
knocks often happen off the field.
During the league’s annual Rookie
Symposium, first-year players are
getting a crash course into everything that goes into being a professional athlete — the good, and the
bad. The NFL wants its newest members to be prepared not only for what
awaits them this season, but for the
years ahead, especially those days
when they’re no longer making big
paychecks or big plays.
Through various educational seminars, candid, sometimes heartbreaking
speeches and panel discussions, players are learning the X’s and O’s of life.
“It’s a great opportunity for us to
be out here learning from players
who’ve been here, been in our shoes
and who are where we want to be,”
said San Diego Chargers linebacker
Manti Te’o, the former Notre Dame
star who this year was the target of
a hoax involving a fake girlfriend.
“As we get into the next phase of
our lives, it’s a new phase, something

we’re not used to, so to keep our circle small and remember the people
who have always been there for you.”
The AFC’s rookie class arrived
in Aurora, Ohio, on Sunday to begin the four-day session, which the
league has constructed as a teaching
and bonding experience. The NFC
rookies arrive Wednesday and stay
through Sunday.
On Monday, players attended a
seminar titled: “Are You Bigger Than
The Game?” that featured Cincinnati
cornerback Adam “Pacman” Jones
and former Ohio State star running
back Maurice Clarett as speakers.
Jones recently pleaded not guilty
to a misdemeanor assault charge and
has had other off-the-field issues that
led to league suspensions. He talked
frankly about his many errors and
warned players about them.
“He’s always been a guy who has
preached don’t do the same mistakes
he’s done,” said New York Jets rookie
quarterback Geno Smith, who knows
Jones because both played at West
Virginia. “He’s made a lot of mistakes
in his career, but he’s a guy who is
still standing strong and still work-

ing hard. He’s using his past trials
and tribulations to try and help us.”
Because Jones is still an active
player and Clarett’s story is well documented, their messages resonated
with the young players.
“Growing up, those were the role
models of their era,” Steelers linebacker Jarvis Jones said. “Great players, tremendous players. Just to see
where they’re at it in life now and
the things they’ve been through, it
opened our eyes because we’re no
different from nobody else.
“For me, I always try to surround
myself with positive people. I don’t
do nothing negative, man. I can
make the best decisions for me and
my family and my team as well. What
stuck out to me was just some of the
decisions that they made, clearly it
was caused by them just not thinking
about it before they made it.”
Clarett urged the players to stay
straight. His promising pro career
was derailed by legal troubles not
long after he helped lead the Buckeyes to their first national title in 34
years. Clarett wound up serving 3
1-2 years in prison.

Karl Merton Ferron | Baltimore Sun | MCT photo

Baltimore Ravens tight end Dennis Pitta (88) drags Cincinnati Bengals cornerback Adam Jones (24) for extra yardage
in the first quarter in Cincinnati, Ohio, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2012.
The Ravens won, 24-16.

AP Sports Briefs
Colts’ lose Brazill to
substance-abuse suspension
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) —
Colts receiver LaVon Brazill
has been suspended by the NFL
for four games for violating the
league’s substance-abuse policy.
Neither the Colts nor the
league said what Brzill tested
positive for. He will be eligible to
return to the active roster following Indy’s game Sept. 29 against
Jacksonville, though he will be
eligible to practice at training
camp and will be able to play in
all four preseason games.
A team spokesman said the
team would not comment on the
suspension.
As a rookie last season, Brazill
had 11 receptions for 186 yards
and one touchdown.
He was expected to compete
with Nathan Palmer and Griff
Whalen for the No. 4 receiver
spot behind Pro Bowler Reggie

Wayne, second-year receiver T.Y.
Hilton and free agent signee Darrius Heyward-Bey.
NBA regular season games
for London, Mexico City
NEW YORK (AP) — The
NBA says regular-season games
will be played next season in
London and Mexico City.
The San Antonio Spurs are set
to play the Minnesota Timberwolves at Mexico City Arena on
Dec. 4, and the Atlanta Hawks
and Brooklyn Nets will meet at
The O2 in London next Jan. 16.
The NBA said Tuesday it’s the
first time regular-season games
in two countries outside of the
United States and Canada will be
played in the same season.
In March, the league announced eight preseason games
would be played in several countries from Oct. 5-18.
The latest games bring the NBA’s

60412545

global package next season to 12
teams playing 10 regular-season
and preseason games in 10 cities in
seven countries and territories.
AP Source: Grizzlies
negotiating with Joerger
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — A
person familiar with the situation says Memphis is negotiating
with assistant Dave Joerger (yaygehr) to become the Grizzlies’
head coach.
The person spoke to The Associated Press Tuesday on condition of anonymity because the final deal hasn’t been reached yet.
ESPN.com first reported the
negotiations.
This would be Joerger’s first
NBA head coaching job. He had
been an assistant the past six
seasons with the Grizzlies under
coach Marc Iavaroni and later
Lionel Hollins, who whose contract was not renewed earlier this

month despite leading Memphis
to a 56-26 record and a Western
Conference finals appearance.
The Grizzlies also interviewed
George Karl, the NBA coach of
the year before being fired by
Denver, Chicago Bulls assistant
Ed Pinckney and former Phoenix
coach Alvin Gentry.
Brian Shaw gets first crack
at head coaching job
DENVER (AP) — A person
with knowledge of the negotiations tells The Associated Press
that Indiana Pacers assistant
coach Brian Shaw has agreed to
succeed George Karl as coach of
the Denver Nuggets.
The person spoke to The AP
on condition of anonymity Monday night because the deal hadn’t
been officially announced.
The Nuggets called a news conference for Tuesday afternoon to
introduce their new coach.

60429410

Grand jury to reconvene in
Ohio H.S. rape case
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
An eastern Ohio grand jury investigating whether other laws
were broken in the rape of a
16-year-old girl is scheduled to
begin work again.
One of the key issues before
the panel in Steubenville is
whether adults who are required
to report crimes knew early on
of the rape last August but didn’t
say anything.
The Office of Attorney General Mike DeWine said Tuesday
that the grand jury will meet
again July 8.
The panel last met May 24, then
adjourned to give investigators
time to gather more evidence.
A judge in March convicted
two high school football players
of raping the West Virginia girl
after an alcohol-fueled party
last summer.

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