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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

Ohio River Sweep....
Page 3

Mostly cloudy.
High of 84. Low of
67........ Page 2

OVP Top 5
Stories: No. 3,....
Page 6

Charles L. Houck, 81
Paul A. Miller, 51
Kay F. Pullins, 72
Rosemary Sheets, 75
Betty Irene Wyne, 88

50 cents daily

THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 103

Southern approves 3-year agreement with union
McNickle hired
as preschool-3rd
grade principal
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE
—
The
Southern Local Board of
Education
unanimously
approved a three year ne-

gotiated agreement with
the Southern Local Education Association (SLEA)
during Monday’s board
meeting.
The new agreement will
expire on June 30, 2016.
According to Superintendent Tony Deem, the
agreement provides for
an increase in base salary
over the next three years.
The first year has an in-

crease of 3 percent, with a
two percent increase in the
second year and a one percent increase in the third
year. Language was developed in the agreement to
address the Ohio Teacher
Evaluation System, a policy which the board adopted last month.
The only change to insurance in the new agreement is an increase in life

insurance from $35,000 to
$40,000.
In other business, Tricia
McNickle was hired as the
preschool-third grade principal on a one year limited contract. The hiring is
pending completion of all
the administrative requirements for the position.
The resignation of Patty
Taylor as intervention specialist was approved effec-

tive Aug. 1.
Chris Caroll was approved on a one year limited contract as a physical
education teacher for the
2013-14 school year.
The transfer of Melissa
Reedy to evening custodian was approved in accordance with the OAPSE
negotiated agreement.
Jacynda Lynch was approved on a one year lim-

ited contract as a fourth
grade language arts teacher for the 2013-14 school
year.
Anthony Shamblin, Josh
Smith, Mike Whitlatch,
Shane Hayman, Greg Satterfield, and Melissa Reedy
was approved as casual labor employees for the summer. Board member Peggy
See AGREEMENT ‌| 5

Children reported
shot to death in
Jackson home
Staff Report

GDTnews@civitasmedia.com

Submitted photos

Colorful beanbags are available for visitors who prefer to rest while contemplating the art. Here Jorma take time out
from his busy schedule for a time of refreshing.

Exploring culture of the 1960s
Grand opening
of the Fur Peace
Psylodelic Gallery

See DEATHS ‌| 2

New OB/GYN
joins PVH

Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The grand opening celebration of the Psylodelic
Silo, where the public can explore
the history and culture of the
1960’s, will take place Saturday at
the Fur Peace Ranch with festivities from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Big Brother and the Holding
Company is coming in to celebrate
as Jorma and Vanessa Kaukonen’s
Fur Peace Ranch lights up the
skies on the Silo which after Saturday will be open daily for the
public to visit and explore the history of the hippie generation.
The music of Big Brother will
introduce the first “Psylodelic SitIn” where patrons will take part in
family-friendly activities like tiedye workshops, face painting, and
games along with painting “Darwin” the Volkswagen bug.
Those attending will be invited
to walk down a guitar neck sidewalk into the silo filled with posters, clothes, and history where
they can record their favorite 60’s
era memory or paint what’s on
their mind from that era.
The Fur Peace Ranch Center for
Art &amp; Culture, as it now called, at

JACKSON — Two children were found dead in their
grandparent’s Jackson home Wednesday morning, according to authorities with the City of Jackson.
The Jackson Police Department, the agency leading the
investigation, confirmed on Wednesday afternoon that
the children, ages nine and 12, were found shot to death
inside their grandparent’s home shortly after 11 a.m. on
Wednesday.
According to media reports circulating throughout the
day on Wednesday, officials with the Jackson Police Department and the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office were
observed at the scene at 38 East South Street, Jackson, on
Wednesday afternoon, and the home, as well as the garage
apartment behind it, 34 East South Street, were both surrounded with crime scene tape.
Investigators with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation (BCI) were on the scene by 2
p.m., according to reports.
Early on Wednesday afternoon, Jackson County Sheriff
Tedd Frazier would not confirm the deaths of any chil-

Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

The Psylodelic Gallery where visitors can explore the history of the hippie
generation.

its Saturday celebration will shine
a spotlight on the art and installations of the Psylodelic Gallery and
provide a prime opportunity for
area representatives to echo the

inspirations and goals of the psylodelic era. Big Brother and the
Holding Company will perform
See OPENING ‌| 5

POINT PLEASANT — Pleasant Valley Hospital’s latest
addition to its staff is Tanya Leigh Watson, DO, a boardcertified obstetrician and gynecologist (OB/GYN) whose
career includes having been a physician in the United States Navy.
Watson, a native of Wyoming
County, is board-certified through
the American Osteopathic Board
of Obstetrics and Gynecology and
licensed through the West Virginia Board of Osteopathic Medicine. Watson specializes in the
care and treatment of long acting
reversible contraception. She will
perform non-surgical state-of-the- Dr. Tanya Leigh Watson
art procedures like endometrial
ablation and essure tubal ligation
as well as surgical procedures such as vaginal and abdominal hysterectomies.
“We are very excited to welcome Dr. Watson to Pleasant Valley Hospital,” stated William “Bill” Barker, senior
vice-president of administration at Pleasant Valley Hospital. “As a physician in the Navy Medical Corps, she attended to service members and their families in much the
same way civilian physicians here at Pleasant Valley Hospital provide services to patients and their families. Dr.
Watson had an amazing career in the United States Navy.
She practiced at the forefront of medicine and gained a
See WATSON ‌| 5

Chester-Shade Historical Association beneficiary of OVB gift
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

CHESTER — Money
for operational expenses
and community programs
doesn’t come easy for nonprofit organizations, like
the Chester-Shade Historical Association.
So this week when Dan
Short, Meigs Branch manager for the Ohio Valley
Bank, presented a check
for $2,500 to ChesterShade, one of the officers
immediately began talking about the many needs
which could be taken care

of and the school programs
that could be presented
with the unexpected gift.
OVB gave the money without restrictions as to how
it could be spent.
Currently, the Chester
group is in the process of
organizing Chester-Shade
Day which will be held on
July 20 in conjunction with
the 150th commemoration
of the Battle of Buffington
Island, which took place at
Portland. While no definite
programs or projects were
designated as to the use
of the OVB money, it was

suggested that some will
might go into the expenses
of staging that event.
Chester-Shade
Day
will feature a variety of
activities for adults and
kids with events starting
at 10 a.m. and concluding
with the Civil War Ball
under the big tent on the
Commons with Jean Hilton “Miz Rosebud” as the
caller. Another feature of
the day relating to the Civil
War will be a Ladies Tea to
take place from 1 to 2 p.m.
with re-enactors presiding.
This year a collectible

150th Civil War Commemorative stamp will be
issued by the U.S. Postal
Service. The Chester Post
Office will have a booth set
up on the Chester Commons and Kim Arnold will
be available there to stamp
envelopes.
Again this year a highlight will be the selection
of Ohio’s champion harmonica player with the
competition to begin at 5
p.m. Competitive activities, craft demonstrations
and displays, will be featured during the day.

Photo by Charlene Hoeflich

On behalf of the Ohio Valley Bank, Dan Short, Meigs Branch
manager, presents a check for $2,500 to the Chester Shade
Historical Association. Accepting the check on behalf of
Chester Shade were Civil War re-enactors Becky Grate and
Mike Harbour, association members.

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Supreme Court
strikes federal
marriage provision

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 44.60
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 18.66
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 83.85
Big Lots (NYSE) — 31.48
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.51
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 84.54
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.25
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.29
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 38.25
Collins (NYSE) — 62.79
DuPont (NYSE) — 53.53
US Bank (NYSE) — 35.93
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.25
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 52.39
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 52.50
Kroger (NYSE) — 34.48
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 49.73
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 73.35
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 21.64

Thursday, June 27, 2013

BBT (NYSE) — 33.88
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.71
Pepsico (NYSE) — 81.30
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.63
Rockwell (NYSE) — 83.48
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.07
Royal Dutch Shell — 63.70
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.55
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.01
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.81
WesBanco (NYSE) — 25.97
Worthington (NYSE) — 32.36
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
June 26, 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.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Thursday: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm
before 9 a.m., then showers and thunderstorms likely,
mainly between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m. Some of the storms
could produce heavy rainfall. Mostly cloudy, with a high
near 84. West wind 9 to 13 mph. Chance of precipitation
is 70 percent. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and
quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in
thunderstorms.
Thursday Night: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. West
wind 5 to 9 mph becoming light after midnight. Chance
of precipitation is 20 percent.
Friday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 83. Southwest wind 6 to 13
mph. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent. New rainfall
amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher
amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Friday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms
before 1 a.m., then a slight chance of showers between
1 a.m. and 4 a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a low around
64. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent. New rainfall
amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher
amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Saturday: A chance of showers between 11am and
3pm, then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 3
p.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 80. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Saturday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 63. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 81.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 63.
Monday: A chance of showers. Mostly sunny, with a
high near 82. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.

Meigs County
Community Calendar

WASHINGTON (AP) — In a historic victory for gay
rights, the Supreme Court on Wednesday struck down a
provision of a federal law denying federal benefits to married gay couples and cleared the way for the resumption
of same-sex marriage in California.
The justices issued two 5-4 rulings in their final session of the term. One decision wiped away part of a federal anti-gay marriage law that has kept legally married
same-sex couples from receiving tax, health and pension
benefits.
The other was a technical ruling that said nothing at all
about same-sex marriage, but left in place a trial court’s
declaration that California’s Proposition 8 is unconstitutional. Gov. Jerry Brown quickly ordered that marriage
licenses be issued to gay couples as soon as a federal appeals court lifts its hold on the lower court ruling, possibly next month.
In neither case did the court make a sweeping statement, either in favor of or against same-sex marriage.
And in a sign that neither victory was complete for gay
rights, the high court said nothing about the validity of
gay marriage bans in California and roughly three dozen
other states.
A separate provision of the federal marriage law that
allows a state to not recognize a same-sex union from
elsewhere remains in place.
President Barack Obama praised the court’s ruling on
the federal marriage act, which he labeled “discrimination enshrined in law.”
“It treated loving, committed gay and lesbian couples
as a separate and lesser class of people,” Obama said in a
statement. “The Supreme Court has righted that wrong,
and our country is better off for it.”
House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said he was disappointed in the outcome of the federal marriage case
and hoped states continue to define marriage as the
union of a man and a woman.
The ruling in the California case was not along ideological lines. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the majority opinion, joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg,
Stephen Breyer, Elena Kagan and Antonin Scalia.
“We have no authority to decide this case on the merits, and neither did the 9th Circuit,” Roberts said, referring to the federal appeals court that also struck down
Proposition 8.
In the case involving the federal Defense of Marriage
Act, Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the majority opinion, joined by the court’s liberal justices.
“Under DOMA, same-sex married couples have their
lives burdened, by reason of government decree, in visible and public ways,” Kennedy said.
“DOMA’s principal effect is to identify a subset of statesanctioned marriages and make them unequal,” he said.

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.
Friday, June 28
POMEROY — The
Jackson County, W.Va. Senior Choir will present a
concert 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).
POINT
PLEASANT
— Revive 2013, a free
concert, will be held from
5-8:30 p.m. at the Point
Pleasant High School auditorium. The event will
feature music and a message with Tyrus Morgan.
The Soul Harvest band will
cords. Children must be traffic light. Weather per- also sing.
accompanied by a parent mitting, both lanes of Ohio
Sunday, June 30
or legal guardian. Please 143 will be open Septembring medical cards and/ ber 1, 2013.
MIDDLEPORT — Rev.
or commercial insurance
MEIGS COUNTY — Barry Sheets will be bringcards, if applicable. A do- The westbound lane of ing the message, “True
nation is appreciated, but Ohio 124 (located at the Patriotism”, for the Sunnot required.
63.91 mile marker, about day Morning Service at
1.5 miles north of Reeds- the First Baptist Church of
July 4 activities
ville) will be closed to al- Middleport, 211 S. Sixth
MIDDLEPORT — The low for a bridge replace- Ave. Rev. Sheets, in adMiddleport Fourth of July ment project. Traffic will dition to preaching, is a
celebration will be held be maintained by traffic scholar who teaches classes
on Thursday, July 4, with signals and concrete bar- on the Constitution. There
events beginning at 4 p.m., riers. Weather permitting, will be no evening service
and concluding at 10 p.m. both lanes of Ohio 124 will on that day. The service bewith fireworks. Donations be open November, 1 2013. gins at 10:15 a.m.
are currently being acREEDSVILLE — BiramMEIGS COUNTY —
cepted by the Middleport Ohio 124 (located 0.4 Hayman Reunion, 1 p.m. at
Community Association to
miles north of Williams Shelter House 2 at Forked
help expand the fireworks
Run State Park.
Run Road) will be reduced
display.
CHESHIRE — BradWILKESVILLE — The to one lane to allow for a bury-Jenkins reunion, 1
annual Fourth of July pa- bridge replacement proj- p.m., Old Kyger Baptist
rade in Wilkesville will be ect. Traffic will be main- Church located on Old
held at 11 a.m. on July 4. tained by traffic signals Kyger Church Road off of
Registration is free and be- and concrete barriers. Stingy Creek Road. A potgins at 10 a.m. Prizes will Weather permitting, both luck meal will be served.
be awarded for various pa- lanes of Ohio 124 will reHENDERSON — Derade categories. For more open August 31, 2013.
scendants of Sam and MelMEIGS COUNTY — vina Birchfield will hold a
information call 669-5646.
The bridge on Township reunion at the Henderson
Road 447, Beech Grove Community Center in
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY — Road, located approxiOhio 143 (located just 0.25 mately 500 feet west of
miles south of State Farm Township Road 9, Romine
Road) will be reduced Road, will be closed beginto one lane to allow for a ning Monday, June 3. This
bridge replacement proj- closing is necessary in or- From Page 1
ect. During construction der to replace the existing
there will be a 10’ width bridge. The project will be dren, saying it was an onrestriction. Traffic will be completed in approximate- going investigation.
“There will be no commaintained with a portable ly one month.
ment until the investigation is completed,” Frazier
said. He made no other
comments.
However, in a news release issued to media outlets later in the day, JackJeff Warner Agency
son police reported that
the bodies of two children
Nationwide Insurance
had indeed been discov113 West 2nd Street
ered at the home late on
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Wednesday morning.
Tel: 740-992-5479
The Jackson Police DeFax: 740-992-6911
partment
is reportedly
warnerj1@nationwide.com

Meigs County Local Briefs
Chester-Shade
yard sale
CHESTER — A yard
sale will be held from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. on Thursday
at the Chester Courthouse
by the Chester-Shade Historical Association.
Board of Elections
Office closed
POMEROY
—The
Meigs County Board of
Elections will be closed
from 2 p.m. on Tuesday,
June 25 until Friday, June
28 at 8:30 a.m. so staff can
attend a conference for
training.
Vacation Bible School
RACINE — Morning
Star United Methodist
Church will hold Vacation
Bible School from 6:30-8
p.m., June 25-27. a final
practice and cook out will
be held at 6:30 p.m. on Sat-

urday, June 29. The VBS
program will be held at 10
a.m. on Sunday, June 30.
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 re-

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

Deaths

119 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rick Price, Owner

740-992-2020
60427388

Riverwalk Dental
R. Craig Mathews, DDS
530A West Union St.
Athens, Ohio 45701

60425114

For general dentistry and implant needs —
accepting new patients and emergencies.

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

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

60423104

YOU’RE BUSY.

Joining Parkersburg
Orthopedic Associates

Call 740-992-3381 today.

Steven Miller, M.D.

WE’RE READY.

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.

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
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To schedule an appointment: (304)
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1st $40.00 2nd $30.00 3rd $20.00 4th $10.00
Contact Brian Howard @ 740-525-5764 or brian.howard@fbsc.com
to pre-register or sign up that day!

handling the investigation
with the assistance of the
Jackson County Sheriff’s
Office and BCI.
Officials have not released who lives at the
home, nor the identities of
the children.
“No other details are
available since the investigation is ongoing and
pending notification of all
family members,” the press
release from the Jackson
Police Department reads.
Further information will
be released as it is made
available by investigators.

485-8040

www.orthodoc.aaos.org/drmiller

60422766

�Thursday, June 27, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

3 women in Ohio
captive case want
quick resolution

Cleaning up the river

CLEVELAND (AP) — A man charged with holding
three women captive in his Cleveland home for over a decade will undergo an evaluation to determine if he is mentally competent to stand trial, a judge ordered Wednesday.
Although both the defense and prosecution agree Ariel
Castro is competent, Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Judge Michael Russo said he wants to make sure the
52-year-old man is able to understand the charges and assist attorneys in his defense.
The examination by a court-appointed doctor likely will
be Thursday, the judge said.
Castro has pleaded not guilty to 329 counts in an indictment that covers August 2002, when the first woman
disappeared, to February 2007. More charges could be
filed in the case cracked May 6 when one woman escaped
from Castro’s house, leading to the rescue of the other
two.
Prosecutor Tim McGinty told the judge he would be
going back to the grand jury soon to seek the additional
charges. Attorney General Mike DeWine said this month
that a state crime laboratory is checking new evidence to
determine if there were additional victims.
McGinty said he believes Castro understood what he
was doing when the crimes were committed and he is
competent now.
“We have absolutely no doubt … that he’s entirely competent, knows exactly what he’s doing now and did then,”
McGinty said in court Wednesday.
Castro’s attorney, Craig Weintraub, told reporters afterward that he believes his client is competent for trial.
A brief statement issued Wednesday by attorneys on
behalf of the women suggested they want a quick resolution of the case.
“The longer this process lasts, the more painful it is for
them. And the more sordid details of this horror that get
disclosed in this process, the more painful it is for them,”
said Kathy Joseph, attorney for Michelle Knight.
James Wooley, representing Amanda Berry and Gina
DeJesus, said the women have faith in the legal process
but added, “The simple, honest truth is they would like it
to be over. They want this whole thing behind them. Any
date set by which this may end is like light at the end of
a tunnel.”
The indictment alleges Castro held the women captive,
sometimes chaining them to a pole in a basement, to a
bedroom heater or inside a van. One of the women had a
child by Castro. The indictment says that when one of the
women tried to escape, he assaulted her with a vacuum
cord around her neck.
McGinty hasn’t said if he’ll pursue a death sentence for
a charge of forced miscarriage involving one woman.
Castro is being held on $8 million bail and has turned
down media interview requests.
The trial has been scheduled for early August, but that
could change to give attorneys more time to prepare. Another pretrial hearing was set for July 3.
Weintraub said he received 900 documents from prosecutors Tuesday night, but he doesn’t think “there’s any
information in there that we don’t already know.”

Submitted photos

A total of 36 volunteers turned out for the annual Ohio
River Sweep despite high water throughout the area. The
volunteers collected one ton of trash. They cleaned up
about 15 river miles of the Ohio River. The River Sweep is
an opportunity for the residents to show pride in Meigs
County by keeping it clean. Some groups assisting in the
clean up included 4-H and scout groups.

Songs, books downloaded online to be taxed in Ohio
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Downloading the
latest pop music hit or
best-selling crime novel
could cost more next year
in Ohio.
A package of tax changes added to the state budget would increase the
state sales tax and apply it
to digital products, such as
MP3s, e-books and videos
bought on the Internet.
If approved by the Legislature on Thursday, tablet
readers and music listeners
would find a 5.75 percent
state sales tax tacked on to
their downloaded items on
Jan. 1. That’s a slight boost
from the current rate of 5.5
percent.
Republican Gov. John
Kasich told reporters
Wednesday that he believed the tax was fair,
noting that he frequently
downloads books online.

“Look, if you go down
the street and you visit a
store here and you buy a
Kanye West CD, you pay
taxes on it,” he said. “If you
download it, you don’t.”
“I think it’s entirely appropriate to balance all this
out,” Kasich added.
Local taxes also would
be applied in tandem to the
digital items. That means
buyers could see a 7 percent tax in parts of central
Ohio, compared with an 8
percent rate in Cuyahoga
County and a 6.75 percent
tax in Hamilton County.
Under current law, states
can only require stores to
collect sales taxes if the
store has a physical presence in the state. As a result, many online sales are
essentially tax-free, giving
Internet retailers an advantage over brick-and-mortar
stores. Though Ohio law

requires consumers to pay
a use tax if the items they
buy online aren’t taxed by
the seller.
Larger retailers with
stores all over the country
like Wal-Mart, Best Buy
and Target collect sales
taxes when they sell goods
over the Internet. But online retailers like Amazon
don’t have to collect sales
taxes, except in states
where they have offices or
distribution centers.
Majority
Republican
lawmakers in Ohio contend
that because some retailers
have sales representatives
in the state or sell products
with ads targeting Ohioans, the businesses have
“nexus” in Ohio and could
have the sales tax can be
applied to their items.
Under Ohio’s tax proposal, the sales tax wouldn’t
apply to any video pro-

gramming that’s included
in a cable service package.
But viewers could expect
their Netflix and Hulu Plus
subscriptions to be taxed.
The Ohio Department
of Taxation estimates that
the state would see an additional $15 million in the
next two budget years by
applying the sales tax to
digital products.
The tax package would
also eliminate a sales tax
exemption for magazine
subscriptions beginning
Sept. 1, a change that’s
drawn heat from some publishers.
John Dunn, the publisher of Cincinnati Magazine,
recently told legislators on
an Ohio House committee
that it would feel wrong to
pass along the tax to his
316,000 readers.
“We all know how it feels
when gas prices rise and

fall 20 to 40 cents within a
three-day time period,” he
said in testimony. “This is
no different.”
Absorbing the tax could
mean layoffs at the magazine, Dunn added.
Roughly half of the states
in the country apply a sales
tax to magazine subscriptions, said Brad Weltman,
of the Magazine Publishers
of America.
Weltman told the House
committee that the sales
tax on subscriptions has
created legal challenges
and policy disagreements
in other states.
Plus, he said, a challenging economy has forced
many magazines to drive
down their subscription
prices. “Low promotional
pricing would yield little
in sales tax revenue,” he
testified.
Getting rid of the sales

tax exemption for magazine subscriptions would
bring in $11 million annually to Ohio, according
to the state taxation department. The tax change
would apply most major
magazines, not just those
who have offices in Ohio.
Republican leaders see
the move as “equalizing”
how the sales tax is applied. Hard copies of albums, books or magazines
from the newsstand are
already taxed, while their
online counterparts are
not.
“That’s a loophole. There
is no difference,” said Senate President Keith Faber,
when he announced the
tax package last week.
State lawmakers face a
Sunday deadline to pass
the budget. A new fiscal
year begins Monday.

W.Va. senator sticks with gun buyer check proposal
ground check system has
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National Rifle Association. Each has appeared on
West Virginia stations this
month.
After repeatedly endorsing Manchin, the NRA has
attacked him over his role
in the Capitol Hill gun debate. Manchin’s response
ad does not target the
group but rather its top
leaders, while touting his
gun owner credentials.
An NRA spokesman
says the existing back-

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CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) — He doesn’t know
when the next vote may
come, but U.S. Sen. Joe
Manchin isn’t giving up on
broader gun buyer background checks.
The West Virginia Democrat continues to seek
needed supporters for his
proposal to expand checks
to gun shows and online
commercial sales.
Manchin’s resolve is
reflected in a TV ad that
answers one aired by the

�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Cyclorama marks 150th
anniversary of Gettysburg
Genaro C. Armas
and Joann Loviglio
The Associated Press

GETTYSBURG, Pa. —
Standing in the middle of
the gruesome battle scene
during Pickett’s Charge,
surrounded by the horrific
sight of 12,000 infantrymen fighting, bloodied,
mangled and dying, some
of the most hardened
soldiers were brought to
tears.
But that was two decades after the decisive
1863 battle. The soldiers
described in newspaper
accounts as being overcome with emotion were
Civil War veterans looking
at a massive in-the-round
painting, known as a cyclorama, a grand illusion recreating the pivotal battle
with a level of realism not
seen before.
“They were the IMAX
of their day,” said Katie
Lawhon, spokeswoman for
Gettysburg National Military Park. The National
Park Service has owned
the cyclorama since 1942.
Visitors coming for the
150th anniversary of the
Battle of Gettysburg will
experience the four-story
cyclorama, one of only
three known to survive in
the U.S., fully restored in
a new visitor center with
a dramatic light and sound
show.
As much novelty as fine
art, cycloramas commonly
depicted military or religious scenes and were
displayed in purpose-made
buildings.
Hung inside a rotunda,
a properly installed cyclorama creates an immersive
360-degree
experience
thanks to its colossal size
and meticulous details. A
diorama in front of the canvas adds to the effect by
extending the scene in 3-D.
French artist Paul Philip-

poteaux and a team of
20 painters created four
identical Gettysburg cycloramas in all, based on his
sketches and photos of the
landscape, historical accounts and interviews with
Pickett’s Charge survivors.
They were so popular that
a number of Philippoteaux
knockoffs started making
the state fair rounds.
“When Paul Philippoteaux is finished with
the paintings and lays everyone off, those master
drawings get out there and
other competing companies acquired the artist and
drawing,” said Sue Boardman, program manager
with the Gettysburg Foundation and a cyclorama
expert.
Philippoteaux
signed
his work by adding his
likeness, leaning against a
tree in a Union uniform, as
soldiers around him charge
the front line. The work
was otherwise politically
neutral: Whether Union
or Confederate, all Philippoteaux’s soldiers fight heroically and die with honor.
“He would tinker with it
if someone who was there
told him a detail that wasn’t
right,” Lawhon said. “He
continued to make changes
after it was completed.”
Motion pictures killed
the cyclorama craze, and
they began to quickly vanish by the late 1800s. The
only other one still on display depicts the Battle of
Atlanta and resides in that
city.
Gettysburg’s cyclorama
was originally displayed
in Boston, then spent a
decade languishing boxed
in an open shed that a Boston newspaper colorfully
mourned as a “mausoleum
of greatness.” It was purchased by a retail mogul,
who chopped it up for
display, and eventually arrived in its current home-

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

Our main number is
(740) 992-2155.

Department extensions are:

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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Sarah Hawley, Ext. 13

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Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
Class./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

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Circulation Manager: David Killgallon, 740-446-2342, Ext. 25

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Information
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town exactly a century
ago, already the worse for
wear.
Time was also not any
kinder in the decades that
followed. By the 1990s, it
“was so aesthetically compromised that … the illusion it was once capable of
creating could only be read
in century-old accounts,”
Boardman said.
A five-year, $15 million upgrade completed in
2008 repaired deterioration from heat, moisture,
pollution, neglect and illadvised repair attempts.
The cyclorama’s former
1960s dwelling by modernist architect Richard Neutra wasn’t as lucky: It was
demolished this winter after preservationists lost a
lengthy court battle.
Conservators separated
the painting’s 27 panels
and cleaned each one inch
by inch with cotton swabs,
stabilized brittle areas and
removed bad touchups and
damaging glue. A missing
14-foot vertical section and
a 12-foot horizontal slice of
sky were replaced.
“The colors are very
vivid,” Lawhon said. “We
have to remind visitors
that it’s from 1884 because
it doesn’t look it.”
Visual tricks like an elevated viewing platform
heighten the perception
of being in the action. Restorers rehung the canvas
so the center bows inward
as originally intended, and
they reconstructed a longabsent diorama of trees,
fences, stone walls and a
cannon, Lawhon said.
“When it’s stretched
correctly, it’s best for the
canvas, and it’s best for
the eye when you’re at the
horizon level,” she said. “It
had been hung incorrectly
for decades and it’s much
more dramatic. People
who haven’t seen it in a
while will be surprised.”

Page 4
Thursday, June 27, 2013

Bullied NY bus monitor
teaches kindness year later
Carolyn Thompson
The Associated Press

GREECE, N.Y. — No new carpet or
furniture for the home she’s lived in for 46
years. No fancy car in the driveway.
After being gifted a life-changing sum
following a school bus bullying episode
seen around the world a year ago, former
bus monitor Karen Klein says she really
hasn’t changed all that much.
Sure, the “Today” show mug she drinks
coffee from reminds her of the widespread
media attention her story brought, and
the occasional stranger wants to snap her
picture.
She’s also retired, something the
69-year-old widow couldn’t afford before.
But Klein, who drove a school bus for
20 years before spending three years as
a monitor, remains as unassuming as she
was before learning firsthand how the
kindness of strangers can trump the cruelty of four adolescent boys.
“It’s really amazing,” Klein said at her
suburban Rochester home, still perplexed
at the outpouring unleashed by a 10-minute cellphone video of her being ridiculed,
sworn at and threatened by a group of seventh-graders last June. They poke at her
hearing aid and call her names as she tries
to ignore them.
“Unless you have something nice to say,
don’t say anything at all,” Klein says calmly a few minutes in.
One boy taunts: “You don’t have a family
because they all killed themselves because
they don’t want to be near you.” Klein’s
oldest son committed suicide more than
a decade ago.
The video, recorded by a fellow student,
was posted online and viewed more than
1.4 million times on YouTube.
When 25-year-old Canadian Max
Sidorov was moved to take up an online
collection to send her on vacation, more
than 32,000 people from 84 countries responded — pledging $703,873 in donations.
“It’s just the way it hits them, I guess. I
don’t know. I don’t know,” Klein said, still
unsure of why it all happened.
Sidorov has called it “ridiculously more
than I expected.”
Klein used $100,000 as seed money for
the Karen Klein Anti-Bullying Foundation,
which has promoted its message of kindness at concerts and through books. Most
recently, the foundation partnered with
the Moscow Ballet to raise awareness of
cyberbullying as the dance company tours
the United States and Canada.

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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

‘There’s a lot of nice
people out there, I have
learned that. And to ignore
the negative people.’
— Karen Klein
Bullied NY bus monitor
“There’s a lot I wish I could be doing,
but I don’t know how to do it,” Klein said.
“I’m just a regular old lady,” she added
with a laugh.
She has spent some helping family
members and friends, and “the rest is under lock and key” for retirement, and maybe a motor home to do some traveling, she
said. She wants to get back to her crafts,
fix some things around the house, maybe
get new carpet and furniture, and take it
easy, especially since having a pacemaker
implanted in March.
“There are other people who it would
probably change dramatically,” said
Klein’s daughter, Amanda Klein-Romig.
“But for her, no, everything’s the same
pretty much. It’s not like she’s jaunting every weekend to a different place.”
Klein has been to Boston, Toronto and
other cities to promote her foundation.
She participated in a WNBA anti-bullying
event with the New York Liberty in Newark, N.J., and has been invited to appear
on “Raising McCain,” a cable television
series launching this summer starring
Arizona Sen. John McCain’s daughter,
Meghan.
“There’s a lot of nice people out there,
I have learned that,” Klein said. “And to
ignore the negative people.”
Klein has been criticized by those who
say she didn’t do her job that June 2012
afternoon and by others who think she
sought out fame and fortune.
“They make it sound like I did this on
purpose,” Klein said. She didn’t even
know the incident had been recorded until
being called in to school by administrators
and the police.
“She didn’t ask for this,” Klein-Romig
said.
Klein has met with one of the boys who
bullied her. He and his parents came to her
home to apologize. The other three sent
typed apologies, which she said struck her
as less sincere.
“I hope they learned a lesson; they probably didn’t,” Klein says, shrugging. “It
might have been a big joke to them.”

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Thursday, June 27, 2013

Agreement

Obituaries

From Page 1

Paul A. Miller

Paul A. Miller, 51, of Middleport, Ohio, passed away
Sunday, June 23, 2013.
He was born October 15, 1961, in St. Nazir, France,
son of George Miller and Karen Keller Thacker. He was a
mechanic and a U.S. Navy Veteran.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by a son,
Joshua Miller; a daughter, Kimberly (Robert) Murphy;
three grandsons, Christian, Caleb and Jeremy; and three
granddaughters, Autumn, Nevaeh, and Andrea.
He was preceded in death by two brothers, Jack Miller
and Michael Thacker.
Services will be held at a later date.
Ewing Funeral Home is serving the family.

Kay Frances Pullins

Kay Frances Pullins, 72, of Coolville, Ohio, passed
away Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at her residence.
She was born June 2, 1941, in Nelsonville, Ohio,

daughter of the late Robert M. and Helen L. Lovsey Gillilan. She was a member of Nelsonville Wesleyan Church,
a 1959 graduate of Nelsonville High School and she received her LPN degree from Hocking College.
She is survived by her husband, James Pullins; a daughter, Jennifer and Chad Clingenpeel; three grandchildren,
Megan, Matthew and Audry; several cousins, and brothers and sisters-in-law.
Services will be held at 11 a.m., Saturday, June 29,
2013, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, Ohio.
Burial will be in the Greenlawn Cemetery, Nelsonville,
Ohio.
Friends may call from 9 a.m. until time of service on
Saturday at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers donations can be made to the Holzer
Hospice, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
You can sign the online guest book at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.

Death Notices
Houck

Charles Lee Houck, 81, of Gallipolis, died on Sunday,
June 23, 2013, at Hospice of Huntington, Huntington,
West Virginia.
A memorial service will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday,
June 29, 2013, at the Willis Funeral Home with Pastor
Thom Mollohan officiating. Friends may call at the funeral home from 12-1 p.m. prior to the service.
In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation in Charles’
memory to Hospice of Huntington, 1101 Sixth Avenue,
Huntington, W.Va. 25701.

Sheets

Rosemary (Notter) Sheets, 75, of Kettering, Ohio, for-

merly of Gallipolis, died on June 25, 2013.
Family will receive friends from 5-7 p.m. on Friday,
June 28, 2013, at Newcomer Funeral Home, 3380 Dayton-Xenia Road, Beavercreek, as well as from 4-6 p.m. on
Saturday, June 29, 2013, at Willis Funeral Home, 12 Garfield Ave., Gallipolis, where funeral services will follow at
6 p.m. Burial will take place at 1 p.m. on Sunday, June 30,
2013, at Mound Hill Cemetery, Gallipolis.

Wyne

Betty Irene Wyne, 88, of Pomeroy, died Tuesday, June
25, 2013, in the Hospice Room at Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis. Arrangements are by Souers-Cardaras Funeral
Home, 46 Fayette St., Nelsonville.

Opening
From Page 1
at8 p.m. Earlier, Jorma will
host an interview with the
musicians and record their
historical
perspective,
which will then be a part of
the museum’s archives.
At the Gallery there will
be permanent exhibits of
posters from some of the
best-known acts of the
decade, clothing and jewelry worn at Woodstock,
original photographs, art
prints, guitars, and much
more. There will be a video and audio storyboard
where patrons can record
their own experiences, and

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

there will be “found art”
projects, which will allow
those attending to create
their own unique creation.
In addition there will be
guest lecturers and speakers including a series of
events featuring artist
Wes Wilson, known for
his Fillmore posters commissioned by Bill Graham,
musicians, writers, and
other influences from the
psychedelic era.
Events planned for the
future include working
with the schools, arranging field trips to the Ranch
where they can be introduced to the times of the

1960s and participate in
special projects and contests in art, music, and literature of that era.
Also planned are community nights where there
will be films, concert footage and a liquid light show
suitable for all age groups.
The museum is off to a
grand start with artifacts
collected from friends and
compatriots. Among the
items on display now are
Wavy Gravy’s Woodstock
Sleeping Bag, Jack Casady’s Woodstock Outfit, and
60’s era posters and intimate photos from Jorma’s
personal collection.

And if you get tired from
your stroll through the gallery, Jorma says you can
just rest in a beanbag chair
and contemplate the art.
The stated goal of the
Fur Peace Ranch Center
for Art and Culture is “to
further improve and bolster the arts in Southeast
Ohio by working to provide educational programming for children and
families and encourage
free thought and open expression.”

Gibbs voted “no” on the
approval.
The Elementary Handbook was approved for the
2013-14 school year as presented by Kent Wolfe.
A two year contract
was approved with Jefferson County Educational
Service Center for Virtual
Learning Academy services at a rate of $1,000 per
day and $185 per student.
Property, liability and
fleet insurance were approved with Reed and Baur
in the amount of $28,228.
Student voluntary insurance was approved with
Reed and Baur for the
2013-14 school year.
A total of $16,464.60

was accepted as funds from
the high school items sold
at the recent auction.
Membership in the Ohio
High School Athletic Association was approved for
the 2013-14 school year.
The treasurer was authorized to advertise for
quotes for bread/bakery,
milk/dairy, and gas/fuel
products for the 2013-14
school year.
A transfer of $66,676.46
was approved from fund
001-000 to 035-0000.
All board members were
present at the meeting.
The next regular meeting
will be held at 8 p.m. on
July 22 in the Southern
Elementary Library. A special meeting is being held
at 7:30 a.m. on June 27.

Watson
From Page 1
wide-range of experiences
as a Naval Physician serving as an OB/GYN at Camp
Lejeune Naval Hospital in
North Carolina.”
Barker went on to say,
“Dr. Watson also provided
services during her residency at hospitals here in our
region including O’Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens, Ohio, and Southern
Ohio Medical Center in
Portsmouth, Ohio. She is
a valuable asset to our patients and Pleasant Valley
Hospital. We are pleased to
have her join us.”
Watson has extensive
experience in the specialty
of obstetrics and gynecology and will provide
preventive and primary
gynecological care as well
as comprehensive medical
and surgical care to women with diseases of the
reproductive system. She
specializes in medical and
surgical methods to treat
such gynecologic conditions like menstrual disorders, management of pelvic

support and health, and
gynecological treatment to
females with diseases of
the reproductive system.
She also has special medical interests in infertility,
incontinence, quality and
performance improvement,
and obstetrics.
Watson earned her medical degree in 2003 at the
West Virginia School of
Osteopathic
Medicine,
Lewisburg and she completed her internship at
Walter Reed Army Medical
Center, Bethesda, Md., in
2004. She finished her residency program in 2009 as
Chief Resident with Ohio
University in conjunction
with O’Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens and
Southern Ohio Medical
Center in Portsmouth.
Watson will see women
of all ages at her clinic located at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, suite 214. For an
appointment, call 304-6753405.

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�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 27, 2013

The Daily Sentinel

THURSDAY,
JUNE 27, 2013

Sports

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Hernandez charged with murder
ATTLEBORO, Mass. (AP) —
New England Patriots tight end
Aaron Hernandez was arrested and
charged Wednesday with murdering
a friend a few days after they got into
a dispute at a nightclub.
Hernandez was taken from his
home in handcuffs Wednesday morning, more than a week after Boston
semi-pro football player Odin Lloyd’s
bullet-riddled body was found in an
industrial park about a mile from
Hernandez’s home. Soon after his
arrest, the Patriots announced they
had cut Hernandez from the team.
Lloyd was a 27-year-old semi-pro
football player for the Boston Bandits. His relatives said he was dating
the sister of Hernandez’s fiancee,
that the two men were friends and
that the men were out together on
the last night of Lloyd’s life. He was

shot multiple times in the back and
chest, authorities said.
Hernandez was charged with murder and weapons counts.
In court, prosecutors described
a killing borne out of a dispute at
a Boston nightclub on the night of
June 14, but they didn’t say exactly
what supposedly did to anger Hernandez.
Hernandez and two friends picked
up Lloyd at home at 2:30 a.m. on June
17, Assistant District Attorney Bill
McCauley said. Surveillance footage
from Hernandez’s home shows him
leaving earlier with a gun, McCauley said. He also told someone in the
house that he was upset and couldn’t
trust anyone anymore, the prosecutor said.
After picking up Lloyd, Hernandez
said he was upset with Lloyd because

Lloyd had spoken with people Hernandez had trouble with during their
outing to the nightclub, McCauley
said.
After that conversation, Lloyd
texted his sister, “Did you see who I
am with,” the prosecutor said. When
his asked who, he answered at 3:22
a.m., “NFL,” then, a minute later,
“Just so you know,” he said.
Between 3:23 a.m. and 3:27 a.m.,
people working the overnight shift at
the industrial park reported hearing
gunshots, McCauley said.
It’s not clear who investigators believe fired the shots.
Hernandez’s attorney, Michael
Fee, asked for bail, saying Hernandez
is not a flight risk, is a homeowner
and lives with his fiancee and an
See HERNANDEZ ‌| 8

Bryan Walters/photo

River Valley senior Noel Mershon delivers a pitch during
a non-conference softball contest against Gallia Academy in Centenary, Ohio.

Lady Raiders land 4 on
All-OVC softball team
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

The River Valley softball team had four players selected to the AllOhio Valley Conference
softball teams for the
2013 season, as voted
on by the coaches within
the league.
The Lady Raiders had
two first team selections
and a pair of honorable
mention choices after
completing the campaign with a 16-12 overall mark and a 4-6 record
within the OVC. It is
believed to be the first
winning season in RVHS
softball history, and all
four All-OVC selections
are repeat honorees from
a year ago.
Senior Noel Mershon
and sophomore Chelsea
Copley were the first
team choices for RVHS,
while senior Ashley
Cheesebrew and junior
Libby Leach were each
selected as honorable
mention representatives.
Mershon and Copley
were first team selections a year ago, while
Leach and Cheesebrew
both earned honorable
mention selections a
year ago.
League
champion
South Point led the
way with seven choices,
which included coach of
the year honors for Lady
Pointers frontman Tanner Heaberlin. Fairland
was next with five choices, followed by RVHS,
Coal Grove, Rock Hill
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 softball squad
from a year ago.
2013 All-OVC
Softball Team
First Team

Chelsea
Copley**,
River Valley So.
Noel Mershon**, River Valley Sr.
Kaitlyn
Brown*,
South Point Sr.
Sylvia Griffith, South
Point So.
Haley Rawlins, South
Point Fr.
Abbey
Winkler*,
South Point So.
Kenzi Martin, Rock
Hill Sr.
Samantha
Nixon*,
Rock Hill Jr.
Kelsey Huff, Chesapeake Fr.
Melanie Noble, Chesapeake Fr.
Morgan Sites, Coal
Grove Jr.
Kaitlyn
Murphy**,
Coal Grove Jr.
Haley Woodall, Fairland Sr.
Chandler
Fulks**,
Fairland Jr.
Chelsey Stanley, Fairland Sr.
Honorable Mention
Ashley Cheesebrew*,
River Valley Sr.
Libby Leach*, River
Valley Jr.
Brianna
Whaley,
South Point Sr.
Andrea Kleinman**,
South Point Sr.
Brooke Hanshaw**,
Rock Hill Jr.
Brooke Eastham, Rock
Hill Jr.
Anna Mayo, Chesapeake Sr.
Laura Rice, Chesapeake Fr.
Deanna
Bentley*,
Coal Grove Jr.
Leah Crum, Coal
Grove So.
Ellen Hinshaw, Fairland So.
Molly Morris, Fairland Fr.
Coach of the Year
Tanner
Heaberlin,
South Point
* — indicates AllOVC honorable mention
choice in 2012.
** — indicates AllOVC first team choice in
2012.

Photos by Alex Hawley

Members of the Eastern girls basketball team pose for a picture before the start of a Division IV state semifinal
contest against Berlin Hiland at the Jerome Schottenstein Center in Columbus, Ohio.

OVP Story #3: Lady Eagles soar to state
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Dominant.
In a single word, that’s what would
best describe the entire calendar year for
Eastern’s female athletes.
The Lady Eagles won at least a league
title and a sectional title in volleyball,
basketball and softball while also winning league and district team titles in
both cross country and track and field.
The girls golf team was the only program
to not meet any of that criteria, and softball was the only other squad that failed
to at least reach the regional tournament.
Want something even more impressive?
All of these programs were simply duplicating accomplishments from the year
before, with only a handful of exceptions.
The basketball and softball teams didn’t
win league titles a year ago and the volleyball squad managed to advance to the
Division IV state tournament.
As exceptional as the Lady Eagles
were in just about everything they did,
there was one group that truly managed
to stand out from the others. It also hapSee LADY EAGLES ‌| 8

Every Big 12 coach has been to NCAA tourney
Stephen Hawkins
The Associated Press

Smoother traffic expected
again for NASCAR race
SPARTA, Ky. (AP) — That traffic isn’t a concern for
this weekend’s NASCAR races tells Kentucky Speedway
general manager Mark Simendinger how well his track
and state authorities worked to improve things last year.
There was certainly room to grow after horrific gridlock marred the inaugural Sprint Cup Series race here
two years ago. Race fans and driver Denny Hamlin complained of crawling for hours along Interstate 71, and
thousands never made it into the 107,000-seat track.
Entry and exit was a breeze last June following $11 million in upgrades and a traffic plan advising commercial
drivers to instead use Interstates 64 and 75 between Cincinnati and Louisville. Kentucky State Police said Monday
the plan would be used again this year, and Simendinger
is confident that journeys will be even smoother the third
time around.
“There were some refinements to be made and we
tweaked things a little bit,” Simendinger said Tuesday,
“but we didn’t have a single car backed up for the race
and you usually don’t see that for a NASCAR race.
“To make things even better than last year, I don’t know
if we can do that.”
See KENTUCKY |‌ 8

Eastern junior Jenna Burdette (14) goes up for a shot over a Hiland
defender during the Lady Hawks 54-51 victory in the OHSAA Division IV state semifinal at Value City Arena on the campus of the Ohio
State University.

Tubby Smith has joined what was
already an impressive roster of men’s
basketball coaches in the Big 12.
With Smith now coaching at Texas
Tech and the conference’s lone newcomer, the Big 12 is the only league
that can boast that all of its head
coaches have taken teams to the
NCAA tournament. Six of the 10
coaches have been to the Final Four.
“It makes it hard. I don’t know if
there’s ever been another league ever
that had 60 percent of coaches that
have coached in the Final Four,” said
West Virginia coach Bob Huggins,
who is part of that group. “That’s extremely impressive.”
Five of the Big 12 coaches have
more than 500 career victories, led
by Huggins’ 723 though he got only
13 in his first Big 12 season. The
other 500-game winners are Texas’
Rick Barnes (560), Oklahoma’s Lon
Kruger (514), Smith (511) and Kansas’ Bill Self (507) — that last trio
reaching the mark last season.
“It speaks well (of the Big 12),”
said Kruger, who last season became
the first coach to take five different

teams to the NCAA tournament. He
led the Sooners to their first NCAA
tournament since 2009, Blake Griffin’s final season in Oklahoma.
“You have unbelievable coaches in
this league. The records speak for
themselves, what a lot of the coaches
in our league have accomplished,”
Iowa State’s Fred Hoiberg said Tuesday during a summer teleconference
with league coaches.
“That’s an unbelievable stat, 60
percent of your league that have
coached in the premiere event in college basketball.”
Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State,
Oklahoma and Oklahoma State made
it to the NCAA tournament last season, while Baylor won the NIT championship. The Jayhawks had the
deepest NCAA run, getting to the
round of 16 at Cowboys Stadium in
Arlington, Texas, where the Big 12
next April.
Kansas shared its ninth consecutive Big 12 title with Oklahoma
State, which got a boost for 2013-14
when Big 12 player of the year Marcus Smart decided to stay for more
than just his freshman season with
the Cowboys.
Smart became only the third play-

er in league history to be the AP’s
Big 12 Player of the Year and Freshman of the Year in the same season.
The others were Texas’ Kevin Durant
in 2007 and Kansas State’s Michael
Beasley the season after that.
With Smart back, and Markel
Brown and Le’Bryan Nash staying as
well, Oklahoma State returns its top
six scorers next season.
That could make the Cowboys a
favorite to end the Kansas stranglehold atop the Big 12 standings. Or
does it?
Kansas had four senior starters
last season and star freshman Ben
McLemore is a likely top pick Thursday night after declaring for the NBA
draft. But the Jayhawks have another
talented class of newcomers, headed
by 6-foot-7 superstar recruit Andrew
Wiggins.
Barnes said Oklahoma State had
a good season and that with Smart
staying, “you would naturally expect
the progression there. But you can’t
out Kansas from the fact the caliber
of player they have in Wiggins and
what they were able to put together.
… I don’t know what order necessarily, but I think those two teams belong at the top.”

�Thursday, June 27, 2013

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

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REAL ESTATE SALES
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The Program Coordinator for sexual assault
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�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Cavs mulling options with top pick in NBA draft

Hernandez
From Page 6
8-month-old baby. He also said
Hernandez had never been accused of a violent crime.
“It is at bottom a circumstantial case. It is not a strong case,”
Fee said.
The judge ordered Hernandez
held without bail pending further proceedings.
Hernandez was wearing a
white V-neck T-shirt, with his
arms inside the shirt and behind
his back as he was led from his
North Attleborough before 9
a.m. Wednesday. He casually spit
into some bushes on his way to a
police cruiser.
Hernandez was taken from the
North Attleborough police station to his court hearing Wednesday afternoon. About two dozen
supporters cheered, some yelling
“We love you Aaron,” as the car
carrying him left the police station.
At about 10:20 a.m., the Patriots announced they had released Hernandez and expressed
sympathy to Lloyd’s family and
friends.
“Words cannot express the
disappointment we feel knowing that one of our players was
arrested as a result of this investigation,” the Patriots said in a
statement. “We realize that law
enforcement investigations into
this matter are ongoing. We support their efforts and respect the
process. At this time, we believe
this transaction is simply the
right thing to do.”
Lloyd’s mother, Ursula Ward,
declined to comment at her Boston home Wednesday morning.
“Nothing to say, please. Thank
you,” she said, before shutting
the door.
State police have searched in
and around Hernandez’s sprawling home in North Attleborough
several times. At least three
search warrants have been issued in connection with the investigation.

CLEVELAND (AP) — Once
again, the Cavaliers are facing a
major summer “decision.”
The last one was hard to accept. This one is difficult to
make.
And while it doesn’t quite
stack up with LeBron James’
infamous announcement that
he was bolting from home three
years ago and leaving Cleveland
heartbroken and short of a title,
the Cavs are faced with the challenge of picking another topflight player to get them back to
respectability.
For the second time in three
years and third time over the
past decade, the Cavaliers hold
the No. 1 overall draft pick.
This year, it’s both a blessing
and burden.
With no player emerging as the
consensus first choice, the Cavs,
who also own the No. 19 pick
and two second-round selections

Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journal/MCT photo

Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Mike Brown, left, hugs Dan Gilbert at
center court on being named NBA’s Coach of the Year before the start
of Game 2 of the NBA first-round playoffs against the Detroit Pistons at
Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, Tuesday, April 21, 2009.

(Nos. 31 and 33) have spent the
past month doing their due diligence by meeting with players,
assessing their needs and weighing their many options.

They’ve discussed several
trades to rid themselves of the
top pick, move down and acquire
veterans for one of the league’s
youngest teams.

The Cavs have kept things
close to the vest during the
weeks leading into the draft.
General manager Chris Grant
has not spoken publicly to the
media since firing coach Byron
Scott after last season, and the
Cavs did not open their pre-draft
workouts to reporters.
As of Tuesday night, Grant
and his staff were still working
on their draft board and it’s possible they could go into Thursday with their plan still evolving.
Last weekend, owner Dan
Gilbert, who made it clear after winning the lottery that he
expects his team back in the
playoffs next year, even went on
Twitter to solicit some feedback.
“Ok cavs fans, its Chris Grant’s
call but who do you like #1 &amp;
why?” Gilbert posted.
“One of the toughest calls in
NBA draft history. Let’s hear
your view.”

Kentucky
From Page 6
Perhaps, but neither the track nor state
police are taking anything for granted with
another large crown expected for Saturday
night’s Quaker State 400 Cup race. It caps a
tripleheader weekend that begins Thursday
night with the UNOH 225 Camping World
Truck Series race and continues with Friday
night’s Feed The Children 300 Nationwide
Series event.
More than 100 state troopers will again
help manage traffic on I-71 and Kentucky 35
along with parking at the speedway. The only
change is that those needing to reach ADA
parking can use exits 55 and 57 off the interstate.
While KSP trooper and public affairs officer Brad Arterburn said the re-routing of
tractor-trailers to other interstates freed up
I-71, he also credited an informational network of local outlets, the Internet and social

media such as Facebook and Twitter, which
kept race fans informed of conditions every
half hour.
Spectators were also urged to arrive earlier
for the race instead of the peak period several
hours beforehand, which Arterburn said resulted in a smooth traffic flow all day.
“Last year, traffic was perfect,” Arterburn
said. “I don’t think it will be a problem. We
believe it will work again this year.”
Arterburn also noted that police were
helped by a widening of Kentucky 35 and
exit 57 off the interstate and an additional
20,000 parking spaces. The latter move was
one of several taken by Kentucky Speedway,
which also built a pedestrian tunnel and began a shuttle between parking lots and the
track.
The combination allowed the track to
avoid a repeat of the first-year nightmare
that’s been referred to as “Carmageddon,”
a snarl that ensnared Hamlin to the point of

fretting about missing the pre-race drivers’
meeting.
The incident still gnaws at Speedway Motorsports Inc. chairman Bruton Smith, whose
company owns the speedway.
Smith said earlier this month in an interview with The Associated Press that the
state could help even more by widening I-71
southbound from Cincinnati and provide “a
whole interstate instead of half of one.” At
the same time, he acknowledged his facility
had to do its part as well to make things more
fan friendly.
It remains a work in progress, but at least
getting there isn’t half the battle anymore.
“We want to be a first-class facility and to
do that, we have to deal with the problems
we’ve got,” Smith said. “When people are
spending good money on a ticket for a race,
you want it to be a great experience for them.
If we continue to do that, you’ll see great
things happen here.”

Lady Eagles
From Page 6
pened to come from one of the
smallest groups — numbers-wise
— that EHS had in competition
all year long.
The girls basketball team —
which had only nine players on
its varsity roster — tore down
some long-standing walls this
winter on its way to a first-ever
Final Four berth at the Division
IV OHSAA Championships at
the Schottenstein Center in Columbus, Ohio.
The Lady Eagles became the
first Meigs County team to qualify for a state tournament in girls

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basketball, not to mention also
being the first Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division program
to accomplish that same feat.
With the exception of Ohio
Valley Christian, no other Ohio
Valley Publishing area squad has
ever qualified for a state tournament in girls basketball.
The Lady Eagles — who went
23-5 overall this winter while
sharing the TVC Hocking league
crown with Waterford (15-1)
— advanced to a school-record
third consecutive Sweet 16 appearance after beating Federal
Hocking, Manchester and South
Gallia by an average of 46 points

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in sectional and district tournament play.
Eastern picked up its secondever regional semifinal victory
following a 63-47 win over Sycamore Mohawk, then gutted out
a thrilling 57-56 triumph over
Newark Catholic in the regional
championship to secure a berth
in the Final Four.
The Lady Eagles became the
first Division IV team from southeastern Ohio to ever qualify for
a state tournament since Ohio
expanded from three divisions to
four divisions back in 1988. EHS
was also the first southeastern

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Ohio team to play in a Division
IV state tournament since the
three-point line was added to the
high school ranks in 1988.
Eastern eventually dropped a
heartbreaking 54-51 decision to
eventual state runner-up Berlin
Hiland in the state semifinals,
but the journey in getting to that
point far outweighed the eventual final outcome in Columbus.
The Lady Eagles started the
year with seven varsity players,
and each was a key contributor
to the success that the team enjoyed. EHS coach John Burdette
added a pair of junior varsity

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players to the roster just before
the start of the tournament, and
the rest — as they say — is history.
Jenna Burdette, Jordan Parker,
Maddie Rigsby, Erin Swatzel,
Katie Keller, Savannah Hawley,
Tori Goble, Taylor Palmer and
Morgan Barringer all became
historical legends in Division IV
during this run, and only Hawley
and Goble will be lost to graduation for next season.
Which means, like this past
school year showed, Eastern
is lining up for another strong
showing after dominating the
field in 2012-13.

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Entertainment

THURSDAY PRIMETIME
6

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10

(WBNS)

11

(WVAH)

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13

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400
450
500

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

PM

6:30

THURSDAY, JUNE 27
7

PM

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11:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Parks and
America's Got Talent
WSAZ News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
Parks and
The Office "A.A.R.M."
News
Fortune
Recreation Recreation
Tonight
Show (N)
WTAP News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Parks and
America's Got Talent
WTAP News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
Parks and
The Office "A.A.R.M."
at Six
News
Fortune
Recreation Recreation
at 11
Show (N)
ABC 6 News ABC World Entertainm- Access
Motive "Against All Odds" Rookie Blue "Different,
ABC 6 News (:35) Jimmy
Wipeout "Brains vs.
at 6 p.m.
News
Brawn" (N)
(N)
Not Better" (N)
at 11
Kimmel (N)
ent Tonight Hollywood
Euromaxx
Song of the Mountains
Wild! "The Great Elephant Secret War "Building
Tavis Smiley Inside E
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
Highlights
Business
Gathering"
Weapons, Talking Peace"
(N)
Street
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm- Wipeout "Brains vs.
Motive "Against All Odds" Rookie Blue "Different,
Eyewitness (:35) Jimmy
News at 6
News
(N)
Not Better" (N)
News 11
Kimmel (N)
ent Tonight Brawn" (N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
Two and a
Elementary "Snow
10TV News (:35) David
The Big
Person of Interest "One
HD
News
Fortune
Bang Theory Half Men
Percent"
Angels"
HD
Letterman
The Big
The
Two and a
Two and a
The Big
Hell's Kitchen "Five Chefs Does Someone Go? "THV, Eyewitness News
Everybody
Bang Theory Half Men
Half Men
Bang Theory Compete, Part 2 of 3" (N) Part 2 of 2" (SF) 2/2 (N)
Simpsons
Loves Ray
BBC News
Doctors on Law Works Dirk Gently
Death/Paradise A woman Charlie Rose (N)
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
America
Business
Call
predicts her own murder.
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
Two and a
Elementary "Snow
13 News
(:35) David
The Big
Person of Interest "One
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition
Bang Theory Half Men
Percent"
Angels"
Letterman
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother WGN News at Nine
Funniest Home Videos
Weekly
Access
Bull Riding Championship West Coast Customs
Game Time Insider
UFC Unleashed
WPT Poker LA Classic
SportsCenter
NBA Draft
NBA Draft (L)
(3:00) LPGA Golf
SportsCenter
X Games Site: Olympic Stadium -- Munich, Germany
SportsCenter
Trading Spouses
Trading Spouses
Wife Swap
Wife Swap
Wife Swap
Pretty Wicked Moms
Funniest Home Videos
�� Paul Blart: Mall Cop ('09, Com) Kevin James.
�� Paul Blart: Mall Cop ('09, Com) Kevin James.
The 700 Club
(4:05) ��� Inglourious Basterds ('09, War) Brad Pitt. Fight Masters
Impact Wrestling
Fight Masters
Drake
Sam &amp; Cat
Sam &amp; Cat
Figure (N)
Big Time (N) WendVinn
Full House
Full House
The Nanny
The Nanny
Friends 1/2 (:35) Friends
NCIS "In the Zone"
NCIS "Recoil"
NCIS "Freedom"
Burn Notice (N)
Graceland "Pizza Box" (N) (:05) Necessary Rough
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy BigBang
BigBang
Sullivan (N) BigBang
Conan (N)
(5:00) The Situation Room OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
(5:30) �� National Treasure ('04, Adv) Nicolas Cage. The Hero "Heart"
��� Four Brothers ('05, Act) Mark Wahlberg.
The Hero "Heart"
(5:30) �� Liar Liar Jim Carrey.
��� O Brother, Where Art Thou? ('00, Com) George Clooney.
Showville (N)
Small To (N) Small Town
PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
PropWars
The First 48
The First 48
Inter. "Terry/ Alissa"
Intervention "Ryan" (N)
Scared "Lake County, FL" Beyond Scared Straight
(5:00) To Be Announced
B. Planet "Ocean World" Blue Planet "Frozen Seas" B. Planet "Seasonal Seas" Blue Planet "Tidal Seas"
B. Planet "Seasonal Seas"
House "The Down Low"
House "Remorse"
�� 28 Days ('00, Dra) Sandra Bullock.
I'm Having Their Baby
�� 28 Days
Charmed "A Witch's Tail" Charmed "A Witch's Tail" L.A. Hair
L.A. Hair (N)
House of Curves (N)
L.A. Hair "VIP Blow Out"
The Kardashians
E! News
�� The Lake House ('06, Rom) Sandra Bullock.
The Kardashians
C. Lately
E! News
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
'Til Death
'Til Death
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Queens
Queens
Queens
(:35) Queens
Life Below Zero
State Troop. "Ice Patrol" Mountain Movers (N)
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero
Crossover
Crossover
Prem.World The Grid
Tour de France Preview
CFL Football Pre-season Montreal Alouettes vs. Winnipeg Blue Bombers (L)
(5:00) Racing NASCAR Race Hub
NCWTS
NASCAR Truck Racing UNOH 225 Site: Kentucky Speedway (L)
Pinks!
Car Warriors "Chevelle"
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Swamp "The Reaper"
Truckers "Fear the Crack"
Take Over
(:45) Tabatha Takes Over
(:45) Housewives NJ
(:45) Wives NJ "Gym Rats" (:45) WivesNJ Tabatha Takes Over (N)
Watch (N)
Take Over
106 &amp; Park: BET's Top 10 Live (N)
�� B.A.P.S ('97, Com) Halle Berry, Dennis Rodman, Natalie Desselle. �� Beauty Shop ('05, Com) Queen Latifah.
Market Flip Market Flip House
House Hunt. Rehab
Rehab
Renovation Raiders (N)
HouseH (N) House (N)
House Hunt. House
Warehouse 13
Megafault ('09, Sci-Fi) Eric La Salle, Brittany Murphy.
Independence Day-saster ('13, Sci-Fi) Ryan Merriman. Stonehenge Apocalypse
(5:30) This Means War
(:15) Prometheus ('12, Adv) Logan Marshall-Green, Noomi Rapace.
The Out List (N)
Veep
Cathouse
(:10) ��� The Five-Year Engagement Jason Segel.
(:15) �� The Hangover Part II Bradley Cooper.
� Battleship ('12, Sci-Fi) Taylor Kitsch.
(5:00) The Magic of Bell... �� But I'm a Cheerleader
�� Brokeback Mountain ('05, Dra) Jake Gyllenhaal, Heath Ledger.
Polyamory
Sexy Baby

�Thursday, June 27, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 27, 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 Thursday,
June 27, 2013:
This year you have the unique
opportunity to let your mind grow past
preconceived concepts. By the end the
year, you will note how fundamental
judgments can limit your thoughts. You
will relate to others better, and you
also will experience more success and
inner content. If you are single, someone quite bohemian could enter your
life and become the flame that warms
and nurtures you. If you are attached,
you will experience more compassion between you and your significant
other. PISCES is as emotional as you
are.
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)
HHHH You might opt to say less
and stay more centered as of late.
Perhaps the best action to take is
to be receptive to others’ inquiries.
Though it is not natural for you to
assume a passive role, it might be
best. Understanding will evolve as a
result. Tonight: Get some extra R and
R.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHH Domestic matters could be
problematic right now. You might even
get into a quarrel with a family member
if you are not careful. You seem to be
more rigid than you have been in the
past. Be ready to make a kind gesture
in order to avoid a conflict. Tonight:
Happy at home.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Someone might be
demanding more than you want to
give. Realize what is driving you in
certain areas of your life. Know what is
going on within your circle of friends.
Remember that you can’t control anyone besides yourself — nor should
you want to. Tonight: Your treat.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH You might be touched by
recent exchanges between you and
a loved one. Know that this feeling
is allowing a suppressed emotion to
emerge. You’ll need to deal with those
feelings in order to prevent a strong
reaction from occurring. Tonight: Let
your imagination lead the way.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH You would be well-advised
to relate to key individuals directly.
Communication continues to be out of
sync for you, and others as well. Tap
into your creativity, and allow more
space to confirm what you have just
heard. Tonight: Dinner with a favorite
person at a favorite place.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH You could be a lot more
reflective than you have been in a
while. Your wheels might be spinning in order to ensure that you have
the responses you’ll need when it is
impossible to make a prediction. Give
up a need for control, and go with the
flow. Tonight: Defer to a partner.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHH Focus on a recent accomplishment. You often use flattery to
get what you want. Be careful, as you
won’t know what to do when someone
reverses your technique and uses it
on you. Worse yet, you might not even
notice that it’s happening. Tonight: Get
the job done.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH You might be confronted
with a pressing issue. Understand that
you’ll be able to pass right through
it, no matter how many hurdles you
already might have jumped over. A
new friend could warm the cockles of
your heart in the interim. Accept this
with grace. Tonight: Have fun
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH You will see life with more
openness because of the implications
in a special relationship. The result of
feeling so good in the company of this
person could trigger more openness.
Make a point to learn more about why
people do certain things. Tonight:
Togetherness is the theme.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH You’ll find the right words
to compliment someone — be sure to
let him or her know how sincere you
are. A compromise with a loved one
seems inevitable. You also are able
to identify with others, which will make
you extremely popular. Tonight: At a
favorite spot.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHH You could be overthinking
a risk, and you might not be sure of
which way to go. Realize that a decision needs to be made, but doing it
to please someone else might not be
enough. Value this person’s feedback,
but know that ultimately, the decision
will be yours. Tonight: Your treat.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHHH Be aware of what is happening beyond the obvious. Someone
who is important to your daily life might
be beaming, and his or her happiness will be contagious. Open up to
this positive energy. You might have
a sense of what is about to occur.
Tonight: The world is your oyster.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 27, 2013

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