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OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 107, Volume 70

Wednesday, July 6, 2016 s 50¢

Carleton Preschool receives state award
By Lorna Hart

STEP UP TO QUALITY

lhart@civitasmedia.com

SYRACUSE — The Carleton Preschool Program in Syracuse was recognized for its “commitment to high
quality and ongoing dedication to the
learning and development of young children” by Step Up to Quality.
Step Up to Quality is Ohio’s rating
system for learning and development
programs. Participating preschool programs can earn a one to ﬁve star rating,
with a ﬁve-star being the highest.
Carleton’s preschool program is an
inclusion program that is able to serve
both students with and without special
needs. The preschool received a ﬁvestar Step Up to Quality award by meeting all criteria necessary to receive the
Courtesy photos rating.
The system looks at a school’s staff/
AT LEFT, great care is given to provide a quality preschool experience for every child. AT RIGHT, this
preschooler learns in an environment structured to meet his needs.
child ratios, child assessment results

Step Up to Quality is Ohio’s rating
system for learning and development
programs. Participating preschool
programs can earn a one- to fivestar rating, with a five-star being the
highest.

used to plan activities that best support
learning, and development goals for
each child. Whether or not the assessment results are shared with families is
also important.
The program looks to see if the
school creates goals for children, and
designs lesson plans that support each
child’s growth and the transition to a
new classroom or educational setting.
See AWARD | 3

Board approves
contracts, hirings
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

REEDSVILLE — The Eastern Local School
Board gave its approval to list hirings, memberships and contracts for the upcoming school year.
After approving the minutes of the May 18
regular meeting, the board approved the ﬁnancial
reports for May as submitted, along with the ﬁnal
permanent appropriation resolution for the ﬁscal
year 2016 and the temporary appropriation resolution for ﬁscal year 2017.
A special revenue, Fund 587, was established for
IDEA Early Childhood Special Education.
The board then moved to enter into executive
session. Upon their return, they approved pupil
activity contracts and supplemental contracts for
the 2016-17 school year.
Supplemental contracts were given to Kristen
Dettwiller, student council advisor-high school;
Rachel Marten-Swindler, curriculum coordinator;
Sam Thompson, National Honor Society advisor;
Robyn Hawk, 11th grade class advisor; Debbie
Barber, 10th grade class advisor; Carolyn Hayes,
elementary student council; Susan Parsons, junior
high class advisor; Bill Salyer, seventh grade boys
basketball; Sam Thompson, junior high football;
Bryan Durst, assistant junior high football; pupil
activity contracts: R. Jay Reynolds, assistant girls
basketball-junior varsity; Bill Shepard, eighth
grade boys basketball.
Amber Ridenour was approved as the intervention specialist teacher and Amelia R. Davis as the
Spanish teacher for the 2016-17 school year, both
on one year contracts.
Amber Ridenour was also approved for the ESY
tutor position and Patreece Beegle as a substitute.
Josh Fogle and Rachel Marten were each given
approval as the co-athletic directors for the 201617 school year.
Resignation letters were accepted from Nick
Dettwiller, physical education teacher, effective
July 31, 2016; Darcy Ringer, 5-8 grade language
arts teacher, effective the end of the 2015-16
school year; and Jody Howard, K-4 elementary
principal.
One-year renewal contracts were given the goahead for Reliance Communications LLC, for the
hosted district notiﬁcation system and School
See BOARD | 3

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

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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com and visit us on
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share your thoughts.

Courtesy photo

John DeBoard, wolf care specialist, removes Stormy from the back of the Gallia County Dog Warden’s truck.

Gallia dog hybrid taken to sanctuary
By Dean Wright

citizen messaged the shelter’s social media page
that an individual had
OHIO VALLEY—
tried to give the dog to
While wolves once were
him and that the animal
an apex predator of Ohio, left at the shelter may
one typically does not
have been suspected to be
think of them as wander- the same wolfdog. Sheling about Gallia County
ter workers had trouble
any more.
initially collecting the
That might be changanimal as she was shy and
ing.
likely to run.
According to Gallia
The warden said
County Dog Warden
Stormy was good with
Laurie Cardillo, she
canned food for a few
thinks a trend may be ris- days, but once introduced
ing in southern Ohio in
to a raw meat diet she
the number of wolf-dog
would regurgitate the
hybrids being homed
canned food.
with private individuals.
Cardillo made contact
Shelter workers found
with the Southern Ohio
one such dog, Stormy,
Wolf Sanctuary located
wandering near the Gallia in Chesapeake. Facility
County Canine Shelter
operator John DeBoard
last Tuesday. The dog had met with Cardillo in
apparently been tied to
Proctorville on Saturday
the septic tank lid near
to assume care over
the structure and chewed Stormy, who is thought
herself to freedom
to be a low- to mid-blood
through her restraint.
content hybrid, meaning
“She ran around here
she may have not had a
for a couple days,” Cardi- wolf parent but a hybrid
llo said. “We ﬁnally got
wolf parent, according to
a call that a girl on State
Cardillo.
Route 850 had her in a
Cardillo said DeBoard
kennel. She’s about a year- had little trouble collectand-a-half-old. We think
ing the animal or directing
her, due to his experience
there are probably a few
with the hybrids. DeBoard
more out in the county.”
has told Cardillo that
Cardillo said a local
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

WHAT’S A DOG HYBRID?
A hybrid dog is a mix between two or more purebred
dogs. A wolfdog hybrid is the result from a mating
between a wolfe and a dog. A coydog is the result of
mating between a coyote and a dog: coydogs were
deliberately bred in Pre-Columbian Mexico, where
coyotes were held in high regard.

Stormy is seemingly doing
well with the rest of the
pack at the sanctuary.
The warden said in
her experience this was
the ﬁrst wolfdog hybrid
she had found about the
county.
“I don’t recommend
just anybody keeping
these (animals) as pets
because it’s a misunderstood (animal),” Cardillo
said. “It takes somebody
that really understands
the hybrid breed and
knows you can’t make a
full-time house pet out of
them. You’ve got to have
a lot of time and resources. You can’t have a 10- or
12-hour a day job and
have one of those. You’re
going to come home and
the inside of your house
is going to be destroyed.
They need constant
(attention).”
Cardillo said that many
such animals have been

acquired through ﬂea
markets. However, buyers beware. Sellers may
tell a potential customer
anything about an animal
that may not truly be of
wolf stock just to make a
sale. Also, wolf hybrids,
and wolves themselves,
mature to adulthood by
the ages of two or three.
They then become highly
independent and may
not listen to an owner
regardless of training
and, therefore, potentially
unpredictable.
Wolfdogs that make
their way to the Southern
Ohio Wolf Sanctuary are
rehabilitated as best as
possible. Animals that
cannot be homed are kept
for the duration of their
lives at the shelter. Others
are strictly observed as
well as families looking to
adopt them.
See HYBRID | 3

�LOCAL/NATION

2 Wednesday, July 6, 2016

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

DAVID ARTHUR ACREE
MIDDLEPORT —
David Arthur Acree, 70 of
Middleport, passed away
Saturday, July 2, 2016, at
Marietta Memorial Hospital. He was born April
24, 1946, in Van, W.Va.,
to the late Margaret and
Earl Acree. He was a
faithful member of Calvary Christian Church,
a veteran of the United
States Army, and a retired
coal miner from mine 2 at
the Southern Ohio Coal
Company.
He enjoyed ﬁshing,
golﬁng, reading his Bible,
playng video games with
his grandchildren and
playing with his dog, Harley Acree.
He was preceded in
death by his parents;
brothers Earl, Ervin and
Phillip Acree; and sisters
Paula Dolan and Leah
Catnerbury.
He was a very loving
husband of 49 years to

Linda (Perry) Acree,
he was a loving father
to David (Beth) Acree,
Jonathan (Emily) Acree
and Stephanie Young;
grandfather to Ashley,
Ryan, Cadence and Harper Acree, and Bradley,
Benjamin, Brentten and
Brayden Young; brother
to James (Betty) Acree
and Gary (Roberta)
Acree; and uncle to several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will
be 11 a.m. Friday, July 8,
2016, Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with Pastor T.D.
Hale and the Rev. James
Acree Sr. ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in Rocksprings Cemetery. Visitation for family and friends
will be 6-8 p.m. Thursday
at the funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

MARGARET JEAN WERRY
POMEROY — Margaret Jean Werry, 86, of
Pomeroy, died Monday,
July 4, 2016, at her residence.
Jean, or Jeanie to most,
was a beautiful spirit
born on June 1, 1930,
in Pomeroy. She was
the daughter of the late
Eugene and Ella Fisher
Bryant. Upon graduating from Pomeroy High
School, Jean married her
high school sweetheart,
John Earl Werry, on Sept.
9, 1950. Married for 52
years, Jean and John
raised their two sons, Jeffery and Mark Werry, in
Hemlock Grove, Pomeroy.
A woman of the true
Christian faith, Jean
was a member of the
New Beginnings United
Methodist Church and
the Methodist Women’s
Group. Jean was a former choir director for
the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Jean
also enjoyed her years as
a member of the Alpha
Beta Sigma Phi IOTA
Master Group Sorority.
After many years of service at the Farmers Bank
of Pomeroy, she retired to
enjoy her life by traveling,
singing, square dancing,
playing cards, and spending time with her family
and friends.
Jean is survived by a

son, Mark John (Tami)
Werry; six grandchildren: Melissa D. Werry,
Candace Werry (Brad)
McCarty, Brandon S.
Werry, Alicia D. Werry
(Brent) Rhodes, Jana F.
Robinette and Benjamin
E. Robinette; ﬁve greatgrandchildren: Reece
Abigail Carper, Dominick
Butcher, Dominique
Butcher, Eli McCarthy
and Payten McCarthy;
two brothers, Edgar R.
(Betty) Vale and John A.
(Barbara) Bryant; and a
brother-in-law, Paul C.
Werry.
Besides her parents,
she was preceded in death
by her husband, John Earl
Werry; and son Jeffery
Stephen Werry.
Funeral services will
be 11 a.m. Friday, July
8, 2016, at New Beginnings United Methodist
Church in Pomeroy with
the Rev. Alethea L. Botts
and the Rev. John Bryant
ofﬁciating. Burial will be
in Beechgrove Cemetery
in Pomeroy. Visitation
will be 2-4 p.m. and 6-8
p.m. Thursday at EwingSchwarzel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy, and one hour
before the service Friday
at the church.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
ewingfuneralhome.net.

Civitas Media, LLC

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Telephone: 740-992-2155
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michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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bwalters@civitasmedia.com

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740.992.2155

BAKER
CROWN CITY, Ohio — Linda L. Baker, 53, of
Crown City, passed away Sunday, July 3, 2016.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Thursday, July 7,
2016, at Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis. Private interment will be in Brush Cemetery. Friends
may call the funeral home between 6-8 p.m. Wednesday.
DECKARD
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Robin L. Deckard, 69,
Rio Grande, and formerly of Vinton, Ohio, passed
away Sunday, July 3, 2016. Funeral service will
be noon Saturday, July 9, 2016, at McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton chapel. Burial will follow in
Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may call the funeral
home between 11 a.m. and noon Saturday.
HETZEL
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Gary Frank Hetzel
Jr., 44, of Chesapeake, passed away Sunday, July
3, 2016 at home. There will be no services. Hall

Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is
assisting the family with arrangements.
KEARNS
WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. — Joseph Allen
Kearns, 18, of West Columbia, passed away July
3, 2016, in Letart, W.Va., due to injuries received
in an accident. Service will be 1 p.m. Thursday,
July 7, 2016, at Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
W.Va. Burial will follow in Zirkle Cemetery, Letart.
Visitation will be 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Thursday at the
funeral home.
SCHOEPPNER
MARIETTA, Ohio — John J. Schoeppner, 91,
of Marietta, died July 4, 2016. Funeral liturgy with
mass will be 10 a.m. Friday, July 8, 2016, at The
Basilica of St. Mary of the Assumption. Visitation
will be 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. Thursday at the Marietta Chapel of Cawley &amp; Peoples Funeral Home,
Marietta, with a vigil service at 3 p.m.

Harrisonville-Scipio alumni banquet
Staff Report

Alumni in attendance
were: Gladys Hull CumHARRISONVILLE —
ings, Class of 1942; Joe
Scipio High School (1930-1955) was located in
The Harrisonville-Scipio
Stanley, Class of 1945;
Harrisonville. The school was replaced by Rutland
Alumni Association
Flora Douglas Ashborne,
High School (1955-1968).
conducted their 87th
Class of 1951; Paul Cotannual banquet with 30
trell, Class of 1952; Fred
members and guests
Stanley, Pauline BirchThe classes of 1946
for 2016-17: President,
attending.
ﬁeld Leonard, Class of
through 1956 were
Morton Butcher; Vice
The food was catered
1953; Don and Gracie
recognized for their
President, Rachel Burby Corner Restaurant in
Forbed Wilson, Hallie
anniversary years. One
bridge Lefebre; Secretary,
Middleport and served
Rose, Class of 1955;
Mary Wyant Haning;
by the Graham family at member, Larry Clark,
Larry Clark, Class of
Treasurer Larry Clark.
their banquet held at the was present fr0m the
1956; Rachel Burbridge
Scholarships were
Alumni Center near Har- Class of 1956. Gladys
Lefebre, Phyllis Rose
Hull Cumings, Class of
awarded to Seth Petras
risonville.
Dean, Pauline Welch
1942, was recognized as (grandson of Judith
President Morton
Stout, Class of 1957;
the oldest person presWyant Gilliam) and
Butcher welcomed the
Harold Graham, Morton
ent. Both were presented James Dalton Wilcher
group, and Pauline
Btcher, Jay Wiseman
(grandson of James
Birchﬁeld Leonard gave with a ﬂower.
Clark, Mary Wyan Haning, Class of 1961.
the invocation.
Ofﬁcers were elected
Wilcher).

MORE:

Flight attendant reunites soldiers, dogs
By Jim Salter
Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — Derrek Green’s
eyes lit up as the black lab galloped across the airport corridor.
He bent down, threw his arms
out and embraced Zeva, the tailwagging, retired military dog he
had to leave behind two years
earlier.
Watching from the side, Molli
Oliver’s eyes ﬁlled with tears.
Another happy reunion.
Oliver is a chipper 5-foot-2
ﬂight attendant for United Airlines, who has taken it upon
herself to reunite retired military
dogs and their former handlers.
Her personal mission started last
year when she struck up a conversation with a soldier still hurting
ﬁve years after parting ways with
his military canine.
I said, ‘Well, where is the dog?
I’ll get him for you,’” Oliver
recalled.
It was the start of a new passion for Oliver. The reunion of
Green and Zeva in El Paso, Texas,
on Thursday marked her ﬁfth
homecoming.
“It was emotional,” Green, a
26-year-old Army staff sergeant,
said of getting Zeva back. “At one
point I almost started crying, but
I fought back those tears.”
Oliver, 65, of Los Angeles, has
always had a deep bond with the
military — several members of
her family have served. She also
has a love for dogs.
She was heartbroken by Sgt.
Andrew Mulherron’s story as
she ﬂew with Marines heading
for deployment overseas in April
2015. Mulherron was the ﬁrst
handler for another black lab,
Boone, starting in 2009.
Their bond was deepened by
the fact that Boone was a hero,
receiving a medal for detecting
11 conﬁrmed explosive devices in
Afghanistan.
Mulherron eventually settled
in California and Boone went to
another handler. Oliver tracked
down Boone to Fort Leonard
Wood, Missouri, and was able to
secure permission to ﬂy him to
California, her ﬁrst reunion.
For that one and the next three,
Oliver paid for the ﬂights and
other costs herself. News about
her efforts led to donations,
which funded Zeva’s trip to El
Paso.
Any cost is worth it to see the
look on a soldier’s face when he
has his dog back, Oliver said.
“It’s overwhelming for them,”

Photo courtesy of Molli Oliver via AP

Molli Oliver, a flight attendant with United Airlines, poses with Army Staff Sgt. Derrek
Green and black lab, Zeva, after reuniting the two in El Paso, Texas. Green trained with
Zeva two years ago before he was assigned to a combat engineering unit and had to
leave the dog behind. Zeva stayed in kennels in Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., until Green was
able to adopt her. It is the fifth time Oliver has helped reunite a retired military dog with
its former handler.

she said. “It’s a part of them that’s
been missing.”
Doug Miller, working dog
manager for the Department of
Defense, said the military typically has about 1,700 dogs working
in all branches, with another 800
to 1,000 in kennel for training,
awaiting assignment, or for medical reasons.
Most dogs are used for patrol
and detection of drugs and explosives, Miller said.
Over the course of a dog’s
working life, the animal typically
goes through several handlers.
When the dog is retired, the ﬁnal
handler usually gets ﬁrst dibs.
Other times, a past handler has
made it clear he or she wants to
adopt. If multiple handlers want
the dog, the commander chooses
“based on the best interest of the
dog,” Miller said.
Zeva, like Boone, was trained
to sniff out bombs. She ﬁrst
teamed with Green in 2013.

It turned out the military had
other plans for both of them.
Green was sent to a combat engineering unit in 2014. Zeva never
really took to the training and
remained kenneled in Fort Leonard Wood.
“She deﬁnitely is not a military
working dog,” Green laughed.
“She’d rather relax on your couch
than go out and look for bombs.”
Green, now based in Fort Bliss,
Texas, never forgot his friend,
and secured permission to adopt
Zeva. The kennel master reached
out to Oliver.
Last week, she ﬂew to St. Louis
and made the 130-mile drive to
the Army base to pick up Zeva
and ﬂy her to Texas, where the
dog now lives with Green, his
wife, their three young children
and another lab.
Oliver said the ﬁrst ﬁve
reunions are only the beginning.
“We’re trying to help as many
as we can,” she said.

�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 6, 2016 3

OHIO STATE BRIEFS

Man accused of shooting
father, Ohio deputy is indicted
LEBANON (AP) — A man accused of shooting and
injuring his father and an Ohio sheriff’s deputy has been
indicted on charges including attempted aggravated murder
and attempted murder.
Warren County’s prosecutor says 19-year-old Mohammed
Abdou Laghaoui was indicted Tuesday. Prosecutor David
Fornshell says charges against the Warren County man also
include felonious assault and tampering with evidence.
Court records don’t list an attorney for Laghaoui.
Authorities say Deputy Katie Barnes was shot in the
abdomen while responding to a domestic situation at an
apartment complex. She’s expected to recover. The suspect’s father was shot in the hand.
Authorities haven’t found the AK-47 assault riﬂe they
believe Laghaouri used in the shooting. But Fornshell says
a shot ﬁred from the weapon entered a child’s bedroom in a
neighboring apartment.

Police: Officers shoot, wound
baseball bat-wielding man
COLUMBUS (AP) — Police say they shot and
wounded a man after he charged at them with a baseball bat in central Ohio.
Columbus police say the shooting occurred around
2:30 a.m. Monday as they were responding to a
domestic violence report. Investigators say a dispatcher was speaking with a woman complaining that

a man was hitting her.
The man wasn’t at the scene when police arrived.
But they say he soon returned with a baseball bat and
refused ofﬁcers’ orders to drop it. Police say two ofﬁcers ﬁred at the 29-year-old man. He was reported in
stable condition with multiple gunshot wounds.
Police say the man could face charges of assault and
domestic violence.

Boy run over by float during
Ohio Fourth of July parade
UPPER ARLINGTON (AP) — Authorities say a
boy was injured when he was run over by a ﬂoat during a Fourth of July parade in central Ohio.
The Columbus Dispatch reports (http://bit.ly/29lHFIZ
) the boy was walking alongside a trailer being pulled by
a pickup truck in the Columbus suburb of Upper Arlington when witnesses say he either stopped or lost his
footing. That’s when he was knocked to the ground and
a trailer wheel ran over his leg.
Police Ofﬁcer Shawn Paynter says the boy suffered
a leg injury that wasn’t life-threatening. He says the
boy seemed to being doing OK. The ofﬁcer estimated
the boy’s age as about 11.
The parade was stopped for about a half-hour while
paramedics tended to the boy.

Court to hear Ohio ex-sheriff ’s
appeal in corruption case
ATHENS (AP) — A former southeast Ohio sheriff

appealing his corruption conviction will have his case
heard next month by a state appeals court.
An attorney for former Athens County sheriff Pat
Kelly has argued there was insufﬁcient evidence
to convict him on several charges, including theft
and engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity. That’s
among several issues raised in the appeal.
Kelly was accused of pocketing cash by selling
county vehicles to a salvage yard and spending public
money on clothes and meals. His attorney argued that
Kelly traded forfeited vehicles for cash that was used
for law enforcement purposes.
Kelly was sentenced to seven years in prison. The
Fourth District Court of Appeals is scheduled to hear
arguments in the appeal on July 21 in Athens County.

Ohio man restoring plane
flown in D-Day invasion
FREMONT (AP) — A former state lawmaker who
runs a small airport in northwestern Ohio is setting out
to restore a plane that ﬂew during the D-Day invasion.
Rex Damschroder says he hopes to have the DC-3
ready for the 75th anniversary of D-Day in 2019.
And he plans to ﬂy the plane to France for the celebration.
Damschroder operates the Fremont Airport and has
been ﬂying for more than 50 years.
He tells the Sandusky Register (http://bit.
ly/294g51r ) that the plane transported paratroopers
into war.
There’s still a patched bullet hole below a window
where soldiers once sat.

FFA limits travel during GOP convention
By Kantele Franko

air ambulances are exempt from
the restrictions, as are regularly
scheduled commercial passenger
COLUMBUS — Federal ofﬁand cargo ﬂights operating under
cials will restrict road, air and
preapproved security procedures.
water travel around the city for
Cleveland-bound ﬂights not
next month’s Republican National operating under such a program
Convention, with security meawill have to stop ﬁrst at the
sures affecting passenger and
Youngstown or Akron-Canton
cargo vehicles.
airports for security screenings.
The event, at which the party
Drones are prohibited.
ofﬁcially nominates its candidate
Though the convention-related
for president, is expected to
restrictions may be more extendraw as many as 50,000 people,
sive, TFRs aren’t uncommon. A
so visitors and locals alike might
Federal Aviation Administration
ﬁnd value in planning ahead for
safety publication estimated there
the major congestion anticipated would be TFRs for about 5,000
around town.
sporting events nationwide this
Pilots have been alerted that
year.
temporary ﬂight restrictions, or
On the ground, ofﬁcials plan
TFRs, will be in place for varying to close most of the roads that
distances around Cleveland for
immediately surround the main
the GOP convention July 18-21
venue, Quicken Loans Arena,
and in Philadelphia for the Demo- neighboring Progressive Field
cratic National Convention a week and the Huntington Convention
later.
Center a few blocks away. They’ll
Law enforcement aircraft and
restrict trafﬁc on other roads in

Associated Press

that area. That includes a nearby
stretch of busy Interstate 90
where commercial vehicles and
other trafﬁc will be down to one
lane at times, and the road will
close nightly for six hours.
The U.S. Coast Guard
announced restricted zones on
July 17 in Lake Erie near the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
evenings from July 18-22 along
the Cuyahoga River as it winds
inland toward Interstate 90. That
doesn’t mean convention attendees won’t be able to get out on the
water in sightseeing and dinner
tour boats, as the Coast Guard
can issue waivers for such vessels.
Anticipating the possibility of
demonstrators taking to the water
in kayaks or other small vessels,
the agency also designated two
zones offshore at certain times
for such boaters to “express their
views safely and without interference from, or interfering with,
other maritime trafﬁc.”

Questions about medical marijuana
COLUMBUS (AP)
— Attorneys are asking
whether Ohio’s new medical marijuana law that bars
employers from disciplining professionals from
working with marijuana
businesses applies to them.
Lawyers have submitted at least two requests

for formal opinions on
the matter to the state
Supreme Court’s Board
of Professional Conduct.
Only the state’s high
court can discipline
licensed attorneys.
Attorneys want to know
whether lawyers can
use medical marijuana,

Award
From Page 1

Another requirement is that the
preschool includes organizations
or businesses within the community to support children and their
families and uses input from families and community partners to
ensure the program’s continuous
improvement process.
Teachers and the administrators must complete more than
30 hours of specialized training
every two years and have higher

Hybrid

own or operate medical
marijuana businesses
and represent marijuana
cultivators, processors,
dispensaries, patients and
caregivers. The new medical marijuana law bars
professional license holders from being disciplined
“solely for engaging in

speciﬁc educational qualiﬁcations.
The program also takes into
consideration the support and
value shown to their employees
when providing beneﬁt packages
to retain high-quality teachers.
“Carleton Preschool Program is
proud to be a ﬁve-star program,”
said Kayla George, director of
education. “We know that investing in high-quality early childhood education is critical to our
community and has lasting effects
on the educational careers of our
students. It is important to us
that children develop their self-

size. The snouts on
such animals tend to
be longer and narrower
From Page 1
as well. Dogs develop
to the mental capacity
Hybrids are currently
illegal to privately own of a 10- to 30-day old
in Alaska, Connecticut, wolf pup. Wolves, on
the whole, are more
Michigan, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode intelligent animals, the
website states.
Island and Wyoming.
Meigs County Dog
According to missionWarden
Colleen Murwolf.org, wolves typiphySmith
and Assistant
cally have bigger skulls
Dog
Warden
Dee Cumin relation to dogs.
mins
received
training
Their chests and hips
earlier
this
year
to help
are narrower. Their legs
identify
the
predator
are longer and paws are
in livestock kills, and
larger in comparison
to a typical dogs body
Smith said the subject

professional or occupational activities related to
medical marijuana.”
The law also allows
employers to ﬁre workers who are medical
marijuana patients if
they violate drug-free
policies put forth by
their employer.

conﬁdence, social and emotional
skills, and a love of learning as
the foundation of their educational careers.”
According to George, research
conﬁrms that the ﬁrst ﬁve years
of a child’s life has a direct impact
on how children develop emotional well-being, in addition to, learning and social skills. She believes
Carleton Preschool provides just
such an environment for children
to thrive.
To ﬁnd out more about the
Carleton Preschool program,call
740-992-6681.

of coydogs and wolfdogs came up, but so
far, none have come to
their attention.
“Hopefully, the reason
we at the center haven’t
seen any of these dogs
is because their owners
are being responsible,
but we certainly have
them in the county. We
just haven’t encountered any at this time,”
Smith said.
She voiced the same
concerns as her counterpart in Gallia County
and said these dogs are
different; they are more

difficult to train and do
not respond in the same
way as their domesticated relatives.
“Even through it may
seem to be an equal mix
of dog and either coyote or wolf, I feel the
wild part is dominant,”
she said. “They become
bored more easily and
it is difficult to train a
dog who doesn’t care if
he defecates in his bed
as opposed to domestic
dogs that really want to
learn and please their
owners.”
She said she believes

Courtesy photo

Eastern School District board member Samantha Mugrage is
pictured with third-grade student Rylan Weeks, who was recognized
for achieving a total of 1,443 Reading Counts points, the highest
score any student has achieved at Eastern Local.

Board
From Page 1

Connects and Bartee Photography, effective May 27,
2016 through May 31, 2017.
Membership with Coalition of Rural and Appalachian Schools, for the 2016-17 school year, effective
immediately, was approved for payment in the amount
of $325. Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of
School Funding membership for 50 cents per student
for the 2016-17 Fiscal Year was also given the goahead.
It was announced that Eastern will have open
enrollment students for the 2016-17 school year.
The board then approved a variety of items before
them, including advertising for quotes for tires, tubes,
petroleum products, diesel fuel, fuel oil and dairy
products, and the job description and posting for the
position of Eastern Local School District coordinator
of Special Education and federal programs.
Approvals continued for elementary, middle school,
and high school handbooks for the 2016-17 school
year, a three-year negotiated contract between Eastern Local Education Association and the Eastern
Local Board of Education on Sept, 1, 2016, through
Aug 31, 2019, and a service agreement between Meta
Solutions (previously known as SEOVEC) and Eastern Local Schools for the 2016-17 school year at a rate
of $9,400 was put into place.
The next regular meeting of the Eastern Local
Board of Education is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. July 20
in the elementary library conference room.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155, Ext. 2551.

coydogs are a result of
accidental breeding,
unlike most wolfdogs
that are, at least in
southeastern Ohio,

intentionally bred.
Dean Wright can be reached at
(740) 446-2342, Ext. 2103. Lorna
Hart in Meigs County contributed
to this story.

MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION
LUNCH ALONG THE RIVER
July 13th-August 3rd-September 7th,
11-1 Delivery Available
740-591-6095 or 740-416-2247
Dave Diles Park
WE HAVE CAT'S MEOWS OF MIDDLEPORT LANDMARKS!
THESE MAKE GREAT GIFTS!
Library-Post Office-Pool
Middleport High/Jr. High-Meigs High School
$20@
740-992-5877
60664284

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Water presents
its trials and
tribulations
My heart remains planted in the hills of West
Virginia even though I’ve lived in Ohio for two
years now. The mountain state has, and always
will be home to me. As a kid I ﬁshed in the creeks
and paddle-boated across the lakes in West Virginia, and it breaks my heart to know that the
water that brought me such joy as a
youngster has, with recent ﬂooding,
brought so much pain to so many
people.
I’ve always lived on a road overlooking the river. Ever since I can
remember the view from my front
porch has been of the grand Ohio
Michele
ﬂowing past. I was hooked by her
Z. Marcum beauty. Sometimes she’d freeze over
Contributing and be barren of the usual barges
Columnist
heaped with coal, but most days
boats buzzed by — sometimes a
sternwheeler even paraded past.
Since the time I could recognize the famous calliope music, I’d run barefoot through the yard to
catch a glimpse of the churning paddlewheels.
I’ve been fortunate I’ve never had to scamper
to safety like the countless West Virginians who
braved the storm that raged a few weeks ago. I
have had my own sort of trial by water, however
— a supernatural type of ﬂood that had me clawing for the nearest lifeboat I could ﬁnd — a priest
and a lightworker.
The ﬂood in my home wasn’t from the rising
river, wasn’t from a thunderstorm, it was from a
demon who tried to drown me and my family.
For weeks in 2006, a demon sprayed water
inside my house. It was as if a water hose was
being controlled by an invisible hand that doused
the walls and soaked the carpets. The water would
bust hot light bulbs and set off the ﬁre alarms. I
removed all the pictures from my walls and covered them in plastic. The commode water would
form a funnel and hit the ceiling.
The experience was surreal. Me and my family
were aggravated and confused by the situation
because everything we were witnessing didn’t
make sense.
It was a trial by water. It was a turbulent storm,
but I survived and just like my fellow West Virginians in the counties devastated from the rain that
can sometimes be evil, I stayed aﬂoat on a raft of
faith.
Wherever I live, I’ll always be a West Virginia
girl, always living where I found my faith — where
the West Virginia soil meets the water’s edge.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs County and an author. Her
column appears each Tuesday.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
July 6, the 188th day of
2016. There are 178 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On July 6, 1944, an
estimated 168 people died
in a ﬁre that broke out
during a performance in
the main tent of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum &amp;
Bailey Circus in Hartford,
Connecticut. (One of the
survivors of the blaze was
future actor Charles Nelson Reilly, then age 13.)
On this date:
In 1535, Sir Thomas
More was executed in
England for high treason.
In 1777, during the
American Revolution,
British forces captured
Fort Ticonderoga.
In 1865, the weekly
publication The Nation,
the self-described “ﬂagship of the left,” made its
debut.
In 1917, during World
War I, Arab forces led by
T.E. Lawrence and Auda
Abu Tayi captured the
port of Aqaba from the
Turks.
Today’s Birthdays:
Singer-actress Della Reese
is 85. The 14th Dalai
Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, is
81. Actor Ned Beatty is
79. Singer Gene Chandler
is 76. Country singer
Jeannie Seely is 76. Actor
Burt Ward is 71. Former
President George W.

Bush is 70. Actor-director
Sylvester Stallone is 70.
Actor Fred Dryer is 70.
Actress Shelley Hack
is 69. Actress Nathalie
Baye is 68. Actor Geoffrey Rush is 65. Actress
Allyce Beasley is 65. Rock
musician John Bazz (The
Blasters) is 64. Actor
Grant Goodeve is 64.
Country singer Nanci
Grifﬁth is 63. Retired
MLB All-Star Willie Randolph is 62. Jazz musician
Rick Braun is 61. Actor
Casey Sander is 61.
Country musician John
Jorgenson is 60. Former
ﬁrst daughter Susan Ford
Bales is 59. Hockey player
and coach Ron Duguay
is 59. Actress-writer Jennifer Saunders is 58. Rock
musician John Keeble
(Spandau Ballet) is 57.
Actor Brian Posehn is 50.
Political reporter/moderator John Dickerson (TV:
“Face the Nation”) is 48.
Actor Brian Van Holt is
47. Rapper Inspectah
Deck (Wu-Tang Clan) is
46. TV host Josh Elliott is
45. Rapper 50 Cent is 41.
Actress Tamera Mowry is
38. Actress Tia Mowry is
38. Comedian-actor Kevin
Hart is 37. Actress Eva
(EH’-vuh) Green is 36.
Actor Gregory Smith is
33. Rock musician Chris
“Woody” Wood (Bastille)
is 31. Rock singer Kate
Nash is 29. Actor Jeremy
Suarez is 26.

THEIR VIEW

My memories of America
I was born in 1939
in the Midwest. Our
house was surrounded
by woods, and I well
remember the peacefulness and tranquility of
my youth.
But even at ages 3 and
4, I was aware that we
were at war. I had toy
soldiers to play with and
knew that real soldiers
could get hurt — though
I had little idea of what
war and death really
were.
It was a steep climb up
the hill to Mrs. Stevenson’s house next door to
us. She had a big porch
overlooking the woods
and would invite me over
to visit. Mrs. Stevenson
was a reﬁned lady who
wore lipstick — even
on Tuesday mornings at
home — and was always
well-dressed. She said
she’d show me how to
make stretchers for my
injured soldiers. “Bring
some twigs from the
woods.”
I had a goodly supply
of twigs the next time I
climbed the steep hill.
Mrs. Stevenson cut out
rectangular shapes from
white cloth and showed
me how to tie the corners onto the ends of
two twigs to make a
stretcher. I could now
carry my injured toy soldiers to the Red Cross —
or military ﬁeld hospital.
I wondered why Dad
wasn’t coming home
from the shop. He and
three or four other men
repaired electric motors
for factories as part of
the war effort. Working
late at the shop one night
— and in the darkness
at the rear of the second
ﬂoor — he fell down an
elevator shaft, breaking
an arm and a leg. Conﬁned to a hospital bed
in traction for weeks, he
worried about the shop’s
keeping up with demand.
I went off to kindergarten at our small township school three months
after the D-Day invasion
at Normandy in 1944.
There was an American
ﬂag with its bright red,
white and blue colors in
the corner of the classroom, and we would
recite the Pledge of Allegiance. And we regularly
sang, “My country ‘tis
of thee, sweet land of
liberty — land where
my fathers died, land of

Robert Knudsen | White House Photographs/John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston

President John F. Kennedy greets National Poster Children for the Muscular Dystrophy Association.
Pictured in the back row, left to right, are National Youth Chairman for MDA Actress Patty Duke,
parents of the poster children Mr. and Mrs. C. Leigh Whitaker from Cincinnati, Ohio, President
Kennedy, and National Chairman for MDA actor/comedian Jerry Lewis, with MDA Poster Children
Robbie Whitaker, age 7 and Kerrie Whitaker, age 6, in the Oval Office. White House. Washington, D.C.

the pilgrims’ pride.” But
unit being overrun in an
my America was still
attack south of Seoul.
largely one of Thanksgiv- Most were killed, Leigh
ing feasts and Christmas disappeared, and for the
past 37 months was an
presents — not really
knowing that fathers and MIA, missing in action.
A ﬁnal list of returning
sons, mothers and daughPOW’s — prisoners of
ters, were still dying for
war — was being read
that sweet liberty.
off on the radio. SudOnly later in life did
denly the words came
I begin to undercrackling over
stand why Dad
my bedside radio,
wasn’t coming
“Charles Leigh
home from the
Whitaker, Cincinshop and why
nati, Ohio.” I shot
there were row
out of bed to wake
upon row of white
up my sister and
crosses above the
parents. “Leigh’s
cliffs of Normandy. James
coming home.”
I learned that Bed- F. Burns
Newly married,
ford, Va., lost 19
Contributing
my
wife and I
of her sons on the Columnist
were
living in Bosbeaches at Norton
in
1963 when
mandy, a horriﬁc
President
Kentoll for a tiny town in the
nedy
was
assassinated,
foothills of the Alleghshocking the nation and
enies. I was gradually
particularly his home
becoming an American.
state where we were.
In the late summer of
1953, I was about to start Only later did I see the
my freshman year of high photo of Leigh Whitaker,
his wife, and children
school. I was still awake
with President Kennedy
with the radio on while
at the White House a
my sister and parents
few months before the
slept. The Korean conassassination. Leigh
ﬂict was winding down,
and Joyce’s two children
and my brother was still
were the National Poster
serving in the Coast
Children for Muscular
Guard. His best buddy,
Dystrophy.
Leigh Whitaker, was an
Civil rights marches,
army medic in Korea, his

sit-ins, Martin Luther
King Jr.’s stirring “I have
a dream” speech. The
awareness of the limited
liberty that blacks, other
minorities, and women
had was a disturbing but
real echo of those words,
“My country ‘tis of thee,
sweet land of liberty.”
Sweeter for some than
others.
I now have a fuller
understanding of what it
means to be an American. All gave some, and
some gave all. The boys
from Bedford, POWs,
army and navy nurses,
my Dad’s repair shop
were all part of a larger,
longer effort to grant a
full measure of liberty to
all Americans.
What experiences
shaped your understanding of being an American? Has it changed with
the ebb and ﬂow of world
events and personal
triumphs and tragedies?
Let us all reﬂect on what
American has been, is
today, and should be
in the future. And God
bless America on this
240th celebration of our
independence.
James F. Burns, an Ohio native, is a
retired professor at the University
of Florida.

�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 6, 2016 5

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Daily
Sentinel appreciates your
input to the community
calendar. To make sure
items can receive proper
attention, all information
should be received by the
newspaper at least ﬁve
business days prior to an
event. All coming events
print on a space-available
basis and in chronological order. Events can

be emailed to:TDSnews@
civitasmedia.com.

lawn chair, a friend and
enjoy. Home made ice
cream will be available.
MIDDLEPORT —
Middleport Community
Association Fourth of
July Celebration rescheduled. All activities are as
originally planned.

ciation will hold their
monthly board meeting at
7 p.m. at the Academy in
Chester. Meigs Heritage
Festival will be the topic
of discussion.

Wednesday, July 6
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP
— Scipio Township
Trustees regular monthly
meeting at 7 p.m. at the
Harrisonville Fire House.

Friday, July 8
SYRACUSE — The
Community Band will
hold a free concert at the
Syracuse Community
Center at 7 p.m. Bring a

Thursday, July 7
CHESTER — Chester
Shade Historical Asso-

Junior Grange 878 will
meet (instead of July 2),
beginning with a potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m., followed by the meeting at
7:30 p.m. Election of ofﬁcers will be conducted.
Monday, July 11
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Agricultural Society regular
monthly meeting at 7:30

Saturday, July 9
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange 778 and Star

p.m. at the fairgrounds.
LETART TOWNSHIP
— The regular meeting
of the Letart Township
Trustees will be 5 p.m. at
the township building.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Board of
Health will meet at 5 p.m.
in the conference room of
the Health Department,
located at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
Communion is planned with light
refreshment to follow at 11:30 a.m. Pastor Alethea and her husband, Tommy,
arrived in Pomeroy in February 2014
and together they have been a strong
spiritual presence in Pomeroy and the
surrounding areas. They will be greatly
missed when they leave to accept her
RACINE — Racine United Methodist new appointment to serve a congregaVacation Bible School, July 11-13, from tion in the Columbus area. The pubic is
6 -8:30 p.m. This year’s theme is Fishers welcome to attend the farewell.
of Men.
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will
only list event information that is open
to the public and will be printed on a
space-available basis.

Meals are the same for all children
regardless of race, color, national origin, sex, age or disability, and will be
provided at the sites and times as follows: Tuppers Plains Ball Fields, 49999
Arpaugh Rd. Reedsville, Mondays and
Thursdays 10:45 – 11:30 a.m.; Star Mill
Park, Racine, Mondays and Thursdays
12:15-1 p.m.; Hope Baptist Church, 570
Grant St. Middleport, Tuesdays, 10:3011 a.m.; Emi’s Place Park, 326 E Main
St. Pomeroy, Tuesdays 12:15-1 p.m.;
Meigs Elementary, 36871 SR 124, Middleport, every other Wednesday beginning June 15, 11 a.m.-noon. For more
information about the local programs,
contact Chrissy Musser, food service

Racine UMC Vacation
Bible School

Children’s Summer
New Beginnings UMC Food Service Program
farwell for pastor
POMEROY — The Meigs Local
School District is participating in the
Summer Food Service Program. Meals
will be provided to all children without
charge and there will be no discrimination in the course of the meal service.

comprehensive data on
juveniles who pass through
their doors, and less than
half of the courts contacted
by the nonproﬁt had a
publicly available report on
their cases, according to
the new report.
Under state law, each
court is required to prepare
those reports annually

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

AEP (NYSE) - 70.81
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 20.25
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 112.63
Big Lots (NYSE) - 49.98
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 37.49
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 28.52
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 6.49
Champion (NASDAQ) - 0.14
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 44.53
Collins (NYSE) - 82.57
DuPont (NYSE) - 62.96
US Bank (NYSE) - 39.06
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 31.45
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 48.37
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 59.55
Kroger (NYSE) - 37.33
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 67.04
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 83.9
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 22

72°

82°

82°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.49
1.32
0.63
28.21
22.70

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:10 a.m.
8:57 p.m.
8:33 a.m.
10:32 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Jul 11

Full

Jul 19

Last

Jul 26

New

Aug 2

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

Major
Today 1:43a
Thu. 2:41a
Fri.
3:36a
Sat.
4:28a
Sun. 5:16a
Mon. 6:02a
Tue. 6:45a

Minor
7:57a
8:53a
9:48a
10:39a
11:27a
12:12p
12:31a

Major
2:10p
3:06p
4:00p
4:50p
5:38p
6:23p
7:06p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Minor
8:23p
9:18p
10:11p
11:02p
11:49p
---12:55p

WEATHER HISTORY
On July 6, 1829, in Buffalo, N.Y.,
during a summer thunderstorm, a
13-inch-long herring fell on Main
Street. The ﬁsh weighed more than a
half of a pound.

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

AIR QUALITY
300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

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

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

Level
13.33
15.83
20.97
12.59
13.18
24.83
12.89
24.35
33.25
11.80
15.80
33.30
14.60

Portsmouth
89/72

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.59
+0.57
+0.46
+0.29
+0.08
-0.07
-0.10
-0.63
-0.41
-0.38
+0.50
-0.30
-0.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

BBT (NYSE) - 34.22
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 21.43
Pepsico (NYSE) - 106.42
Premier (NASDAQ) - 16.97
Rockwell (NYSE) - 112.68
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 11.56
Royal Dutch Shell - 54.9
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 12.98
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 73.14
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 9.58
WesBanco (NYSE) - 30.25
Worthington (NYSE) - 41.79
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
July 5, 2016, 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.

SUNDAY

84°
62°
Partly sunny

92°
60°

Pleasant with some
sun

Partly sunny with a
shower or t-storm

Marietta
88/70

Murray City
88/69
Belpre
88/70

Athens
87/69

St. Marys
88/70

Parkersburg
87/70

Coolville
87/70

Elizabeth
88/70

Spencer
86/70

Buffalo
87/71
Milton
88/72

St. Albans
87/72

Huntington
87/71

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
73/58
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
67/55
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
76/62
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

91°
69°
Partly sunny and
humid

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
88/73

Ashland
88/73
Grayson
88/72

MONDAY

83°
61°

Wilkesville
88/70
POMEROY
Jackson
88/70
89/70
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
88/70
89/71
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
88/72
GALLIPOLIS
88/71
88/70
87/71

South Shore Greenup
88/73
88/71

51

Logan
88/70

McArthur
88/69

Lucasville
89/72

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
88/72

Very High

Primary: not available
Mold: 516

SATURDAY

91°
71°

Adelphi
88/70

Waverly
89/72

Pollen: 0

Low

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

Clouds and sun with a
Showers and a
t-storm; humid
heavier thunderstorm

3

Primary: leptosphaeria

Thu.
6:10 a.m.
8:56 p.m.
9:35 a.m.
11:09 p.m.

THURSDAY

Humid today and tonight with a thunderstorm.
High 88° / Low 71°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

83°
72°
86°
65°
100° in 1949
46° in 1968

EXTENDED FORECAST

86°
71°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

and ﬁle them no later than
June. The nonproﬁt has
called on the state to implement a comprehensive juvenile justice data collection
system for Ohio. According
to the report, 95 percent of
the unruly and delinquency
cases in the state aren’t
comprehensively tracked by
any entity.

8 PM

POMEROY —Children ages 3-18 are
invited to Mulberry Community Center
in Pomeroy to pick up a free peanut butter and jelly sack lunch (other options
available for those with peanut allergies) or stay and enjoy a story every
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
through Aug. 11 from noon to 1 p.m.
(This program is not part of the Children’s Summer Food Service program).

LOCAL STOCKS

Report: Scarce information
on juvenile justice in Ohio
COLUMBUS (AP) —
There’s limited information available about what
happens to thousands of
juveniles who end up in the
Ohio justice system, according to a newly released
report by the Juvenile Justice Coalition of Ohio.
Few of the state’s 88
juvenile court systems keep

Summer Feeding and
Reading program

Clendenin
86/70
Charleston
84/71

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

Montreal
85/68

Winnipeg
78/55
Billings
79/53

Minneapolis
85/69

Detroit
91/71

Toronto
90/68
New York
92/76

Chicago
90/70
Kansas City
93/76

Denver
93/57

Washington
92/77

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
96/67/s
62/52/sh
88/73/t
86/74/pc
91/73/t
79/53/t
82/57/s
90/70/s
84/71/t
92/73/t
87/54/pc
90/70/t
86/71/t
92/72/pc
88/71/t
99/79/pc
93/57/s
91/73/pc
91/71/t
86/75/pc
96/80/pc
86/73/t
93/76/pc
103/79/s
95/80/pc
76/62/pc
90/75/t
92/80/pc
85/69/pc
90/76/t
96/81/pc
92/76/pc
98/76/pc
96/77/t
94/78/pc
107/83/s
89/72/pc
86/60/pc
90/73/t
89/73/t
91/78/t
90/64/s
67/55/pc
73/58/pc
92/77/t

Hi/Lo/W
95/66/pc
66/55/pc
92/76/t
86/74/t
94/74/t
82/57/pc
90/62/pc
82/65/t
83/71/t
95/75/t
80/52/pc
86/72/t
87/73/t
87/72/pc
86/72/t
99/80/s
88/58/pc
90/70/t
87/71/t
86/74/s
95/80/s
86/74/t
94/71/s
104/79/s
96/81/s
78/63/pc
89/77/t
92/79/s
83/64/t
94/77/t
95/81/t
93/76/t
98/76/s
96/77/t
95/78/t
107/85/s
84/72/t
74/59/pc
92/75/t
91/74/t
94/79/t
92/70/s
67/55/pc
66/59/sh
93/77/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
88/73

High
Low

El Paso
101/77
Chihuahua
97/70

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

107° in Needles, CA
30° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
High
Low

Houston
96/80
Monterrey
100/75

Miami
92/80

117° in Basrah, Iraq
2° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

60647073

POMEROY — New Beginnings
United Methodist Church in Pomeroy
will say farewell to their pastor, the
Rev. Alethea Botts, at 10 a.m. Sunday,
July 10. A farewell service with Holy

director, Meigs Local School District at
740-992-6171.

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 6, 2016 s Page 6

Maddon tossed, Reds top Cubs 9-5

CHICAGO (AP) — Joe Maddon could make light of his latest ejection, saying he got in a
workout and snacked on some
buttered raisin bread after he
got tossed.
On a day when the Cubs lost
again, their manager found at
least a few positives.
John Lackey’s winless streak
stretched to ﬁve starts, Maddon was ejected and the Cincinnati Reds beat struggling
Chicago 9-5 on Tuesday behind
Zack Cozart’s 13th home run.
Lackey (7-5) allowed six
runs — ﬁve earned — six hits
and ﬁve walks in six innings,
dropping to 0-3 in his past ﬁve
starts. The Cubs have lost ﬁve
of their last six games and 10
of 15.
Maddon was ejected for the
second
time this season. David
Paul Beaty | AP
Cincinnati Reds’ Joey Votto watches his RBI double during the seventh inning Ross was batting in the second,
against the Chicago Cubs on Tuesdayin Chicago. Cincinnati won 9-5. Votto had two took a 3-0 pitch and started
RBIs as the Reds defeated the Cubs for only the second in 12 games this season. heading to ﬁrst, only for plate

umpire Jerry Meals to call a
strike. Maddon got tossed by
Meals as he protested from the
dugout, then came out for a
spirited argument that lasted a
few more minutes.
“It was pretty much the
culmination of other calls that
were going against us recently
at the plate,” he said. “I think
it kind of boiled over in that
moment. I haven’t had a day off
in a while.”
Joey Votto added two RBIs
and Jay Bruce homered as the
Reds beat the Cubs for the
second time in 12 games this
season after nearly blowing a
5-0 lead. Cincinnati won for
just the third time in 14 games
overall.
Cozart doubled and scored in
the fourth. He also went deep
in Monday’s loss.
“Everybody wants to beat
the Cubs,” said Billy Hamilton,
who had two hits and scored

two runs. “They’re the best
team in baseball. We know we
can beat those guys. This was a
big day for us.”
Kris Bryant hit his major
league-leading 25th home run
for Chicago. Addison Russell
went deep twice, giving him
giving him three homers in the
past two games. Javier Baez
also connected against Brandon Finnegan (4-7).
Finnegan gave up ﬁve runs
and ﬁve hits in ﬁve innings,
including four homers that
matched Jon Moscot’s seasonhigh for Cincinnati at Colorado
on May 31. He had lasted
a career-low 2 1/3 innings
against Washington in his previous start.
Bryant, Baez and Russell each
connected in a four-run third.
Russell added a solo drive in the
ﬁfth that cut it to 6-5.
See REDS | 10

OHSAA awards
$36,000
in scholarships
Contributed Article

COLUMBUS — The
Ohio High School
Athletic Association
will hand out $36,000
in college scholarships
to recent high school
graduates following
selections made by each
of the OHSAA’s six District Athletic Boards.
The OHSAA’s annual
college scholarship program is now in its 24th
year.
Each of the 36 honorees will receive $1,000
awards, including six
(one from each district)
who will receive an
OHSAA Ethnic Minority Scholarship.
The point system
used in each district is
described below.
Nike and Molten have
also contributed to the
OHSAA scholarship
program.
“These 36 young
people are to be commended for being excellent students, while also
achieving numerous
honors in athletics,”
said OHSAA Interim
Commissioner Dave
Gray. “They are leaders in their schools and
communities and truly
represent what it means
to be a student-athlete.
Their futures are very
bright and their families, teachers and coaches are to be proud for
the roles they have had

in helping guide them
to great high school
careers and now on to
college. The OHSAA is
very proud to be associated with each of them.”
Scholar-athlete recipients are selected based
on a point system which
rewards students for
grade point averages;
class rank; ACT or SAT
scores; varsity letters
earned; and individual
and team athletic honors.
The number of scholarship recipients from
each district are based
upon the number of
schools within the district.
The recipients were
selected by special committees within each of
the OHSAA’s six athletic districts.
Individuals who
receive athletic scholarships from NCAA Division I or II institutions
or appointees to military academies are not
eligible for an award.
2016 OHSAA Scholar-Athlete Scholarship
Recipients
Southeast District (4)
Andrew Wolford, Valley – OHSAA ScholarAthlete
Wesley Stephens,
Chesapeake – OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
Taylor Perry, Fairland
– OHSAA ScholarAthlete
See OHSAA | 10

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, July 6
American Legion Baseball
Lancaster at Pomeroy Post 39, 6 p.m.
Friday, July 8
American Legion Baseball
Beverly at Pomeroy Post 39, 6 p.m.
Thursday, July 14
American Legion Baseball
Athens at Pomeroy Post 39, 6 p.m.
Tuesday, July 19
American Legion Baseball
Pomeroy Post 39 at Jackson, 6 p.m.
Thursday, July 21
American Legion Baseball
Jackson at Pomeroy Post 39, 6 p.m.

Marcio Jose Sanchez | AP file

Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant (35) reacts during the second half of Game 7 of the NBA Western Conference finals against
the Golden State Warriors on May 30 in Oakland, Calif. Durant announced Monday that he is joining All-Stars Stephen Curry and Klay
Thompson with the Warriors. Durant made the decision public on The Players’ Tribune Monday morning. He can’t officially sign until July 7.

Durant’s move changes NBA landscape
By Jon Krawczynski

While there, he helped lead the
Thunder to the Western Conference ﬁnals four times and to the
Four All-Stars, two MVPs, a
NBA Finals in 2012, where they
whole new Splash Family in Gold- lost to the Heat, another super
en State.
team formed when LeBron James
Kevin Durant’s decision to join
and Chris Bosh joined Dwyane
the Warriors on Monday sent
Wade in Miami.
tremors through the NBA, and
Durant himself spoke out negaplayers and executives throughout tively about creating super teams
the league immediately started to when James made his decision in
contemplate how the newest super 2010.
team would alter the landscape.
But after the Thunder could
“Thats crazy!!!! KD in GSW????” never get to the top of the mounWizards center Marcin Gortat
tain with Durant, Russell Westtweeted. “(Are) they gonna score
brook and Serge Ibaka — and
200 points a game?”
even though they had the Warriors
The Warriors already were
down 3-1 in the conference ﬁnals
a super team before one of the
— Durant opted to head west.
league’s most unstoppable scorers
“If you can’t beat um, join um,”
decided to leave Oklahoma City
Clippers forward Paul Pierce
for the Bay Area.
tweeted to tweak Durant.
Golden State won the championWhen James left Cleveland for
ship in 2015, rolled to a regularMiami, stars such as Michael Jorseason record 73 victories last sea- dan, Charles Barkley and Magic
son and came within one game of
Johnson were critical of the deciback-to-back titles when they lost
sion to join forces with players he
to the Cleveland Cavaliers Game 7 had competed against.
of the NBA Finals.
“There’s no way, with hindsight,
Now they have added the player I would’ve ever called up Larry
who nearly eliminated them a
(Bird), called up Magic and said,
round earlier.
‘Hey, look, let’s get together and
Though not everyone is anointplay on one team,’” Jordan said
ing them next year’s champions.
in 2010. “But that’s … things are
“Everyone is so hyped up on the different. I can’t say that’s a bad
matchup problems on the offensive thing. It’s an opportunity these
end? They still gotta come down
kids have today. In all honesty, I
the other end,” Pistons All-Star
was trying to beat those guys.”
center Andre Drummond tweeted.
Denver Nuggets forward Jusuf
“Not a very big team.”
Nurkic was equally puzzled by
Durant’s decision immediately
Durant’s decision.
rekindled the discussion about
“Somebody beat you! And you
stars leaving teams to chase a
go there… ?” Nurkic tweeted.
championship elsewhere.
“Superstar not doing that man.”
Durant spent his ﬁrst nine seaWhile Durant has never been too
sons in Oklahoma City.
concerned by outside opinions, his
AP Basketball Writer

decision may also have ramiﬁcations on the NBA’s collective bargaining negotiations.
During the last lockout, the owners pushed to make changes to the
agreement so that teams, especially those in smaller markets,
would have a bigger advantage in
retaining players.
Commissioner Adam Silver has
said in the past that those changes
were effective, but the inﬂux of
new money into the system this
summer from the league’s new
$24 billion television contract, and
Stephen Curry’s bargain contract
that was negotiated when he was
struggling with ankle injuries, conspired to give the Warriors enough
wiggle room to spend $54 million
on Durant.
The league and the players’
union can opt out of the current
CBA this year, and both sides have
been negotiating to try to avoid
another work stoppage.
One of the biggest talking points
Silver has been making over the
past six months is the league’s continued push for more parity.
“The intention wasn’t that in
this system that teams could sign,
without going above the tax,
that many max player contracts
and that many All-Stars,” Silver
said during All-Star weekend in
Toronto.
“So if you ask me from a league
standpoint, we would prefer that
our All-Stars be distributed around
the league rather than having so
many All-Stars in one market. But
we’ll see what happens this summer.”
See DURANT | 10

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 6, 2016 7

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Hudnall nets 4th ace
of season at Riverside
MASON, W.Va. — The fourth hole-in-one of the
2016 season was recorded by Jeremy Hudnall on
Thursday, June 30, at Riverside Golf Course in Mason
County.
Hudnall used a pitching wedge on the 110-yard
ninth hole to record his ﬁrst career ace. The shot was
witnessed by Heath Stanley, Ken Amsbary and Corey
Miller.

Football League will be holding signups from 11
a.m. until 1 p.m. on every Saturday in July at the
Middleport Stadium. The registration fee is $35
apiece.
For more information, contact Sarah at (740)
444-1606 or Tony at (740) 416-3774. For cheerleading questions, contact Angie at (740) 444-1177.

Gallia Academy football golf
scramble to be held July 16

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The annual Gallia Academy
football golf scramble will be held Saturday, July 16 at
Cliffside Golf Course.
Registration will begin at 7:30 a.m. and the scramble will start at 8:30 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — Middleport Youth League
The format will be bring your own team.
will be having signups for boys and girls ages 7-16
The team will be four players with only one handithat are interested in participating in the 2016 Fall
cap under-10 and a team handicap of 40-or-greater.
baseball and softball leagues.
There will be two divisions to choose from.
Signups will be held from noon until 4 p.m. at the
The blue division is a competitive division that will
Middleport Ball Fields on the Saturdays of July 9, July be playing for cash prizes.
16 and July 23. Signups are also available for either
The white division is a fun division with no handiteams or individuals.
cap requirements and winners will be drawn at ranFor more information, contact Dave at 740-5900438, Jackie at 740-416-1261, or Pat at 740-590-4941. dom.
Food and beverages will be provided.
The deadline for registering is Sunday, July 10.
To register or for questions please call (740) 2561897 or (740) 446-8791.

MYL baseball-softball
sign-ups to be held Saturday

Southern holds basketball
camp from July 11 - July 14

RACINE, Ohio — Southern will be hosting its 10th
annual Hustlin’ Tornadoes basketball camp for boys
and girls entering grades 1-6 from 9 a.m. until noon
on Monday, July 11, through Thursday, July 14.
The camp will be under the instruction of SHS head
coach Jeff Caldwell, who will be aided by his assistant
coaching staff and member of the varsity basketball
program.
The camp’s main emphasis will be stressing the
importance of fundamentals in shooting, dribbling,
passing and defense. There will also be daily competitions in free throw shooting, 3-on-3 and ‘horse’ games.
The cost is $40 per camper or $60 for two from the
same family. You can register the ﬁrst day of camp
and a t-shirt will be given to all participants.
For more information, contact Coach Caldwell at
740-949-3129.

BBYFL holding sign-ups
every Saturday in July
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Big Bend Youth

Kiwanis Juniors golf
tournament is July 14
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —The Cliffside Golf Club
will be hosting the seventh annual Kiwanis
Juniors at Cliffside golf tournament for junior
golfers on Thursday, July 14, starting at 10 a.m.
Registration will be from 9 a.m. until 9:45.
This is an individual stroke play tournament
open to golfers age 9(or under)-to-18 years old.
The participants will be divided into four divisions, 10-under, 11-12, 13-15, and 16-18.
Entry fee is $20 for players 12-under, and $30
for players 13-18. Clubhouse certificates and individual awards will be presented to the top-three
places in each division.
Cart and meal passes will be available for spectators for $15 to follow kids 13-over and $10 to
follow kids 12-under, so that they may follow the
tournament and eat with the kids.
To enter please contact the Cliffside clubhouse

at 740-446-4653, or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919
or 740-645-4381, or by email at rbncaudill@
yahoo.com. Please leave player’s name, age as
of July 14, 2016 and school they are currently
attending.

Tri-County Junior Golf
schedule is released
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The schedule for
the 2016 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf
League has been released.
The tour ofﬁcially began on Monday, June 13, at
the Hidden Valley Golf Course in Point Pleasant.
Age groups for both young ladies and young men
are 10 and under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments, courses and dates of
play are as follows: Wednesday, July 6, at Cliffside
Golf Course in Gallipolis; and Monday, July 11, at
Meigs County Golf Course in Pomeroy.
The fee for each tournament is $10 per player.
A small lunch is included with the fee and will be
served at the conclusion of play each week. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with play starting at
9 a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone at 740-256-6160,
Jan Haddox at 304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing 304675-6135 if you can contribute or have questions
concerning the tour.

Eastern golf
scramble set
POMEROY, Ohio — The Eastern golf team will
hold a golf scramble on Saturday, July 30, at the
Meigs County Golf Course. The format will be a
four-man scramble with a 9 a.m. shotgun start, with
a limit of 10 teams allowed in the event.
Registration is scheduled for 8 a.m. on the day
of the event and the cost is $40 per player, which
includes 18 holes of golf, a cart and lunch.
There will be a skins game ($20 per team) and
mulligans are available for $10 each. There will also
be prizes for closest to the pin, longest drive, and
hitting the green on par 3s to double your money.
Again, the ﬁeld is limited to the ﬁrst 10 teams
to register and pay. Contact EHS golf coach Nick
Dettwiller for more information or to register at
740-416-0344 or by email at nickdettwiller@gmail.
com
All proceeds from the tournament will go directly
to the boys and girls golf teams at Eastern High
School.

URG CAMP ANNOUNCEMENTS
Staff Report

who ranks among the top
10 coaches on the active
RIO GRANDE — The wins list with more than
University of Rio Grande 450, will be the camp
Athletic Department
director.
has announced its 2016
Online registration
Summer Camp schedule. is available through the
Camps will be conducted women’s basketball link
throughout July on the
on the school’s athletic
URG campus.
website, www.rioredstorm.com.
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Registration forms are
The University of Rio
alsoavailable in the lobby
Grande’s 2016 Women’s
of the Lyne Center during
Basketball Camp is sched- regular business hours.
uled for July 10-13 at the
Registration forms
Lyne Center on the URG should be mailed to David
campus.
Smalley, Rio Grande
The overnight instruc- Women’s Basketball
tional camp is open to
Camp, P.O. Box 500, Rio
girls in grades 4-12.
Grande, OH 45674.
Cost is $285 per campChecks should be made
er, which includes lodgpayable to Women’s Basing, meals, a certiﬁcate of ketball Camp.
participation and a t-shirt.
For more information,
Campers will also
contact Smalley at 740receive 24-hour supervi- 245-7491, 1-800-282sion from coaches and
7201, or e-mail dsmalcounselors; lecture/
ley@rio.edu
discussion groups and
film sessions; daily
MEN’S AND
instruction on shooting, WOMEN’S SOCCER
ball-handling, post play
The University of Rio
and defense; and use of Grande soccer programs
the school’s swimming
have announced their
pool.
2016 summer camp
There will also be a
schedule.
camp store featuring
A team camp for girls’
drinks, snacks, pizza and high school squads is
Rio Grande apparel for
planned for July 10-13,
sale each day.
with a boys’ high school
Veteran Rio Grande
team camp slated for July
women’s basketball head 17-21.
Cost for the girls’ camp
coach David Smalley,

is $270, while the boys’
camp has a fee of $305.
Fees for the residential
camps include lodging,
meals, training sessions
and tournament play.
Camp directors are
URG men’s soccer head
coach Scott Morrissey

and women’s soccer head
coach Tony Daniels.
The camp brochure
is available on both the
men’s soccer and women’s soccer links of the
school’s athletic website,
www.rioredstorm.com.
Online registration and

payment is available at
www.rioredstormsoccercamps.com
Registration forms
should be mailed to URG
Lyne Center, P.O. Box
500, Rio Grande, OH
45674.
Checks should be made

payable to Scott Morrissey.
For more information,
contact Morrissey at 740245-7126, 740-645-6438
or e-mail scottm@rio.
edu; or Daniels at 740245-7493, 740-645-0377
or e-mail tdaniels@rio.
edu

WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

6 PM

8
10
11
12
13

WEDNESDAY, JULY 6
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
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depth analysis of current
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13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
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America's Got Talent "Best of Auditions" Catch a recap
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Middle "The The
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Convention" Goldbergs
Family
SuperNature:Wild "Masters Nova "Making North
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Big Brother
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Boat
Real Retreat"
9 Months That Made You
"One of a Kind" (N)
Fresh Off the O'Neals "The
Boat
Real Retreat"
American Gothic
"Nighthawks" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10
9 Months That Made You
"One of a Kind" (N)
American Gothic
"Nighthawks" (N)

10 PM

10:30

Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines Arnold Schwarzenegger. TVMA P. Interest "No Good Deed" P. Interest
18 (WGN) Bl. Bloods "Unsung Heroes"
Insider (N)
Pirates Ball Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at St. Louis Cardinals Site: Busch Stadium (L)
24 (ROOT) In Depth
25 (ESPN) (5:30) SportsCenter
MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Boston Red Sox Site: Fenway Park -- Boston, Mass. (L)
Baseball Tonight (L)
26 (ESPN2) SportsNation The Jump
UEFA Soccer Euro 2016 Semifinal
Battlefrog College
Battlefrog College
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

Fun With Dick and Jane (2005, Comedy) Téa Leoni,
Friends With Benefits (‘11, Com) Justin Timberlake, Mila Kunis. Two Dirty Teacher
Alec Baldwin, Jim Carrey. TV14
friends learn that having sex does complicate their friendship. TVMA
TV14
Dead of Summer "Barney
Another Cinderella Story (2008, Comedy) Andrew Young and Baby Daddy Dead of Summer
Seeley, Jane Lynch, Selena Gomez. TVPG
"Patience"
Hungry (N) (N)
Rubble Eyes"
(5:30)
Grandma's Boy (2006, Comedy) Allen
The Longest Yard (‘05, Com) Adam Sandler. A former football star My Cousin
Covert, Shirley Jones, Linda Cardellini. TV14
puts a team of inmates together to play the prison guards. TV14
Vinny TVMA
H.Danger
H.Danger
Crashlet (N) Thunder
Nicky
School
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
NCIS "Love &amp; War"
NCIS "The Artful Dodger"
NCIS "Status Update"
NCIS "Patience"
Royal Pains (F) (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Why They Hate Us
CNN Tonight
Castle "Slice of Death"
Castle "The Dead Pool"
Castle
Castle "Pretty Dead"
Castle "Knockout"
Happy Gilmore (1996, Comedy) Christopher
Hitch (‘05, Com) Eva Mendes, Kevin James, Will Smith. While helping Dinner for
McDonald, Julie Bowen, Adam Sandler. TV14
his latest client, a professional date doctor falls for a journalist. TV14
Schmucks
Survival "Swamplandia"
Dual Survival
Dual Survival: Untamed (N) Dual Survival (N)
American Tarzan (N)
The First 48 "Southwick/
Duck
Duck
Duck D. "De- Duck Dynasty "RV There
Duck
Wahlburgers WahlburgerDevil's Doorway"
Dynasty
Bug Life"
Yet?"
Dynasty (N) Dynasty (N) (N)
s: Extra H (N)
Air Jaws: Night Stalker
Isle of Jaws
Sharks Among Us
Tiger Beach
(:05) The Return of the
(5:30) Next
Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights (2004, Romance)
(:45)
Dirty Dancing (‘87, Dan) Patrick Swayze. While on vacation, a
Top Model Romola Garai, Sela Ward, Diego Luna. TV14
girl discovers love and romance with a local dance instructor. TV14
Law &amp; Order "Poison Ivy" Law &amp; Order "Indifference" Law&amp;O. "Prisoner of Love" Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order "Life Choice"
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
Kardashians "Oh Baby!"
EJ NYC (N)
Kardashians "Oh Baby!"
(:25) Andy Griffith Show
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Lopez
(:50) Lopez
(:25) Ray "The Apartment" Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Life and Death Row
Alaska Troopers "Fearless Russia's Toughest Prisons World's Toughest Prisons Life and Death Row
"Punishment" (N)
"Execution"
on the Front Lines"
NASCAR America (L)
Ironman (N) Ironman (N) UCI Cycling Tour de France Stage Limoges - Le Lioran
Speak for Yourself
MLB Whiparound (L)
UFC Tonight (N)
TUF 23 "Bump in the Road" Ultimate Fighter 23 (N)
American Pickers "Big
American Pickers "Can't
American Pickers "Great
American Pickers "Tick
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
Moe"
Catch a Break"
Minds Ink Alike"
Tock Pick"
(N)
(N)
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives
New York City Social (N)
The Real Housewives (N)
The Real Housewives
In the House In the House Eve
Eve
Music Moguls
FinFabulous Martin
Martin
Wayans
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Brother vs. "The Finale" (N) H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:00)
Tremors 4: The Legend Begins Michael Gross. In the 1880s, a
Legion (2010, Action) Lucas Black, Tyrese Gibson,
Tremors 3: ... mining town finds itself overrun by gigantic underground worms. TVPG
Paul Bettany. TVMA

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Friday Night
(:15) Vice
(:50)
Jupiter Ascending (2015, Sci-Fi) Channing Tatum, Eddie
400 (HBO) Lights (‘04, Spt) Lucas Black,
Redmayne, Mila Kunis. A janitor learns that her genetic code puts her in
Billy Bob Thornton. TV14
the running as ruler of the universe. TV14
(:55)
Assassins (‘95, Act) Antonio Banderas, Julianne (:10)
Cop Land (1997, Drama) Harvey Keitel, Robert
450 (MAX) Moore, Sylvester Stallone. The mob's top hit man becomes De Niro, Sylvester Stallone. A humble sheriff tries to control
a target when his reputation catches up with him. TVMA a small town owned by tough New York City cops. TVMA
(4:30)
A
The Usual Suspects The sole
(:15)
Sin City: A Dame to Kill For (‘14, Act) Joseph
500 (SHOW) Mighty Heart survivor of a drug deal gone wrong recounts Gordon-Levitt, Eva Green. Deception, love and revenge
TV14
the events that led to an explosion. TVM
drive hard characters in a series of dark storylines. TVMA
(5:15)

10 PM

10:30

Any Given
The Intern
Wednesday Robert De
(N)
Niro. TV14
Criminal Activities (‘15, Cri)
Dan Stevens, Christopher
Abbott, Michael Pitt. TVMA
Roadies "What Would Phil
Do?" An array of crises land
on Bill after a bad show.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, July 6, 2016

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Daily Sentinel

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Rentals

Want To Buy

LPN positions
for work in a 114 bed Long
Term Care Facility.
Salary is commensurate with
experience. To apply go to
www.personnel.wv.gov.
Lakin Hospital is an
EEO/AA Employer.

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water/trash paid. 10 minutes
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across from Gallia County
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call 740-256-6190

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list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

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Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
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Apartments/Townhouses

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RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
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sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
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The following matters are the subject of this public notice by the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete public
notice, including any additional instructions for submitting
comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov
Final Issuance of Renewal of NPDES Permit
City Ice and Fuel
State Rte 7 &amp; 124, Middleport, OH Facility Description:
Wastewater-Semi-Public Receiving Water: Thomas Fork ID #:
0PR00151*BD Date of Action: 08/01/2016 This final action not
preceded by proposed action and is appealable to ERAC.
7/6/16

Help Wanted General

HELP WANTED
MEIGS COUNTY VETERAN SERVICE OFFICE
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

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Finding Senior Housing can be
complex, but it doesn’t have to be.

QUALIFICATIONS: Honorably discharged veteran; DD214; resident of Meigs County, high
school graduate, valid driver's license, experience in using microsoft word and microsoft
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difﬁcult situations from time to time. Resume required.
Deadline for submission of resume is close of business July 13, 2016. Resume must be
dropped off at the veteran service by the veteran applying for the position

MEIGS COUNTY VETERAN SERVICE OFFICE
175 Race Street-Middleport, Ohio 45760
Job &amp; Family Services Building
740-992-2820

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Centenary: Huge Estate Sale
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July 8 - 9 (Fri- Sat) 8am-3pm
misc Furniture, Kitchen items,
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, July 6, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

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�10 Wednesday, July 6, 2016

SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Remembering
the lone US loss
under Coach K
By Brian Mahoney

nals of the 2006 world
basketball championship, a team coached
Ten years later,
by Mike Krzyzewski
Carmelo Anthony still
and led by likely future
remembers where he
Hall of Famers LeBron
stood.
James, Anthony and
He points to a spot
Dwyane Wade falling to
between the 3-point arc a team that had no NBA
and the sideline, recallplayers.
ing the position from
That 101-95 loss
where he watched a cele- in Japan is the only
bration some teammates deefeat in 76 games
couldn’t bear to face.
since Krzyzewski took
“Everybody was walk- over in 2005.
ing off the ﬂoor. There
Whether it was an
was confetti, things on
upset depends on who
the court,” Anthony
you ask, but there’s no
said. “Everybody was
debating what it meant
celebrating and I stayed, to a U.S. team that
I stayed right there on
hasn’t looked back.
the court. I just wanted
As the U.S. rolls into
to see it and kind of feel Rio and Greece tries
it.”
to qualify this week ,
The Americans
people on both sides
haven’t felt it since.
remembered the buildThe U.S. had just lost up, the game and the
to Greece in the semiﬁ- aftermath.

Associated Press

Reds
From Page 6

Votto made it a two-run game with an RBI
double off Travis Wood in the seventh and Bruce
bumped the lead to 9-5 with a two-run drive
against Pedro Strop in the ninth.
Raisel Iglesias pitched two-hit ball over three
scoreless innings in relief for Cincinnati. Suburban
Chicago product Tony Cingrani, celebrating his
27th birthday, worked the ninth.
NOTES: Bruce became the 14th major leaguer
to hit at least 18 homers in each of his ﬁrst nine
seasons.

Kirsty Wigglesworth | AP

Venus Williams, left, and Serena Williams of the U.S celebrate a point against Lucie Hradecka and Andrea Hlavackova of the Czech
Republic during their women’s doubles match on day nine of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London on Tuesday. The Williams
sister won to advance to the doubles quarterfinals.

Williams sisters dominating Wimbledon
LONDON (AP) — In
some ways, making it to
a Grand Slam semiﬁnal is
rather been-there, donethat for Venus Williams.
She is, after all, already
the owner of seven major
titles, including ﬁve at
Wimbledon.
This one, though, is different.
She’s 36 now, a halfdozen years removed from
her last such run. And, in
the interim, she has been
through the daily struggles
of dealing with a disease
that can sap energy and
cause joint pain.
Williams made it to
the ﬁnal four at the All
England Club for the ﬁrst
time since 2009, and at any
Grand Slam tournament
since the year after that,
playing mistake-free to beat
Yaroslava Shvedova 7-6
(5), 6-2 in the quarterﬁnals
Tuesday.

“Semiﬁnals feels good.
But it doesn’t feel foreign
at all, let’s put it that way,”
said Williams, whose ﬁrst
Wimbledon title came in
2000, and whose most
recent came in 2008.
Asked to compare her
current level of play to that
of the past, Williams shook
her head, shut her eyes and
laughed.
“I don’t remember. Six
years ago is ages ago,” she
responded. “I was most
likely kicking butt six years
ago, if I was in the semis or
the ﬁnals. You have to be.”
Just like in the old days,
Williams will be joined in
the semiﬁnals by a familiar face — younger sister
Serena, who moved closer
to equaling Stefﬁ Graf’s
Open-era record of 22nd
Grand Slam championships
by defeating 21st-seeded
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
6-4, 6-4. Serena hit 11 aces,
including one at 123 mph
to end it.
This, then, is the latest

chapter of the remarkable
Williams tale: A pair of siblings from Compton, California, who rose to the top
of tennis. It’s the 11th time
they’ve reached the semis
at the same major; in all
previous 10, one took home
the trophy. That includes
four all-in-the-family ﬁnals
at the All England Club,
with Venus winning in
2008, and Serena in 2002,
2003 and 2009.
On Thursday, they will
try to set up another such
meeting, when No. 1 Serena faces unseeded Elena
Vesnina of Russia, while
No. 8 Venus takes on No.
4 Angelique Kerber of Germany.
“Obviously, I want her
to win so bad,” Serena said
about Venus, before quickly
adding: “Not in the ﬁnal, if
I’m there.”
Kerber, who surprised
Serena in the Australian
Open ﬁnal in January for
her ﬁrst Grand Slam title,
advanced by eliminating

Durant
From Page 6

The summer is here, and so are the
Warriors, who still have work to do.
The Heat went 2-2 in the ﬁnals during the James, Wade and Bosh era,
including a loss to the underdog Dallas
Mavericks in their ﬁrst season together.
When James went back to Cleveland
to team up with Kevin Love and Kyrie
Irving, the Cavaliers lost in the ﬁnals
their ﬁrst year before winning this season.
And everyone remembers the Los
Angeles Lakers falling short both in
2003-04 — when Gary Payton and
Karl Malone joined Kobe Bryant and
Shaquille O’Neal to chase a title —
and even more spectacularly in 201213 when Dwight Howard and Steve

OHSAA
From Page 6

60666291

Sue-Yeon Ryu, Athens –
OHSAA Ethnic Minority
Scholar-Athlete
Northwest District (7)
Riley Nagel, Deﬁance
Tinora – OHSAA ScholarAthlete
Alicia Hernandez,
Archbold – OHSAA
Ethnic Minority ScholarAthlete
Cameron Conaway,
Greenwich South Central
– OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Kyle Homan, Maria
Stein Marion Local –
OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Jackson Hemmelgarn,
Coldwater – OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
Alec Rhodes, Findlay
Liberty-Benton – OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
Emily Mescher, Maria
Stein Marion Local –
OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Central District (4)
Aaron Wood, Lancaster
Fisher Catholic – OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
Isabella Pesavento,
Columbus School for

No. 5 Simona Halep 7-5,
7-6 (2). Vesnina, ranked
50th and never before
a major quarterﬁnalist,
moved on by overwhelming
No. 19 Dominika Cibulkova
6-2, 6-2.
The last men’s quarterﬁnal spot was earned by
2010 runner-up Tomas
Berdych, who completed
his 4-6, 6-3, 7-6 (8), 6-7 (9),
6-3 victory over Jiri Vesely
in a match suspended after
the fourth set Monday
night because of darkness.
On Wednesday, the semiﬁnalists will be determined
by these matchups: Andy
Murray vs. Jo-Wilfried
Tsonga, Roger Federer vs.
Marin Cilic, Milos Raonic
vs. Sam Querrey, and
Berdych vs. Lucas Pouille.
There wasn’t much
drama in the quartet of
women’s matches Tuesday,
although Venus was perilously close to dropping
her opening set against the
96th-ranked Shvedova, now
0-3 in major quarterﬁnals.

Nash came to town.
This time appears to be different,
with all four of Golden State’s All-Stars
aged 28 or younger and squarely in
their prime.
“Only problem there’s only 1 ball,”
Jazz center Rudy Gobert tweeted.
And only so much money, as odd as
that sounds this summer.
So the Warriors have agreed to trade
Andrew Bogut and will likely have to
jettison Harrison Barnes — two important cogs for them the past two seasons
— and will rely on several minimum
salary veterans to ﬁll out the roster for
depth.
They will also face a crush of attention and many hoping they fail.
Warriors forward Draymond Green
no doubt understands this, and got
straight to the point with Durant in his
ﬁrst message to him on Twitter:
“Block out the noise.”

Girls – OHSAA ScholarAthlete
Danielle Evans, Newark Catholic – OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
Tyndale Hannan, Dublin Coffman – OHSAA
Ethnic Minority ScholarAthlete
East District (4)
Dallas Foster, Sugarcreek Garaway – OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
Olivia Warther, Dover –
OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Conner Roahrig,
Coshocton – OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
Daniel Trouten, St.
Clairsville – OHSAA
Ethnic Minority ScholarAthlete
Southwest District (7)
Kristin Langston, Versailles – OHSAA ScholarAthlete
Samantha Rowland,
Tipp City Tippecanoe –
OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Sean O’Brien, Cincinnati Country Day– OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
Benjamin Greenwell,
Milford – OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Brooke Lezotte,
Waynesville– OHSAA

Scholar-Athlete
Gary Zhao, Mason –
OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Tigar Cyr, Cincinnati
Seven Hills – OHSAA Ethnic
Minority Scholar-Athlete
Northeast District (10)
Edward Conger, Euclid
– OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
James Norris, Cleveland St. Ignatius –
OHSAA Ethnic Minority
Scholar-Athlete
Vanessa Pasadyn,
Brunswick – OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
Thomas Sullivan,
Cleveland St. Ignatius –
OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Daniel Branch, Richﬁeld Revere – OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
John Colangelo, Canton Central Catholic –
OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Jacob Ondash, Mantua
Crestwood– OHSAA
Scholar-Athlete
Bradley Hauptman,
Kirtland – OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Rachel Reolﬁ, Canton Central Catholic –
OHSAA Scholar-Athlete
Austin VanSickle,
Loudonville – OHSAA
Scholar- Athlete

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