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                  <text>8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

72°

85°

84°

Partly sunny, seasonably warm and humid
today. Partly cloudy tonight. High 91° / Low 69°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Save,
support
newspapers

Winter
sports
highlights

WEATHER s 3

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 102, Volume 73

Thursday, June 27, 2019 s 50¢

Throwback Thursday: Island Queen

DJFS
requests
approved
By Lorna Hart
Special to the Sentinel

explained.
The 2019 Meigs County Cloverbud
Camp will be held on July 23 from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. The camp is open to any
child in kindergarten, ﬁrst grade and
second grade, regardless of if they are
a cloverbud or not.
At camp, Meigs County Cloverbuds
will make new friends and see old
friends too, while enjoying fun events
just for them.
Camp will begin at the fairground’s
Thompson Roush building at 9 a.m.

P0MEROY — With a
packed agenda, Meigs
County Commissioners
began their regular session on Thursday, June
20.
After approving the
minutes of last weeks
meeting and making
motions to pay bills and
now and thens (miscellaneous county expenses
over $5,000), the Commissioners moved onto
appropriations and adjustments to the budgets of
the prosecutor, victims
assistance, 911, and the
sheriff’s ofﬁces.
All were approved
except the request from
the Sheriff’s ofﬁce, which
was tabled pending clariﬁcation from the Clerk
for the Sheriff, Cheyenne
Trussell.
Next up, the commissioners awarded three
contracts: D.V.Webber
Construction of Reedsville for the Syracuse
ﬁre hydrant installation
project; Karr Contracting
for the demolition of Judy
Days in Middleport, with
work completed before
October 1, 2019; and
D.V. Webber for the 2018
CDBG Pomeroy Village
Meigs Cooperative Parish
Generator Installation
Project.
Job and Family Services Director Chris
Shank brought several
contracts and agreements
before the board, including a request that was
approved for “the Meigs
County Department of
Job and Family Services,
acting in its authority as
the Administrative Agent
of the Meigs County Family Children First Council,
to enter into a contract
with the Meigs County
Department of Job and
Family Services, to provide Early Intervention
Service Coordination.”
Shank presented and
was given approval for
requests of children and
juvenile services that
include the following:
foster care contract for
residential services with
the Children’s Center of
Ohio, LLC; continuation
of the contact with Early
Intervention Service
Coordination; Oasis
Therapeutic Foster Care
Network, Inc. and Oasis
Therapeutic Foster Care
Network, Inc. Transitions for Youth to provide respite care and/or
preservation, reuniﬁcation, emergency shelter
care, and foster care; sub
grant agreement with the
Meigs County Juvenile
Court to provide a Juvenile Diversion Program.
A Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU)
with Integrated Services
for Behavioral Health “to
collaborate on a system
of care for children with
serious emotional disturbances which includes
working with families
and communities to
meet the needs of these
children; and a system of

See CAMP | 5

See DJFS | 5

Photo from the Collection of Bob Graham

Dated April 30, 1913, this photo from the Collection of Bob Graham shows the Island Queen docked along the Pomeroy riverfront. The boat was part of The Coney Island
Co. Passengers can be seen making their way from the boat, up the ramp toward town.

Victim Assistance report presented
By Lorna Hart

costs of the program, including medical insurance and an
increased need for their serPOMEROY — Meigs County vices.
“No raises are being requestCrime Victim Services director
ed for any of our personnel
Theda Petrasko presented the
due to the increasing costs of
past performance reports for
the Victims Assistance portion our health insurance coverage.
of the Prosecutor’s ofﬁce during We have taken out some other
Thursday’s Meigs County Com- line item costs to try and offset
the increase. We will not be
missioners meeting.
Petrasco advised the commis- requesting funds to transport
our victims if transportation is
sioners she is in the process
needed; we will not be requestof writing the annual Victims
ing any equipment or business
of Crime Act (VOCA) Grant.
materials. We are requesting
Petrasko said their ﬁscal year
$1,200 less this year for trainbegins Oct. 1, 2019 and ends
ing and $500 less for supplies.
Sept. 30, 2020.
There is nowhere else in our
President of the Commisbudget to offset the cost of persioners Tim Ihle thanked
sonal health insurance.”
Petrasko for the great works
As an example, Victims Serthey do helping victims in
vices budget approximately
Meigs County.
$24,000 per year for each
“I come to you every year,”
employee family health insurPetrasko said, referring to the
ance policy.
commissioners. “I’ve never
The agency is a part of
had them not approve our
Meigs County Prosecutor
grant, but as you know, our
ofﬁce continues running before James K. Stanley’s Ofﬁce and is
grant funded by the Ohio Attorwe know if we have been
approved, so we rely on you to ney Generals Ofﬁce for Crime
keep us going until we receive Victim Services. Currently it
employees one full time Advothe grant.”
She said that her ofﬁce runs cate who also serves as director,
one full time secretary who is
on a “bare bones budget”,
also an Advocate, and a part
and she is currently working
time Civil Protection Order
on grants to cover increasing

Special to the Sentinel

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Weather: 3
Opinion: 4
News: 5
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

Lorna Hart | Courtesy

Meigs County Victim Assistance Director Theda Petrasko presents her annual
report to Commissioners Randy Smith and Tim Ihle.

Advocate.
In 2018, Meigs County had
516 new victims affected by
several different types crime
that were served through the
assistance program.
Petrasko’s report to the
commissioners and the OAG’s
Ofﬁce includes 40 adult physical assaults, seven adult sexual
assaults, three arson, 57 burglary/breaking and entering,
65 child abuse/endangering/
neglect, one child pornography,
42 child sexual assaults, 97

domestic violence incidents,
two DUI/DWI, 20 ID fraud and
unauthorized use of credit cards
or checks, three kidnapping,
three vehicular hit and run, 32
robbery, 106 stalking/harassment/protection order violations, and 39 protection orders
ﬁled with 176 requests. This
does not include carry over
victims from previous years that
the agency is still serving.
Lorna Hart is a freelance writer for The Daily
Sentinel.

Cloverbud Camp to be
held at fairgrounds
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MEIGS COUNTY — Cloverbud
Camp will be returning to Meigs
County next month after a several
year absence.
Nancy Sydenstricker, one of the
4-H educators at the Meigs County
OSU Extension, explained that for
the past six or seven years, Cloverbud
age kids in Meigs County had been
able to attend the day camp in Gallia County, rather than it being held
locally. With it held out of the county,
not many local children took part, she

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Thursday, June 27, 2019

DEATH NOTICES
WILSON
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Rickey Allen Wilson, 63,
of Chesapeake, Ohio died Tuesday, June 25, 2019 at
St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va. Funeral
service will be conducted 2 p.m. Friday, June 28, 2019
at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio. Burial will follow in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation will be held 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, June
27, 2019 at the funeral home.
FORBUS
INVERNESS, Fla. — Jean Forbus, age 89, of
Inverness, Fla., formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died
with family by her side on June 21, 2019 at Vitas Hospice in Lecanto, Fla.
A Celebration of Life Memorial Service was held on
Monday, June 24, 2019 at the Chas E. Davis Funeral
Home in Inverness and was conducted by Pastor
Marne Palmani of Fort Cooper Baptist Church. Jean
will be laid to rest with her husband at Florida National Cemetery in Bushnell, Fla. at a later date.

MEIGS BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event information that is open to the public and will be printed
on a space-available basis.

Road Closure
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill” is
closed due to a slip until further notice.
POMEROY — Meigs County Road 18, Kingsbury Road, west of State Route 33 will be closed for
approximately 2 months beginning Tuesday, May 28,
in order to complete a bridge replacement project.
This bridge is located just west of the intersection of
County Road 19, Peach Fork Road.

Vacation Bible School
RACINE — “Who is my neighbor” Bible School
will be held Monday, June 24-Wednesday, June 26,
from 6-8 p.m. each night at Racine United Methodist
Church, 818 Elm Street, Racine. A pool party will be
held on Friday, June 28.
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grove Christian
Church Family Vacation Bible School will be held
on Saturday, July 6. From 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. will be
a puppet skit, worship, teaching, crafts, food and
prizes at the church located at 38387 Hemlock Grove
Road. From 2-4 p.m. will be swimming, games and
fellowship at Ohio Valley Christian Assembly at 39560
Rocksprings Road. The theme is Fishers of Men from
the verse Matthew 4:19.

Scholarship Applications
POMEROY — Applications for the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association scholarship are available until the end of June. The applicant must be
a college junior or senior majoring in education,
have at least a 2.5 GPA and have a home residence
in Meigs County. For applications or more information call Becky at 740-992-7096 or Charlene at 740444-5498.

OVP STOCK REPORT
Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ).…...................................$19.50
Walmart Inc(NYSE).….................................................$110.06
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE)....................................................…$28.51
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)………................................$35.68
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)…............................................$132.32
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)…................................$31.34
Kroger Co(NYSE)…........................................................$21.43
BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)….........................................$48.08
City Holding Company(NASDAQ).............................….$73.85
American Electric Power(NYSE)..................................$88.50
Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ).….............................$36.60
Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)……...............................….$6.73
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)…...................................…$26.25
Apple(NASDAQ)….......................................................$199.80
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)……........................................$51.12
Post Holdings…...........................................................$102.68
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE) …..................….$33.50
McDonald’s(NYSE)…..................................................$204.55
Stock reports are the closing quotes of transactions on
June 26.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Daily Sentinel

‘The Mothman Legend’
Breedlove,
Wamsley
to present
By E.A. Carter
Special to OVP

GALLIPOLIS – The
legendary Mothman will
rise again.
Well, at least tales of
the mythical – or not so
mythical – creature will
be related Friday, June
28 at Bossard Memorial
Library in Gallipolis.
Paranormal documentary producer Seth
Breedlove and local
Mothman aﬁcionado Jeff
Wamsley are teaming up
to offer the program for
area folks interested in
the lore of the beast that
terrorized Mason, Gallia,
and Meigs counties in
the mid to late 1960s –
and some say still does
to this day. The presentation is scheduled to
begin at 6 p.m. Friday.
Admission is free and
the talk is open to the
general public.
Breedlove, who lives
in Wadsworth, Ohio,
operates the production
company Small Town
Monsters, which, according to its Facebook page,
is “dedicated to documenting Small Town
America’s strange tales
and occurrences.” The
company’s ﬁrst production, “Minerva Monster,”
was released in 2015.
“I’ve been fascinated
by (cryptids and the
paranormal) for about
the last decade or so,”
said Breedlove, who
originally released
“Small Town Monsters”
in book form before
moving into documentary ﬁlm production.
“Obviously, it’s all sort
of ﬁltered through
that small-town lens.
Mostly because I grew
up in a small town, I
was fascinated by how
rural communities can
be affected by a local
legend; something that
isn’t taken very seriously
by other people. It can
almost become a tourist
boom if towns know how
to capitalize on it.”
Two of the 11 ﬁlms the
company has released
have been dedicated to
the Mothman legend:
“The Mothman of Point
Pleasant” (2017) and

Beth Sergent | OVP

Pictured is a scene from the 2017 Mothman Festival, where filmmaker Seth Breedlove screened
his film, “The Mothman of Point Pleasant” at the historic State Theater. Breedlove, and Mothman
Museum Director Jeff Wamsley will appear on Friday at the Bossard Memorial Library for a
program on Mothman, with Breedlove appearing at the museum on Saturday.

“Terror in the Skies”
(2019). Breedlove said
the ﬁnal installment of
the Mothman trilogy,
“The Mothman Legacy,”
is scheduled for release
in 2020.
“We wanted to do
something about the
Mothman that did offer
some new information
about the case,” Breedlove said regarding the
2017 ﬁlm. “There’s
a large chunk of that
movie that is relatively
unknown or had not
been put out there in
a way that tied all the
pieces together in the
way we did. I think probably my favorite bit of
information that wasn’t
out there before was the
Chief Cornstalk curse
being basically the invention of a play from the
1930s, rather than an
actual historical event.
I was glad that we were
able to bust what was
pretty much a myth that
people had accepted as
historical fact. It was a
play that invented the
curse.”
Breedlove said he
credits Wamsley for
encouraging his production team to move forward with the Mothman
documentary.
“Jeff’s amazing,”
Breedlove said. “There
wouldn’t even be a
‘Mothman of Point
Pleasant’ movie without Jeff because I was
very leery of doing it. I
actually went and had a
meeting with Jeff before
I even ofﬁcially decided
to do the movie. Jeff
was very insistent that
there was stuff we could

do with that story that
hadn’t been done before
and that he would be
very giving of his own
research material. Jeff
actually supplied us with
those original audio tape
interviews with some of
the original witnesses.
He gave us the footage of
the Silver Bridge clean
up that was taken the
week of the actual bridge
collapse. I don’t think
without Jeff the ﬁlm
would be in existence.”
Wamsley, the founder
and director of the
Mothman Museum and
the annual Mothman
Festival in Point Pleasant, said the enduring
mystery of Mothman
keeps people interested
in the folklore.
“The Mothman story
has lasted over 50 years
mainly because the
story is an open book
that has never really
been solved,” he said.
“Multiple witnesses and
a weird turn of events
like the men in black and
Silver Bridge disaster all
culminated into a huge
unsolved mystery that is
timeless.”
The interest in the
Mothman legend and
his knowledge of the
lore keeps Wamsley busy
ﬁelding requests for
information from a wide
range of people.
“I get emails and calls
almost daily from investigators, writers, TV
shows, etc.,” he said. “I
have never claimed to
be any type of Mothman
expert; I just happened
to amass a huge collection of archives at the
Mothman museum and

I also knew some of the
original witnesses who
conﬁded in me their
experiences.”
Wamsley noted that
people regularly contact
him to share their own
encounters with the
Mothman.
“I do get eyewitness
reports and sightings
frequently, many from
all over the world,” he
said. “It’s difﬁcult to
conﬁrm or validate all
of the reports I receive,
but they are all interesting bits of information.
People are still here in
Point Pleasant always
looking for the Mothman.”
Following Friday’s
presentation at the
Bossard Memorial
Library, Breedlove will
make an appearance
Saturday at the Mothman Museum in downtown Point Pleasant.
From 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday he’ll host a launch
party for the third
Mothman ﬁlm. Breedlove said he’ll autograph
posters and DVDs for
visitors during the
launch party.
For information about
Small Town Monsters,
visit the website www.
smalltownmonsters.
com. Like Small Town
Monsters on Facebook.
For information
about the Mothman
Museum, visit www.
mothmanmuseum.com.
Like The Mothman
Museum on Facebook.
E.A. Carter is a freelance journalist
and photographer, and an
armchair monster hunter. Contact
him at eacarter6768@gmail.com.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
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@aimmediamidwest.com.

Card shower
Ruby Brewer will be 95 years
old on June 27, she is also recovering from a health issue. Send
birthday/get well cards to PO Box
4, Long Bottom, Ohio 45743.

SYRACUSE — Ladies of the
Meigs County Republican Party
meeting, 6 p.m., Carleton School,
discussions on assisting local candidates, everyone welcome.

will not be able to register death
certiﬁcates during this time.
The Ohio Department of Health
IPHIS/EDRS system will be down
for a server migration.

Friday, June 28

Wednesday, July 3

MIDDLEPORT — The June
free community dinner at the
Middleport Church of Christ’s
Family Life Center will be held at
5 p.m. This month they are serving pulled pork sandwiches, cole
slaw, green beans, and dessert.
Everyone is welcome.

POMEROY — Nancy the Turtle
Lady, Pomeroy Library, Two programs: 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Learn
about reptiles and amphibians
with Nancy and her real-life creatures.

Sunday, June 30

TUPPERS PLAINS — Hayman-Biram family reunion will
be held at the VFW in Tuppers
Plains. Covered dish dinner will
be served at 1 p.m. Drinks and
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library, 5 p.m., Out of This World tableware will be provided.
DIY. Teens create their own
“galaxy” t-shirts. Participants are
asked to bring a dark blue, purple,
or black shirt. All other supplies
RUTLAND TWP. — The
are provided.
Rutland Township Trustees will
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil
meet at 7:30 a.m. at the Township
&amp; Water Conservation District
Garage.
Board of Supervisors will hold
POMEROY — The Meigs
their regular monthly meeting at
County Health Dept. ofﬁce of
11:30 a.m. at the district ofﬁce.
Vital Statistics will not be able
The ofﬁce is located at 113 E.
to issue/sell certiﬁed copies of
Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomebirth certiﬁcates from 3-4 p.m. on
roy.
Mon. July 1st. Funeral Homes: we

Thursday, June 27

Monday, July 1

Thursday, July 4
MEIGS COUNTY — All
branches of the Meigs County
District Public Library will be
closed in observance of Independence Day.

Friday, July 5
RACINE — Meigs County
Pomona Grange will meet at 6:45
p.m. at the Racine Grange Hall.
Refreshments will be served at
6:45 p.m. followed by meeting at
7:30 p.m.

Monday, July 8
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township trustees will hold
their regular monthly meeting at
7 p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 27, 2019 3

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

H. Edward Ayers, MD
Internal, Pediatric &amp;
Adolescent Medicine

Good health begins with
great pediatric care.

Patrick Semansky | AP

Protesters gather to demand the defunding of government agencies for border protection and
customs enforcement Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Primary care physicians and nurse practitioners at Pleasant Valley Hospital are here to help
people of all ages manage acute and chronic illnesses. With a full spectrum of medical services, our goal is to keep you and your family well.
From preventive care and routine checkups to
diagnosing and delivering the most advanced
treatment options available, our primary care
providers are here to help you make the healthcare decisions that are right for you and your
family...

Senate passes $4.6B border
aid measure; Pelosi seeks talks
demands to send the
Senate bill directly to
Associated Press
President Donald Trump
without changes.
The Senate vote sent
WASHINGTON —
the must-pass legislation
The GOP-held Senate
measure back the Demoon Wednesday passed a
cratic-controlled House.
bipartisan $4.6 billion
Next steps are unclear,
measure to deliver aid
but Pelosi quickly disto the southern border
missed speculation that
before the government
runs out of money to care the Democratic-controlled
for thousands of migrant House will simply accept
families and unaccompa- the Senate measure,
which cleared a key comnied children.
The sweeping 84-8 vote mittee last week with
just one dissenting vote.
came less than 24 hours
after the Democratic-con- Asked if the House would
pass the Senate bill and
trolled House approved
send it to Trump, Pelosi
a companion measure
said, “No.”
backed by party liberals
Pelosi called Trump
that was weighed down
Wednesday afternoon
by a White House veto
to discuss the measure.
threat and bipartisan
“There’s some improverejection by the Senate.
ments that we think can
Republicans and the
be reconciled,” Pelosi told
White House far prefer
reporters.
the Senate measure but
Trump said passing the
House Speaker Nancy
legislation was urgent
Pelosi is pressing for
as he left the White
quick negotiations to
House for Japan and he
merge the bills — promappeared to leave the
ising that Democrats
door open for negotiawon’t knuckle under to

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

72°

85°

84°

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.

85°
62°
85°
64°
99° in 1954
47° in 1915

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
4.25
3.42
24.11
21.50

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:05 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
2:37 a.m.
3:42 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Jul 2

First

Jul 9

Full

Jul 16

Last

Jul 24

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

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

Major
8:00a
8:40a
9:22a
10:08a
10:59a
11:56a
12:26a

Minor
1:49a
2:28a
3:09a
3:55a
4:45a
5:41a
6:42a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Major
8:22p
9:03p
9:47p
10:35p
11:28p
---12:23p

Minor
2:11p
2:51p
3:35p
4:22p
5:14p
6:11p
7:13p

WEATHER HISTORY
Hurricane Audrey slammed ashore
just east of the Texas-Louisiana
border on June 27, 1957. The storm
killed 430 people in Cameron, La.,
and caused $130 million in damages.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

A t-storm in spots in
the afternoon

Cloudy, a shower and
t-storm around

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

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. Wed.

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

Chillicothe
89/69

Level
12.98
22.27
24.53
12.80
13.13
26.22
12.40
28.71
35.68
12.83
28.50
35.60
29.50

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.52
+1.85
+0.98
+0.21
+0.23
+0.64
+0.15
-0.78
-0.37
+0.16
-0.40
-1.20
-4.00

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

87°
69°

Belpre
89/67

Athens
88/67

St. Marys
89/68

Parkersburg
87/68

Coolville
88/67

Elizabeth
90/66

Spencer
89/66

Buffalo
90/67

Ironton
91/69

Milton
91/68

St. Albans
91/69

Huntington
89/69

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
67/53
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
69/56
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
77/62
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Humid with sun and
clouds

Marietta
87/66

Wilkesville
89/67
POMEROY
Jackson
90/67
90/68
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
90/67
91/68
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
89/71
GALLIPOLIS
91/69
91/68
90/68

Ashland
90/69
Grayson
90/69

Clendenin
91/67
Charleston
89/67

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
83/57

Billings
84/60

Montreal
84/62

Minneapolis
83/66

Toronto
85/65
Detroit
87/69
New York
89/72
Washington
94/74

Chicago
88/70

Denver
92/61

Kansas City
90/72

89°
72°
Variable clouds, a
t-storm possible

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

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
91/63/pc
75/59/pc
91/70/pc
84/71/s
93/72/s
84/60/t
80/53/pc
75/66/c
89/67/s
93/70/pc
86/56/pc
88/70/pc
89/71/pc
88/71/pc
89/70/pc
92/74/pc
92/61/pc
90/73/c
87/69/pc
86/77/c
91/71/t
89/69/pc
90/72/pc
99/77/s
93/72/c
77/62/pc
91/73/pc
91/79/pc
83/66/t
93/71/pc
94/75/pc
89/72/s
90/70/pc
92/72/pc
92/73/s
105/79/s
87/68/s
70/58/pc
94/68/pc
94/72/s
91/74/pc
92/67/s
69/56/s
67/53/c
94/74/s

Hi/Lo/W
92/66/s
77/63/s
90/69/pc
85/73/pc
95/74/s
82/60/c
77/52/c
86/70/s
89/68/pc
92/68/pc
91/58/pc
88/70/pc
89/69/s
88/69/t
90/70/s
94/73/s
96/63/pc
91/76/pc
88/69/t
87/76/pc
92/69/t
89/69/s
93/74/pc
102/77/s
92/70/pc
79/62/pc
91/73/pc
90/78/t
89/72/pc
94/72/c
90/74/pc
89/73/pc
93/70/s
90/74/pc
94/74/pc
108/85/s
87/68/t
82/61/pc
94/68/pc
95/74/pc
93/74/pc
91/62/s
71/54/s
69/53/c
96/76/s

EXTREMES WEDNESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
91/70

El Paso
101/74

Chihuahua
95/70

WEDNESDAY

89°
68°

Partly sunny and
humid

Murray City
88/67

McArthur
88/67

Portsmouth
91/70

TUESDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Logan
88/66

Adelphi
88/67

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone

MONDAY

Mostly sunny, hot and
humid

South Shore Greenup
90/69
90/69

65

SUNDAY

88°
65°

Lucasville
91/69
Very High

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91°
70°

Very High

Primary: other, grass, trees
Mold: 4074

For more information or to schedule
an appointment with H. Edward Ayers, MD,
please call 304.675.6015.

SATURDAY

Waverly
90/68

Pollen: 13

Low

MOON PHASES
New

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

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SHGLDWULF� DQG� DGROHVFHQW� SDWLHQWV�� +H� DOVR� SURYLGHV�
URXWLQH�SUHYHQWLYH�FDUH�DQG�FKURQLF�GLVHDVH�PDQDJHPHQW�IRU�DGXOW�SDWLHQWV�

91°
68°

0

Primary: cladosporium
Fri.
6:06 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
3:06 a.m.
4:44 p.m.

FRIDAY

Partly sunny, seasonably warm and humid today.
Partly cloudy tonight. High 91° / Low 69°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Wed.

... because good health begins with
great pediatric care.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

tions.
“We are moving along
very well with a bipartisan bill in the Senate,”
Trump said. “It’s very far
along and I believe the
House is also going to
also be getting together
with the Senate to get
something done. It’s
humanitarian aid. It’s
very important.”
The ﬁnal outcome isn’t
clear. An impasse could
imperil passage of the
measure, which is needed
soon before federal agencies caring for migrants
are hamstrung by lack of
money.
Congress plans to leave
Washington in a few days
for a weeklong July 4
recess, and pressure is
intense to wrap up the
legislation before then.
Failure to act could bring
a swift political rebuke
and accusations of ignoring the plight of innocent
immigrant children who
are living in overcrowded,
often inadequate federal
facilities.

OH-70130706

By Andrew Taylor
and Alan Fram

High
Low

99° in Winter Haven, FL
29° in Angel Fire, NM

Global
High
Low

Houston
91/71
Monterrey
91/72

Miami
91/79

123° in Mitribah, Kuwait
9° 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.

OH-70107872

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
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financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
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w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

�Opinion
4 Thursday, June 27, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Save and
support local
newspapers
“For the times they are a-changin’” sang Bob
Dylan. And the digital age has changed the way
information is eaten, swallowed, and digested.
We can’t stop progress, but we must
maintain the saliency of our local
newspapers. Why? Local newspapers
serve signiﬁcant roles in local societies.
“When local newspapers shut their
doors, communities lose out. People
and their stories can’t ﬁnd coverMelissa
age. Politicos take liberties when it’s
Martin
nobody’s job to hold them accountContributing
able. What the public doesn’t know
columnist
winds up hurting them. The city
feels poorer, politically and culturally,” penned Kriston Capps in a 2018 article at
www.citylab.com.
I recently attended the annual conference for
members of the National Society of Newspaper
Columnists, a 501(c)6 nonproﬁt organization. The
NSNC promotes professionalism and camaraderie
among columnists and other writers of the serial
essay, including bloggers. And advocates for columnists and free-press issues. www.columnists.
com.
The alarm is sounding and signaling action to
save and support hometown newspapers.
The School of Media and Journalism at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has
collected, researched and analyzed data from 2004
to 2016 on more than 9,500 local newspapers. The
comprehensive study of newspaper coverage in
the United States found that 516 rural newspapers
closed or merged from 2004 to 2018. In metropolitan areas, 1,294 newspapers were shuttered. A
national total of 1,810 papers that ceased publication. Read the 88-page report “The Rise of a New
Media Baron and the Emerging Threat of News
Deserts” at www.usnewsdeserts.com.
A “news desert” refers to a community that is no
longer covered by daily newspapers or has limited
access to local news.
“News deserts present problems for small
communities that rely on local newspapers for a
majority of their news. Plus, owners of small, local
newspapers tend to balance business interests
with civic responsibility, and therefore play a role
in the vitality of the community that they serve.”
www.newsmediaalliance.org.
The referenced study asks and answers, “What
can be done to save the journalism that has been
provided by community newspapers for more than
200 years? There are no simple answers and no
guarantees. It will take a concerted and committed
effort by many to avert a growing number of news
deserts.” www.usnewsdeserts.com.
Don’t close the casket and bury local newspapers yet! Ye naysayers of doom and gloom — readers want, need, and love their local newspapers.
I urge readers of every local newspaper to write
a letter of support to the newspaper staff. Dust
off your duff and vocalize your opinion by writing a Letter to the Editor. Take some time out of
your hurry-scurry day and communicate with your
newspaper people. They need to know you care.
What else can you do? Pay for a subscription to
your local newspaper. The staff and their families
need to eat at least once a day.
Use newspaper content as a teaching tool in
elementary, middle, and high school. Communities
need strong newspaper-in-education programs.
Local businesses need to continue spending
their advertising dollars with hometown newspapers, whether in print or digital.
“Without a local paper, there is a strong risk of
news deserts emerging across vast regions in the
country with communities that can least afford it
— with political, economic and social consequences for society as a whole.” www.usnewsdeserts.
com.
Who owns your hometown newspaper? For
more information visit www.newspaperownership.
com. “In addition to newspaper owners, individuals and institutions will need to make a committed
and concerted effort to save community journalism.”
Melissa Martin, Ph.D, is an author, columnist, educator, and therapist.
She lives in Wheelersburg in Southern Ohio.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Business executive Ross Perot is 89. Former
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt is 81. Singermusician Bruce Johnston (The Beach Boys) is 77.
Fashion designer Vera Wang is 70. Actress Julia
Duffy is 68. Actress Isabelle Adjani is 64. Country
singer Lorrie Morgan is 60. Actor Brian Drillinger
is 59. Writer-producer-director J.J. Abrams is 53.
Former Sen. Kelly Ayotte (AY’-aht), R-N.H., is
51. Olympic gold and bronze medal ﬁgure skater
Viktor Petrenko (peh-TREHN’-koh) is 50. Actor
Edward “Grapevine” Fordham Jr. is 49. TV personality Jo Frost is 49. Actor Yancey Arias is 48.
Actor Christian Kane is 47.

THEIR VIEW

Finding perfect quote
Recently, I had reason
to be searching through
my quote books for the
perfect quote that ﬁt for a
couple who were soon to
be celebrating their 60th
wedding anniversary. Of
the ﬁve books of quotes
I have collected over the
past 20 years, I found one
that I thought would be
perfect for them. (#17
was for cousins Bill and
Barb Brake.)
During the search for
this one particular quote,
I decided that the following would be good to use
for this week’s article.
I’m sure that at least one
of them should “strike a
cord” and speak to you.
1. “You cannot do a
kindness too soon, for
you never know how
soon it will be too late.”
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
2. “There is more hunger for love and appreciation in this world than for
bread.” — Mother Teresa
3. “Light tomorrow
with today.” — E.B.
Browning
4. “Feeling gratitude

gut, Jr.
and not expressing
10. “Diplomacy
it is like wrapping
is to do and say
a present and not
the nastiest thing
giving it.” — Wilin the nicest way.”
liam Arthur Ward
— Isaac Goldberg
5. “When some11. “A fanatic
one gives you
is one who can’t
something, it’s not Kay
change his mind
really yours until
Conklin
you say ‘Thanks’.” Contributing and won’t change
the subject.” —
— Unknown
columnist
Winston Churchill
6. “Not all read12. “It takes your
ers are leaders, but
enemy and your friend
all leaders are readers.”
working together, to hurt
— Harry S. Truman
you to the heart; the one
7. “Take care of your
friends, because there will to slander you and the
come a time when you’re other to get the news to
you.” — Mark Twain
not much fun to be with
13. “Once, during proand there is no reason
hibition, I was forced to
to like you except out of
live for days on nothing
long-standing habit.” —
but food and water.” —
Garrison Keillor
W. C. Fields
8. “The fruits of the
14. “We judge ourselves
Spirit are: Love, Joy,
by what we feel capable
Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Faithful- of doing, while others
ness, Gentleness and Self- judge us by what we have
already done.” — Henry
control.” — Galatians
Wadsworth Longfellow
5:22
15. “90% of the politi9. “High school is
cians give the other 10%
closer to the core of the
a bad name.” — Henry
American experience
Kissinger
than anything else I can
16. “You will always
think of.” — Kurt Vonne-

have in your life what you
desire others to have in
theirs.” — Gloria Steinem
17. “Love is born with
the pleasure of looking at
each other, it is fed with
the necessity of seeing
each other, it concludes
with the impossibility
of separation.” — Jose
Marti
18. “Beautiful young
people are acts of nature,
but beautiful old people
are works of art.” — Eleanor Roosevelt
19. “You are only young
once, but you remember
it forever.” — Liberty
Heights movie
20. “We only see in a
lifetime a dozen faces
marked with the PEACE
of a contented spirit.” —
Henry Ward Beecher
Thanks for taking time
to read these wonderful
quotes. I hope that some
of them spoke to you as
they ﬁrst spoke to me.
Kay E. Conklin is a retired Delaware
County recorder who served four
terms. She graduated from Ohio
Wesleyan University with a degree
in sociology and anthropology.

TODAY IN HISTORY
War II, American forces
liberated the French port
of Cherbourg (SHEHR’Today is Thursday,
June 27, the 178th day of boorg) from the Ger2019. There are 187 days mans.
In 1957, Hurricane
left in the year.
Audrey slammed into
Today’s Highlight in History coastal Louisiana and
Texas as a Category 4
On June 27, 1991,
storm; the ofﬁcial death
Supreme Court Justice
toll from the storm was
Thurgood Marshall, the
ﬁrst black jurist to sit on placed at 390, although
the nation’s highest court, a variety of state, federal
and local sources have
announced his retireestimated the number of
ment. (His departure
fatalities at between 400
led to the contentious
and 600.
nomination of Clarence
In 1974, President
Thomas to succeed him.)
Richard Nixon opened an
ofﬁcial visit to the Soviet
On this date
Union.
In 1844, Mormon
In 1984, the Supreme
leader Joseph Smith and
his brother, Hyrum, were Court ended the National
Collegiate Athletic Assokilled by a mob in Carciation’s monopoly on
thage, Illinois.
In 1846, New York and controlling college football telecasts, ruling such
Boston were linked by
control violated antitrust
telegraph wires.
In 1880, author-lecturer law.
In 1988, at least 56
Helen Keller, who lived
people were killed when
most of her life without
a commuter train ran
sight or hearing, was
into a stationary train
born in Tuscumbia, Alaat the Gare de Lyon terbama.
In 1905, the Industrial minal in Paris. In 1988,
Workers of the World was Mike Tyson retained the
undisputed heavyweight
founded in Chicago.
crown as he knocked out
In 1944, during World
The Associated Press

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“The main dangers in this life are the
people who want to change everything — or
nothing.”
— Viscountess Nancy Astor
American-born British politician (1879-1964)

Michael Spinks 91 seconds into the ﬁrst round
of a championship ﬁght
in Atlantic City, New
Jersey.
In 1990, NASA
announced that a ﬂaw in
the orbiting Hubble Space
Telescope was preventing the instrument from
achieving optimum focus.
(The problem was traced
to a mirror that had not
been ground to exact
speciﬁcations; corrective
optics were later installed
to ﬁx the problem.)
In 2005, the Supreme
Court ruled, in a pair
of 5-4 decisions, that
displaying the Ten Commandments on government property was constitutionally permissible
in some cases but not in
others. BTK serial killer
Dennis Rader pleaded
guilty to ten murders that

had spread fear across
Wichita, Kansas, beginning in the 1970s. (Rader
later received multiple life
sentences.)
In 2008, North Korea
destroyed the most visible symbol of its nuclear
weapons program, the
cooling tower at its main
atomic reactor at Yongbyon. (However, North
Korea announced in
September 2008 that it
was restoring its nuclear
facilities.)
Ten years ago: Dr.
Conrad Murray, the cardiologist who was with
Michael Jackson during the pop star’s ﬁnal
moments two days earlier, sat down with investigators for the ﬁrst time
to explain his actions.
Actress Gale Storm, 87,
died in Danville, California.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 27, 2019 5

Trump heads to Asia for global talks

Victims question
Harris’ record
on clergy abuse

By Zeke Miller
and Jonathan Lemire
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
The fun and ﬂattery are
largely over for President Donald Trump as
he embarks on his third
overseas trip in a month,
this time facing a ﬂurry
of international crises,
tense negotiations and
a growing global to-do
list.
Trump heads ﬁrst to
Osaka, Japan, for the
annual Group of 20 summit, then on to South
Korea for consultations
on North Korea’s nuclear
program. The agenda
for his four-day trip is
as laden with hazards
for the president as it is
light on the ceremonial
pomp that marked his
recent state visits to
Japan and the United
Kingdom.
The showdown
between the U.S. and
Iran, a trade war with
China and the threat of
fresh election interference by Russia are just
some of the issues confronting the American
leader who has shown
little patience for the
subtleties of global
interactions and whose
administration has struggled to grapple with
simultaneous challenges.
The president will
meet one-on-one with at
least eight world leaders
on the summit’s sidelines
as he faces mounting
pressures to deliver
results on a lengthy
roster of global concerns. But White House
ofﬁcials are playing
down prospects of speciﬁc accomplishments
in what will almost certainly be Trump’s most
consequential trip of the
year.
Trump said before
departing Wednesday
that he’d be meeting
“competitors” from other
nations, adding, “That’s
OK. We’re doing great.
We’re doing better than
any of them.”
His calendar includes
sit-downs with Rus-

SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) — Joey Piscitelli
was angry when
Kamala Harris emerged
as a contender for the
Democratic presidential
nomination. It brought
back the frustration he
felt in the 2000s, when
he was a newly minted
spokesman for clergy
sex abuse victims and
Harris was San Francisco’s district attorney.
Piscitelli says Harris never responded
to him when he wrote
to tell her that a priest
who had molested him
was still in ministry at
a local Catholic cathedral. And, he says, she
didn’t reply ﬁve years
later when he wrote
again, urging her to
release records on
accused clergy to help
other alleged victims
who were ﬁling law-

Carolyn Kaster | AP

President Donald Trump gestures as he walks to Marine One across the South Lawn of the White
House in Washington on Wednesday for the short trip to Andrews Air Force Base en route to Japan
for the G-20 summit.

sian President Vladimir
Putin, Chinese President
Xi Jinping, Turkey’s
Recep Teyyip Erdogan
and Saudi Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman,
all of whom have authoritarian tendencies, as
well as disquieted allies
including Germany’s
Angela Merkel and more
contented ones such as
Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe.
The president left
Washington days after
pulling back from the
brink of armed conﬂict with Iran and as
he trades threats over
its nuclear program
and support for terror
groups. With Iran threatening to breach uranium
enrichment limits set in
the 2015 nuclear accord
as soon as Thursday,
Trump will be asked to
articulate his strategy for
containing Iran to skeptical world leaders after
pulling the U.S. from the
deal last year.
“The leaders are
going to be pressing the
president for clarity and
then to get into a uniﬁed
allied approach to the
challenge, and it’s just
simply unclear to me
whether we have that
policy or that approach,”
said Heather Conley,
director of the Center
for Strategic and International Studies’ Europe

program.
Trump will also ﬁnd
himself face-to-face with
Putin for the ﬁrst time
since special counsel
Robert Mueller’s investigation ended without
ﬁnding evidence that the
Trump campaign criminally conspired with
Russia during the 2016
election. It will also be
their ﬁrst meeting since
their summit in Helsinki in July 2018, when
Trump declined to side
with U.S. intelligence
agencies over Putin on
the question of election
interference, leading to
an uproar at home and
abroad.
Trump told reporters as he left the White
House that he expects a
“very good conversation”
with Putin but added
that “what I say to him is
none of your business.”
White House ofﬁcials
said Trump would warn
Putin to refrain from
interfering in U.S. elections, though Trump has
been criticized for joining with Putin in attacking Mueller’s probe, and
advisers worry he may
do so once again.
Last November, Trump
canceled a planned meeting with Putin at the
G-20 in Argentina after
Russia seized two Ukrainian vessels and their
crew in the Sea of Azov,

but the continued detention of the crew members does not appear to
be deterring the leaders
from meeting this time.
Aside from Iran, the
leaders are expected to
discuss hotspots in Syria
and Venezuela, as well as
nuclear weapons.
With Xi, a senior
administration ofﬁcial
said, Trump’s top aim
will be rebooting trade
negotiations between
the two countries after
they collapsed earlier
this year. In an interview with Fox Business
Network on Wednesday, Trump threatened
again to impose even
stiffer tariffs on Chinese
imports to the U.S. if
talks remain stalemated.
But ofﬁcials in both
nations are looking for
an off-ramp as concerns
mount about the economic impact of the
yearlong trade war.
Trump’s meeting with
Erdogan will be his
ﬁrst since announcing,
and then backing off, a
withdrawal of U.S. forces
from Syria. There also is
a growing rift between
the two NATO allies
over Turkey’s planned
purchase of a Russian
surface-to-air missile system and a U.S. threat to
suspend planned deliveries to Turkey of the F-35
Joint Strike Fighter.

DJFS

land, rental properties.
These proceeds are not
counted as expected
income, so those are
From page 1
the funds we have been
spending for events
residential centers
that promote Meigs
to be established in
County,” said Ihle.
the region that will
Ihle said this year a
beneﬁt and support
large portion of those
children in foster care,
funds have been spent
especially those with
on the Bicentennial Celsevere needs” was also
ebration.
approved.
Smith pointed out the
Shank’s ﬁnal item, a
Bicentennial Committee
request to enter into a
is trying to spread the
sub grant agreement
with the Meigs County celebration into every
township with markers
Council on Aging to
provide a Home Maker as an example.
“Everything we do is
(Home Based) Services
program, was approved. to show how great this
Commissioner Randy county is, and we certainly want to support
Smith read a request
from the Pomeroy Blues all the efforts that are
going on, but are funds
and Jazz Society for
are limited, especially in
ﬁnancial support for
their upcoming festivals this Bicentennial year.”
Smith then made a
in Pomeroy. The reading brought about a dis- motion to approve the
request before them,
cussion of the amount
and to set a limit of
events throughout the
$500 as the amount to
county should receive.
be given to all requests
Commissioner Tim
in 2019.
Ihle wanted to make
“We would like to do
clear that money given
more, there are great
to such events did not
things going on in the
come from taxpayer
county,” Smith said,
funds.
“Taxes are to run the “But we have to work
with the money we have
government. Someavailable.”
times we have some
side money from things
Lorna Hart is a freelance writer
like the hotel tax, timfor The Daily Sentinel.
ber sales from county

‘They died in each other’s arms,’ mother says
Associated Press

SAN MARTIN, El
Salvador — The mother
of a man who drowned
alongside his 23-monthold daughter while trying
to cross the Rio Grande
into Texas says she ﬁnds
a heartbreaking photograph of their bodies
hard to look at but takes
some comfort in knowing
“they died in each other’s
arms.”
Óscar Alberto Martínez Ramírez and his
daughter Valeria were
swept away by the current near Matamoros,
Mexico, and Brownsville,
Texas, this week. The
grim photo shows the girl
tucked inside her father’s
shirt for protection with
her arm draped over his
neck — an image that
underscores the dangers
migrants and asylumseekers face trying to
make it to the United
States and the desperate measures they resort
to in the face of policies
designed to deter them.
“It’s tough, it’s kind of
shocking, that image,” the
25-year-old man’s mother,
Rosa Ramírez, told The
Associated Press. “But at
the same time, it ﬁlls me
with tenderness. I feel so
many things, because at
no time did he let go of
her.”
“You can see how he
protected her,” she said.

Antonio Valladares | AP

Rosa Ramirez sobs as she shows journalists toys that belonged
to her nearly 2-year-old granddaughter Valeria in her home in
San Martin, El Salvador, on Tuesday. The bodies of Ramirez’s son,
25-year-old Oscar Alberto Martinez Ramirez, and his daughter were
found Monday morning on the banks of the Rio Grande, a day after
the pair were swept away by the current when the young family
tried to cross the river to Brownsville, Texas. Her daughter-in-law
Tania Vanessa Avalos, 21, survived.

“They died in each other’s arms.”
Ramírez had shared
a sea-green brick home
with barred windows in
San Martin on the outskirts of the capital, San
Salvador, with her son,
his 21-year-old wife Tania
Vanessa Ávalos and their
daughter until the young
family decided to make
the journey north.
In their working-class
neighborhood of about
40,000, Martínez worked
in a pizzeria and Ávalos
as a cashier in a fast-food
restaurant, Ramírez said.
The area has had problems with gang violence
but these days it’s calm,
she said, adding that he
never had any problems
with gangs — they left
for economic reasons.

Ramírez said that she
had given them the big
room in the two-bedroom
house, but they dreamed
of saving money for a
place of their own and
that drove the family
to head for the United
States in early April.
“I told him, ‘Son, don’t
go. But if you do go, leave
me the girl,’” Ramírez
said.
“’No, mamá,’” she said
he replied. “’How can you
think that I would leave
her?’”
Now she feels a hole
that “nobody can ﬁll, but
God gives me strength,”
she said.
Marta Argueta de
Andrade, their 50-yearold neighbor, said she
met the family about ﬁve
years ago. She described

them as “good people,”
and Martínez as an easygoing young man.
“I would see him walking with the girl. I called
her ‘little curly one,’”
Argueta said. “She was
very pretty.”
“I would say to those
who are thinking of
migrating, they should
think it over because not
everyone can live that
American dream you hear
about,” Ramírez said.
“We can put up a ﬁght
here,” she added. “How
much I would like to have
my son and my granddaughter here. One way
or another, we get by in
our country.”
The U.S.-Mexico border region has long been
perilous for those trying
to cross illegally into the
United States between
ports of entry, from the
fast-moving Rio Grande
to the scalding Sonoran
Desert. A total of 283
people died while trying
to cross last year; ﬁgures
for 2019 have not yet
been released.
On Sunday, Martínez
decided to make that
journey, swimming with
Valeria from Matamoros
to the Texas side of the
Rio Grande, where he left
her on the riverbank and
started back to get his
wife. Seeing him leave,
the girl threw herself
into the water. Martínez
returned to get her, but
both were swept away.
Ávalos was not harmed.

Camp
From page 1

with the campers divided into teams. The Meigs
County 4-H Teen Leaders will be helping with the
camp and serving as camp counselors for the day.
Throughout the day campers will be learning
about bugs and butterﬂies with hands-on activities, games, songs, books, crafts, snacks and more.
Lunch of pizza, fruits and veggies will also be provided for campers.
Among the planned activities are a “Spider
Web” string maze, a nectar relay, caterpillar ball
toss, a bug scavenger hunt, bug bingo, and making “bug fossils”. The Teen Leaders will also be
working on a photo booth for this campers to take
souvenir photos.
Campers should wear play clothes and tennis
shoes, as well as bring sunscreen and a bag to
keep their belongings in for the day. Campers will
receive a camp t-shirt.
The registration deadline is July 2. Registration
can be completed at the Meigs County Extension
Ofﬁce located at 113 E. Memorial Drive, Suite E,
Pomeroy. Camp fees for 4-H members are $20. For
more information call 740-992-6696.
Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The Daily Sentinel.

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suits.
“She did nothing,”
said Piscitelli, today
the Northern California
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the Survivors Network
of those Abused by
Priests.
Survivors of clergy
abuse and their attorneys say that Harris’
record on ﬁghting sex
abuse within the Catholic Church is relevant as
the U.S. senator from
California campaigns
for the presidency as
a tough-on-crime exprosecutor who got her
start prosecuting child
sexual abuse cases.
They complain that
Harris was consistently
silent on the Catholic
Church’s abuse scandal
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�Sports
6 Thursday, June 27, 2019

Daily Sentinel

For Durant and Leonard, the move is to stay put
By Tim Reynolds

of them would be wisest to do.
Durant will be offered a $221
million, ﬁve-year contract from
Toronto’s Kawhi Leonard and Golden State. That’s one year
and $57 million more than any
Golden State’s Kevin Durant
are both very difﬁcult to ﬁgure other team can offer. Provided
out. They seem to enjoy giving that he won’t be playing next
cryptic answers, a minimum of year anyway because of his
clues, and clearly relish having ruptured Achilles and that
there’s no guarantee that the
enigmatic status.
It makes free agency tough to after-surgery version of Durant
will remain in the best-playerforecast.
on-the-planet conversation, it
Luckily for Toronto and
Golden State, the math should would be less than prudent to
leave that much money on the
be very simple.
table.
Leonard and Durant are the
“He’s been everything to us,”
biggest dominoes that will fall
Warriors general manager Bob
sometime after the free-agent
window opens Sunday evening Myers said earlier this month.
With Leonard, it’s all a bit
— unless, of course, neither
more complex.
ends up falling elsewhere and
The NBA champion Rapdecide to stay put for now. And
that is what the math says both tors could offer him anything

Associated Press

Nathan Denette | The Canadian Press via AP

Toronto Raptors team president Masai Ujiri speaks to the media during an endof-season news conference in Toronto on Tuesday. At left is the Larry O’Brien
Trophy.

from $32 million for one year
to $190 million for ﬁve years,
and the reality is that Leonard
probably wants something in
between. In the summer of
2021, after Leonard completes
his 10th year in the league, he
goes from being able to command 30% of a salary cap to
35% of a salary cap.
That 5% is going to be a lot
of money. That’s why, for Leonard, the smarter play in terms
of ﬁnances is to sign a shorter
deal this summer — two years,
$68 million or so, maybe with a
third year at his option — and
cash in for all he will have coming two years from now.
“He’s a conﬁdent human
being,” Raptors President
See MOVE | 7

UConn to rejoin Big
East, board vote
makes it official
STORRS, Conn. (AP) — UConn is heading
back to the Big East
The University of Connecticut Board of Trustees on Wednesday accepted an invitation to move
its basketball and most other athletic teams from
the American Athletic Conference.
University President Susan Herbst signed a contract, and the teams are expected to begin play in
the conference in the 2020-21 academic year.
“While we all appreciate the AAC…the board
must make a decision that is best for the athletic
program,” said Tom Ritter, the interim chairman
of the Board of Trustees. “At this time, I support
accepting the Big East invitation as a better overall ﬁt and, in my opinion, best for our program
and student athletes.”
The move is designed energize the school’s fan
base by renewing some old rivalries. It also means
an end to costly road trips to states such as Texas,
Oklahoma and Florida for conference games.
UConn is currently dealing with a deﬁcit in its athletic division of more than $40 million.
The school hasn’t indicated what it plans to do
with its football program, a sport not offered by
the Big East.
“Make no mistake that we will still be committed to our football program,” Ritter said. “We will
have options for football and we will have time to
decide on a pathway for a successful and exciting
football program.
Herbst said she and athletic director David
Benedict will hold off on commenting until an
ofﬁcial announcement from the Big East. That’s
scheduled for Thursday at a noon news conference
at Madison Square Garden, an arena that’s hosted
several iconic moments in UConn basketball history.
“This is a Big East process and we need to
respect their process,” Herbst said. “UConn nation
and the news media have a lot of questions, I
know that. All of them will be answered. But we’ve
got to follow the Big East, so hold tight.”
UConn was a charter member of the Big East,
which was formed in 1979. The Huskies never
actually left the conference. The American was
formed by UConn and the other remaining conference schools in 2013 after the league’s basketballfocused private schools broke away, eventually
negotiating to take the conference name with
them.
UConn is expected to add cache to the basketball league. But women’s basketball coach Geno
Auriemma cautioned on Monday that it won’t be
the league fans remember.
The latest version of the Big East will include
UConn, Butler, Creighton, DePaul, Georgetown,
Marquette, Providence, St. John’s, Seton Hall, Villanova and Xavier.
“It’s like saying you’re moving back to your
hometown, but the block that you lived on and half
the city is gone,” he said. “It’s not the same.”
But Auriemma said his team’s success has not
depended on what conference it is in.
UConn became a national power in basketball as
a Big East school, winning three men’s titles under
coach Jim Calhoun and eight women’s NCAA
championships under Auriemma.
The school added another men’s title and three
See UCONN | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Saturday, June 29
Legion Baseball
Post 39 vs Nitro (DH) at
Point Pleasant HS, noon
Wednesday, July 3
Legion Baseball

Post 39 vs Huntington
(DH) at Meigs HS, 5 p.m.
Saturday, July 6
Legion Baseball
Post 39 at Nitro (DH),
noon

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Hannan senior Dalton Coleman (13) and Ohio Valley Christian senior Justin Beaver (14) both reached the 1,000-point career plateau on
Dec. 8, 2018, during the Wildcats’ 65-47 victory over the Defenders in a non-conference matchup in Ashton, W.Va. Joining the recordsetting duo are HHS coach Shawn Coleman, left, and OVCS coach Steve Rice.

Looking back at 2018-19 Winter
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

We’ve taken a step
back into the fall sports
season, but today we will
look at the recent 2018-19
winter campaign within
the Ohio Valley Publishing area.
Meigs, Mason and Gallia counties struggled
a bit in both boys and
girls basketball as only
two of the 20 programs
advanced past the opening round of the postseason. The OVP area also
came away with a grand
total of zero league championships.
Wrestling, on the other
hand, had two different
teams and a grand total
of 26 individuals compete
at the state level in some
fashion this past winter,
rather it be in Ohio or in
West Virginia. Wrestling
also produced a team
league champion, two
regional team titles and a
team state championship
… as well as three individual state champions.
Point Pleasant wrestling was again a headline
story in the OVP area
this past winter after
rolling to victories at the
WSAZ Invitational and
the Class AA Region IV
tournament, then secured
the program’s fourth state
championship by winning
the Class AA crown by
an impressive 83-point
margin.
The Big Blacks had
ﬁve grapplers compete

in state ﬁnals, which
yielded a trio of ﬁrst-time
champions in Isaac Short
(106), Derek Raike (120)
and Justin Bartee (126).
Point Pleasant qualiﬁed wrestlers to the state
level in all 14 weight
classes this past winter,
with 10 ending up with
top-six podium ﬁnishes.
PPHS, however, was
the only area program
making notable history
on the mat.
River Valley enjoyed
its ﬁrst full roster in
20 years under coach
Matthew Huck, and the
Raiders absolutely made
the most of their 14-man
journey.
The Silver and Black
won the Division Region
22 title and eventually
competed in their ﬁrstever OHSAA State Wrestling Dual Team Championship held at St. John’s
Arena. RVHS eventually
lost 54-18 in the opening
round to eventual champion Milan Edison.
The Raiders followed
by winning four individual Tri-Valley Conference
crowns, produced seven
district qualiﬁers and netted the program’s ﬁrstever tandem entry into
the OHSAA individual
tournament.
Both Eric Weber and
Nathan Cadle joined
Zach Davis (2003-04) as
the only individual state
qualiﬁers in River Valley
history.
Wahama scored its ﬁrst
regional champion since

River Valley senior Jacob Edwards locks up with an opponent
during the OHSAA State Wrestling Dual Team Tournament held Feb.
10 at St. John’s Arena in Columbus, Ohio.

2014 and also netted
the program’s secondever state runner-up in
Antonio Serevicz at 220
pounds. Trevor Hunt was
also sixth overall for the
White Falcons at 145
pounds.
Gallia Academy captured the program’s
fourth consecutive Ohio
Valley Conference championship while producing
eight individual league
champions — ﬁve of
whom were repeat honorees. The Blue Devils also
produced four district
qualiﬁers.

Eastern wrestling sent
two grapplers to the district level for a second
consecutive postseason,
including the Eagles’
ﬁrst-ever two-time qualiﬁer in Dillon Aeiker.
South Gallia also
produced a pair of district qualiﬁers for the
ﬁrst time ever in Justin
Butler and Chad Bostic.
Bostic also became the
program’s ﬁrst-ever TVC
champion after winning
the 170-pound league
title.
See WINTER | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

UConn

NCAA adjusts transfer waiver guidelines

hundreds of student
athletes, fans and our
future,” Edsall said in
a statement. “With the
From page 6
decision, it leaves our
more women’s champion- football program in
ships as members of the transition at this point
in time, but the Board
American.
of Trustees, University
The UConn women
Leadership and Athletic
have never lost to an
Director will make the
American Athletic Conference opponent, going decision that they feel is
120-0 in the regular sea- best for our Football program moving forward.”
son and six conference
Not everyone is
tournaments.
pleased with the move.
UConn football also
UConn football seasonfound some success in
the Big East. The teams ticket holder Tom
went to ﬁve bowl games, McDougall made the
including the 2011 Fiesta 40-minute drive from
Bowl. But when Big East west Hartford to address
football collapsed, so did the board. He said the
vote means they don’t
the Huskies’ program.
care about him or other
It has a record of 28-69
football fans.
since that season.
“It doesn’t even make
Football coach Randy
Edsall said he’s not sure sense,” he said. “There
is more money in the
what the future of his
sport will look like at the American Athletic
Conference. There is a
school.
future in the American
“The Board of TrustAthletic Conference.
ees, University LeaderThere’s an escape route
ship and the Athletic
in the American Athletic
Director made the deciConference. The Big
sion that this was in the
East offers none of these
best interest of our 22
things.”
intercollegiate teams,

By Ralph D. Russo

immediate eligibility to
play.
The adjustments
approved by the DiviFollowing fresh
sion I council will
concerns about the
require schools requesthandling of athletes
ing a waiver for an
switching schools, the
NCAA approved several incoming transfer to
adjustments Wednesday provide more documentation to support the
to the guidelines used
argument — and more
to determine when
waivers can be granted detailed veriﬁcation
of an athlete’s claims
to transfers seeking

Associated Press

Tri-County Junior
Golf Schedule
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The schedule for the 2019
Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf League is
winding down.
The tour ofﬁcially began on Wednesday, June 12,
at Riverside Golf Club in Mason. Age groups for
both young ladies and young men are 10-and-under,
11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournament, course and date of
play is as follows: Tuesday, July 9, at Meigs County
Golf Course in Pomeroy.
The fee for each tournament is $12 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 304-675-6135
if you can contribute or have questions concerning
the tour.

From page 6

Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Move
From page 6

Masai Ujiri said. “He’s
an unbelievable person.
He is his own person. …
I think we’ve built a trust
there.”
Of course, all that is the
money aspect of things.
Leonard has already
pocketed about $85 million in on-court earnings
and the big money is
really going to start rolling in now. Durant is up
to around $190 million on
the court, with probably
just as much off the court.
They’re both set for life,
so money won’t be the
sole driving force in their
respective decisions.
The basketball stuff still
matters. No matter how
much Durant and Leonard have in the bank, they
cannot buy championship
rings.
This is where the ambiguity starts to kick in,
although there shouldn’t
be much. Even with the
Los Angeles Lakers about
to get Anthony Davis in
a trade, even with the
Brooklyn Nets quite possibly about to land Kyrie
Irving in free agency, it’s
fairly clear that the Raptors and Warriors — this
past season’s NBA ﬁnalists — will go into next
season with the most
realistic championship
aspirations.
The Warriors won’t

have Durant because of
his Achilles injury. They
will still have Stephen
Curry and, probably,
Klay Thompson — provided he re-signs, as is
expected. They will still
have Steve Kerr calling
the shots. They will have
deep-pocketed, freespending owners who
won’t want the team’s
ﬁrst season in the new
Chase Center to be, by
Warriors’ standards, a
step backwards after ﬁve
consecutive NBA Finals
appearances.
The Raptors have a
chance to go back-toback and even though
the Eastern Conference
is deeper now than it
has been in recent years
— Milwaukee won 60
games this past season,
Philadelphia should be
strong again, Boston
and Indiana have some
work to do but could ﬁnd
themselves right back
in the mix — there’s an
argument to be made
that Leonard’s best
path to a third title ring
would lead him to stay in
Toronto.
For Durant and Leonard, all the talk about
New York and Brooklyn
and Los Angeles should
be just that — talk.
The simplest, and
right, move for both is
this: Run it back. Stay
put. Be the dominoes
that don’t fall, and let the
rest of the league react
to that.

about their original
school.
“The overall goal of
these adjustments was
to provide the membership with as much
information and knowledge and education as
to what they need to
be including in their
waiver requests,” said
Brandy Hataway, NCAA
director of academic

and membership affairs.
“I don’t know if I’d say
it’s extra (information).
A lot of it is information that was already
being requested in the
process. It’s just now
letting schools know
on the front end rather
than them submitting
their requests and staff
going back to them and
saying we need x, y, z.”

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Winter
Eastern put together the best postseason run after
falling in the Division IV girls basketball district
championship game. The Lady Eagles (15-9) were
appearing in their ninth district ﬁnal in 10 years.
The Meigs girls basketball team captured the
remaining sectional championship from the tri-county
area. The Lady Marauders put together a 15-9 campaign in earning the program’s ﬁrst district appearance since 2000.
Of note, the Wahama girls basketball team went
11-13 overall and 7-9 in league play. It is signiﬁcant
in that it was the ﬁrst time that the Lady Falcons had
double-digit wins since the 2011-12 campaign. WHS
also had more TVC Hocking wins this winter than all
of its previous six seasons combined.
The OVP area also produced ﬁve different 1,000point scorers this winter, including a pair on the same
night in the same game.
Hannan senior Dalton Coleman and Ohio Valley
Christian senior Justin Beaver each reached quadruple digits for their career during Hannan 65-47
victory in Ashton back on Dec. 8, 2018.
Meigs senior Kassidy Betzing became the ﬁrst
player at MHS to reach 1,000 career points since
2011, then Meigs junior Weston Baer followed about
a month later by becoming the ﬁrst boy to accomplish
the feat in 20 years.
Wahama junior Hannah Rose hit the 1,000-point
plateau during the opening game of the postseason.
River Valley also had six swimmers qualify for the
district tournament.

Thursday, June 27, 2019 7

RedStorm women’s
basketball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio
Grande’s 2019 Women’s Basketball Camp is scheduled for July 7-10 at the Lyne Center on the URG
campus.
The overnight instructional camp is open to girls
in grades 4-12. Cost is $295 per camper, which
includes lodging, meals, a certiﬁcate of participation
and a t-shirt.
Campers will also receive 24-hour supervision
from coaches and counselors; lecture/discussion
groups and ﬁlm sessions; daily instruction on shooting, ball-handling, post play and defense; and use of
the school’s swimming pool.
There will also be a camp store featuring drinks,
snacks, pizza and Rio Grande apparel for sale each
day.
Veteran Rio Grande women’s basketball head
coach David Smalley, who ranks among the top 10
coaches on the active wins list with more than 500,
will be the camp director.
Online registration is available through the women’s basketball link on the school’s athletic website,
www.rioredstorm.com. Registration forms are avail-

able in the lobby of the Lyne Center during regular
business hours.
Registration forms should be mailed to David
Smalley, Rio Grande Women’s Basketball Camp, P.O.
Box 500, Rio Grande, OH 45674. Checks should be
made payable to Women’s Basketball Camp.
For more information, contact Smalley at 740-2457491 or at 1-800-282-7201, or by e-mail dsmalley@
rio.edu.

GAHS youth
football camp
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy football staff will be conducting a youth football camp
for boys entering grades 1-8. The camp will be held
from July 22-23 from 6-8 p.m. each day at Memorial
Field. Camp participants will be instructed by both
staff and players.
The cost of the camp is $30 per student and $20
apiece for two-or-more students. For questions or to
register, please contact Coach Jared McClelland at
740-645-5783.

Kiwanis Juniors
Golf Tournament
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Cliffside Golf Course will
be hosting the 11th annual Kiwanis Juniors at Cliffside Golf Tournament for junior golfers on Thursday, July 18, 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 ages 10-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-and-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 to follow kids for $15 apiece, 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 740645-4381. Please leave player’s name, age as of July
18, 2019 and the school the individual is currently
attending.

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Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
(N)
Fortune
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV
News (N)
Theory
Theory
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
Business
depth analysis of current
events. (N)
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

The Wall "Matt and Nick"
(N)
The Wall "Matt and Nick"
(N)
Holey "The Thunderdome of
Mini Golf" (N)
Song of the Mountains
"Ralph Stanley Tribute Show
With Nathan Stanley"
Holey "The Thunderdome of
Mini Golf" (N)
Young
Young
Sheldon
Sheldon
MasterChef "Gordon Takes
on a Tarte"
Jamestown Jocelyn learns
what it means to lose
everything.
Young
Young
Sheldon
Sheldon

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Democratic Presidential Primary Debate "June 27 2019"
Democratic presidential nomination hopefuls debate. (L)
Democratic Presidential Primary Debate "June 27 2019"
Democratic presidential nomination hopefuls debate. (L)
Family Food Fight "Meet
Reef Break "Lost and
the Families: Part 2" 2/2 (N) Found" (N)
American Experience The Stonewall Inn
The
was a sanctuary for homosexuals and
Committee
sparked the gay rights movement.
Family Food Fight "Meet
Reef Break "Lost and
the Families: Part 2" 2/2 (N) Found" (N)
Life in Pieces Life in Pieces Elementary "Command:
Delete" (N)
(N)
(N)
Spin the Wheel "Feiler
Eyewitness News at 10 (N)
Family" (N)
Mannheim Steamroller 30/40 Live See
Lasting
performances from the popular Mannheim Impressions
Steamroller annual Christmas tour.
Life in Pieces Life in Pieces Elementary "Command:
(N)
(N)
Delete" (N)

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Love Stories"
24 (ROOT) The Dan Patrick Show (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (PARMT)
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

Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St.
In Depth (N) Pirates Ball MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Houston Astros Site: Minute Maid Park
MLB All-Star Elect. (L)
O.J.: Made in America "Part Four"
UFC Main Event
NFL Live
CFL Football Edmonton Eskimos at Winnipeg Blue Bombers (L)
Wife Swap "Allemon and
Little Women: Atlanta
Little Women ATL "Stealing LW Atlanta "Jealousy is Not (:05)
Enough (‘02, Thril)
Jennifer Lopez. TV14
Johnson"
"Crazy, Stupid Love"
My Shine" (N)
a Good Look" (N)
(5:30)
Thor: The Dark World (2013, Action) Chris Siren "Mixed Signals" (N)
Siren "Serenity" (N)
Grown-ish
Grown-ish
Hemsworth, Tom Hiddleston, Natalie Portman. TVPG
"Tweakin'"
Lip Sync
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Mom
Mom
Mom
Coming to America Eddie Murphy. An African prince travels to
America to avoid an arranged marriage and find a new bride. TV14
Battle (N)
Battle (N)
Loud House Loud House SpongeBob SpongeBob
Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa Ben Stiller. TVPG
You Smarter Friends 1/2
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift TV14
The Fast and the Furious (‘01, Act) Vin Diesel. TV14 Queen "La Maldición" (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
Bones
Bones
RoboCop (‘14, Act) Marc Abraham, Joel Kinnaman. TV14
Movie
(5:30)
My Cousin Vinny (1992, Comedy) Marisa
Caddyshack (1980, Comedy) Rodney Dangerfield,
The Sandlot (‘93,
Tomei, Ralph Macchio, Joe Pesci. TVMA
Ted Knight, Chevy Chase. TV14
Child) Tom Guiry. TVPG
Naked and Afraid "Belize" Naked "Ecuador Jungle"
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid "Strife in Africa" (N)
The First 48 "Killer
The First 48 "Down on
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Contact"
Bourbon/ Deadly Trap"
Sin/ Bloodlines"
Dawn"
Monsters "Body Snatcher" River Monsters
River Monsters
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Fish or Die (N)
Snapped "Wendy Cobb"
Snapped "Lupita Acuna"
Snapped "Sabrina Zunich" Snapped "Suzanne Schoff" Snapped "Tanasha Siena"

Law &amp; Order: C.I. "Grow" Growing Up Hip Hop
Growing Up Hip Hop
Hip Hop "Sex With You" (N) Hip Hop "Sex With You"
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
Keeping Up With the Kardashians "Khloe's Pop-Up Birthday!" (N)
(:20) Andy Griffith Show
(:55) Griffith A. Griffith
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
South West "The Good, the Mountain (N) Untamed (N) Yellowstone Wolf Dynasty Ameri. Parks "Yellowstone: America's National Parks
Bad and the Deadly" (N)
"The Pack"
On the Hunt" (N)
(N)
NASCAR (N)
Monster Jam "Seattle"
MonsterJ. "New Orleans" Monster Jam "Syracuse"
Monster Jam "Denver"
(3:00) USGA Golf U.S. Senior Open (L)
ARCA Auto Racing Bounty 150 (L)
Fox Soccer Tonight (L)
Mountain Men: Outdoors Mountain Men "Polar
Mountain Men "Darkness Mountain Men "Family
(:05) Alone "The Moose"
"New Blood"
Vortex"
Falls"
First" (N)
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives (N)
Watch (N)
Housewives
Movie
(:35)
National Security (‘03, Com) Steve Zahn. TVPG
Are We Done Yet? (‘07, Com) Ice Cube. TV14
House Hunt. House Hunt. House Hunt. House Hunt. Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Christin (N) Unspouse (N) H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00)
Underworld:
Underworld: Awakening (2012,
(:45) Annabelle (‘14, Hor) Annabelle Wallis. Malevolent forces follow a
Rise of the Lycans TV14
Action) India Eisley, Michael Ealy. TVMA
couple to their new home and appear to be connected to a doll. TVMA

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

(5:40) The Predator Genetically upgraded

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

7:30

Vice News
Predators return to Earth to hunt humans to Tonight (N)
the brink of extinction. TVMA
(:05)
Unknown (2011, Mystery) Diane Kruger, January
Jones, Liam Neeson. After awakening from a coma, a man
discovers that his identity was stolen. TV14
(5:10)
The Aviator (‘04, Bio) Leonardo DiCaprio.
The life of legendary director and aviator Howard Hughes,
from the 1920s to the mid-1940s. TV14

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The 15:17 to Paris Jenna Fischer. Three
(:35)
Years and Years Absent
sister Edith brings news from Americans traveling through Europe stop a Euphoria
abroad.
terrorist attack on a train in France. TV14
Inception (2010, Action) Ken Watanabe, Joseph Gordon-Levitt,
Maze
Leonardo DiCaprio. A skilled thief has a final shot at redemption if he can Runner: The
execute his toughest job to date. TV14
Death Cure
The Original Kings of Comedy (‘00, Doc) D.L.
City on a Hill "What They
Saw in Southie High"
Hughley, Steve Harvey. A concert film featuring four major
African American stand up comedians. TVMA

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, June 27, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Federer seeded No. 2, Nadal No. 3 at Wimbledon
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — Eight-time
champion Roger Federer
was seeded No. 2 for
Wimbledon, one spot
ahead of Rafael Nadal,
reversing their positions
in the ATP rankings and
creating a debate about
whether the All England
Club’s seeding system
should be changed.
Top-ranked Novak
Djokovic, the defending
champion, was seeded
No. 1 on Wednesday at
the grass-court Grand
Slam tournament, where
recent results on the

surface are used to help
determine seedings. The
other majors do not do
that.
Nadal told a Spanish TV station that he
doesn’t think it makes
sense that Wimbledon
is the only tournament
that uses its own seeding system. Former U.S.
Davis Cup captain Patrick McEnroe and former
player and coach Brad
Gilbert tweeted that they
thought Nadal should
have been seeded No. 2.
The ATP’s top 32 men
are seeded at Wimble-

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don, but the order is
based on a formula that
gives players additional
credit for ranking points
earned at tournaments
played on grass over the
preceding two years.
That allowed Federer,
who won his 10th title
at Halle, Germany, last
week, to jump ahead of
Nadal, who potentially
could have to beat both
Djokovic and Federer to
win what would be his
third championship at
Wimbledon.
Nadal is coming off
his record 12th title at

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Naomi Osaka is No.
2, followed by Karolina
Pliskova.
Seven-time Wimbledon
champion Serena Williams is seeded 11th, the
same place she holds in
this week’s rankings. A
year ago, early in her
return to the tour after
having a baby, Williams
was ranked just 183rd
but seeded 25th.
She wound up reaching
the ﬁnal before losing
to champion Angelique
Kerber.
The draw is Friday;
play begins Monday.

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There were other
examples of shifts from
rankings to seedings.
Last year’s runner-up,
Kevin Anderson, was
seeded No. 4, even
though he is ranked only
No. 8 this week; 2018
semiﬁnalist John Isner
is seeded No. 9, ranked
No. 12; 2017 runner-up
Marin Cilic is seeded No.
13, ranked No. 18.
This year’s women’s
seedings at the All England Club strictly follow
the WTA rankings, so
French Open champion
Ash Barty is at No. 1.

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that on Friday, June 28, 2019 at
10:00 a.m., a public sale will be held at 640 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769. The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company is selling for cash in hand or certified check the
following collateral:
2016 SUBARU CROSSTREK WAGON
VIN#JF2GPABC6G8235197
2005 CHEVROLET TAHOE (for parts)
VIN#1GNEK13T65J120292
2007 FORD FUSION (for parts)
VIN#3FAHP07ZY7R208132
2012 TOYOTA RAV 4
VIN#2T3DK4DV1CW073970
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio,
reserves the right to bid at this sale, and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale. Further, The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company reserves the right to reject any or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”,
with no expressed or implied warranty given.
For further information, or for an appointment to inspect
collateral, prior to sale date contract Kristi Mainville at
740-992-4048.
6/25/19,6/26/19,6/27/19

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the French Open, which
is played on clay, and he
did not enter any sort of
tuneup event on grass
this year. He rarely does.
While Nadal did reach
the Wimbledon ﬁnal in
ﬁve consecutive appearances in the tournament
from 2006-11, he had
not been so successful
of late until a run to the
semiﬁnals last year. From
2012-17, Nadal never
made it past the fourth
round at the All England
Club, including one exit
in the ﬁrst round and a
pair in the second.

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, June 27, 2019 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

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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�SPORTS

10 Thursday, June 27, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Europe dominates Women’s World Cup
LE HAVRE, France
(AP) — Even Netherlands forward Lineth
Beerensteyn had to check
that the number was
right.
“Oh my God — seven,”
she exclaimed. “That’s a
lot.”
Europe sure is dominating this Women’s World
Cup.
The Netherlands
made it a record seven
European teams in the
quarterﬁnals by knocking
out Japan, which won
the tournament in 2011
and reached the ﬁnal four
years ago.
Never before in the previous seven editions had
an Asian team missed
out on making the last
eight. Only the United
States’ victory over Spain
prevented a clean sweep
by European teams in
the round of 16, and the
defending champions
now have to face host
France on Friday.
“Sometimes it kind of
feels like a Euros,” Netherlands forward Vivianne
Miedema said. “America
is amazing.”
The compliment isn’t
being returned by U.S.
forward Tobin Heath.
“As a football fan, to
me I would want a little
bit more diversity at this
point,” Heath said. “I
ﬁnd European football is
sometimes a little boring
and I think that there’s
some teams that are so
exciting to watch, that
you won’t be able to see
this kind of different
style, which is unfortunate at this stage because
I appreciate certain
teams that are no longer
in the tournament.”
There is a freshness to
the ﬁeld, however.
The Dutch are in the
quarterﬁnals for the
ﬁrst time in only their

second appearance to the
tournament. Italy, their
opponent on Saturday, is
back in the quarterﬁnals
for the ﬁrst time since
the ﬁrst FIFA women’s
showpiece in 1991.
The round opens with
Norway playing England,
which ﬁnished third
in 2015, and wraps up
Saturday night with twotime champion Germany
taking on Sweden.
Investment domestically is raising standards
for players, cementing
Europe’s control of the
international game.
“The biggest example
is Italy,” Miedema said.
“They put a lot of money
into Juventus and in a
couple of other clubs.
You see it directly on the
World Cup.”
All but one of the
Italian players plays at
home, with eight out of
23 playing on the Serie
A-winning Juventus
squad.
“Once the league in
your country is really
strong then you know
your national team is
going to become better as well,” Miedema
said. “It’s only going to
become bigger.”
But a few clubs have
emerged as forces in the
women’s game.
As many players on
the Netherlands squad
play for Ajax — four
— as they do for newly
crowned English champion Arsenal, including
Miedema. While Arsenal
was crowned European
champion in 2007, Ajax
has never conquered the
continent.
The appearance of
Norway in the World Cup
quarterﬁnals signals a
resurgence for the 1995
champions.
The Norwegians
reached the semiﬁnals

Francois Mori | AP

Netherlands’ Lieke Martens, top, celebrates with teammates after scoring her team’s second goal from the penalty spot during the
Women’s World Cup round of 16 soccer match between the Netherlands and Japan at Roazhon Park in Rennes, France, on Tuesday. The
Netherlands won 2-1.

in four of the ﬁrst ﬁve
editions of the Women’s
World Cup, but were
eliminated in the group
stage in 2011 and in the
round of 16 in 2015.
The majority of the
squad still plays for
Norwegian clubs, which
struggle to make an
impact in continental
competitions and can’t
afford the professional
contracts enjoyed by the
entire England traveling
party.
“When there is money,
other leagues can dominate,” Norway coach Martin Sjögren said through
a translator. “In Scandinavian countries they

were really early starting
with women’s football
— that means we have
a history … but bigger
nations started to invest.
It had to produce results
and maybe put women’s
football even more on the
map.”
Sweden ﬁnished third
in 1991 and 2011 and
lost the 2003 ﬁnal to Germany.
“We have shown Scandinavian countries can
even compete again,”
Sjögren said.
On the world stage,
maybe. It’s harder on the
continent.
Swedish team Umeå
was crowned European

champions in 2003 and
2004 but the country
hasn’t been represented in the ﬁnal since
Djurgården lost in 2005.
Since Arsenal’s triumph
in 2007, German and
French teams have had a
lock on the European trophy. French club Lyon is
the team to beat, winning
four Champions League
titles in a row.
“The investment and
output and the value you
get for money invested is
high in women’s football,”
said Nadine Kessler, the
former world player of
the year who is now head
of women’s football at
European governing body

UEFA. “It can pay off
much quicker than in the
men’s game.”
England, Germany
and France were the only
European teams in the
quarterﬁnals four years
ago before the U.S. beat
Japan in the ﬁnal.
“There are already four
World Cup winners from
three different confederations,” said Kessler,
a European champion
with Germany in 2013.
“The efforts over the past
few years have allowed
Europe to become generally better and more
teams involved in the top
level of the international
game.”

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$27,606

2019 RAM 1500 LARAMIE
4X4, CREW CAB, 5’7 BOX, 4WD

$39,000

2017 JEEP WRANGLER UNLIMITED SPORT
4X4,4WD

/
!

2019 RAM 1500 CLASSIC
SLT, 4X4, CREW CAB, 6’4 BOX, 4WD

$30,000

$23,000

2019 JEEP CHEROKEE LIMITED
4X4, 4WD

$25,000

2012 NISSAN ROGUE
AWD, 4DR, S

2013 JEEP WRANGLER UNLIMITED
RUBICON 4WD, 4DR, NAVIGATION

2019 JEEP COMPASS LIMITED
4X4, 4WD

$26,500

$9,500

$29,000

2019 RAM 1500 LARAMIE
4X4, CREW CAB, 5’7 BOX, 4WD

/
!
$5.00 off 5 quart oil change and ﬁlter.
Restrictions may apply, see dealer for
details.

Pot Hole Special: alignment, rotate, &amp; balance
$149.00 plus tax. Customer pay only.
Restrictions may apply, see dealer for details.

308 East Main Street Pomeroy, OH 45769
Sales: 877-580-1692 Service: 877-652-6990 Parts: 877-664-1226

"

"

)

!

/

/

Monday - Thursday
9am to 7 pm
Friday
9am - 6pm
Saturday
9am - 5pm
Closed on Sunday

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