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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Kurt Busch
outduels
brother

OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

74°

86°

83°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Humid today with clouds and sun. Some rain
and a t-storm tonight. High 91° / Low 70°

SPORTS s 6

WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 111, Volume 73

Tuesday, July 16, 2019 s 50¢

Neace remains in custody following arraignment
Defense waives bond request
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Tammy Neace sits alongside counsel Gregory Meyers during her arraignment on
Monday in Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

POMEROY — A Pomeroy
woman charged in the shooting death of another woman
appeared in court for the ﬁrst
time on Monday morning.
Tammy S. Neace, 45, of
Pomeroy, appeared before
Judge Linda Warner in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
on the single count of Aggravated Murder, an unclassiﬁed
felony, as indicted last week by
a Meigs County Grand Jury.
The charges also includes a

gun speciﬁcation.
Neace was indicted on July
9 for the the shooting death of
Kelli Markins on July 3. The
shooting happened during a
custody exchange for a minor
child. Neace is the maternal
grandmother of the child and
Markins was the paternal
grandmother. The incident
happend at the residence
Neace shared with her daughter and grandchild.
Neace was accompanied by
appointed counsel Gregory
Meyers from the Ohio Public
Defenders Ofﬁce. Meyers

entered a “not guilty” plea on
behalf on Neace. Meyers also
stated that Neace would be
exercising her right to remain
silent moving forward.
Regarding bond in the matter, Meyers stated that they
would waive and pass on discussion regarding bond, but
may make a request once he
has received discovery in the
case.
Judge Warner explained the
possible penalties associated
with the charge, which range
from the indeﬁnite term of 20
years to life in prison, up to life
in prison. Additionally, the gun
See NEACE | 5

Fire at old Kyger
Creek High School
investigated
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

CHESHIRE — The Ohio Fire Marshal’s Ofﬁce
and the Gallia Sheriff’s Ofﬁce are investigating a
ﬁre which took hold of the old Kyger Creek High
School Saturday evening.
According to state public information ofﬁcer,
Brian Bohnert, the ﬁre occurred reportedly near
the school’s gymnasium and the cause is still being
investigated.
First responders received the ﬁre call at roughly
8:25 p.m.
Five departments assisted in bringing the ﬁre
under control, the Gallipolis Fire Department, the
Middleport Fire Department, the Rutland Fire
Department, the Pomeroy Fire Department and
the Gallia Springﬁeld Township Fire Department.
Gallia EMS was also on scene as a precaution due
to the extreme temperatures.
No one was injured during the event.
The school has also been recognized as the former River Valley High School.
Ohio Valley Publishing will continue reports as
details unfold.
Dean Wright can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2103.

Photos by Kala Hawthorne | Courtesy

Participants in the 4-H Food and Fashion Review included (back row) Melinda Lawson, Elizabeth Spires; (front/staggered, left to right)
Lakin Ridenour, Alana Ridenour, Kristina Weakley, Alexis Schaefer, Manuel Kole Gheen, Paige Smith, Gage Clary, and Aubrey Brown.

Fashion on display at 4-H judging
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

Courtesy photo | Jennifer Harrison

The old Kyger Creek High School burns Saturday evening.
Five area fire departments joined in mutual aid to put out the
flames.

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10

POMEROY — Members of the 4-H organization in Meigs County
ﬁnished pre-fair judging
with food and fashion
project judging on Friday.
The style review took
place Friday evening at
the Meigs County Senior
Center on Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Members who participated in
a clothing project presented their outﬁts and
quilts to complete their
requirements.
Cloverbuds — younger
members in Kinder-

garten through second
grade — had the opportunity to show and tell
about fun activities
they’ve been working on
with their 4-H groups.
These ranged from building Lego sets, helping
care for animals, learning to sew, and doing
other crafts.
Lakin Ridenour was
nominated for the Rising
Star State Award. Each
county can nominate one
member between the
ages of 8 and 11 for this
award. Ridenour must
compete at the Ohio
State Fair with her clothing project to be considered for the award.

Lego projects were among those worked on by Cloverbuds.

Fashion and Food
Judging Results
Loungewear: Lakin
Ridenour, grand cham-

pion;
You Can Quilt: Melinda
See FASHION | 5

Bus system rolling in Mason County
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Additional
stops in Gallia,
Cabell counties
By Erin (Perkins) Johnson
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT
— The Mason County
Public Transit Service is
up and running, with the
ﬁrst week of operation
being free to riders.
To kick off this service,
See BUS | 3

Erin (Perkins) Johnson | Courtesy

Despite the heat, many people gathered at Riverfront Park to welcome the new public transit service
to Mason County on Monday.

�DEATH NOTICE/NEWS

2 Tuesday, July 16, 2019

DEATH NOTICE
STOUT
BIDWELL — Clarence B. Stout, 86, Bidwell,
passed away Sunday, July 14, 2019 in Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be conducted 11 a.m., Thursday, July 18, 2019, in the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with Minister
Tim Gainer ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in the Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens. Family and friends may call
at the funeral home Wednesday 5-9 p.m.

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.

Pie contest
CHESTER — The Ohio’s Best Pie Contest &amp; Auction will be held during the Meigs Heritage Festival
on July 20, on the Chester Commons, Chester, Ohio.
Bring your pies between 9-11 a.m., judging by three
of Meigs’ ﬁnest pie eaters will take place at 11:30
a.m., winners will be announced just before the uncut
wining pie being auctioned off at 1 p.m. Makers of
the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place pies will receive gifts, cash
prizes and the thrill of seeing their pie being sold to
the highest bidder. All pie makers are encouraged to
donate their favorite pie to the Festival to help feed
the hungry and raise funds for the Chester Shade
Historical Assoc. that maintains the Chester Academy
and Historical Courthouse.

Career readiness workshops
ROCKSPRINGS — Rio Grande Meigs Center will
be hosting TGIF (Think Grande It’s Friday) free work
readiness and career workshops. Friday, July 19 from
2-4 p.m. will be Resume Building and Marketing
Yourself; Friday, July 26 from 2-4 p.m. will be Interview Skills/Dress for Success; Friday, Aug. 2 from 2-4
p.m. will be Develop Your Career Pathway. A GED
Preparation workshop is also being planned. For more
information or to signup call the Meigs Center at 740992-1880.

Vacation Bible school
POMEROY — The First Southern Baptist Church
of Pomeroy will be having a VBS July 14-17, from 6-9
p.m. each night.
RUTLAND — The Rutland Free Will Baptist
Church in Rutland will be having Vacation Bible
School Monday, July 22-Friday, July 26 from 6-8:30
p.m. each evening. The theme will be “Roar: Life is
wild, God is good.” Friday, July 26 will be a cookout,
picnic and program. Two names will be drawn from
each class for those having perfect attendance (one
boy and one girl). They will each receive a new bicycle. All other children will be given prizes. Pastor Ed
Barney invites all area children.
POMEROY — The Carleton Church, Kingsbury
Road, Pomeroy, will hold Vacation Bible School from
6:30-8:30 p.m., Aug. 5-9. The theme is “It’s a jungle
out there” (Life is wild, God is good). Program will
be held at 6:30 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 9, followed by a
picnic and pinata at the shelter house. For more information call 740-992-7690.

Meigs County Trade Days
ROCKSPRINGS — Meigs County Trade Days ﬂea
market will be held July 20 and 21 at the Meigs County Fairgrounds. This is a project of the Meigs County
Fair Board. Gates are open both days from 7 a.m. to 3
p.m. Free admission and free parking. In addition, the
Safe and Healthy Kids event, presented by the Meigs
County Health Department will take place on July 20
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more information call 740416-4015 or 740-416-5506.

Road closure
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill” is
closed due to a slip until further notice. Tickets will
be issued to those who drive through the closed portion of the road.
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.

Trump moves to end asylum

By Colleen Long
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
The Trump administration said Monday it will
end asylum protections
for most migrants who
arrive at the U.S.-Mexico
border in a major escalation of the president’s
battle to tamp down
immigration.
According to a new
rule published in the
Federal Register , asylum seekers who pass
through another country
ﬁrst will be ineligible for
asylum at the U.S. southern border. The rule,
expected to go into effect
Tuesday, also applies
to children who have
crossed the border alone.
The rule applies to
anyone arriving at the
U.S.-Mexico border.
Sometimes asylum seekers from Africa , Cuba
or Haiti and other continents arrive there, but the
vast majority of migrants
arriving recently come
from Central America.
There are some exceptions, including for victims of human trafﬁcking
and asylum-seekers who
were denied protection
in a country. If the country the migrant passed
through did not sign one
of the major international treaties governing how
refugees are managed
(though most Western
countries signed them) a
migrant could still apply
for U.S. asylum.
But the move by President Donald Trump’s
administration, even if
blocked by courts, is
reversing decades of U.S.
policy on how refugees
are treated and marks
an escalation even compared to other hardline
efforts meant to choke
off the ﬂow of people
from poor and war torn
nations.
Attorney General
William Barr said that
the United States is “a
generous country but is

Mark Lambie | The El Paso Times via AP

A group of asylum seekers cross the border between El Paso, Texas, and Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico
on July 4.

being completely overwhelmed” by the burdens
associated with apprehending and processing
hundreds of thousands of
migrants at the southern
border.
“This rule will
decrease forum shopping
by economic migrants
and those who seek to
exploit our asylum system to obtain entry to
the United States,” Barr
said in a statement.
The policy is almost
certain to face a legal
challenge; the American
Civil Liberties Union
already signaled it would
sue. ACLU attorney Lee
Gelernt, who has litigated some of the major
challenges to the Trump
administration’s immigration policies, said the
rule was unlawful.
“The rule, if upheld,
would effectively eliminate asylum for those at
the southern border,” he
said. “But it is patently
unlawful.”
U.S. law allows refugees to request asylum
when they arrive at the
U.S. regardless of how
they did so, but there is
an exception for those
who have come through
a country considered to
be “safe.” But the Immigration and Nationality
Act, which governs asylum law, is vague on how

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155

a country is determined
“safe”; it says “pursuant
to a bilateral or multilateral agreement.”
Right now, the U.S.
has such an agreement,
known as a “safe third
country,” only with Canada. Mexico and Central
American countries were
considering a regional
compact on the issue,
but nothing has been
decided. Guatemalan
ofﬁcials were expected in
Washington on Monday,
but apparently a meeting
between Trump and Guatemalan President Jimmy
Morales was canceled
amid a court challenge in
Guatemala over whether
the country could agree
to a safe third with the
U.S.
The new rule also will
apply to the initial asylum screening, known as
a “credible fear” interview, at which migrants
must prove they have
credible fears of returning to their home country. It applies to migrants
who are arriving to the
U.S., not those who are
already in the country.
Acting Homeland
Security Secretary Kevin
McAleenan said additional funding given by
Congress for aid at the
U.S.-Mexico border isn’t
enough.
“Until Congress can

act, this interim rule will
help reduce a major ‘pull’
factor driving irregular
migration to the United
States.”
Trump administration
ofﬁcials say the changes
are meant to close the
gap between the initial
asylum screening that
most people pass and the
ﬁnal decision on asylum
that most people do
not win. But immigrant
rights groups, religious
leaders and humanitarian groups have said the
Republican administration’s policies amount
to a cruel effort to keep
immigrants out of the
country. Guatemala,
Honduras and El Salvador are poor countries
suffering from violence .
“This is yet another
move to turn refugees
with well-founded fears
of persecution back to
places where their lives
are in danger_in fact the
rule would deny asylum
to refugees who do not
apply for asylum in
countries where they are
in peril,” said Eleanor
Acer of Human Rights
First. “The president
can’t stand the fact that
seeking protection in the
United States is legal, so
he’s doing everything he
can to make the asylum
process as difﬁcult as
possible.”

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.

Pomeroy. For more information
call 304-761-0638.
POMEROY — At 10:30 a.m.
Melvin &amp; Donna Lawrence will
be singing, praising, and teaching
God’s word at the gazebo on the
Pomeroy Parking Lot. Everyone is
welcome.
POMEROY — The PHS Class
of 1959 will be having their 3rd
Friday Lunch at Fox Pizza at
noon. Come join us.

Thursday, July 18

Saturday, July 20

RACINE — Summer Reading
Bubble Bash, Racine Library,
5-7 p.m. Celebrate the end of the
Summer Reading Program with
an inﬂatable water slide, a foam
machine, bubbles, games, prizes,
and more.

MIDDLEPORT — A Chicken
BBQ will be held at the Middleport Fire Department. Serving
begins at 11 a.m. at the BBQ pit.
PORTLAND — The annual
Bufﬁngton Island Batterﬁeld
Memorial Service will be held
at 11 a.m. at the Portland Park,
on State Route 124 in Portland
Ohio. Immediate after the Portland Community Center will
provide lunch at noon. After
Lunch there will be a Guest
Speaker and Music. Lunch will
be hot dog and sauce or slaw,
chips, or pulled pork sandwich
or chicken sandwich, baked
beans, macaroni salad, cole slaw

Friday, July 19
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

Daily Sentinel

POMEROY — A Kids Summer Fun Day fundraiser will be
hosted by BASE (Battle All-Stars
Elite) beginning at 11 a.m. The
event will include outdoor games,
dunking booth, bounce houses
and much more. The event will
be held at 398 Mechanic Street in

desert and drinks.

Sunday, July 21
TUPPERS PLAINS —The
Amazing Grace Community
Church will host praise and worship by The Pathﬁnders at 10 a.m.

Monday, July 29
MIDDLEPORT —The Meigs
County Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m. at the
ofﬁce located at 97 North Second
Avenue in Middleport.

Friday, Aug. 2
POMEROY —The regular
meeting of Meigs County Public
Employee Retiree Inc., Chapter
74 will be held at 1 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community Center,
260 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Courtney Midkiff, Administrator
Meigs County Health Department will be the guest speaker.
District 7 Representative Greg
Ervin will be present to provide
state PERI updates. All Meigs
County PERI retirees are urged
to attend.

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.

LIVESTOCK SALE
GALLIPOLIS — The latest
livestock report as submitted by
United Producers, Inc., 357 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio, 740446-9696.
Date of Sale: July 10, 2019
Total Headage: 250
Feeder Cattle (#1 Cattle)
Yearling Steers 600-700
pounds: $118.00-$120.00; 700800 pounds: $124.00-$133.00;
Yearling Heifers 600-700 pounds:
$105.00-$125.00; 700-800 pounds:
$101.00; Steer Calves 300-400
pounds: $132.00 - $165.00; 400-

500 pounds: $128.00 - $161.00;
500-600 pounds: $122.50 $155.00; Heifer Calves 300-500
pounds: $110.00 - $146.00; 500600 pounds: $110.00-$137.00;
Feeder Bulls 250-400 pounds:
$120.00-$152.00; 400-600
pounds: $115.00-$133.00; 600800 pounds: $100.00-$117.00

Bulls
By Weight: $68.00-$94.00

Cows &amp; Fat Cattle
Comm &amp; Utility: $51.00 $63.50; Canner/Cutter: $41.50
- $50.00; Bred Cows: $300.00 $585.00; Choice Steers &amp; Heifers:
$91.00 – $97.00

Comments
#2 &amp; #3 Feeders: $67.50.00 $105.00
Small Animal Sale, July 27,
at 2 p.m. All small animals welcome.

Small Animals
Roaster Lambs: $87.50; Feeder
Lambs: $130.00-$136.00; Aged
Sheep: $53.00; Market Hogs:
$28.00 - $40.00; Sows (Heavy):
$41.00

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 16, 2019 3

Bus
From page 1

a ribbon cutting ceremony and press conference
was held at the Riverfront
Park in Point Pleasant on
Monday. Randy Damron
from the West Virginia
Division of Highways was
the emcee for ceremony
and gave the welcome
and introduction of the
speakers which included
Director of Tri-River
Transit Authority Paula
Smith, Mayor of Point
Pleasant Brian Billings,
President of the Mason
County Commission
Rick Handley, Housing
Director of the Mason
County Homeless Shelter and Simms Housing
and Board Member of
the Southwestern Community Action Council
John Machir, and Chief
of Staff for West Virginia
Governor Jim Justice,
Mike Hall.
“Believe it or not, it
was ﬁve months ago that
this was only a dream and
we believe this is a great
opportunity to bring our
citizens and their communities closer to one
another by providing
them a way to travel for
their various needs,” said
Handley.
“What a day for Point
Pleasant, what a day for
Mason County,” said Billings. “You know several
months ago this project
started using its footwork
and its legs to become a
reality and with the help
of the county commission, the council, and
staff members with the
City of Point Pleasant
and working with the
Tri-River Transit Authority and others, here we
are cutting the ribbon
to provide the necessary
transportation for our
seniors, our homeless,
and for folks like you and
I that want to travel up
and down this great Ohio
River, perhaps we’ll even

Commissioner Rick Handley speaks during the ribbon cutting
ceremony for the Mason County public transit service.

travel across the river or
down to Barboursville,
but the main purpose is
seeing that we have transportation beneﬁts for
those that need it.”
Handley gave acknowledgements to special
guests in attendance
including Director of the
West Virginia Division of
Public Transit Bill Robinson, West Virginia State
Senator Eric Tarr, Mason
County Commissioners
Tracy Doolittle and Sam
Nibert, Chairman of the
Southwest Community
Action Council Board
David Harris, Hamlin
Mayor and Board Member of Tri-River Transit
Authority David Adkins,
Interim CEO of Pleasant
Valley Hospital Connie
Davis, City Clerk Amber
Tatterson, Mayor of
Mason Donna Dennis,
Mayor of New Haven
Greg Kaylor, New Haven
Council Recorder Roberta
Hysell, Mason County
Superintendent Jack
Cullen, Mason County
School Board Member
Rhonda Tennant, Mason
County School Board

Member Ashley Cossin,
Mason County Circuit
Clerk Elizabeth Jones,
and City of Point Pleasant Councilwoman Leigh
Ann Shepard. Handley
also read aloud a letter
sent by U.S. Representative Carol Miller.
“I would like to thank
everyone who is gathered
here today and not only
the dignitaries and community leaders seated
here today, but every
man, woman, and child,
Mason County residents
of every stripe and walk
of life because each of
you are important to the
future success of the transit system that we launch
today…” said Machir.
“I acted on a vision
based on my 27 years
of experience in social
services that all residents
in Mason County could
access transportation
equally and by so doing
could have social and
economic opportunities
made available to them.”
After all of the speakers
said their piece and the
ribbon was cut in front of
one of the Tri-River Tran-

Photos by Erin (Perkins) Johnson | Courtesy

The speakers of the ribbon cutting ceremony, from left, Commissioner Rick Handley, Housing Director
of the Mason County Homeless Shelter and Simms Housing and member of the Southwestern
Community Action Council John Machir, and Chief of Staff for West Virginia Governor Jim Justice,
Mike Hall, Director of Tri-River Transit Authority Paula Smith, and Mayor of Point Pleasant Brian
Billings.

sit buses, complimentary
gift bags from the Tri-River Transit Authority were
handed out to all who
attended the ceremony
and a reception with complimentary refreshments
was held at the Mason
County Board of the Education ofﬁce.
Tri-River Transit,
based in Lincoln County,
is providing this public
transit service which will
operate on a deviated
ﬁxed route service three
days per week, Monday,
Wednesday, and Friday.
The deviated ﬁxed route
service will operate on a
designated route through
Apple Grove, Point Pleasant, Mason, New Haven,
Clifton, Hartford, with
limited stops at Barboursville where people can

catch the Huntington
public transit system and
Gallipolis, Ohio. The bus
will deviate up to ¾ of a
mile off of the route when
requested at least one
day in advance. The fare
for a trip deviation is $2
plus zone fare. The pick
up and drop off locations
will be at the curb. It is
encouraged that riders
arrive at the bus stops at
least ﬁve minutes early. It
is important to allow sufﬁcient time to be at the
bus stop for the return
trip as it is important
not to miss the bus ride
home, especially if it is
the last trip of the day.
Four drivers, all from
Point Pleasant, have
been hired to run the two
buses. Handley commented they are still looking

for one more part-time
driver to be hired. One
bus will be running the
scheduled routes and the
other bus will be used as
a dial-a-ride service on
a ﬁrst come, ﬁrst served
basis and require at least
48 hours advanced notice.
One way bus fare is $1
each time a passenger
boards a bus. One way
deviated ﬁxed route service is $2 each time a passenger boards a bus. Zone
fare is an additional $1.
Copies of the bus
schedule can be picked
up at the Mason County
Courthouse or found
online at https://tririver.
org/mobile.
Erin (Perkins) Johnson is a staff
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing.
Reach her at (304) 675-1333,
extension 1992.

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�Opinion
4 Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Choosing
to be a
farrier?

With the internet, today’s students have a host
of resources to use in selecting a vocation with the
knowledge that they will probably switch careers
several times during their work life
as they change and the world of work
evolves.
I send my college students straight
to the internet and to TypeFocus
where they can complete a lengthy
questionnaire based on the Myers
Briggs Type Indicator, which reveals
Dr. Vivian their personality traits and careers
Blevins
that mesh with their strengths, valContributing ues, interests, and skills. From there,
columnist
I send them to the Occupational Outlook Handbook’s latest report, again
on line, produced by the U.S. Bureau
of Labor Statistics, which gives them an overview
of that job’s requirements, labor demand, and pay
levels.
Dick Vondenhuevel, 69, of Sidney, will soon celebrate his 50th year as a farrier, a job he loves and
about which he says in regard to plans for retirement, “I am one bad horse away from going to the
nursing home.”
A farrier shapes and ﬁts horseshoes and cleans,
trims, and shapes horses’ hooves. Maybe you
grew up calling these individuals blacksmiths, and
perhaps you studied Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem “The Village Blacksmith”: “The smith,
a mighty man is he/With large and sinewy hands,
And the muscles of his brawny arms/Are strong as
iron bands.” At 6-foot 2-inches and always wearing
cowboy boots which add 2-plus-inches, Vondenhuevel ﬁts Longfellow’s description.
Vondenhuevel says, “When I was a kid in Lexington, Kentucky (born in Sidney but went to
12 schools in 12 years as his father milked herds
of cattle at one place and another), I bought my
ﬁrst horse, Padre Bob, a Buckskin Quarter horse
gelding from John Botkins. Paid $200 for him and
earned that money by working on a farm.”
He hated school and after graduating from Fairlawn High School, he spent 12 weeks in August
of 1969 at a horseshoeing school in Sturgis, South
Dakota.
“The school was tough and getting into the business and staying in the business is even tougher.
I’ve had teeth knocked out and all my ﬁngers and
toes broken. And it’s hard on the back.”
To him, however, “Horses are a dream and those
who own them think of riding in the wind or winning the Kentucky Derby. We also dream of stuff
we’re gonna do with our horse or what our horse is
gonna do.”
Vondenhuevel currently owns two horses: Chief
Macintosh, a Leopard Appaloosa, and Sergeant
Jim Jordan, a registered thoroughbred yearling, 15
months old, and the kind that runs in the Kentucky
Derby, a horse he plans to sell or race.
He’s proud of the horse he worked with, “Let’s
Call It Even,” from Red Lion, Ohio, which won the
Ohio Governor’s Cup last year.
Occasionally, he loses sleep when he has a job
coming up and such was the case recently when
he had an appointment with Candy, a mule at the
Johnson Farm and Indian Agency. She had kicked
him before and had quite a reputation for “acting up.” He says a ﬂy bite or other unexpected
incidences can make an animal cranky. But that
appointment came off without a hitch.
Vondenhuevel has sand in his boots, and his
work has taken him to places he would never have
gone otherwise. It all started with his favorite
uncle, Rich Sherwood, “a little bit of a gypsy” who
traveled extensively with his work and remembered his nephew with post cards. Also, the family lived on Marian Long’s farm, and her wealth
allowed her to travel. She, too, sent him post cards
as well as letters.
With the ability to self-schedule, he has traveled extensively: the Great Smoky Mountains, the
Allegheny Mountains, West Texas, Australia —
from Tampa Bay Downs to Cedar Valley, Ontario,
Canada.
Once he saw an old post card from the 1950s
with a photo of the Palo Duro Canyon and thought,
I’d love to ride there. So four years ago, he did.
Back to the postcards and letters. Vondenhuevel
writes ﬁve to 10 letters a day, and I’m fortunate
enough to get one from time to time. I met him a
few years ago when he thought I might be interested in writing the story of World War II veteran T D
Ulrich being blown up by Nazi forces while working in the engineering room on a minesweeper,
The USS Salute. I was, so Vondenhuevel brought
him to a restaurant parking lot in Miami County,
and I interviewed Ulrich and wrote the story.
With belief in God and the power of prayer,
Vondenhuevel writes to those on chemo, kids with
Down Syndrome, the disabled, sending inspirational messages to persons he might not recognize
if they walked up to him.
As Longfellow writes, “Thanks to thee my worthy friend/For the lesson thou has taught/Our fortunes must be wrought.”

THEIR VIEW

Walk on the moon still inspires
50 years ago this week,
one of Ohio’s greatest
sons, Neil Armstrong,
became the ﬁrst man to
walk on the Moon. On
July 20, 1969, the world
watched in awe as grainy
footage beamed in from
the lunar surface 289,000
miles away to millions
of TV screens around
the globe. As a 13-yearold, I will never forget
watching on a small
black-and-white TV as
Neil Armstrong made his
famous ﬁrst small step
then walked on the stark
landscape of the moon.
It was an extraordinary
technological accomplishment made possible by
American ingenuity and
teamwork. During a time
of division in our country,
with an unpopular war
in Vietnam and social
upheaval at home, the
success of the bold mission helped inspire and
unify our country.
Neil Armstrong was
also continuing our
state’s legacy of pioneering in ﬂight. In 2003,
Congress ofﬁcially designated Ohio ‘Birthplace of
Flight’ due to the Wright
brothers being born and
raised in Dayton. It was
in their bicycle shop there
that they dreamed up and
researched the ﬁrst airplanes more than a century ago. Ohio has never
stopped leading the way,

his family. What
though. In fact, one
I admired most
of my Ohio predeabout Neil wasn’t
cessors here in the
what he accomU.S. Senate, John
plished, but how
Glenn, became
he carried himself.
the ﬁrst American
How he handled
to orbit the Earth
the spotlight that
back in 1962. In all, Sen. Rob
came with his
Ohio has produced Portman
two dozen astroContributing achievements said
as much about
nauts, more than
columnist
Neil Armstrong
any other state,
as the time he
and many more
spent on the moon half a
now call Ohio home.
century ago, or his many
Our legacy of ﬂight
other accomplishments.
here in Ohio continues
Even before he blazed
today. In Dayton, we have
trails through space,
the National Air Force
Neil was already conMuseum that houses
tributing to Ohio’s rich
more than 300 historic
aircraft and the National legacy of pushing the
boundaries of ﬂight. He
Aviation Hall of Fame.
had already served his
Wright-Patterson Air
nation with bravery and
Force Base, one of the
largest bases in the coun- skill on Gemini 8 — as
try, trains not only pilots a test pilot, he risked
in our Air Force, but also his life ﬂying dangerous and experimental
those of our allies all
new airplanes. Before
around the world. Last
he was a test pilot, he
month, I had the honor
of announcing with Neil’s distinguished himself by
widow, Carol Armstrong, serving his country as a
naval aviator — among
that the Smithsonian
will be bringing a special other things, ﬂying 78
exhibit on the Apollo 11 combat missions over
the Korean peninsula. In
mission called ‘Destinaone such mission, he had
tion Moon’ to Cincinto eject from his plane
nati’s Museum Center.
into enemy territory,
On that day in 1969,
holding out long enough
Neil Armstrong became
for Marines to locate and
all of our heroes, and
escort him to safety.
over the years, back
For all of these
home in Cincinnati,
achievements, Neil
my family and I came
received the highest
to know him, his wife
honors our grateful
Carol, and the rest of

nation could bestow: the
Presidential Medal of
Freedom, the Congressional Gold Medal, and
the Congressional Space
Medal of Honor. Despite
all the awards, he would
always be a humble Midwesterner and a proud
Ohioan, who believed
that the honor of serving
his country was all the
reward he deserved. He
was a refreshing counterweight to the celebrity culture we too often
embrace today.
50 years after Apollo
11, let’s always remember the bravery and
patriotism of Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin,
and Michael Collins,
but also the thousands
of men and women who
supported them here on
Earth, and the many courageous astronauts who
came before and after
them. As Neil once said,
“The important achievement of Apollo was demonstrating that humanity
is not forever chained
to this planet and our
visions go rather further
than that and our opportunities are unlimited.”
Let’s be inspired by
the memory of Apollo 11
to continue to dream big
and expand our opportunities.

Rob Portman is a United States
senator from Ohio.

TODAY IN HISTORY
bomb in the desert of
Alamogordo (ahl-ahToday is Tuesday, July moh-GOHR’-doh), New
Mexico; the same day,
16, the 197th day of
2019. There are 168 days the heavy cruiser USS
Indianapolis left Mare
left in the year.
(mar-AY’) Island Naval
Today’s Highlight in History Shipyard in California on
On July 16, 1969, Apol- a secret mission to deliver
atomic bomb components
lo 11 blasted off from
to Tinian Island in the
Cape Kennedy on the
Marianas.
ﬁrst manned mission to
In 1957, Marine Corps
the surface of the moon.
Maj. John Glenn set a
transcontinental speed
On this date
record by ﬂying a Vought
In 1790, a site along
F8U Crusader jet from
the Potomac River was
California to New York in
designated the perma3 hours, 23 minutes and
nent seat of the United
8.4 seconds.
States government; the
In 1964, as he accepted
area became Washington,
the Republican presiD.C.
In 1911, actress-dancer dential nomination in
San Francisco, Barry M.
Ginger Rogers was
Goldwater declared that
born Virginia Katherine
“extremism in the defense
McMath in Indepenof liberty is no vice” and
dence, Mo.
that “moderation in the
In 1945, the United
pursuit of justice is no
States exploded its ﬁrst
virtue.”
experimental atomic
The Associated Press

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Any life, however long and complicated it
may be, actually consists of a single moment:
the moment when a man knows forever more
who he is.”
— Jorge Luis Borges
Argentine author (1899-1986)

In 1979, Saddam Hussein became president of
Iraq.
In 1980, former California Gov. Ronald Reagan won the Republican
presidential nomination
at the party’s convention
in Detroit.
In 1981, singer Harry
Chapin was killed when
his car was struck by a
tractor-trailer on New
York’s Long Island
Expressway.
In 1999, John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife, Carolyn,
and her sister, Lauren Bessette (bih-SEHT’), died

when their single-engine
plane, piloted by Kennedy,
plunged into the Atlantic
Ocean near Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts.
In 2002, the Irish
Republican Army issued
an unprecedented apology for the deaths of
“noncombatants” over
30 years of violence in
Northern Ireland.
In 2004, Martha Stewart was sentenced to ﬁve
months in prison and ﬁve
months of home conﬁnement by a federal judge in
New York for lying about
a stock sale.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 16, 2019 5

Trump digs in on racist tweets
By Jill Colvin,
Jonathan Lemire
and Calvin Woodward

Omar ignited a bipartisan uproar in Washington several months
Associated Press
ago when she suggested
that some members of
Congress support Israel
WASHINGTON —
because of money, while
Unbowed by searing
Tlaib riled up a supportcriticism, President Donive crowd by calling the
ald Trump on Monday
president a profane name
emphatically defended
and predicting he would
his tweet calling on four
be removed from ofﬁce.
Democratic congressTrump on Monday
women of color to go
singled out Omar, in
back to their “broken and
Alex Brandon | AP
crime infested” countries. President Donald Trump speaks during a Made in America showcase particular, accusing her
Condemnation of his
on the South Lawn of the White House on Monday in Washington. of having “hatred” for
Israel, and expressing
comments “doesn’t con“love” for “enemies like
Somalia, and was not
disaffected voters with
cern me because many
al-Qaida.”
making a “universal
people agree with me,” he incendiary racial rheto“These are people that,
statement.”
ric, has no intention of
declared.
in my opinion, hate our
But Trump didn’t
backing away from that
Trump responded to
country,” he said.
make that distinction
strategy going in 2020.
questions at the White
Omar, in an interview,
in his tweets. He cited
Trump has faced few
House after his Sunday
“Congresswomen” — an once laughed about how
consequences for such
tweet assailing the lawalmost-certain reference a college professor had
attacks, which typically
makers, all of whom are
earn him cycles of front- to a group of women who spoken of al-Qaida with
U.S. citizens and three
have labeled themselves an intensity she said
of whom were born here. page media attention.
Earlier Monday, Trump “the squad” that includes was not used to describe
He has been roundly crit“America,” ‘’England” or
Omar, Rep. Alexandria
icized by Democrats who made clear he had no
“The Army.”
Ocasio-Cortez of New
labeled his remarks racist intention of backing
Following a familiar
down, asking on Twitter York, Ayanna Pressley
and divisive. A smatterscript, Republicans
of Massachusetts and
when “the Radical Left
ing of Republicans also
remained largely silent
Congresswomen” would Rashida Tlaib of Michihave objected, though
after Trump’s Sunday
gan.
“apologize to our Counmost leading Republimorning broadsides that
“I don’t think that
try, the people of Israel
cans have been silent.
caused Democrats to set
the president’s intent
and even to the Ofﬁce
Trump, resurrecting
aside their internal rifts
language not prevalent in of the President, for the any way is racist,”
to rise up in a united
said Short, pointing
the U.S. for decades, said foul language they have
chorus against him.
to Trump’s decision to
used, and the terrible
Monday that if the lawHouse Speaker Nancy
choose Elaine Chao, who
things they have said.”
makers “hate our counPelosi said Trump wants
was born outside the
“So many people are
try,” they “can leave” it.
country, as his transpor- to “make America white
“If you’re not happy in angry at them &amp; their
again,” while Ocasiotation secretary.
horrible &amp; disgusting
the U.S., if you’re comCortez said Trump
Chao is one of the
plaining all the time, you actions!” he wrote.
“can’t conceive of an
few minorities workAsked whether
can leave, you can leave
America that includes
right now,” he said. The Trump’s comments were ing among the largely
us.”
lawmakers’ criticism has racist, Marc Short, chief white and male aides
“Mr. President, the
of staff to Vice President in high-proﬁle roles in
been largely aimed at
Trump’s administration. country I ‘come from,’
Mike Pence, defended
Trump and his admin&amp; the country we all
Trump, telling reporters She is the wife of Senistration’s policies and
swear to, is the United
ate Republican leader
he had been responding
actions.
States,” she tweeted,
Mitch McConnell, who
It was yet another sign to “very speciﬁc” comadding that, “You rely on
had made no comment
ments made by Rep.
that Trump, who won
on Trump’s attacks as of a frightened America for
Ilhan Omar of Minnethe presidency in 2016
your plunder.”
midday Monday.
sota, who was born in
in part by energizing

Fashion
From page 1

Lawson, grand champion;
Designed By Me: Manuel Kole Gheen, grand
champion;
Sundresses and Jumpers: Kristina Weakley,
grand champion;
Sports Nutrition:
Ready, Set, Go: Trenton
Morrissey, grand champion; Arielle Beeler, reserve
champion;
Party Planner: Rachel
Jackson, grand champion;
Star Spangled Foods:
Hannah Jackson, grand
champion; Elizabeth
Spires, reserve champion;
Yeast Breads on the
Rise: Cooper Schagel,
grand champion;
Let’s Bake Quick
Breads: Raeann Schagel,
grand champion;
Let’s Start Cooking:
Matthew Jackson, grand
champion; Paige Blackwood, reserve champion;
McKenzy Burnem, honorable mention;

Neace

Photos by Kala Hawthorne | Courtesy

Alana Ridenour talks with Michelle Stumbo and Nancy Sydenstricker during the event on Friday
evening.

Everyday Food and
Fitness: Kendall Schagel,
grand champion; Sydney
Dillon, reserve champion;
Cake Decoration: Ellie
Howell, grand champion;
Olivia Wood, reserve
champion.
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

stated that Neace allegedly approached the vehicle
with a handgun and shot
the victim four times.
From page 1
Markins was taken
to the Holzer Meigs
speciﬁcation carries a
three year mandatory sen- Emergency Department
where she died from her
tence if convicted.
injuries.
Neace was ordered to
Wood said there had
have no contact with surviving family members of been previous exchanges
of custody which had not
the victim in the case.
Following the hearing, went smoothly and that
the situation had been
Meigs County Sheriff
revisited in court. He
Keith Wood spoke about
the case and the ongoing added that there are several custody exchanged
investigation.
which occur at public
“My heart breaks for
the Markins family,” said locations, including the
sheriff’s ofﬁce, and he
Wood. He added that it
encouraged those with
is a sad situation with a
child involved for a “three any concerns about
exchanges to make a plan
hour visit.”
to meet at a public locaWood explained that
tion.
the victim had accompaAs for where Neace
nied her son to the custowas between the shootdy exchange to pick him
his child for a visit when ing and turning herself
in early Friday morning,
the shooting occurred.
When they arrived, Wood Wood said Neace did

Cloverbud Alexis Schaefer talks with Michelle Stumbo during the
event on Friday.

travel out of state and
was in Tennessee at one
time. When she returned
to the sheriff’s ofﬁce she
did so in a vehicle with
Tennessee tags.
The weapon allegedly
used in the shooting and
the Hyundai Accent
which Neace is believed
to have ﬂed in following
the shooting have not yet
been located, said Wood.
Wood encouraged
anyone with information regarding the case,
or information on those
who may have been
involved in helping
Neace during the time
between the shooting
and being taken into
custody, to contact the
sheriff’s ofﬁce at 740992-3371.
“If you know something that can lead to the
correct penalty in this
case please come forward,” said Wood.

Wood commended
the work of the Holzer Emergency Department staff, as well as
expressed appreciation
for the agencies who
have worked on the case,
including Middleport
Police Department, Ohio
State Highway Patrol,
Ohio Bureau of Criminal
of Investigation, and law
enforcement agencies
in Tennessee and West
Virginia.
An initial pretrial is
scheduled for Aug. 5,
with a ﬁnal pretrial on
Aug. 21, a motions hearing on Sept. 4 and a jury
trial scheduled for Sept.
24.
The case remains
under investigation.
Neace remains in the
custody of he Meigs
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Seth Wenig | AP

Annie Farmer, left, and Courtney Wild, right, accusers of
Jeffrey Epstein, stand outside the courthouse in New York on
Monday. Epstein will remain behind bars for now as a federal
judge mulls whether to grant bail on charges he sexually
abused underage girls.

Women urge jail
until trial for Epstein
as judge weighs bail
By Larry Neumeister
and Jim Mustian

ney Alex Rossmiller
said the government’s
Associated Press
case is “getting stronger
every single day” since
Epstein was arrested
NEW YORK — Two
Jeffrey Epstein accusers July 6 as he arrived at a
New Jersey airport from
urged a judge Monday
Paris on his private
to keep the wealthy
plane.
ﬁnancier behind bars
During a raid at
until he goes on trial on
Epstein’s Manhattan
federal charges that he
mansion following his
sexually abused underarrest, Rossmiller said,
age girls.
investigators found
The women stood
“piles of cash,” ‘’dozens
just feet from where
of diamonds” and an
Epstein was seated in
expired passport with
his blue jail outﬁt as
Epstein’s picture and a
they asked a federal
judge to reject a request fake name in a locked
safe.
by Epstein’s lawyers
“How many safes are
that he remain under
house arrest in his $77 there in so many other
locations like these?”
million Manhattan
Rossmiller asked.
mansion until trial on
He labeled the wellconspiracy and sex trafconnected Epstein, 66,
ﬁcking charges.
a ﬂight risk and danger
Courtney Wild, an
to the community, sayunnamed victim in the
2008 lawsuit against the ing he should remain
incarcerated until he is
Department of Justice
tried on charges that he
for the secret plea deal
that allowed Epstein to recruited and abused
dozens of underage
avoid similar charges,
spoke for the ﬁrst time girls in New York and
Florida in the early
in court with a fellow
2000s.
accuser.
Epstein’s lawyer,
Wild said she was
Martin Weinberg, said
sexually abused by
Epstein in Palm Beach, that his client has not
committed crimes
Florida, when she was
since pleading guilty to
14.
“He’s a scary person,” soliciting a minor for
prostitution charges
she said.
in Florida in 2008 and
Annie Farmer said
that the federal governshe was 16 when she
ment is reneging on a
met Epstein in New
12-year-old plea deal
York.
not to prosecute him.
“He was inappropriEpstein had demate with me,” she said,
onstrated that he
not elaborating.
The Associated Press “disciplined himself,”
Weinberg said, by not
doesn’t name alleged
engaging in any crimes
victims of sexual abuse
since the Florida deal,
without their consent.
in which he agreed to
Through their lawyers,
submit himself to sex
both Farmer and Wild
said they were willing to offender registration
procedures in multiple
be publicly identiﬁed.
states.
Judge Richard M.
The “14-year gap is
Berman said he’ll rule
an elegant rebuttal” to
Thursday whether
expectations that he
Epstein can be freed
would re-offend, Weinwith a strict bail packberg said.
age, but he noted at
But the judge later
the outset of two-hour
noted he had read lithearing there was a
erature related to sex
presumption in cases
offenders that indicated
involving sexual abuse
of children that a defen- the chance of a sex
dant will remain locked offender committing a
new crime grew over
up.
time.
Assistant U.S. Attor-

HELP WANTED
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT
Part-time position
25 hours a week
Applicant must have computer,
accounting &amp; filing skills. Must be
able to relate well with the public.
A background check will be given.
Send resume to:
Meigs Cooperative Parish PO Box
171, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

OH-70136468

Deadline for applications
is July 31st

�Sports
6 Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Djokovic tops Federer in historic final for 5th at Wimbledon

Ben Curtis | AP

Serbia’s Novak Djokovic poses with his trophy after defeating Switzerland’s
Roger Federer in the men’s singles final match of the Wimbledon Tennis
Championships on Sunday in London.

WIMBLEDON, England
(AP) — For nearly ﬁve tight,
tense and terriﬁc hours, Novak
Djokovic and Roger Federer
traded the lead, playing on
and on and on until an unprecedented ﬁfth-set tiebreaker was
required to settle their memorable Wimbledon ﬁnal.
In the end, it was Djokovic
who emerged victorious, coming back to edge Federer 7-6
(5), 1-6, 7-6 (4), 4-6, 13-12 (3)
and become the ﬁrst man in 71
years to take home the trophy
from the All England Club after
needing to erase championship
points.
“Unfortunately in these kinds
of matches, one of the players
has to lose,” Djokovic said. “It’s
quite unreal.”
After facing two match
points at 8-7 in the last set, he
wound up claiming his ﬁfth

Wimbledon title and second in
a row.
This triumph also earned
Djokovic his 16th Grand Slam
trophy overall, moving him
closer to the only men ahead of
him in tennis history: Federer
owns 20, Rafael Nadal has 18.
“I just feel like it’s such an
incredible opportunity missed,”
said Federer, who actually accumulated 14 more total points,
218-204. “I can’t believe it.”
He has ruled grass courts
since the early 2000s; he has
won Wimbledon eight times
dating to 2003, and this was
his record 12th appearance in
the title match. But Djokovic
is now 3-0 against Federer
in ﬁnals at the place and 4-0
against him in ﬁve-setters anywhere.
This one was unlike any
other, though.

That’s because, while it was
reminiscent of Federer’s 16-14
ﬁfth-set victory over Andy Roddick in the 2009 Wimbledon
ﬁnal, that score is no longer
possible: The All England Club
altered its rule this year to do
away with never-ending matches and institute a tiebreaker at
12-all in a deciding set.
At one point during the ﬁnal
set Sunday, Djokovic asked
chair umpire Damian Steiner
whether the change called for
the tiebreaker at 10-10. Later,
when Djokovic held for an
11-10 lead, it was Steiner who
got confused, beginning to call
out the score as 11-9, before
catching himself.
“I respect whatever the rule
is,” Federer said when asked
what he thinks of the altered
See FEDERER | 7

Summer League
winds down, and now,
maybe, some NBA rest
By Tim Reynolds
Associated Press

They’ll hand out T-shirts to the Summer
League winners following the championship game
between Memphis and Minnesota in Las Vegas on
Monday night, and then things will ﬁnally slow
down a bit in the NBA.
Maybe.
And probably not for long.
It’s been a hectic month since Toronto won the
NBA championship and the so-called offseason
commenced. Already this summer, 18 current and
former All-Stars have changed franchises, and
that number will rise to 19 if Vince Carter ﬁnds a
new home for his ﬁnal season. Recent NBA Finals
MVPs Kawhi Leonard, Kevin Durant and Andre
Iguodala all were among those on the move.
And another three past ﬁnals MVPs — Dwyane Wade, Dirk Nowitzki and Tony Parker — all
retired. So when next season begins, very little
will look the same.
“I think there’s going to be a lot of parity,”
Brooklyn coach Kenny Atkinson said. “That’s my
gut.”
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver expected this
summer to be loaded with player movement, and
wasn’t complaining about so many big names —
Durant, Leonard, Chris Paul, Russell Westbrook,
Anthony Davis, Paul George, Kyrie Irving, Al Horford, Jimmy Butler and many more — needing to
ﬁle change-of-address cards.
“At the end of the day, it’s positive for the
league,” Silver said. “I will say, though, I’m mindful of this notion of balance of power, and I think
it applies in many different ways. An appropriate
balance of power between the teams and the players … at the end of the day, you want to make sure
you have a league where every team is in a position to compete.”
There were some clear winners in free agency:
Brooklyn (who got Durant and Irving), the Los
Angeles Clippers (who got George and Leonard)
and the Los Angeles Lakers (who got Davis) were
among them. It could be argued that the Oklahoma City Thunder won as well — no, they won’t be
as good this season as they were this past season
after trading George and Westbrook, but general
manager Sam Presti has enough draft picks now to
enjoy ﬂexibility for years.
The losers are clear as well: Toronto lost
Leonard and Danny Green and Golden State lost
Durant, so last season’s ﬁnalists certainly aren’t
favorites to be this season’s ﬁnalists. It’s also easy
to say that New York lost after coming up empty
on the big-name free agents, but the Knicks got
plenty of good players on deals that ensure the
team will have money again next summer.
A lookahead at what’s coming, and some notes
on what’s gone down:
So now what?
Any NBA withdrawal will really only last about
three weeks, until roughly three dozen players
return to Las Vegas for USA Basketball’s training
camp leading up to the FIBA World Cup in China
that starts on Aug. 31.
San Antonio’s Gregg Popovich is coaching the
Americans, assisted by Golden State’s Steve Kerr,
Atlanta’s Lloyd Pearce and Villanova’s Jay Wright.
Zion Williamson, knee permitting, may take part
See NBA | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, July 16
Legion Baseball
Post 39 vs. Beverly Lowell
at Meigs HS, 6 p.m.

Saturday, July 20
Legion Baseball
Post 39 vs. TBA at Beavers
Field, 2 p.m.

Timothy D. Easley | AP

Kurt Busch crosses the finish line ahead of Kyle Busch (18) to win the NASCAR Cup Series auto race Saturday at Kentucky Speedway
in Sparta, Ky.

Kurt Busch outduels little brother to win
SPARTA, Ky. (AP) —
Kurt Busch ﬁnally beat
his little brother in a
head-to-head NASCAR
ﬁnish and took his new
team to victory lane a
week after they coughed
away their ﬁrst win.
The downside of
Busch’s big win Saturday
night at Kentucky Speedway?
Kyle Busch didn’t stick
around to give his older
brother a promised ride
home.
“I was supposed to
ﬂy home with him and
now I’m looking for a
plane ride,” Kurt Busch
laughed. “That’s Kyle. He
won’t even wait.”
Kurt Busch certainly
wanted to ﬂaunt his
trophy after beating his
brother in a door-to-door
overtime battle. Kurt
Busch was the victor —
the ﬁrst time in three 1-2
ﬁnishes for the Busch
Brothers that Kyle did not
win — and earned a playoff spot with his ﬁrst win
for Chip Ganassi Racing.
“My little brother gave
me just enough room.
It was like ‘You gonna
lift? I ain’t gonna lift.
You gonna lift? I ain’t
gonna lift.’ And we had
a duel,” Busch said. “We
had a duel going down
through (turns) 3 and 4,
and I didn’t know who
was going to come out on

top.”
Kyle Busch settled
for second after a dramatic ending in which
the brothers banged their
cars and both nearly lost
control as they hurtled
toward the checkered
ﬂag.
“I’m glad it was a thriller, just unfortunately we
were on the wrong end
of the deal,” Kyle Busch
said. “It’s obviously cool
to put on great races and
great ﬁnishes, and been
a part of a lot of them …
none with my brother like
that, so that was a ﬁrst.
“You know, no hard
feelings, and we move
on.”
The showdown came
a week after Kurt Busch
lost at Daytona because
he pitted from the lead
moments before weather
stopped the race. That pit
call haunted Busch and
his crew chief all week,
but a late call for four
tires gave the No. 1 team
a shot at redemption.
Joey Logano had the
victory in hand until a
spin by Bubba Wallace
with six laps remaining
sent the race into overtime.
Logano and Kyle Busch
lined up side-by-side on
the restart for what was
expected to be a race for
the victory, but both Erik
Jones and Kurt Busch

shoved their cars into the
mix for an intense ﬁnal
two laps. Kurt Busch and
Kyle Busch touched as
they raced for the lead,
both cars wiggled, and it
appeared Kurt Busch was
headed into the wall.
But he recovered to
squeeze past his brother
right before the checkered ﬂag.
“He could have clobbered us against the wall,
and third place probably
would have got it,” Kurt
Busch said of the contact
with Kyle Busch. “What
an awesome run.”
Team owner Chip
Ganassi called into victory lane from Toronto,
where he’s with his IndyCar team. The victory is
the third straight of the
season for Chevrolet and
ﬁrst in nine races at Kentucky. It ended a two-race
Kentucky winning streak
for Martin Truex Jr. and
Toyota.
Jones was third in
a Toyota and Ganassi
driver Kyle Larson was
fourth. Denny Hamlin
was ﬁfth as JGR had
three cars in the top ﬁve.
The ﬁnish was ﬁtting
considering the ﬁrst two
stages belonged to the
Busch brothers. Kurt won
the ﬁrst 80-lap segment
while Kyle Busch won the
second.
In the end, Kurt Busch

claimed the most important stage and bragging
rights with a dogged run
on the top side to spark
a wild celebration and
burnout on the frontstretch. His Ganassi crew,
maligned all week for the
horrible Daytona pit call,
rushed to greet him and
he dove into their arms.
The crew then rode on
his Chevrolet to victory
lane, one lone member
waving the checkered
ﬂag.
Busch led four times
for 41 laps after starting
fourth.
Clint Bowyer, Logano,
pole sitter Daniel Suarez
and Ryan Newman led
four Fords in the second
ﬁve with Chris Buescher
10th in a Chevy.
Suarez led 52 laps and
ﬁnished a rollercoaster
night on an up note. A
bad pit call for four tires
dropped him to 14th and
he was later penalized for
speeding on pit road.
STRUGGLING: Austin
Dillon (35th) posted his
second consecutive ﬁnish
of 33rd or worse in his
No. 3 Chevy.
Up next
NASCAR travels to
Loudon, New Hampshire
next Sunday, where Kevin
Harvick nudged Kyle
Busch late to win last
July.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Boxing champ Whitaker dies

Federer
From page 6

By Tim Dahlberg

setup. “So really, it is what it is, you know?”
Federer and Djokovic pushed each other to the
limit in what became as much a test of focus and
stamina as it was about skill. It is the longest ﬁnal in
the history of a tournament that dates to the 1870s,
eclipsing by nine minutes Nadal’s ﬁve-set win over
Federer in 2008.
Like that one, this is destined to be discussed for
years.
“I’ll try to forget,” joked Federer, who is less than a
month shy of his 38th birthday and would have been
the oldest man to win a Grand Slam title in the professional era.
“It was a great match. It was long. It had everything. I had my chances. So did he. I thought we
played some great tennis. In a way, I’m very happy
with my performance, as well,” Federer said during
the trophy ceremony. “But Novak, it’s great. Congratulations, man. That was crazy. Well done.”
First, it was Federer who kept falling behind, then
coming back. He twice trailed by a set even though
he came quite close to winning the match in three:
Federer was two points from grabbing the opening
set on seven occasions but couldn’t do it; he was one
point from seizing the third, but again came up short.
Then, Federer was down a break early in the crucible of the ﬁfth. And then, after seemingly gaining
the upper hand, standing a single point from winning
while serving for the victory at 8-7, 40-15, he faltered.
He sent a forehand wide on the ﬁrst championship
point, and Djokovic produced a cross-court forehand
winner on the next. Soon enough, the 32-year-old
Djokovic had broken back and on they would play for
another 45 minutes.
“Deﬁnitely tough to have those chances,” Federer
said.
Djokovic has done this to him before.
In the semiﬁnals of the 2010 and 2011 U.S. Opens,
Djokovic erased two match points each time before
coming back to win.
Looking at the bigger picture, there’s also this
takeaway from Sunday: Nadal’s status as Federer’s
principal nemesis has been well-documented and
much-examined over the years — which is a small
part of why Friday’s semiﬁnal victory for Federer was
fraught with meaning. But it’s now high time to discuss Djokovic’s edge over Federer.
Djokovic has won their past ﬁve meetings and
holds a 26-22 advantage overall head-to-head, including 10-6 at Grand Slam tournaments and 3-1 at
Wimbledon.
By the reverberating sound of things around the
old arena Sunday, a vast majority of the spectators
were pulling for the popular Federer. Made it seem as
though he might be British, not Swiss.

Associated Press

Pernell Whitaker, an Olympic
gold medalist and four division
champion who was regarded as
one of the greatest defensive
ﬁghters ever, has died after being
hit by a car in Virginia. He was
55.
Police in Virginia Beach said
the former ﬁghter was hit by a
car Sunday night. The driver of
the car remained on the scene,
and police said they were investigating the circumstances of the
death.
Sweet Pea was Whitaker’s nickname, and it ﬁt perfectly. He was
a master of getting hit and not
getting hit back, a southpaw who
slipped in and out of the pocket
and rarely gave an opponent an
opportunity to land a clean shot.
Whitaker won a gold medal at
the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles — one of nine U.S. champions
that year — and made his pro
debut on national television. He
advanced quickly, and was ﬁghting for a major title by his 17th
ﬁght, a loss to Jose Luis Ramirez
that he would avenge the next
year.
But Whitaker was also known

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
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy Blue places in each division.
Cart and meal passes will be available for spectaDevil Youth Flag Football Program is designed
tors to follow kids for $15 apiece, so that they may
to provide student-athletes in grades 1-through-6
follow the tournament and eat with the kids.
with an opportunity to learn the fundamentals of
To enter please contact the Cliffside clubhouse at
the game of football in a fun, safe, and educational
740-446-4653, or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919 or 740environment.
More information and signup for the league will 645-4381. Please leave player’s name, age as of July
18, 2019 and the school the individual is currently
take place during GAHS youth football camp on
attending.
July 22-23 from 6-8 p.m. at Memorial Field. You
can also contact Coach Scott Cooper at 740-7102969.

GAHS youth football
camp set for July 22-23

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,

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.

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)

Loaded west
Philadelphia, Boston, Brooklyn, Indiana and Miami
all likely got better in the East. Milwaukee kept most
of its team that won an NBA-best 60 games.
The East will be good.
The West might be bloody.
The Clippers, the Lakers, Houston, Golden State,
Denver, Utah, Portland and San Antonio could end up
as the eight playoff teams in the Western Conference.
It’s plausible; they’re probably the most realistic eight
picks right now. But at least four of those teams —
most of them with superstar duos that are all the rage
now — won’t be in the second round of next season’s
playoffs.

decision over Mayweather’s uncle,
Roger, in 1987.
Still, it was two controversial
decisions — one a draw, the other
a loss — that may have deﬁned
his career more than anything.
The ﬁrst came against Chavez,
the Mexican great who was
unbeaten in 87 ﬁghts when he and
Whitaker met in a highly anticipated ﬁght in San Antonio.
Whitaker came out in his trademark style, confusing Chavez and
frustrating the Mexican champion. Chavez stalked Whitaker
throughout the ﬁght, but Whitaker wasn’t there to be found for the
most part, and when he traded
with Chavez he seemed to get
the better of the Mexican. Ringside statistics showed Whitaker
landing 311 punches to 220 for
Chavez, while throwing 153 more
punches.
But when the decision came
down, it was a draw that was
roundly criticized throughout
boxing.
“He would stand in the pocket
and make everybody miss and
frustrate the hell out of them,”
Duva said. “He said it was the
most beautiful feeling in the
world, to hit the other guy and
not get hit.”

Gallia Academy
Youth Flag Football

From page 6

Who’s left?
Plenty of free agents remain unsigned, and that’ll
still be the case even in September as training camps
get ready to open.
It’s still hard to see the Thunder keeping Paul,
acquired in the Westbrook trade to Houston, so
expect at least one more blockbuster trade before too
long. Or can a player who is owed $121 million over
the next three seasons be bought out? Stay tuned.
Carter wants to come back for a 22nd NBA season,
which would be a league record. If he gets into a game
after Jan. 1, he’ll also become the ﬁrst NBA player to
appear in four different decades.
Jamal Crawford remains out there as well, and contenders should be calling him.

as the victim of one of the worst
decisions in boxing, a draw that
allowed Julio Cesar Chavez to
remain unbeaten in their welterweight showdown before a crowd
of more than 60,000 at the Alamodome in San Antonio in 1993.
Four years later, Whitaker was
on the losing end of another difﬁcult decision against Oscar De La
Hoya in Las Vegas, a ﬁght many
ringsiders thought he had won.
“When you see the list of greatest boxing robberies in history
they were both No. 1 and No. 2
on the list,” said Kathy Duva, his
longtime promoter. “And every
list of top 10 ﬁghters of all time
he was on, too.”
Whitaker was a champion in
four weight classes, winning his
ﬁrst one with a 1989 decision
over Greg Haugen at lightweight,
in a professional career that
spanned 17 years. He ﬁnished
with a record of 40-4-1 and was a
ﬁrst ballot selection into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
His style was unique and it was
effective, a hit-and-don’t-be-hit
strategy that was later adopted
by a rising young ﬁghter named
Floyd Mayweather Jr. Whitaker
and Mayweather never met in
the ring, but Whitaker did win a

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

NBA
in camp as one of the young players brought in to help
the more-established pros get ready. If Williamson
impresses, he may get a shot at joining the varsity
club.
Also, this season’s NBA schedule is likely to come
around the second week of August, if recent years are
any indicator.

Tuesday, July 16, 2019 7

CABLE

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News
3 (N)
WTAP News
(N)
ABC 6 News
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Newswatch

TUESDAY, JULY 16
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
(N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
(N)
Ent. Tonight Access
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
(N)
News (N)
(N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
(N)
Fortune
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV (N)
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

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

America's Got Talent "Judge Cuts 1" Country music
superstar Brad Paisley joins the panel. (N)
America's Got Talent "Judge Cuts 1" Country music
superstar Brad Paisley joins the panel. (N)
The Lion King (N)
Modern
The
Family
Goldbergs
American Experience "Chasing the Moon" The thrilling
era of the space race, from its earliest days to the 1969
moon landing.
The Lion King (N)
Modern
The
Family
Goldbergs
Blood &amp; Treasure "The
Love Island (N)
Wages of Vengeance" (N)
9-1-1 "Hen Begins" Hen's
Spin the Wheel "Latham
Family"
history is revealed.
American Experience "Chasing the Moon" The thrilling
era of the space race, from its earliest days to the 1969
moon landing.
Love Island (N)
Blood &amp; Treasure "The
Wages of Vengeance" (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Bring the Funny "The Open
Mic 2" (N)
Bring the Funny "The Open
Mic 2" (N)
Modern "A Black "Good
Moving Day" in the 'Hood"
Nova "Apollo's Daring
Mission"
Modern "A Black "Good
Moving Day" in the 'Hood"
CBS News Special "Man on
the Moon" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10 (N)
Nova "Apollo's Daring
Mission"
CBS News Special "Man on
the Moon" (N)

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) JAG "Psychic Warrior"
24 (ROOT) Xterra Pan American
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)

Longevity award
For now, Golden State’s Stephen Curry is the longest-tenured player under contract to one team. He’s
entering his 11th season with the Warriors.
With Nowitzki (21 seasons with Dallas) retired,
Mike Conley (12 seasons with Memphis) traded to
Utah and Westbrook (11 seasons with Oklahoma
City) traded to Houston, no current player has had a
longer uninterrupted run with one team than Curry.
But if Udonis Haslem re-signs with Miami, it’ll be
his 17th season with the Heat.

40 (DISC)

The numbers
Including the $196 million extension for Portland’s
Damian Lillard, a $170 million extension for Denver’s
Jamal Murray and another in-the-works $170 million extension for Philadelphia’s Ben Simmons, NBA
teams have committed to spend roughly $4 billion
in new deals that were struck in the last three weeks
alone.
And that’s with 100 more signings to come, at least.
That $4 billion ﬁgure is twice what the total payroll
was a decade ago for every team in the league, combined.

68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)

42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)

74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Disappearance "The Tree"
Pirates Ball Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at St. Louis Cardinals Site: Busch Stadium (L)
ESPN "Unguarded" (N)
Chris Herren (N)
Poker World Series Final Table (L)
NFL Live
ESPN FC
Soccer International Champions Cup (L)
Wife Swap "Carmichael/
Dance Chat (:50) Dance Dance Moms "Fan Favorite Dance Moms "A Team On (:05) Dance (N) /(:15)
Marrying
Hanna"
(N)
Party (N)
Moments" (N)
Trial" (N)
(5:00)
The Twilight Saga: New Moon (2009, Drama) Good Trouble "Happy
17 Again (2009, Comedy/Drama) Leslie Mann,
Taylor Lautner, Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart. TV14
Thomas Lennon, Zac Efron. TV14
Heckling" (N)
Ink Master "Art of War" (N)
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
Loud House Loud H. (N) SpongeBob SpongeBob Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked Jason Lee. TVG Friends
Friends
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Super Smackdown
Chrisley (N) Chrisley
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Detour (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
Movie
Kong: Skull Island (‘17, Act) Tom Hiddleston. TVPG
Animal King "Ambo" (N)
Animal Kingdom "Ambo"
(5:30)
Colombiana (2011, Action) Michael Vartan,
Moneyball (2011, Biography) Robin Wright, Jonah Hill, Brad Pitt. Billy Beane
Callum Blue, Zoe Saldana. TV14
attempts to put together a baseball team using computer generated analysis. TVPG
Deadliest Catch
Deadliest Catch
Catch "Crane Wreck" (N)
D. Catch "Devil's Cut" (N) Myst. of Abandoned
(2:30)
JFK (‘91, Hist) Biography "Farrah Fawcett Forever" Farrah Fawcett was a Biography "JFK Jr.: The Final Year" The final year of John
Kevin Costner. TVMA
model, actress and sculptor.
F. Kennedy Jr. is explored. (N)
Star Law "Owl Gone Bad" Star Law "Wildcat Garage" Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law (N)
Lone Star Law
Chicago P.D. "The Price We
Chicago P.D. "Chin Check" Chicago P.D. "Now Is
Chicago P.D. "Thirty
Chicago P.D.
"Conventions"
Always Temporary"
Balloons"
Pay"
Criminal Mind "Aftermath" C.Minds "The Boogeyman" C.Minds "North Mammon" C.Minds "Empty Planet"
C.Minds "The Last Word"
Chrisley
Chrisley
E! News (N)
Relatively "One of Us" (N)
Bride Wars (‘09, Com) Kate Hudson. TVPG
(:25) Andy Griffith Show
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:45) Ray
(:20) Ray "Robert's Rodeo" (:55) 2½Men Two 1/2 Men
700 Sharks
When Sharks Attack
When Sharks Attack
When Sharks Attack "The The Whale That Ate Jaws
"Terror Down Under"
"Bedlam in Brazil" (N)
Shark Bite State" (N)
"Eyewitness Report" (N)
Dirt Racing
American Ninja Warrior
UCI Cycling Tour de France Stage 10 Saint-Flour - Albi
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
PBA Bowling Elias Cup Quarter-final (L)
PBA Bowling Elias Cup Quarter-final (L)
American Pickers
American Pickers "Bound American Pickers "Big
American Pickers
(:05) American Pickers
"Aerosmith Van"
"Summertime Fun" (N)
for Badness"
Money Racer"
"Corvette King"
Beverly "Thirst Impressions" Beverly Hills
Beverly "Hurricane Camille" Beverly Hills (N)
Housewives Potomac
I Can Do Bad All by Myself (‘09, Com/Dra) Taraji P. Henson, Tyler Perry. TVPG
Tales "My Life" (N)
The Next Big Thing (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Good Bones (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:15)
Twister (1996, Action) Bill
(:45)
Volcano (‘97, Act) Tommy Lee Jones. A volcano eruption in
Jurassic Park (‘93,
Paxton, Jami Gertz, Helen Hunt. TVPG
downtown Los Angeles throws the city into panic and disarray. TVPG
Sci-Fi) Sam Neill. TV14

6 PM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Bad Times at Los Espookys Vice News
Behind Closed Doors "Part (:20) Halloween (‘18, Hor) Judy Greer, Jamie Lee Curtis.
Tonight (N) One" (P) Pt. 1 of 2 (N)
the El Royale (2018,
Michael Myers escapes from prison and hunts the woman
Mystery) TVMA
who escaped his original rampage. TVMA
(4:50)
(:25) Pitch Perfect 3 After graduating from
There's Something About Mary (‘98, Com) Cameron
Phat Girlz (‘06, Com)
Anchorman: college, the Barden Bellas reunite and head Diaz, Matt Dillon, Ben Stiller. A sleazy private detective
Jimmy Jean-Louis, Kendra
The Legend... to Europe to perform. TVPG
falls for the woman his client hired him to locate. TVMA
Johnson, Mo'nique. TVPG
(5:45)
Basic Two military agents
(:25) Mile 22 (‘18, Act) Mark Wahlberg. A
The Loudest Voice "2008"
City on a Hill "From
Barack Obama proves the
investigate the disappearance of a sergeant CIA agent tries to get an asset with crucial Injustice Came the Way to
ultimate enemy to take on.
during training. TVMA
information out of a hostile country. TVMA Describe Justice"
(4:35)

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Pagenaud wins for 3rd time
TORONTO (AP) —
Simon Pagenaud won
his third race of the season and Alexander Rossi
tightened the championship race with Josef
Newgarden in IndyCar’s
Sunday race through the
streets of Toronto.
The win on the streets
around Exhibition Place
is the ﬁrst for Pagenaud
this year away from Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The Frenchman
won the Indy 500 and
the road course race at

the speedway to save his
job with Team Penske.
Pagenaud had to save
fuel in the waning laps
to hold off reigning
series champion Scott
Dixon. But Penske teammate Will Power caused
a caution on the ﬁnal lap
and Pagenaud was able
to coast to the ﬁnish in
his Chevrolet.
“I was conﬁdent all
weekend, I never had a
doubt,” said Pagenaud,
who started from the
pole and paced nearly

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every practice session.
“We were only focused
on ourselves. I never
really looked at who was
behind. We were just
focused on getting the
car where we wanted it
to be.
“Those days are the
best. There are a lot of
bad days in racing, but
those sweet days make
up for it.”
Dixon’s runner-up ﬁnish denied Chip Ganassi
Racing a weekend
sweep. Ganassi got his

ﬁrst NASCAR win of the
season Saturday night
with Kurt Busch in Kentucky.
Dixon again indicated
he will need offseason
surgery on an ailing
elbow — he’s described
the ligament strain as
“tennis elbow — and
that it bothered him during his drive. The reigning series champion won
at Toronto last year,
beating Pagenaud.
Rossi ﬁnished third,
one spot ahead of Indy-

(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

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Legals
Legal Notice
The Chester Township
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7/16/19

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in the form of luck. So
it was good to just kind
of capitalize on what we
felt was our maximum
today. Obviously ﬁnishing in front of Josef
Newgarden) was a good
thing.”
Robert Wickens drove
the parade lap in a car
equipped with hand
controls that allowed
the Canadian to drive
for the ﬁrst time since
he suffered a spinal cord
injury in a crash last
August.

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

Legals

LEGALS

Car points leader Newgarden. The two began
the race separated by
just seven points and
Rossi cut the deﬁcit to
four points.
“We didn’t think we
had a ﬁrst-place car
really at any point this
weekend,” Rossi said.
“The fact that we were
able to put it in the top
ﬁve was a good thing.
Then we thought we had
a podium car. That was
really about it, unless we
had anything come to us

825 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis , Oh 45631
740-446-2342

Ready to Take on Your Next Challenge?
Apply with Résumé to Matt Rodgers,
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, July 16, 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

By Hilary Price

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Tuesday, July 16, 2019

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Bengals guard Boling
retires after 8 seasons

Texas Tech’s Matt Wells, West Virginia’s
Neal Brown and Kansas State’s Chris
Klieman, who won four FCS national
titles the past ﬁve years as head coach at
North Dakota State.

CINCINNATI (AP) — Bengals left
guard Clint Boling retired Monday after
eight seasons in the NFL, citing medical
concerns. The club posted that he has
been dealing with a blood clot.
Boling was the Bengals’ most dependable offensive lineman, playing every
snap last season. He started all 16
games ﬁve times during his career,
including each of the last two. Boling
was a fourth-round pick in 2011.
His retirement is another setback to
a line in ﬂux. The Bengals drafted left
tackle Jonah Williams with the 11th
overall pick, but he suffered a shoulder injury during a workout, requiring
surgery that will sideline him for the
season. The Bengals signed guard John
Miller from Buffalo in the offseason and
drafted guard Michael Jordan from Ohio
State.

Morgan retires after
9 NFL seasons
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Tennessee
defensive lineman Derrick Morgan says
he’s retiring after playing nine NFL seasons for ﬁve head coaches.
Morgan announced his decision Monday on social media and with a post at
The Players’ Tribune. He wrote that he
had a strong indication 2018 would be his
ﬁnal season and that he always wanted to
leave the game on his own terms. Morgan
says he is thankful to say he accomplished
both goals.
The 16th pick overall out of Georgia Tech
in 2010, Morgan spent his entire career
with Tennessee. He started 106 of 118
games and had 44 ½ sacks playing defensive and outside linebacker. He had a sack
in his lone playoff game, the Titans’ wildcard win in Kansas City in January 2018.
Morgan says he sees this as a transition
as he works to create more opportunities
for the underserved and overlooked.

Oklahoma, Kansas help
start Big 12 media days
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Oklahoma is again favored in the Big 12 after
winning the last four conference titles.
Kansas is expected to still be on the
other end of the standings, even with a
new coach that has a national title to his
credit.
New Jayhawks coach Les Miles, the
65-year-old former Oklahoma State coach
who later won a national championship
at LSU, will be the ﬁrst coach to take the
podium at Big 12 football media days
Monday. That will be after Commissioner
Bob Bowlsby kicks off the two-day talkfest with his annual address.
Players and coaches from Oklahoma
and Kansas will take part Monday, along
with Oklahoma State, TCU and Texas
Tech. The second day, Tuesday, will feature Baylor, Iowa State, Kansas State,
Texas and West Virginia — and the only
two quarterbacks scheduled to appear
this week.
The Big 12 is holding its media days
for the ﬁrst time at the home stadium
of the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys, where the
league plays its championship game.
The 65-year-old Miles, after more than
2 ½ seasons out of coaching, is one of
four new Big 12 coaches. The others are

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

Redskins QB Alex
Smith sheds leg brace
ASHBURN, Va. (AP) — Washington
Redskins quarterback Alex Smith has
ﬁnally shed the massive brace on his right
leg eight months after breaking his tibia
and ﬁbula in gruesome fashion.
Smith’s wife, Elizabeth, posted a photo
Monday of him holding the ring external
ﬁxator in his hand. The team’s Twitter
account re-posted that picture with the
message, “The brace is off! A great step
for Alex in his recovery.”
Given the severity of the injury, it’s
unlikely Smith plays this season and
Washington selected QB Dwayne Haskins
in the ﬁrst round. Smith recently said
he plans to play in the NFL again and is
under contract through 2022.
Coach Jay Gruden said last month that
Smith’s recovery “is going to be a pretty
lengthy process.” At the time, Gruden
said Smith can throw but was still about
a month away from getting rid of the leg
brace.

2 PM

86°

83°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

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.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

89°
70°
86°
66°
104° in 1936
52° in 1987

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
1.74
2.11
25.95
24.07

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:16 a.m.
8:53 p.m.
8:57 p.m.
5:53 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

Jul 16

Jul 24

New

Jul 31

First

Aug 7

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

Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Major
11:56a
12:21a
1:13a
2:05a
2:55a
3:44a
4:30a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
88/72

Moderate

High

Very High

Minor Major Minor
5:43a ---- 6:09p
6:34a 12:46p 6:59p
7:25a 1:37p 7:49p
8:16a 2:28p 8:39p
9:06a 3:17p 9:28p
9:54a 4:05p 10:15p
10:40a 4:51p 11:01p

WEATHER HISTORY
Lightning struck a man in Barry’s
Landing, Wyo., on July 16, 1978. The
lightning traveled from his shoulder
to his feet, blasting off his clothes
and burning holes in his socks. The
lucky victim survived.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone
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. Mon.

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.30 +0.34
Marietta
34 16.51 -0.94
Parkersburg
36 21.90 -0.71
Belleville
35 12.66 -0.10
Racine
41 13.01 +0.20
Point Pleasant 40 24.65 -0.20
Gallipolis
50 12.31 +0.23
Huntington
50 26.41 -1.55
Ashland
52 34.54 -0.83
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.65 -0.08
Portsmouth
50 19.00 -3.70
Maysville
50 34.10 -0.90
Meldahl Dam
51 19.80 -3.90
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Ashland
90/71
Grayson
90/71

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

96°
72°

Turning sunny with a
t-storm; humid

Partly sunny, hot and
humid

Hot and humid with
clouds and sun

Logan
85/70

Variable clouds, a
t-storm possible

93°
74°
A t-storm possible in
the afternoon

NATIONAL CITIES
Murray City
85/70
Belpre
88/70

Athens
86/70

St. Marys
88/70

Parkersburg
87/69

Coolville
87/70

Elizabeth
90/69

Spencer
90/70

Buffalo
91/70

Ironton
91/71

MONDAY

91°
71°

Marietta
87/70

Wilkesville
88/70
POMEROY
Jackson
89/70
89/70
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
91/70
90/70
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
87/72
GALLIPOLIS
91/70
91/70
91/70

South Shore Greenup
90/71
89/71

52
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
90/71

Mixed doubles
Ivan Dodig of Croatia and Latisha Chan of Taiwan won the mixed
doubles title at Wimbledon.
The eighth-seeded pair beat Robert Lindstedt of Sweden and Jelena
Ostapenko of Latvia 6-2, 6-3.

96°
74°

McArthur
86/70

Very High

Primary: other, grasses
Mold: 1621

FRIDAY

Japanese champions
Shintaro Mochizuki became
the ﬁrst Japanese player to win a
Grand Slam junior boys’ title by
beating Carlos Gimeno Valero of
Spain 6-3, 6-2 in the Wimbledon
ﬁnal.
Mochizuki used his serveand-volley style to great effect,
winning 17 of 23 points when he
went to the net. In comparison,
Gimeno Valero won only one of
four points at the net.
“I like coming into the net,
yeah, a lot,” Mochizuki said. “I’m
good at that.”
Mochizuki won the last three
games of the ﬁrst set and then
broke for a 3-1 lead in the second.
He broke again in the ﬁnal game,
converting his fourth match point.
Gimeno Valero was playing his
ﬁrst tournament on grass.

91°
74°

Adelphi
85/71
Chillicothe
86/71

on Thursday.
For Hsieh, it was her third
Grand Slam doubles title. She
won the 2013 Wimbledon and
2014 French Open titles with
partner Peng Shuai.
Strycova and Hsieh have only
played together 10 times, with
nine of those partnerships coming this season. They won three
titles this year, including on grass
in Birmingham before Wimbledon
started, but lost in the third round
at the French Open.
“We deﬁnitely talked about
playing together because we have
a good chance to play the Masters,” Strycova said. “We will play
together until the end of the year,
and then we sit down and we will
see how it goes, how we feel.”

WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
— Three days after losing in her
ﬁrst major semiﬁnal in singles,
Barbora Strycova won her ﬁrst
major title in doubles.
Strycova and Hsieh Su-wei won
the women’s doubles at Wimbledon on Sunday by beating Gabriela Dabrowski of Canada and Xu
Yifan of China 6-2, 6-4 on Centre
Court.
“There is no word to describe
the feeling,” said Strycova, a
Czech veteran who will take over
the No. 1 rankings in doubles on
Monday. “It’s kind of like unreal,
but in the same time it’s amazing.”
The match had been scheduled
for Saturday, but it was postponed
a day because the men’s doubles
ﬁnal ran long, ﬁnishing in ﬁve
sets. So the women’s doubles
instead followed the men’s singles
ﬁnal on Centre Court while the
mixed doubles was relocated to
No. 1 Court.
“We were waiting a long time,”
Strycova said of Saturday’s delay.
“Yesterday was tough because we
were ready, ready, then suddenly
the supervisor came to us. If they
just split sets, we cancel. We were
just warming up. It was tough.”
Even on Sunday they had to
wait. The men’s singles ﬁnal
between Novak Djokovic and
Roger Federer went to a tiebreaker at 12-12 in the ﬁfth set — the
ﬁrst year that rule has been in
place.
“I was thinking (I’m) glad
Wimbledon change the rules,”
said Hsieh, who is from Taiwan.
“Otherwise I will keep eating and
I will get fat.”
The 33-year-old Strycova produced the best singles run of her
career at this year’s Wimbledon
tournament, becoming the oldest
ﬁrst-time major semiﬁnalist in the
professional era. She ended up
losing to Serena Williams 6-1, 6-2

THURSDAY

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

Waverly
86/70

Pollen: 20

Low

MOON PHASES

A couple of heavy
t-storms; cloudy

3

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
6:17 a.m.
8:52 p.m.
9:39 p.m.
6:48 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

Humid today with clouds and sun. Some rain
and a t-storm tonight. High 91° / Low 70°

ALMANAC

Strycova wins doubles
title after semifinal loss

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

85°
69°
74°

Daily Sentinel

Milton
92/71
Huntington
91/71

St. Albans
92/71

NATIONAL FORECAST

Clendenin
92/70
Charleston
92/70

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

110s
Seattle
Winnipeg
100s
76/60
80/61
90s
Montreal
81/72
80s
70s
Billings
Toronto
81/58
60s
88/70
50s
Minneapolis Chicago
New York
40s
87/72
84/72
89/75
30s
Detroit
Denver
82/72
20s
95/65
BARRY
10s
Washington
San Francisco
Kansas City
0s
93/76
71/56
88/75
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
Atlanta
T-storms
86/65
94/76
Rain
El Paso
103/79
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Houston
Ice
92/79
Chihuahua
Cold Front
98/70
Miami
Warm Front
91/81
Monterrey
Stationary Front
98/71

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

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
96/72/pc
68/56/c
94/76/pc
87/77/pc
92/73/pc
81/58/pc
85/58/s
86/75/s
92/70/c
97/73/pc
87/57/t
84/72/t
88/69/c
86/75/c
86/71/c
99/77/s
95/65/s
88/75/pc
82/72/pc
90/78/pc
92/79/pc
84/71/t
88/75/pc
109/84/s
82/72/t
86/65/s
90/75/t
91/81/pc
87/72/pc
90/73/t
91/78/pc
89/75/pc
99/77/pc
94/76/t
92/75/pc
114/90/s
84/70/t
82/68/s
96/76/t
94/75/pc
84/75/t
95/67/s
71/56/pc
76/60/sh
93/76/pc

Hi/Lo/W
97/73/pc
69/56/c
93/76/t
88/77/t
95/74/t
84/60/pc
90/59/pc
90/73/t
88/70/t
96/74/pc
87/58/s
91/75/pc
83/71/t
83/73/t
82/72/t
97/78/s
98/64/s
96/79/t
85/72/t
89/78/pc
93/77/pc
87/74/t
96/80/s
107/82/s
91/73/s
81/63/pc
86/76/t
91/80/s
83/75/t
86/74/t
92/77/pc
91/75/t
98/77/s
93/75/t
93/76/t
109/89/pc
83/70/t
84/68/t
97/76/pc
97/77/pc
94/81/s
93/73/s
71/56/pc
69/59/c
95/78/t

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

113° in Thermal, CA
33° in Mammoth Lakes, CA

Global
High
121° in Adrar, Algeria
Low -10° 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

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="4415">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="616">
              <text>July 16, 2019</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="713">
      <name>stout</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
