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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Pee Wee
tourney
champions

Moore
completes
career

OPINION s 4

LOCAL s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 105, Volume 72

Tuesday, July 3, 2018 s 50¢

INDEPENDENCE DAY EVENTS
RACINE — The
parade begins at 10
a.m., with line-up
at 9:15 a.m. in the
Southern High School
parking lot. Prizes for
parade entries will be
given in 3 categories:
bikes, ﬂoats, vehicles.
Following the parade
will be the Chicken
BBQ at the ﬁre stations
with serving to begin
at 11 a.m. Numerous
ﬂavors of homemade
ice cream will also be
available. A Frog Jump
competition will be
held at Star Mill Park
with registration beginning at 5 p.m. There is
a $3 entry fee. Participants can bring their
own frogs or “rental
frogs” are available for
$1. Age groups for the
event are 12 and under,
13-17 and 18 and up.
Prizes will be awarded
for ﬁrst, second and
third in each class, as
well as the overall longest jump of the day.
The day’s events will
conclude with ﬁreworks
at 10 p.m. at Star Mill
Park.

MIDDLEPORT —
Music at Dave Diles
Park with DJ Kip Grueser from 4:15-7:45 p.m..
The band “Remember
Then” will take to the
park stage at 7:45 p.m.
The parade begins at
6 p.m., with line-up
at 5:30 p.m. beside
Dairy Queen and down
First Street. Following
the parade will be a
ﬂag raising ceremony
at Dave Diles Park
conducted by Feeney
Bennett Post 128. Fireworks will launch at 10
p.m.
WILKESVILLE —
The Wilkesville 4th of
July parade will be held
at 11 a.m. in downtown
Wilkesville. Registration for the parade
begins at 10 a.m. at
the new ﬁre station.
Prize lists are as follows: Children 1-10,
$50, plus a $10 ParMar
Gift Card. (Registration across from the
160 Restaurant); Best
car entry, $75, plus
$10 ParMar Gift Card;
See EVENTS | 5

Rhythm on the River

Photo by Dave Harris

The second installment of this summers Rhythm on the River
concert series was held on Friday night with Eliza Neals and
the Narcotics preforming on the Pomeroy Parking Lot. Neals
whose release “10,000 Feet Below” was one of the top Blues
releases in the country last year performed for the crowd. The
Narcotics, which among them featured Detroit Blues legend
Howard Glazer on guitar, performed a show that matched the
outside temperature. Neals with her powerhouse vocals was
a delight for local music fans. The concerts sponsored by the
Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society will present Angela Perley and
the Howlin’ Moons from Columbus this Friday at 8 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Parking Lot Amphitheater.

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
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facebook to share your
thoughts.

Firefighters work to put out the fire at the Point Pleasant River Museum on Sunday afternoon.

Photos by Ed Lowe | Courtesy

Recovering from the flames

By Erin Perkins
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT
— This past Sunday,
the Point Pleasant River
Museum was having a
regular day with its staff
and approximately 17
visitors until the smoke
detector sounded.
Jack Fowler, Point
Pleasant River Museum
director, reported he
was in the simulation
room at the time the ﬁre
began. Fowler explained
he and others who were
inside the building
attempted to extinguish
the ﬁre themselves, but
could not. After smoke
started billowing out,
the local ﬁre department was contacted and
everyone inside the river
museum evacuated.
The Point Pleasant Fire Department
(PPFD) Fire Chief JR
Spencer reported at
2:25 p.m. the call came
in reporting the ﬁre at
the river museum. The
call generated over 100
responders to the scene.
Area local ﬁre departments such as Gallipolis
FD, Mason FD, New
Haven FD, Flatrock FD,

A firefighter at the top of a ladder truck sprays water into the River Museum in an effort to put out
the fire on Sunday evening.

Leon FD, Valley FD,
Middleport FD, and
Pomeroy FD responded
to the scene to help
alongside the PPFD as
well as the Point Pleasant City Police and
Mason County Sheriff’s
Department, Mason
County EMS, and
Mason County Ofﬁce of
Homeland Security.
Spencer said the ﬁre
originated in the attic
of the building. He
explained the cause of
the ﬁre is still unde-

termined, but is being
investigated by the West
Virginia State Fire Marshal’s Ofﬁce.
“There was heavy
damage throughout the
building, damage by
actual ﬂame was limited
to the attic/second ﬂoor
area, but both ﬂoors
suffered heat, smoke,
and water damage,” said
Spencer.
Spencer explained
many items were
removed during the ﬁre.
Fowler said between

60-70 percent of the
items within the river
museum were salvaged.
Both Spencer and
Fowler commented on
how crucial the help
from the community was
during this ordeal. Members of the community
helped remove items
from the river museum.
They extended appreciation to workers from the
City of Point Pleasant,
Mayor Brian Billings,
See FLAMES | 3

Library upgrades lighting through partnership
Staff Report

POMEROY — The
Meigs County District
Public Library system
has partnered with
Energy Optimizers, USA,
to upgrade its lighting
systems to LEDs for an
expected savings of more
than $6,500 annually.
All exterior and interior lighting for three
of the system’s libraries
— Middleport, Pomeroy and Racine public
libraries — will make
the switch to LEDs. In
addition to delivering
an immediate payback,
the work is expected to
qualify the library system
for a nearly $2,000 rebate
from AEP Ohio. The
anticipated return on
investment is 14 percent.
“We are making muchneeded capital improvements to our libraries
that will deliver a notice-

able beneﬁt to our users
while saving a signiﬁcant
amount of taxpayer dollars,” said Kristi Eblin,
Meigs County District
Public Library director.
“I am conﬁdent our users
and staff will be pleased
with the enhanced lighting, and we will free up
funds that can be used
for technology and programs to serve our communities.”
LED lighting uses an
average of 60 percent less
energy than the systems
being replaced. With a
lifetime rating of 50,000
– 100,000 hours, LED
lights last 3 to 5 times
longer than less efﬁcient
bulbs, which will reduce
the library’s operations
and maintenance costs.
And because LED lighting puts out less heat,
the library can expect to
lower its cooling bills in
the summer months.

Courtesy photo

Racine Library

LED lighting is also
easier on the eyes, which
is of considerable beneﬁt
to library patrons.
“By making a relatively
simple and cost-effective
change in lighting, the
Meigs County District
Public Library is making
a tremendous improvement in how it operates,”
said Greg Smith, Energy

Optimizers, USA, president. “The system will
conserve both ﬁnancial
and natural resources
and enhance its readerfriendly spaces, all while
demonstrating accountability to its stakeholders.”
Information provided by Energy
Optimizers, USA.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, July 3, 2018

OBITUARY
JEFFERY WAYNE CUNDIFF
POMEROY — Jeffery
Wayne Cundiff, 52, of
Pomeroy, passed away, on
Monday, June 25, 2018, at
his residence. Born July
13, 1965, in Pomeroy, he
is the son of Charles and
Paulette Kearns Cundiff,
who survive in Pomeroy.
He was Union Cement
Mason and a member of
the Operative Plasterers and Cement Masons
Local #132 of Columbus.
In addition to his
parents, he survived by
his sisters, April (Mark)

Mayes, of Pomeroy, Angie
Fletcher, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., Joy Cundiff,
of Pomeroy, and Cassie
(Todd) Roach, of West
Columbia, and numerous,
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. on Thursday, July 5, 2018, in the
Cremeens-King Funeral
Home, Pomeroy with
Pastor Mike Finnicum
will ofﬁciating. Friends
may call one hour prior to
the service at the funeral
home.

Daily Sentinel

State hasn’t used $5M allocated for youth
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
Ohio has yet to spend any of the
$5 million allocated this year for
services for troubled youth on the
cusp of being removed from their
homes or at risk of entering the
justice or foster-care systems.
Money from the “crisis stabilization fund” was designated to
help pay for support groups, child
care, transportation and other
expenses, reported The Columbus Dispatch. County Family and

Children First councils were given
the task of making local plans to
administer the funds.
Stipulations attached to the
federally funded program have
caused roadblocks, according to
child welfare advocates.
Residential treatment and clinical services aren’t covered by the
program. Funding is also only
available to families with annual
incomes at or below 200 percent
of poverty.

Republican state Rep. Sarah
LaTourette, of Chesterland, continues to urge state ofﬁcials to
adjust the program to better serve
residents.
LaTourette and Republican
state Sen. Randy Gardner, of
Bowling Green, sent Gov. John
Kasich a letter in April saying
they had intended that the program help middle class families in
addition to those living under the
poverty line.

Smith applauds bill passage protecting pastors
MEIGS BRIEFS

and its tributaries. The
legislation provides fundCOLUMBUS — Speak- ing assistance to Ohio’s
southern counties that
er of the Ohio House
Ryan Smith (R-Bidwell) have been devastated by
ﬂooding, allowing those
has applauded the pascommunities to further
sage of Senate Bill 299,
or the “Clean Lake 2020 meet the needs of disaster relief efforts and to
Plan,” and House Bill
reach out to struggling
36, or the “Ohio Pastor
residents. It allocates an
Protection Act,” by the
Ohio House of Represen- appropriation of over
$7 million for FY 2019
tatives.
to the Local Disaster
These bills were two
Assistance Fund, to be
of over 30 pieces of legutilized by eligible local
islation voted on by the
governments in meeting
House recently.
the funding match for
Senate Bill 299,
federal disaster assissponsored by State
tance funds.
Senator Randy Gard“I applaud the work
ner (R-Bowling Green)
put forth by Represenand spearheaded in the
tative Arndt to carry
House by State RepreSenate Bill 299 through
sentative Steve Arndt
(R-Port Clinton), aims to the House,” said Smith.
allocate funds to disaster “This bill not only helps
relief in Ohio, and makes to ensure that Lake Erie
will remain a resource
critical investments to
for our state for years to
support and preserve
come, but also provides
the health of Lake Erie
Staff Report

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.

Children’s Art Class
MIDDLEPORT — Wendy Miller will be offering
art classes for school-age children at Riverbend Arts
Council, 290 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, Ohio. Classes
will be on Monday, July 9, 16, 23, and 30 from 10:30
a.m. to noon. Each class will be $10 with all materials
furnished. For more info call Wendy at 740-416-4015.

Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic on Tuesday, from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m., at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/
legal guardian. A $30.00 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however, no one will
be denied services because of an inability to pay an
administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable. Shingles and pneumonia vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility
determination and availability or visit our website
at www.meigs-health.com to see a list of accepted
commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults. The
Ohio Department of Health (ODH) does NOT recommended for routine Hepatitis A vaccination of Healthcare Workers. Additionally, the Advisory Committee
on Immunization Practices (ACIP) does NOT recommend routine Hepatitis A vaccination for Food Workers. Currently, ODH is strongly recommending the
following groups to get the Hepatitis A vaccine: men
who have sex with men, persons who inject drugs and
person who use illegal non-injection drugs. These are
the highest risk groups for transmission of Hepatitis
A. Call 740-992-6626 for vaccine availability.

Road Closure
RACINE — Meigs County Road 28, Bashan Road,
will be closed between C-30, Morning Star Road, and
T-109, Carmel Road, for approximately two weeks
beginning Monday, July 9. County forces will be
repairing a slip in this area.
RACINE — A bridge replacement project begins
on May 29, 2018, on County Road 29 (Bowmans Run
Road) in Meigs County. The project is taking place
.17 miles off of County Road 34 (Pine Grove Road).
The road will be closed in this area through August
31, 2018.
RACINE — A portion of State Route 124 in Meigs
County is closed due to a rockfall. It is located
between Yellow Bush Road and McNickles Road. The
road is closed in both directions in this area. ODOT’s
detour is SR 124 to SR 733 to US 33 to SR 124. The
reopening date is unknown at this time.
ATHENS — The westbound US Route 33 ramps at
East State Street in Athens will be closed. The closure
is expected to last until July 25. The detour for trucks
and commercial trafﬁc is via US 50E to the East
State Street Exit. Local trafﬁc will be detoured to the
Stimson Avenue Exit, 16C. Concrete replacement
work will also begin on the US 33 EB on-ramp in this
time period. Temporary pavement will be installed to
maintain trafﬁc. In order to discourage neighborhood
cut-through trafﬁc, Grant Street will be modiﬁed to
be one way north through at least the duration of the
ramp closure period.

crucial funding and
resources to southern
Ohioans impacted by
severe weather and
ﬂooding.”
House Bill 36, sponsored by Rep. Nino
Vitale (R-Urbana),
seeks to emphasize and
uphold religious freedom. It speciﬁes that no
ordained or licensed minister or religious society
is required to solemnize
a marriage or host a
marriage ceremony if
the marriage does not
conform to the minister’s
or religious society’s
sincerely held religious
beliefs. In these instances, the bill removes civil
and criminal liabilities
for any pastor or religious society that refuses
to solemnize such a marriage. In addition, House
Bill 36 prohibits the state
or a political subdivision
from either penalizing or

withholding beneﬁts or
privileges from a minister or religious society
for exercising this freedom.
“Freedom of religion
and expression are both
important principles
guaranteed in the First
Amendment to our Constitution, and I commend
Representative Vitale’s
effort in crafting this
important legislation,”
said Smith. “House Bill
36 will enable religious
clergy to abide by their
core beliefs and values
without being subject
to government interference.”
House Bill 36 now
heads to the Ohio Senate
for further consideration,
and Senate Bill 299,
which passed both the
House and Senate unanimously, awaits Governor
John Kasich’s consideration.

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 Showers

corn and lemonade will be
served.

Saturday, July 7
MIDDLEPORT — The Daisy
Tea Party will be held from 2-4
p.m. at the Middleport Church of
Christ for girls in Meigs County
entering Kindergarten and
1st grade. Tea Party is $4 and
includes patch. Registration for
2018-19 year is $25. Contact Jerrena Dill at 740-416-1934.

Library, 2 p.m., Science ROCKS
with the Ohio Valley Museum of
Discovery. Children will have the
chance to visit hands on science
stations.

Friday, July 13
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library, 10:30 a.m., Inspirational
Book Club Discuss this month’s
current selection, The Inn at
Ocean’s Edge by Colleen Coble,
with the group.

Get well soon card shower,
Beth Sergent, 500 Viand St.,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550. Please
send cards to help us wish Beth a
RACINE — The Theiss reunion
POMEROY — Pomeroy
speedy recovery.
will be held at 1 p.m. at the
Library, 2 p.m., Shark Cart. The
Racine American Legion.
Newport Aquarium’s WAVE
Foundation is bringing a real, live
shark to the library.
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library, Nancy the Turtle Lady,
two programs: 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
BEDFORD TWP. — The BedChildren will experience live rep- ford Township trustees will hold
tiles, amphibians, and more.
their regular monthly meeting at
POMEROY — Pomeroy
7 p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall. Library, 11 a.m., Gardening
RIO GRANDE — The CadotSeries: Edible Weeds. Kevin
Blessing Camp #126 of the Sons
Fletcher with OSU Extension
of Union Veterans of the Civil
Ofﬁce will be presenting.
War will have their meeting at
POMEROY — Meigs County
government ofﬁces will be closed 1 p.m. in the Bob Evans Homestead House at Bob Evans Farms.
in observance of Independence
The SUVCW is the legal heir to
Day.
MEIGS COUNTY — All Meigs the GAR (Grand Army of the
RACINE — Racine Library, 5-7
Republic) and is for the purposes p.m., Bubble Bash. Celebrate 7
Library locations are closed in
observance of Independence Day. of Patriotic and Educational proweeks of reading with the end of
grams dedicated to the memory
the summer reading party. Water
of the Veterans of the American
slides, a foam party, and more
Civil War. Any male that has
await.
ancestry who served during the
war is invited to attend.
CHESTER — The Chester
LETART TWP. — The regular
Shade Historical Association will
have a MHF Planning meeting at meeting of the Letart Township
Trustees will be held at 5 p.m. at
6:30 p.m. in the Academy. The
POMEROY — Pomeroy
regular board meeting will be held the Letart Township Building.
Library, Cookbook Club. This
the following week on Thursday,
month’s theme is Savory and/or
July 12, 2018 at 6:30 p.m. All are
Sweet Salads. Bring a dish and
welcome to come.
the recipe to share, while sampling others’ dishes.
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse
Community Center Board of
Directors will meet at 7 p.m.
POMEROY — Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT — Snack &amp;
Canvas with Michele Musser will Library, 6 p.m., Acoustic Night at
POMEROY — Pomeroy
the Library. All are invited to lisbe held at 6 p.m. at the RiverLibrary, Book Club. Discuss this
bend Art Council, 290 North 2nd ten or play along with the group
month’s selection, What She
Avenue, Middleport, Ohio. Your in this informal jam session.
Knew by Gilly Macmillan, with
SUTTON TWP. — The regular the group.
choice of a 16x20 canvas Beach
monthly meeting of the Sutton
or Woods Scene with choices of
palm or pine trees, camper, birds, Township Trustees will be held at
dolphin or chair. For more infor- 7 p.m. in the Racine Village Hall
Council Chambers.
mation and to reserve a space
call Michele at 740-416-0879 or
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Donna at 740-992-5123.
Library, Acoustic Night at the
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library. All are invited to listen or
Library, 5 p.m., Family Movie
play along with the group in this
Night: Sherlock Gnomes. Popinformal jam session.
POMEROY — Pomeroy

Sunday, July 8

Tuesday, July 3

Monday, July 9

Tuesday, July 17

Wednesday, July 18

Wednesday, July 4

Thursday, July 19

Thursday, July 5
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Friday, July 20

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�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 3, 2018 3

Legislation provides
nearly $115M for new
voting machines
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Counties would
split nearly $115 million to replace voting
machines around the state under a bill approved
by the Ohio Legislature.
Money for the new equipment would be dispersed across Ohio’s 88 counties on a per-voter
basis, under the bill approved this past week.
Counties with more voters would get more funding.
Ohio’s counties will be able to choose which
new equipment to purchase. The equipment would
require approval by federal and state ofﬁcials.
The Columbus Dispatch reports most Ohio voting machines are over a decade old. About half of
the state’s counties use paper ballots that are optically scanned, and half use touch-screen voting.
The legislation now goes to Gov. John Kasich. It
would give counties new voting machines by the
2019 election season.

Erin Perkins | OVP

Several individuals have been helping with the clean up of the Point Pleasant River Museum.

Flames

Ed Lowe | Courtesy

Firefighters from numerous departments were on the scene of a fire at the Point Pleasant River
Museum on Sunday afternoon and evening.

Youth Center and the dry
items are being taken
to the K.V.C building
where Fowler and river
museum workers Ruth
and Martha Fout will
be located for the time
being.

Erin Perkins | OVP

Damages from inside the Point Pleasant River Museum.

Fowler reminds that
the Belle of Cincinnati
event is coming up on
July 30 and all proceeds
from this event go to the
river museum. Also, the
upcoming annual Tribute
to the River supports the
river museum.
Fowler explained
the river museum will
receive insurance payment, but rebuilding
will be a costly matter
and he hopes people
will have a warm spot in
their hearts for the river
museum and help now in
its time of need.
For anyone wishing to
make a monetary donation, an account has
been opened at the Ohio
Valley Bank Point Pleasant branch called the
River Museum Rebuild
Fund. The fund is also
on Facebook, https://
www.gofundme.com/
river-museum-ﬁre-recovery-fund.
For anyone wishing to
help with cleaning, individuals are meeting at
the Point Pleasant Youth
Center at 9 a.m., Tuesday. Commissioner Rick

Handley advises those
coming to clean to bring
paper towels and window
cleaner with them.
Erin Perkins is a staff writer for
Ohio Valley Publishing. Reach her at
(304) 675-1333, extension 1992.

Paul: Ax attack
threatened
LOUISVILLE, Ky.
(AP) — U.S. Sen. Rand
Paul says he and his
family were targeted by
someone threatening to
attack them with an ax.
Paul told reporters
Monday in his home

Cooking in the Village
MIDDLEPORT — The Riverbend Arts Council
will present Cooking in the Village, a cooking
demonstration with Rick Werner and Jessica Wolf
featuring easy summertime recipes. The presentation will be held from 1-3 p.m. on Saturday, July
14 at the Riverbend Arts Council, located at 290
North Second Avenue in Middleport.

A complete wellness
blood profile for only

$25

Wellness blood profiles may be purchased at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Laboratory starting Monday, July 2. Profiles are available from
the lab Monday through Friday (closed holidays) from 7:00 a.m. to
11:00 a.m. Lab work should be performed while fasting 8-10 hours
beforehand. No appointment necessary. Those who purchase profiles
should register at the front desk before having lab work performed.
Profile includes:

state of Kentucky that
Capitol Police issued
an arrest warrant for a
suspect. Then in a tweet,
Paul thanked Capitol
Police for arresting the
suspect.
During a stop in
Leitchﬁeld in western
Kentucky, Paul said a
man threatened to kill
him and “chop up” his
family with an ax.
The Republican lawmaker says it’s “just horrendous” that political
leaders have to “deal
with things like this.”

Complete Blood Count

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Optional testing is available for Hemoglobin A1C and Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone.
Cost is $7 per test.

Christopher E. Tenoglia

For more information, please call 304.675.4340, ext. 1377.

ATTORNEY AT LAW

Help Right Here At Home �/81*�&amp;$1&amp;(5
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740-992-6368
200 E. 2nd Street s Pomeroy, OH
tenlaw@suddenlinkmail.com

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Laboratory Services
OH-80002425

OH-70056545

BOISE, Idaho (AP)
— A 3-year-old Idaho
girl who was stabbed at
her own birthday party
died Monday, two days
after a man invaded the
celebration and attacked
nine people with a knife,
authorities said.
Timmy Kinner is
accused of stabbing a
group of children and
the adults who tried to
protect them at the party
at an apartment complex
that is home to many
refugee families.
Word of the child’s
death came at Kinner’s
ﬁrst court appearance,
where Ada County Magistrate Judge Russell
Comstock told him that
he was charged with ﬁrstdegree murder and other
felonies in connection
with the Saturday night
attack.

Comstock told Kinner
he was “an extreme danger to the community”
and ordered him held
without bond.

MEIGS BRIEF

Low-Cost
Blood Profiles

IN BRIEF

Birthday girl
stabbed, dies

Fair to focus on state’s best
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ofﬁcials say this
year’s Ohio State Fair will focus on promoting
the best the state has to offer in areas including
Ohio’s agricultural industry.
The 2018 state fair will be held July 25 through
Aug. 5 at the Ohio Expo Center in Columbus.
Fair ofﬁcials say this year’s event includes a wide
range of food, entertainment, agriculture, livestock and art exhibitions. Highlighted traditions
and interactive displays for all ages also will be
available.
Livestock exhibitions will include cattle, goats,
poultry, sheep, llamas, horses, swine, rabbits and
more. Horticulture and ﬂoriculture competitions
will include giant pumpkins and ﬂoral arrangements among other contests.

From page 1

Mason County Commission members, local
marine companies, and
many others who have
given assistance during
this ordeal.
Spencer reported he
had one ﬁreﬁghter who
had to be transported to
the emergency room for
heat related illness and
several other individuals had to be treated on
scene.
Fowler explained as
of right now the focus
is cleaning the river
museum and its items.
Following, an appraisal
will need to be done and
an engineer will need
to come into the river
museum and assess the
damages.
Items that are needing
cleaned are being taken
to the Point Pleasant

OHIO BRIEFS

�����9DOOH\�'ULYH��3RLQW�3OHDVDQW��:9������

�Opinion
4 Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

To live.
To love. It
comes hard.

Admissions many times are difﬁcult.
You take what’s been given you in life, the job,
the dreams, the always wishing for something
more.
Frequently you will read something that will trigger yet another
thing desired.
The news came about Charles
Krauthammer, writer, columnist,
renowned savant, who passed away
Thursday.
McZena last
I used to follow him and his musMuse
ings, because he had a very good
Louise
way of writing and talking about an
Swartzwalder
issue. And his analysis always made
sense.
This doesn’t mean I always agreed with him.
But I respected him.
If you are a person who also wants to be given
good regard, you do a little yearning and wonder
how, in the end, you will measure up.
My husband John Hyde was also a renowned
writer, columnist, explorer of the future.
He was written about in the Washington Post
and the Des Moines Register, when he passsed
away.
This, a very odd feeling, being called by a
reporter friend at the Register, to speak about
John.
It’s probably natural that as a person gets older,
he or she looks more and more out and about.
If you’re of retirement age, but refuse to retire,
this probably means you’re not quite done yet.
Some people know in advance they will soon be
gone. Krauthammer knew that.
My John didn’t.
To be able to accept in advance the fact you
have a fatal disease, is, I think, one of the more
remarkable things a person could ever do.
Another good friend of mine from the Des
Moines Register, Don Kaul, has accepted the fact
he has incurable prostate cancer.
He has already made a statement he wishes to
accept no more treatments. He has moved back to
Washington, after moving for a bit back to Michigan. He did that, he said, so he could be closer to
family members.
How many times in life are we ever given choices like that?
My father, who passed away from liver cancer,
made the statement he would rather be hit by
a train than have to know devastating news in
advance.
But he endured.
I lived in Washington, D.C. when we got news
of his cancer. I would ﬂy back and forth to visit
home, helping mom and dad.
When it was obvious his time was getting closer,
I remained at the farm. We had hospice people
come to help us.
We eventually had to buy morphine patches we
could apply to dad’s skin so the pain would be
lessened.
Something never explained once happened to
me.
This is something I don’t like to think about
much.
On Nov. 14, 2002, I was in a crash while
attempting to make a trip to see my sister, in
Wooster.
It took two rescue squads and the jaws of life to
remove me. I was taken ﬁrst to Wooster Hospital,
then transported to the Akron trauma hospital.
My sisters were notiﬁed and they traveled there.
Husband John ﬂew in from Washington to get to
Akron.
I had numerous surgeries, was placed in intensive care.
I have no memory of any of those things.
After a month it was determined I was well
enough to undergo rehabilitation. This took place
at National Rehabilitation Hospital in Washington.
I had to be ﬂown there, with an attending nurse.
My ﬁrst memory of anything occurred there. It
was when John told me my sister Jane and niece

THEIR VIEW

Sanitized scandals, linguistic trickery
Throughout Justice
Department Inspector
General Michael Horowitz’s massive
report on
Victor
D. Hanson the Hillary
Contributing Clinton
email invescolumnist
tigation
are lots of
strange things. One of
the weirdest is the extent
to which the FBI went
to make up words and
phrases to disguise reality.
An early draft of the
2016 FBI report on the
email scandal was reportedly subjected to linguistic surgery to exonerate
the former secretary of
state, who at the time
was the Democratic
nominee for president.
Clinton was originally
found to be “grossly negligent” in using an illegal
email server. That legalistic phrase is used by
prosecutors to indict for
violation of laws governing the wrongful transmission of conﬁdential
government documents.
Yet the very thought of
a likely President Clinton
in court so worried the
chief investigator, FBI
Director James Comey,
that he watered down
“grossly negligent” to the
mere “extremely careless.”
FBI investigators also
had concluded that it
was “reasonably likely”
foreign nations had read
Clinton’s unsecured
emails. Comey intervened
to mask such a likelihood
by substituting the more
neutral word “possible.”
Former President
Barack Obama was found
to have improperly communicated with Clinton
over her illegal server

while she was in a foreign country. Obama had
denied that fact by falsely
claiming that he never
knew of her server until
much later, after it was
publicized.
The FBI hierarchy
under Comey tried to
hide the embarrassing
details of Obama’s conduct. As a result, the FBI
deleted Obama’s name
from its report. In its
place, the FBI inserted
the laughable “another
senior government ofﬁcial” — as if the president
of the United States was
just another Washington
grandee who had improperly communicated on an
illicit email server.
According to Comey’s
congressional testimony,
then-Attorney General
Loretta Lynch ordered
him not to use the supposedly incriminating
noun “investigation”
in connection with his
investigation of the
Clinton emails. Instead,
she instructed Comey to
use the benign-sounding
“matter.”
One of the oddest mysteries of the IG report is
the FBI’s delay in addressing the fact that disgraced
former U.S. Rep. Anthony
Weiner had a number of
Clinton’s private emails
on his unsecured laptop.
They were all forwarded
to him by his wife, Huma
Abedin, an aide to Clinton. Their Washingtoninsider marriage had
been widely publicized.
Yet Comey, the nation’s
premier public investigator, claimed he had no
idea that Weiner and Abedin were married. Comey
would have the inspector
general believe that Abedin had forwarded numer-

ous emails from Clinton,
some of them classiﬁed,
to a mere acquaintance.
Stranger still, Comey
asserted his ignorance
of the Weiner-Abedin
marriage in an Orwellian
manner: “I don’t know
that I knew that [Weiner]
was married to Huma
Abedin at the time.”
Translated, that means
Comey claimed that
he was not sure at one
point that he was sure at
another point that Weiner
was married to Abedin, at
least at the time when the
emails came to his attention. Therefore, he did
not act as he should have.
What were the common
themes in the FBI’s linguistic distortions?
Two realities: One,
the FBI made sure that
Obama, the boss of most
of the wayward FBI and
DOJ ofﬁcials, was not
to be entangled in any
scandal.
Two, seemingly everyone at the Department of
Justice and FBI assumed
Hillary Clinton was
going to be president.
They were sure Donald
Trump was headed for
a humiliating and welldeserved defeat. Therefore, in the heat of the
2016 campaign, the FBI
and DOJ did what they
could to ingratiate themselves with those they
expected to be in power
during a likely eight-year
Clinton presidency.
The inspector general’s
report on the Clinton
email covers just one
scandal. Presumably, the
IG and other investigators will issue reports
on a number of other
ongoing scandals that
involved the 2016 campaign.

How did government
ofﬁcials, by hiding
information about the
so-called Steele dossier,
mislead the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance
Court to get warrants to
spy on U.S. citizens associated with the Trump
campaign?
How was it decided
that the Clinton campaign would pay Christopher Steele for gathering dirt on the Trump
campaign, and how did
the information from
the dossier get to intelligence agencies?
How was an FBI informant inserted into the
Trump campaign?
How were names of
U.S. citizens unmasked
by Obama administration
ofﬁcials and leaked to
the press?
If the IG report on the
Clinton email scandal
is any guide to these
upcoming investigations,
expect widespread abuse
of the English language
to warp reality.
The media is using the
antiseptic “informant” in
place of the cruder but
more accurate “spy” or
“mole.”
The off-putting but
accurate “wiretapping”
has become the more
professional “surveillance.”
The sanitized “improper” always sounds
cleaner than the more
accurate “illegal.”
In sum, “2016” could
make a logical sequel to
“1984.”
Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist
and historian at the Hoover
Institution, Stanford University and
the author, most recently, of “The
Father of Us All: War and History,
Ancient and Modern” You can
reach him by emailing author@
victorhanson.com.

See LOVE | 5

TODAY IN HISTORY
On this date
In 1775, Gen. George
Today is Tuesday, July Washington took com3, the 184th day of 2018. mand of the Continental
There are 181 days left in Army at Cambridge, Massachusetts.
the year.
In 1890, Idaho became
Today’s Highlight in History the 43rd state of the
Union.
On July 3, 1863, the
In 1913, during a 50th
three-day Civil War Battle of Gettysburg in Penn- anniversary reunion at
sylvania ended in a major Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, Civil War veterans
victory for the North as
Confederate troops failed re-enacted Pickett’s
to breach Union positions Charge, which ended with
during an assault known embraces and handshakes
between the former
as Pickett’s Charge.
enemies.
The Associated Press

Courtesy photo

Colorful, carousing Carousel

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“The trouble with life isn’t that there is no
answer, it’s that there are so many answers.”
— Ruth Benedict
American anthropologist (1887-1948)

In 1938, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
marked the 75th anniversary of the Battle of
Gettysburg by dedicating
the Eternal Light Peace
Memorial.
In 1944, during World
War II, Soviet forces

recaptured Minsk from
the Germans.
In 1950, the ﬁrst carrier strikes of the Korean
War took place as the
USS Valley Forge and the
HMS Triumph sent ﬁghter planes against North
Korean targets.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 3, 2018 5

Pee Wee Baseball Tournament champions

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Vacation Bible School
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grove Christian Church Family Vacation Bible School will be
held July 7. “Join us for Christmas in July, Old
West Style. Treasure Jesus, discover his miraculous birth.” Puppet skits, worshio, teaching, crafts
and food at the church from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Swimming, games and fellowship from 2-4 p.m.
at Ohio Valley Christian Assembly. Pastor Diana
Kinder 740-591-5960.
POMEROY — First Southern Baptist Church,
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, will be hosting
Vacation Bible School July 8-13, from 6-9 p.m.
each night. The theme is Game On: Gearing up
for life’s big game. There will be snacks, music,
Bible study, missions, games and crafts.
TUPPERS PLAINS — St. Paul United Methodist Church, 42216 State Route 7, Tuppers Plains,
will host Maker Fun Factory Vacation Bible School
from 6-8:30 p.m., July 16-19. Ages four and up.

Courtesy photo

The Eastern baseball team recently won the Big Bend Pee Wee Boys Tournament Championship. Pictured are Logan Wolfe, Colton Lloyd,
Jace Stevens, Ethan Edwards, Derrick Barnes, Lane Atha, Caleb Abner, Hunter Needs, Braxton Yonker, Michael Holdren, and coaches Greg
Lloyd, Justin Edwards, Ben Wolfe, Ryan Barnes.

Love
From page 4

Shawna were coming for
a visit.
Many things I didn’t
know. The extent of my
injuries. What truly had
happened.
I had to attend classes,
designed to see if I was
making any kind of progress.
The ﬁrst clue I was
probably advancing was
when I was in a class
where someone was talking about treatments
people could get, as part
of rehabilitation, where
they could bake things.
I asked if the bakers
were going to be using
NSF approved baking
utensils.
This, from my time
as owner of a large food
business.
People decided I must
know a little something.
I had to learn how to
get in and out of cars.
My left side had been
destroyed and I had

a titanium rod placed
there. My left eye still
remained crossed,
and I was treated by
an astoundingly good
physician who called in
interns once to show
them my adult strabismus.
John would come with
me to many appointments. He was with me
when Dr. Plotsky made
that comment.
We looked at each
other. Adult strabismus?
The doctor explained.
It was a type of paralysis.
This had occurred
when the vehicle had
smashed into my Ford
Ranger. I had so loved
my Ford Ranger, but it
turns out those aren’t
built so well because the
frame yielded, so very
easily.
My one sister said
when they extracted me
from the truck, there was
an inch of space between
one part of the truck and
my face.
So it goes.
I don’t take what happened to me lightly. I had

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

75°

8 PM

88°

88°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

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.

87°
70°
86°
65°
101° in 1931
47° in 1988

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

1.38
1.38
0.25
26.65
22.21

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:08 a.m.
8:57 p.m.
none
11:01 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Jul 6

New

Jul 12

First

Jul 19

Full

Jul 27

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

Major
Today 4:17a
Wed. 5:05a
Thu. 5:52a
Fri.
6:37a
Sat.
7:21a
Sun. 8:06a
Mon. 8:53a

Minor
10:28a
11:16a
12:03p
12:25a
1:10a
1:54a
2:39a

Major
4:39p
5:27p
6:14p
7:00p
7:45p
8:32p
9:20p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

Very High

Minor
10:50p
11:38p
---12:48p
1:33p
2:19p
3:07p

WEATHER HISTORY
On July 3, 1966, northwest winds
pushed temperatures to a recordbreaking 102 degrees in Hartford,
Conn., and 107 in New York City and
Harrisburg, Pa.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
12.87
16.36
22.12
12.70
12.74
25.25
12.71
25.87
34.19
12.90
17.60
34.20
18.00

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.39
-0.70
+0.65
+0.37
+0.07
+0.84
+0.82
-1.76
-1.03
-0.16
-4.20
-0.70
-4.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

Heavy thunderstorms

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

Logan
90/73

Adelphi
90/73
Chillicothe
91/73

Portsmouth
93/74

MONDAY

88°
69°

Partly sunny

87°
71°

Humid with sunshine
and some clouds

Marietta
93/73

Murray City
90/73
Belpre
93/73

Athens
91/72

St. Marys
94/73

Parkersburg
93/71

Coolville
92/73

Elizabeth
95/73

Spencer
94/72

Buffalo
95/73

Ironton
95/73

Milton
95/73

Clendenin
95/72

St. Albans
96/73

Huntington
94/72

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
74/55
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
75/58
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
78/62
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SUNDAY

85°
61°

Wilkesville
92/72
POMEROY
Jackson
94/72
92/73
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
95/74
94/73
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
89/74
GALLIPOLIS
95/72
96/73
94/74

Ashland
94/73
Grayson
94/73

and big ﬂoats at the
school. The National
Anthem will be played
after the parade at the
Fireman’s Park by the
Meigs High School
Marching Band, with
a ﬂag raising to be
held. Bingo begins at
noon and will go all
the way to 11 p.m..
Games range from $.25
to $1. Concessions will
open at 8 a.m. and will
remain open throughout the day. Additional
games, activities and
a dunking booth will
take place in the park.
At 1 p.m. the Riveside
Cloggers will be on the
stage. Next Level will
perform at 4 p.m. with
Double Shot performing at 8 p.m. Fireworks
will launch at 11 p.m.
on Saturday night.

Partly sunny and
humid

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
90/73

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

THURSDAY

Some sun, a stray
t-storm in the p.m.

South Shore Greenup
94/73
92/73

49

Reach Swartzwalder at
lswartzwalder@aimmediamidwest.
com

Mostly sunny, hot and
humid

Lucasville
92/74

High

Best ﬂoat, 475, plus
$10 ParMar Gift Card;
Most unique entry,
$75, plus a $10 ParMar Gift Card; Best
horse and rider entry,
$100, plus $10 ParMar
Gift Card. Food will be
served at the Wilton
Community Center following the parade.
RUTLAND — Rutland Fire Department’s
4th of July event will
be held on Saturday,
July 7. The parade
through town will
begin at 11 a.m. with
line-up at 10 a.m.
Line-up will be on
Brick Street and Depot
Street, with ﬁre trucks

85°
64°

Very High

Primary: grasses, other
Mold: 2775

From page 1

93°
72°

Waverly
91/73

Pollen: 5

Low

MOON PHASES
Last

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

Events

96°
73°

0

Primary: cladosporium

Wed.
6:08 a.m.
8:57 p.m.
12:26 a.m.
11:59 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

Playwright Tom Stoppard is 81. Writer-producer
Jay Tarses is 79. Actor Michael Cole (TV: “The
Mod Squad”) is 78. Attorney Gloria Allred is 77.
Folk singer Judith Durham (The Seekers) is 75.
Actor Kurtwood Smith is 75. Country singer Johnny Lee is 72. Humorist Dave Barry is 71. Actress
Betty Buckley is 71.

to run about, jump, get
in your face. She has the
capacity to make things
difﬁcult.
There have been
moments I have thought
I would like to make her
go away.
A softie, I never have.
I look at her now, and
know she has a purpose.
And I am just now ﬁguring it out.
She is a beauty, a tortoiseshell. I have told her
she is a face cat.
This used to mean a
being had only looks.
And not much else.
But that idea, not true.
One day she didn’t
appear for a while, and
I found myself worrying
about her. This, after
sometimes wishing she
would disappear.
She ran from her hiding place. Made peace
with me.
The right to be living,
and to give love, comes
hard.

EXTENDED FORECAST

Humid today and tonight with a stray
thunderstorm. High 95° / Low 72°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

to learn to walk again, to
learn to drive.
I did all those things.
I moved back home,
navigating in a wheel
chair.
Once, I went to the
downstairs bathroom
in the wheelchair. Then
I discovered I couldn’t
get out of the bathroom
without collapsing the
wheelchair.
I laughed.
When the huge scab
came off my right leg, I
laughed.
When I observe people
being stalwart, I give my
humble bow to people
who have the strength to
face what is happening to
them.
I thank whatever
supreme power there is,
who decided to let me
remain here.
I look at my collection of pets, and even
now, after some rough
moments, view one troublesome beautiful cat.
Her name is Carousel.
She is the one I call a
ﬂibbertigibbet.
She has a certain bent

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

Charleston
95/73

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

Montreal
90/71

Winnipeg
78/65

Billings
72/51

Minneapolis
88/73

Denver
97/61

Detroit
88/73

Toronto
88/66

New York
92/76

Chicago
88/73

Washington
94/76

Kansas City
93/75

Monterrey
96/68

Wed.
Hi/Lo/W
94/71/s
72/58/pc
88/72/t
83/73/pc
92/74/pc
77/57/s
96/64/s
87/75/t
94/72/s
93/69/t
80/54/t
90/74/t
94/76/s
90/73/t
94/74/t
96/77/t
91/59/pc
93/75/s
91/74/t
88/75/sh
85/72/r
93/76/s
92/74/s
104/80/s
93/72/pc
80/62/pc
96/79/t
89/75/pc
90/73/t
96/75/t
88/76/t
88/74/pc
92/68/s
86/70/t
91/76/pc
108/85/s
89/71/t
88/67/s
90/72/t
90/73/t
93/75/pc
96/69/s
70/57/pc
80/59/pc
90/77/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
High
Low

107° in Thermal, CA
30° in Crested Butte, CO

Global

Houston
95/75

Chihuahua
89/67

Today
Hi/Lo/W
93/68/pc
73/57/s
91/73/pc
85/72/pc
96/74/pc
72/51/pc
77/52/pc
91/75/t
95/73/pc
96/72/pc
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�Sports
6 Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Daily Sentinel

LA-Bron: James agrees to 4-year contract with Lakers
CLEVELAND (AP) —
LeBron James is leaving
home for Hollywood and
an iconic team.
The Los Angeles Lakers have a new superstar
— L.A.-Bron.
The four-time NBA
MVP announced Sunday
night that he has agreed
to a four-year, $154 million contract with the
Lakers, joining one of
the league’s most storied
franchises and switching
conferences to try and
dethrone the Golden
State Warriors and grow
his own legacy.
For the second time
in his career, James is
saying goodbye to the
Cleveland Cavaliers,
who drafted the teenage
sensation from Akron in
2003 and have to be satisﬁed with winning just
one title in the 11 years
they had him.
Unlike his two previCarlos Osorio | AP ous forays in free agency,
Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James (23) is defended by Golden State Warriors’ Klay Thompson and James did not drag out
Stephen Curry (30) during the first half of Game 4 of the NBA Finals on June 8 in Cleveland.
his decision and made

the announcement less
than 24 hours after NBA
free agency opened.
This Summer of LeBron was barely a ﬂing.
His management
agency, Klutch Sports
Group, announced his
agreement with the
Lakers with a simple,
short release. It was a
stark contrast from eight
years ago, when a poorly
conceived TV special to
announce his departure
from Cleveland backﬁred
and damaged James’
image.
James isn’t planning
any more comments and
there won’t be a welcoming press conference or
celebration in Los Angeles, a person familiar
with his plans said Sunday night on the condition of anonymity. James
will make his next public
comments on July 30 in
Akron when he opens a
public school started by
his family foundation.
It was all different this

time.
The game’s biggest
star will now lead a
young Lakers team —
run by Lakers Hall of
Famer Magic Johnson
— that has been overmatched in recent years
while rebuilding. But
the Lakers will instantly
rise with James, a threetime champion who after
being swept by the Warriors in this year’s NBA
Finals said he is still
driven and very much in
“championship mode.”
James wasn’t planning
to have any face-to-face
meetings, but Saturday
night he met with Johnson, who sold him on his
vision for the Lakers, the
person told AP. Earlier
in the week, Johnson
seemed resigned to the
possibility he might
not get James or Paul
George, who ended up
re-signing with the Oklahoma City Thunder.
See JAMES | 7

Owen Moore completes career at Chicago
Neymar leads
Brazil into World
Cup quarterfinals
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SAMARA, Russia (AP) — Neymar ﬂaunted his
ﬂair and his theatrics with a goal and an assist
Monday at the World Cup.
The world’s most expensive player led Brazil
over Mexico 2-0 Monday and into the quarterﬁnals of the tournament for the seventh straight
time.
Neymar broke through Mexico’s stern resistance by setting up the opener when his back-heel
released Willian. Neymar then ran into the penalty
area and slid to tap Willian’s cross into the net.
While his scoring is so often the focus, Neymar
also creates goals for his teammates. A toe-poked
attempt to beat Mexico goalkeeper Guillermo
Ochoa in the 88th minute was diverted into the
path of Robert Firmino, who scored the second.
Neymar has 11 goals and nine assists in his last 19
games for Brazil.
But before setting up the second goal it looked
like Neymar’s game — or even his World Cup —
could be over with 20 minutes to go. It turned
out to be pure histrionics. Writhing in agony after
his right ankle was stepped on by Miguel Layun,
Neymar managed to get back on his feet. But not
before trying to step on Layun. Both escaped punishment.
The ﬁve-time World Cup champions will next
face either Japan or Belgium in the quarterﬁnals,
the stage they have reached at every World Cup
since 1994.
Mexico has now lost at this stage at every tournament over the same period of time, extending
its wait for the “quinto partido” — or ﬁfth game
— for at least another four years. The last time
Mexico reached the quarterﬁnals was when the
country hosted the tournament in 1986.
This year’s World Cup had started so promisingly for Mexico. The team opened with a win
over Germany, setting the defending champions
on the path to an early exit. They caused problems
for Brazil, too, initially.
But they couldn’t ﬁnd a way to stop Neymar,
who has scored two goals in four matches in Russia.
“The key was to play together without the ball
because with the ball we know the quality of the
team,” Willian said. “We know we have players
that can decide the game.”
Neymar’s dispute with Layun unfolded as the
Mexico substitute tried to recover the ball. In a
delayed reaction, Neymar made the most of Layun
stepping on his ankle, rolling around with his hand
covering his eyes.
The rapid recovery seemed miraculous for a
player who missed the last three months of the
season with a broken right foot.
“We wasted a lot of time because of one single
player,” Mexico coach Juan Carlos Osorio said,
without naming Neymar. “I think this is a real
shame for football, especially for kids who are
watching because this this has to be a sport of
virility, of determination, a man’s sport, like other
games, and not a charade.”
During the win over Costa Rica in the group
stage, Neymar tried to win a penalty by ﬂopping
to the ground in the area. A video review reversed
See BRAZIL | 7

CHICAGO, Ill. — Surviving the Windy City is
one thing, thriving there
is a whole different ball
game.
Owen Moore — a
2014 Gallia Academy
High School graduate
— recently graduated
from the University of
Chicago with a degree
in Public Policy Studies, after playing four
years of football for the
Maroons.
“It was deﬁnitely not
easy, but I had a great
time,” Moore said “I
made a lot of great
friends over the years.
I’m really glad I did it,
and I would do it again,
even though it was difﬁcult. It was a great experience that most people
don’t get to have, so I’m
very thankful for it.”
Chicago — one of the
top academic universities in the nation — is
an NCAA Division III
school, that competes in
the University Athletic
Association.
While with the
Maroons, Moore was
coached by Chris Wilkerson, who has a 30-19
record in ﬁve seasons
with the program.
“Owen was simply
one of the most outgoing and gregarious
individuals I have ever
had the opportunity to
coach,” said Wilkerson.
“He had some ups and
downs throughout his
playing career, but the
one thing that stayed
consistent was his
smile, sense of humor
and commitment to the
team. He truly deﬁned
being a student-athlete
and a team player. I
know Owen will be successful at whatever he
does, and he will deeply
missed.”
On the gridiron,
Moore was a four-year
varsity letter winner,
competing in 37 games
on the offensive line.
Moore helped to pave
the way for the school’s
second all-time leading
rusher, Chandler Carroll, while also blocking for the program’s
second all-time leading

Courtesy Photo

Owen Moore (70) prepares to pass block during the Maroon’s 35-16 victory over Millsaps on Sept. 17,
2016, in Chicago, Ill.

passer, Burke Moser.
Owen’s college career
started out with a bang,
as he played in all-9
games in his freshman
season, helping UC
to an 8-1 record and a
UAA Championship.
“That was a really
special team, we had
a really great group
of seniors that year,”
Moore said of the championship squad. “We
went 8-1 that year and
ended up beating Case
Western — which is
one of our rivals — in
the ﬁnal game at their
place in the snow, in
order to clinch the title
outright.”
The Maroons went
6-4 in 2015, with Moore
playing all-10 games
on the offensive line.
Moore missed a game
in each his junior and
senior seasons, helping
Chicago win four games
in 2016 and six games
in 2017.
In Moore’s four seasons, Chicago had a
combined league record
of 18-9, winning at least
50 percent of its league
games each fall.
Moore was a mem-

ber of the University
Athletic Association
All-Academic team
three years. As a senior
he was selected to
the National Football
Foundation Hampshire
Honor Society.
Moore noted that the
road trips, such as a
visiting historical landmarks in San Antonio,
Texas, prior to a game
at Trinity College, as
some of the best memories to go along with his
football career.
Moore completed his
degree a quarter early,
graduating from the
university with honors
in March.
“It was the best
school I could have
asked for, I would never
want to go anywhere
else,” Moore said. “I
had a great time there,
amazing experiences,
world-class professors
and classmates. I was
able to have so many
opportunities there, that
I never would have had
if I had gone somewhere
else.”
Currently, Moore is
interning at a lowermiddle market invest-

ment bank in Chicago,
and is hoping to stay on
as analyst.
Moore may have
found a new place to
call home, but has not
forgotten the people
who have helped him
along the way.
“I just want to thank
my family for being
so supportive and
really paving the way
for me to accomplish
everything that I have,”
Moore said. “I also want
to thank everybody back
home in the Gallipolis
and Gallia County greater community that has
always supported me.
“I have a lot of friends
that have grown up in
different places and they
deﬁnitely didn’t have
any sort of community
like ours. I’ve always
had people helping me
grow and develop both
as a football player and
as a student, and I’m
really thankful for that,
because it would not
have been as easy as it
was without those kind
of people.”
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 3, 2018 7

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

MLB

Lakers waive Thomas Bryant

total of roughly $36.1 million, along with a $5.5 million qualifying offer out to Julius Randle.

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) — The Los Angeles
Lakers have waived center Thomas Bryant.
The Lakers made the roster move Saturday as the
start of free agency neared.
Bryant was a second-round pick in last year’s
draft. The Indiana University product excelled for
the Lakers’ G League afﬁliate but averaged 1.5
points and 1.1 rebounds in 15 appearances for Los
Angeles.
Bryant’s $1.38 million contract for next season
would have become fully guaranteed next week.
The Lakers have spent the past year clearing salary cap room for their pursuit of elite free agents
including LeBron James. Los Angeles currently has
just six players under contract for next season for a

Hornets sign Bridges

James

as “a championship that
united generations of
Clevelanders, both living and passed.”
“LeBron, you came
home and delivered the
ultimate goal,” Gilbert
said in a statement .
“Nothing but appreciation and gratitude for
everything you put
into every moment you
spent in a Cavaliers uniform. We look forward
to the retirement of the
famous (hash)23 Cavs
jersey one day down the
line…”
On Friday, James
informed the Cavs that
he was not exercising his $35.6 million
option and becoming
a free agent. While in
Los Angeles following
a family vacation, he
spoke to Cavs general
manager Koby Altman
moments after free
agency opened on Sunday, and it appears that
was more a courtesy
than a chance for Cleveland to make one last
pitch.
Cleveland’s roster
was exposed during
this year’s ﬁnals, and
James may not have
seen a way for it to
improve enough to win
a fourth title.
James gave Cleveland
something to remember
in his ﬁnal season. He
played in all 82 regularseason games and then
somehow carried a
team that underwent
several transformations
to a fourth straight

From page 6

But Johnson was
conﬁdent he could pull
something off.
“I’m Magic Johnson,”
he said.
The Lakers’ rich legacy is something that
has always appealed
to James and it wasn’t
long after his announcement that he heard
from Kobe Bryant, who
won ﬁve titles during
20 seasons with Los
Angeles.
“Welcome to the family (at)KingJames,”
Bryant said on Twitter
. “(hash)lakers4life
(hash)striveforgreatness.”
James and Bryant
were Olympic teammates and there has
been a perceived rivalry
between the pair of
alpha males. They’re
now linked like never
before and if James
wants to prepare for
his eventual life after
basketball, who better to learn from than
Johnson, who has made
a fortune as a business
entrepreneur, or Bryant, an Academy Award
winner.
The massive Los
Angeles market will
also provide James
with a grander platform
for his philanthropy
and social activism.
He already owns two
homes in Southern Cal-

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — The Hornets have
signed ﬁrst-round draft pick Miles Bridges from
Michigan State and hired ﬁve assistant coaches.
Terms of Bridges’ deal were not made available
Monday.
Bridges, a forward, was a unanimous 2017-18
All-Big Ten ﬁrst-team selection and second-team AllAmerican selection at Michigan State where he led
the Spartans in scoring at 17 points per game last
season.
The Hornets also signed J.P. Macura, an undrafted guard from Xavier, to a two-way contract.

ifornia and has a ﬁlm
production company.
This is the third time
in eight years James has
changed teams. After
bolting from Cleveland
in 2010, he returned in
an emotional homecoming four years later,
determined to make the
Cavs champions. The
33-year-old had previously said he wanted
to ﬁnish his career in
Ohio, and although
he’s leaving again, Cavs
fans are more forgiving after he ended the
city’s 52-year sport title
drought in 2016.
Shortly after the
announcement, which
came in a surprising
manner, James posted
a three-photo tribute to
Cleveland fans on his
Instagram account.
“Thank you Northeast Ohio for an incredible four seasons,”
James wrote. “This will
always be home.”
But there will always
be a portion of Cleveland fans disappointed
that James left again
and that he wouldn’t
give the Cavs a longer
commitment. His deal
with the Lakers is his
longest since he signed
for six years with
Miami in 2010.
And unlike eight
years ago when he
ripped James for leaving, Cavs owner Dan
Gilbert thanked him.
Gilbert opened his comments by referring to
Cleveland’s 2016 title

conference title and
matchup against the
Warriors.
As has been the case
in the past, James
didn’t have enough
help as the Cavs were
swept, dropping him to
3-6 in the NBA Finals
— a record sometimes
used to compare him to
Michael Jordan.
His stay with the
Cavaliers will best be
remembered for 2016,
when he rallied the
Cavs from a 3-1 deﬁcit
in the ﬁnals to stun the
Warriors. James helped
seal a Game 7 win with
a chase-down block of
Andre Iguodala, the
signature moment of a
career that has shown
no signs of decay.
With the Lakers,
James will be playing in
the Western Conference
for the ﬁrst time and
just down the Paciﬁc
Coast Highway from
the Warriors, the team
that has stymied him
three times in the past
four ﬁnals.
The chance to play
for one of America’s
most storied franchises
is a new challenge for
James, who prides
himself on knowing the
game’s history. In Los
Angeles, championships
are the standard and
he’ll feel new pressure
in upholding the legacies of Johnson, Bryant,
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
Jerry West and other
Lakers greats.
It’s now his turn.

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Inglourious Basterds (2009, War) Christoph Waltz, Eli Roth, Brad The Affair Noah tries to
500 (SHOW) named Major faces a new enemy, a terrorist Pitt. An elite group of soldiers crosses paths with a woman whose family teach his students a lesson.
that can hack people's minds. TV14
was killed by Nazis. TVMA
(5:00) Table

W
54
56
42
39
24

Cleveland
Detroit
Minnesota
Chicago
Kansas City

W
45
38
35
29
25

Houston
Seattle
Oakland
Los Angeles
Texas

W
55
54
46
43
38

Atlanta
Philadelphia
Washington
New York
Miami

W
48
45
42
33
34

Milwaukee
Chicago
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati

W
48
47
42
40
36

Arizona
Los Angeles
San Francisco
Colorado
San Diego

W
47
44
45
41
37

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Baltimore 8, L.A. Angels 2
Detroit 9, Toronto 1
Tampa Bay 3, Houston 2
Chicago Cubs 11, Minnesota 10
Chicago White Sox 10, Texas 5
Cleveland 15, Oakland 3
Seattle 1, Kansas City 0
N.Y. Yankees 11, Boston 1
Monday’s Games
Detroit 3, Toronto 2, 10 innings
Atlanta at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Boston at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Kansas City, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Detroit (Fulmer 3-7) at Chicago Cubs
(Hendricks 5-8), 2:20 p.m.
Minnesota (Odorizzi 3-5) at Milwaukee
(Guerra 4-5), 4:10 p.m.
Boston (Johnson 1-2) at Washington
(Roark 3-9), 6:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Newcomb 8-2) at N.Y. Yankees
(German 2-4), 7:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Cobb 2-9) at Philadelphia (Eflin
6-2), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Wheeler 2-6) at Toronto (Estrada 4-7), 7:07 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Giolito 5-7) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani 3-1), 7:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay (TBD) at Miami (Hernandez
0-5), 7:10 p.m.
Houston (Keuchel 4-8) at Texas (BibensDirkx 1-1), 8:05 p.m.
Cleveland (Bieber 3-0) at Kansas City
(Duffy 4-7), 8:15 p.m.
San Diego (Richard 7-7) at Oakland (Bassitt 1-3), 9:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Heaney 4-5) at Seattle (LeBlanc 3-0), 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Boston at Washington, 11:05 a.m.
Atlanta at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Miami, 1:10 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
Baltimore at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m.
San Diego at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels at Seattle, 4:10 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 4:10 p.m.
Houston at Texas, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Kansas City, 8:15 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Saturday’s Games
Chicago Cubs 14, Minnesota 9
Miami 5, N.Y. Mets 2
Cincinnati 12, Milwaukee 3
Philadelphia 3, Washington 2
Colorado 3, L.A. Dodgers 1
Atlanta 11, St. Louis 4
San Diego 4, Pittsburgh 3
San Francisco 7, Arizona 0

L10
5-5
7-3
8-2
5-5
3-7

Str Home
W-1 31-12
L-1 28-12
W-3 23-17
L-2 22-22
W-1 12-29

Away
23-15
28-17
19-24
17-23
12-30

L10
6-4
2-8
2-8
5-5
3-7

Str Home
W-1 27-13
W-2 23-21
L-3 20-20
W-1 16-27
L-3 11-29

Away
18-24
15-27
15-25
13-27
14-29

L10
5-5
8-2
7-3
3-7
7-3

Str Home
L-3 25-17
W-7 28-14
L-1 22-21
L-1 20-21
L-1 19-26

Away
30-14
26-17
24-18
23-21
19-21

L10
5-5
6-4
3-7
2-8
5-5

Str Home
W-3 23-17
W-2 28-16
L-2 19-20
W-1 14-26
L-1 17-25

Away
25-17
17-21
23-20
19-22
17-26

L10
5-5
5-5
4-6
4-6
7-3

Str Home
L-2 24-17
W-4 24-14
L-4 23-22
W-1 21-21
W-2 19-25

Away
24-18
23-21
19-18
19-22
17-23

L10
6-4
6-4
8-2
5-5
3-7

Str Home
L-3 23-19
W-1 23-23
W-3 26-14
L-1 15-22
L-1 19-25

Away
24-18
21-16
19-26
26-21
18-24

Sunday’s Games
Cincinnati 8, Milwaukee 2
N.Y. Mets 5, Miami 2
Philadelphia 4, Washington 3, 13 innings
Atlanta 6, St. Louis 5
Chicago Cubs 11, Minnesota 10
L.A. Dodgers 6, Colorado 4
Pittsburgh 7, San Diego 5
San Francisco 9, Arizona 6
Monday’s Games
Atlanta (Sanchez 3-2) at N.Y. Yankees
(German 2-4), 7:05 p.m.
Boston (Porcello 9-3) at Washington
(Scherzer 10-4), 7:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Shields 3-9) at Cincinnati (Castillo 5-8), 7:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Eovaldi 2-3) at Miami (Chen
2-5), 7:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Gibson 2-6) at Milwaukee
(Suter 8-5), 8:10 p.m.
San Francisco (Bumgarner 1-2) at Colorado (Freeland 7-6), 8:40 p.m.
St. Louis (Martinez 4-4) at Arizona (Ray
3-0), 9:40 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Kingham 2-3) at L.A. Dodgers
(Wood 4-5), 10:10 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Detroit at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 4:10 p.m.
Boston at Washington, 6:05 p.m.
Atlanta at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Cincinnati, 7:10
p.m.
Tampa Bay at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
San Francisco at Colorado, 8:10 p.m.
San Diego at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.
MLB Calendar
2018
July 2 — International amateur
signing period opens.
July 6 — Last day to sign for amateur
draft picks subject to deadline.
July 17 — All-Star Game, Washington.
July 29 — Hall of Fame inductions,
Cooperstown, N.Y.
July 31 — Last day to trade a player
without securing waivers.
Aug. 31 — Last day to be contracted
to an organization and be eligible for
postseason roster.
Oct. 2-3 — Wild-card games.
November TBA — Deadline for teams
to make qualifying offers to their eligible
former players who became free agents,
fifth day after World Series.
November TBA — Deadline for free
agents to accept qualifying offers, 15th
day after World Series.
Nov. 6-8 — General managers’
meetings, Carlsbad, Calif.
Nov. 8-15 — All-Star tour of Japan.
Nov. 30 — Last day for teams to offer
2019 contracts to unsigned players on
their 40-man rosters.

10:30

America's Got Talent "Auditions 1" Acts of all types and World of Dance "The
ages audition to win $1 million.
Qualifiers 1"
America's Got Talent "Auditions 1" Acts of all types and World of Dance "The
ages audition to win $1 million.
Qualifiers 1"
The Middle The Middle Black-ish
Black-ish
The Last Defense "Darlie
Routier: The Fight" (N)
"The Setup"
Civilizations "What Is Art
American Experience "The Great War" Discover how
(Good For)?" (N)
WWI transformed America through personal stories.
The Middle

New York
Boston
Tampa Bay
Toronto
Baltimore

All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
27 .667
—
—
29 .659
—
—
41 .506 13
11
45 .464 16½
14½
59 .289 31
29
Central Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
37 .549
—
—
48 .442
9
16½
45 .438
9
16½
54 .349 16½
24
58 .301 20½
28
West Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
31 .640
—
—
31 .635
½
—
39
.541 8½
8
42 .506 11½
11
47 .447 16½
16
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
34 .585
—
—
37 .549
3
—
40
.512
6
3
48 .407 14½
11½
51 .400 15½
12½
Central Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
35 .578
—
—
35 .573
½
—
40
.512 5½
3
43 .482
8
5½
48 .429 12½
10
West Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
37 .560
—
—
39 .530 2½
1½
40 .529 2½
1½
43 .488
6
5
49 .430
11
10

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Hustlin’ Tornadoes
basketball camp
RACINE, Ohio — The Southern High School
basketball program will be hosting the 12th annual
Hustlin’ Tornadoes Basketball Camp from 9 a.m. until
noon on Monday, July 9, through Thursday, July 12, at
the high school gymnasium.
The camp will be under the direction of SHS varsity
boys coach Jeff Caldwell and members of the coaching
staff, as well as returning varsity basketball players.
The camp is open to all boys and girls entering
grades 1-6. The cost of the camp is $40 per individual
or $60 for a pair from the same family.
All campers will be taught fundamentals of basketball and will have a chance to participate in daily competitions of free throws, 3-on-3 and ‘H-O-R-S-E’.
Each camper receives a t-shirt and prizes will be
given in different age groups to competition winners.
For more information, contact Coach Caldwell at
740-444-1205.

Brazil
From page 6

the decision to award a
penalty kick and Neymar’s frustrations a few
minutes later led to a yellow card.
Brazil coach Tite also
played a big role in the
victory over Mexico,
deciding to replace
Philippe Coutinho with
Firmino. Fresh among
tiring legs, Firmino was
able to evade the defense
to get in the right place to
score the second goal.
Neymar, though, still
led the celebrations,
charging toward the corner ﬂag. Tite came to join
him.

With Germany, Argentina and Spain among the
contenders already eliminated, Brazil’s hopes of a
sixth World Cup title have
received an extra lift.
Quotable
“Being able to play
at such a level against a
team like Brazil really
shows that Mexico is a
good team,” Osorio said.
“We were maybe not very
efﬁcient and we didn’t
have that extra quality
that they had coming to
our goal.”
Next for Brazil
After a return to its
training base in Sochi,
Brazil heads back north
to Kazan for Friday’s
quarterﬁnal match.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Daily Sentinel

XXX�NZEBJMZUSJCVOF�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, July 3, 2018 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
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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
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"Y $AVE 'REEN

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

GAHS Athletic Hall of Fame
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The GAHS Hall of Fame
committee is currently accepting applications for
the class of 2018. Applications can be found on the
Gallipolis City Schools’ website and the ﬁling deadline is July 25, 2018.
This year’s inductees will be honored at Memorial Field on Friday, October 12th and with a banquet at GAHS on October 13th. They will join the
16 prior classes and 124 current members.
Please call Tom Meadows, President, at 740-6454880 with any questions.

served at the conclusion of play each week. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with play starting at
9 a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone at 740-256-6160,
Jan Haddox at 304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing 304675-6135 if you can contribute or have questions
concerning the tour.

Juniors Golf Tournament

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Cliffside Golf Course will
be hosting the 10th annual Kiwanis Juniors at Cliffside Golf Tournament for junior golfers on Thursday, July 12, starting at 10 a.m. Registration will be
from 9 a.m. until 9:45.
This is an individual stroke play tournament
open to golfers age 10-or-under to 18 years old.
The participants will be divided into four divisions,
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The schedule for the 2018 10-under, 11-12, 13-15, and 16-18.
Entry fee is $20 for players 12-and-under, and
Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf League has
$30 for players 13-18. Clubhouse certiﬁcates and
been released.
The tour ofﬁcially began on Wednesday, June 20, individual awards will be presented to the top-three
places in each division.
at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis. Age groups
Cart and meal passes will be available for spectafor both young ladies and young men are 10 and
tors for $15 to follow kids 13-and-older and $10 to
under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
follow kids 12-and-under, so that they may follow
The remaining tournaments, courses and dates
of play are as follows: Monday, July 2, at Riverside the tournament and eat with the kids.
To enter please contact the Cliffside clubhouse
Golf Course in Mason; Tuesday, July 10, at Meigs
County Golf Course in Pomeroy; and Monday, July at 740-446-4653, or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919 or
740-645-4381, or by email at rbncaudill@yahoo.
16, at Riverside Golf Course in Mason.
com. Please leave player’s name, age as of July 12,
The fee for each tournament is $10 per player.
2017 and the school they are currently attending.
A small lunch is included with the fee and will be

Junior Golf Schedule

RIO GRANDE SUMMER CAMPS
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.
Women’s Basketball
The University of Rio Grande’s Registration forms are available
in the lobby of the Lyne Center
2018 Women’s Basketball Camp
during regular business hours.
is scheduled for July 8-11 at the
Registration forms should be
Lyne Center on the URG campus.
mailed to David Smalley, Rio
The overnight instructional
Grande Women’s Basketball
camp is open to girls in grades
Camp, P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande,
4-12. Cost is $295 per camper,
OH 45674. Checks should be
which includes lodging, meals, a
made payable to Women’s Basketcertiﬁcate of participation and a
ball Camp.
t-shirt.
For more information, contact
Campers will also receive
24-hour supervision from coaches Smalley at 740-245-7491, 1-800282-7201, or e-mail dsmalley@
and counselors; lecture/discusrio.edu.
sion groups and ﬁlm sessions;
daily instruction on shooting,
ball-handling, post play and
Men’s and Women’s soccer
defense; and use of the school’s
The University of Rio Grande
swimming pool.
soccer programs have announced
There will also be a camp store their 2018 summer camp schedule.
featuring drinks, snacks, pizza
A team camp for girls’ high
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande Athletic
Department has announced its
2018 Summer Camps and Clinics
schedule. Camps will be conducted
throughout the months of June and
July on the URG campus.
The remaining schedules, broken
down by individual sports, are as
follows:

school squads is planned for July
8-11, with a boys’ high school
team camp slated for July 15-19.
Cost for the girls’ camp is $270,
while the boys’ camp has a fee of
$305.
Fees for the residential camps
include lodging, meals, training
sessions and tournament play.
Camp directors are URG men’s
soccer head coach Scott Morrissey
and women’s soccer head coach
Tony Daniels.
The camp brochure is available on both the men’s soccer
and women’s soccer links of the
school’s athletic website, www.
rioredstorm.com. Online registration and payment is available at
www.rioredstormsoccercamps.
com.
Registration forms should be
mailed to URG Lyne Center, P.O.
Box 500, Rio Grande, OH 45674.
Checks should be made payable to
We Storm Soccer Camps.
For more information, contact
Morrissey at 740-245-7126, 740645-6438 or e-mail scottm@rio.
edu; or Daniels at 740-245-7493,
740-645-0377 or e-mail tdaniels@
rio.edu.

Independence Day Bash
Help Us Celebrate the Greatest Country in the World!
Independence Day 2 Week Celebration!
Friday June 29th - Sunday July 8th

Join Us July 7th for
The Vocal and Guitar
Talents of

Paul Doeffinger
from 6p-9p

50% Off All Kids Meals July 4 !
Sunday Brunch Buffet Every Sunday From 10a-3p
Ohio Proud Steaks-Chili Dogs-Bahama Mama Sausage-Great Mexican CuisineWeekend salad Bar- Beer and Cocktail Specials
OH-70060259

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In Our dining Room
With a Riverside View
of The Ohio River!
On-the-Road Refresh
Packages Available!

Follow us on Facebook for Details! www.thewildhorsecafe.com

I’M NOT A
DOCTOR.

JOLIET, Ill. (AP) — Kyle Busch and Kyle Larson raced all over the track during an electric
ﬁnal lap. As Busch began to celebrate his dramatic victory, Larson gave him a thumb’s up.
It was quite a ﬁnish, and they knew it.
Busch outdueled Larson down the stretch
Sunday in the NASCAR Cup Series race at Chicagoland Speedway, earning his ﬁfth victory of
the season.
“It was a good day, a great ﬁnish, an exciting
one for that, especially at a mile and a half,”
Busch said. “People don’t necessarily see those
very much anymore. Man, you just got to be
pumped for that. It’s cool.”
Busch moved into the lead on a restart with
58 laps to go, replacing Kevin Harvick at the
front of the ﬁeld. Busch, Harvick and Martin
Truex Jr. — NASCAR’s top three teams so far
this season — were up front with about 40 laps
left before a hard-charging Larson crashed the
party.
He powered by Harvick to get into second.
He appeared to be in trouble after brushing the
wall with seven laps left, but he kept going and
Busch was slowed by a couple lapped cars at the
back of the ﬁeld.
Busch and Larson then were neck-and-neck
on the ﬁnal lap. Larson bumped into the back of
Busch’s car and moved into the lead. Busch then
raced into the back of Larson’s car and sped
ahead for the victory.
“When I was going down the backstretch, I
was like, ‘Hell, no, you’re not taking this one
away right now,’” Busch said. “This was kind of
where I was at. I was just going to do anything
that it took for us to be able to get back to the
start/ﬁnish line ﬁrst.”

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Manziel watches
as Masoli stars

HAMILTON, Ontario (AP) — Johnny Manziel watched from the sideline again as Jeremiah
Masoli starred in the Hamilton Tiger-Cats’ 31-17
victory over the Winnipeg Blue Bombers on Friday night.
Masoli completed 31 of 41 passes for 369 yards
and a touchdown to help the Tiger-Cats improve
to 2-1. The former Ole Miss quarterback has
passed for more than 300 yards in eight consecutive games.
Manziel is making a comeback with the Canadian Football League team after being released by
the Cleveland Browns in March 2016. The 2012
Heisman Trophy winner at Texas A&amp;M was 21 of
32 for 168 yards and a touchdown in two exhibition games.

Bucks’ Antetokounmpo
cover athlete for NBA 2K19

Pomeroy’s Landmark Restaurant and Bar Presents...

th

Kyle Busch wins
NASCAR Cup Series
race in wild finish

Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo is the cover athlete for the NBA 2K19
standard edition video game. The two-time NBA
All-Star known as the “Greek Freek” is the ﬁrst
international player to be featured on the cover.
Antetokounmpo says he has “worked hard to earn
recognition in the NBA and being on the cover of
NBA 2K10 is a dream come true.” NBA 2K19 will
be available Sept. 11.
NEW YORK (AP) — Milwaukee Bucks forward
Giannis Antetokounmpo is the cover athlete for
the NBA 2K19 standard edition video game.
The two-time NBA All-Star known as the
“Greek Freek” is the ﬁrst international player to be
featured on the cover.
Antetokounmpo says he has “worked hard to
earn recognition in the NBA and being on the
cover of NBA 2K10 is a dream come true.”
NBA 2K19 will be available Sept. 11.
LeBron James was previously announced as the
cover star for the NBA 2K19 20th anniversary edition available on Sept. 7.

But I know what I want from one.
Sure, I want a great doctor. But I need more than that. Someone
whose schedule can accommodate my busy schedule. I want a
doctor who can relate to how I feel and who is a good listener...
because she has experience in treating those same health issues.
I want a doctor who knows the healthcare system and can get me
to the people I need when I need them. Top-level specialists...
first-rate technicians...and savvy insurance experts that can get
me through the paperwork. I guess what I really want is an experienced doctor with a great support team behind her. That’s
what I’ve been holding out for. Now I know where to find her.

NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS
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Patient of Tess Simon, MD

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