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                  <text>PVH
receives
donation

Racine
4th of
July

Capehart
Junior
Golf

BUSINESS s 3

NEWS s 4

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 107, Volume 72

Thursday, July 5, 2018 s 50¢

Throwback Thursday: Independence Day

MIDDLEPORT 4TH
OF JULY COVERAGE
Coverage of the Fourth of July festivities in the
village of Middleport will appear in the Friday,
July 6 edition of The Daily Sentinel and online at
mydailysentinel.com.

Holzer transitions
to new electronic
health record system
OHIO VALLEY — As of July 1, Holzer is now
utilizing athenaOne®, an electronic health record
system (EHR) that includes practice management
and patient engagement services.
Holzer’s new platform is innovative, intuitive,
and structured to respond more efﬁciently to
change than past systems. The healthcare landscape is ever evolving and, after much consideration, an upgraded EHR system was determined
the best option to continue advancing our services. This system will beneﬁt both patients and
staff.
“As technology in the medical industry continues to evolve, Holzer is proud to offer these
advancements for our communities,” shared
Michael Canady, MD, Chief Executive Ofﬁcer,
Holzer Health System. “Our organization will continue to provide excellent service, every time for
our friends, family members, and loved ones who
receive care at our facilities.”
The documentation process with athenaOne®
is user friendly, which is beneﬁcial for a patient’s
diagnosis, treatment plan, and prescription order.
“Holzer’s new EHR system removes unnecessary processes, allowing providers and clinical
team members more quality time with patients
and visitors,” stated Rodney Stout, MD, Chief
Medical Ofﬁcer, Holzer Health System. “We are
excited to move forward with this development
that will enhance our patients’ and visitors’ experience within our health system.”
Holzer employees interacting with the EHR
received comprehensive training to enhance operations and meet our patients’ needs. Our providers
and staff are prepared for the EHR transition and
ready to assist patients that visit any Holzer facility throughout this process.

Photo from the collection of Meigs Historical Society member Bob Graham

Court Street in Pomeroy was filled with people, flags, horse and buggies to mark an Independence Day celebration in the late 1800s or
early 1900s. While cars have now replaced the horse and buggy, people still gather in villages, such as Middleport, Racine and Rutland,
to celebrate Independence Day with parades and activities.

A star spangled celebration

See HOLZER | 2

STATEHOUSE NEWS

Legislation approved to
reduce flow of opioids
COLUMBUS — State Representative Jay
Edwards (R-Nelsonville) today announced that the
Ohio House Health Committee has passed legislation he sponsored that originally addresses prescriptions for opioids and alternative treatments.
Substitute House Bill 167 changed from the
original legislation as a result of new rules from
the Administration that were in line with portions
of the bill, mainly surrounding the number of
pills per prescription for acute pain. However, the
bill will now also address gaps in patient access
to medication-assisted treatment, better helping
those in care for addiction. Speciﬁcally, House
Bill 167 allows pharmacists to provide short-term
doses of certain treatments to patients if their prescriber is unavailable or in emergencies.
“This is one of many steps that I have taken to
See STATEHOUSE | 5

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
TV listings: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The Southern Marching Band performs the National Anthem for the flag raising at Home National Bank.

4th of July in Racine
RACINE — Despite
the heat on Wednesday
morning local residents
lined the streets of Racine
for the annual 4th of July
Parade in the village.
Fire trucks from several
departments, as well as
several tractors, bicycles,
ATVs and other vehicles
were part of the parade
which made its way from
Southern High School
though the village.
As is tradition, the
parade made a stop at
Home National Bank
where American Legion
Post 602 and the Southern Marching Band took
part in the ﬂag raising
and the playing of the
National Anthem.

As the parade resumed,
children in their red,
white, and blue collected
candy, popsicles and
other items thrown by
parade participants.
Following the parade,
many in the crowd made
their way to the Racine
Fire Station for the chicken BBQ and homemade
ice cream.
Later in the day was
the return of Frog Jumping at Star Mill Park, with
ﬁreworks planned to cap
off the evening.
Additional photos from the Racine
4th of July Parade appear on Page
4 of today’s edition. Coverage of
the Frog Jumping event will appear
in the Friday edition of The Daily
Sentinel.

American Legion Post 602 of Racine raises the American Flag
during the Independence Day Parade in Racine.

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Tucker Hupp drives his truck down Elm Street along the parade
route on Wednesday morning.

At left, the
float from the
First Baptist
Church
showed the
stripes of
the American
Flag and a
Bible with
the theme
“America,
America,
God shed
His grace on
thee.” The
float took first
place in the
RACO contest.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, July 5, 2018

DEATH NOTICE

TODAY IN HISTORY

MILLER
POINT PLEASANT — Frank E. Miller, 91,
of Point Pleasant, died Tuesday, July 3, 2018, at
home.
A funeral service will be 11 a.m., Saturday,
July 7, 2018, at the Church of Christ in Christian
Union in Gallipolis, Ohio, with Rev. Bud Allman
ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Suncrest Cemetery
in Point Pleasant. Military graveside rites will be
given by Wright Patterson Air Force Honor Guard.
Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m., Friday at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant.

By The Associated Press

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.

Thursday, July 5
CHESTER — The Chester Shade Historical
Association will have a MHF Planning meeting
at 6:30 p.m. in the Academy. The regular board
meeting will be held the following week on Thursday, July 12, 2018 at 6:30 p.m. All are welcome to
come.

Friday, July 6
MIDDLEPORT — Snack &amp; Canvas with
Michele Musser will be held at 6 p.m. at the Riverbend Art Council, 290 North 2nd Avenue, Middleport, Ohio. Your choice of a 16x20 canvas Beach
or Woods Scene with choices of palm or pine
trees, camper, birds, dolphin or chair. For more
information and to reserve a space call Michele at
740-416-0879 or Donna at 740-992-5123.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 5 p.m., Family
Movie Night: Sherlock Gnomes. Popcorn 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.

Sunday, July 8
RACINE — The Theiss reunion will be held at 1
p.m. at the Racine American Legion.

Monday, July 9
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township
trustees will hold their regular monthly meeting at
7 p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall.
RIO GRANDE — The Cadot-Blessing Camp
#126 of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil
War will have their meeting at 1 p.m. in the Bob
Evans Homestead House at Bob Evans Farms.
The SUVCW is the legal heir to the GAR (Grand
Army of the Republic) and is for the purposes of
Patriotic and Educational programs dedicated to
the memory of the Veterans of the American Civil
War. Any male that has ancestry who served during the war is invited to attend.
LETART TWP. — The regular meeting of the
Letart Township Trustees will be held at 5 p.m. at
the Letart Township Building.

Tuesday, July 10
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse Community Center Board of Directors will meet at 7 p.m.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 6 p.m., Acoustic Night at the Library. All are invited to listen
or play along with the group in this informal jam
session.
SUTTON TWP. — The regular monthly meeting of the Sutton Township Trustees will be held
at 7 p.m. in the Racine Village Hall Council Chambers.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Board of
Health meeting will take place at 5 p.m. in the
conference room of the Meigs County Health
Department, which is located at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
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bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
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mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@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.

In 1935, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Today is Thursday, July signed the National Labor
5, the 186th day of 2018. Relations Act.
In 1940, during World
There are 179 days left in
War II, Britain and the
the year.
Vichy government in
Today’s Highlight in History: France broke off diploOn July 5, 1947, Larry matic relations.
In 1946, the bikini, creDoby made his debut
ated by Louis Reard, was
with the Cleveland Indimodeled by Micheline
ans, becoming the ﬁrst
black player in the Ameri- Bernardini during a
can League three months poolside fashion show in
Paris.
after Jackie Robinson
In 1954, Elvis Presley’s
broke the color barrier
ﬁrst commercial recordin the National League.
ing session took place at
In the game against the
Sun Records in Memphis,
Chicago White Sox at
Tennessee; the song he
Comiskey Park, Doby,
recorded was “That’s All
pinch-hitting for Bryan
Right.”
Stephens, struck out in
In 1962, independence
his ﬁrst at-bat during the
took effect in Algeria;
seventh inning; Chicago
the same day, civilians of
won 6-5.
European descent, mostly
French, came under
On this date:
attack by extremists in
In 1687, Isaac Newthe port city of Oran.
ton ﬁrst published his
In 1977, Pakistan’s
Principia Mathematica,
army, led by General
a three-volume work setting out his mathematical Mohammad Zia ul-Haq,
seized power from Presiprinciples of natural phident Zulﬁkar Ali Bhutto.
losophy.
(Bhutto was executed in
In 1811, Venezuela
1979.)
became the ﬁrst South
In 1984, the Supreme
American country to
Court weakened the
declare independence
70-year-old “exclusionfrom Spain.
In 1865, the Secret Ser- ary rule,” deciding that
evidence seized in good
vice Division of the U.S.
Treasury Department was faith with defective court
warrants could be used
founded in Washington,
against defendants in
D.C. with the mission of
criminal trials.
suppressing counterfeit
In 1991, a worldwide
currency.

Daily Sentinel

to become saints in the
Roman Catholic church,
approving a miracle
needed to canonize Pope
“Without promotion
John Paul II and waiving
something terrible
Vatican rules to honor
happens: Nothing!”
Pope John XXIII. Enraged
— P.T. Barnum, American
Islamists pushed back
showman (born this
against the toppling of
date 1810, died 1891).
President Mohammed
Morsi, as tens of thouﬁnancial scandal erupted sands of his supporters
as regulators in eight
took to the streets vowing
countries shut down
to win his reinstatement
the Bank of Credit and
and clashed with their
Commerce International. opponents in violence
Actress Mildred Dunnock that killed some three
died in Oak Bluffs, Masdozen people.
sachusetts, at age 90.
In 2011, a jury in Orlan- One year ago:
do, Florida, found Casey
The 9th U.S. Circuit
Anthony, 25, not guilty
Court of Appeals ruled
of murder, manslaughter that two laws passed by
and child abuse in the
Congress did not end
2008 disappearance and
the right to a bond heardeath of her 2-year-old
ing for unaccompanied
daughter, Caylee.
immigrant children who
are detained by federal
authorities.
Ten years ago:
(Stations: Single name
Venus Williams won
“Joe” is correct)
her ﬁfth Wimbledon singles title, beating younger
sister Serena 7-5, 6-4
Today’s Birthdays:
in the ﬁnal. Gas station
Actress Katherine
owner Kent Couch ﬂew
Helmond is 89. Actress
a lawn chair rigged with
Shirley Knight is 82.
helium-ﬁlled balloons
Singer-musician Robbie
more than 200 miles
Robertson is 75. Julie
across the Oregon desert, Nixon Eisenhower is 70.
landing in a ﬁeld in Cam- Rock star Huey Lewis is
bridge, Idaho.
68. Baseball Hall of Fame
pitcher Rich “Goose”
Gossage is 67. Country
Five years ago:
musician Charles Ventre
Pope Francis cleared
two of the 20th Century’s is 66. Singer-songwriter
Marc Cohn is 59.
most inﬂuential popes

THOUGHT
FOR TODAY

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, worship, teach-

ing, 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.

Sunday, July 8
SYRACUSE — The
Mission Church, located
on Bridgeman Street in
Syracuse, will host speaker Dr. Michael Pangio of
Abundant Ministry Fellowship, Struthers, Ohio,
at 6 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.

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 administraMIDDLEPORT — Wendy Miller tion fee for state-funded childhood
vaccines. Please bring medical
will be offering art classes for
cards and/or commercial insurschool-age children at Riverbend
ance cards, if applicable. Shingles
Arts Council, 290 N. 2nd Ave.,
and pneumonia vaccines are also
Middleport, Ohio. Classes will be
available. Call for eligibility deteron Monday, July 9, 16, 23, and
mination and availability or visit
30 from 10:30 a.m. to noon. Each
our website at www.meigs-health.
class will be $10 with all matericom to see a list of accepted comals furnished. For more info call
mercial insurances and Medicaid
Wendy at 740-416-4015.
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
MIDDLEPORT — The River(ACIP) does NOT recommend
bend Arts Council will present
routine Hepatitis A vaccination for
Cooking in the Village, a cooking
Food Workers. Currently, ODH is
demonstration with Rick Werner
strongly recommending the followand Jessica Wolf featuring easy
summertime recipes. The presenta- ing groups to get the Hepatitis A
vaccine: men who have sex with
tion will be held from 1-3 p.m. on
Saturday, July 14 at the Riverbend men, persons who inject drugs
Arts Council, located at 290 North and person who use illegal noninjection drugs. These are the highSecond Avenue in Middleport.
est risk groups for transmission of
Hepatitis A. Call 740-992-6626 for
vaccine availability.

Children’s Art Class
at Riverbend

Cooking in the
Village July 14

Immunization
Clinic Tuesday

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

Holzer

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
RACINE — Meigs County Road be one way north through at least
the duration of the ramp closure
28, Bashan Road, will be closed
period.
between C-30, Morning Star

Road closures in
Meigs County

new portal members must create a
patient account at myholzer.com.
We encourage you to utilize our
secure patient portal for upcomFrom page 1
ing appointments and requests,
To better meet our community’s as well as to view your personal
patient information. To create your
health needs, our health system
offers MyHolzer.com, a patient por- account, visit www.myholzer.com
to begin the registration process.
tal available to schedule appointments, request prescription reﬁlls,
Holzer Health System is proud
send a note to your physician, and
to continue growth of our services
much more. With the new EHR sys- for our communities, and looks
tem implementation, current and
forward to a bright future. Our

health system provides unparalleled access to leading technology,
right here at home. With all our
employees, providers and highlevel services, the Holzer family’s
mission to achieve patient-centered
excellence will continue to thrive.
For more information on services
available within the Holzer system, visit www.holzer.org or call
1-855-4-HOLZER.
Submitted by Holzer Health System.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 5, 2018 3

Brown joins Holzer Meigs
POMEROY — Mary
Brown, FNP, Primary
Care, has joined the team
of providers at the Holzer
Meigs Clinic location.
Brown received her
education at Hocking
College, Nelsonville,
Ohio, her bachelors in
nursing from Ohio University in Athens, Ohio,
and her masters in nursing from Walden University. She is a member of
the American Association
of Nurse Practitioners.
Prior to joining Hol-

zer, Brown gained
experience in longterm care, rehabilitation, pediatrics,
intensive care,
primary care, and
case management.
Brown
In addition, she
was a volunteer
nurse for Good Samaritan Clinic for more than
ten years.
When asked about
joining Holzer, Brown
remarked, “I am so
excited to be serving my
friends and family mem-

bers. I look forward to working
with our communities to improve the
health and wellness of my area.”
Brown and her
husband, Jeff, live
in Racine, Ohio
and have one son, Shannon. She is a native of
the area, being born on
a family farm in Chester, Ohio. Her hobbies
include equestrian trail
riding and gardening.
Brown is a supporter of

Auto sales rise in 1st
half, but analysts
warn of turbulence

the Make A Wish Foundation and The St. Jude’s
Children’s Research
Hospital, American
Heart Association, and
the American Cancer
Society.
Brown is accepting
family practice patients
at the Holzer Meigs location in Pomeroy, Ohio.
For more information, or
to make an appointment,
call 1-855-4-HOLZER.

DETROIT (AP) —
Neither higher gas
prices nor rising interest rates could put a
damper on U.S. auto
sales during the ﬁrst
half of the year.
Sales rose 1.8 percent
during the ﬁrst half of
the year, while June
sales were up about 5
percent compared with
a year ago, according
to Edmunds.com.
Analysts said the
boost was fueled by
strong consumer conﬁdence and low unemployment.
But analysts at Cox
Automotive, which
includes Kelley Blue
Book, issued a cautionary note on the
numbers, saying that
much of the increase
was due to low-proﬁt
sales to ﬂeet buyers
such as rental car companies, and retail sales
to individual buyers
were propped up by rising incentives such as
rebates and subsidized

Submitted by Holzer Health
System.

PVH receives donation from Eastern Star

leases.
Sales are “defying
gravity” said Jonathan
Smoke, chief economist
for Cox. “Retail sales
have been ﬂat, and
even those sales have
been supported by
incentives being up 6
percent.”
Cox analysts also
said rising interest
rates and a possible
trade war due to tariff
threats from President
Donald Trump could
raise new-vehicle prices
and payments and
cut into auto sales in
the second half. Still,
given the fact that
automakers are willing
to spend to keep their
share of the market,
Cox analysts raised
their full-year forecast
by 100,000 vehicles to
16.8 million vehicles.
Trucks and SUVs
accounted for 68 percent of the market in
June, a record high as
car sales continued to
fade, Edmunds said.

Courtesy photo

Pleasant Valley Hospital.

PVH receives an ‘A’ for
patient safety in recent
hospital safety grade

Courtesy photo

Pleasant Valley Hospital (PVH) recently received a donation of teddy bears and stuffed animals from Linda and Phillip Russell, Worthy
Matron and Worthy Patron of the Athens Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star #175. Their donation of teddy bears and stuffed
animals will go to the Pleasant Valley Hospital Pediatric Unit. Linda and Phillip collected enough stuffed animals to share with several
area hospitals. “Being in the hospital can sometimes be scary for little ones. We wanted to give them something to help comfort them,”
stated Phillip Russell. Pictured from left to right: Anna Sines, RN, Linda Russell, and Phillip Russell.

MASON COUNTY
— Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, is
the only hospital in the
region to earn an “A”
rating from The Leapfrog Group in the newest release of Hospital
Safety Grades.
As an A-rated hospitals by this national
non-proﬁt health care
ratings organization,
Pleasant Valley Hospital is ranked among
the safest hospitals
in the United States.
Only 832 hospitals in
the U.S. received an
A-ranking.
“We are so proud of
these scores, as they
reﬂect the hard work
and dedication of our
staff. It is extremely
difﬁcult to earn the A
rating, so this recognition is very meaningful
to our team and us.
Pleasant Valley Hospital is a quality organization because that is
what the people in our
community deserve.
It is our responsibility and privilege to
help our community
live healthier and happier. This achievement
speaks to our hospital’s
culture of safety and
unwavering dedication
to providing the very
best patient care,” stated Glen Washington,
FACHE, CEO, of Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Leapfrog Group

S&amp;P 500 snaps 3-day winning streak
AP Business Writer

U.S. stocks closed
lower Tuesday as a swift
sell-off in the ﬁnal minutes of trading wiped out
earlier gains and snapped
a three-day winning
streak for the market.
Technology companies
and banks led the market
slide, outweighing gains
in health care and energy
stocks. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average and
S&amp;P 500 each fell 0.5
percent. The Nasdaq
composite fell nearly 1
percent, while smaller
companies bucked the
trend with modest gains.
The trading session
was shortened ahead of
the Independence Day
holiday. Once investors
return Thursday, they’ll
have no shortage of reasons to snap out of the
holiday lull by the end of
the week.
On Friday the U.S.
is set to impose a 25
percent tariff on $34 billion worth of Chinese
imports. And China is
expected to strike back
with tariffs on a similar
amount of U.S. exports.
The big question is how

far the two countries will
go in their dispute over
trade.
“The market might get
worked up about a titfor-tat retaliation, which
we’ll probably see,” said
Scott Wren, senior global
equity strategist for the
Wells Fargo Investment
Institute. “There’s a relatively low probability of
an all-out trade war.”
The Trump administration has said it won’t
target an additional $16
billion worth of Chinese
goods until it gathers further public comments. It’s
also identifying an additional $200 billion in Chinese goods for 10 percent
tariffs, which could take
effect if Beijing retaliates.
Uncertainty over U.S.
trade policy has hung
over the market since late
February. The S&amp;P 500
posted two consecutive
weekly declines heading
into this week.
Investors will also
have their eye Friday on
the Labor Department’s
latest monthly jobs and
wage report.
Analysts expect the
report will show that
hourly wages rose 2.8
percent last month. But if

it comes in above 3 percent, that could be a bad
day for the market, Wren
said.
“The market is paying
very close attention to
wage pressure, very close
attention to anything
that’s going to hurt corporate margins, anything
that’s going to make the
Fed want to quicken the
pace and magnitude of
interest rate hikes,” Wren
said.
On Tuesday, gainers
slightly outnumbered
decliners on the New
York Stock Exchange,
with small-company
stocks faring better than
the overall market. Trading volume was lighter
than usual going into
Wednesday’s U.S. market
holiday.
The S&amp;P 500 index
fell 13.49 points, or 0.5
percent, to 2,713.22.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 132.36
points, or 0.5 percent, to
24,174.82. The Nasdaq
lost 65.01 points, or 0.9
percent, to 7,502.67.
Smaller-company stocks
bucked the broader market decline. The Russell
2000 index picked up
5.33 points, or 0.3 per-

cent, to 1,660.42.
Bond prices rose. The
yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.83 percent
from 2.87 percent late
Monday.
Technology and bank
stocks took some of the
heaviest losses. Chip
maker Micron Technology slumped 5.5 percent
to $51.48, while Charles
Schwab dropped 2.1 percent to $50.24.
Traders sent shares in
Campbell Soup higher
after the New York Post
reported an activist investor is in talks with shareholders about potentially
selling the company. The
stock gained 1.8 percent
to $41.03.
Crude oil futures pared
some of their early gains.
Benchmark U.S. crude
added 20 cents to $74.14
a barrel in New York. The
contract reached more
than $75 a barrel in early
trading. Brent crude,
used to price international oils, rose 46 cents
to $77.76 a barrel in
London.
The dollar fell to
110.62 yen from 110.86
yen on Monday. The euro
strengthened to $1.1652
from $1.1610.

Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ)
Walmart Inc(NYSE)
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE)
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)
Kroger Co(NYSE)
BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)
City Holding Company(NASDAQ)
American Electric Power(NYSE)

Submitted by Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

Christopher E. Tenoglia

OVP STOCK REPORT

ATTORNEY AT LAW

$17.26
$84.44
$40.78
$42.28
$108.80
$38.48
$28.70
$50.48
$76.92
$70.50

Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ)
$53.85
Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)
$14.81
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)
$28.80
Apple(NASDAQ)
$183.92
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)
$43.99
Post Holdings
$85.42
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE)
$29.55
McDonalds’s(NYSE)
$156.48
Stock reports are the closing quotes of transactions on
July 3, 2018.

Help Right Here At Home �/81*�&amp;$1&amp;(5
�:521*)8/�'($7+
�MESOTHELIOMA

OH-70056545

By Alex Veiga

assigns letter grades
of A, B, C, D and F to
hospitals across the
nation based on their
performance in preventing medical errors,
infections and other
harms.
“It takes consistent,
unwavering dedication
to patients to achieve
the highest standards
of patient safety. An
‘A’ Safety Grade recognizes hospitals for this
accomplishment,” said
Leah Binder, president
and CEO of The Leapfrog Group. “We congratulate the clinicians,
board, management
and staff of Pleasant
Valley Hospital for
showing the country
what it means to put
patient safety ﬁrst.”
Developed under the
guidance of a Blue Ribbon National Expert
Panel, the Leapfrog
Hospital Safety Grade
uses 27 measures
of publicly available
hospital safety data to
assign A, B, C, D and
F grades to more than
2,600 U.S. hospitals
twice per year. It is calculated by top patient
safety experts, peer
reviewed, fully transparent and free to the
public.
To learn more, visit
www.hospitalsafetygrade.org.

740-992-6368
200 E. 2nd Street s Pomeroy, OH
tenlaw@suddenlinkmail.com

�NEWS

4 Thursday, July 5, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Leo and Max Poole drive along the parade route in Racine on
Wednesday morning.
A line of tractors took part in the Racine 4th of July Parade on Wednesday morning.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Racine 4th of July Parade
The Meigs County Sheriff’s Office and Syracuse Police Department
joined the Racine Police Department in the parade.

The Southern Marching Band played patriotic songs as they
marched along the parade route.

Kids of all ages made their way through the parade route on ATVs,
go karts and other vehicles.

At right,
the
Antiquity
Baptist
Church
float
took
second
place
in the
RACO
contest.

The Racine Police Department led the parade through town on
Wednesday morning.

The Southern Marching Band Flag team twirled red, white and blue
flags during the parade.

A young parade participant rides on the tractor in Wednesday’s 4th
of July parade in Racine.

Easton Hunter drives his grandmother and great-grandmother in
Members of American Legion Post 602 in Racine ride along the
the parade on Wednesday morning.
parade route. The Legion members conducted a flag raising at
Home National Bank as part of the parade.

Family members of United States military veterans were among Two horses and their riders took part in the Racine 4th of July
those in the parade.
parade.

Tyson Hupp and Addi Ramsburg represent Carmel Sutton United
Methodist Church as they ride their four-wheelers in the Racine
parade.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Statehouse
ﬁght the opioid epidemic and save lives” Edwards
said. “This bill would have saved Daniel’s life and
we cannot allow more lives to be lost. It is a such a
small window for those in treatment to get them the
help they desire. We need to focus on the barriers
they face, that lead some of them back into addiction. Also, trained professionals are scared to provide
much needed medication, because under current law,
administering this live-saving drug in an emergency
situation could lead to legal repercussions; this has to
change!”
The legislation is also known as Daniel’s Law,
named for Daniel Weidle of Germantown, who tragically died of an overdose in 2015 after battling addiction for years. Daniel’s father, Scott, has made it his
mission to share Daniel’s story in the hopes of educating others about addiction.
Substitute House Bill 167 now awaits consideration
to be heard on the House ﬂoor.

Bill offers tax exemption for
widows of public servants
COLUMBUS — State Representative Jay Edwards
(R-Nelsonville) announced that the Ohio House has
passed legislation that would grant surviving spouses
of public service ofﬁcers killed in the line of duty an
extension of Ohio’s homestead exemption.
House Bill 513 would give a widow or widower
of a peace ofﬁcer, ﬁreﬁghter, EMT, or paramedic a
$50,000 homestead exemption. Ohio’s homestead
exemption helps certain homeowners to reduce their
property tax bills by shielding some of the market
value of their homes from taxation.
“Peace ofﬁcers, ﬁreﬁghters, EMT’s, and paramedics
are the backbone of our community” Edwards said.
“Their families deserve assistance if the worst were to
happen. I am proud to support our ﬁrst responders”.
Currently, Ohio’s homestead exemption applies to
military veterans who are disabled and low-income
senior citizens. Under House Bill 513, the surviving
spouse must apply to the county auditor with a letter
of veriﬁcation from the department or state pension
fund conﬁrming the death of the ofﬁcer in the line of
duty.
House Bill 513 now awaits consideration by the
Ohio Senate.

WEATHER

77°

89°

82°

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.

(in inches)

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

0.00
1.63
0.50
26.90
22.46

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:09 a.m.
8:57 p.m.
12:56 a.m.
12:58 p.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.

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

Major
5:52a
6:37a
7:21a
8:06a
8:53a
9:43a
10:37a

Minor
12:03p
12:25a
1:10a
1:54a
2:39a
3:28a
4:22a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
6:14p
7:00p
7:45p
8:32p
9:20p
10:12p
11:08p

Minor
---12:48p
1:33p
2:19p
3:07p
3:58p
4:53p

WEATHER HISTORY
The temperature on July 5, 1937,
soared to 117 degrees at Medicine
Lake, Mont., the hottest reading ever
for Montana. Montana has some of
the nation’s coldest winters, but they
can become hot in the summer.

84°
58°

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Sunny, pleasant and
less humid

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

AIR QUALITY

Senate pass on payday
Perhaps the most signiﬁcant legislation left
unresolved as lawmakers headed off for summer
break was a bill reforming Ohio’s payday lending
laws. The legislation would cap interest rates on
short-term loans and impose other restrictions.
The Ohio House wasted no time passing the
measure after the chamber resolved a complicated
and protracted impasse over who should succeed
the former House speaker, Republican Cliff Rosenberger. The House’s action came after Rosenberger
resigned in April amid an FBI investigation that
includes international trips the then-speaker took
where payday lobbyists also were present.
But the Senate failed to complete its work on
the bill before the break. Senate President Larry
Obhof said it was signiﬁcant legislation that
needed more time. He has called senators back in
September, if not sooner.

Portsmouth
94/72

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 13.30 +1.16
Marietta
34 18.67 -0.04
Parkersburg
36 21.98 +0.60
Belleville
35 12.69 +0.16
Racine
41 12.94 -0.23
Point Pleasant
40 24.32 -0.54
Gallipolis
50 12.15 -0.10
Huntington
50 26.63 +0.51
Ashland
52 34.93 +0.40
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.27 +0.22
Portsmouth
50 19.50 +2.20
Maysville
50 34.60 +0.30
Meldahl Dam
51 17.90 +1.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

SUNDAY

MONDAY

87°
60°
Mostly sunny and
pleasant

85°
70°

Mostly sunny and
nice

Marietta
90/70
Belpre
92/71

Athens
91/71

St. Marys
91/70

Parkersburg
90/68

Coolville
91/71

Elizabeth
92/71

Spencer
92/70

Buffalo
93/72
Milton
94/72

St. Albans
94/72

Huntington
92/70

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
85/60
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
74/62
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
T-storms
89/70
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

WEDNESDAY

88°
64°

Nice with plenty of
sun

Murray City
91/70

Ironton
94/72

Ashland
93/71
Grayson
94/71

TUESDAY

90°
66°

Wilkesville
92/70
POMEROY
Jackson
93/72
92/71
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
93/72
94/71
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
91/72
GALLIPOLIS
94/72
93/72
93/72

South Shore Greenup
94/72
93/71

55
300

From A to V
On their ﬁnal day, June 27, lawmakers sent 19
bills to Republican Gov. John Kasich addressing
topics from algal blooms to voting machines.
A spending measure sent to the governor allots
$20 million to the soils and water phosphorus program that helps ﬁght harmful algal blooms in Lake
Erie. Another $3.5 million was devoted to soil
and water conservation districts. Lawmakers also
sent $7 million in disaster funding to 18 counties
affected by ﬂooding.
Another bill releases the $114.5 million necessary to help county boards of elections buy new
voting equipment. The timing was crucial to get
the machines in place in time for a test run in
2019 ahead of the 2020 presidential election.
Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted had
called on Kasich and state lawmakers in December
to provide state ﬁnancial support to modernize the
machines.
Another bill expands the list of offenses that can
be expunged from the criminal records of people
who also are victims of human trafﬁcking.

Partly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
91/70

Lucasville
94/72

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
90/71

Very High

Primary: unspeciﬁed
Mold: 2488

Logan
91/71

Adelphi
91/71

Waverly
91/72

Pollen: 1

Low

MOON PHASES
Last

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

SATURDAY

83°
59°

4

Primary: ascospores, unk.
Fri.
6:10 a.m.
8:57 p.m.
1:25 a.m.
1:58 p.m.

FRIDAY

A thunderstorm this afternoon; humid. A
thunderstorm tonight. High 94° / Low 72°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

93°
74°
86°
65°
101° in 1911
51° in 1963

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio’s Legislature
is on summer break after a ﬂurry of activity that
included passage of dozens of bills, many sent to
the governor, and a few key proposals left in limbo.
The pace of the action was accelerated because
a stalemate over who would succeed Republican
Cliff Rosenberger as speaker in the House prevented it from passing any bills for weeks.
Here is a look at where things stand:

Information provided by the office of State Rep. Jay Edwards.

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

AP Statehouse Correspondent

COLUMBUS — State Representative Jay Edwards
(R-Nelsonville) announced that the Ohio House
approved Senate Bill 257, legislation that makes the
process for applying for hunting, ﬁshing, and trapping
licenses more consumer friendly.
Senate Bill 257 is a bipartisan bill that expands
licensure options for hunters, ﬁshers, and trappers
by allowing the Chief of the Division of Wildlife
within the Ohio Department of Natural Resources
(ONDR) to issue multi-year and lifetime licenses.
Funds acquired from the purchase of these licenses
will go into the newly created Multi-year and Lifetime
License Fund.
“It shouldn’t be difﬁcult or burdensome to get these
licenses” Edwards said. “I think it is important to us
in Southeast Ohio and across our great state that we
allow more of our youth and families to get into hunting and ﬁshing and the values it can bring to people’s
lives.”
The legislation has a number of other provisions
reforming this licensing process including: making
licenses valid starting on the date of purchase, offering discounts for the purchase of multiple licenses at
once, and legalizing hunting from all-terrain vehicles.
The goal of the bill is to make it easier for Ohioans to
purchase and maintain licenses, better enabling them
to enjoy Ohio’s public waters.
Senate Bill 257 now heads to the Governor for his
consideration.

COLUMBUS — State Representative Jay Edwards
(R-Nelsonville) announced the passage of House
Bill 552, legislation that makes changes to Ohio law
related to companion animals.
House Bill 552 would allow dog wardens to use a
tranquilizer gun to capture animals without having a
veterinarian present. Safeguards are included in the
legislation that require certiﬁed ofﬁcers to obtain a

2 PM

By Julie Carr Smyth

House passes legislation
reforming hunting, fishing laws

House passes legislation to
protect companion animals

8 AM

Payday loans, guns
among stalled issues
at Ohio Statehouse

classiﬁcation from the State Board of Pharmacy prior
to practicing chemical capture outside of the direct
supervision of a veterinarian.
The bill would also prohibit animal shelters from
using gas chambers to euthanize domestic animals, a
practice not commonly used but is still in place in a
small number of facilities.
“I’ve always thought it was important to protect
animals” Edwards Said. “This bill will ensure that animals are treated more humanely. The fact that we are
in living in 2018 and still using gas chambers to kill
animals absolutely disgusts me. I am very happy this
bill will change these gruesome practices.”
Under the bill, the mandate for dog wardens to sell
unclaimed dogs to teaching or research institutions
would be eliminated. Currently, after a three-day
impound period, a dog seized by the county dog
warden must be turned over to research or teaching
facilities for $3, if such facilities request the dog. By
eliminating this mandate, the county dog warden has
the option to sell such dogs to research and teaching
facilities, but is no longer obligated to do so.
Additionally, the dog warden may set the fee at
which they turn over these dogs.
This legislation would allow dog wardens to perform their duties more safety, efﬁciently, and humanely, as well as ensure animals are euthanized in an ethical and compassionate manner.
House Bill 552 now goes to the Ohio Senate for further consideration.

From page 1

TODAY

Thursday, July 5, 2018 5

Clendenin
92/72
Charleston
92/71

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
76/54
Montreal
92/69

Billings
89/65
Toronto
89/63

Minneapolis
84/64

New York
88/75

Detroit
Chicago 90/65
91/65

Denver
84/58

Washington
90/78

Kansas City
90/72

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

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
88/66/t
70/56/c
88/70/t
84/76/pc
90/76/pc
89/65/s
102/69/s
91/75/pc
92/71/t
90/70/t
77/57/t
91/65/t
93/71/t
89/68/t
91/69/t
96/77/pc
84/58/t
84/67/t
90/65/t
88/76/pc
90/74/t
92/73/t
90/72/t
107/86/s
94/76/t
89/70/pc
95/76/pc
90/80/c
84/64/c
96/76/pc
89/77/t
88/75/pc
90/71/s
88/74/t
90/74/pc
114/94/s
87/68/t
89/72/s
89/72/t
91/73/t
96/77/pc
99/75/s
74/62/pc
85/60/pc
90/78/pc

Hi/Lo/W
89/68/s
73/57/pc
88/70/t
85/67/t
84/65/t
99/68/s
97/65/s
84/64/t
81/58/t
89/67/t
85/58/s
79/58/s
81/58/t
76/62/pc
81/58/pc
96/77/pc
92/61/s
85/64/s
80/58/pc
88/76/r
91/74/t
82/59/pc
86/67/sh
111/92/s
92/72/t
104/77/s
85/63/t
89/78/sh
84/65/s
88/68/t
88/77/t
83/65/t
92/71/t
88/73/t
83/67/t
113/93/s
80/55/pc
84/57/sh
90/67/t
90/68/t
87/62/pc
102/77/s
76/59/pc
76/58/pc
87/69/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
96/74
Chihuahua
93/64

High
Low

Atlanta
88/70

104° in Needles, CA
27° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
High
124° in Khanaqin, Iraq
Low -6° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
90/74
Monterrey
91/68

Miami
90/80

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

You’ll Feel Right At Home.

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Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close
a loan quickly. Please come see us for all your bank needs, we
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�S ports
6 Thursday, July 5, 2018

Daily Sentinel

England finally wins penalty shootout
MOSCOW (AP) — After
three haunting failures,
England ﬁnally won a penalty shootout at the World
Cup.
And it happened under
a coach who for 22 years
has taken the blame for a
previous shootout loss at a
major tournament.
England advanced to the
World Cup quarterﬁnals
by beating Colombia 4-3
in a shootout following a
1-1 draw Tuesday, sending
Gareth Southgate running
onto the ﬁeld to celebrate
the end of the national
team’s years of misfortune.
“It will never be off my
Matthias Schrader | AP
England’s Eric Dier scores the winning penalty during the round of 16 match between Colombia back, sadly. That’s someand England at the World Cup in the Spartak Stadium in Moscow, Russia, on Tuesday. England thing that will live with me
eliminated Colombia 4-3 on penalties after the game ended 1-1.
forever,” Southgate said of

his 1996 shootout failure.
“But today is a special
moment for this team. I
hope it will give belief to
generations of players that
follow, because they can
see what is possible in life.”
England will next play
Sweden on Saturday in
Samara. The 1966 champions have reached the
World Cup quarterﬁnals
for the ﬁrst time since the
David Beckham era, when
a golden generation exited
in the last eight in 2002
and 2006.
“We have to see what
is possible and not be
hindered by history or the
expectations,” Southgate
said. “I think these young
players are showing that.”

Eric Dier scored the
decisive kick after a scrappy game went through
30 minutes of extra time,
denying Colombia a second consecutive trip to the
quarterﬁnals.
“It was a nervous one,”
Dier said. “I’ve never really
been in a situation like that
before.”
Harry Kane scored his
tournament-leading sixth
goal to give England the
lead with a penalty kick in
the 57th minute. Colombia
scrambled for an equalizer
and ﬁnally got it when
Yerry Mina headed in a
corner in the third minute
of stoppage time.
See WORLD CUP | 7

Will LA mean LeBron
behind the scenes
and on the big screen?
LOS ANGELES (AP) — “Space Jam 2?” A
whole new “House Party” franchise?
With the leadership of LeBron James, anything
is possible.
As James comes from Cleveland to Los Angeles
looking to take the Lakers to more championships with a blockbuster $154 million contract
announced this week, he could also push those
two 1990s properties closer to reality and go from
part-time presence to major player in Hollywood.
James hasn’t yet spoken about his plans for Los
Angeles. But if he wants to, he’s already shown
he can act, and not just in that good-for-an-athlete
way.
His one real ﬁlm role, playing himself in the
2015 Amy Schumer ﬁlm “Trainwreck,” directed
by Judd Apatow, won big raves.
The Associated Press’ Lindsey Bahr called him
“a comedic revelation.” Ann Hornaday of The
Washington Post said he showed “expert, deadpan
timing.”
James’ co-stars agreed.
“He was really good. Like everything with him
it was very effortless,” said Bill Hader, who played
the movie’s male lead with James as his sidekick
and previously acted with James when he hosted
“Saturday Night Live.” ”He’s always listening. I
know actors that don’t listen, they’re just waiting
to say their line. He listened.”
Hader said there was frequent improvisation on
“Trainwreck,” and LeBron easily kept up with the
sketch comedy pros like Hader.
“You’ll never believe this, but he was super conﬁdent,” Hader told the AP with a laugh by phone
from the Toronto set of the ﬁlm “It 2.”
“But not cocky,” Hader added.
“I remember Chris Rock was on set and rattled
off a line suggestion really fast for LeBron, and
LeBron said it back during the scene verbatim,”
Hader said. “I remember thinking, “I can’t do that.”
He wouldn’t be the ﬁrst Laker to try acting.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Shaquille O’Neal had
their share of famous, and infamous roles. And
Kobe Bryant ended up with an unlikely Academy
Award for an animated short based on a poem he
wrote about basketball.
Whether or not he appears on screen, James has
already begun a major media career that can only
get a boost from LA.
Gone are the days when athletes had to be in a
major market to make it in ﬁlm and television, as
James himself has shown through his years building his brand in Cleveland.
But there’s nothing like face-time for becoming
a force in Hollywood.
James and his business partner Maverick Carter
have a production company, SpringHill Entertainment, that has a deal with Warner Bros. and ofﬁce
space on the legendary movie company’s lot,
where he could become a regular.
“Certainly the proximity will make it easier for
LeBron personally to be part of future projects,”
said David Schwab, an executive vice president at
Octagon, a global sports and entertainment marketing and management ﬁrm. “The advantage of
a market like New York, Los Angeles and Golden
State is the ability to have coffee, lunch or dinner
daily” with key decision makers. “In a smaller
market you don’t get those consistent opportunities,” he said.
Schwab said James’ partners at Warner Bros.
and elsewhere are most likely “excited that he’s
in Los Angeles as they could possibly use LeBron
personally to close business deals with future partners of their own.”
James, via SpringHill and his digital ﬁlm company Uninterrupted has already brought some
See LEBRON | 7

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Wyatt Nicholson putts on the second green at the Meigs County Golf Course, during the Capehart golf league on June 25 in Pomeroy,
Ohio.

A warm day for Capehart round No. 3
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. — Perhaps the best question of
the day would have been
which was warmer the
temperature or the golf
being shot at the Riverside Golf Course.
A total of 41 golfers
teed off on Monday
morning, chasing the
point lead in each age
group. The conclusion
of the day’s play did
not provide much of an
answer. Only two groups,
girls age 13-14 and girls
age 18-19 have leaders
that cannot be reached.
The 41 young men and
woman that participated
was the largest group
in many years, the golf
course was lush and
green, and the overall
condition was as good as
it has been in some time.
Several of the players
expressed their pleasure
at the condition of the
course.
The best score of the
day was shot by a member of the 10-and-under
age group, as Grant
Roush recorded a 36.
Even with that score on
ﬁle, Grant remains in
second place in the race
for the winners plaque.
Grant’s point total of
20 places him 4 points
behind current leader
Alec Conway.
Riley Cotterill is now
third with 15 points, a
single point ahead of
Mason Morris. Also
playing in this age group
today was Noah Leach-

and remains in fourt
place tie in the point
race for this group. Jacob
Spencer ended up in ﬁfth
place, while Zack King’s
sixth place left him in a
tie for fourth place in the
point race. Kael O’Brian
played in his initial effort
go earn his ﬁrst points of
the season.
On the ladies side of
this group, Caitlin Cotterill scored 54 for the
day. Caitlin now has 29
points for the season
and cannot be caught
regardless of next week’s
results.
The largest group of
player’s today were the
young men in the 15-17
year old group. A total
Jarret Hupp tees off on the third hole at the Meigs County Golf of 11 young men particiCourse, during the Capehart golf league on June 25 in Pomeroy, pated with three of them,
Ohio.
Wyatt Nicholson, Jarrett
Hupp and Justin Vogt,
same situation exists for
man, Timmy Russell,
Blake Fackler and Porter Marlo Norris and Lorena tying for ﬁrst with a
score of 39. Fourth place
Kennedy.
Midkiff.
went to Whitney Byrd
Cole Miller ﬁnished
Ali Norris now has a
with a score of 40, while
third for the boys in this
point total of 28 point
Jensen Anderson turned
group, while Evan Pope
and cannot be caught
in a 42. Andrew Vogt
and Ethan Roberts also
at this point in time.
was next with a 44, while
Kyrstin Fackler is second played in this group.
with 10 points while Tea- Kyra Collins ﬁnished just Ryan Harbour shot a 47.
Matthew Morris, Gus
one shot behind Lorena
gan Conway is third and
Brooklyn Smith is fourth. in Monday’s competition. Kennedy, Isaac Roush
and T.J. Vogt also played
Brennen Sang shot
The age group for
in this group. Wyatt and
the low score for the
the 11-12 year olds is
Whitney are tied for ﬁrst
boys 13-14 year old
deadlocked for both
in the point race, with 23
group. Brennen now has
the young men and the
points apiece. Jarrett is
accumulated 18 point,
young ladies. As strange
still in the picture with
but trails Landon Atha
as it may seem, the lead18 points.
by four points. Landon
ing point total for both
First place for the
ﬁnished third to increase
the guys and girls is
girls today in this group
his leading total to 22
27 points. Joe Milhoan
was Kylee Tolliver, who
points. Second in Monand Caleb Pierson will
turned in an excellent
day’s scoring was Ethan
face off next week at
score of 39 for the day.
Short, who turned in a
the Meigs County Golf
59 for his effort.
Course to determine a
See CAPEHART | 7
John Greer was fourth
possible winner. The

�SPORTS/TV

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 5, 2018 7

Ex-wrestlers say congressman knew of alleged OSU abuse
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— An Ohio congressman isn’t
being truthful when asserting
he was unaware of allegations
that a now-dead team doctor
was abusing athletes, according to two former university
wrestlers.
U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, a former standout college wrestler
at the University of Wisconsin
and later a coach at Ohio State,
knew when he was at the university that the doctor was
groping male wrestlers, said
ex-wrestlers Mike DiSabato and
Dunyasha Yetts.
The wrestlers’ allegations
were ﬁrst reported Tuesday
by NBC. Jordan, a two-time
NCAA Division I wrestling
champion, denies them.
Jordan, a founder of the
conservative Freedom Caucus,
is one of the most powerful Republicans in Congress
and a potential contender for
speaker. He’s taken leading

roles in ﬁghting the Affordable
Care Act and in pushing back
against the government’s Russia investigation, most recently
interrogating Deputy Attorney
General Rod Rosenstein in
committee.
Male athletes from 14 sports
at Ohio State have reported
alleged sexual misconduct by
Richard Strauss, who was on
the faculty and medical staff
and published a variety of
research. Strauss died in 2005,
and it was ruled a suicide.
Ohio State has not released
details about the claims but
said more than 150 former students and witnesses have been
interviewed so far. The school
has urged anyone with information about Strauss to contact
the independent investigators
from Seattle-based law ﬁrm
Perkins Coie.
Perkins Coie also is reviewing whether Strauss examined
high school students.

RIO GRANDE SUMMER CAMPS
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:
Women’s Basketball
The University of Rio
Grande’s 2018 Women’s
Basketball Camp is scheduled for July 8-11 at the
Lyne Center on the URG
campus.
The overnight instructional camp is open to
girls in grades 4-12. Cost
is $295 per camper, which
includes lodging, meals, a
certiﬁcate of participation
and a t-shirt.
Campers will also
receive 24-hour supervision from coaches and
counselors; lecture/discussion groups and ﬁlm
sessions; daily instruction on shooting, ballhandling, post play and
defense; and use of the
school’s swimming pool.
There will also be a
camp store featuring
drinks, snacks, pizza and
Rio Grande apparel for
sale each day.
Veteran Rio Grande
women’s basketball head
coach David Smalley,
who ranks among the top
10 coaches on the active
wins list with more than
500, will be the camp
director.
Online registration
is available through the
women’s basketball link
on the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com. Registration
forms are available in the
lobby of the Lyne Center
during regular business
hours.
Registration forms

basketball player of all
time, Michael Jordan,
has been in circulation for several years.
From page 6
The movie with Jorprojects to big and small dan battling animated
screens, with many more aliens alongside Bugs
Bunny and his Warner
in the works. Here are
Bros. cartoon buddies
some highlights:
brought mixed reviews
— “Space Jam 2.”
and eyerolls at the time,
The idea of James
but has become a cult
reviving the 1996
movie starring another classic. Justin Lin of
the “Fast &amp; Furious”
candidate for greatest

World Cup
From page 6

“To get knocked down at the
end like we did at the end, it’s
difﬁcult to come back from that,”
Dier said. “But we were ready for
that. We were calm. We stuck to
our plan.”
England trailed 3-2 in the penalty shootout after Jordan Henderson’s shot was saved by David
Ospina, but Mateus Uribe hit the
bar and England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford then stopped Carlos
Bacca’s kick.
“I did a whole bunch of
research,” Pickford said. “Falcao

Kaitlyn Hawk assured her
of winning the point race
for this season in her age
group.
From page 6
All of the day’s players
were provided a lunch
Kylee earned 10 points
after the conclusion of
for her effort, and she
play. Next week’s tourtrails Haley Pierson by
nament will be held
10 points. If Haley participates next week, Kylee on Tuesday, July 10th
at the Meigs County
cannot match Haley’s
Golf Course located
total.
just North of Pomeroy,
Another very close
Ohio. The entry fee will
effort exists in the boy’s
be $10.00 per player
18-19 year old group.
Levi Chapman and Doug- that will include a small
las Workman both shot 40 lunch. Play will beginto tie for ﬁrst. The point ning at 9:00 a.m. with
registration starting at
total for both of these
young men is now 27 set- 8:30 a.m. Play is open to
all area youth age 19 and
ting up a showdown for
younger. Please contact
next week’s matchup.
Bryce Swatzel shot a 52 any of the following if
and now has accumulated you have questions : Jeff
18 points for the season, Slone, 740-256-6160, Jan
while Theo McElroy’s 54 Haddox, 304-675-3388 or
Bob Blessing, 304-675earned him fourth place.
6135.
The points earned by

spokesman Ian Fury.
Late Tuesday, a law ﬁrm
representing Ohio State contradicted that statement. An
investigative legal team looking into the allegations against
Strauss previously contacted
Jordan’s ofﬁce by phone and
email requesting he participate
in an interview, but Jordan did
not respond, said Kathleen
Trafford of Porter Wright in
Columbus.
“The investigative team is
continuing its efforts to schedule an interview with Rep. Jordan, as well as other individuals with potential knowledge
relating to the allegations,”
Trafford said.
Fury said the ofﬁce can’t ﬁnd
a record of those requests but
remains willing to assist investigators.
The U.S. House speaker’s
ofﬁce on Tuesday called the
allegations against Jordan “serious.”

ﬁlms has been attached
as director.
— “House Party.”
Stephen Glover and
Jamal Olori of “Atlanta”
are writing a script that
James and SpringHill
hope will revive the franchise that starred Kid n’
Play and spawned three
big-screen sequels from
1990 to 1994.
— “Smallfoot.” James
will have another chance

is the only one who didn’t go his
way. I don’t care if I’m not the biggest keeper in the world. I have
the power and agility.”
Pickford succeeded where Peter
Shilton, David Seaman and Paul
Robinson failed as the 1990, 1998
and 2006 World Cups ended in
shootout losses. On top of that,
England was knocked out of the
1996 European Championship
semiﬁnals and the quarterﬁnals in
2004 and 2012 on penalties. The
country’s only shootout success
came earlier at Euro ‘96.
Southgate’s penalty in the 1996
shootout at Wembley against Germany was stopped, a failure he has
lived with for 22 years.
“Penalty shootouts are lot about

to show off his comic
chops as the voice of a
skeptical yeti in Warner
Bros’ animated ﬁlm.
— “Now We’re Talking.” A digital comedy
series on Uninterrupted
that features two rival
professional football
quarterbacks who
become broadcasters
and frequent pro athlete
cameos is about to enter
its second season.

mentality and obviously we know
England in the past haven’t done
great,” Kane said. “So, it’s nice to
get that one off our back and we’ll
have huge belief moving forward.”
Scrappy
There was edginess from the
start, with Colombia forward Juan
Cuadrado and England defender
Harry Maguire involved in a spat
before Radamel Falcao barged
into Kieran Trippier, sparking the
England defender to retaliate.
Colombia nearly lost Wilmar
Barrios to a red card late in the
ﬁrst half. But after a video review,
Barrios was given a yellow for
knocking his head into the chest
of Jordan Henderson.

THURSDAY EVENING
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Capehart

fraud case has nothing to do
with what he went through as a
student-athlete.
DiSabato, of Dublin in suburban Columbus, also told
the AP that Jordan had direct
knowledge of the Strauss allegations. DiSabato, 50, said he
was moved to tell Ohio State of
Strauss’ actions after hearing
accounts last year of gymnasts
sexually abused by sports doctor Larry Nassar. DiSabato says
he’s angered that Jordan hasn’t
acknowledged the abuse.
Jordan’s spokesman said in
a statement that the congressman never saw or heard about
any abuse or had any abuse
reported to him during his time
at Ohio State.
“He has not been contacted
by investigators about the
matter but will assist them
in any way they ask, because
if what is alleged is true, the
victims deserve a full investigation and justice,” said

LeBron

should be mailed to David
Smalley, Rio Grande
Women’s Basketball
Camp, P.O. Box 500,
Rio Grande, OH 45674.
Checks should be made
payable to Women’s Basketball Camp.
For more information,
contact Smalley at 740245-7491, 1-800-2827201, or e-mail dsmalley@rio.edu.
Men’s and Women’s soccer
The University of Rio
Grande soccer programs
have announced their
2018 summer camp
schedule.
A team camp for girls’
high 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 740245-7126, 740-645-6438
or e-mail scottm@rio.
edu; or Daniels at 740245-7493, 740-645-0377
or e-mail tdaniels@rio.
edu.

Yetts, 47, of Steubenville,
said Strauss groped him at
least three times during routine
exams when he wrestled in the
early to mid-1990s. Jordan was
Yetts’ weight-class coach at the
time, and the two spoke frequently about Strauss, he said.
Jordan was among the people
Yetts told about groping the
ﬁrst time in happened in 1992,
Yetts told The Associated Press
Tuesday.
“He’d even make comments,
‘This guy better not touch
me,’” Yetts said.
Beginning in 2007, Yetts
served 18 months in prison
after pleading guilty to federal
mail fraud charges. Yetts was
accused of bilking investors
out of $1.8 million as part of an
investment scheme he ran from
1998 to 2001.
Yetts, an operations manager
for a gas drilling company, said
Tuesday he has paid his debt
for past mistakes. He said the

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PREMIUM

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Faith Under Fire (2018, Docu-Drama) Trevor Morgan,
(:05) Twist of Faith ('13,
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Marvel's Cloak &amp; Dagger Marvel's Cloak &amp; Dagger Marvel's Cloak &amp; Dagger
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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, July 5, 2018
Los Angeles
San Francisco
Colorado
San Diego

MLB
National League
All Times EDT
East Division
W
L Pct
Atlanta
49 36 .576
Philadelphia
46 37 .554
Washington
42 43 .494
Miami
36 52 .409
New York
33 49 .402
Central Division
W
L Pct
Milwaukee
50 35 .588
Chicago
49 35 .583
St. Louis
43 41 .512
Pittsburgh
40 45 .471
Cincinnati
37 49 .430
West Division
W
L Pct
Arizona
48 38 .558

GBa
—
2
7
14½
14½
GB
—
½
6½
10
13½
GB
—

46
45
43
37

39 .541 1½
42 .517 3½
43 .500
5
50 .425 11½

American League
All Times EDT
East Division
W
L Pct GB
Boston
59 29 .670
—
New York
56 28 .667
1
Tampa Bay
43 43 .500 15
Toronto
40 45 .471 17½
Baltimore
24 60 .286 33
Central Division
W
L Pct GB
Cleveland
47 37 .560
—
Detroit
38 50 .432
11
Minnesota
35 47 .427
11
Chicago
30 55 .353 17½
Kansas City
25 60 .294 22½
West Division

Houston
Seattle
Oakland
Los Angeles
Texas

W
L Pct GB
56 31 .644
—
55 31 .640
½
47 39 .547 8½
43 43 .500 12½
38 48 .442 17½

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Tuesday’s Games
Chicago Cubs 5, Detroit 3
Milwaukee 2, Minnesota 0
Boston 11, Washington 4
N.Y. Yankees 8, Atlanta 5
Philadelphia 3, Baltimore 2
Toronto 8, N.Y. Mets 6
Chicago White Sox 12, Cincinnati 8, 12
innings
Tampa Bay 9, Miami 6, 16 innings
Colorado 8, San Francisco 1
Oakland 6, San Diego 2
Arizona 4, St. Louis 2
L.A. Dodgers 8, Pittsburgh 3

Wednesday’s Games
Boston 3, Washington 0
N.Y. Yankees 6, Atlanta 2
Miami 3, Tampa Bay 0
Chicago Cubs 5, Detroit 2
Baltimore at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m.
San Diego at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 4:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Cincinnati, 7:10
p.m.
Pittsburgh at L.A. Dodgers, 8:10 p.m.
San Francisco at Colorado, 8:10 p.m.
St. Louis at Arizona, 10:10 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Miami (Hernandez 0-5) at Washington
(Hellickson 2-1), 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Fried 1-2) at Milwaukee (Chacin
6-3), 8:10 p.m.
San Diego (Lauer 3-5) at Arizona (Miller
0-2), 9:40 p.m.
St. Louis (Weaver 4-7) at San Francisco

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AMERICAN LEAGUE
Tuesday’s Games
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Milwaukee 2, Minnesota 0
Boston 11, Washington 4
N.Y. Yankees 8, Atlanta 5
Philadelphia 3, Baltimore 2
Toronto 8, N.Y. Mets 6
Chicago White Sox 12, Cincinnati 8, 12
innings
Tampa Bay 9, Miami 6, 16 innings
Houston 5, Texas 3
Cleveland 6, Kansas City 4
Oakland 6, San Diego 2
Seattle 4, L.A. Angels 1
Wednesday’s Games
Boston 3, Washington 0
N.Y. Yankees 6, Atlanta 2
Miami 3, Tampa Bay 0
Chicago Cubs 5, Detroit 2

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, July 5, 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
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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10 Thursday, July 5, 2018

Daily Sentinel

NCAA prepares minority coordinators for head coaching jobs
OXON HILL, Md. (AP)
— Camera lighting made
beads of sweat emerge
from Tony Elliott’s
forehead as he ﬁelded
questions ranging from
football philosophy to
something he could share
about his private life.
The Clemson co-offensive coordinator paused,
smiled and couldn’t hide
his joy about riding an
all-terrain vehicle through
the woods. The walls
broke down as Elliott
made a human connection with mock interviewer Jon Oliver in the best
possible preparation he
can get for a head coaching job.
Despite helping the
Tigers win a national
title, Elliott has never
interviewed for a head-

coaching job.
“Two phone calls,”
Elliott said.
College football as a
public entity can’t institute a Rooney Rule like
the NFL, which compels
teams to interview minority candidates for head
coaching jobs. So instead
of focusing all its efforts
on the schools, the NCAA
is putting some of its rising coaching candidates
through its Champion
Forum to better prepare
them for the interview
process.
It is an effort to
increase the diversity in
the Power Five conferences and across the country.
“You can’t shame people into hiring people,”
said Oliver, a former
University of Virginia

Pickford the hero
as England’s
penalty curse ends
MOSCOW (AP) —
The research paid off
for Jordan Pickford.
When Carlos Bacca
stepped up to take
Colombia’s ﬁfth and
ﬁnal penalty, Pickford
knew he was likely to
shoot to the left.
The 24-year-old
goalkeeper, in just
his seventh England
appearance, trusted
his research and
leaped. Research
wasn’t enough on its
own — he also needed
lightning reactions to
shoot his left arm up to
paw away Bacca’s high
shot.
The save gave
England’s Eric Dier
a chance to win the
shootout , and he converted. England moved
on 4-3 on penalties
after a 1-1 draw.
“I did a whole bunch
of research,” Pickford
said, his conﬁdence
sky-high. “(Radamel)
Falcao is the only one
who didn’t go his way.
I don’t care if I’m not
the biggest keeper in
the world. I have the
power and agility.”
Pickford was just
two years old when
England last won a
penalty shootout, a
few days older when
the now-England coach
Gareth Southgate
missed the deciding
penalty in a European
Championship semiﬁnal loss to Germany.
That defeat at home
was treated almost as
a national trauma, as
was the penalty loss to
Argentina two years
later.
Pickford only
emerged as a leading
Premier League keeper
last year and made his
debut for England in
November. But he has
rapidly become part
of Gareth Southgate’s
new generation of English talent.
At 6 foot 1 inch
(1.85 meters), Pickford
is small for a World
Cup goalkeeper.
“A top-class save.
I’m surprised he could
reach it, given his
height,” Southgate
said of the save from
Bacca’s penalty.
“His athleticism
around goal is excellent and again he executed the planning in
the penalty shootout.
We’d studied all their
penalty takers. Great
credit to a collective of
staff and him for taking on that information
and preparing in the
right way. You don’t
always get what you
deserve in life, but I

think tonight we did.”
On an evening that
ended with such frenetic energy, Pickford
had little to do earlier.
Colombia was on the
defensive for most of
the ﬁrst half and lacked
bite in attack. England
took the lead on a
Harry Kane penalty in
the 57th and Colombia
came charging back. In
stoppage time Mateus
Uribe ﬁred a stinging
shot from long range
and Pickford leaped to
keep it out with one
outstretched hand,
sending it wide of the
goal and cannoning
into the advertising
boards.
Pickford could do
nothing about the subsequent corner. Colombia defender Yerry
Mina rose above Harry
Maguire and headed
the ball off the turf and
in despite Kieran Trippier’s headed clearance
attempt. Extra time
and penalties loomed,
and fans felt the weight
of those 22 years without a shootout win.
After the 90 minutes
were up, “we just reset.
And just go ‘Bang,
we’re going again and
however long it takes.’
Like the gaffer said, ‘If
it takes extra time, if
it takes penalties, we
are going to win this
game,’” Pickford said.
“It’s a bit of a lottery,
but you can do your
research.”
It wasn’t just England’s miserable record
which seemed to stack
the odds against the
team. Its penalty takers lacked experience
of major tournaments
— though none of the
penalty takers had
been involved in any of
those shootout losses
— and had to stare
down a stand packed
with raucous Colombian fans.
While Colombia’s
David Ospina stood
taciturn, Pickford was
a ball of energy. He
jumped and jiggled on
the line.
Falcao sent Pickford diving headlong
before placing the ball
through the unguarded
center. Juan Cuadrado
put the ball high
and left, far beyond
Pickford’s reach. Luis
Muriel sent him diving
the wrong way.
With England 3-2
down and facing elimination, Pickford leaped
to touch the crossbar as Mateus Uribe
stepped up, and the
Colombian blasted the
ball into the bar.

athletics administrator
who now works with the
Champion Forum. “You
can’t tell (schools) what
they need to be doing.
But what we can do is
make sure (the candidates) are ready.”
Minorities make up
only 19 percent of Division I head football
coaches and less across
the Power Five conferences: the ACC, SEC, Big
Ten, Big 12 and Pac 12.
In contrast, 61 percent
of Division I players are
minorities.
The Champion Forum
has helped Penn State’s
James Franklin, Vanderbilt’s Derek Mason, Stanford’s David Shaw, Arizona’s Kevin Sumlin and
others get head jobs with
the aim of pushing along

the next generation.
Elliott, Michigan
assistant head coach Pep
Hamilton, LSU defensive
coordinator Dave Aranda,
Florida State defensive
coordinator Harlon
Barnett, South Carolina
offensive coordinator
Bryan McClendon and
Navy offensive coordinator Ivin Jasper are all part
of the latest class. Picked
by their conferences and
schools to go through the
program, they’re all in
phase two that includes
one-on-one mock interviews, conversations with
search ﬁrms and information about contracts
and what to expect from
being a head coach.
“It’s just the knowledge
of what goes into becoming a head coach, what

(athletic directors) look
for, what search ﬁrms
look for,” said Jasper, who
has been a candidate for
jobs at Georgia Southern,
Yale and Rice during his
time at Navy. “Having
those tools in our toolbox now and know what
people look for, now we
can address those issues
and work on getting better at it.”
Jasper and Elliott had
their mock interviews
back-to-back with their
wives seated a few feet
away. Oliver played the
role of the interviewer for
a job at a ﬁctional Atlantic University in Florida,
ﬁring questions at each
coach about a head job
and asking for their questions.
Afterward, Oliver

critiqued them on everything from how fast they
were talking to what
they shouldn’t have said.
Oliver has seen coaches
go from not being able
to ﬁnish answers to having a better idea of what
to expect the next time
the phone rings about an
opening.
“Had I not gone
through this process, I
wouldn’t know what I was
getting into,” Elliott said.
“I wouldn’t have been
encouraged to go prepare in the areas where
I needed to prepare to
ultimately be successful.
Because at the end of the
day, it’s not just becoming
a head coach. It’s being
a successful head coach
and building a successful
program.”

Past champs Sharapova, Kvitova beaten at Wimbledon
LONDON (AP) — These are
not the sorts of matches Maria
Sharapova is supposed to lose,
letting lead after lead slip away
Tuesday against a qualiﬁer ranked
132nd — and in the ﬁrst round of
Wimbledon, no less.
Then again, at this edition of
The Championships, as they prefer
to call the event around here, the
initial 48 hours have provided more
surprising exits than anyone’s
accustomed to: A total of seven
top-10 men’s and women’s seeds
departed in the opening round,
more than in any previous year in
the professional era’s half-century.
That includes two-time champion Petra Kvitova, who was sent
home by Aliaksandra Sasnovich of
Belarus 6-4, 4-6, 6-0 a few hours
before 2004 titlist Sharapova folded
against Vitalia Diatchenko in a 6-7
(3), 7-6 (3), 6-4 loss she seemingly
controlled time and again before
dropping the last three games.
“Sometimes,” Sharapova said,
“you put yourself in a better, or
winning, position, and you don’t
ﬁnish.”
A 15-month doping ban kept
her out of the grass-court Grand
Slam tournament in 2016, and an
injury sidelined her a year ago. It
looked as if it would be a pleasant,
straightforward return when she
went ahead by a set and a break at
5-2.
Sharapova then served for the
match at 5-3, but faltered. After

Tim Ireland | AP

Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic reacts after losing a point to Aliaksandra Sasnovich
of Belarus during their women’s singles match on the second day at the Wimbledon Tennis
Championships in London on Tuesday. Aliaksandra Sasnovich of Belarus defeated Kvitova
6-4, 4-6, 6-0.

being pushed to a third set,
Sharapova went up a break at 2-1.
That edge disappeared right away.
She went up another break at 4-3.
That advantage, too, was given
right back. Sharapova’s collapse
eventually ended, perhaps ﬁttingly,
with her 11th double-fault.
How unlikely was this result?
Since losing the ﬁrst two Grand
Slam matches of her career as a
teenager, Sharapova was 49-1 in
openers at majors, 13-0 at Wimbledon.
She’s a former No. 1, now seeded
24th, who owns ﬁve Grand Slam
titles.

And Diatchenko?
Repeatedly sidetracked by injuries of one sort or another — “I
think I will write a book after I
ﬁnish playing,” Diatchenko joked
about her health history, even on a
day she was visited by a trainer for
groin and lower back issues — the
27-year-old Russian came in 0-2
at Wimbledon and 8-25 overall in
main-draw matches at all tour-level
events.
“Everybody,” Diatchenko said
afterward, “expects me to lose the
match.”
But she didn’t, in part because
Sharapova failed to win it.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS
at 740-645-4880 with any
Hustlin’ Tornadoes dent,
questions.
basketball camp
Tri-County Junior
RACINE, Ohio — The Southern
High School basketball program
Golf Schedule
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.

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, Presi-

four divisions, 10-under, 11-12,
13-15, and 16-18.
Entry fee is $20 for players
12-and-under, and $30 for players
13-18. Clubhouse certiﬁcates and
individual awards will be presented
to the top-three places in each division.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Cart and meal passes will be
schedule for the 2018 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf League available for spectators for $15 to
follow kids 13-and-older and $10
has been released.
to follow kids 12-and-under, so that
The tour ofﬁcially began on
they may follow the tournament
Wednesday, June 20, at Cliffside
and eat with the kids.
Golf Course in Gallipolis. Age
To enter please contact the Cliffgroups for both young ladies and
side clubhouse at 740-446-4653,
young men are 10 and under,
or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919 or
11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
740-645-4381, or by email at rbnThe remaining tournaments,
caudill@yahoo.com. Please leave
courses and dates of play are as
follows: Tuesday, July 10, at Meigs player’s name, age as of July 12,
2017 and the school they are curCounty Golf Course in Pomeroy;
rently attending.
and Monday, July 16, at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason.
The fee for each tournament is
$10 per player. A small lunch is
included with the fee and will be
served at the conclusion of play
each week. Registration begins at
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
8:30 a.m. with play starting at 9
annual Gallia Academy football
a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone at
golf scramble will be Saturday, July
740-256-6160, Jan Haddox at 304- 21, at Cliffside Golf Course. Regis675-3388, or Bob Blessing 304-675- tration begins at 7:30 a.m. and the
6135 if you can contribute or have scramble will start at 8:30 a.m.
questions concerning the tour.
The format will be bring your
own team, and the team will be
four players with only one handicap under eight and a team handicap of 40 or greater.
There will be two divisions to
choose from. The blue division is
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Cliffa competitive division that will be
side Golf Course will be hosting
playing for cash prizes. The white
the 10th annual Kiwanis Juniors
division is a fun division with no
at Cliffside Golf Tournament for
junior golfers on Thursday, July 12, handicap requirements and winstarting at 10 a.m. Registration will ners will be drawn at random.
Food and beverages will be probe from 9 a.m. until 9:45.
This is an individual stroke play vided at the event. The deadline
for registration is Friday, July 13.
tournament open to golfers age
To register or for questions,
10-or-under to 18 years old. The
please call 740-645-5783.
participants will be divided into

GAHS football
golf scramble

Kiwanis Juniors
Golf Tournament

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