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                  <text>Scenes
from the
Blues Bash

Biker
Sunday
held

MLB Hall
of Fame
inductions

NEWS s 4A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 121, Volume 72

Sound of the season

Entries taken
Friday, Saturday for
Meigs Fair contests
Staff Report

ROCKSPRINGS
— Entries for several
Meigs County Fair contests and exhibits will
take place this Friday
and Saturday.
Entries will be
accepted from 8 a.m. to
4 p.m. on Friday, Aug.
3 and Saturday, Aug. 4
at the fair board ofﬁce
located at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds.
All open class entries
will be taken at this
time, including, ﬂowers
and plants; domestic
arts; amateur painting;
amateur photography;
baking and canning;
open class animal
entries; pretty baby
contest; and Little Miss
and Mister.
The annual Pretty
Baby Contest will be
held at 1 p.m. on Monday, Aug. 13, at the Hill
Stage. This is a change
from past years when
the contest was held on
Saturday of fair week.
Participants are to be

dressed in casual clothing, nothing fancy, with
no hat or bows. All participants must be Meigs
County residents.
Age categories will be
birth to three months;
three to six months; six
to 12 months; 12 to 18
months; 18 months to
two years; two years;
and three years. A boy
and girl will be selected
as the ﬁrst place winner
in each age group.
In addition to preregistration, registration will take place
from noon to 1 p.m.
on the day of the contest. The contest is
sponsored by Home
National Bank.
Little Miss and Little
Mister Meigs County
Fair will be crowned on
at 11 a.m. on Monday,
August 13.
The contest will take
place on the Hill Stage
and is sponsored by the
Rutland Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary.
See ENTRIES | 2A

Search warrant
conducted on Porter
Road in Bidwell
Staff Report

BIDWELL — Gallia Sheriff Matt Champlin
announced that the Gallia County law enforcement community is conducting an investigation
into the trafﬁcking of narcotics which began late
Sunday evening and continued into the early
morning hours Monday.
During the course of the investigation, the
sheriff’s ofﬁce has said a large quantity of money
and cash were seized from a residence on Porter
Road in the Bidwell community of Gallia County.
In addition, a small caliber ﬁrearm was recovered
as well.
“This investigation is a result of the diligence of
the entire Gallia County law enforcement community working collaboratively and it has resulted in
a search warrant to ensure that a large quantity of
narcotics was prevented from making it onto the
streets and into the hands of local addicts. I am
proud of these continued efforts of all of our law
enforcement agencies working together to ﬁght
this battle in an effort to win this war against the
out of town drug dealers who think that they can
prey on our neighbors and family members,” said
Champlin
Champlin further states, “This investigation is
still ongoing and is being led by The Gallia-Meigs
Major Crimes Task Force who will be in consultation with Gallia County Prosecuting Attorney

Tuesday, July 31, 2018 s 50¢

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

With football season just a few weeks away, it is time for the local high school marching bands to prepare for their turn under the
Friday night lights as well. The Meigs Marauder Marching Band spent last week at band camp, preparing their halftime and competition
performance for the upcoming season. On Friday evening, the band presented a preview of their show “If Only” for family, friends and
community members. The show includes music from The Wizard of Oz. Long-time Band Director Toney Dingess thanked those who had
helped out with the week’s activities, including assistants, boosters and school administration.

Bash brings in thousands
By Erin Perkins
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — People
from near, along with
those from far, gathered
in downtown Pomeroy
this weekend to enjoy
time with their friends as
well as an array of musical performances and
locally-crafted brews.
Blues Bash organizer
Jackie Welker commented
the 18th Annual Big Bend
Blues Bash hailed thousands of visitors throughout the weekend ranging
from the yearly regulars
to the newcomers.
“I have attended every
year,” commented bash
goer Candi Ohlinger,
“and I attend because I
love the music and the
people. The people coming together for such a
fun event is exciting.”
Bash goers were able
to experience the musical
styling of several artists
beginning last Friday at
6 p.m. with Snuggleﬁsh
kicking off the bash and
continuing into Saturday
with Dwayne Dopsie and
Zydeco Hellraisers rounding it out.
“I think the crowd thor-

Erin Perkins | OVP

The 18th Annual Big Bend Blues Bash hailed thousands of visitors throughout the weekend ranging
from the yearly regulars to the newcomers.

oughly enjoyed the artists
this year,” said Welker, “I
think this was as diverse
of a lineup as we’ve ever
had and considering the
entire summer series, we
had something for everyone from rock to blues,
soul, Americana, roots,
zydeco.”
The line-up consisted
of returning favorites as

well as offered new favorites for the bash goers.
Welker said, “It’s always
great seeing old friends,
but fun to make new ones
as well.”
Though all of the performers were individually
impressive in their own
ways, Welker felt Dopsie
knocked it out of parking
lot.

“The uniqueness and
showmanship of Dwayne
Dopsie was outstanding,
a true show stopper,” said
Welker, “I’ve always felt
Pomeroy has a bit of a
Louisiana ﬂair about it,
having Dwayne performing zydeco in town was a
perfect ﬁt.”
See BASH | 2A

See WARRANT | 2A

New Haven pool currently closed

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Weather: 6A

By Mindy Kearns

B SPORTS
TV listings: 2B
Classifieds: 3B
Comics: 5B

Special to the Register

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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com and visit us on
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thoughts.

NEW HAVEN — There’s both
bad news and good news when it
comes to the New Haven Municipal Swimming Pool.
The bad news is the pool was
closed last week to be drained
and cleaned. The good news is
the pool will reopen with the
swimming season being extended
through Labor Day.
New Haven Mayor Greg Kaylor said the pool was completely
drained Friday following concerns
from residents. Water in the pool
was turning black, and with no
way to clean it, the council had
two options: close the pool for the

remainder of the year, or completely drain the pool, clean the bottom
and sides, reﬁll it, and extend the
season. Members chose the latter.
Once the pool was drained, the
teenage lifeguards, town workers, mayor, council member Roy
Grimm, and a few others spent
all day Saturday and Monday
morning washing down walls and
using a pressure washer to clean
the sludge from the bottom. Once
clean, the mayor said there are
a few minor repairs to be made
to the pool and one of the diving
boards.
With the help of the ﬁre department, Kaylor said the pool will
be reﬁlled from a nearby ﬁre
hydrant. It should be reopened

this week, he added.
Due to the down time, the council agreed to extend the swim season. Normally, the pool closes just
prior to the Mason County Fair. It
will now be extended until Labor
Day, but only on weekends once
school begins. Kaylor said some
evenings might be added as well.
Kaylor blamed the pool’s problems on its age and old, galvanized
piping. The pipes allow manganese
to build up, causing the water to
have a black tint. He said he consulted with the health department,
and while the manganese presents
no health risks, the council felt
cleaning it would be best.
See POOL | 2A

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2A Tuesday, July 31, 2018

DEATH NOTICES
QUALLS
MIDDLEPORT — John Qualls, 81, of Middleport, died Saturday, July 28, 2018, at Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center in Middleport.
Funeral arrangements will at noon on Friday
August 3, 2018, at Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Pastor Hollis Calhoun ofﬁciating.
Burial will be in the Minersville Cemetery. Calling
hours will be Friday from 10 a.m.-noon.

Warrant
From page 1A

Jason Holdren’s ofﬁce
regarding charges on the
suspects.”
Names of suspects
were not released as of
publishing time while law

Daily Sentinel

enforcement continues
interviews with the investigation.
The Major Crimes
Task Force of GalliaMeigs is a state task
force under the jurisdiction the Ohio Organized
Crime Investigations
Commission which is
part of the Ohio Attor-

ney General’s Ofﬁce, the
task force was formed
in September 2013 and
consists of the Gallia and
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁces, Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Investigation,
the Gallipolis City Police
Department, the Middleport Police Department
and both the Gallia and

Meigs County Prosecutor’s Ofﬁces.
Champlin encourages
the public to keep feeding his ofﬁce tips either
through his deputies or
by leaving an anonymous
message on the Gallia
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
Tip Line at 740-4466555.

MCCLOUD SR.
MASON — Johnnie Edward McCloud Sr., 73,
of Mason, W.Va., died July 28, 2018 in Lakin State
Hospital, West Columbia, W.Va. following an
extended illness.
Graveside service will be 11 a.m., Tuesday, July
31, 2018, in the Graham Baptist Church Cemetery,
New Haven, W.Va.
Arrangements provided by Foglesong-Casto
Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va.
OURS
GALLIPOLIS — Kenneth E. Ours, 91, a lifelong resident, died on Saturday, July 28, 2018 in
the Grant Medical Center, Columbus.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m., Thursday,
August 2, 2018 at Willis Funeral Home with Pastors Matthew Henry and Alfred Holley ofﬁciating.
His burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery.
Friends may call on Wednesday, August 1, 2018
from 5-8 p.m. at Willis Funeral Home.
ROBERTSON JR.
POINT PLEASANT — Ronald Eugene Robertson Jr., died Saturday July 28,2018 while at Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio.
A celebration of Ron’s life will be Thursday, Aug.
2, 2018 at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home from 5-7
p.m. with a funeral service at 7 p.m.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Thursday, Aug. 2
POMEROY — The Praise Singers will perform
at 7 p.m. at Calvary Pilgrim Church. The Praise
Singers include performers Caleb Zeigler, Nathan
Black, Nathaniel Stoltfus, Darren McDonald, and
Jeffrey Anderson.

Vacation Bible School
POMEROY — VBS at Carleton Church,
Kingsbury Road, will be held July 30-Aug. 3
from 6:30-8:30 p.m. each evening. The theme
is Camp Moose on the Loose, with study about
Peter, crafts, handouts, drawings, food and
games.
MIDDLEPORT — Hope Baptist Church, 570
Grant Street, Middleport, will host Game On
VBS from July 30-Aug. 3, 6:15-9 p.m. each night.
Games, fun and more.

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
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
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.

Mindy Kearns | Courtesy

The New Haven Municipal Swimming Pool was drained Friday after concerns of dark water. Workers have been at the pool both Saturday
and Monday, scrubbing and power washing, and it was scheduled to be refilled either late Monday afternoon or Tuesday. The pool will
reopen later this week, with an extended swimming season planned until Labor Day.

Pool
From page 1A

The pool has seen tremendous
increased activity this year, since
free admission began. Some days,
over 100 swimmers have come to
the pool.
Residents, businesses, churches,

and other organizations came
together in the late spring with
enough donations to not only keep
the pool open, but to allow the
free admission for everyone for
the entire season. Chemicals for
the season were donated by Jamie
Roush. The latest donation was
made by Pharmacist David Morgan, Kaylor said, who donated two
new wooden picnic tables and 14

Bash

night and the Maple Lawn
Brewery had musical performances on Saturday.
The Big Bend Blues
From page 1A
Bash continues to return
every year because of all
Along with the Blues
Bash going on downtown, the increasing community
support the live, local
Court Street Grill had
musical performances on music scene keeps receivboth Friday and Saturday ing.

resin Adirondack chairs.
Recreation remains a high priority in the town of New Haven,
with work also progressing on a
basketball court near the pool.
More details on the court will be
announced once completed.
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer for Ohio Valley
Publishing, email her at mindykearns1@hotmail.
com.

Welker extended a special thank you to Mayor
Don Anderson and the
Pomeroy Village Council,
Police Chief Mark Profﬁtt and the Pomeroy
Police Department, Phil
Ohlinger and the Pomeroy
Blues and Jazz Society,
Fire Chief Rick Blaettnar

and the Pomeroy Fire
Department, Floyd Ridenour, the local AEP line
crew, and all of this year’s
Blues Bash sponsors and
support staff.
Erin Perkins is a staff writer for
Ohio Valley Publishing. Reach her at
(304) 675-1333.

Entries
From page 1A

The Little Miss and Little Mister contest is open
to Meigs County children
who are four through
seven years of age by the
contest date. The child
must turn four years of
age before Aug. 13, 2018,
and must not turn eight
years of age prior to Aug.
13, 2018.
One boy and one girl
will be selected by out of
county judges to reign
as Little Mister and
Little Miss Meigs County,
respectively.
Registration will also
be accepted from 9-10
a.m. on the day of the
contest. The contest is
sponsored by the Rutland
Fire Department Ladies

I’M NOT A
DOCTOR.

File photo

Open entries will be taken Friday and Saturday at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.

Auxiliary.
In addition to the registration, camping spaces,
reserve parking permits
and fair passes will be on

sale from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
on Aug. 3 and 4.
Last year, there was
a record number of
entries during the two

days, with a total of
3,917 entries submitted
in categories including,
ﬂowers, photography and
animals.

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
TESS SIMON, MD // INTERNAL MEDICINE

304.857.6538
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
PRIMARY CARE

OH-70057256

Kourtney Long
Point Pleasant High School Secretary
Patient of Tess Simon, MD

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 31, 2018 3A

Eastern Local free and reduced meal plan details announced
REDSVILLE —
Eastern Local School
District has announced
its 2018-2019 program
year policy for Free and
Reduced Priced Meals for
students unable to pay
the full price of meals or
milk served under the
National School Lunch
and School Breakfast,
After School Care Snack
or Special Milk Program.
Each school ofﬁce and
the central ofﬁce has a
copy of the policy, which
may be reviewed by any
interested party.
The Federal Income
Eligibility Guidelines will
be used for determining
eligibility. Children from
families whose annual
income is at or below the
Federal Guidelines are eligible for free and reduced
price meals or free milk if
the school participates in
the Special Milk Program.
Application forms
are being distributed to
all homes in a letter to
parents or guardians.
To apply for free and
reduced-price beneﬁts,
households should ﬁll out
the application and return
it to the school. Additional copies are available
at the principal’s ofﬁce in
each school. A complete
application is required.
Households which cur-

or income decreases
because of unemployment
or other reasons, the
family should contact the
school to ﬁle a new application. Such changes may
make the children of the
family eligible for free or
reduced-price beneﬁts if
the family income falls at
or below the levels shown
above.
In accordance with
Federal civil rights law
and U.S. Department
of Agriculture (USDA)
civil rights regulations
and policies, the USDA,
its Agencies, ofﬁces, and
employees, and institutions participating in or
administering USDA programs are prohibited from
discriminating based on
race, color, national origin, sex, disability, age, or
reprisal or retaliation for
prior civil rights activity
in any program or activity
conducted or funded by
USDA.
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means of communication for program
information (e.g. Braille,
large print, audiotape,
American Sign Language,
etc.), should contact the
Agency (State or local)
where they applied for
beneﬁts. Individuals who
are deaf, hard of hearing

or have speech disabilities may contact USDA
through the Federal
Relay Service at (800)
877-8339. Additionally,
program information
may be made available
in languages other than
English.
To ﬁle a program
complaint of discrimination, complete the USDA
Program Discrimination
Complaint Form, (AD3027) found online at:
http://www.ascr.usda.gov/
complaint_ﬁling_cust.
html, and at any USDA
ofﬁce, or write a letter
addressed to USDA and
provide in the letter all of
the information requested
in the form. To request
a copy of the complaint
form, call (866) 632-9992.
Submit your completed
form or letter to USDA
by:
(1) mail: U.S. Department of Agriculture
Ofﬁce of the Assistant
Secretary for Civil Rights
1400 Independence
Avenue, SW
Washington, D.C.
20250-9410;
(2) fax: (202) 6907442; or
(3) email: program.
intake@usda.gov.
This institution is an
equal opportunity provider.

that gave his ruling party is 79. Actress Susan Flanvirtually unlimited pownery is 79. Singer Lobo
ers. Los Angeles reached is 75. Actress Geraldine
a deal with international
Chaplin is 74. Former
“The trouble with the
Olympic leaders to host
movie studio executive
public is that there is too
the 2028 Summer Games. Sherry Lansing is 74.
much of it.”
(The games were ofﬁSinger Gary Lewis is
Five years ago:
— Don Marquis,
cially
awarded
to
Los
73. Actor Lane Davies
President
Barack
American journalist,
Angeles
in
September.)
is 68. Actress Susan
Obama’s
national
security
poet and dramatist
Wooldridge is 68. Interteam
acknowledged
for
(1878-1937).
national Tennis Hall of
the ﬁrst time that, when
Today’s Birthdays:
Famer Evonne Goolaginvestigating one susActor Don Murray
released a grisly videoong Cawley is 67. Actor
pected terrorist, it could
is 89. Jazz composertape showing the body of read and store the phone musician Kenny Burrell is Barry Van Dyke is 67.
American hostage Wilrecords of millions of
87. Actress France Nuyen Actor Alan Autry is 66.
liam R. Higgins, a Marine Americans. Voters in Zimlieutenant-colonel, danbabwe went to the polls
gling from a rope.
in national elections that
In 1992, the former
were won by President
Soviet republic of GeorRobert Mugabe amid
gia was admitted to the
opponents’ allegations of
United Nations as its
fraud.
179th member. Thai Airways Flight 311, an AirOne year ago:
bus A310, crashed while
Retired Marine Gen.
approaching Tribhuvan
John Kelly was sworn in
International Airport
as White House chief of
in Nepal; all 113 people
staff, replacing Reince
Holzer welcomes
aboard died.
Priebus. Hours later,
In 2002, a bomb
White House communicaLeslie Patch, MD, FACS,
exploded inside a cafete- tions director Anthony
Board Certiﬁed
ria at the Hebrew Univer- Scaramucci was let go,
sity of Jerusalem, killing
just 11 days after he was
Ophthalmologist,
nine people, including
appointed to the job.
ﬁve Americans.
Former Arizona sheriff
to our locations
Joe Arpaio was convicted
in Jackson
of a criminal charge for
Ten years ago:
Scientists reported the refusing to stop trafﬁc
and Gallipolis!
patrols that targeted
Phoenix spacecraft had
conﬁrmed the presence of immigrants. (Arpaio was
later pardoned by Presifrozen water in Martian
dent Donald Trump.)
soil. Three teenagers
The Trump administrawere shot to death when
a gunman opened ﬁre on tion slapped ﬁnancial
sanctions on Venezuelan
a group of young people
President Nicolas Maduro
who’d gathered to go
swimming in the Menom- after a weekend election

Jazz composer-musician
Michael Wolff is 66. Actor
James Read is 65. Actor
Michael Biehn is 62. Rock
singer-musician Daniel
Ash (Love and Rockets)
is 61. Actor Dirk Blocker
is 61. Entrepreneur Mark
Cuban is 60. Rock musician Bill Berry is 60.
Actor Wally Kurth is 60.
Actor Wesley Snipes is
56. Country singer Chad
Brock is 55. Musician Fatboy Slim is 55.

rently receive Special
Nutrition Assistance
Program Beneﬁts (SNAP,
formally known as food
stamps) or Ohio Works
First (OWF) funds for a
child must provide the
child’s name, the SNAP
or OWF case number
and signature of an adult
household member on the
application. Households
which do not receive
SNAP or OWF funds
must provide the names
of all household members,
the last four digits of the
Social Security Number of the adult signing
the application or state
“none” if the adult does
not have a Social Security
Number, the amount and
source of income received
by each household member, (state the monthly
income) and the signature of an adult household
member. If any of this
information is missing,
the school cannot process
the application.
Families with children
eligible for school meals
may be eligible for free
health care coverage
through Medicaid and/
or Ohio’s Healthy Start
&amp; Healthy Families programs. These programs
include coverage for doctor visits, immunizations,
physicals, prescriptions,

dental, vision, mental
health, substance abuse
and more. Please call
1-800-324-8680 for more
information or to request
an application. Information can also be found on
the web at http://jfs.ohio.
gov/ohp/consumers/familychild.stm. Anyone who
has an Ohio Medicaid
card is already receiving
these services.
The information provided on the application
is conﬁdential and will be
used only for the purpose
of determining eligibility and may be veriﬁed
at any time during the
school year by school or
other program ofﬁcial. To
discourage the possibility
of misrepresentation, the
application forms contain a statement above
the space for signature
certifying that all information furnished is true and
correct. Applications are
being made in connection
with the receipt of federal
funds. Schools or other
ofﬁcials may check the
information on the application at any time during
the school year. Deliberate misrepresentation of
information may subject
the applicant to prosecution under applicable
state and federal laws.
Households will be

notiﬁed of the approval or
denial of beneﬁts.
Foster children are
categorically eligible for
free meal beneﬁts regardless of the household’s
income. If a family has
foster children living with
them and wishes to apply
for such meals or milk for
them, contact the school
for more information.
Under the provision of
the policy, Brian Collins,
Director Of Food Service
Operation will review
applications and determine eligibility. If a parent or guardian disagrees
with the decision on the
application or the result
of veriﬁcation, the decision may be discussed
with the determining
ofﬁcial on an informal
basis. If a formal appeal
is desired, the household
has the right to a fair
hearing. A fair hearing
can be requested either
orally or in writing from:
Brian Collins, 38850 SR
7 Reedsville, OH 45772 (
740-985-3304 ).
The policy contains
an outline of the hearing
procedure.
Households may apply
for beneﬁts any time
during the school year.
If a household is not currently eligible and if the
household size increases

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, July
31, the 212th day of 2018.
There are 153 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On July 31, 1991, President George H.W. Bush
and Soviet President
Mikhail S. Gorbachev
signed the Strategic Arms
Reduction Treaty in Moscow.
On this date:
In 1777, during the
Revolutionary War, the
Marquis de Lafayette, a
19-year-old French nobleman, was made a majorgeneral in the American
Continental Army.
In 1919, Germany’s
Weimar Constitution was
adopted by the republic’s
National Assembly.
In 1948, President
Harry S. Truman helped
dedicate New York International Airport (later
John F. Kennedy International Airport) at Idlewild
Field.
In 1954, Pakistan’s K2
was conquered as two
members of an Italian
expedition, Achille Compagnoni and Lino Lacedelli, reached the summit.
In 1957, the Distant
Early Warning Line, a
system of radar stations
designed to detect Soviet
bombers approaching
North America, went into
operation.
In 1964, the American
space probe Ranger 7
reached the moon, transmitting pictures back to
Earth before impacting
the lunar surface.
In 1970, “The HuntleyBrinkley Report” came
to an end after nearly 14
years as co-anchor Chet
Huntley signed off for
the last time; the broadcast was renamed “NBC
Nightly News.”
In 1971, Apollo 15 crew
members David Scott and
James Irwin became the
ﬁrst astronauts to use a
lunar rover on the surface
of the moon.
In 1972, Democratic
vice-presidential candidate Thomas Eagleton
withdrew from the ticket
with George McGovern
following disclosures
that Eagleton had once
undergone psychiatric
treatment.
In 1989, a pro-Iranian
group in Lebanon

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Wis. (The gunman, Scott
J. Johnson, was later sentenced to life in prison
without parole.)

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4A Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Music gets in the soul and makes people want to dance.

Daily Sentinel

Many boats gathered around to enjoy the music of the Blues Bash from the river.

A weekend full of blues and brews

Rattlesnake Shake performing at the Blues Bash.
At right,
the Bernie
Nau Trio
performs
for Jazz
Night at the
Court Street
Grill each
Thursday.

Chris O’Leary and his band performing at the Blues Bash.

Several people gathered into the Maple Lawn Brewery to enjoy some indoor performances.

The Maple Lawn Brewery had a line-up of performers throughout
the day on Saturday.

Photos by Erin Perkins | OVP

Blues Bash goers could lounge in their chairs to enjoy the music or stand and dance among friends.

The Maple Lawn Brewery had a line-up of performers throughout
the day on Saturday.

The Maple Lawn Brewery had a line-up of performers throughout
the day on Saturday.

Rattlesnake Shake band
member feeling the music.

Chris O’Leary band member
Shouts and Whispers performing at the Blues Bash.
feeling the music.

Music gets in the soul and makes people want to dance.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 31, 2018 5A

The Belle’s annual visit

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

618) and Haning Ridge
Road(Township Road 233).
The road will be closed in
this area. ODOT’s detour is
SR 681 to US 50 to US 33.
The estimated completion
date is Aug. 10, 2018.

School Supply
Giveaway
HARRISONVILLE —
Harrisonville Presbyterian
Church, State Route 143,
Harrisonville, Ohio, will
hold its 10th annual school
supply giveaway, Saturday,
Aug. 11, from 11 a.m.-1
p.m., featuring free school
supplies (backpacks, pens,
pencils, crayons, paper,
etc.), free food, games, face
painting, some clothing, and
$25 shoe coupons (redeemable at Shoe Show, Mason,
W.Va. for school shoes or
boots only). Coupons are
limited and will be given
out on a ﬁrst-come, ﬁrstserved basis.
Erin Perkins | OVP

The Belle of Cincinnati returned Monday for the annual dinner cruise. The cruise is a fundraiser for the Point Pleasant
River Museum and has become a popular event and night out for local residents. The Belle is known as the flagship of BB
Riverboats and is described as being a “majestic and ornate beauty,” by her owners. According to BB Riverboats, the Belle is
also known for allowing visitors to “cruise in ultimate comfort and luxury surrounded by a lavish Victorian decor, appointed
with sumptuous details.”

Ohio, W.Va. AGs join bipartisan
effort to protect Veterans Memorial
COLUMBUS — Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine has
joined an effort by a bipartisan
group of 28 states to protect a
historic cross honoring World
War I veterans as part of a
case with much broader implications for the First Amendment.
The 28-state bipartisan coalition urges the U.S. Supreme
Court to consider and ultimately protect veterans memorials
that include religious symbolism. The coalition’s friend of
the court brief seeks to overturn a lower court’s ruling that
one such memorial violates the
Establishment Clause of the
U.S. Constitution.
“Veterans memorials have

historically used religious and
secular symbols to honor the
sacriﬁce of the men and women
who have bravely served our
nation,” said Attorney General
Mike DeWine. “These memorials are not built to inspire religious devotion; they are built to
honor and remember those who
have died securing our freedom.
This case could impact the
manner in which we’ve honored
our nation’s heroes for generations.”
The case at hand involves a
nearly century-old memorial
cross in Bladensburg, Maryland,
started by community members
and mothers whose sons died
in World War I, and ﬁnished
by the American Legion. The

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initial lawsuit seeks to force the
state of Maryland to tear down
the historic cross.
The Supreme Court’s ultimate
decision could impact memorials across the nation, including
those at Arlington National
Cemetery.
Besides Ohio, the other states
that joined the brief are Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho,
Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee,
Texas, Utah, Virginia, and West
Virginia, as well as the governor
of Kentucky.

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 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,
RACINE — Meigs County if applicable. Shingles and
pneumonia vaccines are also
Road 28, Bashan Road, will
available. Call for eligibility
be closed between C-31,
determination and availBald Knobs-Stiversville
ability or visit our website
Road, and T-109, Carmel
at www.meigs-health.com to
Road, for approximately 4
see a list of accepted comweeks beginning Monday,
mercial insurances and MedJuly 23. County forces will
icaid for adults.
be repairing a slip in this
The Ohio Department of
area.
Health (ODH) does NOT
MEIGS COUNTY — A
recommended for routine
culvert replacement projHepatitis A vaccination of
ect begins on July 27, on
Healthcare Workers. AddiState Route 681 in Meigs
County. The project is taking tionally, the Advisory Committee on Immunization
place between US 33 and
Practices (ACIP) does NOT
Markham Road (Township
Road 652). One lane will be recommend routine Hepatitis A vaccination for Food
closed in this area. Temporary trafﬁc signals and an 11 Workers. Currently, ODH is
strongly recommending the
foot width restriction will
following groups to get the
be in place. The estimated
Hepatitis A vaccine: men
completion date is Aug. 31,
who have sex with men,
2018.
persons who inject drugs
MEIGS COUNTY — A
and person who use illegal
culvert replacement projnon-injection drugs. These
ect begins on July 30 on
are the highest risk groups
State Route 681 in Meigs
for transmission of Hepatitis
County. The project is takA. Call 740-992-6626 for vacing place between Fredrick
cine availability.
Road (Township Road

Road Closures
and Restrictions

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Funding for this statement, publication, press release, etc. was made possible, in part, by the Food
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�NEWS/WEATHER

6A Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Fellowship, worship, and motorcycles

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

Card Shower

Jim Smith (long-time caretaker of
Mulberry Pond) is currently at Overbrook Center in Middleport. Cards
may be sent to him at 333 Page Street,
Room 110, Middleport, OH 45760.
Hazel McKelvey will turn 96 on July
31. Cards may be sent to her at 55624
State Route 124, Portland, OH 45770.

Tuesday, July 31
POMEROY — OH Kan Coin Club
will be meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the
upper room at the Farmers Bank.
MEIGS COUNTY — All branches
of the Meigs County District Public
Library will be closed for a staff training. Normal hours will resume on
Wednesday, Aug. 1.

Wednesday, Aug. 1
SCIPIO TWP. — A free Firehouse
Community Dinner will be held at the
Scipio Township Fire Department in
Harrisonville, State Route 684. Dinner will be served from 5-6 p.m., and
will feature chicken salad on a croissant, fruit salad, potato salad, beverage and “Make Your Own Ice Cream
Sundae”.

Photos by Diana Johnson | Courtesy

The sixth annual Biker Sunday had a nice turn out with 122 bikers showing up for the event on Sunday morning at Northbend Church in Mason. Bill
Davis, an organizer of the event and a member of the Heaven’s Saints Motorcycle Ministry, West Virginia Chapter, led the group on a ride to the Racine
Locks and Dams prior to lunch and the bike games.

Thursday, Aug. 2
CHESTER — The Chester Shade
Historical Association monthly board
meeting at 6:30 p.m. Everyone is
invited to come.

Friday, Aug. 3
POMEROY — The regular meeting
of the Meigs County Public Employee
Retirees Inc. will be held at 1 p.m.
at the Mulberry Community Center,
156 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Guest
speaker will be a representative from
Ohio Public Employee Retirement
System providing updates on statewide OPERS concerns. District 7
Representative Greg Ervin will update
members on PERI issues. All Meigs
County Public Employee retirees are
urged to attend.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

69°

77°

76°

A little rain today. A shower or thunderstorm
around tonight. High 82° / Low 67°

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.

85°
66°
86°
65°
101° in 1999
53° in 2014

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
5.41
4.40
30.68
26.36

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:29 a.m.
8:41 p.m.
10:59 p.m.
9:53 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

New

First

Full

Aug 4 Aug 11 Aug 18 Aug 26

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

Major
Today 2:52a
Wed. 3:41a
Thu. 4:29a
Fri.
5:17a
Sat.
6:05a
Sun. 6:53a
Mon. 7:43a

Minor
9:03a
9:52a
10:40a
11:28a
12:17p
12:40a
1:29a

Major
3:14p
4:02p
4:51p
5:40p
6:29p
7:19p
8:11p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Minor
9:25p
10:13p
11:02p
11:51p
---1:06p
1:57p

WEATHER HISTORY
Duluth, Minn., recorded an all-time
high temperature of 106 degrees on
July 31, 1936. This is hotter than has
ever been recorded at Miami Beach,
Fla., where being near the ocean
prevents extreme heat.

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

THURSDAY

Low

Moderate

High

High

Lucasville
81/67
Very High

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
12.50
16.10
21.77
12.97
12.95
25.03
13.11
25.79
34.36
12.88
16.40
34.60
14.70

Portsmouth
81/67

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.77
-0.35
-0.03
-0.16
-0.18
-0.26
-0.07
+0.19
+0.05
-0.17
+0.80
+0.90
+0.40

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Logan
78/65

Ashland
81/66
Grayson
81/66

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

86°
66°

88°
67°

Mostly cloudy with a
shower or t-storm

Mostly cloudy with a
t-storm possible

Mostly cloudy,
showers possible;
humid

85°
71°
Humid with periods
of sun

NATIONAL CITIES
Belpre
81/67

Athens
79/66

Today

St. Marys
81/67

Parkersburg
81/65

Coolville
80/67

Elizabeth
82/67

Spencer
82/68

Buffalo
82/68

Ironton
81/66

MONDAY

88°
67°

Marietta
80/67

Murray City
79/65

Wilkesville
80/65
POMEROY
Jackson
81/67
81/66
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
82/68
82/67
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
78/64
GALLIPOLIS
82/67
82/68
82/67

South Shore Greenup
81/66
81/66

56

Partly sunny and
pleasant

McArthur
79/65

Very High

Primary: grasses and other
Mold: 2350
Moderate

Chillicothe
80/66

FRIDAY

81°
65°

Adelphi
79/65

Waverly
80/66

Pollen: 2

Low

MOON PHASES

Mostly cloudy and
humid with a t-storm

4

Primary: cladosporium

Wed.
6:29 a.m.
8:40 p.m.
11:28 p.m.
10:51 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

82°
66°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Milton
82/67
Huntington
80/64

Clendenin
83/70

St. Albans
83/69

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Winnipeg
100s
Seattle
78/47
84/57
90s
80s
70s
60s
Billings
Minneapolis
91/60
50s
85/64
40s
Chicago
30s
80/63
20s
San
Francisco
10s
66/53
Denver
0s
Kansas City
85/56
-0s
81/62
-10s
Los Angeles
89/69
T-storms
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
93/74
Flurries
Chihuahua
Ice
Houston
97/67
92/74
Cold Front
Warm Front
Monterrey
Stationary Front
97/71

Charleston
81/68

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

Montreal
82/70
Toronto
79/65
Detroit
78/65

New York
80/72

Washington
83/75

Wed.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
88/67/t 93/68/pc
Anchorage
69/58/c 65/56/c
Atlanta
83/68/t
81/66/t
Atlantic City
79/75/c
85/75/t
Baltimore
83/73/c
86/72/t
Billings
91/60/pc 91/64/s
Boise
102/71/pc 102/66/s
Boston
81/71/pc 85/76/c
Charleston, WV
81/68/t
80/66/t
Charlotte
83/71/t
83/70/t
Cheyenne
83/53/s 80/55/c
Chicago
80/63/pc 83/67/c
Cincinnati
76/62/t
80/63/t
Cleveland
79/67/r
78/66/t
Columbus
78/65/t
80/64/t
Dallas
90/70/pc 93/68/s
Denver
85/56/s 84/58/pc
Des Moines
84/63/pc 88/65/s
Detroit
78/65/sh 82/64/sh
Honolulu
88/76/pc 88/78/pc
Houston
92/74/t 95/75/pc
Indianapolis
76/64/r
80/64/t
Kansas City
81/62/pc 87/65/s
Las Vegas
104/87/pc 107/88/s
Little Rock
83/65/t 87/63/s
Los Angeles
89/69/pc 88/68/pc
Louisville
81/67/t
83/66/t
Miami
88/77/pc
89/78/t
Minneapolis
85/64/s
79/56/t
Nashville
82/65/t 85/67/pc
New Orleans
88/74/t
86/73/t
New York City
80/72/c
85/74/t
Oklahoma City
82/60/s 86/65/s
Orlando
88/75/pc
89/75/t
Philadelphia
84/74/c
87/75/t
Phoenix
107/87/pc 110/86/pc
Pittsburgh
78/66/t
80/63/t
Portland, ME
81/65/pc 77/68/sh
Raleigh
83/71/t
86/71/t
Richmond
83/73/c
87/72/t
St. Louis
80/65/t 86/67/pc
Salt Lake City
98/73/pc
96/72/t
San Francisco
66/53/pc 66/53/pc
Seattle
84/57/s 79/57/pc
Washington, DC
83/75/c
88/74/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
83/68

High
Low

110° in Needles, CA
30° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
High
Low
Miami
88/77

121° in In Salah, Algeria
15° in Queenstown, South Africa

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

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Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 31, 2018 s Section B

HoF to ‘honor’ Owens as part of class
By Barry Wilner

exhibit that includes a glass
locker for each new member;
their pictures on the light
Despite his decision to not standards of Tom Benson
Hall of Fame Stadium; a role
attend Saturday’s Pro Footin opening videos shown
ball Hall of Fame induction
within the stadium; and
ceremonies, Terrell Owens
will be “honored” by the hall mention in any reference to
the 2018 class.
for his NFL career.
Baker said NFL Network
Hall President David
and ESPN, which both
Baker tells The Associated
televise the inductions, will
Press on Monday that the
show a video of Owens’
Canton, Ohio, shrine’s miscareer to the audience at
sion statement begins with
the goal “to honor the heroes home. That video will not be
shown in the stadium.
of the game.”
“It’s difﬁcult he will not
So Owens, who instead
be here to put on the jacket,
will be making an appearunveil his bust, make a
ance at the University of
speech, and attend the
Chattanooga , where he
parade,” Baker says. “For
played college football, will
those things, there’s nothing
be part of the 2018 class

The Associated Press

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

An outside view of the Pro Football Hall of Fame located in Canton, Ohio.

we can do.”
Owens has cited the fact it
took three years of eligibility for him to make the hall,
claiming there were false
representations of him as a
teammate during the voting process. He also noted
that no former players vote,
ignoring that Hall of Famers
James Lofton and Dan Fouts
are among those on the committee.
The 44-year-old Owens
had a mostly sensational
15-year career playing for
San Francisco, Philadelphia,
Dallas, Buffalo and Cincinnati. He is second to Jerry
Rice in receiving yards and
See HALL | 2B

Kyle Busch wins
6th race of the
season at Pocono
LONG POND, Pa. (AP) — Kyle Busch and his
Joe Gibbs Racing team were in sync everywhere
on the track but victory lane. When it was time
to snap photos of the winners, some members
ﬂashed one ﬁnger, others held up six.
Yes, that’s one for the win at Pocono Raceway
and six for the total this season.
Busch then heard his name shouted from the top
of the Richard Petty 200 Victory Circle. He craned
his neck toward the section where the words were
ﬂanked by two images of Petty in his feathered
Stetson hat and dark glasses.
Busch still has a long chase toward Petty on the
Cup wins list but it hasn’t kept the 33-year-old star
from thinking about how far he can get.
“The top! Pretty simple,” Busch said.
Busch had no one to bump him out of the lead
this week and stormed from the bottom half of the
ﬁeld Sunday at Pocono Raceway on the way to his
sixth NASCAR Cup victory of the season.
While champagne was sprayed on the podium,
team owner Joe Gibbs was a safe distance from
the party, a Super Bowl ring glistening on a ﬁnger
he plugged into his ear to mufﬂe the noise as he
talked on the phone.
“Crazy, man. He’s on a tear right now,” he said
to the other side.
The milestones kept piling up for Busch in a
race where he matched Kevin Harvick for most
wins this season.
Busch tied three-time champ Tony Stewart for
13th on the career wins list with 49.
“You keep reaching higher up the ladder and
you keep reaching more milestone drivers,” Busch
said. “Tony Stewart is one of the all-time best and
one of the drivers that I was a fan of growing up.
It’s awesome to be able to tie him. There’s many
more. We want to keep going.”
Gibbs ﬁelded cars for both Busch and Stewart
and said both drivers were born to race.
“Very talented, driven, they want to go to the
front,” Gibbs said. “Both of them were real talented, that’s for sure.”
Busch, who won eight times in 2008, made it
look easy at Pocono this weekend, with a win
Saturday in the Truck Series race. He won for
the 192nd time over the Cup, Xﬁnity and Truck
Series.
“How many can you get? I don’t know. I’d like to
think everything’s achievable,” Busch said.
He has Cup wins this year at Texas, Bristol,
Richmond, Charlotte and Chicagoland. He hasn’t
gone more than three races without a winning a
race since April. Busch had never won at Pocono
until July 2017. He’s won 10 races since that date
and led more than 2,000 laps.
The only quibble with all this success?
“I do have a trophy case problem,” Busch said,
laughing.
Busch was set to start second but his No. 18
Toyota was one of 13 cars dumped to back of
the pack for ﬂunking post-qualifying inspection.
The penalized cars included Harvick, who used a
bump-and-run on the 18 with seven laps left last
week at New Hampshire to knock Busch out of
contention.
Oh well.
Much like the qualifying penalty, last week was
just a minor afterthought.
Harvick’s pole qualifying run also was tossed
out but he led 30 laps and ﬁnished fourth.
The race was red ﬂagged with six laps left in
the wake of a violent wreck by Darrell Wallace Jr.
Wallace lost the breaks in his No. 43 Chevrolet
and the car shot across the grass and slammed
See BUSCH | 2B

Photos by Hans Pennink | AP

Jim Thome fans Betsy Yolchim, left, and her husband Tomm Betsy, of Erie, Pa., wait for the start of National Baseball Hall of Fame
induction ceremonies Sunday in Cooperstown, N.Y.

Jones shines in induction speech
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.
(AP) — Chipper Jones
didn’t bow to the pressure of the moment, and
it was considerable.
Jones was inducted
Sunday into the Baseball
Hall of Fame, and he
stood there delivering his
speech with wife Taylor
staring up at him, hours
away from giving birth
to a son to be named
Cooper in honor of the
special day.
Faced with that daunting task, Jones delivered
ﬂawlessly, just as he did
during a 19-year career
with the Atlanta Braves.
“She changed my life
forever,” Jones said as his
wife brushed away tears.
“It took me 40 years and
some major imperfections in me along the
way to ﬁnd my true profession. Now we’ve taken
our two families and
blended them together.
It has given me what I’ve
been searching for my
entire life —true happiness.”
A crowd estimated at
about 50,000 gathered
on a sun-splashed day to
honor six former players.
Also enshrined were Jim
Thome, Vladimir Guerrero, Trevor Hoffman and
former Detroit Tigers
teammates Jack Morris
and Alan Trammell.
Jones controlled his
emotions in a speech that
took the crowd through
his entire career, starting
with his rookie season

National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Chipper Jones gestures
while speaking Sunday during an induction ceremony at the Clark
Sports Center in Cooperstown, N.Y.

when he helped lead the
Braves to the 1995 World
Series title. He was one
of the greatest switch-hitters in baseball history,
in the mold of his dad’s
favorite player, Mickey
Mantle, and ﬁnished
with a .303 career batting average, 468 home
runs, and 1,623 RBIs,
credentials that earned
him election on the ﬁrst
try.
Jones also heaped
praise on his mom and
dad — “You’re the reason
I’m on this stage,” he
said — and ended his
speech by thanking the
loyal Atlanta fans.
“You stuck by me,” he
said. “You’re the reason
I never want to play
anywhere else. I love you
guys. Thank you.”
Emotional during a
Hall of Fame visit in February to tour the museum in preparation for
this day, Thome held it
together despite having

to wipe away tears after
his daughter Lila sang
the national anthem. Like
Jones, he heaped praise
on his wife, Andrea.
“Obviously, induction
into the Hall of Fame is
one of the greatest honors of my life,” Thome
said. “The best thing,
though, that’s ever happened to me is the day
you agreed to marry me.
You are without a doubt
the best teammate I
could ever have and, with
the world as my witness,
I love you more today
than ever.”
The lefty-swinging
Thome hit 612 home
runs, eighth all-time, and
had an MLB record 13
walk-off homers, mostly
for the Cleveland Indians.
Thome marveled
that the genesis of this
moment was hitting
rocks on a gravel driveway with an aluminum
bat as a kid.

“It’s been my great
privilege to have played
the game for as long as I
did,” he said. “And I can
say this with certainty,
the possibilities are just
as important as the outcome. Living the dream
that is major league baseball, the best part is not
the result but taking the
journey with the people
whose contributions
make it all possible.
“I’m so honored to be
part of something so special. Baseball is beautiful,
and I am forever in its
service.”
Greeted by hundreds
of fans waving Dominican Republic ﬂags, Guerrero spoke in his native
Spanish in a speech that
was translated from
Spanish and lasted just
ﬁve minutes. He thanked
his father and mother,
who cooked dinners for
him and does the same
now for his son, and the
fans and the people in his
hometown of Don Gregorio. His son Vladimir Jr.,
the top prospect in the
minor leagues with the
Blue Jays, was in attendance.
The nine-time AllStar outﬁelder batted
.318 with 449 homers
and 1,496 RBIs and is
the ﬁrst player inducted
wearing the cap of the
Angels, the team where
he enjoyed his greatest
success.
See SPEECH | 2B

�SPORTS/TV

2B Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Browns owners remain committed to 1-win coach Hue Jackson
has the pieces to win.
“He has good quarterbacks,
he has some skill players, he
has a veteran offensive lineman
— now, we have to ﬁgure out
left tackle — and three really
good (running) backs and a
good defense.”
Jackson has also been helped
by not also handling offensive
coordinator duties. With some
urging and the blessing of the
Haslams, he turned his offense
over to Todd Haley, who was
ﬁred after six seasons with
Pittsburgh.
“You have to give Hue credit
for bringing in Todd Haley,
which I think will allow Hue
to be the head coach,” Haslam
said. “I think this will be the
ﬁrst opportunity Hue will have
to do what we know he can do
as head coach as a leader. Even

BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Two
miserable seasons. One measly
win.
Still, Cleveland coach Hue
Jackson continues to have the
“unwavering” support of owners Dee and Jimmy Haslam,
who believe his third year will
bring out the best in him —
and the Browns.
“I think we will see the real
Hue Jackson,” Jimmy Haslam
said Saturday before practice.
Jackson has lost 31 of 32
games since taking over a
Cleveland franchise that has
undergone numerous coaching changes and front-ofﬁce
upheaval since the team’s NFL
expansion return in 1999. However, the Haslams feel the worst
is over, and thanks to a roster
overhaul directed by general
manager John Dorsey, Jackson

though Todd will be calling
all of the shots on offense, I
think Hue will obviously have
some impact there like he will
defense. We are excited to see
it.”
The Browns went 0-16 last
season, matching the 2008
Detroit Lions as the only teams
in NFL history to lose all 16
games. But while there were
many Cleveland fans calling
for Jackson’s ﬁring, his players remained united behind
him and the Haslams decided
to bring him back for another
year.
That doesn’t mean Jackson’s
job is permanently safe, but
Haslam refused to say there
was a mandate on wins this
season.
“No, we’re excited about Hue
Jackson,” Haslam said. “I think

our commitment to him has
been unwavering and still is.”
Jackson is grateful for the
Haslams’ backing.
“I said all last year, I felt like
I had their full support,” he
said following the Browns’ ﬁrst
practice in pads. “They were
always in communication with
me, and I thank them for that.
I’m glad they feel that way. My
job is to go out and coach this
football team and get them better and we’ve got to do it better
than we’ve ever done it since
I’ve been here. We have some
players that I think are going to
help make the difference, but at
the same time, it’s just all talk
right now.
“We have to go do it. So
we’ve just got to keep working,
but I do thank them for that.”
As the 2017 season unrav-

eled, the Haslams chose to
ﬁre head of football operations
Sashi Brown, whose analyticsheavy approach yielded mixed
results and not enough wins.
Dorsey, who guided Kansas
City’s turnaround from 2013
to 2016, replaced Brown and
spent this past offseason
acquiring talent.
Haslam felt it was fair to
assess Jackson’s upcoming
third season as his ﬁrst.
“I think in some ways you
could say because of the talent he’s had, particularly at
quarterback, particularly last
year, it could view it as his ﬁrst
year, but we don’t look at that,”
Haslam said. “I know everybody’s saying Hue has to win
this many games or he has to
win that many games. We don’t
look at it (like that).”

Busch

Hall

From page 1B

From page 1B

into the wall. There were
several tense seconds
during a wait for Wallace
to put down his window
net. Once out, he sat on
the track and slumped
against the car before he
taken to the track medical center.
When the race
resumed, Busch zipped
away and he surged
ahead again on the ﬁnal
restart in overtime to
add to the win total for
NASCAR’s Big Three:
Busch, Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. have won
16 of the 21 Cup Series.
“What’s crazy is, how
this year keeps going,”
Busch said. “Harvick
gets one, we get one,
Truex gets one. We’re all
back and forth.”
Busch held off a pair
of young drivers aiming
for their ﬁrst career Cup
win. Daniel Suarez, the
ﬁrst Mexican driver to
win the pole for a Cup
race, ﬁnished second and
Alex Bowman was third.
There are just ﬁve
races left before the
16-driver playoff ﬁeld is
set.

third in touchdown
catches behind Rice
and Randy Moss, who
is entering the hall this
week and will attend the
festivities.
But he also eventually
wore out his welcome
in those cities, and now
Canton probably can be
added to that list.
Though he will always
be received properly at
the hall, Baker says.
“I told him I am
very disappointed, it
is unprecedented, and
we’ve certainly been try-

Derik Hamilton | AP

Kyle Busch celebrates in Victory Lane on Sunday after winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race in
Long Pond, Pa.

Only seven drivers
have won races this season.
Harvick had a shot at
his seventh win derail
when the Ford was damaged on pit road and he
slipped again to the back
of the pack. Harvick is
0 for 36 at Pocono and
has yet to win there or at
Kentucky Speedway.
Here are other items
of note at Pocono.

have at Pocono in a blow
somewhat cushioned by
the protective barriers.
He said he felt helpless
and the wreck “scared
the hell out of me.”
“That was a huge hit,”
he said. “Mom, everybody back at home, I’m
OK. That scared the hell
out of me.”
Wallace just signed a
two-year contract extension through 2020 with
Richard Petty Motorsports.
“Everything was good.
They gave me an ultra-

Wallace wreck
Wallace had one of the
hardest hits a driver can

sound, no twins or anything,” Wallace said.
JGR stars
Busch and Suarez
went 1-2, Erik Jones was
ﬁfth and Denny Hamlin
10th. Gibbs said Craftsman/Stanley has signed
on as a primary sponsor
for Jones next season.
Fight! Fight!
Matt DiBenedetto
approached Aric Almirola on pit road and
engaged in a brief, heated conversation.

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Wheel of
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Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Wheel of
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Fortune
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PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
13 News at Inside
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7:30

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9:30

America's Got Talent "Judge Cuts Three" Martina
McBride sends one act to the live shows. (N)
America's Got Talent "Judge Cuts Three" Martina
McBride sends one act to the live shows. (N)
Splitting Up Splitting Up Splitting Up Splitting Up
"Pilot"
Together
Together
Together
10 That Changed America No Passport Required
"10 Homes That Changed
"Queens, NYC" (N)
America"
Splitting Up Splitting Up Splitting Up Splitting Up
"Pilot"
Together
Together
Together
NCIS "Keep Your Enemies Bull "Survival Instincts"
Closer"
Love Connection "Tiffany
Beat Shazam "Episode
Nine" (N)
and Ahmed" (N)
10 That Changed America No Passport Required
"10 Homes That Changed
"Queens, NYC" (N)
America"
NCIS "Keep Your Enemies Bull "Survival Instincts"
Closer"

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Making It "Meet Your
Makers" (P) (N)
Making It "Meet Your
Makers" (P) (N)
Splitting Up Splitting Up
Together
"Heat Wave"
Frontline "Separated:
Children at the Border" (N)
Splitting Up Splitting Up
Together
"Heat Wave"
NCIS: New Orleans "A New
Dawn"
Eyewitness News at 10
p.m. (N)
Frontline "Separated:
Children at the Border" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "A New
Dawn"

10

PM

10:30

18 (WGN) BlueB. "Collateral Damage"
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
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Interrupt (N)
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MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park -- Pittsburgh, Pa. (L)
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C. Football ESPN FC (N) Soccer International Champions Cup (L)
Baseball Tonight (L)
Married at First Sight
Grey's Anatomy "Why Try Married at First Sight
Married:Love Married at
(:05) SevYear "Revelations
Unlocked (N) First Si. (N) "Troube in Paradise" (N)
to Change Me Now"
"Who Did I Marry?"
and Realizations" (N)
(5:30)
Ratatouille (2007, Family) Voices of Patton The Bold Type "Trippin'"
Sweet Home Alabama (2002, Comedy) Candice
Oswalt, John Ratzenberger, Brad Garrett. TVG
Bergen, Josh Lucas, Reese Witherspoon. TV14
(N)
(:25) Mom
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
The Expendables 3
Sylvester Stallone. TV14
Loud House Loud House Loud House H.Danger
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SpongeBob The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water TVG
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Miz &amp; Mrs. WWE Super Smackdown
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Animal King "Off the Tit" Animal King "Off the Tit"
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D. Catch "Baptism by Fire" Catch "Supermoon Storm" Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadliest Catch (N)
Hard to Kill "Test Pilot"
The First 48 "Chopper"
The First 48 "The
The First 48 "Officer Down" The First 48 "Cruel
The First 48 "Fatal
Invitation"
An officer is executed.
Summer"
Showdown/ Deadly Text"
River Monsters
River Monsters
River Monsters
Monsters Divers investigate a German U-boat wreck.
Chicago P.D. "Natural Born Chicago P.D. "Actual
Chicago P.D. "Debts of the Chicago P.D. "Climbing Into Chicago P.D. "You Never
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Physical Violence"
Past"
Bed"
Know Who's Who"
Law &amp; Order "Tabloid"
Law &amp; Order "Monster"
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Kardash "No Good Deeds" E! News (N)
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Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone Daniel Radcliffe. Upon learning Face Off "Through the
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(5:35) Victoria and Abdul A lonely Queen

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ing to persuade him to
come,” Baker says. “He
has a whole city here,
with 4,800 volunteers
who do everything to
honor these guys. For
him, this could be the
opportunity to be honored the way I believe he
always felt he should be
honored.
“We respect he has
strong feelings of his own
and I respect his right
to make that decision. I
invited him to the hall,
even at the last moment
he would be welcomed,
and he is welcomed every
day the rest of his life.
Even though he is not
here, we will honor him
to the best of our ability.”

9:30

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HBO First Look /(:15)
Jennifer's Body ('09, Hor)
Sharp Objects "Ripe"
Victoria becomes dearest friends with one
Megan Fox. A nerdy girl must uncover the truth behind her
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Sister Act ('92, Com) Maggie Smith, Whoopi
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Big Trouble Tim Allen. Several
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a mysterious suitcase in Miami. TVPG
The Debt ('11, Thril) Tom Wilkinson, Helen Mirren. Marshall (2017, Biography) Josh Gad, Sterling K. Brown, Who Is
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America?
Retired Mossad agents determine if they really did capture Chadwick Boseman. A future Supreme Court Justice
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defends at trial a black man accused of sexual assault.

Speech
From page 1B

Just as he did in his
unﬂappable role in
the bullpen during his
career as an ace reliever,
Hoffman was ﬂawless in
delivering his speech,
also closing it by thanking his wife, Tracy.
“You shared with me
this amazing journey of
ups and downs from the
beginning, always never
letting me get too high
or get too low,” Hoffman
said. “I love you.”
Hoffman played the
bulk of his career with
the San Diego Padres
before ﬁnishing with
the Milwaukee Brewers.
After failing to impress
the front ofﬁce in three
years as a shortstop, he
switched to the bullpen
and became a star. Using
a stultifying change-up,
Hoffman recorded 601
saves over 18 seasons,
second all-time to former
Yankees star Mariano
Rivera’s 652.
He also credited his
parents for his success.
“Mom, dad, you’re
the biggest reason I’m
on this stage,” Hoffman
said. “In fact, you’re all
of my reasons. Not a
day goes by that I’m not
thankful for all both of
you have done. I love
you both beyond words.”
Morris, now 63, spent
15 years on the ballot before getting the
call from the Hall of
Fame last December.
Known for his toughness on the mound, he
pitched 18 seasons for
the Tigers, Twins, Blue
Jays and Indians, and
played on four World
Series champions. The
crowning achievement
of his career was his
1-0, 10-inning completegame victory in Game 7
of the 1991 World Series
while pitching for his
hometown Twins against
the Braves.
Among those he
thanked were his dad
and his late mother and
the late Sparky Anderson, who managed the
Tigers to the 1984 World

Series championship.
“Thank you mom and
dad for everything you
taught me and have done
for me,” Morris said,
his voice cracking with
emotion as he looked at
his dad. “Mom, I know
you’re smiling down on
us today. Dad, thank
you for instilling in me
the work ethic that was
so vital to my success,
but more than that you
showed equal love for all
your children.
“I know Sparky Anderson is with us here
today,” Morris added.
“He taught me so many
things, especially to
respect this great game.
He taught me a valuable
lesson by allowing me
to fail and ﬁght through
adversity.”
Trammell, who
played shortstop for 20
seasons — all for the
Tigers — and Morris
were selected together
by a veterans committee, which made the
day extra special for the
Motor City.
“We signed together
in 1976, spent 13 years
together in Detroit, and
now 42 years later, Cooperstown. Wow!” Morris
said.
Trammell earned six
All-Star Game selections, four Gold Glove
Awards and three Silver
Slugger Awards. His
.977 ﬁelding percentage ranks sixth among
shortstops with at least
2,000 games played.
During his tenure, the
Tigers had one of the
great double play combinations in MLB history
in Trammell and second
baseman Lou Whitaker,
who was in the audience
on a special day for the
Motor City.
“For 19 years Lou
Whitaker and I formed
the longest running double play combination in
the history of baseball,”
Trammell said, recalling the two were called
up to the Tigers on the
same day. “Lou, it was
an honor and a pleasure
to have played alongside
you all those years. I
hope someday you’ll be
up here, too.”

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 31, 2018 3B

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EMPLOYMENT

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT

MERCHANDISE

Medical/Health

Apartments/Townhouses

Rentals

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous
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BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor
under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
The Daily Sentinel?
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Delivery times is approx. 3 hours daily
Must be 18 years of age
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EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
AN APPLICATION:
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or
510 Main St. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
or 109 West 2nd St. Pomeroy, Oh 45679
OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
POTENTIAL REVENUE
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PER MONTH!

VILLAGE OF POMEROY S.R. 833 SANITARY
SEWER EXTENSION
LEGAL NOTICE- INVITATION TO BID
Sealed Bids will be received for furnishing all labor, materials
and equipment necessary to complete a project known as
Village of Pomeroy S.R. 833 Sanitary Sewer Extension at
the Village of Pomeroy Office (the "OWNER"), 660 E. Main
Street, Suite A, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 11:00 A.M. local
time on August 15, 2018, and at said time and place, publicly
opened and read aloud. Bids may be mailed or delivered in advance to the Village of Pomeroy at the above address.
The project consists of 5,995 feet of 8" and 6" PVC sewer, 11
manholes, and a lift station upgrade. Alternatives will also be
evaluated.
A copy of the Bid Documents containing the Bid Requirements
and Contract Documents (including all bid sheets, plans, specifications, and any addenda) can be obtained from IBI Group,
5085 Tile Plant Road, New Lexington, OH 43764 with a
non-refundable payment of $100 each. Checks should be
made payable to IBI Group. This legal ad will be available for
viewing at Builders Exchange and Dodge Data &amp; Analytics.
Each Bidder is required to furnish with its submission of the
fully completed Bid Documents, a Bid Security in accordance
with Section 153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security furnished in Bond form (Bid Guarantee and Contract and Performance Bond as provided in Section 153.57.1 of the Ohio Revised Code), must be issued by a Surety Company or Corporation licensed in the State of Ohio to provide said surety. Those
Bidders that elect to submit bid guaranty in the form of a certified check, cashier's check, or letter of credit pursuant to Chapter 1305 of the Ohio Revised Code and in accordance with Section 153.54 (C) of the Ohio Revised Code. Any such letter of
credit shall be revocable only at the option of the beneficiary
OWNER. The amount of the certified check, cashier's check,
or letter of credit shall be equal to ten (10) percent of the Bid
and the Successful Bidder will be required to submit a bond in
the form provided in 153.57 of the Ohio Revised Code in conjunction with the execution of the Contract.
Each proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties
submitting the Bidding Documents and all persons interested
therein. Each bidder must submit evidence of its experiences
on projects of similar size and complexity. The OWNER intends that this Project be completed no later than the time period as set forth in Article 4 of the Standard Form of Agreement
between OWNER and CONTRACTOR on the Basis of a Stipulated Price.
Each Bidder must insure that all employees and applicants for
employment are not discriminated against because of race,
color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap, ancestry, or age.
All CONTRACTORS and subcontractors involved with the project shall to the extent practicable, use Ohio products, materials,
services and labor in the implementation of their project. DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 143.011 OF THE (OHIO) REVISED CODE APPLY
TO THIS PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE
(OHIO) REVISED CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF
THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
Additionally, CONTRACTOR compliance with the equal employment opportunity requirements of Ohio Administrative Code
Chapter 123, the Governor's Executive Order of 1972, and
Governor's Executive Order 84-9 shall be required.
Bidders must comply with the prevailing Davis-Bacon wage
rates on Public Improvements in Meigs County as determined
by the U.S. Department of labor, Federal Wage and Hour Division.

OH-70047967

The ENGINEER's estimate for this project is $1,000,000

CALL TODAY!

Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has an
opening for a RN/LPN Office Manager for one
of our physician offices. One year experience
in a physician office or hospital related area
working with direct patient care is preferred.
WV license is required.

The Village of Pomeroy reserves the right to waive any informalities or irregularities. The Village of Pomeroy reserves the
right to reject any or all bids or to increase or decrease or omit
any item or times and/or award the bid to the lowest and best
bidder.
7/24/18,7/31/18,8/7/18

Apply at: Pleasant Valley Hospital, 2520 Valley
Dr., Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, fax to (304) 6756975 or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/D/F/V

The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District is accepting applications for
the next two weeks with intentions of
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within the next month.
The position is considered a distribution
maintenance position, but because of
the advanced changes in our systems
technology, computer knowledge and or
other trades will be given preference in
the applicant selection process. No prior
water system knowledge is required as
we will train to levels needed. You may
pick up an application at 39561 Bar
30 Road, which is three miles south of
Tuppers Plains just off State Route 7 or
print one off of our website www.tpcwd.org

OH-70064830

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Ellm View Apts.
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Equal Housing Opportunity

OH-70067366

Taking Applications For
LPN's &amp; Nursing Assistants
Apply Within or On
Indeed.com
Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood WV 26164

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

4B Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Browns’ Bitonio willing, not eager to move to left tackle
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — The
retirement of Joe Thomas left a
gaping hole at left tackle for the
Cleveland Browns.
Left guard Joel Bitonio is
willing, but not necessarily eager to succeed his close
friend at the position.
“If they want me to do that,
like, cool, whatever makes the
Browns better,” Bitonio said.
“But I think left tackle is the
toughest spot on the line, and
after playing left guard for four
years, going on ﬁve now, it
would deﬁnitely be different.
“I don’t think it’s a thing
where I have to volunteer for
the spot, but if we get down the
line and something needs to
happen, we’ll see what happens
there.”
Though Bitonio isn’t a house-

hold name outside of Cleveland, he is one of a handful of
known quantities on a team
that went winless in 2017 and
is 1-31 in two seasons under
coach Hue Jackson.
The 6-foot-4, 305-pounder
was a second alternate for the
Pro Bowl and did not miss
a play last year, helping the
Browns average 4.46 yards per
rush to rank sixth in the NFL.
Offensive line coach Bob
Wylie acknowledged that
bumping Bitonio, an All-Mountain West left tackle at Nevada,
to the outside is tempting, but
not palatable because it would
simultaneously create a weakness at guard.
“The state of the left tackle is
our state of the union,” Wylie
said. “But (moving Bitonio)

Alexander Rossi runs
away with IndyCar
race at Mid-Ohio
LEXINGTON, Ohio
(AP) — Alexander Rossi
took a gamble Sunday
at Mid-Ohio Sports Car
Course that paid off with
his second IndyCar victory of the season and
fourth overall.
Starting from the pole
and using a two-stop
strategy while the rest
of the ﬁeld pitted three
times, the 2016 Indianapolis 500 winner ﬁnished
12.8 seconds ahead of
rookie Robert Wickens in
the caution-free race on
the 13-turn, 2.258-mile
permanent road course.
The race covered 90 laps
and 202.3 miles.
“It was a little concerning at times,” Rossi said.
“Guys committed to
doing it, but they bailed.
(The strategy) worked.
“We didn’t know how
it would work. Without
a warm-up we were not
capable of knowing the
fuel mileage you’re getting.”
Will Power was third,
14.7 seconds back. Josef
Newgarden was fourth,
and points leader Scott
Dixon ﬁfth.
“Maybe we should have
thought of that,” Power
said about Rossi’s strategy. “I don’t know what
my fuel number would
have been.”

Rossi also won the
street race in Long Beach,
California, in April. The
victory Sunday was
Andretti Autosport’s 60th
in the series.
Rossi had a 23-second
lead over Wickens when
he made his second pit
stop on Lap 59. Wickens
took the lead but, because
he had been so far back
when Rossi pitted it,
was only a matter of
time before he would fall
behind again.
“We ran a good race
today,” Wickens said. “We
were just unfortunate
with the trafﬁc. I got
stuck behind (Takuma)
Sato. We had to wait 10 to
15 laps to make a move. It
was a frustrating stint.”
Rossi got the lead for
good when Wickens pitted on Lap 65 and Power
temporarily moved to
second. Rossi cruised
from there and his only
problem was trying to do
a post-race doughnut in
celebration only to get
stuck in the grass.
He led 66 laps.
Dixon leads the series
with 494 points, 46 more
than Rossi. Newgarden,
the defending champion
is third, 60 points back.
Rossi led the ﬁrst 30
laps until pitting, allowing
Wickens to take the lead.

is the last option. If you were
going to go from A down, that
would be Z. That would be Z.”
Thomas was the face of the
franchise for 11 seasons, earning 10 Pro Bowl selections and
playing 10,363 consecutive
snaps before suffering a careerending torn left triceps last
Oct. 22 against Tennessee.
Third-year pro Shon Coleman has the ﬁrst shot to ﬁll his
shoes, while second-rounder
Austin Corbett and former No.
2 overall pick Greg Robinson
are in the mix. Coleman was
pulled off the ﬁeld Sunday during practice and received an
audible scolding by Jackson.
Center JC Tretter, right
guard Kevin Zeitler and Bitonio each expressed hope that
one of the top three candidates

can win the job and keep their
three-man interior unit intact.
“I’m excited to work with
them again and, hopefully, be
a dominant inside group,” said
Bitonio, a second-round selection by Cleveland in 2014. “I’ve
become really good friends
with JC and Kevin, so we’re
kind of bonding and I think the
sky is the limit. We’re continuing to grow together.”
Tretter said the uncertainty
at left tackle hasn’t affected
Bitonio during training camp,
nor does he expect it to,
because he is a “real pro.”
Jackson wants to make a
decision before the Browns’
third preseason game on Aug.
23 against the Eagles, putting
Coleman on the hot seat to
produce or force the staff to

contemplate option Z.
“I know that Joel will do
anything for the football team,
but hopefully we do not have to
go to that,” Jackson said. “But
if we do, we do. Once we get
a feel for what we have there,
then as a group we’ve got to
make a decision on how to continue to move forward.”
Bitonio is hoping for the
best, and hoping to stay where
he feels most comfortable. All
47 of his NFL games have been
played as a starting left guard.
“Right now, I’m really
focused on playing left guard
and trying to get whoever is
playing next to me ready to
play left tackle,” he said. “I
think anything else is something that’s pretty far down the
line.”

HOF PREVIEW

Lewis ‘heart and soul’ of Ravens for 17 years
BALTIMORE (AP)
— Ray Lewis arrived in
Baltimore shortly after
the transplanted Cleveland Browns, who were
attempting to start anew
in a city that had gone
12 years without an NFL
team.
Selected 26th overall
in the 1996 draft after
establishing himself as
a star at the University
of Miami, Lewis had no
idea what he was getting
into.
“We had no team. We
had no logo. We had
nothing,” Lewis recalled.
“There was nothing to
really respect.”
Over the next 17
years, the Baltimore
Ravens reached the
postseason nine times,
won two Super Bowls
and built a hard-hitting
and relentless defense in
the image of Lewis, their
unquestioned leader.
A 13-time Pro Bowl
selection and two-time
NFL Defensive Player of
the Year, Lewis helped
make the Ravens far
better than respectable
while establishing himself as one of the best
linebackers to play the
game.
His unparalleled play
and unmatched leadership made him an obvious ﬁrst-ballot entrant
into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame. Lewis

Chris Gardner | AP file

Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis laughs during the second
day of football training camp July 29, 2006, in Westminster, Md.
Lewis will be enshrined at the Football Hall of Fame in Canton,
Ohio on Saturday.

received the news last
February, and still gets
chills thinking about it.
“That knock on the
door was like the ﬁrst
time I got my ﬁrst jersey,” Lewis said. “It was
like when you ran home
and you wanted to put on
your pads. You weren’t
playing no game, you just
wanted to put on your
pads because you were
part of an elite team. You
made it. So, it’s almost
like the same feeling.”
He will be enshrined
Saturday, joining offensive tackle Jonathan
Ogden as the second
Ravens star to have a
bust in Canton, Ohio.
“It’s pretty clear Ray
was the heart and soul of
the Ravens for 17 years.
If anyone is deserving
of this honor, it’s Ray

Lewis,” Ogden said. “He
is a guy we all looked to
— both on offense and
defense — to lead our
team.”
There are many great
linebackers in the Hall of
Fame. Few of them combined skill and authority
the way Lewis did.
After delivering an
emotional speech before
the game , Lewis would
continue to push his
teammates in the huddle
before taking ownership
of the middle of the ﬁeld,
looking to punish anyone
in a different jersey.
“One of a kind. I think
he’s the best that ever
played,” Ravens coach
John Harbaugh said. “It’s
not just the on-ﬁeld play;
it’s the whole package.”
Harbaugh acknowledged he carries the bias

that comes with coaching Lewis for the ﬁnal
ﬁve years of his NFL
career. Others, however,
back the assertion.
“He’s the best I’ve
seen,” said Mike Singletary, a Hall of Fame
linebacker and former
assistant coach in Baltimore. “If people thought
I was good, I know that
Ray was better.”
It’s hard to determine
Lewis’ most notable
quality. His ferocity on
the ﬁeld? His teaching
and leadership skills?
Or was it his relentless
drive to win?
Hall of Fame defensive
back Rod Woodson, a
teammate of Lewis’ on
the 2000 Super Bowl
team, chooses all of the
above.
“What needs to be said
about a guy who was, by
far, the best leader I witnessed in my 17 years of
play? His singular focus
to be the best player and
teammate he could be
what separates him from
other Hall of Famers,”
Woodson said.
“His play was off the
charts. He was a virtual
tackling machine — and
a playmaker. He caused
fumbles, recovered
fumbles, interceptions,
tipped passes. He did it
all for longer than anyone who played his spot
in the middle.”

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, July 31, 2018 5B

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

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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�SPORTS

6B Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

PPHS Meet the
Teams night

held at the campus for new students in those buildings.

bers, and varsity and junior
varsity cheerleaders will be able
to purchase reserve seats on
Wednesday, Aug. 8.
Reserve seats for the genPOINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
eral public will be available on
— Point Pleasant Junior-Senior
Thursday, Aug. 9.
High School will be holding
The price is $35 per ticket.
a Meet the Teams night at
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
Tickets may be purchased in
approximately 7 p.m. Monday, Reserve seats for the 2018
the Athletic Director’s ofﬁce at
Aug. 13, at Ohio Valley Bank
Gallia Academy High School
Gallia Academy High School
Track and Field in Mason
football season will go on sale
County. The event is free and
starting on Tuesday, Aug. 7, for between the hours of 8 a.m.
and 3 p.m.
open to the public, and all
the Gallia Academy Athletic
Gallia Academy Athletic
levels of fall sports at PPJSHS
Super Boosters.
will be introduced at the event.
Parents of varsity and junior Super Boosters will be limited
to 10 tickets purchased on the
Meet the Teams night will also varsity football players, Gallia
follow the open house being
Academy Marching Band mem- ﬁrst day of sales.

GAHS football
reserve seats

checks payable to Southern
After the ﬁrst day, there will
Athletic Boosters.
be no limit on the number of
There will be a skins game
tickets which may be purchased.
and 50-50 rafﬂe, as well as closest to the pin and long drive
competitions. Mulligans and
red tee shots will also be available to purchase.
Food and beverages will
MASON, W.Va. — The
Southern football team is host- be provided at the event, and
ing a four-person golf scramble club house credit will go to the
on Sunday, Aug. 5, at Riverside top-3 teams.
To register a team, please
Golf Club. Registration begins
contact SHS head coach Casat 7:30 a.m. and the scramble
sady Willford via email at caswill start at 8:30 a.m.
Cost is $60 per individual or sady.willford53@gmail.com or
on the phone at 740-416-8470.
$240 per team. Please make

Southern football
golf scramble

Team Sky’s dominance at Tour de France set to continue
PARIS (AP) — The
Tour de France has a new
champion, but the narrative remains the same
at cycling’s biggest race:
Team Sky’s domination
has no limits.
By placing Geraint
Thomas on top of the
podium on the ChampsElysees on Sunday, the
British outﬁt ended three
weeks of racing which
sadly lacked suspense
with a sixth win in the
past seven Tours.
Once again, Team
Sky riders have been
untouchable on the roads
of France, controlling
the race with ease as
Thomas became the third
Briton to win the Tour
after Bradley Wiggins
and four-time champion
Chris Froome.
Since Wiggins won in
2012 wearing a Team
Sky jersey, the richest
team in the peloton has
claimed every edition
of the race except one,
in 2014 when Froome
crashed out and Vincenzo Nibali of Italy
emerged victorious.

equal ﬁve-time Tour winners Jacques Anquetil,
Eddy Merckx, Bernard
Hinault and Miguel Indurain.
More talent is already
emerging behind them in
Egan Bernal, the 21-yearold Colombian rider
who competed at his
ﬁrst Tour this summer.
Bernal did amazing work
for Thomas and Froome
in the mountains, assisting both in the ﬁnal
Pyrenees stage. Despite
his relentless efforts as a
domestique, Bernal still
managed a 15th-place ﬁnish overall.
In addition to BerMarco Bertorello via AP
nal,
Brailsford has also
Britain’s Geraint Thomas drinks Champagne Sunday during the 21st and last stage of the 105th
recruited two of the
edition of the Tour de France cycling race between Houilles and Paris Champs-Elysees.
brightest prospects in
cycling, 21-year-old
tion to the next. We are
next year then we won
Even the expulsion
Pavel Sivakov and Tao
always thinking about
the Tour with Bradley,”
of Gianni Moscon for
Geoghegan Hart, who is
said Brailsford, who has the future.”
punching a rival during
Although Thomas has 23-years-old.
Stage 15 had no effect on supervised the team
“My job is to look three
yet to extend his contract
Sky’s well-oiled machine, since it was created in
or four years ahead,”
with Sky, both he and
as the team managed by 2010. “Chris Froome
Brailsford said. “Our
Froome are expected to
Dave Brailsford complet- learned a lot by riding
be part of the team next riders in their 30’s won’t
alongside Bradley, he
ed a fourth consecutive
be there forever. Within
season. At 32, Thomas
gained a lot of experiGrand Tour win.
is in the best form of his the next two or three
ence, then Geraint
“We were well behind
learned from Chris. It is life while the 33-year-old seasons, I will have the
our goals the year we
started, we did better the passed on from a genera- Froome will try again to opportunity to add other

The Pomeroy Merchants
invite you and your
girlfriends to enjoy dining
and shopping in our
restaurants &amp; shops

Girls’ Night Out
THURSDAY, AUGUST 9 TH , 2018

5:00PM TO 8:00PM

Downtown Pomeroy

OH-70066174

Meet for dinner or drinks
at Court Grill, Maple Lawn
or WildHorse Café

youngsters in the group.
This year, Egan has been
looking very carefully at
was Chris does, he kept
asking questions, looked
at everything we do to
win the Tour. It was the
best possible experience
for the future.”
Sky’s rivals have often
complained of a lack of
means in attempting
to dethrone the British
giant at the Tour. Sky has
an estimated budget of
$40 million, about double
that of Tom Dumoulin’s
Sunweb team.
“Of course, they have
more money to spend, it
makes life easier sometimes,” said Dumoulin,
the runner-up to Thomas. “Of course, having a
big budget matters. But
it would be too easy to
say that Geraint Thomas
had a big advantage just
with this team. He was
the strongest rider.”
Brailsford is adamant
it’s not just the money,
but also Sky’s expertise
in developing talents that
help him lure the best
riders.

Luck felt sore, tired but
pain-free after throwing at camp
WESTFIELD, Ind.
(AP) — Andrew Luck
feels as sore and tired as
he expected four days
into training camp.
He’s also pain free —
just as the Indianapolis
Colts hoped.
Luck passed his ﬁrst
major tests by returning to the practice ﬁeld,
taking all of his normal
snaps during the Colts’
ﬁrst two workouts, connecting with receivers on
the run rather than throwing at stationary targets
while feeling good physically and mentally.
It’s a good start for
the quarterback with the
surgically repaired right
shoulder.
“Every day there will
be new hurdles,” he said
Sunday. “The second day,
things seemed to calm
down or slow down a
lot. The ﬁrst day I was
nervous, I was excited
and there was a certain
element of the unknown.
I wasn’t quite sure what
was going to happen. It
was also very fun to be
out there with the guys
and focus on getting better at practice and not
just surviving practice.”
The angst could be
sensed all around the
Colts’ new camp site
earlier this week in Westﬁeld, Indiana, a northern
suburb of Indianapolis.
Fans roared throughout
Thursday’s opening workout, even cheering when
Luck was throwing to ball
boys and quarterbacks.
One fan shouted “stay in
that pocket” as Luck went
through an individual
drill designed to help all
four quarterbacks evade
oncoming pass rushers.
Not surprisingly, the
early jitters also impacted
Luck’s performance.

Michael Conroy | AP

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck (12) throws on the
first day of practice Thursday at the team’s football training camp
in Westfield, Ind.

He was just 4 of 9 with
an interception in his
ﬁrst 11-on-11 work since
having a partially torn
labrum ﬁxed in January
2017.
On Friday, he was 15 of
19 overall.
He resumed throwing
Sunday night, his ﬁrst full
practice in pads in nearly
20 months, and was 19 of
22 with two touchdowns
in seven-on-seven and
11-on-11 drills.
“There have been four
or ﬁve throws that have
been like, ‘Oh yeah, that
looks 100 percent like
normal,’” coach Frank
Reich said before the
evening workout. “Then
there have been one or
two that we just need to
work through and continue to get better.”

Luck did not talk with
reporters after those practices or Saturday when he
left the ﬁeld about halfway through Saturday’s
practice at Grand Park
Sports Campus — as
scheduled.
“It’s weird, but this is
the plan Frank and I and
(general manager) Chris
(Ballard) and everybody
who helped came up with
at the start. I know it’s
helped me continue to get
better and better and better,” Luck said. “It is sort
of a bit odd to reconcile
‘OK, I’m out here, but I
don’t get to participate.”
But after blaming his
slow recovery at least partially on skipping steps
in a rush to get back, he’s
sticking to the plan this
time.

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