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                  <text>Buckeye
State news

Today in
history

NEWS s 5

EDITORIAL s 4

Capehart
golfers
finish up
SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 110, Volume 71

Wednesday, July 12, 2017 s 50¢

NWS confirms
Monday tornado

Body of missing kayaker located

By Sarah Hawley

ATHENS — The
body of a missing Meigs
County kayaker was
located early Tuesday
morning along the Hocking River in Athens.
Steve Lippson, 40, of
Racine, went missing
on Saturday afternoon
when six kayakers were
swept over the falls near
White’s Mill in the Hock-

down along a ridgetop
between Pomeroy Pike
and Lakewood Rd.
just to the southwest
CHESTER TWP. —
of Chester, Ohio,” the
The National Weather
statement reads.
Service in Charleston,
“One outbuilding
West Virginia, has conto a horse ranch was
ﬁrmed an EF0 tornado
in the Chester Township destroyed. One tree fell
area of Meigs County on onto a home causing
slight damage. In addiMonday evening.
tion, several trees were
According to the
public information state- uprooted, and numerous
ment issued on Tuesday tree limbs were snapped
along the property.
evening by the NWS,
the tornado occurred at Along with Lakewood
approximately 7:35 p.m. Rd. several additional
downed trees and limbs
with estimated maxiwere observed.”
mum wind speed of 70
There was also damMPH.
age to a corn ﬁeld,
The path of the tornado was 50 yards wide according to Meigs
County Emergency
and traveled a distance
Management Agency.
of 600 yards.
Meigs EMA conﬁrmed
“An EFo tornado
there were no injuries as
with winds estimated
a result of the tornado.
to be 70 MPH touched

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Staff Report

ing River on the west
side of Athens, according to previous Sentinel
reports.
Lippson’s body was
located around 6:40 a.m.,
Tuesday, approximately
200 yards downstream
from where the incident
occurred on Saturday.
According to the release
by Athens County Emergency Management
Agency, the body was

discovered by an OhioHealth O’Bleness Memorial Hospital employee.
“The Athens Fire
Department and all agencies involved in this incident would like to extend
their deepest sympathies
to the family and friends
of Mr. Lippson for the
loss of their loved one,”
the release states.
Five of the individuals
who went over the falls,

along with the others in
the group were able to
make it to the shore safely, either with the assistance of ﬁrst responders
or had rescued themselves from the water.
There were 14 kayakers
in the group at the time
of the incident.
Rescue crews had been
searching the area near
the falls since Saturday
See BODY | 3

Southern community
center renamed in
honor of Hart
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE — The
Southern Local Community Center (and
ﬁtness center) has been
renamed in honor of the
late Kathryn Hart.
The board adopted a

resolution concerning
the community ﬁtness
center name during its
recent meeting.
The Southern Local
Community Center is
now known as the Kathryn Hart Community
Center.
See CENTER | 3
Members of the Meigs Track Team were honored by the Meigs Local Board of Education for their accomplishments at the 2017 OHSAA
State Track and Field meet. Pictured are (left to right) Coach Mike Kennedy, Devyn Oliver, Taylor Swartz, Sky Brown, and Heather Hawley,
Board of Education Student Liaison. Not present for the picture was Kassidy Betzing.

Health Dept. to accept
electronic payments
Staff Report

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department can now
accept electronic payments for fees and
services such as, but
not limited to, certiﬁed
birth and death certiﬁcates.
Visa, MasterCard,
Discover and American
Express are accepted.
There is a $2.50 processing fee for each
debit card transaction
and a $2.50 processing
fee for each credit card
transaction up to $50.
Credit card payments
exceeding $50 will be
based on a 4 percent

processing fee. There is
a maximum credit card
charge of $1,000.
You can now electronically order
copies of Ohio birth
certiﬁcates (1909-present) and Meigs County
death certiﬁcates
(1909-present) via the
health department’s
website, www.meigshealth.com. The service
is offered via VitalCheck and there are
additional convenience
charges.
For more information contact Courtney
Midkiff, Administrator/
Registrar, at 740-9926626 or courtney.midkiff@meigs-health.com.

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

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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thoughts.

Board honors track team
Staff Report

ROCKSPRINGS —
Members of the Meigs
Track Team were honored by the Meigs Local
Board of Education for
their accomplishments at
the 2017 OHSAA State
Track and Field Meet
during the recent board
meeting.
The girls 4x100 team
consisting of Kassidy

Betzing, Sky Brown,
Devyn Oliver, and Taylor
Swartz had a podium
ﬁnish of eighth. Betzing
also competed in the
long jump with a second
place podium ﬁnish. The
team is coached by Mike
Kennedy. Team members
were presented with a
certiﬁcate and charm.
In personnel matters,
Hannah Thompson was
hired as a vocational

agriculture teacher at
Meigs High School on a
one-year contract.
Mattie Lanham was
hired as as third grade
teacher at Meigs Intermediate on a one-year
contract.
The resignation of Eric
Penrod as an intervention specialist at the
intermediate school was
accepted effective June
14.

The resignation of
Emily Schmaltz as eighth
grade math teacher was
accepted effective Aug.
18.
The board accepted
the resignation of Brittany Beman as intervention specialist at the
middle school effective
Aug. 18.
Maternity leave was
approved for a teacher as
See TRACK | 3

Eastern Board approves hiring personnel
Staff Report

REEDSVILLE — The Eastern Local Board of Education
approved numerous personnel
matters during its recent meeting.
Emma Roberts was hired on a
one year contract as the speech
pathologist for the 2017-18 school
hear, with salary in accordance
with the ELEA negotiated agreement.
Brian Collins was hired as the
Director of Operation for Food
Service and Transportation Personnel, on a two year administrative contract at the appropriate
salary per board adopted administrative schedule effective 2017-18
school year.
Patrece Beegle was approved
as the ESY Tutor beginning June
29, and ending on or before Aug.
11. Sandy Needs was approved
as a third grade reading intervention tutor for the period of July 10
through July 14.
Pupil activity and supplemental
contracts for the 2017-18 school

year were approved as follows, Bill
Sheppard, 7th grade boys basketball coach; Matt Simpson, junior
varsity boys basketball coach; Tim
Simpson, assistant boys basketball coach; Brittany Cunningham,
assistant volleyball coach; Mykala
Sheppard, 8th grade volleyball
coach; Mindy Durst, 7th grade volleyball coach; Wyatt Westfall, volunteer junior high football coach;
Roger Bunce, volunteer junior
high football coach; DJ Maxon,
volunteer junior high girls basketball coach; Megan Cross, head volleyball coach; Kevin Damewood,
archery coordinator; Cris Kuhn,
high school choir/handbell director and band director; Bill Salyer,
8th grade boys basketball coach;
Nathan Jeffers, yearbook advisor
and play director; Deborah Kerwood, quiz bowl team advisor and
Model United Nations advisor;
Sam Thompson, head junior high
football coach; Bryan Durst, assistant junior high football coach;
Chuck Robinson, 8th grade girls
basketball coach.

A letter of resignation was
accepted from Edward Holter, bus
driver, effective June 30.
Romayne Martindale was
approved as a substitute secretary
for the 2017-18 school year.
The board approved hiring the
following individuals as workers
through the TANF Summer Program retroactive to June 12, 2017:
Anna Halfhill, Jeremiah Martindale, Isiah Martindale, Elijah Martindale.
The board also approved entering into a Memorandum of Understanding with the Meigs County
Department of Job and Family
Services (MCDJFS) effective the
2017-18 school year. MCDJFS
will provide youth employees that
meet the eligibility of the program.
MCDJFS agrees to subsidize 100
percent of the eligible employee’s
wages and fringe beneﬁts, excluding health care.
Open enrollment students were
approved for the 2017-18 school
See HIRING | 3

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, July 12, 2017

NANCY ‘NAN’ ROSE DAVIS
SYRACUSE — Nancy
“Nan” Rose Davis, 83, of
Syracuse, passed way on
Monday, July 10, 2017,
at the Cabell Huntington
Hospital in Huntington,
W.Va. She was born on
Aug. 13, 1934, in Cedartown, Georgia, to the
late Robert and Elizabeth
(West) Casey. Nan was
a member of the Victory
Baptist Church. She also,
retired from the Peoples
Bank as head teller after
40 years of service.
She is survived by her
children, John W. Davis
Jr. of Syracuse, Stan
(Alane) Davis of Georgia;
three grandchildren, Stan
Jr., Ashley and Cassidy
Davis; brothers, Dan

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

(Joan) Casey of Georgia
and Pat (Louisa) Casey of
Georgia.
She is preceded in
death by her parents;
husband, John William
Davis, Sr; son, Wally
Davis; brothers, Robert
(Geneva) Casey and Fred
(Sarah) Casey.
A graveside funeral
service will be held on
Friday, July 14, 2017, at
Letart Falls Cemetery
at 1 p.m. with Pastor
James Keesee ofﬁciating.
Services are under the
direction of the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Saturday, July 15
SALEM TWP. — The
Salem Township Volunteer Fire Department
will hold its 39th Annual
Ice Cream Social with
serving from 11 a.m. to
3 p.m. at the ﬁrehouse
located on State Route
124 in Salem Center.
The menu will consist of
10 ﬂavors of homemade
ice cream, pulled pork
sandwiches, sloppy joes,
hot dogs, pies and more.
For more information,
contact Linda Montgomery at 740-669-4245.
POMEROY — The
annual Glaze Family
Card Shower
Reunion will be held at
Howard Wolfe is curthe Rocksprings Road
rently in Belpre Landing home of Louise Radford.
Nursing Home. Cards
All Glaze Family and
may be sent to him at
friends are invited. Pot1915 Hill Street, Belpre, luck meal at 12:30 p.m.
Ohio 45710.
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange #778 and
Wednesday, July 12
Star Junior Grange #878
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP
will hold their fun night,
— Township Trustees
potluck supper and
regular monthly meetwork session with work
ing is scheduled at 7
on fair display beginp.m. at the Harrisonville ning at 4 p.m. followed
by potluck at 6:30 p.m.
Fire House.
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@civitasmedia.com.

MARTIN
GALLIPOLIS — Wenona D. Martin, 42, of Gallipolis died Monday July 10, 2017 at Cabell Huntington
Hospital. Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday July 13,
2017 at the Willis Funeral Home. Burial will follow in
Swan Creek Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home from noon to 1 p.m. prior to the service.

LESLIE
CHESAPEAKE — James Keneral Leslie, 88, of
Chesapeake, passed away Monday, July 10, 2017 at
Wyngate at River’s Edge, Proctorville.
Funeral service will be conducted 1 p.m. Thursday,
July 13, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville. Burial will follow in Spring Hill Cemetery, Huntington, W.Va. Visitation will be held one
hour prior to the service at the funeral home.

and fun night to follow.
Monday, July 17
POMEROY — Meigs
Cooperative Parish
Coordinating Council’s
Volunteer Banquet
(potluck) will be 6 p.m.
at the Mulberry Community Center. The Parish scholarships for the
2017-2018 school year
will be presented.
LETART TWP. —
The regular meeting
of the Letart Township
Trustees will be held
at 5 p.m. at the Letart
Township Building.

thing is free. Prizes and
drawings will be held.
Monday, July 24
CHESTER TWP. —
The annual Family Picnic of the Meigs County
Ikes will be 6:30 p.m.
at the Club House on
Sugar Run Road, Chester Township. The Club
will furnish hamburgers
and hot dogs. Bring your
favorite covered dish,
drinks, table service,
and family members.

Friday, Aug. 4
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Public
Friday, July 21
Employee Retirees,
POMEROY — The PHS Chapter 74 , will hold
Class of ‘59 will be having their regular meeting at
1 p.m. at the Mulberry
their 3rd Friday lunch at
Community Center,
Fox Pizza at noon.
located at 156 Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy. Meigs
Saturday, July 22
County Commissioner
MIDDLEPORT —
Randy Smith will be
Hope Baptist Church,
present and provide
570 Grant Street,
updates on various
Middleport, will host
county issues. All Meigs
a block party from 1-3
County Public Employee
p.m. The event will
Retirees are urged to
include games, food,
attend.
bounce houses. Every-

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR
Vacation Bible School
REEDSVILLE —Reedsville
Community VBS will be held
at Reedsville United Methodist
Church, July 17-21, from 6-8:30
p.m., with a water slide from
8:30-9 p.m. The theme is Fun
Maker Factory.
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grove Christian Church,
38387 Hemlock Grove Road,
Pomeroy, will hold a Family Vacation Bible School, Gold Rush:
Discover Jesus’ Bold Claims, on
Saturday, July 22. Music, teach-

KING
GALLIPOLIS — Phillip Andrew King, 53, of Gallipolis, passed away unexpectedly on Saturday July 8,
2017.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m., Friday July 14, 2017
at Paint Creek Baptist Church with Pastor Christian
Scott ofﬁciating. Friends may call at the church on
Friday from 11 a.m. until the time of service. A private burial will be held at King Family Cemetery.

ELLIS
CHESAPEAKE — Mildred L. Ellis, 87, of Chesapeake passed away Tuesday, July 11, 2017 at The
Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House, Huntington,
W.Va. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio is in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.

ing, crafts and food at the church
will take place from 10 a.m. to
1:30 p.m.m with swimming and
games from 2:30-4 p.m. at OVCA,
39560 Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy. For more information contact
Pastor Diana Kinder at 740-5915960.
MIDDLEPORT — First Baptist Church in Middleport will
hold Vacation Bible School with
the theme Barnyard Roundup
(All about Jesus), July 24-27 from
6-8 p.m. daily. There will be lessons, music, activities, snacks,

a bounce house on Thursday
and pool party on Friday. Ages
Kindergarten to 5th grade. Registration on Monday by parent or
guardian at the church, 211 S. 6th
Ave., Middleport. For questions
call 740-992-1121.
COOLVILLE — Vacation Bible
School will be held at Whites
Chapel Wesleyan Church, Lydia
Road, Coolville will be held on
July 18-20 from 6:30-8 p.m. with
the program on July 21 at 7 p.m.
We will be studying David and
Jonathan. All welcome.

Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
JP Morgan (NYSE)
Kroger (NYSE)
Ltd Brands (NYSE)
Norfolk So (NYSE)
OVBC (NASDAQ)
BBT (NYSE)
Peoples (NASDAQ)
Pepsico (NYSE)
Premier (NASDAQ)
Rockwell (NYSE)

Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
Royal Dutch Shell
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
Wal-Mart (NYSE)
Wendy’s (NYSE)
WesBanco (NYSE)
Worthington (NYSE)

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE)
Akzo Nobel
Big Lots, Inc.
Bob Evans Farms
BorgWarner (NYSE)
Century Alum (NASDAQ)
City Holding (NASDAQ)
Collins (NYSE)
DuPont (NYSE)
US Bank (NYSE)
Gen Electric (NYSE)

BROWNING
PATRIOT — Fredda Browning, 69, of Patriot, died
Monday, July 10, 2017 at her residence. Services will
be 1 p.m., Saturday, July 15, 2017 at the Willis Funeral
Home with Rev. Mick Browning and Rev. Brandon
Browning ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Neal Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday,
July 14, 2017 from 5-8 p.m. A full obituary will appear
in Thursday’s Gallipolis Daily Tribune.

68.84
29.56
46.65
67.69
45.53
16.53
66.01
108.25
82.57
51.77
26.38

51.99
92.83
22.63
43.79
122.50
37.00
45.38
32.35
113.74
20.83
164.16

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions July
11, 2017.

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�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Center
From page 3

The unanimously
approved resolution, stated
that Hart was a lifelong
resident of Racine Southern
Community and was an
active volunteer in the community, including creating
the Party in the Park family
event 11 years ago. Hart
was also a member of the
American Legion, volunteering numerous hours.
Hart was the president
and founder of the Racine
Area Community Organization (RACO) which each
year presents thousands of
dollars in scholarships to
Southern seniors.
Additionally, Hart was
part of the Sonshine Circle,
an organization which does
numerous things to beneﬁt
the school and community
and was a member of the
library board.
In employment matters, the board accepted
the resignation of Erin
Lisle as middle school science teacher due to other
employment.
The resignation of Lisa
Schenkelberg, intervention
specialist, was accepted due
to other employment.
Supplemental contracts
were approved as follows:
Alan Crisp, work study
coordinator; Kim Hupp, varsity volleyball coach; Beth
Bay, girls summer activities
coordinator; Carl Wolfe, athletic director; Kathy Miller,
transportation director;
Jeff Caldwell, boys summer
activities coordinator, Title
IX, golf and varsity boys
basketball coach; David
Kight, varsity girls basketball coach; Mike Chancey,
varsity football head coach;
Derek Miller, assistant varsity football coach; Eddie
Fife, volunteer football
coach; Mike Kloes, volunteer football coach; Eric
Hupp, volunteer football
coach; Tyson Lee, volunteer
football coach; Jason Circle,
volunteer football coach;
and Courtney Manuel, cross
country coach.
Ten extended days were
approved for the principals
to prepare for the upcoming
school year.
Beth Bay was approved
for nine days of summer
school instruction, four
hours per day, at a rate of
$23 per day. Summer school
is for at risk readers entering third grade.
A fourth of a dock day
was approved for Doug
Devore.
The board approved
recipients of scholarships
presented by the RacineSouthern Scholarship Association as follows:Helen
Coast Hayes Scholarship
($500) — Daniel Dunfee
George M. Sayre Scholarship ($500) — Trey Pickens
Edith Jividen Scholarship
($500) — Sierra Cleland
and Katelyn Barton
Wayne O. Roush Scholarship ($500) — Sara Schenkelberg
Alumni Scholarship
($500) — Marissa Johnson
and Talon Drummer
Hilton Wolfe Jr. Scholarship ($500) — Crenson
Rogers
Reconnecting Youth
($250) — Abbi Carsey,
Jordan Fisher and Larissa
Petrie
Dave Diles Scholarship
($500) — Talon Drummer
AMP Ohio ($500) —
Kamryn Smith
Chase Roush ($1,000)
— Clayton Wood, Marlee
Maynard, Talon Drummer
and Tanner Thorla
Maude Sellers Scholarship ($500) — Marissa
Johnson
Shelly R. Thorla Scholarship ($500) — Marlee
Maynard
The scholarship association has awarded 210
scholarships for $100,650 to
Southern graduates.
The purchase of 13 cafeteria tables were approved
at a cost of $14,157.02,
which includes delivery.
A payment in the amount
of $969 was approved to

Dodson Pest Control for
annual pest control services.
A payment in the amount
of $420 was approved to
Systems28 for annual ﬁre
alarm monitoring at the
Southern Local Fitness
Center.
A servicce agreement
with Quality Sales and
Service in the amount
of $1,370 was approved
for printer, fax and shred
services for July 1, 2017 to
June 30, 2018.
Final permanent appropriations for the 2017 ﬁscal
year were approved in the
amount of $11,488,593.50.
Temporary appropriation
for the 2018 ﬁscal year were
approved in the amount of
$11,076,841.16.
Liberty Mutual Insurance
was approved for property,
liability and ﬂeet insurance
for the 2017-18 school year
at a premium of $38,651.
Reed and Baur Insurance
is the local agent. Student
voluntary insurance was
also approved with Reed
and Baur. Life insurance
rates were approved as presented.
A transfer of $75,501.55
was approved from the
general fund into the food
service line item.
The supplemental pay
schedule was approved as
presented. The purchase of
three work shirts and one
polo shirt were approved for
custodial staff.
Policy additions and
revisions were approved as
presented.
Donations for the K-8
Playground Project were
approved as follows: Emma
Leachman, $11; Ohio Valley
Bank, $5,000; Wal-Mart,
$500; Darrel Norris and
Son Greenhouses LLC,
$150; Peoples Bank, $2,000;
Southern Elementary PTO,
$5,479.69.
A work site agreement
for the Summer Youth
Opportunities Program was
approved with the Meigs
County Department of Job
and Family Services for the
work experience term of
June 6 to Aug. 25.
The ﬁscal year 2017
Youth Led Prevention Grant
was accepted in the amount
of $750.
A contract with SchoolPointe, Inc. was approved
for the period of July 1,
2017 to June 30, 2018, for
webhosting for the district’s
website. The contract is in
the amount of $4,820.
The board approved
authorizing the treasurer
to enter into a scheduled
maintenance contract for
maintenance and controls
with Limbach for the period
of July 1, 2017 to June 30,
2018, in the amounts of
$20,988 and $6,780.
Continued membership
in the Ohio High School
Athletic Association was
approved for the 2017-18
school year.
The board approved
continued membership
in the Coalition of Rural
and Appalachian Schools
(CORAS) for the 2017-18
school year at a cost of
$325.
Open enrollment students were approved as
presented.
Lunch prices were set at
$2.70 for the high school,
which reﬂects a $.10
increase in accordance with
SB 210. Adult lunch prices
will remain at $3.25.
The next meeting in set
for 6:30 p.m. on July 24 at
the Kathryn Hart Community Center.

Wednesday, July 12, 2017 3

Individuals unable to file unemployment claims
reporting, in order to
obtain the missed week’s
beneﬁts.
Contact Southeastern
Ohio Legal Services, Athens Ofﬁce (athens@oslsa.
org or 740-594-3558) with
any questions.

OHIO VALLEY — If
you recently tried to ﬁle
an application for unemployment beneﬁts, or ﬁle
your weekly unemployment claim by phone, you
likely were surprised to
instead reach a recording
informing you that all
reporting must now be
done with a computer.

This is incorrect. After
a brief switch to computer-only, the Attorney
General’s ofﬁce is reinstating the phone reporting
system, as a Department
of Labor guideline and
the Ohio Revised Code
make it is impermissible
for states to exclusively
use online ﬁling, because

it does not permit equal
access for individuals
unable to use or access
web-based systems.
If you missed a weekly
claim ﬁling because of
lack of computer access,
you need to contact your
processing center and
explain the circumstances
surrounding your missed

Information submitted by
Southeastern Ohio Legal Services.

Body

under investigation. The
cause of death is pending
an autopsy by the coroner,
according to Stephanie
Leis of ODNR.
According to the release
by EMA, the Athens
Fire Department, Ohio

Department of Natural
Resources, Athens Poice
Department, Rome Twp.
Volunteer Fire Department
Dive Team, Portsmouth
Fire Department, Wellston
Fire Department, Athens
County EMS and EMA,

and the Athens Police
Department had assisted
during the search.
An account for donations to assist the Lippson
family has been set up at
Home National Bank in
Racine and Syracuse.

assist three handicapped
students retroactive to
June 12 through Aug.
11, not to exceed 29
From page 1
hours per week.
requested.
A ﬁeld trip request
Danielle Polk was
was approved from
hired on a two-year con- Denise Russo for four
tract as school psycholo- cosmetology seniors
gist.
to Grove City on July
Stacie Scarberry was 31-Aug. 1 for state board
approved as a third
exams.
grade summer intervenThe board approved
tion instructor at Meigs ratiﬁcation of a negotiIntermediate.
ated agreement with the
Alyssa Cremeans was OAPSE/AFSCME Local
hired as the girls varsity 4/AFL-CIO and its Local
golf coach for the 2017
017 running July 1,
season.
2017 to June 30, 2020.
The board hired WinRevisions to the athter Sellers as a personal letic handbook were
assistant for a summer
approved as presented
intervention program
by Steven Wood, event/
at Carleton School to
activities director.

The board approved
the purchase of security
cameras, license and
support from Northwestern Ohio Security
Inc. in the amount of
$55,560.49.
Property, auto and
liability insurance for
the 2017-18 school year
were approved with
Wright Specialty Insurance in the amount of
$81,726. Reed and Baur
Insurance is the local
agent. Voluntary student
accident insurance was
also approved with Reed
and Baur.
An agreement was
approved with Julian
and Grube Inc. for Medicaid Agreed Upon Procedures for ﬁscal year

2018 and 2019 at a cost
of $1,700 per ﬁscal year.
A purchased service agreement was
approved with Donna
Bently for the period of
July 1, 2017 to June 30,
2018.
Final permanent
appropriations for ﬁscal year 2017 were
approved in the amount
of $29,133,536. Temporary appropriations for
ﬁscal year 2018 were
approved in the amount
of $24,456,755.
Minutes of the previous meeting were
approved.
A thank you card was
received by the board
from Marge Barr for the
retirement gift.

From page 1

afternoon, continuing the
search since that time.
The incident remains

Track

Hiring

The board approved cal year 2017. Advancapproved to provide
supervisory and educa- renewing memberes and transfers from
tional support services. ship through Buckthe general fund were
eye Association of
The board authoFrom page 3
approved as presented,
School Administrators along with temporary
rized the redemption
year.
of the School District’s (BASA) for the 2017appropriations for ﬁsThe board approved
18 school year.
Classroom Facilities
the ﬁrst reading of the
cal year 2018.
Minutes of the preRefunding Bonds.
board of education
The next meeting
vious meeting were
The job descripnew/updated/revised/
will be held at 6:30
approved, along with
tion was approved for
deleted bylaws/polip.m. on Wednesday,
the
ﬁnancial
reports
Transportation
Supercies/forms/adminisJuly 26, in the library
and
ﬁnal
permanent
visor
of
Bus
Maintetrative guidelines,
appropriations
for
ﬁsconference room.
nance.
as recommended by
NEOLA.
Advertising for
quotes for tires, tubes,
petroleum products,
diesel fuel and fuel oil
were approved.
Continued membership in the Ohio High
School Athletic Association was approved
for the 2017-18 school
year.
The board approved
a one year contract
with West Interactive
Services Corporation
(previously known
as School Connects),
a family medicine obstetrician at Pleasant Valley
for the hosted district
Hospital, and a doctor is the only thing I ever wanted to be.
notiﬁcation system
Serving the health needs of women is my passion, and as a
known as School Mesfamily medicine obstetrician, I have the unique ability to prosenger, for the 2017vide primary care to women of all ages that will address their
18 school year.
The board approved
FRQFHUQV��'XULQJ�ZRPHQ·V�FKLOGEHDULQJ�\HDUV��SDWLHQWV�FDQ�
a membership with
even continue using my services throughout their pregnancies,
Coalition of Rural and
including delivery. Providing excellent care is very important to
Appalachian Schools
PH�EHFDXVH�WKHUH·V�RQH�WKLQJ�,�NQRZ��DQG�LW·V�WKDW�ZKHQ�\RX�
(CORAS), effective
empower the health of women, you empower the health of the
July 1, 2017 through
community, too.
June 30, 2018 for the
2017-18 school year.
Eastern Elementary,
Karah Cloxton, MD
Middle School, and
Family Medicine Obstetrician
High School Hand Preventive Care
books were approved
for the 2017-18 school
year.
 Treatment of minor
The purchase serillness and injury
vice agreement with
the Athens-Meigs
 Management of
Educational Service
chronic conditions
Center for the 201718 school year was
 Obstetric care,
��LQFOXGLQJ�KLJK�ULVN���
pregnancies

PENTACOSTAL
ASSEMBLY REVIVAL
Friday-JULY 14th
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�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

June’s jobs report
is brighter than
expected
The following editorial appeared in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on Monday, July 10:
Accompanied by the customary cautionary
note about analysis based on one month’s ﬁgures,
June’s job creation rate, provided by the U.S.
Department of Labor, should have provided Americans with a shaft of light Friday.
June produced a better-than-expected 222,000
new jobs, supplemented by an adjustment upward
of 47,000 of April and May ﬁgures. Unemployment rose a tick, to 4.4 percent from 4.3 percent,
but that is still low. Average hourly wages were
up 2.5 percent from a year ago. Labor-force participation rose slightly, to 62.8 percent from 62.7
percent, even as some employers complained of
difﬁculty in ﬁlling jobs. Inﬂation, a key factor for
poor and middle-class people in the face of generally stagnant wages, remains under 2 percent.
Although it is too early to claim a “Trump
bump” upward in the economy, June’s ﬁgures, coupled with a robust stock market, should be seen as
positive and cause for hope.
There are still shoes waiting to drop and a
considerable number of issues with unknown or
potentially negative longer-term impact. One of
these is the paralysis in Washington on some very
important issues, some in areas where President
Donald Trump as a candidate promised action.
There is no agreed-upon budget. Raising the
national debt limit above $20 trillion will be contentious. The direction America will go on health
care remains tortuously tangled.
Tax reform is somewhere over the rainbow.
The promised job-creating infrastructure bill is
nowhere in sight.
Also on the negative side is a slowdown in auto
sales and the fact that the spurt in new jobs seems
to have resulted partly from growth in publicsector employment rather than in the manufacturing and retail sectors generally watched for signs
of economic health. The long-term employment
impact of Trump’s policies on immigration and
American participation in international trade
pacts has yet to become visible.
All in all, however, the job ﬁgures released on
July 7 look good. Americans need some good
news right now.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday,
July 12, the 193rd day
of 2017. There are 172
days left in the year.

THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
“There is no remedy

Today’s Highlight in
for love but to love
History:
more.”
On July 12, 1967,
— Henry David Thoreau
rioting erupted in New(1817-1862)
ark, New Jersey, over
the police beating of
a black taxi driver; 26
to a secret mountaintop
people were killed in
location as part of a
the ﬁve days of violence drill involving a mock
that followed.
nuclear attack on Washington.
On this date:
In 1977, President
In 1543, England’s
Jimmy Carter defended
King Henry VIII marSupreme Court limits
ried his sixth and last
on government paywife, Catherine Parr.
ments for poor women’s
In 1817, author, poet abortions, saying,
and naturalist Henry
“There are many things
David Thoreau was
in life that are not fair.”
born in Concord, MasIn 1984, Democratic
sachusetts.
presidential candidate
In 1862, during the
Walter F. Mondale
Civil War, President
announced his choice
Abraham Lincoln
of U.S. Rep. Geraldine
signed a bill authorizA. Ferraro of New York
ing the Army Medal of
to be his running-mate;
Honor.
Ferraro was the ﬁrst
In 1909, the House of woman to run for vice
Representatives joined
president on a majorthe Senate in passing
party ticket.
the 16th Amendment to
In 1988, Democratic
the U.S. Constitution,
presidential candidate
allowing for a federal
Michael S. Dukakis
income tax, and submit- tapped Sen. Lloyd Bentted it to the states. (It
sen of Texas as his
was declared ratiﬁed in running-mate.
February 1913.)
In 1994, President
In 1917, artist
Bill Clinton, visiting
Andrew Wyeth was
Germany, went to the
born in Chadds Ford,
eastern sector of Berlin,
Pennsylvania.
the ﬁrst U.S. president
In 1948, the Demoto do so since Harry
cratic National Conven- Truman.
tion, which nominated
In 2001, Abner
President Harry S.
Louima (loo-EE’-mah),
Truman for a second
the Haitian immigrant
term of ofﬁce, opened
tortured in a New York
in Philadelphia.
City police station,
In 1957, President
agreed to an $8.7 milDwight D. Eisenhower
lion settlement with
was ﬂown by helicopter the city and its police
from the White House
union.

THEIR VIEW

As physical jobs decline, something is lost
By Victor Davis Hanson
Contributing columnist

As jobs that require
physical work decline
thanks to technological
advances, life superﬁcially appears to get better.
Cheap cellphones, video
games, the internet,
social media and laborsaving appliances all
make things easier and
suggest that even more
and better beneﬁts are
on the horizon. Formerly
backbreaking industries,
from the growing of
almonds to the building
of cars, are increasingly
mechanized, using fewer
but more-skilled operators.
Anyone who has spotwelded or harvested
almonds with a mallet and canvas has no
regrets in seeing the
disappearance of such
rote drudgery. Consumers beneﬁt in the form
of cheaper prices. But
as we continue on this
trajectory, initiated in
the Industrial Revolution, is something lost?
Something only poorly
approximated by greater
leisure time, non-muscular jobs and contrived
physical exercise in airconditioned gyms?
Talk long enough to
the most accomplished
academics, lawyers
and CEOs — who also
tend to be the most
conscientious about
biking, jogging and
weightlifting (obesity
being an epidemic of the
poor and lower middle
classes) — and more
often than not, they will
brag about a long-ago
college summer job waiting tables or repairing
hiking trails. They might
praise the granite-counter installer who redid
their kitchen, or offer an
anecdote about the time
they helped the treetrimmer haul limbs from
the backyard out to the
trailer at the curb. There
seems a human instinct
to want to do physical
work.
The proliferation
of hard-work realitytelevision programming
reﬂects this apparent
need, if only vicariously.
Indeed, the more we
have become immobile
and urbanized, the more
we tune in to watch reality television’s assorted
truckers, loggers, farm-

ers, ﬁshermen, drillers
and rail engineers. In a
society that supposedly
despises menial jobs,
the television ratings for
such programs suggest
that lots of Americans
enjoy watching people
of action who work with
their hands.
Physical work, in its
eleventh hour within
a rapidly changing
Western culture, still
intrigues us in part
because it remains the
foundation for 21st
century complexity.
Investors may know
the oil trade better than
oil drillers, but buying
and selling based on
intimate knowledge of
Indonesian politics or
the nature of the American automobile market
are still predicated on
someone’s knowing how
to feed down steel casing to follow the drill
bit. If there is no one to
pump oil, there is nothing to sell. Selling plums
to Japan is not the same
as pruning a plum tree.
Both aspects of the oil
and plum industries are
critical to their success,
but the commercial tasks
are cerebral and secondary, the physical ones
elemental and primary.
Before any of us can
teach, write or speculate,
we must ﬁrst have food,
shelter and safety. And
for a bit longer, at least,
that will require some
people to cut grapes
and nail two-by-sixes.
No apps or 3-D printers
exist to produce brown
rice. The almond farmer
outside my window uses
a computerized machine
for seemingly every task
— irrigating, cultivating and harvesting. But
this morning, two men
are cutting out diseased
limbs in the orchard,
selecting their cuts with
the help of an Echo
chainsaw, whose basic
tenets of portability,
gasoline power source,
and chain running on a
guided frame have a 100year pedigree.
It is astonishing,
the degree to which a
high-tech, post-modern
society still depends on
low-tech, pre-modern
labor, whether that is a
teen in constant motion
for eight hours as a
barista at Starbucks or
a mechanic on his back
underneath a Lexus,

searching to ﬁnd a short
that popped up in a computerized code on his
tablet.
Physical work, moreover, has an intrinsic
satisfaction in that it is
real, in the primordial
sense that nonphysical
work is not. The head of
the Federal Reserve may
be more important to
our general welfare than
the city road crew patching asphalt roads, but
there remains something
wondrous in transforming material conditions
through the hands, an
act that can be seen
and felt rather than just
spoken or written about.
Changing the physical
landscape, either by
building or destroying
something previously
constructed or altering
it, lends a sense of conﬁdence that the human
body can still manifest
one’s ideas by concrete
action.
Physical labor also
promotes human versatility: Those who do
not do it, or who do
not know how to do it,
become divorced from
— and, at the same
time, dependent on —
laborers, in psychological as well as concrete
ways.
Lawyers, accountants
and journalists living in
houses with yards and
driving cars to work
thus count on a supporting infrastructure of
electricians, landscapers
and mechanics. Without them, life grinds to
a halt, unless one has
rudimentary knowledge
of such tasks — or the
time and willingness to
learn them.
In that context, physical labor can provide
independence, at least
in a limited sense of
not being entirely reliant on a host of hired
workers. By the same
token, working with
one’s hands, however
temporarily, gives some
approximation of what
physical labor is and
what those who do it
might be like.
Especially valuable
in muscular work is
some appreciation of
the tragic view of the
world. For the last four
decades, I have split my
time between teaching
classics and writing, and
working on a farm. I can-

not say that either world
is nobler than the other.
But I did learn that farm
laborers complained
much less about their
own often-unenviable
lots than did academics
about their comparatively enviable compensation and generous time
off. Working outdoors,
often alone, with one’s
hands encourages a tragic acceptance of nature
and its limitations. Talking and writing indoors
with like kind promote a
more therapeutic sense
that life can be changed
through discourse and
argument.
It follows logically
that I learned more from
teaching undergraduates at Cal State Fresno
than from students at
Stanford — not because
they knew Greek and
Latin better (most
did not) but because
they often worked 20
hours or more a week
at minimum-wage jobs
and thus had a far wider
range of experience
with (and empathy for)
characters and events
found in Aristophanes,
Euripides and Hesiod in
the pre-modern world of
the Greeks.
In his ﬁnal play, “Bacchae,” the Athenian
playwright Euripides
explored the nature of
wisdom and who possesses it. After a frenzy
of killing and destruction, he seems to
conclude that neither
the rational and conventional King Pentheus
(“You’ve got a quick
tongue and seem intelligent, but your words
don’t make any sense
at all”) nor the ecstatic
emotion of the divine
Dionysus and his bacchants (“Angry gods
should not act just
like humans”) were
models for emulation.
Best, instead, is the
day-by-day life without
pretense: “The hopes
of countless men are
inﬁnite in number.
Some make men rich;
some come to nothing.
So I consider that man
blessed who lives a
happy existence day by
day.”
Victor Davis Hanson is a senior
fellow in classics and military
history at the Hoover Institution.
This essay was excerpted from the
Manhattan Institute’sCity Journal
and published in the Los Angeles
Times.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 12, 2017 5

BUCKEYE STATE NEWS

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.

Examiner’s Ofﬁce said in a release Monday that the
remains found Oct. 17 were those of a woman who
had been shot in the head. Her death was ruled a
homicide.
The release describes the woman as a white female
in her 30s or 40s, about 5-feet 4-inches to 5-feet
6-inches tall. The release also says she was wearing
medium-size gray boxer shorts or pajama bottoms and
appeared to have been dead for weeks before the bag
was found.
The medical examiner’s ofﬁce asks anyone with a
missing relative who ﬁts the description to contact
them immediately.

BEVERLY, Ohio (AP) — Authorities have identiﬁed an Indiana couple who died when a small plane
crash crashed into a retention pond in southeastern
Ohio.
The State Highway Patrol said Monday that the 63-year-old pilot, Umamahesware Kalapatapu, and his 61-year-old
wife, Sitha-Gita Kalapatapu, were the
only ones on the Piper Archer PA-28.
The plane carrying the Logansport,
Indiana, couple crashed Saturday near
the Washington County village of Beverly, about 75 miles (121 kilometers) southeast of
Columbus.
Authorities said the last contact with the plane
headed to an airport near Parkersburg, West Virginia,
from Cass County, Indiana, was around 10:30 a.m.
Saturday. It was reported missing about noon.
Searchers found the wreckage Saturday afternoon.
There was no word on what caused the crash. The
Federal Aviation Administration and the National
Transportation Safety Board are investigating.

Middleport Yard
of the Week
MIDDLEPORT — A yard of the week program is
beginning in the Village of Middleport. Each week, out of
town judges will judge yards in the village, with a yard of
the week to be selected from one of the following: yards,
porches, entry ways, planter boxes, or overall neatness.
One “Yard of the Week” will be selected each week. Only
properties within the village limits will be judged.

Ohio city’s school officers will
carry overdose antidote

Road
Closure

AKRON, Ohio (AP) — Ofﬁcers patrolling public
middle and high schools in one of northeast Ohio’s
largest cities will start carrying the overdose antidote
naloxone during the coming school year.
The Akron Board of Education voted 5-1 in favor of
the policy Monday. Supporters say access to the antidote, also known by the brand name Narcan, could
help prevent potential drug deaths amid the opioid
epidemic.
Only board member Debbie Walsh dissented. Walsh
tells the Akron Beacon Journal (http://bit.ly/2v6O4k7
) she worries it sends the wrong message and gives
people the idea that, as she puts it, “As long as there’s
Narcan, we’re safe.”
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — A coroner’s ofﬁce says a
School resource ofﬁcers at Akron’s six high schools
driver killed when he drove the wrong way on Interand nine middle schools will carry the antidote and
state 75 in Ohio and crashed into a tanker truck full of be trained to use it. It will be stored in the schools’
gasoline had alcohol and marijuana in his system.
health clinics.
The Montgomery County Coroner’s Ofﬁce says
30-year-old Andrew T. Brunsman, of Centerville,
died from multiple blunt force injuries in the April 30
crash.
Police have said Brunsman was driving the wrong
way when he collided with the truck, which exploded.
The truck driver suffered a dislocated shoulder in the
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — A proposal before the city
accident.
council in Toledo would make it a misdemeanor crime
The explosion sent smoke and ﬂames into the air
to obstruct access to health care facilities including
above downtown Dayton for hours, causing damage
the Ohio city’s only abortion clinic.
to pavement on the highway and a ﬁre in the storm
The Blade (http://bit.ly/2sL6Z3b ) reports the prosewer system. No other injuries were reported
posal would create 20-foot buffer zones where people
A third vehicle was damaged by debris from the
would be banned from using unwanted physical concrash.
tact or threats of such action to block someone from
entering or exiting.
Council President Steven Steel sponsored the measure. He says such physical contact already is unlawful but would elevate the crime based on location if
the proposal passes.
The abortion clinic’s escort coordinator, Kristin
CLEVELAND (AP) — A medical examiner is
Hady, says she supports the idea because protesters
seeking the public’s help to identify a woman whose
sometimes harass and intimidate patients and don’t
remains were found in a bag last year in a vacant ﬁeld respect the rules, creating safety concerns.
in Cleveland.
Anti-abortion advocates say the measure would
limit free speech. Steel says that’s not true.
The Cuyahoga (ky-uh-HOH’-guh) County Medical

CHESTER — Due to the Heritage Festival on July
15, Scout Camp Road will be closed from Route 248 to
Mill Street, and Mill Street will be closed from Scout
Camp Road to Allen Street. This is the area around
the Chester Commons.
MEIGS COUNTY — Beginning June 5, State Route
124 in Meigs County will be closed between Township
Road 29 (Wells Run Road) and Township Road 144
(Dewitts Run Road) for a slip repair project. The estimated completion date is September 1, 2017.

Coroner: Ohio wrong-way driver
had alcohol, pot in system

Scholarship
Applications Available
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teachers
Association is looking for candidates for a scholarship to
be given in early August. Applicants must be a college
junior or senior education major whose home residence
is Meigs County. A GPA of 2.5 or higher is also a requirement. Questions or applications can be obtained by calling Charlene at 740-444-5498 or Becky at 740-992-7096.

Ohio abortion clinic access at
issue in buffer zone proposal

Immunization
Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic from 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/
legal guardian. A $15 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however, no one will
be denied services because of an inability to pay an
administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines.
Please bring medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or visit our website at www.
meigs-health.com to see a list of accepted commercial
insurances and Medicaid for adults.

Medical examiner seeks help to
ID woman’s remains in Ohio

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

73°

87°

87°

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.

83°
71°
86°
66°
103° in 1930
50° in 1963

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
2.35
1.50
25.42
23.46

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:14 a.m.
8:55 p.m.
11:10 p.m.
9:29 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Jul 16

New

Jul 23

First

Jul 30

Full

Aug 7

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

Major
Today 2:41a
Thu. 3:34a
Fri.
4:26a
Sat.
5:17a
Sun. 6:08a
Mon. 6:57a
Tue. 7:47a

Minor
8:53a
9:46a
10:38a
11:29a
12:20p
12:44a
1:33a

Major
3:05p
3:57p
4:50p
5:41p
6:32p
7:23p
8:14p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Minor
9:16p
10:09p
11:01p
11:53p
---1:10p
2:00p

WEATHER HISTORY
Lightning sparked 335 separate
forest ﬁres in the northern Rockies
on July 12, 1940. Too often, western
thunderstorms contain little or no
rain, and the ﬁres quickly spread.

A t-storm in spots in
the afternoon

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Partly sunny, pleasant
and less humid

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

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

Level
12.40
16.70
21.65
12.82
13.02
25.50
13.48
25.98
34.56
13.06
17.70
34.60
16.20

Portsmouth
94/73

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.75
+0.02
+0.10
+0.27
-0.24
+0.74
+0.96
+0.30
+0.42
+0.34
-0.40
+0.30
-1.80

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

89°
68°

Mostly sunny and
pleasant

Marietta
91/71

Murray City
91/70
Belpre
92/71

Athens
91/70

87°
71°
Mostly sunny

Today

St. Marys
91/71

Parkersburg
90/71

Coolville
91/70

Elizabeth
93/71

Spencer
92/70

Buffalo
94/71

Ironton
95/73

Milton
95/72

St. Albans
95/72

Huntington
94/74

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
75/55
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
71/56
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
84/66
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

85°
66°

Mostly sunny and
pleasant

Wilkesville
92/71
POMEROY
Jackson
93/71
93/71
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
93/71
94/72
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
91/73
GALLIPOLIS
94/72
94/71
93/72

Ashland
94/73
Grayson
94/73

MONDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
91/70

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

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

Chillicothe
92/72

South Shore Greenup
94/73
93/72

55

Logan
90/70

Adelphi
90/70

Lucasville
93/73
Very High

SUNDAY

85°
63°

Very High

Primary: grass, pine, other
Mold: 1227

SATURDAY

87°
66°

Waverly
92/72

Pollen: 37

Low

MOON PHASES
Last

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

FRIDAY

90°
71°

0

Primary: cladosporium

Thu.
6:14 a.m.
8:54 p.m.
11:44 p.m.
10:29 a.m.

THURSDAY

Mostly cloudy and humid today and tonight.
High 94° / Low 72°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Clendenin
94/71
Charleston
93/72

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
67/52

Billings
88/63

Denver
88/60

Montreal
72/55

Minneapolis
87/61

Toronto
78/63

Detroit
Chicago 89/69
Kansas City 92/70
96/74

New York
87/74
Washington
94/80

Thu.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
91/70/t
89/68/t
Anchorage
69/57/pc 73/61/pc
Atlanta
90/74/t 92/75/pc
Atlantic City
86/77/pc 90/75/pc
Baltimore
94/75/pc 99/76/pc
Billings
88/63/s 97/69/s
Boise
97/68/s 100/70/pc
Boston
85/70/pc
78/62/t
Charleston, WV 93/72/pc 91/72/pc
Charlotte
92/74/t 92/74/pc
Cheyenne
85/57/t
82/56/t
Chicago
92/70/t 81/64/c
Cincinnati
91/73/c 89/71/pc
Cleveland
91/73/t
84/69/t
Columbus
91/73/c
87/70/t
Dallas
96/78/pc 95/78/s
Denver
88/60/t
84/59/t
Des Moines
91/71/t 84/67/pc
Detroit
89/69/t
83/63/t
Honolulu
87/75/sh 87/76/pc
Houston
93/77/pc
94/77/t
Indianapolis
90/74/pc
88/68/t
Kansas City
96/74/s 89/71/pc
Las Vegas
107/85/s 108/87/s
Little Rock
92/74/t
91/74/t
Los Angeles
84/66/pc 83/66/pc
Louisville
95/77/pc 93/76/pc
Miami
90/81/sh
89/81/t
Minneapolis
87/61/pc 77/60/pc
Nashville
93/75/pc 92/75/pc
New Orleans
90/77/t
90/77/t
New York City
87/74/pc
91/70/t
Oklahoma City
96/73/s 96/72/pc
Orlando
90/75/t
88/74/t
Philadelphia
92/78/pc
95/75/t
Phoenix
108/88/pc 108/89/pc
Pittsburgh
86/72/c
86/69/t
Portland, ME
80/60/pc
65/55/t
Raleigh
95/75/pc 95/75/pc
Richmond
98/78/pc 98/77/pc
St. Louis
100/80/pc
95/75/t
Salt Lake City
97/72/pc 98/73/pc
San Francisco
71/56/pc 70/55/pc
Seattle
75/55/s 75/53/s
Washington, DC 94/80/pc 98/79/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
90/74

High
Low

El Paso
98/74
Chihuahua
93/64

106° in Needles, CA
31° in Climax, CO

Global
High
126° in Basrah, Iraq
Low -8° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
93/77
Monterrey
93/73

Miami
90/81

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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60701680

Authorities: Indiana couple
killed in Ohio plane crash

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Meigs football
golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Meigs Marauder
football team will host a golf scramble on Saturday, July 22, at Riverside Golf Course.
The tournament will be a four-man, bestball scramble that includes bringing your own
team. The cost of the tournament is $240 per
team. The team must have a combined handicap of over 40, and only one player can have a
handicap less than eight.
Registration will begin at 8 a.m., with a 9
a.m. shotgun start following. All checks should
be made available to Meigs Football.
Various prizes will be given out on selected
holes and there will also be a double your
money Par 3 hole, a skins game and a cash
pot. Prizes will be awarded for ﬁrst, second
and third place ﬁnishers with club house
credit. Also, new Meigs football shirts will be
given out. Food and beverages will be available.
This tournament is the rescheduled event
from April 22, which was canceled due to
inclement weather.
Interested golfers should contact Tonya Cox
at 740-645-4479 or Riverside Golf Course at
304-773-5354.

GAHS football
golf scramble
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The annual Gallia
Academy football golf scramble will be Saturday,
July 22, at Cliffside Golf Course. Registration
begins at 7:30 a.m. and the scramble will start
at 8:30 a.m.
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 a competitive division that
will be playing for cash prizes. The white division is a fun division with no handicap requirements and winners will be drawn at random.
Food and beverages will be provided at the
event.
The deadline for registering is Friday, July 14.
To register or for questions, please call 740-6451075 or 740-645-5783.
For continued updates, please check out Facebook.com/GAHSBlueDevilsFootball

GAHS youth
football camp
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
football staff will be conducting a youth football
camp for students entering grades 1-8 from 6-8
p.m. on Monday, July 24, through Wednesday,
July 26, at Memorial Field. Camp participants
will be instructed by the Gallia Academy football staff and players.
The cost of the camp is $35 per camper and
$25 for each additional family member. Students can register the ﬁrst day of camp or preregister by Friday, July 14, to receive $10 off.
All campers will receive a t-shirt and compete
for prizes. It is requested to that campers bring
cleats and a water bottle.
Contact assistant coach Cody Call at 740794-1951 or email cody_call23@yahoo.com for
more information or to pre-register.
See BRIEFS | 10

Riverside seniors
begin 2nd half
MASON, W. Va. — The second half of the Riverside Senior Men’s Golf League began on Tuesday,
July 4 —with 70 players taking part.
The 70 players were broken into 16 teams of
four players and two teams of three players.
The low score for the day was 59 (11-under
par), as there was a three-way tie for ﬁrst-place
between the teams of Mike Fetty, Glenn Long,
Claude Profﬁtt and Don Waldie; Siebert Belcher,
Bob Avery, Gene Thomas and Carl Stone; and
Willis Korb, Bill Yoho, Jim Lawrence and Kenny
Pridemore.
The closest-to-the-pin winners were Jim Turley
on the ninth hole and Glenn Long on the 14th
hole.
The following is the point-leader list after the
ﬁrst week of the second half: Mike Fetty (17.0),
Glenn Long (17.0), Claude Profﬁtt (17.0), Don
Waldie (17.0), Siebert Belcher (17.0), Bob Avery
(17.0), Gene Thomas (17.0), Carl Stone (17.0),
Willis Korb (17.0), Bill Yoho (17.0), Jim Lawrence
(17.0) and Kenny Pridemore (17.0).
There were also 11 players with 14.0 points and
eight players with 11.5 points.

Wednesday, July 12, 2017 s 6

Capehart golfers finish 2017 campaign
Staff Report

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Wyatt Nicholson tees off on the third hole at the
Meigs County Golf Course, during the Capehart
Golf League, on June 19.

POMEROY, Ohio — The
Frank Capehart Tri-County
Junior Golf League faced some
wet weather before play was
completed Monday during
the 2017 Fun Day ﬁnale at the
Meigs County Golf Course.
Mother Nature let both the
players and spectators know
that she can play a role in a
tournament at any time. The
rain did not come down too
long, just long enough and hard
enough to make everyone a little miserable for a short period
of time.
However, play was completed
through the downpour without
being stopped.
Monday’s tournament was
played under a format not used
at any other time during the

year. All players were given a
handicap based on their previous scores from the initial four
tournaments. Age divisions did
not exist and the boys played
against the girls.
All in all, it turned out to be
a fun day, enjoyed by everyone
at the course. The weather did
manage to keep the number of
participants to a season low, as
only 34 players took part in the
action.
Joe Milhoan, a player from
the 11-12 year old age group,
ended up with the lowest net
score of the day — posting a 33
after handicap with an effort of
50 over nine holes.
This was not an easy victory
for Joe as he just edged Laith
Hamid, Alec Conway and Bailey
Smith by a single shot. All three
See GOLFERS | 10

All rise as Judge smashes his way to Derby title
MIAMI (AP) — Aaron
Judge hit the glass
behind left ﬁeld that
supports the retractable
roof at Marlins Park. He
drove balls over the Red
Grooms home run sculpture in left-center, over
the batter’s eye in center
and — unusually for a
Home Run Derby, to the
opposite ﬁeld, too.
He even hit the roof.
The larger-than-life
New York Yankees slugger dominated the AllStar Home Run Derby in
the same manner he has
smashed his way through
his rookie season, beating Minnesota’s Miguel
Sano 11-10 with two minutes to spare in the ﬁnal
on Monday night.
“It was a blast. I
enjoyed every minute of
it — watching the other
guys swing, coming
here early and talking to
the media,” Judge said.
“Everything about today
was fantastic.”
Five years ago, Judge
won the college home
run derby in Omaha,
Nebraska. This time, he
outslugged some of baseball’s top stars, including
local favorites Giancarlo
Stanton and Justin Bour
of the Miami Marlins.
“A lot more fans,”
Judge said. “Your adrenaline is pumping, you’re
nervous, you’re excited.
But this was an incredible experience.”
Judge, 6-foot-7 and 282
pounds, hit 47 home runs
in the derby that totaled
3.9 miles. His longest
drive of the night went
513 feet, and he topped
500 four times.
“I thought I had seen
it all before. He didn’t
even look like he was getting tired,” said Seattle’s
Robinson Cano, the 2011
Derby winner. “He was
going opposite ﬁeld. He
was late on the ball and
he was putting the ball in
the upper deck.”
Judge had no trouble
hitting the roof, thought
to be previously
untouched by batted ball.
That drive didn’t count.
“I got it in BP, too,
earlier. So I wasn’t too
surprised by that,” Judge
said.
Hitting second each
time, Judge knocked
out Bour 23-22 in the
ﬁrst round and beat Los
Angeles Dodgers rookie
Cody Bellinger 13-12 in
the second. Then, with
lightning visible behind
the huge glass door, he
hit a 458-foot drive above
the batter’s eye for the
title.

Wilfredo Lee | AP

New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge competes in the MLB baseball All-Star Home Run Derby on Monday

“That guy Aaron
Judge, he doesn’t get
tired,” Sano said.
Many of the All-Stars
sat in foul territory, some
with their kids.
“I had never seen him
in person. He’s really
impressive,” said Colorado’s Charlie Blackmon,
who was eliminated in
the ﬁrst round. “The ﬁrst
time I saw him, he was in
a crowd. I was wondering
what he was standing on.
He’s a monster.”
Judge leads the major
leagues with 30 home
runs, and some Yankees fans showed up
to support him in their
full dress — ﬂowing
black robes and white
powdered wigs. Booed
initially by the crowd of
37,027, Judge earned
cheers once Stanton, the
defending champion, and
Bour were eliminated in
the ﬁrst round.
Judge has hit the longest home run in the
regular season this year
in the majors — 495 feet.
He broke a TV monitor
at Yankee Stadium with a
BP drive that went over
the center-ﬁeld bleachers in May and dented a
door casing with a home
run last week.

In Tuesday night’s
game, he’s set to bat third
for the American League.
Sano beat Kansas
City’s Mike Moustakas
11-10 in the opening
round, and the Yankees’
Gary Sanchez topped
Stanton 17-16.
Stanton, who got home
at about 5 a.m. after a
game in San Francisco,
started slowly against
pitcher Pat Shine, hitting three liners before a
429-foot drive to center.
Stanton began to ﬁnd his
grove and hit a 496-foot
shot off the glass behind
the left-ﬁeld seats, then
started spraying impressive drives. He had 15
when his 30-second
bonus road started but
added just one more. The
crowd groaned when his
last fell short.
“It just didn’t work
out as we had planned,”
Shine said.
Bellinger, hitting off his
dad, former big leaguer
Clay Bellinger, earned
bonus time as four
minutes expired with
his 13th drive, into the
right-ﬁeld upper deck,
then with ﬁve seconds
remaining knocked out
Blackmon 15-14.
Hitting without batting

gloves, Bour excited fans
with 22 homers . Judge,
hitting against his regular BP pitcher, Danilo
Valiente, had 22 through
four minutes, according
to the scoreboard, and
when he hit one in bonus
time he walked away. But
scoreboard reverted to
22 — apparently the roof
shot was subtracted —
and Judge added another
with a few seconds left.
“I thought I had 23
already, but I guess I tied
him,” he said. “I really
didn’t have any worries.”
Seeming tired, Sanchez
opened the second round
with 10 and Sano needed
just 3:10 to hit 11, the
longest at 491 feet. In a
matchup of the leading
candidates for rookies of
the year, Bellinger hit 12
and Judge topped him
with a minute to spare,
including a 513-foot shot
high off the window, a
drive that left his bat at
119 mph and rose 143
feet.
“I had no pressure
going into it,” Judge
said. “I’m a rookie. This
is my ﬁrst time doing it.
For me, I got no expectations. I’m just going to go
in there and have some
fun.”

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 12, 2017 7

IOC to pick Los Angeles, Paris for 2024 or 2028 Olympics
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) — If they
can agree who goes ﬁrst,
Paris and Los Angeles
will be awarded the 2024
and 2028 Olympics.
International Olympic
Committee members
voted unanimously to
seek a consensus threeway deal between the two
bid cities and the IOC
executive board. Talks
will open with Paris widely seen as the favorite for
2024.
If a deal falls through,
only the 2024 hosting
rights will be voted
on when the IOC next
meets, on Sept. 13 in
Lima, Peru.
However, an agreement seemed assured by
the reaction of the two
mayors. Eric Garcetti of
LA and Anne Hidalgo of
Paris emerged on stage
holding hands to welcome
the decision.
A deal is also likely
because a head-to-head

ﬁght for 2024 would create a loser that is unlikely
to return four years later
for a new 2028 bid contest.
“Both of us will ﬁnd it
more and more difﬁcult
to convince cities —
whether it’s Paris, Los
Angeles or other American cities — to really go
into this process if one
of us gets turned down,”
Garcetti had said earlier
Tuesday.
The mayors were
united on stage by IOC
President Thomas Bach,
who raised an arm of
each in a shared gesture
of triumph.
A deal to make both
cities winners would fulﬁl
a strategy that Bach set
in motion last December
to help safeguard a stable
future for the signature
Olympic event.
“With Los Angeles
and Paris, there are two
fantastic cities from
countries with a profound

MLB

Boston
New York
Tampa Bay
Baltimore
Toronto

W
50
45
47
42
41

L
39
41
43
46
47

Cleveland
Minnesota
Kansas City
Detroit
Chicago

W
47
45
44
39
38

L
40
43
43
48
49

Houston
Los Angeles
Texas
Seattle
Oakland

W
60
45
43
43
39

L
29
47
45
47
50

Washington
Atlanta
Miami
New York
Philadelphia

W
52
42
41
39
29

L
36
45
46
47
58

Milwaukee
Chicago
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati

W
50
43
43
42
39

L
41
45
45
47
49

Los Angeles
Arizona
Colorado
San Diego
San Francisco

W
61
53
52
38
34

L
29
36
39
50
56

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB
.562
—
—
.523
3½
—
.522
3½
—
.477
7½
4
.466 8½
5
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.540
—
—
.511
2½
1
.506
3
1½
.448
8
6½
.437
9
7½
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.674
—
—
.489 16½
3
.489 16½
3
.478 17½
4
.438
21
7½
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.591
—
—
.483 9½
8
.471 10½
9
.453
12
10½
.333 22½
21
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.549
—
—
.489
5½
7½
.489
5½
7½
.472
7
9
.443 9½
11½
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.678
—
—
.596
7½
—
.571 9½
—
.432
22
12½
.378
27
17½

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Milwaukee 5, N.Y. Yankees 3
Houston 19, Toronto 1
Tampa Bay 5, Boston 3
Baltimore 11, Minnesota 5
L.A. Angels 3, Texas 0
Colorado 10, Chicago White Sox 0
L.A. Dodgers 5, Kansas City 2
Seattle 4, Oakland 0
Detroit 5, Cleveland 3
Tuesday’s Games
AL (TBD) at NL (TBD), 8:00 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Chicago Cubs at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.

Olympic history,” Bach
said.
The IOC approved the
expected double award
after hearing both cities
present their 2024 hosting plans at a conference
center in the Olympics’
capital city, Lausanne.
Both cities used 45
minutes of videos and
speeches, including one
with French President
Emmanuel Macron promoting the Paris cause,
in a closed-door session
with IOC members to
explain how they would
host the 2024 Olympics.
At separate news conferences, the mayors said
they could work toward
a deal.
“We look forward to
working together, maybe
not in competition but
collaboration with Paris,”
LA’s Garcetti said after
his city’s bid ofﬁcials
opened the campaign
event.
Garcetti and Hidalgo

have long touted their
good relations on other
issues such as climate
change.
“We are all at the disposition and by the side of
the IOC which was right
to ask itself this question,” Hidalgo said at the
Paris news conference,
citing her friendship with
Garcetti as potentially a
“key element.”
The dual award can
give the IOC a decade of
stability with two worldclass cities touting ﬁnancially secure bids. LA
plans to use only existing
venues with zero risk of
white elephants. This follows years of overspending by Olympic hosts
and a series of political
defeats that have sunk the
campaigns of potential
candidates.
It also avoids inﬂicting
a third recent defeat on
Paris — which lost with
bids for the 2008 and
2012 Olympics — and

the United States. New
York and Chicago both
lost heavily for 2012 and
2016, respectively.
Those losses deepened
a rift between the U.S.
Olympic Committee and
the Swiss-based IOC that
LA 2024 and a new team
of American ofﬁcials have
worked hard to heal.
Paris also failed with a
1992 bid and pinned its
hopes on hosting in 2024,
exactly 100 years after its
previous Summer Games.
“We lost three times,
we don’t want to lose a
fourth one,” Macron said
at the news conference.
“I’m here to convey the
message that there’s a
strong unity to back this
candidacy.”
Minutes after Macron
spoke, U.S. President
Donald Trump wrote on
Twitter: “Working hard
to get the Olympics for
the United States (L.A.).
Stay tuned!”
Garcetti said the Olym-

pic movement “can’t
afford to lose the United
States.”
The IOC’s most valuable TV rights deal is
with NBC and several of
its top-tier sponsors are
American.
Still, a 2028 Olympics
in Southern California
could be the ﬁrst American-hosted games since
1996 in Atlanta.
Bach has said the idea
of a double award was
presented to him at a
lunch last year by friends
whom he declined to
identify in a recent interview with French sports
daily L’Equipe.
The LA bid team
declined to comment
Tuesday whether the
suggestion came from
its supporters, as some
believe.
“He (Bach) has good
friends who gave him
good advice,” LA bid
chairman Casey Wasserman said.

2-time champ Nadal loses 15-13 in 5th set
L10
6-4
3-7
6-4
3-7
4-6

Str Home
L-2 25-14
L-1 26-17
W-2 27-19
W-2 25-16
L-1 22-24

Away
25-25
19-24
20-24
17-30
19-23

L10
6-4
5-5
6-4
5-5
5-5

Str Home
L-1 21-24
L-2 20-28
L-3 24-19
W-1 23-20
L-1 19-18

Away
26-16
25-15
20-24
16-28
19-31

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

Str Home
W-1 27-18
W-1 23-19
L-1 25-20
W-1 27-22
L-1 24-21

Away
33-11
22-28
18-25
16-25
15-29

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

Str Home
W-1 26-19
L-1 20-22
W-3 21-21
L-2 19-24
W-1 16-25

Away
26-17
22-23
20-25
20-23
13-33

L10
8-2
4-6
6-4
5-5
6-4

Str Home
W-1 26-23
L-2 24-20
W-2 26-24
W-2 21-22
W-2 23-20

Away
24-18
19-25
17-21
21-25
16-29

L10
9-1
3-7
5-5
6-4
5-5

Str Home
W-6 39-11
L-2 33-15
W-1 26-18
L-1 22-22
L-4 17-24

Away
22-18
20-21
26-21
16-28
17-32

N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Toronto at Detroit, 7:10 p.m.
Minnesota at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Seattle at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.
Texas at Kansas City, 8:15 p.m.
Cleveland at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at L.A. Angels, 10:07 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 4:05 p.m.
Toronto at Detroit, 6:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Houston, 7:10 p.m.
Seattle at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m.
Texas at Kansas City, 7:15 p.m.
Cleveland at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at L.A. Angels, 9:07 p.m.

Independent review
confirms decision for
Horn over Pacquiao
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — An independent
review of the scoring in Manny Pacquiao’s contentious WBO welterweight world title loss to Jeff Horn
has conﬁrmed the outcome in favor of the Australian
former schoolteacher.
A Philippines government department asked the
WBO to review the refereeing and the judging of the
so-called “Battle of Brisbane” in Australia on July
2 after Horn, ﬁghting for his ﬁrst world title, won
a unanimous points decision against Pacquiao, an
11-time world champion.
In a statement late Monday, the WBO said three of
the ﬁve independent judges who reviewed the bout
awarded it to Horn, one awarded it to Pacquiao and
one scored a draw.
WBO President Francisco Valcarcel asked the judges, who came from different countries and remained
anonymous, to assign their own scores to rounds, saying the results would be tabulated to ascertain which
rounds each ﬁghter won using an average scale based
on 100, 80 and 60 percent.
Based on the analysis, the WBO said Pacquiao won
the 3rd, 8th and 9th round by 100 percent, the 5th
round by 80 percent and the 11th by 60 percent. Horn
was given the 1st, 6th and 12th rounds by 100 percent, the 2nd, 4th and 7th by 80 percent and the 10th
by 60 percent.
“From the results, it can be established that Pacquiao won 5 rounds while Horn won 7 rounds,” the
WBO statement said.
A further step of combining the independent judge’s
scores for each round with the bout judge’s scores for
each round also conﬁrmed a win for Horn, the WBO
said.
The Philippines Games and Amusements Board
(GAB) last week urged a review, saying it wanted to
protect the integrity of the sport.

LONDON (AP)
— Rafael Nadal kept
getting pushed to the
brink of defeat. He kept
resisting.
He dropped the ﬁrst
two sets, then won the
next two. He erased
two match points in the
riveting ﬁfth set’s 10th
game, then another two
in its 20th game. Only
when his fourth-round
match against 16thseeded Gilles Muller of
Luxembourg stretched
past 4½ hours, the sunlight fading, did Nadal
blink.
After repeatedly digging himself out of difﬁcult situations, Nadal
ﬁnally succumbed,
broken in the last game
of a 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 4-6,
15-13 loss to Muller on
Monday.
“I played with the
right determination,
right passion, right attitude,” Nadal said, “to
win the match.”
But he could not pull
through, extending
his drought without a
quarterﬁnal berth at the
All England Club to six
years.
“Just tried to hang
in there,” Muller said.
“Still kept believing.
Yeah, somehow in the
end, I made it.”
Nadal won two of his
15 Grand Slam championships at Wimbledon,
and played in the ﬁnal
three other times, most
recently in 2011. But
since then, Nadal’s exits
at the All England Club
have come in the ﬁrst
round (2013), second
round (2012, 2015) or
fourth round (2014,
2017).
All of those losses,
except Monday’s, came

against men ranked
100th or worse. The
34-year-old Muller is not
exactly a giant-killer: He
had lost 22 consecutive
matches against players
in the top ﬁve. And he’d
only reached a Grand
Slam quarterﬁnal once
before, at the 2008 U.S.
Open.
Nadal said Muller’s
powerful serve and
crisp volleys make him
“uncomfortable” to play.
Now Muller, who also
beat Nadal at Wimbledon in 2005, will get a
much-needed chance
to recover before facing 2014 U.S. Open
champion Marin Cilic in
Wednesday’s quarterﬁnals.
Other men’s quarterﬁnals: defending
champion Andy Murray
against Sam Querrey of
the U.S., Roger Federer
against Milos Raonic,
Tomas Berdych against
Novak Djokovic or
Adrian Mannarino. The
Djokovic-Mannarino
fourth-rounder was postponed until Tuesday; it
had been scheduled for
No. 1 Court after NadalMuller concluded.
But that duo played
on and on, past 8 p.m.,
when the descending
sun’s reﬂection off the
arena bothered Nadal
so much that he held up
action; chair umpire Ali
Nili asked spectators
to stand in the way and
block the rays. A few
games later, Nili told
fans to stop doing the
wave, suggesting they
wait for the next changeover so play could proceed.
Hours earlier came
what might be interpreted as a bad omen for

Nadal: Going through
his prematch rituals on
the way to the court, he
jumped up so high that
he banged his head on
the doorway’s transom.
He staggered back a bit,
then tried to laugh it off,
before rubbing the top of
his head.
“Maybe that’s why the
ﬁrst two sets I was winning quite easy,” Muller
joked. “Maybe still a
little bit feeling dizzy.”
After all, until Monday, Nadal hadn’t lost a
Grand Slam set since the
ﬁfth of the Australian
Open ﬁnal in January
against Federer. From
the outset of the French
Open — where he won
a record 10th championship last month — and
through his ﬁrst three
matches at Wimbledon,
Nadal won 28 consecutive completed sets at
the majors. Healthy
and playing terriﬁcally,
Nadal seemed poised to
again be a factor at the
All England Club.
Don’t forget: From
2006-11, he reached the
ﬁnal in ﬁve consecutive
Wimbledon (he missed
it in 2009 because of bad
knees), winning titles in
2008 and 2010.
After losing two
sets in the opening 75
minutes against Muller,
Nadal adjusted. He
stepped a little farther
behind the baseline to
give himself more time
to react. He also fared
better on his own serve,
ﬁnishing with 23 aces,
an unusually high total
for Nadal and only seven
fewer than Muller.
So they headed to a
ﬁfth set, which was masterful, ﬁlled with brilliance from both.

Still, things were not
looking good for Nadal
when he served while
down 5-4 and doublefaulted to trail 15-40.
But Nadal deﬂected
those initial two match
points for Muller with
an ace and a service winner. Muller’s next two
match points came at
10-9: Nadal deleted the
ﬁrst with a volley winner, and the second disappeared when Muller
shanked a return.
“It was not easy,”
Muller said, “to keep
believing.”
One key: Nadal converted only 2 of 16 break
points. That included
going 0 for 5 in the ﬁfth
set, four in one game,
and was a big reason
that the No. 4-seeded
Spaniard lost despite
remarkable totals of 77
winners and 17 unforced
errors.
“When you are in the
ﬁfth, against a player
like him, (the outcome)
just depends on a few
balls,” Nadal said.
The ﬁfth set alone
lasted 2 hours, 15 minutes, until Nadal pushed
a forehand long, meaning he would not manage to complete what
would have been his
fourth career comeback
from two sets down.
Instead, it was Muller
who was able to enjoy a
win that seemed to be
slipping away.
___
Follow Howard Fendrich on Twitter at
http://twitter.com/HowardFendrich
___
More AP tennis coverage: https://apnews.com/
tag/apf-Tennis

Richmond track changes name, plans $30M update
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Richmond International Raceway is
now Richmond Raceway and is
due for $30 million in redevelopment over the next 15 months.
Track President Dennis Bickmeier and International Speedway
Corp. CEO Lesa France Kennedy
made the announcements Tuesday.
ISC has already made major
changes at its ﬂagship, Daytona
International Speedway, and
has a project at Phoenix International Raceway that should
be completed by 2018, Kennedy
said. She said ISC decided to
make improvements at Richmond
because it “has a very special personality, and it needs to continue.
I think it’s really important that
we continue to upgrade all of our
facilities.”
The redeveloped inﬁeld will

include a covered garage for
teams to work on their cars while
fans can watch from a nearby
fenced-off walkway. There are also
two suites and several covered
areas for fans to socialize before
a race, watch inspections up close
and then the race. There will be
an 80-person club with rooftop
access near a new victory lane.
Drivers will need to pass through
fan areas to get to prerace ceremonies.
The project will give about
8,000-10,000 fans inﬁeld access
at a cost comparable to a $50 pit
pass, the track said.
NASCAR has seen a drop in
attendance most everywhere,
and the changes are “an opportunity to put people at the ground
level of the sport,” Bickmeier
said. “We’re going to be able to
immerse people in the sport in

a way that’s not happened here
before.”
It won’t quite be Richard Petty
on a bulldozer tearing up the
track for a redesign, as he did in
1988, but the project will begin
after the September race, Bickmeier said. Next spring’s race will
be run “in a little bit of a construction zone,” Bickmeier said, and
the ribbon will be cut on the completed project before Richmond
moves from the last race to make
the 10-race playoffs into the playoffs in the fall of 2018.
Gov. Terry McAuliffe attended
the announcement and said the
state, on behalf of Virginia Tourism, would add another $150,000
to the project. The track in Henrico County has a $497 million
economic impact and brings in
about $87 million in state and
local tax revenue.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, July 12, 2017

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Pageville Freewill
Baptist Church

We study Old King James
chapter by chapter
verse upon verse

60726959

LEARN THE
TRUE WORDS
GOD GAVE ALL

Sunday 9:30 am Wednesday 6:30 pm
40964 SR 684 Pageville, Ohio

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Miscellaneous
UTV 700 cc 4x4
electronic ignition, low miles,
none off road, street legal
6,950
call 304-675-4505
Yard Sale
Yard Sale July 14 &amp; 15
9:00am-until ??
Hand made wooden items,
unusual Avon Collectables.
Angels and other misc items
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Help Wanted General
Wanted, person who loves to
clean. Willing to work within a
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willing to work to full time if
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with experience in electrical,
plumbing, carpentry, etc. willing to work per diem / per job.
Send your resumeҋ to Box
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can email your resumeҋ or
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For Sale By Owner
like new electric wheel chair
joy stick controls
price $2800.00
740-446-0458
Apartments/Townhouses
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

Apt For Rent Furnished
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call 446-3667

Apartments/Townhouses
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sec dep $300 &amp; up
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tenant pays elec
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Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications for
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Subsidized Apartments.
Applications are taken
Monday through Thursday
9:00 am-11:30 am. Office is
located at 1151 Evergreen
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(304) 675-5806.

Houses For Rent
Nice 2 bedroom house for rent
in Gallipolis Ferry. Must have
references. $475 month Call
after 5pm. (304)675-1761
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Dig
Up
Buried
Treasure
In
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When it
comes to
bargains,
“C” marks
the spot.
What will
you find
in the
classified?
Bicycle,
dogs, coats,
cars, etc.

Help Wanted General

Seeking Child Care Workers
at The Children's Center of Ohio, LLC.
Position is working with and monitoring delinquent youth. Must
be able to pass drug screening, background check and have a
high school diploma or equivalent. Must be at least 21 years of
age and pass physical requirement. Apply in person at 55
Allison Rd. Patriot, OH 45658 or call 740-379-9083 - boy's
facility - Mon - Fri 9-5 or 2234 Boggs Rd. Patriot, OH 45658
or call 740-256-1766 - girl's facility.

Notices

Help Wanted General

PUBLIC NOTICE

General Assignment Reporters

Buckeye Hills Regional Council is requesting proposals for
the 2018-2019 Title III E National Family Caregiver Support
Program from agencies to provide respite services to caregivers
of persons 60 years of age and older within the Service Area of
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington counties. Funding source is Older Americans Act
Title-III E. Services eligible for Title III-E funding are: Adult Day
Respite, Overnight Respite, Homemaker Respite, Home
Medical Equipment and Personal Care Respite Services.
In addition, Buckeye Hills Regional Council is requesting
proposals for 2018-2019 Title III-D Disease Prevention and
Health Promotion Services. Title III-D Disease Prevention and
Health Promotion Services proposals are being requested for
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington counties.
Title III-D seeks to initiate evidence-based/evidenced informed
programs designed to help older adults prevent/manage chronic
diseases and increase healthier lifestyles.
The PY 2018-19 proposal packets will be available July 17, 2017
by close of business on the Buckeye Hills Regional Council
website: www.buckeyehills.org/aging . Proposal packets and
instructions will be available in electronic format only.
LEGALS

The following matters are the subject of this public notice by the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete public
notice, including any additional instructions for submitting
comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov
Final Issuance of Certification
Ohio River Dredging 2017-2022
Multiple Locations on the Ohio River, Marietta, OH 45750
Facility Description: 401 Certification
Receiving Water: Ohio River
ID #: DSW401165087
Date of Action: 06/30/2017
This final action not preceded by proposed action and is appealable to ERAC.
Grant of a Section 401 Water Quality Certification, Ohio River
Dredging 2017-2022
Final Issuance of OAC Chapter 3745-31 Modification to PermitTo-Install
Imperial Electric Company
345 Sycamore Street, Middleport, OH 45760
ID #: P0122901
Date of Action: 07/05/2017
Chapter 31 modification of varnish dip tank to transition out of
registration status due to an increase in emissions resulting from
a coating change.
Final Issuance of Administrative Modification to Permit-To-Install
Imperial Electric Company
345 Sycamore Street, Middleport, OH 45760
ID #: P0122776
Date of Action: 07/05/2017
Administrative modification of three (3) spray booths to reflect a
change to lower VOC content coatings.
7/12/17

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digital-first mentality when it comes to breaking
news.
The Daily Times, in Portsmouth, Ohio, is a daily
media outlet, publishing Monday through Saturday
and a sister publication, The Community Common,
a free Sunday newspaper.
The Daily Times Website leads the community with
the most up-to-date news 24 hours a day, seven
days a week.
We are looking for a reporting skill set that includes:
accuracy, fairness, source and beat development,
resourcefulness, enterprise/aggressiveness,
completeness, news sense, visual perspective,
teamwork.
Our candidates writing skill set should include:
clarity, organization, effective leads, productivity,
AP style (helpful, but not necessary), reporters
must have a digital-first mentality, acute social
media knowledge, keen understanding or ability to
learn video, proficient in sending stories from the
field, constant use of phones, ability to react to
change productively and handle other essential
duties as assigned.
A degree in journalism or other related discipline
is preferred. Evening and weekend shifts are
required.
Ideal candidates will be self-driven, hard-working,
multi-tasking individuals and have a passion for the
local community. Active participation in teamwork in
your everyday work and/or on special project teams
is vital.
Must have valid driverҋs license, proof of insurance,
mobility and a reliable automobile.
Applications should include five writing samples,
complete with photos (if applicable), references
who can speak directly to your talent, and a cover
letter with your resume: send general assignment
reporter resume packages to Editor Chris Slone at
cslone@civitasmedia.com.

Daily Sentinel

PASS TIME
IN LINE.
READ THE
NEWSPAPER.

In Print. Online. In Touch.
LEGALS

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals will be received at the:
DIVISION OF MINERAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES
2045 MORSE ROAD BUILDING H
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43229-6693
until AUGUST 02. 2017 AT 1:30 PM and opened thereafter for
furnishing the materials and performing the labor for the execution and construction of:
ROCKSPRINGS TIPPLE
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROJECT NUMBER MG-Sb-86
in accordance with the plans and specifications prepared by the
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, DIVISION OF
MINERAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT, COLUMBUS, OHIO.
PROPOSALS WILL BE OPENED IN THE SECOND FLOOR
CONFERENCE ROOM OF 2045 (BUILDING B-2) OF THE
FOUNTAIN SQUARE OFFICES OF THE OHIO DEPARTMENT
OF NATURAL RESOURCES. The United States Office of
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement is supplying
100% of the funds for this project The construction completion
date for this project is NOVEMBER 17, 2017. THE ESTIMATE
FOR THIS PROJECT AS DETERMINED BY THE DIVISION OF
MINERAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT IS $36,046.70.
A MANDATORY pre-bid meeting will be held on JULY 19, 2017
AT 10:00 AM, at the project site. It is the intent of the DMRM to
commence the pre-bid meeting at the designated time. Prior to
commencement of the meeting, an attendance sign-in form
shall be distributed among the contractors present. This form
will be collected by DMRM staff when the pre-bid meeting
begins. Only those contractors signed in prior to collection of the
form who remain in attendance through the discussion of the
plans and detailed specifications shall be deemed present for
the purpose of determining eligibility for bid submission acceptance. Participation in the site viewing subsequent to the completion of the discussion of the detailed specifications will not be
required in establishing attendance. NO PLANS OR
SPECIFICATIONS WILL BE AVAILABLE AT THE PRE-BID
MEETING.
Copies of the plans, specifications, and proposal forms will be
available from the Division of Mineral Resources Management,
Department of Natural Resources. Instructions on how to
access the documents are available by downloading them at
http://minerals.ohiodnr.gov/abandoned-mine-landreclamation/contractor-construction-opportunities. A copy of the
plans and specifications will be available for public review during normal business hours at Division of Mineral Resources
Management, 2045 Morse Road, B-2, Columbus, Ohio 43229.
For information regarding the project, the primary contact person is the Project Engineer, Peter G. Moran, P.E., at the
Zaleski District Office (740) 274-4959. Or in his absence you
may contact the Project Officer, Scott Davies, at the Zaleski
District Office (740) 274-4948.
Each proposal must be accompanied by a BID GUARANTY,
meeting the requirements of Section 153.54 of the Ohio
Revised Code.
CONTRACTORS ARE ADVISED TBA T EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY CONDITIONS ARE APPLICABLE TO
THIS PROPOSAL IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVISIONS
OF SECTIONS 153.59 AND 125.11 J OF THE OHIO REVISED
CODE. THIS PROJECT IS SUBJECT TO A 5 EDGE PARTICIPATION GO.AL IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVISIONS OF
O.R.C. SECTION 123.152 AND O.A.C. 123:2-16-08. WAGE
RATES ESTABLISHED IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION
1513.18 AND 1513.37 OF THE REVISED CODE ARE ALSO
APPLICABLE TO THIS PROPOSAL.
CONTRACTORS ARE FURTHER ADVISED THAT, IF AWARDED THE CONTRACT, BOTH THE CONTRACTOR AND ITS
SUBCONTRACTOR(S) SHALL PERFORM NO SERVICES
REQUESTED UNDER THIS CONTRACT OUTSIDE OF THE
UNITED STATES IN ACCORDANCE WITH EXECUTIVE
ORDER 2011-12K.
Sealed proposals shall be delivered to the address given at the
top of Notice To Bidders. No bidder may withdraw his bid within
sixty (60) days after the actual date of the opening thereof.
The Director of Natural Resources reserves the right to reject
any or all bids, or to accept the bid which embraces such
combination alternate proposals as may promote the best
interest of the State.
7/5/17, 7/12/17

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, July 12, 2017 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 Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Golfers
From page 1

of these players shot a
net score of 34.
Taylor Boggs shot
a net score of 35 giving her the fifth best
score of the day, while
Landon Roberts, Landon McGee and Haley
Pierson each turned in
a net score of 36.
The next best net
scores were a 37s from
Jensen Anderson,
Whitley Byrd, Bronson
Shepard, Sarah Bunce
and Zayden Tolliver.
Wyatt Nicholson, Conner Ingles, Andrew
Vogt, Alli Norris and
Brooklyn Smith all netted scores of 38.
Grant Roush, Justin
Vogt, Marlo Norris,
Kaden McCutcheon
and Ethan Roberts all
had net scores of 39,
while T.J. Vogt, Jay
Sayre, Gus Kennedy,
Caleb Pierson and Teagan Conway each had
net rounds of 40.
Jonah Hoback was
the only golfer with a
net score of 41. Zack
King followed with a
net score of 43. Both
Trenton Peacock and
Casey Greer shot net
scores of 44. Logan
Colburn netted a 46
while Riley Cotterill
followed with a net of
47.
The best gross score
of the day was a 38 by
Laith Hamid, followed
by Jensen Anderson
with a 41. Taylor
Boggs shot a 42 and

Grant Roush posted a
43. Whitley Byrd and
Jonah Hoback also
added identical rounds
of 44.
Prior to giving prizes
to the various handicap
winners, plaques were
awarded to the individual age group champions. Grant Roush
and Marlo Norris won
the 10-and-under age
group. Conner Ingles
was the victor in the
11-12 year old boys
group.
T.J. Vogt was the
boys winner in the
13-14 year old group,
while Mattie Ohlinger
won the girls championship. Jensen Anderson won the boys championship in the 15-17
year old group and Kaitlyn Hawk was champ
in the girls division.
Taylor Boggs was
the clear winner of the
18-19 year old girls
division while Hayden
James picked up the
boys section of this
group.
Each player on Monday received a prize
for their efforts. Prizes
were related to golf in
some way ranging from
golf balls, tees, ball
divot repair tools, ball
marking pens, a new
putter, putting aides,
golf towels, golf gloves,
golf hats and practice
golf balls.
The directors of the
league — Jan Haddox,
Jeff Slone and Bob
Blessing — are looking
forward to continuing
the league for many
years to come.

Briefs
From page 6

IOC to pick Los Angeles, Paris for 2024 or 2028
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) — If they can
agree who goes ﬁrst,
Paris and Los Angeles
will be awarded the
2024 and 2028 Olympics.
International Olympic
Committee members
voted unanimously to
seek a consensus threeway deal between the
two bid cities and the
IOC executive board.
Talks will open with
Paris widely seen as the
favorite for 2024.
If a deal falls through,
only the 2024 hosting
rights will be voted
on when the IOC next
meets, on Sept. 13 in
Lima, Peru.
However, an agreement seemed assured
by the reaction of
the two mayors. Eric
Garcetti of LA and
Anne Hidalgo of Paris
emerged on stage holding hands to welcome
the decision.
A deal is also likely
because a head-to-head
ﬁght for 2024 would
create a loser that is
unlikely to return four
years later for a new
2028 bid contest.
“Both of us will ﬁnd it
more and more difﬁcult
to convince cities —
whether it’s Paris, Los
Angeles or other American cities — to really
go into this process if
one of us gets turned
down,” Garcetti had
said earlier Tuesday.
The mayors were
united on stage by

IOC President Thomas
Bach, who raised an
arm of each in a shared
gesture of triumph.
A deal to make both
cities winners would
fulﬁl a strategy that
Bach set in motion last
December to help safeguard a stable future for
the signature Olympic
event.
“With Los Angeles
and Paris, there are two
fantastic cities from
countries with a profound Olympic history,”
Bach said.
The IOC approved
the expected double
award after hearing
both cities present their
2024 hosting plans at a
conference center in the
Olympics’ capital city,
Lausanne.
Both cities used 45
minutes of videos and
speeches, including one
with French President
Emmanuel Macron promoting the Paris cause,
in a closed-door session
with IOC members to
explain how they would
host the 2024 Olympics.
At separate news
conferences, the mayors
said they could work
toward a deal.
“We look forward
to working together,
maybe not in competition but collaboration with Paris,” LA’s
Garcetti said after
his city’s bid ofﬁcials
opened the campaign
event.
Garcetti and Hidalgo

Gallia Academy
football reserve seats

Meigs youth
football camp

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Reserve seats for the 2017
Gallia Academy High School football season will go
on sale starting on Tuesday, Aug. 8 for the Gallia
Academy Athletic Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity football playROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The 2017 Meigs youth
ers, Gallia Academy Marching Band members, and
football camp will be held for kids in grades K-8 from
varsity and junior varsity cheerleaders will be able to
10 a.m. until noon on Saturday, Aug. 12, at Farmers
purchase reserve seats on Wednesday, Aug. 9.
Bank Stadium on the campus of Meigs High School.
Reserve seats for the general public will be available
The camp will focus on attitude, effort, hard work,
on Thursday, Aug. 10.
teamwork, fundamentals, technique, individual drills
The price is $35 per ticket.
and group drills. The camp instruction will be proTickets may be purchased in the Athletic Director’s
vided by the Marauder coaching staff and players.
ofﬁce at Gallia Academy High School between the
Cost of the camp is $20 and proceeds will beneﬁt
hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
the Meigs football team. If registered by Tuesday, Aug
Gallia Academy Athletic Super Boosters will be lim1, you will be guaranteed a camp t-shirt. Registration
ited to 10 tickets purchased on the ﬁrst day of sales.
will also be held at 9 a.m. on the day of the camp.
After the ﬁrst day, there will be no limit on the numFor more information, call 740-645-4479 or 740ber
of tickets which may be purchased.
416-5443.

Kiwanis Juniors
Golf Tournament

Gallia Academy
football reserve parking

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Cliffside Golf Club will
be hosting the ninth annual Kiwanis Juniors at Cliffside golf tournament for junior golfers on Thursday,
July 13, starting at 10 a.m. Registration will be from 9
a.m. until 9:45.
This is an individual stroke play tournament open
to golfers age 10-or-under to 18 years old. The participants will be divided into four divisions, 10-under,
11-12, 13-15, and 16-18.
Entry fee is $20 for players 12-and-under, and $30
for players 13-18. Clubhouse certiﬁcates and individual awards will be presented to the top-three places in
each division.
Cart and meal passes will be available for spectators
for $15 to follow kids 13-and-older and $10 to follow
kids 12-and-under, so that they may follow the tournament and eat with the kids.
To enter please contact the Cliffside clubhouse
at 740-446-4653, or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919 or
740-645-4381, or by email at rbncaudill@yahoo.com.
Please leave player’s name, age as of July 14, 2017 and
the school they are currently attending.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy High
School Athletic Department is offering reserved parking spaces for varsity football games only.
These reserved spots are located on the lower lot of
the softball ﬁeld to provide an environment to tailgate
prior to the game.
Your participation supports all of the athletic programs in Gallipolis City Schools.
The cost is $25 for all home games.
Reserve parking for the 2017 Gallia Academy
High School football season will go on sale starting
on Tuesday, Aug. 8, for the Gallia Academy Athletic
Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity football players,
Gallia Academy Marching Band members, and varsity
and junior varsity cheerleaders will be able to purchase reserve parking on Wednesday, Aug. 9.
Reserve parking for the general public will be available on Thursday, Aug. 10.

Eastern golf
scramble
POMEROY, Ohio — The Eastern boys and girls
golf teams will host a golf scramble on Saturday,
August 5, at the Meigs County Golf Course.
The 18-hole tournament will be a bring your own
team, four-man, best-ball scramble. The cost is $40
per golfer, with additional fees to buy into the skins
game or buy mulligans.
Registration will begin at 8 a.m. with a 9 a.m.
shotgun start. Prizes will be given for skills contests, including closest to the pin and longest drive,
and lunch will be provided. All proceeds will go
directly to the Eastern High School boys and girls
golf teams.
The tournament is limited to 10 teams. To register early, contact EHS golf coach Jeremy Hill at
954-254-2562.

Daily Sentinel

MYL baseball/
softball signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Middleport Youth
League will be having signups for boys and girls ages
7-16 that are interested in participating in the 2017
Fall baseball and softball leagues.
Signups will be held from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. at
the Middleport Ball Fields on Saturday, July 15, and
Saturday, July 22.
Signups are also available for either teams or individuals.
For more information, contact Dave at 740-5900438.

PYL all-star baseball
tournament
POMEROY, Ohio — The Pomeroy Youth League
will be holding a 12-and-under boys little league all-

have long touted their
good relations on other
issues such as climate
change.
“We are all at the
disposition and by the
side of the IOC which
was right to ask itself
this question,” Hidalgo
said at the Paris news
conference, citing her
friendship with Garcetti
as potentially a “key element.”
The dual award can
give the IOC a decade
of stability with two
world-class cities touting ﬁnancially secure
bids. LA plans to use
only existing venues
with zero risk of white
elephants. This follows
years of overspending
by Olympic hosts and
a series of political
defeats that have sunk
the campaigns of potential candidates.
It also avoids inﬂicting a third recent defeat
on Paris — which lost
with bids for the 2008
and 2012 Olympics —
and the United States.
New York and Chicago
both lost heavily for
2012 and 2016, respectively.
Those losses deepened a rift between the
U.S. Olympic Committee and the Swiss-based
IOC that LA 2024 and a
new team of American
ofﬁcials have worked
hard to heal.
Paris also failed with
a 1992 bid and pinned
its hopes on hosting in
2024, exactly 100 years

after its previous Summer Games.
“We lost three times,
we don’t want to lose
a fourth one,” Macron
said at the news conference. “I’m here to convey the message that
there’s a strong unity to
back this candidacy.”
Minutes after Macron
spoke, U.S. President
Donald Trump wrote on
Twitter: “Working hard
to get the Olympics
for the United States
(L.A.). Stay tuned!”
Garcetti said the
Olympic movement
“can’t afford to lose the
United States.”
The IOC’s most valuable TV rights deal is
with NBC and several
of its top-tier sponsors
are American.
Still, a 2028 Olympics
in Southern California
could be the ﬁrst American-hosted games since
1996 in Atlanta.
Bach has said the
idea of a double award
was presented to him
at a lunch last year
by friends whom he
declined to identify in
a recent interview with
French sports daily
L’Equipe.
The LA bid team
declined to comment
Tuesday whether the
suggestion came from
its supporters, as some
believe.
“He (Bach) has good
friends who gave him
good advice,” LA bid
chairman Casey Wasserman said.

star tournament on Friday, July 14, through Sunday,
July 16.
There will be a three-game guarantee with pool play
and a single elimination tournament on Sunday.
For more information, contact Ken at 740-416-8901
or Clinton at 740-591-0428.

6th Annual John
Gray Memorial 5K
RACINE, Ohio — The 6th Annual John Gray
Memorial 5k will be held on Friday, Aug. 11, at Star
Mill Park.
The race will begin at approximately 9 p.m. and will
go through the town of Racine.
Race registration is $20 with proceeds going to the
John Gray Memorial Scholarship Fund.
You may register online at www.johngraymemorial5k.com and, to guarantee an event t-shirt, please
pre-register by July 24.
There will also be day of registration at the park
until 8:30 p.m.
Contact Kody Wolfe at 740-416-4310 or visit the
web at www.johngraymemorial5k.com for more information.

Gallia Academy
Athletics 5K run
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy Athletics “Finish on the 50” 5K run is set for Saturday, Aug.
19.
Registration is set for 5 p.m. at Memorial Field in
Gallipolis, with the race set to begin at 6:30 p.m.
It will conclude on the 50-yard line at Memorial
Field.
Cost is $25 for pre-registration and $30 after preregistration.
Age groups will include ages 9-and-under, 10-to-19,
20-to-29, 30-to-39, 40-to-49 and ages 50-and-over.
Registration can be made online at www.tristateracer.com.

URG soccer hosting
boys team camp
The University of Rio Grande soccer program will
be holding a team camp for boys high school teams
from July 16-20. Cost for the boys camp is a fee of
$305.
Fees for the residential camps include lodging,
meals, training sessions and tournament play.
The camp director is URG men’s soccer head coach
Scott Morrissey.
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 740-245-7493, 740-645-0377 or e-mail
tdaniels@rio.edu

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