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                  <text>Buckeye
state news
briefs

Partly
sunny,
H:83, L:60

Road to
British
Open

NEWS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 117, Volume 71

Tuesday, July 25, 2017 s 50¢

CHIP outlines goals for healthier county
Editor’s Note: This
article provides an overview of the Community
Health Improvement
Plan which is a project
of the Meigs County
Health Department and
multiple other agencies.
Upcoming articles will
detail the results of the
assessments, as well as
the plan moving forward
toward a healthier community.
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MEIGS COUNTY
— For the past several

months representatives
from the Meigs County
Health Department and
many other agencies
and organizations have
worked together to create a Community Health
Improvement Plan for
Meigs County.
The CHIP, which was
ofﬁcially endorsed by
the commissioners last
week, creates a ﬁve-year
plan to improve the
overall health of those in
the county and promote
healthy living.
Ohio law requires that
all local health departments obtain accredita-

tion through the Public
Health Accreditation
Board by 2020. Part of
that requirement is that
heath departments participate in a public health
improvement process.
As part of the process, the Meigs County
Health Department ﬁrst
contracted with Ohio
University’s Voinovich
School of Leadership and
Public Affairs to assist
with the initial stages
of the MAPP model and
the CHA (Community
Health Assessment).
The health department
then contracted wit the

University of Rio Grande
to continue to MAPP
model and public health
improvement process to
develop and ﬁnalize the
CHIP. This led to the
forming of Get Health
Meigs! (GHM!) which
meets on a regular basis
to focus on promoting
healthy living in the
county.
The purpose of a CHIP
is to provide a community baseline for future
health priorities; to
identify how to strategically and collaboratively
address community
health priority areas; to

create a living record of a
community’s health goals
and strategies; and to
provide a tool to enable
community members to
reach their full health
potential through assessment, leadership and
partnerships.
The primary goals
of the health improvement process include,
to improve health and
quality of life for Meigs
County citizens; to
increase community
health resources; and to
lower the costs of health
care overall.
The 75-page CHIP doc-

ument ﬁrst takes a look
at the background of the
area covered by the plan,
including geography and
demographics, before
detailing the CHA-CHIP
process.
As part of the CHA
process feedback was
received in seven
ways:Key community
stakeholder interviews;
A community stakeholder meeting was held
to identify the community vision related to longterm community health,
factors inﬂuencing health
and barriers to care;
See CHIP | 3

Meigs driver allegedly
involved in Athens
County fatal crash
Staff Report

ATHENS COUNTY — An Athens County wan
was killed in a single vehicle crash on Sunday
morning on State Route 144 in Athens County.
Michael L. Taylor, 54, of Coolville, was the passenger in the vehicle which was driven by Travis J.
Barber, 28, of Reedsville. Taylor was pronounced
dead on arrival by a representative from the Athens County Coroner’s Ofﬁce.
The 1995 Chevrolet C/K 1500 pickup truck was
southbound on State Route 144 when it slid off
the left side road, striking a ditch and small group
of trees, according to a report from the Ohio State
Highway Patrol.
Barber reportedly ﬂed the scene and was later
found at the Holzer Meigs Emergency Department
in Pomeroy where he declined further treatment
and was released.
Drugs and alcohol are suspected to have contributed to the crash, according to Ohio State Highway Patrol.
Neither Taylor nor Barber were wearing seat
belts at the time of the crash.
The crash remains under investigation.

FOR THE RECORD

Mindy Kearns/Courtesy

Motorcycle games, such as the one pictured, will be featured during the afternoon of Northbend Church’s Biker Sunday and Community
Outreach on July 30. There will also be a bike parade and show, with trophies awarded to the top bikes chosen by popular vote.

On a roll for souls
Biker Sunday to return

Meigs County Sheriff’s Office

Night Shift

By Mindy Kearns

July 10

Special to the Register

Vandalism — Deputy Stacy responded to a residence on South Third Street in Racine and took a
report on car vandalism.
Breaking and entering — Sgt. Jones responded
to a residence on State Route 124 in Pomeroy for
a breaking and entering. The scene was processed
and a report was taken. Several Dewalt tools,
John Deere welder, air compressors, copper ﬁttings, radiators, car batteries and several antique
items were taken from the business. Anyone with
information on this crime is urged to contact the
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
See RECORD | 5

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

MASON — A new
motorcycle show category, as well as new games,
await bikers attending
this year’s Biker Sunday and Community
Outreach at Northbend
Church (formerly Soul
Harvest Church) in
Mason.
The annual event will
be held July 30 at the
church, which is located

at 500 Adamsville Road.
“It’s all about the salvation of souls and reaching out to the biker community,” said Bill Davis,
one of the organizers,
who is also a member
of the Heaven’s Saints
Motorcycle Ministry,
West Virginia Chapter.
In years past, the event
has drawn nearly 1,000
people. And while the
majority of bikers come
from Mason, Meigs and
Gallia counties, Davis

said some have attended
from as far away as Myrtle Beach, S.C.
The day begins at 9
a.m., with breakfast and
fellowship. At 10 a.m.,
a church service will be
held with Pastor Jason
Simpkins bringing the
message.
Following the service,
a bike parade and ride
will take place. Upon the
bikers’ return, the community outreach will be
held.
Davis said the motorcycle show will feature
a new category this year

for “Dresser” bikes.
The category will join
those for American Iron,
Metric, and Custom
bikes. First-, second-, and
third-place trophies will
be awarded in each category, chosen by popular
vote.
Motorcycle games will
be featured throughout
the afternoon in the ﬁeld
between the church and
Dollar General Store.
Davis promises there will
be some new games this
year, as well as many of
See ROLL | 5

Attending ‘the Summit’
Local troops attend national jamboree
By Morgan McKinniss
mmckinniss@aimmediamidwest.com

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

GALLIPOLIS — Local
Boy Scouts are attending
the Boy Scouts of America’s National Jamboree
at the Summit Bechtel
Reserve in Mount Hope,
W.Va.
The National Jamboree
is an event that draws
thousands of scouts
and leaders to the new
camp, which is adjacent

to the New River Gorge.
Established in 2010, the
Summit now serves as
the permanent home of
the National Jamboree,
and is open year round
for scouts to pursue the
many high adventure
activities offered.
Five scouts from Troop
200 of Gallipolis left
this week in pursuit of
adventure with other
members of the Buckskin
Council as members of

troop 2402. All but Jacob
Oehler are going for the
ﬁrst time. Oehler made
his ﬁrst trip to national
jamboree in 2013, the
inaugural jamboree for
Summit where over
40,000 scouts were present from across the country. There are 40,000
scouts expected to be on
hand for this year’s jamboree.
Also leaving for adventure is James Harrison
and his father Jim, both
from Troop 201 of Gallipolis. Several scouts

from Meigs County are
also a part of the contingent including Andrew
Brooks, Ryan Harbour,
and Isaac Card of Troop
235 in Chester. The
troop from Buckskin
Council includes 35
scouts from Ohio and
West Virginia and four
adults.
According to Marlene
Stout, an adult leader
with Troop 200, this
event will make a signiﬁcant difference in the
See SUMMIT | 5

�2 Tuesday, July 25, 2017

OBITUARIES/NEWS

OBITUARIES

EMILY ROSE WILL

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

LEWIS SPENCER ‘LEWI’ WOLFE

a maternal uncle, Drake
POMEROY — Emily
Markins; a maternal aunt,
Rose Will, 19 days old,
Rikashae Pollard; paterWeston; his sisters, Rhon- passed away unexpectHEBRON — Lewis
edly, at 3:27 p.m. on July nal aunts, Rachel (Cody)
da Wolfe and Vicki (CalSpencer “Lewi” Wolfe
Heiss, Amber Waldrup,
22, 2017, in the Rivervin, deceased) Osborn;
passed away peacefully
Selby Cochran, Amber
side Methodist Hospital
father-in-law, David
at Riverside Methodist
Will; and a paternal uncle,
Columbus. Born on July
Hospital on July 23, 2017. (Marybelle, deceased)
Warren Cochran.
Simmons; brother-in-law, 3, 2017, in Columbus,
Lewi was born April 23,
Emily is preceded in
1952, in Clarksburg, West Robert (Linda) Simmons; she was the daughter of
death by her maternal
Michael Adam Will and
numerous nieces and
Virginia, to Beryl and
nephews; and many dear Mersadies Markins, who great-grandfather, Jay
Ruby (Hayman) Wolfe.
Markins, Sr.; paternal
survive
friends.
His family relocated to
great-grandparents, John
In addition to her parLewi was preceded in
Hebron, Ohio, in 1955
ents, Emily is survived by Fry, Trudy Lipke, Paul
death by his parents and
and he graduated from
Will Sr., Joanna West,
her maternal grandparhis nephew Jason Brill.
Lakewood High School,
ents, Kelli (Don Profﬁtt) and Sonny West; and a
The family will greet
class of 1970.
paternal uncle, Zachary
Markins, of Pomeroy
Lewi married Elizabeth friends on Wednesday,
Waldrup.
and Lawrence Markins,
“Lissa” Simmons in 1977 July 26, 2017, from 4
Graveside services
of South Shore, Ky.;
p.m. until 7 p.m., at the
and together they raised
will be held on Saturday,
Hebron home of Hoskin- paternal grandparents,
two sons, Jerrod (Leah)
Edna (John) Lipke, Jr., of August 5, 2017 at 2 p.m.
son Funeral and Cremaand Jonathan (Stacey).
Middleport, and Michael in the Meigs Memory
tion Service, 108 N. 7th
A carpenter by trade,
(Jennifer) Will, of Pome- Gardens. Pastor Hershel
St. in Hebron, where
Lewi had a long career
roy; maternal great-grand- White will ofﬁciate and
funeral services celebratwith Wolfe Enterprises
interment will follow.
parents, Pamalia Craft,
ing his life will be held
(having retired one
The Cremeens-King
of Pomeroy, Roger and
week before his passing) at 11 a.m. on Thursday,
Funeral Home, Pomeroy
July 27, 2017, with burial Susan Craft, of Lexingand also had worked as
is entrusted with the
ton, Ky., Laura Markins,
to follow in the Hebron
Hebron’s zoning inspecarrangements. Expresof South Shore, Ky., Ray
Cemetery.
tor as well as owning
sions of sympathy may be
In lieu of ﬂowers, dona- and Shelia Profﬁtt, of
and operating Lewis
sent to the family by visitRacine; paternal greatWolfe Builders. He loved tions can be made in
ing Cremeens Funeral
Lewi’s memory to Nation- grandparents, Donna
tinkering in his garage
Homes, www.cremeensfuwide Children’s Hospital Fry, of Middleport, John
on projects and his ’67
neralhomes.com.
Lipke, Sr., of Butler, Pa.,
and ’68 Mustangs with a NICU.
Dottie Will, of Pomeroy;
Hoskinson Funeral
cold Stroh’s in hand and a
NASCAR race on the TV. and Cremation Service,
Hebron, is honored to
Lewi is survived by
THACKER
care for Lewi and the
his four adoring grandchildren Eleanor “Nora”, Wolfe family.
GALLIPOLIS — Robert E. Thacker, 82, of GallipoEloise “Ella”, Emily and
lis, Ohio died on Saturday, July 22, 2017 at the Holzer
Assisted Living.
WILL
Services will be 4 p.m., Wednesday, July 26, 2017
at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Cline McCallister
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Brenda Sue Will, 65, ofﬁciating. Friends may call at the funeral home from
of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Friday, July 21, 2017, at 3-4 p.m. the day of the service.
home.
ADAMS
A funeral service will be 2 p.m. Wednesday, July
26, 2017, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point PleasNEW HAVEN — Enid Laverne Layne Adams, 87,
ant, with Father Ray Hage ofﬁciating. The family will
of New Haven, W.Va., died on Saturday, July 22, 2017.
receive friends one hour prior to the funeral service
Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, July
Wednesday at the funeral home.
26, 2017, at noon at the St. Paul Lutheran Church in
New Haven. Burial will follow in the Kirkland CemLAUDERMILT
etery. Visitation will be held two hours prior to the
funeral service at the church. Arrangements are under
MIDDLEPORT — Dakota Louise Laudermilt of
the direction of the Anderson Funeral Home of New
Middleport died on Saturday, July 22, 2017, at her
Haven, W.Va.
residence.
Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. on Tuesday,
July 25, 2017, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Visitation will be held two hours
prior to the service.
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)

GILLESPIE
MIDDLEPORT — Randy Jay Gillespie, 58, of
Middleport, Ohio, died at his residence.
Services will be 11 a.m., Thursday, July 27, 2017
at the Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Todd Hines
ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Calvary Cemetery, Rio
Grande, Ohio. Friends may call at the funeral home on
Wednesday, July 26, 2017 from 7–9 p.m.

69.19
29.20
47.56
66.99
44.72
18.10
67.95
109.86
84.35
52.79
25.43

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.

Pediatric back-to-school
fair set for Saturday, July 29
GALLIPOLIS — Holzer is hosting a Pediatric
Back to School Fair on Saturday, July 29 from
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Hospital’s Shelterhouse,
located next to Holzer Center for Cancer Care
in Gallipolis. The ﬁrst 100 children to attend
will receive backpacks ﬁlled with school essentials. A variety of activities will be available
including bounce houses, face painting, refreshments, education materials, and more. For more
information, call (740) 446-5901.

Free meals for kids at
Middleport Church of Christ
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Church of
Christ is partnering with the U.S. Department
of Agriculture to serve free meals the rest of the
summer. There are no income requirements,
and any child under age 18 may come to eat.
The meals will be served in their Family Life
Center at the corner of 5th and Main Streets
in Middleport, Monday-Friday from noon until
12:30 p.m. The meals run now through Tuesday,
August 22nd. There will be weekend take-home
meals available for those interested but parents
must ﬁll out a one-time application that does
have income requirements to get these meals.
An application may be picked up and returned
at the meal site during the daily meal time. If
you have any questions feel free to contact the
church at 740-992-2914 Monday through Friday
9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

Part of SR 124 in
Meigs County closed
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.

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)

48.48
91.28
23.23
44.26
117.50
36.25
46.59
30.86
116.13
19.76
163.96

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

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions July
24, 2017.

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�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

BUCKEYE STATE NEWS

Robbery suspect dies
after shooting himself
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Police say a man suspected of robbing a person outside a bank in Ohio
has died after shooting himself.
Police responded to reports of a
robbery outside a Chase Bank branch
in Columbus 3:30 p.m. Sunday.
Ofﬁcers tracked the suspect to
Schiller Park, and police say the man
pulled out a handgun and shot himself before they could approach.
The man, identiﬁed as 40-year-old
David Bush, was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.
The Columbus Dispatch reports Bush had no
local criminal record.

Man dies after being pinned
between car, utility pole
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Police say a 60-year-old
man has died after being crushed between his car
and a utility pole in Ohio.
Police say Timothy McKay, of Toledo, was stand-

ing near his idling car outside his home when the
vehicle slipped into reverse shortly before 5 p.m.
Sunday.
The car rolled down the street and struck McKay,
pinning him against the pole.
McKay was transported to a hospital, where he
was pronounced dead.
Police do not know why the man got out of his
car, but they are continuing to investigate.

Body recovered in Lake
Erie near Ohio beach club
AVON LAKE, Ohio (AP) — Authorities have
recovered the body of a 21-year-old man who apparently drowned in Lake Erie near a private beach
club in northeast Ohio.
He and another swimmer had been on the lake
in an inﬂatable raft before witnesses spotted them
struggling in the water near Avon Lake on Sunday.
Avon Lake Fire Chief Chris Huerner says neither
of the men was wearing a life vest.
One of them managed to make it safely back to
shore unhurt. Emergency responders recovered the
other man’s body after several hours of searching.
His name wasn’t immediately released.

Hemlock Grange
holds meeting
Staff Report

HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grange #2049
met recently at the grange hall. Kim Romine
opened the meeting with prayer and ﬂag presentation and Ann Lambert played a patriotic song.
Romine reported on rural development and common sense reform.
Pamona Grange was to meet at Hemlock on
July7. Communications from the Ohio State
Grange were read.
Aug. 14-19 will be the fair with booth for display.
Judging will be set up for Aug. 11.
Adell White, FAC, announcers that all contests
will be judged at August meeting. Literacy program
was presented by Margaret Parker titled “Attracting Pollinators to the Garden.” Pollination is the
movement of pollen from the male part (anther)
of one ﬂower to the female part (pistil) of another
ﬂower. Without pollination most plants cannot
make seeds and fruits. Key animal pollinators
include honey bees, native bees, ﬂies, moths and
other insects, as well as birds and some mammals.
Next meeting will be proceeded by a picnic supper of hamburgers and hot dogs.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

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

Tuesday, July 25, 2017 3

been rescheduled from
4 p.m. to 1 p.m., at the
water ofﬁce.

to support our local
candidates. We will welcome any and all input.

Thursday,
July 27

Friday,
July 28

Friday,
Aug. 4

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Public
Employee Retirees,
Chapter 74 , will hold
their regular meeting at
CHILLICOTHE —
The Southern Ohio
MIDDLEPORT — The 1 p.m. at the Mulberry
Community Center,
Council of Governments monthly Free Commulocated at 156 Mulberry
(SOCOG) will hold its
nity Dinner at the Midboard meeting at 10
dleport Church of Christ Avenue, Pomeroy. Meigs
County Commissioner
a.m. at Yocktangee Park, Family Life Center,
Randy Smith will be
AMVets Shelter, Chillicorner of 5th and Main
present and provide
cothe, Ohio, 45601.
Streets, will be held at
updates on various
Board meetings usually
5 p.m. This month they
county issues. All Meigs
are held the ﬁrst Thurs- are serving meatballs,
County Public Employee
day of the month at 27
mashed potatoes, green
Retirees are urged to
West Second Street,
beans, rolls, and desChillicothe, OH 45601.
sert. This is open to the attend.
MARIETTA — The
public.
PORTLAND — Hazel For more information,
Buckeye Hills Regional
MARIETTA — The
McKelvey will turn 95 on call 740-775-5030, ext.
103.
Regional Advisory Coun- Council Executive ComSunday, July 30. Cards
POMEROY — The
mittee, which also serves
cil for the Buckeye Hills
may be sent to her at
55627 SR 124, Portland, Meigs Soil &amp; Water Con- Regional Council (Aging as the RTPO Policy
servation District Board and Disability program) Committee, will meet at
Ohio 45770.
of Supervisors will hold will meet at 10 a.m. in
noon at 1400 Pike Street,
their regular monthly
the Buckeye Hills ofﬁce
Marietta.
meeting at 11:30 a.m.
at 1400 Pike Street,
at the district ofﬁce.
Marietta.
The ofﬁce is located at
113 E. Memorial Drive,
Suite D, Pomeroy.
LEBANON TWP. —
SYRACUSE — The
The Lebanon Township
Ladies of the Meigs
Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting County Republican
at 7 p.m. at the township Party will meet at 6:30
MIDDLEPORT — The
garage. The 2018 budget p.m. at the Carleton
Meigs County Veterans
School in Syracuse,
will be presented.
Service Commission
Ohio. Everyone is welLEADING CREEK
will meet at 9 a.m. at the
come. Please come and
— Leading Creek Conofﬁce located at 97 North
join us in discussing
servancy District’s July
Second Avenue, Middleboard meeting time has how we can make money port.

Card
Shower

Tuesday,
July 25

Vacation Bible School
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.
RUTLAND — Vacation Bible School at Rutland
Free Will Baptist Church will be held July 24-28,
from 6-8:30 p.m., nightly. Drawing for bicycles
for students with perfect attendance on Friday. A
picnic will be held at 6 p.m. on Friday.
POMEROY — The Carleton Church, Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy, will hold Vacation Bible
School from 6:30-8:30 p.m., July 31 to Aug.
4. The theme is Hero Central: Discover Your
Strength in God. Program will be hled Friday,
Aug. 4 at 6:30 p.m., followed by picnic and pinata
at the shelter house. For more information call
740-992-7690.
Sunday, July 30
ALBANY — A BBQ, Ice Cream Social and
Music Night will be held at the Albany United
Methodist Church located at the corner of Williams
and W. Clinton Streets in Albany. The BBQ and Ice
Cream Social start at 4 p.m. with the music at 6
p.m. The event is free and everyone is welcome.

Monday,
July 31

Chip
From page 1

A convenience survey
to determine environmental factors that inﬂuence health, beliefs and
attitudes in the community that impact health
and access and barriers
to care;
A focus group to better
understand health behaviors and beliefs, ways to
improve health in the
community and methods
to engage and inform the
community about the
accreditation process;
An environmental scan
throughout the county
to determine economic
factors, social functioning, health resources and
environmental health;
Utilizing existing data
from state and national
resources related to
demographics, physical
environment, health indicators, health care shortages and mortality rates;
A Forces of Change
Assessment which is a
component of the MAPP
assessment process.
Four assessments were
completed in 2015 and
early 2016 to provide a
comprehensive picture
of the county’s health
and provide a foundation for identifying key

health and and social
issues. The assessments
included the Community Health Assessment,
Community Themes and
Strengths Assessment,
Forces of Change Assessment, and the Local
Public Health System
Assessment (seven of 15
organizations asked to
participate responded).

These assessments
allowed GHM! to outline
ﬁve priorities — substance abuse, maternal
and child health, workforce development,
chronic illness and
healthy behaviors —
which are addressed in
the CHIP. These priorities will be outlines in
future articles.

Taking Care of the
important things in life!

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�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

THEIR VIEW

Appalachia is in
need of smart
internet policies

Bridge of forgiveness

The Internet was supposed to level the playing
ﬁeld for geography. You would be able to work
from anywhere as long you had access to a quality
high-speed connection. The promises
were boundless as the most rural
Geary
parts of West Virginia would be
Weir
opened to global markets. The great
Contributing
mountains of Appalachia would no
columnist
longer be a hindrance to growth –
but instead serve as a calling card to
those who wanted to get away from it all and still
be able to be connected at the same time.
But the reality is that the only way for the promised land of connectivity to become reality is for
even the most rural parts of Appalachia to be connected to broadband Internet at the same levels as
downtown Washington D.C. Today, we
“With each new
have an opportunity
development that
to fully deliver on
finds the Internet
the Internet’s possibilities for connect- moving faster and
ing Appalachia to
faster comes the
the rest of the world.
need for upgrades to
But we can only
that infrastructure
accomplish this if
and supporting
they get things right
in Washington DC.
equipment. And our
The backbone of
mountains make that
broadband Internet
is still an actual infra- more difficult.”
structure of wires,
cables and ﬁbers – running along poles. With each
new development that ﬁnds the Internet moving
faster and faster comes the need for upgrades to
that infrastructure and supporting equipment. And
our mountains make that more difﬁcult.
Washington DC has also made the process more
difﬁcult in that providers do not have predictability
in knowing what the future may hold with constantly changing regulations by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) being initiated
and then sometimes removed.
In 2015, under the Obama Administration, the
FCC placed broadband under a category of utility
regulations that were created in the 1930s. This
slowed development in rural areas as providers
ﬁgured out how to work with the new regulations.
Then, under the Trump Administration, the FCC
decided to remove the same 1930s-era regulations
to move the development of broadband back to
how it was naturally coming along before 2015.
This back-and-forth action by the FCC has created long-term uncertainty for broadband internet
providers. Understanding that these same utilitystyle regulations can come back into play after the
next election, investment may continue to be slow
because the size of the infrastructure to be developed means projects can take years to complete –
well beyond one administration to another.
The regulations were put in place in 2015 to
keep the Internet open to those using it. The argument by some of the largest users (including the
video streaming and pornography industries) was
that without the utility-style regulation, the Internet would become slower. In fact, the Internet got
faster and faster while more infrastructure was
developed leading up until that point.
The solution is for Congress to step in with
bipartisan legislation that will solve the issue once
and for all. Providers have publicly stated they support an open internet – so all sides can agree that
it should be written into law. By doing so, it will
protect users and consumers while giving stability
to providers so they can invest in bringing broadband internet to rural areas like West Virginia.
Our great state is beyond the precipice of a new
economy. Without smart policies, broadband will
become like highways and other infrastructure that
came too little and too late to Appalachia. And
then, not only will the promise of the Internet not
be fulﬁlled – but we will continue to see yet another generation leave our wonderful state to live in
places where they can be connected.
Geary Weir is the Executive Director of the Webster County West
Virginia Economic Development Authority.

Burning a bridge is
easy. Strike the match
and don’t look back—
just hope you don’t have
to backtrack. Building a
bridge is tricky at best
and any high school science student will attest
constructing a sturdy
one requires wisdom.
Similarly, bridges on
life’s highway can be illdesigned, not to mention intimidating, but
without them we are
dependent on ferries
which transport us to
the other side at a much
slower pace.
To stride forward on
our journey, we must
not hesitate when destiny places a bridge on
our path. One bridge
we can’t afford to avoid
crossing is forgiveness.
Forgiving ourselves
can be more difﬁcult
than forgiving those
who’ve harmed us,
hurt us or downright
destroyed something
inside of us. If we
don’t forgive ourselves
though, guilt and regret
corrode our guts and
make traversing our life
course excruciating.
Sometimes we only
offer pardon to others
when we hear them say
the magic words, “I’m
sorry,” but even then,

to 1967—a time
as we are assurwhen phones had
ing the offender
rotary dials, comwe forgive them,
puters were excluwe know that
sive to NASA
true forgiveness
and 46 people
requires more
perished when
than words—it
takes humility and Michele Z. the Silver Bridge
collapsed.
acceptance that
Marcum
Bridge safety
we have more in
Contributing
standards
common with the columnist
throughout the
offender than we’d
nation became
like to admit.
Linking our humanity stricter as a result of
the tragedy and at the
to theirs forms a bridge
direction of President
where otherwise would
Johnson. My dad was a
exist a gap of misundeputy in Meigs Counderstanding and pain.
ty, Ohio, and responded
Extending forgiveness
to our trespassers tight- to the catastrophe. He
arrived to the screams
ens the bolts that hold
the bridge together and of survivors being
pulled from the icy
ensures us safe passage
water. The images still
over troubled waters.
haunt him.
The invisible cords
I’ve read stories
of receptivity from
of those who barely
one heart to another
escaped this and other
is truly more beautiful
such disasters who are
than The Tower Bridge
paralyzed at the thought
in London, one of the
most photographed and of crossing a bridge.
Scientists have termed
breathtaking bridges
this fear gephyrophobia.
in the world. London
Some states with
Bridge hasn’t fallen as
extremely long bridges
the famous children’s
like Maryland offer
lyrics suggest, but one
Driver’s Assistance Proclose to the home-front
grams. Phone booths
on the banks of the
located on either side
Ohio did.
of the Chesapeake Bay
Say the word,
Bridge connect people
“bridge,” in the triwith a driver who will
state area and there
drive them across. For
are instant ﬂashbacks

some, crossing a bridge
no matter who is driving is too excruciating,
so they elect to stay put
or ferry over.
Life’s highway provides no surrogate
drivers, but there are
many guides along the
route—elders, friends,
and when you’re earnest, an angel or two.
So, don’t be a gephyrophob. Take a big breath
and whiz across the
bridge to the fresh land
on the other side.
Maintain your bridges. Keep them safe.
Keep them passable
for those who follow in
your steps. Keep them
strong by letting go of
grievances that weigh
them down.
Forgive others. Forgive yourself. Don’t look
back. Don’t look down.
Just keep on trucking.
Keep on forging alliances and building bridges
of forgiveness—one’s
that don’t break under
pressure—one’s created
with heart that spur
you on your path. Now,
that’s architecture at its
ﬁnest.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native
of Meigs County, author of “Rain
No Evil” and host of Life Speaks
on AIR radio. Access more at
soundcloud.comlifespeaks.

THEIR VIEW

It’s still O.J.’s America. Nothing has changed
The following editorial appeared in The
Sacramento Bee on Friday, July 21:
For nearly a quartercentury, O.J. Simpson
has served as a referendum on some American
flashpoint: race, class,
domestic violence, justice, California, celebrity.
On Thursday, as a
Nevada parole board
granted him an October
release after nine years
in prison for a 2008
robbery and kidnapping
conviction, it was striking how many of those
issues still divide us.
And how little Simpson — and we — have
changed.
It is hard to remember, but there was a
time when Simpson
was merely a talented
athlete, and the nation
didn’t live in the thrall
of live-streamed news
and reality TV and
24-hour cable. There
was a time when
American culture was
more about history and
heroes and less about
spectacle and tabloid-

grade pathology.
But the wee hours of
June 13, 1994, when
the slaughtered bodies of Nicole Brown
Simpson and her friend
Ronald Goldman were
found outside her
condominium in the
Brentwood area of Los
Angeles — her white
Akita famously keening — marked the birth
of a different kind of
nation.
Simpson’s trial on the
slayings of his ex-wife
and her male friend
may not have been the
first to be dubbed the
“Trial of the Century,”
but it surely was the
most massively followed. The televised
“slow-speed chase,”
as The Juice, facing
arrest, fled up the 405
in a white Bronco with
his friend A.J. Cowlings, is regarded by
many as the beginning
of reality TV as we
know it.
Cameras in the courtroom — novel at the
time — turned that
murder trial into an
event, and the event

into a platform. A mass
audience watched, and
weighed in, as lawyers
aired issues that, until
then, few had dared
discuss publicly, even
in Los Angeles’ tonier
quarters. The black
man’s marriage to the
Orange County blonde.
The men she flaunted
when they would fight,
and the 911 calls she
made when he beat
her. The hangers-on,
the help. The police
who were racist or starstruck.
The Los Angeles
riots and the white-onblack police brutality
that set them off, only
a couple of years in the
rearview mirror: Those
became pivotal when
the mostly AfricanAmerican jury heard
tapes in which detective Mark Fuhrman,
telling tales to a screenwriter, used the N-word
over and over. Thus,
Simpson’s acquittal
became the jury’s blackon-white retort to Los
Angeles’ law enforcement abuses. Then as
now, few Californians

believed he was innocent.
He is 70 now, and
gray-haired. He had to
try twice to hoist his
burly frame from the
chair after the Nevada
Parole Board approved
his release.
Still, there was no
missing the old O.J. as
he charmed and wheedled, going on about
the lowlife escapade
that put him behind
bars, face earnest as a
choirboy’s. No missing
his supporting cast,
either, newly famous
now thanks to a miniseries and award-winning documentary.
Here was former
prosecutor Christopher
Darden on the “Today”
show. There was
Fuhrman, giving Fox
News commentary.
And there we were,
glued to our screens
and Twitter, a nation as
captive as we’ve ever
been to racism, sexism,
celebrity, cheap thrills
and famous dissembling con men.
It’s O.J.’s America.
Still.

YOUR VIEW

‘In Bloom’ judge has
‘memorable’ visit

tify your community. Thank you for putting together such an informative look
at your town.
We enjoyed the wonderful ﬂoral
displays all over town that really make
Dear Editor,
your community shine at this time of
Fellow America in Bloom (AIB) judge year. We also commend Gallipolis in
Bloom for establishing the pollinator
Teresa Woodard and I want to extend
garden across from your elementary
our thanks and appreciation to all the
school and ﬁlling it with an eye-catchGallipolis in Bloom participants who
ing mix of plants. The educational garmade our visit to your community so
den also serves as a source of healthy
memorable. We are truly inspired by
the ongoing effort and dedication of so vegetables for local students to take
home.
many individuals and groups to beau-

We enjoyed the glimpses into Gallipollis’ past at the Our House tavern
building and the historic cemeteries.
Other highlights of our broad ranging
tour were the newly developed waterfront area and the lovingly restored
Opera House.
Gallipolis was our third stop in this
year’s round of AIB evaluations. Other
contestants in the Circle of Champions
(Small Communities category) include
Greendale, IN; Logan, OH; and Belpre,
OH. All of these communities were
winners of three American in Bloom

awards in the past. This is the requirement for placement in this higher level
category. A winner in this category will
be announced in early Oct. 2016 in Holliston, MA at the annual AIB symposium and awards ceremony. Results of
our written review will be shared with
Gallipolis n Bloom members and city
ofﬁcials after the awards ceremony.
Thanks again and congratulations on
all your efforts to beautify your delightful city!
Karin Rindal
AIB judge 2014-2017

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

From page 1

scouts’ development as
leaders.
“I believe through this
experience that they
will build conﬁdence
and self esteem. Not
only from accomplishing their goals daily but
through having to be
independent, building
friendships, camaraderie and working through
adversity,” said Stout.
The scouts will be
away from home for for
nearly two weeks, living
outside regardless of
weather, and are responsible for their individual
objectives and their
troop.
“They have to take
their turn cooking food
for the troop, plan and
organize their day with
a buddy, take care of
themselves physically,
mentally and spiritually,
shower, be responsible
for their gear and laundry, money management, etc.,” explained
Stout.
Scouts have the
opportunity to do many

Roll
From page 1

the favorites.
And while some
activities are centered
around the motorcycles
and their riders, there
are activities for all.
A free lunch will
be served, including
Kiser’s Barbecue, side
dishes, desserts, and
drinks. Sno Biz will be
on the grounds to provide free frozen treats
throughout the day.
Water slides and other
inﬂatables will offer

King responded to the scene and
made contact with the caller. She
advised the ofﬁcers that Lester
Bush and Preston Cook allegFrom page 1
edly both had guns and had been
shooting them. She then advised
Auto accident — Sgt. Jones
that one individual had alleghandled a deer accident at the
edly pointed a pistol at her and
intersection of Hiland Road and
threatened to shoot her if she did
State Route 7.
not leave, and the other allegedly
had thrown a skillet at her car
July 11
when she tried to leave. A search
Theft from auto — Sgt. Jones
responded to a residence on State of the area was made and two
Route 684, Albany (Pageville), in loaded guns were found hidden in
reference someone having broken the weeds, a 357-magnum hand
into a truck and had stolen a drill gun and a 12-gauge shotgun. The
weapons were seized as evidence,
set. Report taken at the scene.
Cook and Bush were taken into
Theft from auto — Sgt. Jones
custody and transported to the
took a report a resident on
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce. Preston Cook,
Orchard Hill Road of Gallipolis
age 32, of Syracuse, was cited for
who reported his Jeep Wrangler
disorderly conduct and released.
had broken down below Story’s
A charge of aggravated menacing
Run on Saturday and when he
went back to check on his vehicle, was signed on Lester Bush, age
his doors had been stolen. Report 37, of Syracuse, and he was incarcerated pending a court appearwas taken at scene.
ance on the charge.
July 12
Wanted persons — Deputy
July 15
Snoke and Deputy Stacy arrested
Disturbance — Dispatch
Sherry Johnson, age 23, Pomeroy received a call about several
and Brittany Miller, age 31, of
campers drinking and making a
Letart for outstanding warrants
lot of noise in Area 3 at Forked
out of Middleport and Pomeroy
Run State Park at around 3 a.m.
courts.
Deputies were dispatched and
patrolled the area, all was quiet
when they arrived. Deputies
July 13
made contact with all of the camp
Possible poaching — Deputy
sites in that area. All denied makSnoke responded to Calaway
ing the noise and no alcohol was
Road reference to a possible
detected. No further action was
poacher. The area was patrolled
taken on this call.
and nothing was found.
Possible assault — Dispatch
Auto accident — Deputy Jones
received a third party call of an
assisted the Ohio State Patrol
assault at an address on Headwith an auto accident on Rockley Road, Reedsville. Deputies
springs Road. The driver was
arrived and made contact with
reported to have left the scene.
everyone in the home. After
Altercation — Deputy Jones
took statements from the victims speaking with everyone it was
of a possible altercation that hap- determined that no assault had
occurred but they had been argupened at the Mizway Bar. The
ing. The situation was resolved
incident is under investigation.
and no further action was taken
on this call.
July 14
Threats — Dispatch received
a call from a woman stating that
July 16
two guys had guns at the sandbar
Accidental shooting — Dison State Route 124 above Racine. patch received a third party call
Deputies Chris Jones and Brandy of a possible suicide attempt on

Reach Morgan McKinniss at 740446-2342 ext 2108.

entertainment for the
children. Those attending are asked to bring
lawn chairs or blankets
for seating.
Both Davis and his
wife, Cathy, came to
know Jesus as their
Lord and Savior at a
Biker Sunday, he said,
which makes the event
a special one for him.
Davis concluded Northbend Church is one of
the few churches that
continue to hold speciﬁc biker services.

8 AM

2 PM

64°

76°

77°

Partly sunny today with low humidity. Clear
tonight. High 83° / Low 60°

HEALTH TODAY
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.

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
4.90
3.50
27.97
25.46

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:24 a.m.
8:46 p.m.
8:52 a.m.
10:28 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Jul 30

Last

New

Aug 7 Aug 14 Aug 21

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

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

Major
1:52a
2:51a
3:47a
4:40a
5:29a
6:15a
6:58a

Minor
8:05a
9:04a
9:59a
10:51a
11:40a
12:02a
12:47a

Major
2:19p
3:16p
4:11p
5:03p
5:51p
6:37p
7:20p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Minor
8:32p
9:29p
10:23p
11:14p
---12:26p
1:09p

WEATHER HISTORY
The passenger ship Andrea Doria was
moving through fog near Nantucket
Lighthouse, Mass., on July 25, 1956,
when it collided with the Swedish
liner Stockholm. The Andrea Doria
sank less than 12 hours later.

THURSDAY

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

Lucasville
82/60
High

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Day shift
July 12
Investigate complaint — Deputy Riley was dispatched to the
Meigs ER in reference to a male
subject with a gunshot wound to
the leg. After an initial investigation, it appears that the incident
may have taken place in West
Virginia. An open investigation is
still ongoing.
July 13
Theft — Sgt. Grifﬁn received
a call from a resident in Racine
alleging the theft of some medication from her home. It was later
determined that the medication
had been misplaced by another
household member.
July 14
Investigate complaint — Deputy Patterson responded to a call
on Flatwoods Road in reference
to the theft of a wallet. The victim called our ofﬁce the next day
and stated that she had located
the wallet.
July 15
Investigate complaint — Deputy Patterson took a call from a
female stating that her car had
been vandalized while it was
parked at Alligator Jacks. This
incident remains under investigation.

0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
12.93
19.67
22.47
12.86
13.15
25.11
12.48
26.09
34.27
12.47
21.20
34.60
19.00

Portsmouth
83/61

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.10
+2.10
+0.64
none
+0.17
+0.20
-0.51
+0.19
-0.25
-0.82
+2.40
+1.30
-4.40

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

SATURDAY

82°
65°
A thunderstorm in
spots in the morning

82°
63°

Partly sunny

Chance for a couple
of showers

Marietta
79/59

Murray City
79/56
Belpre
80/59

Athens
80/58

88°
68°
Mostly sunny

Today

St. Marys
79/60

Parkersburg
79/59

Coolville
80/59

Elizabeth
80/59

Spencer
80/59

Buffalo
82/61
Milton
83/61

St. Albans
83/61

Huntington
83/62

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
86/60
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
74/57
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
81/65
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
83/61

Ashland
82/61
Grayson
83/61

SUNDAY

82°
65°

Wilkesville
81/59
POMEROY
Jackson
81/59
82/59
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
81/60
83/60
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
80/60
GALLIPOLIS
83/60
82/59
82/60

South Shore Greenup
83/61
82/60

47

Logan
79/55

McArthur
80/57

Very High

Primary: unspeciﬁed
Mold: 2140

Humid with clouds
and sun

Adelphi
79/56
Chillicothe
80/59

FRIDAY

88°
69°

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

Waverly
80/58

Pollen: 1

Low

MOON PHASES

Mostly sunny and
humid

0

Primary: basidiospores, unk

Wed.
6:24 a.m.
8:45 p.m.
9:58 a.m.
11:03 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

89°
65°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

88°
70°
86°
66°
103° in 1934
50° in 1947

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Van Zant Road in the Langsville
area. The female victim had
already been transported to Holzer ER in Gallia County with a
gunshot wound by private auto.
Deputy Hupp was dispatched to
investigate the incident. After
checking the scene and speaking with the victim, and seeing
the wound, it was determined
to be accidental. The victim
stated she was ﬁring the gun
when she dropped it and when
she grabbed for the gun in the
air, before it hit the ground, she
caught it, the gun and it went
off striking her in the leg. No
further action was taken on this
call.

Mindy Kearns is a freelance
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing,
email her at mindykearns1@
hotmail.com.

TODAY

WEATHER

Record

kinds of high adventure
programs. Mountain
biking, white water rafting in the New River,
BMX and skateboarding, zip lining and high
ropes courses, among
the many other areas
expected in a scouting
environment. They are
also required to perform
some kind of community service outside of
the reserve while they
are there.
The Summit serves
as the fourth high
adventure base in scouting. The other three
include Philmont, a
backpacking ranch in
the Rocky Mountains
of New Mexico. The
Northern Tier National
High Adventure Base
on the border of Minnesota and Canada, where
scouts can explore
the wilderness from a
canoe along the many
waterways. The Florida
National High Adventure Sea Base, where
scouts can sail in the
open ocean, camp on
islands, and scuba dive
in the Florida Keys.

Clendenin
83/58
Charleston
82/60

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
79/57

Montreal
73/55

Billings
79/61

Minneapolis
87/71
Chicago
81/65

Denver
95/62
Kansas City
92/74

Toronto
75/58
Detroit
81/64
New York
73/65
Washington
85/69

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
89/73

High
Low

El Paso
91/74
Chihuahua
90/66

Wed.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
87/68/pc
92/71/t
Anchorage
61/54/c 63/54/sh
Atlanta
89/73/pc 90/73/pc
Atlantic City
78/68/pc 78/67/pc
Baltimore
83/66/pc 83/69/pc
Billings
79/61/pc 87/64/pc
Boise
96/67/pc 95/66/pc
Boston
68/59/c 78/63/s
Charleston, WV 82/60/pc 88/68/s
Charlotte
94/72/pc
88/71/t
Cheyenne
87/59/t 78/57/pc
Chicago
81/65/pc 89/72/pc
Cincinnati
81/62/pc 87/69/s
Cleveland
76/62/pc 86/69/pc
Columbus
80/60/pc 85/67/s
Dallas
100/81/s 101/81/s
Denver
95/62/t 83/61/pc
Des Moines
92/75/pc
88/70/t
Detroit
81/64/s 85/69/pc
Honolulu
88/76/s 87/76/s
Houston
96/77/pc 96/77/pc
Indianapolis
81/64/pc 87/72/s
Kansas City
92/74/pc 92/74/pc
Las Vegas
95/83/t 99/83/pc
Little Rock
94/75/t 95/76/s
Los Angeles
81/65/s 83/66/pc
Louisville
87/69/pc 91/76/s
Miami
92/80/pc 92/81/pc
Minneapolis
87/71/pc
82/65/t
Nashville
92/73/pc 94/75/s
New Orleans
91/76/pc 92/76/pc
New York City
73/65/sh 80/69/pc
Oklahoma City
98/75/pc 100/76/s
Orlando
93/75/t
92/74/t
Philadelphia
80/68/pc 81/70/pc
Phoenix
100/84/pc 106/84/s
Pittsburgh
76/61/pc 84/66/s
Portland, ME
69/55/c 78/60/s
Raleigh
94/72/pc 88/71/pc
Richmond
90/69/pc 86/70/pc
St. Louis
93/77/pc 100/81/s
Salt Lake City
86/72/t 90/73/pc
San Francisco
74/57/pc 74/56/pc
Seattle
86/60/s 83/59/s
Washington, DC 85/69/pc 84/73/pc

104° in Valentine, NE
39° in Leadville, CO

Global
High
124° in Basrah, Iraq
Low -8° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
96/77
Monterrey
97/72

Miami
92/80

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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
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Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
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Summit

Tuesday, July 25, 2017 5

�Sports
�s�$?/=.+CM��?6C� M� ���

�+36C�#/8&gt;38/6

Kahne ends drought at smashing Brickyard 400
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) —
Kasey Kahne needed a break
Sunday — and got it.
The 37-year-old driver barely reached the overtime line
before the last caution ﬂag
came out in a crash-marred
Brickyard 400, allowing
Kahne to complete a six-hour
marathon and snap a long
winless streak.
He crossed the yard of
bricks under caution with daylight fading and his muscles
cramping, just ahead of Brad
Keselowski and Ryan Newman.
“I had a great car out front.
I had a pretty good car all
day long. I was really happy,”
Kahne said. “Unbelievable to
win in Indianapolis. Unbeliev�&lt;/1��?/C�n��
able to win a Cup race — it’s
The car driven by Martin Truex Jr. burns after a crash with Kyle Busch during the
been a while. I know it’s great
NASCAR Brickyard 400 auto race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis
for my team.”
Sunday.

But even before kissing the
bricks and posing for photos,
Kahne’s long-awaited victory
celebration was put on hold
as he dropped to the ground
and his crew members tried to
rub out the cramps he fought
through late in the race.
Afterward, Kahne went to
the speedway’s inﬁeld medical center where he received
intravenous ﬂuids. Other
drivers said temperatures
inside the cockpits topped 130
degrees.
The wacky race had a little
of everything — 14 cautions
and 55 caution laps, both race
records, three red ﬂags and a
1-hour, 47-minute rain delay.
Nineteen cars did not ﬁnish.
It lasted so long, drivers were
racing against the impending darkness as much as they
were themselves.

For Kahne, his 18th career
win might have been the
sweetest of all.
He had only three top-10
ﬁnishes in the ﬁrst 19 races.
His future with Hendrick
Motorsports was in question,
and after going almost three
full years and more than 100
races without a win, he was
ﬁnally back in victory lane.
“It puts him in the chase,”
team owner Rick Hendrick
said after his 10th Brickyard
victory. “It puts him in the
playoff. We’re excited about
that.”
Kahne’s last win came in
Atlanta in August 2014.
By any measure, it was a
wacky day.
The two fastest cars on
Indy’s 2.5-mile oval — Kyle
See BRICKYARD | 10

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Mason County
senior sports passes
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Mason County
Board of Education is offering sports passes for
senior citizens over 65. The pass is $30 and is
good for all home sporting events for the 201718 school year. Passes are available on Monday
through Friday at the Mason County Schools
Board of Education ofﬁce from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Football officials
training class
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The OhioKanawha Rivers Football Ofﬁcials Association is
planning to conduct a training class for individuals
who may be interested in becoming a registered
football ofﬁcial with the West Virginia Secondary
Schools Activities Commission.
Interested individuals must be at least 18 years
of age, have a good feel for the game of football,
and be willing to attend the training classes and
take the time to study and learn the rules of the
game.
Current plans have the classes being held on
Tuesdays and Thursdays for the next ﬁve weeks,
with the Tuesday classes being held in Point Pleasant and the Thursday classes being held in Ripley.
Anyone who might be interested can contact
Kevin Durst at 304-593-2544 or Grant Rhodes at
304-532-9405.

Rio Grande golf
open tryouts set
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio
Grande will conduct open tryouts for its new
men’s and women’s golf programs at noon Wednesday, July 26, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis.
Contact head coach Keith Wilson at 740-3951775 or by e-mail at wilsonk@rio.edu for more
information.

Meigs youth
football camp
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The 2017 Meigs
youth football camp will be held for kids in grades
K-8 from 10 a.m. until noon on Saturday, Aug. 12,
at Farmers Bank Stadium on the campus of Meigs
High School.
The camp will focus on attitude, effort, hard
work, teamwork, fundamentals, technique, individual drills and group drills. The camp instruction will be provided by the Marauder coaching
staff and players.
Cost of the camp is $20 and proceeds will beneﬁt the Meigs football team. If registered by Tuesday, Aug. 1, you will be guaranteed a camp t-shirt.
Registration will also be held at 9 a.m. on the day
of the camp.
For more information, call 740-645-4479 or 740416-5443.

Eastern golf scramble
set for Aug. 5
POMEROY, Ohio — The Eastern boys and girls
golf teams will host a golf scramble on Saturday,
Aug. 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
See BRIEFS | 10

Dave Thompson | AP

Winner Jordan Spieth of the United States, right, and runner up Matt Kuchar of the United States look at the trophy after the final round
of the British Open Golf Championship, at Royal Birkdale, Southport, England, Sunday.

Spieth takes road less traveled to British Open
SOUTHPORT, England (AP) — The start
was not what anyone
expected out of Jordan
Spieth. All that mattered
to him was how he ﬁnished the British Open.
And that might have
been the biggest surprise
of all.
The record will show
that Spieth took a threeshot lead into the ﬁnal
round at Royal Birkdale,
closed with a 1-under 69
and won by three shots
over Matt Kuchar, giving
him the third leg of the
career Grand Slam.
“Seventeen pars and a
birdie would have been
ﬁne, too,” Spieth said,
the silver claret jug at his
side. “But there’s a lot of
roads to get there.”
The road less traveled?
This was more like blazing a new trail.
Seve Ballesteros won
the 1979 British Open
at Royal Lytham &amp; St.
Annes by making birdie
from the parking lot. Spieth was spared at Royal
Birkdale by making a
bogey from the driving range when he was
expecting no better than
a double bogey.
Henrik Stenson ﬁnished with four birdies
over the last ﬁve holes
at Royal Troon last year
to pull away from Phil
Mickelson in one of golf’s
greatest duels. Trailing for the ﬁrst time all
weekend, Spieth went

birdie-eagle-birdie-birdie
to overcome his own
doubts and win his third
major just four days
before he turns 24.
“He’s a ﬁghter. He’s
shown that the whole
way through his short
career,” Rory McIlroy
said. “He can dig himself
out of these holes. He’s
an absolute star.”
It sure didn’t look
like that at the start,
when Spieth made three
bogeys on his opening
four holes to lose his
lead, regained a two-shot
advantage with a birdie
and an exquisite pitch for
par on the tough sixth
hole, and then gave it
right back with a threeputt bogey on the ninth
as Kuchar made birdie.
Spieth couldn’t help
but think to the last
time he had the lead in a
major. It was 15 months
ago when he lost a ﬁveshot lead on the back
nine at Augusta National,
and the memories still
lingered.
“As you can imagine,
thoughts come in from
my last scenario when I
was leading a major on
Sunday,” he said. “I was
so conﬁdent and all of a
sudden, the wheels have
kind of come off everything. And how do we
get back on track to salvage this round and just
give yourself a chance at
the end? It took a bogey
to do so.”

Lost in the birdies
and eagle during that
mesmerizing stretch of
golf was an intelligent
question in the midst of
a major meltdown.
Spieth’s tee shot on
the 13th hole went some
75 yards right of the
fairway, and he was told
it bounced off a spectator’s head into even more
trouble. The ball eventually was found nestled
in thick grass on the
slope of a dune so steep
that Spieth could barely
take a stance, much less
swing a club.
He had nowhere to go.
He only had the presence
to ask a rules ofﬁcial,
“Is the range out-ofbounds?”
No, it wasn’t.
That allowed Spieth
to take a one-shot penalty for an unplayable lie
and go back as far as he
wanted on a line from
the ball to the ﬂag. That
led him to the range,
right in the middle of the
equipment trucks. He
was able to move some
more to get the trucks
out of his line, and then
it was a matter of the
shot.
He couldn’t see where
he was going because
of the dunes. He didn’t
know how far — Spieth
thought it was about 270
yards, caddie Michael
Greller thought it was
230 yards, and the caddie persuaded him to hit

a 3-iron .
It came up short
of a pot bunker near
the green, and Spieth
pitched over it to about
7 feet.
“The putt on 13 was
massive,” he said.
Kuchar, who had to
wait 20 minutes for the
ruling, missed his 15-foot
birdie putt and only led
by one. Just not for long.
What followed was a
sequence that takes its
place in major championship lore.
Spieth hit a 6-iron that
narrowly went in the cup
, leaving a short birdie
putt. He holed a 50-foot
eagle putt on the next
hole to regain the lead.
And he followed that
with a 30-foot birdie putt
for the 16th. And when
Kuchar holed a 20-footer
for birdie on the 17th to
stay in the game, Spieth
poured in a 7-footer on
top of him.
Kuchar shot 69 and
didn’t make a mistake
until it no longer mattered. Imagine having
a one-shot lead, going
par-birdie-par-birdie, and
being two shots behind.
Spieth joined Jack
Nicklaus as the only players to get the third leg of
the career Grand Slam at
age 23. Spieth now goes
to the PGA Championship next week in North
Carolina with a chance
to be the youngest to win
them all.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

MLB

Boston
New York
Tampa Bay
Baltimore
Toronto

W
55
51
51
47
44

L
45
46
48
51
54

Cleveland
Kansas City
Minnesota
Detroit
Chicago

W
51
50
49
45
38

L
45
47
48
52
57

Houston
Seattle
Los Angeles
Texas
Oakland

W
65
49
49
48
44

L
33
51
51
50
54

Washington
Atlanta
New York
Miami
Philadelphia

W
59
47
45
44
34

L
38
50
51
52
62

Chicago
Milwaukee
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Cincinnati

W
51
53
49
47
41

L
46
48
50
51
57

Los Angeles
Colorado
Arizona
San Diego
San Francisco

W
68
58
56
43
38

L
31
42
42
55
62

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB
.550
—
—
.526
2½
—
.515
3½
—
.480
7
3½
.449
10
6½
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.531
—
—
.515
1½
—
.505
2½
1
.464 6½
5
.400 12½
11
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.663
—
—
.490
17
2½
.490
17
2½
.490
17
2½
.449
21
6½
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.608
—
—
.485
12
8½
.469 13½
10
.458 14½
11
.354 24½
21
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.526
—
—
.525
—
4½
.495
3
7½
.480 4½
9
.418 10½
15
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.687
—
—
.580 10½
—
.571 11½
—
.439 24½
13
.380 30½
19

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

Str Home
L-2 29-18
W-1 26-17
L-4 27-22
W-1 30-21
L-3 22-24

Away
26-27
25-29
24-26
17-30
22-30

L10
4-6
6-4
4-6
6-4
1-9

Str Home
W-3 24-24
W-5 30-23
L-1 23-31
W-1 25-21
L-9 19-23

Away
27-21
20-24
26-17
20-31
19-34

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

Str Home
L-1 30-21
L-1 28-25
W-2 27-23
W-3 25-20
W-1 28-23

Away
35-12
21-26
22-28
23-30
16-31

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

Str Home
W-2 26-19
L-2 23-25
L-1 25-28
L-1 22-26
W-1 18-26

Away
33-19
24-25
20-23
22-26
16-36

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

Str Home
W-2 26-21
L-1 28-24
L-2 27-23
L-2 26-24
W-1 25-28

Away
25-25
25-24
22-27
21-27
16-29

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

Str Home
W-2 41-13
W-2 31-19
L-2 34-17
W-1 24-23
L-1 20-28

Away
27-18
27-23
22-25
19-32
18-34

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Coach accused of soliciting
girl in West Virginia
CLARKSBURG, W.Va. (AP) — A West Virginia
high school football coach who led his team to three
state championships faces felony charges in a solicitation case.
Media outlets report 34-year-old Bridgeport High
coach Josh Nicewarner was arraigned Friday in Harrison County Magistrate Court on charges of soliciting
a minor by computer and use of obscene matter with
intent to seduce a minor.
Harrison County Sheriff’s Lt. Detective Rob Waybright says Nicewarner allegedly sent a lewd video
to a teenage girl and asked her to send inappropriate
photos of herself.
It wasn’t immediately known whether Nicewarner
has an attorney to comment on the charges.
Nicewarner coached Bridgeport to Class AA football championships in 2013, 2014 and 2015. He’s been
suspended from his position in addition to his job as a
teacher at Liberty High School.

Big Ten announces new TV
deals with FOX, ESPN and CBS
CHICAGO (AP) — The Big Ten Network will
triple its prime-time national TV exposure during
football season and add more basketball games in the
time slot, thanks to new deals with broadcast partners
FOX, ABC/ESPN and CBS.
Commissioner Jim Delany made the announcements at the kickoff of the conference media days
event Monday.
The FOX and ABC/ESPN football deals run for six
years, as does the basketball agreement with CBS.
The conference network extended its joint venture
with FOX through 2032. BTN President Mark Silverman said ratings were up 5 percent last season,
when the network showed more live events and studio hours than ever before. He also announced that
former Big Ten stars Braylon Edwards of Michigan,
James Laurinitis of Ohio State and Corey Wooton of
Northwestern will join the broadcast team.
The deals had been in the works for some time.
Delany said a variety of issues had dragged negotiations out longer than anticipated, among them “pushback” from high school coaches and administrators
over the conference’s own Friday night telecasts.

Ohio St, Penn St, Badgers, ‘Cats
make Big Ten preseason list
ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) — Ohio State, Penn State,
Northwestern and Wisconsin each placed two players
on the preseason Big Ten all-conference list released
Monday.
Buckeyes quarterback J.T. Barrett and defensive end
Tyquan Lewis were joined on the East Division team
by Penn State running back Saquon Barkley and quarterback Trace McSorley. Indiana linebacker Tegray
Scales rounded out the lineup as chosen by a media
panel.
Northwestern placed running back Justin Jackson
and safety Goodwin Igwebuike on the West Division
team, while Wisconsin had linebacker Jack Cichy and
tight end Troy Fumagalli honored. Iowa linebacker
Josey Jewell also made the West lineup.

Browns sign rookie Peppers,
full class under contract
CLEVELAND (AP) — Browns rookie defensive
back Jabrill Peppers has signed and now Cleveland’s
entire draft class is under contract.
Peppers and the Browns had been haggling over
guaranteed money on his four-year-deal, which is
worth $10.3 million and includes a $5.6 million signing bonus.
The Browns chose Peppers — one of Cleveland’s
three ﬁrst-round selections — with the No. 25
overall pick. The former Michigan standout played
numerous positions for the Wolverines, but the
Browns will try him at strong safety and as a kick
returner.
Peppers may have been passed over by other
teams after he had a diluted urine sample at the
scouting combine. Peppers was placed in the ﬁrst
stage of the NFL’s substance abuse policy, but he can
be cleared from the program after 90 days if he has
not positive tests.

Tuesday, July 25, 2017 7

Iron Lady seizes the moment

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — With Katie
Ledecky getting the night
off, Hungary’s Iron Lady
seized the moment Monday at the world championships.
Katinka Hosszu lived
up to her country’s enormous expectations with
an electrifying victory in
the 200-meter individual
medley, spurred on by a
ﬂag-waving, foot-stomping crowd at Duna Arena.
The new 12,000-seat
aquatic facility along the
Danube was packed all
the way to the rafters,
and it was clear who
most of the fans came to
see.
Hosszu didn’t let them
down.
She led from start to
ﬁnish in the race encompassing all four swimming strokes, ﬁnishing
off with the freestyle
and a time of 2 minutes,
7.00 seconds. It was
nearly a second slower
than her world-record
performance at the Rio
Olympics last summer
but enough to hold off
hard-charging Yui Ohashi
of Japan, who settled for
silver in 2:07.91.
The bronze went to
Madisyn Cox of the
United States in 2:09.71,
just ahead of teammate

Michael Sohn | AP

United States’ Mallory Comerford, Kelsi Worrell, Katie Ledecky, and Simone Manuel, from left,
attend the ceremony after winning the gold medal in the women’s 4x100-meter freestyle final
during the swimming competitions of the World Aquatics Championships in Budapest, Hungary,
Sunday.

Melanie Margolis.
After touching the
wall, Hosszu pounded
the water, stuck out her
tongue and climbed atop
a lane rope to acknowledge the raucous crowd.
Her husband and coach,
Shane Tusup, pumped
his ﬁsts and led out a guttural scream.
Hosszu popped out of
the water and ran around
the deck to embrace
Tusup, who handed her
a red cap emblazoned
with the nickname she
received a few years ago

for her grueling repertoire of events.
Iron Lady.
Hosszu wasn’t the only
big name to claim gold
on the second night of
swimming.
Britain’s Adam Peaty
romped to victory in the
100-meter breaststroke,
while Sweden’s Sarah
Sjostrom just missed
breaking her own world
record in the 100 butterﬂy.
After claiming two
golds on Sunday,
Ledecky’s lone race

Monday was the morning
preliminaries of the 1,500
freestyle. She breezed
through the grueling
event in 15:47.57 —
nearly 18 seconds faster
than second-fastest qualiﬁer Mireia Belmonte of
Spain.
The ﬁnal is Tuesday
night.
“It felt good,” Ledecky
said. “I know how to
manage the schedule. I
just kind of have to work
through the prelims as
easy as I can to keep
myself rested.”

Earnhardt Jr. headed to broadcast booth
NEW YORK (AP) —
Dale Earnhardt Jr. will
join NBC Sports Group’s
coverage of stock car
racing next year — and
there may be more
options for NASCAR’s
most popular driver
once he retires.
The agreement with
NBCUniversal will allow
Earnhardt to pursue “a
wide range of opportunities in the company’s
media businesses,
including movies, television, podcasts, and
other areas.” The agreement was announced
Monday by NBC Sports
Chairman Mark Lazarus
and NBC Sports Executive Producer and President of Production Sam
Flood.
“We are excited to

welcome Dale Jr. to our
team - both on and off
the track,” Lazarus said.
“As a company, NBCUniversal allows for talent
to stretch themselves
across not just their ﬁeld
of expertise, but across
other areas of their interests in the media world.”
Earnhardt announced
in April he would retire
after this season, in part
because of his injury
history. Two big crashes
last summer forced
him out of the ﬁnal 18
races, and he missed two
races during the 2012
playoffs also because
of concussion-related
symptoms. The 42-yearold Earnhardt intends to
compete in two Xﬁnity
Series races next season
and plans to be involved

in the sport in other
ways — when his broadcasting duties allow it.
The NASCAR races
next year will air on
either NBC Sports or
Fox channels. This year,
NBC Sports Group will
air the ﬁnal 20 Cup
Series races and the ﬁnal
19 Xﬁnity events.
“It is a tremendous
honor not only to
join NBC Sports next
year but to begin a
new career alongside
people who love NASCAR as much as I do,”
Earnhardt said. “To
be reunited with Steve
Letarte, to be able to call
legends like Jeff Burton,
Dale Jarrett and Kyle
Petty teammates rather
than just friends, to be
able to continue going to

the track and connecting
with race fans, it’s a privilege I don’t take lightly.
I will devote my heart
and soul to this broadcast team and pledge my
very best to the millions
who watch it.”
Earnhardt has 26
career victories, including the 2004 and 2014
Daytona 500, putting
him 29th on NASCAR’s
all-time race winners
list. His father, Dale
Earnhardt, won seven
Cup titles and 76 Cup
races in his storied
career.
NBC said it was also
partnering with Earnhardt on some of his
other businesses, including Dirty Mo Media and
Hammerhead Entertainment.

Colts to put Luck on PUP for start of camp
INDIANAPOLIS
(AP) — Andrew Luck’s
surgically repaired right
shoulder will keep him
out for the start of training camp.
How much more time
he’ll miss is still unclear.
Indianapolis Colts
general manager Chris
Ballard told reporters
Monday that the team’s
franchise quarterback
would go on the physically unable to perform
list when players report
to camp Saturday.
“I want to make this
very clear: Andrew
has not had a setback.
This is all part of the
process,” Ballard said.
“The long-term prognosis is very good and
that is very positive. We
are going to follow the
doctors’ orders and the
process.”
Luck, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2012
draft and the face of the
franchise, had surgery
in January to repair a
partially torn labrum.
He did not participate
in any of offseason
workouts and the Colts
knew all along there was
a good chance he would
still be recovering during camp.
Ballard said Luck did
not start throwing until
last week.

The next step, Ballard
said, is working on his
throwing motion and
regaining strength in his
right arm.
Still, the Colts have
avoided establishing a
timeline for when Luck
will start taking snaps
or whether he would be
ready for the Sept. 10
season opener against
the Los Angeles Rams.
The reason: Ballard
doesn’t want to rush his
best young player back.
“I don’t worry about
when he plays or where
he plays,” Ballard said
when asked if Luck
needs some preseason
action. “Mr. (Jim) Irsay
and I have had some
long conversations
about the next step, and
the next step is practice.
Right now, he’s still ﬁnishing up rehab.”
Luck was not available
Monday because veterans aren’t required to
be at the team complex
until Saturday.
He has said the injury
occurred initially on
Sept. 27, 2015 at Tennessee. After the injury,
Luck struggled —
throwing 15 TD passes,
12 interceptions and
going 2-5 and was sidelined for the ﬁrst time in
his pro career, missing
nine games.

Luck opted against
surgery following that
season and responded
with the best statistical year of his career
despite playing through
soreness.
Coach Chuck Pagano
did make one adjustment — giving Luck an
extra day off each week
in an effort to keep him
healthy.
But after enduring a
second season of shoulder pain, Luck opted for
surgery.
“I feel and see myself
getting better every
day, every week, and
that’s sort of something
that you can hang your
hat on,” Luck said during Indy’s three-day
minicamp in June. “It’s
tangible, measurable
progress, so to me that’s
what matters right now.”
Indianapolis has only
four quarterback on the
roster: Luck, veteran
backup Scott Tolzien,
Stephen Morris and
Phillip Walker.
Tolzien is 0-2-1 as an
NFL starter and lost to
Pittsburgh last season
when Luck could not
play. Morris has spent
three seasons on various practice squads, and
Walker is an undrafted
rookie out of Temple.
But Ballard continues

to insist he’s not looking for a veteran backup
even though plenty, such
as Colin Kaepernick, are
still available.
“Like any position, we
want to create competition and we’ve talked
about that,” Ballard
said. “But right now,
we’re going to roll with
the three guys we’ve
got.”
Luck won’t be the
only player missing the
start of camp.
Defensive end Kendall
Langford, safety Clayton
Geathers and offensive
lineman Brian Schwenke
are also expected to
begin on PUP.
Ballard remains hopeful that Luck, Geathers
and Langford will be
activated by early September.
But Geathers, a
projected starter, is
expected to open the
regular season on PUP
following offseason neck
surgery. The move will
keep Geathers out at
least six weeks.
Safety Malik Hooker,
Indy’s ﬁrst-round draft
pick who had surgery in
February, and left guard
Jack Mewhort, who was
limited during OTAs,
are both expected to be
on the ﬁeld when practice begins Sunday.

�CLASSIFIEDS

Notices

Help Wanted General

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.

General Assignment Reporters

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.
Wanted
Someone needed to sit with
elderly woman in her home in
Bidwell. Hours needed are
week days 3pm -9pm and
week-ends 1pm-9pm. Most be
able to pass back ground
check if interested text or call
Kevin 740-645-9602
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
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Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

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.
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Company)

For Sale By Owner
Prowler 5th Wheel
camper 18th
sleeps 4 1985 model
with the 5th wheel hitch
$2000.00 or best offer
740-645-2224

The Daily Times and Community Common are now
accepting resumes for general assignment
reporters. Qualified applicants will be responsible
for gathering information on an assigned beat,
writing daily and enterprise stories related to that
beat. Our reporters are encouraged to think with a
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.

Apartments/Townhouses
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Must have valid driverҋs license, proof of insurance,
mobility and a reliable automobile.

Daily Sentinel

Auctions

LARGE AUCTION

Thursday, July 27th, 2017 @ 5:30PM

LOCATED AT THE AUCTION CENTER, ROUTE 62N, 786 ADAMSVILLE RD., MASON, WV
25260. ARNIE &amp; DEBBIE MARCUM HAVE RETIRED AND ARE SELLING THE CONTENTS OF
THE WISE OWL RUSTIC PRIMITIVES STORE THAT WAS LOCATED AT THE SPRING VALLEY
PLAZA, GALLIPOLIS, OH.

REMAINING CONTENTS OF THE STORE
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Terms: Cash or Check with valid ID
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR #1955
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118 www.auctionzip.com for Pictures and Complete Listing.

60729459

8 Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Yard Sale

Turn Your Clutter

INTO CASH!

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.

Houses For Rent
3 Bedroom Mobile home in
Camp Conley
large fenced in yard
304-674-3266
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

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

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

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to Thousands of Readers In
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, July 25, 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

"Y $AVE 'REEN

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, July 25, 2017

AP sources: Free
agent Derrick Rose
meeting with Cavs
CLEVELAND (AP) — Derrick Rose is going oneon-one with the Cavaliers.
The free agent guard and former league MVP is
meeting Monday with the Cavs to discuss a contract,
two people familiar with the negotiations told The
Associated Press.
Rose, who played for the New York Knicks last
season, is in Cleveland to meet with the club’s front
ofﬁce, according to the people who spoke to the AP
on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive
nature of the talks. The defending Eastern Conference
champions have had serious discussions with Rose
and his representatives over the past week.
The 28-year-old Rose averaged 18 points and 4.4
assists in 64 games last season, his eighth since being
drafted ﬁrst overall by Chicago in 2008. He was
named the league’s MVP in 2011 while with the Bulls.
Rose’s career has been hampered by knee injuries.
He sat out the entire 2012-13 season following knee
surgery.
The Cavaliers are way over the salary cap and can
only offer Rose a one-year deal for the veteran’s minimum of $2.1 million. But the possibility of playing
alongside LeBron James and contend for a title could
offset any ﬁnancial concerns for Rose.
However, he could be joining Cleveland at a turning point for the franchise. Last week, All-Star point
guard Kyrie Irving asked the team to trade him, a
development that rocked the organization and sent
shockwaves through the league.
Rose was initially viewed as a possible backup to
Irving, but he could now be a starter if the Cavaliers
make a deal for one of the league’s best guards.
It’s been a turbulent month for Cleveland since it
lost to Golden State in the NBA Finals. General manager David Grifﬁn left the team, owner Dan Gilbert
couldn’t entice former NBA star Chauncey Billups to
join his front ofﬁce and now the Irving mess.

Briefs

Daily Sentinel

Froome’s 4th Tour win was his hardest
PARIS (AP) — After
the champagne bubbles
fade and Chris Froome
drifts away from his Sunday night celebrations to
reﬂect on a fourth Tour
de France win, he may
do so with greater fondness than the others.
The ﬁrst, in 2013,
brought the bursting
pride of a ﬁrst success.
But he won by more
than four minutes, as he
did last year. Although
Nairo Quintana ﬁnished
a little over one minute
behind him in 2015,
this year’s victory — by
just 54 seconds — over
another Colombian,
Rigoberto Uran, tastes
sweeter.
“This Tour has been
my toughest yet,”
Froome said.
Froome temporarily
lost the race lead to the
daring Italian Fabio
Aru in the Pyrenees on
a huge climb to the ski
station of Peyragudes,
and thought he’d lost
it altogether two days
later.
Last Sunday in Rodez,
he was forced to change
his rear wheel in the
ﬁnal 40 kilometers (25
miles) after a spoke
broke. He got dropped,
drifting way behind the
peloton.

Thibault Camus | AP

Tour de France winner Britain’s Chris Froome, wearing the overall leader’s yellow jersey, holds son
Kellan as his wife Michelle, left, looks on the Champs Elysees avenue after the twenty-first and last
stage of the Tour de France cycling race in Paris, France, Sunday.

“I was just standing
there on the side of the
road with my teammate
Michal Kwiatkowski,”
Froome said. “I thought
it was potentially game
over.”
Riding with unchained
fury, Kwiatkowski and
Froome bridged the gap
— and saved his Tour.
Fast forward to Saturday’s penultimate stage
in Marseille and a time
trial — one of his strongest disciplines. Froome
was right back in the
ascendency and closing

in on win No. 4.
Yet the future champion was jeered by fans
at the Stade Velodrome
football stadium as he
began his ride, and more
jeers followed along the
route.
Froome had urine
chucked over him on a
previous Tour, so booing was hardly going to
unsettle him. He was
almost chivalrous on the
podium Sunday, addressing fans in admirable
French.
“Thank you for the

Gallia Academy
football reserve seats

will be available on Thursday, Aug. 10.
The price is $35 per ticket.
Tickets may be purchased in the AthFrom page 6
letic Director’s ofﬁce at Gallia Academy
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Reserve seats High School between the hours of 8
a.m. and 3 p.m.
for the 2017 Gallia Academy High
the skins game or buy mulligans.
Gallia Academy Athletic Super BoostRegistration will begin at 8 a.m. with School football season will go on sale
starting on Tuesday, Aug. 8, for the Gal- ers will be limited to 10 tickets pura 9 a.m. shotgun start. Prizes will be
chased on the ﬁrst day of sales.
given for skills contests, including clos- lia Academy Athletic Super Boosters.
After the ﬁrst day, there will be no
Parents of varsity and junior varsity
est to the pin and longest drive, and
lunch will be provided. All proceeds will football players, Gallia Academy March- limit on the number of tickets which
may be purchased.
ing Band members, and varsity and
go directly to the Eastern High School
junior varsity cheerleaders will be able
boys and girls golf teams.
to purchase reserve seats on WednesThe tournament is limited to 10
day, Aug. 9.
teams. To register early, contact EHS
Reserve seats for the general public
golf coach Jeremy Hill at 954-254-2562.

Gallia Academy
football reserve parking

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the news?

welcome and your generosity,” Froome said,
with unintentional irony.
“Your passion for this
race makes it really special. I fell in love with
this race.”
This was the third
straight win for the
Team Sky rider.
“I want to dedicate
this victory to my family.
Your love and support
makes everything possible,” he said. “I also
want to thank my team
Sky (for your) dedication and passion.”

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 22.
Signups are also available for either
teams or individuals.
For more information, contact Dave
at 740-590-0438.

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
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia
Academy High School Athletic Depart- 9 p.m. and will go through the town of
ment is offering reserved parking spac- Racine.
Race registration is $20 with proes for varsity football games only.
These reserved spots are located on ceeds going to the John Gray Memorial
the lower lot of the softball ﬁeld to pro- Scholarship Fund.
You may register online at www.
vide an environment to tailgate prior
johngraymemorial5k.com and, to
to the game.
Your participation supports all of the guarantee an event t-shirt, please preregister by July 24.
athletic programs in Gallipolis City
There will also be day of registration
Schools.
at the park until 8:30 p.m.
The cost is $25 for all home games.
Contact Kody Wolfe at 740-416-4310
Reserve parking for the 2017 Gallia
or visit the web at www.johngraymemoAcademy High School football season
will go on sale starting on Tuesday,
rial5k.com for more information.
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
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia
Wednesday, Aug. 9.
Academy Athletics ‘Finish on the 50’ 5K
Reserve parking for the general pub- run is set for Saturday, Aug. 19.
lic will be available on Thursday, Aug.
Registration is set for 5 p.m. at
10.
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 pre-registration.
Age groups will include ages 9-andunder, 10-to-19, 20-to-29, 30-to-39,
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Mid40-to-49 and ages 50-and-over.
dleport Youth League will be having
Go online to www.tristateracer.com
signups for boys and girls ages 7-16
for registration.
that are interested in participating

Gallia Academy
Athletics 5K run

Hear local thoughts and perspectives.

MYL baseball/
softball signups
there were…….

34 Local Photos
234 Local Names
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Brickyard
From page 6

Busch and Martin Truex
Jr. — went out in a
crash with 49 laps to go.
Truex’s car slid up the
track going through the
ﬁrst turn and the Toyota
teammates both wound
in the wall. Busch led the
ﬁrst 71 laps, 87 of the
ﬁrst 110 and swept the
ﬁrst two stages ahead of
Truex.
“That’s the way it
goes,” Busch said. “Just
chalk it up to another
one we found a way to
lose.”
The ﬁnish was even

wilder.
Over the last 16 laps,
there were ﬁve crashes
and two red ﬂags.
The craziness began
when Kurt Busch, Erik
Jones and Clint Bowyer
got together coming out
of the fourth turn. On
the ensuing restart, Kyle
Larson hit the wall on
the front straightaway to
bring out another caution.
Things again went
awry when Jimmie Johnson, Keselowski and
Kahne went three-wide
through the third turn
on what was supposed
to be the second-to-last
lap. But Johnson’s smoking car started spinning

and hit the wall to force
overtime.
“I wouldn’t call it an
absurdity, I just think it
was a crazy race,” Keselowski said. “There was
some crazy strategy.”
Trevor Bayne got into
the mix with two laps in
the ﬁrst overtime when
his car was bumped from
behind, sending it sideways through the ﬁeld.
Six cars got collected in
the crash, bringing out
yet another red ﬂag and
adding more laps to the
race.
Kahne ﬁnally ended it
by reaching the line just
ahead of Keselowski as
another multi-car crash
occurred behind him.

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