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                  <text>Ohio
Valley
Business

The
good
old days

Area
softball
honors

BUSINESS s 3

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 91, Volume 72

Throwback Thursday: Rutland Train Depot

Thursday, June 7, 2018 s 50¢

Wahama
teacher
charged
with battery
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

Courtesy of Meigs County Historical Society member Bob Graham

This undated photo shows a donkey and his rider at the Train Depot in Rutland, as another man stands in the background waiting for the train.

The colorful 5K
The winners of the 5K Color Run were as follows: first place,
Jared Koenig; second place, Ryan Laudermilt; third place, Russ
Fields.

MASON — A teacher
at Wahama Junior/Senior
High School has been
charged with two misdemeanor counts of battery
after being accused of
allegedly striking two
students.
Marsha S. Nagy, 60,
Rutland, Ohio, appeared
for arraignment before
Magistrate Gail Roush in
Mason County Magistrate
Court, with Roush setting
her bond at $1,500. Court
records show Nagy was
released on a personal
recognizance bond.
According to the
criminal complaint, Nagy
is accused of allegedly
striking one student in
the head with her hand
as they were entering a
classroom, and allegedly
struck another student
“at least one time in the
head with a ruler” while
that student was in her
classroom.
Investigating the incident is Lt. J.S. Fields of
the Mason County Sheriff’s Department, who is
also Wahama’s resource
ofﬁcer.
Superintendent Jack
Cullen told the Register,
Nagy is currently on
administrative leave with
pay, pending the outcome of this case. Cullen
added, Mason County
Schools was cooperating
with law enforcement on
this matter.
Beth Sergent is editor of Ohio Valley
Publishing.

Photos by Erin Perkins | OVP

A participant walking through a blue splash of color.

Southern Local PTO holds
second annual 5K Color Run
By Erin Perkins
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE — The
Southern Local PTO
recently held its second
annual 5K Color Run.

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
TV listings: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

The 5K Color Run
began as a fundraising
technique for Southern
Local playgrounds. One
of the event’s organizers
Heather Dailey-Johnson
commented the proceeds

Participants walking through a splash of green.

from last year’s run aided
in putting a new playground area in for second
and third grade students
at the school, with the
new equipment installed
for the beginning of the
2017-18 school year.
Johnson said the
proceeds for this year’s
run went towards the
expansion of the park
and to help with the play-

grounds maintenance
for Southern Local
Schools.
Johnson shared she
and fellow Southern
Local PTO members
decided to bring a
color run to the county
because they are a fun
experience for everyone. She explained the
Southern Local PTO
put on the very ﬁrst

color for the county
when the ﬁrst race was
held last year. Johnson
commented that run
generated 100 participants.
For the race this year,
53 runners, joggers, and
walkers came out to
get splashed with a bit
color through different

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

REEDSVILLE — The Eastern
Local Board of Education approved
a three-year contract for Elementary
Principal Robin Burrow, as well as
numerous supplemental contracts
during its recent meeting.
Burrow was initially hired by the
district in July 2016 on a two-year
contract.
Supplemental contracts and pupil
activity contracts for the 2018-19
school year, pending proper certiﬁcation, were approved as follows: Joshua Mummey, Head Wrestling Coach;
Katherine Ihling, Color Guard Coach;
Bill Salyer, Varsity Golf Coach; Pat
Newland, Head Varsity Football
Coach and Summer Weight Room

By Julie Carr Smyth
AP Statehouse Correspondent

Coordinator; Debbie Barber, 12th
Grade Class Advisor and Cheerleader
Advisor; Sam Thompson, Assistant
Varsity Football Coach; Rebecca
Otto, Fall Weight Room Coordinator; Deborah Kerwood, Quiz Bowl
Advisor and Model U.N. Advisor;
Carly Hayes, Middle School Student
Council Advisor; Chuck Robinson,
7th Grade Girls Basketball; Susan
Parsons, Jr. High Class Advisor; Bill
Francis, Safety Coordinator; Rachel
Marten, Curriculum Coordinator;
Mindey Durst, 8th Grade Volleyball
Coach; Kenneth Tolliver, Assistant
Golf Coach; Laura Cleland, Assistant
High School Cheerleading Advisor;
Jeff Stethem, Jr. High Football Coach;

COLUMBUS, Ohio —
The scandal-scarred Ohio
House, after weeks of
impasse, on Wednesday
chose the favored successor to
Republican
former
Speaker
Cliff Rosenberger
to lead it
through the
Smith
end of the
year.
Republican House
Finance Chairman Ryan
Smith prevailed in a dramatic 11 rounds of ﬂoor
voting in which he was
unable to win a majority
but got more votes than
any other candidate. The
win to fulﬁll Rosenberger’s unexpired term could
better position Ryan
in the brewing speaker
ﬁght against Republican
former Speaker Larry
Householder for next session.
In nominating Smith,
Republican Rep. Robert
Cupp, a former state

See CONTRACTS | 5

See SPEAKER | 5

See COLORFUL | 5

Eastern Board approves contracts
Staff Report

Ohio’s House
votes to make
Smith its
next speaker

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, June 7, 2018

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Sunday, June 10

Vacation Bible School
POMEROY — Vacation Bible School at Bradford Church of Christ will be held June 11-14 from
9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. each day, at the church located at the corner of Bradbury Road and State Route
124. Classes are available for preschool through
middle school. For more information or transportation call 740-992-5844.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Card Shower
Marvin (Jedie) Milliron of Leading Creek
Road, Middleport, will
be 90 on June 13th.
Cards may be sent to
him at P.O. Box 10
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Thursday,
June 7
RACINE — The regular monthly meeting of
the Sutton Township
Trustees will be held on
Thursday, June, commencing at 7 p.m. in
the Racine Village Hall
Council Chambers.
CHESTER — Chester Shade Historical
Association regular
monthly board meeting, 6:30 p.m., Chester
Academy, discussing
Meigs Heritage Festival
and other related business, open to all.
CHILLICOTHE —
The Southern Ohio
Council of Governments (SOCOG) will
hold its board meeting
at 10 a.m. at 848 Adena
Road, Chillicothe, Ohio,
45601. Board meetings
usually are held the ﬁrst
Thursday of the month.
For more information,
call 740-775-5030, ext.
103.

Friday, June 8
POMEROY — Inspirational Book Club. The
group will be discussing
“Fire in the Night” by
Linda Byler. 10:30 a.m.,
Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY — Family Movie Night. Watch
“A Wrinkle in Time” at
the library. Popcorn and

OBITUARIES

JOHN F. MCCLINTOCK

NANCY J. COOPER

REEDSVILLE —The Bethel Church will be
hosting a free movie night on Sunday, June 10,
6 p.m. The movie showing will be “I Can Only
Imagine.” Free bottled water and popcorn will be
available to guests. Also, the youth ministry will
be selling hot dogs, candy, and other snacks before
the movie.
POMEROY — The group Proclaim from Allegheny Wesleyan College will perform at 11 a.m. at
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, 39589 St. Rt. 143, Pomeroy. Pastor Mark Nix.

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

Daily Sentinel

lemonade will be served.
5 p.m. Pomeroy Library.

Monday,
June 11
BEDFORD Twp. —
The Bedford Township
trustees monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Republican Executive Committee will meet 7:30 p.m.
at the headquarters
on Second Street and
Mechanic Street, Pomeroy, to organize the
executive committee for
the 2018-2020 term.

Tuesday,
June 12
POMEROY — Acoustic Night. Join in this
informal jam session.
Guitars, banjos, and
more are welcome.
Singers and listeners
invited as well. 6 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Board
of Health meeting will
take place at 5 p.m. in
the conference room
of the Meigs County
Health Department,
which is located at 112
E. Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Wednesday,
June 13
POMEROY — Rock
Exploration with Meigs
Soil &amp; Water. 2 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.

Thursday,
June 14
POMEROY — Steps
to home ownership and
home repair. Eligibility
information about home
loans and grants available from USDA Ohio
Rural Development. 10
a.m. to 6 p.m., Pomeroy
Library.

sister Ann Wiles and
SURFSIDE BEACH,
spouse Larry Wiles;
S.C. — John F.
“Bush” and Jim
grandchildren, Ryan
McClintock, age 69,
LIBERTY —
Roller, and June
Miller, Raquel Wolfe, Kira
passed away at 10:02
Nancy Jean (Hartand Owen Cantrell; a.m. on June 1, 2018, at
Gibson, Brenna and Adra
ley) Cooper, 82, of
and brother-in-law, home.
McClintock, Trent and
Liberty, Missouri,
Johnny Cooper.
Nate McClintock; greatJohn is preceded in
died peacefully
She is survived
grandchildren, nieces,
death by his father Ottis
in her home on
by her loving
and great-nieces and
S. McClintock and his
Tuesday, June 5,
husband, Henry
great-nephews.
mother Emma Jane
2018. Born Dec.
Raised in Racine, Ohio,
McClintock.
26, 1935, in Middleport, Cooper; son, David
John graduated from
He is survived by
Ohio, she was the daugh- (Suzanne Zefferi) Cooper, Morrisville, Penn.;
Racine High School and
spouse, Linda; his chilter of Homer and Eva
daughter, Janet (Michael) dren, Sherlyn Wolfe and
attended Ohio University.
(Faulkner) Hartley.
John served as Sergeant
spouse Bryan Wolfe,
Mrs. Cooper graduated Michael, Kansas City,
Mo.; granddaughter who Erica Gibson and spouse during the Vietnam War.
from Middleport High
was raised by Henry and Mart Gibson, John F.
John’s ﬁnal resting
School and the Holzer
Nancy, Jessica (Tony)
place is at Hillcrest CemMcClintock II, Brian
Hospital nursing school.
Martin, Kansas City, Mo.; McClintock and spouse
etery, Conway, South
She met Henry Cooper
granddaughters, Brenda
Carolina.
Valerie McClintock;
on a blind date, and the
(Josh) Florence, Downtwo were married in
ingtown, Penn.; Melissa
LANDAKER, JR.
1957.
(Tony) Carrodo, MillersPOMEROY — David Warren Landaker, Jr., 52, of
Mr. Cooper’s early
ville, Penn.; and Amanda Pomeroy, Ohio, died on June 5, 2018 at St. Mary’s
career with the Marine
Corps took the couple to Kimberling, Kansas City, Medical Center.
Graveside funeral services will be held on Friday,
Cherry Point, N.C., where Mo.; grandsons, Douglas
June 8, 2018, at 11 a.m. at Rocksprings Cemetery
their ﬁrst son, David, was Cooper, New York, NY;
born; and then to Orange and Christopher (Abbey) with Pastor Randy Smith ofﬁciating.
Kimberling, Bolivar, Mo.;
County, Calif., where
nine great-grandchildren, POTEET, SR.
their second son, Doug,
CROWN CITY — James Allen Poteet, Sr., Crown
and daughter, Janet, were Brianna Martin, Alena
City, Ohio died Wednesday, June 6, 2018. Funeral serborn. After the Marines, Carrodo, Madalyn Hilmer, Roman Zavacki, Rocco vices will be conducted 1 p.m. Friday, June 8, 2018 in
Mr. Cooper’s career as a
Carrodo, Merritt Zavacki, the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel,
chemist took the family
Ceci Carrodo, Peter
Gallipolis, Ohio with Pastor Richard Adkins ofﬁciatto 10 cities, including
Hatcher, and Elliana Kim- ing. Burial will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens,
Ashland, Ky.; Parma,
berling; a cousin, Maude Crown City. Friends and family may call at the funeral
Ohio; La Grange, Ill.;
West Chester, Penn.; and Pearl Watson, Huntsville, home Friday 11 a.m. until the time of service.
ﬁnally to Liberty, Mo. in Ala.; and several nieces
and nephews.
MEADOWS
the 1980’s.
Visitation will begin
GALLIPOLIS — Doug Meadows, 74, of Gallipolis,
Through all the travels,
Ohio, died Tuesday, June 5, 2018. The funeral service
Mrs. Cooper served as an at 6 p.m., followed by a
memorial service at 7
for Doug will be 11 a.m. on Saturday, June 9, 2018 at
amazing nurse, includWillis Funeral Home with Pastor Paul Voss ofﬁciating stints at various V.A. p.m., on Friday, June 8,
at Park Lawn Northland
ing. Burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery. Friends
hospitals, and in Kansas
City at Liberty Hospital, Chapel, 1640 North State may call from 5-8 p.m. on Friday, June 8, 2018 at the
Route 291, Liberty. A
funeral home. A Masonic Service will follow the callNorth Kansas City Hosgraveside service at the
ing hours at the funeral home.
pital, MAWD Pathology
Riverview Cemetery in
Group, and the Saint
Middleport, Ohio, will
DAVIS
Luke’s hospital system.
follow at a future date.
GALLIPOLIS — Audrey Gennevieve Davis, 90,
In addition to her parIn lieu of ﬂowers, the
of Gallipolis, died June 6, 2018. Funeral service for
ents, Mrs. Cooper was
preceded in death by her family asks for donations Audrey will be 1 p.m. Monday, June 11, 2018 at the
to Compassionate Care
First Church of the Nazarene in Gallipolis, Ohio. Burison, William Douglas
Hospice, 14500 East
al will follow in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends
“Doug” Cooper; her sis42nd Street South, Suite may call one hour before the funeral from noon until
ters and brothers-in-law,
232, Independence, MO
1 p. m. at the church. Willis Funeral Home is assisting
Sara Daune Owen and
64055.
the family.
Richard Owen, Ida Lee

Middleport Alumni hold banquet
MIDDLEPORT — The
2018 Middleport High
School Alumni Banquet
was held on Saturday,
May 26 at the Riverbend
Arts Council in Middleport. A total of 141 people were in attendance.
Richard Hays and Forrest Bachtel served as the
emcees for the evening
with Bachtel providing
music for the evening,
along with his wife Carol
Scott Bachtel playing
piano. The meal was
catered by Silver Spoons
Catering of Millwood,
West Virginia. Door
prizes were provided by
Kings Ace Hardware,
Dairy Queen, Yellow
Umbrella, McClures and
Barbara Scott Scites.
Alumni attending were
as follows:
1949 — Hazel Hawkins
Ginther, Rosemary Fisher
Moore, and Virginia Grogan Holman;
1950 — Carla Owens

Winebrenner, Donna
Russell Hayth, and Fred
Hoffman;
1951 — Betty Ashley
Rosser, Clifford Coleman,
Frances Chase Coleman,
Don Payne and James
Buell;
1953 — Harold Cart,
Larry Wiley, and Blaine
Walburn;
1955 — Brady Huffman, Ronald Fultz, and
Shelia Stover Hubbard;
1956 — Betty Ward
Field, Jerome Beach,
Juanita Hawkins Walker,
Nancy Roller Cale, and
Patricia Williams Kendrick;
1957 — Barbara
Capteina Mora, Edward
Kitchen, Edward McComas, James Bowles, and
Jane Harris Huffman;
1958 — Carol Blaker
Oiler, Charlotte Lightfoot
VanMeter, Judy VanCooney Stuber, Ronald
Miller, and Vonda See
Walburn;

1959 — Richard Roller,
Eddie Crooks, Gene
Abbott, and Herschel
Knapp;
1960 — Loretta
Hanning Roller and Carter French;
1961 — Betty Gilmore
Wolfe, Darrell Bechtle,
Doris Rice Walburn,
Evelyn Capteina Bauer,
John Blaker, Judy Sauer
Crooks, Kay Jenkinson
Williams, Ray Kloes, and
Tom Anderson;
1962 — Beverly Perrin Kosiba, Cinda Morris
Abbott, and Texanna
White Wehrung;
1963 — Carolyn Russell Collins, Charlotte
Davidson Hanning,
Forrest Bachtel, Judy
Overturf Dowling, Richard Hays, Janet Baker
Downey, and Peter Walburn;
1964 — Carol Scott
Bachtel, Carolyn Nicholson French, Cinda Sauer
Harris, Ellen Dutton

Kiehl, Judy Wildermuth
Allensworth, Marilyn
Swan Anderson, Mick
Morris and Ronald
Hanning;
1965 — Alan Wallace,
Chris Bahr Williams,
Diane VanCooney Lynch,
Joy Boggs Riley, Judy
Moore Webb, Marty
Nicholson, Mary Walburn
Taylor, Paul Gerard, and
Randy Humphreys;
1966 — Robert
Schmoll, Kay Ault Logan,
and Sandra Garten
Hanning;
1968 — Ann Wilson
Wigal, Art Casci, Bill
Hackett, Bill Haptonstall,
Bill Swan, Candace Bahr
Pope, Carol King Brewer,
Debbie King Finlaw, Jane
Gerard Rice, Jerry Davenport, Judy Hysell Humphreys, Keith French,
Mike Gress, and Sandra
Clatworthy Schilling.
Provided by the Middleport Alumni
Association.

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bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

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dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

MANAGING EDITOR
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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

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.

Kid’s Fishing Derby
to be held June 9
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Fish and Game Association annual Kid’s Fishing Derby
will be held beginning at 8 a.m.
on Saturday, June 9. Participants
must be 15 years old or younger
and accompanied by an adult. One
rod and reel per child. Bait is to be
night crawlers or chicken livers; no
minnows or live bait. Directions:
From Pomeroy take Route 7 North,
turn left on Texas Road and follow
the signs.

Middleport
Yard of the Week
MIDDLEPORT — A yard of the
week program is beginning June 1

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.

Road closures in
Meigs County
RACINE — A bridge replacement project begins on May 29,
2018, on County Road 29 (Bowmans Run Road) in Meigs County.
The project is taking place .17
miles off of County Road 34 (Pine
Grove Road). The road will be
closed in this area through August
31, 2018.
RACINE — A portion of State
Route 124 in Meigs County is
closed due to a rockfall. It is

located between Yellow Bush Road
and McNickles Road. The road is
closed in both directions in this
area. ODOT’s detour is SR 124 to
SR 733 to US 33 to SR 124. The
reopening date is unknown at this
time.
ATHENS — Beginning on
Monday, June 11, the westbound
US Route 33 ramps at East State
Street in Athens will be closed.
The closure is expected to last
until July 25. The detour for trucks
and commercial trafﬁc is via US
50E to the East State Street Exit.
Local trafﬁc will be detoured to the
Stimson Avenue Exit, 16C. Concrete replacement work will also
begin on the US 33 EB on-ramp in
this time period. Temporary pavement will be installed to maintain
trafﬁc. In order to discourage
neighborhood cut-through trafﬁc,
Grant Street will be modiﬁed to
be one way north through at least
the duration of the ramp closure
period.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 7, 2018 3

Foxconn chief: US-China dispute over tech, not trade
By Kelvin Chan

deals with Washington if President Trump’s tariff hike on Chinese technology products goes
ahead.
SHENZHEN, China — The
“This is not a trade conﬂict
CEO of Taiwan’s Foxconn,
which assembles Apple iPhones but rather a competition and
comparison of technology,”
and other products for tech
said Gou in a video shown in
companies, said Wednesday
that Washington’s dispute with the event.
Foxconn Technology
China is over technology rather
Group, also known as Hon
than trade.
Terry Gou’s comments at an Hai President Industry Co.,
is the world’s biggest contract
event celebrating the annivermanufacturer of smartphones,
sary of Foxconn’s ﬁrst investment in mainland China follow computers and other technology products and is trying to
Beijing’s threat to scrap trade

AP Business Writer

develop its own brands.
Gou said he planned to
take part in a groundbreaking ceremony at the end of
June for a $10 billion factory
that Foxconn is set to build in
Wisconsin, but he and other
executives said nothing else
about the company’s plans
there or other initiatives outside China.
The White House renewed
its threat last week to impose
25 percent tariffs on Chinese
technology-related goods in
response to complaints Beijing

steals or pressures foreign companies to hand over technology.
It is due to release a list of
products on June 15.
The Chinese government
warned Sunday it would scrap
deals to narrow its trade surplus with the United States
by purchasing more American
soybeans and other goods if
Trump’s tariffs went ahead.
In the video, Gou said the
“U.S. is signiﬁcantly ahead
of China” in areas such as jet
engines and semiconductors.
“If China is to catch up, allow

US stocks on track for fourth gain in a row
By Marley Jay
AP Markets Writer

NEW YORK — U.S. stocks are
heading for a fourth straight gain
Wednesday as banks surge in tandem with interest rates. Smaller,
more domestic-focused companies continue to set records as
investors monitor trade disputes
between the U.S. and other countries as well as global economic
growth. Retailers and heath care
companies are also rising. Electric car maker Tesla is gaining as
investors grow more conﬁdent it
will meet its production targets
for the Model 3 sedan.

rates on mortgages and other
consumer loans. JPMorgan Chase
climbed 2.4 percent to $110.40
and Bank of America gained 3
percent to $29.99.

and said the deal also reduces its
debt. The stock gained 6.7 percent to $41.97,

Shiny
Signet Jewelers soared after
the company had a stronger ﬁrst
Need a drink?
quarter than Wall Street expected
Jack Daniel’s maker Brownand said there are signs its sales
Forman slumped 5.5 percent to
are stabilizing. The company also
$52.78. The company’s sales fell
short of analyst projections while maintained its annual forecasts.
costs connected with the creation Signet traded as high as $75 a
of a charitable foundation affected share in November but plunged
after it reported weak sales,
its earnings. Brown-Forman
announced more store closings,
could be caught up in tariffs on
and dealt with complications from
U.S. goods and said it has conthe sale of its credit portfolio. The
cerns about that might affect its
stock rose 21 percent to $53.42
business. On Tuesday, Mexico
Wednesday.
announced tariffs on bourbon
and other U.S. products, and the
Keeping score
European Union may place duties Feeling wise
The S&amp;P 500 index added 19
on Kentucky bourbon.
points, or 0.7 percent, to 2,768
Athenahealth, a medical billing
Both of those actions are in
as of 2:50 p.m. Eastern time.
software company, climbed after
response to the tariffs on steel
The Dow Jones industrial averit said it is exploring a possible
and aluminum imports that Presi- sale. The company also said CEO
age climbed 293 points, or 1.2
dent Trump imposed last week.
percent, to 25,093. The Nasdaq
Jonathan Bush resigned effecThose issues are likely to take
composite rose 38 points, or 0.5
tive immediately. Investor Elliott
center stage when leaders of the
percent, to 7,676. The Russell
Management recently offered
Group of Seven meet Friday.
2000 index of smaller company
about $6.5 billion to take Athestocks gained 9 points, or 0.5 per- Finance ministers of the other six nahealth private and said it had
governments expressed “concern grown frustrated with the compacent, to 1,673.
and disappointment” over the tar- ny’s performance. Athenahealth
iffs in a statement last weekend.
also named former GE CEO Jeff
The quote
Immelt as its new chairman. The
Worries about international
stock advanced 3.9 percent to
trade tensions have been affectPut it in drive
$157.03.
ing the market for more than
Electric car maker Tesla rose
three months, but Karyn Cavana- after Chairman and CEO Elon
ugh, senior markets strategist at Musk said he expects the comEnergy
Voya Investment Management,
pany will be able to produce 5,000
Benchmark U.S. crude shed 1.2
said it looks like investors are
Model 3 sedans in a single week
percent to $64.73 a barrel in New
feeling better about the state
by the end of this month. That’s
York. Brent crude, used to price
of the economy. That’s helped
Tesla’s long term goal for produc- international oils, inched down to
stocks move higher as Wall
tion of the Model 3, its attempt to $75.36 per barrel in London.
Street shifts money out of bonds reach the mass market with a less
Wholesale gasoline fell 1.7 perand into companies that look like expensive car. Tesla has struggled cent to $2.07 a gallon. Heating oil
they will beneﬁt from continued to reach that target, and doing so slid 0.7 percent to $2.13 a gallon.
economic growth.
would help the company stem its Natural gas rose 0.2 percent to
“It’s refreshing to see that
long-term losses.
$2.90 per 1,000 cubic feet.
investors are realizing this is an
Tesla shareholders also rejected
incredibly good economic backa proposal to overhaul the board
CURRENCY
drop and it’s an incredibly good
of directors and strip Musk of
The dollar rose to 110.17 yen
environment for companies to
his role as chairman. The stock
from 109.76 yen. The euro rose to
make money,” she said. “We’re
gained 7.9 percent to $314.05.
$1.1770 from $1.1715.
in a sweet spot where we have
some growth and low inﬂation
Energetic
Overseas
and investors just don’t want to
Devon Energy climbed after it
The DAX in Germany rose 0.3
believe it.”
said it will sell its interest in two
percent, as did the FTSE 100 in
companies for a total of $3.13
Britain. France’s CAC 40 lost 0.1
billion. Global Infrastructure Part- percent. Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 rose
Bonds and banks
ners will buy its stakes in EnLink 0.4 percent and Hong Kong’s
Bond prices slipped. The yield
Hang Seng advanced 0.4 percent.
on the 10-year Treasury note rose Midstream Partners and EnLink
to 2.98 percent from 2.93 percent. Midstream LLC. Devon increased South Korean markets were
its stock buyback authorization
closed for a holiday.
Higher yields can signal higher

EU to impose retaliatory tariffs on US imports
By Lorne Cook

proportionate response
to the unilateral and illegal decision taken by the
United States.”
BRUSSELS — The
Sefcovic said that forEuropean Union on
malities in ﬁnalizing the
Wednesday announced
list should be completed
it will start imposing
this month. The EU says
duties from July on a
it will introduce “reballist of U.S. products in
ancing” tariffs on about
response to President
Donald Trump’s decision 2.8 billion euros’ ($3.4
billion) worth of U.S.
to slap tariffs on steel
steel, agricultural and
and aluminum imports
other products, includfrom Europe.
ing bourbon, peanut
“The new duties
butter, cranberries and
start applying in July,”
orange juice.
European Commission
Trump imposed tarVice-President Maros
iffs of 25 percent on
Sefcovic told reporters.
steel imports and 10
“It is a measured and

The Associated Press

percent on imported
aluminum from the
EU on June 1. He said
the move is meant to
protect U.S. national
security interests, but
the Europeans claim it
is simply protectionism
and breaks global trade
rules.
The EU exported
some 5.5 million tons
of steel to the U.S. last
year. European steel
producers are concerned
about a loss of market
access but also that steel
from elsewhere will
ﬂood in.
The EU — the world’s

biggest trading bloc —
has also taken its case to
the World Trade Organization. If the WTO rules
in its favor, or after three
years if the case is still
going on, the EU plans
to impose further tariffs
of 3.6 billion euros on
U.S. products.
“The EU’s reaction is
fully in line with international trade law. We
regret that the United
States left us with no
other option than to
safeguard EU interests,”
Trade Commissioner
Cecilia Malmstrom said
in a statement.

me to speak frankly, it must be
in the areas of manufacturing
technology, design and manufacturing technology,” he said.
“They are the real economy.”
Foxconn is trying to develop
beyond its roots as a low-cost
assembler of products and
become an advanced manufacturer and bigger player in the
global supply chain.
The company says its Wisconsin factory will make liquid
crystal display panels for use
in computers, TVs and selfdriving cars.

Kight up for Ohio Hospital
Association Health
Care Worker of the Year
Sharon Kight, nursing assistant, Surgical
Services, Holzer Jackson,
was recently recognized as Holzer Health System
nominee for Health
Care Worker of the
Year Award, sponsored by the Ohio
Hospital Associa- Kight
tion.
The following is
a summary of the nomination that was sent in
on behalf of Holzer for
Kight:
“Sharon Kight has been
an employee with Holzer
Health System for over 25
years, and her contributions to our organization
and community are too
numerous to list. Sharon
exhibits a tremendous
heart; embodying compassion, generosity, and
a selﬂess attitude. She is
continually referred to as
a ray of sunshine and is a
great team player, providing excellent service with
a phenomenal bedside
manner. She is the kind of
individual that wants to
learn everything she can
to make everyone else’s
job easier. She truly loves
her job and the patients
she cares for and it is
evident in the effort she
brings to work every day.
The Ohio Hospital
Association will recognize Kight and other
candidates from hospitals
throughout the state for
being named their facility’s Health Care Worker
of the Year at a special
dinner in Columbus,
Ohio, on June 5 where

several Ohio caregivers
will be presented awards,
including the Albert E.
Dyckes Health
Care Worker of the
Year Award. OHA
asked that nominee criteria include
great leader qualities, goes beyond
the call of duty,
reﬂects the mission and values
of the organization, and
gives back to the community.”
Kight joined Holzer in
1993 and has served in
a variety of departments
during her career with
our organization. These
areas include Urgent
Care, Family Practice,
Cardiology, Internal
Medicine, Pediatrics and
Surgery Services, where
she has spent the past
eight years. “I love working at Holzer,” Kight
shared. “We are a family
and I’ve never wanted to
go anywhere else.”
Kight resides in Jackson with her husband,
Robert, and has four
children: Jessica Gwosch,
Andrea Smites, David
Kight, and N.J. Kight, and
eight grandchildren. Her
hobbies include traveling,
bike riding, and spending
time with grandchildren
and friends.
“I am honored to be
nominated and excited to
represent Holzer at such
a wonderful event,” Kight
continued. “I am blessed
to be a part of such a
wonderful group.”
Submitted by Holzer Health
System.

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — The latest livestock report as provided by United Producers, Inc., 357 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, Ohio, 740-446-9696. Date of sale: May 30.
Total Headage: 150.
Feeder Cattle
Yearling Steers 600-700 pounds: $129.00; Yearling
Heifers 600-700 pounds: $93.00 - $104.00; Steer
Calves 300-400 pounds: $100.00 - $146.00; Steer
Calves 400-500 pounds: $100.00 - $149.00; Steer
Calves 500-600 pounds: $151.00; Heifer Calves 300400 pounds: $83.00 - $170.00; Heifer Calves 400-500
pounds: $83.00 - $147.00; Heifer Calves 500-600
pounds: $100.00 - $104.00; Holstein Steers 400500 pound: $40.00 - $60.00; Feeder Bulls 250 – 400
pounds: $128.00 - $162.50; Feeder Bulls 400-600
pounds: $100.00 - $135.00; Feeder Bulls 600-800
pounds: $85.00 - $102.00
Back to Farm Calves
Bulls (75-110 pounds): $100.00/head
Cattle
Holstein Steers: $67.00
Cows
Comm &amp; Utility: $60.50 – $92.50; Canner/Cutter:
$55.50 - $60.00
Bulls
All Bulls: $69.00 - $91.00
Sheep &amp; Lambs
Roasters: $190.00

OVP STOCK REPORT
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE)
Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ)
Walmart Inc(NYSE)
Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)
Post Holdings
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE)
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)
Kroger Co(NYSE)

$29.95
$53.35
$84.56
$17.82
$43.46
$78.76
$41.41
$42.94
$100.83
$24.68

BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)
$54.39
City Holding Company(NASDAQ)
$78.15
Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ)
$16.80
American Electric Power(NYSE)
$63.81
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)
$38.62
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)
$27.80
McDonalds’s(NYSE)
$162.38
Apple(NASDAQ)
$193.98
Stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions on June 6, 2018.

Goats
Aged Goats: $73.00 - $142.00
Hogs
Sows, Light: $35.00 - $40.00; Feeder Pigs (By
CWT): $22.50 - $47.00
Comments
41Hd Holstein Steers 690# $88.00

�Opinion
4 Thursday, June 7, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Zeus the
Wonder Dog
saved my mother
As a dog lover in a country of dog lovers, I’ve
always had a problem with a favorite saga of dog
lover nation:
Those dog-saves-human stories we sometimes
see on national TV.
You know the recipe for this story.
You
start with a lost kid and a dog,
John
throw in some “Saved by Lassie”
Kass
dialogue (“What’s wrong, girl? Is it
Contributing
Timmy?”) and after the rescue add
columnist
heartwarming music to make the
story even sweeter.
That’s about the time a news presenter says
“Aww” and makes her cute face.
Eye roll. No thank you.
But after what happened the other morning at
our home, I’m a believer.
We’d planned on sleeping late.
At around 4 a.m., Zeus the Wonder Dog began
barking.
It wasn’t his normal deep bark, used for humans,
other dogs and coyotes. There was a desperate frequency in his voice, a fearful urgency, a panic, and
he just wouldn’t stop.
He barked till his voice squeaked. Then he’d
bark again.
So we walked downstairs, anticipating intruders, animal or human, or perhaps the beginnings
of a ﬁre, but we didn’t anticipate this:
My mom on the ﬂoor.
And Zeus barking his head off.
We called 911, and the EMTs got her to the hospital. She had suffered a stroke.
“It was good that you woke when you did,” said
the doctor when I told him that we’d planned on
sleeping late that morning. “If you’d waited …”
But we didn’t wait because Zeus wouldn’t allow
it. He’s a German shorthaired pointer, and as such
he’s got a thick, stubborn Germanic head and he’s
rather stubborn about some things.
Like hating on rabbits in my garden. Like hating
to be alone when others are outside. Like loving
kids because they want to play; like pulling his
dog bed all over and sleeping where he pleases.
Like occasionally silently passing gas — which
tells us he may have snacked on a rabbit — forcing
us all to run out of the house with Betty shouting,
“Zeus? Oh My God! Where’s the Febreze?!!”
But now we’re glad he was stubborn about
not letting us sleep late with Yia-yia on the ﬂoor
before dawn.
At the hospital they began treatment immediately. She’s improved markedly in the last few days.
She can use a walker, and she has great therapists,
like her speech therapist Ellen, who’s convinced
her to keep ﬁghting and trying to remember
things.
Her right eye is weak. But the other day, she
insisted on trying to read my column, the one
about the 30-year-old who refused to leave his parents’ basement. She struggled, and it took her a
half-hour to read the column out loud.
Still, she should be home soon. At 87 years old,
she’s tough.
“How’s Zeus?” she asked.
He keeps checking her bedroom, where she usually sits, listening to light classical music, reading
the Tribune, and does her beloved crossword puzzles, the more difﬁcult the puzzle the better. But
we didn’t mention crossword puzzles at ﬁrst. We’ll
put the crossword puzzles on hold for a time.
“Zeus? Since you’ve been here Zeus has lost 5
pounds,” I said.
She began laughing, and that’s when I knew she
was improving. At home, she’s in constant violation of the no-snacks rule. She keeps slipping him
snacks, deﬁantly, driving us crazy, sneaking him
little pieces of crusty bread with sauce, bits of
stew that she cooks, sausage, snacks all day.
He lies down in the kitchen when we’re not
home and just stares at The Grandma With
Snacks. So when she cooks, we cut down on his
meals. We won’t abide a fat dog.
“He’s too skinny,” she said. “You can just see his
ribs.”
You’re supposed to see his ribs. Mom, he’s not
some fat columnist. He’s a pointer! That’s how
they’re supposed to look. No snacks.
“Don’t yell if I give him something from time to
time,” she said.
I sighed. Even in the hospital, she’s as stubborn
as Zeus.
So with all this going on, back and forth to the
hospital, I took a couple days off just to be there,
and watch her work with her therapists. They
are angels, patient and kind. The other day I sat
watching as Ellen put her to work with word association games, identifying words for things that
are round, like “plate” and “orange,” or naming
different types of animals.
When Ellen was done with the speech therapy
session, we had some time to ourselves before her
occupational and physical therapy sessions after
lunch.
“I really hate this horrid hospital food,” she
whispered. “Have they ever heard of oregano?”
Yeah, I know.
See DOG | 5

THEIR VIEW

Aaah…the good old days
I think that’s why
some people like antique
stores, Flea markets,
auctions, yard sales, and
eBay. Items from the past
are attached to memories.
We remember happy
holidays along with what
food was served; hairstyles and clothes of the
era; television programs
and music. Some hanker
for the good old days.
The good old days
had bad old days as well.
Some memories are probably not accurate and
are based on how each
person remembers it. But
individual perception
becomes our reality. It
seems easy to remember
only the good parts of the
past and forget about the
challenges and struggles.
Just like the times we live
in now—good days and
bad days and in-between
days. Each generation
looks back on their good
old days.
Some like to look back
and reminisce about the
good old days and others
do not. “I don’t do nostalgia. The phrase ‘the good
old days’ never passes
my lips,” writes Nicholas
Haslam.
Maybe it’s an aging
thing—the older I get the
more I like to listen to
and tell stories about yes-

scurry sisters
teryear; the funny,
squeezed the kids
cheery, and goofy
in the car and
memories. Stories
packed grocery
are able to transbags into the
port our mind back
trunk and every
to another time and
crevice. Each kid
another place.
held a bag of someMelissa
Philip Pullman
thing with bags
declared, “After
Martin
nourishment, shel- Contributing at their feet, over
their heads, and
ter and companion- columnist
in-between each
ship, stories are the
other. “Don’t mash
thing we need most
the bread!” yelled one
in the world.”
mom. “Don’t you dare
Aaah…the good old
open that bag of cookies!”
days. And the good old
yelled the other one.
stories.
“I don’t have enough
I met with my aunt
room!” yelled one kid.
Judy and cousin Kim for
“Move other!” yelled
lunch recently. And of
course, we got around to another one. And you
hoped nobody passed gas,
reminiscing about some
of the humorous happen- burped, or picked their
ings during the good old nose.
We rushed home before
days of childhood and
beyond. We laughed over the frozen food had a
chance to melt. And then
grocery store stories.
the bags, boxes, cans, and
Shirley, my mom and
cartons had to be separather sister, Judy piled the
ed. And again we heard,
cousins into one vehicle
“Don’t mash that bread!”
and drove into town to
How many times did I
stock up on food. The
hear that phrase growing
grocery carts would be
crammed full of bargains. up? Hundreds.
Laughing at shared
Before being squashed
memories of loved ones
into the car to go home,
that have passed can be
the moms opened a loaf
medicinal as well. And
of bread and slapped a
seems to lessen grief.
slice of trail bologna on
Aaah…the good old
it (without condiments)
days.
and we ate lunch in the
parking lot.
Shirley, my mom and
Then the two hurryher sister, Judy shopped at

the secondhand shoe store
downtown. Pairs were different sizes—that’s why
they were so cheap. The
right shoe would be size 6
and the matching left shoe
would be size 6 1/2 or 7.
And searching through
the boxes and bins of
shoes was comical. Buying
shoes for a bunch of kids
can be expensive. Nonetheless, our feet survived.
And this story is one of
my favorite narratives.
We tell stories about
the times of yore with
affectionate ears and
eyes. And with chuckles.
Any embarrassment as
long since faded.
Every generation has
their own hometown
memories. Every family abounds with tall
tales and embellished
anecdotes. Homemade
humor—that’s how some
people made it through
the good old days during
the not so good times.
“Nostalgia is a ﬁle that
removes the rough edges
from the good old days,”
writes Doug Larson.
Aaah…the good old
days.
Melissa Martin, Ph.D, is an author,
columnist, educator, and therapist.
She lives in southern Ohio. www.
melissamartinchildrensauthor.
com. Contact her at
melissamcolumnist@gmail.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday,
June 7, the 158th day of
2018. There are 207 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On June 7, 1776, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia
offered a resolution to
the Continental Congress stating “That these
United Colonies are, and
of right ought to be, free
and independent States.”
On this date:
In 1099, the First Crusade began besieging
Jerusalem, which was
captured the following
month.
In 1654, King Louis
XIV, age 15, was crowned
in Rheims (rams), 11
years after the start of his
reign.
In 1769, frontiersman
Daniel Boone ﬁrst began
to explore present-day
Kentucky.
In 1892, Homer Plessy,

a “Creole of color,” was
arrested for refusing to
leave a whites-only car of
the East Louisiana Railroad. (Ruling on his case,
the U.S. Supreme Court
upheld “separate but
equal” racial segregation,
a concept it renounced in
1954.)
In 1929, the sovereign
state of Vatican City came
into existence as copies of
the Lateran Treaty were
exchanged in Rome.
In 1948, the Communists completed their
takeover of Czechoslovakia with the resignation of President Edvard
Benes (BEH’-nesh).
In 1958, singer-songwriter Prince was born
Prince Rogers Nelson in
Minneapolis.
In 1965, the U.S.
Supreme Court, in Griswold v. Connecticut,
struck down, 7-2, a Connecticut law used to prosecute a Planned Parent-

THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
“The history of the world
shows that when a mean
thing was done, man did
it; when a good thing
was done, man did it.”
— Robert G. Ingersoll,
American lawyer and
statesman (1833-1899).

hood clinic in New Haven
for providing contraceptives to married couples.
In 1977, Britons
thronged London to celebrate the silver jubilee of
Queen Elizabeth II, who
was marking the 25th
year of her reign.
In 1981, Israeli military planes destroyed a
nuclear power plant in
Iraq, a facility the Israelis
charged could have been
used to make nuclear
weapons.
In 1993, the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled

that religious groups
could sometimes meet
on school property after
hours. Ground was broken
for the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame in Cleveland.
In 1998, in a crime that
shocked the nation, James
Byrd Jr., a 49-year-old
black man, was hooked by
a chain to a pickup truck
and dragged to his death
in Jasper, Texas. (Two
white men were later sentenced to death; one of
them, Lawrence Russell
Brewer, was executed in
2011. A third defendant
received life with the possibility of parole.)
Ten years ago:
Hillary Rodham Clinton
suspended her pioneering
campaign for the presidency and endorsed fellow
Democrat Barack Obama.
Longshot Da’ Tara spoiled
Big Brown’s bid for a
Triple Crown by winning
the Belmont Stakes.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 7,2018 5

Dog

Contracts

From page 4

From page 1

Then I tried some
speech therapy on her,
with a word problem to
gauge her progress:
“If you were baking
cookies, like those deli­
cious anisette paximathia
(biscotti), and Sen. Chuck
Schumer knocked on the
door, begging and crying
for cookies, would you
give him one?”
She sniffed theatrically.
“Schumer? Certainly
not,” she said. “No cookie
for Schumer. Never. Do
you want me to give him
a glass of milk, too? No.
I may have had a stroke,
but I’m not stupid you
know.”
That’s when I knew she
was truly improving.
And then she said,
“Don’t forget, say hi to
Zeus. Make sure you say
hi to Zeus for me.”

Erin Perkins | OVP

The Southern Local PTO 5k Color Run generated 53 participants.

ners were given medals, Jared Koenig; second
but all participants were place, Ryan Laudermilt;
entered into door prize third place, Russ Fields.
drawings for a variety of
Erin Perkins is a staff writer for
items.
Ohio Valley Publishing. Reach
The winners of the
her at (304) 675-1333, extension
5K Color Run were
1992.
as follows: first place,

Colorful
From page 1

John Kass is a columnist for
the Chicago Tribune. Readers
may send h im email at jskass@
chicagotribune.com

color stations while par­
ticipating in the 5k.
The three top win­

Speaker
From page 1

Supreme Court justice,
said he had the track
record to lead.
“Respectful, processoriented, inclusive,
accommodating, trust­
worthy and decisive,
qualities we all value in a
leader,” Cupp said. “This
is what the lamp of expe­
rience has shown.”
Speakers hold powerful
sway over which bills are
advanced into law in the
state and which ones die
unceremonious deaths.
After his win, Smith,
of Gallia County, called
on House members to
conduct themselves with

respect and “common
decency.”
Lawmakers supported
Smith over Householder’s
choice, term-limited state
Rep. Andy Thompson,
and a surprise llth-hour
addition to the race,
Columbus-area Rep. Jim
Hughes, both Repub­
licans. Thompson, a
conservative from Mari­
etta, pitched himself as a
neutral placeholder who
could restore normalcy
and integrity to the cham­
ber following Rosenberger’s sudden departure.
Householder supported
Thompson in early voting
and later switched his
vote to Hughes.
Rosenberg'er resigned
last month amid an FBI
inquiry into his travel,

his lavish lifestyle and
a condo he rented from
a wealthy GOP donor.
He has said all of his
actions were legal but he
was resigning because
the federal investiga­
tion would take time to
resolve and could become
a distraction.
Republican caucus
members had failed to
agree on a replacement
that could win the 50
votes required by No.
2 Rep. Kirk Schuring,
who’s been leading the
chamber since Rosenberger’s departure.
Thompson, a publisher
and former city council­
man, made his pitch to
fellow Republicans using
a Beatles comparison. He
told caucus members he’d

TODAY

#AccuWeather

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

FRIDAY

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of curw rent 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.

74°
61°
81°
59°
96° in 1940
39° in 1945

Precipitation (in inches)
24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

Trace
0.10
0.88
21.84
18.96

SUN &amp; MOON
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Today

Fri.

6:03 a.m.
8:52 p.m.
2:24 a.m.
2:09 p.m.

6:03 a.m.
8:52 p.m.
2:54 a.m.
3:11 p.m.

•I

Today 7:12a
Fri.
7:55a
Sat.
8:37a
Sun.
9:19a
Mon. 10:05a
Tue. 10:56a
Wed. 11:52a

Minor Major

Minor

1:01a 7:35p
1:43a 8:18p
2:25a 9:00p
3:07a 9:45p
3:52a 10:32p
4:41a 11:24p
—
5:37a

1:23p
2:06p
2:49p
3:32p
4:19p
5:1 Op
6:07p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Waverly

83/60

WEATHER HISTORY
On June 7,1982, violent early morn­
ing thunderstorms produced gusts
to 80 mph which caused consider­
able structural damage and power
outages in Topeka and Kansas City,
Missouri.

Athens o

80/57

Wilkesville

a

82/58

o

I

U

POMEROY,

Jackson

Low Moderate High Very High
Primary: grasses, pine, other

Lucasville

Mold: 3697

84/59
Centerville

84/63

Portsmouth

84/60

82/58

Rio Grande

o

.84/59
GALLI POLIS

9

84/59

83/59

Spencer

82/58

AIR QUALITY

South Shore Greenup

Buffalo

83/59 ^84/59

48

84/59

Ironton

J 84/58

!

84/58 I________ ,
Grayson

Clendenin

Milton

Ashland

84/59
' Huntington

84/58

o

NATIONAL FORECAST

84/60 O

St. Albans

85/59

Charleston

o

ât

O 83/57

O 84/61

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

J 110s
100s

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday
Location

Elizabeth

83/57

83/59

o

Low Moderate High Very High
Primary: cladosporium
Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

80/57

81/57

SOLUNAR TABLE 0HIO RIVER
Major

Murray City

McArthurc

82/61

Flood
Stage

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

Level

24-hr.
Chg.

12.04
17.56
22.03
12.29
12.90
24.90
12.63
27.56
35.32
13.26
22.00
34.80
20.70

-1.39
-0.56
-0.37
-0.19
-0.12
-0.38
+0.40
+0.77
+0.63
+0.47
+0.40
+0.60
-0.20

90s

50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
0s
-0s
□

Today
Hi/Lo/W

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

94/63/pc
94/67/pc
61/49/c
62/49/c
92/70/s
89/70/pc
69/58/s
76/66/pc
76/60/s
82/65/pc
79/56/t 82/57/pc
86/58/pc
89/59/pc
71/56/pc
78/60/pc
92/64/pc
83/57/s
86/66/pc
90/67/pc
86/52/t 87/51/pc
78/59/pc
76/60/t
86/63/s
90/67/pc
80/63/pc
80/63/t
81/61/pc
87/66/t
96/75/s
94/73/pc
91/58/pc
93/57/pc
84/68/pc
85/68/t
81/63/pc
80/63/pc
86/76/sh
85/73/sh
94/72/pc
94/72/pc
89/67/pc
91/70/pc
86/68/pc
89/71/pc
99/74/s
102/76/s
92/69/s
94/71/pc
75/60/pc
81/63/s
88/66/s
93/72/pc
87/73/t
87/75/t
81/62/pc
76/59/t
91/64/s
95/70/s
92/73/pc
92/75/s
73/60/pc
82/64/pc
91/71/pc
93/68/pc
88/70/t
90/69/t
76/59/s
84/65/pc
106/78/s 107/79/pc
78/59/pc
83/63/pc
66/54/pc
77/52/s
84/64/pc
89/69/pc
88/70/s
82/61/s
94/73/s
93/74/pc
92/63/s
90/67/s
65/53/pc
70/55/pc
72/53/pc
67/50/sh
78/64/s
85/69/pc

National
High
Low

Rain
lv \ \| Showers

OSnow

' wwwww
wwwwwv
wwwwv

I* *| Flurries
Ice

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

City

Fri.
Hi/Lo/W

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

-10s
I I T-storms

□

An afternoon shower
possible

Marietta

80/57

a

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

80/59

Chillicothe

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.

Jun 13 Jun 20 Jun 28 Jul 6

Intervals of clouds
and sunshine

81/59

Pollen: 86

0 50 100150200 300
Primary pollutant: Particulates

New First Full Last

9

Adelphi

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

■

MOON PHASES

Increasing amounts
of sun

68°

NATIONAL CITIES

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

»

66°

o

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Couple of
thunderstorms

62°

to
CO

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

At-storm in spots in
the afternoon

89°

WEDNESDAY

âjj

ALMANAC

61°

TUESDAY
o

Partly sunny and hot

Partly sunny today. A shower or thunderstorm in
the area tonight. High 84° / Low 60°

64°

00

64°

1

78°

J

MONDAY
O

in

o

to

77°

, 90°

J

SUNDAY

e
00

i9

SATURDAY
o

w §jjß
’

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

follow the House’s frac­
tious “Let It Be” period
under Rosenberger with
a transcendent “Abbey
Road” finish. The iconic
rockers were notoriously
divided while recording
“Let It Be,” recorded
before but released after
“Abbey Road,” consid­
ered one of the band’s
greatest albums.
Hughes is a freshman
House member this term
but is a longtime politi­
cian, having served in the
House in the early 2000s
and in the state Senate
later.
Lawmaking in the state
had been at a standstill
for weeks, as House
Republicans sparred
over who should succeed
Rosenberger.

00
00

DOWNLOAD THE
APP TODAY

Kevin Damewood, Head
Archery Coach.
The board approved
a one year contract for
Lester Parker.
Robyn Hawk was
approved as the 2018
Summer School Proc­
tor. Sheryl Roush was
approved as the 2018
Summer Testing Coor­
dinator.
Deborah Kerwood,
Joshua Mummey,
Patrick Newland, and
Rachel Swindler were
approved as 2018 CORE
Subject Virtual Academy
Core Course Graders.
Debbie Barber, Patrice
Beegle, Bobbi Harbour,
Ruthie Hopkins, Katie
Ihling, Krista Johnson,
Dezere Martin, and Bill
Salyer were approved
as 2018 Summer School
Intervention Tutors
for grades 4-8. Patrice
Beegle was approved as
the ESY Tutor for the
2018 summer.
Letters of resignation
were accepted from
Amber Ridenour and
Terry Reed, intervention
specialists.
Accepted a letter of
resignation from Amber
Ridenour, Intervention
Specialist, effective May
9, 2018.
A 12-week maternity
leave request for Kristen
Dettwiller, High School
Health and Physical
Education Teacher,
starting at the beginning
of the 2018-19 school
year was approved.
Lee Swain was hired
as the District On-Board
Busing Instructor pend­
ing proper certification,
retroactive to April 1,
2018.
In other business,
minutes of the previ­
ous meeting, financial
reports and the five-year
financial forecast were

approved as presented.
The board approved
making amendments to
the permanent appro­
priation resolution and
certify additional reve­
nue to the Meigs County
Auditor.
A joint agreement
appointing the business
advisory council of the
Athens-Meigs ESC to
serve as the business
advisory council for
Eastern Local School
District was approved.
A one year renewal
contract with West Inter­
active Services Corpora­
tion, for the hosted dis­
trict notification system
known as School Mes­
senger, was approved.
The new/updated/
revised/replaced/deleted
by laws/policies/adminis­
trative guidelines, as rec­
ommended by NEOLA,
were approved.
The insurance propos­
al from SORSA, Schools
of Ohio Risk Sharing
Authority, for property,
liability, and fleet cover­
age for the period July
1,2018 to July 1, 2019,
was approved
The board approved
entering into a Memo­
randum of Understand­
ing with the Meigs
County Department of
Job and Family Services
(MCDJFS) for the 201819 school year. MCD­
JFS will provide youth
employees that meet
the eligibility of the pro­
gram. MCDJFS agrees
to subsidize 100 percent
of the eligible employee’s
wages and fringe ben­
efits, excluding health
care.
Open enrollment
students were approved
and denied as recom­
mended.
The next meeting of
the Eastern Local Board
of Education is sched­
uled for 6:30 p.m. on
Wednesday, June 27, in
the library conference
room.

Miami
5s^^^^^!»i'

for the 48 contiguous states

103° in Sweetwater, TX
26° in Angel Fire, NM

Global
High
Low

122° in Omidiyeh, Iran

10° in Kugaaruk, Canada

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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6 Thursday, June 7, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Eastern’s Cook named All-Ohio HM
By Alex Hawley

State University signee —
was named to the Division
IV honorable mention portion of the All-Ohio list. It’s
Eastern senior Sidney
the third time in her career
Cook was the Ohio Valley
Publishing area’s lone selec- that she’s been an All-Ohioan, as she made the second
tion to the 2018 Ohio High
team as a junior and honorSchool Fastpitch Softball
Coaches Association all-state able mention as a freshman.
Gallia Academy, Southsoftball squads, as voted on
ern, River Valley, Meigs and
by member coaches in the
South Gallia did not have
Buckeye State.
a player chosen in their
Cook, the power-hitting
respective divisions.
shortstop for the 17-7 Lady
Eagles this spring, blasted
11 home runs, to go with
2018 OHSFSCA
three triples and 17 doubles All-Ohio Softball Teams
— all career-highs. With 43
D-II First Team
total hits, she ﬁnished with
Pitchers: Kara Gunter,
a .566 batting average, while Granville, So; Kelsey Byers,
scoring 36 runs and driving West Branch, Sr; Sydney
in 40.
Campbell, Keystone, Jr; AshCook — a Blowing Green ley Riley, Oak Harbour, Sr;

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Sidney Cook (left) throws to first base in front of teammate Cera Grueser
(right), during a non-conference softball game on May 7 in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

Carly Turner, Keaton Ridge,
Sr.
Catchers: Tigan Braskie,
Lakewood, Jr; Kameron
DiMarzio, Steubenville, Sr;
Autumn Acord, Keystone, Jr;
Leah Boggs, Madison, So.
Inﬁeld: Maddie Dryden,
Indian Valley, Jr; Avery
Steiner, Lakeview, Sr; Raylene Hammond, Jackson, Sr;
Cassie Cromwell, Greenville,
Sr.
Outﬁeld: Lindsey Potter,
Jonathan Alder, So; Sophia
Pressler, Bellevue, Sr; Taylor
Pagan, Sheridan, Fr; Faith
Hensley, Monroe, Sr.
D-II Second Team
Pitchers: Kylie Coffelt,
See ALL-OHIO | 7

Shazier: ‘My dream
is to come back and
play football again’
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Ryan Shazier’s routine
hasn’t changed much, even after a life-altering spinal injury put his football career in jeopardy.
The Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker still arrives
at the team facility around 7 a.m. He still watches
copious amounts of ﬁlm. He still works out regularly, often with his teammates alongside. And he
still believes one day he will run out of the Heinz
Field tunnel in full uniform despite the many
obstacles he understands are in his path.
“My dream is to come back and play football
again,” Shazier said on Wednesday in his ﬁrst
wide-ranging public remarks since undergoing
spine stabilization surgery last December. “I’m
working my tail off every single day; have (playing
again) in the back of my mind every single time I
go to rehab.”
Shazier walked into the media room with help
of a cane and spent 20 minutes outlining his
journey since he lowered his head to hit Bengals
wide receiver Josh Malone in the ﬁrst quarter on
Dec. 4. He called the moment after impact when
he grabbed the small of his back while his legs lay
motionless “a little scary,” but was quick to thank
emergency responders in Cincinnati for their delicate work on the ﬁeld in the immediate aftermath.
He underwent spine stabilization surgery on
Dec. 6 and has spent the intervening months
remaining adamant he would play again while
being a ﬁxture at the team’s practice facility,
where he has become a de facto coach. It’s a role
he’s embracing, but one he’s not quite ready to
accept on a full-time basis.
“Just because I got hurt doesn’t mean I’m going
to stop loving the game of football,” said Shazier,
who added that despite the injury he’s going to
give it “everything I have” in an effort to return to
play.
Details of the exact nature of Shazier’s injury
and his long-term prognosis remain sparse. He
declined to get into speciﬁcs about whether playing again is even medically feasible, saying his
medical team has told him to focus on making
incremental improvements.
“Honestly right now, I’m not a doctor,” Shazier
said. “Every day I take it one day at a time. The
further we get along in rehab, the better they can
give me answers.”
Shazier has made remarkable progress in the
last six months. He spent several weeks in the hospital following surgery, though he took time out to
attend several Steelers home games near the end
of the 2017 season. He regularly posts updates
through his social media accounts and provided
an indelible moment during the NFL draft in April
when he walked on stage in Dallas to announce
Pittsburgh’s ﬁrst-round selection.
Though he’s from Florida, Shazier has chosen to
stay in Pittsburgh in part because it helps him feel
like “I’m still myself.”
He’s received a massive outpouring of support
from all over, including an avalanche of “Get Well”
letters from over 500 students at an elementary
school.
T-shirts emblazoned with his familiar No. 50
and the phrase #Shalieve — the hashtag Shazier
made famous in the early stages of his recovery —
have become fashionable across Pittsburgh with
fans and fellow athletes. Several members of the
Pittsburgh Pirates have donned the T-shirts after
games as tribute.
“I’ve met a lot of interesting people, a lot of
people I never thought I’d meet,” Shazier said.
The Steelers placed him on injured reserve last
month, ending any chance of a comeback in 2018.
See SHAZIER | 7

Scott Jones | OVP Sports

Hannan junior Dalton Coleman releases a throw back to the pitcher during an April 30 game against Ironton Saint Joseph at the Craigo
Athletic Complex in Ashton, W.Va.

5 chosen to Class A baseball team
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
— Well represented.
Mason County landed
ﬁve players on the West
Virginia Sports Writers’
Association Class A allstate baseball teams for
the 2018 campaign — as
voted on by a select
panel of media members
throughout the Mountain
State.
Dalton Kearns, Tanner
Smith and David Hendrick each garnered allstate accolades for their
efforts this past season at
Wahama, while Hannan
had a pair of selections
in Kevin Morehart and
Dalton Coleman.
Both Kearns and Hendrick — a senior and
junior, respectively —
were repeat honorees on
the Class A squad, while
Smith, Coleman and
Morehart all came away
with their ﬁrst all-state
baseball honors during
their junior campaigns.
Kearns — a three-time
all-state recipient — was
chosen as a second team
inﬁelder after leading the
White Falcons with 39
hits and a .459 batting
average to go along with
a .536 on-base percentage.
Kearns — who also
led WHS with 41 2/3
innings, four wins and 46
strikeouts — was a special honorable mention
selection as a junior and
honorable mention as a

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Wahama junior David Hendrick releases a pitch during a May 10
baseball contest against Williamstown in Williamstown, W.Va.

sophomore in 2015.
Smith was a special
honorable mention
choice this after producing team-bests of two
homers and 33 RBIs.
Smith was also 3-1 overall and struck out 40 over
30 innings of work with a
2.33 ERA.
Hendrick was chosen
to the honorable mention
list for a second straight
year with a .373 average
that included a homer,
28 RBIs and a team-high
eight triples. Hendrick
also had a 2.96 ERA in
23 2/3 innings of work
while striking out 28.
Both Coleman and
Morehart — a catcher

and pitcher, respectively
— were chosen for their
efforts as battery mates
this spring.
Season statistics were
not available for either
individual at press time.
Ravenswood senior
Chase Swain — a utility
pick — was named the
ﬁrst team captain, while
St. Joseph senior John
Piaskowski — an outﬁelder — was chosen as
the second team captain.
2018 WVSWA Class A
baseball teams
First Team
Pitchers: Garrett
Haggerty, Mooreﬁeld,

Sr; Doug Clark, Wheeling Central, Sr; Charlie
White, St. Joseph, Sr.
Catcher: Dominic Martin, Charleston Catholic,
Sr.
Inﬁelders: Tyler
Wright, Madonna, Sr;
Brett Riffe, Greater Beckley Christian, Sr; Bradan
Mullenix, Williamstown,
Sr; Logan Wells, Wheeling Central, Sr.
Outﬁelders: Pat Mirandy, Magnolia, Jr; Mason
Adkins, Williamstown,
Sr; Jacob Hensley, Sherman, Jr.
Utility: Chase Swain,
Ravenswood, Sr (captain); Lenny Washington,
St. Joseph, So; Garrett
Matherly, Greater Beckley Christian, Jr; Jacob
Hufford, Charleston
Catholic, Fr.
Second Team
Pitchers: George Cupp,
Wheeling Central, Sr;
Luke Daugherty, Tyler
Consolidated, Sr; Jordan
Brown, Gilmer County,
Sr.
Catcher: Ian Smith,
Wirt County, Sr.
Inﬁelders: Ty Sturm,
Parkersburg Catholic, Jr;
Dalton Kearns, Wahama,
Sr; Sam Wykle, Summers
County, Jr; Blake Bennett, Ravenswood, Sr.
Outﬁelders: John
Piaskowski, St. Joseph,
Sr (captain); Jake Ours,
Mooreﬁeld, Sr; Garrett
Scott, Cameron, So.
Utility: Elias Gordon,
See CLASS A | 7

�SPORTS/TV

Daily Sentinel

Class A

Catholic; John Hufford, Charleston Catholic; Marshall Pile,
Charleston Catholic; Brent
Moran, Mooreﬁeld; Blake Watts,
From page 6
Mooreﬁeld; Hayden Baldwin,
Mooreﬁeld; Clay Skovron, East
Notre Dame, Jr; Brandon
Hardy; Addison Rexrode, PendCombs, Charleston Catholic,
Sr; Brett Tharp, East Hardy, Sr; leton County; Timothy Thorne,
Logan Frantz, Fayetteville, So. Pendleton County; Kole Puffenberger, Pendleton County; Jake
Gamble, Magnolia; Leo HerSpecial Honorable Mention
Sam Bosley, Greater Beckley rick, Magnolia; Kolton Elliott,
Paden City; Angelo Gentile,
Christian; Tanner Buchanan,
Wheeling Central, Pat Brown,
Greater Beckley Christian;
Wheeling Central; Trey Scott,
Tristan Coots, Fayetteville;
Cameron; Trin Scot, Cameron;
Jordan Dempsey, Fayetteville;
Tucker Lilly, Summers County; Andrew Anglin, Ravenswood;
Tyler West, Tyler Consolidated;
Nick Gipson, Valley (Fayette);
Nick Cavins, Doddridge CounThomas Blaydes, Charleston

All-Ohio
From page 6

West Branch, Sr; Sloan
Kiser, Madison, Sr; Madison Bryant, Graham, Sr;
Jenna Robbins, Northwestern, Sr.
Catchers: Maggie
Moore, Jefferson Area,
Sr, Chloe Wohlgamuth,
Shawnee, Sr.
Inﬁeld: Emily Walker,
Jonathan Alder, So; Gracella Dunlap, Riverview,
Jr; Alexis Renner, Dover,
Jr; Macy Allen, Columbian, Sr; Sarah Moats, Circleville, Jr; Kelsey Carter,
Clinton-Massie, Jr.
Outﬁeld: Meredith
Thomas, Big Walnut, Sr;
Megan Davis, Lakewood,
Sr; Madi Nunez, Keystone, Sr; Erika Johnson,
Akron Springﬁeld, Sr;
Kalicia Doles, Waverly, Sr.

ty; Bradley McHenry, Gilmer
County; Hunter Hickman, Wirt
County; Devin Williams, Ritchie
County; Eric Williams, Tolsia;
Hunter Eplin, St, Joseph; Luke
Beatty, Madonna; Brent Robinson, Notre Dame; Todd Grifﬁth,
Notre Dame; Brandon Gray,
South Harrison; Kyle Sturgill,
Tug Valley; Brett Smith, Tygarts
Valley, Hunter Lanham, Tygarts
Valley; Taylor Jarrell, Van; Tanner Smith, Wahama.
Honorable Mention
Cole Kipps, Greater Beckley
Christian; Hunter Rinehart,
Fayetteville; Dustin Bailey,
Fayetteville; Nick Gipson, Val-

ley Fayette; Brendan Lanham,
Charleston Catholic; Preston
Tucker, Buffalo; Jarrett Wiseman, Valley Fayette; Brendan
Lanham, Charleston Catholic;
Preston Tucker, Buffalo; Grant
Evick, Pendleton County;
Thomas Davis, Pendleton
County; Lane Ours, Mooreﬁeld; Isaac Van Meter, Mooreﬁeld; Will Nice, Magnolia; Trey
Slider, Paden City; Adam Murray, Wheeling Central; Tanner
Lett, Doddridge County; Patrick Copen, Parkersburg Catholic; Leewood Molessa, Williamstown; Jack Hadley, St. Marys;
Cullen Cutright, Williamstown;
Jacob Hoyt, St. Marys; Connor

Frye, Ritchie County; Lakin
Tucker, Ravenswood; Cory
Sweeney, St. Joseph; Dillon
Pride, Clay-Battelle; Lucas
Smith, Greenbrier West, Peyton Brown, Greenbrier West;
Dalton Coleman, Hannan;
Kevin Morehart, Hannan; Nick
Paul, Madonna; Matt Thompson, MountView; Sam Romano,
Notre Dame; Andrew Rogers,
Notre Dame; Michael Coffey,
Richwood; Noah Dyer, South
Harrison; Landon McFadden,
South Harrison; Logan George,
Tygarts Valley; Caleb Price,
Van; David Hendrick, Wahama.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

D-III Honorable Mention
Abby Davis, North
Union; Baylee Adams,
Cardington; Brooke Roberts, West Jeff; McKenzie
Morrison, Edison; Ariana
Ott, Sandy Valley; Cassandra Bacon, Springﬁeld; Kennedy Kay, Norwayne; Madison Weaver,
South Range; Carson
Crowner, Clear Fork;
Haylee Dominique, Paulding; Leah Johns, Patrick
Henry; Kara May, Spencerville; Abby Howard,
Alexander; Emily Robinson, Westfall; Zoe Doll,
Minford; Maggie Kersting, Seven Hills; Camryn
Olson, Cincinnati Hills
Christian; Taylor Boeckmann, East Clinton.

D-IV First Team
Pitchers: Abby Jarvis,
Mathews, Sr; Sydney
Long, Hillsdale, Sr; Haley
Hawk, Parkway, Sr; Carly
Helmstetter, Monroeville,
Jr; Faith Brown, Valley, Sr;
D-II Honorable Mention
Kami Kortokrax, Bish- Skipp Miller, Bradford, Sr.
op Hartley; Halle GarCatcher: Becca Miller,
man, Granville; Parker
Hilltop, Sr.
Steck, Highland; Shelbee
Inﬁeld: Taylor Duncan,
Stridom, Carrollton; Rylei Danville, Sr; McKinley,
Miller, Maysville; Maris
Alberts, Danville, Jr; Gina
Barbato, Youngstown
Fogle, Toronto, Sr; KaiUrsuline; Delaney Rito,
tlyn Weaver, Shadyside,
West Branch; Olivia
Sr; Katelyn Kennedy,
Whitecar, Holy Name;
East Canton, Sr; Hailey
Sarah Shearer, Norton;
Niederkohr, Carey, So;
Murissa Drown, Clyde;
Quinn Slattman, Tinora,
Emily Lenke, Oak HarSr; Shaelyn Vassar, Portsbour; Lyndsey Seamon,
mouth Clay, Jr; Kylee
Bellevue; Shayla Munyan, Fisher, Newton, Sr.
Fairﬁeld Union; Mariah
Outﬁeld: Ashlyn TomRidgeway, Jackson;
mas, Monroeville, Sr;
Nicole Rawlings, Badin,
Taylor Webb, Symmes
Morgan Gilbert, GreenValley, Sr.
ville; Dana Anderson,
Alter.
D-VI Second Team
Pitchers: Emma
McCracken, Newark
D-III First Team
Pitchers: Casey Burke, Catholic, Jr; Zoey Thomas, Strasburg, Jr; Blayc
Cardington, So; Hannah
Smith, Buckeye Trail, Sr; Hacker, Carey, Sr; Teyah
Allison Smith, Champion, Sautter, Columbus Grove,
So; Kennedy Hickey, Ash- Sr; Katelyn Weinandy,
North Baltimore, Sr.
land Crestview, Sr; Ashley Hitchcock, Eastwood,
Catchers: Danielle
Jr; Sydney Studer, ColoBame, Columbus Grove,
Jr; Sydney Newland,
nel Crawford, Sr; Kasey
Ada, Sr; Cassie Schaefer,
Murphy, Coal Grove, Sr;
Carley Wagers, Williams- Portsmouth Notre Dame,
burg, Sr; Kelsey Day,
So; Denise Young, Waterford, Jr.
West Liberty Salem, Jr.
Inﬁeld: Kylie DaughCatcher: Amber Cieplinski, Waterloo, Jr.
erty, Frontier, Sr; Bailey
Inﬁeld: Avery Clark,
Drapola, Brookﬁeld, Jr;
Kendyl Switzer, Bristol,
North Union, Sr; Taylor
Heckman, Utica, So; Meg Jr; Madisyn Gossard,
Otte, Sandy Valley, Sr;
Ada, Sr; Katie Osburn,
Meghan Turner, Champi- Belpre, Sr; Kristin Davidon, Sr; Maddy Dyer, East- son, Riverside, Sr; Sidney
Jackson, Tri County
wood, Sr; Boo Sturgill,
Wheelersburg, Fr; Brooke North, Fr.
Webb, Chesapeake, Sr.
Outﬁeld: Paige Laughlin, Berne Union, So;
Outﬁeld: Courtney
Seevers, Milton Union, Jr. Autumn Oehlstrom, Lisbon David Anderson, Jr.
D-III Second Team
Pitchers: Shelbey Spur- D-IV Honorable Mention
lock, Otsego, Jr; Kaitlin
Kaitlynn Briggs, DanWhite, Fairﬁeld, Jr.
ville; Payton Hartshorn,
Catchers: Hannah
Granville Christian;
Smith, Garﬁeld, Jr; McK- Candace Caldwell,
enzie Cremeens, Ironton, River; Brooklyn Ruble,
Sr.
Bridgeport; Kaylee Cline,
Inﬁeld: Dani Hall,
Hillsdale; Ashley Schott,
Bishop Ready, Sr; McKen- Canton Central Catholic;
zie Bump, Mt. Gilead, So; Alivia Oulton, Mathews;
Madie Legg, Northridge, Kristin Coleman, New
Jr; Madison Steiner, Gar- Riegel; Libby Henderson,
away, Sr; Sarah Powell,
Gibsonburg; McKenna
Barnesville, Sr; Madison Ray, North Baltimore;
Hoiles, Elmwood, Fr;
Abiail Schroeder, Miller
Avery Rumer, Bluffton,
City; Bailey Strickler,
Jr; Caitlyn Brisker, Oak
Parkway, Aubrey Wyse,
Hill, So; McKinlee RupHilltop; Sidney Cook,
pert, Dixie, Jr; Jenna
Eastern; Madison Pierce,
O’Hair, Middletown
Peebles; Julie Swain,
Madison, Jr.
Portsmouth Clay; Francys
Outﬁeld: Erika Bell,
King, Mechanicsburg;
Manchester, Sr; Kiera
Paige Vilvens, FayetteFrascone, Tuslaw, So;
ville-Perry.
Erin Diem, Patrick Henry,
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740Jr; Faith Golden, Wil446-2342, ext. 2100.
liamsburg, Jr.

Thursday, June 7, 2018 7

Kiwanis Juniors
Golf Tournament
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Cliffside Golf Course will be hosting
the 10th annual Kiwanis Juniors
at Cliffside Golf Tournament for
junior golfers on Thursday, July
12, starting at 10 a.m. Registration will be from 9 a.m. until
9:45.
This is an individual stroke play
tournament open to golfers age
10-or-under to 18 years old. The
participants will be divided into
four divisions, 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 740-4464653, or Ed Caudill at 740-2455919 or 740-645-4381, or by email
at rbncaudill@yahoo.com. Please

Shazier
From page 6

The team also modiﬁed his contract so that he would receive the
majority of the $8.7 million he is
due this year up front.
The 25-year-old two-time Pro

leave player’s name, age as of July
12, 2017 and the school they are
currently attending.

at 740-256-6160, Jan Haddox at
304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing
304-675-6135 if you can contribute or have questions concerning
the tour.

Tri-County Junior
GAHS Youth
Golf Schedule
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Baseball Camp
schedule for the 2018 Frank
Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf
League has been released.
The tour ofﬁcially begins on
Wednesday, June 20, at Cliffside
Golf Course in Gallipolis. Age
groups for both young ladies and
young men are 10 and under,
11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments,
courses and dates of play are
as follows: Monday, June 25,
at Meigs County Golf Course
in Pomeroy; Monday, July 2, at
Riverside Golf Course in Mason;
Tuesday, July 10, at Meigs County
Golf Course in Pomeroy; and
Monday, July 16, at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason.
The fee for each tournament is
$10 per player. A small lunch is
included with the fee and will be
served at the conclusion of play
each week. Registration begins
at 8:30 a.m. with play starting at
9 a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone

CENTENARY, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy baseball program
will be holding a youth baseball
camp for any boy entering grades
3-6 on Monday, June 11, through
Wednesday, June 13, at Bob
Eastman Field on the campus of
GAHS.
The three-day event will run
from 9 a.m. until noon, and the
campers will receive basic fundamental instruction from the
GAHS baseball coach staff and
players. The cost is $50 per camper and there is a family package
that costs $40 apiece for two or
more children, and each camper
will receive a t-shirt. There will
also be daily competitions and a
Camper of the Week award will
also be presented on the ﬁnal day
of camp.
For more information, contact
GAHS coach Justin Bailey at 740339-0318.

Bowler believes walking without
assistance is the next milestone,
one he refuses to put a timetable
on. He is trying instead to focus
on his health, how to best help the
Steelers even if he can’t join them
in the huddle, while making sure
to appreciate it that he’s made
it even this far. He understands
some do not.

There is no guarantee Shazier
will be able to run again without
assistance, let alone throw on a
pair of shoulder pads. It’s something he’ll live with if he has to.
Yet he owes it to himself to try.
“I’m ﬁne with whatever outcome comes with it,” he said.
“I try to stay as positive as possible.”

THURSDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News
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at Six (N)
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Arthur

NBC Nightly
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America
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13 News at CBS Evening
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)

6 PM

6:30

THURSDAY, JUNE 7
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Ent. Tonight Access
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
(N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
(N)
Fortune (N)
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Washington Capitals at Vegas Golden Knights Final
Game 5 Site: T-Mobile Arena -- Las Vegas, Nev. (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Washington Capitals at Vegas Golden Knights Final
Game 5 Site: T-Mobile Arena -- Las Vegas, Nev. (L)
Celebrity Family Feud
The $100,000 Pyramid
To Tell the Truth
Alan Jackson: Precious Memories Alan
Migraine Solution Unravel the mystery and
Jackson performs songs from his new
debunks the myths, looking toward a world
release, an album he made for his mother. without migraine.
Celebrity Family Feud
The $100,000 Pyramid
To Tell the Truth
Life in Pieces S.W.A.T. "Pilot"
The Big Bang Young
Mom
Theory
Sheldon
Eyewitness News at 10
The Four: Battle for Stardom "Week One" Four
competitive singers battle it out. (SP) (N)
p.m. (N)
A Place to Call Home "New Brain Secrets With Dr. Michael Merzenich Discover how
Beginning"
to improve and maintain cognitive fitness and deal with
aging.
The Big Bang Young
Mom
Life in Pieces S.W.A.T. "Pilot"
Theory
Sheldon

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (‘11, Act) Robert Downey Jr.. TVPG
100 Code "Flowers in Hell"
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods
H.S. Baseball WVSSAC Tournament
H.S. Baseball V Foundation Celebrity Classic
24 (ROOT) (5:00) H.S. Baseball
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
MLB Baseball Detroit Tigers at Boston Red Sox Site: Fenway Park -- Boston, Mass. (L)
SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N) NCAA Track &amp; Field Division I Championship Men's and Women's Outdoor Site: Hayward Field (L)
Basket.
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Give Me My Baby (2017, Thriller) Gabriel Hogan, Brooke Sleepwalking in Suburbia (2017, Drama) Ryan S.
(:05) Cradle Swapping (‘17,
Hogan, Kelly Sullivan. TV14
Williams, Lucie Guest. TV14
Dra) Amanda Clayton. TV14
The Incredibles (2004, Animated) Voices of Holly Marvel's Cloak &amp; Dagger (:05) Marvel's Cloak &amp;
(:05) The Fosters "Meet the
Hunter, Samuel L. Jackson, Craig T. Nelson. TVPG
"First Light" (P) (N)
Dagger "Suicide Sprints" (N) Fosters"
American
Younger (N)
Mom
Mom
Friends
Pitch Perfect (‘12, Com) Anna Kendrick. A freshman joins her
university's all-girls singing group and takes on their male rivals. TV14
Woman (N)
Loud House Loud House H.Danger
H.Danger
The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water TVG
Friends
Friends
NCIS "Dead Man Talking" NCIS "Missing"
NCIS "See No Evil"
NCIS "Vanished"
NCIS "The Meat Puzzle"
Family Guy Family Guy Seinfeld
Seinf. 1/2
Seinf. 2/2
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time (L)
CNN Tonight
NCIS: New Orleans
NCIS: New Orleans
American Gangster (‘07, Cri) Russell Crowe, Denzel Washington. TVMA
(5:30)
Groundhog Day (1993, Comedy) Andie
National Lampoon's Vacation (‘83, Com) Beverly
The Great Outdoors
MacDowell, Chris Elliott, Bill Murray. TVPG
D'Angelo, Anthony Michael Hall, Chevy Chase. TVMA
Dan Aykroyd. TVPG
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid (N)
Naked and Afraid XL (N)
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
(:35) Live PD:
Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Patrol (N)
Patrol (N)
Patrol (N)
Patrol (N)
North Woods Law
North Woods Law
North Woods Law
Law "Bait and Switch"
Northwest Law (N)
Chicago P.D. "Get My
Chicago P.D. "The Weigh
Chicago P.D. "Chicken,
Chicago P.D. "The Docks" Chicago P.D. "A Beautiful
Cigarettes"
Station"
Dynamite, Chainsaw"
Antonio's life is in question. Friendship"
Law &amp; O: CI "Best Defense" Growing Up Hip Hop
Growing Up Hip Hop (N)
Growing Up Hip Hop (N)
Growing Up Hip Hop
Total Bellas
E! News (N)
Coyote Ugly (‘00, Com/Dra) Piper Perabo. TV14
Coyote Ugly TV14
(:25) M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
(:35) MASH
(:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Raymond "Young Girl" Mom
Mom
Dark Secrets of the Lusitania
Drain the Sunken Pirate
Drain the Titanic
Drain the Ocean "Gulf of
City
Mexico"
NHL Live! (L)
American Ninja Warrior
Mixed Martial Arts Professional Fighters League 1 (L)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Best (N) Road to/FIFA FIFA Films "One to Eleven" FIFA Soccer International Friendly Chn./USA (L)
Swamp People "Lockjaw" Swamp People "Speed
Swamp People: Blood and Swamp People "United We Stand" Mother Nature creates
Demons"
Guts "Danger Zone" (N)
vicious, unexpected chaos. (SF) (N)
Southern Charm
S. Charm "What Da Fuskie" Southern Charm
Southern Charm (N)
Imposters (N)
(4:35)
Baby Boy Tyrese Gibson. TVMA (:35)
Rush Hour (‘98, Act) Chris Tucker, Jackie Chan. TVPG
The Wood TVMA
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop FlipFlop (N) Flip or Flop H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:55)
G.I. Joe:
Journey to the Center of the Earth (‘08, Adventure)
Journey 2: The Mysterious Island (‘12, Adv) Vanessa
Retaliation TV14
Josh Hucherson, Anita Briem, Brendan Fraser. TV14
Hudgens, Dwayne Johnson, Josh Hutcherson. TVPG

6 PM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Dunkirk While the German Vice News
The Devil Wears Prada (‘06, Com) Anne
Tonight (N) Hathaway, Meryl Streep. An aspiring journalist works for
army surrounds them, Allied soldiers are
hastily evacuated from France. TVPG
an overly demanding fashion magazine editor. TVPG
The Bourne Identity (‘02, Act) Franka Potente,
The Book of Eli (‘09, Adv) Gary Oldman, Denzel
Matt Damon. An amnesiac tries to piece together his
Washington. A drifter in a post-apocalyptic society protects
mysterious past while eluding unknown assassins. TV14
the last copy of the Bible from a gang. TV14
(5:00)
Terms of
(:20)
Bad Moms (2016, Comedy) Kristen Bell, Kathryn Billions "Kompenso" Axe
Endearment (‘83, Rom)
Hahn, Mila Kunis. Amy Mitchell finally has it with being a determines employee's
Shirley MacLaine. TVPG
perfect mom and goes on a wild binge of freedom. TVMA worth at year-end meetings.
(5:40)

10 PM

10:30

The Tale (2018, Drama)
Laura Dern, Laura Allen,
Elizabeth Debicki.
Geostorm (2017, Action)
Abbie Cornish, Ed Harris,
Gerard Butler.
Patrick Melrose "Mother's
Milk"

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, June 7, 2018

Daily Sentinel

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

The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, June 08, 2018
at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
VIN:
1FDWW37P45EC91105
2005 Ford F-350
VIN: 1G1ZS52F85F228275
2005 Chevy Malibu

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Houses For Rent
2 Bdr, 2 Bath Trailor, utilities
NOT included Vinton Area plus
First Month Rent Plus deposit
740-441-7587

VIN: 2A4RR5DX5AR334057
2010 Chrysler T&amp;C
6/6/18,6/7/18,6/8/18
EMPLOYMENT

Ellm View Apts.
Call for amenities,
Landlord pays Water,
Trash, &amp; Sewage.
Rent: $365 &amp; Up!
304 882 3017
Equal Housing Opportunity

%HDXWLIXO &amp;RWWDJH QHVWOHG LQ
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&amp;HQWUDO DLU�
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Apartments/Townhouses
Apts for Rent in Pt Pleasant
basic utilities included
304-360-0163

ANIMALS
Pets
FOR SALE
LABRADOOLE PUPPIES
5 WKS-CALL FOR INFO
304-542-0069
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65 � E\SDVV� �D��S -XQH �
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PDQ\ DVVRUWHG LWHPV LQFO WRROV

10 day run - Print and Online

Total Cost $43.45
Please call Patti Wamsley at 740-446-2342 ext 2093
to help with your advertising.

MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor
under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
The Daily Sentinel?

Turn Your Clutter

INTO CASH!
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Delivery times is approx. 3 hours daily
Must be 18 years of age
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inprint &amp; online

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
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or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
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All three publications Gallipolis Daily-Tribune,
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5 Family yard sale
lots of misc. items
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740-446-2342

Point Pleasant Register
mydailyregister.com
304-675-1333

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
mydailysentinel.com
740-992-2155

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, June 7, 2018 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

"Y $AVE 'REEN

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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Hank Ketcham’s

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By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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see what’s brewing on the

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�SPORTS

10 Thursday, June 7, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Kenseth comfortable with role at Roush Fenway
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP)
— Matt Kenseth’s goals are all
short-term these days.
The 2003 NASCAR champion who rejoined owner Jack
Roush at Roush Fenway Racing
two months ago understands
he’s not yet a threat to win in
the No. 6 Ford. And with a
part-time schedule, Kenseth is
not worried about points or the
Monster Energy NASCAR Cup
Series playoffs.
“It’s a lot different than
anything I ever done before,”
Kenseth said Wednesday at
Darlington Raceway, where
he took part in a tire test. “It’s
stepping into something that’s
somewhat of a project.”
And one that Kenseth’s not
sure he’s yet helped improve.
He was 36th in his return
with Roush Fenway at Kansas

last month due to an accident.
Kenseth took the pole for the
All-Star race at Charlotte and
ﬁnished 14th in the race, then
17th a week later in the CocaCola 600. Kenseth felt the team
had improved a week ago with
a 13th at Pocono and is looking
for better things this weekend
at Michigan.
Kenseth had 39 wins in 21
years of racing, most of those
as Roush driver. Their biggest
moments came in the 2003
championship season when the
ultra-consistent Kenseth had a
win and 25 top 10s to capture
the title.
After the 2012 season, Kenseth jumped to Joe Gibbs Racing where he ﬁnished second
in the championship chase in
2013. He lost his ride at JGR
after this past season and could

not ﬁnd a fulltime seat for
2018.
Instead of fretting about
lost opportunities or lobbying for a spot, Kenseth stayed
content and comfortable on
the sidelines with his family.
His 25-year-old son Ross races
stock cars, and Matt and wife
Katie have four daughters ranging from 8-year-old Kaylin to
ﬁve-month old Mallory.
But amid the family time,
a call came from his old boss,
Roush.
Kenseth thought about
the offer and, because of his
respect for Roush, decided to
return and help improve the
one-time powerhouse No. 6
ride made famous by Hall of
Famer Mark Martin. Trevor
Bayne was in the No. 6 at the
start of the season.

Kenseth said his role is to
help get his car and the No. 17
team of Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
running alongside NASCAR’s
best.
“There’s a lot of great things
there and they have a lot of
good momentum,” Kenseth
said of the Roush Fenway
teams. “But we still know
there’s a lot of work to do to
get both cars up there contending week in and week out.”
That’s part of the reason
Kenseth and the team came
to Darlington for the tire test.
Kenseth won the Southern 500
here in 2013 and has 12 top-10
ﬁnishes in 24 starts, so he’s
adept at navigating the track.
The extra laps, though, give
him an extra chance to bond
with the No. 6 crew during the
tire tests.

“That’s an important thing,”
he said.
Kenseth has enjoyed his
changed role in NASCAR and
hopes he can improve Roush
Fenway’s fortunes for this
season and beyond — but not
necessarily with him in the
car long-term. The 46-year-old
driver sees this season as a
week-to-week proposition without an eye on staking himself
to a full-time job because of
satisfactory performance.
Many of his contemporaries
like Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Carl Edwards and
Tony Stewart have wrapped up
their racing careers and Kenseth said he enjoyed his free
time around his family. But he’s
grateful, he said, to do his part
to help Roush, who gave Kenseth his big boost in NASCAR .

Beilein
staying at
Michigan after
interviewing
with Pistons

St. Louis could still
be on the hook for
Bush’s 2015 injury
ST. LOUIS (AP) —
Former NFL running
back Reggie Bush alleges
that dangerous conditions
at a St. Louis stadium led
to a season-ending injury
in a case that could leave
the city on the hook for
damages, even though the
Rams are long gone.
Defendants in the civil
trial, which began Tuesday, include two public
entities — the St. Louis
Regional Convention and
Sports Complex Authority and the St. Louis
Convention and Visitors
Commission — as well as
the Rams, the St. Louis

Post-Dispatch reports.
Bush was playing for
the San Francisco 49ers
in November 2015 when
he slipped and fell in a
game after being pushed
out of bounds at the former Edward Jones Dome,
now called the Dome at
America’s Center. Bush’s
cleats apparently slipped
on a concrete surface
about 11 yards (10
meters) behind the 49ers
bench. The suit says the
area had been nicknamed
the “concrete ring of
death.” The Rams moved
to Los Angeles the following season.

Patrick Semansky | AP

Sports betting odds are displayed on a tote board behind Delaware
Gov. John Carney on Tuesday as he introduces sports gaming
inside the Race and Sports Book at Dover Downs Hotel and Casino
in Dover, Del. The market for legal sports gambling in the United
States widened significantly on Tuesday with the expansion of
single-game sports bets in Delaware, less than a month after the
U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for states to accept the bets.

Delaware launches
sports betting, other
states close behind
DOVER, Del. (AP)
— The market for legal
sports gambling in the
United States widened
signiﬁcantly on Tuesday
with the expansion of
single-game sports bets
in Delaware, putting legal
wagering within driving
distance of three major
East Coast cities less than
a month after the U.S.
Supreme Court cleared
the way for states to
accept the bets.
Instead of ﬂying to Las
Vegas or betting illegally,
fans in Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington
can make a short drive
to legally wager in Delaware on the NBA Finals,
the Stanley Cup Final
or the World Cup. More
states are likely to join
the action by the time the
NFL starts its season in
the fall.
Gov. John Carney
planned to join other
state ofﬁcials Tuesday
afternoon at Dover
Downs for the launch
of sports betting at
Delaware’s three casinos,
which will offer singlegame and championship
wagering on professional

baseball, football, hockey,
basketball, soccer, golf
and auto racing.
Because of a failed
sports lottery experiment
in 1976, Delaware was
partially exempted from
the 1992 federal ban on
sports gambling that was
recently struck down by
the Supreme Court.
That exemption led to
broader sports betting
legislation passed in 2009
and Delaware’s current
NFL parlay wagering
system, which combined
to give the state a head
start in offering full-scale
sports wagering.
“Obviously the key is
going to be the football
season because the bulk
of betting in America is
on football,” Delaware
Finance Secretary Rick
Geisenberger said last
week. “We’ll learn a little
bit in June and July, but
we’ll learn a lot more in
September.”
While Delaware is the
ﬁrst state to take advantage of the Supreme
Court decision, sports
fans in three other states
could be placing bets by
football season.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais | AP

Washington Capitals forward Devante Smith-Pelly (25) celebrates his goal against Vegas
Golden Knights goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury (29) during the first period in Game 4 of the
NHL hockey Stanley Cup Final on Monday in Washington. The Vegas goalie’s save percentage
has slipped from .947 in the regular season to .845 in the four games of the final, which
Vegas trails 3-1.

Missed chances push Vegas to
brink of elimination in Final
WASHINGTON
(AP) — James Neal
had the puck on his
stick and was staring at
an open net. In a can’tmiss situation, that’s
exactly what he did.
Poised to give the
Vegas Golden Knights
the opening goal in
Game 4 of the Stanley
Cup Final, the veteran
leader of this upstart
expansion team hit
the right post . Ping!
The puck skipped
behind Capitals goaltender Braden Holtby
and slithered harmlessly toward the back
boards.
“You want those
chances. Nine times
out of 10 you probably
put that in the back
of the net,” Neal said.
“I had the composure
to wait. And then you
shoot it and you’re like,
‘Oh!’”
The Golden Knights,
a team in desperate
need of a boost of conﬁdence, collectively
shrugged as a golden
opportunity slipped
away.
“It deﬁnitely would
have changed the outcome of the game and
would have given us
momentum,” said right
wing Alex Tuch, who
knows a thing or two
about being coming
up empty on a close-in
shot.
Not surprisingly, the
Golden Knights sputtered the rest of the
way Monday night in
a 6-2 defeat that put
them on the brink of
elimination. Washington is up 3-1 and can
win its ﬁrst Stanley
Cup on Thursday night
in Las Vegas.
“Go home, win one
game and the pressure
is on them,” Neal said,
hopefully.
Although the Capitals have blown many
a playoff series in the
past, only one team,

the 1942 Detroit Red
Wings, has lost the
Stanley Cup Final after
holding a 3-1 lead.
“Not where we want
to be, that’s for sure,”
Vegas goaltender MarcAndre Fleury said. “But
we have a good bunch
of guys with a lot of
character in the room.
Nobody’s quitting.”
Barring a comeback
of historic proportions — an unlikely
occurrence after being
outscored 12-5 over the
past three games — the
Golden Knights will
always remember this
series for “The Stick”
and “The Post.”
“The Stick” was
wielded by Holtby ,
who used it late in
Game 2 to snuff a
seemingly sure goal
by Tuch in a 3-2 Washington victory. “The
Post” is a symbol of
the frustration Vegas
has experienced in this
series after winning 12
of 15 in roaring to the
Western Conference
title.
Who knows if things
would have been different on Monday night
if Neal put the puck in
the net?
This much is certain:
The reeling Golden
Knights were looking
for something, anything, to build on when
they entered Game 4,
and a 1-0 lead would
have been splendid.
Presented with a power
play in a scoreless ﬁrst
period, Vegas worked
the puck around smartly in the Washington
zone. Then, Erik Haula
whisked a cross-ice
pass to Neal on the left
side of the net, and
Holtby was slow to
react.
“We obviously got
some breaks at the
start of the game,” the
goaltender said. “Honestly, I thought it was
in. Somehow, it didn’t

go in.”
Said Neal: “It’s not
like anyone made a
save. I shot it off the
post on the far side. It’s
done with. It’s not the
ﬁrst time it’s happened.
Probably won’t be the
last. But at this stage,
at that moment, it
changes the game.”
The Capitals rattled
off three straight goals
before the period ended
to take full control.
Game over. On to
the next one for the
Golden Knights, who
face elimination for the
ﬁrst time during the
playoffs.
“You can’t feel sorry
for yourself. You’ve
got to win a game
at home,” Neal said.
“That’s what we’ll
focus on. I like the
way we played. You’ve
got to take the positives.”
Coach Gerard Gallant insisted: “Tonight’s
game was a step
forward. Obviously,
though, we have no
more room for error.”
The Golden Knights
could use a little luck.
Tuch and Brayden
McNabb both lined
shots off the post after
Neal, who scored with
just under 16 minutes
left to make it 4-1.
But the outcome
by then was all but
decided.
The Golden Knights
have struggled to generate offense against
the tenacious Washington defense, and
Fleury has not been
as sharp as he was in
Vegas’ three previous
series. He gave up six
goals on 23 shots as
Vegas dropped its third
straight game.
“Obviously, when
you’re a goalie, you
don’t want to get
scored on,” Fleury said.
“There was a lot of that
tonight. It’s never a
good feeling.”

ANN ARBOR, Mich.
(AP) — John Beilein
is staying at Michigan
after exploring the possibility of coaching the
Detroit Pistons.
“I love the University
of Michigan and I am
excited about coaching
our Men’s Basketball
Team next season and
in the years to come!”
Beilein tweeted Wednesday. “Let’s go hang some
more banners at “THE
GREATEST UNIVERSITY IN THE WORLD.”
Beilein interviewed
with the Pistons , a person with knowledge of
the situation told The
Associated Press last
week on condition of
anonymity because he
was not authorized to
speak publicly about the
matter.
The 65-year-old
Beilein has coached at
Michigan for 11 seasons
with a 248-143 record.
He has led the Wolverines to two Final Fours,
losing in the national
title game this year and
in 2013. Beilein has won
a pair of Big Ten championships and two Big
Ten Tournament titles.
Detroit has made the
playoffs only once in
nine years after advancing at least to the Eastern Conference ﬁnals six
straight years, winning
the 2004 NBA title and
falling a victory short of
repeating as champions
in 2005. The Pistons
have been looking for a
coach for a month since
ﬁring Stan Van Gundy,
who was also their president of basketball operations.
Long considered one
of college basketball’s
top offensive minds,
Beilein is 799-461 in
39 seasons. His college
coaching career began
in 1978 at Erie Community College, and he
went on to Nazareth and
Le Moyne. Beilein, who
is from Burt, New York,
also made Division I
stops at Canisius, Richmond and West Virginia
before moving to Michigan.
When Beilein’s program hit a bit of a rut,
he adapted by bringing
in new assistants to
help shore up his team’s
weaknesses at the defensive end. Michigan was
one of the top defensive
teams in the country
this past season, again
falling just one game
short of a national title.
“I have changed like
the wind,” Beilein said
before this year’s NCAA
Tournament. “And,
maybe that’s why I’m
still coaching.”

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