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                  <text>Ohio
Valley
Business
BUSINESS s 3

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

63°

76°

76°

Mostly sunny and pleasant today. Mainly
clear tonight. High 82° / Low 56°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Locals
named
all-district

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 95, Volume 72

Thursday, June 14, 2018 s 50¢

Paving moving forward after decision
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Paving is moving forward on a portion of Main Street
after a decision by the Ohio Historic Preservation Office
regarding the brick streets in the Village of Middleport.

MIDDLEPORT —
Asphalt is going down on
a portion of Main Street in
Middleport after a ruling
by the State Historic Preservation Ofﬁce (SHPO).
In a letter to the Ohio
EPA with regard to the
project, Diana Welling,
Deputy State Historic
Preservation Ofﬁcer for
Resource Protection and
Review, stated “We concur
with your ﬁnding that the
proposed undertaking

Grand Jury returns
23 indictments;
18 drug related

“Although the brick streets in Middleport
may not meet the criteria for listing in the
National Register of Historic Places, the
SHPO recognizes the community pride and
significance of the brick streets to the citizens
of Middleport and Meigs County.”
— Diana Welling,
State Historic Preservation Officer

(asphalt on Main Street)
will not affect properties
listed in or eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.”
The decision comes
after a site visit on Friday

by representatives from
the Historic Preservation
Ofﬁce and the Ohio EPA
in which they walked the
Main Street area with village ofﬁcials to discuss the
proposal to put asphalt

on a little more than two
blocks of Main Street,
rather than the Middleport
Brick which had been on
the street.
In that meeting, Village
Administrator Joe Woodall discussed the village’s
need for the placement of
asphalt rather than brick
after the wastewater project necessitated an eight
foot trench instead of the
original four foot trench.
To put the bricks back
would have cost the village
See PAVING | 5

Throwback Thursday: Chester Mill

Staff Report

POMEROY — A total of 23 indictments were
returned by a Meigs County Grand Jury on
Wednesday, including 18 drug-related indictments.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney James K.
Stanley announces, in a news release, that the
majority of the drug-related cases containing
methamphetamine charges.
“This month’s indictments reﬂect the recent but
growing trend of methamphetamine regaining its
status as a preferred drug of abuse in our community which illustrates that our county is not only
suffering from what has been termed as an opioid
addiction epidemic, but instead, our county is suffering from an overall drug addiction epidemic,
which includes opioids such as heroin and fentanyl, but also methamphetamine, cocaine, and a
variety of other substances,” Stanley said.
“Law enforcement continues to do an excellent job investigating drug cases, and I applaud
their efforts at cleaning up our county,” continued
Stanley. Anyone who suspects drug activity in
the community is encouraged to report it via the
Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce anonymous tipline
at 740-992-4682.
Those indicted include the following:
Misty Baird, 33, of Gallipolis, Ohio was indicted
for Possession of Drugs (Fentanyl), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree, and Possession of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the ﬁfth degree.
Herbert Bare, 35, of Langsville, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession of Drugs (Fentanyl), a
felony of the ﬁfth degree, and Possession of Drugs
(Methamphetamine), a felony of the ﬁfth degree.
Margilee Boykins, 23, of Pomeroy, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the third degree, and Trafﬁcking in Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the
third degree.
Angie Clark, 31, of Middleport, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession of Drugs (Heroin), a
felony of the third degree, and Illegal Conveyance
of Drugs onto a Detention Facility, a felony of the
third degree.
Timothy Coleman, 37, of Middleport, Ohio, was
indicted for Non-Support of Dependents, a felony
See INDICTMENTS | 2

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

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CONVERSATION
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thoughts.

Photo courtesy of Meigs County Historical Society member Bob Graham

This undated photo shows the Chester Mill with a covered bridge in the background, as individuals stand on the banks of the river.
Present day, the area pictured is near the intersection of State Route 7 and State Route 248 along the Shade River.

Keeping the region moving forward
Buckeye Hills provides updates on project in Meigs County

OPWC grants as well as
a $500,000 grant and a
$500,000 loan for sewer
Staff Report
system improvements
mately $50 million. Local tation (ODOT).
Meigs County received in the Village of Middlecommunities and private
port.
business leveraged $19.5 an ARC project grant
MEIGS COUNTY —
As the designated
for a $250,000 for the
million (39 percent)
Buckeye Hills Regional
Regional Transportation
Council recently provided against the $30.8 million Rutland Sanitary Sewer
project. Supporting local Planning Organization
(61 percent) provided
a report to the Meigs
through state and federal tourism, the Ohio Devel- (RTPO) by Ohio DepartCounty Commissioners
opment Services Agency ment of Transportation
detailing the projects the funding.
(ODOT), Buckeye Hills
through the Governor’s
“We are fortunate to
agency has assisted with
partner with the Buckeye Ofﬁce of Appalachia pro- helps to strengthen the
in the county during the
vided $47,162 in funding rural consultation and
Hills Regional Council,”
past year.
to enhance access paving transportation planning
Buckeye Hills Regional said Commissioner
the road to The Fur Peace processes, linking them
Randy Smith of the conCouncil (Buckeye Hills)
to potential economic and
Ranch near Pomeroy.
tinued work with the
assists communities in
community development
Buckeye Hills is the
agency.
problem solving, iden“These visits (in which liaison for The Ohio Pub- planning efforts.
tifying urgent needs
Local participation is
the report was presented) lic Works Commission
and securing ﬁnancial
critical in making transare beneﬁcial and help us (OPWC) District 18, a
resources to improve
portation decisions with
keep a ﬁnger on the pulse 10-county district cominfrastructure and the
of our region and county. prised of the eight-county limited state and federal
overall quality of life for
budgets, and Buckeye
region, Belmont and
the region. Buckeye Hills They are great partners
Hills works to provide
and the report shows how Muskingum Counties.
serves approximately
260,000 residents across that partnership beneﬁts OPWC provides ﬁnancing a uniﬁed voice for local
communities in state and
for road, bridge, culvert,
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Meigs County,” added
federal transportation
water, wastewater, solid
Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Smith.
discussions. Buckeye
As a local development waste, and storm water
Perry and Washington
Hills also gives partners
facility projects.
Counties in southeastern district for the Appalainformation that is useful
The OPWC district
chian Regional CommisOhio.
in local policy and project
presented 31 projects
The agency works with sion (ARC) last year,
discussion.
for funding under the
regional, state and federal Buckeye Hills adminisBuckeye Hills staff are
State Capital Improvetered more than $10.3
partners to help secure
members of the Meigs
ments Program (SCIP)
million in ARC projects
investments in projects
County Active Transporthat helped create 98 new and the Local Transporthat have a positive
tation Team, that was the
tation Improvements
jobs and retain another
impact on communities
recipient of an ODOT
and residents. Total costs 50 jobs. Funding was pro- Program (LTIP) with
region-wide total project grant to create an Active
vided by ARC, the Ohio
for community and ecocosts of more than $32.2 Transportation plan for
nomic development proj- Development Services
the county. The team has
million. Meigs County
Agency (through the
ects completed over the
been meeting with local
Ohio Governor’s Ofﬁce of was awarded funding
past year in the region
Appalachia) and the Ohio for two paving projects,
(with Buckeye Hills
See MOVING | 5
assistance) were approxi- Department of Transpor- totaling $796,617 in

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, June 14, 2018

DEATH NOTICES
WILLIAMS
GALLIPOLIS — John Franklin Williams, 67,
of Gallipolis, died Tuesday June 12, 2018 at his
residence.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Saturday June 16,
2018 at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home with
Pastor Jim Chapman ofﬁciating. Friends may call
at the funeral home on Saturday from noon until
the time of service.
KIRBY
BIDWELL — Bessie A. Kirby, 92, Bidwell, died
Tuesday, June 12, 2018 at Holzer Senior Care,
Bidwell.
Funeral services will be held 1 p.m., Monday,
June 18, 2018 at the McCoy Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton Chapel with Pastor Jon Mollohan
ofﬁciating. Entombment will follow in Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens. Family and friends may call at
the funeral home on Monday from 11 a.m. until
the time of service.
SAUNDERS
BIDWELL — William H. “Hud” Saunders, 97,
of Bidwell, died Monday June 11, 2018 at his residence.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Friday June 15,
2018 at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
with Pastor John O’Brien ofﬁciating. Entombment
will follow in the Chapel of Hope Mausoleum at
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at
the funeral home on Friday from 11 a.m.until time
of service. Full Military Honors will be presented
at the cemetery by the Gallia County Veterans
Funeral Detail.

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

Thursday,
June 14
RACINE — The
Southern Local School
District special board
meeting w ill be held at
6:30 p.m. in the Kathryn Hart Community
Center. The purpose of
the meeting is Employment of Personnel.
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.

Friday,
June 15
POMEROY — Cookbook Club. Swap recipes and sample dishes.
This month’s theme is
Heroes and Hoagies. 11
a.m., Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY — The
PHS Class of ‘59 will be
having their 3rd Friday
lunch at Fox Pizza, at
noon. Please come join
us if you can.

‘Cornhole Classic’ to arrive in Mason
By Mindy Kearns

MASON — People of all ages are
invited to participate in the “Town
of Mason Family Cornhole Classic
1,” and compete for cash prizes.
The cornhole classic will be held
June 23, beginning at 10 a.m., at
the Stewart-Johnson V.F.W./Lottie
Jenks Memorial Park. It is free to
enter, according to Councilman
Ricky Kearns, who is in charge of
recreation.
While registration will be taken
until the time of play, those who
pre-register before June 16 will
receive a free t-shirt. Registration
the day of the event will begin at 9
a.m.
Winners of the tourney will walk
away with a $300 cash prize. The
second place team will receive

Vacation
Bible School

POMEROY — Take
a Tromp through the
Swamp: Children’s
Music Program. 2 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.

Monday,
June 25

MIDDLEPORT —
The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m.
at the ofﬁce located
at 97 North Second
Avenue, Middleport
(side ofﬁce of the Home
POMEROY — Return National Bank building).
Jonathan Meigs Chap-

Saturday,
June 16

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

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

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

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

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

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

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

will be held July 7. “Join
us for Christmas in July,
Old West Style. Treasure Jesus, discover his
miraculous birth.” Puppet skits, worshio, teaching, crafts and food at
the church from 10 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m. Swimming,
games and fellowship
from 2-4 p.m. at Ohio

Valley Christian Assembly. Pastor Diana Kinder
740-591-5960.

cation are encouraged to
apply. Contact Charlene
740-444-5498 or Becky
740-992-7096 for applications and information.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis Elks Lodge 107
scholarships are now
available for graduating
POMEROY — A beneﬁt spaghetti dinner, bake seniors in high schools in
Gallia and Meigs Counsale and auction for the
ties in Ohio and Mason
Family of Keatyn York
County, W.Va., Scholarwill be held at 6 p.m. on
June 28 at Meigs Middle ship applications are only
available at guidance
School. Proceeds will
counselor ofﬁces in these
go toward medical and
schools. Awards will be
funeral expenses for the
based on the applicant’s
three-year-old who died
ﬁnancial need and schofollowing a car crash in
lastic and leadership qualAthens County earlier
ities. Deadline for return
this month. For more
information or to donate of the application to the
Gallipolis Elks Lodge is
items for the auction
Friday, July 6, 2018. Comcontact Jessica Angel at
pleted applications should
740-444-9404 or Jaelea
Phoenix at 580-334-4738. be sent to Past Exalted
Ruler’s Association, Gallipolis Elks Lodge #107,
408 Second Avenue, PO
Box 303, Gallipolis, OH
45631.
POMEROY – The
Meigs County Retired
Teachers Association is
seeking applicants for the
2018 scholarship. Meigs
County residents who
PAGEVILLE — A culare college juniors and
vert replacement project
seniors majoring in edubegins on June 18, 2018

on State Route 684 in
Meigs County. The project
is taking place between
SR 681 and County Road
692. One lane will be
closed in this area and
trafﬁc will be maintained
with temporary signals.
An 11 foot width restriction will be in place. The
estimated completion date
is June 29, 2018.
ALBANY — A culvert
replacement project
begins on June 18, 2018
on State Route 681 in
Athens County. The
project is taking place
between US 50 in Athens
County and SR 684 in
Meigs County. One lane
will be closed in this
area and trafﬁc will be
maintained with temporary signals. An 11 foot
width restriction will be
in place. The estimated
completion date is June
29, 2018.
RACINE — A bridge
replacement project
begins on May 29, 2018,
on County Road 29 (Bowmans Run Road) in Meigs
County. The project is
taking place .17 miles off
of County Road 34 (Pine
Grove Road). The road
will be closed in this area

through August 31, 2018.
RACINE — A portion
of State Route 124 in
Meigs County is closed
due to a rockfall. It is
located between Yellow
Bush Road and McNickles
Road. The road is closed
in both directions in this
area. ODOT’s detour is
SR 124 to SR 733 to US
33 to SR 124. The reopening date is unknown at
this time.
ATHENS — The
westbound US Route 33
ramps at East State Street
in Athens will be closed.
The closure is expected
to last until July 25. The
detour for trucks and
commercial trafﬁc is via
US 50E to the East State
Street Exit. Local trafﬁc
will be detoured to the
Stimson Avenue Exit,
16C. Concrete replacement work will also begin
on the US 33 EB on-ramp
in this time period. Temporary pavement will be
installed to maintain trafﬁc. In order to discourage
neighborhood cut-through
trafﬁc, Grant Street will
be modiﬁed to be one way
north through at least the
duration of the ramp closure period.

POMEROY — Vacation Bible School at
Bradford Church of
Christ is being held
June 11-14 from 9 a.m.
to 11:30 a.m. each day,
at the church located at

Benefit dinner,
auction

Thursday,
June 21

$200, and the third place team will
get $100.
Kearns said there will be something for everyone at the park during the tournament. Cornfeds will
be selling food, along with Sweets
&amp; Treats from Gallipolis. There
will be bounce houses from M&amp;M
Inﬂatables, and music by K&amp;D
Karaoke.
Kearns said as of last week, 14
teams had joined the event. To register, teams can call or text him at
304-812-0648. Needed information

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.
HEMLOCK GROVE
— Hemlock Grove
Christian Church Family
Vacation Bible School

Monday,
June 18

POMEROY — Gardening Series. Container Gardening with
Kevin Fletcher from
OSU Extension Ofﬁce.
11 a.m., Pomeroy
Library.

While registration will be taken
until the time of play, those who
pre-register before June 16 will
receive a free t-shirt. Registration
the day of the event will begin at
9 a.m.

will be a team name, full names
of both players, and shirt sizes (if
prior to June 16).
The cornhole classic will be
played rain or shine, unless weather becomes too severe, Kearns
said. Residents are invited to bring
chairs and spend the day.
The councilman said plans
are also underway for the town’s
annual Fourth of July celebration.
A parade will be held at noon, with
line-up starting at 11:30 a.m. The
line-up will take place on the block
of Martin and Maple streets, and
will then travel to the park. Activities in the park will be held from
noon to 4 p.m. Additional details
will be forthcoming.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

MEIGS BRIEFS

Wednesday,
June 20

REGISTRATION INFO

Special to the Register

ter NSDAR will meet at
1 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. Installation of
2018-2020 Chapter Ofﬁcers will be conducted.
2018-2019 Chapter Program will be developed.
Interested individuals
are invited to attend.

LETART TWP. —
The regular meeting
of the Letart Township
Trustees will be held
at 5 p.m. at the Letart
Township Building.

Daily Sentinel

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.

Scholarship
Application

Road closures
in Meigs Co.

Indictments
From page 1

of the ﬁfth degree.
Hollie Dugan, 32, of Middleport,
Ohio, was indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Heroin), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree, Possession of Drugs
(Fentanyl), a felony of the ﬁfth
degree, and Possession of Drugs
(Methamphetamine), a felony of
the ﬁfth degree.
Shawntay Garnes, 28, of Middleport, Ohio, was indicted for Possession of Drugs (Fentanyl), a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
Adam George, 27, of Pomeroy,
Ohio, was indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine) a
felony of the ﬁfth degree. In a second case, George was indicted for
Possession of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the ﬁfth degree,
Possession of Drugs (Heroin),
a felony of the ﬁfth degree, and
Possession of Drugs (Fentanyl), a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
Macey Hayman, 22, of Syracuse,
Ohio, was indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Fentanyl), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree.
Ashley Holdren, 27, of Long Bottom, Ohio, was indicted for three
counts of Forgery, each a felony of
the ﬁfth degree, and Receiving Stolen Property, a felony of the fourth
degree.
Stephanina Laudermilt, 22, of
Pomeroy, Ohio, was indicted for

Non-Support of Dependents, a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
John Nelson, 33, of Middleport,
Ohio, was indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Hydrocodone), a felony
of the ﬁfth degree.
Michael Pierce, 59, of Rutland,
Ohio, was indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
Johnny Ratliff, 51, of Cheshire,
Ohio, was indicted for Having
Weapons While Under Disability,
a felony of the third degree, Possession of Drugs (Oxycodone),
and Possession of Drugs (Oxymorphone).
Floyd Rifﬂe, 56, of Middleport,
Ohio, was indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
Cheyenne Seyler, 24, of Mason,
West Virginia, was indicted for Possession of Drugs (Heroin), a felony
of the ﬁfth degree, and Possession
of Drugs (Fentanyl), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree.
Jerri Smith, 37, of Mason, West
Virginia, was indicted for Forgery,
a felony of the ﬁfth degree, and
Receiving Stolen Property, a felony
of the ﬁfth degree.
Stephen Spires, 43, of Cheshire,
Ohio, was indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
Juan Tabler, 53, of Middleport,
Ohio, was indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Fentanyl), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree.
Matthew Ward, 22, of Pomeroy,

June 16
MIDDLEPORT — Old
Bethel FWB will be having a song fest at 6 p.m.
Pastor Wendy Caldwell
invites all to attend.

Ohio, was indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine),
a felony of the third degree, and
Trafﬁcking in Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the third
degree.
Terry Weaver, 63, of Pomeroy,
Ohio, was indicted for Rape, a
felony of the ﬁrst degree.
Glenn Young, Jr., 53, of Racine,
Ohio, was indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
All cases will proceed in the
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas before Judge I. Carson Crow.
For informational purposes,
possible penalties for felony
offenses include: felonies of the
ﬁrst degree- 3-11 years in prison
and up to a $20,000 ﬁne; felonies
of the second degree- 2-8 years in
prison and up to a $15,000 ﬁne;
felonies of the third degree- 9-36
months in prison and up to a
$10,000 ﬁne; felonies of the fourth
degree- 6-18 months in prison and
up to a $5,000 ﬁne; felonies of the
ﬁfth degree- 6-12 months in prison
and up to a $2,500 ﬁne. For most
felonies of the fourth and ﬁfth
degrees, sentencing guidelines
found in the Ohio Revised Code
require ﬁrst-time offenders to be
sentenced to community control
unless certain conditions exist
permitting the imposition of a
prison sentence.
Information provided by the Meigs County
Prosecutor’s Office.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 14, 2018 3

Ohio Farm Bureau defends property rights
COLUMBUS — Protecting
landowners from punitive state
eminent domain laws is the
goal of an Ohio Farm Bureau
legal brief recently submitted
to the Supreme Court of the
United States.
Ohio is one of only three
states in which landowners are
forced to endure a multiple step
legal process with exceptionally
difﬁcult standards that results
in burdensome legal expenses
for both the landowner and
taxpayers. Supreme Court precedent currently prohibits Ohioans from appealing to federal

court to address government
property takings. Ohio Farm
Bureau’s brief seeks to overturn
precedent and gain landowners
the option to appeal directly to
a federal court.
This is the ﬁrst time in the
nearly 100 year history of Ohio
Farm Bureau that the organization has participated in a case
before the Supreme Court of
the United States.
“Engaging in a case before
the Supreme Court was not
a decision we took lightly,”
said Adam Sharp, Ohio
Farm Bureau executive vice

president. “Ohio landowners
deserve fair treatment when
the state decides to take private
property. We hope our participation results in a ruling favorable to Ohioans and property
owners across the nation.” He
added that protecting private
property rights is a priority
issue for Farm Bureau.
An example of why Ohioans
need relief from current law
dates to 1997, when the State
of Ohio expanded the spillway of Grand Lake St. Marys
in Mercer County. The state
refused to compensate 80 land-

owners who were subjected to
frequent and severe ﬂooding
from the spillway expansion.
The state employed numerous
tactics to delay landowners
from receiving their constitutionally required compensation. Eventually the state
was ordered to fairly pay the
landowners, but the process
took nearly 10 years before payments were made. This drawn
out process created massive
legal fees for the landowners
and was unnecessarily expensive for Ohio taxpayers.
OFBF engaged the law ﬁrm

Vorys, Sater, Seymour and
Pease to prepare the amicus
brief. The ﬁrm has a long-term
relationship with Ohio Farm
Bureau and has extensive experience with the workings of the
nation’s highest court. The brief
was submitted in the Knick v.
Township of Scott, Pa. case.
Oral arguments before the
Supreme Court are expected
sometime in the session beginning in October with a ruling
expected by next summer.
Submitted on behalf of the Ohio Farm
Bureau.

Courtesy photo

Steve Evans Country Sausage will join driver Jarett Andretti
and the No. 18 team.

Holzer | Courtesy photos

The Medical Shoppe, represented in the photo by Andrea Saunders
and Dodie Vallee, were recognized as May sponsors.

Steve Evans Country
Sausage joins Andretti
Autosport Short Track

VFW Post #4464, represented by Gary Fenderbosch, was a June
sponsor.

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. – Andretti Autosport
Short Track announces its newest primary associate partner for the 2018 Sprint Car racing season.
Steve Evans Country Sausage will join driver
Jarett Andretti and the No. 18 team. The team will
continue to compete in over 60 Sprint Car events
throughout the country on the USAC National
Sprint Car Series and at weekly Sprint Car tracks
throughout the Midwest.
Steve Evans Country Sausage was made after
Evans found a faded piece of paper with an old
recipe for genuine country sausage on it, written
by his father, Bob Evans. The recipe dates back to
the 1940’s, when Bob Evans made it for his ﬁrst
restaurant.
“Steve Evans Country Sausage has a rich family
history,” commented Andretti. “That’s something
that I can relate to and connect with. Meeting the
people at Steve Evans Country Sausage reminded
me of my family. They have a lot of pride to make
the best products in the market and we want to do
our best on the track each night.”
“We couldn’t be more excited to join Andretti
Autosport Short Track and Jarett Andretti,” said
Steve Evans, founder, Steve Evans Country Sausage. “The Andretti family are great people and
Jarett is continuing the family tradition by racing
Sprint Cars throughout the country. He is bringing
our brand and our story to the millions of Sprint
Car fans who are dedicated to this thrilling form
of motorsports. We now hope that fans will be
dedicated to our country sausage, too. They won’t
be disappointed.”
Andretti is the 2014 USAC National Sprint Car
Rookie of The Year.

Farmers Bank, represented by Jennifer Rose and Jessica Edwards,
were May sponsors.

Jim and M’Lou Morrison were June sponsors.

Holzer recognizes pediatric sponsors
The Earl Neff Pediatric Fund at
Holzer continues to be supported
by area businesses and organizations. The Pediatric Fund, in existence for over 45 years, has supplied needed toys, equipment and
entertainment to the thousands
of pediatric patients who have
received care on Holzer Gallipolis

Pediatric Unit.
The Medical Shoppe, represented by Andrea Saunders and Dodie
Vallee, as well as Farmers Bank,
represented by Jennifer Rose and
Jessica Edwards, were recognized
as May sponsors. June sponsors
are VFW Post #4464, represented
by Gary Fenderbosch, and Jim and

M’Lou Morrison.
The entire staff of Holzer joins
in expressing their gratitude, along
with the young children and their
families, for these contributions to
the Earl Neff Pediatric Fund. For
more information, please contact
Linda Jeffers-Lester, Holzer Heritage Foundation, 740-446-5217.

The article based upon a press release submitted on behalf of
Andretti Autosport Short Track and Steve Evans County Sausage.

6 restaurants in W Va,
Ohio told to make back pay

Local men attend national conference
Submitted

DALLAS, Texas —
Two local men recently
attended a national
convention in Dallas,
Texas for Asirvia Business Solutions, with one

speaking at the
event.
Curry Russell of
New Haven and
Chris Rathburn of
Gallipolis, attended the convention,
Russell
with Russell closing out the event
as a guest speaker. Russell and Rathburn are an
independent afﬁliate and
independent representa-

tive, respectively,
with the company.
The three-day
event included
basic training,
advanced business
services training
and recognition
for hundreds of
afﬁliates throughout the
world. Small business
consultant, Dale Calvert
was the conference’s

opening speaker.
Kevin Marino, CEO of
Asirvia Business Solutions said about both Russell and Rathburn, that
they are valued members
“of our team.”
This was the third
national conference in the
history of the company.
This article based upon submitted
press releases.

Christopher E. Tenoglia

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)

ATTORNEY AT LAW

$29.15
$50.95
$84.09
$16.78
$44.18
$84.53
$42.19
$44.30
$105.27
$26.01

BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)
$53.79
City Holding Company(NASDAQ)
$76.09
Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ)
$17.77
American Electric Power(NYSE)
$63.46
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)
$38.06
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)
$28.60
McDonalds’s(NYSE)
$166.58
Apple(NASDAQ)
$190.70
Stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions on June 14, 2018.

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

OH-70056545

Russell gives
closing remarks

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Six restaurants
in West Virginia and Ohio have been ordered to
pay $111,000 in back pay and damages to 27 workers for minimum wage and overtime violations.
The U.S. Department of Labor says in a news
release a federal court for West Virginia’s southern
district also imposed a $20,150 civil penalty on
four Las Trancas restaurants and a Plaza Maya
restaurant in West Virginia and a Las Trancas restaurant in Ohio. The order also covers Las Trancas corporate ofﬁcers Lorena Arellano and Martin
Arellano.
The statement says an investigation found the
restaurants willfully violated minimum wage, overtime and recordkeeping requirements from May
2014 to October 2017.

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

�Opinion
4 Thursday, June 14, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Get a good
job and other
tips for writers
I have an old friend who is starting a course
in creative writing. I thought he could use
some advice and, because I store writing advice
the way doomsday preppers store beef jerky, I
thought I’d make an offer.
My ﬁrst piece of advice: The
Gina
most
important part of “creative
Barreca
writing”
isn’t creative; you’re probContributing
ably disappointed to hear this, but
columnist
if you hear nothing else, this will
serve.
Nothing is writing except writing. Having
inspired ideas about what you’d like to write, or
vividly imagining your name inside hard covers,
isn’t actually writing.
If you can’t harness your creativity with discipline, you’ll never achieve excellence. Think
of it this way: If somebody gave you a violin,
would you imagine yourself playing both professionally and immediately because you’ve always
deeply loved music? I bet you wouldn’t because
you’d have too much respect for the instrument.
Yet some people believe that the thing they
write should be admired,
Good writing is an
widely read and perhaps given the Pulitzer
echo with edge.
because they have spent The best writing
years reading works
is a reflection, a
similar to what they’re
repetition with
trying to write. Why
would we treat a musical a difference, of
instrument with more
the deep initial
deference than we treat
disruptions
language?
For those who remem- repeated
ber Shakespeare’s “Ham- throughout time.
let,” you’ll know that I’m It’s your business
ﬁddling with a line when as a writer to
Hamlet rebukes two of
know where your
his aides for trying to
echo originated.
play him emotionally
him as if he were a ﬂute.
This leads me to piece of advice No. 2: If you
don’t remember your Shakespeare or never
read him in the ﬁrst place, pick up the collected
plays. If you don’t remember your Dickens or
your Douglass, your Brontes, Baldwin, Atwood
or Smith, ditto. Read the great writers and then
read the pretty great ones. Take notes. Memorize your favorite passages. Make them your
own.
You’re joining a conversation that’s been going
on for thousands of years and you need to know
where you ﬁt in.
Good writing is an echo with edge. The best
writing is a reﬂection, a repetition with a difference, of the deep initial disruptions repeated
throughout time. It’s your business as a writer
to know where your echo originated.
My third piece of advice is to pay attention to
everything that goes on, good and bad, and to
write it down. No great work of art ever came
out of a general idea. It came out of one image,
one sentence overheard on a bus, one exchange
that happened 20 years ago that you never forgot.
Only the speciﬁc can be universal. You can’t
begin a piece of writing by saying, “This will
have all the stories.” No one piece of writing
meets your full daily requirements for literary
content. It’s not like a multivitamin, and there
aren’t labels on art saying “poetic content: 8
percent; sugary content: 22 percent; salty content: 28 percent; etc.” At least — not yet.
Readers want to know why they should stay
on your page. The ﬁrst thing anybody wants to
know is “What’s it about?” even if what they’re
going to read is a haiku. We want to know what
we’re reading in the same way we like to know
what we’re going to be served before the plate is
set down in front of us. The admonition, “Just
start, you’ll like it,” is followed by the unspoken
threat — “or else.”
Here’s No. 4: No piece of writing, just like no
person’s lifetime, is ever really ﬁnished. There
is, however, a moment when it’s done. You can
pound it on the chest all you want but nothing
is going to happen. The best thing to do is to
leave it for others to dissect.
No. 5: If you’re writing for the money, don’t.
Almost every successful writer I know has
either kept his or her day job, inherited money
or married money. From what I know, the last
two are tougher ways to secure health insurance. So while I’m all for following your bliss,
I’d put it this way: Follow your bliss, but ﬁrst
make sure you have dental.
Finally, No. 6: Don’t give into the voices saying you don’t have time to write. You’ll never be
able to say, “Now I will sit down and create art.”
But you can almost always say, “I have a piece
of paper, and a writing instrument, and now I
will work.”
Gina Barreca is a board of trustees distinguished professor of English
literature at University of Connecticut and the author of 10 books. She
can be reached at www.ginabarreca.com.

THEIR VIEW

Recognizing value of experience
Ever since the ﬁrst college campus was created,
its program of studies,
modes of instruction
and standards have, one
way or the other, been
controlled by the college
and its faculty. Campuses were, relatively
speaking, intellectually
pristine, information-rich
enclaves, separated from
the rest of the information-poor world.
Fast forward to the
beginning of the community college movement and the passage of
the GI Bill in late-1940s
America. Suddenly, colleges were not only for
the elite, but they had
overtly economic — as
well as intellectual —
purposes. Over the last
70 years, there have
been multiple changes
in post-secondary education and the employment
landscape. The basic
model, however, that a
degree or certiﬁcate from
a college signals that the
individual is intellectually prepared and ready
to work, has remained
dominant.
Today, there is a revolution underway, and the
credibility of even those
core signaling devices is
under assault from forces
inside and outside the
academy. At the heart of
this revolution lie two
realities, one very old
and the other brand new.
First, the old: As long as
there has been folklore in
America, we have known

searched and disthat life herself is a Peter
sected, matching
magniﬁcent teachSmith
er. Think of phras- Contributing the knowledge,
behavior, skills and
es such as “live and columnist
abilities needed
learn”, “the school
for a speciﬁc
of hard knocks and
career path with those
“older, but wiser.”
Maryland proposal for held by an individual or
taught by a college. And
free community college
“adult-friendly” colleges
follows national trend.
are aligning learners’
But results aren’t clear.
personal and experienEven when Canadian
tial learning with their
researcher Allen Tough
degree requirements,
proved that the average
thus awarding advanced
adult spends about 12
standing for that learnhours a week learning
ing. Furthermore, they
purposefully in their
are aligning their degree
daily life, most colleges
requirements with work
and employers, as well
as adult learners, contin- requirements, including
behaviors and crossued to ignore the value
cutting intellectual skills
of that learning. This
“learning discrimination” such as critical thinking
and teamwork.
placed a determinative
These two realities —
value on where and when
the power of personal
you learned something,
learning and the technonot how well you knew
logical development to
a topic and could apply
harness its value — are
the knowledge. So, colleges “won,” and personal redeﬁning the pathway
to the degree. In other
learning “lost.” As a
result, this “personal” — cases, it is eliminating
the need for the degree
or experiential — learnand blowing through the
ing, despite it constitut“parchment ceiling” that
ing well more than half
of the learning we do in a has stymied and frustratlifetime, has been largely ed so many adults.
Using evidence-based
ignored by colleges and
assessments, learnemployers.
ers’ knowledge can be
The new reality is the
described and applied
technological capacity
that is changing the face directly to job and other
real-life requirements.
of the world, includAnd knowledge gained
ing the world of higher
on the-job, in the commueducation and employnity or in other venues,
ment. Now, the entire
such as the armed sercurriculum of MIT,
vices, can be applied for
among other colleges, is
available online, for free. academic and economic
Job requirements can be value, deepening the

learner’s personal understanding of their learning
as well as the value of
that learning academically and economically.
Imagine a world in
which you can do all of
the following from your
living room:
Calculate your current
proﬁle of knowledge,
skills, behaviors and abilities;
Describe the goal(s)
you have for your personal or professional growth;
Determine the gap
between what you presently “know” and what
knowledge you need to
gain to meet your goal;
And chart your learning path forward to
meet that goal, either
with a college, an informal learning group, an
employer, or on your
own.
These are the beneﬁts
of free-range learning in a
digital world and driven
by the new rules and
the new eco-system that
is evolving to support
you and your learning
throughout life. And,
more broadly, by bridging this divide for all
who qualify, it can only
improve the social, civic
and economic future of
our country.
Peter Smith, Ph.D., is the Orkand
Endowed Chair and Professor of
Innovative Practices in Higher
Education at University of Maryland
University College. His latest
book is “Free-Range Learning in
the Digital Age: The Emerging
Revolution in College, Career, and
Education.”

TODAY IN HISTORY
American Revolutionary
War general and notorious turncoat Benedict
Arnold, 60, died in London.
In 1928, the Republican
Today’s Highlight in History: National Convention,
meeting in Kansas City,
On June 14, 1943, the
Missouri, nominated HerU.S. Supreme Court, in
West Virginia State Board bert Hoover for president
of Education v. Barnette, on the ﬁrst ballot.
In 1934, Max Baer
ruled 6-3 that public
school students could not defeated Primo Carnera
with an 11th round TKO
be forced to salute the
ﬂag of the United States. to win the world heavyweight boxing championship in Long Island City,
On this date:
In 1775, the Continen- New York.
In 1940, German troops
tal Army, forerunner of
entered Paris during
the United States Army,
World War II; the same
was created.
day, the Nazis began
In 1777, the Second
transporting prisoners to
Continental Congress
the Auschwitz (OWSH’approved the design of
vitz) concentration camp
the original American
in German-occupied
ﬂag.
Poland.
In 1801, former
Today is Thursday,
June 14, the 165th day of
2018. There are 200 days
left in the year. This is
Flag Day.

THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
“The flag is the
embodiment not of
sentiment, but of
history.”
— President Woodrow
Wilson (1856-1924).

In 1954, President
Dwight D. Eisenhower
signed a measure adding
the phrase “under God”
to the Pledge of Allegiance.
In 1968, Dr. Benjamin
Spock and three other
peace activists were
convicted in Boston of
conspiring to encourage
young men to evade the
draft during the Vietnam War. (The verdicts
were later overturned
by an appeals court.)

The Iron Butterﬂy single
“In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida”
was released by Atco
Records.
In 1972, the Environmental Protection Agency
ordered a ban on domestic use of the pesticide
DDT, to take effect at
year’s end.
In 1982, Argentine forces surrendered to British
troops on the disputed
Falkland Islands.
In 1985, the 17-day
hijack ordeal of TWA
Flight 847 began as a
pair of Lebanese Shiite
(SHEE’-eyet) Muslim
extremists seized the jetliner shortly after takeoff
from Athens, Greece.
In 1993, President
Bill Clinton nominated
Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg to serve on the U.S.
Supreme Court.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 14, 2018 5

Moving

Retired teachers hear ORTA update
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Retired Teachers met
May 17 at the Trinity Congregational Church for a noon
luncheon. Charlene Rutherford, president, welcomed
the group and all recited the
pledge to the ﬂag. For devotions Duane Wolfe told the
story of “The King and the
Young Man.” The moral of
the story was people want
things in life, but many do
not want the responsibility
of getting and having them.
He sang the song “Handful
of Weeds” and had prayer
before the meal served by the
women of Trinity Church.
Karen Butts of Johnston,
Ohio, was the speaker for
the group. The Ohio Retired
Teachers Association (ORTA)
is now divided into ﬁve
regions and each region has
three liaisons. Butts is the
third Southeast liaison along
with Don Ullmann and Brenda Davis.
She spoke on several issues
including:ORTA can offer
support to any local RTA
attempting to increase membership. They have developed
an incentive program that if
each local chapter increases
membership by 10 percent to
ORTA they will receive $100
to the local RTA.
ORTA is now able to provide a membership list of
ORTA members from each

TODAY
8 AM

2 PM

63°

76°

76°

Mostly sunny and pleasant today. Mainly clear
tonight. High 82° / Low 56°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.34
1.42
1.83
23.16
19.91

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:03 a.m.
8:55 p.m.
6:59 a.m.
9:56 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Jun 20 Jun 28

Last

Jul 6

New

Jul 12

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

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

Major
12:22a
1:29a
2:37a
3:45a
4:48a
5:46a
6:38a

Minor
6:38a
7:44a
8:52a
9:59a
11:02a
11:59a
12:25a

Major
12:19p
2:00p
3:08p
4:14p
5:16p
6:12p
7:02p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Minor
7:10p
8:16p
9:23p
10:28p
11:29p
---12:50p

WEATHER HISTORY
A cloudburst on June 14, 1903,
near Heppner, Ore., caused a ﬂash
ﬂood on Willow Creek. The resulting
20-foot wall of water killed more
than 200 in a few minutes and swept
away a third of the buildings.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
12.39
18.74
22.27
12.42
13.07
24.68
12.08
27.40
34.96
12.86
22.50
34.70
22.40

Portsmouth
84/58

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.01
-0.58
-1.05
-0.38
none
-0.50
-0.05
+0.61
+0.38
+0.13
none
-0.10
+1.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

MONDAY

92°
70°

WEDNESDAY

Humid with some
sunshine

85°
70°
Mostly cloudy with
t-storms possible

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
80/55
Belpre
81/55

Athens
80/55

Today

St. Marys
81/56

Parkersburg
81/57

Coolville
81/55

Elizabeth
82/56

Spencer
82/56

Buffalo
82/56

Ironton
84/57

Milton
84/57

St. Albans
84/57

Huntington
83/59

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
68/52
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
70/56
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
83/63
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

87°
67°

Partly sunny, hot and Mostly sunny, hot and
humid
humid

Wilkesville
80/56
POMEROY
Jackson
82/55
82/56
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
83/56
82/56
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
82/60
GALLIPOLIS
82/56
83/56
81/56

Ashland
83/57
Grayson
83/58

sion from the SHPO will
be made on that project.
Woodall stated that
there will be a requirement included in the
Phase II contract which
ensures the bricks streets
are put back in place.
Updates regarding the
projects taking place in
the village are planned to
be posted to the village
website, https://vomiddleport.wordpress.com/.

TUESDAY

92°
70°

Murray City
80/55

McArthur
80/56

South Shore Greenup
84/57
83/57

53
0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
82/58

Lucasville
83/56
Very High

Logan
81/56

Adelphi
81/56

Very High

Primary: grasses and other
Mold: 2998

Mostly sunny and
pleasant

“As such, this undertaking should have been submitted to the SHPO and
other consulting parties
for review and comment
prior to any construction
activity,” wrote Welling.
Welling stated during
the visit on Friday that
she will recommend a
public meeting be held
before Phase II of the
project in the village
which is set to begin later
this year and will involve
other brick streets in the
village. A separate deci-

SUNDAY

89°
64°

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

Waverly
81/56

Pollen: 26

Low

MOON PHASES

SATURDAY

Mostly sunny and
nice

0

Primary: ascospores, unk.

Fri.
6:03 a.m.
8:55 p.m.
8:02 a.m.
10:56 p.m.

FRIDAY

85°
61°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

80°
69°
82°
61°
97° in 1921
47° in 1963

Impact (FONSI) for this
undertaking ‘because the
Area of Potential Effects
(APE) of the proposed
project is located in a
paved street, this undertaking does not have a
potential to cause adverse
effects on historic properties,’” writes Welling.
She notes that since the
project involves construction and earth moving
activities it does not
meet the criteria to show
“no potential to cause
effects.”

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Submitted by Janice Weber.

having been installed
near the intersection of
Main Street with Fifth
and Sixth Streets. The
crosswalks are one use of
the bricks which was discussed on Friday.
While the village was
clear to go ahead with
the plan as presented, the
SHPO noted that the project should have initially
been submitted for review
before by the Ohio EPA.
“On July 18, 2017, the
Ohio EPA issued a Finding of No Signiﬁcant

we discussed at our site
visit on June 8, 2018,
we strongly encourage
From page 1
the Ohio EPA to work
closely with the Village of
approximately $276,000. Middleport to ﬁnd ways
to mitigate the loss of the
“Although the brick
streets in Middleport may bricks along Main Street,
including but not limited
not meet the criteria for
to, reusing the brick in
listing in the National
Register of Historic Plac- other public works projes, the SHPO recognizes ects with interpretive sigthe community pride and nage about the history of
the brick,” wrote Welling.
signiﬁcance of the brick
Asphalt work on the
streets to the citizens of
street has already begun,
Middleport and Meigs
with the brick crosswalks
County. Therefore, as

WEATHER

Choir under the direction of
Metra Peterson presented
several songs which was
much appreciated by the
group.
The secretary and treasurer’s reports were given and
approved.
Becky Zurcher reported
that she will be putting an
item in the newspaper for
applications for the Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Scholarship. A person must
live in Meigs County and be a
junior or senior in the teacher
education program. They
must have a 2.5 GPA or higher, a resume and transcript
of grades, three references, a
photo and name and address
of the college attending.
Applications must be back by
Aug. 9.
A card of thanks was read
from the Meigs High School
Career Based Intervention
Class for the donation of
supplies for the Care By The
Stairs project. Donna Jenkins
said the group should continue to support the project.
Door prizes were given to
Lori Morrison, Connie Gilkey
and Carolyn Snowden.
The next meeting will be
Sept. 20 at the Wild Horse
Cafe. Members are to bring in
school supplies and classroom
cleaning products and tissues.

county. This membership list
from ORTA includes lifetime
ORTA members from that
county and ORTA members
that pay their annual dues.
ORTA can provide a list of
STRS beneﬁciaries for each
county in Ohio. This is a valuable tool for inviting retirees
to join ORTA.
The STRS system is currently funded at 75 percent.
This is up from 65 percent
the previous year. The
increase was due to the
changes implemented by
STRS. With the loss of COLA
and the modiﬁcations to eligibility for retirement, it is easy
to see why the funding tation
is increasing.
When will COLA or some
alternative form of beneﬁt
enhancement return? This
is what ORTA is focusing its
efforts on.
ORTA is also lobbying
STRS to not remove a subsidy currently in place for
STRS recipients on Medicare. There is a plan in place
to eliminate the subsidy of
$29 per month on people on
Medicare next year. ORTA
will oppose this action as it
seems crazy to reduce health
care beneﬁts when the health
care fund is currently at 153
percent funding level. Health
care is not a guarantee but it
is funded through 2047.
The Meigs Middle School

Paving

All told, last year seniors in
Meigs received more than
$2.6 million in senior program services.
From page 1
The Senior Farmers’
ofﬁcials, bike and pedestrian Market Nutrition Program
enthusiasts, and consultants (SFMNP) provides incomeeligible senior citizens with
over the past six months
special coupons to buy proto develop and incorporate
duce from approved providmore walking and bike
ers. Program coupons may
opportunities within the
be exchanged for eligible
county. RTPO support has
foods from authorized farmcome in the way of providers. Only fresh, locally grown
ing trafﬁc counts for local
and township roads, writing fruits, herbs, vegetables
and honey are eligible to be
letters of support for grant
purchased with the coupons.
opportunities, and serving
as a subject matter expert in Last year in Meigs County,
169 eligible seniors were
trafﬁc data.
enrolled in the nutrition proOne call to Buckeye Hills
can open doors to many long- gram.
Serving as a member of
term services and supports
the Buckeye Hills Regional
for people of all ages, disCouncil Executive Comabilities and income levels.
mittee for Meigs County
Alliance of Information and
in 2017 was Meigs County
Referral Systems (AIRS)
Commissioner Tim Ihle and
certiﬁed staff are ready to
Brian Howard from the prianswer questions, share
vate sector. Meigs County
information about resource
members of the 2017 Aging
options, and connect callers
Regional Advisory Committo the community resources
tee included Commissioner
and services that can best
meet their individual needs. Randy Smith (Alternate,
April Burnem), Jane Banks
Buckeye Hills administers
and Mike Gerlach. Serving
the Older Americans Act to
on the Regional Transportasupport programs for home
tion Planning Organization’s
delivered meals, congregate
Technical Advisory and Citimeals, homemaker services,
adult day services and trans- zens Committee were Gerportation. Last year in Meigs lach and Meigs Co. Engineer
County, 621 individuals were Gene Tripplett.
To learn more about Buckserved by Older Americans
eye Hills, these and many
Act services and the PASSother programs and services,
PORT Medicaid Waiver
visit www.buckeyehills.org or
program, Ohio’s alternative
call 1-800-331-2644.
to nursing home placement.

Clendenin
84/57
Charleston
83/57

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
82/66
Mont eal
65/48

Billings
76/53

Minneapolis
81/71

Denver
94/64

Kansas City
91/74

Toronto
76/53
Detroit
85/62
Chicago
83/64

New York
84/61
Washington
86/64

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

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
93/66/pc 89/68/sh
67/52/s
58/49/r
88/71/pc
89/70/t
82/63/s 77/61/s
84/59/s 80/57/s
76/53/pc 65/52/pc
76/54/s 77/55/pc
78/57/s 72/60/pc
83/57/s 86/60/s
91/69/pc 89/67/pc
87/57/s 84/57/pc
83/64/pc 88/72/pc
83/61/pc 86/65/pc
81/58/s 81/61/s
82/61/s 85/64/s
97/77/pc 95/76/s
94/64/s 92/63/pc
85/72/t 96/77/pc
85/62/s 84/67/s
87/75/pc 89/75/pc
93/76/pc 92/77/pc
83/64/pc 87/68/pc
91/74/s 95/76/s
106/80/s 100/76/pc
93/72/pc 92/73/s
83/63/pc 77/60/pc
87/66/c 89/69/pc
87/75/pc
89/77/t
81/71/pc 88/76/pc
91/68/c 93/70/pc
88/77/pc
89/77/t
84/61/s 78/62/s
92/70/s 91/69/s
92/72/t
91/73/t
84/62/s 80/59/s
109/85/s
91/74/t
79/55/s 80/56/s
75/50/pc 75/54/pc
89/66/pc 87/65/pc
88/63/s 85/62/s
89/74/pc 93/78/pc
94/65/s 90/69/pc
70/56/pc 68/57/pc
68/52/pc 71/54/pc
86/64/s 83/62/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

Atlanta
88/71
El Paso
99/77
Chihuahua
93/69

Global
High
122° in Sibi, Pakistan
Low -15° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
93/76
Monterrey
90/72

109° in Needles, CA
25° in West Yellowstone, MT

Miami
87/75

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

You’ll Feel Right At Home.

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Syracuse 740-992-6333
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Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close
a loan quickly. Please come see us for all your bank needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.

�S ports
6 Thursday, June 14, 2018

Daily Sentinel

4 locals named D-3 all-district
By Scott Jones

sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

Four athletes from the
Ohio Valley Publishing area were named
to the Southeast Ohio
Division III all-district
softball teams for the
2018 season, as voted by
the coaches within the
southeast district of the
Buckeye State.
Meigs had four selections, with three of those
being recognized as ﬁrsttime recipients of all-district honors in softball.
MHS junior outﬁelder
Scott Jones | OVP Sports Taylor Swartz — who was
Meigs junior awaits a pitch during the Lady Marauders’ 10-0 victory over Crooksville in a Division the lone repeat selection
III sectional semifinal contest on May 8 in Rocksprings, Ohio.
— was named as a ﬁrst

team selection in Division
III.
Senior ﬁrst baseman
Peyton Rowe was joined
by sophomore pitcher Breanna Zirkle and freshman
shortstop Jerrica Smith as
honorable mention selections.
The Lady Marauders
ﬁnished the season with
a 12-8 overall record and
were second with a 9-3
record in the Tri Valley
Conference Ohio Division
before falling to Alexander
in the D-3 sectional ﬁnal.
The Wheelersburg duo
of Boo Sturgill and Teresa
Ruby were respectively
named the D-3 player and
coach of the year.

2018 Southeast Ohio
Coaches All-District
Division III Softball Teams
FIRST TEAM
Boo Sturgill, Wheelersburg; Brooke Webb, Chesapeake; Kasey Murphy,
Coal Grove; McKenzie
Cremeens, Ironton; Caitlyn Brisker. Oak Hill; Kaiti
White, Fairﬁeld Leesburg;
Abby Howard, Alexander;
Emily Robinson, Westfall; Zoe Doll, Minford;
Cameryn Alexander,
Piketon; Grace Stevens,
Rock Hill; Christen Risner, Wheelersburg; Kylee
Kellough, Huntington;
Andrea Edmisten, Eastern

See ALL-DISTRICT | 7

Ford vs. Chevy
was a one-sided
matchup in Michigan
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) — Ford vs. Chevrolet
is always a subplot to watch when the top auto
racers come to Michigan.
This past weekend, it was no contest.
Clint Bowyer’s NASCAR Cup Series win Sunday capped a weekend in which Ford dominated
in qualifying and on race day. Bowyer was one
of seven Ford drivers in the top eight in the rainshortened race . The highest Chevy was Chase
Elliott in ninth (Kyle Busch ﬁnished fourth in a
Toyota).
“It’s just unbelievable the start to the season
with the wins and success that we’re having,
come here to our home track with our employees
here watching,” said Mark Rushbrook, global
director of Ford Performance. “To have this performance and strength across all of our teams,
to win the race, it’s just tremendous for all the
company.”
The races at Michigan International Speedway
always seem to take on extra signiﬁcance, since
it’s about 70 miles from downtown Detroit. There
is a Michigan Heritage Trophy that goes to the
race- winning manufacturer for Cup weekend, too.
There’s little debate over who ended up with
Motor City bragging rights this time. Bowyer,
Kevin Harvick and pole winner Kurt Busch gave
Stewart-Haas Racing a sweep of the top three
spots. Team Penske — another Ford team — ﬁnished 6-7-8 with Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano
and Ryan Blaney.
Blaney was the winner of the race’s ﬁrst stage.
“We were really fast. We got our car better all
day and won that stage and kind of got back there
and a lot of guys took two,” Blaney said. “We were
making it back up but then the rain came. It was a
really great race car. Deﬁnitely not an eighth-place
car but unfortunately that is where we ended up.”
The Fords were fast in qualifying too, taking six
of the top seven spots, with Busch winning the
pole .
The victory by Bowyer was the eighth of the
year for Ford in 15 Cup races. It’s been a decade
since Ford ﬁnished with the most victories by a
manufacturer, and in that 2008 season, it ﬁnished
tied with Chevy with 11 wins each.
“It’s a team effort to not have any weaknesses.
We also come here to Michigan for bragging
rights,” Busch said. “I’ve always driven that way.
It really shines through when you see Doug Yates
(of Roush Yates Engines) here, Mark Rushbrook
is here, everybody from all departments, the chief
aero guy was here this weekend from StewartHaas. We put in a full effort. It’s bragging rights to
win at Michigan.”
Those bragging rights belonged to Chevy last
year, when Kyle Larson won both races at MIS.
This season, the only Cup victory for Chevrolet
has been Austin Dillon’s in the Daytona 500. It’s
been better on the IndyCar side, where Will Power
won the Indianapolis 500 in a Chevy, but even in
that series, Chevrolet was largely outclassed by
Honda at Detroit’s Belle Isle two weekends ago .
Kyle Busch leads the Cup standings, followed by
four Ford drivers — Harvick, Logano, Keselowski
and Bowyer. The top Chevy driver is Larson, in
10th place. Jimmie Johnson is 12th and has only
led two laps all season.
Larson said Friday that he didn’t feel Chevys
have been at a disadvantage this year, and he
didn’t want his team to make any excuses. After
Sunday’s race, he said he felt he had the fastest
car — and blamed himself for a “stupid mistake”
that led to a 28th-place ﬁnish. Perhaps Larson and
the other Chevrolets can rebound during the latter
stages of the Cup season, but they have a lot of
catching up to do.
This was Ford’s weekend.

John Minchillo | AP

Cincinnati Bengals defensive end Carlos Dunlap, center, stands with his teammates during practice at the team’s training camp Tuesday
in Cincinnati. Dunlap is second on the team’s career sacks list with 64½, and he’s been the best lineman in the league at batting down
passes over the past few seasons.

Dunlap participates in Bengals camp
CINCINNATI (AP) —
Carlos Dunlap walked
into the Cincinnati
Bengals locker room and
noticed a group of videographers and reporters
waiting by his locker in a
far corner of the room.
“Y’all looking for me?”
he said.
Indeed, Dunlap was
the focus on the ﬁrst day
of mandatory minicamp
after skipping most of
the voluntary offseason
workouts in Cincinnati.
The ninth-year defensive
end chose to work out on
his own while his agent
negotiated a new deal
with the team, costing
him $300,000 in bonuses.
Rather than skip the
minicamp as well, he
decided to catch up on
what he’s missed with a
new defense being imple-

mented.
Plus, he’s encouraged
by the progress made on
a deal that would keep
him in Cincinnati well
beyond 2018.
“There are no hard
feelings between any of
us,” Dunlap said Tuesday. “This is the process.
Both sides understand
it.”
Dunlap is a key to the
Bengals’ hopes of a turnaround this season. They
slid to 18th in the league
overall and 30th against
the run last season while
missing out on the playoffs for a second straight
year. Coordinator Paul
Guenther left to join Jon
Gruden with the Raiders, and Teryl Austin was
hired as his replacement.
Dunlap has been a
game-changer in Cincin-

nati with his ability to
rush the quarterback
and bat down passes.
He’s second on the
team’s career sacks list
with 64½, and he’s been
the best lineman in the
league at batting down
passes over the past few
seasons.
Coaches have been
trying to get him to be
more consistent not only
from game-to-game, but
within games as well. His
number of plays could
diminish this season as
Cincinnati integrates
some of its young pass
rushers into the line rotation.
Carl Lawson had 8½
sacks last season, the
most by an NFL rookie
and one sack shy of Dunlap’s team rookie record
from 2010.

“They’re very adamant
about having a big rotation, and I would too
with all this talent on the
D-line,” Dunlap said.
Dunlap and tackle
Geno Atkins have
anchored the line since
2010. Atkins leads the
NFL in sacks by an
interior lineman over
the past few years. Dunlap had a career-high
13½ sacks in 2015, but
slipped to 8 the following
season and 7½ last year,
third on the team.
By working out on
his own the past few
months, he missed a
chance to learn the
system implemented by
Austin. He said the biggest change is in terminology.
See CAMP | 7

NCAA eases rules on athlete transfers
By Ralph D. Russo
The Associated Press

but should provide more freedom
for athletes to transfer when and
where they want.
College athletes will no longer
Under the new rule, athletes
need permission from their coach
would be permitted to be conor school to transfer and receive
tacted when they notify their curﬁnancial aid from another school.
rent coaches, who have two days
The NCAA Division I Council
approved the change effective Oct. to enter the names into a database
15 on Wednesday. The council also created and managed by the NCAA
that will alert schools who can be
decided that D-I football players
will be allowed to play in up to four recruited. The change will come
with stricter tampering rules to
games in a season without losing
help appease coaches who worry
a year of eligibility if they can no
longer play because of injuries “or illegal recruiting could rise.
Currently, an athlete must ask
other factors.”
The long-awaited transfer reform a coach for permission to contact
other schools when choosing to
ended up being a narrow change,

transfer. A school interested in
recruiting a transferring player also
must ask the current school for
permission to recruit. Without permission from the original school,
the athlete cannot get ﬁnancial aid
from another school, essentially
blocking a transfer.
Nicholas Clark, a former football
player at Coastal Carolina and a
member of a student representative
on the council, said the change promotes fairness and the well-being
of college athletes.
“This creates a safe place for
See TRANSFERS | 7

�SPORTS/TV

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 14, 2018 7

Straight route: Browns’ Gordon clean, driven in comeback
BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
Josh Gordon’s new route
through life, a straight
and sober one, is rewarding him every day.
Given another chance
to revive an NFL career
he nearly threw away due
to addiction, Gordon is
embracing moments he
once ignored.
“Right now for me
it’s a bunch of the small
victories day to day, just
being able to come to
work,” the Browns wide
receiver said Tuesday
while reﬂecting on his
dark past. “Like the little,
little things. Having some
structure in my life.”
Gordon is counting
his blessings — football,
fatherhood and fame —
as the former Pro Bowler,
who erupted on the
league in 2012, continues
a twisted comeback that
looked hopeless at some
many junctures over the
past few years.
Now 27, Gordon, who
revealed following his
most recent drug suspension last season that he
had wandered streets in

Florida in search of his
next ﬁx, is living in the
moment. He’s savoring
small victories.
“To me, it’s just like getting up and not having to
worry about whether or
not you have some type
of security or a place to
stay,” he said.
“Spending time with
my daughter. “I didn’t
have much time, didn’t
get to spend any time
with my family like that
in the past. Being there
with friends. Working
toward the future. Those
are things I look forward
to doing, and I take pride
in and joy in.
“Just coming to work.
Being able to talk to guys,
see guys’ expressions,
interact with them … a lot
of little things. I take a lot
of joy in that.”
Gordon has found inner
peace. The Browns are
hoping he can keep it.
Because of his offﬁeld issues, Gordon has
played in just 10 games
since 2013. He returned
for Cleveland’s ﬁnal ﬁve
games last season, and

Camp

tions (in minicamp) just
because these guys have
been working here for an
amount of weeks and he
hasn’t been here.”

From page 6

“They’re pretty much
similar in scheme —
minor tweaks here or
there — but they’re
things we already had
in our defense,” Dunlap
said. “So it’s not like a full
spring cleaning or anything.”
Coach Marvin Lewis
said Dunlap won’t get
much time on the ﬁeld
during the three-day
minicamp because he’s
missed so much practice
time.
“It’s a chance for him to
get a preview of what will
happen during training
camp,” Lewis said. “He’ll
get very limited repeti-

showed some of the
ﬂashes that helped him
lead the league in yards
receiving as a rookie in
2012.
The talent has always
been there.
Sadly, so has the
trouble.
But Gordon believes
he’s changed personally,
and he’s now prepared to
help the Browns bounce
back from a 0-16 season
and perhaps shock the
league in 2018.
Gordon feels strongly
about his team, which
acquired three-time Pro
Bowl wide receiver Jarvis
Landry and quarterback
Tyrod Taylor in offseason
trades.
“I think we’re the best
receiving corps in the
league, in my opinion,
already just based off of
talent alone,” Gordon
said. “So, you put in the
playbook and some guys
that are hungry enough
to go do it, and hopefully,
we go out there and show
and prove that. We’re
not short on talent at the
wide receiver position at

all.”
Landry agrees.
“He ain’t lyin’,” said

Landry, who caught 400
passes and 22 touchdowns during three sea-

The NCAA transfer
working group, led by
South Dakota State
athletic director Justin
From page 6
Sell, has been working
student-athletes to have on reform since last year.
a conversation with their The group quickly found
support for switching
coaches and makes the
from a permission model
whole process more
transparent,” Clark said. to notiﬁcation while also
Standoffs between ath- codifying rules against
impermissible recruitletes and coaches over
ing of athletes under
transfers have often led
scholarship. A proposal
to embarrassing results
was originally presented
for schools standing
to the D-I Council in
in the way of players
who want to leave. Last April, but tabled to allow
conferences to provide
spring at Kansas State,
feedback from spring
reserve receiver Corey
meetings.
Sutton said he was
“The membership
blocked him from transferring to 35 schools by showed today that it
coach Bill Snyder before supports this signiﬁcant
the school ﬁnally relent- change in transfer rules,”
ed amid public pressure. Sell said. “I’m proud of
the effort the transfer
Even with the new
working group put forth
rule, conferences could
to make this happen for
still restrict athletes
from transferring within student-athletes, coaches
and schools.”
the league.

All-District

Huntington; Brody Entler,
Huntington; Keiara Conwell, South Point; Serah
Whitrace, Lynchburg;
From page 6
Kailey Adkins, Oak Hill;
Andrea Lewis, Oak Hill;
Brown; Taylor Swartz,
Meigs; Ashley Compston, McKenzie LeRoy, Crooksville; Logyn Chamberlin,
Wellston; Laiken Rice,
Crooksville; Alannah
Northwest; Jacqueline
Williams, Crooksville;
Bautista, Portsmouth;
Lacie O’Neal, Crooksville;
Abby Stark, Adena; BritRiley Shreck, Ironton;
tani Wolfenbarker, MinPeighton Rowe, Ironton;
ford.
Britteny Koewler, Eastern
Brown; Allison Malott,
Player of the Year:
Boo Sturgill, Wheelers- Eastern Brown; Jerrica
Smith, Meigs; Breanna
burg.
Zirkle, Meigs; Peyton
Rowe, Meigs; Adrianna
Coach of the Year:
Teresa Ruby, Wheelers- Hoffman, Fairland; Emily
Bowen, Fairland; Libby
burg.
Judge, Fairland; Madison
Harper, Rock Hill; Rileigh
SECOND TEAM
Morris, Rock Hill; Kylee
Morgan Fridley, FairHoward, Rock Hill; Jade
land; Sammy Tatman,
Ports. West; Ayzia Fullen, Johnson, Adena; Megan
Peek, Adena; Sarah
Westfall; Evia Bennett,
Zane Trace; Syanne Con- Clanon, Wheelersburg;
Desiree Ison, North
ley, Huntington; Lauren
Crum, Coal Grove; Ryeigh Adams; Carly Phillips,
Swann, Chesapeake; Han- North Adams; Gracie Hill,
Alexander; Erin Scurlock,
nah Morgan, Lynchburg
Clay; Laney Eller, Wheel- Alexander; Caitlyn Holdersburg; Olivia Anderson, ren, South Eastern; Stacia
Francis, South Eastern;
North Adams; Lyndee
Jess Bolte, South Eastern;
Spargur, Fairﬁeld; Rylie
Maddie Baeter, South
Hughes, Oak Hill; WhitEastern; Kaylea Cooie,
ney Broughton, Eastern
Zane Trace; Alexis Guffey,
Brown; Addison NewZane Trace; Emilee Wilman, North West; Sara
Allen, South Point; Mary son, Zane Trace; Gracie
Riley, Coal Grove; Lauren
Beth Burton, Ironton;
Meyer, Coal Grove; Erica
Makayla White, Ports.
Scott, Wellston; McKenna
West; Kendra Coleman,
Kilgor, Wellston; Madison
Wellston; Darby Minor,
Cochran, Ports. West;
Westfall; Jadyn Mace,
Taylor Coleman, Ports.
Alexander.
West; Taylor Shockey,
Nelsonville-York; KimberHONORABLE MENTION
Alexis Lute, Northwest; ly Jones, Nelsonville-York;
Skylar Rifﬂe, NelsonvilleJaclyn Burchett, NorthYork; Hannah Tolle, Minwest; Jordan Storms,
ford; Emily Shoemaker,
Chesapeake; Erica Bowman, Chesapeake; Marcy Minford; Lauren Arnold,
Dudgeon, Westfall; Gracie Fairﬁeld; Carli Reiber,
Fairﬁeld.
Smith, Piketon; Kalesie
Henderson, Piketon;
Scott Jones can be reached at 740Madison Metzger, Pik446-2342, ext 2106.
eton; Braidon Collins,

Tony Dejak | AP

Cleveland Browns wide receiver Josh Gordon catches a pass during
practice at training camp Tuesday in Berea, Ohio. Gordon, who has
played in just 10 games since 2013 because of off-field issues that
included drug use, played in the last five games last season and is
practicing and looking forward to a brighter season for the Browns.

Transfers

Woodside charged
Rookie quarterback
Logan Woodside — a
seventh-round pick from
Toledo — practiced Tuesday after arraignment
in northern Kentucky.
He was charged over the
weekend with speeding
and driving under the
inﬂuence in Bellevue,
Kentucky, according to
information in his case
ﬁle in Campbell County
District Court. The Bengals said they’re aware
of the matter and gathering information. Lewis
declined further comment.

sons in Miami. “I think
the capability of what we
all can do is endless.”
Gordon also feels Taylor, who led Buffalo to the
playoffs last season, and
No. 1 overall pick Baker
Mayﬁeld are the best
quarterbacks he’s had in
Cleveland.
“By far,” Gordon said.
“It’s going to be an interesting thing to watch the
quarterback battle go on,
but you’ve got a proven
guy in Tyrod. We’ve got
a young talented guy in
Baker. I don’t see how it
can go wrong, really. … I
don’t know a quarterback
that works harder than
Tyrod. He’s deﬁnitely
set the bar. And then
Baker, he’s right behind
the guy and looking up
to a guy that can show
him the exact things you
need to do to be a professional quarterback in this
league. So from a quarterback standpoint, we’re
really set. We’re really
good.”
Cleveland’s success will
also hinge on Gordon
staying available.

The NCAA has made
several attempts in
recent years to change
transfer rules, but this is
the ﬁrst to come up with
something substantive
— if not comprehensive.
Much of the talk about
transfers focuses on
the so-called year-inresidence, the one year
a player in the most
high-proﬁle sports such
as football and basketball
must sit out after switching schools.
There was discussion
about easing that restriction, which doesn’t exist
in most NCAA sports.
Golfers, tennis players
and other athletes in
traditionally nonrevenue
sports can transfer one
time without sitting out.
There was never serious
consideration to lifting
the year-in-residence
altogether, but tying
unrestricted transfer to

an athlete’s grade-point
average was considered.
That idea has fallen off
the table amid concerns
about creating an inequitable system that could
face legal challenges.
The NCAA said legislation that governs
when a Power Five
school can reduce or
cancel ﬁnancial aid for
an athlete may be looked
at next week. Currently,
a student’s notiﬁcation
of intent to transfer at
the end of a term is not
a listed reason a school
can use to cancel aid.
The so-called autonomy
conferences will consider
two different proposals
to allow schools to cancel the aid.
The transfer working group initially was
looking at uniform rules
across all sports. Now
that will be re-examined
in the fall.

THURSDAY EVENING
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7

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at Six (N)
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Little Big Shots "Little Ninja Marlon (N) Marlon (N)
Warrior" (N)
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Warrior" (N)
Celebrity Family Feud
The $100,000 Pyramid

Law &amp; Order: Special
Victims Unit "Complicated"
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Victims Unit "Complicated"
To Tell the Truth

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To Tell the Truth

Celebrity Family Feud

Hawking An intimate,
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The Big Bang Young
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contestants face-off. (N)
p.m. (N)
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debunks the myths, looking toward a world Metabolism
without migraine.
The Big Bang Young
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Theory
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PM

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PM

10:30

Training Day ('01, Thril) Ethan Hawke, Denzel Washington. TVMA
Training Day TVMA
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "In the Box"
UFC 25 Greatest Fights "17-20" (N)
UFC Main Event
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SportsCenter (N)
Countdown Boxing Golden Boy (L)
SportsC. (N)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N) NFL Live
SportsC. (N) CFL Football Edmonton Eskimos at Winnipeg Blue Bombers (L)
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)
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(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
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PREMIUM

First Daughter (2004, Comedy) Marc Blucas, Michael
Keaton, Katie Holmes. TVPG
(5:30)
Just Go With It (2011, Comedy) Jennifer
Aniston, Brooklyn Decker, Adam Sandler. TV14
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Friends
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450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

(:05) The Single Mom's

Club Amy Smart. TV14
Marvel's Cloak &amp; Dagger
"Stained Glass"
American
(:40) Lip Sync
Woman (N) Battle (N)
Loud House Loud House Danger (N) (:45) Danger
Paul Blart: Mall Cop ('09, Com) Kevin James. TV14 Friends
Friends
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Rotten" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Mercy"
Jurassic Park (1993, Sci-Fi) Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Sam Neill. TV14
Family Guy Family Guy Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
NCIS: New Orleans
NCIS:NO "Man on Fire"
Insurgent ('15, Sci-Fi) Shailene Woodley. TV14
(:15)
Divergent TV14
(5:25)
Twister (1996, Action) Bill Paxton, Jami
Jaws (1975, Horror) Richard Dreyfuss, Robert Shaw, Roy Scheider. A great white
Gertz, Helen Hunt. TV14
shark attacks and terrorizes the residents of a Long Island beach town. TV14
Naked "Swamp Queen"
Naked "Trouble in Paradise" Naked and Afraid (N)
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid XL (N)
Live PD:
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(:35) Live PD:
Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Patrol (L) (N) Patrol (L) (N) Patrol (L) (N) Patrol (L) (N)
Woods Law "Buck Fever" North Woods Law
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Bodies are found in barrels.
Law &amp; Order: C.I. "See Me" Growing "The Boy is Mine" Growing Up Hip Hop (N)
Growing "Blurred Lines" (N) Growing "Blurred Lines"
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
Enough ('02, Thril) Jennifer Lopez. TV14
Enough TV14
(:25) M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
(:35) MASH
(:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Raymond "Homework" Mom
Mom
The Boonies "Beyond the
Titanic: 20 Years Later
Drain the Ocean
Drain the Bermuda
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Comfort Zone"
With James Cameron
Triangle
of the Mediterranean"
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Grudge Race Grudge Race Grudge Race Grudge Race Grudge Race Grudge Race Grudge Race Grudge Race
MLB on FS1 Pre-game (L) MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at New York Yankees Site: Yankee Stadium (L)
MLB Whiparound (L)
Swamp People "Monster in Swamp People "Savage
Swamp Mysteries "Gator
Swamp Mysteries with
(:05) Alone "Redemption"
the Dark"
Pursuit"
vs. Python"
Troy Landry "Hogzilla" (N) (SP) (N)
Southern Charm "Reunion" Southern Charm
South/ Charm "Family Ties" Southern Charm (N)
Girlfriends' Guide (N)
(4:00)
Set It Off TV14 (:25)
The Players Club ('97, Dra) Bernie Mac, LisaRaye McCoy. TVM
BETNominationSpecial (N)
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)
(4:25) The
(:25)
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans (2009, Action)
Hellboy II: The Golden Army ('08, Adv) Ron Perlman. Hellboy and
Mechanic
Bill Nighy, Rhona Mitra, Michael Sheen. TV14
his team try to save the world from creatures bent on destruction. TV14

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

(:55) Fist Fight ('17, Com) Ice Cube. After

400 (HBO)

Two Weeks Notice (2002, Comedy) Hugh Grant,
Alicia Witt, Sandra Bullock. TV14
Marvel's Cloak &amp; Dagger Marvel's Cloak &amp; Dagger
"Stained Glass" (N)
"Stained Glass"
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends

7:30
Vice News
Tonight (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

CHIPS ('17, Act) Dax Shepard. Two highway (:45) Westworld "Kiksuya" (:45) Blade
getting his colleague fired, a mild English
patrol officers, a rookie and a veteran, team
Runner 2049
teacher is challenged to a fight. TVMA
up to investigate a heist. TVMA
TV14
(:10)
Chaos (2005, Action) Ryan Phillippe, Wesley
Darkman Liam Neeson. A scientist (:40) John Wick: Chapter 2 Forced out of
Snipes, Jason Statham. Thieves use chaos theory to plant a reinvents himself as 'Darkman' after he is
retirement, John Wick heads to Rome to
virus in the banks to steal money. TVMA
brutally attacked by henchmen. TVMA
face off against deadly killers. TVMA
(5:30)
Kill Bill: Vol. 1 After being
(:25) Dean Demetri Martin. A young man
Billions "Elmsley Count"
Patrick Melrose "At Last"
Patrick confronts the past at
attacked on her wedding day, an assassin and his father both deal with his mother's Chuck looks to strike the
ultimate blow on an enemy. his mother's memorial.
seeks revenge on former associates. TVMA death in their own divergent ways. TVPG

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, June 14, 2018

Daily Sentinel

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All three publications Gallipolis Daily-Tribune,
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Please call Patti Wamsley at 740-446-2342 ext 2093
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, June 14, 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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�SPORTS

10 Thursday, June 14, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Steelers’ Brown needed time to ‘get my mind right’

Keith Srakocic | AP

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown makes a catch in
a drill during practice Tuesday in Pittsburgh. Brown says he skipped
the final two weeks of organized team activities to spend time with
his family and not because quarterback Ben Roethlisberger also
bailed on the voluntary sessions. Brown added he doesn’t feel
much “freedom” lately due to pressure from outside forces.

PITTSBURGH (AP)
— Antonio Brown didn’t
skip out on the vast
majority of the Pittsburgh
Steelers organized team
activities to make a statement. Or to disrespect
the backup quarterbacks.
Or to take a stand
alongside running back
Le’Veon Bell.
The All-Pro insists he
simply felt more comfortable working out
back home in Miami,
where he could spend
time with his ﬁve children and escape what
he described as the
“pressure” he faces from

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Kiwanis Juniors Golf
Tournament July 12 Tri-County Junior
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Cliffside
Golf schedule
Golf Course will be hosting the 10th

school they are currently attending.

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-andunder, and $30 for players 13-18.
Clubhouse certiﬁcates and individual
awards will be presented to the topthree places in each division.
Cart and meal passes will be available for spectators for $15 to follow
kids 13-and-older and $10 to follow
kids 12-and-under, so that they may
follow the tournament and eat with
the kids.
To enter please contact the Cliffside
clubhouse at 740-446-4653, or Ed
Caudill at 740-245-5919 or 740-6454381, or by email at rbncaudill@
yahoo.com. Please leave player’s
name, age as of July 12, 2017 and the

ver
Come OnBO
o
To b’s...
All your favorite
flowers fresh from
the greenhouse!

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The schedule for the 2018 Frank Capehart TriCounty 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 at 740-256-6160, Jan Haddox at
304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing 304675-6135 if you can contribute or have
questions concerning the tour.

OVER

outside forces daily in
Pittsburgh.
“I needed that precious
time with myself to get
my mind right,” Brown
said Tuesday as the Steelers began a mandatory
three-day minicamp.
A move the 29-year-old
star called necessary as
he prepares for his ninth
season. Brown is typically
a ﬁxture at the voluntary
workouts, where he is
usually among the few
players in actual football
pants instead of shorts.
This spring, however,
he participated in the
ﬁrst two days and then

jetted off to Florida. The
fact that starting quarterback Ben Roethlisberger
appeared for the ﬁrst
day of OTAs before taking time off for what he
called a planned family
vacation was purely coincidental.
“I play with any quarterback, no matter who’s
here,” Brown said. “I play
with the Steelers. It’s
not one guy that I (catch
passes from).”
Brown dismissed any
insinuation that he left
OTAs because he didn’t
want to work with the
second or third string. He

also expressed frustration
with media for asking
other players to comment
on his absence.
“You guys making up
stories to ask these guys
stuff that they shouldn’t
be dealing with,” Brown
said. “You know, that’s
the pressure of being
a professional athlete.
Everyday scrutiny. Everyday pressure. It’s hard to
be free.”
Brown, however, struggled to be speciﬁc about
how the attention that
comes with being one
of the NFL’s top players
negatively affects him.

Coaches killed in Florida
shooting to receive ESPY awards
MIAMI (AP) — The
ESPYs are breaking tradition for this year’s Best
Coach Award, awarding it posthumously to
three Florida high school
coaches who died shielding their students from
gunﬁre.
Family members of
Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School
heroes Aaron Feis, Scott
Beigel, and Chris Hixon
will receive the honor
during the award show
on July 18 in Los Angeles, the ESPN network
announced Wednesday.
Students described Feis
as someone who counseled those with no father
ﬁgure and took troubled
kids under his wing.
He was always there for
the students, they said,
whether it was chatting
in his golf cart or helping
them ﬁx their cars. No
one was surprised when
they learned Feis died
shielding students.
The school’s ath-

letic director, 49-yearold Chris Hixon, wasn’t
shy about jumping in
wherever he was needed,
whether it was ﬁlling in
as volleyball coach or
wrestling coach. When
the school needed someone to patrol the campus
and monitor threats as
a security specialist,
Hixon, a married father
of two, did that, too. He
died running toward the
gunﬁre to help ﬂeeing
students.
Geography teacher
and cross-country coach
Scott Beigel, 35, helped
students enter a locked
classroom to avoid the
gunman, and paid for
the brave act with his
life. Several surviving
students said they don’t
think they would be alive
without Beigel’s help.
The award has previously gone to coaches
who guided their teams
to extraordinary performance — not for heroism
off the ﬁeld.

The award has
previously gone
to coaches who
guided their teams
to extraordinary
performance — not
for heroism off the
field.
Previous recipients
include Los Angeles Lakers coach Phil Jackson
and New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick.
The award has usually
gone to coaches of professional teams, though
the 2017 recipient was
coach Bob Hurley of St.
Anthony High School in
New Jersey.
ESPN’s Vice President
Alison Overholt called
the Florida men heroes,
saying they are being
honored for “their immeasurable bravery in the
face of danger and for
their ultimate sacriﬁce to
protect the lives of countless students.”

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Ron Tawney completed his Master of Science in Nursing at Walden

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Large 6 Inch
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of Science in Nursing at University of Rio Grande in Rio Grande,

Including: Zinnias

Nurses Credentialing Center and is seeing patients at our locations in

Ohio. He has worked as a Registered Nurse for Holzer on a variety of
patient units since 2013. Tawney is Board Certiﬁed by the American

Gallipolis, Jackson, and Pomeroy in Ohio.

Two Convenient
Locations:
¼ Mile North Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, WV
(304) 773-5323

www.bobsmarket.com

2400 Eastern Ave
Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446-1711

Schedule an appointment!
1.855.4HOLZER (1.855.446.5937)
OH-70055816

OH-70057173

NEW
ARRIVALS

University in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and completed his Bachelor

www.holzer.org

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