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                  <text>On the
subject of
moving

Winker
paces Reds
past Rangers

OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

70°

73°

74°

Humid today and tonight with a shower or
thunderstorm around. High 77° / Low 66°

SPORTS s 6

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 96, Volume 73

Suspects arrested
in Farmers
Bank robbery
By Sarah Hawley

four door vehicle, upon the suspect ﬂeeing the
bank on foot.
Meigs County
POMEROY —
Sheriff Keith
Two people have
Wood reports
been arrested in
that on June 16,
connection with McMurray
deputies with
the Saturday robhis ofﬁce took
bery at the Farmone male into
ers Bank branch
custody who was
in Tuppers
identiﬁed as the
Plains.
alleged driver of
On Saturday,
the “get away”
June 15, a man
vehicle in the
entered the
Coon
Farmers Bank
bank, allegedly
robbery at the
demanded money
Tuppers Plains branch
and then ﬂed on foot
on June 15. Deputies
toward State Route
identiﬁed the suspect
681. The responding
as David R. McMurdeputies were given
ray, 61, of Parkersburg,
a description of the
W.Va. McMurray was
male as wearing a blue
taken into custody
“Wyoming” full zip-up
at around 3 p.m. in
jacket with a yellow
Pomeroy. Deputies also
shirt underneath and a
recovered the vehicle
mossy oak hat.
used in the robbery
A second individual
attempt and it has been
was allegedly involved
and picked up the susSee ROBBERY | 5
pect in a gray smaller

Tuesday, June 18, 2019 s 50¢

New fuel facility
$1.2 billion project proposed

shawley@
aimmediamidwest.com

Staff Report

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — A major, economic development
announcement for the
area was made on Monday from a company that
wishes to place a coal to
liquids facility, a reported
ﬁrst of its kind in the
United States, in Mason
County, W.Va.
DS Fuels | Courtesy
According to a press
A rendering of a proposed coal to liquids facility in Mason County,
W.Va. Reportedly, this type of facility is the first of its kind in the release from Domestic
Synthetic Fuels (DS
United States.

Fuels), a West Virginiaowned company, it has
plans to convert the
state’s “abundant coal
and natural gas” to gasoline and other fuels, and
will soon break ground
on a coal to liquids facility in Mason County.
The overall project cost,
according to DS Fuel, is
$1.2 billion, with 130plus direct jobs, 130-plus
new indirect coal jobs,
See FUEL | 5

Women’s cancer
screenings to be held
Wednesday, June 19
RUTLAND — All-inclusive women’s cancer
screenings will be held in Rutland on Wednesday.
Through its Breast Education Screening &amp; Navigation Program, the Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine Community Health
Programs (CHP) has long provided mobile women’s cancer screening clinics around southeastern
Ohio as part of its mission to improve women’s
health in the region.
In collaboration with OhioHealth Mobile Mammography, the Heritage College CHP will also
offer same-day mammography at the Meigs County mobile clinic. The next mobile clinic is Wednesday, June 19 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., at Rutland
River of Life Church, 37028 State Route 124 in
Rutland. Services are available to all women, uninsured, underinsured or insured. Appointments are
required and women should call 740-593-2432 or
1-800-844-2654.
Services offered through CHP mobile clinics
include breast health education, PAP tests, breast
and pelvic exams, same-day mammograms, navigation through the continuum of care &amp; Susan G.
Komen Columbus® grant funding for ﬁnancial
support for mammograms. In addition to the
mobile clinics, clinics are held at the college’s Heritage Community Clinic on the Ohio University
Athens campus.
The most current dates, times and locations for
upcoming clinics to area counties are located on
the CHP online events calendar at https://www.
ohio.edu/medicine/community-health/communityclinic/calendar.cfm, or call 740-593-2432 or 800844-2654.

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10

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

The Tribute to Truckers took place on Saturday during Kickin’ Summer Bash.

Photos by Kayla Hawthorne

Kickin’ off summer along the river
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

POMEROY — Local
residents kicked off
the summer season in
Pomeroy during the
10th annual Kickin’
Summer Bash on Friday
and Saturday.
The levee was packed
with children enjoying
scavenger hunts, bounce
houses, face paintings
and more. Adults enjoyed
the evening music from
Jason Roach, Devin
Henry, Nick Michael and
Susan Page Orchestra,
Bliltzkrieg, Brent Patterson, Madeline Brookover,
and Next Level.
There was also an
event on Saturday to
pay tribute to the truckers. Brenda Roush, one
of the event organizers,
said this is the third year
the truckers have been
celebrated at the Kickin’
Summer Bash.
“We give back to the
truckers because without
the truckers we would
have nothing,” Roush
said. “They bring the
goods to us and that’s
our normal way of life
because they do what
they do.”
Some of the truckers
allowed children to sit
in the seats, blow the
horn and see the living
quarters.

Kids took time to dig through a pile of sand as part of the treasure hunt on Saturday.

On Friday evening,
numerous vehicles of all
makes, models and years
were on display on the
parking lot as part of the
Cruise In.
Chamber and Tourism Executive Director
Shelly Combs conducted
the children’s events on
Saturday afternoon. One
of those was a scavenger hunt to teach the
children about Pomeroy.
Items on the hunt including ﬁlling a plastic grocery bag full of trash and
locating items sold at the
store fronts — such as
the type of pottery sold

at The Fabric Shop and
names of beverages at
River Roasters.
The Kickin’ Summer
Bash is a free event
for everyone thanks to
event sponsors from
around the community.
This included several
giveaways for those in
attendance.
“We have event sponsors for everything,”
Roush said. “They give
to the event so that all
the kids can come and
enjoy everything for
free.”
Event sponsors include
Mark Porter Auto

Group, Angell Accounting, Ohio Valley Bank,
The Vaughan Agency,
Little, Sheets &amp; Barr
Law Ofﬁce, Farmers
Bank, Remram Recovery,
Holzer Health Services,
Hoon Inc., Ted Dexter
Trucking, Shain Custom
Signs, Home National
Bank, Wolfe Mountain
Entertainment, Simmons, Musser &amp; Warner
Insurance, Forest Run
Ready Mix, Texas Roadhouse of Athens and DJ
Rockin’ Reggie.
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, June 18, 2019

DEATH NOTICES

Daily Sentinel

Rio Radiologic program accreditation reaffirmed

ROTTGEN

Staff Report

BRADENTON, Fla. — John M. Rottgen, Sr., 85, of
Bradenton, Fla., formerly of Mason, W.Va., died on
June 14, 2019.
Visitation services will be held Thursday, June 20,
11 a.m. at the Chapel of Peace at Mansion Memorial
Park, 1400 36th Avenue East, Ellenton, Fla., followed
by military services at noon.
GARDNER
GALLIPOLIS — Hazel Marie Gardner, age 67 of
Gallipolis, Ohio, died Sunday, June 16, 2019 at St.
Mary’s Medical Center.
In keeping with Hazel’s Wishes, no services are
planned. Waugh Halley Wood Funeral Home is assisting the family.
WREN
NEW HAVEN — Charlotte Sue (Webb) Wren, 83,
of New Haven, died June 11, 2019 in Pleasant Valley
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleasant, following an extended illness.
The service will be held at 6 p.m., Thursday, June
20, 2019 in the New Haven United Methodist Church
with Claudia Thomas ofﬁciating. Visitation will be
Thursday from 4 p.m. until time of service at the
church. A time of food and fellowship will be held
from 2-4 p.m. at the St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, New
Haven.
Arrangements provided by Foglesong-Casto Funeral
Home, Mason.
RUNION
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Reva Mae Runion,
87, of Point Pleasant, W.Va. died Saturday, June 15,
2019 at home.
A graveside service and burial will be held at 11
a.m., Monday, June 17, 2019 at Yauger Cemetery in
Leon with Pastor Mel Mock ofﬁciating.
Arrangements are under the direction of Wilcoxen
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant.

RIO GRANDE — The University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College
School of Health and Behavioral
Sciences’ Radiologic Technology
program has received reafﬁrmation of accreditation through the
Joint Review Committee on Education in Radiologic Technology
(JRCERT).
Director of the Radiologic
Technology program Dr. Tracey
Boggs said having an accredited
program is important for the
students in the School of Health
and Behavioral Sciences to ﬁnd
careers in the ﬁeld.
“To work the ﬁeld of radiologic
technology, you must be a graduate of an accredited program.
Once students do this and pass
their national boards, they are
able to work anywhere within the
United States,” Boggs said. “We
ﬁrst began this program because
we saw a need in our area healthcare facilities for qualiﬁed individuals to ﬁll radiologic technologist
positions. The reafﬁrmation site
visit team was very thorough and
gave an excellent report which
highlights the quality of our program here at Rio.”
The Radiologic Technology program was ﬁrst introduced in 2003
and began the initial accreditation process shortly thereafter.
This is the second reafﬁrmation

Courtesy photo

Radiologic Technology Pinning Ceremony for the Class of 2019.

of accreditation for the program,
and Boggs said she is proud of
the hard work the department has
put into meeting the JRCERT’s
standards.
“I’m extremely pleased that
this visit went so well. We’re so
proud to be able to offer our community an accredited radiologic
technology program here in our
area because it gives students the
opportunity to stay local to get
their education,” Boggs said. “It
also allows them to ﬁnd careers
close to home by connecting with
employers through clinical work
at area hospitals and clinics.”
The Radiologic Technology program is designed to prepare students to be competent entry-level

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

HICKMAN
NEW HAVEN — Burton Creston Hickman, 78,
New Haven, died June 15, 2019 in Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Point Pleasant, following an extended illness.
The service will be held at 7 p.m., Monday, June
17, 2019 in the Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home,
Mason with Rev. Rex Young ofﬁciating. Visitation will
be from 5 p.m. until time of service, Monday at the
funeral home. Military honors will be provided at the
funeral home starting at 7 p.m. by V.F.W. Post #9926
Mason, American Legion Post #140 New Haven and
V.F.W. Post # 0039.
LEWIS
WEST COLUMBIA — Samuel Everson Lewis, 69,
of West Columbia, formerly of Mooreﬁeld, died Friday, June 14, 2019 at Lakin Hospital in West Columbia.
There will be no public services. Burial will be at
the convenience of the family.
Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant is in
charge of arrangements.

radiographers and to contribute
to the healthcare team by evaluating radiographs, applying radiation safety standards at all times,
administering contrast agents
for better imaging and providing
patient education and support.
The 22-month program provides
students with the opportunity to
complete didactic requirements
in the classroom and demonstrate clinical competency in area
healthcare facilities. Graduates of
the program earn an Associate of
Applied Science Degree in Radiologic Technology.
For more information on the
Radiologic Technology program,
contact the Ofﬁce of Admissions
at 740-245-7208.

Road Closure
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill”
is closed due to a slip until further notice.
POMEROY — Meigs County Road 18, Kingsbury
Road, west of State Route 33 will be closed for
approximately 2 months beginning Tuesday, May
28, in order to complete a bridge replacement project. This bridge is located just west of the intersection of County Road 19, Peach Fork Road.

Vacation Bible School
RACINE — “Who is my neighbor” Bible School
will be held Monday, June 24-Wednesday, June 26,
from 6-8 p.m. each night at Racine United Methodist Church, 818 Elm Street, Racine. A pool party
will be held on Friday, June 28.
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grove Christian
Church Family Vacation Bible School will be held on
Saturday, July 6. From 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. will be a

puppet skit, worship, teaching, crafts, food and prizes at the church located at 38387 Hemlock Grove
Road. From 2-4 p.m. will be swimming, games and
fellowship at Ohio Valley Christian Assembly at
39560 Rocksprings Road. The theme is Fishers of
Men from the verse Matthew 4:19.

Scholarship Applications
SYRACUSE — Applications for the 2019-20
Carleton College Scholarships for Higher Education are available for legal residents of the Village of
Syracuse and may be picked up at 1402 Dusky St.,
Syracuse, and returned by June 24. Legal residents
of Syracuse can qualify for a scholarship award for a
maximum of two years. For more information contact Gordon Fisher at 740-9992-2836.
POMEROY — Applications for the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association scholarship are available until the end of June. The applicant must be a
college junior or senior majoring in education, have
at least a 2.5 GPA and have a home residence in
Meigs County. For applications or more information
call Becky at 740-992-7096 or Charlene at 740-4445498.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Abortion clinic’s fate
in hands of high court
KETTERING, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio abortion
clinic’s future is now up to the state’s Supreme Court.
Justices will decide whether to hear an appeal by
Women’s Med Center, the Dayton area’s last abortion
clinic. It continues operating during a long-running
licensure dispute.
At issue is Women’s Med’s inability to secure the
waiver and written transfer agreement with a nearby
hospital required under Ohio’s increasingly stringent
abortion laws.
The Ohio Department of Health says it revoked
Women’s Med’s license in April after a lower court
upheld the order . A Montgomery County court
blocked that revocation while the clinic appeals.
Dayton commissioners voted in May to urge two
local health systems to step in. Neither did.

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
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@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.

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 spaceavailable basis and in
chronological order.
Events can be emailed
to: TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Tuesday,
June 18

Saturday,
June 22

MIDDLEPORT — A
ﬁsh fry will be held at
the Middleport Fire
Department with serving
starting at 11 a.m.
CHESTER — The
Meigs County Ikes will
hold its monthly meeting following the 7 p.m.
POMEROY — Acousmeal at the club house
tic Night at the Library,
on Sugar Run Road in
Pomeroy Library 6 p.m.
Chester Township
Bring an instrument and
play along. Listeners
welcome.

Tuesday,
June 25

Sunday,
June 23

TUPPERS PLAINS
— Mark your calendars!
Sweetsong Recording
MIDDLEPORT —
The Family and Children Artists, The Carriers
will be singing at the
First Council will hold
Amazing Grace Commua special meeting at 11
nity Church in Tuppers
a.m. at Meigs County
Plains, Ohio (across
Department of Job and
from the Tuppers Plains
Family Services.
Fire Department) at 10
a.m. A luncheon will follow. We hope you will
make plans to come out
and enjoy some great
gospel music with The
POMEROY — Big
Carriers.
Blast of Space Science
Show, Pomeroy Library
4:30 p.m. Professor
Rocket will host a silly
science show about
space.
POMEROY — Book
Club Meeting, Pomeroy
Library, 6 p.m. Read and
discuss The Bookshop at
Water’s End by Patti Callahan Henry.
RACINE — A spaMIDDLEPORT —
ghetti dinner fundraiser
for the CC Baker Domes- The Meigs County
Veteran Service Commistic Violence Services
Center will be held from sion will meet at 9 a.m.
in the ofﬁce located at 97
4-7 p.m. at the Racine
North Second Avenue,
American Legion.

Wednesday,
June 19

Monday,
June 24

Friday,
June 21

Suite 2, Middleport.
POMEROY — The
regular meeting of the
Meigs County Library
Board will be held at
3:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library.

Wednesday,
June 26
POMEROY — COSI:
ENERGY Program,
Pomeroy Library, 2
p.m. Visit COSI without
leaving Meigs County.
Explore the ENERGY
exhibit as the Summer
Reading Program continues.

Thursday,
June 27

grams: 11 a.m. and 2
p.m. Learn about reptiles
and amphibians with
Nancy and her real-life
creatures.

Thursday,
July 4
MEIGS COUNTY
— All branches of the
Meigs County District
Public Library will be
closed in observance of
Independence Day.

Wednesday,
July 10
POMEROY — Didgeridoo Down Under,
Pomeroy Library, 2 p.m.
The Meigs Library’s
Summer Reading Program continues with
this Australian music
program.

Friday,
July 12

POMEROY — Pomeroy Library 11 a.m.-8
p.m., Star Wars Retro
POMEROY — Pome- Movie Marathon. Epiroy Library, 5 p.m., Out sode IV-VI will be shown
of This World DIY. Teens back-to-back.
create their own “galaxy”
t-shirts. Participants are
asked to bring a dark
blue, purple, or black
shirt. All other supplies
are provided.
RACINE — Summer
Reading Bubble Bash,
Racine Library, 5-7
p.m. Celebrate the end
of the Summer Reading Program with an
POMEROY — Nancy inﬂatable water slide, a
foam machine, bubbles,
the Turtle Lady, Pomegames, prizes, and more.
roy Library, Two pro-

Thursday,
July 18

Wednesday,
July 3

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 18, 2019 3

Rio honors top business students
Staff Report

RIO GRANDE —The University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College
Emerson E. Evans School of
Business recently announced
its award winners for the 201819 academic year.
The school’s faculty and staff
hosted an awards banquet to
honor these students’ exceptional academic achievements.
Emerson E. Evans School of
Business Co-Chair Jason Winters said he is proud of these
students for going above and
beyond in their studies and
enjoys getting to share their
success with them and their
families at the banquet.
“The awards banquet gives
the School of Business’s faculty
an opportunity to publicly
recognize our outstanding

students from both the associate and bachelor’s degree programs,” Winters said. “It also
gives the student’s parents an
opportunity to meet the faculty
that have been a part of their
son’s or daughter’s life for the
past 2 or 4 years. It is always a
special time of celebration that
we all cherish.”
The annual luncheon
includes multiple awards to
honor students who have succeeded in a variety of ways
during the 2018-19 academic
year, including awards for GPA
and classroom successes. Sara
Klein, a Class of 2019 business
management major, said she is
honored to be recognized and
grateful for the opportunities
and memories she has made in
the School of Business.
“I was very surprised to earn
this award. I had no idea I was

even chosen as a candidate. I’m
glad to see my work has paid
off and grateful for the recognition from the school of business,” Klein said. “A lot of hard
work goes into these degrees,
so having something to recognize that really means a lot to
us. Being in the School of Business has been an adventure and
a roller coaster. I’m thankful
for the relationships I’ve made
with my classmates and professors because they’ve really
made this an amazing experience with a lot of memories.”
The School of Business is
dedicated to creating learning
opportunities for students in
leadership, collaboration, and
business management. The
school’s goal is to help students meet the challenges of
the global market place while
developing partnerships with

business owners and leaders
to explore business operations
and opportunities. Whitney
Gilkeson, a Class of 2019 business management major, said
she appreciates the School of
Business’s efforts to award
students for their efforts in the
classroom.
“I really hadn’t expected any
awards, so I’m very thankful
to the School of Business for
believing I was deserving of
these. Awards luncheons like
this aren’t really common in a
lot of schools or majors, so it’s
an amazing feeling to be a part
of something like this that recognizes us for our work ethic,”
Gilkeson said. “I’ve had a wonderful experience here at Rio
and in the School of Business.
The professors know us on a
name-to-name basis and are so
willing to help when we need

it. They really want to make
sure we succeed.”
Award winners for the 20182019 academic year are Natalie
Wilcoxon and Mark Brown Jr.,
Outstanding Associate Degree;
Whitney Gilkeson and Sara
Klein, Outstanding Bachelor
Degree; Alexis Johnson-Schoolcraft, Associate Degree Business Field Test; Whitney Gilkeson, Bachelor Degree Business
Field Test; Kameron Carpenter
and Whintney Gilkeson, Business Simulation Competition;
and Adam Champer, Kameron
Carpenter, Michael Norris,
Gavin Hawkins, Tina Morris,
Katie Zuniga, Casey Booth and
Kay-Anne Darlington, Recognition as VITA Volunteers.
For more information on the
Emerson E. Evans School of
Business, contact the Ofﬁce of
Admissions at 740-245-7208.

Masked gunman killed after shootout at Dallas courthouse
By Jake Bleiberg
and Jamie Stengle

heard.
The Dallas Morning
Associated Press
News reported that one
of its photographers,
DALLAS — A masked Tom Fox, was outside the
building and witnessed
gunman opened ﬁre
the shooter opening ﬁre.
Monday on a federal
courthouse in downtown Fox said the masked man
Dallas before being fatally parked at a street corner,
then ran and began shootshot in an exchange
ing at the courthouse.
of gunﬁre with federal
The bullets shattered the
ofﬁcers, witnesses and
glass panes in a revolving
authorities said.
Brian Isaack Clyde, 22, door.
An image of the
was pronounced dead
shooter captured by Fox
at a hospital following
showed the man wearing
the shooting outside
a balaclava and a heavy
the Earle Cabell Federal Building. Authorities vest and carrying a riﬂe.
Several magazines could
offered no hint of his
be seen on his belt.
motive, but FBI agent
Another photograph
Matthew DeSarno said
there was nothing to indi- from Fox showed authorities tending to a shirtless
cate the presence of any
other shooters or threats man lying on the ground
in a parking lot outside
to the city.
the building.
Clyde opened ﬁre
Police closed off several
about 8:40 a.m., and law
enforcement immediately blocks around the federal
building.
responded, including
A woman who
three ofﬁcers from the
answered the phone at a
Federal Protective Sernumber listed for one of
vice who were stationed
Clyde’s relative declined
at the building.
to comment.
A bomb squad later
Chad Cline, 46, who
examined a vehicle assolives near the courthouse,
ciated with the gunman
told The Associated Press
as a precaution and performed controlled explo- that a message was broadcast throughout his buildsions, authorities said.
Two loud blasts could be ing shortly before 9 a.m.

Tom Fox| The Dallas Morning News

An armed shooter stands near the Earle Cabell Federal Building Monday in downtown Dallas. The shooter was hit and injured in an
exchange of gunfire with federal officers outside the courthouse.

announcing that there
was an active shooter in
the area and that resi-

dents should stay inside.
Less than half an hour
later, another message

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�Opinion
4 Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

On the
subject of
moving…
There are few things in life that bring me the
joy that I ﬁnd in moving all my possessions from
one location to another. Among that list are root
canals, colonoscopies, the stomach
ﬂu and calamari. Perhaps I have
understated that a bit. Imagine
everything on that list visiting all in
the same day, and that is very close
to the distain I have for moving day.
Nonetheless, that’s how we spent last
weekend.
Herb
Through the years I have packed
Day
most of my material goods and
Contributing moved long distances and short
columnist
distances, and I have never been
able to determine which of the two I
loathed the least. I remember making a move from
Wilmington to Hodgenville, Ky. once (over 200
miles one way) and making two trips per day with
a single straight truck, enduring a mechanical
breakdown on the second trip out, and not hating
that move any worse than the local move we made
this weekend.
Until recent years, each time I picked up my
marbles and moved away, I would recruit as many
friends and family members as I could to assist in
the move. I suppose that explains why nine out
of 10 people you talk to who used to be my friend
now respond, “Herb who?” (just kidding). The
last two moves, we hired a professional moving
company to “professionally” load up our marbles
and move to another location, and let me say this
about that — it is worth every penny they charge!
During the move, I showered the owner of the
moving company with accolades like, “I admire
you for making a career of something that I hate
doing so much,” and “There must be a special
place in Heaven for you guys,” and believe it or
not they presented me with a bill afterward anyway.
They have this thing down to a ﬁne science. I
saw men half my size carry dressers, trunks and
other large objects by themselves! They have some
type of “leverage straps” they put on and it gives
them the ability to move objects that it always
took two, and sometimes four of us, to move.
Incredible.
This move was particularly daunting because
during the six or so months we spent remodeling
the house, I knew that the only possible way to
move our furniture into the second ﬂoor would be
through an upstairs window. There were only two
other options, the most doable was install an elevator, and, of course, that was not within the realm
of budgeting reality. The second option was some
complicated plan that involved a Huey helicopter
and cabling for lifting a roof. Probably more suited
for the movies.
I watched these men scale ladders with loads
strapped to their backs that I thought deﬁed physics. I marveled as they seemed to levitate box
springs and mattresses from their truck into a second story window, and they did it all with a smile
and a song on their lips! (OK, I overstated that a
bit. Alright, a lot).
The move was close enough in proximity that
we used the professional movers for the heaviest of lifting. They even moved unwanted heavy
articles to a temporary resting ground that made
it more manageable for us. We were able to move
household items with no problem.
I would like to say that this moving experience
changed my mind about moving. Sure, I would
like to say that, but I would be lying. I still become
nauseated when I think about the grueling task.
I would like to think that this move is my ﬁnal
move, however, with death being the only exception, I know better than to say never. I would also
like to say that with the completion of the weekend this job is complete. That, too, would be a lie
as the work is only beginning. You know, things
like trying to ﬁnd my toothpaste, the power cord
to my laptop, and that tiny little attachment that
goes to my socket set whose only purpose in life
is vital to reassembling our granddaughters’ bunk
beds.
I hate moving.
Herb Day is a longtime local radio personality and singer-musician.
You can email him at HEKAMedia@yahoo.com and follow his work at
www.HerbDayVoices.com.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Former Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., is 82.
Baseball Hall of Famer Lou Brock is 80. Sir Paul
McCartney is 77. Actress Constance McCashin is
72. Actress Linda Thorson is 72. Rock musician
John Evans is 71. Former Sen. Mike Johanns,
R-Neb., is 69. Actress Isabella Rossellini is 67.
Actress Carol Kane is 67. Actor Brian Benben is
63. Actress Andrea Evans is 62. Rock singer Alison Moyet is 58.

THEIR VIEW

Feng Shui leads to better landscaping
Regular readers of this
column know that we are
hard-headed realists when
it comes to landscape
design. “Form follows
function” is our guiding
principle. “Less is more”
is equally important. So
is “paint with the big
brush ﬁrst”. These are
well-known design clichés
that help us decide what
to do (and NOT to do) in
landscaping. We believe
that if you focus on practical, common-sense solutions, beauty will fall into
place almost automatically.
So, it might surprise
you that over the years
we’ve adopted many principles and ideas from the
ancient oriental discipline
of Feng Shui.
Wikipedia deﬁnes feng
shui (pronounced “fung
shway”) as “a Chinese
philosophical system of
harmonizing everyone
with the surrounding
environment. The term
feng shui literally translates as “wind-water”
in English.” Feng shui
explains “invisible forces”
that bind the universe,

and boulders, potearth, and humantery. Wood; arbors,
ity together. A
planting boxes,
goal of feng shui in
benches. Water;
design is to harness
fountains, birdpositive life force
baths, ponds and
called Qi, (“chi” in
waterfalls. Fire;
English). Feng shui
lights, lanterns,
ideas in landscape Steve
ﬁre pits. Metal;
design help create a Boehme
peaceful and serene Contributing wind chimes,
arbors, and plantplace where posicolumnist
ers.
tive chi will ﬂow
Feng shui garfreely.
dens must be free of clutHistorically, feng shui
was widely used to decide ter so positive chi can
circulate freely. Everywhere and how to place
thing should have a spebuildings in the most
ciﬁc purpose and place.
favorable way, based on
Each tree, plant and
local features such as
bodies of water, stars, or object is there to balance
a compass. For example, the ﬁve feng shui elements. Disorder, disarray
feng shui might sugand clutter disrupt the
gest placing a home on
ﬂow of chi and lower the
a sunny south-facing
energy level of the area.
slope with a hill behind
Our favorite feng shui
it for protection from the
concept is focusing your
north wind.
landscape on the main
Using feng shui helps
balance natural elements entrance door of your
home. We use landscapsuch as wood, water,
ing to direct attention to
metal, ﬁre and earth in
the front door, thus “funyour overall landscape
neling” positive energy
design. In your garden,
the ﬁve elements of feng into your home. Feng
shui holds that directing
shui are represented
attention to the entrance
by various plants and
objects. Earth; soil, rocks will bring prosperity into

your home, and we’ve
actually seen it work.
Entrances that are hidden from the street,
driveway or parking
area actually block chi,
depriving the home of
positive energy.
Using plants and paving creatively to frame
the entrance is just
one way to harness the
ancient discipline of
feng shui to improve
your mood and make
your home more welcoming. Entering your
home should uplift and
inspire you with positive
energy, and should have
the same effect on your
guests. Just a brief look
into feng shui as a design
tool will quickly open
your eyes to many ways
that positive and negative energy can affect
your living space.
Steve Boehme is a landscape
designer/installer specializing
in landscape “makeovers”. “Let’s
Grow” is published weekly; column
archives are on the “Garden Advice”
page at www.goodseedfarm.com.
For more information is available
at www.goodseedfarm.com or call
GoodSeed Farm Landscapes at
(937) 587-7021.

TODAY IN HISTORY
ner that would prompt
future generations to say,
Today is Tuesday, June “This was their ﬁnest
hour.” Charles de Gaulle
18, the 169th day of
2019. There are 196 days delivered a speech on the
BBC in which he rallied
left in the year.
his countrymen after
Today’s Highlight in History the fall of France to Nazi
Germany.
On June 18, 1979,
In 1945, William
President Jimmy Carter
and Soviet President Leo- Joyce, known as “Lord
Haw-Haw,” was charged
nid I. Brezhnev signed
in London with high
the SALT II strategic
treason for his Englisharms limitation treaty in
language wartime broadVienna.
casts on German radio.
(He was hanged in JanuOn this date
ary 1946.)
In 1778, American
In 1948, Columforces entered Philabia Records publicly
delphia as the British
unveiled its new longwithdrew during the
playing phonograph
Revolutionary War.
record in New York.
In 1812, the War
In 1953, a U.S. Air
of 1812 began as the
Force Douglas C-124
United States Congress
approved, and President Globemaster II crashed
near Tokyo, killing all
James Madison signed,
129 people on board.
a declaration of war
Egypt’s 148-year-old
against Britain.
Muhammad Ali Dynasty
In 1815, Napoleon
Bonaparte met defeat at came to an end with the
overthrow of the monarWaterloo as British and
Prussian troops defeated chy and the proclamation
of a republic.
the French in Belgium.
In 1964, President
In 1940, during World
Lyndon B. Johnson and
War II, British Prime
Japanese Prime Minister
Minister Winston
Hayato Ikeda spoke to
Churchill urged his
each other by telephone
countrymen to conduct
as they inaugurated the
themselves in a manThe Associated Press

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Frailty, thy name is no longer woman.”
— Victor Riesel
American labor journalist (1913-1995)

ﬁrst trans-Paciﬁc cable
completed by AT&amp;T
between Japan and
Hawaii.
In 1983, astronaut
Sally K. Ride became
America’s ﬁrst woman
in space as she and four
colleagues blasted off
aboard the space shuttle
Challenger on a six-day
mission.
In 1992, the U.S.
Supreme Court, in Georgia v. McCollum, ruled
that criminal defendants
could not use race as
a basis for excluding
potential jurors from
their trials.
In 1996, Richard Allen
Davis was convicted in
San Jose, California,
of the 1993 kidnapmurder of 12-year-old
Polly Klaas of Petaluma.
(Davis remains on death
row.)
In 2004, an al-Qaida
cell in Saudi Arabia
beheaded American
engineer Paul M. John-

son Jr., 49, posting grisly
photographs of his severed head; hours later,
Saudi security forces
tracked down and killed
the alleged mastermind
of the kidnapping and
murder.
Ten years ago: Tens
of thousands of protesters ﬁlled the streets of
Tehran again, joining
opposition leader Mir
Hossein Mousavi to
mourn demonstrators
killed in clashes over
Iran’s disputed presidential election. Hortensia
Bussi, the widow of
Chilean President Salvador Allende who helped
lead opposition to the
military dictatorship
that ousted her husband,
died at 94. Washington
Capitals forward Alex
Ovechkin was named
the NHL’s most valuable
player for the second
straight year after leading the league with 56
goals.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Iran speeds up
uranium enrichment
as tensions mount
TEHRAN, Iran (AP)
— Iran will surpass the
uranium-stockpile limit
set by its nuclear deal in
the next 10 days, an ofﬁcial said Monday, raising
pressure on Europeans
trying to save the accord
a year after the U.S.
withdrawal lit the fuse for
the heightened tensions
now between Tehran and
Washington.
The announcement
by Iran’s nuclear agency
marked yet another
deadline set by Tehran.
President Hassan Rouhani already has warned
Europe that a new deal
needs to be in place by
July 7 or the Islamic
Republic would increase
its enrichment of uranium.
Atomic energy spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi
suggested that Iran’s
enrichment could reach
up to 20%, just a step
away from weapons-grade
levels.
It appears as if Iran has
begun its own maximum
pressure campaign on the
world after facing one
from President Donald
Trump’s administration
that deeply cut into its
sale of crude oil abroad
and sent its economy into
freefall. Europe has so far
been unable to offer Iran
a way around the U.S.
sanctions.
The development follows apparent attacks
last week in the Strait of
Hormuz on oil tankers,
assaults that Washington has blamed on Iran.
While Iran has denied
being involved, it laid
mines in the 1980s targeting oil tankers around
the narrow mouth of the
Persian Gulf through
which a ﬁfth of the
world’s crude oil passes.

“If this condition continues, there will be no
deal” anymore, Kamalvandi said. He accused
the Europeans of “killing
time” as the clock runs
down.
Rouhani, greeting
France’s new ambassador
to Tehran on Monday,
similarly warned that
time was running out on
the deal.
“The current situation is very critical and
France and the other
parties to the (deal)
still have a very limited
opportunity to play their
historic role for saving
the deal,” Rouhani said,
according to his website.
The announcement
appeared timed to strike
just as European foreign
ministers met in Luxembourg. Federica Mogherini, the European Union’s
top diplomat, declined to
speciﬁcally address the
Iranian announcement.
“At the moment, as of
today, Iran is still technically compliant and we
strongly hope, encourage
and expect that Iran continues to comply,” Mogherini told journalists.
She insisted she would
await the next report on
the issue from the U.N.’s
nuclear watchdog, the
International Atomic
Energy Agency.
Under terms of the
2015 nuclear deal with
world powers, Iran can
keep a stockpile of no
more than 300 kilograms (660 pounds) of
low-enriched uranium.
Kamalvandi said that
given Iran’s recent
decision to quadruple
its production of lowenriched uranium, it
would pass the 300-kilogram limit on Thursday,
June 27.

Robbery

had robbed the Farmers
Bank in Tuppers Plains.
He is currently serving
eight years in a Mississippi prison for that crime.
He was sentenced to 15
years, with the ﬁnal seven
years as post-release
control. He is scheduled
to be released in 2022,
according to the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.
Another robbery
occurred in May 2013
when Chad R. Rennicker,
then 25, entered the bank
with a gun and demanded
money. He and an accomplice were arrested June
1, 2013, in Ripley, W.Va.
Rennicker was charged
in that incident with six
counts of kidnapping and
one count of aggravated
robbery, all of which
merge for sentencing purposes. On Sept. 30, 2013,
Judge Mike Ward sentenced Rennicker to eight
years in prison to run
consecutive to the time
he is currently serving in
another unrelated case
from Belmont County. He
is scheduled for release in
2023.
His accomplice was not
charged, according to previous reports.
In June 2015, Amanda
Sawyer, then 31, entered
the bank with a nylon
stocking over her head
and sunglasses to cover
her eyes. She was apprehended more than six
weeks later while reportedly planning to rob the
TNT Pit Stop in Chester.
Sawyer was sentenced
to nine years in prison
for her crimes and was
ordered to pay back the
money she stole from the
bank. She remains incarcerated with an estimated
release date in 2024.

From page 1

impounded for processing. McMurray was
charged with Aggravated
Robbery, a felony of the
ﬁrst degree through
Meigs County Court.
According to Wood, his
ofﬁce received information of a possible suspect
on the date of the robbery
attempt. On Sunday, deputies were able to conﬁrm
information that had been
received and were able to
get a location on the possible whereabouts of the
suspect that entered the
bank.
In the evening hours
of June 16, the Parkersburg Police Department
arrested Jeffrey A. Coon,
47, of Pomeroy, on an
arrest warrant issued
out of Meigs County for
aggravated robbery, a
felony of the ﬁrst degree.
Coon is currently being
housed at the North Central Regional Jail in West
Virginia awaiting a court
hearing for extradition
back to Meigs County to
face charges.
The Farmers Bank in
Tuppers Plains was previously robbed in 2009,
2013 and 2015.
According to previously
published Daily Sentinel
reports, Sean Bradford
Mitchell, formerly of Athens, robbed the bank in
September 2009 before
ﬂeeing to Mississippi. He
then reportedly robbed
a bank there in what he
says was an attempt to be
shot by authorities. He
was apprehended by law
enforcement following
a standoff in November
2009.
Under questioning,
Mitchell reportedly told
law enforcement that he

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Tuesday, June 18, 2019 5

Student says college betrayed her
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) — The warnings
came in text messages
from her friends: He’s
outside the dorm. He’s at
the student center. He’s
at Starbucks.
But for Alicia Gonzales, sometimes it didn’t
matter where he was.
She would often hide
away in her room on the
campus of Marshall University, overcome with
fear that she’d run into
him — or be subjected
to his ridicule — even
after reporting that he
raped her on school
grounds, and even after
he was convicted of battery. Months later, she
left the school altogether.
“Every time I saw him,
it was horrible for me,”
she told The Associated
Press on Friday. “It was
almost like I was in that
same state of mind, reliving the assault itself and
how fearful I was. I just
felt like I was helpless.”
The Associated Press
does not typically identify sexual assault victims,
but Gonzales has chosen
to be identiﬁed.
Marshall has expelled
22-year-old Joseph
Chase Hardin amid
new rape accusations
involving two additional
women and renewed
scrutiny of the West Virginia school’s handling
of Gonzales’ February
2016 case. The expulsion caps a lengthy
disciplinary process
during which Hardin
was allowed to be on

campus, according to
Gonzales’ ongoing federal lawsuit against the
university.
A spokeswoman for
the college said it followed state law and
federal regulations in
its handling of Gonzales’ case, adding that it
“took every legal measure available to it to
protect the rights of all
parties throughout the
process.”
In announcing Hardin’s expulsion, University President Jerome
A. Gilbert released a
statement saying, “The
safety of our students is
our ﬁrst obligation.”
Hardin was indicted
and jailed last week on
second-degree sexual
assault charges related
to two alleged rapes in
2018. A judge ordered
Hardin to remain jailed
Wednesday at a court
hearing for violating probation from the earlier
case. He was led into the
courtroom in an orange
jumpsuit and turned his
face away from TV news
cameras trained on him
from the gallery.
His lawyer, Kerry A.
Nessel, said his client
maintains his innocence.
“He denies everything,” Nessel said. “To
me, it’s just a he said/she
said situation.”
Gonzales described a
pattern of harassment by
Hardin and his friends
after the alleged rape.
She said they mocked
her on social media

and once waited for her
outside her on-campus
job and sneered as she
emerged. Hardin even
wore one of her headbands at a basketball
game to taunt her, she
said.
“I felt completely
betrayed by the university and I felt like I had
absolutely no protection
throughout it,” she said.
Gonzales said the
attack occurred in the
middle of a school day
in a dormitory room on
campus. When she ﬁrst
reported the attack, the
college expelled Hardin, but he was able to
remain on campus during an appeal process,
according to Gonzales’
suit. The school didn’t
implement restrictions
to prevent her from
encountering Hardin, it
added.
Marshall then assembled a student conduct
panel, before which she
was aggressively crossexamined by Hardin’s
private attorneys, the
suit says. She had no
lawyer present. After the
panel cleared Hardin, he
winked at her and threw
his ﬁst into the air in
celebration, Gonzales
said.
College administrators then reviewed the
hearing process and
suspended Hardin from
campus grounds until
his criminal case was
resolved. He unsuccessfully appealed that decision but was allowed to

return after he entered
what’s called a Kennedy
plea to a battery charge
and was given three
years’ probation after
having originally been
charged with sexual
assault.
In a Kennedy plea,
which is similar to
what’s called an Alford
plea in other states, a
defendant maintains his
or her innocence but
acknowledges there’s
evidence that might lead
a judge or jury to reach
a guilty verdict. Court
paperwork says that
upon entering the plea,
he was judged guilty.
The whole process
took about a year.
The newer charges of
sexual assault against
Hardin involve alleged
rapes of two women
last year in the county
where Marshall University is located, according to an indictment.
Marshall spokeswoman
Leah Payne said the
more recent charges
didn’t occur on campus
and didn’t involve the
school’s police department.
Gonzales, 22, now
attends a college in
Pennsylvania, where
she studies psychology.
She said she hopes to
become a victims advocate after graduation.
She was relieved to hear
Hardin was expelled.
“That makes me feel
like at least some part of
the community is now
protected,” she said.

IN BRIEF

Buttigieg returns home
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) — Authorities say a
man has died after a shooting involving a police
ofﬁcer in South Bend, the Indiana city where
Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg
is mayor.

Fuel
From page 1

thousands of indirect
jobs, an annual payroll of
approximately $11.5 million including employee
beneﬁts and $300 million annual estimated
gross revenue.
The proposed facility will go on 200 acres
secured from the Mason
County Development
Authority in the Mason
County Industrial Park.
The park is approximately ﬁve miles north
of Point Pleasant, along
W.Va. 62, across from
the Mason County Airport and along the Ohio
River.
Construction is estimated to begin October
2019 with a project
completion date of 2022
or early 2023.
The West Virginia
Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP) recently approved
the draft construction
permit for the project.
Company ofﬁcials plan
a series of community
meetings to explain the
project and its beneﬁts
to the community.
According to the press
release on the project
released Monday:
“We want to be as
transparent as possible
in explaining this project to our neighbors,”
said Kevin Whited,
president of the development company that is
building the facility.
“We hope the DEP will
host a public meeting,
so we share information
with the public about
the exciting opportunities this facility will
bring to the region.”
According to Whited,

the coal to liquids facility is expected to create 130 full-time jobs,
including management,
mining and construction, and boost the local,
state and regional economy. “We plan to host a
series of open houses in
the community to help
explain the project.
“I’m from West Virginia,” Whited said.
“We have West Virginians unemployed, and
the coal industry has
been decimated. We’re
not the solution to revive
it, but we’re going to be
part of it.”
The direct coal to
liquids process to be
utilized in Mason
County mixes coal with
a catalyst and hydrogen
derived from natural
gas and subjects the
mixture to heat and
pressure to produce
ultra-low-sulfur diesel
fuel, gasoline and other
liquids. A similar facility in China has been
operating since 2008.
The resulting fuels
burn cleaner than those
reﬁned from petroleum
and are just as effective
in vehicles.
Whited said the
Mason County facility
will differ from previous
coal to liquids projects
proposed for the state.
The technology is more
advanced, and the direct
method used does not
actually burn coal, but
subjects it to heat and
pressure, making the
process much greener.
“This is environmentally sound,” Whited
said. “We’re excited to
bring a $1.2 billion
project to the Mountain
State.”
“The facility serves a
vital role,” said Chris
Hamilton, senior vice

Buttigieg said he changed his campaign schedule to return to South Bend on Sunday and hold
a late night news conference. He said that the
circumstances of the death would be thoroughly
investigated, and called on any witnesses of the
shooting to come forward and speak to investigators.

president of the West
Virginia Coal Association. “For decades, we’ve
been looking at ways to
expand the coal usage,
coal development, activities and how we can
expand the overall fossil
fuel portfolio.
“Any type of domestic
homegrown, synthetic
fuel particularly manufactured from coal accelerates those objectives,”
Hamilton said.
“Domestic Synthetic
Fuels is unique for
West Virginia and the
United States as being
a one-of-a-kind facility
utilizing two of our biggest natural resources
here in West Virginia,”
said Rebecca McPhail,
president of the West
Virginia Manufacturers
Association.
“DS Fuels is a good
ﬁt in West Virginia
because of the natural
resources that we have
here,” she said. “The
two primary ingredients
for its manufacturing
process, coal and natural gas, are in abundance here. So, it makes
us the perfect location
for this type of facility.”
Whited said he chose
Mason County for the
fuel plant because the
area has easy barge
access and is close to
plentiful supplies of coal
and natural gas. He
said he also wants to
bring jobs and economic
development to the
region.
“We’re looking forward to getting it
going,” he said. Funding
has been secured for the
project, which includes
international investors.
“Unlike prior coal
to liquids projects proposed in the Mountain
State, this is going

to happen,” Whited
explained. “We have
the money, we have the
technology and we have
the expertise.”
Whited said DS
Fuels will bring coal
from nearby Kanawha
County to feed the coal
to liquids facility. The
project is expected to
create more than 100
mining jobs to supply
the facility.
Thousands of construction jobs also will
be created, he added.
According to additional information about
the project supplied by
DS Fuels, the project:
Utilizes locally
sourced coal and natural
gas to produce fuel and
other projects;
Adds hydrogen taken
from natural gas to coal
under heat and pressure in the presence of a
catalyst;
Transforms the coal
into a liquid that can
be reﬁned into “high
quality fuels” and other
chemicals.
Manufactured products are ultra-low-sulfur
diesel, jet fuel and gasoline;
Saleable byproducts
are sulfur, ammonia,
solid residue;
Natural gas used is
estimated at 23 million
cubic feet per day, and
2,500 tons of thermal
coal estimated for use
each day;
Yielding 10,750 barrels (451, 500 gallons)
of fuel per day;
Near zero emissions;
High usage of recycled materials.
To learn more about
the project, visit www.
dsfuels.com.
More on this developing story in upcoming
editions.

�Sports
6 Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Winker paces Reds past Rangers, 11-3

John Minchillo | AP

Cincinnati Reds’ Jesse Winker reacts after hitting a two-run double off Texas
Rangers starting pitcher Ariel Jurado in the second inning Sunday in Cincinnati.

CINCINNATI (AP) — With
his dad set to leave town Sunday evening, Jesse Winker
had limited time to provide an
extra-special Father’s Day.
No worries — Joe Winker
went to the airport with plenty
to be proud of.
Winker homered and set
career highs with four hits and
ﬁve RBIs, Yasiel Puig added
a two-run shot, and the Cincinnati Reds beat the Texas
Rangers 11-3 Sunday to avoid
a three-game sweep.
“It was really cool to have
a good day on Father’s Day,”
Winker said. “It was a cool
weekend with my dad. We got
to play some cards and smoke
some cigars. It was funny. He
had to be at the airport by ﬁve.
He tried to stay for as many atbats as he could.”

The Reds broke open a
one-run game with a four-run
fourth. Winker followed pitcher Sonny Gray’s leadoff triple
with a homer, his 11th of the
season and ﬁrst in 21 games.
Puig drove in Joey Votto with
a shot off the batter’s eye for
his 13th homer on the ﬁrst
pitch he saw from reliever Pete
Fairbanks.
“It was a big day for Wink,”
manager David Bell said. “The
two-run home run was the big
hit of the game.”
Puig had three hits for the
second time in three games.
Gray worked around ShinSoo Choo’s solo home run and
Hunter Pence’s two-run shot
to ﬁnish ﬁve innings in a game
that was delayed at the start
by 1 hour, 34 minutes. Gray
(3-5) gave up ﬁve hits and

three runs with one walk and
eight strikeouts. He improved
to 3-1 with a 2.93 ERA over
his last four starts.
Ariel Jurado, who won each
of his previous three starts,
lasted three batters into the
fourth inning. Jurado (4-3)
allowed nine hits, the most
of any of his six starts this
season, and seven runs with
one walk and no strikeouts. He
also hit a batter.
“Jurado left a lot of balls
over the plate,” Texas manager
Chris Woodward said. “They
were all over his changeup.”
The Rangers went 4-3 on
their road trip through Boston
and Cincinnati.
Neither Puig in right ﬁeld or
Winker in center moved more
See REDS | 7

Rangers
roll past
Post 21
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — Getting in the swing
of things.
The Meigs American Legion Post 39 doubled
its win total for the season on Saturday at Meigs
High School, as the hosts swept Athens Post 21 by
consecutive counts of 6-0 and 6-4.
Post 39 (4-2) — which also has a pair of wins
over Vinton Post 303 this season — scored the
ﬁrst runs of the day with one out in the bottom
of the second inning, as Briar Wolfe hit a tworun doubled. Still with one out, Billy Harmon
singled home two more runs, and then the hosts
went ahead 5-0 on a two-out RBI single by Carter
Smith.
The Rangers capped off the 6-0 victory as Wyatt
Hoover singled home Harmon in the bottom of
the sixth.
Coltin Parker was the winning pitcher of record
in a complete game for the hosts, striking out six
batters, walking none, and allowing just two hits.
Jacob Phillips took the pitching loss in four
innings for Post 21 (2-5), allowing ﬁve earned
runs on eight hits and four walks. John Hobbs
ﬁnished the game for the guests, allowing an
unearned run and a pair of hits.
Leading the winning offense, Harmon was
2-for-4 with two runs scored and two runs batted
in, while Cooper Peters went 2-for-4 and scored
once. Wolfe doubled once, scored once and drove
in two runs for the victors, while Hoover and
Carter Smith both earned a single and an RBI.
Cole Arnott and Wes Smith both singled once and
scored once in the win, while Mason Hanning
added a single.
Isaac York and Cameron Bayha each singled
once for Post 21.
Post 21 committed both of the game’s errors and
left three runners on base, while Post 39 stranded
10.
The second game began with four consecutive
scoreless frames, before the hosts broke through
with two outs in the bottom of the ﬁfth. First,
Colton Reynolds singled home Harmon, then Wes
Smith singled home Carter Smith, and ﬁnally
Hoover singled home both Reynolds and Wes
Smith.
A two-run double by Carter Smith with two outs
in the bottom of the sixth made the home lead 6-0.
The guests ﬁnally broke through with consecutive RBI singles by Andy Merckle, York, and Dalton Skinner in the top of the seventh. Bayha drove
in another run with a ground out, but another
ground out ended the game and gave the Rangers
a 6-4 victory.
Carter Smith was the winning pitcher of record
in 6.1 innings for the Rangers, allowing four runs,
three earned, on 10 hits and three walks, while
striking out seven. Wolfe ﬁnished the game and
hit one batter.
Skinner took the pitching loss in ﬁve innings for
Post 21, striking out three batters, walking two,
and giving up four unearned runs on nine hits.
Luke Chapman completed the game for the guests,
allowing two earned runs on a trio of hits.
Hoover paced the winning offense, going 3-for-3
with two RBIs. Carter Smith was 2-for-3 with a
See RANGERS | 7

Carolyn Kaster | AP

Gary Woodland poses with the trophy after winning the U.S. Open Championship golf tournament Sunday in Pebble Beach, Calif.

Woodland denies history with US Open title
PEBBLE BEACH,
Calif. (AP) — In front
of Gary Woodland was a
263-yard shot to the scariest green on any par 5 at
Pebble Beach, especially
with a U.S. Open on the
line. Behind him by one
shot on the leaderboard
was Brooks Koepka, the
most dangerous ﬁgure in
major championship golf
these days.
The safe shot was to
lay up on the 14th and
take his chances with a
wedge
“The idea was to play
for the win,” Woodland
said.
With an extra boost
of conﬁdence from his
caddie — Brennan Little,
who was on the bag for
Mike Weir in his Masters
victory — Woodland
delivered the shot of his
life with a 3-wood that
narrowly cleared a bunker, settled on the edge
of the green and set up a
birdie that gave him the
cushion he needed.
The rest was pure
theater — a 90-foot pitch
off the 17th green he
nearly holed, a 30-foot
birdie putt on the ﬁnal
hole for a 2-under 69 and
a three-shot victory that
denied Koepka’s bold
bid to match a centuryold record with a third
straight U.S. Open.
Woodland’s pitch
across the 17th green
over a hump that checked
and trickled to tap-in
range effectively clinched
it, taking its place with
other big moments on
the 17th green in the
U.S. Open such as Jack
Nicklaus and his 1-iron

off the pin and Tom Watson’s chip-in birdie. It
even got the attention of
Nicklaus.
“Took a lot of guts,”
Nicklaus said on Twitter.
Woodland had that it
abundance, along with a
message from an inspirational friend.
“You got this.”
Until Sunday, when he
cradled the silver trophy
at Pebble Beach, Woodland got more attention from one hole in a
pro-am at the Phoenix
Open. He was gracious
and encouraging to Amy
Bockerstette, a 20-yearold with Down Syndrome
and sheer optimism.
Woodland invited her to
hit a shot on the par-3
16th (into a bunker). He
wanted to blast it out of
the sand but she said, “I
got this.” She hit it out to
8 feet and made the putt.
The PGA Tour-produced
video has more than 20
million views.
“I told myself that a
million times today,”
Woodland said. “I’ve got
this.”
Koepka didn’t make it
easy, keeping the pressure on Woodland until
the very end.
Both represent the
modern athlete in golf.
Both are unﬂappable.
Needing three putts to
win, Woodland ﬁnished
in style. He raised both
arms in the air to salute
the crowd, turned toward
the Paciﬁc and slammed
down his ﬁst.
“I never let myself get
ahead,” Woodland said.
“Once that went in, it all
came out of me. It’s spe-

cial to ﬁnish it off here at
Pebble Beach.”
Koepka had to settle
for a footnote in history. He closed with
a 68, making him the
ﬁrst player with all four
rounds in the 60s at a
U.S. Open without winning.
“It was awesome to
come this close to going
three in a row. It’s incredible,” Koepka said. “I
didn’t really think about
it until I was done on 18
and realized how close I
actually was to not making history, but tying it, I
guess you could say. Just
wasn’t meant to be this
week.”
Distance was no problem for Woodland on
the 14th hole. It was the
potential outcome.
“Left is not good, right
is out-of-bounds, long is
not ideal and the bunker
speaks for itself,” Woodland said. “So to execute
that shot under the pressure, under the situation,
that shot gave me the
conﬁdence. I felt better
after hitting that shot
on the golf course today
than I had in a long, long
time.”
He believes it allowed
him to hit one just as
good on the 17th.
Woodland dropped the
5-iron from his hands
when it sailed well to the
right of the green with
the pin 90 feet away over
a hump.
Up ahead on the par-5
18th, Koepka drilled a
3-iron just over the back
of the green, leaving him
a 50-foot chip for eagle to
tie, with a birdie likely to

do the trick considering
what Woodland faced on
the 17th. Koepka chipped
to 10 feet and narrowly
missed the birdie putt.
Woodland, unable
to hit putter and get
anywhere near the hole,
opted to pitch it with
a 64-degree wedge. He
clipped it perfectly just
over the hump, and it
checked about 12 feet
from the hole and trickled by the pin to secure
par, and effectively the
U.S. Open.
“I was just trying to
get it over that hump,”
Woodland said. “I
thought it had a chance
to go in, but it’s not one I
want over.”
Woodland played
conservatively down the
18th and made one last
birdie that only mattered
in the record book. He
was aware that Tiger
Woods had a 12-under
272 during his historic
rout at Pebble Beach in
2000, and he topped him.
That birdie put him at
13-under 271 and earned
him $2.25 million, the
richest payoff in golf.
The difference was
Woods won by 15 shots
and was the only player
under par. With a marine
layer blocking the sunshine, and no signiﬁcant
wind at Pebble Beach all
week, 31 players ﬁnished
under par.
Koepka started four
shots behind in his bid
to join Willie Anderson
as the only players to
go back-to-back-to-back
in the toughest test in
See TITLE | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 18, 2019 7

Lakers, Pelicans agree on Davis trade

Paul Sancya | AP

Cleveland Indians pitcher Trevor Bauer reacts to striking out
Detroit Tiger’s Brandon Dixon in the ninth inning Sunday in Detroit.
Cleveland won 8-0.

Indians beat Tigers, 8-0
DETROIT (AP) — Trevor Bauer has accomplished
a lot of things in his career, but there was one box he
wasn’t able to check off until Sunday in Detroit.
Bauer pitched his ﬁrst shutout as a pro, ending the
longest winless streak of his career as the Cleveland
Indians beat the Tigers 8-0 Sunday for a three-game
sweep.
Bauer (5-6) gave up four hits, struck out eight and
walked none. This was his 224th start since being
drafted out of UCLA, including 166 in the majors.
“I’m only disappointed that my strikeouts lagged a
little,” he said. “If you pitch a complete game with 10
strikeouts and no walks, you’re really getting into rariﬁed air.”
“I have some mechanical stuff that was out of
whack, but I was able to compensate and go out there
and get those results,” he said.
The 28-year-old righty had been 0-5 in his previous
eight starts before dominating the Tigers in his third
career complete game.
“Any time you go out there and throw nine innings
without giving up a run, you are doing a lot of things
right,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “He got
out of an early jam when it was still 1-0 and then we
got him some runs and he settled in.”
Harold Castro hit a leadoff triple in the second, but
Bauer stranded him with a popup, a groundball and a
strikeout.

Title

Of the four other players who had a shot at
three straight U.S. Opens,
no one came closer than
From page 6
Koepka. He now has a
golf. He made up ground victory in the PGA Championship and runner-up
quickly with four birdies
ﬁnishes in the Masters
in ﬁve holes.
“I felt like, ‘We’ve got a and U.S. Open.
Justin Rose was the
ball game now,’” Koepka
only one who caught
said.
He failed to get up-and- Woodland all day, with
a birdie on the opendown from a bunker for
birdie on the par-5 sixth, ing hole. Rose bogeyed
and missed a 6-foot birdie from the bunker on No.
putt on the par-3 seventh. 2 as Woodland birdied,
and he never caught up.
Still, he stayed within
range, just like he wanted, Rose fell out of the race
with three bogeys in a
knowing that anything
could happen on the back four-hole stretch on the
back nine. He shot 74
nine of a U.S. Open.
and shared third with
Something wonderful
Xander Schauffele (67),
happened to Woodland.
Jon Rahm (68) and Chez
“Gary played a hell of
Reavie (71).
a round today,” Koepka
Woods birdied six of
said. “Props to him to
his last 12 holes and was
hang in there. To go out
in style like that is pretty never a factor. He tied for
21st, 11 shots behind.
cool.”

tournament open to golfers ages
10-or-under to 18 years old. The
participants will be divided into
four divisions, 10-under, 11-12,
13-15, and 16-18.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Entry fee is $20 for players
schedule for the 2019 Frank
Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf 12-and-under, and $30 for players
13-18. Clubhouse certiﬁcates and
League has been released.
individual awards will be presentThe tour ofﬁcially began on
ed to the top-three places in each
Wednesday, June 12, at Riverdivision.
side Golf Club in Mason. Age
Cart and meal passes will be
groups for both young ladies
available for spectators to follow
and young men are 10-andkids for $15 apiece, so that they
under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and
may follow the tournament and
17-19.
eat with the kids.
The remaining tournaments,
To enter please contact the
courses and dates of play are
Cliffside clubhouse at 740-446as follows: Tuesday, June 18, at
4653, or Ed Caudill at 740-245Meigs County Course in Pome5919 or 740-645-4381. Please
roy; Wednesday, June 26, at
Riverside Golf Course in Mason; leave player’s name, age as of July
18, 2019 and the school the indiand Tuesday, July 9, at Meigs
County Golf Course in Pomeroy. vidual is currently attending.
The fee for each tournament is
$12 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
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
at 740-256-6160, Jan Haddox at University of Rio Grande’s 2019
304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing
Women’s Basketball Camp is
304-675-6135 if you can contrib- scheduled for July 7-10 at the
ute or have questions concernLyne Center on the URG caming the tour.
pus.
The overnight instructional
camp is open to girls in grades
4-12. Cost is $295 per camper,
which includes lodging, meals,
a certiﬁcate of participation and
a t-shirt.
Campers will also receive
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Cliffside
24-hour supervision from
Golf Course will be hosting the
coaches and counselors; lecture/
11th annual Kiwanis Juniors at
discussion groups and ﬁlm sesCliffside Golf Tournament for
sions; daily instruction on shootjunior golfers on Thursday, July
ing, ball-handling, post play and
18, starting at 10 a.m. Registration will be from 9 a.m. until 9:45. defense; and use of the school’s
This is an individual stroke play swimming pool.

There will also be a camp
store featuring drinks, snacks,
pizza and Rio Grande apparel
for sale each day.
Veteran Rio Grande women’s
basketball head coach David
Smalley, who ranks among the
top 10 coaches on the active
wins list with more than 500,
will be the camp director.
Online registration is available
through the women’s basketball
link on the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms are available
in the lobby of the Lyne Center
during regular business hours.
Registration forms should
be mailed to David Smalley,
Rio Grande Women’s Basketball Camp, P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, OH 45674. Checks
should be made payable to Women’s Basketball Camp.
For more information, contact
Smalley at 740-245-7491 or at
1-800-282-7201, or by e-mail
dsmalley@rio.edu

Tri-County Junior
Golf Schedule

RedStorm women’s
basketball camp

From page 6

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

time NBA champion and Finals
regular.
In return, the Pelicans receive
the promise of a young core the
Lakers are blowing up in order
to make the deal, as well as the
opportunity to add more; New
Orleans already had the ﬁrst pick
overall in Thursday’s draft and
will have the Lakers’ fourth overall choice, giving new basketball
operations chief David Grifﬁn the
chance to add another top-tier
prospect to his presumed ﬁrst
pick of Duke star Zion Williamson.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Rangers
double, a run scored and two runs batted in, while
Reynolds went 2-for-4, scored once and drove in one
run. Brody Jeffers contributed a double to the winning cause, while Wes Smith chipped in with a single,
a run and an RBI.
Harmon added a single and two runs for Post 39,
Parker singled once and scored once, while Arnott
came up with a single.
Leading the guests at the plate, York was 2-for-3
with a double, a run scored and an RBI, Phillips was
2-for-3 with a run scored, while Skinner was 2-for-4
with an RBI. Merckle singled once, scored once and
drove in one run, Preston Truax singled once and
scored once, while Chapman and Colby Carsey added
a single apiece.
Post 21 had the game’s only error and left eight runners on base, twice as many as the Rangers.
Post 39 is scheduled to return to action on Tuesday
at Logan Post 78.

league year begins July 6. ESPN
ﬁrst reported the trade.
The deal ends a nearly ﬁvemonth saga that became an awkward NBA sideshow, arguably
derailed the Lakers’ push to make
the playoffs and even cost people
jobs after Davis requested a trade
in late January through his agent,
Rich Paul, who also represents
James.
Now the 26-year-old Davis, a
six-time All-Star, will bring his
dynamic, up-tempo, above-therim play to Hollywood alongside
the 34-year-old James, a three-

NEW ORLEANS (AP) —
Anthony Davis will wind up with
LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers after all.
The New Orleans Pelicans have
agreed to trade the disgruntled
Davis to the Lakers for point
guard Lonzo Ball, forward Brandon Ingram, shooting guard Josh
Hart and three ﬁrst-round draft
choices, several people familiar
with the situation said Saturday.
The people spoke to The
Associated Press on condition of
anonymity because the trade cannot become ofﬁcial until the new

Kiwanis Juniors
Golf Tournament

From page 6

than a step on Choo’s ﬁrst-inning rocket into the rightcenter ﬁeld seats, Choo’s 12th of the season.
Winker followed Jose Peraza’s sacriﬁce ﬂy, Peraza’s
ﬁrst of the season, with a two-run double for a 3-1
Reds lead in the second. It was Winker’s ﬁrst RBIs
since May 28.
“He’s been hitting the ball hard,” Bell said. “The
results haven’t been there.”
Pence tied it with his drive into the visitors’ bullpen in left-center ﬁeld in the third on a 3-0 fastball,
Pence’s 17th career homer against Cincinnati, tied for
the second most against any opponent.
Winker added an RBI single in Cincinnati’s threerun ﬁfth.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy football staff will
be conducting a youth football
camp for boys entering grades
1-8. The camp will be held from
July 22-23 from 6-8 p.m. each day
at Memorial Field. Camp participants will be instructed by both
staff and players.
The cost of the camp is $30 per
student and $20 apiece for two-ormore students. For questions or
to register, please contact Coach
Jared McClelland at 740-6455783.

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(5:30)
Pitch Perfect (2012, Comedy) Brittany Snow, Good Trouble
Hotel Transylvania (2012, Animated) Kevin James,
Rebel Wilson, Anna Kendrick. TV14
"Percussions" (SP) (N)
Andy Samberg, Adam Sandler. TVPG
Mom
Mom
Mom
John Wick (‘14, Act) Keanu Reeves. When Russian mobsters kill Ink Master "A Storm Is
his beloved dog, an ex-hit man sets out to exact vengeance. TVMA
Brewin'" (N)
Loud House Loud House Smarter (N)
Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa Ben Stiller. TVPG
SpongeBob Friends
Friends
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Super Smackdown
Chrisley (N) Radkes (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Detour
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Special Report (N)
Movie
The Accountant (‘16, Cri) Anna Kendrick, Ben Affleck. TVMA
Animal King "Tank" (N)
Animal Kingdom "Tank"
(4:30)
Armageddon (1998, Adventure) Liv Tyler, Ben
Taken (2008, Thriller) Famke Janssen, Leland Orser, (:05)
U.S. Marshals
Affleck, Bruce Willis. TV14
Liam Neeson. TV14
Wesley Snipes. TVPG
Guardians of the Glades
D. Catch "Russian Roulette" Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadliest Catch (N)
GuardiansGlades (N)
The First 48 "Flashing
The First 48 "Predator"
The First 48: Teens on the The First 48: Teens on the Kids Behind Bars: Life or
Colors"
Edge "Easy Money" (N)
Edge "Chopper" (N)
Parole "Otis" (N)
Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law "Red Flag" Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law (N)
Star Law "Back Road Bait"
Chicago P.D. "Grasping for Chicago P.D. "Fagin"
Chicago P.D. "Fork in the
Chicago P.D. "Reform"
Chicago P.D. "The Thing
Salvation"
Road"
About Heroes"
Criminal Minds
C.Minds "God Complex"
C.Minds "The Good Earth" Criminal Minds
Criminal Mind "The Fallen"
Chrisley
Chrisley
E! News (N)
Legally Blonde (‘01, Com) Reese Witherspoon. TVPG Legally Blonde 2: Red, ...
(:20) Andy Griffith Show
(:55) Griffith A. Griffith
(:05) Ray
(:40) Ray
(:15) Ray
(:50) Two and a Half Men
(:25) 2½Men
Locked Up Abroad
Locked Up Abroad
Locked Up Abroad
Locked Up Abroad "Jungle Locked Up Abroad "Narco
"Bangkok"
"Caracas"
"Jamaica"
Crash"
Wine Bust"
American Ninja Warrior
American Ninja Warrior
American Ninja Warrior
American Ninja Warrior
American Ninja Warrior
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Best (N) CONCACAF Soccer Gold Cup Pan./T&amp;T (L)
Gold Cup
CONCACAF Soccer
The Curse of Civil War
Civil War Gold "The Plot
The Curse of Civil War
The Curse of Civil "Grave (:05) Unidentified "The UFO
Gold "Southern Comfort"
Gold "Route Awakenings" Thickens" (N)
Expectations" (N)
Insiders"
Beverly "Reunion, Part 2" Beverly Hills
Beverly Hills
Beverly Hills (N)
Watch (N)
Texicnas (N)
(5:25) All Eyez on Me (‘17, Bio) Danai Gurira, Kat. Graham, Demetrius Shipp Jr.. TVMA
Games People Play (N)
Ladies Night (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Good Bones
Good Bones (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:30)
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (‘05,
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Daniel Radcliffe. After using magic
Adv) Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Daniel Radcliffe. TV14 outside of school, Harry faces trial and may be expelled from Hogwarts. TVPG

6 PM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

Blockers (‘18, Los Espookys Vice News
Tonight (N)
Comedy) Leslie Mann, Ike
Barinholtz, John Cena. TVMA
(:05) American Made (‘17, Act) Sarah Wright, Tom Cruise.
A pilot recruited by the CIA to perform reconnaissance
flights starts smuggling drugs. TV14
(5:15)
Risky Business City on a Hill "The Night
(‘83, Com) Rebecca De
Flynn Sent the Cops on the
Mornay, Tom Cruise. TVMA Ice"
(5:15)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Deadpool 2 (‘18, Act) Josh Brolin, Julian Dennison, Wig 'Wig' spotlights the art
of drag.
Ryan Reynolds. Deadpool assembles a new team of
mutants called X-Force to protect the life of a child. TVMA
Cedar Rapids (‘11, Com) Ed Helms. A man
A Thousand Words Eddie Murphy. After
leaves his sleepy town to represent his
an encounter with a spiritual guru, a literary
insurance company at a convention. TVMA agent finds an odd tree in his yard. TVPG
(:05)
Gone in 60 Seconds (‘00, Act) Angelina Jolie,
City on a Hill "The Night
Nicolas Cage. A retired car thief re-enters the business to Flynn Sent the Cops on the
steal 50 cars with his crew in one night. TVPG
Ice"

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Daily Sentinel

With questions looming, Raptors start thinking about future
TORONTO (AP) —
The Toronto Raptors
were still partying it up
in Las Vegas, part of an
extended celebration following their ﬁrst championship, when the NBA
starting reshaping itself
for a new season with the
blockbuster trade agreement Saturday that will
send Anthony Davis to
the Lakers.
Talk about snapping
back to reality.
Turns out Raptors
coach Nick Nurse already
had.
Back home in Toronto
Sunday, on the eve of a
parade to honor his team,
Nurse said he and general

manager Bobby Webster
have already started talking about a future that’s
full of tough questions.
“Bobby and I have
already had two meetings about it since the
championship,” Nurse
said. “The reality is that
it’s right upon us, and
we get to work. I’ve got
several meetings today
with some players. We
don’t have any choice but
to get to work on it. My
thought, always, is stay
hungry. We’ve got to get
our guys that we want
back.”
No player is more
important to Toronto’s
fortunes than Finals MVP

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008

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Kawhi Leonard, who is
expected to opt out of the
ﬁnal year of his contract
and become a free agent.
“We deﬁnitely want
him back,” Raptors forward Pascal Siakam said.
Center Marc Gasol said
Leonard’s elite two-way
game makes him “one of
a kind.”
“I don’t think there’s
any other player of his
caliber right now in the
NBA,” Gasol said. “He’s
on a pedestal by himself.”
With status like that,
longtime teammate
Danny Green said Leonard’s decision is sure to
have a ripple effect across
the NBA.

“Let’s not be foolish,”
Green said. “His decision
affects a lot of guys’ decisions. He can change a
whole organization.”
Raptors President
Masai Ujiri also is the
subject of speculation,
linked to an offer from
the Washington Wizards.
Ujiri, who was not available Sunday, is expected
to speak at Monday’s
parade, which will ﬁnish in the square outside
Toronto’s city hall.
Even after a year
together, Nurse said he
has no idea which way
Leonard is leaning.
“I don’t really know,”
Nurse said. “I know’s he’s

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got to make a decision
here really soon, couple
of weeks. I think he had
a good season and people
like him here, and we can
give him a good deal.”
Guard Fred VanVleet
said he’s joked with
Leonard about the star
forward’s uncertain
future, but doesn’t plan
to deliver a full-scale
sales pitch.
“I would assume that
he knows what is here
and what makes this
place special,” VanVleet
said. “If it’s enough, it’ll
be enough and if it’s
not, it’s not. We would
all love him to be back
and if he’s not then we’ll

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move on from there. He
came here and did what
he was supposed to do.
He brought this city
the championship and
I think he’s earned his
freedom in his career to
do what he wants to do,
and we’ll all respect it
and admire him.”
Even so, respect and
admiration only go so
far.
“If he’s on another
team,” VanVleet said,
“we’ll just have to kick
his (butt) next year.”
Gasol can also opt out
of the ﬁnal year of his
contract, while Green, a
free agent, said he hopes
to return.

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, June 18, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green
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�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Lloyd, World Cup starter again, scores 2 as US beats Chile
PARIS (AP) — Carli
Lloyd wasn’t thrilled to
open the Women’s World
Cup on the bench for the
United States. She accepted the role, but made
no secret she wanted to
start.
When the call came
Sunday, Lloyd made it
count with a pair of goals
to lead the defending
champions to a 3-0 victory over Chile. The win
pushed the United States
into the round of 16.
Lloyd was the hero of
the World Cup in Canada
four years ago when she
scored three goals in the
ﬁnal against Japan that
gave the Americans their
third World Cup title.
But she was on the bench
when the U.S. opened the
tournament, even though
she scored later as a substitute in the 13-0 victory
over Thailand.

changes to the starting
lineup against Chile,
including a new front
line with Lloyd, Christen
Press and Mallory Pugh.
Alex Morgan was moved
to the bench along with
Megan Rapinoe and
Tobin Heath.
Becky Sauerbrunn,
who sat out the match
against Thailand
because of a minor quad
injury, returned and
Alessandra Tarantino | AP
anchored a backline that
United States’ Christen Press shoots the ball during the Women’s
World Cup Group F soccer match between United States and Chile included 20-year-old
Tierna Davidson, who
on Sunday at Parc des Princes in Paris, France.
was making her World
Cup debut. Davidson
clouded the run-up to
the ﬁrst half it was difthe match against Chile. is the youngest player
ﬁcult for me to get into
to start for the United
Several of the Amerithe game. I think the
States in a World Cup
can players reached
second half went better
since Tiffany Roberts
for me and in general for out to their Thai counagainst Norway in 1995.
terparts following the
the team.”
Chile made just one
The victory over Chile match. Lloyd exchanged
lineup change, starting
was more subdued than encouraging words
midﬁelder Claudia Soto
and tweets with goalthe U.S. team’s recordin place of Yanara Aedo.
keeper Sukanya Chor
breaking rout of ThaiChile lost its opener to
land. The Americans cel- Charoenying, and FIFA
ebrated every goal even posted an interview with Sweden 2-0, but Endler
was solid in that game,
Thailand’s coach thankafter the win was well
too, keeping the Swedes
in hand, and the display ing the U.S. players for
out of the goal until 83rd
being professional and
offended many who
minute. The second goal
playing well.
thought the champions
got past the 6-footer in
After such a rout, Jill
should have shown more
stoppage time.
Ellis made sweeping
class. The controversy

goal game in the tournament.
She nearly got another
hat trick — which would
have made her the ﬁrst
player with two in the
World Cup — but her
penalty kick in the 81st
minute went wide left.
“It’s haunting me right
now,” Lloyd said. “Wasn’t
good enough.”
The score could have
been worse for Chile
without unshakable goalkeeper Christiane Endler,
who ﬁnished with six
saves and fended off a
ﬂurry of U.S. shots in the
second half.
Endler was named
player of the match.
“I love the balls coming
towards me and being
able to showcase my
skills,” she said through
a translator. “Obviously
it’s difﬁcult to maintain
concentration. I think in

“I know that my ability
is there, I know this is
my best version of me.
I’ve just got to go out
there and prove it,” she
said. “Whether that’s
coming off the bench
and making an impact,
whether that’s starting
and getting the opportunity, which I’m grateful
for, I’m just trying to
make the most of it. I
want to win.”
Lloyd became the
ﬁrst player to score in
six straight World Cup
matches with her goal in
the 11th minute.
She added another on a
header off a corner in the
35th for her 10th career
World Cup goal, which
moved her into third
on the U.S. list behind
Abby Wambach (14) and
Michelle Akers (12). At
36, she became the oldest
player to have a multi-

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www.taslg.com
TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

70°

73°

74°

Humid today and tonight with a shower or
thunderstorm around. High 77° / Low 66°

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. Mon.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

1.03
3.10
2.34
22.96
20.42

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:03 a.m.
8:56 p.m.
10:15 p.m.
7:08 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Jun 25

New

Jul 2

First

Jul 9

Full

Jul 16

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

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

Major
12:46a
1:42a
2:38a
3:32a
4:24a
5:12a
5:57a

Minor
6:59a
7:55a
8:50a
9:44a
10:35a
11:23a
12:08p

Major
1:13p
2:08p
3:02p
3:55p
4:46p
5:34p
6:18p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Minor
7:26p
8:20p
9:15p
10:07p
10:57p
11:44p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
On the morning of June 18, 1992, a
severe thunderstorm in Indianapolis,
Ind., caused one-inch hailstones and
a 62-mph wind gust. A tornado was
spotted northwest of the airport.

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

Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
76/66
High

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

Portsmouth
77/67

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. Mon.

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.64 -0.05
Marietta
34 17.45 +0.35
Parkersburg
36 21.48 -0.39
Belleville
35 12.39 -0.57
Racine
41 12.62 -0.26
Point Pleasant
40 24.82 +0.56
Gallipolis
50 12.69 +0.53
Huntington
50 25.52 -0.83
Ashland
52 33.82 -0.86
Lloyd Greenup 54 11.87 -0.96
Portsmouth
50 22.60 +3.70
Maysville
50 35.00 +1.20
Meldahl Dam
51 23.60 +3.80
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Logan
75/65

SATURDAY

88°
67°

85°
69°

Partly sunny, breezy
and pleasant

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Cloudy, humid; a p.m.
t-storm possible

Overcast, a shower
and t-storm around

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
75/65
Belpre
75/65

Athens
74/64

St. Marys
76/65

Parkersburg
74/65

Coolville
74/64

Elizabeth
76/66

Spencer
75/65

Buffalo
77/66
Milton
78/68

St. Albans
78/66

Huntington
75/68

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
70/53
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
74/57
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
73/61
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

85°
68°

Murray City
74/64

Ironton
78/68

Ashland
77/68
Grayson
77/68

SUNDAY

82°
63°

Wilkesville
75/64
POMEROY
Jackson
76/66
75/65
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
77/66
77/66
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
77/66
GALLIPOLIS
77/66
77/66
77/66

South Shore Greenup
77/68
76/66

35

Couple of
thunderstorms

McArthur
74/64

Very High

Primary: other
Mold: 1412
Moderate

Chillicothe
76/66

FRIDAY

78°
62°

Adelphi
75/65

Waverly
75/65

Pollen: 2

Low

MOON PHASES

THURSDAY

A thunderstorm in
spots in the morning

3

Primary: ascospores, unk.

Wed.
6:03 a.m.
8:57 p.m.
11:02 p.m.
8:02 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

82°
68°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

82°
67°
83°
62°
100° in 1936
44° in 1964

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

OH-70132260

Responsible Attorney: Adam R. Salisbury,
licensed in Ohio and West Virginia

Clendenin
78/66
Charleston
75/66

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
74/51
Montreal
79/60

Billings
81/56

Minneapolis
76/58

Denver
69/50

Chicago
78/62
Kansas City
83/66

Detroit
78/61

Toronto
76/59

New York
74/63

Washington
85/71

Chihuahua
97/67

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
89/60/pc
63/51/c
85/71/t
77/68/t
85/68/t
81/56/t
89/56/s
69/59/sh
75/66/t
86/71/t
63/49/t
78/62/c
77/64/t
76/61/c
78/66/t
90/73/pc
69/50/t
78/61/t
78/61/c
91/78/pc
93/77/pc
80/64/c
83/66/c
100/80/s
88/71/c
73/61/pc
80/70/t
84/76/t
76/58/pc
84/70/t
87/77/t
74/63/r
86/64/t
85/71/t
80/67/t
103/77/s
74/65/t
70/56/pc
88/71/t
89/72/t
85/70/c
84/63/pc
74/57/pc
70/53/sh
85/71/t

Hi/Lo/W
89/62/s
66/52/pc
87/74/t
75/68/t
83/68/t
79/49/pc
80/48/s
68/60/c
81/66/c
89/73/t
75/49/t
69/52/sh
83/67/c
79/65/c
82/66/c
90/74/t
81/56/pc
73/59/t
78/60/c
91/75/pc
95/78/pc
82/63/t
76/61/t
105/82/s
88/72/t
74/62/pc
86/69/t
89/77/t
77/60/pc
89/74/c
91/77/t
74/65/c
84/63/t
88/71/t
80/68/t
103/78/s
80/65/t
67/56/c
89/71/t
86/72/t
80/65/t
86/60/s
74/58/s
67/51/c
84/71/t

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
85/71
El Paso
98/72

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

High
Low

101° in Needles, CA
36° in Big Bear City, CA

Global
High
Low

Houston
93/77
Monterrey
100/77

Miami
84/76

121° in Umm Said, Qatar
4° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

OH-70107872

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

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