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                  <text>Kempers
celebrate
anniversary

Big Bend
Blues
Bash

Kight
named
EHS coach

LOCAL s 3A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 27, Volume 52

Sunday, July 8, 2018 s $2

Hepatitis A
prevention in
the tri-state
Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY — Due to the Hepatitis A outbreaks within the tri-state area of Kentucky, West
Virginia, and Ohio, several restaurant chains have
implemented preventative measures for their staff.
Sarah Osment, director of Strategic Accounts,
Large Mouth Communications, explained local
Golden Corral restaurants are activating preventive measures such as immunization programs
and daily reinforcement of proactive sanitizing
measures.
Jace Stickdorn, managing director for Platinum
Corral, stated, “As a preventive measure, we
recently implemented a voluntary, free-of-charge
Hepatitis A vaccination program for all of our
employees at the following Golden Corral locations: 304 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio;
1302 Garﬁeld Avenue, Parkersburg; 3761 North
Pointe Drive, Zanesville, Ohio; 2296 N. Memorial
Drive, Lancaster, Ohio; 1660 N. Bridge Street,
Chillicothe, Ohio.
This was implemented in collaboration and
communication with the Gallia County Health
Department, Mid-Ohio Valley Health Department,
Zanesville-Muskingum County Health Department, Fairﬁeld Department of Health and Ross
County Health Department.
In addition, the chain is hosting daily meetings
with staff to reinforce proactive sanitation measures, including regular-interval hand washing and
utensil sanitation.
This is in addition to the program implemented
in May at the following locations, in collaboration and communication with the Ashland Boyd
County Health Department, Cabell-Huntington
Health Department and Greenup County Health
Department.
“The health and well-being of our guests and
employees are top priorities at Golden Corral,”
stated Stickdorn.

Ed Lowe | Courtesy

The staff at the Point Pleasant River Museum appreciate all of the volunteers from near and far who jumped in and helped carry items
within the building.

Brushing off the ashes
By Erin Perkins
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT —
The Point Pleasant River
Museum is currently
open at a new location
following last weekend’s
ﬁre.
Ruth Fout of the
River Museum said
the new ofﬁce is at 21
Main street. The River
Museum’s phone number

is the same, (304) 6740144, but in the case
that number does not
ring through, call (304)
674-9898. The hours for
the River Museum are
Tuesday-Friday, 10 a.m.-3
p.m.; Saturday, 11 a.m.-4
p.m.; Sunday, 1 p.m.-5
p.m.
All items from the ﬁrst
ﬂoor of the river museum
have been removed from
the building; however,

Fout explained the second ﬂoor still has items.
She said they must wait
for clearance before they
are able to remove those
items.
Ruth Fout commented
how much she, her sister
Martha Fout, and Jack
Fowler, Point Pleasant
River Museum director,
appreciate the volunteers
who stepped up and
helped them in their time

of need. She said she saw
not only local volunteers,
but also volunteers from
the Meigs and Gallia
areas. A few volunteers
even traveled from as far
as Charleston.
“We appreciate how
the community jumped
in and helped carry out
items…and all of the ﬁrst
responders,” said Ruth
Fout.
See ASHES | 5A

See HEPATITIS | 5A

Local student
named to AG’s Teen
Ambassador Board
Staff Report

COLUMBUS — One local student is among
those selected for the Ohio Attorney General’s
Teen Ambassador Board.
Emmalea Durst, a student at Eastern High
School, was the lone student from the Meigs and
Gallia County area to be selected, according to a
news release from Attorney General Mike DeWine’s ofﬁce.
More than 300 students representing 52 Ohio
counties were named to the Teen Ambassador
Board for the upcoming school year.
The participants represent more than 160
schools throughout the state.
“We created this board to give Ohio high school
students an opportunity to learn about law and
government and to hear their ideas,” Attorney
General DeWine said. “We look forward to working with this group of students.”
See STUDENT | 5A

By Dean Wright

break up with?’ You make
a story in your head and
it starts to happen.”
Richards encouraged
young writers to read
GALLIPOLIS — Young
outside of their standard
adult literature author
genres of choice in order
Natalie Richards, author
to expand their minds
of critically-acclaimed
and broaden and better
novels such as Six
their writing by looking
Months Later, We All
at new techniques. She
Fall Down and One Was
told prospective writers
Lost, met with Bossard
to expect to write drafts
Memorial Library’s Teen
Dean Wright | OVP
over and over again as
Summer Club to discuss
Young adult author Natalie Richards meets with area teens
the writing profession
Thursday afternoon as part of a writing workshop discussing part of the process as
Thursday afternoon.
the profession of writing, how to go about being published and agents and editors go
over their work. She also
She also met with the
developing plots.
encouraged them to not
French City Writers’
give up and to heed critidifferent,” said Richards. we don’t identify that
Guild in the evening to
cism but not negativity.
that’s writing until so
“You have to be a little
meet with area writers
“I have very conﬂicted
much later. It’s a creative
bit quirky to be a writer
and discuss the craft.
characters and I deﬁnitely
thing. You might look at
because I don’t know a
Richards is the author
tend to write thrillers
someone’s grocery cart
single writer that looks
of six separate books
with heart,” said Richand the last comes out in at the world in a way like and you don’t say ‘Wow,
you’re buying ﬂowers and ards.
everybody else does. We
December.
chocolate.’ You say ‘Hm,
see it in a slightly dif“There has to be
See AUTHOR | 5A
what’d you do? Who’d you
ferent way, sometimes
something in you that’s

deanwright@aimmediamidwest.
com

Council discussions on London Pool continue

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 8A
B SPORTS
Comics: 5B
Classifieds: 6B

Author holds writing workshop with area youth

Staff Report

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

SYRACUSE — The future of
London Pool in Syracuse remains
a topic of discussion for village
ofﬁcials as they await evaluations
on the structural integrity of the
pool.
During the recent Syracuse Village Council meeting councilman
David Poole stated he believes a
full evaluation of the structure is
needed.
One company contacted by
Poole is booked until the fall, while
the company contacted by ﬁscal
ofﬁcer Crystal Cottrill is too busy
with current pool season openings
to take new projects.
Village resident Debbie Clay
stated at the meeting she had a
couple of anonymous donors inter-

ested in donating, but they were
concerned by rumors of the pool
not opening.
Poole explained to Clay that
Council was going all in on the
pool this year with the planning
and management, and the goal is
now to reopen the pool next year.
Council stated they plan to
refund donations if the pool is
unable to open for some unforeseen reason. Mayor Eric Cunningham reassured Clay that if
for some reason the pool does
not open, donors would get their
money back.
Councilwoman Rhonda Rathburn said Council’s intent is to
do a thorough, long-lasting repair
rather than a “band aid” quick ﬁx.
Resurfacing or relining the inte-

rior of the pool appear to be the
best options at the moment, but
a pool expert’s opinion is needed,
according to council minutes provided by Cottrill.
Poole outlined some of the suggestions Ratliff’s (a pool company)
gave him for the pool repair,
discussing ongoing maintenance.
There was further discussion of
possible repairs and the need for
a complete evaluation of the lines,
pumps, etc. before proceeding.
The need to have the evaluation
complete before the pool can
be reﬁlled was agreed upon by
Council, and concerns were raised
about leaving the pool empty. Cottrill is to consult with additional
See COUNCIL | 5A

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, July 8,2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
CHARLES BEMAN
nephews, Charles
THURMAN
Richard (Jes­
— Charles E.
sica) Stephens
Beman, 67, of
of Scottown,
Thurman, passed
and Michael
away Thursday,
G. (Lindsay)
July 5, 2018 at
Stephens of
Ohio State Uni­
Bidwell; three
versity Wexner
great-nephews, Tyler,
Medical Center in
Tate, and Tanner; and a
Columbus.
host of extended family
Born May 23,1951 in
member and friends.
Gallipolis, Charles was
Services will be noon
the son of the late Fred
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
S. Beman and Naomi
Fellure Beman who sur­
at Thurman United
vives at Thurman. He
Methodist Church with
retired from ConstelPastor D. John Rozewiez officiating. Friends
lium and was a farmer.
may call before the
Charles was a member
service from 10 a.m.-12
of Thurman United
p.m. at the church. A
Methodist Church.
private burial service
In addition to his
will be held at Hill
mother Naomi, Charles
Cemetery at the conve­
is survived by his wife,
nience of the family. In
Susan Sprow Beman
lieu of flowers, please
whom he married on
consider a donation in
May 2,1996; sisters,
Charles’s name to Thur­
Janet (Larry) Stephens
man United Methodist
of Vinton and Joan R.
Church, RO. Box 2000,
Beman of Thurman;
Thurman, OH 45685.
stepdaughter, Jamie
Please visit www.
(Dusty) Fisher of
willisfuneralhome.com
Gallipolis; step-grandchildren, Gage Wilson
to send e-mail condoand Tayler Fisher; two lences.
GARY RAY WAUGH
VINTON — Gary
Ray Waugh, age 66, of
Vinton, passed away
Thursday July 5, 2018,
at his residence. Born
July 30, 1951, in Gal­
lia County, Ohio, he
was the son of the late
Lester Waugh and
the late Cecil Vernoka
White Waugh. In addi­
tion to his parents, he
was preceded by his
wife, Dawn Elaine Hall
Waugh.
Gary was a truck
driver. He loved to
hunt, fish, and golf.
He is survived by
one son, Shawn M.
(Bethany) Waugh
of Circleville; three
grandchildren, Abigail
Waugh, James Waugh,
and Josiah Waugh; one
brother, Rufus Allen
(Doris) Waugh of Wil­
liamsburg, Ohio; one
sister, Sharon (Freel)

Tackett of Bidwell; and
by several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will
be 2 p.m., Sunday, July
8, 2018, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
with Rev. Ralph Work­
man officiating. Burial
will follow in the Vinton
Memorial Park. Visita­
tion was held at Waug'hHalley-Wood Funeral
Home on Saturday, July
7, 2018, from 6-8 p.m.
Pallbearers will be:
Shawn Waugh, Carl
Tackett, Bret Tackett,
Chris Tackett, Rex Jus­
tice, and Joe Justice.
Honorary Pallbear­
ers will be: Bobby
McClaskey, Tom Gard­
ner, James Waugh, and
Josiah Waugh.
An online guest regis­
try is available at http://
www.waug'h-halleywood.com/.

US-China trade war
elevates the risks to
the global economy
By Paul Wiseman
and Josh Boak
AP Economics Writers

WASHINGTON
— The trade war
that erupted Friday
between the U.S. and
China carries a major
risk of escalation that
could weaken invest­
ment, depress spend­
ing, unsettle financial
markets and slow the
global economy.

The opening shots
were fired just after
midnight, when the
Trump administration
imposed a 25 percent
tariff on $34 billion of
imports from China,
and Beijing promptly
retaliated with duties
on an equal amount of
American products.
It accused the U.S. of
igniting “the biggest
trade war in economic
history.”

Hmtt&amp;ap Cimes-^entinel
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)

BERNARD HARRIS BUTCHER
GALLIPOLIS — Ber­
nard Harris Butcher, 95,
of Gallipolis, Ohio passed
away on Thursday, July 5,
2018, at Holzer Assisted
Living in Gallipolis.
Born Aug. 3,1922, in
Rivesville, West Virginia,
Bernard was the son of
the late Frank Isaac and
Madge Harris Butcher.
He was a former superin­
tendent of the Southern
Ohio Coal Company belt
line. Bernard was also
a former general man­
ager/superintendent at
Bradshaw Industries in
Fairmont, West Virginia.
He was a member of
Grace United Methodist
Church, Gideons Inter­
national, and the United
Methodist Men. Bernard
was a veteran of the Unit­

ed States Marines
who served his
country during
World War II.
Bernard is
survived by
two daughters,
Kandyse (John)
Nuce of Gallipolis and
Linda (Michael) Betz of
Belpre, Ohio; one son,
Danny (Kathy) Butcher
of Bidwell; five grandchil­
dren, Karissa (Danny)
Martyn, Johnny (Diana)
Nuce, Alyssa C. (Ernest)
Betz-Acosta, Ryan (Tif­
fany Ann) Butcher, and
Tiffany (Tyler) Duncan;
six great grandchildren,
Grace Martyn and Daniel
Martyn, Lydia Butcher,
Brooke Butcher, Jackson
Tyler Duncan, and Aayla
Nuce; another great

grandchild, Lin­
coln Duncan due
in October; one
sister, Beatrice Kisner of Fairmont,
West Virginia; two
brothers, Beverly
Butcher of Fair­
mont, West Virginia and
Verlin “Bud” (Roberta)
Butcher of Clintonville,
West Virginia; and several
nieces and nephews.
In addition to his
parents, Bernard was
preceded in death by his
first wife, Delcie Leveta
Butcher in 1982 and
his second wife, Wanda
Butcher in 2016.
The funeral service will
be 2 p.m. Monday, July 9,
2018, at the Grace United
Methodist Church with
Pastor Ray Kane and

Bob Powell officiating.
Burial will follow at Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call prior to
the service from 12:30-2
p.m. at the church. In lieu
of flowers, please con­
sider making a donation
to The Gideons Inter­
national, P.O. Box 1104,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.
The family also wishes to
express a special thank
you to all the staff with
Holzer Assisted Living.
Full military rites will be
given at the cemetery by
the Gallia County Funeral
Detail.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.

FURBEE
POINT PLEASANT, WVa. — Friend Samuel Furbee, 94, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died June 28, 2018.
A Celebration of Life will be held at the Sycamore
Baptist Church in Hurricane, W.Va., Saturday, July 14,
2018 from 1-4 p.m. Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleas­
ant is serving the family.

RUSCHEL JR.
COCOA, FL. — Albert Philip Ruschel Jr., age 87, of
Cocoa, FL., originally from Pomeroy, died on Monday,
June 25, 2018.
Albert’s burial was at Brevard Memorial Park in
Cocoa on Monday, July 2, 2018.

TRAURIG
CROWN CITY — Ronald Edward Traurig, 85, of
Crown City, Ohio, died Friday, July 6, 2018, at The
Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House, Huntington,
WVa.
Private family services will be held.

BARRETT
HARTFORD — Keith Wayne Barrett of Hartford
died on Thursday, July 5, 2018. Funeral services will
be held on Tuesday, July 10, 2018, at 1 p.m. at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Visita­
tion will be held two hours prior to the service.

Judge meets delay to reunite children
By Elliot Spagat
Associated Press

SAN DIEGO —A
judge on Friday refused to
grant the Trump admin­
istration a blanket exten­
sion of the deadline to
reunite children separated
from their parents at the
border, instead acknowl­
edging that more time
may be justified only in
specific cases.
The administration
said it needed more time
to reunite 101 children
under 5 years old to
ensure the children’s safe­
ty and to confirm their
parental relationships.
“There’s always going
to be tension between
a fast release and a safe
release,” said Sarah Fabi­
an, a Justice Department
attorney.
U.S. District Judge
Dana Sabraw ordered the
administration to share
a list of the 101 children
with the American Civil
Liberties Union, which
successfully sued to force
the reunions, by Saturday
afternoon. The two sides
will try to determine
over the weekend which
cases merit a delay in an
effort to present a unified
front in court on Monday
morning.
“The government must
reunite them,” the judge
said. “It must comply
with the time frame
unless there is an articu­
lable reason.”
The administration has
matched 86 parents to 83
children and 16 are not
yet matched, Fabian said.
The deadline is July 10
for parents with children
under 5 and July 26 for
everyone else.

Charles RexArbogast | AP

Diego Magalhaes, left, 10, kisses his mother Sirley Silveira Paixao, an immigrant from Brazil seeking
asylum with her son. Diego was released Thursday from immigration detention in Chicago. The
Justice Department filed papers Friday seeking an extension of the deadlines to reunite children and
parents separated at the border.

More than 2,000 chil­
dren were separated from
their parents after Attor­
ney General Jeff Sessions
announced in May that
the zero tolerance policy
was in full effect, even if
it meant splitting fami­
lies. While parents were
criminally prosecuted,
children were placed in
custody of the Health and
Human Services Depart­
ment.
Trump reversed
course on June 20 amid
an international outcry
from opponents who said
families should remain
together.
On Thursday, Health
and Human Services
Secretary Alex Azar said
fewer than 3,000 chil­
dren are believed to have
been separated, but that
includes kids who may
have lost parents along
the journey, not just par­
ents who were detained
at the border.

If DNA testing is incon­
clusive, officials said in
a court filing, they won’t
be able to confirm a
child’s parentage by the
deadline. They will need
more time to collect DNA
samples or other evidence
from parents who have
been released from gov­
ernment custody.
About half of the par­
ents of the 101 children
are in the custody of
Immigration and Customs
Enforcement. Others have
left the country or were
released, Fabian said. She
said it has been more dif­
ficult to reunite children
when parents are outside
government custody.
The judge, who was
appointed by President
George W. Bush, set the
deadline last week, writ­
ing that the “situation has
reached a crisis level” and
that the “chaotic circum­
stances” were of the gov­
ernment’s own making.

Jonathan White, a
Health and Human
Services official, filed a
declaration with the court
that gives perhaps the
most detailed account yet
of what the government
is doing and the hurdles
it faces. Its database has
some information about
the children’s parents
but was not designed to
reunify families by the
court’s deadline.
The department has
manually reviewed the
cases of all 11,800 chil­
dren in its custody by
working nights and week­
ends, White said. The
results of that review are
being validated.
DNA cheek swab tests
on parent and child take
nearly a week to com­
plete, said White, who
called the risk of placing
children with adults who
aren’t their parents “a real
and significant child wel­
fare concern.”

Telephone: 740-446-2342
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
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Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

Immigrant PhD candidate rocked by sudden Army discharge

Prices are subject to change at any time.

By Martha Mendoza

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER

CIRCULATION MANAGER

Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109

Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097

bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com

dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

EDITOR

SPORTS EDITOR

Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,

Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101

bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

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825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.

and Garance Burke
Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO —
Growing up in eastern
China, Panshu Zhao fell
in love with America. He
read the Bible his parents
gave him, watched Holly­
wood movies and studied
the ideals of democracy.
He jumped at the chance
to attend graduate school
at Texas A&amp;M University.
In 2016, Zhao enlisted
in the U.S. Army as part
of a special recruitment
program offering immi­

grants in the country
legally a path to citizen­
ship.
The future, he said,
was bright. Now, he is
one of the dozens of
immigrant recruits and
reservists struggling with
abrupt, often unexplained
military discharges and
canceled contracts.
They traded being will­
ing to risk their lives
for the prospect of U.S.
citizenship, a timeworn
exchange that’s drawn lin­
guists, medical specialists
and thousands of other
immigrants to the mili­

tary since the Revolution­
ary War.
“It’s just like you’re
dropped from heaven to
hell,” Zhao told The Asso­
ciated Press on Friday.
It is unclear how many
men and women who
enlisted through the spe­
cial recruitment program
have been ousted from
the Army, but immigra­
tion attorneys told the AP
that they know of more
than 40 recruits who
recently have been dis­
charged or whose status
has become questionable.
Some recruits say they

were given no reason for
their discharge. Others
said the Army informed
them they’d been labeled
as security risks because
they have relatives abroad
or because the Defense
Department had not com­
pleted background checks
on them.
The Pentagon said Fri­
day that there has been
no policy change since
last year, when Defense
Secretary Jim Mattis said
no one could enter basic
training without comple­
tion of a background
investigation.

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 8, 2018 3

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

Ice Cream Social

Understanding juvenile arthritis

recommending the following groups to
get the Hepatitis A vaccine: men who
have sex with men, persons who inject
SALEM CENTER — The Salem
drugs and person who use illegal nonTwp. Volunteer Fire Department will
injection drugs. These are the highest
hold its 40th annual Ice Cream Social
risk groups for transmission of Hepaon Saturday, July 21. Serving will be
from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the ﬁre depart- titis A. Call 740-992-6626 for vaccine
availability.
ment located on State Route 124 in
Salem Center. The menu will include 11
ﬂavors of homemade ice cream, pulled
pork sandwiches, sloppy joes, hot dogs,
pies and more. To celebrate the 40th
RACINE — Meigs County Road 28,
year, one person will win an ice cream
Bashan Road, will be closed between
maker.
C-30, Morning Star Road, and T-109,
Carmel Road, for approximately two
weeks beginning Monday, July 9.
County forces will be repairing a slip in
MIDDLEPORT — Wendy Miller will this area.
RACINE — A bridge replacement
be offering art classes for school-age
children at Riverbend Arts Council, 290 project begins on May 29, 2018, on
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, Ohio. Classes County Road 29 (Bowmans Run Road)
in Meigs County. The project is taking
will be on Monday, July 9, 16, 23, and
30 from 10:30 a.m. to noon. Each class place .17 miles off of County Road 34
will be $10 with all materials furnished. (Pine Grove Road). The road will be
closed in this area through August 31,
For more info call Wendy at 740-4162018.
4015.
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
MIDDLEPORT — The Riverbend
road is closed in both directions in this
Arts Council will present Cooking in
area. ODOT’s detour is SR 124 to SR
the Village, a cooking demonstration
with Rick Werner and Jessica Wolf fea- 733 to US 33 to SR 124. The reopening
date is unknown at this time.
turing easy summertime recipes. The
presentation will be held from 1-3 p.m.
on Saturday, July 14 at the Riverbend
Arts Council, located at 290 North Second Avenue in Middleport.

ages 8-12 years
Aches, pains
old. Most often
and bruises are
the pains occur in
the story of our
the muscle areas
lives as parents of
of the legs or
young children!
behind the knee.
However, there
The aches are
are conditions
easily calmed and
that warrant
Angie
are typically only
further evaluaRosler
tion for a child
Contributing present at night.
These pains can
when complaints columnist
be bothersome
or symptoms
and disturb sleep
become frequent
but do not usually affect
or are affecting sleep.
The CMH program was activity during the day
created to help cover the or come with fatigue,
joint pain, swelling or
cost of additional testadditional symptoms,
ing for eligible medical
such as a rash. For these
conditions.
symptoms please get
A common cause of
aches and pains beyond your child a visit with
their doctor for further
minor injuries are
“growing pains.” Typical evaluation. It is posages for “growing pains” sible that children can
are common at ages 3-4 develop arthritic, auto
immune and other conyears and then again at

Road Closure

Children’s Art Class

Cooking in the Village

Angie Rosler is the CMH nurse
for the Meigs County Health
Department.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Sunday, July 8

Hot Summer
Nights Thursday

RACINE — The Theiss reunion
will be held at 1 p.m. at the Racine
American Legion.

Immunization Clinic

GALLIPOLIS — The 2018 Hot Summer Nights concert series continues.
This weekly concert series will conPOMEROY — The Meigs County
tinue every Thursday night, throughout
Health Department will conduct an
June, July and August, with local musiImmunization Clinic on Tuesday, from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m., at 112 E. Memo- cians appearing as live entertainment.
Gates open at the French Art Colony at
rial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring
6 p.m., with food available for a donachild(ren)’s shot records. Children
must be accompanied by a parent/legal tion, along with legal beverages for
guardian. A $30.00 donation is appreci- purchase. Music will begin at 6:30 p.m.
ated for immunization administration;
Admission is $5 per person for nonhowever, no one will be denied services members, and French Art Colony membecause of an inability to pay an admin- bers attend free, as a member beneﬁt.
istration fee for state-funded childhood For additional information call the FAC
vaccines. Please bring medical cards
at 740-446-3834.
and/or commercial insurance cards, if
applicable. Shingles and pneumonia
vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or
visit our website at www.meigs-health.
com to see a list of accepted commerGallia County Engineer, Brett A.
cial insurances and Medicaid for adults. Boothe, announces the following road
The Ohio Department of Health (ODH) closures due to bridge work: Vanco
does NOT recommended for routine
Road Bridge will be closed on July
Hepatitis A vaccination of Healthcare
9 - 12 , 2018, weather permitting, for
Workers. Additionally, the Advisory
bridge rehabilitation. Southers Road
Committee on Immunization Practices
Bridge will be closed July 16 - 26, 2018,
(ACIP) does NOT recommend rouweather permitting, for bridge deck
tine Hepatitis A vaccination for Food
replacement. Local trafﬁc will need to
Workers. Currently, ODH is strongly
use other county roads as a detour.

Monday, July 9
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford
Township trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at
the Bedford Town Hall.
RIO GRANDE — The CadotBlessing Camp #126 of the Sons of
Union Veterans of the Civil War will
have their meeting at 1 p.m. in the
Bob Evans Homestead House at Bob
Evans Farms. The SUVCW is the
legal heir to the GAR (Grand Army
of the Republic) and is for the purposes of Patriotic and Educational
programs dedicated to the memory
of the Veterans of the American Civil
War. Any male that has ancestry who
served during the war is invited to
attend.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis
Neighborhood Watch is seeking new
members to assist in its constant
surveillance of the community for

County engineer
announcements

Kempers to celebrate 70th anniversary
Gordon and Betty
(Chandler) Kemper of
Gallipolis will celebrate
their 70th wedding
anniversary on July 17.
The Kempers were
married on July 17,
1948, by Rev. Clarence
E. Shepard.
The couple has one
daughter, Kolleta
(Richard) Fridley of
Middleport. They have
two granddaughters,
Megan (Aaron) Ihle
and Courtney (Phillip)
Mayes-Morehead, and
one great-grandchild on
the way.
Gordon retired from

ditions that can cause a
wide array of symptoms
and treatment. Better to
be safe than to be sorry.
Children with Medical
Handicaps is a program
developed to assist
families in covering
medical expenses for
their children. Currently, Meigs County
has approximately 60
families beneﬁting from
the program. If you feel
your child has an eligible condition that may
qualify for the program
please contact the Meigs
County CMH nurse
Angie Rosler RN at the
Meigs County Health
department (740) 9926626 Ext: 1075.

suspicious activity. Those looking to
become involved can join the meetings at the Gallipolis Justice Center
building on Second Avenue across
the street from the Gallia County
Courthouse. The meetings are at
1:30 p.m. the ﬁrst Monday of every
Month.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia
County Board of Developmental Disabilities will hold a regular monthly
board meeting for the month of July
on Monday, July 9, 2018 at 4 pm at
the Administrative Ofﬁces, 77 Mill
Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
LETART TWP. — The regular
meeting of the Letart Township
Trustees will be held at 5 p.m. at the
Letart Township Building.

Tuesday, July 10
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse Community Center Board of Directors will
meet at 7 p.m.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 6
p.m., Acoustic Night at the Library.
All are invited to listen or play along
with the group in this informal jam
session.

FRIENDS &amp;

FAMILY
SUNDAY, JULY 8, 2018 ONLY!

Courtesy photos

Gordon and Betty Kemper.

The City of Gallipolis
and Betty is retired
from Revco Co.
The couple will celebrate at home with

OPEN 8 AM - 10 PM
family. Cards may be
sent to Gordon and
Betty Kemper at 556
4th Avenue, Gallipolis,
OH 45632.

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�el

Opinion
4A Sunday, July 8, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Independence Day
thoughts inspire
new speakership
A lot has happened up at the Ohio Statehouse in
recent weeks. In early June, I was elected by my
peers to serve as the 103rd Speaker of the Ohio
House, and I hope to be able to represent you and
the rest of the 93rd District even better in my new
role. Along with this honor comes great responsibility, and we’ve been incredibly busy over the
past weeks to pass vital legislation that will impact
Ohioans across the state.
It’s because of all of this work that the Fourth of
July holiday was especially welcome
this year. My job not only commits
me to busy days in Columbus, but
it’s also important to remain present
in the community to hear your ideas
and concerns, especially during a
holiday that brings us all together as
Americans.
Ryan
With so many different events
Smith
going on throughout the district, I
Contributing hope you were able to take advancolumnist
tage of the clear, hot weather and
celebrate Independence Day with
friends and family. Whether that was
by spending the day at the pool or watching your
local parade, there was something for everyone
this year. With cookouts and carnivals in abundance, I’m proud of our communities for maintaining the true reason for the holiday, our freedom as
citizens of an independent nation.
This year was the 242nd anniversary since
the United States declared independence from
the British rule, and the beliefs that inspired the
American Revolution still run in each of our veins
today. We are a ﬁerce, strong people who continue
to uphold principles of freedom of speech and religion, personal responsibility, equality, and democracy. It is perhaps more important than ever that
we each are able to speak our minds and vote with
our conscience without fear of retribution.
It is this guiding value that has ensured the
success of the United States and why we remain
a beacon of innovation, liberty, and individuality
to much of the rest of the world. Our founding
fathers wanted to live in a country that was governed by the people, for the people, and I believe
that America still abides by that sentiment. It is
with many of these thoughts in mind that I take
on the role of Speaker, and I’m looking forward to
working alongside my fellow members in this new
capacity, along with the continued goal of serving
the great people of the 93rd House District.
Ryan Smith (R-Bidwell) is currently the Speaker in the Ohio House of
Representatives. Smith represents the 93rd District which includes
Gallia County.

TODAY IN HISTORY

THEIR VIEW

Supporting Ohio grandparents
We all know how devastating the addiction
epidemic has been for
our state, and it has farreaching consequences
for Ohio families. It’s
often grandparents who
step in to care for kids
when their parents can’t
because of addiction, or
when parents are tragically taken from their family
by a fatal overdose.
Our ofﬁce has heard
from a number of Ohio
grandparents raising
their grandchildren and
unfortunately, we know
the opioid epidemic is
putting more and more
grandparents in this situation.
More than 2.5 million grandparents in the
United States, including more than 100,000
Ohio grandparents, are
the primary caretaker of
their grandchildren, and

take on an addiexperts report that
tional child. For
these numbers are Sherrod
so many grandgrowing as the
Brown
addiction epidemic Contributing parents, taking on
the responsibility
gets worse.
columnist
of raising their
These relatives
grandchild means
face unique challenges. The grandchildren the end of retirement for
those who can go back to
they’re caring for are
work, or the depletion of
dealing with the trauma
their savings.
of having a parent sufOne Ohio grandmother
fering from addiction,
wrote to me, saying “I
or having tragically lost
kept my grandchildren
a parent. Grandparents
also face their own health out of the system out of
love. I don’t get much
challenges as they grow
older, and any parent of a help. I worked 43 years.”
We need to learn more
toddler can tell you that
about all of the challengcaring for very young
es facing grandparents
children can be physilike her, and other relacally demanding. Many
tives in Ohio who have
of these older Ohioans
stepped up as caregivers,
never expected to be
doing that full-time again. so we can support them
as they raise these chilFamily members also
don’t often qualify for the dren.
That’s why I worked to
same level of ﬁnancial
pass the bipartisan Supsupport a foster parent
would receive when they porting Grandparents

Raising Grandchildren
Act, which is headed to
the president’s desk to be
signed into law.
My bill establishes
a federal task force to
support grandparents
raising grandchildren to
identify, coordinate, and
share information and
resources. The task force
will also share resources
to help grandparents and
other relatives maintain
their own health and
well-being.
We have a long way
to go to support these
families, but this bill
is a simple, bipartisan
step we are taking, right
now, to support the Ohio
grandparents and children whose lives have
been upended because of
addiction.
Sherrod Brown is a U.S. Senator
from Ohio.

By The Associated Press

Today is Sunday, July 8, the 189th day of 2018.
There are 176 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On July 8, 1776, Col. John Nixon gave the ﬁrst
public reading of the Declaration of Independence,
outside the State House (now Independence Hall)
in Philadelphia.
On this date:
In 1663, King Charles II of England granted a
Royal Charter to Rhode Island.
In 1889, The Wall Street Journal was ﬁrst published.
In 1907, Florenz Ziegfeld staged his ﬁrst “FolThought for
lies,” on the roof of the
New York Theater.
Today: “America
In 1919, President
is not just a
Woodrow Wilson received
power, it is a
a tumultuous welcome in
promise.”
New York City after his
— Nelson A.
return from the Versailles
Rockefeller,
Peace Conference in
American politician
France.
and businessman
In 1947, a New Mexico
(born this date in
newspaper, the Roswell
Daily Record, quoted ofﬁ1908, died 1979)
cials at Roswell Army Air
Field as saying they had
recovered a “ﬂying saucer” that crashed onto a
ranch; ofﬁcials then said it was actually a weather
balloon. (To this day, there are those who believe
what fell to Earth was an alien spaceship carrying
extra-terrestrial beings.)
In 1950, President Harry S. Truman named
Gen. Douglas MacArthur commander-in-chief of
United Nations forces in Korea. (Truman ended
up sacking MacArthur for insubordination nine
months later.)
In 1965, Canadian Paciﬁc Air Lines Flight 21, a
Douglas DC-6B, crashed in British Columbia after
the tail separated from the fuselage; all 52 people
on board were killed in what authorities said was
the result of an apparent bombing.
In 1967, Academy Award-winning actress Vivien
Leigh, 53, died in London.
In 1975, President Gerald R. Ford announced he
would seek a second term of ofﬁce.

THEIR VIEW

We can’t afford to lose focus on illegal drugs
When I ﬁrst began my
career in law enforcement nearly 40 years
ago, I never thought that
our part of Ohio would
be one of the worst hit
by the opioid outbreak.
Southeastern Ohio, West
Virginia and Appalachia
as a whole are the epicenter of the devastating
opioid overdose outbreak
that is leading to deaths
and crime throughout
the country.
In addition to the
direct deaths and overdoses, those addicted to
opioids are more likely
to commit secondary
crimes to feed their
addiction. With home
and car break ins as well
as shoplifting incidents
on the rise, we are all
impacted by the opioid
epidemic in very real
ways.
There is no doubt that
prescription opioids and
the greed of many manufactures teamed with
shady doctors caused
a lot of this crisis here
at home. While many
have rightfully held
those responsible for the
prescription drug crisis
accountable, we all must
understand that this not
nearly the end of this
crisis.
While prescription

Police are seedrugs have long
ing an inﬂux of
been blamed for
“Mexican Oxy”
causing the criknock off pills are
sis as a whole,
stamped to look
data provided by
like legitimate
the CDC shows
drugs but conthat we saw a 30
tain a dangerous,
percent jump in
Steve
illegal and lethal
opioid related
Kane
concoction that is
deaths in 2017
Contributing
killing Americans
alone. That is well columnist
every single day.
after most drug
Far too often, we
makers had been
challenged and practices are seeing the new realwere put in place to bet- ity in law enforcement.
Anyone who thinks that
ter track prescription
the Mexican Cartels or
drugs, those writing
the prescription and the those in a Chinese smuggling ring are stupid
pharmacies dispensing
– think again. They are
the drugs.
ﬁnding new and creative
With all the added
ways to get their drugs
scrutiny on the makaround our system. In
ers and marketers of
many cases, the USPS is
prescription drugs, how
acting as unknown courican we be seeing a such
ers of extremely dangersteady increase?
ous drugs. Scared and
The fact of the matter
impressionable younggrowth we seeing was
sters are being used to
not caused by prescripcarry drugs across our
tion painkillers but
wide open Southern
by illegal dangerous
border.
synthetic opioids like
While it is important
fentanyl. Drug cartels in
to focus inward on those
Mexico and smugglers
that have impacted the
in China have stepped
opioid epidemic and litiup their activity. A few
gate those cases, it is far
years ago few had heard
more important to focus
the word fentanyl but
on the current threat we
now it is on the mind of
face in America.
everyone, including our
Our leaders in Columlaw enforcement ofﬁcers
bus and in Washington
that can be harmed by a
single grain of this stuff. need to focus on the cur-

rent threat and acknowledge that at this point in
time, illicit foreign drugs
are killing more people in
America than anything.
Now is the time to
ensure that our law
enforcement personnel
have the tools they need
to combat current and
future threats. We need
to invest in making our
airports more keen on
catching these drugs, we
need the Post Ofﬁce to
step up and ﬁnd ways to
detect these drugs, and
we need to make sure
that our Southern border
is not the gateway to
America for drugs.
Americans are rightfully outraged over the
role prescription drugs
played in this crisis,
but it would be to our
detriment to forget the
growing part played by
foreign manufactured
illicit drugs, those that
smuggle them around
our nation and the ones
in our community that
sell the stuff.
Steve Kane, of Shade, Ohio,
has supervised Crime Scene
Special Agents, Canine Units,
and Narcotic Special Agents and
worked with the United States
Attorney’s Office and United
States Drug Enforcement Agency
in supervising multi-agency drug
task force operations on several
occasions.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

weekly immunization
clinic announcement on
Thursday, that “The Ohio
Department of Health
From page 1A
(ODH) does NOT recomAlso, Jennifer Thomas, mend routine Hepatitis A
vaccination of Healthcare
nursing director and
Workers. Additionally,
administrator at the
the Advisory CommitMason County Health
tee on Immunization
Department, stated in
Practices (ACIP) does
a previous article, resNOT recommend routine
taurants within Mason
County started requiring Hepatitis A vaccination
their employees to get the for Food Workers. Currently, ODH is strongly
Hepatitis A vaccination
recommending the folas well. Thomas recomlowing groups to get the
mends individuals regularly wash their hands as Hepatitis A vaccine: men
who have sex with men,
the disease is communipersons who inject drugs
cable.
Individuals can contact and person who use illegal non-injection drugs.
their primary physicians
These are the highest
as well as their local
risk groups for transmishealth departments and
sion of Hepatitis A.”
pharmacies to ask about
The Meigs County
possible means of getting
Health Department offers
a Hepatitis A immunizaimmunization clinics
tion.
each Tuesday.
The Meigs County
According to The CenHealth Department has
ter for Disease Control
advised, as part of its

Hepatitis

Sunday, July 8, 2018 5A

develop over a period
of several days and usually last less than two
months, although some
people (10-15 percent)
with Hepatitis A can
have symptoms for as
long as six months.
The CDC explained
unvaccinated individuals
who have been exposed
recently, within two
weeks, to the Hepatitis
A virus should get the
Hepatitis A vaccine or a
shot of immune globulin
to prevent severe illness.
In order to treat the
symptoms of Hepatitis
A, doctors usually recommend rest, adequate
nutrition, and ﬂuids;
however, some people
will need medical care in
a hospital. It can take a
few months before people
with Hepatitis A begin to
feel better.

and Prevention (CDC)
website, Hepatitis A
is usually transmitted
person-to-person through
the fecal-oral route or
consumption of contaminated food or water.
The CDC explained
Hepatitis A is a self-limited disease that does not
result in chronic infection. Most adults with
Hepatitis A have symptoms, including fatigue,
low appetite, stomach
pain, nausea, and jaundice, that usually resolve
within two months of
infection. Most children
less than 6 years of age
do not have symptoms
or have an unrecognized
infection.
The CDC said if symptoms occur, they usually start appearing four
weeks after exposure,
but can occur as early as
two and as late as seven
weeks after exposure.
The symptoms usually

Erin Perkins, OVP Reporter,
contributed to this article.

From page 1A

Future plans of the
River Museum and the
cause of the ﬁre are still
in question. Ruth said
they are deliberating
about plans in their current location.
She explained one goal
they are working towards
is selling tickets for the
upcoming Belle of Cincinnati dinner cruise.
The dinner cruise
is set for July 30, with
boarding at 6:30 p.m. and
departure at 7 p.m. from
Point Pleasant Riverfront
Park. The vessel should
return to the park around
9:30 p.m. that night.
A buffet-style dinner
is planned as is a performance from Sam Stephens, the one man band.
Tickets are $50 for adults
and $30 for children ages
4-12. This cruise is also
handicap-accessible for
those with special needs.
For those wishing to

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

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7

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8

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10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
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CABLE

6:30

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at Six (N)
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Globe Trekker "North East
England"
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Golf
Sunday (N)
(5:00) Authors Anonymous
Kaley Cuoco. TV14
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Washington
NewsHour
Week
Weekend (N)
13 News
Weekend
Weekend (N) News (N)

6 PM

Ed Lowe | Courtesy

purchase tickets should
contact Ruth or Martha
at the river museum.
Ruth commented the
tickets are limited.
Following the cruise,
the Tribute to the River
during Labor Day weekend also brings in funds
for the River Museum.
Donations for the

Ruth said donations can also be made
directly to the River
Museum, via telephone
if it is a card payment,
or through mail at P.O.
BOX 412, Point Pleasant, W.Va., 25550.

River Museum can
be made to the River
Museum Rebuild Fund
at Ohio Valley Bank in
Point Pleasant or on
Facebook at https://
www.gofundme.com/river-museum-ﬁre-recoveryfund. The amount raised
in donations so far is
$3,405.

Erin Perkins is a staff writer for
Ohio Valley Publishing. Reach her
at (304) 675-1333, extension 1992.

6:30

SUNDAY, JULY 8
7 PM

7:30

Running Wild With Bear
Grylls "Roger Federer" (N)
Running Wild With Bear
Grylls "Roger Federer" (N)
America's Funniest Home
Videos
Masterpiece "Downton
Abbey, Series III" Robert and
Cora aren't speaking.
America's Funniest Home
Videos
60 Minutes

8 PM

8:30

7:30

9:30

America's Got Talent "Auditions 2" The auditions
continue with acts of all types and ages.
America's Got Talent "Auditions 2" The auditions
continue with acts of all types and ages.
Celebrity Family Feud (N) The $100,000 Pyramid (N)

10 PM

10:30

Shades of Blue "A Walking
Shadow" (N)
Shades of Blue "A Walking
Shadow" (N)
To Tell the Truth (N)

Masterpiece "Poldark"
George maneuvers Poldark
toward checkmate.
Celebrity Family Feud (N)

Masterpiece "Endeavour: Passenger"
The Tunnel
Morse investigates a disappearance, fearing (N)
that it’s linked it to an unsolved murder. (N)
The $100,000 Pyramid (N) To Tell the Truth (N)

Big Brother (N)

NCIS: Los Angeles "Under NCIS: Los Angeles
Pressure"
"Liabilities"
Family Guy Ghosted (N) Eyewitness News at 10
p.m. (N)
Masterpiece "Endeavour: Passenger"
The Tunnel
Morse investigates a disappearance, fearing (N)
that it’s linked it to an unsolved murder. (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles "Under NCIS: Los Angeles
Pressure"
"Liabilities"

One Strange Rock "Escape" Simps. "Frink Bob's
Gets Testy" Burgers
Masterpiece "Poldark"
Masterpiece "Downton
Abbey, Series III" Robert and George maneuvers Poldark
Cora aren't speaking.
toward checkmate.
60 Minutes
Big Brother (N)

7 PM

9 PM

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Blue Bloods "Open Secrets" Blue Blood "Insult to Injury" BlueB. "Righting Wrongs" BlueBlood "Custody Battle"
18 (WGN) BlueB. "Unwritten Rules"
MLR Rugby Utah Warriors vs. Seattle Seawolves
In Depth
Poker Night Poker Heartland Tour
24 (ROOT) Xterra Pan American
25 (ESPN) Baseball Tonight
MLB Selection Show (L)
MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Los Angeles Angels Site: Angel Stadium (L)
26 (ESPN2) (5:30) NBA Basketball Summer League (L) NBA Basketball Summer League G.S./Hou. (L)
NBA Basket. Summer League Mem./Orl. (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)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
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(4:15) Finding (:45)
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Pocahontas
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Bar Rescue "How to Train Bar Rescue "Win, Lose or
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Ice Age: The Meltdown Ray Romano. TVPG
Full House
Full House
SVU "Deadly Ambition"
SVU "American Tragedy"
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My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 Nia Vardalos. TV14
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CNN Newsroom
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(:55) The Walking Dead "Live Bait"
(:55) The Walking Dead
The Walking Dead "Too Far Preacher "Gonna Hurt" (N)
Gone"
"Dead Weight"
Naked "Island of Tears"
Naked and Afraid XL "Fight to the Finish" (N)
Naked and Afraid XL: All Stars "The Lion's Den"
Ozzy and Jack's World
Ozzy and Jack's World
Ozzy and Jack's World
Ozzy and Jack's World
OzzyandJack'sDetour "New
Detour "Spicy In-Laws"
Detour "Pearls of Wisdom" Detour "Twisted Sister"
Detour "Kelly of the Beast" Kid on the Block"
River Monsters
River Monsters
Vet Gone Wild (N)
Extinct or Alive (N)
I Was Prey (N)
Snapped "Diana Nadell" (N) Buried in the Backyard
A Wedding and a Murder Snapped "Diana Nadell"
Buried in the Backyard
"A Myrtle Beach Murder"
"Murder House" (N)
"Murder House"
Monk
Monk
Monk
Monk
Monk
Total Bellas
Total Bellas
Total Bellas
Bellas "Save The Date" (N) Very Cavallari (N)
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
World's Deadliest "Born to Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Monster Fish "Giant
Kill"
"Battle Lines"
"Wildest Weather" (N)
"Not In Our Backyard" (N) Catfish"
Racer TV (N) Swimming Pro Series (L)
Cycling Tour de France Stage 2 Mouilleron-Saint-Germain - La Roche-sur-Yon
(4:00) IMSA Auto Racing
MLS Soccer New York Red Bulls at New York City FC (L)
FIFA Soccer World Cup
American Pickers "Good
American Pickers "Big
Evel Live Travis Pastrana looks to honor Evel Knievel by performing three of his
and Evel"
Money Motors"
legendary stunts. (L)
Housewives Potomac
The Real Housewives
Housewives Potomac (N)
Kandi (N)
Cheating "Girl Fight" (N)
Kandi
(5:05)
Madea's Family Reunion Tyler Perry. TVPG
Diary of a Mad Black Woman (‘05, Dra) Steve Harris, Kimberly Elise. TV14
Property "Mad About Plaid" Property Brothers
Bargain (N) Bargain (N) Hunters (N) Hunters (N) Mexico (N) Mexico (N)
(5:30)
Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (‘10,
Iron Man (2008, Action) Gwyneth Paltrow, Jeff Bridges, Robert Downey Jr.. Tony
Act) Gemma Arterton, Ben Kingsley, Jake Gyllenhaal. TV14 Stark creates a suit of high tech armor to fix his mistakes and defend the innocent. TVPG

6 PM

6:30

(4:30) Kingsman: The

400 (HBO) Golden Circle (‘17, Act)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

pool and determine
what steps need to be
taken in order to open
for the 2019 season.
From page 1A
At the time of the
decision for the pool to
remain closed, Cottrill
pool companies for
expert opinions as soon stated, “The village
is morally and legally
as possible.
responsible to ensure
As previously
reported, Syracuse Vil- the pool is structurally
stable, safe, and clean.
lage Council made the
unanimous decision in Rather than delaying
the opening indeﬁnitely
May to not open Lonand putting the entire
don Pool for the 2018
staff and community
season. The decision
to keep the 40-year-old on hold while the necessary inspections,
pool closed was based
fundraising, and repairs
in part on concerns
over structural integrity are done, council unaniof the pool. The closure mously agreed this was
the best decision for
for 2018 will allow for
everyone involved.”
time to evaluate the

First responders and civilians alike joined together to assist the Point Pleasant River Museum in their
time of need.

SUNDAY EVENING
6 PM

BLUFFTON, Ohio—Bluffton University has
announced the dean’s list for the undergraduate
students for the spring term.
Students with a GPA of 3.6 or higher are eligible
for the dean’s list.
Wyatt Jarrell from Racine was named to the
dean’s list.
Bluffton University is a residential, liberal arts
campus with 85 undergraduate majors, minors and
programs; adult degree-completion programs in
accounting, organizational management and RN
to BSN; MBA programs; and master’s degrees in
organizational management and education.
Founded in 1899 and afﬁliated with Mennonite
Church USA, the university is located in Northwest Ohio. It has an enrollment of around 1,000
students and has 16 NCAA Division III athletic
teams. Bluffton’s 100-year legacy is expressed
today in its enduring values of discovery, community, respect and service, which are woven into
the academic program and campus life. Bluffton
students go into the world prepared for life as well
as for their chosen vocation.

Council

Ashes

BROADCAST

Local student named
to Bluffton’s dean’s list

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

(:55) Justice League (‘17, Act) Ben Affleck, Jason Momoa,

9 PM

9:30

Sharp Objects (P) (N)

Gal Gadot. Batman and Wonder Woman recruit a team of
Taron Egerton. TV14
superheroes to defend the Earth from invasion. TV14
Self/ Less (‘15, Sci-Fi) Ryan Reynolds, Ben Kingsley. A
Couples Retreat (‘09, Com) Jason Bateman, Kristen
wealthy man dying of cancer has his consciousness
Bell, Vince Vaughn. Four couples vacation on an island and
transferred into a healthy young body. TV14
belatedly learn that couples therapy is mandatory. TV14
(:15)
Bad Moms (2016, Comedy) Kristen Bell, Kathryn The Affair Noah tries to
The Affair Alison and Ben
Hahn, Mila Kunis. Amy Mitchell finally has it with being a teach his students a lesson. dig into her past. (N)
perfect mom and goes on a wild binge of freedom. TVMA

10 PM

10:30

Succession "Which Side Are
You On?" (N)
The Losers (‘10,
Act) Chris Evans, Jeffrey
Dean Morgan. TVPG
I'm Dying Up Here "Lines
Crossed" (N)
(:55)

Student
From page 1A

The mission of the
Teen Ambassador
Board is to provide
Ohio’s future leaders
with an inside look at
Ohio law and government. The board is
open to high school
juniors and seniors
from public, private,
home, charter, and
online schools located
in Ohio.
Board members
advise the Attorney
General’s Ofﬁce on
issues relating to teens,
and they work with
their peers to develop
solutions. They also

attend presentations,
hear from elected
ofﬁcials, interact with
assistant attorneys
general, and have the
opportunity to participate in events around
the state.
During the 2018 Two
Days in May Conference on Victim Assistance and the 2017 Law
Enforcement Conference, board members
presented workshops
on popular apps that
teens use to help
attendees understand
the apps, potential
dangers, and available
security measures.
This year’s Teen
Ambassador Board
kick-off meeting will be
held in August.

Author

“I got rejected in
so many times and
From page 1A
in so many ways. I
“I do not write white was told I couldn’t
knights and white hats. write, why I ever
I think there are too
thought I could
many books that tell
write and people
teenagers that to be a
told me I wasn’t
hero you have to be a
bookworm and the top good enough or
of your class and this
educated enough…I
and that. If you’re not a heard it all and got
hot mess when you’re
17-years-old, you’re not published anyway.
Sometimes, guys, a
doing it right…When
you’re that old, you are lot of life is hearing
a hot mess, so let’s own that sort of stuff
and recognize that.
and pulling up your
Who in their life wasn’t
socks anyway.”
trying to ﬁgure everything out then?”
Richards encouraged
teens who enjoy “worldbuilding” to look into
genres such as science
ﬁction, fantasy and history due to the nature
of studying the expansiveness of cultures and
environmental situations.
“It took me four
years and six months
of writing seriously (to
publish six books),”
said Richards. “When
I say seriously I mean
I didn’t occasionally
write on the weekend. I
wrote 20 hours a week.
Maybe 30. I got reject-

— Natalie Richards,
Author

ed in so many times
and in so many ways.
I was told I couldn’t
write, why I ever
thought I could write
and people told me I
wasn’t good enough
or educated enough…I
heard it all and got published anyway. Sometimes, guys, a lot of
life is hearing that sort
of stuff and pulling up
your socks anyway.”
Dean Wright can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2103.

�A long the River
6A Saturday, July 7, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Big Bend Blues Bash returns July 27
Staff Report

POMEROY — The
18th annual Big Bend
Blues Bash will be held
July 27 and 28 in downtown Pomeroy.
The annual event features two days of blues
and local craft beers along
the Ohio River in Pomeroy.
Craft beer companies
such as Pomeroy’s Maple
Lawn Brewery, Cider
House, Sixth Sense Brewing Company, North High
Brewing Company, and
Devil’s Kettle will be set
up for the weekend. Free
camping and boat docking on the Ohio River will
be available. Ticket cost
is $20 for Friday, $25 for
Saturday, and $40 for a
weekend pass.
On Friday evening the
ﬁrst performer will go on
at 6 p.m. with the last performer on at 10 p.m. On
Saturday, the music starts
early with the ﬁrst performer going on at noon
and the last performer at
10 p.m.
Several returning musical favorites will take
to the Blues Bash stage
along with a few new
faces.
Friday
On Friday evening,
the event will begin with
Snuggleﬁsh at 6 p.m., followed by local favorites
Blitzkrieg at 7 p.m.
At 8 p.m. will be Noah
Wotherspoon, with Joanna Connor at 10 p.m.
Rattlesnake Shake will
perform at 10 p.m. on Friday evening at the Court
Grill.
Snuggleﬁsh is comprised of musicians from
the river cities, and plays
“good time” music.
Blitzkrieg, Southeast
Ohio’s longest running
rock band, is made up of
Phil Moon on lead guitar,
vocals and keyboard; Lyle
Moon on bass guitar,
vocals and keyboard; Ed
Sisson on rhythm guitar
and vocals; and Rob
Heady on drums, percussion and vocals.
The band’s motto is “I
Rock therefore I am.”
The Noah Wotherspoon
Band is from Cincinnati,
Ohio. The band has been
playing festivals and
venues around the world,
from the Mt. Baker Blues
Festival in Washington to
the Olsztyn Blues Nights
Festival in Poland. The
band’s debut studio album
entitled “Mystic Mud”
was also presented a “Jimi
Award” for Best Blues/
Rock Album of the Year in
2015 by Blues411.
Joanna Connor, from
Chicago, draws her musical inﬂuences from Aretha
Franklin and Buddy Guy.
According to her biography, Joanna cut her
teeth at the famous club
owned by Buddy Guy on
the south side of Chicago
— the Checkerboard
Lounge with house band
the 43rd St. blues band.
Joanna was given her own
night at the legendary
Kingston Mines at the age
of 26, was signed to Blind
Pig records soon thereafter, toured 49 states and
25 countries. She was the
ﬁrst artist not on a major
label to be signed to an
endorsement deal by
Gibson Guitars and Victoria Amps. She has been
featured in every major
city newspaper and guitar
magazine. Her band was
featured in a documentary
for German television,

BIG BEND
BLUES BASH
2018
Friday, July 27
6 p.m. — Snugglefish
7 p.m. — Blitzkrieg
8 p.m. — Noah
Wotherspoon
10 p.m. — Joanna Connor
10 p.m. (Court Grill) —
Rattlesnake Shake
Saturday, July 28
Noon — Brent Patterson
Showcase
1 p.m. — Napalm AllStars
2 p.m. — Blues Cowboys
3 p.m. — Shouts &amp;
Whispers
4 p.m. — Bernie Nau Trio
5 p.m. — Rattlesnake
Shake
6 p.m. — Chris O’Leary
8 p.m. — Lance Lopez
10 p.m. — Dwayne Dopsie
&amp; Zydeco Hellraisers
10 p.m. (Court Grill) —
Angela Perley &amp; the
Howlin’ Moons

Joanna Connor

Photos from the artist websites and Facebook pages

Angela Perley

The Chris O’Leary Band

and featured on NPR and
House of Blues Radio
Hour. She has held a
house gig at the Chicago
House of Blues for 10
years running and at the
Kingston Mines since
2004, where she is a
favorite of audiences of all
ages and nationalities.
Rattlesnake Shake will
round out the evening at
Court Grill, before taking
the the Blues Bash stage
on Saturday.
Based in Detroit,
Rattlesnake Shake is a
tribute to Peter Green’s
Fleetwood Mac speciﬁc
to 1967 through 1970.
The band formed in 2000.
Rattlesnake Shake perform all the favorite hits
of Fleetwood Mac prior
to Stevie Nicks/Lindsay
Buckingham era. Classics
like Black Magic Woman,
Albatross, and Green
File photo
Noah Wotherspoon performing on the main stage at last year’s
Manalishi.

File photo

Crowds will once again gather in downtown Pomeroy for the annual
Blues Bash.

Dwayne Dopsie

B.B. King and other legends. When he was 23,
Lopez, went to Europe
Blues Bash.
on his very ﬁrst solo Tour
in 2000-01, after getting
Saturday
they toured across the US his name known in the
On Saturday, the Brent “Uncle Buck” McPherEuropean market by being
and Canada lighting up
son began having bands
Patterson Showcase will
a member of Lucky Peterappear at his rustic saloon stages everywhere they
kick things off at noon,
went. Chris has appeared son’s band. Between 2008and dance barn in the
followed by Napalm Allon stage with: Legendary 11 Lance, began touring
deep-country near New
Stars at 1 p.m.; Blues
Europe again heavily
Rolling Stones sideman
Marshﬁeld, Ohio.o.
Cowboys at 2 p.m.;
and began to play bigger
Bobby Keys, The FabuShouts &amp; Whispers,
Shouts &amp; Whispers at 3
lous Thunderbirds, Jimmy festivals and toured with
based in Athens, plays
p.m.; Bernie Nau Trio at
large rock acts ZZ Top,
Vivino, Jeff Healy, Dan
4 p.m.; Rattlesnake Shake rhythm and blues. The
band is comprised of Jeff Akroyd, Albert Lee, Dave Whitesnake, Def Leppard,
at 5 p.m.; Chris O’Leary
Carr, acoustic and electric Edmunds, Dave Maxwell and Rod Stewart. Lopez
Band at 6 p.m.; Lance
has stunned audiences
and the great James Cotguitar and vocals; Bob
Lopez at 8 p.m. and
worldwide with his ﬁery
Dwayne Dopsie &amp; Zydeco Lazuka, electric and slide ton to name just a few.
brand of Texas Blues
Chris has also recorded
guitar and lead vocals;
Hellraisers at 10 p.m.
Rock and Powerhouse
Scott Lee, keyboards and with Bill Perry and
Angela Perley &amp; the
performances. He has
Hubert Sumlin, among
vocals; Carey Lea, bass,
Howlin’ Moons will
won over the likes of guiothers.
return to Pomeroy to per- conga and vocals; and
tar legends like Jeff Beck,
The Chris O’Leary
form at the Court Grill at Ken Dean, drums, percusJohnny Winter, Billy GibBand’s debut CD “Mr.
sion, and vocals.
10 p.m. on Saturday.
As the Bernie Nau Trio, Used to Be” won the 2011 bons, B.B. King, and Eric
Playing blues, country
Clapton who are all not
Best New Artist Debut
and classic rock, the Blues Bernie Nau and friends
only personal friends of
present classic jazz tunes CD Blues Blast Award
Cowboys are based in
Lopez’s, but fans.
and was nominated for
in an approachable and
Athens. Band Members
The Saturday evening
best new artist debut at
highly listenable format.
include, Dave “Uncle
Whether you’re an experi- the 2011 American Blues headliner is Dwayne DopBuck” McPherson, bass
and vocals; David Leach, enced jazz fan or a novice, Music Awards. The regu- sie &amp; Zydeco Hellraisers
from Louisiana.
lar members of the band
drums; Mike Thompson, this skilled trio will take
“America’s Hottest
include: Chris Vitarello,
you on a musical advenguitar and vocals; John
Accordion” winner,
guitar; Matt Raymond,
ture.
Wetzel, harmonica, guiDwayne (Dopsie) Rubin,
bass; Chris DiFranChris O’Leary’s musitar and vocals; Michael
cesco, baritone sax; Andy plays a unique, high
cal background includes
(Tobe) Tobar, keyboards
energy style of zydeco.
Stahl, tenor sax; Andrei
duties as lead singer and
and vocals.
Dwayne hails from one
Koribanics, drums.
The Blues Cowboys are front man for rock and
of the most inﬂuential
Lance Lopez was born
a group of friends who’ve roll hall of famer and
Zydeco families in the
in Shreveport, La. In
Grammy award winner
played music together
world. Although inspired
1999, Lopez started his
Levon Helm’s band, The
in some form or another
by tradition, he has develBarnburners. During the solo career and began
most of their lives, often
touring locally and region- oped his own high energy
6 years that Chris and
with each other. The
style that deﬁes existing
ally opening shows for
group began when David Levon played together

stereotypes and blazes a
refreshingly distinct path
for 21st century Zydeco
music. This singer/songwriter and accordionist
has performed all over the
world since debuting his
band, Dwayne Dopsie and
the Zydeco Hellraisers, at
age 19.
Dwayne Dopsie and
The Zydeco Hellraisers
not only pump out incredible Zydeco music, they
also add a bit of rhythm
and blues, funk, rock and
roll, reggae and pop to
their performances.
Rounding out the 2018
Blues Bash will be Angela
Perley &amp; the Howlin’
Moons.
Angela Perley &amp; the
Howlin’ Moons are a
Columbus, Ohio local
band armed with electric
guitars, swooning vocals,
and songs that split the
difference between rock
and roll and dreamy
psychedelia. The band
packed the biggest
punch of their career
with Homemade Vision
(2016). Like the band’s
debut, Hey Kid (2014),
an album whose kickoff
track, “Athens,” earned
Perley an International
Songwriting Award in
2014. Homemade Vision
was recorded in the Howlin’ Moons’ hometown of
Columbus.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 8, 2018 7A

TOPS holds meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Tuppers Plains Chapter of TOPS recently met
at the St Paul’s United
Methodist Church.
The meeting was called
to order with the TOPS
(Taking Pounds off Sensibly) and KOPS (Keeping
Off Pounds Sensibly)
pledges; as well as the
Pledge of Allegiance.
There were 15 members present. The top

loser was Connie Rankin.
Mary Bush was the top
loser for the quarter.
Glenda Hunt won the
marble game, it will start
again at the next meeting.
The Fall Rally, Oct. 20
in Grove City, Ohio, was
discussed. There will be
no meeting on July 16.
Election for ofﬁcers
was held. Leader: Pat
Sneeden; Co-Leader:
Cindy Hyde; Secretary:

CHURCH CALENDAR

Vacation
Bible School

MaryBeth Morrison; and
Treasurer: Mary Bush.
Following the elections,
Veggie Bingo was enjoyed
by all.
For more information
about TOPS or to join the
Tuppers Plains’ Chapter
support meetings, call Pat
Sneeden at 740-541-9696.
Weekly meetings are
Mondays at 6 p.m.

POMEROY — Emoji Mania Vacation Bible School will be held from
July 9-13, 6-8 p.m. each night at The
Refuge Church, 121 W. 2nd Street,
Pomeroy. Ages 4-10. For transportation or more information call 740416-5277.
POMEROY — First Southern Baptist Church, 41872 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, will be hosting Vacation
Bible School July 8-13, from 6-9 p.m.
each night. The theme is Game On:
Gearing up for life’s big game. There
will be snacks, music, Bible study,
missions, games and crafts.
TUPPERS PLAINS — St. Paul
United Methodist Church, 42216
State Route 7, Tuppers Plains, will
host Maker Fun Factory Vacation
Bible School from 6-8:30 p.m., July
16-19. Ages four and up.

Submitted by Mary F. Bush.

GOP senator concerned
about Trump tariff battles
By Dan Sewell

on Friday. The Trump
Associated Press
administration’s tariffs
on imported steel and
aluminum from U.S. allies
CINCINNATI — A
Republican senator who’s also have triggered trade
retaliation.
a former U.S. trade ofﬁ“To me that’s concerncial voiced concern Friday
ing, because it’s going to
about the impact Presihurt some of our Ohio
dent Donald Trump’s
trade battles will have on jobs; farmers, workers,
some of our service prothe Ohio economy.
viders,” Portman said.
Sen. Rob Portman, a
“I go around the state
U.S. trade representatalking to people, they’re
tive during George W.
worried about it.”
Bush’s presidency, said
But Portman said the
he supports being tough
United States does need
with China but would
to ensure that countries
like to see more caution
“play fair,” and that China
and negotiating with the
European Union, Canada should reciprocate on
trade and investment and
and Mexico.
The United States and shouldn’t take intellectual
property without followChina launched a trade
ing rules.
war with each other

Sunday, July 8

“I think the administration needs to shake it up
a little with China,” Portman said.
In dealing with the
steel tariffs and Canada,
Mexico and European
Union, he said there
should be more efforts
to work out trade differences.
“Let’s be very careful
how we go forward,”
Portman said. “Let’s try
to negotiate something ...
let’s not get into a trade
war in the meantime,
because that will hurt
both sides.”
Portman on Friday
visited PreventionFirst!,
a Cincinnati-based antidrug coalition he’s long
been involved with.

SYRACUSE — The Mission
Church, located on Bridgeman Street
in Syracuse, will host speaker Dr.
Michael Pangio of Abundant Ministry Fellowship, Struthers, Ohio, at 6
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — First Light Worship Service in the Family Life Center, 9am; Sunday School, 9:30am;
Morning Worship Service, 10:45am;
Youth “The Resistance” in the FLC,
6pm; Evening Worship Service
6pm; First Church of the Nazarene,
1110 First Ave. with Pastor Douglas
Downs.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey Chapel Church will hold service at
6 p.m.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill
Baptist Church, Sunday School 10
a.m., evening service 6 p.m.

July 4 holiday
wrecks kill 8

2 suspects arrested, 2 more
sought in rape of teen sisters
BOWLING GREEN,
Ohio (AP) — A second
suspect has been arrested
and two others are being
sought for the kidnapping
and sexual assault of two
teen sisters at an Ohio
motel, authorities said
Thursday.
The U.S. Marshals
Service arrested David
Contreras, 28, in Lubbock, Texas. Bowling
Green police say he’s been
charged with rape and
kidnapping for the June
28 sexual assault of the
sisters, ages 13 and 14,
at a Days Inn where they
were staying with their
mother.
Authorities continue
to search for 19-year-old
Juan Garcia Rios Adiel
and Arnulfo Ramos,
whose age isn’t known.
Both are charged with
rape and kidnapping.
Juan Simon, 24, was
arrested shortly after

the alleged assault and
is charged with unlawful sexual conduct with
a minor. Court records
don’t indicate whether he
has an attorney.
Peter Elliott, U.S.
Marshal for Northern
Ohio, said Contreras was
told by Immigration and
Customs Enforcement
last year to leave the U.S.
after being twice arrested
for driving under the
inﬂuence and once for
theft. Contreras was freed
on bond and never left
the country, Elliott said.
Adiel was found with
a legal resident card
under a false name and is
believed to be in the U.S.
illegally, Elliott said.
It’s unclear what
Ramos’ immigration
status is. Elliott said he
suspects Ramos also is in
the country illegally.
Simon had an identiﬁcation card identifying

him as a Guatemalan
citizen. Elliott said
Simon has been previously removed from the
U.S. four times.
WTVG-TV in Toledo
has reported that Bowling Green police spoke
with the four men
shortly after the sexual
assault allegations were
reported but before
investigators had interviewed the girls or their
mother.
Bowling Green police
Major Justin White told
WTVG the four men
were living at the motel,
as were the girls and
their mother.
A reward of as much
as $10,000 is being
offered for information
leading to the arrest of
Adiel and Ramos.

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The State
Highway Patrol says
eight people died in
trafﬁc crashes over the
Fourth of July holiday

GALLIPOLIS — Children’s Ministry, Summer Block Party, 6-8 p.m.,
First Church of the Nazarene.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey
Chapel Church will hold service at 7
p.m.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill
Baptist Church, prayer meeting.

Sunday, July 15
GALLIPOLIS — First Light Worship Service in the Family Life Center,
9am; Sunday School, 9:30am; Morning Worship Service, 10:45am; Youth
“The Resistance” in the FLC, 6pm;
Evening Worship Service 6pm; First
Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First
Ave. with Pastor Douglas Downs.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey
Chapel Church will hold service at 6
p.m.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill
Baptist Church, Sunday School 10
a.m., evening service 6 p.m.

Wednesday, July 18
GALLIPOLIS — Children’s Ministry, Summer Block Party, 6-8 p.m.,
First Church of the Nazarene.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey
Chapel Church will hold service at 7
p.m.
ADDISON — Business meeting
and Bible study 7 p.m., Addison Freewill Baptist Church

reporting period. The
patrol says the eight
people were killed in
four crashes in the
period which began July
3 and ended July 4.
A patrol release says
21 fatal crashes killed
21 people in last year’s
Fourth of July holiday

reporting period. That
period ran longer, from
June 30 to July 4.
Troopers say they
made 296 arrests for
impaired driving and
276 for drug-related
charges in this year’s
July 4 holiday reporting
period.

No attorney representing claimants
RXWVLGH�RXU�WHDP�RI�ODZ�ÀUPV
has ever tried, or won, a C8
cancer case in the courtroom.

This story has been corrected to
show one of the suspects police are
looking for is Juan Garcia Rios Adiel,
not Juan Garcia Rios Adel.

HILL PETERSON CARPER
BEE &amp; DEITZLER, PLLC

Smalley Reid;
1953 — Louise Bigley, John Guinther, Jim
Ridenour, Emma Ritchie
Rhodes, Virgil Windon,
Virginia Windon Tyler;
1954 — Donna Dorst
Story, Richard Gaul,
Kathleen Hayman Secman, Donna Smalley
Young;
1955 — Roger Keller,
Betty Ours Gaul, Emerson Pooler;
1956 — Ronald Clay,
Roger Epple, June Ridenour Epple, Rosemary
Rose Keller;
1957 — Lela King Windon, Sue Lambert Quigley, George Morrison,
Marion Sloter, Kathryn
Smith Windon, Helen
Hoffman Wilson.
Six ﬂowers from Bob’s
Market were given as
door prizes.
Motion to adjourn by
June Epple, seconded by
Kathleen Morris.
Submitted by Betty Newell.

Wednesday, July 11

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alumni. A request for
new ofﬁcers was given,
but there were no volunteers during the business
meeting. After adjournment, Richard Gaul
and Kathryn Windon
volunteered to be copresidents.
Gifts were presented to
the oldest alumni attending. Epple thanked the
Chester Garden Club, the
cooks, Bob’s Market, the
janitor and everyone that
helped.
Alumni present:
1939 — Rex Summerﬁeld;
1945 — Donald Mora;
1947 — Deloris Epple
Holter, Mary Kay Tuttle,
Robert Wood;
1948 — Kathleen Torrence Morris;
1949 — Lois Spencer
Ebersbach;
1951 — Howard Larkins and Forrest Rhodes;
1952 — Donald Marks,
Starling Massar, Betty
Nelson Newell, Betty

GALLIPOLIS — Vacation Bible
School will be held at Faith Baptist
Church, 3615 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
during the week of July 9 - 13, 9:30am
- 12:30 pm. Children age 4 through
5th grade are welcome to attend. The
theme for this year is “Time Lab.”

C8 IN YOUR WATER
CAN CAUSE CANCER

Chester Alumni holds banquet
CHESTER — The
Chester Alumni Association held its annual banquet and meeting on June
2 at the Eastern Elementary School cafetorium.
President Roger Epple
welcomed the 28 alumni
and 23 guests, followed
by the Pledge of Allegiance and the singing of
God Bless America led by
Diana Buckley.
Following the invocation by John Frank, a
delicious steak dinner
was served by the ladies
auxiliary of the Tuppers
Plains VFW.
The business meeting
began with the secretary
Betty Newell reading
the minutes from 2017.
George Morrison gave
the treasurer’s report of
$3,388.50, prior to this
year’s expenses. Motion
by Mary Rose, seconded
by Bob Wood to accept
both reports.
Epple then read the
names of 17 deceased

Monday, July 9

Responsible attorney:
Harry Deitzler, WVSB #981
149 Bella Vista Dr.
Vienna, WV 26105

�NEWS/WEATHER

8A Sunday, July 8, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ex-athletes say OSU doc groped, ogled men for years
By Kantele Franko, Andrew
Welsh-Huggins
and John Seewer
Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio — On
paper, Richard Strauss was a
well-regarded Ohio State University physician who examined young athletes for decades
as a team doctor and sportsmedicine researcher.
Some former athletes recall
him differently: Locker-room
voyeur. Serial groper. “Dr. Jelly
Paws.”
In interviews with The Associated Press in recent weeks,
seven former athletes and a
former nursing student shared
detailed allegations of sexual
misconduct dating back to the
1970s against the doctor, who
killed himself in 2005 at age 67
and is only now under investigation.
The eight men, including
three who didn’t want their
names made public, say they
want to see anyone who
ignored concerns about Strauss
held accountable and hope to
make sure something similar
doesn’t happen to others.
They described how Strauss
fondled them during medical
exams and ogled naked young
men, sometimes showering
among athletes multiple times
a day for no apparent reason
or perching himself on a stool
to stare. Some said Strauss
groped them barehanded during physicals, had them drop
their pants even while examining them for a cough or heartburn, and badgered students to
go home with him.
Two of the athletes who
spoke to the AP say Strauss
wasn’t stopped even after they
complained — one to a coach
and another to a school physician.
Former wrestling team captain Dave Mulvin said he raised
concerns in the late 1970s,
when Strauss fondled him
during an exam that Mulvin
abruptly ended, telling the doc-

Mike Householder | AP

Brian Garrett says he was sexually assaulted by Dr. Richard Strauss in 1996. Strauss, who killed himself in 2005, joined
Ohio State University in 1978 and was on the faculty and medical staff.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

64°

81°

81°

Pleasant today with plenty of sunshine. Clear
tonight. High 88° / Low 60°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

(in inches)

Friday
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.07
1.94
0.77
27.21
22.73

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:11 a.m.
8:56 p.m.
2:29 a.m.
4:07 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

Jul 12

First

Jul 19

Full

Jul 27

Last

Aug 4

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

Today
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.

Major
8:06a
8:53a
9:43a
10:37a
11:36a
12:08a
1:13a

Minor
1:54a
2:39a
3:28a
4:22a
5:20a
6:23a
7:28a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
8:32p
9:20p
10:12p
11:08p
---1:11p
1:44p

Minor
2:19p
3:07p
3:58p
4:53p
5:52p
6:55p
7:59p

WEATHER HISTORY
Ten inches of rain fell July 8, 1935,
near Cortland, N.Y., with similar
amounts southward to Pottsville, Pa.
Floods in the Susquehanna Valley
killed 52 people.

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

Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
87/61
High

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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
13.11
17.25
21.67
12.51
12.79
25.34
13.05
25.89
34.39
12.97
18.10
34.50
16.00

Portsmouth
88/62

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.90
-1.38
+0.36
+0.01
+0.10
+0.90
+0.69
-0.25
-0.40
-0.35
+0.90
+0.20
-0.60

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

WEDNESDAY

Logan
84/59

THURSDAY

90°
66°

Partly sunny, pleasant
and less humid

Pleasant with clouds
and sun

Times of clouds and
sun

95°
74°
An afternoon
thunderstorm possible

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
84/59
Belpre
85/60

Athens
85/59

Today

St. Marys
85/59

Parkersburg
84/59

Coolville
85/59

Elizabeth
86/60

Spencer
85/59

Buffalo
86/60
Milton
87/61

Clendenin
86/61

St. Albans
87/60

Huntington
86/62

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
79/57
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
76/60
20s
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
95/70
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

89°
64°

Murray City
84/60

Ironton
87/61

Ashland
86/61
Grayson
87/62

FRIDAY

87°
63°

Wilkesville
85/59
POMEROY
Jackson
86/60
86/60
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
87/59
87/60
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
86/65
GALLIPOLIS
88/60
87/61
87/61

South Shore Greenup
87/61
87/62

37

Partly sunny and
humid

McArthur
85/60

Very High

Primary: unspeciﬁed
Mold: 1833
Moderate

Chillicothe
87/63

versity over business matters,
but they said none of that has
any bearing on their allegations
or their credibility.
DiSabato said he never spoke
up about Strauss while he was
at the university because he
didn’t recognize it as abuse and
because he didn’t want to jeopardize his wrestling career. He
said Strauss’ behavior was an
open secret among wrestlers,
who would snicker when a new
teammate headed into his ﬁrst
exam with Strauss.
Two other wrestlers have
also told NBC and the Wall
Street Journal respectively that
Jordan knew of the alleged
abuse. Other former wrestlers
are defending Jordan, though
also acknowledging a culture of
inappropriate activity by outsiders at Larkins Hall, where
wrestlers worked out and showered.
Independent investigators are
reviewing allegations against
Strauss by men from 14 sports

90°
64°

Adelphi
85/60

Waverly
86/61

Pollen: 3

Low

MOON PHASES

TUESDAY

Nice with plenty of
sun

0

Primary: basidiospores, unk.
Mon.
6:11 a.m.
8:56 p.m.
3:06 a.m.
5:15 p.m.

MONDAY

89°
65°

Statistics for Friday

81°
67°
86°
65°
100° in 2012
51° in 1964

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

tor about voyeurism at the
recreation and training center,
where they said Strauss and
other older male faculty members and university employees
were known to go to leer at
athletes in the locker rooms,
showers and sauna.
Hellickson said in a statement that he never ignored
abuse of wrestlers. And former
assistant coach Jim Jordan,
now a powerful Republican
congressman from Ohio, has
insisted he was never aware of
any abuse, a claim he repeated
on Fox News Friday night.
“It’s false. I never saw, never
heard of, never was told about
any type of abuse,” Jordan said.
“If I had been, I would have
dealt with it.”
But two former wrestlers,
Yetts and Mike DiSabato, dispute Jordan’s account.
Yetts was convicted of fraud
over an investment scheme,
and DiSabato has been involved
in legal disputes with the uni-

tor his behavior was “weird.”
Mulvin said he went to the student health center to ﬁnish the
exam and complained about
Strauss to another doctor, who
shrugged it off.
Some athletes saw it as the
price of getting medicine or
treatment. Nick Nutter, an
All-American wrestler in the
1990s, said he constantly did
a calculation before deciding
whether to see Strauss: “Is
this injury bad enough that I’m
going to get molested for it?”
Strauss described the fondling as just “doing his job,”
said ex-wrestler Denyasha
Yetts. Yetts said he complained
about Strauss to his coach after
being groped during three
exams, and the coach, Russ
Hellickson, told the doctor to
stop such behavior.
Other wrestlers said Hellickson, who coached at Ohio
State for two decades starting
in 1986, expressed concerns
to a Larkins Hall administra-

and are also looking into his
work for student health services and at his off-campus
medical clinic.
Ohio State says more than
150 former athletes and witnesses have been interviewed
so far, and the school has
urged anyone with information
to contact the investigators
from the Seattle-based law
ﬁrm Perkins Coie.
The university said in a
statement Thursday that it is
“focused on uncovering what
may have happened during this
era, what university leaders at
the time may have known, and
whether any response at the
time was appropriate.”
“We remain steadfastly
committed to uncovering the
truth,” it added.
The case has powerful
echoes of the scandal involving former sports doctor Larry
Nassar, who sexually abused
hundreds of girls and women
while he worked for Michigan
State University and USA
Gymnastics. Michigan State
recently agreed to a $500 million settlement, and Nassar
has been sent to prison for the
rest of his days.
No one has publicly defended Strauss since the investigation began, and relatives
haven’t responded to messages
left by the AP.
Strauss joined Ohio State in
1978 and was on the faculty
and medical staff. He earned
tenure, published a variety of
research and was selected to
test Olympic athletes for illegal drug use during the 1984
Summer Games in Los Angeles. He retired as a professor
in 1998.
In April, the university
announced that an investigation of Strauss had been
opened after it learned of allegations of sexual misconduct.
The 228 pages of Strauss’
employment records released
by Ohio State offer no clues
the university was aware of
any sexual misconduct.

Charleston
85/59

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
84/58

Billings
89/65

Minneapolis
90/71

Chicago
86/68
Denver
97/66

Montreal
85/62

Toronto
84/61

Detroit
85/64

New York
82/66
Washington
85/67

Kansas City
89/68

Mon.
Hi/Lo/W
84/66/t
61/52/r
87/71/pc
83/67/s
88/68/s
94/69/s
102/65/s
87/69/s
87/63/s
88/66/s
90/58/s
91/73/s
89/71/s
88/72/s
89/69/s
88/74/t
96/65/s
92/68/s
92/70/s
87/76/sh
87/74/t
88/71/s
92/71/s
107/88/t
88/72/t
91/71/pc
90/73/s
90/75/t
89/70/pc
89/73/pc
89/76/t
87/69/s
87/69/t
88/72/t
88/68/s
104/86/t
85/66/s
86/66/s
87/63/s
88/65/s
91/75/s
99/77/pc
76/61/pc
73/57/pc
88/71/s

EXTREMES FRIDAY

Atlanta
82/70

National for the 48 contiguous states
CHRIS

El Paso
90/72
Chihuahua
86/63

City
Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
87/67/t
Anchorage
63/55/c
Atlanta
82/70/pc
Atlantic City
79/63/s
Baltimore
84/62/s
Billings
89/65/s
Boise
99/66/s
Boston
82/65/s
Charleston, WV
85/59/s
Charlotte
85/62/pc
Cheyenne
91/60/s
Chicago
86/68/s
Cincinnati
87/66/s
Cleveland
84/66/s
Columbus
86/65/s
Dallas
92/74/pc
Denver
97/66/s
Des Moines
87/65/s
Detroit
85/64/s
Honolulu
86/75/sh
Houston
86/74/t
Indianapolis
87/68/s
Kansas City
89/68/s
Las Vegas
110/88/pc
Little Rock
85/70/pc
Los Angeles
95/70/pc
Louisville
90/71/pc
Miami
90/77/t
Minneapolis
90/71/s
Nashville
88/71/pc
New Orleans
86/74/t
New York City
82/66/s
Oklahoma City
89/68/s
Orlando
89/73/t
Philadelphia
85/63/s
Phoenix
110/86/s
Pittsburgh
82/60/s
Portland, ME
83/60/s
Raleigh
83/60/pc
Richmond
84/60/s
St. Louis
88/72/s
Salt Lake City 101/76/pc
San Francisco
76/60/pc
Seattle
79/57/pc
Washington, DC
85/67/s

High
Low

121° in Death Valley, CA
35° in Fraser, CO

Global
High
Low

Houston
86/74
Monterrey
88/72

Miami
90/77

126° in Basrah, Iraq
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.

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�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 8, 2018 s Section B

Earnhardt a fan favorite after debut race in booth
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) —
Dale Earnhardt Jr. leaned toward
the track in the broadcast booth and
hollered like a NASCAR fan at home
over a gripping ﬁnal lap in his debut
race.
Once Kyle Larson tried to swipe
the lead from Kyle Busch with a daring pass at Chicagoland, Earnhardt
could not harness his enthusiasm.
“Slide job!”
“SLIDE JOB!”
Earnhardt smiled and clapped his
hands at the move and — in a ﬂash
— the retired NASCAR star had a
signature call.
“I was really surprised that that
took off like it did,” Earnhardt said
Friday at Daytona International
Speedway. “I got done with the race,
Terry Renna | AP went to the car, drove to the airport.
NASCAR auto racing fans walk by a billboard advertising Dale Earnhardt Jr. in his new role as a broadcast By the time I got to the airport,
everybody was texting me, saying
personality at Daytona International Speedway on Friday in Daytona Beach, Fla.

it over and over, and I’m hearing it
everywhere all week.”
Sure enough, race fans on social
media parodied the call and “slide
job” was used as a voice over for
other memorable moments in sports.
At Daytona, fans cried out “slide
job” and they clamored on Twitter
for a business to produce T-shirts
with Earnhardt’s image and the
quote.
Earnhardt could only laugh at the
hoopla his excited cries created in a
sport desperate for any kind of feelgood buzz. It was exactly what NBC
Sports counted on when it hired the
outspoken and folksy Earnhardt, a
two-time Daytona 500 champion, to
work the booth this year.
Take a walk around Daytona and
it’s clear the biggest star in the sagging sport is still Earnhardt — who
See EARNHARDT | 2B

Kight hired as Eastern boys basketball coach
Stars and stripes:
Sending baseball’s
best to Washington TUPPERS PLAINS,
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.
com

NEW YORK (AP) — Now that fan voting is
ﬁnished, it’s a good time to take a hard look at AllStar Game selections.
Which players are worthy of participating July
17 in Washington, and who gets left out?
Let’s touch on this topic ﬁrst: Shohei Ohtani is
incredibly talented and fascinating to watch, but
the Los Angeles Angels’ two-way Japanese star
simply hasn’t been on the ﬁeld enough to earn a
spot. Not at pitcher OR designated hitter.
Ohtani just returned to the lineup from an elbow
injury that’s knocked him off the mound for now.
He’s only made nine major league pitching starts,
and the Angels have limited his at-bats all season
due to concerns about the rookie’s workload.
So while it would deﬁnitely be fun to see him
in baseball’s summer showcase, there are several
more deserving American League sluggers at DH.
It wouldn’t be fair to deny one of them in favor of
Ohtani. And he’s unavailable to pitch at this point.
Let him win his invitation next season with a
fully healthy and productive ﬁrst half. Or the year
after that. Or whenever it happens.
Buzzkill, I know.
But even without Ohtani, there’s plenty to watch
for leading up to the ﬁrst All-Star Game in the
nation’s capital since the Senators hosted at RFK
Stadium in 1969.
Start with Atlanta outﬁelder Nick Markakis.
With more than 2,150 career hits, he’s poised to
make an All-Star team for the ﬁrst time in his 13th
big league season.
Matt Kemp, Miles Mikolas and Mike Foltynewicz are enjoying feel-good comebacks.
Robinson Cano, the MVP of last year’s game,
will sit this one out while serving a drug suspension.
Injuries may keep familiar stars such as Clayton
Kershaw, Stephen Strasburg, Carlos Correa and
Corey Seager from returning, but in their place
should be exciting newcomers like Aaron Nola,
Ozzie Albies, Alex Bregman and Eddie Rosario.
The American League has won ﬁve times in a
row and is 17-3-1 in the last 21 years.
“I want to win. I always want to win. It’s not
playing for home-ﬁeld advantage anymore in the
World Series, but all these guys are competitors
and they want to win for their respective league,”
said National League manager Dave Roberts of the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
There’s a logjam at shortstop in the AL, and the
NL bullpen is loaded.
That sort of thing is where it gets complicated:
Each roster has 32 spots, with 12 going to pitchers. Every club must be represented, too.
Online voting for the starters at each position
ended at midnight Thursday, and the teams will be
revealed Sunday night.
“I’m looking forward to it. It’ll be a great experience,” said Houston’s AJ Hinch, who will manage
the AL squad. “It’s as casual a game as you’ll play
with the biggest names on the stage, and all the
attention that comes with it. It’s a big deal.”
Disregarding fan and player balloting, here are
our picks:
AMERICAN LEAGUE
FIRST BASE — Jose Abreu of the White Sox gets the
start, barely nudging out Toronto switch-hitter Justin
Smoak.
SECOND BASE — AL MVP Jose Altuve from the World
Series champion Astros is backed up by 34-year-old
Oakland veteran Jed Lowrie, whose first All-Star nod is
probably long overdue.
SHORTSTOP — Cleveland whiz Francisco Lindor is in
the lineup. Top trade target Manny Machado from lowly
Baltimore, and Jean Segura from Seattle are on the
bench. Gold Glove winner Andrelton Simmons of the
See BASEBALL | 2B

Ohio — An experienced leader for an
experienced group of
Eagles.
At a recent meeting, the Eastern Local
School District Board
of Education approved
the hire of David Kight
as the varsity boys basketball coach.
“It’s a great opportunity here,” said Kight.
“The win totals have
come up the last few
years, so we’re going
to try and continue to
build on what they’ve
done.”
Kight is replacing
Jeremy Hill, who ended
his ﬁve-year tenure
with the Eagles to take
the head coaching job
at Meigs. Eastern has
improved its record in
each of the last three
seasons, going 10-13
this past winter.
“With the boys that
I’ve met so far, there’s
an extremely great
nucleus here,” Kight
said. “They have great
attitudes and great
effort, so we’re excited
about it. I think numbers have been pretty
good, I’ve seen like
17-or-18 kids in the
gym just in the month
of June.
“I’m very routine,
so they know the drill,
they know when things
are going to start, when
things are going to get
serious and there’s no
more playing around.
They’re learning me
and I’m learning them,
it’s been good so far.
Coach (Matt) Simpson
is going to stay on and
help me, which I’m
excited about.”
Kight is a 1994 graduate of Jackson High
School, where 11 of of
his years of basketball
coaching experience
came. Kight spent four
years with the Western
High School boys, with
half of his time there as
head coach.
Then Kight spent
two seasons as head
coach of the Meigs
varsity boys, in which
time he led the Maroon
and Gold to a sectional
crown. Kight spent
last season as the head
coach of the Southern
varsity girls, with the
Lady Tornadoes going
7-17 on the year.
“It was sad to leave

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

David Kight coaches from the sideline, during a non-conference girls basketball game between
Southern and Athens, on Jan. 31 in Racine, Ohio.

Southern,” Kight said.
“I enjoyed coaching last
season, and with some
of the girls that we had
back, it was hard to tell
them we were up and
leaving.”
On the court, Kight
plans to ﬁne-tune the
motion offense and
man-to-man defense
that the Eagles are
already familiar with.
“There are probably
going to be more new
things on the defensive
end, with more switching,” Kight said. “I
don’t know how much
switching they did last
year. It’ll still be manto-man, but we’ll add
some switching and
aspects like that. A lot
of the motion offense
concepts are the same.
“When I’ve had them
in the gym and been
coaching them, they’re
receptive to listening

“I want them to
continue to have
success and build off
of what they’ve built
on the last couple
years and see if they
can take it further
than they did last
year.”
— David Kight
Varsity boys basketball
coach

and learning, trying to
ﬁx what I think they
did wrong. Whether
it’s been in a drill or at
summer league, their
response has been
good.”
The Eagles’ 2018-19
campaign will begin at
‘The Nest’ on Nov. 30,
with a non-conference
bout against River Valley.

“It’s fun when you
take something at the
beginning of November
and then see the ﬁnished product around
February or March, to
see how much they’ve
grown” Kight said. “I
want them to continue
to have success and
build off of what they’ve
built on the last couple
years and see if they
can take it further than
they did last year.”
Kight and the Eagles
are both looking to
return to the Convo
for the ﬁrst time since
2013 and they’ll also
try to improve on last
season’s 6-10 league
record, which placed
EHS sixth in the ﬁnal
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division
standings.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, July 8, 2018

Rajon Rondo expects
to ‘win now’ with
LeBron, LA Lakers
LAS VEGAS (AP) —
Rajon Rondo ofﬁcially
joined the Los Angeles
Lakers on Friday with a
clear idea about his future
with LeBron James.
“We’re expected to win
now,” Rondo said.
Rondo agreed to a oneyear deal worth $9 million earlier this week to
suit up alongside James,
whose signing hasn’t yet
been announced by the
Lakers.

The veteran point
guard is eager to be a
mentor to Lonzo Ball,
and he sees a chance for
immediate success with
the thoroughly revamped
club. The Lakers haven’t
made the playoffs for
a franchise-record ﬁve
consecutive seasons, but
Rondo believes they’ll
make immediate strides
back toward contention
for a 17th NBA championship.

Baseball

competitive position is
Scooter Gennett from the
Reds. Right behind him are
flashy Javier Baez from
From page 1B
the Cubs and 21-year-old
Angels is really tough to
igniter Ozzie Albies from the
leave out.
surprising Braves.
THIRD BASE — Jose
SHORTSTOP — San
Ramirez gives the Indians
Francisco pro Brandon
both starters on the left
Crawford is backed up by
side of the infield. Bregman
Colorado bopper Trevor
backs up at the hot corner,
Story.
from Houston.
THIRD BASE — Nolan
CATCHER — Wilson
Arenado is sensational with
Ramos is a big reason the
his bat and glove for the
Rays are holding their own.
Rockies. Eugenio Suarez is
Perennial pick Salvador
blossoming into a big run
Perez represents the
producer for the Reds, and
struggling Royals despite his St. Louis’ Matt Carpenter
subpar season.
can play both corner infield
OUTFIELD — Angels star
spots — even second base if
Mike Trout plays center, with needed.
Boston’s Mookie Betts in left
CATCHER — A changing
and Yankees masher Aaron
of the guard, with Miami’s
Judge in right. Reserves
J.T. Realmuto starting and
include Rosario from the
Chicago’s Willson Contreras
Twins, Mitch Haniger from
second string. St. Louis
the Mariners, and Nicholas
stalwart Yadier Molina barely
Castellanos from the Tigers. beats out familiar rival
DESIGNATED HITTER —
Buster Posey of the Giants
J.D. Martinez has been worth for another bench spot.
every penny during his first
OUTFIELD — Milwaukee
season in Boston. Texas’
newcomer Lorenzo Cain is
Shin-Soo Choo and New
expected back from a groin
York hulk Giancarlo Stanton, strain in time to start in
last year’s NL MVP, both still center, flanked by Markakis
play the outfield sometimes, in right and Kemp from the
which helps. Seattle slugger Dodgers in left. Despite a low
Nelson Cruz is a very
batting average, slumping
difficult omission.
slugger Bryce Harper of
STARTING PITCHERS —
the Nationals starts at DH
Luis Severino is in line to
in his home ballpark. Also
become the first Yankees
available are Christian Yelich
pitcher to start an All-Star
(Brewers), Odubel Herrera
Game since Roger Clemens (Phillies) and Gregory
in 2001. Other right-handers Polanco (Pirates).
include Justin Verlander,
STARTING PITCHERS
Gerrit Cole and Charlie
— Washington ace Max
Morton from Houston, plus
Scherzer, who won his
Cy Young Award winner
second consecutive Cy
Corey Kluber and Trevor
Young Award last year and
Bauer from Cleveland. The
third overall, gets the ball
left-handers are Boston ace to start on his own mound.
Chris Sale and Tampa Bay’s The other right-handers
Blake Snell. Seattle lefty
are Nola from the Phillies,
James Paxton is our top pick Foltynewicz from the Braves,
to replace Verlander, who
Mikolas from the Cardinals,
doesn’t plan to pitch in the
and Jacob deGrom of the
All-Star Game because he’s Mets. Cubs lefty Jon Lester
scheduled to start two days rounds out the group,
before.
with Patrick Corbin of the
RELIEVERS — Four filthy
Diamondbacks next in line
closers in the bullpen:
as a potential replacement
Yankees lefty Aroldis
for someone.
Chapman, plus rightRELIEVERS — So many
handers Craig Kimbrel
to choose from, and not
(Boston), Edwin Diaz
only closers. A bevy of NL
(Seattle) and Blake Treinen
setup men are putting up
(Oakland).
dominant numbers. In the
end, this bullpen features
Dodgers closer Kenley
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Jansen, Arizona setup man
FIRST BASE — Braves
Archie Bradley and San
cornerstone Freddie
Diego’s Kirby Yates from the
Freeman starts over
right side, complemented
Arizona’s Paul Goldschmidt, by Nationals closer Sean
who overcame a miserable
Doolittle, Milwaukee
May with a monster June.
strikeout artist Josh Hader
SECOND BASE — The
and San Francisco’s Tony
unexpected starter at a
Watson from the left side.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pridemore leads Riverside seniors
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. —
Kenny Pridemore, of
Point Pleasant, has
taken the lead of the
2018 Senior Men’s Golf
League at Riverside
Golf Club.
Pridemore — moving up one spot from
a week ago — has a
14-week total of 149.5
points, a single point
ahead of last week’s

leader and current runner-up Carl Stone.
A total of 62 golfers
were on hand Tuesday,
and they were divided
into 14 four-man teams,
and a pair of trios.
The low score of the
day was a 11-under par
59, ﬁred by a quartet
of teams. The winning
squads were the team
of Charlie Hargraves,
Mike Wolfe, Kenny

Greene and Bill Rood,
the team of Pridemore,
Richard Mabe, Glenn
Long, and J.J. Hemsley,
the team of Paul Maynard, Hook Hoffman,
Jim Lockhart and Bob
Avery, and the team of
Jim Lawrence, Bobby
Watson, Randall Thornhill and Ed Coon.
The closest to the
pin winners were Stone
on the ninth hole and

Larry Legg on No. 14.
The current top-10
standings are as follows: Kenny Pridemore
(149.5), Carl Stone
(148.5), Bobby Watson
and Charlie Hargraves
(138.0), Paul Maynard
(127.0) Dewey Smith
and Albert Durst
(123.0), Ed Coon
(119.5), Bob Humphreys and Fred Pyles
(111.5).

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

2018 Elks Youth
Football League Camp

varsity and junior varsity cheerleaders will be able
to purchase reserve seats on Wednesday, Aug. 8.
Reserve seats for the general public will be available on Thursday, Aug. 9. The price is $35 per
ticket.
Tickets may be purchased in the Athletic Director’s ofﬁce at Gallia Academy High School between
the hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Gallia Academy Athletic Super Boosters will be
limited to 10 tickets purchased on the ﬁrst day of
sales. After the ﬁrst day, there will be no limit on
the number of tickets which may be purchased.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Elks Youth Football
League will be sponsoring a football camp on Monday, July 16, and Tuesday, July 17, from 6 p.m. to 8
p.m. at Memorial Field.
The camp is free for any student entering grades
1-through-6. Students who turn 13 before Aug. 1,
2018 are ineligible. Every camp participant will
receive a t-shirt.
All players previously registered to play on the
Gallipolis teams A, B and C should attend. Any
student who wishes to play in the EFL who is not
previously registered should attend camp and register from 5 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. on the July 16 or 17. No
registrations will be accepted after 6 p.m. on July
MASON, W.Va. — The Southern football team
17. There is no fee to participate.
is hosting a four-person golf scramble on Saturday,
For more information, contact Kim Canaday at
Aug. 5, at Riverside Golf Club. Registration begins
740-208-6414.
at 7:30 a.m. and the scramble will start at 8:30 a.m.
Cost is $60 per individual or $240 per team.
Please make checks payable to Southern Athletic
Boosters. There will be a skins game and 50-50
rafﬂe, as well as closest to the pin and long drive
competitions. Mulligans and red tee shots will also
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Reserve seats for the 2018 be available to purchase.
Food and beverages will be provided at the event,
Gallia Academy High School football season will go
and club house credit will go to the top-3 teams.
on sale starting on Tuesday, Aug. 7, for the Gallia
To register a team, please contact SHS head coach
Academy Athletic Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity football play- Cassady Willford via email at cassady.willford53@
gmail.com or on the phone at 740-416-8470.
ers, Gallia Academy Marching Band members, and

Southern football
golf scramble

Gallia Academy
football reserve seats

the pantheon of “Holy
Cow!” and “Whoa,
Nelly!” in enduring
catchphrases in broadFrom page 1B
cast history.
“I don’t know that
retired at the end of last
that’s a catchphrase
season on the heels of
because I don’t know
his 15th straight most
that you can just work it
popular driver award.
The Daytona fan zone in any time,” Earnhardt
has a billboard-sized ad said. “That was just a
promoting itself as “The natural reaction to what
World Center of Racing” I was seeing. That’s
what my bosses asked
on the same wall as a
close-up image of Earn- me to do, say what I was
hardt wearing a headset thinking.”
Earnhardt is a bit of
with the caption, “Same
a NASCAR everyman,
Dale. New View.”
and called the action in
Earnhardt’s presence
much the same way a
looms large in a sport
that has failed to create couple of buddies might
any new stars anywhere see it over a couple of
beers at a bar.
nearly as popular as
But fresh off the
the driver who inspired
track, Earnhardt had the
“Junior Nation.” He
experience necessary
hosted a Q&amp;A with
to describe ﬁrst-person
drivers such as Ausaction for fans at home.
tin Dillon and Denny
“Down the front
Hamlin in the fan zone
straightaway, there’s
before Friday night’s
another bump coming
qualifying runs.
into turn 1,” Earnhardt
“He’s like the John
Madden of racing,” NBC said, looking at the
analyst and former crew view of an in-car camera. “You feel it right
chief, Steve Letarte,
THERE (as the car
said.
jiggled). It’s like driving
Hold the turducken.
off a set of stairs. It’s
It was only one race
not a dip. It’s really a
and even Earnhardt
conceded the call wasn’t ledge.”
Sam Flood, the NBC
quite ready to join

Earnhardt

Sports executive who
hired Earnhardt, said
his only advice for the
former driver was to
simply be himself. Earnhardt had some broadcast experience as the
host of his own podcast
and found the tip easy
to follow.
“I’m not having to
trim as much rough
edges as I thought I
would,” Earnhardt said.
There was a bit of a
Junior bump on the ratings — the Chicagoland
race was up 14 percent
from last season. Yes,
there was the caveat
that last year’s race was
in September and went
up against the NFL. But
certainly there were a
few disconnected fans
who tuned in — thanks
in part to a massive
promotional push that
featured Earnhardt at
the expense of the drivers — just to hear an
unﬁltered Earnhardt
have fun in the booth.
“I’m just trying to ﬁnd
my lane, man,” he said.
Letarte, who worked
as Earnhardt’s crew
chief at Hendrick
Motorsports, said his
buddy would be a natural in the booth.

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“He’s a guy that not
only was the most popular driver, not only was
a very successful race
car driver, but he’s a
huge historian,” Letarte
said. “He understands
every decade, which I
think helps him because
he can relate to all
the fans — from the
14-year-old to the grandfather — which I think
makes him unique.”
Earnhardt earned
plaudits for his debut
and left the track feeling
every bit a winner as he
did 26 times in his Cup
career. But the broadcast rookie just couldn’t
ﬁre up the DVR to critique his performance.
“I’m afraid I won’t like
it,” he said. “If I did all
right, I’m going to keep
doing that.”
He’s open to constructive criticism — his
nearly 2.5 million Twitter followers will surely
blow up his notiﬁcations
if they hear something
they don’t like — but
Earnhardt knows the
best thing he can do
in the booth is keep it
simple.
“It’s not brain surgery,” Letarte said. “It’s
TV.”

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�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 8, 2018 3B

Belgium eliminates Brazil
Advances to
World Cup
semifinals
KAZAN, Russia (AP)
— Neymar used Brazil’s
famed yellow jersey to
shield his anguish. The
Belgians, clad in red and
dancing in a celebratory
circle nearby, couldn’t
hide their relief.
Belgium reached the
World Cup semiﬁnals
for the ﬁrst time in 32
years, holding off ﬁvetime champion Brazil 2-1
Friday in one of the country’s greatest soccer feats.
“We’ve achieved
something that is really
beautiful,” said Kevin De
Bruyne, who scored Belgium’s second goal, “and
it’s not easy.”
Belgium eliminated
Brazil by successfully fusing the attacking potency
of De Bruyne and Romelu
Lukaku with the creativity of Eden Hazard and
the goalkeeping exploits
of Thibaut Courtois. Plus
an own-goal from Brazil.
It all adds up to a
semiﬁnal match against
France on Tuesday in St.
Petersburg.
“Just treasure it and
pass it down in the generations,” Belgium coach
Roberto Martinez said,
still seemingly in awe of
what his team achieved at
the Kazan Arena.
Belgium took the lead
after a slice of good
fortune involving a pair
of Manchester City
teammates who were on
opposing sides. Brazil
midﬁelder Fernandinho’s trailing right arm
inadvertently helped
Belgium captain Vincent
Kompany’s header land
in his own net in the 13th
minute.
De Bruyne then completed a counterattack
launched by Lukaku to
double the lead in the

Francisco Seco | AP

Brazil goalkeeper Alisson plunges to the pitch after Belgium’s Kevin De Bruyne, left, scored his side’s
second goal during the quarterfinal match between Brazil and Belgium at the World Cup in the Kazan
Arena in Kazan, Russia, on Friday. Belgium won 2-1.

31st minute.
As Belgium lost cohesiveness in the second
half and Brazil’s changes
stirred the team, substitute Renato Augusto
reduced the deﬁcit in the
76th with a header. But
it was too late for Brazil
to muster an equalizer as
Courtois thwarted several
efforts to force the game
into extra time.
While Belgium’s golden
generation is ﬁnally
ﬂourishing, Neymar is
leading Brazil home after
failing to live up to the
expectations that come
with being soccer’s most
expensive player. Crouching on the ﬁeld, he pulled
his shirt over his face
while Belgium exalted in
victory.
Humiliated 7-1 by Germany in the semiﬁnals
fours year ago on home
soil with Neymar out
injured, Brazil didn’t even
get that far this time. Just
like defending champion
Germany and Argentina
before them, the Kazan
Arena is where Brazil’s
World Cup challenge
ended.
“Randomness happened
and it was cruel to us,”
Brazil coach Tite said. “It
was hard to swallow.”
Especially after Brazil
conceded only one goal in

the previous four games
in Russia. But the defense
was breached after 13
minutes in Tatarstan.
Fernandinho’s own-goal
ensured for the ﬁrst
time since March 2017
that Brazil was trailing
in a competitive match.
Unlike then — an eventual 4-1 victory over
Uruguay — there was no
comeback.
Not when Courtois was
proving to be an impenetrable barrier in the
Belgium goal, denying
Marcelo’s strike before
the lead was extended by
De Bruyne.
“They were more effective,” Tite said, struggling to hold back tears.
“Not a superiority in
terms of performance, but
in terms of effectiveness
on the pitch.”
Belgium held on even
after Philippe Coutinho’s
cross was headed in by
Augusto, who managed to
evade Kompany and Jan
Vertonghen three minutes
after replacing Paulinho.
“Sometimes you have
to accept that Brazil has
got this ﬁnesse, that quality, and that they’re going
to break you down, and
(Belgium) just refused
to accept that,” Martinez
said. “This is something
special.”

Belgium, which ﬁnished fourth at the 1986
tournament and has
never won the European
Championship, is now
on a 24-match unbeaten
streak.
Neymar
Criticized for his playacting, Neymar went
down lightly under minimal contact from Marouane Fellaini at the start
of the second half when
Brazil trailed 2-0. But as
the referee started to seek
a video review, Neymar
appeared to urge against
it. A booking — if he got
one for diving — would
have ruled him out the
semiﬁnals.
Suspended
Belgium will be without
defender Thomas Meunier for the semiﬁnals after
tripping Neymar and
earning a second yellow
card of the tournament.
“I don’t regret the yellow card, it was for the
sake of the team,” Meunier said, “and we have a
good bench.”
Europe’s rule
There is guaranteed to
be a fourth straight European team winning the
World Cup on July 15 in
Moscow.

RIO GRANDE SUMMER CAMPS
RIO GRANDE,
Ohio — The University of Rio Grande
Athletic Department
has announced its 2018
Summer Camps and
Clinics schedule. Camps
will be conducted
throughout the months
of June and July on the
URG campus.
The remaining schedules, broken down by
individual sports, are as
follows:
Women’s Basketball
The University of Rio
Grande’s 2018 Women’s
Basketball Camp is
scheduled for July 8-11
at the Lyne Center on
the URG campus.
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 24-hour supervision from coaches and
counselors; lecture/
discussion groups and
ﬁlm sessions; daily
instruction on shooting,
ball-handling, post play
and defense; and use of
the school’s 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 740245-7491, 1-800-2827201, or e-mail dsmalley@rio.edu.
Men’s and Women’s
soccer
The University of
Rio Grande soccer programs have announced
their 2018 summer
camp schedule.
A team camp for girls’
high school squads is
planned for July 8-11,
with a boys’ high school
team camp slated for
July 15-19. Cost for
the girls’ camp is $270,
while the boys’ camp
has a fee of $305.
Fees for the residential camps include
lodging, meals, training
sessions and tournament play.
Camp directors are
URG men’s soccer head
coach Scott Morrissey
and women’s soccer
head coach Tony Daniels.
The camp brochure
is available on both
the men’s soccer and
women’s soccer links
of the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com. Online registration and payment is
available at www.rioredstormsoccercamps.com.
Registration forms
should be mailed to
URG Lyne Center, P.O.
Box 500, Rio Grande,
OH 45674. Checks
should be made payable
to We Storm Soccer
Camps.
For more information,
contact Morrissey at
740-245-7126, 740-6456438 or e-mail scottm@
rio.edu; or Daniels at
740-245-7493, 740-6450377 or e-mail tdaniels@rio.edu.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Hustlin’ Tornadoes
basketball camp
RACINE, Ohio — The Southern High School
basketball program will be hosting the 12th annual
Hustlin’ Tornadoes Basketball Camp from 9 a.m. until
noon on Monday, July 9, through Thursday, July 12, at
the high school gymnasium.
The camp will be under the direction of SHS varsity
boys coach Jeff Caldwell and members of the coaching
staff, as well as returning varsity basketball players.
The camp is open to all boys and girls entering
grades 1-6. The cost of the camp is $40 per individual
or $60 for a pair from the same family.
All campers will be taught fundamentals of basketball and will have a chance to participate in daily competitions of free throws, 3-on-3 and ‘H-O-R-S-E’.
Each camper receives a t-shirt and prizes will be
given in different age groups to competition winners.
For more information, contact Coach Caldwell at
740-444-1205.

GAHS Athletic Hall of Fame
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The GAHS Hall of Fame
committee is currently accepting applications for the
class of 2018. Applications can be found on the Gallipolis City Schools’ website and the ﬁling deadline is
July 25, 2018.
This year’s inductees will be honored at Memorial
Field on Friday, October 12th and with a banquet at
GAHS on October 13th. They will join the 16 prior
classes and 124 current members.
Please call Tom Meadows, President, at 740-6454880 with any questions.

Tri-County Junior
Golf Schedule
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The schedule for the 2018
Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf League has
been released.
The tour ofﬁcially began 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: 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 304-675-6135 if you
can contribute or have questions concerning the tour.

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

GAHS football golf scramble
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The annual Gallia Academy
football golf scramble will be Saturday, July 21, at
Cliffside Golf Course. Registration begins at 7:30 a.m.
and the scramble will start at 8:30 a.m.
The format will be bring your own team, and the
team will be four players with only one handicap
under eight and a team handicap of 40 or greater.
There will be two divisions to choose from. The
blue division is a competitive division that will be
playing for cash prizes. The white division is a fun
division with no handicap requirements and winners
will be drawn at random.
Food and beverages will be provided at the event.
The deadline for registration is Friday, July 13.
To register or for questions, please call 740-6455783.

Ross D. Franklin | AP file

Columbus Blue Jackets forward Boone Jenner has signed a
four-year contract extension.

Blue Jackets give
Jenner 4-year,
$15M contract
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The Columbus
Blue Jackets re-signed
forward Boone Jenner
to a four-year, $15 million contract, locking up
a player who has been a
stalwart presence in the
team’s emergence as a
playoff contender.
The Blue Jackets
announced the deal on
Thursday. The contract
pays the 25-year-old
Jenner $3.75 million
annually through the
2021-22 season, according to a person with
direct knowledge of
the contract who spoke
to The Associated
Press on condition of
anonymity because
the Blue Jackets didn’t
reveal the value of the
deal.
Jenner was a restricted free agent who made
$2.9 million in 2017-18,
a season in which he
missed all of training
camp and the ﬁrst seven
games of the season
with a back injury.
Although his numbers

have fallen off since
he scored 30 goals in
2015-16, Jenner was an
alternate captain and
key contributor down
the stretch last season,
which ended in a ﬁrstround playoff loss to the
eventual Stanley Cup
champion Washington
Capitals.
The native of
Dorchester, Ontario,
said he was happy to
get the four-year deal
after starting his NHL
career with the Blue
Jackets. He’ll likely be
the left wing on the second or third line.
“Being there for ﬁve
years, I knew that’s
where I wanted to be,
especially with the team
we’ve got and the way
things are going and
what we’re building,”
he said. “It’s something
I’ve been a part of and
want to continue to be a
part of.”
He ended last season
with 13 goals and tied
his career high with 19
assists.

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, July 8, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

France reaches World Cup semifinals, beats Uruguay 2-0
NIZHNY NOVGOROD,
Russia (AP) — A shot
that ﬂew directly at the
hands of the opposing
goalkeeper turned into
a World Cup goal for
Antoine Griezmann.
The France striker
scored the second goal in
his team’s 2-0 quarterﬁnal
victory over Uruguay on
Friday, sending a seemingly easy-to-save shot
at a waiting Fernando
Muslera. But the ball hit
the keeper on the palms,
bounced off and looped
over his head and into
the net.
The victory gave
France a spot in the
World Cup semiﬁnals.
The 1998 champions will
next face either Brazil or
Belgium on Tuesday in
St. Petersburg.
Griezmann didn’t celebrate what was his third
goal of the tournament.
“I was playing against
a lot of friends,” said
Griezmann, who is teammates with Uruguay
defenders Diego Godin
and Jose Gimenez at
Atletico Madrid, “so I
think it was normal not
to celebrate.”
Raphael Varane gave
France the lead with a
header in the 40th min-

ute. Griezmann sent in a
free kick from the right
side and Varane raced
across the area. He got
his head to the ball and
sent it into the far corner
behind Muslera.
Griezmann scored his
goal, which was similar
to the one scored by Real
Madrid forward Gareth
Bale against Liverpool
goalkeeper Loris Karius
in the Champions League
ﬁnal, in the 61st minute.
“We all saw that it was
not a very common goal,
but Muslera has been
a very important pillar
for all this process and
through all our work on
our way up to here, so
I’m not going to wash
my hands putting any
responsibility on my
players,” Uruguay coach
Oscar Tabarez said.
“This is the kind of thing
that I will discuss with
the players in the locker
room.”
Griezmann is a Frenchman who plays professionally in Spain, but he
has a special fondness for
Uruguay. He likes the traditional South American
drink mate, he speaks
Spanish like someone
from the South American
country and he’s been

up in that match.
Four minutes after
Varane gave France the
lead, Uruguay nearly
equalized. France goalkeeper Hugo Lloris
dived to his right and
got a hand on a header
from Martin Caceres,
pushing it just wide of
the goal.
“Lloris had a great
save,” France coach
Didier Deschamps said.
Petr David Josek | AP “Apart from that, they
France’s Benjamin Pavard, top, and Uruguay’s Cristian Rodriguez
didn’t have many great
challenge for the ball during the quarterfinal match between
Uruguay and France at the 2018 soccer World Cup in the Nizhny opportunities.”

ager with multiple goals
in a World Cup knockout
game since a 17-year-old
Pele in 1958.

No longer unbeaten
Heading into the
match, Uruguay had
been unbeaten in 2018
and Muslera had the
best save percentage of
any goalkeeper at the
tournament who had
played more than one
match. He had 11 saves
and had allowed only
one goal in four World
Cup matches in Russia.
Novgorod Stadium, in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, Friday, July 6,
A country of only
Mbappe’s chances
2018.
3.5 million, Uruguay
Although he didn’t
France’s speed against
pictured wearing the
score, 19-year-old France won World Cup titles
Uruguay’s stubborn
team’s jersey.
in 1930 and 1950 and
forward Kylian Mbappe
defense and its occaGodin, who was playagain looked dangerous then waned. But it has
sional attacking threats.
ing for Uruguay on Friundergone a revival in
on the attack, trying to
day, is also the godfather But with Uruguay striker slice in from the right
the last 12 years under
of Griezmann’s daughter. Edinson Cavani injured
the 71-year-old Tabarez,
wing or directing quick
and on the bench and
“I love Uruguayan
a former elementary
passes into Uruguay’s
Luis Suarez neutralized, defense.
culture and I love Uruschool teacher.
it was France that scored
guayans, so I have a lot
The country was tryMbappe, who has
the goals.
of respect for them,”
ing to reach the semiﬁmodeled his game after
Suarez, who scored
Griezmann said.
nals for the second time
Cristiano Ronaldo and
two goals in the group
France went on to
in the last three World
is being compared to
stage, didn’t get a single Zinedine Zidane, also
reach the World Cup
Cups.
ﬁnal the last two times it touch on the ball in
“It seems that the four
picked up a second-half
France’s penalty area for yellow card for falling to games we won before
advanced to the semiﬁnals. They won their only the entire match. Cavani the ground as if in agony this one are worth nothscored both goals in the
World Cup in 1998 on
ing, but that’s not true,”
after a touch from an
2-0 win over Portugal in opponent.
home soil, and in 2006
Tabarez said. “Today
lost to Italy on penalties. the round of 16, but he
we played against oppoMbappe scored twice
sat on the bench with an against Argentina to
The match at Nizhny
nents that were stronger
Novgorod Stadium pitted injured left calf he picked become the ﬁrst teenthan we were.”

NASCAR’s ‘Young Stars’
tired of blame for sport’s woes

John Raoux | AP

Alex Bowman (88) heads to the track in his Chevrolet during a NASCAR auto racing practice at
Daytona International Speedway on Thursday in Daytona Beach, Fla. The Camaros have been mostly
noncompetitive since Austin Dillon won the season-opening Daytona 500, a less-than-ideal debut
for the model in the Cup Series.

Slide job! Chevrolet’s performance
plummets in new Camaro
DAYTONA BEACH,
Fla. (AP) — Darrell
Wallace Jr. has a proposition for the two guys
dominating the NASCAR Cup Series: Swap
cars for a race and see
what happens.
Vocalizing what’s
been obvious on the
track all season, Wallace
said Thursday the problem with the Chevrolets
is, well, the Chevrolets.
“My car handles way
worse than (Kevin) Harvick or Kyle (Busch)’s
car at 200 mph,” Wallace said at Daytona
International Speedway.
“Just because the cars
look the same and they
all go through tech
and everything, they
are damn sure not the
same.
“My car is not the
same as any other 18
or 4 car. It would be
interesting to say, ‘Let’s
swap seats and see how
that goes.’”
Chevrolet has been
mostly noncompetitive
since Austin Dillon won
the season-opening
Daytona 500 in February. The American
automaker hasn’t been
to victory lane since
and hadn’t really gotten
close until Chevy driver
Kyle Larson swapped
the lead on the ﬁnal lap
with Busch last week at
Chicagoland Speedway.
Meanwhile, Toyota
and Ford have pulled
away in the standings.
Toyota’s stable includes
Busch (ﬁve wins) and
defending Cup Series
champion Martin Truex
Jr. (three wins). Ford

has Kevin Harvick (ﬁve
wins), Clint Bowyer
(two wins) and Joey
Logano (one win).
For Chevy, it’s been
a bumpy debut for the
Camaro, which replaced
the maligned Chevrolet
SS this year.
“A lot of people were
pumped up about the
Chevy Camaro, and we
haven’t delivered the
wins that we thought
our camp would this
year as far as that goes,”
Dillon said. “We’re
working, though, as
a group to get closer.
Larson had a great shot
at Chicago. That’s positive. And hopefully we
can ﬁgure out how to
get the speed that his
Camaro has shown all
year.”
Larson has been the
lone bright spot for
Chevy in 2018. The
Chip Ganassi Racing
standout has six topﬁve ﬁnishes, as many
as fellow Chevy drivers
and Hendrick Motorsports teammates Chase
Elliott (four) and seventime series champion
Jimmie Johnson (two)
combined. Elliott will
race Saturday after suffering a sprained ankle
this week.
“I think everybody
in the Chevrolet camp
is frustrated when it
comes to not seeing the
wins up on the board,”
Dillon said.
Chevy won 13 consecutive manufacturer
championships in the
premier Cup Series
between 2003 and 2015.
But Toyota and Ford

have clearly closed the
gap. The reason is complicated, but one Chevy
believes it will be able
to handle in time.
Chevrolet designed
the Camaro to take
advantage of NASCAR’s
previous inspection system of templates.
But NASCAR
switched to a more
precise scanning system
this year, which erased
some of Chevy’s expected gains.
Ford, especially those
at Stewart-Haas Racing,
improved the most from
the change in inspection
procedures.
Adding to Chevy’s
woes, NASCAR began
enforcing a rule that
requires front splitters
to be completely ﬂat.
That tweak changed
aerodynamics and
caused the Chevrolets
to plow through turns
more than before.
Teams had been
allowed to make their
own splitters in previous years, and Toyota
had been the biggest
beneﬁciary of that rule
in 2017. The Japanese
automaker won 16 of
36 races, including the
championship, last year.
But anything can, and
often does, happen at
Daytona.
Restrictor-plate racing
is usually unpredictable,
which is how Dillon
led only the ﬁnal lap in
February and notched
the biggest win of his
career.
Chevy can only hope
for some more luck Saturday night.

DAYTONA BEACH,
Fla. (AP) — It was the
ﬁnish NASCAR banked
on as the genesis of its
ballyhooed youth movement.
Austin Dillon and Darrell Wallace Jr. ﬁnished
1-2 in the Daytona 500,
a promising pair of
20-somethings behind
the wheel of iconic car
numbers that could
excite old-school fans,
yet a pair with enough
social media savvy that
might attract millennials
to a sport in dire need of
a spark.
The kids were coming!
Wallace and good
buddy Ryan Blaney,
Chase Elliott, William
Byron and Daniel Suarez
were among the relative
newcomers in NASCAR
who had their images
plastered on billboards
and program covers and
hailed as NASCAR’s
version of The Next Big
Thing.
Yet, at NASCAR’s
halfway point, the series
returns this weekend to
Daytona International
Speedway with the socalled Young Guns in
danger of becoming The
Next Big Bust.
They’re not winning
races — or even fans
inside their sport.
International Speedway Corp. President
John Saunders pinned
some of NASCAR’s woes
on the failure of the new
crop of drivers that have
failed to replace retired
stars Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
Tony Stewart, Jeff Gordon, Carl Edwards and
even Danica Patrick in
performance or popularity.
“We still have an issue
with star power, and
hopefully this stable of
young drivers coming
along will start to win
and build their brands,”
Saunders said Thursday.
ISC owns tracks in
California, Kansas, Virginia, Arizona and Alabama and reported a 10
percent dip in attendance
this season for the six
races held on its properties from March through
May.
Weather and travel;
ticket prices and event
oversaturation; and long,
boring races — all kinds
of critical issues and

mundane nuisances —
have been blamed for
NASCAR’s tumble.
Now it’s Saunders’
turn to gripe about the
dearth of stars, and the
drivers have had enough
of serving as NASCAR’s
whipping boys.
“Honestly, this whole
‘young guys need to win
now’ thing is getting
old,” the 24-year-old
Blaney said. “We’re trying. We’re trying our
hardest. It’s not like I go
out there and I’m happy
for ﬁfth every single
week.
“Any other guy under
the age of 25, I’ll just
say is the same way. It’s
not a competition here
between young guys and
old guys. It’s a competition between 39 other
cars and yourself. No
matter what your age
is or your experience
level, everyone is trying
to accomplish the same
goal.”
Wallace threw the criticism back at Saunders,
saying outdated tracks
that fail to keep pace
with modern-day amenities are just as much at
fault for driving away
fans.
“It kind of goes handin-hand from us behind
the wheel to people that
are here hosting us,”
Wallace said.
Wallace, whose
second-place ﬁnish in
the Daytona 500 was
the best ever by a black
driver in the event, is a
social media darling with
more than 176,000 Twitter followers, posting
behind-the-scenes videos
and starring in a documentary series that aired
on Facebook Watch. The
24-year-old Richard Petty
Racing driver even takes
on his critics and serves
as his own one-man publicity machine for NASCAR fans.
But it’s checkered ﬂags
and championships that
will deﬁne drivers, not
likes and retweets.
“I might not post stupid videos every week or
stuff like that to try and
gain fans,” Kyle Larson
said, taking a subtle shot
at Wallace. “I try to gain
fans on the race track.”
Larson, 25, nearly
broke his season-long
winless streak last week

when he lost a last-lap
dual with Kyle Busch
at Chicagoland. Busch
won his ﬁfth race of the
season and rubbed his
hand in his eye to mimic
a crying child for all the
fans whining that the
2015 Cup champion won
another race.
NASCAR has a threedriver chase toward the
championship through
the ﬁrst 18 races:
—Busch, 33, ﬁve wins.
—Kevin Harvick, 42,
ﬁve wins.
—Martin Truex Jr., 38,
three wins.
Dillon and 28-year-old
Joey Logano, an 11-year
veteran and former Daytona 500 champ, are the
only drivers in their 20s
who have won this season. Just six drivers have
won races, and NASCAR’s 16-driver playoff
ﬁeld could have more
contenders making it on
points than victories.
“I think it would be
healthy for the sport if
we just see more variation in winners,” Blaney
said. “There have been
six winners this year.
Come on now. You can’t
just put that on the
young guys for not winning. That’s a lot of other
people that aren’t winning, too.”
Seven-time champion
Jimmie Johnson is winless. So is former Daytona 500 champion Denny
Hamlin and 2012 series
champ Brad Keselowski.
But those greats all
have resumes that can
stamp them as future
Hall of Famers.
Fair or not, NASCAR
and its tracks threw
their promotional weight
this season behind upand-comers instead of
perennial contenders and
have paid the price for
the slight: FOX and FS1
averaged 2.54 million
viewers for Cup Series
races this season, down
23 percent from last year
(3.31 million).
The youth movement
needs to start, well, moving.
“I just want to know
what we do about it, do
you know what I mean,”
Dillon asked. “How do
you move forward with
that? Because the guys
that are in the sport are
talented enough to win.”

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, July 8, 2018 5B

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

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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Today’s Solution

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LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
(Sale of Old Football Stadium and Grounds)
The Meigs Local School District, by and thorough the duly
elected members of the Board of Education, and with approval
of the Board Treasurer, has recently reviewed the real property
holdings of the local school district and has found, in keeping
with the requirements of Ohio Revised Code Sections 3313.41
and Ohio Revised Code Section 3313.411, that the Board does
own a certain parcel of Real Property that is unfit and obsolete
for the original purpose for which it was acquired, that the same
is no longer needed for any known purpose and that the same
should be sold, the same being generally described as a 12.86
acre parcel of land as situated in Salisbury Township, Village of
Pomeroy, County of Meigs and State of Ohio, being more commonly known as the former “Football Stadium for Meigs High
School.” Based upon the same the Board did resolve to sell
said property, at public sale, as is required, being more particularly described as follows, to wit:OLD FOOTBALL STADIUM
REAL PROPERTY DESCRIPTION 12.86 Acre Parcel Situated
in Salisbury Township, in the Village of Pomeroy, Meigs
County, State of Ohio, part of Lot 82, Fraction 10, town 2 North,
Range 13 West of the Ohio Company’s Purchase and being
described as follows: beginning at an iron pin found at the
northwest corner of said Lot 82; Thence N 87 deg. 12’ 31” E, a
distance of 350.90’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 33 deg. 18’ 07”
W, a distance of 25.39’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 28 deg. 21’
59” E, a distance of 51.50’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 13 deg.
44’ 51” W, a distance of 37.08’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 60
deg. 53’ 09” E, a distance of 320.50’ to an iron pin set; Thence
N 39 deg. 36’ 51” E, a distance of 100.00’ to an iron pin set;
Thence N 51 deg. 30’ 15” W, a distance of 71.74’ to an iron pin
set; Thence N 39 deg. 54 27” E, a distance of 4.50’ to an iron
pin set; Thence N 63 deg. 41’ 45” W, a distance of 21.29’ to an
iron pin set; Thence N 51 deg. 30’ 15” E, a distance of 207.74’
to an iron pin set; Thence N 87 deg. 12’ 31” E, a distance of
275.00’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 00 deg. 14’ 51” W, a distance of 51.71’ to an iron pin set; Thence N 78 deg. 12’ 47” E, a
distance of 330.25’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 07 deg. 50’ 42”
E, a distance of 485.35’ to an iron pin found; Thence S 14 deg.
48’ 23” E, a distance of 100.00’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 02
deg. 00’ 04” W, a distance of 49.41’ to an iron pin set; Thence
S 61 deg. 59’ 51” W, a distance of 45.00’ to an iron pin set;
Thence S 81 deg. 41’ 43” W, a distance of 84.95’ to an iron pin
found; Thence S 78 deg. 43’ 46” W, a distance of 112.39’ to a
railroad spike found; Thence N 55 deg. 14’ 25” W, a distance of
89.89’ to a point; Thence N 32 deg. 37’ 38” W, a distance of
99.18’ to an iron pin found; Thence S 64 deg. 15’ 16” W, a distance of 140.19’ to an iron pin found;
Thence S 64 deg. 13’ 41” W, a distance of 159.48’ to an iron
pin found; Thence S 396 deg. 42’ 30” W, a distance of 63.53’ to
an iron pin found; Thence S 59 deg. 27’ 54” W, a distance of
133.21’ to an iron pin found; Thence N 26 deg. 00’ 21” W, a distance of 826.27’ to the POINT OF BEGINNING, passing a chiseled notch found in face of cliff at 153.00’ for reference, said
described tract containing 12.86 Acres, more or less, excepting
all legal utility easements and rights of way.
Reference Deeds:
All 10.30 acres from Volume 144, page 482
All 0.50 acres from Volume 136, page 379, Parcel 1
All 2.06 acres from Volume 162, page 500, Parcel 1
Bearings are assumed and are for angle measurement only.
MEIGS COUNTY AUDITORS PARCEL No.1602500000
The above description is based on a survey in January
2013 by E &amp; E Borderline Surveying, Robert R. Eason, Ohio
P.S. No. 7033.
The Board of Education further states that this property will be
sold at auction to the highest bidder at a public sale to be held
on the 1st day of August, 2018, at 10:00a.m., to be held at Bob
Roberts Field (Old Stadium) near ticket booth. The minimum
opening bid shall be not less that One Hundred forty thousand
dollars ($140,000.) and, if an opening bid is made, all bids
thereafter shall increase in increments of not less than
$1,000.00, per bid, until sold. The successful bidder shall provide a bank guarantee letter or cashier’s check for not less than
10% of the purchase price on the day of the sale, with the balance due within 30 days of the sale. If sold, the Board of
Education does further state that the property herein described
shall be conveyed by “quit claim deed” to the successful bidder,
in “as is and where is” condition, with no warranties, either or
express or implied, and that this property is not being conveyed
for any specific purpose or use and that no certification is made
as to the suitability of the same as to any particular use.Further,
the members of this Board expressly reserve the right to accept
or reject any and all bids, for any reason or no reason at all. All
sales shall be final.

Better Together
Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has a full-time opening for a MLT/MT.
Three years or greater general staff tech experience preferred. Baccalaureate
degree in medical technology or related field plus eligibility for ASCP and/
or associates degree in applied science or related field plus certification by
ASCP.

OH-70047967

RYAN MAHR, PRESIDENT
BOARD OF EDUCATION
ROY JOHNSON, TREASURER
BOARD OF EDUCATION

CALL TODAY!

CHRISTOPHER E. TENOGLIA
ATTORNEY FOR THE BOARD
7/1/18, 7/8/18, 7/15/18, 7/22/18, 7/29/18

NEW CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES

Apply at: Pleasant Valley Hospital, 2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant, WV
25550, fax to (304) 675-6975 or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.

All three publications Gallipolis Daily-Tribune,
Point Pleasant Register and Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
(includes weekend) $5.00 for each additional line.

EOE: M/D/F/V
OH-70062676

5 day run - Print and Online

Total Cost

$

37.45

OH-70051356
OH-70045325

10 day run - Print and Online

Total Cost

$

43.45

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

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 8, 2018 7B

Blue Jackets sign Duclair to $650K, 1-year deal
Anthony Duclair is a bit
embarrassed about bouncing around to various teams
and taking a league-minimum, one-year deal.
Duclair signed a $650,000
Paul Sancya | AP file
contract
Friday for next seaEx-Chicago Blackhawks left wing Anthony Duclair
has signed with the Columbus Blue Jackets on a son with the Columbus Blue
$650,000, one-year contract.
Jackets, his fourth NHL

team. He’s been traded
twice and last week became
an unrestricted free agent
when the Chicago Blackhawks decided not to offer
him a contract to retain his
rights.
“It’s deﬁnitely a huge
wake-up call,” Duclair said

third-round pick who won
a world junior gold medal
with Canada and spent time
with the New York Rangers, Arizona Coyotes and
Blackhawks. The one-time
20-goal scorer remains
unﬁlled potential after parts
of four NHL seasons.

on a conference call. “You’re
a 22-year-old free agent, it’s
not the best thing out there.
Obviously, it’s going to raise
some eyebrows and raise
some questions.”
Columbus was one of
a few teams interested in
signing Duclair, a 2013

Classifieds

Turn Your Clutter

REAL ESTATE AUCTION
� ������ � ����������������

INTO CASH!

3202 RACCOON RD. GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631
Dir: From 2nd Ave Park go SW on OH-7/2nd Ave 3.0 mi to R on OH-218
2.1 Mi to L on Racoon Rd. .4 mi to site on L.

Advertise Your Garage Sale to Thousands of Readers In
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Point Pleasant Register
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

3 Bed, 1 bath, 1,260 sq ft , 2 story home
built in 1900 with public water and gas heat
on 2 parcels (parcel ID#s: 00500116200 &amp;
00500116301) approx. 12.75 acres of land
total. Private, beautiful views of surrounding
valley!

4 lines, 2 days
inprint &amp; online

OH-70062392

TERMS: Open Houses, Sun. July 15, 2-4 PM and 1 hr. prior to auction. 10% nonrefundable deposit due sale day – bal. in 45 days. A 5% buyer’s fee added to ﬁnal bid to
generate sales contract price. Any inspections must be made prior to bidding. See our
site for pics, vids &amp; details.

Only $15.00

FIRST QUALITY AUCTION &amp; REALTY
Mark Walton, Auctioneer &amp; Broker
(330) 607-3687 www.waltonauctionsite.com

ANTIQUE AUCTION
SATURDAY, JULY 14, 2018 @ 10:00 A.M.

AUCTION LOCATED AT 17116 KANAWHA VALLEY RD., SOUTHSIDE, WV 25187.
FROM PT. PLEASANT, WV TAKE RT. 817 SOUTH, 9.3 MILES, ON THE LEFT.
THERE WILL BE FIELD PARKING. WE’RE SELLING THE ESTATE OF THE LATE
RODNEY P. &amp; JESSIE IRENE BRAND.

OH-70062397

TERMS OF SALE CASH OR CHECK W/ VALID ID
FOOD AVAILABLE
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR. #1955
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
EXECUTRIX : CLARA CATHERINE YAUGER
www.auctionzip.com

OH-70051355
OH-70045667

ANTIQUES: Outstanding Walnut Flat-Wall Cupboard; Lg. Walnut School Master Desk w/ Gallery Top; Primitive Cabinet; 3 Stack
Bookcase; Old Trunk’s; Early Chest; Victorian Love Seat; Mission Oak Desk; Early Rocker; 12 Tin Pie Safe; 4 Pc. Cherry BR Suite;
Plus more.
COLLECTIBLES: Several Beautiful Quilts;Blenko Water Set; Plus Other Pieces of Blenko; Oriental Pictures; Vase’s; Record’s; Sheet
Music to include Al Jolson, Bing Crosby, &amp; more; Stone Jars; Child Set of Blue &amp; White Dishes; Zane Gray Books plus others; Life
Magazines; China Dogs; Early Baskets; Old Games; Tea Set; Fenton Cranberry Lamp; Fenton Glassware; Seth Thomas Weight Clock;
Old Concrete Yard Statues; Coal Hod; Glassware; 2 Gal. Churn; Fruit Jars; Bottles; Plus much more.
MODERN FURNITURE, APPLIANCES &amp; HOUSEHOLD: Whirlpool Washer &amp; Dryer; Westinghouse 36” Range; Farm Table &amp; Chairs;
Keller Table &amp; 6 Chairs; Matching China Cabinet &amp; Server; Sumter 4 Pc. Queen size BR Suite; Sofa; Love Seat; Cedar Chest;
Recliner; Wurlitzer Piano; Yamaha Guitar; Hanging Reverse Painted Lamp; Cookware; Camera’s; MTD Snow Blower;
Cherry Howard Miller Clock; plus more.
PAINTINGS: Mr. Brand was an artist and has a Lg. amount of paintings he painted. These paintings will be sold in a 2nd auction ring.
BOOKS: Mrs. Brand was an author and has several books she wrote. Along with the contents of their library and Mrs. Brand’s books,
they too will be sold in a 2nd auction ring.

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
my dailytribune.com
740-446-2342

Point Pleasant Register
mydailyregister.com
304-675-1333

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
mydailysentinel.com
740-992-2155

All vehicles rebuilt on site, over 100 years of combined experience. Selling the best used vehicles since 1989.

LUNSFORD’S
SARDIS AUTO

2571 Sardis Rd, Oak Hill, OH 45656�* 740-682-7232
Nothing like getting all your automotive needs taken care of in one stop! Quality, honest service you can rely on.

SUMMER HOT DEALS

OH-70061992

SOLD
2015 Kia Optima

2014 Kia Sedona

2014 Toyota Camry

2010 Ford F-150

2013 GMC Terrain

29k miles

64k

47k miles

4x4 57k miles extra clean

52k Local Trade

2015 Dodge Ram 1500

2003 Mercury Marquis

2012 Infiniti G37X

2017 Jeep Patriot Sport

2005 Honda Accord Ex

Hemi Powered 4x4 56k miles

73k

60k miles All Wheel Drive

4x4 6k

84k Leather

2015 Nissan Altima S

2015 Honda Civic SE

1999 Honda Prelude

2014 Ford Escape

2014 Chevy Equinox

40k miles

44k miles

88k miles

45k Runs &amp; Drives Like New

49k 4x4

2011 Hyundai Genesis
60k miles

Appointments for weekend and
later hours are available!
Hours: Mon-Fri 8am-5:30pm

2007 Chevy Silverado Z71
LT, all leather - Bose, local truck, 4 door

�8B Sunday, July 8, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Hi, I’m Annee. Jessica
Wilson, DO is my doctor.

Doctors of Osteopathic Medicine
practice health care differently.
Listening to you and partnering in your care are at the heart of their approach to medicine.
DOs are trained to promote the body’s natural tendency toward health and self-healing.
While they practice according to the latest science and use the latest technology, they also
consider options to complement pharmaceuticals and surgery, such as Osteopathic Manipulatative Treatment (OMT). By combining the latest advances in medical technology with
OMT, DOs offer their patients the most comprehensive care available in medicine today.
“Honestly, I didn’t know there was a difference, until I met Jessica Wilson, DO. She truly
listens and pays more attention to me as a person than my chart. She looks beyond my
symptoms and addresses the root of the problem. If you are seeking a new doctor who cares
for you as a whole person, I would love for you to give my doctor a call,” stated Annee
Carman, patient.

For more information or to schedule an appointment, please call

OH-70056700

304.857.3632
1MFBTBOU�7BMMFZ�)PTQJUBM�1SJNBSZ�$BSF�t������7BMMFZ�%SJWF�t�1PJOU�1MFBTBOU �87�������t��QWBMMFZ�PSH

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