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                  <text>On this
day in
history
OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

75°

81°

79°

Mostly cloudy, then clearing and less humid
today. Mainly clear tonight. High 87° / Low 61°

Today’s
weather
forecast

France
defeats
Croatia

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 113, Volume 72

Tuesday, July 17, 2018 s 50¢

Three people
arrested on
drug charges
Staff Report

MIDDLEPORT —
Two men from Dayton
and a woman from Gallipolis were arrested on
Saturday for allegedly
selling drugs from a
vehicle parked on Storys Run Road.
Meigs County Sheriff
Keith Wood reports
that on Saturday, July
14th, 2018 his ofﬁce
received information that two black
males and a white
female were parked
in a vehicle behind a
residence located on
Storys Run Road in
Middleport and were

allegedly selling large
amounts of narcotics out of the vehicle.
Deputy Campbell,
Deputy King, Deputy
Leggett, and Sgt. Stewart responded to the
area and attempted to
make contact with the
alleged suspects.
Deputies approached
the residence and
located the vehicle that
matched the description and was occupied
by two black males
and a white female. As
deputies made contact
with the suspects, a
short pursuit took
See CHARGES | 3

Kayla Hawthorne | Courtesy

Participants in the 4-H Food and Fashion Show

Food and Fashion wrap up judging week
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

Appeals
court affirms
conviction
Staff Report

POMEROY —The Fourth District Court of
Appeals has afﬁrmed the aggravated assault conviction of Meigs County woman.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney James K. Stanley stated in a
news release that a decision ﬁled
by the Ohio Fourth District Court
of Appeals afﬁrmed Paulena Yost’s
conviction for Aggravated Assault,
a felony of the fourth degree.
Aggravated assault, as charged,
Yost
alleges that “No person, while
under the inﬂuence of sudden passion or in a sudden ﬁt of rage, either of which is
brought on by serious provocation occasioned by
the victim that is reasonably sufﬁcient to incite
the person into using deadly force, shall knowingly: (1) Cause serious physical harm to another
or to another’s unborn; (2) Cause or attempt to
cause physical harm to another or to another’s
unborn by means of a deadly weapon or dangerous ordnance, as deﬁned in section 2923.11 of
the Revised Code.”
On Nov. 14, 2017, Yost, 21, of Syracuse, Ohio,
was convicted of aggravated assault for stabbing
the victim, her live-in boyfriend, in the back on
March 6, 2017, during a dispute at their residence.
At sentencing, Stanley argued that Yost should
receive the maximum sentence of 18 months in
prison. Meigs County Court of Common Pleas
Judge I. Carson Crow agreed and sentenced Yost

POMEROY — County
4-H’ers ﬁnished judging
week Friday night at the
Food and Fashion Show
at the Meigs County
Senior Center.
The ﬁnal event of 4-H
judging week was Friday
night to recognize the
members who completed
food and fashion projects. The judging for
those projects was earlier

in the afternoon but participants showcased their
projects and creations
to members of the community.
Among the reviews
for the food and fashion
projects were Cloverbud
show and tells. Cloverbuds, ages ﬁve through
eight, talked about
projects they worked on
with their club advisers.
These projects included
caring for animals and
livestock, ﬁshing, grow-

ing vegetables, sewing
purses, painting, and
various arts and crafts.
Kyra Zuspan also gave
a demonstration and
is eligible to compete
at the Ohio State Fair.
Her demonstration was
about the importance
of wearing your crown
and complimenting others to make a change in
the world. Zuspan also
noted that 4-H’ers are
more likely to make these
changes and to give back

to their communities.
Caitlin Carr was
named as the Meigs
Country nominee for
the Lloyd and Doris
Roby 4-H Clothing Program Award. The ﬁnal
selection will be based
on overall outstanding
achievement in 4-H clothing projects, as well as
leadership skills in the
4-H program. The winner will be awarded $500
See FASHION | 5

Training Ohio’s first responders
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to OVP

REEDSVILLE — Fireﬁghters from departments in southeastern
Ohio participated in the
State Fire Marshal driving training at the Olive
Township Volunteer Fire
Department on Saturday
and Sunday.
Chuck Stephens, the
assistant chief and training ofﬁcer at the ﬁre
department, said seven
departments participated
Kayla Hawthorne | Courtesy
Firefighters took part in training over the weekend with a driving in the training. Stephens
said the training was not
simulator from the State Fire Marshal’s Office.

only for the county, but
for the state. Departments from as far as Vinton County showed up
for the training.
Instructors from the
Ohio State Fire Marshal
led ﬁreﬁghters through
training simulators. Mike
Isgett, one of the instructors, said there are three
scenarios each participant must complete. The
ﬁrst is an orientation of
how to start and stop the
ﬁretruck. In the second
scenario, the ﬁre truck
See TRAINING | 5

Buffington Island Battlefield Memorial coming
Staff Report

See APPEALS | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7-8
Comics: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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thoughts.

PORTLAND — Ohio Department Sons of Union Veterans
of the Civil War will be hosting
the Bufﬁngton Island Battleﬁeld
Memorial Service, July 21, at
11 a.m. at the Bufﬁngton Island
Battleﬁeld Park to remember the
155th anniversary of what has
been called the only major American Civil War battle in Ohio’s history.
According to an Ohio History
Connection program provided by
James Oiler, commander of CadotBlessing Camp 126 with the Sons
of Union Veterans of the Civil War,
on July 19, 1863, the Battle of
Bufﬁngton Island commenced and
was recognized as an engagement
during “Morgan’s Great Raid”
into Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky.
General John Hunt Morgan led
roughly 1,800 Confederate cavalrymen against 3,000 Union artillery,
cavalry and infantry, which were
supported by gunboats on the

File photo

Union troops travel through southeastern Ohio in hopes of catching up with Morgan and
his Raiders.

Ohio River. The encounter lasted
two hours, reportedly. Morgan’s
Confederate forces were to cross
the Bufﬁngton Island ford before
meeting with and being defeated
by Union resistance.
A third of Morgan’s command

was considered captured and
his forces “scatted to the north.”
Morgan was captured July 26 in
Columbiana County.
The battle reportedly also
See MEMORIAL | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, July 17, 2018

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

JOHN R. BREWER
MARIETTA — John R.
Brewer, 71, of Marietta,
Ohio, passed away Thursday, July 12, 2018, at Riverside Methodist Hospital
in Columbus, Ohio.
He was born Sept.
26, 1946 in Huntington,
W.Va., son of the late John
Dale Brewer and Doris
Patton Brewer Goodrich.
John was a Physical
Therapist at Marietta
Memorial Hospital and a
Vietnam Veteran serving
in the U.S. Army.
He is survived by two
brothers, David Brewer of
Long Bottom, Ohio and
Charles Brewer of The

by a parent/legal guardian. A
$30.00 donation is appreciated
for immunization administration;
however, no one will be denied
services because of an inability
to pay an administration fee for
state-funded childhood vaccines.
Please bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance cards,
if applicable. Shingles and pneumonia vaccines are also available.
Call for eligibility determination
POMEROY — The West Virand availability or visit our webginia Department of Transportasite at www.meigs-health.com to
tion says the regular inspection
see a list of accepted commercial
of the Bridge of Honor between
insurances and Medicaid for
Pomeroy and Mason will take
adults. The Ohio Department of
place from July 16-July 19,
Health (ODH) does NOT recomresulting in lane closures. One
mended for routine Hepatitis A
lane will remain open in each
vaccination of Healthcare Workdirection at all times.
ers. Additionally, the Advisory
CHESTER — Scout Camp
Committee on Immunization
Road and Mill Street in the area
Practices (ACIP) does NOT recof Chester Commons will be
ommend routine Hepatitis A vacclosed from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on
cination for Food Workers. CurSaturday, July 21, for the Meigs
rently, ODH is strongly recomHeritage Festival.
mending the following groups to
get the Hepatitis A vaccine: men
POMEROY — The Meigs
who have sex with men, persons
County Health Department
who inject drugs and person who
will conduct an Immunization
Clinic on Tuesday, from 9-11 a.m. use illegal non-injection drugs.
These are the highest risk groups
and 1-3 p.m., at 112 E. Memofor transmission of Hepatitis A.
rial Drive in Pomeroy. Please
CHESTER — The Ohio’s
Call 740-992-6626 for vaccine
bring child(ren)’s shot records.
Best Pie Contest &amp; Auction
availability.
Children must be accompanied
will be held during the Meigs
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs
will only list event information
that is open to the public and will
be printed on a space-available
basis.

Phillipines; several nieces, nephews, great-nieces,
great-nephews and a special friend, Jean Smith.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by his twin brother,
James Dale Brewer, who
was killed in Vietnam.
John will be cremated
and there will be no visitation or funeral service.
Arrangements have
been entrusted to WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home
in Coolville, Ohio.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
www.whiteschwarzelfh.
com.

Road closure
announced

Immunization
clinic Tuesday

KAREN REN TRIPLETT
COOLVILLE — Karen
Ren Triplett, 67, of
Coolville, Ohio, passed
away on July 15, 2018,
at the Cleveland Clinic.
She was born on Dec. 23,
1950, daughter of Leslie and Allie Hawley of
Cheshire, Ohio.
Karen was valedictorian of the 1968 class at
Middleport High School.
She graduated from Ohio
University in 1971 with
Magna Cum Laude honors.
She is survived by her
husband of 47 years,
Eugene “Gene” Triplett;
her children, Michelle
(Donnie) Shelton of
Pomeroy and Russ
(Melissa) Triplett of
Medina; grandchildren,
Nate, Jack, Brady, Addy,

Cameron and Maddie;
her parents, Leslie and
Allie Hawley; brother,
George (Sharon) Hawley
of Middleport; sister,
Denise (Jim) Spence
of Marion; niece and
nephew, Penny Horn and
Jimmy Spence of Marion;
and sister-in-law, Becky
Triplett.
Karen was preceded
in death by her nephew,
Chip Rife.
Graveside funeral services will be held on Friday, July 20, 2018, at 10
a.m. with Pastor Randy
Smith ofﬁciating at Meigs
Memory Gardens.
In lieu of ﬂowers, donations in memory of Karen
Triplett may be made to
the Meigs County Dog
Shelter.

Pie contest to
be held July 21

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Vacation Bible School
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.
RUTLAND — The Rutland FreeWill Baptist
Church will hold Vacation Bible School July
23-27, 6-8:30 p.m. each night. The closing program and party will be July 27. Perfect attendance
names will be drawn with one boy and one girl in
each class winning a bicycle. The theme is Rolling River Rampage. Each day will include music,
skits, crafts, snacks and devotions. Pastor Ed
Barney invites everyone to come as we teach your
children about Jesus and His way of life.
RACINE — Vacation Bible School at Racine
United Methodist Church, 818 Elm Street,
Racine, will be held from 6-8 p.m., July 23-25.
MIDDLEPORT — The First Baptist Church
of Middleport, 211 S. 6th Ave., Middleport, will
hold our Vacation Bible School from July 23-26
from 6-8 p.m. The theme for the week will be
Splash Canyon focusing on God’s Promise on
Life’s Wild Ride. Classes will be held for children who just ﬁnished Kindergarten through 5th
Grade. You may bring your younger child if you

WARNER
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Brandon Michael
Warner, 30, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Thursday,
July 12, 2018 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant.
A Celebration of Life service will be 4 p.m., Saturday, July 21, 2018 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant with Pastor Joe Nott ofﬁciating. The family
will receive friends two hours prior to the service Saturday at the funeral home.
KEEFER
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Mary Louise Keefer,
of Point Pleasant, died on Sunday, July 15 at the age
of 94.
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home,
Point Pleasant, W.Va. on Wednesday, July 18 at 2 p.m.
with Reverend Carl Swisher ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow at Kirkland Memorial Gardens. The family will
meet with friends and family from 1- 2 p.m. prior to
services at the funeral home.
BUSH

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COLUMBUS — Bethany Marie (Woolum) Caudill,
39, of Columbus, died Saturday July 14, 2018.
A celebration of the life and testimony of Bethany
Marie Caudill will be held on Tuesday, July 17, 2018
at Elevate Ministries in Jackson. The family will welcome friends, family, and guests from 2 p.m. until 6
p.m. with the celebration service beginning at 6 p.m.
Arrangements are under the direction of the MayhewBrown Funeral Home in Jackson.

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Saturday, July 28
LONG BOTTOM — Mount Olive Community
Church, 51305 Mount Olive Road, Long Bottom,
will hold a hymn sing at 6 p.m. Everyone welcome.
Bring your song to sing. Pastor Don Bush.

Sunday, July 29
MIDDLEPORT — The Cornwell Twins will present their music ministry during the 10:30 morning
worship service at Heath United Methodist Church
located at 339 S. 3rd. Ave. in Middleport. All are
invited to a potluck luncheon downstairs following
the service.

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stay with him/her. There will be a different lesson
from the Bible taught each evening and, besides
the lessons, the children will sing, do crafts, enjoy
games, and receive snacks. Registration slips will
need to be ﬁlled out before VBS begins on Monday. Please bring your child to be registered on
Monday beginning at 5:45 p.m. Pastor Billy Zuspan is our pastor. Penny Fisher and Lori Zuspan,
both teachers in the public school systems, are in
charge of our VBS.

TUESDAY EVENING

POMEROY — Lester R. Bush, 38, of Pomeroy, died
Saturday, July 14, 2018, in the Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington, West Virginia.
Cremation services are entrusted to the CremeensKing Funeral Home, Pomeroy. A memorial service will
be held at the convenience of the family.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

Heritage Festival on July 21, on
the Chester Commons, Chester,
Ohio. Bring your pies between
9-11 a.m., judging by 3 of Meigs’
ﬁnest pie eaters will take place
at 11:30 a.m. with the uncut
wining pie being auctioned at 2
p.m. Makers of the 1st, 2nd and
3rd place pies will receive trophies, cash prizes and the thrill
of seeing their pie being sold to
the highest bidder. The winners
will be announced just prior
to the auction. All pie makers
are encouraged to donate their
favorite pie to the Festival to
help feed the hungry and raise
funds for the Chester Shade Historical Assoc. that maintains the
Chester Academy and Historical
Courthouse.

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Who Is
The Affair
Rugby players struggle to survive 72 days in Moore, Pete Postlethwaite, Jeff Goldblum. A research group travels to an America?
the Andes after their plane crashes. TVMA island inhabited by dinosaurs to study their behavior. TV14

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

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

Tuesday, July 17
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 2 p.m., Shark
Cart. The Newport Aquarium’s WAVE Foundation
is bringing a real, live shark to the library.

Wednesday, July 18
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 11 a.m., Gardening Series: Edible Weeds. Kevin Fletcher with
OSU Extension Ofﬁce will be presenting.

Thursday, July 19
RACINE — Racine Library, 5-7 p.m., Bubble
Bash. Celebrate 7 weeks of reading with the end
of the summer reading party. Water slides, a foam
party, and more await.
MIDDLEPORT — Food Truck Thursday will be
held from 6-8 p.m. at Dave Diles Park in Middleport. Music by Nick Michael and The Susan Page
Orchestra. Bring a chair. In the event of rain event
will move to Middleport Village Hall.

Friday, July 20
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, Cookbook
Club. This month’s theme is Savory and/or Sweet
Salads. Bring a dish and the recipe to share, while
sampling others’ dishes.
POMEROY — The PHS Class of ‘59 will be having their 3rd Friday lunch at Fox Pizza at noon.
Please join us if you can.

Saturday, July 21
MIDDLEPORT — Fish fry at the Middleport
Fire Dept. Serving starts at 11 a.m., Race Street at
the ﬁre station.

Monday, July 23
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, Book Club.
Discuss this month’s selection, What She Knew by
Gilly Macmillan, with the group.
POMEROY — The regular meeting of the
Meigs Co. Library Board will be held at 3:30 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Library.
LETART TWP. — Letart Township Trustees
Meeting will be held at 5 p.m.

Tuesday, July 17, 2018 3

Lawsuit spurs national reform
of illegal diversion in
DEA’s determination of
how many opioid pills
CHARLESTON —
can be manufactured
West Virginia Attorney
each year.
General Patrick Mor“We must do everyrisey sued the U.S. Drug
thing to reduce the overEnforcement Adminsupply of opioid painkillistration (DEA) and
ers,” said Morrisey, “the
his unilateral action is
now locked in sweeping reforms accomplished
reform to national drug through this rule and
our lawsuit are the ﬁrst
policy.
steps toward changing
The DEA, as a direct
a fundamentally ﬂawed
result of the lawsuit,
system that for too long
sent a ﬁnalized rule to
the Federal Register that placed industry wants
over the legitimate
embraces the attorney
general’s call for greater medical need and coninput and consideration tributed to increased

Staff Report

crime, higher medical
costs, strained emergency services, greater
reliance on foster care
and far too many senseless deaths.”
The ﬁnalized rule
takes steps to account
for diversion, increases
input from speciﬁc
stakeholders and establishes hearings when
states request DEA
consider additional evidence of excess opioid
supplies. All of these
suggestions were set
forth by Morrisey.
The DEA previously

relied on the amount
of pills pharmaceutical
manufacturers expected
to sell within a year. The
broken approach did not
account for the number
of pills diverted for
abuse.
The ﬁnalized rule,
which came out on last
Wednesday, was less
than four months after
U.S. Attorney General
Jeff Sessions ordered
DEA to review its policy,
a directive issued itself
just hours before a key
deadline in Morrisey’s
lawsuit.

Charges
From page 1

place before the three
individuals were taken
into custody.
Deputies reportedly
located two large plastic
baggies that contained
approximately 80 grams
of suspected methamphetamine, heroin, crack
cocaine, and marijuana.
Taken into custody was
Michael Lee Cook, aka
“Blue”, 49, of Dayton,
Ohio, along with Derrick Lee Cook, 40,
of Dayton, Ohio, and
Nancy J. Johnson, 37, of
Gallipolis.
The suspects were all
charged with Possession
of Methamphetamine,
Possession of Heroin,
and Possession of Crack
Cocaine, all felonies of
the second and third
degree. The case has
been turned over to
the Gallia-Meigs Major
Crimes Task Force,
which will consult with
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney James K.

Courtesy photo

Money and suspected drugs were located on Saturday be Meigs County Sheriff’s Deputies.

Stanley about the case.
Further charges are
pending at this time.
“We continue to send
our message to these
drug dealers that you are
not welcome in our community” stated Sheriff
Wood. “My ofﬁce, along
with the task force are
committed to ﬁnding
you and arresting you

for bringing this poison
into our community.”
The Major Crimes
Task Force of GalliaMeigs is a state task
force under the jurisdiction of the Ohio Organized Crime Investigations Commission which
is part of the Ohio Attorney General Ofﬁce. The
task force was formed

in September 2013 and
consists of the Meigs
and Gallia County Sheriff Ofﬁces, Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Investigation, the Middleport
Police Department, the
Gallipolis City Police
Department and both
the Meigs and Gallia
County Prosecutor’s
Ofﬁces.

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�Opinion
4 Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Never leave
your wife at
a truck stop
“Florian and Myrtle Krebsbach left for Minneapolis and the Clinic because Myrtle was pretty
sure she had cancer,” wrote Garrison Keillor.
Florian got on Interstate 94
in Avon and headed south, later
deciding to stop at a truck stop,
where they both had a couple of
cups of coffee. Florian left to use
the men’s room, and while he was
gone, Myrtle went to the ladies
room.
Without thinking, while Myrtle
Pat
was in the restroom, Florian
Haley
Contributing walked outside, got behind the
wheel of their ’66 Chevy, checked
columnist
the mirror, and headed for the freeway.
He had driven 25 miles before he missed her.
He immediately turned around, but discovered
he wasn’t on the Interstate anymore. He was
lost.
Four hours later Florian pulled back into the
truck stop. Myrtle was gone. The waitress said,
“You mean the lady in the blue coat?”
He wasn’t sure how to describe her except as
real mad, probably.
“Oh, she left here hours ago. Her son came to
get her,” the waitress said.
A similar incident happened to us. Our story,
however, happened in West Virginia, not Minnesota, many years after Keillor wrote his essay.
Brenda and I had left our home in Staunton,
Virginia around 5 a.m. to get a jump on our day.
We were heading back to Ohio to visit both of
our families.
We had pulled into the Westbound I-64 Welcome Center high above White Sulphur Springs,
West Virginia, to rest for a few moments. We sat
in the green metal chairs, and closed our eyes.
After about 20 minutes, we decided to resume
our trip to Ohio. “Do you mind if I rest a little
while longer in the back seat while you drive?”
Brenda asked.
“That will be ﬁne. I will be right back,” I said,
as I made a quick stop at the restroom.
Once back on the road, I started thinking
about the rest of the trip, not paying any attention to the silence in the backseat. I drove for
another 15 miles before I glanced into the back
seat to check on Brenda.
She wasn’t there!
I couldn’t believe it. My mind started racing.
Had she fallen out of our car into the parking
lot, perhaps run over by one of the numerous
semi-trucks pulling in and out of the rest area?
Had she gotten into the wrong car, maybe was
halfway back to Virginia by now?
I couldn’t try to call Brenda, because this happened before the advent of cell phones.
Turning around wasn’t as easy as I had
thought. There were no exits within miles on
the mountainous interstate. There were no
crossover lanes to be found.
I began to panic. Finally, I saw a crossover
and sped into the gravel opening.
Knowing the West Virginia State Police
didn’t heavily patrol that isolated area of the
Interstate, I drove 80 to 90 miles per hour
until I ﬁnally saw the sign that read, “Wild and
Wonderful West Virginia Welcome Center — 2
miles.”
In a desperate hurry, I sped across a crossover
the wrong way, and pulled into the Welcome
Center parking lot.
I let out a sigh of relief when I saw Brenda sitting alone outside on a bench, napping slightly.
“Brenda, are you ready to go?” I asked, shaking her gently.
“Sure. Are you OK?” she asked. “You were in
the bathroom a long time.”
I nodded, smiled and said, “I’m ﬁne. Yes, I’m
ﬁne.”
“Thanks for letting me doze,” Brenda said.
“What did you do while I was napping?”
“Oh, I just read a short story Garrison Keillor
had written about a man forgetting and leaving
his wife at a truck stop,” I said.
Brenda looked at me long and hard before
speaking. “That’s funny. I just had a very similar
dream,” Brenda said. “I hope that never happens
to us.”
Seeing no trace of a smile on Brenda’s lips, I
said, “I’m sure it won’t.”
Back in the car, I turned the radio on. “And
that’s all the news from Lake Wobegon, where
all the women are strong, all the men are goodlooking, and all the children are above average,”
the man with the deep voice said.
“He is quite a storyteller, isn’t he?” I said,
before turning off the radio and changing the
subject.
Pat Haley is a Clinton County Commissioner and a former Clinton
County Sheriff.

THEIR VIEW

Won’t you be my neighbor
Lately I have found
myself asking the question: What unites us?
Some of us in the Piqua
community might
respond with something
along the lines of, “It’s
our hatred of Troy that
unites us.” But if that’s
too brash, we might say
something like, “It’s our
Piqua Indians that unite
us.” Simple enough. But
as we get to the national
level, it becomes harder
to ﬁgure out what unites
us nowadays. We are all
Americans – that part is
obvious. But all Americans have different political views and that just
brings us back to square
one. To try and get myself
away from the negativity on the 24-hours news
channels, I made it a
priority to only watch the
CBS Evening News on
Fridays for Steve Hartman’s “On the Road”
segments. You know, the
feel-good stories that
showcase the best of what
America, and her people,
have to offer.
But after a while, I
found myself on YouTube
watching segments of
another show: “Mister
Rogers’ Neighborhood”.
This was a show that
I remember watching
as a young child, but I
never really gave it much
thought. However, now
that I’m older, I look at
segments from his show
and begin to see that he
was no ordinary individual. During the time he

wouldn’t we be?
was alive, he was
This was a man
a forward-thinking
that embodied the
Presbyterian minbest of what we
ister who changed
can be. Here was
lives and gave hope
a deeply Christian
to millions of chilindividual who
dren. Even though
never belittled anyhe is gone, he is
Nick
still quite possibly a Thompson one that thought
man that can unite Contributing differently or held
different convicus and can help us columnist
tions than him.
be better people.
He exempliﬁed
This year marks
the Golden Rule and
the 50th anniversary of
lived by it. His famous
his show and, by posinvitation, “Won’t you
sible coincidence, there
be my neighbor?” is a
are two movies that
portray his life and work. surprisingly challenging
question for us to ask. In
One will be an upcomdivisive times such as the
ing movie starring Tom
Hanks as Fred Rogers and Civil Rights movement,
many people in the South
the other is a recently
said with regards to black
released documentary
about the show and Fred Americans, “I don’t want
them as my neighbor.”
himself, appropriately
Meanwhile, Fred was on
titled “Won’t You Be My
Neighbor?” After a month TV asking everyone, no
matter their skin color,
in theaters, that ﬁlm is
the highest grossing doc- economic status, disabiliumentary of 2018. While ty, or religion, “Won’t you
it’s an incredibly inspiring be my neighbor?” How
many of us would be willﬁlm to behold, the comments and reviews I read ing to ask another person,
no matter who they were,
for it were just as inspiring. Every single one that to be our neighbor? Not
I read either talked about many of us. I know that
even I would ﬁnd that difhow much Fred changed
ﬁcult.
their lives or how much
Today, we see people
joy he brought to their
like the Kardashians on
childhood. I could not
TV and think to ourﬁnd any comment or
selves that that’s how we
review that mentioned
need to be; that we need
anything negative about
to be beautiful and rich
him. Nothing mean-spirto be accepted by sociited, crude, or untrue. It
seemed that the one thing ety. Fred, on the other
hand, would tell you, “I
we Americans could be
like you just the way you
united on is our percepare. You make every day
tion of Mister Rogers.
special and you know
But, of course, why

how? By just your being
you.” It’s powerful messages like that that we
need to hear more of.
Too often we are looking
to politicians and TV
personalities for guidance when they do not
display the best of this
country.
Fred was a person who
undoubtedly displayed
our country’s capability
to be great. Unfortunately, at this moment
in time, his message of
kindness and respect
is losing the battle. In
these politically divisive
times, we ﬁnd it easy to
shout and belittle others
that think, act, or vote
differently. We seem to
think that what Fred
taught us is too difﬁcult
in practice. But if he
could do it, then what
is our excuse? What can
we possibly do? Well, as
he once observed, “The
greatest thing we can
do is to help somebody
know that they’re loved
and capable of loving.”
Perhaps Mister Rogers will not be the ﬁnal
piece that will connect
this country back to a
united whole. However,
if we all just try to be
the best neighbors that
he knew we could be,
then this nation will
surely be well on its way
to becoming united and
truly great again – one
neighborhood at a time.
Nick Thompson is a resident of
Piqua, Ohio.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Tuesday, July
17, the 198th day of
2018. There are 167 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlights in
History
On July 17, 1944,
during World War II,
320 men, two-thirds of
them African-Americans,
were killed when a pair
of ammunition ships
exploded at the Port Chicago Naval Magazine in
California.
On this date
In 1821, Spain ceded
Florida to the United
States.
In 1918, Russia’s Czar
Nicholas II and his family were executed by the

Bolsheviks.
In 1936, the Spanish Civil War began as
right-wing army generals
launched a coup attempt
against the Second Spanish Republic.
In 1938, aviator
Douglas Corrigan took
off from New York, saying he was headed for
California; he ended up
in Ireland, supposedly
by accident, earning the
nickname “Wrong Way
Corrigan.”
In 1954, the two-day
inaugural Newport Jazz
Festival, billed as “The
First American Jazz Festival,” opened in Rhode
Island; among the performers the ﬁrst night
was Billie Holiday, who
died in New York on this
date in 1959 at age 44.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Dreams have as much influence as actions.”
— Stephane Mallarme
French essayist and poet (1842-1898)

In 1955, Disneyland
had its opening day in
Anaheim, California.
In 1967, jazz composer-musician John
Coltrane died in Long
Island, New York, at age
40.
In 1975, an Apollo
spaceship docked with a
Soyuz spacecraft in orbit
in the ﬁrst superpower
link-up of its kind.
In 1981, 114 people
were killed when a pair
of suspended walkways
above the lobby of
the Kansas City Hyatt

Regency Hotel collapsed
during a tea dance.
In 1996, TWA Flight
800, a Europe-bound
Boeing 747, exploded
and crashed off Long
Island, New York, shortly
after departing John F.
Kennedy International
Airport, killing all 230
people on board.
In 1997, Woolworth
Corp. announced it was
closing its 400 remaining ﬁve-and-dime stores
across the country, ending 117 years in business.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 17,2018 5

MEIGS BRIEFS

Ice Cream Social Childrens Art Class
MIDDLEPORT — Wendy Mill­
er will be offering art classes for
school-age children at Riverbend
Arts Council, 290 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio. Classes will be
on Monday, July 23, and 30 from
10:30 a.m. to noon. Each class
will be $10 with all materials fur­
nished. For more info call Wendy
at 740-416-4015.

SALEM CENTER — T h e
Salem Twp. Volunteer Fire
Department will hold its 40th
annual Ice Cream Social on
Saturday, July 21. Serving will
be from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
fire department 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 year, one person will win an
ice cream maker.

Fashion
From page 1

toward college tuition.
Carr and Zuspan
were nominated for the
Master Clothing Educa­
tors of Ohio Award in
the senior and junior
categories, respectively.
The final selection for
both categories will also
be based on overall out­
standing achievement
in 4-H clothing projects
and leadership skills.
The winners in each
category will be given a
cash award to be applied
toward college tuition.

Road closure
RACINE — Meigs County

Road 28, Bashan Road, will be
closed between C-30, Morn­
ing Star Road, and T-109, Car­
mel Road, for approximately two
weeks beginning Monday, July 9.
County forces will be repairing a
slip in this area.
RACINE — A bridge replace­
ment project begins on May 29,
2018, on County Road 29 (Bow­
mans Run Road) in Meigs County.
The project is taking place .17
miles off of County Road 34 (Pine
Grove Road). The road will be
closed in this area through August
31, 2018.

pion;
Yeast Breads on the
Rise: Cooper Schagel,
grand champion;
Global Gourmet: Cait­
lin Carr, grand cham­
pion;
Party Planner: Raeann
Schagel, grand cham­
pion;
Sew Fun: Hannah
Jackson, grand cham­
pion;
You’re the Chef:
Elisabeth Oldaker, grand
champion;
Embellish: Kyra Zus­
pan, grand champion;
Let’s Bake Quick
Breads: Raeven Reedy,
grand champion;
Snack Attack: Eliza-

Carr was nominated
for the State 4-H Fashion
Board. Selection for the
board will be made dur­
ing the 2018 Ohio State
Fair Fashion Revue.
Food and Fashion
Project Results
Creative Costumes:
Caitlin Carr, grand
champion;
Let’s Start Cooking:
Gabrielle Oldaker, grand
champion; Lydyah Bar­
ringer, reserve cham­
pion; Brianna Hall, hon­
orable mention; Michael
Brown, honorable men­
tion;
You Can Quilt: Addie
McDaniel, grand charn-

Appeals
From page 1

to 18 months in prison.
Yost then appealed her
conviction to the Ohio
Fourth District Court of
Appeals.
In the appeal, Yost
claimed that the imposi­
tion of the maximum
sentence was not clearly
and convincingly sup­
ported by the record.
Stanley argued that the
imposition of the maxi­
mum sentence was war­
ranted considering the
seriousness of the facts
of the case.
The appellate court
agreed with the State
and overruled Yost’s
assignment of error and
affirmed the judgement
of the trial court, finding
that the fact that Yost

beth Spires, grand cham­
pion; Hannah Jackson,
reserve champion; Lexis
Tipton, honorable men­
tion;
Sew for Others: Maylee Barringer, grand
champion;
Sports Nutrition:
Maylee Barringer, grand
champion;
Cake decorating:
Katelin Ferguson, grand
champion (Senior divi­
sion); Kyra Zuspan,
grand champion (Junior
division); Phoebe Rife,
reserve champion
(Junior division).

stabbed the victim in
the back with a kitchen
knife as he packed his
belongings to move out
of the residence, that the
victim suffered a wound
that required stitches,
and that the incident
occurred in the presence
of children constituted
a more serious act of
aggravated assault than
normal, which warranted
the imposition of the
maximum prison sen­
tence.
Judge William H. Harsha wrote the opinion,
and both Judge Peter
B. Abele and Judge
Matthew W. McFarland
concurred in the judg­
ment and opinion for the
Court of Appeals.
Yost will serve the
remainder of her prison
sentence, which is due
to expire on April 12,
2019.

Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

Kayla Hawthorne | Courtesy

Memorial
From page 1

included Rutherford
Hayes and William
McKinley, two future
presidents with Ohio
ties.
Associated with the
program are musician
Steve Free and reenactor
William Donegan.
According to program
information, “Steve
Free is an internation­
ally acclaimed singersongwriter and educator,
living in southern Ohio.
The winner of numerous

with “The General in
General” and according
to Ohio History Con­
nection information
“The General in General
introduces us to the life
of West Point gradu­
ate General William
Stark Rosecrans, United
States Army. William E.
Donegan shares his pre­
war accomplishments,
experiences as an archi­
tect and civil engineer
and significant cam­
paigns during the Civil
War in which Rosecrans
commanded forces at
Rich Mountain, Carnifax
Ferry and the Kanawha
Valley. These campaigns

music industry awards
including 9 ASCAP
awards, a Platinum
Record and Grammy
nomination, he has
charted over 30 songs
on the National and
International Americana
and Country and Bill­
board charts including
15 #1 songs. In 2000
he received a lifetime
achievement award from
Airplay International
in Nashville. In 2008,
he won the Governor’s
Award in Ohio in 2009
and was honored by
being named an ‘Ohio
Treasure.’”
Donegan is associated

TODAY

WEDNESDAY

75° 81° 79°
Mostly cloudy, then clearing and less humid
today. Mainly clear tonight. High 87° / Low 610

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

84°
72°
86°
66°
102° in 1988
51° in 1967

Precipitation (in inches)
24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest. 0.13
Month to date
2.07
Normal month to date
2.26
Year to date
27.34
Normal year to date
24.22

1Ì

The

Index

£&amp; 88°
66°

Sunshine, pleasant
and less humid

Nice with periods of
clouds and sun

and

conditions

to

Today Wed.

changes
provide

a

dew
from

point,
past

scale

the

Waverly

High Very High

Primary: unspecified

Lucasville

Mold: 1947

86/61

I

o

l^

Primary: cladosporium

O

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

Spencer

85/61
Buffalo

86/61

61

500

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

Jul 19 Jul 27 Aug 4 Aug 11

SOLUNAR TABLE
period

indicates peak feeding times

for fish and game.

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

Major Minor

Major Minor

4:23a 10:36a
5:19a 11:31a
6:09a 12:21 p
6:55a 12:44a
7:39a 1:27a
8:21a 2:09a
9:03a 2:51a

4:49p

11:02p

5:43p

11:55p

6:32p
7:18p

1:07p

8:02p

1:50p

8:44p

2:33p

9:26p

3:15p

WEATHER HISTORY
Excessive rain hit north-central
Pennsylvania in the early morning
hours of July 17,1942. Smethport
received 30.8 inches in 4.5 hours, a
state record.

OHIO RIVER

Grayson

O 86/63

Location

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

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

86/62
9
'

Huntington

85/62

NATIONAL FORECAST
'ài

86/62 O
St.

Albans

86/63
9

Charleston

Level

J J

i

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

100s
90s

24-hr.
Chg.

12.52 -0.01
16.30 +0.37
21.53 -0.22
12.81 -0.19
12.44 -0.33
24.48 -0.80
12.41 -0.76
25.63 -0.90
34.39 -0.83
13.16 -0.60
15.10 -1.50
34.00 -0.80
13.30 -2.10

j

O 85/62

J 110s

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday
Flood
Stage

Clendenin

Milton

Primary pollutant: Particulates

/ l J i t 86/63

A couple of showers
possible

City

J P !&gt;

Ti
Low Moderate

67°

NATIONAL CITIES

0

85/59

¿¡St 84°

84/57

85/60

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

MONDAY

Cloudy, a couple of
showers possible

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

O

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.

solunar

Humid with some
sun; a p.m.t-storm

■iTiii■
New

Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

78°
63°

83

Chillicothe

overall

Pollen: 3

0 50 100150200 300

The

87°
A °
68° y J J &lt; J 64°

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

MOON PHASES
Last

of duty deaths that some­
times occur from emer­
gency vehicle accidents.
The United States Fire
Administration reported
in the 2016 annual report
that 89 firefighters died
while on duty in 2016.
“ [The driving simula­
tor] doesn’t replace driv­
ing an actual emergency
vehicle,” said Isgett. He
added that it is the closest
that firefighters will get
without risking damag­
ing the truck or putting
someone in harm.

SUNDAY

85/58

weather

showing

SATURDAY

barometric

probability and severity of an asthma attack.

AIR QUALITY

Full

a

rent air quality, pollen counts, wind,

Sunrise 6:17 a.m. 6:18 a.m.
Sunset 8:52 p.m. 8:51 p.m.
Moonrise 11:30 a.m. 12:36 p.m.
Moonset
none 12:17 a.m.

First

is driven to a destination
while watching for traf­
fic and pedestrians. The
final scenario is a mock
emergency, which allows
participants to learn the
correct way to place the
firetruck at the scene
without putting emergen­
cy responders in danger
of getting hit by traffic.
Isgett said the ultimate
goal of the driving simu­
lator is to reduce the line

Adelphi

combines the effects of cur­

Low Moderate High Very High

SUN &amp; MOON

From page 1

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

AccuWeather.com Asthma

temperature,
pressure,

Training

FRIDAY

THURSDAY

82°
59°

/ n !'

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

helped to define him and
shape his character. The
year, 1863, was a year
of great significance
for our country and
for General Rosecrans,
and today we honor his
contributions. William
E. Donegan, native of
Charleston, West Vir­
ginia, enjoys history and
all things historical. He
is a member of the West
Virginia Reenactors
Association and the Fed­
eral Generals Officers
Corps. As a participant
in the Officers Corp,
William portrays Union
General William Stark
Rosecrans.”

EXTENDED FORECAST

8AM 2PM 8PM

Temperature

Firefighters took part in training over the weekend with a driving
simulator from the State Fire Marshal's Office.

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

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

90/69/pc 93/69/pc
65/52/pc
69/53/s
90/73/t 91/72/pc
84/70/t
84/66/s
91/68/t
87/63/s
84/60/pc
93/61/s
99/67/s
99/63/s
87/70/t 80/66/pc
85/62/t 82/58/pc
91/72/t 91/70/pc
81/56/t
90/59/s
81/64/s 80/62/pc
87/63/c
82/62/s
80/64/c
77/59/s
85/63/c
81/60/s
104/80/s 105/82/s
88/60/t
94/63/s
86/68/s
84/68/t
83/62/s
81/62/s
88/78/pc 89/77/pc
97/77/s 98/78/pc
85/61/pc
82/61/s
91/66/pc
84/69/t
108/88/pc 103/88/pc
95/74/t
88/70/t
85/69/pc 86/69/pc
89/65/c
86/65/s
90/76/pc 91/77/pc
80/64/s 82/66/pc
90/67/t 88/66/pc
94/79/t
90/79/t
87/70/t
86/66/s
93/74/pc
99/73/s
91/76/t
88/76/c
90/70/t
87/64/s
106/86/pc 105/87/pc
83/58/t
78/56/s
80/66/t 81/59/pc
89/72/t 89/67/pc
89/69/t
87/64/s
90/68/s 85/67/pc
96/73/s
99/72/s
75/60/pc 77/59/pc
87/60/s 77/57/pc
90/71/t
87/69/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

I -10s

National for the 48 contiguous states

[33 T-storms

High
Low 37°

~/l Bain
IC s si Showers
^ ' Snow

107° in Needles, CA

in

West

Yellowstone,

MT

Global

, - Flurries

High
121 ° in Ouargla, Algeria
Low 13° in Summit Station, Greenland

lice

Forecasts and graphics provided by

Weather(W):
sh-showers,

AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

s-sunny,

pc-partly

t-thunderstorms,

cloudy,
r-rain,

flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

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�Sports
6 Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Cardinals win in interim manager Shildt’s debut
ST. LOUIS (AP) —
Mike Shildt wasn’t sure
what to expect in his ﬁrst
day as interim manager of
the St. Louis Cardinals.
He certainly didn’t
foresee the treatment he
received in a wild postgame celebration that
occurred following the
Cardinals’ 6-4 win over
the Cincinnati Reds on
Sunday.
“They got me in a laundry basket and they spin
you around and then they
go at you with a bunch of
cold water to the point
where I was hyperventilating,” Shildt said.
Veteran Dexter Fowler,
who homered in the win,
was happy to lead the joyful water attack.
“That guy knows his
stuff, and you’re happy
to put a smile on his face
and get the (ﬁrst) win for
him,” Fowler said.

591-474 during Mathey’s
tenure and made the playoffs in each of his ﬁrst
four years. But St. Louis
failed to reach the postseason the last two years.
Matheny was a gold
glove catcher for St.
Louis from 2000-04 and
used those leadership
qualities as a manager.
Veteran catcher Yadier
Molina said the ﬁring of
Matheny reﬂects on the
entire team.
“When you see that
happen, it’s because us, as
players, we’re not doing
our job,” Molina said. “I
hate to say it, but that’s
what it is. The blame is
on us.”
Jeff Roberson | AP
Matt Carpenter and
Cincinnati Reds’ Adam Duvall, left, is out at first as St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Matt Carpenter
Fowler homered to lead
handles the throw during the eighth inning Sunday in St. Louis.
an opportunistic sevenager Mike Matheny, who hit attack Tommy Pham
Rumors of discontent
The frivolity came at a
in the locker room, along was ﬁred after Saturday’s broke out of a 0-for-20
perfect time for the Car8-2 loss after six-plus sea- slump with a two-run,
with inconsistent play,
dinals, who broke a sixsons. The Cardinals were go-ahead single for the
game home losing streak. spelled the end for man-

Cardinals, who snapped a
three-game losing streak.
Cincinnati, which had
won four of ﬁve, is 35-26
since beginning the season 8-27.
John Gant (3-3) picked
up the win with four
hitless innings of relief.
He struck out four and
walked two.
Carpenter began the
game with a ﬁrst-pitch
homer, his ﬁfth leadoff
home run of the season
and 20th of his career. He
leads the team with 19
round-trippers.
Fowler added a solo
shot in the second off
Anthony DeSclafani (4-2)
for a 2-0 lead.
Pham erased a 3-2
deﬁcit with a two-run
single that highlighted a
four-run outburst in the
fourth. It was Pham’s
See CARDINALS | 8

Truex repeats as
NASCAR Cup winner
at Kentucky Speedway
SPARTA, Ky. (AP) — No matter which driver
led Martin Truex Jr., the advantage always
seemed temporary as he positioned himself to
make a pivotal move.
Distance usually followed his passes, particularly after his ﬁnal one that sealed his dominance.
Truex Jr. won the NASCAR Cup Series race
at Kentucky Speedway, passing Brad Keselowski
and then Kurt Busch late on the way to repeating as champion on Saturday night.
Truex’s No. 78 Toyota Camry appeared even
more dominant than last July as he led ﬁve
times for 174 of 267 laps and swept the ﬁrst two
stages from the pole. The defending Cup champion was always in contention in the 400-mile
race, even while trailing. He proved it at clutch
moments late, overtaking Keselowski on lap 201
and Busch 23 laps later to become Kentucky’s
ﬁrst back-to-back winner, earning his fourth victory this season and 19th of his career.
“It feels good, you know,” said Truex, who
won by 1.901 seconds on the 1.5-mile track.
“You never know how these races are going to
play out. You never know quite what is going
to happen, and we had such a strong Toyota
tonight they weren’t going to beat us.”
His competition certainly couldn’t hold him
off.
Drivers such as Keselowski and Kurt Busch
did their best, only to be overtaken by a car and
driver that have quickly made Kentucky their
domain.
“We had better speed than we’ve had at mileand-a-halves, but not enough to run with the 78
(Truex),” said Keselowski, who led twice for 38
laps.
Dominant as Truex was here a year ago in
leading 152 of 274 laps, Busch and Keselowski
still loomed as favorites after combining for
ﬁve victories in the previous seven races. Keselowski’s knack for winning this race in evennumbered years was particularly compelling,
and for a moment it looked like he might do it
again with a bold rush off pit road to claim the
lead entering the ﬁnal segment.
Truex soon took care of that before Busch
grabbed the lead on lap 210, a brief edge as the
defending Cup champion took over for good 14
laps later.
Truex’s dominant run to victory last July
provided an opening some hoped might expand
membership in Kentucky Speedway’s exclusive
winner’s club. He turned out keeping things the
same by taking control when he wanted.
It was that way all night for Truex, who led
51 laps to win the ﬁrst stage and led 118 after
claiming the second. Even when he trailed, it
wasn’t by much as he stayed close enough to
make a run. Just seven drivers led overall, with
10 laps divided among four drivers.
Ryan Blaney and Keselowski were next in
Fords, followed by Kyle Busch (Toyota) and
Kevin Harvick (Ford).
Rounding out the top 10 were Kurt Busch,
Erik Jones — who started second in a Toyota
— Aric Almirola, Kyle Larson and Joey Logano.
Kurt Busch led three times for 45 laps.
Larson ran in the top ﬁve for much of the
night, an impressive performance considering
he started from the back of the ﬁeld as penalty
for missing driver introductions. His chances
were hurt by a trackbar issue that shufﬂed him
back in the pack.
“It’s hard to say if I would have won or not,”
Larson said, “but I would have at least liked to
have had the shot.”

Martin Meissner | AP

France goalkeeper Hugo Lloris lifts the trophy after France won 4-2 during the final match between France and Croatia at the 2018 soccer
World Cup on Sunday in the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow, Russia.

France beats Croatia for 2nd World Cup
MOSCOW (AP) —
Taking turns sliding
across the rain-soaked
turf holding the World
Cup trophy tight, teenager Kylian Mbappe and
the rest of France’s players acted like the youthful bunch they are.
Nothing, not a Pussy
Riot protest nor a postgame downpour that
soaked Russian President
Vladimir Putin, was
going to stop the party.
It carried on long after
a thrilling 4-2 win over
Croatia on Sunday. In the
locker room with French
President Emmanuel
Macron striking poses
with players, then a
champagne-spraying,
water-splashing interruption of the coach Didier
Deschamps’ news conference.
“Sorry! They’re young
and they’re happy,” said
Deschamps, like a proud
father.
Deschamps had good
reason to indulge them.
His team is mostly aged
25 or under and can
return almost intact to
defend their title in 2022
in Qatar.
“Our children are
going to be very proud,”
forward Antoine Griezmann said. “The World
Cup, it’s a lot.”
The 19-year-old
Mbappe became only the
second teen after Pele
to score in a World Cup

ﬁnal.
Mbappe had just
shown his electrifying
speed in the 52nd minute
when play was held up by
four protesters who ran
onto the ﬁeld. Russian
punk band Pussy Riot
later took credit for the
incident — watched from
the VIP seats by Putin,
whose government once
jailed members of the
activist group. Charges
were ﬁled against the
group Sunday, too.
Putin was later on the
ﬁeld to award medals
to the players in a ceremony soon drenched in
rain and joy. As thunder
pealed and lightning
cracked, FIFA president
Gianni Infantino handed
France captain Hugo Lloris the gold World Cup
trophy.
Gold confetti stuck to
the soaked Les Bleus as
they paraded the trophy
around the Luzhniki
Stadium, a ﬁnal act of an
enthralling tournament
in which Croatia reached
its ﬁrst ﬁnal while powers Brazil, Germany and
Argentina went home
early.
About 12 minutes after
a protester gave Mbappe
a double high-ﬁve on
the ﬁeld, Mbappe sent a
right-footed shot from 25
yards (meters) past goalkeeper Danijel Subasic .
The goal put France up
4-1, closing the door on

Croatia who had been the
better team until Mbappe
took control.
The only other teen
to score in a World Cup
ﬁnal was Pele, who was
17 when Brazil beat Sweden 5-2 in 1958.
Mbappe, who plays for
Paris Saint-Germain in
the French league, was
born months after France
won its only other World
Cup title in 1998.
“I have a whole story
to write,” Mbappe said.
“This is just the beginning.”
Paul Pogba and Griezmann, France’s two other
key creative players, also
scored. Pogba played a
disciplined role in Russia, but his natural joy
was evident celebrating his 18-yard (meter)
shot, and leading the
champagne shower for
Deschamps.
But it was Mbappe
who put the match out
of reach with a furious
passage of play in the
second half. In the 59th,
a run from Mbappe started a play that ended up
with Pogba on the edge
of the penalty area. With
his second attempt, the
midﬁelder curled his shot
beyond Subasic.
Griezmann scored
from the penalty spot
in the 38th minute
fully four minutes after
his corner kick was
knocked out of play by

Ivan Perisic’s arm. The
referee ruled it handball
only after a video review,
just as the ﬁrst thunders
claps boomed around the
stadium.
“In a World Cup ﬁnal,
you do not give such a
penalty,” Croatia coach
Zlatko Dalic said.
France took the lead in
the 18th when Croatia’s
tallest outﬁeld player,
1.90-meter (6-foot-3) forward Mario Mandzukic,
rose to meet Griezmann’s
free kick with the top of
his head. He deﬂected it
past his own goalkeeper.
Perisic and Mandzukic
both scored for Croatia,
ﬁrst to equalize in the
28th minute and later
as a consolation goal in
the 69th, embarrassing
Lloris with a ﬂicked shot
as the France goalkeeper
tried to dribble the ball
out of his goalmouth.
But the three-goal lead
was too much for the
red-and-white-checkered
squad that made a habit
of coming back at the
World Cup — and played
three straight 120-minute
games before the ﬁnal.
“We were dominant,
we had control,” Dalic
said through a translator. “What we’ve had in
terms of luck over the
tournament, we lacked
that today.”
Deschamps became
See FRANCE | 8

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 17, 2018 7

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8 Tuesday, July 17, 2018

MLB
All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home
Away
Boston
68 30 .694
—
— 9-1 W-2 34-13 34-17
New York
62 33 .653 4½
— 6-4
L-1 33-13 29-20
Tampa Bay
49 47 .510 18
8½ 6-4
L-1 26-17 23-30
Toronto
43 52 .453 23½
14 3-7 L-2 24-25 19-27
Baltimore
28 69 .289 39½
30 4-6 W-2 16-33 12-36
Central Division
W
L
Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home
Away
Cleveland
52 43 .547
—
— 4-6 W-1 31-19 21-24
Minnesota
44 50 .468 7½
12½ 8-2 W-1 29-22 15-28
Detroit
41 57
.418 12½
17½ 3-7 W-1 25-23 16-34
Chicago
33 62 .347 19
24 3-7 W-1 19-29 14-33
Kansas City
27 68 .284 25
30 2-8
L-1 11-35 16-33
West Division
W
L
Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home
Away
Houston
64 35 .646
—
— 6-4
L-1 32-21 32-14
Seattle
58 39 .598
5
— 3-7 L-4 31-17 27-22
Oakland
55 42 .567
8
3 7-3 W-2 24-21
31-21
Los Angeles
49 48 .505 14
9 5-5
L-1 24-23 25-25
Texas
41 56 .423 22
17 3-7 L-2 19-28 22-28
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home
Away
Philadelphia
53 42 .558
—
— 5-5 L-2 30-16 23-26
Atlanta
52 42 .553
½
— 3-7 W-1 25-20 27-22
Washington
48 48 .500 5½
5 5-5 W-1 22-24 26-24
Miami
41 57
.418 13½
13 5-5 W-2 23-28 18-29
New York
39 55
.415 13½
13 4-6
L-1 19-32 20-23
Central Division
W
L
Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home
Away
Chicago
55 38
.591
—
— 7-3 W-3 28-15 27-23
Milwaukee
55 43
.561 2½
— 2-8 L-6 30-18 25-25
St. Louis
48 46
.511 7½
4 5-5 W-1 24-24 24-22
Pittsburgh
48 49 .495
9
5½ 8-2 W-6 29-24 19-25
Cincinnati
43 53 .448 13½
10 6-4
L-1 21-26 22-27
West Division
W
L
Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home
Away
Los Angeles
53 43 .552
—
— 6-4 W-1 28-24 25-19
Arizona
53 44 .546
½
½ 5-5
L-1 26-23
27-21
Colorado
51 45
.531
2
2 8-2 W-5 23-23 28-22
San Francisco
50 48 .510
4
4 5-5 L-2 31-19 19-29
San Diego
40 59 .404 14½
14½ 2-8 L-5 20-31 20-28
NATIONAL LEAGUE
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Sunday’s Games
Miami 10, Philadelphia 5
Baltimore 6, Texas 5
Washington 6, N.Y. Mets 1
Boston 5, Toronto 2
Atlanta 5, Arizona 1
Cleveland 5, N.Y. Yankees 2
Pittsburgh 7, Milwaukee 6, 10 innings
Chicago White Sox 10, Kansas City 1

Cardinals

Adam Duvall tied the
game for the Reds with
a two-run, bases-loaded
single in the fourth. Jose
From page 6
Peraza then put his team
in front with a single off
ﬁrst hit since July 5.
the leg of starter Miles
He entered the game in
Mikolas.
the second inning after
DeSclafani allowed six
starter Harrison Bader
earned run on ﬁve hits
left with a knee injury.
over 3 1-3 innings.
Both Pham, who is
“I just wasn’t good,”
hitting .243 and Fowler
(.176), have struggled at DeSclafani said. “I was
terrible.”
times this season.
Mikolas, who is headed
“Those are guys that
to the All-Star Game, surhave proven success in
rendered three runs on
this league,” Shildt said.
six hits over four innings
“It’s deﬁnitely good for
in his shortest outing of
their conﬁdence.”
the season.
Shildt said he was still
Reds outﬁelder Jesse
in awe of his new situaWinker extended his
tion after the contest.
hitting streak to a career“I’m still not believhigh 10 games with a
ing it to some degree,”
third-inning single.
Shildt said. “But it’s a
Cincinnati begins the
real moment. (I) just got
through managing a game second half on Friday
for the St. Louis Cardinals. against Pittsburgh.

France

unbridled evening for the
French who won with an
exuberance not often seen
From page 6
in a mostly efﬁcient, controlled title run.
Back home in France,
only the third man to win
the World Cup as a player tens of thousands of
fans headed to the Eiffel
and a coach. He joined
Tower to watch a broadMario Zagallo of Brazil
cast on giant screens that
and Franz Beckenbauer,
who captained West Ger- Paris police closed the
area more than two hours
many.
before kickoff.
France’s captain 20
Two years ago at home,
years ago, Deschamps
was lifted up by his play- France ﬂopped in a Euroers on the ﬁeld and ﬂung pean Championship ﬁnal
into the air several teams it was expected to win
and caught. The normally against Portugal.
“But maybe if we had
staid coach did a few
been European chamskipping dance steps in
pions we would not be
the rain before stopping
champions today,” Desand laughing at himself.
champs said.
It was that kind of

Daily Sentinel

Pirates get 5-game sweep of Brewers
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— One late-inning rally
wasn’t enough for the
Pittsburgh Pirates.
Trailing and down to
their ﬁnal out on two
occasions, the Pirates
managed a 7-6 victory
over the Milwaukee
Brewers that gave them
the ﬁrst ﬁve-game
sweep in the majors in
nearly a dozen years.

With two men on and
two outs in the 10th
inning and a steady rain
turning into a downpour, Josh Bell made
solid contact on a pitch
from Dan Jennings
(3-3). The crack of the
bat was followed closely
by bolt of lightning
from the clouds as Bell
left the batter’s box.
The ball got past cen-

ter ﬁelder Lorenzo Cain
and bounced all the
way to the wall, scoring
Gregory Polanco easily
from third. The relay
throw beat Colin Moran
to the plate but skipped
off the pitcher’s mound
and through the legs
of catcher Erik Kratz,
giving Pittsburgh an
improbable victory.
Bell had gained a

tactical advantage when
earlier in the at-bat,
Jennings had a slider
slip out of his hand that
nearly went for a wild
pitch. With the tying
run on third, Bell didn’t
think Jennings would
risk throwing it again.
“I was just dead-red
heater,” Bell said. “I
got it and I put a good
swing on it.”

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

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.

Southern football
golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Southern football team is
hosting a four-person golf scramble on Sunday, Aug.
5, at Riverside Golf Club. Registration begins 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 be available to purchase.
Food and beverages will be provided at the event,
and club house credit will go to the top-3 teams.
To register a team, please contact SHS head coach
Cassady Willford via email at cassady.willford53@
gmail.com or on the phone at 740-416-8470.

Meigs High School
football camp
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The Meigs football
program will be having a team camp/combine for its
high school football players at 4 p.m. Monday, July
23, at Farmers Bank Stadium. Players are to wear
their team camp gear.

To register in person, there will be three different signup dates at the recreation ﬁelds in front of
the career center by the PPJSHS. All three signups will run from 6-8 p.m. on Thursday, July 19,
Tuesday, July 24, and Monday, July 30.
For more information, please visit www.masoncountysoccerleague.com on the web.

MYL baseball/
softball signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Middleport Youth
League will be having signups for boys and girls
ages 7-16 that are interested in participating in the
2018 fall baseball and softball leagues.
Signups will be held from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. at
the Middleport Ball Fields on the Saturdays of July
14 and July 21.
Signups are also available for either teams or individuals.
For more information, contact either Dave at 740590-0438, Jackie at 740-416-1261, Pat at 740-5904941, or Chasity at 740-416-0878.

Gallia Academy
football reserve seats
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Reserve seats for the 2018
Gallia Academy High School football season will go
on sale starting on Tuesday, Aug. 7, for the Gallia
Academy Athletic Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity football players, Gallia Academy Marching Band members, and
varsity and junior varsity cheerleaders will be able
to purchase reserve 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.

GAHS Athletic
Hall of Fame

MCSL youth
soccer signups

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.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The Mason
This year’s inductees will be honored at MemoCounty Soccer League is currently accepting resrial Field on Friday, Oct. 12, and there will also be a
gistrations for the 2018 youth soccer league.
banquet at GAHS on Oct. 13. They will join the 16
Online registration is now open until August
prior classes and 124 current members.
1, and the registration link can be found on the
Please call Tom Meadows, President, at 740-645league website at www.masoncountysoccerleague.
4880 with any questions.
com

Classifieds
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the 2018 County Resurfacing Project Parts 1, 2, &amp; 3 will be received by the Meigs County Commissioners at their office at The Meigs County Courthouse, 100 E.
Second Street, Suite 301, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 11:10
A.M., August 2, 2018, and then at 11:10 A.M. at said office
opened and read aloud.
Resurfacing and striping of C35, C20, C20A, C345, and portions of C3 and C25. The engineer’s estimate for this project is
$1,390,437.60
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS
PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES.
Bid documents may be secured at the office of The Meigs
County Engineer, 34110 Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769; Phone Number 740-992-2911 for a $10.00
non-refundable fee.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the full
amount of the bid with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioners or by certified check, cashier’s
check, or irrevocable letter of credit upon a solvent bank in the
amount of not less than 10% of the bid amount in the favor of
the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners. Bid bonds shall be
accompanied by Proof of Authority of the official or agent signing the bond.
Bidders must be prequalified. Prequalification shall be in accordance with 102.01 of the 2016 Ohio Department of Transportation Construction and Material Specifications.
Bids shall be sealed and marked as Bid for: 2018 County Resurfacing Project - Parts 1, 2, &amp; 3 and mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissioners
The Meigs County Courthouse
100 E. Second Street, Suite 301
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
7/17/18, 7/24/18

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, July 17, 2018 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

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PARDON MY PLANET
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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Djokovic, Kerber, Williams each made a comeback
LONDON (AP) —
From champions Novak
Djokovic and Angelique
Kerber, to runner-up Serena Williams, this edition
of Wimbledon was all
about comebacks of various sorts.
When Djokovic won
his fourth title at the All
England Club and ﬁrst at
a Grand Slam tournament
in more than two years by
beating Kevin Anderson
6-2, 6-2, 7-6 (3) on Sunday, it was the culmination of what he called a
“journey” and a “process”
as he returned from surgery to his right elbow.
Kerber collected her
ﬁrst Wimbledon championship with a 6-3, 6-3
victory over Williams on
Saturday to mark a turnaround from a rough 2017
that saw her slip from No.
1 in the rankings and deal
with two ﬁrst-round exits
at majors.

“I’m still sure,” said
Kerber’s coach, Wim Fissette, “that we haven’t
seen the best Angie.”
And while Williams
didn’t win what would
have been her eighth
Wimbledon singles trophy, her run to the ﬁnal
just 10½ months after a
difﬁcult childbirth and
complications involving
blood clots served as, in
Kerber’s words, “such an
inspiration for everybody,
for all of us, for every person watching you.”
Williams’ loss left her
with 23 Grand Slam
titles, the most in the
half-century of professional tennis and only one
short of Margaret Court’s
record.
She can take a crack
at that mark at the U.S.
Open, which begins on
Aug. 27 in New York.
“I didn’t know a couple
of months ago where I

nals. It was also the ﬁrst
time that happened at
any Grand Slam tournament in the Open era.
The big 3
Men’s tennis is back to
having its Big 3 of Roger
Federer, Rafael Nadal and
Djokovic. Federer and
Nadal had combined to
win six majors in a row
until Djokovic got back in
on the action. Each member of that trio has been
counted out in recent
years, but they just keep
on winning. All can excel
on hard courts, Djokovic’s
Neil Hall via AP
Novak Djokovic of Serbia returns the ball to Kevin Anderson of South Africa during the men’s singles best surface. So the next
couple of months should
final match Sunday at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London.
be entertaining.
have really showed me
was, where I would be,
change,” said Anderson’s
that, ‘OK, I can compete.’ coach, Brad Stine.
how I would do, how I
Old guys
Obviously I can compete
would be able to come
Djokovic, 31, and
for the long run in a
back. It was such a long
Anderson, 32, made
WTA depth
Grand Slam.”
way to see light at the
this Wimbledon ﬁnal
There’s no question
Here is what else we
end of the road, kind
the depth in the women’s the ﬁrst in the Open era
learned at Wimbledon in game is as great as
of,” Williams said. “So
with a pair of men older
2018:
I think these two weeks
than 30. Add in Nadal,
ever and there is a lot
32, and Isner, 33, and it
more room for trophywas the ﬁrst quartet of
collecting at the majors.
Tiebreaker time?
thirtysomething semiﬁAnderson’s 26-24 victo- Kerber’s victory ended
ry in the ﬁfth set against a stretch in which seven nalists at any major in
the past 50 years. Which
players split the previJohn Isner in a semiﬁnal
means they all deserve
that lasted more than 6½ ous seven Grand Slam
kudos, but also raises
titles, including ﬁrsthours was the secondthe question: Where are
time champs Simona
longest Grand Slam
all the young guys? No
Halep, Caroline Woznimatch ever and renewed
up-and-comers reached
acki, Sloane Stephens
a debate about the rules:
the quarterﬁnals. One
Should Wimbledon adopt and Jelena Ostapenko.
breakthrough did come
For the ﬁrst time since
a ﬁfth-set tiebreaker?
from Stefanos TsitsiCurrently, the U.S. Open Wimbledon began seeding players in the 1920s, pas, a 19-year-old from
is the only major that
decides matches that way. none of the top 10 seeds Greece who made it to
the fourth round.
reached the quarterﬁ“It absolutely needs to

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Boomer
leaving radio
NEW YORK (AP) —
Boomer Esiason is dropping his national radio
duties on NFL Monday
night games.
Esiason was the ana-

lyst on Westwood One’s
broadcast for 18 years,
sharing the booth with
Kevin Harlan and, before
that, Marv Albert and
Howard David. The 1988
NFL MVP called the
Super Bowl for each of
those seasons.
Citing his daily drive-

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time radio show in New
York and his work on
CBS and Showtime
studio shows, Esiason
said Monday “the timing
was right for me to step
away.”
A 14-year NFL veteran
who led the Bengals
to the 1988 AFC title,
Esiason made four Pro
Bowls. He ranks ﬁrst
among left-handed quarterbacks with 247 touchdown passes, and 19th
overall.
After his son, Gunnar, was diagnosed with
cystic ﬁbrosis, Esiason
created the Boomer Esiason Foundation (BEF) in
1993 to fund research to
ﬁnd a cure for the deadly
disease. Its mission is to
provide a higher quality
of life for people with
cystic ﬁbrosis. In addition, BEF provides education, awareness, and
scholarships for people
with the disease.
BEF has raised more
than $150 million for
the ﬁght against cystic
ﬁbrosis. In 1995, the
NFL honored him with
the Walter Payton Man
of the Year Award for
excellence on the football
ﬁeld and charitable work
through his foundation.

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