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                  <text>Overeating
and
stress
OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

73°

87°

82°

Mostly sunny and humid today. Mainly clear,
warm and humid tonight. High 92° / Low 70°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Meyer’s
text
messages

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 137, Volume 72

Wolfe inducted
into Atomic
Speedway HOF
Staff Report

CHILLICOTHE,
Ohio — Racine, Ohio’s
Scott Wolfe was recently inducted into the
Atomic Speedway Hall
of Fame, making him
the 45th member of the
honorable fraternity
and class of 2018. The
Hall of Fame at Atomic
originated in 2010.
Atomic Speedway celebrated its 65th year
of operation this year
of operation in 2018
under new owner Brad
McCown.
Wolfe began his racing career in 1981,
although his roots in
racing stretched back
much further. Born in
late October of 1959,
Wolfe was at his ﬁrst
race at 6 months old
and spent many of his
childhood weekends at
the races. “It’s where I
learned how to count”,
he joked. “Tommy
Dickson was No. 0,
Harold Boso was No.
1, Frankie Burris ‘The
Deuce’ was No. 2, and
John Life was No. 3. It
has been a quick, fun
ride. I can’t believe it’s
been that long ago.”
Unlike most of the
“Hall of Fame” inductees, Wolfe’s induction
was a surprise. Wolfe
has served as Master

of Ceremonies for most
of the HOF events. So
after Wolfe announced
the last 2018 candidate, announcer Mike
Goins said “There’s one
more”.
“I panicked because I
thought I had left someone out, and I fumbled
through my papers
looking for who I had
missed. Then Mike said
my name. It became
pretty emotional after
that,” said Wolfe.
“I am so very honored to be a part of this
elite group,” Wolfe said.
Wolfe raced for 30
years and was the public relations director at
the speedway for over
25 years. He has been
the competition Race
Director, announcer,
ﬂagman, and even
scored the cars at
times. Wolfe also was
the Race Director for
the American Motor
Association (AMRA)
and served as that
organization’s president and PR director.
Additionally, Wolfe has
been a writer for many
nationally known racing trade papers, and
is still a staff writer for
Dirt Late Model Magazine and Dirt Modiﬁed
Magazine. He has had

Tuesday, August 28, 2018 s 50¢

Nina, Pinta return to Gallipolis

Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — The
Nina and Pinta are
returning to Gallipolis,
after 10 years.
The Gallia County
Convention and Visitors Bureau announced
that the boats will be
docked in town from
November 2-7. The
crew will be providing
guided tours for groups
and individuals from 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. each day.
During the tour, guests
will be whisked back in
time, surrounded by the
design and materials
of the historic caravel.
Being a ﬂoating museum,
there are also exhibits on
each ship highlighting
the history of the Age of
Discovery, navigation of
the era, how the ships
were built and a taste of
what life was like over
500 years ago.
The Nina is a replica
of the ship on which
Columbus sailed across
the Atlantic on his three
voyages of discovery to
the new world beginning
in 1492. The Pinta was
recently built in Brazil
to accompany the Nina
on all her travels. She is
a larger version of the
archetypal caravel and
offers large deck space
for walk-aboard tours.
One can book a tour
Courtesy Photo

See NINA | 5 Recreations of Columbus’ Nina and Pinta will be visiting Gallipolis.

See HOF | 5

‘Paddle Battle’ returns
Proceeds benefit
completion of
dining hall
By Erin Perkins
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

Courtesy of Scott Wolfe

Announcer Mike Goins (left) and Scott Wolfe at the Hall of
Fame induction.

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7-8
Comics: 9

POINT PLEASANT
— Kayakers of all ages
and skill levels will have
the opportunity to once
again partake in a friendly “battle” for prizes
when they take it to the
water at Krodel Park.
The second annual
“Paddle Battle” kayak
race, hosted by the
Mason County 4-H Leaders Association, will be
held on Saturday, Sept.
8, 10 a.m. at Krodel Park
with registration begin-

File photo

Kayakers of all ages and skill levels will be able to partake in the
second annual “Paddle Battle” kayak race at Krodel Park.

ning at 9 a.m. Participants have the option to
pre-register at the WVU
Extension Ofﬁce or by
calling (304) 675-0888.
All are welcome to attend
and concessions will be

available.
For those who preregister, cost is $15 per
person or $10 per person
for groups of four or
more. The cost for day
of registration will be

$20 per person or $15
per persons for groups of
four or more.
All participants must
provide their own kayaks
and their own ﬂotation devices as well as
complete a release form.
Participants under 18
must be accompanied by
an adult.
The age groups for
the event are as follows:
junior, ages 8-10; teens,
ages 11-16; young adult,
ages 17-27; adult, ages
28-49; classic, ages 50
and older.
All proceeds for the
event will be going
towards the completion
of the 4-H dining hall at
the camp in Southside.
Lorrie Wright, extension
See BATTLE | 5

Eastern Board approves personnel items
Staff Report

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thoughts.

REEDSVILLE — Supplemental
contract, substitute staff and other
personnel items were approved
during the recent meeting of the
Eastern Local Board of Education.
Ryland Michael was hired as a
full time bus driver on a one year
contract for the 2018-19 school
year as per the OAPSE Collective
Bargaining Agreement and Salary
Schedule, pending proper certiﬁcation.
Supplemental Contracts for the
2018-19 school year, pending proper certiﬁcation, included Bryan
Durst, Volunteer Assistant 7th and
8th Grade Volleyball Coach; Katie

Williams, Freshman Class Advisor
and Student Council Advisor; Pat
Newland, Sophomore Class Advisor; Amelia Davis, Junior Class
Advisor.
Substitute teachers approved for
the 2018-19 school year, pending
proper certiﬁcation, on an as needed basis were Kristin Barton, Isle
Burris, Cynthia Chadwell, Marjorie Fetty, John Flemming, Tyler
Legg, David Moore, Cynthia Nau,
Tanner Ogle, James Ritchie Jr.,
JoAnn Salyer, Amanda Schwarzel,
Jack Sigman Jr., James Simpson,
Larina Sisson, Ladona Stephens,
Alisha Stewart, Jeff Vogt, Dean
Wagner and Signe Wasserman.
Archery Coach Volunteers for

the 2018-19 school year, pending proper certiﬁcation, were
approved as follows: Mark Gillilan, Chris Adams, Brooke Card,
Jenni Durst, Shawn Durst, Brittany Durst Wood, Robert Brooks,
Katrina Brooks, Brian Sharp, Felicia Mettler.
Classiﬁed substitutes approved
for the 2018-19 school year were
Mary Bradbury and Amanda
Schwarzel. Jessica Davis was
approved as a substitute nurse for
the 2018-19 school year.
Extended days of service for
the 2018-19 school year were
approved for the following staff:
See BOARD | 2

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Daily Sentinel

RUSH

OBITUARIES
JAMES MARTIN REED

RACINE — Michael David Rush, 73, of Racine,
died at 7:40 p.m., Friday, August 23, 2018 at the HolOhio; grandchildren, Tim zer Meigs Emergency Room, Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT —
(Kristi) Durst, Jimmy
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday,
James Martin Reed, 94,
(Julie) Durst, Tad (Melis- August 31, 2018 in the Cremeens-King Funeral Home,
of Middleport, Ohio
sa) Reed and Elizabeth
Racine. Rev. Dr. Walter Gobel will ofﬁciate and interpassed away on August
Reed; great grandchilment will follow in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
26, 2018. He was born
dren, Jarret, Trenton,
may call two hours prior to the service at the funeral
on October 23, 1923 in
Meigs County, son of the Hannah, Cole, Alexa and home on Friday.
late Lawrence and Frieda Josie; and several nieces
GILLISPIE SR.
and nephews.
Reed.
In addition to his parHe was a member of
ents, he was preceded
ASHTON, W.Va. — Donald Edward Gillispie Sr.,
the Bradford Church of
in death by his broth83, of Ashton, W.Va. died on Aug. 25, 2018 at PleasChrist where he served
ant Valley Nursing and Rehab Center, Point Pleasant,
as Sunday School Teach- ers, Robert and Richard
Reed.
W.Va.
er, Superintendent and
Funeral services will be
A funeral service will be held on Tuesday, Aug. 28,
Elder of the Church. He
held on Thursday, August 2018 at the Deal Funeral Home at 1 p.m. with Charles
was retired from Kyger
30, 2018 at 11 a.m.
Langdon ofﬁciating. Burial will be in the Beale Chapel
Creek Plant.
with Pastor Russ Moore Cemetery, Apple Grove, W.Va. The family will receive
He is survived by his
ofﬁciating at Anderson
friends at the funeral home from 11 a.m.- 1 p.m. on
wife of 75 years, Helen
McDaniel Funeral Home Tuesday, Aug. 28.
“Jackie” Reed; his children, James David (Phyl- in Middleport. Burial will
lis) Reed of Carroll, Ohio follow at Riverview Cem- CARTER
etery. Visiting hours will
and Ruth (Ed) Durst of
be on Wednesday from
Middleport; his brother,
HARTFORD, W.Va. — Kenneth Eugene Carter, 87,
6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the
Lawrence “Gene” (Beuof Hartford, W.Va., died August 24, 2018.
lah) Reed of Mt. Gilead, funeral home.
Funeral services will be held on Tuesday, August 28,
2018 at 7 p.m. with Pastor Chris Nease ofﬁciating at
Anderson Funeral Home in New Haven, W.Va. Visiting
DAVID WILLIAM DEEM
hours will be on Tuesday from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the
funeral home. Burial will be on Wednesday at 11:30
Lisa (Lee) Gangwer,
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
a.m. at the Fairview Cemetery in Bidwell, Ohio.
— David William Deem, Sharon Thomas, Jason
(Holly) Deem and
44, of Gallipolis, Ohio
TOWNSEND
Jimmy Jr. (Staci) Deem;
passed away peacefully
step-children, Andrew,
on Aug. 23, 2018.
SCOTTOWN, Ohio — Richard Austin Townsend,
Adrian, and Ashley Car- 79, of Scottown, Ohio died Sunday, August 26, 2018
He was born on Nov.
penter; a special friend, at home. Funeral service will be conducted 2 p.m.
29, 1974 in Gallipolis,
Tammy Barnes; several
son of Jimmy and CarWednesday, August 29, 2018 at Hall Funeral Home
nieces and nephews.
rie Deem of Racine,
and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will follow
Funeral services will
Ohio.
in Wilgus Fairview Cemetery, Wilgus, Ohio. Visitabe held on Wednesday,
He was a loving son,
tion will be held one hour prior to the service at the
Aug. 29, 2018 at 11 a.m. funeral home.
father, brother, and
at Anderson McDaniel
uncle. David was a
Funeral Home in Pome- RANDOLPH
member of the Racine
roy, Ohio. Burial will
Masonic Lodge 164.
follow at Chester CemIn addition to his
CROWN CITY — Carl L. Randolph, 67, of Crown
etery. Visiting hours will City, Ohio died Monday, August 27, 2018 at his resiparents, he is survived
be on Tuesday from 6- 8 dence.
by his daughter, Hailey
p.m. at the funeral home
Deem; brothers and
At Carl’s request, there will be no calling hours or
with Masonic Services
sisters, Dorinda Deem,
funeral service. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the
Belinda (Steven) Clark, at 7:45 p.m.
family.

IN BRIEF

Guantanamo
judge retires
MIAMI (AP) — The slowmoving Sept. 11 war-crimes case
at Guantanamo has outlasted the
judge.
Army Col. James Pohl has
retired from the military while
presiding over the military commission trial of ﬁve prisoners at
the U.S. base in Cuba accused of
planning and aiding the terrorist

Board
From page 1

Sara Will, Elementary/
Middle School Guidance
Counselor, 20 days; Sheryl Roush, High School
Guidance Counselor, 20
days; Emma Roberts,
Speech Pathologist, 5
days.
Allison Bunger from
Ohio University was
approved for an internship with Emma Roberts,
beginning the week of
Aug. 27 and ending the
week of Nov. 30.
Erica Fox from Rio

attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Pohl has presided over the case
since the May 2012 arraignment
and the ensuing years of pre-trial
hearings. No trial date has been set
in the death-penalty case.
The judge also presided over an
earlier version of the commission
under President George W. Bush
that was halted before trial as well
as other major military cases.
Pohl gave notice Monday that he
was leaving the military after 38
years of service. A Marine Corps
colonel replaces him.

Grande was approved for
an internship with Mildred Wilson, kindergarten teacher, beginning the
week of Sept. 3, and ending the week of Nov. 23.
Joshua Mummey was
approved for a six-week
paternity leave request
beginning Aug. 20 and
returning on Oct. 2.
Kristen Dettwiller was
approved for an extended
medical leave of absence
for the 2018-19 school
year.
A letter of resignation
from Charles Martindale
Jr., High School Custodian, was accepted effective
Aug. 10, as was a letter

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dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

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bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

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Kushner Cos.
fined $210K
NEW YORK (AP) — The
Kushner family real estate company has been ﬁned $210,000 by
New York City regulators following an Associated Press investigation that showed it routinely ﬁled
false documents with the city
claiming it had no rent-regulated
tenants in its buildings when it,
in fact, had hundreds.

of resignation from bus
driver Shelly Caldwell,
effective Aug. 13.
In other business, the
board,
Approved the minutes
of the July 19 regular
meeting of the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
Approved the ﬁnancial
reports for the month of
July as submitted.
Approved amending
the permanent appropriation resolution to include
changes and to certify
additional revenue to the
Meigs County Auditor.
Approved the new/
updated/revised/deleted
bylaws/policies/forms/
administrative guidelines,
as recommended by
NEOLA.
Approved a resolution
of intent not to provide
career-technical education
in grades 7 and 8 for the
2018-19 school year.
Approved posting the
position of Saturday
School Monitor for the
2018-19 school year.
Approved to revise the
terms and details of the
following job descriptions: Bus Driver, Custodian, Maintenance,
Mechanic, Paraprofessional, School Nurse,
School Secretary, Teacher
Approved a depository
agreement for active
and inactive deposits of
money and funds for the
period of August 1, 2018
through July 21, 2022
with Farmers Bank and
Savings Company.
Approved a list of
items for disposal at
public auction to be held
Sept. 1, beginning 10

a.m. on the campus of
Eastern High School:
6 School Buses, 1994
Ford Van, 2000 Chevy
2500 Truck, Outside
Exercise Equipment,
Indoor Exercise Equipment, Juice Coolers,
Metal Cabinets, Kitchen
Cooler, Projectors, TVs,
Café Tables, Refrigerator, Wheel Horse Riding
Lawn Mower, Treadmill,
Filing Cabinets, 1 Piece
Student Desks, Student
Desks and Chairs, Teacher Desks and Chairs,
Computer Tables,
Mobile 2-way Radios,
Milk Coolers, Misc. Oil
Filters/Belts, Small Storage Shed, Miscellaneous
Items deemed as surplus
by administration.
Approved the Equity
in School Lunch Policy
Section 205 of the Child
Nutrition Authorization
Act mandate set forth
by the Ohio Department
of Education for the
increase in the amount
of $0.10 to the regular
student lunch prices for
the 2018-19 school year
making the cost of lunch
$2.40.
Approved adopting the
Career-Based Intervention (CBI) program for
Eastern Middle School
(grades 7th and 8th).
Approved/Denied
Open Enrollment Students for the 2018-19
school year.
Set Thursday, Sept.
20, 2018, at 6:30 p.m. for
the date and time of the
next regular meeting of
the Eastern Local Board
of Education in the
library conference room.

Gregorio Borgia | pool/AP

Pope Francis, flanked by Vatican spokesperson Greg Burke,
listens to a journalist’s question Sunday during a press
conference aboard of the flight to Rome at the end of his twoday visit to Ireland.

Alleged cover-up
pivots on when, if
sanctions imposed
VATICAN CITY (AP)
— The archbishop of
Washington on Monday
“categorically denied”
ever being informed
that Pope Benedict XVI
had sanctioned his predecessor for sexual misconduct, undercutting a
key element of a bombshell allegation that the
current pope covered up
clergy abuse.
Cardinal Donald
Wuerl issued a statement Monday after the
Vatican’s former ambassador to the United
States accused Pope
Francis of effectively
freeing ex-Cardinal
Theodore McCarrick
from the sanctions in
2013 despite knowing
of McCarrick’s sexual
predations against seminarians.
Wuerl would have
presumably known
about the sanctions
since McCarrick lived
in his archdiocese.
The claims of the
former Vatican ambassador, Archbishop Carlo
Maria Vigano, have
thrown Francis’ papacy
into crisis.
The core of his coverup charge against Francis rests on what sanctions, if any, Benedict
imposed on McCarrick
and what if anything
Francis did to alter
them, when armed with
the same knowledge of
McCarrick’s misdeeds.

Vigano, who was Vatican ambassador from
2011-2016, said he had
been told that Benedict
imposed sanctions on
McCarrick starting in
2009 or 2010, after a
decade’s worth of allegations of misconduct had
reached the Vatican.
By that time, two
New Jersey dioceses
had settled complaints
of sexual harassment
and misconduct against
McCarrick lodged by
two former seminarians. It was apparently
common knowledge
that McCarrick would
invite seminarians to
his New Jersey beach
house, and into his bed.
“The cardinal was
to leave the seminary
where he was living, he
was forbidden to celebrate Mass in public,
to participate in public
meetings, to give lectures, to travel, with the
obligation of dedicating himself to a life of
prayer and penance,”
Vigano wrote of the
Benedict sanctions.
The problem is the
historic record is rife
with evidence that
McCarrick lived a life
devoid of any such
restriction in those
years. He traveled
widely, including for
Catholic Relief Services, the humanitarian branch of the U.S.
church.

MEIGS BRIEF

Road closures
and restrictions
RACINE — Meigs County Road 28, Bashan
Road, will continue to be closed between C-31,
Bald Knobs-Stiversville Road, and T-109, Carmel
Road, for an additional 2 weeks in order to complete repair work on the slip in this area. This
pushes the projected completion date back to
Thursday, Aug. 30.
MEIGS COUNTY — A culvert replacement
project begins on July 27, on State Route 681 in
Meigs County. The project is taking place between
US 33 and Markham Road (Township Road 652).
One lane will be closed in this area. Temporary
trafﬁc signals and an 11 foot width restriction will
be in place. The estimated completion date is Aug.
31, 2018.

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, Aug. 28
LEBANON TWP. — The Lebanon Township
Trustees will hold their regular monthly meeting
at 6:30 p.m. at the township garage.
POMEROY — The Oh Kan Coin Club will meet
at 6:30 p.m. on second ﬂoor at Farmer Bank in
Pomeroy.

Wednesday, Sept. 5
HARRISONVILLE — Everyone is welcome
to attend the free Firehouse Community Dinner
at the Scipio Township Fire Department in Harrisonville, State Route 684. Dinner will be served
from 5-6 p.m., and will feature meatloaf, mashed
potatoes and gravy, buttered corn, beverage and a
“Make Your Own Ice Cream Sundae” bar.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 28, 2018 3

US and Mexico tentatively set to replace NAFTA
By Paul Wiseman,
Luis Alonso Lugo
and Rob Gillies

Trump has frequently
condemned the 24-yearold NAFTA trade pact
Associated Press
as a job-killing “disaster”
for American workers. Yet the preliminary
WASHINGTON — The
agreement announced
Trump administration
Monday is far from ﬁnal.
and Mexico have reached
Even after being formally
a preliminary accord to
signed, it would have be
replace the North Ameriratiﬁed by lawmakers in
can Free Trade Agreeeach country.
ment with a new deal
The U.S. Congress
that would be intended
wouldn’t vote on it until
to encourage more manunext year — after Novemfacturing in the United
ber midterm elections
States.
that could end Republican
At the same time,
control of the House of
President Donald Trump
Representatives.
threatened to keep Can“There are still a lot
ada, the third member
of
questions left to be
of NAFTA, out of any
Evan Vucci | AP
answered,”
MacKay said.
new trade agreement. In
President Donald Trump hangs up after talking with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto on the
He
noted,
for
example,
announcing the tentaphone Monday in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington.
that Trump said nothing
tive accord Monday at
Monday about dropping
deal of uncertainty ..
the White House, Trump on Canadian auto imports restart talks.
trepidation, nervousness Trump’s tariffs on Mexi“We will only sign a
said a new pact would be to intensify pressure on
can or Canadian steel —
called “the United States- Ottawa to a agree to deal new NAFTA that is good — a feeling that we are
tariffs that were imposed
on the outside looking
for Canada and good for
to Trump’s liking.
Mexico Trade Agreein,” said Peter MacKay, a in part to pressure those
Canada’s NAFTA nego- the middle class,” said
ment.”
former Canadian minister countries to reach an
Adam Austen, a spokestiator, Foreign Minister
Trump said he was
agreement on NAFTA.
man for Freeland, adding of justice, defense and
open to including Canada Chrystia Freeland, is
But at least initially,
foreign affairs who is now
that “Canada’s signature
— “if they’d like to nego- cutting short a trip to
it looks like at least a
a partner at the law ﬁrm
is required.”
Europe to ﬂy to Washtiate fairly.” He threattentative public-relations
Baker McKenzie.
“There is still a great
ened to impose new taxes ington Tuesday to try to

victory for Trump, the
week after his former
campaign manager was
convicted on ﬁnancial
crimes and his former
personal attorney implicated him in hush money
payments to two women
who say they had affairs
with Trump.
Over the weekend, U.S.
and Mexican negotiators
worked to narrow their
differences, capping talks
that had begun a year
ago and have proved
highly contentious.
The Ofﬁce of the U.S.
Trade Representative
said Monday that Mexico
had agreed to ensure that
75 percent of automotive content be produced
within the trade bloc
(up from a current 62.5
percent) to receive dutyfree beneﬁts and that 40
percent to 45 percent be
made by workers earning at least $16 an hour.
Those changes are meant
to encourage more auto
production in the United
States.

McCain’s final
statement: Americans
have ‘more in common’
By Melissa Daniels
and Laurie Kellman

Evan Vucci | AP

An American flag above the White House in Washington flies at full-staff Monday, less than 48 hours after the death of Sen. John
McCain.

White House flags back at full-staff
By Laurie Kellman

That brought complaints
from both right and left,
including the America
Legion.
WASHINGTON
“On the behalf of
— Flags at the White
House were back at full- The American Legion’s
two million wartime
staff Monday, even as
objections mounted and veterans, I strongly
urge you to make an
Senate leaders of both
parties formally request- appropriate presidential
proclamation noting
ed that American ﬂags
at government buildings Senator McCain’s death
stay at half-staff to honor and legacy of service
to our nation, and that
Sen. John McCain.
our nation’s ﬂag be
President Donald
half-staffed through
Trump also passed up
several chances to com- his internment,” said
a statement to Trump
ment on McCain, with
whom he had frequently from Denise Rohan, the
organization’s national
traded criticism.
The ﬂags at the White commander.
Aides to Senate MajorHouse had been lowered
ity Leader Mitch McCoa day earlier but were
nnell and Democratic
back up on Monday in
Leader Charles Schumer
a break with tradition.

Associated Press

requested that the
Department of Defense
keep ﬂags at government
buildings lowered until
the sunset after McCain
is buried in Annapolis,
Maryland, next Sunday.
That’s standard procedure when a member
of the Senate passes
away. McCain served
in the chamber for six
terms, most recently as
chairman of the Armed
Services Committee.
McCain was a frequent critic of Trump
on everything from his
leadership style to his
Russia policy. Trump
questioned the decorated Navy pilot’s Vietnam
heroism and chafed at
McCain’s vote to kill the
president’s “Obamacare”

repeal.
McCain died on
Saturday at 81 after a
13-month struggle with
brain cancer. Trump
tweeted condolences
to McCain’s family but
made no reference to the
Arizona senator.
U.S. Flag Code states
that ﬂags be lowered “on
the day of death and the
following day for a Member of Congress.”
After Democratic
Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts died in 2009,
President Barack Obama
ordered ﬂags at the
White House ﬂown at
half-staff for ﬁve days.
The White House
didn’t immediately
respond to questions
Monday.

In Washington, McCain
will lie in state Friday in
Associated Press
the Capitol Rotunda with
a formal ceremony and
PHOENIX — Sen. John time for the public to pay
respects. On Saturday,
McCain expressed his
deep gratitude and love of a procession will pass
country in his ﬁnal letter the Vietnam Veterans
and implored Americans Memorial and arrive for
to put aside “tribal rivlar- a funeral at Washington
National Cathedral. Fories” and focus on what
mer Presidents George W.
unites.
Bush and Barack Obama
Rick Davis, former
are expected to speak at
presidential campaign
manager for McCain who the service.
The Senate has draped
is serving as a family
spokesman, read the fare- John McCain’s desk in
well message Monday at a black fabric and placed
press brieﬁng in Phoenix. a vase of white roses on
top. Monday was the
In the statement,
Senate’s ﬁrst day back in
McCain reﬂected on the
session since his death,
privilege of serving his
country and said he tried though McCain had not
been back to Washington
to do so honorably. He
since December.
also touched on today’s
A private funeral is
politics.
planned for Sunday
“Do not despair of
afternoon at the Naval
our present difﬁculties
Academy Chapel followed
but believe always in the
promise and greatness of by a private burial at the
academy cemetery.
America, because nothPresident Donald
ing is inevitable here,”
Trump was not expected
McCain wrote. “Americans never quit. We never to attend any of the sersurrender. We never hide vices.
McCain was a noted
from history. We make
critic of Trump, and
history.”
Trump’s response to
McCain died Saturday
McCain’s death has been
from an aggressive form
closely watched. On Monof brain cancer. Plans
day, for instance, ﬂags at
taking shape called for
the White House were
McCain to lie in state
Wednesday in the Arizo- not lowered. When asked
na State Capitol on what about Trump’s response
would have been his 82nd to McCain’s death, Davis
said that the family is
birthday. A funeral will
choosing to focus on the
be conducted Thursday
outpouring of support
at North Phoenix Bapfrom around the world
tist Church with former
Vice President Joe Biden instead of “what one person has done or said.”
speaking.

John McCain services planned

Judge blocks online plans for printing 3D guns
By Martha Bellisle

acquired by felons or
terrorists.
U.S. District Judge
Robert Lasnik extended
A U.S. judge in
a temporary restrainSeattle blocked the
ing order, and his new
Trump administration
Monday from allowing decision will last until
the case is resolved.
a Texas company to
He said Cody Wilson,
post online plans for
making untraceable 3D owner of Defense Disguns, agreeing with 19 tributed, wanted to
post the plans online so
states and the District
that citizens can arm
of Columbia that such
themselves without
access to the plastic
guns would pose a secu- having to deal with
licenses, serial numbers
rity risk.
and registrations.
The states sued to
Wilson has said that
stop an agreement that
“governments should
the government had
live in fear of their citireached with Austin,
zenry.”
Texas-based Defense
“It is the untraceDistributed, saying
able and undetectable
guidelines on how to
nature of these small
print undetectable
ﬁrearms that poses a
plastic guns could be

Associated Press

unique danger,” Lasnik
said. “Promising to
detect the undetectable
while at the same time
removing a signiﬁcant
regulatory hurdle to
the proliferation of
these weapons — both
domestically and internationally — rings
hollow and in no way
ameliorates, much less
avoids, the harms that
are likely to befall the
states if an injunction is
not issued.”
The State Department had reached the
settlement with the
company after the
agency removed the
3D gun-making plans
from a list of weapons
or technical data that
are not allowed to be

exported.
The states argued
that the federal agency
didn’t follow the law
when it removed 3D
guns from the munitions list. They said
the government was
supposed to notify
Congress and provide a
30-day window before
making a change to that
list, but it did not.
A lawyer with the
U.S. Justice Department had argued
against the injunction,
saying possessing 3D
plastic guns is already
against the law, and the
federal government is
committed to enforcing
that law.
But the judge said it
wasn’t enough.

Wed. Aug. 29
McCain lies in state
on what would be
his 82nd birthday.
Thurs. Aug. 30
Funeral at North
Phoenix Baptist
Church.

Phoenix

Fri. Aug. 31
McCain lies in state at the Capitol
Rotunda, the public pays respects.
Sat. Sept. 1
Procession and funeral at
Washington National Catherdral.
Annapolis
Wash. D.C.
Sun. Sept. 2
Private funeral at Naval Academy
Chapel and private burial at the
Naval Academy Cemetary.

Jeff Warner Agency
Nationwide Insurance

113 West 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Tel 740-992-5479
Fax 740-992-6911
warnerj1@nationwide.com
OH-70068551

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Johnson: ‘Tax cut
misinformation
campaign continues’
As we speak, Congress is working on “Tax Cuts
2.0,” which would make many of the reforms in
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) permanent,
and extend tax relief to millions
more Americans.
But, the recent tax cuts are never
without their enemies, many of
whom populate the hallways of liberal newsrooms across the country.
The left-leaning mainstream media
continues to spread misinformation
Rep. Bill
about tax reform, in an attempt to
Johnson undermine its reforms in the public
Contributing eye and kill the second round of tax
columnist
cuts.
Recently, the New York Times’
editorial board—the same editorial board that
openly lobbied against the TJCA’s passage—ran
yet another politically charged editorial: “You
Know Who the Tax Cuts Helped? Rich People.” At
the outset, the editorial describes the TCJA—the
most substantive tax relief package since Ronald
Reagan was in the White House—as a “massive
tax cut for corporations and wealthy families.”
It proceeds to claim “the idea that the tax cuts
were going to line workers’ pockets was always a
mirage,” before denouncing tax relief as a budgetbuster.
But the Times certainly isn’t alone. Vox, the leftwing news outlet, recently published the following
headline: “Of course the tax cuts are good for the
banks.” The TCJA, Vox’s Emily Stewart argues,
“heavily beneﬁts the wealthy and corporations,”
leaving low- and middle-income Americans in the
dust.
The liberal media’s talking points ﬂy in the face
of reality. Whether you support the Trump administration or not, tax cuts are undoubtedly helping
Americans across the spectrum. Unemployment is
down to its lowest level in decades. In each of the
18 counties I represent, unemployment rates have
decreased by at least 30% since January of 2017.
And, more than half of small businesses have plans
to expand, boost hiring, or increase employee
beneﬁts.
I’ve heard directly from many of those I represent that they are beneﬁting directly from keeping
more of their own money. I’ve visited small businesses that gave bonuses to their employees. I had
a gentleman stop in to my ofﬁce to say thank you
– he’s using the extra money in his check every
month to make his car payment.
Do they qualify as large “corporations” or
“wealthy” hedge fund managers? Has the Times’
editorial board forgotten its newspaper’s own
reporting?
Don’t believe me? It wasn’t so long ago that the
New York Times itself said so. In February, two
of the Times’ economic reporters analyzed the
impact of the TCJA, particularly among middleclass Americans. From that analysis they concluded, “Most American voters view tax cuts favorably
because they are positively affecting their bottom
lines”. (Is there a cite for this) In other words, the
Times’ own analysis in February directly contradicts the Times’ most recently published editorial.
The two reporters interviewed Erin Parker, a
high school teacher in Texas, who admitted the
TCJA would “help the technology start-up where
her husband works.” They also reached out to
Gina Coats, a project manager at a Missouri
plumbing company, who told them her take-home
income is now signiﬁcantly higher than before.
Colleen Doering, a small business owner in Florida, claimed she and her husband are “paying several hundred dollars a month less in taxes because
of the new law.” Because of it, they recently decided to spend $10,000 on a landscaping project
and plan a much-needed vacation.
Had they talked to folks in Eastern and Southeastern Ohio, they would have heard similar
stories.
Even the Times’ reporters acknowledged the
“series of high-proﬁle company announcements
of bonuses, raises, or other beneﬁts attributed
to tax savings.” Most importantly, they concede
“Americans [will] see lower taxes reﬂected in
their paychecks.”
On both counts, they’re right—but, there’s
more. To date, more than 710 U.S. employers (that
are known) have distributed pay raises, bonuses,
and other generous employee beneﬁts because of
federal tax cuts. From Apple and Wal-Mart to hundreds of small businesses in Ohio and nationwide,
employers are using their tax savings to reward
workers.
Even those who haven’t been rewarded with a
bonus can look forward to larger paychecks. Due
to the TCJA, an estimated 90 percent of wage
earners are now blessed with greater take-home
pay…the “crumbs” as Nancy Pelosi referred to
them.
This isn’t the top one percent. This is the overwhelming majority of working Americans. The
New York Times can admit it or not, but we’d be
foolish not to pursue a second round of tax relief,
given the resounding success of its predecessor.
Those telling you otherwise are nothing more
than the purveyors of “fake news.”
Bill Johnson represents Ohio’s sixth congressional district.

THEIR VIEW

Suffer the children
leaving a widow
We need a march
with eight chilof ministers, not a James
F. Burns
dren. An uncle
national military
Contributing in the north of
parade. We need
columnist
Ireland sent her
a parade of pureencouragement
souled priests and
and advice to the
a rally of righteous
children.
rabbis. Not a national
To the widow, he
military parade.
wrote, “You have the
Shock and awe have
promise of the Almighty
their place. Our nation’s
capital is not it. We need who has said I am a
father to the fatherless
a national cleansing, top
to bottom, coast to coast. and a husband to the
We seek an elevated level widow. With the strength
of discourse and spiritual of divine grace, may you
be enabled to bring up
inspiration.
your children in the fear
My ancestor’s tomband love of God.”
stone sits atop a grassy
To the children, the
knoll in a small rural
uncle wrote, “Dear chilcemetery in Ohio. A
dren, pray to God mornhand on the tombstone
ing and night that he
points upward, the
may preserve you from
inscription reading,
the dangers to which
“Gone to a far better
youth are exposed. The
place.”
Word of God will point
Jesus said, “Suffer the
out wherein you ought
little children to come
to go.”
unto me.” Now they
This uncle’s neighsuffer. If prayer is speakbor—they belonged to
ing to God, we need a
the same small church—
national year of prayer,
had left long ago for
not a single day.
America. Becoming a
My ancestor with the
successful businessman
pointing-hand grave
and politician, he dined
marker was still a boy
with George Washington
when his father died,

and was the director of a
large eastern bank. But
David Acheson never forgot where he came from.
He wrote home to his
aged parents, “When I
reﬂect on the care and
attention you bestowed
upon me, instructing me
in every good and virtuous thing, I wonder how
children could ever be
ungrateful to their parents.” When he returned
to Ireland in his dotage
for a ﬁnal visit, he “went
straight to the graves of
his father and mother,
and, casting himself
down, recalled their tender care over his youth.”
And the advice of the
mothers of these two
Irish families was nearly
identical, the one warning her son in America
to “take care of what
company you keep,” the
other saying to “shun
such company as leads to
vice.” Today’s equivalent
is to know with whom
you’re dealing. Some
altar boys didn’t. Some
female gymnasts didn’t.
We’ve swept too many
things under the rug.

If this sounds like a
sermon, so be it. The
future of a nation is in its
children, its soul in their
treatment. We know the
record. Children being
abused, shot, molested,
made homeless, left to
the mercy of drug dealers
and human-trafﬁckers.
And worst of all ignored.
We can do better. We
must.
And who will seize
the reins of leadership in
such a campaign of moral
improvement? I would
look to the local level
where you’re more likely
to know with whom
you—and your children—are interacting.
There are many talented, trustworthy, and
spiritually-intact teachers, coaches, counselors,
clerics, scout leaders,
doctors, nurses, and others out there whom you
already know or should
get to know. Build your
“be better, not bitter”
program with them and
for your children and
your community. We can
do better. We should. We
must.

THEIR VIEW

Overeating and stress
The dog puked on your
new shoes. The car had a
ﬂat tire on a major highway. The in-laws showed
up unannounced and the
house is mess. Ahhh!
Stress rushes into your
brain and body.
You missed a deadline
at work. You are late on
your mortgage payment.
You had another huge
argument with spouse.
Ohhh! More stress.
Stress Eating
You feel annoyed,
angry, and overwhelmed.
You grab a package of
cookies. “I’ll just nibble a
few,” you mumble. Before
you know it, the contents
of the entire package are
in your belly.
Stress eating, comfort
eating, emotional eating;
words that describe overeating. Short-term you
feel better, but long-term
you feel worse. Stressinduced cravings create a
habitual pattern of using
food to self-soothe, temporarily escape emotions,

the Small Stuff” or
and avoid prob“Don’t Sweat the
lems. Frustration,
Small Stuff About
guilt, and remorse
Money or Don’t
visit.
Sweat the Small
According to
Stuff with Your
a 2011 article in
Family.”
Harvard Health,
“Stress, the horMelissa
mones it unleashes, Martin
Stress
and the effect of
“The deﬁnition
Contributing
high-fat, sugary
of
stress for most
columnist
“comfort foods”
people tends to
push people toward
focus on the negaovereating.”
tive feelings and emoThe adrenal glands
tions it produces. Almost
release a hormone called
every deﬁnition of stress
cortisol which increases
also discusses certain
appetite. You give in and resultant physical, physigobble gooey goodies:
ological or biochemicookies, cake, candy
cal responses that are
bars. Or you gorge on
experienced or observed.
fried salty foods. You
A very comprehensive
overindulge until you feel deﬁnition of stress that
uncomfortable or stuffed. includes these and more
The more unmanaged
is the biopsychosocial
stress in your daily life,
model, which, as it name
the more apt you are to
suggests, has three comturn to food for emotion- ponents. This deﬁnition
al relief and comfort.
of stress distinguishes
Read the book, “Why
between an external
Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers” element, another that
by Robert Sapolsky.
is internal, as well as
Examine Richard Carla third that represents
son’s books: “Don’t Sweat the interaction between

these two factors,”
according to The American Institute of Stress.
www.stress.org/.
In August 2017, the
American Psychological Association (APA)
conducted its annual
Stress in America survey.
Most common sources of
stress included: future of
our nation, money, work,
political climate, and violence/crime. Stress issues
in the nation included:
heath care, the economy,
trust in government,
crime and hate crimes,
terrorist attacks in the
US, high taxes, unemployment and low wages,
environmental issues,
and thinking about problems in our nation. www.
apa.org/news/press/
releases/stress/2017/
state-nation.pdf.
How do American’s
cope with stress? According to the APA survey
physical activity, listening to music, spending
See STRESS | 5

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

Battle

organization provides and
this event is a way to promote this concept, while
also raising money for the
From page 1
dining hall.
Wright commented it
agent, shared the goal
was decided last year by
for this year is to raise
at least $1,000, doubling the leaders association to
host the races on Krodel
what was raised at the
Park’s lake as it would
inaugural event.
make for a more family
Though the campers
friendly environment
were able to return to
compared to a race on the
their camp at Southside
again this year, the dining river. The lake is free of
hall still needs additional debris, no large motorwork to meet ﬁre marshal ized boats will be causing
waves, and the area can
codes before the kitchen
be easily monitored by
can be usable.
safety personnel. The
Wright shared she
decided to bring a kayak City of Point Pleasant
race event to Point Pleas- approved the use of the
park at their recent counant last year because
cil meeting.
she knew of no other
In addition, a kayaking
similar events within the
“Quick Start” class will
county and she wanted
be offered at 8 a.m., the
to promote an activity
day of the race with a certhe entire family could
do together and have fun tiﬁed L1 ACA instructor.
The cost is $10 per pertogether.
son and pre-registration
She commented
is necessary. The class
though kayaking is an
will touch on safety,
older known sport, it is
skills, and maneuvers.
a newer one and gainWright commented the
ing popularity in Mason
County. Wright explained instructor is excited to
share what he has learned
how 4-H is about people
working together through to all of the participating
the various activities the kayakers.

Stress
From page 4

time with friends/family, yoga/meditation, and
prayer were among the
top techniques of stress
management.
Learn 5 Things You
Should Know About
Stress from the National
Institute of Mental
Health. www.nimh.nih.
gov/health/publications/
stress/index.shtml.
What is Mindful Eating?
The practice of mindful
eating focuses on being
aware of your thoughts,
emotions, and senses
while eating food. Slow
down your chewing.
Savor the ﬂavor. Appreci-

2 PM

73°

87°

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.

0.00
5.56
3.30
37.35
29.81

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:54 a.m.
8:05 p.m.
9:31 p.m.
8:46 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Sep 2

New

Sep 9

First

Full

Sep 16 Sep 24

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

Major
Today 1:27a
Wed. 2:15a
Thu. 3:05a
Fri.
3:55a
Sat.
4:47a
Sun. 5:40a
Mon. 6:34a

Minor
7:38a
8:26a
9:16a
10:07a
10:59a
11:53a
12:19a

Major
1:49p
2:37p
3:27p
4:19p
5:12p
6:06p
7:02p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Minor
8:00p
8:48p
9:38p
10:30p
11:24p
---12:48p

WEATHER HISTORY
So much cool air moved southward
on Aug. 28, 1944, that Raleigh, N.C.,
had a high of only 68 degrees, which
is its lowest maximum temperature
ever in August.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Humid with intervals
of clouds and sun

Not as warm with a
t-storm in the area

Variable clouds with a
shower or two

A t-storm in spots in
the afternoon

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

0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Chillicothe
91/71

Level
13.34
16.53
21.71
12.88
12.96
25.57
13.42
26.01
34.69
13.08
16.60
34.50
15.80

Portsmouth
92/70

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.11
-0.11
-0.16
+0.09
-0.01
-0.07
+0.07
+0.58
+0.45
+0.47
+0.20
+0.40
+1.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Murray City
90/69
Belpre
91/70

St. Marys
91/71

Parkersburg
91/71

Wilkesville
90/69
POMEROY
Jackson
91/69
91/69
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
92/70
91/70
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
90/71
GALLIPOLIS
92/70
92/70
91/70

Elizabeth
92/70

Spencer
90/70

Buffalo
91/70

Ironton
91/71

Milton
91/70

St. Albans
91/71

Huntington
91/71

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
81/55
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
71/59
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
81/67
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Mostly cloudy and
humid

88°
69°
Mostly cloudy with a
shower possible

NATIONAL CITIES

Coolville
91/69

Ashland
91/71
Grayson
91/71

MONDAY

87°
65°

Marietta
91/71

Athens
90/69

McArthur
90/68

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Logan
91/69

Adelphi
91/69

South Shore Greenup
91/71
91/70

77

SUNDAY

88°
67°

Lucasville
91/70

Very High

SATURDAY

86°
66°

Very High

Primary: ragweed, grass/other
Mold: 2075

FRIDAY

81°
67°

Waverly
90/69

Pollen: 102

Low

MOON PHASES
Last

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

THURSDAY

90°
71°

1

Primary: cladosporium

Wed.
6:55 a.m.
8:04 p.m.
10:01 p.m.
9:45 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

82°

Temperature

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

EXTENDED FORECAST

for nearly 20 years.
As an added twist,
Wolfe married his wife
Holly at the Atomic
track in 2011.
Wolfe thanked his
wife and brother Bryan
for keeping the induction a secret and also
for being there along
with daughter Jovi.
Among others there
for the induction from
the area were Kevin
Layne, Benny Hickel,
Kenny McKnight, Max
Eichinger, Randy Arms,
Randy “Squeek” Arms,
Bill Thorla, and John
Gordon.

to contact our ofﬁce as soon as
possible to get on our list.”
Ticket prices are: Adults $8,
seniors (60 and older) $7, children (5-16 years) $6, ages 4 and
under are free. Group rates are
$5 per person (ages 5 and older)
with a minimum of 15 people.
For additional information,
call the Gallia County Convention and Visitors Bureau at
(740) 446-6882 or info@visitgallia.com.

of people allowed in a 30 minute
slot is 100.
“This is a true educational
event and ideal for students,”
From page 1
said Amanda Crouse, Executive
Director of the Gallia County
anytime from 9-6 p.m. Each
group has a tour guide assigned Convention and Visitors Bureau.
“We have over 2,500 students
to them. Each tour will last
from Gallia, Meigs, Chesapeake,
an average of 30 minutes with
time split between the Nina and Athens, Jackson in Ohio and
Pinta. Groups of 15 or more will Mason in West Virginia. If anyone is interested in scheduling a
receive a group rate of $5 per
group tour, we encourage them
person. The maximum number

Mostly sunny and humid today. Mainly clear,
warm and humid tonight. High 92° / Low 70°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

Wolfe’s colors yellow and
black with his Dad’s No.
41. He toured the car
with his now wife Holly
and brother Bryan Wolfe
as the pit crew. Wolfe’s
career ended with a
blown engine at Ohio
Valley, but thanks to
Kevin Layne was able to
race in the ﬁnal points
race at Atomic. Layne
loaned Wolfe his back-up
engine to secure a top
ﬁve in points Wolfe’s
ﬁnal year. Layne got into
racing when he began
helping Wolfe on the
race car at age 12 and
the duo raced together

pionship the next year
(1983), then came back
to win the championship in 1987 at Skyline.
From page 1
Wolfe ﬁnished second in
articles published in Flat points at Atomic in 1995
and had several top-ﬁve
Out magazine and even
points runs there. Wolfe
had his own column in
Mid-American Auto Rac- ran at 28 different tracks
ing News, Racing News, in Ohio, Kentucky, and
West Virginia. Scott and
RPM Weekly, and Dirt
Racing Round-up among his dad concluded that
they had been to over
others.
120 different race tracks
In his second year of
all over the country to
racing, Wolfe broke his
watch races.
back in his Dad’s No.
His last year of racing
41 Corvette at Atomic
Speedway, but overcame in 2010, he ran a memorial tribute car painted
his injuries to win the
in his late father Hilton
Skyline Track Cham-

8 PM

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

HOF

Melissa Martin, Ph.D, is an author,
columnist, educator, and therapist.
She lives in Southern Ohio. www.
melissamartinchildrensauthor.
com. Contact her at
melissamcolumnist@gmail.com.

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

90°
72°
85°
63°
103° in 1948
47° in 1945

Immunization Clinic Hours

Nina

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Head Start openings

The Takeaway
Only eat when you’re
hungry and stop when
your stomach is full.
Identify sources of stress
and patterns of overeating. Tune into emotions
before snacks and meals.
Use stress management
tools.

8 AM

WEATHER

ment will conduct an Immunization Clinic on Tuesday, from 9-11 a.m. and 1-6 p.m., at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied 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 vacRACINE — Southern Local Head Start is still
cines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
accepting students for the 2018-2019 school year.
Students must be between the ages of 3-4 to attend. insurance cards, if applicable. Shingles and pneuHead Start provides all day services, healthy meals, monia vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility
and educational activities to those who meet enroll- determination and availability or visit our website
at www.meigs-health.com to see a list of accepted
ment criteria. Our qualiﬁed, nurturing staff will be
commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.
happy to assist in meeting all student and family
The Ohio Department of Health (ODH) does
needs. If you wish to inquire about our services,
please contact Bradbury Learning Center , which is NOT recommended for routine Hepatitis A vacthe main ofﬁce for Southern Head Start, at 740-992- cination of Healthcare Workers. Additionally, the
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
1740 between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Head
Start at Southern is a full day experience. Research (ACIP) does NOT recommend routine Hepatitis
has shown that an early start has proven to improve A vaccination for Food Workers. Currently, ODH
is strongly recommending the following groups to
academics so get your child enrolled now!
get the Hepatitis A vaccine: men who have sex with
men, persons who inject drugs and person who use
illegal non-injection drugs. These are the highest
risk groups for transmission of Hepatitis A. Call
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Depart- 740-992-6626 for vaccine availability.
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.

ate and enjoy food.
Intentionally become
aware of your reasons for
wanting to eat. Are you
hungry, bored, anxious,
overwhelmed? Are you
eating out of habit? Are
you wanting to comfort
eat because of stress?
Identify your feelings.

TODAY

Tuesday, August 28, 2018 5

Clendenin
91/70
Charleston
89/71

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
63/47

Montreal
88/75

Billings
68/47

Toronto
90/72

Minneapolis
71/53

Chicago
91/68

Denver
74/51
Kansas City
90/63

Detroit
92/73

New York
94/78

Washington
95/79

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

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
88/61/s
62/49/pc
90/73/pc
88/77/s
94/74/s
68/47/pc
77/52/s
96/78/s
89/71/s
93/71/pc
61/44/pc
91/68/c
91/71/s
92/75/s
90/73/s
97/79/s
74/51/pc
83/57/t
92/73/s
89/78/c
91/78/pc
90/75/s
90/63/t
98/78/s
91/73/pc
81/67/pc
92/77/s
88/77/pc
71/53/c
93/75/pc
88/78/t
94/78/pc
95/70/s
89/74/t
95/77/s
104/79/s
89/71/s
91/74/s
93/71/pc
95/73/s
95/77/s
74/55/s
71/59/pc
81/55/pc
95/79/s

Hi/Lo/W
90/65/pc
61/54/pc
87/72/t
89/76/s
94/74/s
80/53/s
86/57/s
98/78/s
89/71/s
91/70/pc
80/54/s
74/58/sh
88/67/t
88/66/t
88/71/t
97/78/s
85/58/s
75/56/s
83/60/t
88/76/pc
90/77/pc
86/65/t
79/63/s
101/79/s
88/71/t
83/67/pc
90/74/t
89/77/t
72/55/s
91/74/t
88/77/pc
94/78/s
89/71/pc
90/74/pc
95/78/s
105/82/s
87/69/pc
93/71/pc
92/70/pc
95/74/s
84/69/pc
85/67/s
72/60/pc
72/56/s
95/78/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

Atlanta
90/73

El Paso
98/72

104° in Needles, CA
28° in Tuolumne Meadows, CA

Global
Chihuahua
91/66

Houston
91/78
Monterrey
98/71

Miami
88/77

High
121° in Basrah, Iraq
Low -35° 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.

You’ll Feel Right At Home.

Racine 740-949-2210
Syracuse 740-992-6333
Middleport 740-691-5131

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
OH-70030880

OH-70003248

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

�Sports
6 Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Daily Sentinel

RedStorm men blank Warriors in home opener
By Randy Payton

with a commanding 15-1 edge
in shots overall, including a 9-0
advantage in shots on frame.
Zurita and Reilly’s second
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Eduhalf markers extended a 1-0
ardo Zurita and Harry Reilly
halftime lead for the Redscored second half goals just
Storm, which resulted from a
68 seconds apart, helping the
goal by freshman Nicolas Cam
University of Rio Grande pull
Orellana (Santiago, Chile) with
away for a 3-0 win over the
Indiana Institute of Technology 24:27 remaining before the
in non-conference men’s soccer intermission.
Cam Orellana beat a Tech
action, Saturday night, at Evan
defender one-on-one inside the
E. Davis Field.
18-yard box and scored off the
The RedStorm, which was
dribble from about nine yards
making its 2018 home debut,
out in front of the goal.
improved to 3-0 with the vicThat’s how things stayed
tory. All three wins have been
until Zurita - a senior from
by shutout.
Indiana Tech was playing its Sant Boi de Llobregat, Spain,
whistled a shot from just inside
season opener.
the top of the 18-yard box past
Rio Grande, which entered
the match ranked No. 16 in the Tech net-minder Ivan Safranic
NAIA preseason poll, ﬁnished and into the upper right corner

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Tara Gerlach|courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Ewan McLauchlan works the ball away from an Indiana Tech
defender during the first half of Saturday night’s 3-0 win over the Warriors at
Evan E. Davis Field.

of the goal for a 2-0 lead with
37:57 remaining.
Reilly, a senior from Coventry, England, set the ﬁnal score
just over a minute later by
ﬁnding the back of the net off a
touch from Cam Orellana.
Junior Richard Dearle (Castle Donington, England) posted a second clean sheet in his
second start for Rio Grande,
which also enjoyed an 8-2 edge
in corner kick opportunities.
Safranic collected six saves
in a losing cause for the Warriors.
Rio Grande returns to action
next Friday when it travels to
Goshen (Ind.) College for a 7
p.m. kickoff.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director for the University of Rio Grande.

Vikings fend
off South
Gallia, 14-12
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — Lady Luck wore a
horned helmet.
Visiting South Gallia forced ﬁve turnovers,
accumulated 256 more yards of total offense and
claimed a 23-4 edge in ﬁrst downs — and that
still wasn’t enough Saturday night during a 14-12
setback at Symmes Valley during a Week 1 nonconference contest in Lawrence County.
The Rebels (0-1) rushed for 301 yards, ﬁnished
plus-3 in turnover differential and held the host
Vikings (1-0) to a mere 95 yards of total offense,
yet never held a lead at any point in the season
opener.
SVHS took a permanent lead on its opening
drive of the game as Nick Strow scored on a fouryard run for an early 6-0 edge.
The Vikings caught, or rather, scooped up a
break on South Gallia’s ensuing drive as Josh Ferguson returned a fumble 35 yards to the house.
Keifer Wilson found Ryan Lewis with a twopoint conversion pass, giving SVHS a 14-0 cushion
after one quarter of play.
SGHS started whittling its way back in the second frame as Kyle Northup scored on a 10-yard
run, allowing the Red and Gold to close to within
14-6 at the intermission.
Jeffrey Sheets pulled the Rebels even closer in
the third stanza with a two-yard run, which ultimately concluded the scoring — despite numerous
chances for both squads the rest of the way.
South Gallia averaged 6.5 yards per carry on
46 rushing attempts and also lost half of its four
fumbles in the contest. The Rebels did come away
with three fumble recoveries and a pair of interceptions.
SGHS was also ﬂagged 15 times for 120 yards,
while the Vikings were penalized nine times for 65
yards.
Northup led the South Gallia rushing attack
with 121 yards on 17 carries, followed by Sheets
with 90 yards on a dozen attempts. Jacob Birtcher
also added 68 yards on seven totes.
Freshman Tristan Saber was 7-of-19 passing for
50 yards in his varsity debut, throwing neither a
touchdown nor a pick.
Sheets and Northup both hauled in three passes
apiece for 30 and 12 yards, respectively. Garrett
Saunders also had two grabs for 12 yards in the
setback.
Ferguson paced SVHS with 22 rushing yards on
ﬁve carries. Wilson was 5-of-7 passing for 25 yards
See VIKINGS | 10

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Aug. 28
Boys Golf
South Gallia at Waterford,
4:30
Girls Golf
Gallia Academy at
Jackson, 4 p.m.
RVHS home meet, 4:30
Volleyball
River Valley at Meigs, 7
p.m.
Coal Grove at Gallia
Academy, 6:30
Waterford at South Gallia,
7 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 7 p.m.
Eastern at Belpre, 7 p.m.

Cross Country
Gallia Academy at Rock
Hill, 4:30
Wednesday, Aug. 29
Boys Golf
Wahama at Riverside, 4
p.m.
Volleyball
Southern at Eastern, 7
p.m.
Symmes Valley at South
Gallia, 7 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Point
Pleasant, 7 p.m.

Jonathan Quilter | The Columbus Dispatch via AP

Ohio State football coach Urban Meyer, right, listens to athletic director Gene Smith near the end of the Big Ten championship football
game Dec. 6, 2014, in Indianapolis. Ohio State suspended Meyer for three games Aug. 22, for mishandling repeated professional and
behavioral problems of an assistant coach. Smith was suspended without pay from Aug. 31 through Sept. 16.

Meyer’s texts raise open records question
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Any attempt by
Ohio State coach Urban
Meyer to eliminate workrelated text messages
on his university-issued
phone to hide information would be illegal,
open records experts said
following a two-week
investigation into his
handling of domestic violence allegations against
an assistant coach.
Ohio State suspended
Meyer for three games
after investigators concluded he mishandled
Zach Smith’s repeated
professional and behavioral problems and
instead protected his
protege for years through
domestic violence allegations, a drug problem and
poor job performance.
Among the many questions raised by the investigation into the highly
successful coach of the
ﬁfth-ranked Buckeyes was
how he responded when
the story broke.
On Aug. 1, investigators say, Meyer and the
team’s director of operations discussed ways to
change the settings on his
phone to eliminate messages older than a year.
The discussion came the
same day a story said
Smith’s then-wife had
shared allegations of
domestic violence with
Meyer’s wife, Shelley

Meyer, via texts.
“A bad article,” Brian
Voltolini, director of
football operations, told
Meyer on the practice
ﬁeld, according to investigators.
Courtney Smith alleged
her husband attacked her
in 2015. Zach Smith has
never been criminally
charged with domestic
violence. The university
put Meyer on paid leave
and began investigating
after Courtney Smith
spoke out publicly, sharing text messages and
photos she traded in 2015
with Shelley Meyer, who
is a registered nurse and
instructor at Ohio State.
Zach Smith was ﬁred last
month after his ex-wife
asked a judge for a protective order.
When the university
obtained Meyer’s phone
on Aug. 2, it was set to
only retain texts within
a year. Investigators said
they couldn’t determine if
that setting was made in
response to the breaking
news story.
“It is nonetheless
concerning that his ﬁrst
reaction to a negative
media piece exposing
his knowledge of the
2015-2016 law enforcement investigation was
to worry about the media
getting access to information and discussing how
to delete messages older

than a year,” the report
said, referring to Meyer.
The latest university
records retention policy
doesn’t single out text
messages. A category covering “transient” records
includes telephone messages, some emails, drafts
and other documents that
“serve to convey information of a temporary value,
have a very short lived
administrative, legal and/
or ﬁscal value.”
Those should be
disposed of once their
“administrative, legal or
ﬁscal use has expired,”
but no ﬁxed time is allotted. It could be “as short
as a few hours and could
be as long as several
days or weeks,” the 2016
policy says.
As murky as the policy
seems, Fred Gittes, a
veteran open records
lawyer in Columbus, said
any elimination of texts
on Meyer’s universityissued phone related to
his coaching responsibility would break Ohio’s
open records law. He also
noted that a lack of older
text messages would
make it difﬁcult to determine whether NCAA
recruiting rules were
violated.
Open records advocate
Dennis Hetzel questioned
why investigators didn’t
do more to track down
any older messages.

“What happened to
these text messages
seems like a pretty big
thing to ignore or not pay
a lot of attention to,” said
Hetzel, executive director
of the Ohio News Media
Association.
Tom Mars, an attorney
who pried phone records
out of the University of
Mississippi in a lawsuit
on behalf of former Rebels coach Houston Nutt
in 2017, questioned why
Ohio State couldn’t determine if Meyer deleted
text messages from his
university phone.
“If you can get possession of the phone, with
the right software, the
right forensic expert, you
can retrieve everything
the user thought was
deleted,” Mars said.
He added: “I have a lot
of respect for the people
who oversaw that investigation, but I think they
owe the public an explanation why they weren’t
able to recover deleted
text messages, assuming
they made that effort.”
Nutt himself had more
than 1,000 text messages exposed by a public
records request in 2007
when he was the coach
at Arkansas. His lawyer
pulled phone records
from former Ole Miss
coach Hugh Freeze in a
See MEYER | 10

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

XXX�NZEBJMZUSJCVOF�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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Tuesday, August 28, 2018 7

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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Carpenter fuels
Rio men’s XC in
season opener
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

PATASKALA, Ohio - Kameron Carpenter gave
the University of Rio Grande its top ﬁnish by
ﬁnishing seventh in the Trailblazer Invitational
hosted by Ohio Christian University, Friday evening, at Watkins Memorial High School.
Carpenter, a senior from Newark, Ohio, completed the 5K course in a time of 17:02.
No other RedStorm runner cracked the top 20
in the 53-runner ﬁeld.
Junior Keshawn Jones (Mansﬁeld, OH) ﬁnished 23rd in a time of 17:39, while junior River
Spicer (West Milton, OH) placed 27th in a ﬁnish
of 18:11. Sophomore Dean Freitag (Magnolia,
OH) rounded out Rio’s quartet of runners in 37th
place with a time of 19:05.
The invite, which included four other schools
from the River States Conference, was not scored
as a team competition.
Point Park University’s Xavier Stephens had
the fastest ﬁnish with a time of 16:19.
Rio Grande returns to action next Friday at the
Wittenberg Invitational in Springﬁeld, Ohio.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of
Rio Grande.

RedStorm volleyball opens with losses
By Randy Payton

on Friday for a lack of eligible players.
The Fighting Scots
VIENNA, W.Va. — The posted a 3-1 (24-26,
University of Rio Grande 25-17, 25-15, 25-18) vicvolleyball team learned a tory in the RedStorm’s
tough lesson on Saturday ﬁrst match, while Notre
- sometimes it doesn’t pay Dame cruised to a 3-0
win by scores of 25-13,
to be helpful.
25-15, 25-12.
The RedStorm
Rio Grande tallied a
extended a kind hand to
a neighbor by being a late .031 attack percentage
and had 13 service errors
stand-in for a tri-match
in the opening match
hosted by Ohio Valley
loss.
University, but suffered
Freshman Ashley Taylosses to both the host
Fighting Scots and Notre lor (Chillicothe, OH)
Dame College at the Sny- led the RedStorm at the
net with nine kills, while
der Activity Center.
sophomore Macy Roell
Head coach Billina
Donaldson’s squad, which (Farmersville, OH) ﬁnished with a team-high
was originally supposed
26 assists, 12 digs, four
to open its’ regular seablocks (two solo, two
son schedule next week,
assists) and two service
agreed to help out OVU
aces.
on short notice when
Sophomore Baylee PurBlueﬁeld State College
sifull (New Carlisle, OH)
pulled out of the event

For Ohio Valley Publishing

For Ohio Valley Publishing

BASEBALL
Major League Baseball Players
Association
MLBPA — Named Bruce Meyer senior director, collective bargaining &amp;
legal.
American Association
FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS —
Released C Chris Coste.
LINCOLN SALTDOGS — Traded LHP

Jose Jose to Somerset (Atlantic) for a
player to be named.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
NFL — Named Tim Ellis chief marketing officer.
ATLANTA FALCONS — Signed K Giorgio Tavecchio.
DETROIT LIONS — Signed DE Robert
Ayers. Waived CB Josh Okonye.

also had two service aces
and three block assists
in the loss, while junior
Katie Hemsley (Jackson,
OH) totaled 11 digs.
Ohio Valley, a member
of the NCAA Division
II Great Midwest Athletic Conference, got
10 kills each from Carolina Ramirez and Jessica
Rafay in the win.
Kanan Fuimaono and
Alyssa DeSplinter had
18 assists apiece for the
Fighting Scots, while
Kaylynn Makimoto had
a team-high 18 digs and
Yolaine Lopez ﬁnished
with 14 digs and ﬁve service aces.
OVU ﬁnished with a
.214 attack percentage
and had 12 service aces
as a team.
Things didn’t get better along the net for Rio
Grande against Notre

Dame College, as the
RedStorm ﬁnished with
more attack errors (25)
than it did kills (20) for a
-.048 attack percentage.
Taylor again led the
way with six kills in a losing cause, while Roell had
17 assists and 10 digs.
Mary Kate McHugh
had a match-high 19 kills
in the triumphant effort
for NDC, while Paige
Staudacher had 31 assists
and Alexandra Kaeberlein
ﬁnished with 16 digs for
the Falcons, a member
of the NCAA Division II
Mountain East Conference.
Notre Dame had just 13
attack errors as opposed
to 41 kills in the victory.
Rio Grande returns to
action next Thursday in
its originally scheduled
season opener at the University of Pikeville.

Sullivan leads RedStorm women at invite
By Randy Payton

TRANSACTIONS

Daily Sentinel

PATASKALA, Ohio - Abalena
Sullivan ran to a seventh-place
showing to give the University of
Rio Grande its top ﬁnish in the
Trailblazer Invitational hosted by
Ohio Christian University, Friday
evening, at Watkins Memorial
High School.

Sullivan, a freshman from Chillicothe, Ohio, ﬁnished the 3K course
in 12:05.
Junior Kelsey Miller (Georgetown, OH), the only other RedStorm runner in the 38-runner
ﬁeld, ﬁnished 20th in a time of
13:13.
The invite, which included ﬁve
other schools (four of which, like
Rio, hailed from the River States

Conference), was not scored as a
team competition.
Point Park University recorded
four of the top ﬁve ﬁnishers,
including Anna Shields with the
winning time of 10:49.
Rio Grande returns to action
next Friday at the Wittenberg Invitational in Springﬁeld, Ohio.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director
at the University of Rio Grande.

Rio women’s golf team finishes 7th at Trine Fall Classic
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

ANGOLA, Ind. — The University of
Rio Grande women’s golf team opened
the fall portion of its 2018 schedule
with a seventh-place ﬁnish in the Trine
University Kickoff Fall Classic, Thursday afternoon, at Zollner Golf Course.
The Redstorm ﬁnished last among

the participating schools with a team
score of 150-over par 438.
Grace College won the team title with
a 44-over par total of 332, while the
host team was a distant second at 364.
Grace also had two of the top three
individual ﬁnishers in Sydney Abbott
and Lauren Keiser. The duo - along with
Olivet’s Nicole Deweyert - all ﬁnished at
10-over par 82.

Freshman Abby Eichmiller (Vincent,
OH) gave Rio its top individual ﬁnish,
tying for 19th place among the 45 competitors with a 25-over par round of 97.
Also for the RedStorm, freshman
Elizabeth Leach (Waterford, OH) was
30th with a 33-over par 105; freshman
Hunter Rockhold (Clinton, OH) tied for
37th place after carding a 44-over round
of 116; freshman Madison Duskey (Bev-

Classifieds
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE WELL IMPROVEMENTS
MEGIS COUNTY
LEGAL NOTICE- INVITATION TO BID
Sealed Bids will be received for furnishing all labor, materials
and equipment necessary to complete a project known as
Village of Syracuse Well Improvements at the Village of
Syracuse (the “Owner”), 2581 3rd Street, Syracuse, Ohio
45779 until 11:00 P.M. local time on September 12th, 2018,
and at said time and place, publicly opened and read aloud.
Bids may be mailed or delivered in advance to the Syracuse
Village office at the above address.

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

A digital copy of the Bid Documents containing the Bid Requirements and Contract Documents (including all bid sheets,
plans, specifications, and any addenda) can be obtained from
IBI Group, 5085 Tile Plant Rd., New Lexington, Ohio 43764
with a non-refundable payment of $75 each. Paper copies of
these documents may be requested for an additional
non-refundable cost of $75. Checks should be made payable to
IBI Group. This legal ad will be available for viewing at Builders
Exchange and Dodge Data &amp; Analytics.

DONALD E. SAVAGE
LORELEI SAVAGE, et al.

Each Bidder is required to furnish with its submission of the
fully completed Bid Documents, a Bid Security in accordance
with Section 153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security
furnished in Bond form Bid Guarantee and Contract and Performance Bond as provided in Section 153.57.1 of the Ohio
Revised Code), must be issued by a Surety Company or
Corporation licensed in the State of Ohio to provide said su
rety. Those Bidders tthat elect to submit bid guaranty in the
form of a certified check, cashier’s check or letter of credit pursuant to Chapter 1305 of the Ohio Revised Code and in
accordance with Section 153.54 (C) of the Ohio Revised
Code. Any such letter of credit shall be revocable only at the
optionof the beneficiary Owner. The amount of the certified
check, cashier’s check or letter of credit shall be equal to ten
(10) percent of the Bid and the Successful Bidder will be re
quired to submit a bond in the form provided in 153.57 of the
Ohio Revised Code in conjunction with the execution of the
Contract.
Each proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties submitting the Bidding Documents and all persons
interested therein. Each bidder must submit evidence of its experiences on projects of similar size and complexity. The
Owner intends that this Project be completed no later than the
time period as set forth in Article 4 of the Standard Form of
Agreement Between Owner and Contractor on the Basis of a
Stipulated Price.
Each Bidder must insure that all employees and applicants for
employment are not discriminated against because of race,
color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap, ancestry, or age.
All contractors and subcontractors involved with the project
shall to the extent practicable, use Ohio products, materials,
services and labor in the implementation of their project.
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED
IN SECTION 143.011 OFTHE (OHIO) REVISED CODE APPLY
TO THIS PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE
(OHIO) REVISED CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF
THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
Additionally, contractor compliance with the equal employment opportunity requirements of Ohio Administrative Code
Chapter 123, the Governor’s Executive Order of 1972, a
nd Governor’s Executive Order 84-9 shall be required.
Bidders must comply with the prevailing wage rates on
Public Improvements in Megis County as determined by
the Ohio Department of Commerce, Divisionof Labor and
Worker Safety – Wage and Hour.
The Engineer’s estimate for this project is $205,000
The Village of Syracuse reserves the right to waive any informalities or irregularities.The Village of Syracuse reserves the
right to reject any or all bids or to increase or decrease or omit
any item or times and/or award the bid to the lowest and best
bidder.
8/28/18, 9/4/18, 9/11/18

Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as Trustee for the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement dated as of May 1,2005 Park Place
Securities, Inc. Asset-Backed Pass-Through Certificates
Series 2005-WHQ3 Case Number:
17-CV-007
Plaintiff,
Judge: Carson Crow
vs.
LEGAL NOTICE

Defendants,
The Defendant, Unknown Heirs, Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and Assigns and their Spouses, if any, of
Lorelei Savage, but whose current address is unknown, will
take notice that on January 24, 2017, the Plaintiff, Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A., as Trustee for the Pooling and Servicing Agreement dated as of May 1,2005 Park Place Securities, Inc.
Asset-Backed Pass-Through Certificates Series 2005-WHQ3,
filed its Complaint in Case No. 17-CV-007 , in the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio, seeking a foreclosure of
its mortgage interest in the real property located at 31175
Painter Ridge Road, Vinton, OH 45686, Permanent Parcel No.
1300161003,("Real Estate"), and alleged that the Defendant,
have or may have an interest in this Real Estate.
The Defendant, Unknown Heirs, Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and Assigns and their Spouses, if any, of
Lorelei Savage is required to answer the Plaintiff's Complaint
within twenty-eight (28) days after the last date of publication of
this notice. In the event that the Defendant, Unknown Heirs,
Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and Assigns
and their Spouses, if any, of Lorelei Savage fails to respond in
the allotted time, judgment by default can be entered against
them for the relief requested in the Plaintiff’s Complaint.
Carrie L. Davis (0083281)
Thomas M. Drinan (0080307)
Michael R. Brinkman (0040079)
Yanfang Marilyn Ramirez (0074242)
Rachel K. Pearson (0079176)
Attorney for Plaintiff
Reisenfeld &amp; Associates LLC
3962 Red Bank Road
Cincinnati, OH 45227
voice: (513) 322-7000
facsimile: (513) 322-7099
8/21/18, 8/28/18, 9/4/18

erly, OH) was 40th with a 48-over score
of 120 and freshman Erin Fridley (Delaware, OH) was 41st with a 49-over
round of 121.
Rio Grande returns to action next
weekend at Indiana East University’s
Red Wolf Classic in Richmond, Ind.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, August 28, 2018 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Local CC teams compete at Wellston

MLB
National League
All Times EDT
East Division
W
L Pct GB
Atlanta
73 57 .562
—
Philadelphia
70 60 .538
3
Washington
65 66 .496 8½
New York
58 72 .446 15
Miami
53 79 .402 21
Central Division
W
L Pct GB
Chicago
76 53 .589
—
St. Louis
73 58 .557
4
Milwaukee
73 59 .553 4½
Pittsburgh
64 67 .489 13
Cincinnati
56 75 .427 21
West Division
W
L Pct GB
Arizona
72 58 .554
—
Colorado
71 59 .546
1
Los Angeles
70 61 .534 2½
San Francisco 65 67 .492
8
San Diego
50 83 .376 23½
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Philadelphia 8, Toronto 3
Atlanta 4, Miami 0
Washington 15, N.Y. Mets 0
Milwaukee 7, Pittsburgh 4
Chicago Cubs 9, Cincinnati 0
St. Louis 12, Colorado 3
San Francisco 3, Texas 1
Arizona 5, Seattle 2
L.A. Dodgers 7, San Diego 3

American League
All Times EDT
East Division
W
L Pct
Boston
90 42 .682
New York
83 47 .638
Tampa Bay
70 61 .534
Toronto
60 70 .462
Baltimore
37 94 .282
Central Division
W
L Pct
Cleveland
74 56 .569
Minnesota
61 69 .469
Detroit
53 78 .405
Chicago
51 79 .392
Kansas City
40 91 .305
West Division
W
L Pct
Houston
80 50 .615
Oakland
79 52 .603
Seattle
74 57 .565
Los Angeles
63 68 .481
Texas
58 74 .439

By Scott Jones

GB
—
6
19½
29
52½

sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

WELLSTON, Ohio —
Off to the races.
River Valley, Southern and South Gallia
each began their 2018
cross country campaign
during the 2018 Golden
Rocket Invitational held
Saturday on the campus of Wellston High
School.
A total of 19 teams
and 247 varsity participants competed in
the annual event, with
Trimble coming away
with the boys team title
and Vinton County capturing top team honors
in the girls event.
Both varsity races featured over 100 runners
apiece, with 140 boys
and 107 girls taking to
the course in the separate competitions.
The Tomcats posted
a winning score of 35
points in the boys race,
ﬁnishing six points
ahead of runner-up Athens (41). River Valley
was the only local program to record a team
score after ﬁnishing

GB
—
13
21½
23
34½
GB
—
1½
6½
17½
23

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Philadelphia 8, Toronto 3
Chicago White Sox 7, Detroit 2
Tampa Bay 9, Boston 1
Oakland 6, Minnesota 2
Cleveland 12, Kansas City 5
San Francisco 3, Texas 1
Houston 3, L.A. Angels 1
Arizona 5, Seattle 2
N.Y. Yankees 5, Baltimore 3

Meyer

between Meyer and Zach
Smith from July 18-July
24, 2018, and between
Oct. 25, 2015 and Dec.
From page 6
1, 2015. The paper asked
lawsuit Nutt ﬁled against for the same communications between athletic
the school. The records
revealed a one-minute call director Gene Smith —
no relation to Zach Smith
to an escort service and
— and Meyer for the
led to an internal invessame time period for any
tigation that resulted in
materials “pertaining to
Freeze’s resignation.
While smartphone tech- Zach Smith.”
Although top Ohio
nology can create a trove
State lawyers and athletic
of public records, it also
allows someone to try to ofﬁcials were aware of
this records’ request,
hide them with a simple
“no one appears to have
keystroke or reset, said
Adam Marshall, litigation actually checked Coach
attorney at the Reporters Meyer’s phone or even
approached him about the
Committee for Freedom
requests,” the investigaof the Press.
“The issue of retaining, tion found.
The Associated Press
searching and producing
made a request for simitext messages and other
records is a huge problem lar information on Aug. 2;
across the nation when it the university has yet to
comes to implementation respond.
Jo Potuto, a former
of public records law,”
chairwoman of the NCAA
Marshall said.
A public entity such as Division I Committee on
Infractions and a law proa major university like
fessor at Nebraska, said a
should be able to easily
distinct protocol should
create policies and probe in place for retaining
grams to hold on to text
records.
messages for extended
“You don’t want to
periods, he added.
be in a situation as an
The investigation was
led by Mary Jo White, an employer that there is
attorney and former chair such a heavy level of
of the U.S. Securities and suspicion as to how
you’re doing your job
Exchange Commission.
that you have to retain
The investigative team
records going back forsaid the “lack of clarity”
surrounding Meyer’s text ever,” she said. “On the
messages was compound- other hand, I do believe
ed by the university’s fail- strongly a university
should have policies that
ure to promptly respond
if an investigation or
to two open records
the start of an inquiry
requests by the student
is being triggered, then
newspaper, the Lantern,
there should be a policy
on July 25.
that nobody should be
The newspaper asked
erasing texts from that
for emails and text mespoint forward.”
sages and call histories

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

IRONTON, Ohio — Going
strong a week into history.
The Gallia Academy girls soccer team remained unbeaten
after wrapping up its inaugural
opening week as a varsity sport
on Saturday afternoon with a
4-1 victory over host Ironton
Saint Joseph in a non-conference
friendly in Lawrence County.
The visiting Blue Angels (2-00) — who posted a 2-0 win at
Chesapeake in their ﬁrst-ever
match on Tuesday — have yet
to trail in a contest this fall as
the Blue and White led 1-0 at

and threw a pair of
interceptions. Jack Leith
led the hosts with four
catches for 33 yards.
The Rebels open league

BROADCAST

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)

13 (WOWK)

Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

29 (FREE)

CABLE

18
24
25
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P.O. BOX 802 | 19 LOCUST STREET | GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631-8467
Phone: 740-441-9941 or (Toll-Free) 1-877-545-7242
Fax: 740-446-4741 E-Mail: rickmcdanielinctax@sbcglobal.net

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for a workshop addressing
issues pertaining to a minister’s compensation
package, accountable reimbursement plans, housing
allowance, fringe benefits, and the responsibility of
the church &amp; accountable individuals.

57

(OXY)

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60
61

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You should plan to attend if you have any dealings
with church finances, or any interest in these matters.

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To register, or for more information, call toll-free
877-545-7242 or 740-441-9941.

67 (HIST)
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First Baptist
Church

I N C O M E TA X P R E PA R AT I O N S I N C E 1 9 7 3

(ESPN)
(ESPN2)

39 (AMC)

JoinUs

74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

6:30

place effort.
Jessica Luther led
the Lady Rebels with
a 52nd place time of
26:43.10, followed by
Cara Frazee (27:44.16)
in 64th and Leslee
Clark (35:54.67) in
104th place.
Lauren Twyman led
the Lady Raiders with
a 37th place effort of
25:24.19, followed by
Hannah Culpepper
(25:30.93) and Kaylee
Gillman (26:14.69)
with respective ﬁnishes of 39th and 48th.
Josie Jones (27:18.11)
was also 59th overall,
while Connie Stewart
(27:36.37) followed
with a 63rd place effort.
Julia Nutter
(28:06.92) and Kate
Nutter (30:19.72)
rounded out the topseven ﬁnishers for
River Valley as they
placed 69th and 84th,
respectively.
Visit baumspage.com
for complete results of
the 2018 Golden Rocket
Invitational.
Scott Jones can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext 2106.

intermission and 2-0 early in the
second half before tacking on the
ﬁnal two scores of regulation.
Kyrsten Sanders provided the
only ﬁrst half goal with an unassisted boot in the 13th minute,
then Sarah Watts gave GAHS a
2-0 cushion in the 54th minute
with an unassisted goal.
The Lady Flyers followed their
only goal in the 55th minute to
close to within 2-1, but the Blue
Angels re-established a two-goal
lead following an unassisted goal
by Junon Ohmura in the 63rd
minute.
Sanders tacked on the ﬁnal
score with an unassisted goal
just seconds later, also in the

63rd minute.
Alexis Nickels made 15 saves
in net for Gallia Academy. The
guests also claimed a 25-16 edge
in shots.
Abby Cremeans and Preslee
Reed each scored a goal in the
opener at Chesapeake earlier in
the week.
The Blue Angels traveled to
Southeastern on Monday night
and make their home debut on
Thursday when Fairland comes
to Lester Field for an Ohio Valley Conference matchup at 5:30
p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 28
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
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America's Got Talent "Live Quarter Finals 3" (N)

Making It "Inside Out" (N)

America's Got Talent "Live Quarter Finals 3" (N)

Making It "Inside Out" (N)

Bachelor in Paradise One guy is feeling reassured about Castaways "Three's a
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Crowd" (N)
Best of WOUB
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Bachelor in Paradise One guy is feeling reassured about
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NCIS "One Step Forward" Bull "Absolution"

Castaways "Three's a
Crowd" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans
"Powder Keg"
Beat Shazam "Episode
Love Connection "Armond Eyewitness News at 10
Three"
and Grace"
p.m. (N)
GI Jews: Jewish Americans in World War II Discover the Pavlo Live in Kastoria Pavlo
story of the brave Jewish Americans who served in World returns to Greece for a
War II.
spectacular concert.
NCIS: New Orleans
NCIS "One Step Forward" Bull "Absolution"
"Powder Keg"

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

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Blue Bloods "Backstabbers"
Press (N)
WVU (N)
(12:00) ITF Tennis U.S. Open
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Close for Comfort"
How I Met How I Met
Your Mother Your Mother
Mom
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Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at St. Louis Cardinals Site: Busch Stadium (L)
ITF Tennis U.S. Open Men's and Women's First Round Site: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center (L)
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"Emotional Bootcamp" (N)
Unlocked (N) First Si. (N) "Fantasies and Firsts" (N)
Zookeeper (2011, Comedy) Rosario Dawson, Leslie
Ace Ventura: Pet Detective (1994, Comedy)
Bibb, Kevin James. TVPG
Courteney Cox, Sean Young, Jim Carrey. TV14
Mom
John Wick ('14, Act) Keanu Reeves. When Russian mobsters kill Ink Master "Opening Shots"
his beloved dog, an ex-hit man sets out to exact vengeance. TVMA
(SP) (N)
Loud House Loud House Loud House SpongeBob P Ranger (N) SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Friends
Friends
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Super Smackdown
Miz (SF) (N) Chrisley (F)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Wrecked
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3 Days to Kill ('14, Act) Kevin Costner. TV14
American Sniper ('14, War) Sienna Miller, Bradley Cooper. TVMA
Movie
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Freeman, Robert Duvall, Elijah Wood. TV14
tries to save his son from a polar storm engulfing New York. TV14
After ...
D. Catch "No Safe Harbor" Deadliest Catch (N)
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(:05) Hard to Kill (N)
The First 48 "Senior Year" The First 48 "Calling for a The First 48 "Monster"
The First 48 "Trap House" The First 48 "Deadly Secrets
Killer/ Boiling Point"
and True Lies"
River Monsters Goes Tribal Great Barrier Reef
Wild Peru: Andes Battleground (N)
Chicago P.D. "A Beautiful Chicago P.D. "Call It
Chicago P.D. "Get My
Chicago P.D. "The Weigh Chicago P.D. "Chicken,
Friendship"
Macaroni"
Cigarettes"
Station"
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Law &amp; Order "Born Again" LawOrder "Girl Most Likely" Law &amp; Order "Equal Rights" Law &amp; Order "Slaughter" Law &amp; Order "Dazzled"
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Grown Ups ('10, Com) Kevin James, Adam Sandler. TVPG
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Loves Ray
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Live Free or Die "Forever
The Human Family Tree
America Before Columbus Millions of people lived in
Lost Treasures of the Maya
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Snake Kings
GloryRd. (N) Glory Road Mecum10
Mecum10
Octane (N) Caf./ Octane Glory Road Glory Road PN on the Road (N)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Best (N) Michigan
UFC UFC 220 Site: TD Garden
Forged in Fire "Cavalry
Forged in Fire "The Lion
Forged in Fire "The Arming Forged in Fire "The
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Counting (N) Counting (N)
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Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck "Stew Coup" Below Deck (N)
Million "Yippee Ki Yay!" (N)
(5:00)
Big Momma's House 2 TVPG (:35)
Obsessed ('09, Thril) Idris Elba, Beyoncé Knowles. TV14
Hit the Floor (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
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Flippers (N) Desert Flip H.Hunt (N) House (N)
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Skyfall ('12,
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Act) Daniel Craig. TVPG
prison is betrayed and locked in the most secure facility. TVMA
Tucker, Tom Wilkinson, Jackie Chan. TVPG

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

(5:35) Murder on the Orient Express A

OH-70073191

REGISTRATION WILL BEGIN AT 8:30.
REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED.

(ROOT)

27 (LIFE)

42

1100 Fourth Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
saturday, sept. 8
9:00 am to noon

(WGN)

30 (SPIKE)

INCOME TAX SERVICES

6 PM

WSAZ News
3 (WSAZ)
3 (N)
WTAP News
4 (WTAP)
at Six (N)
ABC 6 News
6 (WSYX)
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

play in their home debut
Friday night when Waterford comes to town for a
7:30 p.m. clash between
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division programs.

Rick McDaniel

23:45.17.
Tony Tonkovich of
Athens won the boys
race with a time of
16:45.67, with Hunter
Morgan of Whiteoak
coming in second with
a mark of 17:45.25.
Rylee Fee of VCHS
won the girls race with
a time of 20:05.93,
while her teammate
Lilly Chevalier was the
runner-up with a time
of 21:10.68.
The Lady Vikings
came away with the
girls team title after
posting a winning
total of 23. Athens was
second with 52 points,
while River Valley
placed sixth with a tally
of 171.
Sydney Roush had the
top local ﬁnish and also
led the Lady Tornadoes
with a 13th place effort
of 22:57.42, while Mallory Johnson (25:08.17)
and Madison Lisle
(27:47.54) were next
for SHS with respective
ﬁnishes of 33rd and
66th. Kathryn Matson
(28:35.14) completed
the top-ﬁnishers for
Southern with a 77th

TUESDAY EVENING

12 (WVPB)

From page 6

ﬁfth with 151 points.
The top local ﬁnisher
came from the Raiders
as Rory Twyman placed
12th with a time of
18:57.04. Dylan Fulks
(19:17.85) and Cody
Wooten (19:59.37) also
had respective efforts
of 18th and 27th for the
Silver and Black.
RVHS senior Caleb
McKnight (21:35.40)
provided a 59th place
effort, while Ian Eblin
(21:45.46) and Drew
Dillon (21:53.13) followed with efforts of
61st and 65th, respectively. Rounding out
the top-seven ﬁnishers for River Valley
was Nathan Young
(25:32.05) who placed
119th.
South Gallia had one
runner earn a top-20
ﬁnish, as Garrett Frazee
(19:24.42) was 19th.
Grifﬁn Davis closed
out the Rebels ﬁnishers, with a 110th place
effort of 25:10.90.
For the Tornadoes,
David Dunfee was the
lone male competitor,
posting a 97th place
ﬁnish with a time of

Blue Angels top Ironton St. Joe, 4-1

11 (WVAH)

Vikings

Daily Sentinel

7:30
Vice News
Tonight (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Father Figures (2017, Comedy) Ed Helms, J.K. Simmons, Hard Knocks '18 (N)
400 (HBO) renowned detective investigates a murder
Owen Wilson. Two brothers learn a shocking truth about
while aboard a luxury passenger train.
their long-lost father, and set out to find him. TVMA
(:15)
A Walk in the Clouds ('95, Rom) Keanu Reeves.
Waking Ned Devine Ian Bannen. Two (:35) Going in Style Michael Caine. Three
450 (MAX) A disillusioned Second World War soldier gallantly offers to friends attempt to get their greedy hands on men, in need of money, decide to rob the
help an unwed pregnant girl. TVPG
a dead man's winning lottery ticket. TVPG bank they blame for their troubles. TVPG
(5:00)
Amistad A group of African (:45)
Enemy of the State (1998, Action) Gene Hackman, Jon Voight, Who Is
500 (SHOW) slaves are tried for murder after they kill
America?
Will Smith. A successful lawyer is pursued by a treacherous National
Freeway TVM
one of their captors. TVMA
Security Agency official. TVMA

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