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                  <text>When life
and science
don’t mesh

Herding
cats,
literally

All-district
softball
squad

OPINION s 4A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 24, Volume 53

Sunday, June 16, 2019 s $2

A dignified ending...

Ready for
‘River Rec’
festival
Schedule of
events released
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

Photos by Beth Sergent | OVP

...on Flag Day
A solemn, patriotic tradition took place at 6:14 p.m. on Friday
(6/14), Flag Day, at Fort Randolph in Point Pleasant. Hosting
a flag retirement ceremony were the Sons of the American
Revolution assisted by Daughters of the American Revolution
and Children of the American Revolution. The actual process of
flag retirement consists of folding the flag in the proper manner,
and respectfully placing it onto a fire where it is consumed. In
previous years, hundreds of flags have been retired during just
one ceremony at Fort Randolph. Friday’s ceremony included
the singing of the National Anthem, the Pledge of Allegiance,
inspection of the flags, a prayer and gun salute.

See RIVER | 5A

Request for
transcript
granted in
Tucker case

Making progress
Work continues
on second Habitat
House in Middleport
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MIDDLEPORT — Work is
continuing on Meigs County’s
second Habitat for Humanity
House which is being built in
Middleport.
Volunteers, along with Construction Site Supervisor Bryan
Smith and the homeowners
have been making progress on
the house after weather cancelled the Blitz Build in early

May. Despite the cancellation of
the two-day building event, volunteers have completed a large
portion of the work, with the
project to continue throughout
the month of July.
The three bedroom, two
bathroom house will be home to
Shad and Aja Collins and their
three children.
When visiting the building
site recently, Aja was working
alongside a crew of volunteers
from Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Volunteers are still needed to
work on the project which is to
be completed later this summer.
Signups are currently available
online for dates in late June and
throughout July. Those interested in volunteering may sign

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

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Brian Billings. Pedal boats were
once a staple at the lake. After some
discussion, the council approved to
purchase two new pedal boats for
Krodel Park. They authorized City
Accountant Shannon Pearson to seek
out the pedal boats and purchase
them. Following in the week, City
Inspector Randy Hall and his work
crew installed the Krodel Park Pedal
Boat launch pad.
Billings shared this launch pad
will be used exclusively for the pedal
boats.
The pedal boats will be rented at
the Yak Shak. Currently, there is one
pedal boat on hand and the second

POMEROY — Before
ﬁling his sentencing
memorandum in the case,
the new attorney for
former corrections and
probation ofﬁcer Larry
Tucker has requested a
transcript of the nearly
two-week trial in the
case.
Tucker, 56, of Pomeroy,
was convicted on May 2
of 24 of the 25 charges
considered by a 12-person
jury in his cases.
At trial, Tucker was
represented by Public
Defender Kirk McVay. In
mid-May, Tucker retained
attorney William Lee Burton as his representation
in the case.
Burton previously
requested an extension
to ﬁle the sentencing
memorandum in the case,
as he was retained just
days before the ﬁling was
due. Judge Linton Lewis
granted the request, giving Burton an additional
two weeks (from the date
of his order) to ﬁle the
memorandum. The ﬁling
is now due to be made
by June 17. It is unclear
how the request for the
transcript will impact the
ﬁling deadline.
The request for the
transcript was made
by Burton on June 12,
according to the time
stamp on the court
documents. On June 13,
Judge Lewis granted the

See PEDAL | 7A

See TUCKER | 5A

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Volunteers Pam Muncy and Mitch Smith from Pleasant Valley Hospital are
pictured with homeowner Aja Collins at the new Habitat for Humanity House.

up at https://hfhseo.volunteermatrix.com.
Aja said she is looking forward to having the stability for
her children to live in the new
house for much of their childhood. She explained that growing up she spent 17 years in the

same house, and hoped for the
same for her young children.
The new house is located on
Brownell Avenue in Middleport,
next to the ﬁrst house constructed through the program.
See PROGRESS | 5A

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

GALLIPOLIS — The
54 annual Gallipolis
River Recreation Festival,
or “River Rec,” is fast
approaching with actor/
musician John Schneider
performing a free concert
on Independence Day,
alongside other free, family-friendly activities set
for July 3-4 at City Park
in downtown Gallipolis.
This year, on July 3,
also known as “KidzDay,”
visitors can experience
free KidZone games and
free inﬂatables. Other
“KidzDay” Events, set
for 2-6 p.m., July 3, are
bowling, football skills
challenge, soccer skills,
corn hole, Connect Four,
Jenga, hula hoop-jump
rope and bubble gum
blowing contest. A Nerf
Gun War is set for 4-6
p.m. and a Foam Party
will take place at 5 p.m.
New to “River Rec”
this year, is the Circus
Sideshow set to roll out

An old favorite returns
By Erin (Perkins) Johnson
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT — This week,
another addition perfect for summertime fun was added to Krodel Park
and it’s a blast from the past.
At the recently held Point Pleasant
City Council meeting, the council
members discussed how well the
additions to Krodel Park were beneﬁting the park and how much the
visitors were enjoying them. To give
park visitors an added activity, they
discussed adding pedal boats to rent
from the Yak Shak, explained Mayor

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, June 16, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
MARY ELIZABETH (MCGRAW) VEST

WILDERMUTH
MIDDLEPORT — A Memorial Celebration for Jim
Wildermuth will be held Sunday, June 23. A burial
service will be at 1 p.m. at Beech Grove Cemetery,
followed by a gathering at the Middleport Church of
Christ Fellowship Hall from 2-4 p.m.

ALLEN, Texas
— Mary Elizabeth
(McGraw) Vest, 89, of
Allen, Texas, (formerly of
Bidwell and Chillicothe)
went to be with her Lord
HAMM
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Mary Elizabeth Boyd and Savior Wednesday,
Hamm, 69, of Point Pleasant, W.Va. died on Thursday June 12, 2019. Mary
was the daughter of the
night, June 13, 2019 at the Emogene Dolin Hospice
late Clyde and Minnie
House, Huntington, W.Va.
Services will be held at 3:00 p.m., Saturday, June 15, (Fraley) McGraw. She
was born July 10, 1929 in
2019 at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant
Greenup, Kentucky.
with Pastor Bob Patterson ofﬁciating. Burial will folShe married Harold
low at Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Visitation will be
“Hank” Vest January 26,
held one hour prior to the service.
1946 and he preceded
her in death as well as
brothers Clyde Jr., Frank
WOODALL
and Wayne McGraw, and
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Kennedy Nicole
sister Sue Graves.
Woodall, infant daughter of Randie Woodall, died on
Surviving are her chilFriday, June 14, 2019, while at Pleasant Valley Hospidren Diana (Richard)
tal.
Bergman of Allen, Texas;
A graveside service will be held Monday, June 17,
Roger (Nola Kay) Vest
2019 at 11 a.m. at Forest Hills Cemetery, Flatrock,
of Chillicothe and Teresa
W.Va. with Sampy Hart ofﬁciating.
Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. is serv- “Terri” (Ron) Toler of
ing the family.
CUNNINGHAM
LETART, W.Va. — Lawrence Junior Cunningham,
81, of Letart, W.Va. died Thursday, June 13, 2019 at
his home, following a short illness.
The service will be held at 3 p.m., Sunday, June 16,
2019 at Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va. with
Pastor Huling Greene ofﬁciating. Burial with full military rites provided by American Legion Post #140,
New Haven, W.Va. and the VFW Post #9926, Mason
will follow in the Zerkle Cemetery, Letart. Visitation
will be from 1 p.m. until time of service on Sunday at
the funeral home.

MIDDLEPORT —
Sarah Lucille (Boyles)
Johnson, “Sug/Sugar”,
65 of Middleport, passed
away on June 11, 2019,
with her family by her
side, at home.
She was born to the
late Clarence Edward and
Sara Lee (Laudermilt)
Boyles on February 23,
1954 in Mason, West
SISK
Virginia. Sarah is also
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — Lisa Jane Sisk, of New
preceded in death by both
Haven, W.Va. died on Thursday, June 13, 2019 at her
her parents and a brother
residence.
Clarence Eugene Boyles.
Arrangements are incomplete at this time and will
She graduated from
be announced by the Anderson Funeral Home in New Meigs High School in
Haven at a later date.
1973. After graduating,
Sarah married James
Robert Johnson Sr. “Bob”
SIMMONS
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. — Ernie Simmons, 82, died and continued to live
June 13, 2019 at The Wyngate Senior Living Commu- with him in Middleport
for 25 years even though
nity, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Funeral arrangements are entrusted to White Funer- they separated, they
al Home in Coolville. Visitation for family and friends remained friends and supwill be Sunday, June 16, 2019 from 6-8 p.m. A Mason- portive parents/grandparic service will be conducted by the Coolville Masonic ents. Sarah was a devoted
mother of three and is
Lodge 337 F&amp;AM at 8 p.m. Graveside services will
survived by her three
be at the Torch Baptist Cemetery at 1 p.m., Monday,
children: a son Bobby
June 17, 2019, with Pastor Charles Jarvis ofﬁciating.
TARGETT
REEDSVILLE — Patty A. Targett, 63, of Reedsville,
died Friday, June 7, 2019 at her residence.
A graveside memorial service will be held at the
Wilson Cemetery in Hebron, at a later date. Arrangements were entrusted to White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home in Coolville.
YOHO
COOLVILLE — Lawrence “Larry” Yoho, of
Coolville, died at his home on June 7, 2019.
A graveside memorial service will be held Saturday,
June 22, 2019 at noon, at the Coolville Cemetery with
Charles Martindale ofﬁciating. Arrangements have
been entrusted to White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in
Coolville.
BALL
COLUMBUS — Robin Deniese Ball, 51 of Columbus, died Friday June 14 2019.
Funeral Services will be held 11 a.m., Tuesday, June
18, 2019 in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton,
with Pastor Tim Stout ofﬁciating. Friends and family
may call at the Funeral Home Monday 6 - 8 p.m.
SPIRES
POMEROY — Rita B. Spires of Pomeroy, died at
the Arbor’s of Pomeroy on Friday, June 14 2019. A visitation will be held on Tuesday, June 18, 2019 from 11
a.m. to noon at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Burial will take place at the convenience
of the family.

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Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

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Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
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825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.

Bidwell. Mary
was the proud
Grandma of eight
grandchildren:
LeAnn, Brandon,
Brett (Jennifer)
Bergman, Rodney, Randy, Dale
(Krista) Vest, Christopher (Denise) Toler and
Amy (Jason) Roe. Mary
was blessed with eleven
great-grandchildren,
who she adored, and
they loved their great
Grandma Vest: Caleb and
Brayden Bergman; Angel,
Andrew, Aiden and Alexander Toler; Colton, Conner, Collin and Colbie
Roe and Kylie Vest.
Also surviving are her
brothers: John (Janice)
and Carl McGraw, both
of Chillicothe and sister,
Dottie Mertz, of Don-

ald’s, South Carolina.
Mary was a
member of Faith
Baptist Church
in Bidwell; the
First Capital Car
Club and the CHS
class of 1948. She was
the former owner of the
Trim &amp; Thin Beauty
Salon in Chillicothe for
many years. Mary also
was a beautiful quilter
and made them all with
love for her children,
grandchildren and greatgrandchildren to treasure. She was a loving
Christian wife, mother,
grandmother and great
grandma, she will be
greatly missed.
Funeral services will be
conducted Tuesday, June
18, 2019 at 1 p.m. at the

Faith Baptist Church in
Bidwell, with the Pastor
Jim Lusher ofﬁciating.
Friends and family may
pay their respects from
11 a.m. -1 p.m. prior to
the service. Mary will be
laid to rest alongside her
husband at Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens in Gallipolis.
The McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, is honored
to have been chosen to
serve the Vest Family.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
donations may be made
to Faith Baptist Church,
3615 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or Hospice in Mary’s
memory.
Online condolences
may be sent to www.
mccoymoore.com

SARAH LUCILLE (BOYLES) JOHNSON
Johnson of Williamstown, West
Virginia, a daughter and son-in-law
Sherry (Johnson)
and Shawn Mace
of Nelsonville and
a son Willie Johnson of Middleport. Sarah
is also survived by ﬁve
grandchildren for whom
she cherished: McKenzee
and Rebecca Mace, Mandie and Braylyn Johnson
and Jayden Johnson and
her partner of 22 years,
Maria McKinney. She is
survived by many cousins, nieces, nephews,
aunts, uncles, friends,
family, previous foster
children and previous coworkers that she called
family.
Sarah had been
employed with the Gingerbread Preschool, Imperial Electric, was a supervisor at Athens County
Children Services:
Genesis Community Resi-

dential Center and
a wonderful foster
parent to many
youth through
the Milestones
Therapeutic Foster
Care Network.
Her passion with
kids was not only shown
through her own children/
grandchildren but also
through her love of being
a baseball/softball coach
for 15-plus years for the
Middleport youth league,
Women Softball leagues
and being a Leader for
the Black Diamond Girl
Scouts and the Boy
Scouts. She was also
an assistant Girl Scout
leader for her granddaughters. Sarah was a
mother to many, not only
to her own with her door
always open to any in
need. Sarah loved ﬁshing,
coaching ball, being a
leader, camping, going to
the beach and spending
time with her children

and grandchildren. She
also enjoyed attending
services at the Emmanuel
Baptist Church in Parkersburg, West Virginia.
Sarah enjoyed skating
with her family at the
Chester Skate-a-way, as a
child/teen and continued
this tradition with her
own three children.
The viewing hours will
be held on Sunday, June
16, 2019 from 6-8 p.m.
at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy, for family and
friends. A funeral service
will be on Monday, June
17, 2019 at 11 a.m. with
burial services at Meigs
Memory Gardens, Pomeroy. Pastor Randy Smith
will ofﬁciate.
In lieu of ﬂowers donations may be made to the
funeral home to help with
the expense.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

Chester Alumni hold banquet
CHESTER — Chester
High School Alumni
Association held its
annual banquet and
meeting June 1, 2019
at the Eastern Elementary School cafetorium.
President Richard Gaul
welcomed the 31 alumni
and 23 guests for 54
total.
The Pledge of Allegiance and the singing
of God Bless America,
led by Diana Buckley,
were followed by the
invocation by John
Frank.
A delicious steak dinner was served by the
Auxiliary of the Tuppers
Plains VFW.
The business meeting
began with Secretary
Betty Newell reading
the minutes of last
year’s meeting. Treasurer Kathryn Windon gave
the treasurer’s report

with $1364.80 balance.
Motion was made by
Mary Rose and second
by Bob Wood to approve
both reports. Motion
carried.
A gift was presented
to Rex Summerﬁeld, the
oldest man, and Mary
Rose, the oldest woman,
present.
The secretary read
the names and year of
graduation of the 11
deceased during the
past year.
Ofﬁcers for next
year will be President
Richard Gaul, 1st Vice
President Robert Wood,
2nd Vice President John
Guinther, and Secretary
Betty Newell. We are
waiting for someone to
step up to be treasurer.
The president thanked
the following: Chester Garden Club, the
Ladies Auxiliary, the

janitor, and all others
that helped. Potted ﬂowers were given as door
prizes.
A “special” thank
you was given to Amy
Smith. Without her, we
probably wouldn’t be
able to do this every
year.
Roll Call by classes —
Reunion classes ﬁrst
1939 — Rex Summerﬁeld
1944 —None
1949 — Lois Spencer
Ebersbach
1954 — Frona Bissell Rifﬂe, Donna Dorst
Story, Richard Gaul,
Kathleen Hayman Seckman, Donna Smalley
Young
All Classes
1945 — Donald Mora
1946 — None
1947 — Delores Epple
Holter, Robert Wood,
Mary Rose

1948 — None
1950 — Nola Epple
Brown
1951 — Howard Larkins
1952 — Helen Bissell
Garvarick, Starling Massar, Betty Smalley Reid,
Betty Nelson Newell
1953 — Louise Bigley
Frank, John Guinther,
Virgil Windon
1955 — Roger Keller,
Betty Ours Gaul, Emerson Pooler, Joyce Bailey
Messenger
1956 — Darlene Bailey Buckley Long, Ronald Clay, Roger Epple,
June Ridenour Epple,
Rosemary Rose Keller
1957 — Lela King
Windon, Sue Lambert
Quigley, Marion Sloter,
Kathryn Smith Windon,
Helen Dorst Wilson
Meeting adjourned.
Submitted by Secretary Betty Newell.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR

Monday,
June 17
LETART TWP. — The
regular meeting of the
Letart Township Trustees will be held at 5 p.m.
at the Letart Township
Building.
GALLIPOLIS — The
American Legion Lafayette Post #27 will meet
at the post home on
McCormick Road, 6 p.m.
All members are urged to
attend.
GALLIPOLIS — The
American Legion Ladies
Auxiliary, Sons of the
American Legion and
American Legion Lafayette Post #27 will have a
joint E-Board meeting at
the post home on McCor-

mick Road at 7 p.m. All
E-Board members are
urged to attend.

Tuesday,
June 18
MIDDLEPORT — The
Family and Children First
Council will hold a special meeting at 11 a.m.
at Meigs County Department of Job and Family
Services.
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Board of
Developmental Disabilities will hold a regular
monthly board meeting
for the month of June on
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
at 4:00 pm at the Administrative Ofﬁces, 77 Mill
Creek Road, Gallipolis,

OH 45631.

Wednesday,
June 19
POMEROY — Big
Blast of Space Science
Show, Pomeroy Library
4:30 p.m. Professor
Rocket will host a silly
science show about
space.

Friday,
June 21
GALLIPOLIS — Regular monthly board meeting of the O. O. McIntyre
Park District, 11 a.m.,
in the Park Board ofﬁce
at the Courthouse, 18
Locust St.

GALLIPOLIS — Ohio
AFSCME Retirees, Gallia and Jackson Counties,
Sub-chapter 102, will
hold their next meeting 2
p.m. at the Gallia County
Senior Resource Center,
1165 State Route 160, in
Gallipolis. The sub-chapter is seeking new members in the two-county
area. For more information, interested retirees
may call: 740-245-0093
or 740-245-5255.

Saturday,
June 22
MIDDLEPORT — A
ﬁsh fry will be held at the
Middleport Fire Department with serving starting at 11 a.m.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

National
Safety Month

Sunday, June 16, 2019 3A

GALLIA, MEIGS
BRIEFS

MOV Pride 08 wins tournament

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

cated (by alcohol
According to
and/or drugs)
the Centers for
when it comes
Disease Control
to impairment,
(CDC), the leadbut we don’t
ing cause of death
look at things
for individuals age
like fatigue or a
1 to 44 is unintenprevious injury.
tional injury. The Brody
The same goes
CDC also reports Davis
the 2013 medical Contributing for work. If I
were to show up
and work loss cost columnist
under the inﬂuassociated with
ence of drugs or
fatal injuries and
alcohol, I am likely to
nonfatal injuries totals
get sent home or even
$671 billion dollars in
the U.S. These statistics ﬁred, but if I show up
tired or with an injury,
are why it is vital to
SYRACUSE —
I am going to work.
practice safety at work,
Applications for the
in your home and on the In an ofﬁce setting,
2019-20 Carleton
this could be a little
road. Due to statistics
College Scholarships
like this, since 1996, the less dangerous, but
for Higher Education
National Safety Council if a heavy equipment
are available for legal
has named June National operator or doctor
residents of the Village
show up fatigued that
Safety Month to help
of Syracuse and may
bring awareness to safe- could cause injury, not
be picked up at 1402
only to yourself, but to
ty issues in our nation.
Dusky St., Syracuse,
others.
For safety month 2019,
and returned by June
The ﬁnal piece of
the focus will be on: haz24. Legal residents of
the puzzle is hazard
ard recognition, slips,
Syracuse can qualify
recognition. Hazard
trips and falls, fatigue
for a scholarship award
recognition is the abiland impairment.
for a maximum of two
ity to see hazardous
Unintentional falls,
years. For more inforissues, including those
many of which have to
mation contact Gordon
in machines, the envido with slipping and
Fisher at 740-9992ronment and people.
tripping, rank as the
2836.
Hazard recognition is
number one cause of
POMEROY —
nonfatal injuries treated truly paying attention
Applications for the
in a hospital emergency to what is around you
Meigs County Retired
and knowing the dandepartment for the
Teachers Association
year 2017, according to gers.
scholarship are availIf you see a car
the CDC. This makes
able until the end of
all over the road, a
slips, trips, and falls an
June. The applicant
downed powerline, or
important category to
must be a college
further examine. One of a cord running across
junior or senior majora walk-way, you can
the things we as a sociing in education, have
see that those items
ety can do to prevent
at least a 2.5 GPA and
are hazards or potenfalls is put the phones
have a home residence
tial hazards, and they
down, keep our heads
in Meigs County. For
should be addressed.
up and pay attention to
applications or more
where we walk. Another By addressing these
information call Becky
issues by speaking
great way to prevent
at 740-992-7096 or
with the police, elecfalls includes keeping
Charlene at 740-444walkways clear of debris tric company or the
5498.
person who has the
including cords, rugs
and any other item that cord in the walk-way,
you have recognized a
may cause someone to
Red or Black
trip and fall. Other ideas hazard and attempted
to have it ﬁxed for the
to reduce falls include
IN STOCK
safety of you and others.
placing railing on both
Also Available
As you go through
sides of stairs, properly
Top Soil &amp;
not only June, but your
marking slip and trip
hazards, and using prop- entire year, remember
Over Sized Gravel
to recognize hazards at
er safety devices when
work, in your home and
CROWN
working on areas that
on the road and address
are fall hazards.
EXCAVATING &amp;
Many times, we think them as needed to keep
yourself and others safe
STONE
of impairment as the
and healthy.
use of alcohol or street
5885 St Route 218
drugs while trying to
Gallipolis
Brody Davis is the Public Health
do things such as drive
Emergency Response Coordinator
740-256-6456
a vehicle or use equipfor the Meigs County Health
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�Opinion
4A Sunday, June 16, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

When life
and science
don’t mesh
This article is going to betray my age, and it
will probably betray yours, too. If you are in your
sixties or older, the story that follows may elicit
a smile and perhaps even a memory of a similar
event from your life that you remember to this
day. If you are younger than that, you may recoil
at the horror of the Neanderthal-like conditions in
which you think we older folks were raised.
The impetus for this column was an article on
child discipline titled, “The Spanking Debate is
Over,” which recently appeared in the journal Psychology Today. The gist of the article is there is no
research that suggests that spanking children as a
form of punishment is anything other than undeniably bad for them and that doing so may saddle
them with future personal problems like anxiety,
violence, resentment, hostility, fear, and shame.
In other words, it doesn’t work.
I often recite research when I
argue about what is best for children,
so I take ﬁndings like this seriously.
However, there are times when scientiﬁc studies don’t correlate with
my own life experiences, and that
is certainly true of the debate on
Tom Dunn spanking children.
Contributing
In the 1950’s and 1960’s, I grew
columnist
up in a home where spanking was an
arrow in my parents’ quiver of potential punishments for inappropriate behavior. I
can’t remember many times when receiving a swat
on the backside was necessary, but my siblings
and I knew the possibility existed, and there is
little doubt that knowledge impacted our behavior
in a positive way. Although that was apparently a
bad thing, we all seem to be relatively well adjusted adults today.
One particular instance that remains embedded
in my memory occurred when I was still quite
young, when I announced to my parents that I
was going across the street to shoot baskets. My
father’s response was short and to the point. “First
of all, you don’t tell us what you’re going to do,
and second, no, you can’t go, because it is almost
dinner time,” he informed me.
Upon hearing my father’s denial, in a decision I
can only attribute to a case of temporary insanity,
I inexplicably and uncharacteristically deﬁed him
while announcing I was going anyway.
When my father heard my idiotic proclamation,
he informed me that if I went, a spanking would
be awaiting me upon my return home. He, in
fact, said it in a much more colorful, albeit calm
manner, but the message was clearly sent and
received.
And, for God knows what reason, I went anyway.
I’m certain I had a jolly old time on the basketball court that day, as I loved shooting baskets,
but I have no speciﬁc recollection of my time
doing so. What I DO remember, however, is what
awaited me upon my return home. It was my
father, with nary a belt, club or paddle at hand. He
calmly instructed me to bend over his knee and
accept my punishment for disobeying him, which
was an application of his open, bare hand to my
backside.
In other words, he kept his promise.
Now, if I am to believe the research highlighted
in the Psychology Today article, on that day more
than 50 years ago, my father taught me that violence was OK, and he damaged my psyche while
turning me into a fearful, shame-ﬁlled adult who
needs therapy because of the intense resentment I
feel towards him for spanking me.
Of course, nothing remotely close to that is
true. The lessons I learned that day were actually
quite valuable. I learned that neither I, nor any
of the other Dunn kids, were running the show
in our household and that there was a hierarchy
where we kids were ranked well below Mom and
Dad on the decision-making tree. I also learned
that idle threats were not issued and that my
father was not interested in spending a lot of
time exploring my feelings about his decisions,
debating the wisdom of his rules, or counting to
ﬁve while I decided if I wanted to comply with
his wishes. He and Mom were in charge, and we
knew it. If we decided to defy them, consequences
would ensue. It was really a pretty simple (and
loving) life.
Despite how the research suggests I am supposed to feel today, at no time in the more than
50 years since this event occurred have I ever felt
resentful, violent, stiﬂed, unloved, threatened,
anxiety-ridden or any of the other myriad of negative feelings that are apparently attributable to
being spanked as a child. In fact, quite the contrary is true.
What I remember most is that when reasoning with me didn’t work, another option was
employed.
And, I remember it worked.
Tom Dunn is the former superintendent of the Miami County
Educational Service Center.

THEIR VIEW

Who should make the final decision?
Am I the only husband
that has been sent back
to closet after hearing,
“That doesn’t work, go
back and try again?”
I thought I looked just
ﬁne today. But my wife
strongly disagreed this
morning. After digging
deep in my soul and eating a little humble pie,
I knew she was correct.
Every guy, including
me, must come to terms
with the fact that our
better half is often better at certain things.
In my 13 years as a
real estate agent I have
found that although buying and selling a home is
a joint venture, there is
often a dominant player.
It could be the husband,
or it could be the wife.
Unlike the past when
husbands made the ﬁnal
decision, today it could
either be the husband or
the wife.
Let’s look at Mr. and
Mrs. Buyer. Mrs. Buyer
loves the home the
couple just viewed. She
feels this is the home

near the leach
they need to purlines that is just
chase. The maswaiting for somesive kitchen with
one to throw
granite counter
money into its
tops on cherry
repair.
cabinets and the
What are the
master bedroom
Buyers to do?
both are just what Randy
They both love
the family needs. Butler
The backyard is
Contributing the home, but only
one of them see
gorgeous, and
columnist
the roof or the wet
it even has an
area as a concern.
inground pool.
Should they move forMr. Buyer is excited
ward, or look for a house
about the 30-foot by
that may not have what
50-foot man-cave with
they want, but needs no
the shop area. In the
repairs? Which one of
corner he even eyes an
them makes that call?
upright air compresWhen a couple pursor! Rebuilding that old
chases a home it’s kind
hotrod could be in his
of like the way a partnerfuture. To top it off the
ship in business works.
basement has a room
One partner can kill the
large enough for the
pool table he has had in entire deal with a “no,”
but it also takes two
storage for years.
“yesses” for the deal to
He then pulls himself
back to the present and happen. If you really
think about it, that is a
the sagging roof with
fair way to operate. We
shingles beginning to
all have our own areas of
curl up. Wow, can they
expertise. Each partner
spend another $10,000
is better in some areas
to replace it in the next
than the other. Some
couple years. Not to
of us a may need to
mention the wet area

be reminded of that at
times.
When my wife and I
make large or small decisions, it can at times be
a process. Some things
are so obvious to me that
I can’t fathom how she
doesn’t care or even see
what I see so plainly. I am
sure she could probably
say the same about me.
Yet at other times, it is
not even a process at all.
We seem to be completely
on the same page. I am
sure whether it is a home
or a shirt to match the
khakis, all couples can
relate.
So, to answer my own
question: Who should
make the ﬁnal decision
when it comes to buying
a home?
“Two heads are better
than one, not because
either is infallible, but
because they are unlikely
to go wrong in the same
direction.” – C.S. Lewis.

Randy Butler is a lifelong resident
of Highland County and a licensed
real estate agent for Classic Real
Estate in Hillsboro.

TODAY IN HISTORY
By The Associated Press

In 1932, President
Herbert Hoover and Vice
President Charles Curtis
were renominated at the
Republican National Convention in Chicago.
In 1933, the National
Today’s Highlight in History:
Industrial Recovery Act
On June 16, 1858,
became law with Presiaccepting the Illinois
dent Franklin D. RoosRepublican Party’s
evelt’s signature. (The
nomination for the U.S.
Senate, Abraham Lincoln Act was later struck down
said the slavery issue had by the U.S. Supreme
to be resolved, declaring, Court.) The Federal
“A house divided against Deposit Insurance Corp.
was founded as President
itself cannot stand.”
Roosevelt signed the
Banking Act of 1933.
On this date:
In 1944, George
In 1567, Mary, Queen
of Scots, was imprisoned Stinney, a 14-year-old
black youth, was elecin Lochleven Castle in
trocuted by the state of
Scotland. (She escaped
South Carolina for the
almost a year later but
murders of two white
ended up imprisoned
girls, Betty June Binnickagain.)
er, 11, and Mary Emma
In 1883, baseball’s
Thames, 7.
ﬁrst “Ladies’ Day” took
In 1963, the world’s
place as the New York
Gothams offered women ﬁrst female space traveler,
free admission to a game Valentina Tereshkova
26, was launched into
against the Cleveland
Spiders. (New York won, orbit by the Soviet Union
aboard Vostok 6; Teresh5-2.)
kova spent 71 hours in
In 1903, Ford Motor
ﬂight, circling the Earth
Co. was incorporated.
48 times before returning
In 1911, IBM had
safely.
its beginnings as the
In 1978, President
Computing-TabulatingRecording Co. which was Jimmy Carter and
incorporated in New York Panamanian leader Omar
Torrijos signed the instruState.
Today is Sunday, June
16, the 167th day of
2019. There are 198 days
left in the year.

Thought for Today:
“I have never in my
life learned anything
from any man who
agreed with me.”
— Dudley Field Malone,
American attorney (18821950).

ments of ratiﬁcation for
the Panama Canal treaties
during a ceremony in
Panama City.
In 1996, Russian voters went to the polls in
their ﬁrst independent
presidential election;
the result was a runoff
between President Boris
Yeltsin (the eventual
winner) and Communist
challenger Gennady Zyuganov. Sportscaster Mel
Allen died in Greenwich,
Connecticut, at age 83.
In 2015, real estate
mogul Donald Trump
launched his successful
campaign to become president of the United States
with a speech at Trump
Tower in Manhattan.
In 2017, President
Donald Trump acknowledged for the ﬁrst time
that he was under federal
investigation as part of
the expanding probe into
Russia’s election med-

dling as he lashed out at
a top Justice Department
ofﬁcial overseeing the
inquiry.
Ten years ago: President Barack Obama met
with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak at
the White House; afterward, Obama declared
North Korea a “grave
threat” to the world and
pledged the U.S. and its
allies would aggressively
enforce fresh penalties
against the nucleararmed nation. Sen.
John Ensign of Nevada,
a leading Republican
mentioned as a potential
presidential candidate,
admitted he’d had an
extramarital affair with a
campaign staff member.
Federal health regulators
warned consumers to
stop using Zicam Cold
Remedy nasal gel and
related products because
they could permanently
damage the sense of
smell.
Five years ago: President Barack Obama
notiﬁed Congress that
up to 275 troops could
be sent to Iraq to provide
support and security for
U.S. personnel and the
American Embassy in
Baghdad.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Local governments seeking
negotiating power in opioid lawsuit
By Andrew WelshHuggins
Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Lawyers suing
over the toll of opioids
asked a judge Friday to
allow a structure for all
25,000 municipal and
county governments in
the U.S. to be paid —
if a settlement can be
reached with companies
that make and distribute
powerful prescription
painkillers.
The approach, if
approved, would create dueling negotiating
systems as state governments are also in collective settlement negotiations with the drug
industry.
The uniﬁed approach
on behalf of municipalities would also help
the manufacturers and
distributors by deﬁning
a ﬁnalized group of entities beneﬁting from a
settlement, said Joseph

Rice, a South Carolinabased attorney representing local governments in the complaint.
“If you’re a corporation
trying to address this
problem, you need to get
closure, you need to put
it behind you,” Rice said
in an interview Friday.
“If you’re going to put
signiﬁcant resources
into the resolution,
you’ve got to know it’s
behind you. The only
way to do that is to get
releases from everybody
that’s got a potential
claim.”
The action would also
help address a problem
that is widespread and
reaches across city and
county lines, Rice said.
Providing assistance
from a settlement to one
county doesn’t help the
people in a neighboring
town, he said.
“These pills have
wheels, they move
around,” Rice said, citing the documented

Sunday, June 16, 2019 5A

River

the artisan tent, noon - 4
p.m., blacksmithing, 1-3
p.m., stained glass, 4-7
p.m., open painting and
From page 1A
mini terrariums; 12:30
p.m. Gospel music;
at 2 p.m., July 4, featur12:30 p.m. Lion’s Club
ing multiple acts like
KidzDay Activities; 2-6
glass walking, bed of
p.m. KidZone activities;
swords, contortion, and
2-6 p.m. Contemporary
more. In addition, free
Christian music; 7 p.m.
musical entertainment
returns to the main stage Little Mister &amp; Miss
as do pageants for young Firecracker.
Gospel and Contempeople and opportunities for talented locals to porary Christian music
lineups for July 3: 10
perform. Concessions,
artisans, one of the area’s a.m. Wayfollowers, 11
a.m. Gloryland Believlargest parades and, of
course, ﬁreworks will be ers, 11:30 a.m. Covered
by Love, 1 p.m. The
offered.
Raineys; 2 p.m. Ordinary
Itinerary for the 2019
People, 3 p.m. Vinton
Gallipolis River RecreBaptist, 4 p.m. River
ation Festival is as folCity Fellowship, 5 p.m.
lows:
Fellowship of Faith.
Wednesday, July 3
10 a.m. Gospel music; Thursday, July 4
noon, opening ceremony;
7:45 a.m. Baby Tot
noon to 10 p.m., inﬂatregistration/check in; 9
ables open and are free;
a.m. Baby Tot Sparkler
noon, concessions and
Contest; 9 a.m. Rubber
artisans open for busiDucky Race on the Riverness, including, under
front; 9-11 a.m. Senior’s

cases of pain pills
obtained in Florida
being taken to West Virginia.
The motion ﬁled Friday requests the creation
of a negotiating class
“for the speciﬁc purpose
of creating a uniﬁed
body to enter into further negotiations with
defendants,” according
to the ﬁling. “It is neither aimed at being the
vehicle for litigation or
settlement.”
Hundreds of local
governments and other
entities, such as hospitals, have accused pharmaceutical companies of
downplaying the addictive nature of opioids
and prescription painkillers largely blamed for
one of the deadliest drug
crises in U.S. history.
Opioids include prescription and illicit drugs.
The complaints are
being overseen by Cleveland-based U.S. District
Judge Dan Polster.

different inmates and/
or probationers between
January 2011 and
November 2017.
From page 1A
In addition to the
sexual assault and related
request and ordered
charges, the theft in
that the transcript be
ofﬁce charge dealt with
completed at Tucker’s
the overlap of time when
expense.
The jury found Tucker Tucker was on the clock
at both Meigs County
guilty on six counts of
Common Pleas Court
kidnapping, six counts
and the Middleport Jail,
of sexual battery, ﬁve
counts of attempted sex- being paid at both locaual battery, four counts of tions.
In addition to being
gross sexual imposition,
found guilty of the 24
one count of soliciting,
one count of attempting charges, the jury ruled on
speciﬁcations on each of
to compel prostitution
the kidnapping charges.
and one count of theft
They determined that
in ofﬁce. The lone not
guilty verdict came on a Tucker did not release
the respective victims in
misdemeanor count of
a safe place unharmed,
sexual imposition.
and that the kidnapping
Tucker worked as a
corrections ofﬁcer at the offenses were committed
Middleport Jail and as a with sexual motivation.
Tucker also faces
Meigs County Common
further proceedings on
Pleas Court probation
ofﬁcer. He allegedly sexu- sexually violent predator
ally assaulted or attempt- speciﬁcations contained
ed to sexually assault 12 in the indictment, which

Tucker

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Volunteers from Pleasant Valley Hospital work on the Habitat for Humanity House under
construction in Middleport.

Bingo; 10 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Inﬂatables open (Armbands - $12 each or 4 for
$40); 10 a.m. concessions and artisans open
for business, artisan
tent schedule includes
10:30 a.m. - noon, ﬂower
crowns, 1-3 p.m., stained
glass, 4-7 p.m., open
painting; 11:30 a.m. 68th
Annual Gallipolis Rotary
Mile; noon is the parade;
2 p.m. Circus Sideshow;
3 p.m. Gallipolis Junior
Women’s Club Talent
Show; 6 p.m. Gallipolis
Twirling Angels; 7-10
p.m. Big Buck Country
Jamboree featuring opening act Rob McNurlin
&amp; the Beatnik Cowboys
followed by headliner
John Schneider; 10 p.m.
ﬁreworks.
Admission to River
Rec is free.
For more information,
go to https://www.gallipolisriverrec.com/.
Beth Sergent is editor of Ohio
Valley Publishing.

will be presented to the
court at a later date. If
Tucker is found guilty of
the speciﬁcations, additional time in prison may
be added to the court’s
sentence.
In ﬁling the sentencing
memorandum on behalf
of the state, Special Prosecutor Angela Canepa
argued for a prison sentence equal to the maximum of 96 years to life in
prison for Tucker.
Tucker was originally indicted on 32 total
counts, with seven of the
charges dismissed before
being considered by the
jury. No sentencing date
has been set, and Judge
Linton Lewis ordered a
pre-sentence investigation to be completed in
he case. Tucker remains
held in the Washington
County Jail after his
bond was revoked following the guilty verdicts.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Progress
From page 1A

Habitat for Humanity
projects are about more
than just building a house
for a family, it is changing the lives of those in
that family and possibly
others in the community.
Despite what some
may think with regard to
the Habitat for Humanity Houses, the houses
are not given to the new
owners. The homeowners
put sweat equity hours
in at the project or other
Habitat for Humanity
sites (250 sweat hours
per adult in the home).
They also have to pay a
monthly mortgage which
is set up through the
organization. Families
must meet certain criteria to be eligible for a
Habitat home, but they
do not necessarily have

In Loving Memory Of

Virginia Irene Bloomer

Who Passed Away Seven Years Ago
Volunteers from Pleasant Valley Hospital work on the Habitat for
Humanity House under construction in Middleport.

to be living in poverty.
They must meet three
criteria: a need for shelter, the ability to pay for
a habitat home, and a
willingness to partner
with Habitat for Humanity.
Additionally, the
homeowner receives
educational information
to allow them to be successful as they move into
their own home.
Throughout the build-

June 17, 2012

ing process, the homeowners are able to select
the paint colors, ﬂooring,
cabinets, counter tops
and other items in the
house, so that when they
move in the place will
feel like it is home.
Anyone interested in
volunteering may call
740-592-0032 ext. 104 or
email volunteer@habitatseo.org.

How is it that I never saw your wings
when you were here with me?
When you closed your eyes and soared
to the heavens I could hear the
faint ﬂutter of your wings as you left.
Your body no longer on this side
your spirit here eternally I see your halo shine.
I close my eyes and see the multi-colored wings
surround me in my saddest moments and my happiest times.
Mother my angel God has given you your assignment
always my mother forever my angel.
You ﬂy into my dreams and when I am asleep
I feel your wings brush against my face wiping away
the tears I shed since I can no longer hold
you in my arms but in my heart.
You earned those wings dear mother
and you will always be my angel eternal.

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
The Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services is seeking qualiﬁed applicants
to ﬁll a Service Coordinator position within the Ohio Early Intervention Program.
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS: Holds an associate’s degree, bachelor’s degree, or
graduate-level degree from an accredited college or university in audiology, child and
family studies, child development, child life, counseling, education, hearing and speech
sciences, human development, human ecology, human social services, medicine,
nursing, nutrition science, occupational therapy, ophthalmology, optometry, physician’s
assistant, physical therapy, psychology, rehabilitation, social work, or speech/language
pathology; or Holds an associate’s degree, bachelor’s degree, or graduate-level degree
from an accredited college or university in any ﬁeld and has at least two years of veriﬁed
full-time (or equivalent part-time) supervised, paid experience in case management
and/or working with children birth through age ﬁve with disabilities, developmental
delays, or diagnosed physical or mental conditions that have a high probability of
resulting in a developmental delay and their families and completes required trainings.

“AND THE PEACE OF GOD, WHICH PASSETH
ALL UNDERSTANDING, SHALL KEEP YOUR
HEARTS AND MINDS THROUGH CHRIST
JESUS.”
PHILIPPIANS 4:7

Applicants should submit a cover letter and a current resume. The position starts at
$15.29 per hour. The cover letter and resume should be hand-delivered or mailed to:

For more information on Ohio Early Intervention visit: www.ohioearlyintervention.org

OH-70130251

The deadline for submission is June 21, 2019 at 4:00pm.

Your Family

OH-70131741

Heather Cundiff, Administrative Assistant to the Director
Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services
P O Box 191-175 Race Street, 3rd ﬂoor
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Love And Missing You Always,

�Along the River
6A Sunday, June 16, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Herding cats…literally
Mason County
Kitty Korral helps
protect strays
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — As the sun
recently set on a residential street in Point Pleasant, W.Va., the aroma of
sardines ﬁlled the air.
Sardines? Yes, sardines.
Some readers may be gagging at the thought while
the mouths of others
are watering. However,
the sardines weren’t for
humans but to attract the
community cats living on
the street.
Community cats, also
known as strays and feral
cats, are those felines
which observe humans
without getting too close.
They are self-reliant and
independent. Though
some will allow humans
to leave them food, they
will not approach that
food unless the human
is a safe distance away.
If the cat needs medical treatment, or spayed
or neutered, catching
them by hand is not an
option because these cats
have street smarts and
highly developed survival
instincts. Also, without
spaying and neutering,
their numbers only grow
and overwhelm those trying to care for them or
even those who don’t care
for them, literally. For
this reason, the issue of
too many cats is not just
one for cat lovers, it’s a
community issue. There
appears no way to adopt,
rescue or euthanize, out
of the pet overpopulation
problem, but there is an
alternative growing in
popularity.
Enter the Mason County Kitty Korral, a nonproﬁt organization which
began last year and operates a trap, spay/neuter
and release program or
TNR. All the volunteers
are admittedly cat and
animal lovers, becoming
involved because they
are trying to provide a
humane solution to cat
overpopulation. Volunteers humanely trap the
cats, transport them to
a veterinarian where
they are given medical
care, including a rabies
vaccine, spayed or neutered, then released back
to their neighborhoods
where they’ve learned to
survive. They are released
without having the ability to reproduce and by
neutering the males, this
reduces the urge to ﬁght
which reduces the spread
of disease and injury. The
cat colonies eventually
die off of natural causes
without overwhelming
shelters which often don’t
have the resources to
domesticate a feral cat,
which can mean a bleak
ending.
Programs like the TNR
offered by Kitty Korral
can beneﬁt everyone - cat
lover or not.
On that recent night
in Point Pleasant, residents gathered to show
Kitty Korral volunteers
Renee Wickline and
Camala “Cammy” Simpkins where the community cats normally eat. A

couple days leading up
to Kitty Korral’s arrival,
the residents were told to
gradually reduce the food
supply so that when trapping day arrived, the cats
would be ready to eat.
Simpkins opened the
back of her SUV to reveal
stacks of humane traps.
She lined the traps with
rubber mats to protect
the cats’ paws and allow
for easy cleaning. Wickline steadied the traps
while Simpkins opened
a huge can of wet food
for cats and plopped a
spoonful inside the far
end of the trap. She then
opened a can of sardines,
with Wickline turning
her head to avoid gagging
from the smell. Simpkins
dipped into the sardines
and created a trail of ﬁshy
goodness (or grossness)
that was meant to lead
cats further into the trap
to spring the door shut.
Once “baited” the traps
were draped with custom
covers or blankets made
by volunteers meant to
calm the cat and create
the illusion of being hidden - feral cats often hide
as a means of survival.
The traps were set and
then, the waiting began.
While sitting on the
porch steps of one of the
residents, Wickline and
Simpkins were joined by
faithful volunteer Dixie
Flowers from Letart who

had transported two feral
cats from New Haven to
be included in the next
day’s journey to Help for
Animals in Barboursville
for care. The Kitty Korral helps cats from across
Mason County, not just
Point Pleasant, and had
booked 10 slots for spays
and neuters the following day. Wickline and
Simpkins were hopeful
they could ﬁll them all
but time would tell as the
evening progressed.
“It’s a lot of hurry up
and wait,” Wickline said
when describing a night
of trapping.

ing, “Our goal is the better quality of life and to
stop the overpopulation
of cats.”
Flowers had never met
Simpkins or Wickline but
that all changed when
she read about the group
in the Point Pleasant
Register.
“I love cats,” Flowers
said about why she volunteers. “I saw the article
in the newspaper (about
a Kitty Korral meeting)…and I saw it, and I
thought, ‘at last,’ …this is
something I can do.”
Flowers went on to say
trapping the community
cats and getting them
“ﬁxed” made her feel
good because it meant
more won’t be born to
“face the same fate” as
others who died from disease, neglect or abuse.
Still, to some some
Photos by Beth Sergent | OVP
TNR is a foreign concept
with local veterinarians
but that doesn’t mean it
(LEFT) The
as
well,
if
possible
in
the
can’t be useful.
Kitty Korral
future.
volunteers
Wickline said she’s had
drape the
Of course, there’s a dif- people tell the group to
humane traps
ference between animal
“just take all the cats”
with covers
lovers and animal advoin a neighborhood and
to keep the
cates. When asked what
not bring them back but
cats inside
pushed them to take up
“we can’t get rid of them,
calm. Unlike
we have no place to take
domestic cats, advocating for creatures
feral cats will
who couldn’t on their
them but we can stop it
not “meow”
own behalf, Simpkins
and cut down on it until
when in
said the tipping point for there are laws where peosurvival mode
her was volunteering at
ple are held accountable
and remain
the local animal shelter,
for their animals.”
eerily silent
answering call after call
TNR may not be the
inside the
about cats. She then
solution some people
traps.
met up with Wickline
want but it is a humane
(ABOVE)
and later Kathy Stone of
solution that seems to
Cammy
Operation Fancy Free in
work in other areas.
Simpkins, at
Jackson
County,
W.Va.,
Though Mason County
left, and Renee
who had attempted to
Kitty Korral does TNR
Wickline, of
get a TNR group started for feral cats, it can also
the Mason
in Mason County a few
help with community
County Kitty
Korral, prepare years back. Simpkins said cats who are otherwise
humane traps
Stone has been an invalu- domesticated for those
for community able resource with tips on who care for the felines
cats. The Kitty
Korral provides how to operate the group but cannot afford to get
and care for the cats.
them spayed or neutered.
free spay and
Kitty Korral has
neuter services Though it has taken her
for those cats. a few years to do it, the
trapped the community
colony numbers in Jackcats at the West Virginia
son County are down as
State Farm Museum and
are cats and kittens being plans on having upcomeuthanized, Simpkins
ing fundraising events at
said of Stone’s efforts.
the venue soon. They are
Now a year into their
Simpkins said the
considering a tacos and
venture, the Mason
group would like to be
trivia night and picture
County Kitty Korral is a
trapping twice a week
with your pets night.
non-proﬁt group with an They also plan to be out
instead of once a week
ofﬁcial 501(c)(3) number. in the community more
- this is due to available
Getting to that point,
appointments with vetthis summer at festivals
has required much effort and events, to let the
erinarians, which are in
and work on the part of a public know who they are
short supply themselves
very small group of volun- and their mission.
in rural areas. As Simpteers which operates off
kins put it, the group
Back on that street in
a small grant, fundraisers Point Pleasant, as the
has the money to spay
and donations from the
and neuter more cats
sun disappeared the
community. When asked traps started to snap and,
but appointments are
what is the most reward- much to everyone’s relief,
sometimes a hurdle. As
ing part of what can be a an elusive female, a male
it stands, Kitty Korral
books their appointments heartbreaking endeavor,
and kitten were trapped.
Wickline said, “giving the Also headed down to
with Help for Animals
animals a better quality
in Barboursville three to
Help for Animals the
of life.”
four weeks in advance
next day, a domesticated
Simpkins agreed, addbut is hopeful to work
stray from that same
street, two cats from New
Haven and multiple cats
from another trap site in
Point Pleasant. The 10
slots were ﬁlled.
According to the
ASPCA, in just seven
years, one unspayed
female cat and her
offspring can produce
420,000 kittens. The
cycle for one local neighborhood was stopped
recently by Kitty Korral.
“We will help in anyway we can,” Wickline
said. “We will pick them
up, you don’t have to
pay for anything…it’s out
there.”
Find the Mason
County Kitty Korral on
Facebook.

This white, feral, female cat humanely trapped by the Mason County Kitty Korral was later spayed and Beth Sergent is editor of Ohio Valley
Publishing.
released back to her habitat, unable to produce more kittens.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 16, 2019 7A

Pedal

and Billings hopes to see
the park continue to grow
and become bigger and
better.
From page 1A
In looking at future
park updates, it is in the
pedal boat will be arrivworks for Claﬂin Corner
ing to the park possibly
to have grills, picnic
this weekend. The pedal
tables, a water fountain,
boats can be rented for
and additional lighting
$20 an hour and they
added as well as more
have the capacity to hold
lighting for the walking
two adults and three chiltrail.
dren, weight limit to not
Several hands have
exceed 775 pounds.
worked together to bring
Currently, the hours of
the Yak Shak are SundayThe new pedal boat pictured near the Krodel Park Pedal Boat these new additions to
Friday, noon-7 p.m. and
launch pad. The city will have two boats for rent this summer, with the park explained Billthe possibility of adding more.
ings including representaSaturday, 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
tives of the Claﬁn FounHowever, starting on
dation, local business
ant
Splash
Pad,
the
Yak
He
commented
with
all
Monday, July 1, the new
Shannon Johnson | Courtesy
owners, and individuals
Shak
with
the
kayak
rentof
the
additions
throughhours will be ThursdayMayor Brian Billings and Butch Bonecutter from the Street
wanting to see improveals and now the pedal
out the past few years
Saturday, 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
Department testing out the new pedal boat.
including the playground, boat rentals, Krodel Park ments within the city.
and Sunday, noon- 7 p.m.
is a “showcase” of the
the Robert and Louise
taken place at Krodel
should the council memBillings shared should
Erin (Perkins) Johnson is a staff
city.
Claﬂin Walking Trail,
Park…,” said Billings.
bers approve.
the popularity of the
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing.
Those who visit the
Claﬂin Corner with the
“Folks in our area have
“I am thoroughly
pedal boats really take off,
Reach her at (304) 675-1333,
park now have more to do extension 1992.
been so pleased as well.” gazebo, the Point Pleaspleased with what has
more may be purchased,

COLLEGE NEWS AND NOTES

Area students named to
Muskingum Dean’s List

Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine;
Trenton Carter Prater of Middleport, Bachelor
of Science in Communication; Laura Ann Payne of
Middleport, Bachelor of Science in Communication;
NEW CONCORD, Ohio — The following students Haley Danielle Kennedy of Middleport, Bachelor of
Arts;
have been named to the Spring 2019 Dean’s List at
Brittany Nicole Wood, of Pomeroy, Master of Social
Muskingum University in New Concord, Ohio.
Work; Duane Bruce Wolfe Jr., of Pomeroy, Bachelor
Elizabeth Nease and Emily Sinclair, both of Pomeof Specialized Studies; Kyrie Jordanne Swann of
roy, and Kamryn Smith of Racine.
Pomeroy, Bachelor of Science in Nursing; Nathaniel
To be named to the Dean’s List, Muskingum University students must attain strictly prescribed levels Jacob Sisson of Pomeroy, Bachelor of Science in Communication Sciences and Disorders; Meghan H. Short
of academic performance in their overall grade point
average. For more information about Muskingum Uni- of Pomeroy, Bachelor of Science in Communication
Sciences and Disorders; Courtney Elizabeth Robinson
versity, visit muskingum.edu.
of Pomeroy, Bachelor of Arts; Lindsay Kathleen Patterson of Pomeroy, Bachelor of Science in Education;
Mitchell T. Howard of Pomeroy, Bachelor of Science
in Communication Sciences and Disorders; Hayley
Erika Aanestad of Pomeroy, Master of Education;
Tristen A. Wolfe of Racine, Bachelor of Science;
ATHENS — More than 4,800 students qualiﬁed
Dakota Reid O’Brien of Racine, Bachelor of Science
for the spring semester 2019 Dean’s List at Ohio
in Computer Science; Taylor J. McNickle of Racine,
University’s Athens campus. In addition, more than
5,300 students graduated with bachelor’s, master’s or Bachelor of Business Administration; Jacob T. Hoback
of Racine, Bachelor of Arts;
doctorate degrees from the University.
Timothy A. Stevens of Reedsville, Bachelor of Arts;
The graduates represented every region of the
Kayla Marie Hawthorne of Reedsville, Bachelor of
United States and numerous countries, including:
Iraq, Tanzania, Vietnam, Germany, China, Honduras, Science in Journalism; Kayla Charlene Chaney of
Reedsville, Master of Education;
Spain, Argentina, New Zeeland, Egypt and Austria.
Cody Allen White of Rutland, Bachelor of Science
Graduates from Meigs County were as follows:
in Aviation; Matthew Adam Shiﬂet of Rutland, BachLindsay Nicole Wolfe of Long Bottom, Bachelor of
elor of Science in Journalism;
Science in Child and Family Studies; Morgan Nicole
Melissa A. Weaver of Syracuse, Bachelor of Science
Snowden of Long Bottom, Bachelor of Science in
in Communication.
Nursing; Matthew Clayton Friend of Long Bottom,

OU announces spring
Dean’s List, graduates

Students on the Dean’s List represented 35 states,
including: Texas, Washington, West Virginia, Hawaii,
Colorado, New York, Louisiana, Rhode Island and
Ohio, as well as Puerto Rico and the District of
Columbia.
Meigs County Students named to the Dean’s List
for the Spring Semester were as follows:
Lindsay Nicole Wolfe of Long Bottom; Elayna
Teresa Bissell of Long Bottom; Angela Danielle
Morris of Middleport; Haley Danielle Kennedy of
Middleport; Sadie Ray Fox of Middleport; Madison
Brooke Dyer of Middleport; Duane Bruce Wolfe Jr.
of Pomeroy; Tyler Jacob Williams of Pomeroy; Bryce
Steven Swatzel of Pomeroy; Gregory Charles Sheets II
of Pomeroy; Raeline Noelle Reeves of Pomeoy; Chase
Matthew King of Pomeroy; Lilah Mae Gagne of Pomeroy; Katelyn Nicole Edwards of Pomeroy; Sky Brown
of Pomeroy;
Grace Adeline Wolfe of Racine; Tristen A. Wolfe
of Racine; Kalynn Ann Seymour of Racine; Riley L.
Roush of Racine; Kendra Robie of Racine; Taylor J.
McNickle of Racine; Daniel Ryan Dunfee of Racine;
Timothy A. Stevens of Reedsville; Garrett Lee Ritchie
of Reedsville; Madison Jayne Kuhn of Reedsville;
Miranda Renee Gillilan of Reedsville; Matthew Adam
Shiﬂet of Rutland; Dillon Mahr of Rutland; Earl Russell Henry Fields IV of Rutland; Paige Elizabeth Denney of Rutland; Chais Nicole Michael of Syracuse; and
Talon Quinn Drummer of Syracuse.
OHIO students must earn at least 3.5 grade point
average for the semester with a schedule of classes
totaling at least 15 hours, 12 of which were taken for
letter grades, to achieve this distinction.

LARGE AUCTION

ESTATE AUCTION

LOCATED AT THE AUCTION CENTER,

AUCTION LOCATED AT 5934 PARKERSBURG RD.,
(RT 21) SANDYVILLE, WV.

JUNE 22, 2019
@ 10:00 A.M.

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2019
AT 10:00 A.M.
RT 62N, 786 ADAMSVILLE RD., MASON WV 25260

SELLING THE ESTATE OF HELEN CLARESTINE SMITH, THE WIFE
OF THE LATE CARL E. SMITH.

ANTIQUE FURNITURE: Nice Oak Secretary w/Claw
Feet; Round Oak Table w/Claw Feet; 4 Oak Press
Back Chairs; 3 Pc. Poster BR Suite; Beautiful 2
Pc. Cherry Step Back Cupboard; Lg Oak Mantle;
Victrola; Dressers; Wash Stands; Table; Bah. RollTop Desk; Plus much more. MODERN FURNITURE:
2 Pc. Cherry Secretary; Round Oak Table w/
Chairs; Table w/6 Chairs; 2 Nice Wing-Back
Chairs; Pub Table w/Stools; Rainbow Sweeper;
and more. GLASSWARE &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Nice
Buckboard Child’s Wagon; 2 Aunt Jamima Cookie
jars; Coca Cola Bottle Carrier; Adv. Tin’s; Granite
Ware; Log Cabin Quilts; Plus Much more. AUTO,
ROTO TILLERS &amp; LAWN MOWERS: ITEMS START
SELLING AT 12:00 P.M. 6HP Troy Bilt Super Bronco
Rear Tine Tiller; 8HP Wizard Rear Tine Tiller; Troy
Bilt Chipper Vac; Troy Bilt Self Propelled Lawn
Mower. 1995 Toyota Corolla, 4dr, 1.6 Liter Engine.
BOOSTER WATER PUMP: Scala 2 Like New! Plus
Box Lots to be sold outside. We are loaded!!.

ANTIQUES
Pristine 1880 Vienna Regulator Wall Clock built in Vienna, Austria w/Documentation, (2)
Occupied Japan Lamps, Matching C&amp;O RR Caboose Lanterns, Pope Gosser china set,
15 Vintage Wine Barrels, Radio Flyer Wagon, Sellers Porcelain Top Work table, Hand
painted Fenton.
JEWELRY &amp; COLLECTIBLES
Various Sterling Silver necklaces, charms, brooches, 8 Sterling Silver Cups; Quilts &amp;
various elegant linens and doilies, Vintage Emerson Electric fan, wooden sugar bucket,
(5) early Noma Rope Twist Christmas Candle decorations, Old wooden ﬁle boxes,
Vintage scales, Easter &amp; Christmas decorations.
MODERN FURNITURE
Ethen Allen 12pc Dining Room suite w/ Gorgeous Bubble Glass China Cabinet &amp; sever,
(2) Prime Ethen Allen Bookcases, Ethen Allen 3pc Cherry coffee table w/ end tables,
Unique Ethen Allen 3 tiered stand, Outstanding Ethen Allen 4pc Bedroom suite, Ethen
Allen 3pc Beautiful Nesting tables, Ethen Allen Cherry dresser, bed, and night stand,
Ethen Allen Credenza w/ 2 matching stools, (2) Matching Ethen Allen Sofas, (2)Ethen
Allen matching Wingback chairs, (2) Ethen Allen Barrel Back chairs, 5pc Wooden
dinette w/ stool, Norwalk Sofa, Norwalk chair w/ stool, 3pc Florida Furniture Industries
Bedroom suite, (2) D&amp;R Kincaid chairs, Flex-Steel chair w/ ottoman, Glass stop coffee
table, Seth Thomas clock, Patio Furniture, Technics Organs in working condition, Childs
rocker, and more
H
Mikasa 10 place setting China, Kenmore Household Range, GE Washer and Dryer,
Gibson Chest Freezer, New Coleman Deluxe table lamps, Oreck and Bissel Vacuums,
Realistic Stereo System, Women’s RAM Milady golf clubs, bowling ball, Hook Rug, PM
Eagle book ends, various books, and more.
P
Ned Young, Fred Sanders, Marj Teague Dog picture, Timothy Prine Train Sketch, Floral
Pictures, Autumn &amp; Winter pictures, K. Helman Oil on Canvas, Japanese Birds, Wiepper
Dog picture, and more.
T
Nuts and Bolts Cabinets, Kennedy Tool box, Misc Tools, Misc Yard Tools
TERMS

FOOD AVAILABLE

CASH OR CHECK W/VALID ID, OR CREDIT/DEBIT W/5% BUYERS FEE
All items sold AS IS.

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/VALID ID, CREDIT/
DEBIT W/5% BUYERS PREMIUM

Bring a chair. Come enjoy one of the cleanest estates to be auctioned.
Food and Porta-John provided.

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
JAMES GROVES AUCTIONEER LICENSE #2348
BRITTNEY GROVES AUCTIONEER LICENSE #2347

PHONE # 304-773-5447 OR
304-593-5118

304-773-5447 OR
304-593-5118
***AUCTIONEERS NOTE: 2 AUCTION RINGS
SO BRING A FRIEND!!

OH-70132140

OH-70131109

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
JAMES GROVES #2348
BRITTANY GROVES #2347

CHECK AUCTIONZIP.COM FOR PICTURES
CO-EXECUTORS SAM MCPHERSON AND
STEPHANIE CHAMBERS

�8A Sunday, June 16, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

#?8.+CM��?8/�� M� ����s�#/-&gt;398��

8 locals named to D-2 all-district softball squad
By Alex Hawley

team, inﬁelder Brooklyn Sizemore
and outﬁelder Grace Hash. On
honorable mention for the Lady
Eight athletes from the Ohio Val- Raiders was second baseman Bayley Publishing area were named to lee Hollanbaugh.
On second team for the Blue
the Southeast Ohio Division II alldistrict softball teams for the 2019 Angels were junior shortstop Alex
season, as selected by the coaches Barnes and sophomore second
baseman Malerie Stanley. Barnes
from within the district.
River Valley and Gallia Academy was named to the honorable mention portion of the list in each of
— which ﬁnished the year with
the last two seasons, while this
respective records of 12-12 and
11-12 — picked up four selections makes Stanley’s ﬁrst all-district
honor.
apiece.
On special mention for Gallia
The Lady Raiders — who had
Academy are junior pitcher and
two players on the all-district
third baseman Bailey Meadows, as
squad a season ago — were repwell as sophomore outﬁelder Bailie
resented by a quartet of ﬁrst-time
Young. Last season, Young was a
all-district selections. The lone
ﬁrst-team choice.
local on the Division II ﬁrst team
Taylor Page and Sydney Camwas RVHS senior inﬁelder and
Ohio University-Chillicothe signee polo of Sheridan shared the D-2
Player of the Year award, while
Cierra Roberts.
A pair of freshmen represented
See SOFTBALL | 2B
the Silver and Black on second
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

RVHS senior Cierra Roberts fires to first base, during the Lady Raiders’ win on April 17 in Rocksprings, Ohio.

Capehart golf
league opens
at Riverside
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. — The actual season opening
golf tournament for the Frank Capehart Junior
Golf League took a week longer than originally
planned.
The nice-looking and well-conditioned Riverside
Golf Course hosted the initial tournament for the
young men and woman in this area on Wednesday.
The ﬁrst tournament for the 2019 season was
scheduled for Cliffside Golf Course on June 5th,
however, the weatherman decided to prohibit that
contest from taking place.
Weather conditions this Wednesday were pleasant for both the participants as well as the spectators. Play actually was a bit cool and windy at
times, but complaints were few and far between. A
total of 35 young men and woman were pleased to
be taking part in the tournament.
The age group of the 10-and-under players consisted of ﬁve young men and two young ladies.
A tie resulted in this boys division for ﬁrst place
between Riley Cotterill and Nate Harris, with
both shooting identical scores of 51. Ben Supple
claimed the second place trophy with his score 63.
Both Cy Watterson and Brier Taylor ﬁnished just
one stroke farther back with their scores of 64.
The two young ladies taking part in this age
group tied with the winning score. Ali Norris and
Teagan Conway — both veterans of last year’s
play — shared in the ﬁrst place trophy with their
scores of 63 for the day.
Several of the male participants taking part in
the 11-12 year old age group are also veterans of
last year’s play. Grant Roush squeezed out a twostroke victory for the ﬁrst place score of 46 over
Alex Conway’s second place score of 48. Mason
Morris shot the third-best score in this group with
a score 49. Brady Meadows was fourth with his
score while Noah Leachman and Jesse Jordan also
played in this group.
Marlo Norris — a multiple winner from previous years — was the only young lady in this age
group providing her the ﬁrst place trophy.
The group in the male age group of 13-15
included 8 players. This group is highly competitive and appears to be improving. Wednesday’s
winner was another veteran, Connor Ingels. Joe
Milhoan won the second place trophy with his
score of 44. Brycen Bumgarner was next in this
tournament with his score 45. Caleb Pierson was
next with Brennen Sang followed with Kaden
McCutcheon and Nathanael Baird and Matthew
Lawrence.
The only player in the ladies division of this
group was the winner, Lorena Kennedy.
Six veteran participants took place in the boys
division of the 15-17 year old group. Whitney
Byrd’s excellent score of 37 won the ﬁrst place trophy while the second place trophy was won by T.J.
Vogt. Ethan Short ﬁnished with the third place
score, while Jake Conrath, Tanner Lisle, and Matthew Morris also played.
The girls division 1st place trophy in this group
was won by another veteran player, Caitlin Cotterill, with her score of 54.
The older 18-19 year old group, both boys and
ladies, were all veteran players. All of them have
grown into real ladies and gentlemen and it is a
pleasure to have them participating once again.
The boys division was won by Levi Chapman
with a ﬁne score of 39. Ryan Harbour and Jensen
Anderson tied for the second place trophy with a
score of 41. Wyatt Nicholson was the 4th player in
this group.
See CAPEHART | 2B

Photos by Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Wooster senior Chelsea Copley makes a sliding catch in right field, during a NCAC doubleheader at Denison on April 13 in Granville, Ohio.

Copley completes career with Fighting Scots
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

WOOSTER, Ohio —
Consistency and versatility, a winning combination
on the road to success.
Chelsea Copley — the
2015 River Valley High
School Valedictorian
— recently completed
her softball career at
The College of Wooster,
an NCAA Division III
school that competes in
the North Coast Athletic
Conference.
Copley appeared in 151
games for the Fighting
Scots — one-shy of the
program record —and
helped the team to a
75-83 record in her tenure.
Chelsea — who never
changed her major —
graduated with a B.A. in
Communication Sciences
and Disorders, while also
earning her licensure in
Early Childhood Education. A four-year letterwinner and two-year
team captain, Copley had
mixed emotions about
her softball career coming
to an end.
“It feels good to be
done, but it’s kinda sad,”
Copley said. “When you
go through all of it, it’s
kinda similar to high
school, you want to keep
going to the next thing.
Now that all the dust has
settled, it’s kinda hit me
that it’s done. It was really fun, I’m glad I got to do
it, and I’ll miss it a lot.”
After ending her high
school softball career as
an All-Ohioan, Chelsea’s
college career began with
a bang, as she hit a home
run in her ﬁrst at-bat. She

Wooster senior Chelsea Copley glides into third base, during the
Fighting Scots’ April 13 contest at Denison in Granville, Ohio.

went on to blast six more
homers in her time with
the Fighting Scots, four
coming in her sophomore
season. Those four dingers place her in a tie for
ﬁfth in program history,
while her career total of
seven puts her in a tie
for sixth in the Wooster
record book.
Copley — who also
appears at seventh in
the record book with 40
career walks — admitted
that when she looks back
at her career, it’s not the
record book moments
that come to mind, but
rather the bond she built
with her teammates.
“I just remember having fun,” Copley said.
“On the ﬁeld, we had a
lot of fun things going
on, but off the ﬁeld, we
just had so much fun all

the time. On the ﬁeld, I
can think of several highlights, my top moments
that stick out to me from
softball, but when I think
about college softball, I
think about all the funny
stuff we did off the ﬁeld,
or the funny moments
we had at practice. It was
about winning and losing
games, that’s a big part of
it, but looking back at college, it was so much more
than just playing softball.
“Softball-wise, I hit a
home run in my ﬁrst college at-bat, I’ll never forget that. I hit a home run
to beat our rival in the
NCAC tournament my
sophomore year, I’ll never
forget that. We made it
to the tournament twice,
we had to sweep Ohio
Wesleyan to get there my
sophomore year. Those

are probably the most
intense games I played,
but they were the most
fun. There are deﬁnitely
moments that stick out,
but I can sit here and talk
for an hour about funny
things that happened off
the ﬁeld.”
As the only senior on
the 2019 squad, Copley
helped the Fighting Scots
to a 26-13 record and its
second NCAC tournament appearence in her
career. The 26 victories
are the most in team
history, and featured a
program-best 12-game
winning-streak.
Copley primarily played
as a defensive specialist
in her senior year, recording 25 outs and assisting
on three, without committing a single error. Her 28
total chances without an
error was only matched
by one other player on
the team this spring.
With just 27 of her
career 374 at-bats coming in her ﬁnal season,
Copley ﬁnished with a
career batting average of
.241, with 62 singles, 18
doubles and three triples.
She stole 13 bases in her
career, scored 45 runs
and drove in 42.
In her sophomore season, Copley was named
to the All-NCAC team as
an honorable mention,
posting a career-best .270
batting average with four
homers. She started all-43
games as a right ﬁelder in
her sophomore campaign,
tying four of her teammates for the most games
played in a single season
at Wooster.
See COPLEY | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, June 16, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Raptors earn 1st NBA title, top injured Warriors in Game 6
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)
— Kawhi Leonard raised
his arms high in triumph
and celebrated Canada’s
ﬁrst NBA championship.
“We the North!” is now
“We the Champs!”
Leonard and the
Toronto Raptors captured
the country’s ﬁrst major
title in 26 years with their
most remarkable road win
yet in the franchise’s NBA
Finals debut, outlasting
the battered and depleted
two-time defending champion Golden State Warriors 114-110 on Thursday night in a Game 6 for
the ages.
“I wanted to make history here. That’s what
I did,” a soaking wet
Leonard said, ski goggles
perched on his forehead
and sporting a fresh black
champions hat.
Stephen Curry missed
a contested 3-pointer
in the waning moments
before Golden State
called a timeout it didn’t
have, giving Leonard a
technical free throw with
0.9 seconds left to seal it.
Leonard, the NBA Finals
MVP for a second time,
then got behind Andre
Iguodala for a layup as

shooting from deep to
score 22 points with ﬁve
3s off the bench, while
Leonard wound up with
22 points. Kyle Lowry
scored the game’s ﬁrst
eight points and ﬁnished
with 26 in all to go with
10 assists and seven
rebounds.
Fans poured into
the streets in Toronto,
screaming and honking
horns after the Raptors
pulled off a third straight
win on Golden State’s
home ﬂoor that said
goodbye to NBA basketball after 47 seasons.
And the Raptors did it
with the very kind of
depth that helped deﬁne
Golden State’s transformation into a dynasty
the past ﬁve seasons.
This time, the WarBen Margot | AP riors were wounded.
Toronto Raptors forward Kawhi Leonard celebrates after the Raptors defeated the Golden State Warriors 114-110 in Game 6 to win the
Golden State already
NBA Finals 4-2 in Oakland, Calif. on Thursday. Leonard was named the NBA Finals MVP.
was down two-time
reigning NBA Finals
MVP Kevin Durant, who
slowly, hands on his
Serge Ibaka pulled
ard could let it all out. A
the buzzer sounded, but
had surgery Wedneshead on a night Splash
his head up through
Canadian team — and
it went to review and
Brother Klay Thompson day for a ruptured
the hoop by the Golden
we’re not talking hockey
the basket was called off
right Achilles tendon.
State bench as the crowd suffered a torn ACL in
before Leonard’s two free here — stood on top of
his left knee and depart- Then, the Warriors lost
chanted “Warriors!
throws. That only delayed one of the traditional
Thompson — and they
Warriors!” after a sensa- ed with 30 points.
major sports leagues for
the celebration for a
Fred VanVleet rescued couldn’t overcome just
tional send-off at Oracle
the ﬁrst time since the
moment.
one more heartbreaking
the Raptors down the
Arena.
When it actually ended, Toronto Blue Jays won
stretch with his dazzling injury.
Curry walked away
the 1993 World Series.
the typically stoic Leon-

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Tri-County Junior
Golf Schedule

3388, or Bob Blessing 304-675-6135 if
you can contribute or have questions
concerning the tour.

apiece, so that they may follow the tournament and eat with the kids.
To enter please contact the Cliffside
clubhouse at 740-446-4653, or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919 or 740-645-4381.
Please leave player’s name, age as of
July 18, 2019 and the school the individual is currently attending.

sessions; daily instruction on shooting,
ball-handling, post play and defense;
and use of the school’s swimming pool.
There will also be a camp store featuring drinks, snacks, pizza and Rio
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The schedule
Grande apparel for sale each day.
for the 2019 Frank Capehart Tri-County
Veteran Rio Grande women’s basketJunior Golf League has been released.
ball head coach David Smalley, who
The tour ofﬁcially began on Wednesranks among the top 10 coaches on the
day, June 12, at Riverside Golf Club
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Cliffside Golf
active wins list with more than 500,
in Mason. Age groups for both young
Course will be hosting the 11th annual
will be the camp director.
ladies and young men are 10-and-under, Kiwanis Juniors at Cliffside Golf TourOnline registration is available
11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
nament for junior golfers on Thursday,
through the women’s basketball link
The remaining tournaments, courses July 18, starting at 10 a.m. Registration
on the school’s athletic website, www.
and dates of play are as follows: Tueswill be from 9 a.m. until 9:45.
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The Unirioredstorm.com. Registration forms
day, June 18, at Meigs County Course
This is an individual stroke play
versity of Rio Grande’s 2019 Women’s
are available in the lobby of the Lyne
in Pomeroy; Wednesday, June 26, at
tournament open to golfers ages 10-or- Basketball Camp is scheduled for July
Center during regular business hours.
Riverside Golf Course in Mason; and
under to 18 years old. The participants 7-10 at the Lyne Center on the URG
Registration forms should be mailed
Tuesday, July 9, at Meigs County Golf
will be divided into four divisions,
campus.
to David Smalley, Rio Grande Women’s
Course in Pomeroy.
10-under, 11-12, 13-15, and 16-18.
The overnight instructional camp
Basketball Camp, P.O. Box 500, Rio
The fee for each tournament is $12
Entry fee is $20 for players 12-andis open to girls in grades 4-12. Cost is
per player. A small lunch is included
under, and $30 for players 13-18. Club- $295 per camper, which includes lodg- Grande, OH 45674. Checks should be
with the fee and will be served at the
house certiﬁcates and individual awards ing, meals, a certiﬁcate of participation made payable to Women’s Basketball
Camp.
conclusion of play each week. Registra- will be presented to the top-three places and a t-shirt.
For more information, contact Smaltion begins at 8:30 a.m. with play start- in each division.
Campers will also receive 24-hour
ing at 9 a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone at
Cart and meal passes will be available supervision from coaches and counsel- ley at 740-245-7491 or at 1-800-282740-256-6160, Jan Haddox at 304-675for spectators to follow kids for $15
ors; lecture/discussion groups and ﬁlm 7201, or by e-mail dsmalley@rio.edu

Kiwanis Juniors
Golf Tournament

RedStorm women’s
basketball camp

Softball
From page 1B

Lady Generals skipper Troy Wolfe was
named Coach of the
Year.
2019 Southeast Ohio
Coaches All-District
Division II Softball
Teams
FIRST TEAM
Taylor Pagan, Sheridan; Sydney Campolo, Sheridan; Sarah
Moats, Circleville;
Jessica Camp, Miami
Trace; Taylor Evans,
Jackson; Jocie Fisher,
Unioto; Lexi Parsons,
Logan Elm; Josie
Crabtree, McClain;
Hannah Robinson,
Waverly; Diamond
Decker, Warren;
Cierra Roberts,
River Valley; Kerrigan Ward, Vinton
County; Kaylee Stewart, Athens; Makayla
Sheridan, Sheridan;
Olivia Wolfe, Miami
Trace; Zoiee Smith,
Waverly; Brittny Ogg,
Fairﬁeld Union; Kylee
Bako, Jackson; Hallie
Pinkerton, Unioto;
Hailey Robinson,
Waverly.
Co-Players of the
Year:
Taylor Pagan, Sheridan; Sydney Campolo,
Sheridan.
Coach of the Year:
Troy Wolfe, Sheridan.
SECOND TEAM
Malerie Stanley,
Gallia Academy;
Jayla Brown, Chilli-

cothe; Sydney Resser,
Logan Elm; Kaitlyn
Sturgeon, Sheridan;
Gracey Searmon, Hillsboro; Kenzie McConnell; Circleville; Avery
King, Unioto; Maddy
Kenkins, Washington
Court House; Olivia
Tengolia, Athens;
Beckley Smith,
McClain; Brooklyn
Sizemore, River Valley; Briana Sexton,
Vinton County; Payton Porter, Logan
Elm; Jayla Campbell,
Unioto; Alex Barnes,
Gallia Academy;
Grace Hash, River
Valley; Leah Alford,
Jackson; Ashley
Campbell, Miami
Trace.
HONORABLE
MENTION
Laikyn Teasley, Fairﬁeld Union; Meliah
Johnson, Chillicothe;
Mallory Parsons, Hillsboro; Sidney Payton,
Miami Trace; Sidney
Gray, Circleville;
Olivia Shutts, Warren;
Kenzie Dietrick, Hillsboro; Makenna Knisely, Washington Court
House; Emma Bellaw,
Waverly; Katie Kish,
Athens; Kailyn Sharp,
Athens; Abby Faught,
Vinton County; Julia
Hall, Chillicothe;
Baylee Hollanbaugh,
River Valley; Allison
Beatty, McClain;
Kaylee Stevenson,
McClain; Bailie
Young, Gallia Academy; Bailey Meadows,
Gallia Academy.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

place trophy with her
score of 49.
Next week’s tournament will be held at
the Meigs County Golf
Course located just North
of Pomeroy, Ohio. This
tournament will be on
Tuesday, June 18. The

entry fee is $12. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m.
with play to begin at 9:00
a.m. and is open to all
area youth age 19-andunder. A small lunch will
be served at the conclusion of play. The directors
of the league are always

looking for contributions to help support the
league. If you have any
questions, please contact
any of the following: Jeff
Slone, 740-256-6160, or
Jan Haddox, 304-6753388 or Bob Blessing,
304-675-6135.

one season. I thought it
would kinda be easier, it
deﬁnitely wasn’t, but it
was kinda nice, because
From page 1B
softball was my favorite.”
Copley’s ability to
adapt was put to test
Chelsea ﬁnished with
a career ﬁelding percent- with coaching changes
throughout her career,
age of .950, and made
and she credits the bond
starts at six different
spots in the ﬁeld — sec- from the teammates as
something that helped
ond base, third base,
the transition between
shortstop, and all-3 outleaders.
ﬁeld positions.
“I came in, I was
Perhaps Copley’s versatility came from her high recruited by someone,
she was there for the fall
school days, when she
was a three-sport athlete, season and she ended up
leaving for personal reaearning all-district and
all-conference honors in sons after that, and then
I had an interim head
softball, basketball and
coach,” Copley said.
volleyball.
“While I was there I had
Chelsea talked about
four assistant coaches,
the adjustment it took
from being a three-sport a new one every year,
and then I had three
athlete, to focusing on
softball year-round, with head coaches, the one
who recruited me, the
a season in the fall and
interim, and then Coach
team workouts in the
(Victoria) Rumph, who I
winter.
“I was still just as busy had at the end.
“Everyone coaches difeven though it was just
one sport,” Copley said. ferently, leads differently,
and has different rules.
“Playing three sports, I
The way practices were
was busy in every searan and things like that
son, I went from one
sport, to the next, to the deﬁnitely changed, and
next. College was differ- I think the culture even
changed a little bit over
ent because it was only
the years, but that bond
softball, but it’s softball
that you have with your
year-round instead of
teammates kinda stays
being softball of for just

the same.”
Copley’s versatility also had to come in
handy when dealing with
the roster changes that
occurred in her tenure.
“I would say I played
with around 40 teammates,” Copley said.
“Going in, I was the
younger one and I got
to know everyone else,
and then after that, there
was always a new group
coming in. There was
always an adjustment
period when you meet
people, kind of that awkward week where you
get to know each other,
but after that it was like
you’ve known them your
whole life. You were with
your teammates from
sun-up to sun-down, so
the relationships that
you form with people
in college were a lot different. I learned more
about people in college
in a week, than I know
about people I went to
high school with for four
years.”
Copley earned her
way onto the National
Fastpitch Coaches Association All-American
Scholar Athlete list
twice, requiring a 3.5
grade-point average-orbetter. Chelsea made the

Dean’s List in her ﬁnal
semester, meeting the
required 3.65 GPA.
While playing competitive softball may be
behind her, Chelsea still
umpires games and could
even see herself coaching
in the future. But ﬁrst,
Copley will attend graduate school at Saint Mary’s
College in Notre Dame,
Indiana, with plans to
become a Speech Language Pathologist.
“My dream job is to
work in a school setting
as an S.L.P., but I’m
deﬁnitely open to the hospital setting or a specialized center when I ﬁrst
start out,” Copley said.
“School has always been
my dream, that’s why I
did teaching and speech,
to work with kids. I can
deﬁnitely see when I
settle down and get a job,
maybe one of these days,
coaching like my dad did.
My dad coached for a
lot of years, and I would
deﬁnitely consider doing
that later on, but for
right now, I have to ﬁnish
school.”
Chelsea is the daughter
of John and Michelle Copley of Bidwell, Ohio.

Capehart
From page 1B

Haley Pierson in the
ladies division, was the
only player in this group
and she won the ﬁrst

Copley

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Looks are deceiving
Snapping
turtles are
interesting
creatures

It’s not going to win
any beauty or popularity
contests, but it is hard
not to admire the snapping turtle.
The Common Snapping
Turtle (Chelydra serpentine) needs no introduction – most people know
it when they see it. The
snapping turtle is the
largest turtle in Ohio
and can weigh up to 35
pounds with a carapace
(shell) length of 20 inches, although the average
snapping turtle is substantially smaller. is widespread throughout most
of eastern North America, ranging from Florida
to the Rocky Mountains,
north to southern Canada
and northeast to New
England as far as Nova
Scotia.
It is considered a species of “least concern” by
the International Union
for Conservation of
Nature. The larger Alligator Snapping Turtle mostly found in the southeastern United States is
considered threatened.

for breakfast.
Over the past
Incidentally, the
month or so I have
sex of snapping
been on hiatus
turtle offspring
from writing, but I
is determined by
have had a couple
the temperature
of encounters with
at which the eggs
snapping turtles.
develop; warmer
First, at the lime
In the
eggs equal female
doser on Bailey
Open
young.
Run Road, I came
Jim Freeman
Snapping turtles
across a baby snapcan live pretty
ping turtle about to
enter the road. The doser much anywhere there is
is used to treat acid mine water. No pond is out of
drainage, but that can be reach for these turtles,
a story for another day – which can travel overland
if you want to know what a great distance to ﬁnd a
new home or to lay eggs.
it does there is a large
sign on the fence outside I have heard it said that a
pond can be deﬁned as a
of the doser.
Anyway, I scooped it up body of water surrounding a snapping turtle.
(the baby snapper) and
They generally reign
carried back away from
supreme in their habitat,
the road. This one was
and most anything can be
so tiny that it couldn’t
food to a large snapping
help but be cute, and
turtle.
more importantly it was
I’ve seen snapping
small enough that I didn’t
turtles in pretty much
have to worry about my
any type of water you
ﬁngers.
can imagine, from ponds
Later that same day,
and lakes, to streams and
while using the string
trimmer along the drive- rivers, muddy ditches,
way, I discovered a larger, even acid-mine drainage
impacted streams – one
decidedly un-cute snapping turtle basking in the of the largest snapping
turtles I have ever seen
grass – I just gave that
one a wide berth and con- was in Thomas Fork,
which is historically
tinued my work.
Then just this Wednes- affected by acid-mine
drainage. Snappers hiberday I noticed a hole
nate over the winter, usualong our driveway that
upon closer examination ally laying in the mud in
revealed perhaps a dozen the bottom of a body of
broken egg shells; appar- water, “breathing” under
ently something found a the water through memclutch of snapping turtle branes in their throat or
mouth – ordinarily they
eggs and enjoyed eggs

must surface to breathe.
Snapping turtles are
not considered particularly aggressive while in
water – they prefer to ﬂee
versus ﬁght – but a snapping turtle on land can be
combative indeed, standing its ground, hissing,
and biting with its sharp
beak anything that gets
too close. A mature, male
snapping turtle has few
natural predators – except
maybe humans. Snapping
turtles are occasionally
eaten as food.
By the way, snapping
turtles make poor pets;
they are neither cute nor
cuddly, and resent being
picked up and handled.
Although their biting
power is greatly exaggerated, they can still
inﬂict nasty bites with
their sharp beaks. The
safest way to pick up a
common snapping turtle
is by grasping the carapace above the back legs,
or from behind with a
shovel.
Nobody really knows
how long a snapping turtle can live; in captivity
their lifespans are considered around 47 years, but
there is a possibility that
they can live longer than
100 years.
Jim Freeman works with the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District. His column generally
appears every other weekend. He
can be contacted weekdays at
740-992-4282 or at jim.freeman@
oh.nacdnet.net

Chastain relishing NASCAR opportunities
NEWTON, Iowa (AP)
— Ross Chastain seems
like the busiest driver in
NASCAR.
Chastain opened the
season with 36 consecutive starts across the Cup,
Xﬁnity and Truck series
and has logged a staggering 7,501 laps since
February, a streak that
only came to an end when
he sat out last week’s Cup
event in Michigan.
It has been a taxing
season for the 26-year-old
Chastain, who has sponsorship duties to handle
for all three of his rides
between races. He is not
about to say no to anyone
as he tries to establish
himself in the sport.
“Sunday night, I’m
tired. There’s no way
around it,” Chastain
said. “You prepare. You
hydrate. You work out.
You eat right. You’re a
race car driver, so you get
through it.”
Chastain, who this
month switched from
competing for Xﬁnity

Phelan M. Ebenhack | AP file

NASCAR driver Ross Chastain (10) opened the season with 36
consecutive starts across the Cup, XFinity and trucks series, a
streak that’s believed to be a record in stock car racing. Chastain
has logged a staggering 7,501 laps since February, a streak that
only came to an end when he sat out last week’s Cup event in
Michigan.

points to points in trucks,
will run this weekend at
Iowa Speedway. Part of
the reason he is reluctant
to turn down any spots
behind a wheel is because
he spent years ﬁghting to
run in competitive rides.
Chastain broke through
as an 18-year-old in The
Trucks Series in 2011. He
ran a full schedule there
in 2012, but ﬁnished just

17th. Chastain moved
over to the Xﬁnity series
in 2015, and even though
he ﬁnally took a checkered ﬂag last year, in Las
Vegas, Chastain has never
ﬁnished better than 10th
in that series.
Chastain is also in his
second season in Cup,
where he has one top-10
ﬁnish (the Daytona 500
in his native Florida).

Chastain has outperformed his pole position
in 10 of the 12 races he
ﬁnished.
The plan this season
was for Chastain to compete for an Xﬁnity title
once again. But a rough
start there and a hot start
in trucks helped lead to
a switch in the points
pursuit.
“There were a lot of
contributing factors. I
don’t need to get into all
of it, but our hand got
forced a little bit,” Chastain said. “But it was just
the right move, honestly.”
By switching his championship afﬁliation, Chastain had to give up all
of the points — and his
win at Kansas — he had
earned in his truck up to
that point.
But if Chastain keeps
running like he has so far,
it likely won’t matter.
Chastain has ﬁnished
in the top 10 in all nine
truck starts, even though
he hasn’t ﬁnished higher
than sixth in qualifying.

MLB

Tampa Bay
New York
Boston
Toronto
Baltimore

W
42
41
37
25
21

L
27
27
34
44
48

Minnesota
Cleveland
Chicago
Detroit
Kansas City

W
46
35
34
25
22

L
22
33
34
41
47

Houston
Texas
Oakland
Los Angeles
Seattle

W
47
37
35
34
30

L
23
32
35
36
43

Atlanta
Philadelphia
New York
Washington
Miami

W
41
38
33
32
24

L
29
31
36
37
43

Milwaukee
Chicago
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati

W
39
38
35
31
30

L
30
31
33
38
37

Los Angeles
Colorado
Arizona
San Diego
San Francisco

W
47
36
37
34
29

L
23
33
34
36
38

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.609
—
—
.603
½
—
.521
6
1
.362
17
12
.304
21
16
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.676
—
—
.515
11
1½
.500
12
2½
.379
20
10½
.319 24½
15
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.671
—
—
.536 9½
—
.500
12
2½
.486
13
3½
.411 18½
9
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.586
—
—
.551
2½
—
.478
7½
5
.464 8½
6
.358 15½
13
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.565
—
—
.551
1
—
.515
3½
2½
.449
8
7
.448
8
7
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.671
—
—
.522 10½
2
.521 10½
2
.486
13
4½
.433 16½
8

L10
6-4
3-7
5-5
4-6
3-7

Str Home
W-1 19-17
L-3 22-13
W-3 17-17
L-1 12-22
L-3 9-26

Away
23-10
19-14
20-17
13-22
12-22

L10
6-4
6-4
6-4
3-7
3-7

Str Home
W-2 22-10
W-1 20-17
W-3 20-15
L-2 11-22
L-1 14-23

Away
24-12
15-16
14-19
14-19
8-24

L10
7-3
6-4
5-5
5-5
5-5

Str Home
W-1 26-10
W-1 24-12
L-1 18-16
L-1 19-18
W-1 13-22

Away
21-13
13-20
17-19
15-18
17-21

L10
8-2
5-5
5-5
6-4
3-7

Str Home
W-8 21-15
L-2 23-14
L-2 19-13
W-1 16-16
L-1 12-24

Away
20-14
15-17
14-23
16-21
12-19

L10
6-4
5-5
5-5
3-7
3-7

Str Home
L-1 22-13
L-2 24-11
W-2 20-13
W-1 13-18
L-1 15-16

Away
17-17
14-20
15-20
18-20
15-21

L10
6-4
5-5
7-3
3-7
6-4

Str Home
W-2
27-7
L-1 21-14
L-1 14-16
W-1 18-20
W-3 14-20

Away
20-16
15-19
23-18
16-16
15-18

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Friday’s Games
Boston 13, Baltimore 2
Cleveland 13, Detroit 4
Tampa Bay 9, L.A. Angels 4
Texas 7, Cincinnati 1
Minnesota 2, Kansas City 0
Chicago White Sox 10, N.Y. Yankees 2
Houston 15, Toronto 2
Seattle 9, Oakland 2
Saturday’s Games
L.A. Angels at Tampa Bay, 1:10 p.m.
Boston at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m.
Toronto at Houston, 4:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Detroit, 6:10 p.m.
Kansas City at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Chicago White Sox, 7:10
p.m.
Texas at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Seattle at Oakland, 9:07 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Boston (TBD) at Baltimore (Means 6-4),
1:05 p.m.
Cleveland (Bauer 4-6) at Detroit (Turnbull
3-5), 1:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Canning 2-2) at Tampa Bay
(Stanek 0-1), 1:10 p.m.
Texas (Jurado 4-2) at Cincinnati (Gray
2-5), 1:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Junis 4-6) at Minnesota
(Perez 7-2), 2:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Paxton 3-3) at Chicago
White Sox (Despaigne 0-1), 2:10 p.m.
Toronto (Thornton 1-5) at Houston (Peacock 6-3), 2:10 p.m.
Seattle (Leake 5-6) at Oakland (Anderson
0-1), 4:07 p.m.
Monday’s Games
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Houston at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Boston at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Baltimore at Oakland, 10:07 p.m.
Kansas City at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Friday’s Games
St. Louis 5, N.Y. Mets 4, 1st game, 10 innings
Washington 7, Arizona 3
Pittsburgh 11, Miami 0
St. Louis 9, N.Y. Mets 5, 2nd game
Texas 7, Cincinnati 1
Atlanta 9, Philadelphia 8
San Diego 16, Colorado 12, 12 innings
L.A. Dodgers 5, Chicago Cubs 3
San Francisco 5, Milwaukee 3
Saturday’s Games
Arizona at Washington, 4:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Miami, 6:10 p.m.
St. Louis at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Texas at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:20 p.m.
San Diego at Colorado, 8:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Pittsburgh (Archer 3-6) at Miami (Alcantara 3-6), 1:10 p.m.
St. Louis (Hudson 5-3) at N.Y. Mets (Vargas 3-3), 1:10 p.m.
Texas (Jurado 4-2) at Cincinnati (Gray
2-5), 1:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Irvin 2-1) at Atlanta
(Foltynewicz 1-5), 1:20 p.m.
Arizona (TBD) at Washington (Sanchez
2-6), 1:35 p.m.
San Diego (Margevicius 2-6) at Colorado
(Lambert 2-0), 3:10 p.m.
Milwaukee (Anderson 3-1) at San Francisco (Samardzija 3-5), 4:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Quintana 4-6) at L.A.
Dodgers (Ryu 9-1), 7:05 p.m.
Monday’s Games
Philadelphia at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Houston at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 7:20 p.m.
Miami at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Milwaukee at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.

Sunday, June 16, 2019 3B

Bouwmeester and
Blues’ greybeards
finally lift Stanley Cup
By Stephen Whyno
Associated Press

Jay Bouwmeester had
to turn on the TV to
see playoff hockey for
almost a decade after he
made it to the NHL.
A third overall pick
with lofty expectations,
Bouwmeester didn’t get
to play beyond the regular season his ﬁrst nine
years in the league.
“Every year you got
sick of watching the
playoffs,” Bouwmeester
said.
Bouwmeester put 764
games on his resume
before ﬁnally getting
his ﬁrst taste of the
playoffs, a record at the
time for active players
when he ﬁnally got the
opportunity in 2013.
Bouwmeester has since
racked up 75 more playoff games. On Wednesday night in Boston,
he was the ﬁrst player
St. Louis Blues captain
Alex Pietrangelo handed the Stanley Cup to
as a sign of respect for
the 35-year-old veteran
and appreciation for his
long road to his ﬁrst
NHL championship.
“It’s crazy,” Bouwmeester said. “You go
through times where
you have ups and
downs in your career,
you always see lots of
guys in here, guys that
end up winning and
you know it’s so hard.
To ﬁnally do it, I don’t
know. I’m kind of dumbfounded.”
Bouwmeester — who
signed a $3.25 million
contract extension
just before the playoffs
began — was used to
his career being deﬁned
in two parts. For years,
he was the guy who
never made to the
postseason and then
he was the guy who
went all the time. There
were other highlights,
of course — a 2014
Olympic gold medal,
the 2016 World Cup of
Hockey title. But until
this week, he was the
guy with 1,184 regularseason games without
an NHL championship,
trailing only Joe Thornton and Patrick Marleau
among active players.
Not anymore.
“You play the 82
games or whatever it
is and that’s ﬁne, you
want to be successfully
individually and as a
team, but at the end of
the day, you want to be
in the playoffs because
those are the fun
games,” Bouwmeester
said. “Once you get
there, you realize even
more how much fun it
is and really how easy
the games are to play
because everybody’s
focused.”
The Blues didn’t
make anything easy in
the playoffs, going to
at least six games in
all four rounds. They
eliminated their ﬁrst
three opponents on the
ﬁrst chance before losing Game 6 of the ﬁnal
against Boston.
That gave Pietrangelo more time to think
about who he’d give the
Cup to after receiving
it from Commissioner
Gary Bettman. Not that
he needed it.
“It’s not hard to ﬁgure
out,” Pietrangelo said
with a wry smile.
Bouwmeester handed
it to next door neighbor
and 35-year-old alternate captain Alex Steen,
who just completed his
10th full season with St.
Louis and 14th in the
NHL. That was a nobrainer.
“He’s been through a
lot, too,” Bouwmeester

said of Steen, who is
signed for two more
years. “He played 14
years. People talk, we
didn’t have anybody
who won a Cup, it
doesn’t matter. You play
the games, and now we
all have one.”
That includes 36-yearold journeyman forward
Chris Thorburn, who
skated three shifts for
1:52 on Oct. 13 in his
only NHL action of the
season. Still, he was the
third player to get the
Cup after Pietrangelo
on a team full of championship newcomers.
“The team makes
you feel a part of it,”
said Thorburn, who is
a pending free agent
and could be at the end
of his career. “We don’t
leave a man behind.
Everyone’s part of the
group, part of something special. Just feels
like everyone had a part
in it.”
Including 32-year-old
St. Louis native Chris
Butler, who played 13
NHL games in his ﬁfth
year in the Blues organization. Butler could
probably be a mainstay
for their top minor
league afﬁliate in San
Antonio for a few more
years, but the 18th
player to get the Cup
more than appreciates
the value of winning it.
“There is a lot of
people that play a long
time in this business
and never get an opportunity to be at this
stage,” Butler said. “You
try not to take anything
for granted, you try
and enjoy every little
bit of it. To be a part of
something like this, it’s
hard to put into words,
but this is pretty damn
special.”
UP NEXT
Now that the Cup
belongs to the Blues,
their biggest offseason decisions revolve
around a handful of key
restricted and unrestricted free agents.
That includes pending
restricted free agent
Jordan Binnington
, who came out of
nowhere to become the
Blues’ goaltender of the
present and future, and
Patrick Maroon and
Carl Gunnarsson, both
pending unrestricted
free agents.
General manager
Doug Armstrong will be
busy negotiating new
contracts for pending
RFA forwards Robby
Fabbri, Zach Sanford,
Oskar Sundqvist,
Sammy Blais and Ivan
Barbashev and defenseman Joel Edmundson.
Vince Dunn, who
could sign an extension
as soon as July 1, got
to raise the Cup at age
22 and looks at Bouwmeester with admiration for all the games
he played before getting
the honor.
“For me at such a
young age, it’s very special,” Dunn said. “You
kind of take things for
granted when you’re
younger, but now you
really take it in.”
THE CHIEF
St. Louis will presumably rush to remove the
interim tag from Craig
Berube’s title after
he became the fourth
coach in the past 11
seasons to lead a team
to the Stanley Cup after
taking over midseason.
“We’re going to work
that out,” Armstrong
said.
Maybe it can wait
just a bit longer: The
championship parade is
Saturday in St. Louis.

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, June 16, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Browns’ Landry: Mayfield comments on Johnson a ‘non-issue’
SHAKER HEIGHTS,
Ohio (AP) — Jarvis
Landry’s not worried
about the Browns bickering.
The splashy wide
receiver said Friday he
doesn’t believe recent
harsh comments quarterback Baker Mayﬁeld
made about disgruntled
running back Duke Johnson will affect chemistry
for a Cleveland team
dealing with high expectations.
“It’s a non-issue,”

Landry said while hosting his youth camp at
Shaker Heights High
School.
As Landry spoke,
Browns owner Jimmy
Haslam watched from
high in the bleachers and
general manager John
Dorsey was on the ﬁeld
watching drills under
gorgeous, blue skies and
in cool, football-seasonlike temperatures.
Last week, Mayﬁeld,
who set the NFL rookie
record for touchdown

passes last season, was
critical of Johnson, who
demanded a trade and
skipped Cleveland’s voluntary workouts after
learning Dorsey shopped
him around after signing
free agent Kareem Hunt.
Mayﬁeld called Johnson’s situation “selfinﬂicted” and stressed
the back has “got to do
his job” as long as he’s
with the Browns.
On Thursday, NFL
Network, citing multiple
sources, reported that

several Browns players
approached Mayﬁeld in
the locker room to voice
their displeasure about
his comments and any
differences were “hashed
out.”
Landry dismissed
the report and believes
Mayﬁeld and Johnson
can still work together
despite any differences.
“I don’t think it would
be difﬁcult at all,”
Landry said. “It’s a nonissue, and it’s not one
that we are feeling any

particular way about.
It’s something that is
being blown up from
(the media) more than it
really is.”
The Browns are facing
new scrutiny following a busy offseason in
which they acquired star
receiver Odell Beckham
Jr., Landry’s former LSU
teammate and close
friend. The Browns have
become fashionable, and
with that comes extra
attention.
“That’s a part of this

story. That’s a part of
everything that we’re
trying to accomplish,”
said Landry, who had
81 catches for 976 yards
and four TDs in his ﬁrst
season with Cleveland.
“We’re going to have
to work through those
things. The best way to
tell the foundation of
something is internally.
If we stay strong and
continue to trust each
other, continue to build
on our relationship, our
chemistry, we’ll be ﬁne.”

Draft, free agency… and lots Prosecutors to retry Kellen
of questions await the NBA Winslow Jr. on rape charges
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)
— NBA Commissioner
Adam Silver is expected
to open next week’s draft
by announcing that Zion
Williamson is the No. 1
overall selection headed
to New Orleans. And four
months after that, Silver
will be in Toronto on
opening night to help the
Raptors hand out championship rings and watch
them raise a banner.
There are few other
certainties in the NBA
right now.
The league has a new
champion and a new
landscape. Toronto has
climbed to the mountaintop, defeating a Golden
State team that lost AllStars Kevin Durant and
Klay Thompson to major
injuries toward the end
of the NBA Finals. For
the ﬁrst time in a halfdecade, the Warriors
won’t be the overwhelming favorites to win it all
next season. They might
not even be favored to
win the Western Conference.
“I think true champions like we are, we
should be able to adapt
and keep this same kind
of DNA no matter what
our roster looks like next
year,” Warriors guard
Stephen Curry said. “And
have high hopes about
being back on this stage,
whether it looks the same
or not.”
It won’t look the same.
Not much will next season.
The champion Raptors
don’t know if they’ll be
keeping NBA Finals MVP
Kawhi Leonard, who
becomes a free agent in
a couple weeks and one
that every team with lots
of spending power will
want. Danny Green, who

went to Toronto in the
deal that brought Leonard, is a free agent. Marc
Gasol, a huge midseason
pickup, is a free agent.
There are even reports
that Raptors President
Masai Ujiri may consider
leaving.
“I was focused on the
now, and I wanted to
make history here and
that’s all I did,” Leonard
said. “I’m still playing
basketball no matter what
jersey I have on.”
Durant won’t be
playing on opening
night next season, and
almost certainly not on
any night next season
because of his torn Achilles — though he’ll still
be highly coveted if he
hits the free-agent market
as expected. Thompson
will miss, at minimum,
most of the regular season with his torn ACL.
The Warriors may lose
DeMarcus Cousins in
free agency and Shaun
Livingston to retirement.
The team going to San
Francisco might look
much different than the
one that ended this season in Oakland.
Longtime NBA stars
like Dwyane Wade, Dirk
Nowitzki and Tony Parker will be gone, enjoying
retirements. Vince Carter
plans to be back for a
22nd and ﬁnal season.
Leonard, LeBron James
and Andre Iguodala —
if he returns, which is
expected — may be the
only three players on the
court to start the season
with an NBA Finals MVP
trophy in their possession.
There will be new
coaches taking over in
Sacramento, Phoenix,
Cleveland, Memphis and
with the Los Angeles

By Julie Watson

Lakers. The makeups of
the front-ofﬁce teams in
Washington and New
Orleans will be different.
And then there’s all the
player movement, which
could be seismic.
Anthony Davis may be
traded by the Pelicans, as
the soap opera there continues. Kyrie Irving, who
told Boston fans before
the season that he’d resign with the Celtics, is
going to be a free agent.
Durant might change
teams. Thompson may as
well, though that seems
unlikely. Kemba Walker
is dropping every hint
that he wants to stay in
Charlotte.
“I don’t know if I’ll sign
back with them,” said
Walker, who is eligible
for a supermax contract
worth $221 million over
ﬁve years. “I’m not sure.
But they are my ﬁrst priority. … We’ll see when
the time comes.”
There’s going to be a
lot of “we’ll see” over the
next few months.
Milwaukee had the
NBA’s best regularseason record at 60-22
and will likely enter next
season with the MVP
— if Giannis Antetokounmpo walks away with
that trophy on June 24.
He’s vowing to improve
and that might make the
Bucks, who have some
free-agent decisions to
ponder, better as well.
“Giannis is going to
get better,” Bucks coach
Mike Budenholzer said.
“To be excited about
his future at 24 … the
thing that makes Giannis
unique and exciting is in
our minds, we feel like
he’s going to get a lot
better. Giannis, we feel,
has got a lot of room to
grow.”

Winslow, who played
for Cleveland, Tampa
Bay, New England and
the New York Jets, was
VISTA, Calif. — Forconvicted Monday of
mer pro football player
raping a 58-year-old
Kellen Winslow Jr. will
homeless woman and
be retried after a jury
convicted him of raping two counts of lewd conduct involving two other
a homeless woman but
women.
failed to agree on eight
A judge declared a
other criminal charges,
mistrial on the remainincluding the rape of a
ing charges after the jury
54-year-old hitchhiker
and an unconscious teen said it was hopelessly
in 2003, California pros- deadlocked. The remaining charges include six
ecutors said Friday.
felonies, including the
Assistant District
two counts of rape and
Attorney Dan Owens
said at a hearing in San a sodomy charge for the
Diego County Superior attack on the homeless
woman. Winslow also
Court that ﬁve women
will be retried on two
who testiﬁed against
Winslow at the ﬁrst trial misdemeanor charges
of elderly battery and
will be back on the witabuse.
ness stand at a second
One of the convictions
trial set for September.
for a lewd act occurred
“A sexual assault victim having to go forward in front of a 77-yearwith testimony in court old woman at his gym,
although he was acquita second time is never
easy so we will certainly ted of the same charge
involving the same
support them through
woman on a different
that process,” Owens
occasion at the gym.
said.

Associated Press

Public Auction
Jenny Lind Antiques
Auction
Sat. June 22, 2019
10:00AM
1200 Viand St. Point Pleasant, WV
Selling the contents of Jenny Lind Antique Shop
All items are in Great condition
OAK FLAT WALL CUPBOARD, 1940’S GIRLS BICYCLE,
1940’S BOYS BICYCLE, 1940’S BABY STROLLER

Jackson settles in as Ravens starting QB
on Sundays until Nov.
18, when he started in
place of an injured Flacco
and started the Ravens
on a 6-1 hot streak that
enabled them to reach the
postseason as AFC North
champions.
Flash forward to this
week, when a much more
poised and conﬁdent
Jackson led the offense
during the three-day mandatory minicamp.
“Right now it’s pretty
calm to me,” Jackson
said. “Playing in those
seven games being
around my teammates,
it’s been pretty good.”
Jackson performed so
well last season that the
Ravens traded Flacco
and decided they would
rewrite the playbook and
build the entire team
around a former University of Louisville star who
has proven to be equally
effective at the next level.
“You build around your
players, nobody more so
than your quarterback,”
coach John Harbaugh
said. “You identify who
your quarterback is going
to be for the long term,

which we’ve done, we
need to build everything
around what he can do.
Offense, defense, even
special teams are built
with that in mind. What
type of team are we going
to be, based on the skill
set of the quarterback?”
Baltimore intends to
use the same philosophy
that proved so successful
a year ago. The offense
relied heavily on the run,
led by Jackson’s impromptu downﬁeld bursts.
If a long drive didn’t
end in a touchdown,
standout kicker Justin
Tucker almost unfailingly
slammed through a ﬁeld
goal. The league’s topranked defense did its
share by making sure the
Ravens would prevail in
low-scoring games.
The expectation this
year is that Baltimore will
beneﬁt from Jackson’s
experience.
“He’s a much better
player than he was a year
ago,” Harbaugh said.
“And he will be a much
better player at the end of
training camp than he is
right now.”

MAPLE OPEN FACED CHINA CABINET, 1940’S WALNUT DRESSER,
MAPLE DROP LEAF DINING TABLE AND CHAIRS, OAK DINING
ROOM TABLE &amp; CHAIRS, MAHOGANY DROP LEAF DINING TABLE
AND CHAIRS, WHITE KITCHEN CABINET WITH GLASS DOUBLE
UPPER DOORS, 1930’S MAHOGANY CHINA CABINET ON LEGS,
BEDROOM SUITE 1930’S (VANITY, CHEST AND DOUBLE BED),
JENNY LIND CHERRY DOUBLE BEDS 1930-1940’S, 1930’S HALF
KITCHEN CUPBOARD, 1940’S ROCKING CHAIR, WALNUT TABLES.
1930’S OAK DRESSER, OLD TRUNK, OAK BUFFET, WALNUT
BUFFET, 2 UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS, 1930’S ROSE VELVET
UPHOLSTERED CHAIR, 1940’S MAPLE ROCKER, SOLID OAK
CHAIR, 1930-1940’S LAMPS, SOLID MAPLE DROP LEAF DINING
TABLE, BRAIDED RUGS, 1940’S FLOOR MODEL RECORD PLAYER &amp;
RADIO, LIVING ROOM GLASS TOP TABLES, ROUND COFFEE TABLE
&amp; 2 END TABLES, SET OF STACKING TABLES, ROUND WHITE
METAL PATIO TABLE &amp; CHAIRS, CEDAR LINED CHIFFEROBE,
LOTS MORE ANTIQUES, PICTURES, GLASSWARE.
See auctionzip~com for more listing and pictures
Come early bring and friend and also bring a lawn chair

OH-70132063

OWINGS MILLS, Md.
(AP) — It’s been a year
since Lamar Jackson
arrived at his ﬁrst NFL
minicamp, fully understanding that his stature
as a former Heisman
Trophy winner and ﬁrstround draft pick didn’t
guarantee a lick of playing time during the regular season.
Former Super Bowl
MVP Joe Flacco was the
Baltimore Ravens starting quarterback, so Jackson immediately settled
into backup role while he
got a handle on a brand
of football that was unlike
anything he had experienced before.
“I would say I was kind
of startled just being
in the league,” Jackson
recalled Wednesday.
“Growing up, hearing all
the things about when
you go in the league,
this and that is going to
happen. Or the game is
totally different, it’s a lot
faster.”
Jackson was too quick,
elusive and talented to be
buried on the bench, so
he was used periodically

If convicted of multiple accounts of forcible
sex offenses, Winslow
would face up to life
in prison. The single
conviction carries a
maximum sentence of
nine years.
The judge denied
a defense request
that Winslow, 35, be
released on $1 million
bail and home conﬁnement with GPS monitoring. Prosecutors said
that while he was free
on bail last January
Winslow approached an
18-year-old high school
senior walking near
his home in Encinitas
and told her she was
attractive and asked
where she lived. The
lewd act in front of the
77-year-old woman he
was convicted of also
happened while he was
out on bail.
The judge ruled him
a danger to the community and a ﬂight risk,
especially now that he
has been convicted.

For more info contact auctioneers
Erick Conrad 304-675-0947
Joe Arrington 304-812-8114

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 16, 2019 5B

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

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LEGALS

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Best Deal New &amp; Used
MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy

Livestock
14 Angus Bulls and Heifers
top performance and blood
lines priced reasonable. Slate
Run Angus Jackson,Oh
740-418-0633 see
www.slaterunangus.com

OH-70004516
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�COMICS

6B Sunday, June 16, 2019

BLONDIE

Sunday Times-Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

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By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

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By Norm Feuti

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By Chris Browne

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

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By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 16, 2019 7B

What’s in a nickname? NFL has had great ones in its history
“Steel Curtain” — A
Pittsburgh twist on the
Cold War phrase “Iron
Curtain” for the Steelers’ stellar defense of the
1970s, which paved the
way for four Super Bowls
in a six-season span.
Pretty much every dominant Pittsburgh defense
since then receives the
same honor.
“Legion of Boom” —
Pun on the “Legion of
Doom” group of villains
from DC Comics. The
Seahawks’ strong defensive teams of the past
decade helped win Super
Bowl 48 and nearly
repeated the next year.
Team Nicknames
Its most prominent mem“Aints” — Refers to
the struggles of the woe- bers included Richard
Sherman, Earl Thomas,
ful New Orleans Saints
in the 1980 season when Kam Chancellor, Bobby
Wagner and K.J. Wright.
they were the ﬁrst team
“Purple People Eatto ﬁnish 1-15 in a season.
ers” — The bruising
Fans registered their
disgust by wearing paper Minnesota Vikings’
defensive line from the
bags over their heads at
the games. But the name late 1960s through the
’70s. Members included
also refers in general to
Hall of Famers Alan Page
the team’s struggles for
most of its ﬁrst 30 years. and Carl Eller, plus Jim
Marshall. If not for going
“America’s Team” —
Love ‘em or hate ‘em, it’s 0-4 in Super Bowls, the
the Dallas Cowboys. And group likely would be
more celebrated.
despite having not won
“Greatest Show on
a Super Bowl since the
1995 season, their popu- Turf” — The high-scoring St. Louis Rams led
larity nationwide hasn’t
by Kurt Warner, Marshall
waned.
NEW YORK (AP)
— The memorable
moments and teams in
NFL history can be summarized by a word or
phrase such as the “Steel
Curtain” or “America’s
Team.”
And the NFL has had
more than its share of
those moments and
teams through the years.
Even though a list such
as this could be virtually
endless, here’s a look
at some of the top NFL
nicknames, including
players, plays, teams and
even stadiums.

Faulk and Isaac Bruce
during the late 1990s
and early 2000s. These
Rams played in a dome
on turf and piled up the
yards and points as they
won Super Bowl 34 and
fell just short to New
England two years later.
“Hogs” — Washington’s big, beefy offensive
line (by the standards of
the day) during the ﬁrst
Joe Gibbs coaching era
in the 1980s and early
’90s that helped lead
the way to three Super
Bowls. Some male fans
at RFK Stadium would
wear dresses and fake
pig snouts to honor their
Hogs.
“The Smurfs” — With
help from the Hogs,
Washington’s group of
wide receivers — Gary
Clark, Alvin Garrett and
Charlie Brown — who
were all under 6-foot,
also played a key role
in the team’s success.
The name refers to the
popular cartoon series in
the 1980s featuring small
blue characters.
“Monsters of the Midway”— The fearsome
defense of the Chicago
Bears. First used in the
early 1940s, then applied
to the iconic 1985 team
led by Hall of Famers

Richard Dent and Mike
Singletary that rolled to
the Super Bowl. And it
even was used for last
season’s team led by
Khalil Mack, which went
12-4 and won the NFC
North.
“New York Sack
Exchange” — The defensive line of the New York
Jets in the early 1980s,
including Mark Gastineau, Joe Klecko and
Marty Lyons. But like all
Jets teams in the past 49
years, this group failed to
reach the Super Bowl.

after a hit in a preseason
game in 1978.
“The Mad Bomber”
— Daryle Lamonica got
this nickname after being
traded from the Buffalo
Bills to Oakland in 1967
and he unleashed a deep
passing game with the
Raiders for the next
several seasons. He was
the quarterback in the
infamous “Heidi” game
in 1968 as he led the
Raiders to a 43-32 comeback win over the Jets.
Finished with more than
19,000 yards passing and
164 touchdowns.
“The Minister Of
Player Nicknames
Defense” — Packers and
“Concrete Charlie”
Eagles defensive lineman
Chuck Bednarik —
Reggie White. White
Hard-hitting Hall of
became an ordained
Famer played both cenminister long before the
ter and linebacker for
the Eagles. The six-time end of his Hall of Fame
career that included
All-Pro made a gamesaving tackle to preserve being an eight-time AllPro and two-time NFL
Philly’s 1960 NFL title
Defensive Player of the
win over Green Bay —
Year. He ﬁnished with
the only playoff loss for
198 sacks and 33 forced
the Vince Lombardi-led
fumbles.
Packers.
“Slingin’” Sammy
“The Assassin” —
Baugh — This Hall of
Defensive back Jack
Famer was a key part of
Tatum was known for
the early passing boom
his ﬁerce and intimidatin the NFL in the late
ing hits for the Oakland
1930s and early ’40s for
Raiders in the 1970s,
Washington. Not just a
including one that left
“slinger,” he amazingly
Patriots wide receiver
Darryl Stingley paralyzed led the NFL in passing,

punting and interceptions in 1943. Baugh
ﬁnished his career with
31 interceptions and was
voted to the NFL’s 75th
Anniversary team.
“Megatron” — Lions
standout wide receiver
Calvin Johnson, who had
more than 700 catches,
11,000 yards and 83
touchdowns. The threetime All-Pro retired at
30 after the 2015 season
and a nine-year career.
The nickname comes
from the main villain in
the “Transformers” ﬁlm
franchise.
“Prime Time” — Hall
of Fame cornerback
and return man Deion
Sanders. He was one of
the most dominant cornerbacks of all time. At
his peak, Sanders took
away half of the ﬁeld
because teams wouldn’t
throw near him. Yet he
still managed 53 interceptions. The six-time
All-Pro also knew how to
ﬁnd the end zone with
22 career TDs (nine
pick-6s, six on punt
returns, three on kickoff
returns, three receiving
and one on a fumble
return). Sanders is the
only player to appear in
both a Super Bowl and a
World Series.

‘This isn’t for everyone’: A labor of love for football refs
ATHENS, Ga. (AP) —
It has never been more
difﬁcult to be an ofﬁcial
in college football.
Those who do it face
relentless, often uninformed criticism and
attacks on their credibility. Complaints from fans
armed with DVR, fueled
by sports-talk instigators
and ampliﬁed by social
media, have become so
intense the Southeastern
Conference is exploring
ways to publicly push
back.
And the job — a parttime job at that — has
never required more time
and effort.

“This isn’t for everybody,” said Tom Quick,
entering his 20th season
as a Division I ofﬁcial, the
last eight in the SEC after
12 seasons in the Big 12.
“The level of scrutiny
you have to deal with,
the preparation it takes
to succeed isn’t for everybody.”
Yet Quick is back for
more, and he joined
Grantis Bell, Phillip Davenport and ﬁve other veteran football ofﬁcials this
spring in Athens to give
members of the media a
crash course in how the
job actually works. After
coaching up the media

crew well enough that it
ofﬁciated most of Georgia’s spring game without
major incident, Quick,
Bell and Davenport spoke
to The Associated Press
about what seems like the
worst gig in sports and
why they keep coming
back to what is clearly a
labor of love.
When Quick started,
crews were seven people.
Now there are eight
on the ﬁeld, two in the
replay booth and three
more manning the video
center review at the conference ofﬁce.
College football ofﬁcials
travel to the site of a

Saturday game on Friday.
Dinner and meetings Friday night last 4-5 hours.
On Saturday, the crew
does another 2-3 hours
of prep and ﬁlm in the
morning before heading
to the stadium two hours
before kickoff. They survey the ﬁeld, make sure
players behave during
warmups and meet brieﬂy
with head coaches.
After a game that can
last three hours (at least)
comes what could be the
toughest part of the day:
The review session with a
game day observer on site
that can take 45 minutes
to two hours.

“So if you have a 7:30
kick, the game ends at 11.
When you shower your
postgame starts at midnight,” said Quick, who is
part-owner of a company
that sells bonds and insurance to businesses. “You
have a 5:30 departure
out of Atlanta (Sunday)
morning. That’s a typical
weekend.”
Davenport quickly
adds: “Then you get up
and go to work on Monday.”
Most ofﬁcials have fulltime careers that have
nothing to do with football, but the work doesn’t
stop from Monday to

Thursday. Film study and
rules review throughout
the week is a must.
“Yes, it’s more stressful, but if you prepare
for these situations that
generally takes the stress
level off,” said Bell, a
former West Virginia football player who has been
ofﬁciating in the SEC for
six years.
The challenge is both
mental and physical.
“Well, because you
know players are faster
and play is faster, we got
to be quicker,” Bell said.
“So, mentally we’ve got
to be tougher. Physically,
we’ve got to be more ﬁt.”

SUNDAY EVENING

California police say
Raptors president
shoved, hit deputy
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) — A California
police agency will pursue
a misdemeanor battery
charge against Toronto
Raptors President Masai
Ujiri after the executive
was accused of shoving
and hitting a sheriff’s
deputy in the face and
shouting obscenities as
he tried to join his team
on the court to celebrate
their NBA championship.
After the game Thursday in Oakland against
the Golden State Warriors, Ujiri tried to walk
past the deputy who was
checking court-access
credentials, Alameda
County sheriff’s spokesman Sgt. Ray Kelly said.
When the deputy
stopped him, Ujiri
shoved him back several
feet, Kelly said.
“That’s when our
deputy goes hands-on
and moves Mr. Ujiri back
from the court. Mr. Ujiri
made a second, more
signiﬁcant shove and
during that shove his
arm struck our deputy
in the side of the head,”
Kelly said.
Ujiri was also accused
of shouting obscenities
at the deputy.
Several bystanders
intervened and Ujiri got
onto the court without
displaying any credentials, Kelly said.
The deputy com-

plained of pain in his jaw
and was taken to a hospital for evaluation and
later released.
“We had the opportunity to make an arrest
and we chose not to,”
Kelly said. “We decided
it would be in everyone’s
best interest to slow
things down and do an
investigation.”
Kelly said deputies
took witness statements
and were reviewing
footage from body cameras worn by the deputy
along with footage from
the arena surveillance
system and cellphones.
Warriors fan Greg Wiener said he was standing
next to the deputy when
the encounter occurred
and did not see Ujiri
strike him in the face.
“The thing about
the cops saying the
policeman asked for his
credentials, that didn’t
happen. There was no
conversation at all,” Wiener said.
“This part about striking him in the face, yeah
that didn’t happen,” he
added.
Wiener said the
encounter began when
the deputy put his hand
on Ujiri’s chest and
pushed him. Ujiri shoved
him back before bystanders intervened, Wiener
said, adding that he has
not been interviewed by
authorities.

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Masterpiece Mystery! "Endeavour: Pylon" The Widower
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Blended TV14 The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Claws (N)
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(3:30) The Godfather II: Uncut (1974, Drama) Robert De Fear the Walking Dead
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City on a Hill "The Night
and Ass Whuppings"
"Visiting the Mero Regina Flynn Sent the Cops on the and the Frog" (SF) (N)
Troops" (N) Hall
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8B Sunday, June 16, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

LUNSFORD’S
SARDIS AUTO

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

SUMMER HOT DEALS
2014 Ford Edge Limited

2017 Jeep Cherokee Latitude

2010 Ford Edge Limited

2007 Nissan Murano SL

2009 Buick Lucerne

31k miles Loaded $16,995

AWD 62k miles $10,995

AWD Leather 102k miles $6,995

69k miles Extra Clean $5,750

AWD 66k miles $14,995

2011 GMC Sierra SLT

2016 Jeep Wrangler

2014 Honda Accord EX

2015 Chevy Malibu LT

4x4 All Terrain Extra Clean 63k miles Call For Price

New Soft Top, Carpet &amp; Tires 49k miles $19,500

40k miles REDUCED $11,995

39k miles REDUCED $11,995

2006 Chevy Silverado
Crew Cab

2012 Chevy Silverado LT

2012 Honda Accord LX

07 Honda Accord EXL

4x4 Clean $6,495

4x4 Crew Cab 74k miles Call For Price

74k miles $8,495

53k miles Like New $7,300

Stop by and see them before they are finished!
We always have photos of our cars &amp; trucks before repairs!
OH-70131979

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

WEATHER

2 PM

8 PM

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Partly sunny with a
t-storm possible

Temperature

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

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

0.00
2.05
1.96
21.91
20.04

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:03 a.m.
8:56 p.m.
8:24 p.m.
5:34 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

Jun 17 Jun 25

New

Jul 2

Minor
5:14a
6:05a
6:59a
7:55a
8:50a
9:44a
10:35a

Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
81/68

High

Very High

First

Jul 9

Major
11:53p
---1:13p
2:08p
3:02p
3:55p
4:46p

Minor
5:40p
6:32p
7:26p
8:20p
9:15p
10:07p
10:57p

WEATHER HISTORY
Damaging hail pelted Dubuque, Iowa,
on June 16, 1882. Bits of material
were found in the hailstones, including gravel, blades of grass and even
live frogs.

0 50 100 150 200

300

Portsmouth
82/69

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.39 -0.61
Marietta
34 17.08 -0.20
Parkersburg
36 21.71 -0.86
Belleville
35 12.79 -0.36
Racine
41 12.66 -0.52
Point Pleasant
40 24.65 -0.22
Gallipolis
50 12.42 +0.09
Huntington
50 26.66 -1.03
Ashland
52 34.59 -0.65
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.63 -0.22
Portsmouth
50 20.30 -2.50
Maysville
50 34.30 -0.40
Meldahl Dam
51 20.60 -1.90
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Marietta
78/67

Murray City
78/66
Belpre
79/68

Athens
79/66

Parkersburg
78/68

Coolville
79/67

Milton
82/69

St. Albans
83/68

Huntington
81/69

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
77/57
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
71/57
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
74/61
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Elizabeth
81/68

Spencer
80/66

Buffalo
82/68

Ironton
83/69

Ashland
83/69
Grayson
83/69

85°
70°
Some sun with
t-storms possible;
humid

Today

St. Marys
79/67

Wilkesville
80/66
POMEROY
Jackson
81/67
80/67
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
81/68
81/67
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
81/67
GALLIPOLIS
82/68
81/67
81/68

South Shore Greenup
83/69
81/68

SATURDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
79/65

Very High

Primary: grasses and pine
Mold: 921
Moderate

Chillicothe
80/67
Waverly
81/68

Pollen: 34

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Mon.
6:03 a.m. Environmental Services
8:56 p.m.
9:23 p.m. AIR QUALITY
6:19 a.m. 0

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

Major
11:27a
12:19p
12:46a
1:42a
2:38a
3:32a
4:24a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Low

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

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

Logan
79/66

Adelphi
80/67

4

Primary: ascospores, unk.

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

Showers and a
Cloudy, a shower and
Mostly cloudy and
70°
77°
77°
Showers and a t-storm today, mainly later. A shower heavier thunderstorm
t-storm around
humid with a t-storm
and t-storm around tonight. High 82° / Low 68°
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

80°
66°

THURSDAY

84°
68°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

WEDNESDAY

81°
61°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

TUESDAY

83°
67°

Statistics for Friday

74°
50°
83°
61°
96° in 1930
43° in 1978

MONDAY

83°
66°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

Clendenin
82/67
Charleston
81/67

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
64/50

Billings
75/56

Minneapolis
66/55
Chicago
73/57

Montreal
73/53

Toronto
70/55
Detroit
73/59

Denver
79/54

New York
77/66
Washington
86/71

Kansas City
86/63

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
88/72

High
Low

El Paso
98/69
Chihuahua
97/68

Mon.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
87/65/pc 87/61/pc
Anchorage
67/53/pc 65/53/c
Atlanta
88/72/pc
88/72/t
Atlantic City
78/69/pc
79/67/t
Baltimore
86/71/pc
89/70/t
Billings
75/56/pc 78/55/pc
Boise
88/59/pc 89/61/pc
Boston
70/62/r 74/61/c
Charleston, WV
81/67/t
83/66/t
Charlotte
89/69/pc 92/71/pc
Cheyenne
69/50/pc 66/48/pc
Chicago
73/57/c 71/56/c
Cincinnati
81/66/t
79/65/t
Cleveland
72/62/c
78/61/t
Columbus
81/66/t
78/65/t
Dallas
85/72/t
84/72/t
Denver
79/54/pc 74/51/pc
Des Moines
83/61/c 79/63/pc
Detroit
73/59/pc 75/61/c
Honolulu
90/76/pc 90/76/pc
Houston
90/78/t 90/77/pc
Indianapolis
81/67/t
80/63/t
Kansas City
86/63/c 82/63/c
Las Vegas
102/77/pc 100/79/pc
Little Rock
87/67/t
83/67/t
Los Angeles
74/61/pc 72/59/pc
Louisville
85/71/t
82/70/t
Miami
84/75/t
85/77/t
Minneapolis
66/55/c 76/61/pc
Nashville
90/72/pc
87/71/t
New Orleans
92/75/pc 90/74/pc
New York City
77/66/c 80/66/c
Oklahoma City
82/64/t 84/67/c
Orlando
88/73/t
85/72/t
Philadelphia
84/69/pc
87/69/t
Phoenix
105/78/s 104/78/s
Pittsburgh
76/65/t
78/66/t
Portland, ME
68/56/c 76/55/c
Raleigh
89/69/pc 91/71/pc
Richmond
89/73/pc 93/75/pc
St. Louis
86/69/t
81/68/t
Salt Lake City
83/62/t 82/62/pc
San Francisco
71/57/s 74/58/s
Seattle
77/57/pc 78/58/pc
Washington, DC
86/71/t
89/72/t

115° in Death Valley, CA
29° in Embarrass, MN

Global
High
119° in Dayyer, Iran
Low 18° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
90/78
Monterrey
97/73

Miami
84/75

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

OH-70107875

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

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

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