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                  <text>Today
in
History
OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

70°

78°

78°

Humid today with clouds limiting sunshine. A
moonlit sky tonight. High 84° / Low 63°

Today’s
weather
forecast

HS
football 30
days away

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 118, Volume 72

Wednesday, July 25, 2018 s 50¢

Remembering Buffington Island

Village
officials
make
push for
old field
Auction remains
scheduled for Aug. 1
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

A Firing of Salute was held as part of the Memorial Service to commemorate the 155th anniversary of the Battle of Buffington Island.

Fallen soldiers remembered 155 years later
By Sarah Hawley

Union Veterans of the Civil War.
“The Civil War was one of if
not the most important event
on United States soil,” said
PORTLAND — Numerous
Langdon. “Brothers fought
individuals and organizations
brothers, fathers shot sons,”
came together on Saturday to
added Langdon, recalling the
commemorate the 155th anniversary of the Battle of Bufﬁng- battles of the Civil War which
put family members on opposton Island.
ing sides.
Bufﬁngton Island, located
Several wreaths were placed
near Portland, was the location
at the monument by the orgaof Ohio’s only signiﬁcant Civil
nizations involved in the day’s
War battle on July 19, 1863.
events.
The Battle of Bufﬁngton
To conclude the ceremony,
Island was the major engagea ﬁring salute was conducted,
ment during General John
Hunt Morgan’s Great Raid into along with the playing of Taps. Taps were played to conclude the ceremony, with one man playing at the top of
Following the program at
Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio.
the Indian mound.
The battle, 155 years ago, lasted the memorial site, the day’s
events moved to the Portland
about two hours, involving
Community Center for lunch,
1,800 of Morgan’s Confederate
music by Steve Free and a precalvarymen and 3,000 Union
sentation by reenactor William
artillery, calvary, and infantry
Donegan.
supported by navy gunboats,
Free, accompanied by his
according to information prowife, performed two songs
vided by event organizers.
during the memorial service,
While Morgan’s troops had
before entertaining the crowd
planned to cross the river at
at lunch.
Bufﬁngton Island, the Union
Free is an internationally
gunboats and troops stopped
acclaimed singer-songwriter
the crossing and captured
nearly a third of Morgan’s com- and educator, living in southern
mand. Morgan and the remain- Ohio. The winner of numerous music industry awards
ing forces moved north, with
including 9 ASCAP awards, a
Morgan captured on July 26 in
Platinum Record and Grammy
Columbiana County.
nomination, he has charted
The ceremony included a
over 30 songs on the National
brief presentation by Commander Kerry Langdon of
See BUFFINGTON | 5 Service participants pause as Taps are played.
the Ohio Department Sons of

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
TV listings: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

See FIELD | 3

Spreading
awareness
of Lyme
Disease
By Erin Perkins
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

how to work together for a bright
Ohio future.
“Ohio’s 88 counties serve as branch
administrative ofﬁces of the state by
providing vital services. Counties are
given this speciﬁc responsibility but
limited authority by the Ohio Revised
Code,” CCAO President Daniel Troy
said. “CCAO was very pleased with
the meetings with both gubernatorial
candidates, as we look to foster an
improved and stronger relationship
between state and county government. Collaboration and cooperation
between the two government entities
must exist to strengthen counties and

POINT PLEASANT —
A Mason County woman
discovered and self-diagnosed an ailment which
plagued her for years,
now she is spreading
awareness of the disease.
Gabrielle Fuller, of
Point Pleasant, has
Chronic Lyme Disease,
also known as Late Stage
Lyme Disease, and has
been battling the ailment
for over a decade.
Fuller stated, “In the
fall of 2015, I began noticing strange symptoms
that I couldn’t explain. I
went to my family doctor who ran some tests,
including a test for Lyme
disease, autoimmune diseases, vitamin deﬁciency,
etc. Everything came
back negative.”
Fuller explained after
the testing, her spine
began burning and she
decided to see a neurologist.
“It took me months
to get in. At this time,
I needed someone with
me at all times, so that I
could care for myself, my
husband, and the girls
properly. My precious
mother stepped in, thank
God for her. I thought I
was dying. I would go to
bed at night and my body

See CCAO | 5

See AWARENESS | 3

CCAO calls for a stronger partnership
between state and county government
COLUMBUS, Ohio — At a press
conference Monday morning, the
County Commissioners Association
of Ohio (CCAO) called for a stronger partnership between state and
county government as they released
“Stronger Counties. Stronger Partnership. Stronger Ohio.,” a brieﬁng
guide detailing county funding needs
and asks that need to be addressed in
future state budgets and legislation.
The CCAO board met this past
Friday with both major gubernatorial candidates (Richard Cordray and
Mike DeWine) and their respective
lieutenant governor candidates (Betty
Sutton and Jon Husted) to brief them
on issues confronting counties and

POMEROY — Pomeroy Mayor Don Anderson
and councilwoman Maureen Hennessy addressed
the Meigs Local Board
of Education on Tuesday
evening regarding the fate
of the district’s former
football ﬁeld.
Bob Roberts Field and
the surrounding property
totaling nearly 13 acres
were initially sold at auction in March, but when
the buyer backed out the
district once again made
the move to sell the property at auction.
Anderson told the
Board of the history of
schools and related properties being constructed
in Pomeroy with tax dollars from village residents
in the late 1950s and
early 1960s.
Having one of the nicest ﬁelds in the league,
said Anderson, once the

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, July 25, 2018

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

Card Shower
Jim Smith (long-time
caretaker of Mulberry
Pond) is currently at
Overbrook Center in
Middleport. Cards may
be sent to him at 333
Page Street, Room 110,
Middleport, OH 45760.

Thursday,
July 26
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil &amp; Water
Conservation District
Board of Supervisors
will hold their regular
monthly meeting at
11:30 a.m. at the district ofﬁce. The ofﬁce
is located at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite
D, Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE — The
Ladies of the Meigs
County Republican
Party will meet at 6
p.m. at the Carleton
School in Syracuse,
Ohio. Everyone is
welcome. Please come
and join us in discussing how we can make
money to support our
local candidates. We
will welcome any and
all input.
LEBANON TWP.
— The Lebanon Township trustees will have
their regular monthly
meeting at 6 p.m. at the
township garage. The
proposed 2019 budget
will be available for
viewing.

The July meeting of
the Veterans Service
Commission will be
held at 9 a.m. at the
ofﬁce located in the
side ofﬁce of 97 North
Second Avenue, Middleport.
SALEM TWP. —
Salem Twp. monthly
meeting will be held
at 6 p.m., at the Salem
Twp. Volunteer Fire
Department building,
28844 State Route 124,
Langsville, Ohio 45741.

Tuesday,
July 31
POMEROY — OH
Kan Coin Club will be
meeting at 6:30 p.m. in
the upper room at the
Farmers Bank.
MEIGS COUNTY
— All branches of the
Meigs County District
Public Library will be
closed for a staff training. Normal hours will
resume on Wednesday,
Aug. 1.

Wednesday,
Aug. 1
SCIPIO TWP. — A
free Firehouse Community Dinner will be
held at the Scipio Township Fire Department
in Harrisonville, State
Route 684. Dinner will
be served from 5-6 p.m.,
and will feature chicken
salad on a croissant,
fruit salad, potato salad,
beverage and “Make
Your Own Ice Cream
Sundae”.

Friday, Aug. 3

POMEROY — The
regular meeting of the
Meigs County Public
Employee Retirees Inc.
will be held at 1 p.m.
at the Mulberry Community Center, 156
Mulberry Ave., PomeMIDDLEPORT —
The monthly Free Com- roy. Guest speaker will
be a representative from
munity Dinner at the
Ohio Public Employee
Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Cen- Retirement System
ter will be held at 5 p.m. providing updates on
statewide OPERS conThis month they are
serving chicken alfredo, cerns. District 7 Repsalad, garlic bread, and resentative Greg Ervin
will update members on
dessert. The public is
PERI issues. All Meigs
invited to attend.
County Public Employee retirees are urged to
attend.

Friday, July 27

Saturday,
July 28

CHESTER — The
Meigs County Ikes will
hold its annual family
picnic at noon at the
clubhouse on Sugar Rub
Road. Bring your favorite covered dish, drink,
table service and family
member(s). Hot dogs
and hamburgers will be
furnished by the Club.

Monday,
July 30
MIDDLEPORT —

Saturday,
Aug. 4
VINTON — The
annual Vinton Bean
Dinner, sponsored by
American Legion Post
161 and Auxiliary, will
be held in Vinton Community Park. Parade
begins at 11:30 a.m.
Beans are served from
noon to 2:30 p.m. Live
music, bingo, refreshments. All welcome. For
more information, contact 740-388-8319.

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CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

BENJAMIN H. EWING

EVELYN L. HALEY

Hardy of Glouster;
POMEROY
a son, Benjamin II
— Benjamin H.
(Suzanna) Ewing
Ewing, 74, of
of Rutland, Ohio; two
GLEN DALE, W.Va.
of Pomeroy; his
Pomeroy, Ohio,
sisters, Jane (Harley)
— Evelyn L. Haley, age
grandchildren,
passed away
Eblin, of Rutland, Ohio,
90, of Glen Dale, W.Va.,
Hannah and Abbie
Sunday, July 22,
passed away on Monday, and Jean LeFleu; ﬁve
Hawley, Ashley
2018, at Arcadia
grandchildren, Henry
July 23, 2018, at her
and Ryan Acree
Nursing Center in
J. (Angela) Burke,
home.
and Lauren and Jaxon
Coolville, Ohio.
Elizabeth (Sean Firkle)
She was born Jan. 21,
Ewing; step-grandchilHe was born Nov.
Yoho-Hocutt, Charles S.
1928, in Cheshire, Ohio,
dren, Amanda Hardy,
17, 1943, in Pomeroy,
Burke, Stephanie (Jamie
the daughter of the late
Lucas) Dayton and Kerry Ohio, son of the late Wil- Charles Hardy and Jacob
Charles and Evelyn ShuHardy; great-granddaughliam Henry and Beulah
Adam (Karen) Yoho; 10
lar Schuler.
ter, Callie Hardy; and speDeweese Ewing. He
great-grandchildren; 17
Evelyn was a Nurse’s
cial friends, Ron and Toni
great-great-grandchildren; was a 1961 graduate of
Aide and a foster parent
McDole.
Pomeroy High School, a
and several nieces and
to over 23 children. She
In addition to his pargraduate of Rio Grande
was a Methodist by Faith. nephews.
University, the Cincinnati ents, he was preceded in
Family will receive
In addition to her parCollege of Mortuary Sci- death by his wife, Doris
friends on Friday from
ents, she was preceded
Caldwell Ewing and a
ence and was the former
in death by her husband, 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. at
special cousin, Robert
owner of Ewing Funeral
Grisell Funeral Home,
Charles M. Haley; one
Home in Pomeroy for 50 Buck.
400 Jefferson Avenue,
daughter, Kathy Yoho;
Funeral services will
years. Ben was a 50 year
two sisters, Mary Schuler Moundsville.
be held at 11 a.m., FriVisitation Monday from member of the Shade
and Nancy VanMeter; and
River Lodge #453 F&amp;AM day, July 27, 2018, at the
two brothers, Chuck and 6-8 p.m. at Birchﬁeld
Funeral Home, 212 Main in Chester, where he was Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral
Jim Schuler.
Home in Pomeroy, Ohio,
a 32nd Degree Mason, a
Street, Rutland, Ohio
Survivors include
with Pastor Wayne Dunmember of the Ancient
45775, where funeral
one daughter, Mary
Accepted Scottish Rites, lap ofﬁciating. Burial will
services will be held on
S. (James) Burke of
follow in the Beech Grove
the Grand Commandery
Tuesday at 11 a.m.
Moundsville, W.Va.;
Knights Templar of Ohio, Cemetery.
Sympathy expressions
son-in-law, Ronald Yoho
Visitation will be held
the Elks and was also
at grisellfuneralhomes.
of N.C.; one brother,
at the funeral home,
an Eagle Scout. He was
com.
John (Priscilla) Schuler
Thursday, from 5-8 p.m.
the Youth Director for
A Masonic service will be
the Ohio Quarter Horse
YESTER
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Margaret M. Yester, Association and Director conducted at 8 p.m. by
of the All American Quar- the Shade River Lodge
91, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. died Monday, July 23,
ter Horse Congress. Ben #453 F&amp;AM.
2018 after an extended illness.
The family will be
also served on the Board
A funeral service will be 1 p.m., Saturday, July 28,
having a dinner and
of Directors for Farmers
2018, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
fellowship at the EwingBank and Savings ComW.Va., with Rev. Ron Sweeney ofﬁciating. Burial will
pany and on the Board of Schwarzel Family Center
follow at Beale Cemetery in Apple Grove, W.Va. The
following the graveside
Trustees for Rio Grande
family will receive friends two hours prior to the
service.
University.
funeral service, Saturday at the funeral home.
You are invited to sign
He is survived by two
the online guestbook at
daughters, Elizabeth
WATERS
www.ewingfuneralhome.
(David) Acree of Racine
WEST COLUMBIA — Oscar Dale Waters, 76, of
net.
and Kimberly (Charles)
West Columbia, died Friday, July 20, 2018, at Lakin
Hospital.
JORDAN
There will no public services. Burial will be at the
ASHTON, W.Va. — Mary Elizabeth Jordan, 91, of
convenience of his family. Wilcoxen Funeral Home of
Ashton, W.Va. died Sunday, July 22, 2018, at the EmoPoint Pleasant is in charge of arrangements.
gene Dolin Jones Hospice House, Huntington, W.Va.
A funeral service will be 1 p.m., Friday, July 27,
RATCLIFFE JR.
2018, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — Raymond Ratcliffe Jr., 80,
W.Va. with Rev. Bob Johnson and Pastor Chuck Elkins
of New Haven, W.Va., died on July 21, 2018.
ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Mount Zion Cemetery
Funeral services will be announced by Anderson
in Fraziers Bottom, W.Va. The family will receive
Funeral Home in New Haven.
friends two hours prior to the funeral service, Friday
COLLEY
at the funeral home.
JACKSON — Mary Ruth “Cookie” Colley, 73, of
Jackson, Ohio died Thursday, July 19, 2018 at HosHANNING
pice of Huntington.
POINT PLEASANT — Violet Ann Marie Hanning,
A memorial service will be held at Willis Funeral
Point Pleasant, was born and later died June 8, 2018.
Home in Gallipolis, Ohio on Thursday, July 26, 2018
Arrangements were made by Deal Funeral Home,
from 2-4 p.m.
Point Pleasant.

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

Road Closures
and Restrictions
RACINE — Meigs County Road
28, Bashan Road, will be closed
between C-31, Bald Knobs-Stiversville Road, and T-109, Carmel
Road, for approximately 4 weeks
beginning Monday, July 23. County
forces will be repairing a slip in
this area.
MEIGS COUNTY — A culvert
replacement project begins on July
27, on State Route 681 in Meigs
County. The project is taking place
between US 33 and Markham Road
(Township Road 652). One lane
will be closed in this area. Temporary trafﬁc signals and an 11 foot
width restriction will be in place.
The estimated completion date is
Aug. 31, 2018.
MEIGS COUNTY — A culvert
replacement project begins on July

30 on State Route 681 in Meigs
County. The project is taking place
between Fredrick Road (Township Road 618) and Haning Ridge
Road(Township Road 233). The
road will be closed in this area.
ODOT’s detour is SR 681 to US 50
to US 33. The estimated completion date is Aug. 10, 2018.

Immunization
Clinic Tuesday
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct
an Immunization Clinic on Tuesday, from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.,
at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian.
A $30.00 donation is appreciated
for immunization administration;
however, no one will be denied
services because of an inability
to pay an administration fee for

state-funded childhood vaccines.
Please bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance cards, if
applicable. Shingles and pneumonia vaccines are also available. Call
for eligibility determination and
availability or visit our website at
www.meigs-health.com to see a list
of accepted commercial insurances
and Medicaid for adults.
The Ohio Department of Health
(ODH) does NOT recommended
for routine Hepatitis A vaccination
of Healthcare Workers. Additionally, the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices (ACIP)
does NOT recommend routine
Hepatitis A vaccination for Food
Workers. Currently, ODH is strongly recommending the following
groups to get the Hepatitis A vaccine: men who have sex with men,
persons who inject drugs and person who use illegal non-injection
drugs. These are the highest risk
groups for transmission of Hepatitis A. Call 740-992-6626 for vaccine
availability.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Vacation
Bible School

211 S. 6th Ave., Middleport, will
hold our Vacation Bible School
from July 23-26 from 6-8 p.m. The
theme for the week will be Splash
Canyon focusing on God’s Promise
RUTLAND — The Rutland
on Life’s Wild Ride. Classes will be
FreeWill Baptist Church will hold
held for children who just ﬁnished
Vacation Bible School July 23-27,
6-8:30 p.m. each night. The closing Kindergarten through 5th Grade.
program and party will be July 27. You may bring your younger child
if you stay with him/her. There will
Perfect attendance names will be
drawn with one boy and one girl in be a different lesson from the Bible
taught each evening and, besides
each class winning a bicycle. The
the lessons, the children will sing,
theme is Rolling River Rampage.
Each day will include music, skits, do crafts, enjoy games, and receive
snacks. Registration slips will need
crafts, snacks and devotions. Pasto be ﬁlled out before VBS begins
tor Ed Barney invites everyone to
on Monday. Please bring your
come as we teach your children
child to be registered on Monday
about Jesus and His way of life.
beginning at 5:45 p.m. Pastor Billy
RACINE — Vacation Bible
School at Racine United Methodist Zuspan is our pastor. Penny Fisher
and Lori Zuspan, both teachers in
Church, 818 Elm Street, Racine,
the public school systems, are in
will be held from 6-8 p.m., July
charge of our VBS.
23-25.
POMEROY — VBS at Carleton
MIDDLEPORT — The First
Church, Kingsbury Road, will be
Baptist Church of Middleport,

held July 30-Aug. 3 from 6:30-8:30
p.m. each evening. The theme is
Camp Moose on the Loose, with
study about Peter, crafts, handouts,
drawings, food and games.

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

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

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 25, 2018 3

IN BRIEF

LONDON (AP) —
Filmmaker James Cameron and Titanic discoverer Robert Ballard are
backing a bid by a group
of British museums to
acquire a collection of

Field

sion would take from the
scoreboard end of the
ﬁeld out to about the 20
yard line.
From page 1
“Pomeroy is not a rich
village, we watch every
schools consolidated
nickel,” said Anderson,
Meigs played its games
in noting that the village
at Bob Roberts Field in
would ultimately pay for
Pomeroy.
the property if necessary,
With consolidation,
but could not afford the
Anderson said that the
buildings and properties, minimum bid currently
in place.
once no longer useful,
“I am not going to
should have gone back to
bankrupt the village for
the original owners, in
this case, the residents of a football ﬁeld,” said
Anderson.
Pomeroy.
“I appreciate where
“If it was your hometown you would feel that you are coming from and
your responsibility to the
way,” said Anderson of
people of Pomeroy,” said
his desire to have the
board member Heather
ﬁeld back for the village
he now serves as Mayor. Hawley. “My responsibility is to the children
“It just makes sense.”
of Meigs Local. Taking
As for why Anderson
something of value and
wants the property back
giving it away is not
for the village, he noted
responsible….My responthat the property backs
sibility monetarily is to
up to the current sewer
the children.”
treatment plant in the
Hennessy had a difvillage. Should the village
need to expand the plant ferent approach for why
the village should have
the football ﬁeld property, at least a portion of the ﬁeld back, asking the
board to reconsider going
it, would be necessary.
Asked how much land the forward with the auction.
“We have waited 47
village would need for
that expansion, Anderson years to get the ﬁeld back
stated that engineer esti- to Pomeroy… treat us like
mates are that the expan- Middleport and Rutland.

Awareness

up and kind of linked
arms,” Cameron said.
“It’s an incredible piece
of history, an object
lesson about human
hubris. If it gets sold
into private hands, it
disappears from the
public eye. It would be
broken up and could
never be reassembled.”

Please return the ﬁeld
back to the village,” said
Hennessy.
Board President Ryan
Mahr stated while there
are some cases in which
the school properties
have been given back to
the villages, that has not
always been the case.
Mahr and Hawley both
noted that they were not
on the board at the time
of the consolidations and
the disposal of the buildings.
Mahr said the board
would take the matter
under consideration. The
board did enter into executive session regarding
the sale of property, with
no action taken following
the executive session.
As previously reported,
at an auction held in
March, local resident
Shannon Spaun was the
highest bidder on the
property, with a bid of
$171,000. Spaun did not
complete the purchase of
the property.
The currently advertised auction is to be
held at 10 a.m. on Aug.
1 near the ticket booth
at the old ﬁeld. The
minimum opening bid,
according to the legal

advertisement of the
sale, is $140,000. At the
March auction, Spaun
and local automotive
dealer Mark Porter traded bids from a starting
price of $100,000.
This will be the third
time the Board had
attempted to sell the
property, with the ﬁrst
attempt in 2013 being
unsuccessful.
Other than the ﬁeld
being used for the ﬂag
football program each
fall, the ﬁeld and property were considered
to be a liability from an
insurance point for the
district.
The ﬁrst game on the
Pomeroy ﬁeld was played
in 1950. In 1990, the ﬁeld
and stadium were rededicated and named for
longtime educator, coach,
and athletic booster Bob
Roberts.
The stadium was home
to the Pomeroy Panthers
football team from 19501966 and the Marauders
from 1967-2011, when
the team moved to the
new stadium at Rocksprings.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

“After a church service one night, God
revealed to me that it was Lyme Disease. I
researched it and turns out that most tests
come back negative if you’ve had it for a
long period of time.”

From page 1

would jerk without warning, my hands shook, I
had tremors, deep bone
pain, joint pain, brain
fog, dizziness, stuttering,
numbness, and more. I
would go to bed at night
and not know if I would
wake up in the morning. I
started to compose letters
in my head to my daughters for them to open on
their future birthdays,
weddings, and upon the
births of their children. I
did a lot of praying and
I questioned God’s plan
for my life. I cried uncontrollably, and often,” said
Fuller.
She went through several more tests such as
MRI’s of her brain and
spine, multiple blood
tests, hearing tests, inner
ear tests, breathing tests,
and an EMG.
Fuller shared she
prayed for answers as no
one seemed to be able to
tell her what her ailment
was.
“After a church service
one night, God revealed
to me that it was Lyme
Disease. I researched it
and turns out that most
tests come back negative if you’ve had it for
a long period of time. I
also realized that I had
been exposed to toxic
mold which had sent my
immune system into overdrive,” said Fuller.
She said through the
website www.ilads.org,
she was able to discover
her ailment and found a
physician referral for a
Lyme Literate medical
doctor.
Fuller explained she
pieced together her
symptoms and she has
been suffering from the
disease ever since she
was a young teenager, her
health gradually deteriorating as she aged.
“I honestly don’t
remember what it feels
like to be normal. I’ve had
tingling feet, low blood
pressure, rapid heartbeat,
crawling sensations,
inability to swallow,

“Titanic,” starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate
Winslet, said there are
grave concerns that the
collection will be broken
up and sold privately
because that company
has ﬁled for bankruptcy.
“That’s why people
who feel some protective role have stepped

— Gabrielle Fuller

Gabrielle Fuller | Courtesy

Gabrielle Fuller has Chronic
Lyme Disease, but she is
surviving day by day to live her
best life.

chills, sweating, fatigue,
dizziness upon standing
and more for at least 14
years, but no one symptom was ever constant,”
said Fuller.
She commented once
treatment started she
began doing much better,
though her body is slowly
recovering. Living with
the disease is an ongoing
daily struggle.
“The last two years
have been so hard on us,
but I have grown so close
to the Lord through it
all. He has been with me
every step of the way and
provided for our every
need. He is so good to

me, so much better than
I deserve. My husband
has been my rock and my
mom has been such an
amazing help to me. My
church has been such a
great support to me and
I appreciate everyone
that has been praying for
me,” said Fuller.
She explained living
with Lyme Disease does
not have to be death sentence to those suffering,
once a proper diagnosis is
given and treatment can
begin, then one’s normal
life can return.
Fuller has created a
group page on Facebook,
Ohio Valley Lyme Disease
Support Group, to help
raise awareness about
Lyme Disease and help
support others suffering
from the ailment.

MHA program
ranked one of the
best, most affordable
ATHENS — Ohio
University’s online Master of Health Administration (MHA) program
has been named one of
the best and most affordable in the country,
according to College
Choice.
The Master of Health
Administration, offered
in the Department of
Social and Public Health
within Ohio University’s
College of Health Sciences and Professions,
prepares health professionals to be healthcare
leaders in a variety of
settings and facilities
such as clinics, nursing
homes, outpatient care
centers, rehabilitation
centers and mental
health organizations.
College Choice is a free
online resource that
helps students by providing information on
universities and colleges
throughout the country.
Of the 35 top online
Master’s in Health
Services degrees, Ohio
University’s MHA was
ranked No. 20. In the
category of Most Affordable, the MHA placed at
No. 21.
“These rankings are
well-deserved for our
online Master of Health
Administration; the
ﬁrst graduate program
at Ohio to go entirely
online 10 years ago,”
said Tania Basta, chair
of the Department
of Social and Public
Health. “The online
platform has made this
degree readily accessible for working health
professionals and these
rankings conﬁrm our
commitment to quality
and value in the competitive online market.
We are proud that this

online degree continues
to attract and prepare
health administrators to
meet the rapidly changing needs of healthcare.”
In determining its
best MHA programs,
College Choice considered academic quality,
affordability, return on
investment, retention
rates and graduation
rates.
“At Ohio University,
you’ll jump into a fastpaced, customizable
online Master of Healthcare Administration
program. Each class in
the 36-hour program
lasts seven weeks. Most
students take one class
at a time and are still
able to graduate in as
little as two years,” College Choice notes. “Ohio
University makes it easy
for you to stay connected even after you have
ﬁnished the program.
The online MHA blog
is a networking tool to
keep you looped in to all
the new industry trends,
continuing education
opportunities, current
legislation and more.”
In terms of affordability, College Choice
looked for “the most
bang for your buck.”
The organization said
OU’s MHA has a “futurefocused” curriculum and
that the University is
“committed to preparing
its graduates for future
trends and issues related
to health services.”
Since OU’s MHA
began, more than 1,400
students have graduated
from the program —
194 of them in the calendar year of 2017.
For more information on OU’s Master of
Health Administration
program, click here.

Holzer welcomes
Leslie Patch, MD, FACS,
Board Certiﬁed
Ophthalmologist,
to our locations
in Jackson
and Gallipolis!

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

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Cameron bids
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5,500 artifacts from the
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�Opinion
4 Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Carving out
the next
president
A game some are playing now involves asking
participants to reconsider the U.S. presidents
sculpted on Mount Rushmore in the Black Hills of
South Dakota. The sculpting began in 1927 and
included presidents George Washington, Thomas
Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and
Theodore Roosevelt. Of the 45 men
who have held that ofﬁce, whom
would you select to be featured in
that spot — assuming, of course,
that you have a magic wand in your
pocket?
On Nov. 3, 2020, we will be votVivien
ing for the president of the United
Blevins
States. Now is the time to be conContributing
sidering the qualities you would like
columnist
in a president before all the ugliness
surfaces.
Ideally, both Republicans and Democrats should
select a person whom many Americans can
endorse. Am I foolish to even suggest this?
We know that we have diverse opinions/needs/
wants, but we should start with absolute requirements and then move to preferred qualities.
Does this sound like a job you’ve chased? Yes,
men and women will soon be chasing the presidency. A dialogue about what we want to include
in the job description is a good place to start, and
I’d prefer we keep the current president’s and past
presidents’ names out of this exercise.
Later, we might consider the compromises we
might be willing to make, given that such compromise is essential in most major decision making.
Know that I’m interested in your opinions, and
perhaps some readers will respond to my list.
Note that my list is not in priority order:
1. Physical and mental ﬁtness. Our next president will have a difﬁcult, complex, demanding job.
2. Knowledge of American history. In the
scheme of things, we have a relatively short history as a nation. That history is complicated by a
host of factors with diverse voices and positions.
To understand American history is also to know
the history of our relationships with other countries, the overt relationships and the more subtle
ones.
3. Sound grounding in American government.
The candidates don’t need to be Constitutional
scholars, but they should know how government
works as provided in a host of documents.
4. Ability to select cabinet members whose
areas of expertise complement his/her own. Cabinet members should be of both parties, extremely
competent, and reﬂect the diversity of the country.
5. A comfort level with conﬂict and the ability
to manage it so that good decisions can be made
and supported.
6. Honest, ethical. It’s all right to say, “At this
juncture, I’m not in a position to talk about that.”
I want both parties to recognize that we have
exemplary talent in this nation which calls for
promoting the emergence of that leadership.
Recycling the same personalities we’ve seen for
decades will not position our country to move
ahead to address issues in a host of areas that are
important to our prosperity such as job development, health care, education, immigration, law
enforcement, racism , military readiness, etc.
As a person who has always enjoyed a lively
debate, I embrace sharing points of view. Endless
quarreling is not, however, healthy for us. Divisions among us threaten what we have achieved as
a great nation. I must remain hopeful.
Dr. Blevins has taught undergraduate and graduate students as well
as prison inmates, and now teachescommunication and American
literature classes at Edison State Community College. Reach her at
(937)778-3815 or vbblevins@woh.rr.com.

THEIR VIEW

Police danced in a honky-tonk
“Why don’t we get
something to eat and
then stop over at the
Country Palace? It will
give us an opportunity
to chill and relax,” the
host of the law enforcement seminar said, after
we had ﬁnished the long
day’s study.
I had never been inside
a honky-tonk bar before,
and was a bit unsure.
There were several other
law enforcement ofﬁcers
in our group, including a
couple from the Columbus Police Department,
which served as the host
agency.
I don’t remember
exactly where the bar was
located, but I do remember it was in a rough part
of Columbus.
We walked in the front
door, and every head in
the bar slowly turned to
look hard at us. We had
come straight from the
classroom and were still
wearing white shirts,
with rolled up sleeves.
To say we looked out
of place was putting it
mildly.
The cigarette smoke
was dense and ponderous, winding like a swollen river throughout the
club. We couldn’t see the
band standing on the
small stage in front of the
room, or the people sitting at the tables.
One man was smoking
a cigar, but the women
preferred cigarettes, with
many packs of Kools
strewn on the tables.
“They might have to

dressed in a bright
move the tables
red, rufﬂed shirt,
back so there
with a large cowis room for the
boy belt holding
smoke,” one of the
up his coal-black,
ofﬁcers remarked
skintight trousers
sarcastically.
that ﬂared at the
As we walked
Pat
bottom.
further inside, we
His name was
were able to see
Haley
discernible faces
Contributing Paul “Tiny” Wellcolumnist
man, and he was
for the ﬁrst time.
the personiﬁcation
We sat down about
of a honky-tonk
four tables away
country music singer.
from the stage.
The eager patrons
We noticed a group
let out a thunderous
of factory workers were
applause.
sitting at a table with a
“Tiny” stepped up to
pitcher of beer in the midthe microphone, and in a
dle. They had their ﬁrst
very pleasant voice asked
names embroidered on
their shirts just above the the crowd how many
name of the local factory had been to Luckenbach,
Texas. His question was
where they all worked.
I wasn’t at all convinced met with whistles, howls
this was the best location and yelps.
“Let’s go to Luckenin Columbus to “relax”, as
bach, Texas, with Waylon
the host had earlier sugand Willie and the boys,
gested.
this successful life we’re
The smoke thickened
livin’, got us feuding
as the crowd increased.
The bar noise was so loud like the Hatﬁelds and
McCoys,” he sang in a
it was hard to hear anyvery pleasant tenor voice.
one talking at our table.
Tiny started his next
“Do you think we
song with no introducshould stay here?” a
young ofﬁcer from a rural tion. He began to sing
county sitting next to me “Blue Eyes Crying in
asked. “There seems like the Rain”, and an entire
a lot of tough people here table of women, with the
exception of two older
to me.”
ones, jumped onto the
“We don’t have much
choice since we rode over dance ﬂoor.
To our surprise, two
here with these guys from
of the ofﬁcers with us
Columbus,” I replied.
walked over to the table
The band suddenly
and asked the remaining
stopped playing, and a
larger-than-life appearing women to dance. The
women smiled, held out
man walked on stage.
their hands, and eagerly
His bouffant hair was
walked to the dance ﬂoor
jet black, with long,
with the ofﬁcers.
huge sideburns. He was

When the same young
ofﬁcer who had asked me
a question earlier saw
the ofﬁcers dancing, he
asked this time with more
urgency in his voice, “Do
you think this is a good
idea? Should they be dancing with those women? I
think they are asking for
trouble. Do you think we
should stay here?”
“I don’t think they
are going leave anytime
soon,” I said.
Seven or eight slow
dances later, the young
ofﬁcer’s concerns were
realized.
The singing and dancing came to a complete
stop when one of the
women began yelling at
one of the ofﬁcers.
“I’m going to call the
cops!” she shouted. Then,
she hit him hard in the
ear.
“I think it is time to
leave,” I said to the young
ofﬁcer. Evidently, the
other two ofﬁcers agreed
as they scampered back
to the table, and one of
them nonchalantly said,
“It’s smoky in here. Let’s
get some fresh air,” as we
left the building.
“I hope they arrest that
woman,” the ofﬁcer said,
as he rubbed his ear.
“Yes. It’s people like
her who give nice places
like this a bad name,”
his partner said, as we
climbed into the car and
headed back to the hotel.
Pat Haley is a Clinton County
Commissioner and former Clinton
County Sheriff.

TODAY IN HISTORY
By The Associated Press

hold the rank.
In 1917, Nikon Corp.
had its beginnings with
Today is Wednesday,
July 25, the 206th day of the merger of three opti2018. There are 159 days cal manufacturers in
Japan.
left in the year.
In 1943, Benito Mussolini was dismissed as
Today’s Highlight
premier of Italy by King
in History:
On July 25, 1994, Israe- Victor Emmanuel III,
li Prime Minister Yitzhak and placed under arrest.
(However, Mussolini
Rabin and Jordan’s King
Hussein signed a declara- was later rescued by the
Nazis, and re-asserted his
tion at the White House
authority.)
ending their countries’
In 1946, the United
46-year-old formal state
States detonated an
of war.
atomic bomb near Bikini
Atoll in the Paciﬁc in the
On this date:
ﬁrst underwater test of
In 1866, Ulysses S.
Grant was named General the device.
In 1952, Puerto Rico
of the Army of the United
States, the ﬁrst ofﬁcer to became a self-governing

commonwealth of the
United States.
In 1956, the Italian
liner SS Andrea Doria
collided with the Swedish passenger ship
Stockholm off the New
England coast late at
night and began sinking;
51 people — 46 from the
Andrea Doria, ﬁve from
the Stockholm — were
killed. (The Andrea Doria
capsized and sank the following morning.)
In 1960, a Woolworth’s
store in Greensboro,
North Carolina, that
had been the scene of a
sit-in protest against its
whites-only lunch counter
dropped its segregation
policy.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Advertising is a valuable economic factor because it
is the cheapest way of selling goods, particularly if the
goods are worthless.”
— Sinclair Lewis, American author (1885-1951).

In 1961, in a televised
address on the Berlin
Crisis, President John F.
Kennedy announced a
series of steps aimed at
bolstering the military
in the face of Soviet
demands that Western
powers withdraw from
the German city’s western sector.
In 1972, the notorious Tuskegee syphilis
experiment came to light
as The Associated Press

reported that for the previous four decades, the
U.S. Public Health Service, in conjunction with
the Tuskegee Institute in
Alabama, had been allowing poor, rural black male
patients with syphilis to
go without treatment,
even allowing them to
die, as a way of studying
the disease.
In 1984, Soviet cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya
became the ﬁrst woman

to walk in space as she
carried out more than
three hours of experiments outside the orbiting space station Salyut
7.
In 2000, a New Yorkbound Air France Concorde crashed outside
Paris shortly after takeoff,
killing all 109 people on
board and four people
on the ground; it was
the ﬁrst-ever crash of the
supersonic jet.
In 2002, Zacarias
Moussaoui declared he
was guilty of conspiracy
in the September 11
attacks, then dramatically
withdrew his plea at his
arraignment in Alexandria, Va.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 25, 2018 5

CCAO
From page 1

improve the well-being of all
Ohioans.”
State polices enacted over the
last decade have forced counties
in the difficult position of balancing revenue loss with escalating
costs. The loss of the Medicaid
managed care organization
(MCO) sales tax, severe reductions in the Local Government
Fund (LGF) and the phase out
of the tangible personal property
tax (TPP) has eliminated approximately $351 million per year in
county revenue statewide.
“The state’s revenue policy
decisions, coupled with our
growing costs, have created
an environment where many
counties have had to deplete
reserves, delay capital projects
and struggle to provide the
services that Ohioans need. In
many instances, while the state
was cutting taxes, counties were
forced to raise taxes to continue
their state mandated functions,”
said CCA0 1st Vice President
Julie Ehemann.
Furthermore, exploding
costs associated with the opiate
epidemic are crippling justice
and public safety budgets, and
indigent defense reimbursement
from the state continues to go
down while expenses continue
to rise.
“Counties, acting on behalf of
the state, must have the state’s
financial commitment to ensure
that county revenue streams
correspond to the services they
are mandated by the state to
provide. County challenges have
increased significantly, and a
stronger partnership between
state and county government is
critical to the quality of life and
prosperity of Ohio and its citizens,” CCAO Executive Director
Suzanne Dulaney said.
The County Commissioners
Association of Ohio advances
effective county government for
Ohio through legislative advocacy, education and training, technical assistance and research,
quality enterprise service
programs, and greater citizen
awareness and understanding of
county government.

Henry Myers, Chaplain of the CadotBlessing Camp #126, gave the
benediction.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Numerous organizations came together to remember those killed in the Battle of Buffington Island.

Buffington
From page 1

and International Americana
and Country and Billboard
charts including 15 #1
songs. In 2000 he received a
lifetime achievement award
from Airplay International
in Nashville. In 2008, he
won the Governor’s Award
in Ohio in 2009 and was
honored by being named an
‘Ohio Treasure.
Donegan performed the
program “The General in
General”as Union General
William Stark Rosecrans.
The General in General
introduces the audience to
the life of West Point graduate General William Stark
Rosecrans, United States
Army. Donegan’s presentation shared Rosecrans’ prewar accomplishments, experiences as an architect and
civil engineer and significant
campaigns during the Civil
War in which Rosecrans
commanded forces at Rich
Mountain, Carnifax Ferry
and the Kanawha Valley.
These campaigns helped
to define him and shape his
character. The year, 1863,

Ohio Department Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War Commander
Kerry Langdon spoke during the
memorial.

Numerous organizations came together to remember those killed in the
Battle of Buffington Island.

Wreaths lined the area in front of the
memorial.

Steve Free played and sang during
the service and during the lunch
which followed.

was a year of great significance for the country and
for General Rosecrans, and
today is honored for his contributions.
Donegan, a native of
Charleston, West Virginia,
enjoys history and all things
historical. He is a member of

TODAY
8 AM

2 PM

Reenactors pause to remember those
lost in the Battle of Buffington Island.

the West Virginia Reenactors
Association and the Federal
Generals Officers Corps.
As a participant in the Officers Corp, William portrays
Union General William Stark
Rosecrans.
Organizations taking part
in the Battle of Buffington
Island Memorial Service

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

88°
67°

WEATHER

70°

78°

78°

Humid today with clouds limiting sunshine. A
moonlit sky tonight. High 84° / Low 63°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

81°
67°
86°
66°
103° in 1934
50° in 1947

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.06
5.15
3.50
30.42
25.46

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:23 a.m.
8:46 p.m.
7:19 p.m.
4:28 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

MOON PHASES
Last

Full

Jul 27

New

First

Aug 4 Aug 11 Aug 18

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

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
10:29a
11:14a
12:00p
12:24a
1:13a
2:03a
2:52a

Minor
4:17a
5:02a
5:48a
6:36a
7:25a
8:14a
9:03a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Primary: unspecified causes
Mold: 2388

Major
10:53p
11:38p
---12:48p
1:36p
2:25p
3:14p

Minor
4:41p
5:26p
6:12p
6:59p
7:48p
8:36p
9:25p

WEATHER HISTORY
The passenger ship Andrea Doria was
moving through fog near Nantucket
Lighthouse, Mass., on July 25, 1956,
when it collided with the Swedish
liner Stockholm. The Andrea Doria
sank less than 12 hours later.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
13.12
16.16
21.82
13.13
12.85
24.60
12.81
26.11
34.70
13.32
16.80
34.50
15.70

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.33
-0.18
-0.06
-0.07
-0.44
-0.87
-0.52
+0.59
+0.52
+0.45
+0.10
+0.20
+0.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Logan
83/59

Lucasville
84/64
Portsmouth
84/65

SUNDAY

83°
62°
Partly sunny and nice

Mostly cloudy with a
t-storm possible

80°
68°
Cloudy, a
thunderstorm
possible; humid

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
81/62
Belpre
82/63

Athens
82/61

Today

St. Marys
81/62

Parkersburg
81/61

Coolville
82/62

Elizabeth
82/62

Spencer
81/62

Buffalo
82/63

Ironton
83/64

Milton
82/63

Clendenin
81/62

St. Albans
82/64

Huntington
81/65

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
90/63
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
72/56
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
98/72
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

81°
65°

Mostly cloudy

Wilkesville
82/62
POMEROY
Jackson
83/61
83/62
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
83/62
84/64
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
86/64
GALLIPOLIS
84/63
83/62
83/63

Ashland
83/65
Grayson
83/65

MONDAY

84°
64°

Murray City
83/59

McArthur
83/59

South Shore Greenup
83/64
83/64

67

Variable clouds, a
t-storm in spots

Adelphi
84/61
Chillicothe
85/63

SATURDAY

83°
61°

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

Waverly
84/63

Pollen: 6

Primary: cladosporium
Thu.
6:24 a.m.
8:45 p.m.
8:05 p.m.
5:16 a.m.

Partial sunshine

2

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

included, Ohio Department
Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil War, Ohio History
Connection, Auxiliary to
Ohio Department SUVCW,
McClellan Camp and Auxiliary, Auxiliary for the John
Townsend Camp #108,
Sister Anthony O’Connell
Auxiliary, Gen. Benjamin
Fearing Camp #2 SUVCW,
Cadot-Blessing Camp #126
SUVCW, Brooks-Grant
Camp #7, Portland Community Center, and Buffington
Island Battlefield Preservation Foundation.

Charleston
79/65

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
64/52

Montreal
79/70

Billings
79/58

Toronto
82/63
Minneapolis
78/57

Detroit
86/64
Chicago
88/69

Denver
89/59

New York
79/72
Washington
81/71

Kansas City
90/67

Thu.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
98/72/pc
95/69/t
Anchorage
67/59/sh 67/56/pc
Atlanta
89/71/t 91/71/pc
Atlantic City
78/73/t
83/72/t
Baltimore
80/69/t
86/69/t
Billings
79/58/pc
79/55/t
Boise
100/65/s 99/63/s
Boston
82/72/sh
82/70/t
Charleston, WV
79/65/t 84/67/pc
Charlotte
87/68/t
90/70/t
Cheyenne
81/55/t
71/52/t
Chicago
88/69/s 80/60/pc
Cincinnati
85/64/c 86/67/pc
Cleveland
81/67/t 85/66/pc
Columbus
84/65/t 86/67/s
Dallas
100/77/pc 102/80/pc
Denver
89/59/t
80/58/t
Des Moines
86/63/pc 78/57/s
Detroit
86/64/pc 83/61/pc
Honolulu
87/76/pc 90/78/pc
Houston
98/76/s 99/77/s
Indianapolis
86/64/pc 85/61/pc
Kansas City
90/67/pc
82/58/t
Las Vegas
113/90/s 112/89/s
Little Rock
93/71/s 96/73/s
Los Angeles
98/72/s 95/70/s
Louisville
88/67/pc 90/68/pc
Miami
91/78/t
91/76/t
Minneapolis
78/57/t 71/57/pc
Nashville
90/69/pc 92/72/s
New Orleans
93/79/pc 95/79/s
New York City
79/72/t
84/73/t
Oklahoma City
94/70/pc 91/69/pc
Orlando
87/73/t
88/73/t
Philadelphia
80/73/t
88/72/t
Phoenix
116/91/pc 113/90/pc
Pittsburgh
79/60/t 83/65/pc
Portland, ME
76/67/sh
80/65/t
Raleigh
83/70/t
88/71/t
Richmond
81/69/t
88/71/t
St. Louis
89/71/s 88/66/pc
Salt Lake City
96/70/pc 93/70/pc
San Francisco
72/56/pc 71/57/pc
Seattle
90/63/s 89/62/s
Washington, DC
81/71/t
88/73/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

National for the 48 contiguous states
El Paso
101/80
Chihuahua
97/71

Houston
98/76

118° in Needles, CA
36° in Bodie State Park, CA

High
Low

Atlanta
89/71

Global
Miami
91/78

Monterrey
99/72

High
Low

121° in Timimoun, Algeria
2° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

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6 Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Daily Sentinel

30 days … and counting

Meyer says
assistant’s
firing best
thing for
Buckeyes

Dave Harris | OVP Sports

Wednesday marks the official 30-day countdown for the 2018 high school football seasons in both Ohio and West Virginia. Meigs County — which has teams at Meigs,
Southern and Eastern — will be hoping that at least one of those programs can make the playoffs for the first time since the Tornadoes appeared in the 2016 Division
VII playoffs. Pictured above is Meigs wideout Weston Baer during a run against River Valley in a 2017 Week 5 contest in Bidwell, Ohio.

Frost looks at home with Nebraska
CHICAGO (AP) — Scott
Frost talks to Tom Osborne
almost every week. He welcomes his college coach into
his ofﬁce at Nebraska, or they
go turkey hunting or ﬁshing.
Hard at work at rebuilding
his storied alma mater, Frost is
keeping his friends as close as
possible.
The 43-year-old Frost is
home again after a successful run with Central Florida,
returning to Lincoln in December after coaching the Knights
to a 13-0 record last season.
The long-term objective is
moving Nebraska back into the
upper echelon of college football, and the plan is a familiar
one.
“Coach Osborne had the
formula that Nebraska ﬁgured
out,” Frost said. “Some of the
things he did to make the program arguably the best in the
country can still work today.
Nebraska has just gone away
from them. We’re going to
adopt a lot of things again and
do it in a modern way and do it
in a way that recruits and kids
are going to want to be a part
of.”

Frost grew up about 90 minutes west of Nebraska’s campus
and led the 1997 Cornhuskers
to a share of the national championship in Osborne’s ﬁnal year
as coach. It was part of a wildly
successful decade for the Cornhuskers, who went 108-16-1 in
the 1990s.
But the program hasn’t
enjoyed that level of success in
quite some time. Mike Riley
went 19-19 in three seasons
before he was ﬁred in November.
Enter Frost, who once again
was unable to resist the siren
song of his home state. Frost
began his playing career at
Stanford before coming home.
“Being a football coach is
rewarding because of the time
you get to spend with young
men and the things you get to
try to pour into them,” he said.
“It’s even more special to do it
around people you care about
and the place you’re from and
at your alma mater.”
It’s a high-stakes move for
Frost, Nebraska and the Big
Ten, which could use a healthy
Cornhuskers program to help
balance the conference’s West

See COACH | 7

Annie Rice | AP

Nebraska head coach Scott Frost speaks at the Big Ten Conference NCAA college
football Media Day on Monday in Chicago.

Division with its powerhouse
schools in the East. So naturally Frost’s arrival on the scene
was a frequent topic of conversation at the Big Ten football
media day on Monday.
“I think the fact that Scott
played at Nebraska and has
had an amazing series of successes as a young coach really
breathes a lot of enthusiasm
into the fan base,” Commissioner Jim Delany said.

It sounds as if his players feel
the same way.
“He’s a championship quarterback. You want to show him
that you can play,” star receiver
Stanley Morgan Jr. said. “You
want to show him that I’m that
guy, like I can compete with
you. Actually sometimes I want
to show him that I could have
played with him, I could have

will be conducting a free basketball camp for kids in grades
K-6 at the church’s Outreach
Center. The three-night camp
will run from Monday, July 30,
through Wednesday Aug. 1,
between 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Southern boys basketball coach
Jeff Caldwell will be directing
the camp.

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio —
The Meigs football training
camp will begin on July 30.
High school training camp will
run from 5:30 p.m. until 9 p.m.
The Middle school training
camp will be from 6 p.m. until
7:30 p.m.

League is currently accepting
resgistrations for the 2018
youth soccer league.
Online registration is now
open until August 1, and the
registration link can be found
on the league website at www.
masoncountysoccerleague.com
To register in person, there
will be three different signup
dates at the recreation ﬁelds
in front of the career center by
PPJSHS. The remaining signup
will run from 6-8 p.m. on Monday, July 30.
For more information, please
visit www.masoncountysoccerleague.com on the web.

MCSL youth
soccer signups

Racine FBC
Basketball Camp

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
— The Mason County Soccer

RACINE, Ohio — The
Racine First Baptist Church

See HOME | 7

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Southern football
golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The
Southern football team is hosting a four-person golf scramble
on Sunday, Aug. 5, at Riverside
Golf Club. Registration begins
at 7:30 a.m. and the scramble
will start at 8:30 a.m.
Cost is $60 per individual or
$240 per team. Please make
checks payable to Southern
Athletic Boosters.
There will be a skins game
and 50-50 rafﬂe, as well as closest to the pin and long drive
competitions. Mulligans and
red tee shots will also be available to purchase.
Food and beverages will
be provided at the event, and
club house credit will go to the
top-3 teams.

To register a team, please
contact SHS head coach Cassady Willford via email at cassady.willford53@gmail.com or
on the phone at 740-416-8470.

Meigs football
training camp

CHICAGO (AP) —
Ohio State coach Urban
Meyer has a saying he
uses with his program:
Event + Response = Outcome.
The outcome this time
was the dismissal of a
longtime assistant.
Meyer is facing questions about his relationship with former receivers coach Zach Smith,
who was ﬁred Monday
after an Ohio court granted a domestic violence
protection order to his
ex-wife last week.
“It’s something our
team lives by, E + R =
O, you press pause and
get your mind right and
step up, press pause and
gather information, get
your mind right, gather
energy, and then step up
to do the right thing,”
Meyer said Tuesday of
Smith’s dismissal. “That’s
the position I hold. That’s
how we did that.”
Smith, the grandson of
former Ohio State coach
Earle Bruce, was charged
in May with misdemeanor criminal trespass. At
the time of the charge,
Zach Smith’s attorney
said Smith’s ex-wife had
accused him of driving to
her apartment after she
told him they would meet
elsewhere so he could
drop off their son.
Smith pleaded not
guilty last month. Courtney Smith asked for a civil
protection order on Friday, and her request was
granted. A hearing has
been scheduled for Aug. 3.

GAHS football
reserve seats

Some NFL
coaches
already
are on hot
seat in July
NEW YORK (AP) —
The NFL season doesn’t
start for another six
weeks and already job
security is an issue for
some coaches.
Yes, even in late July.
Every season, teams
that entered with low
expectations show signiﬁcant improvement
and make unexpected
deep postseason runs.
Last season, Jacksonville
with coach Doug Marrone went to the AFC
championship game and
held a late lead at New
England before Tom
Brady rallied the Patriots. And, of course, the
Eagles and coach Doug
Pederson, despite losing
Carson Wentz to a torn
ACL, beat Brady and Bill
Belichick in the Super
Bowl.
There’s always pressure
on NFL coaches to win.
And win now.
Here are a few who
enter the 2018 season on
the hot seat:

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
Reserve seats for the 2018
Gallia Academy High School
football season will go on sale
starting on Tuesday, Aug. 7, for
the Gallia Academy Athletic
Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior

JASON GARRETT
(67-53, 1-2 in playoffs)
There’s always pressure

See BRIEFS | 7

See HOT SEAT | 7

�SPORTS/TV

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 25, 2018 7

Furyk not ready to commit to taking Woods
CARNOUSTIE, Scotland (AP) — Ryder Cup
captain Jim Furyk says it
was fun to watch Tiger
Woods contend at the
British Open and brieﬂy
take the lead in the ﬁnal
round. Whether that
means Woods is a lock for
the U.S. team is still to be
determined.
“I’m going to handle
him the way I do everyone else,” Furyk said
Monday before boarding
a ﬂight for the Canadian
Open. “I’ll ask my top
eight guys. The way he’s
playing, he might be one
of them. I’ll ask the vice

captains, collectively, and
I think we’ll do the best
we can to round out the
team. We want the guys
playing the best.”
Woods moved from
No. 31 to No. 20 in the
Ryder Cup standings
with two tournaments
remaining before the
top eight qualify for the
Sept. 28-30 matches in
Paris. Points are based
on money, and the two
events left for Woods —
a World Golf Championship and PGA Championship — offer two of the
largest purses.
Woods already has

at being a playing assistant.
He has played just 12
events that offer Ryder
Cup points, about half
as many tournaments
as most American prospects.
Woods had the lead for
three holes at Carnoustie
until a double bogey at
No. 11, and he wound up
tied for sixth. It at least
moved him to No. 50 in
Peter Morrison | AP
the world ranking, makTiger Woods plays out of the rough on the 11th fairway during the
final round for the 147th British Open Golf championships Sunday ing him eligible for the
$10 million Bridgestone
in Carnoustie, Scotland.
Invitational next week at
Firestone, where he has
been appointed an assiswas at Hazeltine two
tant captain, just as he
years ago. He has hinted won eight times.

Briefs

Thursday, Aug. 9.
The price is $35 per ticket.
Tickets may be purchased in
the Athletic Director’s ofﬁce at
From page 6
Gallia Academy High School
between the hours of 8 a.m.
varsity football players, Gallia
Academy Marching Band mem- and 3 p.m.
Gallia Academy Athletic
bers, and varsity and junior
Super Boosters will be limited
varsity cheerleaders will be
to 10 tickets purchased on the
able to purchase reserve seats
ﬁrst day of sales.
on Wednesday, Aug. 8.
After the ﬁrst day, there
Reserve seats for the general public will be available on will be no limit on the number

Hot Seat

of tickets which may be purchased.

GAHS Athletic
Hall of Fame
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
GAHS Hall of Fame committee
is currently accepting applications for the class of 2018.
Applications can be found on

the Gallipolis City Schools’
website and the ﬁling deadline
is July 25.
This year’s inductees will be
honored at Memorial Field on
Friday, Oct. 12, and there will
also be a banquet at GAHS on
Oct. 13. They will join the 16
prior classes and 124 current
members.
Please call Tom Meadows,
President, at 740-645-4880 with
any questions.

Home
From page 6

been your receiver.”
It’s a familiar script
for the Big Ten after
Jim Harbaugh took
over at Michigan
in December 2014.
Harbaugh also played
quarterback in college
and returned to his
alma mater with much
fanfare and excitement.
He coached against
Frost in 2016, directing the Wolverines to
a 51-14 victory over
UCF in Ann Arbor.
“He brought a really
motivated, excellent football team up
there,” Harbaugh said.
“Expect that he’ll do
the same thing in his
current position.”
Harbaugh himself is
beginning an intriguing year after Michigan went 8-5 last season, dropping its last
three games.
Asked about the
Wolverines’ six-game
losing streak against
rival Ohio State and
the pressure on him
to stop that slide, Harbaugh responded: “We
feel like just improvement. We need to
improve. And that
will lead to success. It
will lead to championships. It’s that simple.”
Frost, who signed
a $35 million, sevenyear contract, has no
such problems at the
moment. The Cornhuskers went 4-8 in
Riley’s last season,
and Frost deﬁnitely
has some time before
the honeymoon wears
off at Nebraska.
But he is planning
for one quick turnaround.
“I know if we’re
getting better day by
day we’re going to be
really dangerous and
hard to beat in the
very near future,” he
said. “We’ll see how
this ﬁrst year goes,
but people better get
us now because we’re
going to keep getting
better.”
WEDNESDAY, JULY 25

in Dallas, Gruden also
Atlanta), and getting
is always an issue. But
has to contend with the past them and the New
Gruden will set the
champs in his division.
Orleans Saints in the
record for the longestAnd there will be com- NFC South, especially
serving coach (65
From page 6
games) since Dan Snyder parisons to Jay Gruden’s with Ryan Fitzpatrick
Super Bowl-winning
making three starts for
took over as owner in
on the head coach of the
brother, Jon, who has
Tampa Bay, will be tough.
1999 in Week 1 of the
Dallas Cowboys, espeupcoming season against returned to coaching with
cially with Jerry Jones
the Oakland Raiders.
Arizona.
as owner. The franchise
VANCE JOSEPH (5-11)
Gruden has made the
that has won ﬁve Super
Only entering his
playoffs once in his ﬁrst
Bowls has not advanced
second season, Joseph’s
DIRK KOETTER (14-18)
four years and lost to
past the divisional round
Denver debut was a dud
Koetter will enter his
Aaron Rodgers and the
of the playoffs since the
at 5-11 — an avalanche of
third season in Tampa
Packers in the wild-card
1995 season, the last year
disappointment by BronBay without starting
game after the 2015 seait won the NFL title. Garquarterback Jameis Win- cos standards, especially
son.
rett has 67 regular-season
so closely removed from a
ston, who will miss the
Gruden’s biggest
wins since taking over
Super Bowl title.
ﬁrst three games while
challenge could be at
in the 2010 season. He
In an attempt to stasuspended for violatquarterback after Kirk
has had only one losing
bilize the QB position
ing the NFL’s personal
Cousins signed with
season as head coach.
that’s been troublesome
conduct policy after a
TODD BOWLES (22-29)
Minnesota. The team
However, he has reached
league investigation of an since Peyton Manning
Life in the AFC East
traded for Alex Smith,
the postseason only twice having to deal with the
retired, the team signed
accusation that the 2013
and the comparisons
and won one game in the never-ending juggernaut
Case Keenum, who led
Heisman Trophy winner
playoffs.
the Vikings to the NFC
groped a female Uber
in New England is almost at the position in the
NFC East can be daunt- driver during a ride in
The Cowboys were
championship game last
unfair. Facing Brady and
ing: Dak Prescott, Eli
13-3 two seasons ago and Belichick twice every
season. Joseph needs big
Arizona in March 2016.
will be expected to be in
production from Keenum
Koetter also is in a
season is not good for any Manning and Carson
playoff contention with a opposing head coach’s job Wentz — not to mention division with two teams
and the rest of the offense
Super Bowl MVP Nick
to support an overworked
full season of quarterback security.
with recent Super Bowl
defense.
Dak Prescott and running
appearances (Carolina,
Bowles, who received a Foles. As with Garrett
back Ezekiel Elliott. But
two-year extension after
WEDNESDAY EVENING
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18 (WGN) Blue Bloods
24 (ROOT) In Depth (N) Pirates Ball MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Cleveland Indians Site: Progressive Field
Joe Thomas.
Job security in DC
The Browns hold the
NFL’s longest active playoff drought at 15 seasons
and fans don’t really trust
this process. Jackson, a
highly regarded offensive
coordinator in Cincinnati, is counting on top
overall draft pick Baker
Mayﬁeld being the team’s
longtime answer at quarterback. The challenge for
Jackson and the Browns
is going against the rugged defenses and Super
Bowl-winning QBs in
Pittsburgh and Baltimore
in the AFC North.

25 (ESPN)
26 (ESPN2)
27 (LIFE)

Coach

that what was reported
wasn’t actually what
happened. And Shelley
(Meyer’s wife) and I actuFrom page 6
ally both got involved
because of our relationZach Smith was
accused of aggravated bat- ship with that family and
tery on his then-pregnant advised for counseling
wife in 2009 while he was and wanted to help as we
moved forward.”
a graduate assistant on
The Smiths got
Meyer’s staff at Florida.
divorced in 2016. Asked
The charge was dropped
if Smith’s ﬁring had anybecause of insufﬁcient
thing to do with the alleevidence, and Meyer,
gations becoming public,
who calls the late Bruce
Meyer acknowledged it
one of his biggest mentors, brought Smith along was a factor.
“I really don’t care
when he took over Ohio
about that,” Meyer said.
State before the 2012
“I try to stay focused on
season.
what’s the most important
“In 2009 Zach was an
intern, a very young cou- thing. That’s our players
ple,” Meyer said. “As I do and our team.
“But I do understand
many times, most coaches
the value. It’s The Ohio
and people in leadership
State University is bigpositions, you receive a
phone call, ﬁrst thing you ger than all of us. So you
have to do what’s right by
do is tell your boss, let
the experts do their jobs. them. And the timing. It
We’re certainly not going wasn’t just my decision. It
was a group effort on sevto investigate.
eral people that I rely on.”
“It came back to me

29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

10:30

Reverie "Despedida" (N)
Shark Tank A way to
communicate with your pets.
Nova "Treasures of the
Earth: Power"
Shark Tank A way to
communicate with your pets.
SEAL Team "Call Out"
Eyewitness News at 10
p.m. (N)
Nova "Treasures of the
Earth: Power"
SEAL Team "Call Out"

10 PM

10:30

Last Man St. Last Man St.
UFC UFC 110
SportsCenter (N)
MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Baltimore Orioles Site: Camden Yards (L)
SportsCenter (N)
Horn (N)
Interrupt (N) NFL Live
Soccer International Champions Cup (L)
Soccer
Grey's Anatomy "Mama
Little Women: LA "Kicking LIttle Women "Beauty and Little Women: LA "Sins and (:05) Seatbelt (:35) Seatbelt
Tried"
and Screaming"
the Booze" (N)
the City" (N)
Psychic (N) Psychic (N)
YoungHu10 Things I Hate About You (1999, Comedy) Julia Young &amp;
The Waterboy (1998, Comedy) Kathy Bates, Henry
Stiles, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Heath Ledger. TV14
Hungry (N) ngry (F) (N) Winkler, Adam Sandler. TV14
(4:30)
Red (‘10, Act)
Red 2 (2013, Action) Helen Mirren, John Malkovich, Bruce Willis. A team of retired Yellowstone "Coming
Bruce Willis. TV14
C.I.A operatives reunite to track down a missing nuclear device. TVPG
Home" (N)
Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House Double Dare SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob
NCIS "We Build, We Fight" NCIS "Blast From the Past" NCIS "Trapped"
Suits "Pecking Order" (N)
Colony (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Frontal (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
NCIS: New O. "My City"
NCIS: New Orleans
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (‘16, Act) Henry Cavill, Ben Affleck. TVPG
(5:00)
Lethal Weapon 4 (1998, Action) Danny
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (‘11, Act) Robert Downey Jr.. Sherlock
Glover, Chris Rock, Mel Gibson. TVMA
Holmes and Dr. Watson team up to take down their nemesis, Professor Moriarty. TVPG
Shallow Water Invasion
Air Jaws (N)
Air Jaws (N)
SharkTankSharkWeek
SharkCam Stakeout
OzzyandJack'sDetour "The Ozzy and Jack's World
OzzyandJack'sDetour "I Am OzzyandJack'sDetour
Wahlburgers "Pittsburger
Devil Made Me Do It"
Detour "Twisted Sister"
Ice Cream Man"
"Grand Ole Osbournes" (N) Meets Wahlburger" (N)
Pools "Green With Envy"
Pools "Hidden Party Zone" Insane Pools DeepEnd
Insane Pools Super (N)
Animal Cribs
Chicago P.D. "Say Her Real Chicago P.D. "Get Back to Chicago P.D. "The Three
Chicago P.D. "The Number NCIS "Marine Down"
Name"
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The Wedding Singer (‘98, Com) Adam Sandler. TV14 The Wedding Singer TV14
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(:35) MASH
(:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Everybody Loves Ray Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Underworld, Inc. "The
Drugs, Inc. "Euro Coke"
Drugs, Inc. "Dallas Dope
Drugs, Inc.: The Fix "Big
Drugs, Inc. "Hallucinogens"
Money Laundry"
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NASCAR Race Hub (L)
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UFC Main
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UFC's Road to the Octagon Knockout (N) Main Event
American Pickers "Hidden American Pickers
Sniper: The Ultimate Competition America's best snipers SIX "The Reckoning" (N)
in Plane Sight"
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compete in an annual event. (N)
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Housewives "Wigging Out" The Real Housewives (N)
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(5:25)
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(:55)
Soul Plane (‘04, Com) Tom Arnold. TVMA
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Boise "Boise River Blowout" Buying and Selling (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(:15)
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(:15)
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Weiss, Scott Adkins, Kellan Lutz. TV14
makes a deal with the god Horus to take back the throne from evil god Set. TV14

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

(:55) The Boy Downstairs A woman recalls Vice News

400 (HBO)

10 PM

Reverie "Despedida" (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The Snowman (‘17, Cri) Rebecca Ferguson, Chloë Sevigny, Succession "Prague"
Tonight (N) Michael Fassbender. Detectives hunt a serial killer who
her first relationship after unknowingly
moving into her ex's building. TV14
always leaves a snowman at the scenes of his crimes. TV14
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The Ref Denis Leary. A burglar
(:40)
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couple going through a divorce completely destroy the
takes a bickering couple hostage and ends A couple struggles to spend Christmas with
house in which they both live. TVMA
up providing counseling for them. TVMA
all four of their divorced parents. TV14
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Vantage Point (‘08, Act) Dennis
Braveheart (1995, Action) Sophie Marceau, Patrick McGoohan, Mel Gibson. A
Sum of All
Quaid. Five eyewitnesses tell the story of an 13th century Scottish liberator rebels against the English who try to rule Scotland. TVM
Fears TV14 attempted presidential assassination. TV14

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, July 25, 2018 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

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ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

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By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Gordon to miss start of Browns camp to treat health
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Days before opening
training camp, the Cleveland Browns learned Josh
Gordon will be missing
again.
For how long remains
unclear.
The troubled wide
receiver, who has been
suspended numerous
times over the past six
years by the NFL for drug
violations, said on Twitter
that he won’t be with the
team for the start of camp
as he continues to recover
from addictions that have
derailed his promising
career and threatened his
life.
An unusual talent who
has been able to outrun
his dark past, Gordon
has missed two full years
after being indeﬁnitely
suspended by Commissioner Roger Goodell and
hasn’t played a complete
season since 2013, when
he led the league in yards

Ron Schwane | AP file

Cleveland Browns wide receiver Josh Gordon warms up during
the team’s organized team activity June 5 at its NFL football
training facility, in Berea, Ohio. Grordon, who has been suspended
numerous times by the NFL for drug violations, announced on
Twitter that he will not be with the team when camp opens later
this week. Gordon says his absence “is a part of my overall health
and treatment plan.”

receiving and scored nine
touchdowns.
While Gordon’s social
media post was vague,
NFL spokesman Brian
McCarthy said the
27-year-old has not been
suspended.
“We will address the
matter at the appropri-

ate time,” McCarthy
said in an email to The
Associated Press, adding
“there’s no timetable” on
Gordon’s return.
Gordon’s disclosure
came as the Browns are
preparing to begin camp
under coach Hue Jackson
amid great optimism fol-

lowing a 0-16 season.
The team overhauled
its roster during the offseason, adding former
Buffalo quarterback Tyrod
Taylor, Pro Bowl receiver
Jarvis Landry and a few
other potential starters
in trades before drafting
Heisman Trophy-winning
QB Baker Mayﬁeld with
the ﬁrst overall pick.
Gordon had been a
major part of Cleveland’s
plans for 2018, but those
could now be on hold.
In recent weeks,
rumors that Gordon failed
a drug test circulated
on social media. But it
wasn’t until he posted his
message Monday that it
became known he could
be sidelined again.
“I am reaching out to
you all personally and
letting you know that I
am not only doing great
physically but mentally as
well,” Gordon wrote in a
statement directed to “my

before this season starts,
we believe it will help me
maintain the progress I’ve
made for not only today
but for many years to
come.”
Gordon later followed
up with a tweet that said,
“Thanks again.. See ya
soon” followed by an
emoji of hands folded in
prayer.
Because he is in Stage
3 of the NFL’s substanceabuse program, Gordon
is subject to random drug
testing. He faces another
indeﬁnite suspension for
any violation.
Gordon has missed 43
of Cleveland’s past 48
games because of suspensions. Last year, he was
reinstated by Goodell
following a three-month
stay in a rehab facility. He returned for the
Browns’ ﬁnal ﬁve games
and caught 18 passes for
335 yards and a touchdown.

Cleveland Browns and
NFL Family.”
“You will notice that I
will not be in Cleveland
for the start of training camp. Rest assured,
this, too, is a part of my
overall health and treatment plan. I appreciate
the awesome support I
have received from teammates, friends, fans, and
the Browns organization.
Just like you, I am excited
to start the season and I
have every intention of
being ready and available
to join my teammates
soon to help bring winning football to our fans.
“With the help of the
NFL, NFLPA, and the
Browns’ organization, I
have been able to utilize
the resources available to
me that will ensure my
well-being on and off the
ﬁeld. By continuing to follow the plan set up by our
medical director and his
team and taking this time

Tour de France chaos: farmers’ protest, tear gas and crashes
BAGNERES-DE-LUCHON,
France (AP) — Tear gas in
riders’ eyes. A farmers’ protest
blocking the road. Two key
crashes on dangerous descents.
The only thing lacking from
the wild 16th stage of the Tour
de France on Tuesday was a
shakeup in the overall standings.
Frenchman Julian Alaphilippe took advantage of his
downhill skills to win the ﬁrst
of three mountainous legs in
the Pyrenees, which was brieﬂy
interrupted when police used
tear gas to disperse a farmers’
protest that had blocked the
road with bales of hay.
The overall standings were
unchanged. Geraint Thomas in
the yellow jersey, second-placed
Chris Froome and third-placed
Tom Dumoulin all crossed

together nearly nine minutes
behind.
The farmers’ protest
occurred 30 kilometers into the
218-kilometer (135.5-mile) leg
from Carcassonne to Bagneresde-Luchon.
Thomas, Froome, world
champion Peter Sagan and
other riders were treated with
eye drops due to the tear gas
amid a 15-minute delay.
“I just felt my throat and
nose were burning, eyes were
burning afterward,” Froome
said. “But I think quite a lot of
riders were in a similar situation.
“Thankfully the effect didn’t
last long,” Froome added. “It
was just a temporary thing with
stinging and burning.”
It was the latest in a series of
incidents involving spectators

during this year’s race, with
Team Sky riders being pushed
and spat on and 2014 champion Vincenzo Nibali having his
back broken in a crash when a
fan caught their camera strap
on his handlebars.
“We feel safe. Obviously on
some of the climbs not everyone’s our fans but we don’t feel
threatened,” Thomas said. “It’s
hard in cycling when you’re
just on the open road. It’s not
like football or something.
Everyone’s doing the best they
can and hopefully everyone
can just behave and let us
race.”
The small group of farmers
from the Aude department
were protesting a planned
reduction of European Union
funding, according to French
authorities.

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while descending from the Col
de Portet-d’Aspet, hitting a
wall and ﬂipping off his bike
spectacularly but avoiding
major injury. It was the same
descent where Italian rider
Fabio Casartelli died during
the 1995 Tour.
“I thought I was broken
everywhere,” said Gilbert, a
teammate of Alaphilippe’s on
the Quick-Step team. “But I
ended up more or less OK.”
Alaphilippe also won the
10th stage and is wearing the
polka-dot jersey of the mountains classiﬁcation leader.
Yates led Alaphilippe by 20
seconds at the top of the Col du
Portillon climb 10 kilometers
from the ﬁnish but lost control
with 6K to go, falling to the
pavement on a left turn and
sliding across the road.

“We are not going to lock the
riders in a stadium or a tennis
court,” Tour director Christian
Prudhomme said. “People
should not block the road, no
matter what causes they are
ﬁghting for.”
Thomas remained 1 minute,
39 seconds ahead of fourtime champion Froome, with
Dumoulin 1:50 back.
Alaphilippe took the lead
when Adam Yates crashed on a
technical descent in the ﬁnale.
“I knew the ﬁnale was
tricky,” Alaphilippe said. “I
was sad for (Yates) but it could
have happened to me, too,
because I took a lot of risks. …
I went all out for 220 kilometers today. I’m exhausted.”
Belgian rider Philippe Gilbert was leading when he
crashed earlier in the stage

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>July 25, 2018</text>
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