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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 89, Volume 71

Delivery driver
allegedly robbed
at gun point
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS
—The Meigs County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce is
investigating an
alleged armed robbery
of a pizza delivery
driver on Friday
evening.
Meigs County
Sheriff Keith Wood
reported in a news
release that his ofﬁce
had received a report
on Friday, June 2, at
approximately 11:09
p.m. from Fox’s Pizza
stating that one of
their delivery drivers
from the Tuppers
Plains store had
been robbed while
attempting to make a
delivery.
Deputies responded
and met with the
victim who stated
that he was making a
delivery on Number
Nine Road when he
passed a male subject
standing at Number
Nine Road and Bridle
Trail Road. The victim
stated that he received
a text message from
the store manager
stating that he had
passed the customer
and upon returning
to the male subject
standing at the side of
the road, the victim
got out of his vehicle
to give the male
subject his pizza and
take payment.
The victim stated
that while he was
attempting to get
change for the male
subject, the male
showed the victim a
ﬁrearm and demanded
all of his money. After
taking the victim’s
money the victim was
ordered back in his
vehicle and to leave.
The victim stated
that the male suspect
was 5 feet, 7 inches
to 5 feet, 8 inches in
height, of thin build,
wearing a camo long
sleeve jacket, long
pants, boots, a camo
ski mask and rubber
gloves.
This case is still
under investigation.
A statement on
the Fox’s Pizza
Den Tuppers Plains

Facebook page
regarding the incident
reads as follows:
To our loyal
customers and
everyone in the
surrounding areas of
Tuppers Plains, Ohio…
On Friday, June 2,
at 11 p.m., one of our
delivery drivers was
robbed at gunpoint on
the corner of Number
Nine Rd and Bridle
Trail Rd.
The suspect is a 5’7”5’9” small-frame male,
wearing all camo and a
ski mask.
The order he placed
from a private number,
was a large pepperoni
pizza and 12 mozzarella sticks.
If anyone has ANY
information or leads,
please contact the Meigs
County Sheriffs Department at 740-992-3371.
The reward to
whoever turns this
disgusting person in,
is $2000.00 cash and
a $250 food credit to
be used at any of the 3
Fox’s Pizza Den locations in this county.
(They must be arrested,
convicted, and sentenced, ﬁrst, of course.)
With the circumstances, we will NO
LONGER be taking
orders from private
callers. You MUST
have a valid telephone
number to give, otherwise we will not be
taking your order. Meet
at’s will ONLY happen at our designated
areas. If you cannot
make it to one of those
spots, we are sorry but
we cannot accommodate you. The safety of
OUR EMPLOYEES is
at the TOP of our priorities. We will be taking all of the necessary
steps to ensure this!!
Please share this
post in hopes to ﬁnd
this lowlife scum!!!!!
We have been a part of
this surrounding community for 16 years,
and never did we ever
dream we would have
to be dealing with this.
Please pray for our
effected employee and
Please help us in keeping our communities
safe!!!

INDEX
Obituary: #X, #X
Opinion: #X
Weather: #X
Nation: #X
World: #X

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Tuesday, June 6, 2017 s 50¢

Woman held on $200,000 bond
By Sarah Hawley

an indictment stemming
from an April 12 incident
POMEROY — A Syra- in which she was alleged
cuse woman is being held to have rammed a vehicle
on $200,000 bond after
in which two adults and
being arrested on Friday two children were riding.
during a second alleged
Meigs County Prosecuincident involving chiltor James K. Stanley told
dren.
the Sentinel that during
April M. Ritchhart, 39, the incident Ritchhart
was arraigned on Monday allegedly believed her
morning in Meigs County children were in the trunk
Common Pleas Court on of the vehicle and she

reportedly rammed it in
order to get the vehicle to
stop. There were no children in the trunk, Stanley
stated.
Stanley stated it is
believed that Ritchhart
was under the inﬂuence at the time of the
incident, although the
prosecution is waiting for
results of a blood draw
which was completed at

the hospital following the
incident to conﬁrm if this
was the case.
Ritchhart was initially charged with DUI
through county court in
relation to the incident,
with that charge having
been dismissed the day
before the indictment was
ﬁled.
She is currently
See BOND | 2

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Members of the 4x100 meter relay team on the podium are, Taylor Swartz (front left), Devyn Oliver (front right), Sky Brown (back right)
and Kassidy Betzing (back left). The team is also shown following the state meet awards presentation from left to right, Taylor Swartz,
Sky Brown, Kassidy Betzing and Devyn Oliver.

4x100 team named Academic All-Ohio
COLUMBUS — All four
members of the Meigs
High School girls 4x100
meter relay team which
competed at the state meet
this past weekend have
earned Academic All-Ohio
honors.
Taylor Swartz, Devyn

Oliver, Sky Brown and
Kassidy Betzing were
recognized by the Ohio
Association of Track and
Cross Country Coaches for
their academic and athletic
achievements.
To receive the award, an
athlete must qualify as a

individual or as a member
of a relay team for the
state meet, must carry a
3.5 GPA on a 4.0 scale,
and be at least a sophomore.
The relay team advanced
to the ﬁnals in their event,
ﬁnishing eighth with a

school-record time of
49.93 seconds.
Betzing also placed
second in the long jump
competition.
For more on this weekend’s state meet see the
sports pages of today’s
edition.

For the Record: Meigs County Sheriff ’s Office
Staff Report

to a hospital for further
treatment.
Meigs County Sheriff’s
May 19
Ofﬁce
Alarm — Deputy
Day Shift
Myers responded to
May 18
an alarm activation on
Probation violation
Cotterill Road. When
— Deputy Snoke and
Myers arrived, the propAdult Parole Authority
erty owner was there and
Ofﬁcer Reaser performed everything was secure.
a home check on parolee, The property owner was
Jeremy Barney, 38, of
outside working and had
Langsville. While looking the fob in his pocket and
through the residence,
believes he may have accidrugs and paraphernalia
dentally hit the button to
were reportedly located.
activate the alarm.
Barney was taken into
Sex offender — Sgt.
custody and charges will Patterson registered one
be ﬁled.
sex offender.
Burglary — Deputy
May 20
Riley is investigating
Court papers — Sgt.
a burglary reported
Mohler served two court
by a Long Bottom
papers and attempted one
resident. The residence
other.
was entered sometime
May 21
between May 17 and
Investigate complaint
May 18 by unknown
— Deputies responded to
suspect(s). The incident
a residence in Darwin in
remains under investiga- reference to a male subtion.
ject acting erratically. The
EMS assist — Sgt. Pat- male was transported to
terson and Deputy King
the Meigs ER for evaluwent to a residence on
ation.
Salem School Lot Road
Assault — Deputy
after receiving reports of Snoke spoke with a
an unresponsive female
female who had been
at the residence. Once at to the ER due to being
the residence, deputies
assaulted by a male
located the female and
acquaintance. Upon
secured the scene for
further investigation, it
the medics. It was deterwas discovered that the
mined that the female had assault had taken place in
overdosed. Medics treatSouth Carolina a couple
ed the female at the scene of days prior, and the
and were able to revive
victim did not wish to
her and transported her
pursue any charges at this

time.
May 22
Trafﬁc — Deputies
assisted the Ohio Highway Patrol in a crash that
took place on State Route
7 near Eastern High
School. One male was
transported by EMS.
May 23
Medic assist — Deputies secured the scene at
a residence on Hysell Run
Road for Meigs EMS. A
patient was transported
but nothing criminal had
taken place.
Assault — Deputies
were dispatched to a
residence on Morning
Star Road to investigate
a report of shots being
ﬁred. Upon arrival, deputies learned that workers
with the Nelson Tree
Company were trimming
some tree limbs from the
power lines when a resident became upset and
allegedly ﬁred shots in
their direction. The male
was later placed under
arrest and charges are
pending in Meigs County
Court.
May 24
Assist CPS — Sgt. Patterson and Deputy Perry
assisted Child Protective
Services on the removal
of juveniles from a residence on Cone Road. The
children were removed
without incident.
Court papers — Sgt.
Grifﬁn served three court

papers.
May 25
Alarm — Sgt. Patterson
responded to an alarm at
a residence on Ball Run
Road. The residence was
checked and everything
was secure. It is unknown
what activated the alarm.
Sex offender — Sgt.
Patterson registered two
sex offenders.
May 26
Assault — Deputy
Jones is investigating a
report of an assault that
took place at Taz’s Marathon. The victim reported
that he was walking back
to his car when Brewce
Martin, 51, of Rutland,
allegedly threatened him
and then tried to run over
him with his car. The victim was able to get into
his vehicle just before his
vehicle was reportedly
struck by Martin’s vehicle. Martin then ﬂed the
scene. The victim’s car
received signiﬁcant damage from the incident.
Charges have been ﬁled.
Court papers — Deputy Riley served three
court papers and attempted three others.
Sex offender — Sgt.
Patterson registered one
sex offender.
May 27
Investigate complaint
— Sgt. Patterson is investigating a report of an
See RECORD | 2

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2 Tuesday, June 6, 2017

KATHY SUE WHITE

OBITUARIES
EPHRIAM VON HERDMAN
KENTON — Ephriam
Von Herdman, age 61,
of Kenton, passed away
at 2:45 p.m., Wednesday
May 31, 2017 in the
Marion General Hospital
ICU.
He was born in Columbus, Ohio on December
3, 1955 the son of the
late Oley and Ardella
(Hoschor) Herdman Sr.
On July 23, 1999 he married Deborah Rader and
she survives.
He is survived by his
son Ephriam Von Herdman II of Rutland, Ohio;
daughter April Hart of
Rutland, Ohio; 7 grandchildren and 2 great
grandchildren; brothers
Oley (Sandy) Herdman
Jr. of Wellston, Ohio,
David (Diane) Herdman,
of Rutland, Ohio, and
Keith Herdman of Pomeroy, Ohio; sister Priscilla
“Sis” Riddle of Pennsyl-

vania; and mother-in-law
Juanita Rader of Kenton.
Ephriam was preceded
in death by his brothers
Ronald and Timmy and
father-in-law Leroy Dean
Rader.
During his lifetime he
worked in construction
and was a laborer
in various factories.
Ephriam enjoyed
spending his free time
ﬁshing and hunting.
A memorial service for
Ephriam Von Herdman
will be held at a later
date. It was his wishes
to be cremated. The
Schindewolf Stout Crates
Funeral Home, Kenton is
assisting the family with
arrangements.
Donations may be
made to the American
Heart Association.
Condolences may be left
for the family by visiting
stoutcrates.com.

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.
Hours change
POMEROY — The Meigs County Board of Elections hours will be temporarily changing to 8am-4pm
until June 13, the next regular monthly meeting set
for 8:30am, where changing the hours will be voted
on by Board Members.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Courthouse is
now open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through
Friday.
Scholarship Applications Available
SYRACUSE — Applications for the 2017-18 Carleton College Scholarships for Higher Education are
available for legal residents of the village of Syracuse.
Residents may pick up an application from Gordon
Fisher, 1402 Dusky St., Syracuse. Applications must
be returned by June 28. Legal residents of Syracuse
can qualify for scholarship awards for a maximum of
two years.
Foundation offers development grants
OHIO VALLEY — The Southern Ohio Agricultural and Community Development Foundation will
be offering competitive grants available July 1 for
Adams, Athens, Brown, Clermont, Clinton, Fayette,
Gallia, Greene, Jackson, Highland, Lawrence, Meigs,
Monroe, Morgan, Montgomery, Noble, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, Vinton, Warren and Washington Counties.
Grants offered in agricultural development, Pat
Raines Young Farmer, environmental and water quality and educational assistance. Call the foundation
ofﬁce at 937-393-2700.
Road Closure
MEIGS COUNTY — Beginning June 5, State
Route 124 in Meigs County will be closed between
Township Road 29 (Wells Run Road) and Township
Road 144 (Dewitts Run Road) for a slip repair project.
The estimated completion date is September 1, 2017.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays at 112 E.
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s
shot records. Children must be accompanied by a
parent/legal guardian. A $15 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. Zostavax
(shingles); 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.

SHADE — Kathy Sue
White, 58, of Shade,
Ohio, passed away on
June 3, 2017.
She was born on
October 27, 1958 in
Mason, West Virginia,
daughter of Paul D.
White of Shade and Linda
K. Shepard of Conyers,
Georgia.
She attended the Three
Rivers Kingdom Hall
of Jehovah Witness in
Gallipolis.
Kathy is survived by
her father, Paul (Patsy)
White of Shade; her
mother, Linda Shepard
of Conyers; sisters

and brother, Barbara
(Marvin) Banks of
Willards, Maryland;
Cindy Peek of Shade;
Kimberly (Eric) Bolton
of Shade; David White
of Conyers, Georgia;
and Tamara White of
Covington, Georgia;
and several nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded in
death by her niece, Kira
White.
A memorial service
will be held on Saturday,
June 10, 2017 at 2 p.m.,
at the Kingdom Hall,
37319 State Route 124,
Middleport, Ohio, 45760.

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
SMITH
COOLVILLE — Michael Smith, 62, of Coolville,
Ohio, died Tuesday, May 30, 2017.
A memorial celebration in his honor will be held at
4 p.m., Saturday, June 10, 2017 at the Swamp Stock
Mug Boggs in Coolville. There will be no visitation.
GERLACH
LETART, W.Va. — Robert C. Gerlach, 77, of Letart,
W.Va., passed away June 5, 2017 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Arrangements will be announced Wednesday in the Point Pleasant Register by the Deal Funeral
Home.
NOBLE
SOUTH POINT — Frances Louise Noble, 74, of
South Point, Ohio passed away Sunday, June 4, 2017
at The Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House, Huntington, W.Va.
A memorial service will be held 1 p.m. Wednesday,
June 7, 2017 at Walnut Hills Church of the Nazarene,
340 Norway Avenue, Huntington.

Middleport Alumni banquet held
Crooks, Herschel
Knapp, Nancy Haddox
Morris, Dick Roller;
1960 — Carter French,
Olivia Bowles Lockett,
Loretta Hanning Roller;
1961 — Tom Anderson,
Evelyn Capteina Bauer,
John Blaker, Randall
Bowles, Judy Sauer
Crooks, Raymond Kloes,
Janis Hauck Soltesz,
William Soltesz, Bill
Stobart, Kay Jenkinson
Williams;
1962 — Cinda Morris Abbott, John Case,
Barbara Jones Hegler,
Beverly Perrin Kosiba,
Coleen Wilson Ohlinger,
Karen Gregg Patterson,
Texanna White Wehrung; 1963 — Carolyn
Russell Collins, Charlotte Davidson Hanning,
Richard Hays; 1964
— Judy Wildermuth
Allensworth, Marilyn
Swan Anderson, Carolyn
Nicholson French, Ron
Hanning, Cinda Sauer
Harris, Mick Morris,
Janice Tannehill Peterson; 1965 — Gloria
Fetty Case, Diane VanCooney Lynch, Marty
Nicholson, Joy Boggs
Riley, Suzanne Sayre,

Alan Wallace, Sherry
Simmons Weaver, Judy
Moore Webb; 1966 —
John Blake, John Hood,
Joyce Long Redman,
Robert Schmoll, Roger
Swartz;
1967 — Susan Morris
Baker, Jim Bartlett, Margie Harris Blake, Asa
Bradbury, Jim Butcher,
RuthAnn Halley Carsey,
Sandra Swartz Douglas,
Jamerilla Ward Fyffe,
Sue Rue Garner, Debbie
Grueser Gerlach, Mike
Gerlach, Stephanie Pullins Girton, Rose Marie
Hackett, Sandra Garten
Hanning, Paul Haynes,
Sandra Humphreys, Bill
Hysell, Kay Ault Logan,
Marily Stumbo Meier,
Kathy McElhinny Mullins, Anna Hanson Neal,
Cathy Pickens, Janis
Schmoll, Frank White
and Roberta Bing Wukelich; 1968 — Debbie
King Finlaw.
Numerous scholarships were presented as
part of the alumni banquet. Information on the
scholarships awarded at
the banquet will appear
in a later edition of The
Daily Sentinel.

more information call
Jordan Pickens at 740416-9667.

Village Hall Council
Chambers commencing
at 7 p.m.

Monday, June 12
BEDFORD TWP. —
The Bedford Township
trustees will be holding
their meeting at the Bedford Town Hall at 7 p.m.
Tuesday, June 13
SUTTON TWP. —
The regular monthly
meeting of the Sutton
Township Trustees
will be held the Racine

Saturday, June 24
POMEROY — A
CPR and First Aid
training will be held
from 9 a.m. to 1
p.m. at the Mulberry
Community Center
Meigs Cooperative
Parish. Lunch provided.
Contact Lenora Leifheit
RN-BC for information
and registrations at 740992-5836.

Bond

multiple kidnappings
and felonious assaults on
ofﬁcers outside of an inhome day care in MiddleFrom page 1
port. Stanley declined to
indicted on a single
go into speciﬁcs on the
count of felonious assault case as charges have yet
in the case.
to be ﬁled, but stated
Ritchhart’s arrest came that Ritchhart was again
on Friday when she is
believed to be under the
alleged to have attempted inﬂuence of an unknown

substance. The children
involved were not related
to Ritchhart.
“This is two distinct
incidents involving
children,” said Stanley,
noting that it was a scary
situation.
Bond for Ritchhart was
set at $200,000 without
10 percent permitted.

She was also ordered
to have no contact with
the victims in the felonious assault case or the
alleged victims in the
incident from Friday.
An initial pretrial in
the case is set for July 10,
with a ﬁnal pretrial on
July 31. A jury trial is set
for Aug. 17.

Record

people arguing in the
roadway. Upon their
arrival, they found it to
be a vehicle accident.
OSP handled the accident
scene and arrested Danny
Walker 61, Rutland for
OVMI.
Auto accident —
Deputy Hupp responded
to Sorden Road, Long
Bottom in reference to
an auto accident. The
juvenile driver was cited
for failure to control and
released.
Suspicious persons —
Deputy Stacy responded
to the area of Whites Hill
Road about a couple of
subjects out walking up
and down the road with
ﬂashlights. The caller
believes they came up
and knocked on their

door or were messing around. The caller
advised he just wanted
the area patrolled and
no personal contact was
needed at this time.
Deputy Stacy located two
females in the area and
transported them to their
residence.
May 31
Suspicious person —
Deputy Stacy responded
to 37285 Murray Road off
of Ball Run Road in reference to a caller advising
there was a black male
wearing a gray hoodie
and jean shorts walking
up and down the road
and no one up that way
knows him. Deputy Stacy
patrolled the area and
was unable to locate the
male.

MIDDLEPORT —
The annual Middleport
High School Alumni
Banquet was held on
May 27, honoring the
graduating classes of
1942, 1947, 1952, 1957,
1962 and 1967.
There were approximately 210 alumni and
guests in attendance for
the banquet held at the
Riverbend Arts Council
in Middleport.
Master of Ceremonies
Richard Roller, Class of
1959, served as the Master of Ceremonies, with
the welcome and invocation by Richard Hays,
Class of 1963.
The evening concluded with the singing
of the Middleport High
School ﬁght song and
alma mater.
Alumni attending
included, 1942 — Henry
Clatworthy; 1944 —
Jeanne Young Bradbury; 1946 — Alfred
Scarberry; 1947 — Kay
Johnson Derring; 1949
— Charles Byer, Hazel
Hawkins Ginther, Rosemary Fisher Moore;
1950 — Donna Russell
Hayth, Fred Hoffman,

Raymond Walburn,
Carla Owens Winebrenner; 1951 — James
Buell, Clifford Coleman,
Frances Chase Coleman,
Betty Ashley Rosser,
Roscoe Wise;
1952 — Ruth Chase
Jenkins, Carolyn Pierce
Litchﬁeld; 1953 —
Robert Byer, Harold
Cart, Larry Wiley;
1955 — Ronald Fultz,
Shelia Stover Hubbard,
Brady Huffman, Donna
McCool McPhail, Jim
Puckett; 1956 — Jerome
Beach, Nancy Roller
Cale, Bette Ward Field,
Patricia Williams Kendrick, Larry Lewis,
Ernestine Asbury McComas, John Vroman, Juanita Hawkins Walker;
1957 — Keith Anderson, James Bowles, Ira
Butcher, Okey Cart,
Stephen Coats, Gordon
Guthrie, Robert Hennessy, Jane Miller Huffman, Edward Kitchen,
Edward McComas,
Barbara Capteina Mora;
1958 — Ron Miller,
Carol Blaker Oiler, Milton Wayland; 1959 —
Gene Abbott, Patricia
Michael Arnold, Edward

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@
civitasmedia.com.

Tuesday, June 6
POMEROY — The
Diabetes Academy,
Diabetes 101 will
be held 3-4 p.m. at
Hopewell Health
Center.
Saturday, June 10
POMEROY —
Middleport Lodge #363
will hold an outdoor EA
degree at 7 p.m. with
meal ($5) fellowship at
5:30p.m. Bring a lawn
chair. Located at 39059
State Route 143. For

Civitas Media, LLC

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

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@civitasmedia.com

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

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Tyler Wolfe, Ext. 2092
twolfe@civitasmedia.com

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

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

209 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 209 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

May 29
Assist EMS — Sgt.
Jones responded to Dyesville Road from a caller
From page 1
who advised that her
unknown subject turning daughter woke her up
off the cooling system
stating there was a male
of a semi-trailer parked
outside beating on their
along State Route 124 in door wanting them to call
Minersville. The trailer
911 because there were
must be kept at a certain some people after him
temperature to ensure
and they were going to
the quality of the prodkill him. After Sgt. Jones
uct inside, and someone
spoke to the male it was
keeps shutting the system determined he needed to
down. If anyone has any
be transported by EMS
information about the
due to medical issues.
subject(s) who may be
The male was then transdoing this, please call the ported to Holzer ER by
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Meigs EMS.
Ofﬁce at 740-992-3371.
May 30
Court papers — DepuAssist OSP — Deputy
ty Patterson served three Hupp and Sgt. Jones
court papers.
responded to Bradbury
Night Shift
Road in reference to

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 6, 2017 3

2 London Bridge attackers named
By Gregory Katz
and Raphael Satter
Associated Press

LONDON — British
police named two of the
three men who left a trail
of bloodshed with a van
and knife attack in central
London and appealed for
the public’s help Monday
to learn more about their
movements in the days
leading up to the deadly
rampage that killed seven
people dead and dozens
wounded.
Khuram Shazad
Butt was a 27-year-old
Pakistani-born Briton
known to authorities,
according to a statement
issued by London police.
Rachid Redouane, who
had claimed to be Moroccan and Libyan, variously
given his age as 30 or 25
and also used Elkhdar as
a surname, was unknown
until the night the two
were shot dead along
with a third attacker who
has not been identiﬁed,
police said.
Ten others who were
arrested in the east London neighborhood of
Barking where the two
named suspects had lived
remained in custody.
The attack launched by
three men in the London
Bridge area Saturday
night is shaping the ﬁnal

Alastair Grant | AP

A woman places flowers on a tribute Monday in the London Bridge area of London. Police arrested several people and are widening
their investigation after a series of attacks described as terrorism killed several people and injured more than 40 others in the heart of
London on Saturday.

days of an election campaign, focusing attention
on Prime Minister Theresa May’s role in reducing the ranks of police
ofﬁcers.
Labour Party leader
Jeremy Corbyn said he
supported those calling
for May to resign because
of her role reducing

police stafﬁng during her
tenure as home secretary,
though he said the best
remedy was to vote her
out.
“There’s an election
on Thursday, that’s the
chance,” he said, citing an
“appalling” cut in police
stafﬁng levels.
“We’re calling for a

restoration of police
numbers, and there’s a
call being made for her
to go, because of what
she’s done on the police
numbers.”
May, under ﬁre because
of three major attacks in
Britain in the last three
months, said Corbyn
wasn’t ﬁt to safeguard

Britain’s security at a
time of heightened threat.
“We have given
increased powers to the
police to be able to deal
with terrorists — powers
which Jeremy Corbyn has
boasted he has always
opposed,” she said.
The Islamic State group
has claimed responsibil-

ity for the brazen attack
that started on London
Bridge, then continued in
the streets surrounding
Borough Market.
Most of the London
Underground stations
reopened in the neighborhood where the attack
took place, allowing normal life and commerce to
resume after more than
24 hours of lockdown.
Some residents cooped
up inside all day Sunday emerged from their
homes for the ﬁrst time
since the attacks.
“We were all stuck!”
said Marcia Rainford, a
58-year-old who said she
was sealed into her building complex with her
mother and two children.
“We got blocked in.
One whole day,” she said.
Luckily she had a full
fridge. “I always stock
up!”
Dozens were injured,
18 of them critically, in
the attack that started on
the London Bridge, when
three attackers swerved
the vehicle into pedestrians then, armed with
knives, rampaged through
Borough Market, slashing
and stabbing anyone they
could ﬁnd. The three men
wore fake suicide vests —
to make them even more
imposing.

Bill Cosby goes on trial, his legacy and freedom at stake
By Maryclaire Dale
and Michael R. Sisak
Associated Press

NORRISTOWN, Pa.
— Bill Cosby went on
trial Monday on charges
he drugged and sexually
assaulted a woman more
than a decade ago, with
a prosecutor warning
the jury not to fall into
the trap of confusing the
79-year-old comedian
with the beloved family
man he played on TV.
Cosby used his power
and fame to violate an
employee of Temple
University’s basketball
program, Assistant District Attorney Kristen
Feden said in her opening statement. The TV
star previously admitted
under oath that he gave
Andrea Constand pills
and touched her genitals
as she lay on his couch at
his suburban Philadelphia
mansion, the prosecutor
said.
“She couldn’t say no,”
Feden said. “She can’t
move, she can’t talk.
Completely paralyzed.
Frozen. Lifeless.”

wooden cane and grabbed
his spokesman’s arm for
support as he walked past
dozens of cameras into
the courthouse. Cosby’s
wife, Camille, was not in
court. But actress Keshia
Knight Pulliam, who
played his daughter Rudy
on the top-rated “Cosby
Show” in the 1980s and
‘90s, was at his side as
he made his way into the
building.
Cosby smiled but said
nothing when someone
asked how he was feeling.
Pulliam told reporters
she came to the trial to
support her TV dad.
“I want to be the perMatt Rourke | AP
son
that I would like to
Bill Cosby arrives for his sexual assault trial Monday at the Montgomery County Courthouse in
have
if the tables were
Norristown, Pa. More than a decade after Cosby invited a college basketball manager to his home to
discuss her career, the comedian goes on trial in the only criminal case to emerge from the dozens of turned,” she said. “Right
sexual assault allegations lodged against him.
now it’s the jury’s job
and the jury’s decision to
afterward, when, in fact,
and allergy medicine
Defense lawyer Brian
determine guilt or innophone records show the
McMonagle immediately Benadryl only after she
two talked 72 times after cence. It’s not mine or
complained she couldn’t
attacked what he said
anyone else’s.”
mid-January — with 53
sleep.
were inconsistencies in
Constand, 44, of the
of those calls initiated by
McMonagle said
Constand’s story, disToronto
area, is expected
Constand.
puted that Constand was Constand changed the
to
take
the
stand this
Cosby
is
charged
with
date of the encounter
incapacitated, and made
week and tell her story in
three counts of aggrafrom mid-March to midthe case that she and
public for the ﬁrst time. A
vated indecent assault.
Cosby, who was married, January of 2004. And he
woman who claims Cosby
He could get 10 years in
said Constand initially
had a romantic relationdrugged and assaulted
prison if convicted.
told police that she and
ship. McMonagle said
her in 1996 will also testiThe TV star carried a
Cosby had never spoken
Cosby gave her the cold

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quotes of transactions June 5, 2017.

fy in an effort by prosecutors to show that he had
pattern of behavior.
Cosby built a good-guy
reputation as a father and
family man, on screen and
off, during his extraordinary 50-year career in
entertainment. He created TV characters, most
notably Dr. Cliff Huxtable,
with crossover appeal
among blacks and whites
alike. His TV shows,
movies and comedy tours
earned him an estimated
$400 million.
Then a deposition
unsealed in 2015 in a
lawsuit brought by Constand revealed that Cosby
had a long history of
extramarital liaisons with
young women and that he
obtained quaaludes in the
1970s to give to women
before sex. Dozens of
women soon came forward
to say he had drugged and
assaulted them.
The statute of limitations for prosecuting
Cosby had run out in
nearly every case. This is
the only one to result in
criminal charges against
the comic.

Trump lashes out at London’s mayor, again
By Julie Pace and
Catherine Lucey

a stepped-up police presence in the city after the
Associated Press
incident.
In a Sunday tweet,
WASHINGTON —
Trump mischaracterized
President Donald Trump Khan’s remarks by sugcontinued a long-running gesting the mayor had
feud with London’s mayor said there was “no reason
on Monday, criticizing
to be alarmed” about
him on Twitter for the
the attack itself. Khan’s
second day in a row in
spokesman said he was
the wake of the deadly
too busy to respond to
van and knife attack in
Trump’s “ill-informed”
the city.
tweet.
Trump said London
On Monday, a spokesMayor Sadiq Khan
man for Khan responded
had offered a “pathetic
to the latest statement
excuse” and “had to think from Trump, saying,
fast on his ‘no reason to
“Nothing has changed
be alarmed’ statement.”
since yesterday.”
Trump’s tweet renewed
He said, “The mayor is
his mischaracterization of focused on dealing with
Khan’s statement to Lon- Saturday’s horriﬁc and
don residents following
cowardly attack and workthe attack that left seven
ing with the police, the
people dead and dozens
emergency services and
injured. The mayor had
the Government to keep
told London residents
London safe.”
not to be concerned by
Asked if Trump was

wrong to make the comments, British Prime
Minister Theresa May
said at a news conference
Monday that “Sadiq Khan
is doing a good job and
it’s wrong to say anything
else — he’s doing a good
job.”
White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders
said Monday that Trump
was not “picking a ﬁght
with the mayor of London
at all.” She also pushed
back against criticism
that the president had
mischaracterized Khan’s
remarks, saying “the
media wants to spin it
that way.”
Asked if Trump was
criticizing the mayor of
London because he is
Muslim, Sanders said that
was “utterly ridiculous.”
Trump’s latest missive at Khan was part of
several Monday morning

tweeted statements from
the president. Trump also
lashed out at his own Justice Department for seeking a “watered down” version of the travel ban he
signed in March instead
of a broader directive that
was also blocked by the
courts.
The war of words was
the latest episode in a
long simmering conﬂict
between Trump and
Khan, a Muslim who
was elected as London’s
mayor in May 2016. After
his election last year,
Khan tweeted criticism of
then-candidate Trump’s
rhetoric, saying his “ignorant view of Islam could
make both our countries less safe. It risks
alienating mainstream
Muslims.” Trump later
challenged Khan to an IQ
test during an interview
on ITV.

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, June 6, 2017

The Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Stomp those divots
of frustration
There’s nothing that will break up the
monotony of deciding which type of yogurt
to buy in the grocery store like a kicking,
screaming kid throwing a hissy ﬁt. More often
than not, the kid earns the candy
bar or the newest toy they’re
clutching. Maybe we adults could
learn a thing or two from these
crazed creatures who will stomp
till they drop in order to get what
they want.
Resilience is as important as
Michele
patience. As adults we often forget
Zirkle
this vital instrument that propels
Guest
us toward the object of our focus
columnist
like the jockey spurs on his derby
winning colt. And why wouldn’t
we? We’ve been taught to “take a breath,” “calm
down,” “suck it up,” and “take it easy.”
But the squeaky wheel is the one that gets
greased, and some days I want to squeal so
loudly that a deaf old man in Brazil can hear
me. I want to stomp so forcefully that the body
of my ﬁrst incarnated self can feel the tremble
vibrate through my limbs, and I don’t feel bad
for feeling this way.
For everything there is a season as referenced
in Lennon’s song and the ancient text of the
Bible. Even Jesus, the Prince of Peace, got
pissed and ﬂipped the tables over on those
selling doves in the temple.
The power of the Inﬁnite created the soft
breeze of summer that turns into the most
tumultuous of hurricanes when the time is
right. Nature has a way of balancing frustration
and peace. Nature has a built-in knowing of
when the time is right. The birds head South
when they’re supposed to, the salmon swim
upstream in time to spawn, the forest ﬁres rage,
stripping the land so that the rain can move
nutrients to the soil that restores the ecosystem.
But how am I supposed to know when it’s best
to throw a tantrum and when it’s best to strike a
child’s pose on my yoga mat and just breathe?
When in doubt I imagine I am spread eagle
and spinning on a giant cosmic wheel that will
land on whichever response it is time for. I have
grown to trust the wind that spins this wheel
and believe that a popular ad campaign in the
80s had it right. Sometimes we need to “Just Do
It,”—just stomp until we get our way and the
frustration evaporates or until we are too damn
tired to care about the item being pulled from
our grasp. Then maybe we will earn a nap.
Devastation will come and go just as a storm
brews, shreds the land to bits and leaves a
rainbow illuminating the freshly cleansed earth.
We just have to believe that progress is made
not only through peace, but through frustration
and that we have the right to dig deep to
plant our seed of change. Inside us lies all the
determination and nourishment we need.
So, go ahead. What are you waiting for?
Stomp those divots!
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs County, author of “Rain No
Evil” and host of Life Speaks on AIR radio. Access more at soundcloud.
comlifespeaks. Marcum is appearing at the West Virginia Writer’s Inc.
Conference at Cedar Lakes in Ripley, June 9-11 beginning at 8:45 a.m.

LETTER TO EDITOR

First responders
make a difference
Recently my wife passed away in her sleep
and I would like to let the community at
large know just what kind of EMS &amp; Sheriff
Department personnel we have in this
county. The 1st thing I did was to call 911
and the dispatcher answered at once. He was
professional, considerate, &amp; kind. The ﬁrst
responder was a Deputy Sheriff with a squad
and 2 responders following shortly there after.
The Deputy was everything that you would
want in such a time of need. He followed
the procedures that I am sure that has been
promoted by the Sheriff and the State of Ohio
when dealing with the death of a person but,
procedures did not retract from his humanity
and this showed throughout the process. He
even interfaced with the coroner so as to lessen
the amount of detail that I needed to recount
to him. I had already gone over the events of
the morning several times and he helped to
lessen my pain. He even offered to stay with
me as long as I felt he was needed. Deputy
Grifﬁn, thank you so much, you made a terrible
morning bearable. To the ladies on the squad,
you were kind and professional. Thank you as
well.
In a day and age when ﬁrst reponders are
taken for granted and Law Enforcement
personnel are at risk, we can be proud of the
men and women of our county, who come to our
aid (and at times risk their lives for us).
Danny Will
Pomeroy

THEIR VIEW

Maher’s use of offensive word offers lessons
By Heidi Stevens

just how ﬁnely tuned.
They’re on the
lookout for inequity.
They spot it in family
dynamics, classroom
exchanges and
friendships. They know
when they’re getting
a fair shake and when
they’re not.
We can teach them
to use that same sharp
sense to look out
for others, not just
themselves. And when
they hear casual racism,
homophobia, religious
intolerance, we can help
them call it out.
Appropriate answers
will vary, obviously,
depending on kids’ ages
and personalities. But a
simple “I’m not OK with
that word” is a good
start.
And the Maher/
Sasse moment is a good
excuse to arm them
with it.

“We’d love to have you
work in the ﬁelds with
us.” And Maher replied:
“Work in the ﬁelds? Senator, I’m a house (racial
slur).”
The audience groaned,
then laughed a bit. The
show went on.
A few hours later,
Sasse hopped on Twitter
to offer a bit of a mea
culpa for not pushing
back on Maher’s language.
“Am walking off a
redeye from LAX,” he
tweeted, in four parts.
“3 reﬂections on @
billmaher 1. I’m a 1st
Amendment absolutist.
Comedians get latitude
to cross hard lines.
“2. But free speech
comes with a responsibility to speak up when
folks use that word. Me
just cringing last night
wasn’t good enough.
“3. Here’s what I wish
I’d been quick enough to
say in the moment: ‘Hold
up, why would you think
it’s OK to use that word?

…

In 1966, black activist James Meredith was
shot and wounded as he
walked along a Mississippi highway to encourage
black voter registration.
In 1968, Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy died at Good
Samaritan Hospital in
Los Angeles, a day after
he was shot by Sirhan
Bishara Sirhan.
In 1977, a sharply
divided U.S. Supreme
Court struck down a Louisiana law imposing an
automatic death sentence
on defendants convicted
of the ﬁrst-degree murder
of a police ofﬁcer.
In 1982, Israeli forces
invaded Lebanon to drive
Palestine Liberation
Organization ﬁghters
out of the country. (The
Israelis withdrew in June
1985.)
In 1994, President Bill
Clinton joined leaders
from America’s World
War II allies to mark the
50th anniversary of the
D-Day invasion of Normandy. A China Northwest Airlines passenger
jet crashed near Xian
(SHEE’-ahn), killing all
160 people on board.
Ten years ago: The
Group of Eight summit
opened in Heiligendamm,
Germany. Police arrested
a suspect in the abduc-

THOUGHT FOR TODAY

Contributing Columnist

Comedian Bill Maher
has built a career out of
dividing people into sets
and knocking down the
ones he cares for least:
women, Muslims, nonatheists.
When he used a racial
slur and made light of
slavery all in one phrase,
it was a new low, but a
pretty predictable one.
So it’s tempting to write
him off and turn away.
I hope we don’t — at
least not before using his
Friday night exchange as
a way to talk to our kids
about being upstanders.
First, some background. Maher was hosting Sen. Ben Sasse, a
Republican from Nebraska, on his HBO show,
“Real Time.” They were
discussing adulthood and
whether it’s in short supply, the topic of Sasse’s
new book.
Sasse invited Maher to
visit Nebraska sometime:

” … The history of the
n-word is an attack on
universal human dignity.
It’s therefore an attack
on the American Creed.
Don’t use it.’”
It’s easy to get tripped
up when someone makes
an insensitive comment
or joke to us or in our
presence. It’s easier to
call them on it if you’ve
thought through such a
scenario and discussed
some responses.
Sasse had the beneﬁt
of a few hours and a very
public platform (Twitter)
to offer his reply. Most
people, including our
kids, don’t.
We owe it to them
— and to this nation’s
ability to evolve — to
prepare them.
Kids have a ﬁnely
tuned sense of justice.
Try telling a pair of
siblings that one of
them gets 15 minutes
of screen time before
dinner and the other
gets 16 and you’ll see

Heidi Stevens is a columnist for
the Chicago Tribune. Readers
may email her at hstevens@
chicagotribune.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, June
6, the 157th day of 2017.
There are 208 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On June 6, 1944, during World War II, Allied
forces stormed the
beaches of Normandy,
France, on “D-Day” as
they began the liberation of German-occupied
Western Europe.
On this date:
In 1523, Gustav Vasa
became Sweden’s new
king, Gustav I.
In 1654, Queen Christina of Sweden abdicated;
she was succeeded by her
cousin, Charles X Gustav.
In 1799, American politician and orator Patrick
Henry died at Red Hill
Plantation in Virginia.
In 1809, Sweden adopted a new constitution.
In 1844, the Young
Men’s Christian Association was founded in
London.
In 1925, Walter Percy
Chrysler founded the
Chrysler Corp.
In 1933, the ﬁrst
drive-in movie theater
was opened by Richard
Hollingshead in Camden
County, New Jersey. (The
movie shown was “Wives
Beware,” starring Adolphe Menjou.)

“Excellence is to do a common thing in an
uncommon way”
— Booker T. Washington,
American educator (1856-1915)

tion and death of 18-yearold Kelsey Smith, whose
body was found in a Missouri park four days after
she’d disappeared from
a Kansas store’s parking
lot. (Edwin R. Hall later
pleaded guilty to capital
murder and was sentenced to life in prison.)
Police in Connecticut
looking for clues in the
yearlong disappearance of
a 15-year-old Bloomﬁeld
girl found her locked in
a hidden room in a West
Hartford home owned by
an acquaintance of her
parents. (Adam Gault
later pleaded guilty to
kidnapping and sexual
assault and was sentenced to 25 years in
prison.) The Anaheim
Ducks captured the Stanley Cup with a 6-2 victory
over the Ottawa Senators
in Game 5. Bob Barker
taped his last episode as
host of CBS’ “The Price
Is Right.”
Five years ago: Business social network
LinkedIn reported that

some of its users’ passwords had been stolen
and leaked onto the Internet. New Yorkers lined
the West Side waterfront
to welcome the space
shuttle Enterprise as it
sailed up the Hudson
River to its new home
aboard the Intrepid Sea,
Air &amp; Space Museum.
One year ago: A jury
in Los Angeles returned
a death sentence for
Lonnie Franklin Jr., the
serial killer known as
the “Grim Sleeper” who
murdered nine women
and a teenage girl over
several decades. Space
station astronauts opened
the world’s ﬁrst inﬂatable
space habitat, the Bigelow Expandable Activity
Module, or BEAM, and
ﬂoated inside. Kimbo
Slice (Kevin Ferguson),
the bearded street ﬁghter
who parlayed his internet
popularity into a mixed
martial arts career and
worldwide fame, died in
Margate, Florida, at age
42.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 6, 2017 5

Olive-Orange Alumni Banquet held
well as Cris Kuhn for the
dinner music. A special
thanks was given to Martie
Baum for the decorations.
During the business
meeting the ﬁrst item was
recognizing the oldest man
and the oldest woman who
were Thurman Dye, class
of 1941, and Retha Bailey
Day, class of 1943.
The honor classes recognized were, 1952 — Patricia Kibble Snider, John
Rice, Richard Spencer,
and Doris Reed Gibbs;
1957 — Dolores Schultz
King, Lillie Baker Wetzel,
Geraldine Powell Smith,
Marlene Robinson Donocan, Janie Swartz Kuhn

lene Newland Kuhn; 1956
— Robert Powell, Clara
Chaney Jones, Rowena
Sanders Walters, and Dale
Kuhn.
Guests attending included, Rose Barnhouse, Linda
Eastman, Roberta Holter,
Leah Manges, Karen
Manges, Terri Collins,
Melissa Collins, Connie
Marshall, Diane Robinson,
Bryan Gibbs, Ellen Riggs,
Nancy Sanders, Mary Lou
Harris, Janet Powell, Tom
Jones, Glenna Sanders,
Rod King, Janice Wolf, Bill
Smith, Mary Lou Boyles
and John Shank.
The secretary and treasury reports were given

and Phillip Boyles.
Other alumni attending
were, 1941 — Thurman
Dye; 1943 — Helen Cullums Swartz, Retha Bailey
Day; 1944 — Macel Smith
Barton, Dorothy Matlack
Cominsky, Iris Boring
Randolph, and Mildred
Spencer Holter; 1948 —
Iris Rice Karhan; 1951
— Harlod Swartz, Gerald
Swartz, and James O. Dye;
1953 — Howard Caldwell,
Marion Riggs, Norma Robinson Swartz, and Delbert
Sanders; 1954 — Shirley
Collins Edwards, Clifford
Longenette, and Sonny
Harris; 1955 — Florence
Boyles Spencer, and Mar-

and stood as approved
as read. The president
then asked for the election of ofﬁcers. Howard
Caldwell made a motion
to keep the same ofﬁcers.
Marion Riggs seconded
the motion and John Rice
moved that the election be
closed.
Howard Caldwell
reported on a trophy case
being constructed by
Eastern Local School for
the trophies and any other
memorabilia pertaining to
the sports from Chester
High School and OliveOrange High School. He
also said we could have
the person who is building

MEIGS CHURCH
CALENDAR

Southern holds academic banquet
RACINE — Southern Local
School District held its annual
academic banquet to honor students who have made a commitment to academics. Southern
honored 97 students.
The guest speaker was Bruce
Wolfe, a Southern graduate
who is retired from the Disney
Company at Disney World,
and owner of Wolfe Mountain
Entertainment. Wolfe gave a
speech about “not getting stuck

in a set path” but taking advantage of the paths life gives you.
He concluded with the poem,
‘The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost.
The meal was served by
Southern Local High School
teaching staff. Southern would
like to thank it’s many sponsors
for the evening. Principal Daniel Otto noted, “These businesses and individuals have made
a commitment to excellence in

our youth.” Thanks to Racine
Home National Bank, Kim
Romine and Forest Run Ready
Mix, SHS Band Boosters, SHS
Athletic Boosters, Southern
Local Education Association,
OAPSE 453, SES PTO, Carmel
Sutton Church, Racine Baptist
Church, People’s Bank, Roush
Brothers Farm and Greenhouse,
Farmers Bank, Darrel Norris
&amp; Son Greenhouses, Bob’s
Market, Joyce Thoren &amp; the

late Pete Thoren, Linda Diddle,
Bartee Photographers, RPG
Management and Roush Contracting.
Academic Banquet Committee consisted of: Tony
Deem,Daniel Otto, Russ Fields,
Scott Wolfe, Beth Bay, Rachel
Hupp, Andrea Wiseman, Tricia
McNickle, Lori Sharp, Darren
Jackson, Meg Guinther, Vicki
Northup, Kevin Porter, and
Kent Wolfe.

Hunter Reed, Clayton Ritchie,
Taylynn Rockhold, Hannah
Sharp, Amber Sturgeon.
11th grade: Morgan Baer,
Joshua Brewer, MacKenzie
Brooks, Emily Bunce, Katelyn
Butcher, Austin Coleman,
Elizabeth Collins, Sidney
Cook, Tyler Davis, Mattison
Finlaw, Melynda Grifﬁn,
Joseph Leach, Allyson Miller,
Davide Soggiu. 10th grade:
Allison Barber, Jacob Barrett,
Jonathan Bollweg, Ciara
Browning, Kelsey Casto,

Hannah Damewood, Emmalea
Durst, Nathen Durst, Hannah
Hill, Kennedy Lantz, Isaiah
Martindale, Brooke Mays,
Alexus Metheney, Jessica
Parker, Anna Pierce, Rebecca
Pullins, Katie Ridenour, Tiffany
Tripp. 9th grade: Ivy Adams,
Gabrielle Beeler, Brayden
Bush, Mason Dishong, Hannah
Faulisi, Rylee Haggy, Lexa
Hayes, Autumn Honaker,
Bradley Kimes, Eion Marcinko,
Bailey Putman, Ronna
Robinson, Brittany White.

Sunday, June 11
MIDDLEPORT —
Power in the Blood
drama ministry will present the live drama “God
Help Me” at 6 p.m. at Ash
Stret Church, 398 Ash
Street, Middleport.
Tuesday, June 13
REEDSVILLE — The
Reedsville United Methodist Women will host
a Stanley Fuller Brush
party at the Reedsville
Fellowship Hall at 6:30
p.m. Everyone welcome.

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
REEDSVILLE — Eastern
High School has announced its
honor roll for the fourth nine
weeks of the 2016-17 school
year.
All “A” Honor Roll — 12th
grade: Katelyn Edwards, Jett
Facemyer, Taylor Parker, Laura
Pullins, Brody Wood. 11th
grade: Jessica Adams, Elayna
Bissell, Tysen Casto, Kaitlyn
Hawk, Morgain Little, Marta
Mosquera Capdevila, Issac
Tackett. 10th grade: Ally Durst,
Blaise Facemyer, Katlin Fick,

Cera Grueser, Shayla Honaker,
Mollie Maxon, Rhiannon
Morris, Garrett Rees. 9th
grade: Faith Bauerbach, Teddi
Casto, Michael Letson, Aubree
Lyons, Derrick Metheney,
Madelyn Nutter, Kristyn
Stewart, Emily VanMeter.
All “A and B” Honor Roll
— 12th grade: Hannah Bailey,
Katlyn Barber, Danielle
Burrelli, Matthew Frank,
Abby Hawley, Kelsey Kimes,
Jeremiah Martindale, Makenna
McGrath, Austin Murphy,

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

59°

69°

71°

Intervals of clouds and sun today. A shower in
spots late tonight. High 76° / Low 53°

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.

73°
68°
80°
59°
96° in 1899
41° in 1945

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.21
0.21
0.74
18.42
18.82

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:04 a.m.
8:51 p.m.
6:14 p.m.
4:34 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Full

Jun 9

New

First

Jun 17 Jun 23 Jun 30

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

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

Major
10:01a
10:41a
11:24a
12:09p
12:34a
1:24a
2:16a

Minor
3:50a
4:30a
5:12a
5:57a
6:45a
7:36a
8:28a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
10:23p
11:04p
11:47p
---12:57p
1:48p
2:40p

Minor
4:12p
4:52p
5:35p
6:21p
7:09p
8:00p
8:52p

WEATHER HISTORY
D-Day took place in Normandy,
France, on this date in 1944. The assault that helped the Allies win World
War II came with partial clearing after
a storm that produced record low
barometer readings.

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

THURSDAY

Low

Moderate

High

High

Lucasville
75/52
Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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. 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
13.10
16.44
21.76
12.86
13.02
25.20
12.88
25.96
34.52
12.96
16.90
33.40
16.40

Portsmouth
76/53

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.72
-0.26
-0.01
+0.16
+0.28
+0.64
+0.66
-0.42
-0.22
+0.05
-1.50
none
-2.40

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Warmer with
considerable
cloudiness

88°
66°

A morning shower;
otherwise, some sun

Partly sunny and nice

Marietta
73/53

Murray City
72/52
Belpre
73/53

Athens
73/52

MONDAY

92°
70°
Hot with plenty of
sunshine

Today

St. Marys
73/53

Parkersburg
72/52

Coolville
73/52

Elizabeth
73/53

Spencer
72/52

Buffalo
74/52
Milton
74/52

Clendenin
73/50

St. Albans
74/53

Huntington
75/53

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
81/56
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
67/53
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
77/60
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SUNDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
75/53

Ashland
75/53
Grayson
75/53

Camp Meeting
MORRISTOWN —
The 69th annual Camp
Meeting will be held at
God’s Tabernacle, Morristown, Ohio, June 8-18.
Youth Services with
the Duncan Family will
be held on June 9-17 at
10:30 a.m. A special missionary service will be
held at 2 p.m. on June 18.
Children’s services will be
held June 11-17 at 6 p.m.
nightly.

83°
58°

Wilkesville
74/51
POMEROY
Jackson
75/52
75/51
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
74/53
75/52
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
76/54
GALLIPOLIS
76/53
74/53
75/53

South Shore Greenup
75/53
75/52

77

Logan
73/52

SATURDAY

80°
57°

Spotty afternoon
showers

McArthur
73/51

Very High

Primary: walnut, grass, other
Mold: 694
Moderate

Chillicothe
74/53

FRIDAY

71°
52°

Adelphi
74/53

Waverly
75/51

Pollen: 31

Low

MOON PHASES

Mostly cloudy and
cool with a shower

2

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
6:03 a.m.
8:52 p.m.
7:10 p.m.
5:07 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

71°
52°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

the case build a cabinet
for our senior pictures to
be stored. It was decided
to have this done and if
needed will take donations
from the alumni members
to help with the cost.
The $50 door prize was
won by Ellen Riggs, and
the two, $25 door prizes
were won by Mildred
Spencer Holter and Lillie
Baker Wetzel. They were
donated back to help on
the cost of the cabinet.
Other gifts donated by the
members were given as
door prizes.
The president then auctioned several pies for the
auxiliary.

Charleston
73/52

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
81/57

Billings
76/55

Denver
75/53

Minneapolis
82/59
Chicago
75/53

Kansas City
81/56

Montreal
59/47
Toronto
61/49
Detroit
69/53

New York
60/53

Washington
79/60

Chihuahua
99/64

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

105° in Needles, CA
21° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global

Houston
88/70
Monterrey
99/72

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
90/64/pc 91/64/c
62/50/c 62/52/c
78/65/sh 80/60/pc
68/57/sh 62/56/c
76/56/c 68/54/sh
76/55/pc 84/58/pc
86/61/s 96/66/s
52/50/r 58/50/c
73/52/pc 69/53/sh
80/61/sh 80/60/pc
67/49/t
72/51/t
75/53/s 75/52/s
76/52/pc 68/51/sh
66/54/sh 65/53/sh
73/54/pc 67/53/sh
90/68/pc 87/67/pc
75/53/t
77/54/t
83/58/s 83/62/s
69/53/pc 69/51/c
87/73/pc 87/73/pc
88/70/t 91/66/s
76/54/s 69/52/c
81/56/s 79/58/s
105/77/s 103/76/pc
85/61/pc 81/59/s
77/60/pc 75/59/pc
79/59/s 74/56/c
90/78/t
87/78/t
82/59/s 83/63/s
82/58/pc 79/56/pc
82/71/t 86/69/pc
60/53/sh 62/54/c
88/60/s 81/58/s
83/71/t
83/70/t
70/55/sh 65/54/c
108/81/s 106/79/pc
67/51/sh 65/53/sh
53/47/r 64/46/c
82/60/c 78/58/c
82/59/pc 72/55/sh
82/60/s 82/58/s
93/69/s 96/70/s
67/53/pc 69/56/pc
81/56/pc 75/57/pc
79/60/pc 70/57/sh

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

Atlanta
78/65
El Paso
98/72

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

High
122° in Sibi, Pakistan
Low -7° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
90/78

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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
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Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
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60701680

REEDSVILLE — The
Olive-Orange High School
Alumni held their 83rd
reunion at the Eastern
Elementary School on May
27, 2017, with a total of 58
alumni and guests attending.
The president, Phillip
Boyles, welcomed the
attendees and all stood and
recited the pledge to the
ﬂag. He also recognized
all who had served in the
military. Janice Kuhn then
gave the invocation.
Following the dinner
the president thanked the
Ladies Auxiliary VFW
Post 9053 for an excellent
dinner and their service as

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 6, 2017 s 6

Conkey, Criner
named to NAIA
All-America
teams

Rio Grande pair comes
away with 2nd team honors
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Two
members of the University of Rio
Grande’s record-setting softball
team have been named to the 2017
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) All-America
teams.
Sophomore pitcher Kelsey Conkey
(Minford, OH) and freshman shortstop Michaela Criner (Lancaster,
OH) both were named to the Second
Team by the NAIA All-America committee.
Conkey, who was named the River
States Conference Player of the Year
and Pitcher of the Year, ﬁnished 22-2
with two saves and a 0.94 earned
run average. She ﬁnished with 18
complete games and 10 shutouts,
while allowing 97 hits and 20 earned
runs over 148-1/3 innings in the
circle.
Conkey led the RSC in wins, shutouts and ERA.
The right-hander also walked just
25, struck out 102 and allowed a
miniscule .184 opponent’s batting
average.
At the plate, Conkey batted .331
with a team-high 14 home runs and
53 RBI. She also had a .629 slugging
percentage.
Her earned run average ranked
sixth nationally and she ﬁnished in
the Top 15 nationally in runs allowed
and opponent batting average. Her
14 home runs also ranked 14th
See HONORS | 7

Johnson
extends track
record with 11th
win at Dover
DOVER, Del. (AP) — Hooked on
NASCAR as a kid, there was something about Cale Yarborough that
made a fan out of Jimmie Johnson.
Johnson was glued to the set as he
sat on a dirty old couch at home in
El Cajon, California.
He loved Yarborough’s fearlessness
and the way the Hall of Fame driver
kind of reminded Johnson of his
grandfather.
Johnson even stopped at a
Hardee’s on a road trip because he
believed the fast-food joint and Yarborough’s sponsor was the race shop.
There was one more part of Yarborough that Johnson admired:
“His winning,” Johnson said.
Oh, Yarborough won — 83 times.
The same number in the record
book as that California kid who grew
up to become even better than his
idol.
Johnson sped off on the ﬁnal
restart Sunday and earned another
slice of NASCAR history, winning
in overtime at Dover International
Speedway for the 11th time and
moving into a tie for sixth on the
career victories list.
He then tipped his cap — more
like, his tribute helmet — toward
Yarborough.
“Cale, you’re the man,” Johnson
said.
Johnson again made an impact at
his favorite track — and he worked
hard to take this checkered ﬂag.
He was forced to start from the
rear of the ﬁeld because of a gear
change, then zipped past Kyle Larson in overtime on the restart.
“You put that route in front of me
and I’ll chase it down,” Johnson said.
Johnson and Yarborough are tied
for sixth on the career wins list.
Johnson may have had a sense history was ahead in the No. 48 Chevrolet.
He wore a helmet painted in tribute to Yarborough. He tweeted this
See DOVER | 7

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Meigs’ Kassidy Betzing captured state runner-up honors in the Division II girls long jump as part of Saturday’s state track and field meet at Jesse Owens
Memorial Stadium.

Betzing, Oiler lead OVP state track placers
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio —
With a single jump, Meigs’
Kassidy Betzing jumped to
the front of the line — and
almost to the very top of the
awards podium.
With the fastest race of
her decorated hurdling
career, Gallia Academy
senior Madi Oiler made
school history.
And, by breaking yet
another school record, the
Lady Marauders mustered
all-Ohio honors in the
4x100m relay.
Indeed, it was a fabulous
ﬁve for the Ohio Valley
Publishing area on Saturday — with ﬁve individuals
ultimately earning places
on the coveted medals
stand, as part of the annual
state track and ﬁeld meet,
held inside sun-baked Jesse
Owens Memorial Stadium in
Columbus.
That’s because Betzing,
after placing seventh in the
Division II girls long jump
a year ago, captured state
runner-up honors in the
same event — and only losing out on the magical state
championship by a razorthin quarter of an inch.
Oiler, after placing sixth
in the Division II girls 300m
hurdles two years back,
amassed a fourth-place ﬁnish in that race on Saturday
— becoming the highestplacing Gallia Academy girl
at the state’s 300m hurdles.
In between, Betzing joined
fellow Meigs sophomore
Taylor Swartz — along with
seniors Devyn Oliver and
Sky Brown —to place eighth
in the Division II girls
4x100m relay.
As Cyndi Lauper once
sang, girls just want to have
fun.
But these ladies set personal-best and even school
records, and absolutely
enjoyed their experience
underneath the hot sunshine
at Ohio State University.
Betzing began the barrage,
jumping a personal-best
18-feet and nine-and-onequarter inches to eventually
land state runner-up.
In fact, after only edging
her way into the ﬁnals by
sitting in eighth-place following the preliminaries,
Betzing brieﬂy led the state
championship chase —after
erupting for her 18-9 1/4
on the opening jump of her
three ﬁnals attempts.

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Madi Oiler finished fourth in the Division II girls 300m hurdles as part of Saturday’s state
track and field meet at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium.

But leave it to Springﬁeld
Kenton Ridge senior Jamari
McDavid, who — by
jumping her massive 18-feet,
nine-and-one-half inches
on her second-to-last of six
jumps — bested Betzing’s
best leap by a mere quarter
inch.
Still, Betzing was much
happier on Saturday,
eclipsing last season’s state
jump (17-2 3/4) by nearly 19
inches.
“Last year, it’s kind of hard
being on the bottom of the
podium. But being a little
closer to the very top, it’s
much much better,” she said.
“This feels so much better
than last year. I’m so excited
that I PR’d (personal record)
and it’s amazing. I already
can’t wait to get better for
next year.”
McDavid won the state
championship as a freshman,
before her state runner-up
performance last season to
Wheelersburg’s Ellie Ruby.
Ruby ﬁnished ﬁfth this
year in 17-feet and 10-andone-quarter inches, as
only four inches separated
third-place Jenna Frantz
(18-5 1/2) and fourth-place
Katelyn Meyer (18-1 1/2).
All three trailed Betzing

and McDavid, but Betzing
— who swept both the
Southeast District and
Region 7 championships
almost never made it out of
the prelims.
With the top nine jumps
from the two preliminary
ﬂights qualifying for the
ﬁnals, Betzing — jumping
second in the opening
ﬂight — fouled on her ﬁrst
and third tries, sandwiched
around her 17-feet, 1 3/4inch jump on her second
attempt.
She ﬁnished ﬁfth in her
ﬂight, and actually had to
sweat it out as the eight
second-ﬂight jumpers took
their three preliminary
turns.
She ended up eighth after
the prelims, but quickly
moved to the top spot —
with her 18-9 1/4 on her
opening attempt in the
ﬁnals.
By Betzing busting
that leap out, she brought
the Marauder faithful in
attendance to their feet.
“Oh my gosh. It was
awesome, especially having
everyone come up and
support us. I am completely
blessed for that,” she said.
“Honestly, I just had to get

my mind right and calm
down. I was so nervous. I
knew I could jump really far
and PR. So I just had to do
it.”
Meigs track and ﬁeld head
coach Mike Kennedy talked
about the rapid pendulum
swing with a single jump.
“I tell people I’m 28, but
honestly I’m 52 and I think
I had a heart attack for a bit
there. I’m okay now,” joked
the coach. “I told her father
right there what a heady
kid she is. That (two fouls)
could have torn a lot of kids
up. Then have to watch
jumper after jumper go all
the way through the second
ﬂight. But for her to pull it
together in the ﬁnals after
she squeaked into the ﬁnals,
that says a lot about her
character and mental state.”
Betzing jumped second
in the ﬁnals, and scored a
17-feet three-and-a-half inch
leap on her second attempt.
But McDavid, leading
after the prelims and
jumping last in the ﬁnals,
stole the spotlight right back
—nailing her 18-9 1/2 on
her second try.
Betzing then jumped
See TRACK | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 6, 2017 7

More sights from the 2017 OHSAA meet

Track
From page 6

COLUMBUS, Ohio
— Some additional
photos of Ohio Valley
Publishing area studentathletes participating in

the 2017 OHSAA track
and ﬁeld championships
this past weekend at
Jesse Owens Memorial
Stadium.

Alex Hawley/photo

EHS senior Laura Pullins clears 5-foot-6 in the Division III high
jump Division III finals on Friday at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium.

Alex Hawley/photo
Paul Boggs/photo

Eastern senior Jett Facemyer, second from left, competes in the
Division III boys 800m run Saturday at the 2017 OHSAA track and
field championships in Columbus, Ohio.

Meigs sophomore Taylor Swartz finishes the 4x100m relay
in the Division II state semifinal on Friday at Jesse Owens
Memorial Stadium.

Paul Boggs/photo

Alex Hawley/photo

Gallia Academy seniors Kaleb Crisenbery, left, and Isaiah
River Valley senior Isaiah Beach clears the final hurdle in the Lester compete in the Division II boys 800m run at the 2017
Division II 100m hurdles state semifinal on Friday at the at Jesse OHSAA track and field championships in Columbus, Ohio.
Owens Memorial Stadium.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Tri-County
Junior Golf Schedule
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The schedule for
the 2017 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf
League has been released.
The tour ofﬁcially begins on Monday, June
12, at the Hidden Valley Golf Course in Point
Pleasant. Age groups for both young ladies and
young men are 10 and under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16,
and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments, courses and
dates of play are as follows: Monday, June 19, at
Meigs County Golf Course in Pomeroy; Monday,
June 26, at Riverside Golf Course in Mason;
Wednesday, July 5, at Cliffside Golf Course in
Gallipolis; and Monday, July 10, at Meigs County
Golf Course in Pomeroy.
The fee for each tournament is $10 per player.
A small lunch is included with the fee and will
be served at the conclusion of play each week.
Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with play
starting at 9 a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone at 740256-6160, Jan Haddox at 304-675-3388, or Bob
Blessing 304-675-6135 if you can contribute or
have questions concerning the tour.

740-446-4624 or at 740-645-9036.

Southern football
golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Southern football team
will hold a golf scramble on Saturday, June 10, at
the Riverside Golf Course in Mason County. The
format will be a four-man scramble, bring your
own team.
Each squad must have a team handicap of 40+
and only one player can be under 10. Price is $65
per person and includes golf, mulligan, cart, lunch
and beverages. Prizes include club house credit
for the top three teams, among other cash prizes.
There will also be a skins game at a cost of $20
per team.
The tournament will begin with a shotgun
start at 8:30 a.m. For more information, contact
Southern football coach Mike Chancey at 740591-8644.

GAHS Blue
Angel Volleyball Camp

CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
Blue Angels volleyball teams will be holding a
volleyball camp for girls entering grades 3-8 this
coming fall. The camp will run from Monday,
July 10, through Wednesday, July 12, and be from
6 p.m. until 8 p.m. in the Gallia Academy High
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipolis Lions
School gymnasium.
Club will hold its 19th annual golf outing on
Players will practice volleyball skills, work
Saturday, June 10, at Cliffside Golf Course in
on volleyball fundamentals, and play volleyball
Gallia County. The event will be held in a fourgames. The camp will conclude on Wednesday
man scramble format and will have a shotgun
with athletes participating in game play from
start time of 8:30 a.m. Individual golfers will be
6:30-8 p.m. Parents and spectators are welcome.
paired together based on A-B-C-D handicap.
The cost is $60 per athlete, and each athlete
The individual cost of the event is $50 for a
will receive a camp t-shirt. Registrations may be
Cliffside member and $60 for a non-member. Cost
picked up at the GAHS Ofﬁce Monday through
includes green fees, cart, lunch and beverages.
Friday, 8 a.m. until 3 p.m. and from some local
There will be prizes of $1,000, $600 and $400 for
businesses. Players may also register at 5:30 p.m.
the top-three ﬁnishing teams, as well as a skills
Monday, July 10, outside of the GAHS gymnagame or a $50,000 prize for a hole-in-one.
sium.
Also, the top ﬁve players that end up closest to
Athletes who come without a parent need to
the pin on a designated hole will be eligible for a
have the liability form signed by a parent in order
shot at $1 million with a hole-in-one. There will
to participate. For more information, contact varalso be an auction at the conclusion of the event.
sity head coach Janice Rosier at Janice-rosier@
For more information, contact Rick Howell at
att.net

Gallipolis Lions
golf scramble

15-feet and nine-and-ahalf on her ﬁnal attempt,
thus losing out on the
state championship —but
maintaining her runnerup spot as the next seven
jumpers, including Ruby
right before McDavid,
didn’t surpass her 18-9
1/4.
“I wasn’t upset (for
being state runnerup). I was just really
happy that I PR’d,” said
Betzing.
“It’s just a testament to
her. You have a talented
kid from the get-go, who
we knew in junior high
was going to be talented.
But you just don’t go out
there and win it. You put
in the hard work. We’re
so proud of the work she
has done every day in
practice,” said Kennedy.
“You can’t ask for more
than that.”
Except for, with two
more years remaining,
Betzing winning the
girls long jump state
championship.
“I would like to see
her on the top of that
podium for the next two
years,” said Kennedy.
Also near the top of
the podium was Oiler,
who set a new personal
and GAHS record in the
girls 300m hurdles in
44.05 seconds.
Oiler is a three-time
state qualiﬁer in the
event, but had the
12th-fastest time in last
year’s semiﬁnals to miss
out on the ﬁnals.
This year, she wasn’t
about to be denied.
“I’m really proud of
myself,” said Oiler. “Last
year, it was a pretty hard
hit to my conﬁdence
by qualifying but not
making it to the ﬁnals.
It was a wake-up call. I
was more determined,
I worked harder, I put
more training in and I
ate right. I didn’t listen
to anyone who said I
couldn’t make it back
here this year or that I
peaked my sophomore
year. I came back with
more determination to
do the best that I could.
My coaches taught me
a lot of things, but they
didn’t teach me how to
give up.”
The top two runners
in each heat and the
next ﬁve fastest times
from Friday’s semiﬁnals
advanced to Saturday’s
state championship race,
as Oiler established
her second school and
personal record at 44.18
in the prelims.
In fact, she entered
the ﬁnals — and in Lane
6 — with the secondfastest time (44.18),
trailing only junior Sara
Foster of Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary.
“It’s a lot of hard
work to get here, but
I’m really blessed to be
surrounded by so much
support,” said Oiler.
“I’ve worked really hard
to bring my time down
and the competition
this year was a lot more
stiff, even to make it to
the ﬁnals. You had to
run 45-ﬂat (seconds)
just to make it into the
top nine. It’s hard to do,
but I’m proud of myself
and thankful to be here
again. I was feeling a
little fatigued at the
end, but today is the
hardest day of the whole
season. I had to give it
everything I had, and I
feel like I did that, so I’m
happy.”
Only ahead of Oiler
were third-place Karlie
Zumbro of John Glenn
in 43.43, state runnerup Foster in 43.02, and
ﬁnally state champion
Rachel Miller of Ontario
in exactly 43 seconds.
Oiler ends her Blue
Angel career making
school history in more
ways than one.

“To PR your last
race of your (high
school) career, and hit
your three best career
times coming in, it’s
unbelievable. She didn’t
like her results from
last year, so she had a
great mindset for this
year. She (Oiler) did
everything right to give
herself a chance to do
well,” said GAHS girls
track and ﬁeld coach
Todd May. “I’m just glad
she got to be a part of
Gallia Academy history
here today. We really
enjoyed her work ethic
and her leadership on
the track. The last two
weeks she has certainly
been impressive. She
answered the call, and
her mental toughness
coming into this
weekend has been the
strongest we’ve ever
seen. She got the results
she knew she could
come here and get.”
The Lady Marauders
got the results they
wanted as well.
They placed eighth
in a school-record relay
time of 49.93 seconds,
breaking their own
mark by just six onehundredths of a second
(49.99) — which they
originally established in
the Region 7 ﬁnals and
tied again in Friday’s
state semis.
The top eight
placers in each event
earn points, but more
importantly earn allOhio honors.
“It’s unreal and like
a dream come true,”
said Brown. “An ofﬁcial
came up to us yesterday
(Friday) and he was
really excited for us.
He asked us if this
excitement meant we
made it (into the ﬁnals).
We were like ‘Yes! We
made it into the ﬁnals!’
He said ‘you girls made
Southeastern Ohio
proud.’ That really got
to us. It was awesome.”
Brown ran the third
leg, while Oliver opened,
Betzing was second and
Swartz anchored.
“It’s crazy,” said
Swartz. “I think we’ve
grown a lot closer. I just
feel like we’re a family
now.”
The Lady Marauders
managed a single point
from the relay, but
tallied nine team points
— including eight by
Betzing by placing
second in the long jump.
“It’s pretty cool and
nice to do this with my
girls one last time,” said
Betzing.
Brown is a four-year
runner in track for
Meigs, while this season
was Oliver’s ﬁrst.
“I couldn’t ask
anything more of
those four girls,” said
Kennedy. “They make
so proud. That’s a great
bunch of kids. They
broke their school
record which they had
set at regionals and
actually tied it in the
prelims yesterday, then
they broke it again today
and got on the podium.
I’m going to miss the
two seniors and the two
sophomores are great
kids and great athletes.
Smart, fast, awesome
kids right there.”
The only non-placers
on Saturday were three
senior boys in the 800m
run, as Gallia Academy’s
Kaleb Crisenbery (11th
in 1:57.68) and Isaiah
Lester (12th in 1:57.70)
crossed back-to-back
in the Division II race
—while Eastern’s Jett
Facemyer ﬁnished 12th
in the Division III run in
1:59.80.
Both Lester and
Facemyer were running
the 800 for the third
and ﬁnal year, while
Crisenbery made his
ﬁrst and only state
appearance.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, June 6, 2017

Notices

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3 bedroom, 2 bath house in
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Notices

PUBLIC NOTICE
Buckeye Hills Regional Council is requesting proposals from
agencies to provide supportive and nutrition services to persons
60 years of age and older within the counties of Athens, Hocking,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and Washington. Funding
sources are Older American's Act Title -III B, Title III-C1, Title IIIC2, and Block Grant.

Help Wanted General

Miscellaneous

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t�4BMBSZ�%FQFOEFOU�
PO�4LJMM�-FWFM�

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy

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Daily Sentinel

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Better Together
Pleasant Valley Hospital is seeking a full-time Office Manager
for an OB/GYN physician practice. This management position is
responsible for directing and coordinating the day to day operations
of a physician’s practice. Must be proficient in medical techniques
and general business office practices required for the treatment of
patients in a physician office setting. Demonstrate a high level of
skill at developing relationships and customer service. Current LPN
license or CMA – Graduated from an approved Certified Medical
Assistants program. Experience in OB/GYN office preferred but not
required.
Pleasant Valley Hospital offers competitive salaries and excellent
benefits. The first choice for caring, compassionate, competent, safe
and quality healthcare throughout the communities we serve.
EEOC/Drug free workplace.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

LEGALS

Apartments/Townhouses

Meigs County Commissioners

Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend

Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications for
2, 3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD
Subsidized Apartments.
Applications are taken
Monday through Thursday
9:00 am-11:30 am. Office is
located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806.

Twin Rivers Tower
is accepting applications
for HUD subsidized,
1 BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled.
Call (304)675-6679
or pick up application at
200 Main St.

2 Bedroom all Electric mobile
home near St Rt 160
740-441-5150
740-339-2923
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������������

INTO CASH!

LEGALS

COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
U.S. Bank Trust, N.A., as Trustee for LSF9 Master Participation
Trust
Plaintiff,
-vsThe Unknown Heirs, Devisees, Legatees, Executors, Administrators, Spouses and Assigns and the Unknown Guardians of
Minor and/or Incompetent Heirs of Irene Baxter, et al.
Defendants.
Case No.: 16-CV-091 Judge: Carson Crow
LEGAL NOTICE IN SUIT FOR FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
The Unknown Heirs, Devisees, Legatees, Executors, Administrators, Spouses and Assigns and the Unknown Guardians of
Minor and/or Incompetent Heirs of Irene Baxter and The
Unknown Heirs, Devisees, Legatees, Executors, Administrators,
Spouses and Assigns and the Unknown Guardians of Minor
and/or Incompetent Heirs of Homer Baxter, whose last known
address is Address Unknown, and cannot by reasonable
diligence be ascertained, will take notice that on the 30th day of
November, 2016, U.S. Bank Trust, N.A., as Trustee for LSF9
Master Participation Trust filed its Complaint in the Common
Pleas Court of Meigs County, Ohio in Case No. 16-CV-091, on
the docket of the Court, and the object and demand for relief of
which pleading is to foreclose the lien of plaintiff's mortgage
recorded upon the following described real estate to wit:
Property Address: 315 Mechanic Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
and being more particularly described in plaintiff's mortgage
recorded in Mortgage Book 90, page 325, of Meigs Recorder's
Office.

Houses For Rent

Turn Your Clutter

6/6/17

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

In order for consideration of the applicantҋs submission, a
representative from that organization or agency MUST attend
the Mandatory Bidderҋs Conference on Wednesday, June 14,
2017 from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm at Buckeye Hills Regional
Council, 1400 Pike Street, Marietta, Ohio. Attendees must remain for the entire meeting. Please RSVP to cash@buckeyehills.org with names of your attendees no later than Monday,
June 12, 2017
6/6/17

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING #2

NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Garage Sale June 8, 9, &amp; 10.
9a-5p S.R. 7N of Pomeroy 5
points area watch for signs

The PY 2018-19 proposal packets will be available June 12,
2017 by close of business on the Buckeye Hills Regional Council website: www.buckeyehills.org. Proposal packets and instructions will be available in electronic format only.

Yard Sale

Meigs County intends to apply to the Ohio Department Services
Agency for funding under the Community Development Block
Grant (CDBG) Program, a federally-funded program administered by the state. The County is eligible for up to $300,000 of
Fiscal Year 2017 CDBG Critical Infrastructure Grant Program
funding, provided the county meets applicable program requirements. On March 6, 2017, the county conducted its first public
hearing to inform the citizens and local officials about the CDBG
program, how it may be used, what activities are eligible, and
other important program requirements.
Based on both citizen input and local officials' assessment of the
county's needs, the county is proposing to submit the following
CDBG activities for Fiscal Year 2017:
County Bridge located in Salisbury Township – Noble-Summit
Road Bridge Replacement Project $113,000 CDBG CI grant.
If selected all projects listed above can be completed during
FY 2017- FY 2019
A second public hearing will be held Monday, June 19, 2017 at
11:00 A.M. in the Meigs County Commissioners Office in the
Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio to give citizens an
adequate opportunity to review and comment on the county's
proposed CDBG Application, including the proposed activities
summarized above, before the county submits its Application to
the Ohio Department of Development.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on June 19,
2017 to express their views and comment on the county's
proposed CDBG Application.

Yard Sale

60722680

Services eligible for Title III -B/Block Grant funding are: Adult
Day, Homemaker, Personal Care and Transportation Services.
Services eligible for Title III-C1 and Title III-C2/Block Grant
funding are Congregate and Home Delivered Meals, Nutrition
Education Service and Nutrition Health Screening Service.

All of the above named defendants are required to answer
within twenty-eight (28) days after last publication, which shall
be published once a week for three consecutive weeks, or they
might be denied a hearing in this case.

Advertise Your Garage Sale
to Thousands of Readers In
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Point Pleasant Register
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
FREE SUNDAY
4 lines, 2 days
inprint &amp; online

Only $15.00
Call or visit your local ofﬁce to place your ad.

Jeffrey R. Helms, Trial Counsel
Ohio Supreme Court Reg. No. 0075659
LERNER, SAMPSON &amp; ROTHFUSS
Attorneys for Plaintiff
P.O. Box 5480
Cincinnati, OH 45201-5480
(513) 241-3100 attyemail@lsrlaw.com
5/23/17, 5/30/17, 6/6/17

Gallipolis Daily Tribune Point Pleasant Register Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
mydailytribune.com
mydailysentinel.com
mydailyregister.com
740-446-2342
740-992-2155
304-675-1333
60652848

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, June 6, 2017 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Hilary Price

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By Bil and Jeff Keane

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By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

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DENNIS THE MENACE

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$IFFICULTY ,EVEL

Hank Ketcham’s

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, June 6, 2017

Honors

47 wins, a school-record
26-game winning streak,
a second straight regular
season conference title
From page 6
and a third consecutive
nationally.
conference tournament
Criner batted a teamchampionship.
best .477, while also
Rio Grande, which
leading the team in hits also enjoyed the high(74), triples (4) and
est ranking in school
slugging percentage
history at No. 17 enter(.652). She also had 10
ing post-season play,
doubles, three home
got within one win of a
runs and 32 runs batted trip to the NAIA World
in.
Series before falling to
Criner led the RSC in eighth-ranked Davenport
batting average and hits, (Mich.) University in the
was second in triple and championship game of
ﬁnished third in slugging the Grand Rapids Brackpercentage. Her batting et in the NAIA Softball
average was the seventh- National Tournament’s
best ﬁgure nationally.
Opening Round.
Conkey and Criner
One other player from
helped lead the Redan RSC school - Midway
Storm to a school-record University junior catcher

Dover

NASCAR history to win
three consecutive championships.
From page 6
Johnson, who won for
the
third time this seaweekend, “Growing
son,
is on a drive for a
up in El Cajon I never
record
eighth.
imagined I would have
With
more wins like
a chance to tie Cale in
this
one,
Johnson just
wins.”
may
pass
Dale Earnhardt
Johnson, the sevenand
Richard
Petty and
time NASCAR chamget
No.
8.
pion, has racked up a
He drove the entire
Hall of Fame resume all
10-race
Chase last seawith team owner Rick
son
with
a tribute helmet
Hendrick and crew chief
to
Earnhardt
and Petty.
Chad Knaus.
“Drivers
have
always
He plopped his
used
helmets
as
their
helmet on top of the
voice,”
Johnson
said.
Chevy in victory lane
His says loud and clear
and swapped it out for
he
has a deep respect for
a throwback No. 28
NASCAR’s
greats.
Hardee’s Chevrolet YarLarson
was
second,
borough hat.
followed
by
Martin
“I remember going to
a race in Oklahoma with Truex Jr., Ryan Newman
my parents, my brother, and Chase Elliott.
Truex won the ﬁrst
we’re driving across the
two
stages on the
country and we pull into
10-year
anniversary of
a Hardee’s,” Johnson
his
ﬁrst
career Cup vicsaid. “I had no idea it
tory,
also
at Dover.
was a burger stand. I
Larson
had
his second
really thought when I
win
of
the
season
in his
walked in the door that
grasp
until
he
spun
the
I was going to Cale Yartires
on
the
restart.
borough’s race shop. I
“Jimmie’s the best of
was very disappointed. I
our
time,” Larson said.
had a burger and left and
“Probably
the best of all
understood the world of
time.”
sponsorship.”
There was a multiJohnson and the
car
wreck on the ﬁnal
78-year-old Yarborough
lap
that
brought the
are the only drivers in
race under caution, but
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

18
24
25
26

(WGN)
(ROOT)
(ESPN)
(ESPN2)

27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39 (AMC)
40 (DISC)
42 (A&amp;E)
52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Rick Steves'
Europe

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7 PM

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

7:30

Kelsey Gravens - also
was named to the AllAmerica Second Team.
Kali Pugh of Oklahoma City was named the
NAIA Player of the Year,
while Kathleen Daniel
of Brenau (Ga.) was
honored as the NAIA
Pitcher of the Year.
Pugh, a senior,
capped off a fantastic
season earning her
second-straight NAIA
All-American status, the
Sooner Athletic Conference Player of the Year
and the NAIA National
Player of the Year.
Pugh ﬁnished No.
1 in three statistical
categories: total at bats
(247), total bases (210)
and total runs scored
(95). The Stars earned

their second straight and NAIA record 10th
- World Series title last
week.
Daniel ﬁnished a stellar freshman season
breaking the NAIA
national record for most
batters struck out (579).
The previous record
holder was Oklahoma
City’s Lilly LaVelle set in
2012 (540).
Daniel ﬁnished the
season ranked No. 1 in
ﬁve statistical categories:
wins (43), opp. batting
average (0.129), hits
allowed per game (3.02),
earned run average
(0.560) and total innings
pitched (327).

Johnson had hit the line
needed to make the race
ofﬁcial and he coasted to
the ﬁnish.
The Hendrick Motorsports driver swept Dover
in 2002 and 2009 and
also won races in 2005,
2010, 2012, 2013, 2014
and 2015.
Johnson also joined
NASCAR Hall of
Famers Richard Petty
(Martinsville-15,
North Wilkesboro-15,
Richmond-13,
Rockingham-11)
and Darrell Waltrip
(Bristol-12,
Martinsville-11) as
drivers to win 11 races
at a single track.
Waltrip and Bobby
Allison are next on the
wins list with 84.
At this rate, Johnson
could pass them by the
end of the season.
“You have to say he’s
one of the greatest
to race in this sport,”
Hendrick said.
Here are some other
happenings from
Sunday’s race:
LOOSE TIRE
Kyle Busch’s No. 18
Toyota lost a tire as it
exited pit road on the
ﬁrst stop.
Busch, who started
from the pole, suffered
damage to the left rear

fender when the wheel
became dislodged.
Busch’s crew chief
could face major
penalties for the
detached wheel.
EARLY EXITS
Kurt Busch, Brad
Keselowski and Ricky
Stenhouse Jr. all made
early exits.
Busch got loose
and connected with
Keselowski in the ﬁrst
stage with both runners
inside the top ﬁve.
Keselowski smacked
the wall and went
straight to the garage.
Busch continued with
heavy damage until he
retired following another
wreck about 30 laps
later.
Keselowski ﬁnished
38th a week after he also
wrecked out of the CocaCola 600 and was 39th.
“I don’t know if it was
Kurt’s fault, just one
of them racing deals,”
Keselowski said. “We
line-up double-ﬁle and
somebody got loose and
just took us out. What a
bummer.”
UP NEXT
NASCAR heads to
Pocono Raceway for the
ﬁrst of its two stops at
the triangle track. Kurt
Busch is the defending
race winner.

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

9:30

10 PM

10:30

America's Got Talent "Auditions" Colorful and hopeful
World of Dance "The
performers compete. (N)
Qualifiers 2" (N)
America's Got Talent "Auditions" Colorful and hopeful
World of Dance "The
performers compete. (N)
Qualifiers 2" (N)
Downward The Middle Black-ish
Black-ish
Fresh Off the
Am.Wife
Dog (N)
"God"
"The Snub" Boat
The American Epic Sessions Numerous top artists recreate America's
(:50) PBS Pre.
musical past using a recording lathe. (N)
"The Vietnam
War"
Am.Wife
Downward The Middle Black-ish
Black-ish
Fresh Off the
Dog (N)
"God"
"The Snub" Boat
NCIS "A Many Splendored Bull "The Woman in 8D"
48 Hours: NCIS (N)
Thing"
Lethal Weapon
The Mick
Brooklyn
Eyewitness News at 10
"Unnecessary Roughness" "The Master" Nine-Nine
The American Epic Sessions Numerous top artists recreate America's
(:50) PBS Pre.
musical past using a recording lathe. (N)
"The Vietnam
War"
48 Hours: NCIS (N)
NCIS "A Many Splendored Bull "The Woman in 8D"
Thing"

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
The Sixth Sense (‘99, Thril) Haley Joel Osment, Bruce Willis. TV14
The Sixth Sense Bruce Willis. TV14
Pirates Ball Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Baltimore Orioles Site: Camden Yards (L)
Postgame
Pirates Ball
SportsCenter
First Take Special (L)
NCAA Softball Division I Tournament Site: ASA Hall of Fame Stadium (L) SportsCenter
Around Horn Interrupt (N) SportsCenter
WNBA Basketball Washington Mystics at Dallas Wings (L) NBA: The Jump
Derailed (2005, Thriller) Jennifer Aniston, Melissa
Love and Other Drugs (‘10, Com) Anne Hathaway, Jake Gyllenhaal. A free spirit
George, Clive Owen. TV14
meets her match when she's introduced to a charming pharmaceutical salesman. TVMA
Matilda (1996, Family) Danny DeVito, Rhea
Truth &amp; Iliza Truth &amp; Iliza
Pretty Little Liars "Driving Famous in Love "Crazy
Miss Crazy" (N)
Scripted Love" (N)
Perlman, Mara Wilson. TVPG
(N)
Ink Master "Bio-Mechanical Ink Master "No One Is
(5:30) Ink
Ink Master "Peck vs. Nunez Live"
Ink Master "Fire and Ice"
Master
Failure"
Safe"
(N)
Loud House H.Danger
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
Nicky
Full House Full House Full House Full House
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Smackdown!
Team Ninja Warrior (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinf. 1/2
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
American Sniper (2014, War) Sienna Miller, Luke Grimes, Bradley Cooper. TVMA
Animal King "Karma" (N) Animal Kingdom "Karma"
(5:45)
Smokey and the Bandit (1977, Comedy)
The Outlaw Josey Wales (‘76, West) Chief Dan George, Clint Eastwood. An exJackie Gleason, Sally Field, Burt Reynolds. TVPG
Confederate soldier searches for the gang responsible for killing his family. TV14
D. Catch "Poisoned at Sea" Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadliest Catch (N)
(:05) Devil's Canyon (P) (N)
Hoarders "Sandra"
Hoarders "Stanks and
Hoarders Overload "Ruby Born This Way "The
Anne"
and Mary" (N)
Blindside" (N)
Devoured Super Snake
Extinct Alive Tiger
Life After: Chernobyl
Russian Yeti: The Killer Lives
A Cinderella Story (2004, Comedy) Chad Michael
The Back-Up Plan (‘10, Rom) Jennifer Lopez. A woman goes through The Back-Up
Murray, Jennifer Coolidge, Hilary Duff. TVPG
artificial insemination and then meets the man of her dreams. TV14
Plan TV14
Law &amp; Order "D-Girl" 1/3 Law &amp; Order "Turnaround" Law&amp;Order "Showtime" 3/3 Law &amp; Order "Mad Dog"
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E! News (N)
Botched "Double D-isaster" Botched "Plastic Fantastic" Botched (N) Botched
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(:35) MASH
(:10) MASH
(:50) Ray
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Genius "Einstein: Chapter Genius "Einstein: Chapter Genius "Einstein: Chapter Genius "Einstein: Chapter Breakthrough "Power to
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the People" (N)
(5:30) NASCAR America (L) Mecum Motorcycle Auctions (N)
Mecum Moto Auctions
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
UFC UFC Fight Night
UFC Unleashed
UFC Top Ten MLB Best (N)
(5:00) Forged in Fire: Cutting Deeper "Night of
Forged in Fire "The
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(N)
"Khopesh"
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Deuces (2016, Crime Story) Meagan Good, Rotimi, Larenz Tate. TVMA
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Fixer Upper
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Fixer Upper
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Good Bones (N)
(5:00)
The Da Vinci Code (2006, Drama) Audrey
Armageddon (1998, Adventure) Liv Tyler, Ben Affleck, Bruce Willis. A drill rigger
Tautou, Jean Reno, Tom Hanks. TV14
and his crew embark on a mission to blow up an asteroid heading for Earth. TV14

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

(4:30) Bend It Real Time With Bill Maher

400 (HBO)

7:30

Wheel of
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Fortune
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Daily Sentinel

7:30
Vice News
Tonight

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Shakespeare in Love (‘98, Rom) Joseph Fiennes.
(:05) Veep
(:35) 24/ 7
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"Ward/
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(:10)
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phobic woman is surprised to develop a
to crack a hijacking ring. TV14
reunion turns into disaster. TVPG
genuine interest in a sports doctor. TVMA
(5:15)
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perfect mom and goes on a wild binge of freedom. TVMA on 'The Tonight Show.'

Jason Dufner
bounces back
to win the
Memorial
DUBLIN, Ohio
(AP) — Jason Dufner
spent quality time on
the practice range that
played in a big role
in his victory at the
Memorial.
It had nothing to do
with his swing.
This was about
beating balls to burn
off the anger from a
5-over 77 in the third
round that looked as
though it might cost
him the tournament.
His pulse back to
normal, which for
Dufner means barely
beating, he bounced
back in a big way
Sunday.
He stayed in the
game during a wild
stretch early, and then
hit the ball so pure that
he hit every green until
the 18th and only once
had a birdie putt over
12 feet.
And then he capped
off his 68 with a
30-foot par putt for a
three-shot victory.
“Yesterday was not
my best day,” Dufner
said. “But I had to get
over it quick. It’s a
72-hole tournament,
there’s a lot of things
that can happen out
there. I knew I was still
in the mix.”
The recap shows
what an up-and-down
week it was for Dufner.
He set the 36-hole
record at Muirfield
Village on Friday and
built a four-shot lead.
The 77 on Saturday
dropped him four shots
behind.
And he wound up
winning by three shots
over Rickie Fowler and
Anirban Lahiri.
“It was important
for me not to leave
this golf course angry
and upset,” Dufner
said. “I needed to
leave it at the golf
course yesterday,
I felt like, and to
move on. It would be
best for me today. It
wasn’t something that
I planned or that I
thought about, it’s just
that’s what I felt like I
needed to do.
Dufner finished
at 13-under 275 for
his fifth PGA Tour
victory, and he earned
mentions with Jack
Nicklaus and Nick
Faldo.
He joined Nicklaus
as the only Ohioborn winners of
the Memorial, the
tournament Nicklaus
created in 1976 and
won twice.
And not since Faldo
in the 1989 Masters
had anyone shot a 77
in the third round of a
PGA Tour event and
still gone on to win.
He was happier
about the first
reference.
“I’ll always have a
close place in my heart
for this event, being a
champion now,” Dufner
said. “It will be very
special for me to look
back and know that I’m
part of an event that
Mr. Nicklaus put on
out here on the PGA
Tour.”
“I think he probably
likes this one better
than Augusta right
now,” Nicklaus said.
“It’s paying a little
better,” Dufner replied.
He earned
$1,566,000, the largest
paycheck of his career.

Fowler, in prime
position to force a
playoff on the 18th
hole by making birdie,
instead made bogey
after Dufner ended it
with his big par putt.
Fowler shot 70 and
tied for second with
Lahiri, who closed
with a 65 before both
of the two rain delays
that lasted a combined
2 1/2 hours.
Justin Thomas
missed consecutive
short birdie putts
that stopped any
momentum he had.
Matt Kuchar fell back
with three bogeys on
the back nine.
They finished
another shot behind.
Daniel Summerhays,
who began the final
round with a three-shot
lead, began the back
nine with two straight
bogeys, and he finished
with a double bogey for
a 78 to tie for 10th.
Dufner got back into
the mix quickly when
Summerhays lost his
three-shot lead after
four holes.
Over the next five
hours because of
the rain delays, four
players had at least a
share of the lead and
seven players were in
the hunt.
Dufner had one
stretch on the front
nine of bogey-birdiebogey-birdie-bogey.
He played the front
nine in even par, and
then he came to life.
He is better with
the putter, though his
strength remains his
iron play, and it was
close to perfect.
“I feel like if I wanted
to have a chance to win
today that I needed to
hit it close,” he said.
He stuffed his
approach on No. 10
to 4 feet and holed a
10-foot birdie putt on
the par-3 12th.
After missing a pair
of birdie chances in the
12-foot range on the
next holes, he hit the
par-5 15th in two and
two-putted for birdie
from 40 feet to take the
lead.
Fowler fell back
when he missed the
14th green long and
took bogey, and then
hit his fairway metal
into the gallery on the
15th and failed to make
birdie.
Dufner gave himself
a cushion on the 17th
with his best drive of
the day and a wedge to
3 feet.
He made it more
exciting than he
preferred on the 18th
by driving into thick
rough just short of the
bunker, and hacking
out into more rough.
He put his third shot
to just over 30 feet on
the 18th.
Fowler, who pulled
his wedge left of the
green, had Dufner
go first to make sure
Fowler would have
needed to hole the
birdie chip to have a
chance.
Dufner ended the
suspense with a putt
and a rare show of
emotion, slamming
down his fist.
“I made the swings
and couldn’t convert
and make the birdies,”
Fowler said. “But to
see him make the putt
on the last was cool.”

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