Crowning moment - Ellington CMS

22
By AMANDA TONOLI [email protected] YOUNGSTOWN Youngstown Board of Education mem- bers were outraged Tuesday after district CEO Krish Mohip scrapped two resolu- tions that would have allowed participa- tion in the Ohio School Boards Associa- tion Legal Assistance Fund. The board unanimously approved the two resolu- tions seeking $250 despite the district CEO’s denial. Board member Jack- ie Adair said she’s had enough of “the CEO dic- tating to us the things he feels he has the authority to do” and suggested get- ting a legal opinion on Mohip’s authority. Mohip was hired by a state-appointed academic distress commission to bring the district out of academic emergency, and he reduced the school board’s role to Associated Press WASHINGTON Senate GOP leaders abruptly shelved their long-sought health care overhaul Tuesday, asserting they can still salvage it but raising new doubts about whether President Donald Trump and the Republi- cans will ever deliver on their promises to repeal and replace “Obamacare.” Republican leader Mitch McConnell announced a delay for any voting at a closed-door sena- tors’ lunch also attended by Vice President Mike Pence. McConnell’s tone was matter-of-fact, ac- cording to those present, yet his action amounts to a stinging setback for the longtime Senate leader who had developed the legislation largely in secret as Trump hung back in deference. Now Trump seems likely to push into the discussion more directly, and he im- mediately invited Senate Republicans to the White House. But the message he delivered to them before reporters were ushered out of the room was not entirely hopeful. “This will be great if we get it done, and if we don’t get it done it’s just going to be By PETER H. MILLIKEN [email protected] YOUNGSTOWN The public got a close-up look at the re- stored copper statues as they were on dis- play Tuesday morning at the street level in front of the Mahoning County Courthouse. After the ground-level dis- play, they were hoisted in the afternoon back to their pedestal on the roof of the 106-year-old building, which is undergoing restoration. During that display, the coun- ty commissioners met in the courthouse rotunda. “This is a beautiful building, over 100 years old. The statues on the top of the building are the crown jewel,” said county Commission- er Anthony Traficanti. Seeing their return to the courthouse “is a highlight of my career,” he told the meeting audience. The three hollow statues, which were re- stored after being removed from the court- house roof in October 2010, are named “Jus- tice” on the left, “Strength and Authority” in the center and “Law” on the right. Crowning moment Restored copper statues back atop county courthouse By PETER H. MILLIKEN [email protected] YOUNGSTOWN The Mahoning County com- missioners on Tuesday autho- rized the sale of the county’s former minimum security jail to Youngstown State University for $525,000 for use as a collab- orative innovation center. They also authorized a co- application with YSU for a $2 million U.S. Economic Devel- opment Administration grant for renovation of that building. The advanced manufactur- ing lab, which has been in the planning stages for two years, will be known as the Mahoning Valley Innovation and Com- mercialization Center. “It’s an excellent thing for the county. I think it’s a way to train our citizens in the trades and to actually bring business- es here that would be able to partner with that. I think the university’s doing a lot of good Officials approve sale of former jail to YSU By JORDYN GRZELEWSKI [email protected] BOARDMAN Three women are charged in connection with a patient death at a township nursing home after a state investiga- tion. Johonna Hull, 28, of Can- field is charged with tam- pering with records and pa- tient abuse/gross neglect; Brenda Lamancusa, 40, of Girard is charged with pa- tient abuse/gross neglect; and Beth Bowman, 51, of Wellsville is charged with tampering with records and patient abuse/neglect. The charges stem from an incident reported June 29, 2015, at Greenbriar Health- care Center on South Ave- BOARDMAN 3 women charged after patient dies at nursing home YOUNGSTOWN SCHOOLS Mohip nixes 2 resolutions OK’d by board By KALEA HALL [email protected] YOUNGSTOWN At just a week and a half old, Virginia Freeze was cel- ebrating 221 years of Youngstown on Tues- day. She may not have known it, but around her was a celebration with balloons, cake and the birthday song. Her brothers, Ed- ward, 5, and Isaac, 3, donned party hats, ate cake and blew birthday party blowouts with their parents, Jim and Grace. The West Side residents were a part of more than 100 in attendance at Downtown Youngstown Partner- ship’s “Happy Birthday, Youngstown” event at Tyler History Center on Federal Street. “We love down- town,” said Jim Freeze, executive director of Youngstown Area Goodwill Industries. “We try By KALEA HALL [email protected] YOUNGSTOWN Youngstown Thermal’s financial difficulty is now under review by the Pub- lic Utilities Commission of Ohio. “We have just been made aware of the fi- nancial troubles for Youngstown Thermal, and that is something we are ac- tively investi- gating,” said Matt Schil- ling, spokes- man for the commission. “At the end of the day, the PUCO is inter- ested that utility customers receive safe and adequate service.” Youngstown Thermal, a steam heat and cooling system provider to several downtown buildings, in- dicated to the commission PUCO eyes Youngstown Thermal’s financial problems WASHINGTON Senate GOP puts off vote on health bill, imperils repeal Groups join forces to throw Youngstown a birthday party 50% OFF VOUCHERS. SEE DETAILS, A2 TODAY’S ISSUE » DAILY BRIEFING, A2 • TRIBUTES, A6 • WORLD & BUSINESS, A10 • VALLEY LIFE, C3 • PUZZLES & TV, C5 NATURE-INSPIRED Bunn students create garden art LOCAL | A3 HEAD COACHES 2 to lead Valley Christian SPORTS | B1 TAPPING INTO THIRST FOR QUALITY Valley has world-class beer retailer VALLEY FOOD | C1 LOCALLY OWNED SINCE 1869 FOR DAILY & BREAKING NEWS 75¢ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 PLEASE RECYCLE inside today INDEX Classifieds . . . . B5-6 Comics . . . . . . . . . C6 Crossword . . . . . . C5 Daily Briefing . . . A2 Editorial . . . . . . . . A9 Legal ads . . . . . . . . B4 Lotteries . . . . . . . . A2 Society . . . . . . . . . . C4 Sports. . . . . . . . . .B1-5 Tributes . . . . . . . A6-7 TV Grid . . . . . . . . . C5 Valley Life . . . . . . . C3 Weather. . . . . . . . . A2 World/Business A10 ANTHONY SAADEY DIES Longtime local restaurateur Anthony Saadey, owner of Mr. An- thony’s Banquet Center, died Tues- day. He was 69. LOCAL, A3 PERMITS OK’D FOR WELLS The state has granted permits for two injection wells proposed for land near the Wyngate Manor manufactured-home community off state Route 7 in Brookfield. LOCAL, A7 ROBERT K. YOSAY | THE VINDICATOR Ironworker Cliff Nelson prepares the rigging for a crane to lift restored copper statues back to the roof of the Mahoning County Courthouse on Tuesday afternoon. The statues were removed from the roof in October 2010 as part of the courthouse restoration project. The restored statues were returned Tuesday to their original rooftop pedestal over the main entrance to the 106-year-old courthouse. See video and photo gallery for this story at vindy.com ONLINE VIDEO & PHOTO See STATUES, A5 See JAIL, A5 INSIDE: Restoration strengthens safety, allure of courthouse. Editorial, A9 Avers See HEALTH, A2 McConnell See CHARGED, A5 See THERMAL, A5 Mohip See SCHOOLS, A5 VINDICATOR EXCLUSIVE See BIRTHDAY, A5 See video for this story at vindy.com ONLINE VIDEO WILLIAM D. LEWIS | THE VINDICATOR Isaac Freeze, 3, left, and his brother Edward, 5, donned appropriate attire for a party celebrating Youngstown’s 221st birthday Tuesday at the Tyler History Center downtown.

Transcript of Crowning moment - Ellington CMS

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

A1 - 06/28/17

By AMANDA [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNYoungstown Board of Education mem-

bers were outraged Tuesday after district CEO Krish Mohip scrapped two resolu-tions that would have allowed participa-tion in the Ohio School Boards Associa-tion Legal Assistance Fund.

The board unanimously approved the two resolu-tions seeking $250 despite the district CEO’s denial.

Board member Jack-ie Adair said she’s had enough of “the CEO dic-tating to us the things he feels he has the authority to do” and suggested get-ting a legal opinion on Mohip’s authority. Mohip was hired by a state-appointed academic distress commission to bring the district out of academic emergency, and he reduced the school board’s role to

Associated Press

WASHINGTONSenate GOP leaders abruptly shelved

their long-sought health care overhaul Tuesday, asserting they can still salvage it but raising new doubts about whether President Donald Trump and the Republi-cans will ever deliver on their promises to repeal and replace “Obamacare.”

Republican leader Mitch McConnell announced a delay for any voting at a closed-door sena-tors’ lunch also attended by Vice President Mike Pence. McConnell’s tone was matter-of-fact, ac-cording to those present, yet his action amounts to a stinging setback for the longtime Senate leader who had developed the legislation largely in secret as Trump hung back in deference.

Now Trump seems likely to push into the discussion more directly, and he im-mediately invited Senate Republicans to the White House. But the message he delivered to them before reporters were ushered out of the room was not entirely hopeful.

“This will be great if we get it done, and if we don’t get it done it’s just going to be

By PETER H. [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNThe public got a close-up look at the re-

stored copper statues as they were on dis-play Tuesday morning at the street level in front of the Mahoning County Courthouse.

After the ground-level dis-play, they were hoisted in the afternoon back to their pedestal on the roof of the 106-year-old building, which is undergoing restoration.

During that display, the coun-ty commissioners met in the courthouse rotunda.

“This is a beautiful building, over 100 years old. The statues on the top of the building are

the crown jewel,” said county Commission-er Anthony Trafi canti. Seeing their return to the courthouse “is a highlight of my career,” he told the meeting audience.

The three hollow statues, which were re-stored after being removed from the court-house roof in October 2010, are named “Jus-tice” on the left, “Strength and Authority” in the center and “Law” on the right.

Crowning moment

Restored copper statues back atop county courthouse

By PETER H. [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNThe Mahoning County com-

missioners on Tuesday autho-rized the sale of the county’s former minimum security jail to Youngstown State University for $525,000 for use as a collab-orative innovation center.

They also authorized a co-application with YSU for a $2 million U.S. Economic Devel-opment Administration grant for renovation of that building.

The advanced manufactur-ing lab, which has been in the planning stages for two years, will be known as the Mahoning Valley Innovation and Com-

mercialization Center.“It’s an excellent thing for

the county. I think it’s a way to train our citizens in the trades and to actually bring business-es here that would be able to partner with that. I think the university’s doing a lot of good

Offi cials approve sale of former jail to YSU

By JORDYN [email protected]

BOARDMANThree women are charged

in connection with a patient death at a township nursing home after a state investiga-tion.

Johonna Hull, 28, of Can-field is charged with tam-pering with records and pa-tient abuse/gross neglect; Brenda Lamancusa, 40, of Girard is charged with pa-tient abuse/gross neglect; and Beth Bowman, 51, of Wellsville is charged with tampering with records and patient abuse/neglect.

The charges stem from an incident reported June 29, 2015, at Greenbriar Health-care Center on South Ave-

BOARDMAN

3 women charged after patient diesat nursing home

YOUNGSTOWN SCHOOLS

Mohip nixes2 resolutionsOK’d by board

By KALEA [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNAt just a week and a half

old, Virginia Freeze was cel-ebrating 221 years of Youngstown on Tues-day.

She may not have known it, but around her was a celebration with balloons, cake and the birthday song.

Her brothers, Ed-ward, 5, and Isaac, 3, donned party hats, ate cake and blew birthday party

blowouts with their parents, Jim and Grace.

The West Side residents were a part of more than 100 in attendance at Downtown

Youngstown Partner-ship’s “Happy Birthday, Youngstown” event at Tyler History Center on Federal Street.

“We love dow n-town,” said Jim Freeze, execut ive d i rector of Youngstown Area

Goodwill Industries. “We try

By KALEA [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNYoungstown Thermal’s

financial difficulty is now under review by the Pub-lic Utilities Commission of Ohio.

“We have j u s t b e e n made aware o f t h e f i -n a n c i a l troubles for Youngstown T h e r m a l , and that is somet h i ng we are ac-tively investi-gating,” said Matt Schil-ling, spokes-man for the commission. “At the end of

the day, the PUCO is inter-ested that utility customers receive safe and adequate service.”

Youngstown Thermal, a steam heat and cooling system provider to several downtown buildings, in-dicated to the commission

PUCO eyesYoungstownThermal’sfi nancialproblems

WASHINGTON

Senate GOPputs off voteon health bill,imperils repeal

Groups join forces to throwYoungstown a birthday party

50% OFF VOUCHERS.

SEE DETAILS, A2

TODAY’S ISSUE » � DAILY BRIEFING, A2 • TRIBUTES, A6 • WORLD & BUSINESS, A10 • VALLEY LIFE, C3 • PUZZLES & TV, C5

NATURE-INSPIREDBunn students create garden art

LOCAL | A3

HEAD COACHES2 to lead Valley Christian

SPORTS | B1

TAPPING INTO THIRST FOR QUALITYValley has world-class beer retailer

VALLEY FOOD | C1

L O C A L L Y O W N E D S I N C E 1 8 6 9 F O R D A I L Y & B R E A K I N G N E W S � 7 5 ¢WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017

PLEASE RECYCLE

inside today

INDEXClassifi eds . . . . B5-6Comics . . . . . . . . . C6Crossword . . . . . . C5Daily Briefi ng . . . A2Editorial . . . . . . . . A9Legal ads. . . . . . . . B4Lotteries . . . . . . . . A2Society. . . . . . . . . . C4Sports. . . . . . . . . .B1-5Tributes. . . . . . . A6-7TV Grid . . . . . . . . . C5Valley Life. . . . . . . C3Weather. . . . . . . . . A2World/Business A10

ANTHONY SAADEY DIESLongtime local restaurateur Anthony Saadey, owner of Mr. An-thony’s Banquet Center, died Tues-day. He was 69. LOCAL, A3

PERMITS OK’D FOR WELLSThe state has granted permitsfor two injection wells proposed for land near the Wyngate Manor manufactured-home community off state Route 7 in Brookfi eld. LOCAL, A7

ROBERT K. YOSAY | THE VINDICATOR

Ironworker Cliff Nelson prepares the rigging for a crane to lift restored copper statues back to the roof of the Mahoning County Courthouse on Tuesday afternoon. The statues were removed from the roof in October 2010 as part of the courthouse restoration project.

The restored statues were returned Tuesday to their original rooftop pedestal over the main entrance to the 106-year-old courthouse.

See video and photo gallery for this story

at vindy.com

ONLINEVIDEO &PHOTO

See STATUES, A5

See JAIL, A5

INSIDE: � Restoration strengthens safety, allure of courthouse. Editorial, A9

Avers

See HEALTH, A2

McConnell

See CHARGED, A5

See THERMAL, A5

Mohip

See SCHOOLS, A5

VINDICATOREXCLUSIVE

See BIRTHDAY, A5

See video for this story at vindy.com

ONLINEVIDEO

WILLIAM D. LEWIS | THE VINDICATOR

Isaac Freeze, 3, left, and his brother Edward, 5, donned appropriateattire for a party celebrating Youngstown’s 221st birthday Tuesday at the Tyler History Center downtown.

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

Associated Press

A new and highly virulent outbreak of data-scram-bling software caused dis-ruption across the world Tuesday. After a similar at-tack in May, the fresh as-sault paralyzed some hos-pitals, government offi ces and major multinational corporations in a dramat-ic demonstration of how easily malicious programs can bring daily life to a halt.

Ukraine and other parts of Europe were hit particu-larly hard by the new strain of ransomware – mali-cious software that locks up computer fi les with all-but-unbreakable encryp-tion and then demands a ransom for its release.

As the malware began to spread across the United States, it affected compa-nies such as the drugmaker Merck and Mondelez In-ternational, the owner of food brands such as Oreo and Nabisco. But its pace appeared to slow as the day wore on.

The origins of the mal-ware remain unclear. Re-searchers picking the pro-gram apart found evidence its creators had borrowed from leaked National Se-curity Agency code, rais-ing the possibility that the digital havoc had spread using U.S. taxpayer-funded tools.

“The virus is spread-ing all over Europe and I’m afraid it can harm the whole world,” said Victor Zhora, the chief executive of Infosafe IT in Kiev, where reports of the malicious software fi rst emerged ear-lier Tuesday.

In Ukraine, victims in-cluded top-level govern-ment offices, where offi-cials posted photos of dark-ened computer screens; energy companies; banks; and even cash machines,

gas stations and supermar-kets.

Multinational compa-nies, including the global law firm DLA Piper and Danish shipping giant A.P. Moller-Maersk were also affected, although the fi rms didn’t specify the ex-tent of the damage.

Heritage Valley Health System said the attack Tuesday affected its two hospitals west of Pitts-burgh as well as satellite operations.

Patients reported on so-cial media that some sur-geries had to be resched-uled. A hospital spokes-woman would say only that operational changes had to be made.

Security experts said Tuesday’s global cyberat-tack shares something in common with last month’s outbreak of ransomware, dubbed WannaCry: Both spread using digital lock picks originally created by the NSA and later pub-lished to the web by a still-mysterious group known as the Shadowbrokers.

Security vendors in-cluding Bitdefender and Kaspersky said the NSA exploit, known as Eternal-Blue, is allowing malware to spread rapidly by itself across internal computer networks at companies and

other large organizations. Microsoft issued a secu-rity fi x in March, but Chris Wysopal, chief technology offi cer at the security fi rm Veracode, warned that would only be effective if 100 percent of computers on a company’s network were patched, saying that if one computer were in-fected, the malware could use a backup mechanism to spread to patched com-puters as well.

Bogdan Botezatu, an analyst with Bitdefend-er, compared such self-spreading software, often called “worms,” to a con-tagious disease.

“It ’s l i ke somebody sneezing into a train full of people,” Botezatu said. “You just have to exist there, and you’re vulner-able.”

Aside from its method of propagation, the malware was different from Wan-naCry. Botezatu said the new program appeared to be nearly identical to Gold-enEye, itself a variant of a known family of hostage-taking programs known as “Petya.”

The motives of those be-hind the malware remain unknown. Emails sent to an address posted to the bottom of ransom de-mands went unreturned.

A2 - 06/28/17

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Salem/Lisbon: 330.332.1033. Fax 330.747.6712.

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NEWSMAKERSNielsen’s top programs for week of June 19-25

NEW YORKPrime-time viewer-

ship numbers compiled by Nielsen for June 19-25. Listings include the week’s ranking and viewership.

1. “America’s Got Talent” (Tuesday), NBC, 12.74 million.

2. “World of Dance,” NBC, 7.61 million.

3. “60 Minutes,” CBS, 7.45 million.

4. “Little Big Shots,” NBC, 7.43 million.

5. “Celebrity Family Feud,” ABC, 7.25 million.

6. “NCIS,” CBS, 6.53 million.

7. “The Big Bang Theo-ry,” CBS, 6.35 million.

8. “The Bachelorette,” ABC, 5.91 million.

9. “American Ninja War-rior,” NBC, 5.85 million.

10. “Blue Bloods,” CBS, 5.51 million.

11. “Bull,” CBS, 5.48 mil-lion.

12. “Steve Harvey’s Funderdome,” ABC, 5.47 million.

13. “NCIS: New Orleans,” CBS, 5.39 million.

14. “The $100,000 Pyra-mid,” ABC, 5.2 million.

15. “Hawaii Five-0,” CBS, 5.02 million.

16. “NCIS: Los Angeles,” CBS, 4.9 million.

17. “20/20,” ABC, 4.75 million.

18. “Wall,” NBC, 4.474 million.

19. “Spartan: Team Challenge,” NBC, 4.471 million.

20. “Mom,” CBS, 4.38 million.

Associated Press

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BIRTHDAYSComedian-director Mel Brooks is 91. Bassist Dave Knights of Procol Harum is 72. Actress Kathy Bates is 69. Actress Mary Stuart Masterson is 51. Actor John Cusack is 51. Nordwind of OK Go is 41. Bassist Mark Stoermer of The Killers is 40. Country singer and for-mer “American Idol” contes-tant Kellie Pickler is 31.

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Detroit

Chicago

Ft. Wayne

Indianapolis

Toledo

Erie

Cleveland

Youngstown

Pittsburgh

Cincinnati

Louisville

Columbus

CharlestonLake Erie

VALLEY WEATHER

TODAY’S NATIONAL FORECAST

REGIONAL FORECAST

KIDS WEATHER AIR QUALITY

POLLEN FORECAST

0 50 100 150 200

Good Moderate Unhealthy

0 3 6 9 12

Good Moderate High

ALMANAC SKYWATCH

NATIONAL FORECAST WORLD FORECAST

Today's high and tonight's low

LAKE ERIE

OVERNIGHTOVERNIGHTTHIS MORNING AFTERNOON

MAP KEY: SUNNY

ALASKA HAWAII

SHOWERSCLOUDS THUNDER SNOW ICE LOWHIGH

WARMCOLD STATIONARY

SunriseSunset

MoonriseMoonset

PLANETS

For Tuesday, June 27, 2017 5:52 a.m. 8:59 p.m.

11:03 a.m.No Set

First Full Last New

Jun. 30 Jul. 9 Jul. 16 Jul. 23

Forecasts, graphics and data provided by ©2017, The Weather Company, LLC

79/65

81/69

80/6779/66

77/61

77/67

75/65

80/66 76/60

Southwest winds 5-10 knots. Water temp.: 68°

82/68

81/66

81/6185/69

FRIDAY

82° 68°

SATURDAY

80° 64°

SUNDAY

80° 63°

MONDAY

79° 61°

Wed

CITY Wed Thu FriAtlanta 87/65/pc 81/71/t 82/70/tAtlantic City 79/59/s 87/69/pc 89/72/pcBaltimore 81/63/pc 90/72/pc 92/73/pcBismarck 81/55/pc 77/54/t 72/51/pcBoston 78/62/pc 81/69/sh 91/71/tCharleston, SC 88/71/pc 88/73/pc 89/74/tCharlotte 84/64/pc 87/69/pc 87/70/tChicago 81/69/t 85/67/t 79/64/tCincinnati 81/66/pc 85/70/pc 84/69/tCleveland 77/67/pc 83/70/t 82/70/tColumbus, OH 81/65/pc 85/70/t 85/71/tDallas 92/76/pc 95/78/pc 95/74/pcDaytona Beach 87/73/t 87/75/t 88/74/tDenver 87/57/pc 83/53/pc 78/54/pcDes Moines 83/67/t 83/65/t 80/61/tDetroit 79/65/pc 82/67/t 81/67/tFairbanks 74/52/pc 78/56/pc 77/56/cHonolulu 88/75/pc 89/75/pc 88/75/shHouston 88/75/t 88/78/t 90/78/tIndianapolis 82/68/pc 86/70/t 83/68/tKansas City 88/72/t 87/70/t 85/66/pcLas Vegas 106/81/s 105/82/s 107/77/sLittle Rock 90/72/pc 88/74/pc 88/74/tLos Angeles 69/61/fg 70/61/fg 71/62/pcLouisville 85/69/pc 89/72/pc 86/71/tMemphis 89/72/pc 88/73/pc 87/73/tMiami Beach 89/79/t 88/79/t 88/80/tMinneapolis 76/62/t 80/62/pc 75/59/tMyrtle Beach 83/70/s 84/73/pc 85/74/pcNew Orleans 85/74/t 84/74/t 89/75/tNew York 80/66/pc 86/73/pc 88/73/tOklahoma City 92/72/pc 92/74/pc 90/70/tOrlando 92/74/t 89/75/t 89/74/tPhiladelphia 81/65/s 90/72/pc 93/74/tPhoenix 108/82/s 108/80/s 109/82/sPittsburgh 76/60/pc 83/68/t 84/66/tRaleigh 84/62/s 86/67/pc 89/71/pcSacramento 91/58/s 95/59/s 94/62/sSalt Lake City 91/61/pc 85/61/pc 89/63/sSan Antonio 91/74/pc 94/77/pc 95/77/pcSan Diego 71/61/fg 70/62/pc 70/62/pcSan Francisco 67/54/fg 68/54/fg 70/55/pcSeattle 71/55/pc 76/57/pc 79/56/pcSt. Louis 88/74/pc 89/73/pc 86/69/tTampa 92/76/t 91/76/t 89/77/tWash, DC 81/65/pc 90/73/pc 91/74/pc

CITY Wed Thu FriAthens 94/75/s 99/77/s 106/79/sBaghdad 120/87/pc 114/84/s 114/85/sHong Kong 90/83/pc 89/82/pc 88/82/pcJerusalem 88/64/s 87/65/s 89/67/sLondon 64/54/r 67/55/r 70/55/rMexico City 75/59/t 75/58/t 71/59/rMoscow 70/49/pc 70/57/pc 81/62/tParis 74/57/r 71/57/r 68/57/rRio de Janeiro 78/64/s 80/64/s 82/68/sRome 94/71/pc 86/69/s 89/68/sTokyo 75/70/r 81/73/pc 79/74/r

THURSDAY

82° 68°

High 68/Norm 80 Low 51/Norm 58.........Records: High 96/1944 Low 42/1897......2016 High 89 2016 Low 70.......................Precipitation 0.09 Normal 0.13................Precip. this month 4.07 Normal 3.49.......Precip. this year 25.37 Normal 18.28........Average wind velocity 7 mph....................High humidity 96% at 2:51 a.m...............

54° 74° 68°Partly CloudyMostly sunny.

Mostly sunny.

50 percent chance of storms.

60 percent chance of storms.

60 percent chance of storms.

Partly cloudy.

30 percent chance of storms.

RISE SETVenus 3:20 a.m. 5:22 p.m.Mars 6:31 a.m. 9:36 p.m.Jupiter 1:59 p.m. 1:38 a.m.Saturn 7:44 p.m. 5:09 a.m.

NUMBERS IN THE NEWS

132 roomsSource: Associated Press

Two weeks into her new life as a full-time Washingto-nian, Melania Trump is staying true to her reputation as more homebody than social butterfl y. She traded life in an expansive, three-story Trump Tower penthouse for the White House, a 132-room mansion with a bowling alley, outdoor swimming pool, tennis courts, gardens and a lot of spaces that would allow her full privacy both indoors and outdoors.

LOTTERIESTUESDAY’S NUMBERS

MULTISTATEMega Millions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-21-45-52-57Mega Ball . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Megaplier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4Tuesday’s Mega Millions jackpot was worth an estimated $145 million.

Tonight’s Powerball drawing is worth an estimated $92 million.

OHIO

EVENING DRAWINGSPick 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3-4Pick 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-0-4-6Pick 5 . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1-7-2-6Rolling Cash 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-23-24-34-37DAY DRAWINGSPick 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-0-0Pick 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-0-9-7Pick 5 . . . . . . . . . . 5-2-9-9-5Check Keno numbers at ohiolottery.com.

PENNSYLVANIA

EVENING DRAWINGSPick 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-7Pick 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3-6Pick 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-5-2-5Pick 5 . . . . . . . . . . 5-8-6-4-6Cash 5 . . . . . .7-17-26-28-29DAY DRAWINGSPick 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-8Pick 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-3-6Pick 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-1-5-4Pick 5 . . . . . . . . . . 2-5-0-7-7Treasure Hunt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12-13-18-21-26

KIDS CORNER

Hayden Hoffaman, Kindergarten Stadium Drive Elementary, Boardman

something that we’re not going to like, and that’s OK and I understand that very well,” he told the senators.

In the private meeting that followed, said Marco Rubio of Florida, the presi-dent spoke of “the costs of failure, what it would mean to not get it done – the view that we would wind up in a situation where the mar-kets will collapse and Re-publicans will be blamed for it and then potentially have to fi ght off an effort to expand to single payer at some point.”

The bill has many crit-ics and few outspoken fans

on Capitol Hill. It was short of support heading toward a critical procedural vote today, and prospects for changing that are uncer-tain. McConnell promised to revisit the legislation af-ter Congress’ July 4 recess.

It hasn’t been easy, as adjustments to placate conservatives, who want the legislation to be more stringent, only push away moderates who think its current limits – on Medic-aid for example – are too strong.

In the folksy analysis of John Cornyn of Texas, the Senate GOP vote-counter: “Every time you get one bullfrog in the wheelbar-row, another one jumps out.”

McConnell has scant margin for error in the closely divided Senate, and the legislation to eliminate Obamacare’s mandates and unwind its Medicaid expansion has shed sup-port practically from the moment it was unveiled last Thursday. By Tuesday morning, at least fi ve GOP senators had announced their opposition to a pro-cedural vote on the bill, and after McConnell an-nounced the delay several more went public with their criticism.

McConnel l ca n lose only two senators from his 52-member caucus and still pass the bill, with Pence to cast a tie-breaking vote.

Cyberattack wallops Europe; spreads more slowly in US

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Customers queue at a grocery shop in Kiev, Ukraine, on Tuesday.

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Man, 80, is missingCHAMPION

The Trumbull County 911 center and Ohio Attorney General Missing Persons Unit have issued an en-dangered missing

adult alert for a Champion Township man, 80.

Roger Wade of Eldon Drive is 5 foot 9, 170 pounds with blue eyes and brown hair. He was last seen wearing a navy blue shirt, shorts and a ball cap.

He left his home at 8 p.m. Monday and hasn’t returned, the 911 center says. He may be driving a 2008 black Kia Spectra with license plate ELH9591.

Anyone with information is asked to call the county 911 center at 330-675-2730 or attorney general at 1-866-693-9171.

Closed to fi x culvertCHAMPION

Eff ective July 5, Bristol Champion Townline Road will be closed from 7 a.m. until 3 p.m. due to culvert replacement. The recom-mended detour is south on Oak Hill Drive, west on state Route 305 and north of Hoff -man Norton Road.

MVSD board to meetMINERAL RIDGE

The Mahoning Valley Sanitary District will have its regular meeting of the board of directors at 4 p.m. today in the assembly room, 1181 Ohltown-McDonald Road.

METROdigest

E-MAIL: [email protected] LOCAL & STATE THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 A3

By JORDYN [email protected]

BOARDMANThree suspects who were

arrested during a drug raid at a Wildwood Drive house last week pleaded not guilty to charges stemming from that operation.

Michael Forgach , 41, Syre-na Whitfield, 25, and Da-wond Roddy, 31, appeared in Mahoning County Area Court here Tuesday for ar-raignment on charges of

permitting drug abuse, pos-sessing drug-abuse instru-ments and possession of drug paraphernalia. Addi-tionally, Whitfi eld is charged

with induc-ing panic in connection with an April 29 incident in which she re-portedly suf-fered a drug overdose at t h e W i l d -

wood house.The charges against the

three stem from a search

3 arrested in drug raid plead not guilty

Longtime Boardman restaurateur Anthony Saadey diesBy KALEA HALL

AND WILLIAM K. [email protected]

Longtime Boardman restaurateur Anthony Saadey, 69, of Canfield, owner of Mr. Anthony’s Banquet Center, died Tuesday in St. Elizabeth Youngstown Hospital. He had been ill for some time.

Funeral arrangements are being handled by Wasko Funeral Home. Services are at 3 p.m. Friday in St. Maron Church in Youngstown, where the family will greet friends from noon to 3 p.m.

Saadey was well-liked and respected by his peers in the restaurant business and others in the Mahoning Valley.

“Anthony was a great guy, and I am saddened by his death,” said Mark Canzonetta, a chef and co-owner of Aqua Pazzo Restaurant in Board-man.

“A long-standing pillar in the res-taurant business, he was always

helpful and straightforward and always had a smile on his face. We didn’t hang out, but I knew him as a gentleman and a professional,” said Canzonetta.

“I loved Anthony like a member of my family,” said Anthony Cafaro Sr., former president of Cafaro Co. in Niles, a longtime friend of Saadey’s. “He was a very strong, proud and respectful individual. He will be deeply missed,” Cafaro said of his friend.

“Mr. Anthony’s and its staff are a picture of consistency, a true testa-

ment to the dedication and hard work of Anthony Saadey. It was a success because he operated it,” said MVR owner Joe Cassese.

“His death is a loss to the com-munity, and his legacy will live on through the great events they will continue to have at the place he es-tablished,” Cassese added.

Joe Saadey, Anthony’s nephew who owns the Upstairs Restaurant and Saadeys Place in Austintown, explained that Anthony was the

By AMANDA [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNChildren’s book illustrator, au-

thor and artist Dar James led a nature-inspired afternoon with Paul C. Bunn Elementary students Tuesday.

Students painted then planted garden artwork around their school garden – adding what they thought the garden needed.

Retired teachers helped spruce up the garden while students cre-ated their garden art.

Retired teacher Samie Winick said retirees have been maintain-ing the garden since 2003.

“We’re lucky to have summer school this summer so the kids get to come out and kind of help,” she said.

Winick said she is excited to hang a gallery wall of the students’ art among the various sections of the garden. It will be titled “Bunn in Bloom.”

Winick wasn’t the only one ex-cited about showing off students’ art.

“I love painting,” gushed second-grader Novalee Wood.

James said she’s happy to be working with Paul C. Bunn stu-dents and have the opportunity to meet with educators.

James isn’t the only one happy about the student-artist arrange-ment.

Paul C. Bunn Principal William

Summer students blossom while creating garden art

‘Bunn in Bloom’

Agenda Thursday Jackson Milton school �

board, 6:30 p.m., regular meeting, high school build-ing, 13910 Mahoning Ave.

Lowellville school board, � 4:45 p.m., special athletic committee, library, 52 Rock-et Place.

Western Reserve Transit �

Authority board of trustees, 3 p.m., WRTA board room, 604 Mahoning Ave., Youngstown.

Boardman school board, � 6:30 p.m., Center Intermedi-ate School, 7410 Market St.

Girard City Council, � 3 p.m., planning commission, mayor’s offi ce, city hall, 100 W. Main St.

Governing Board of the �

Mahoning County Edu-cational Service Center, 5 p.m., MCCTC, 7300 N. Palmyra Road, Canfi eld.

Poland school board, � 6 p.m., work session, high school cafeteria, 3199 Dobbins Road.

Springfi eld Local School �

board, 6:30 p.m., intermedi-ate school, Room 110, 11335 Youngstown Pittsburgh Road, New Middletown.

Struthers school board, � 9 a.m., special meeting, board of education offi ce, 99 Euclid Ave.

Trumbull Career and Tech- �

nical Center, 6 p.m., high school programs committee, director’s offi ce, TCTC, 528 Educational Highway, Warren. AGENDA runs daily. Items for the column should be sent to The Vindica-tor Regional Desk at least two days in advance.

Surplus food/clothing

Price Memorial A.M.E. �

Zion Church, 920 Dryden Ave., Youngstown, produce and food bags, 9 to 11 a.m. Friday. Proper identifi cation required. Bring containers.Food-distribution notices are to be submitted by 3 p.m. the day before they are to be published.

Wade

See BUNN, A4

See RAID, A4

Forgach Whitfi eld Roddy

NIKOS FRAZIER | THE VINDICATOR

Children’s book illustrator, author and artist Dar James instructs young painters for the “Bunn in Bloom” project. James led a nature-inspired afternoon on Tuesday with Paul C. Bunn Elementary students.

Saadey

Larayah Hodges paints a butterfl y for the “Bunn in Bloom” project at Paul C. Bunn Elementary. Students painted then planted garden artwork Tuesday around their school garden.

See SAADEY, A4

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A4 THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 LOCAL & STATE WWW.VINDY.COM

of 120 Wildwood Drive on Friday, which marked the third time township police have raided it since March. The search report-edly turned up a slew of drug-related items, includ-ing more than 100 syringes and suspected heroin.

In court Tuesday, For-gach, who had previously posted bond, appeared with an attorney. Judge Joseph M. Houser contin-ued Forgach’s bond, but warned Forgach that he would be “tempted” to re-voke it if Forgach incurred any additional criminal charges.

Forgach was indicted by a Mahoning County grand jury last week on charges of cocaine possession, heroin possession and permitting drug abuse.

Whitfield and Roddy, who remained in the Ma-honing County jail, will get court-appointed law-yers. The judge set Whit-fi eld’s bond at $3,500, cash or surety, and Roddy’s at $2,500, cash or surety.

Asked by t he judge how she supports herself, Whitfield told him that her child’s father has been supporting her since she moved to the area from Oklahoma a few months ago.

The owners of the house on Wildwood, who are Forgach’s parents, have started the process to re-move Forgach and any other tenants from the property after township officials said they would work with the Mahoning County Prosecutor’s of-fice to have the property declared a nuisance.

A letter from Atty. Alden Chevlen that was deliv-ered to township offi cials Monday states that For-gach was served a statu-tory notice to leave the premises by today . If he does not leave, the next step would be eviction.

The homeowners would like to bring the proper-ty into compliance with township regulations and keep it as a rental prop-erty, according to their at-torney’s letter.

Forgach, Whitfi eld and Roddy are due back in court Aug. 8.

2 people arraigned in separate Trumbull County murder cases

Staff report

WARRENTwo people i nd icted

Monday in separate mur-der cases were arraigned in Trumbull County Common Pleas Court on Tuesday, and both are being held in the county jail in lieu of $1 mil-lion bond.

Austin Burke, 18, of Miller South Road in Bristolville, was indicted on charges of aggravated murder, two counts of aggravated rob-bery and two counts of be-ing a felon in possession of a fi rearm.

Burke is accused of kill-ing and robbing Brandon Sample, 22, of Garfi eld Drive Northeast, who was report-ed missing by his family June 12. Sample’s body was found in a rural area of Bris-tol Township on June 15.

Burke is also charged with the June 20 armed robbery of the Pizza Joe’s restaurant in Cortland. Burke was ar-

rested that same day.In the other murder case,

Lynette Talley, 64, of South-ern Boulevard is charged in the May 8 death of Amari D. Allen, 3, who suffered a traumatic brain injury after being injured at a home on Clearwater Street Northwest on May 5.

Talley, a friend of Amari’s family, was serving as his guardian at the time.

Bot h Burke a nd Ta l-ley pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Talley’s charges are mur-der, felonious assault and two counts of child endan-gering.

Police said Talley told them Amari was choking and she grabbed the food out of his mouth, and he fell back and hit the counter and the fl oor.

Hospital offi cials said Am-ari’s injuries did not fi t with the description Talley gave of how they occurred.

Diane Barber, assistant county prosecutor, asked for a $1 million bond for Tal-ley. She said the “evidence [against Talley] is strong, in-cluding medical evidence, and a failed stipulated poly-graph.”

That means Talley failed a lie-detector test that is ad-missable at trial.

The organization Trum-bull County Parents of Mur-dered Children will raise the victim’s fl ag in memory of Amari at 2 p.m. today in front of the Trumbull Coun-ty Sheriff’s offi ce.

Baun said he enjoys the fact that James is able to get stu-dents involved and engaged in something other than their usual book work.

“The kids realize they can use their talents to learn and use their different intelli-gences and really get to think out of the box,” he said.

Winick said unique oppor-tunities like this are possible because of the garden, which is largely a result of a part-nership with the Men’s Gar-den Club of Youngstown.

“They’ve been rea l ly, really generous with us.”

For information about the summer school program, contact Paul C. Bunn Ele-mentary at 330-744-8963 .

To see more of James’s work, visit Darsworld.com.

Staff report

YOUNGSTOWNReports said an East Lu-

cius Avenue man who called two women to fi lm his inter-action with police after he was pulled over about 5:10 p.m. Monday on the South Side was wanted on several warrants from Trumbull County.

Police pulled over a car driven by Aaron Wright Jr., 30, at Homewood and East Indianola avenues for run-ning a stop sign. Reports said when an offi cer tried to talk to Wright, he refused to give the offi cer any information and also asked for a supervi-sor to be called, as Wright said he knew his rights. That offi cer also smelled marijua-na in the car, reports said.

A supervisor arrived who also smelled marijuana and Wright refused to get out of the car while he talked on a cellphone. A few minutes later, two women pulled up and began fi lming police on their phones and Wright told

of f icers he called them to record the traffic stop, reports said.

W r i g h t refused re-peatedly to get out of the car un-

til he was told he would be physically removed, reports said. Reports said Wright has a suspended license, and when police searched the car because of the mar-ijuana smell, they found a bag of suspected marijuana and a marijuana cigar. A re-cords check also revealed Wright has warrants out of Trumbull County involving engaging in corrupt activity and other charges.

Wright was booked in the Mahoning County jail on the warrants and charges of ob-structing official business, driving under suspension, failure to disclose personal information and possession of marijuana.

City man jailed onobstruction charge

kind of person who would do anything for anyone.

“There’s a lot people cry-ing tonight, and certainly we will cherish the memo-ries,” said Bruce Zoldan, a close friend of Anthony Saadey’s dating back to college. Zoldan, head of Phantom Fireworks of Youngstown, referred to Saadey as a “generous, loving person ... who will certainly leave a legacy in the Valley as a good guy; a gentleman.”

Saadey had other res-taurant enterprises be-sides Mr. Anthony’s Ban-quet Center at 7440 South Ave. in Boardman, which opened in August 1982. They included Anthony’s on the River and attempt-ing to revive the closed B&O Restaurant, both down-town. Neither venture was a long-term success, ac-cording to Vindicator fi les.

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

A4 - 06/28/17

RAIDContinued from A3

BUNNContinued from A3

Wright

Burke Talley

NIKOS FRAZIER | THE VINDICATOR

Second-grader Novalee Wood paints for the “Bunn in Bloom” proj-ect. The school garden the kids helped to decorate is largely a result of a partnership with the Men’s Garden Club of Youngstown.

BIRTHSST. ELIZABETH BOARDMAN HOSPITALRebecca Johnson and Derek Crislip,

Niles, girl, June 25.Kaylee Dickey, Youngstown, girl,

June 26.Kayla Bailing, Youngstown, girl, June 26.Cooper and Kali Carlisle, North

Lima, boy, June 26.

ST. JOSEPH WARREN HOSPITALRoger and Cristal Young, Hubbard,

boy, June 26.

SAADEYContinued from A3

EMAIL: [email protected] LOCAL & STATE THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 A5

The statues were dis-played on a fl atbed trailer in the southbound curb lane of Market Street, which was closed to motor vehicles in front of the courthouse for the occasion.

Their heads, which had to be removed for highway bridge clearance purposes, were bolted back on imme-diately after their downtown arrival early Tuesday.

The center statue in the 2,200-pound cluster is 12 feet high; and the cluster is 16 feet 10 inches wide and 79 inches deep.

“They did a great job, I think. It says a lot about our tax dollars at work,” Doug Martinec, construc-tion superintendent with Murphy Contracting Co. of Youngstown, said of the res-toration crew.

Murphy Contracting is the building restoration project’s

general contractor.“They’re in very good

shape now. I’m intending to give us another 100 years of life. ... Their inside struc-ture has been restored with stainless steel this time,” Elizabeth Murphy, an Akron historic architect engaged in the restoration, said of the statues.

“They also will not have to put up with acid rain or any of those kinds of airborne pollutants,” because of re-duced industrial air pollu-tion, she said.

“These are the same struc-ture as the Statue of Liberty. It’s copper sheet metal with a steel frame,” she explained.

The statues were restored at the McKay Lodge Fine Arts Conservatory Labora-tory Inc. in Oberlin.

The $70,000 statue restora-tion included realignment of all bent pieces, re-soldering of all copper joints, applica-tion of a chemical patina and installation of a new stain-

less-steel interior armature and anchoring system.

The courthouse restora-tion project has included re-placement of rusted statue pedestal support beams and of the building’s roof and 730 pieces of the building’s fi red-clay masonry, known as terra cotta, around the building’s upper perimeter.

The project was delayed by the need to replace un-foreseen asbestos roofing discovered in the pedestal.

In January 2017, the com-missioners added $853,529 to the $6 million restoration project to cover additional work to be performed this year, including brick repairs and replacement of rotted original wooden window frames in two interior win-dow wells.

T he bu i ld i ng, wh ich opened March 6, 1911, has a granite exterior and a mar-ble interior and was entered in the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

things, and it’s nice that the county can partner with them on that,” said Audrey C. Tillis, executive director of the county commission-ers.

“It will enable us to estab-lish an advanced manufac-turing technology training center,” Mike Hripko, YSU’s associate vice president for research, said of the com-missioners’ action.

“We’ll be well-positioned to train next-generation manufacturing workers in skills that manufactur-ers are looking for, such as 3-D printing, electronics as-sembly, advanced welding, machining and robotics,” he added.

The former minimum security jail at Commerce Street and Fifth Avenue is now used as a staging area for the county sheriff’s day-reporting inmate work de-tail.

The innovation center is envisioned as a place with-

in walking distance of YSU and Eastern Gateway Com-munity College, where high school and college students, entrepreneurs, engineers, machinists and welders will be able to interact.

To cover the high cost of equipment, the project is a partnership of the Mahon-ing Valley Manufacturers’ Coalition, YSU, Eastern Gateway, the Mahoning, Trumbull and Columbiana counties and Choffin ca-reer and technical centers, Youngstown City Schools and the Youngstown Busi-ness Incubator.

The idea for the center, estimated to occupy 60,000 square feet, arose from dis-cussions among manufac-turers and educational insti-tution officials concerning training programs.

In March, the county com-missioners and Sheriff Jerry Greene discussed a possible land sale for the innovation center with YSU President Jim Tressel and other YSU officials in executive ses-sion.

In other action, the com-

missioners agreed to lease 1,532 square feet on the sec-ond fl oor of the county Chil-dren Services Building at 222 W. Federal St. to Area Agency on Aging XI for $13,788 a year for the agency’s work under the county’s new 1-mill, fi ve-year senior citizen services real-estate tax levy.

The one-year lease, renew-able annually for up to fi ve years, begins Saturday.

Services to county resi-dents age 60 and older will begin Monday under the levy, which will generate about $4.1 million in annual revenue.

Those wishing to be evalu-ated for services should call 330-505-2300 and ask for the community resources de-partment.

Services being offered include home-delivered meals, recreation, wellness programs and guardianship services.

The commissioners also voted to close New Road in Austintown between South Turner Road and state Route 46 from July 5 to 12 for cul-vert repairs.

nue.Michael McBride, an as-

sistant Mahoning County prosecutor, said the charg-es relate to the death of a patient at the facility.

“Evidence indicated, and the autopsy showed, that a gentleman ... was mis-takenly given the wrong medication. He was given an opiate rather than what he was prescribed to get,” said McBride, noting that the victim was about 70 years old. “Ultimately he passed away. The charges are largely over not only the mistake in providing him that medication, but proba-bly even more importantly, the lack of action that was

taken by the staff at Green-briar.”

Those f indings come from the Ohio Attorney General Offi ce’s health care fraud section, which inves-tigated the matter.

The case is being prose-cuted in Mahoning County Area Court here. All of the charges are first-degree misdemeanors, punishable by up to six months in jail and a $1,000 fi ne.

Court records indicate that Hull is scheduled to appear in court July 25 for a hearing, and Lamancusa is scheduled for a hearing July 27. As of Tuesday, Bowman had not yet been served with the charges against her.

Greenbriar did not re-spond to a request for com-ment.

that it is facing short-term fi nancial problems.

Carl Avers, chief executive of the company, announced in a news release Monday that the company’s assets are on the market.

Tuesday, Avers disputed reports that employees have not been paid. He would not go into detail about the company’s fi nancial status.

In a review of recent court fi lings, The Vindicator found in the Northern District Court of Ohio, Eastern Divi-sion, a lawsuit from Febru-ary brought by EDF Energy Services LLC of Houston. EDF claims Youngstown Thermal breached its con-tract by not paying for natu-ral gas it received from EDF. The company requested moneta r y da mages of more than $600,000 from

Youngstown Thermal. In May, Judge Benita Y. Pear-son ordered Youngstown Thermal to pay $547,919 to EDF.

In Mahoning County Common Pleas Cour t, AT&T fi led a lawsuit against Youngstown Thermal in March claiming the compa-ny caused $270,433 in dam-age to its property in April 2015 and did not repair the damage.

Youngstown Thermal’s steam-utility service is a district energy network. On the network are about 50 heating customers and four cooling customers in down-town. The Vindicator, the city and the Youngstown Business Incubator are some of its customers.

Youngstown Thermal re-cently lost a major client in Youngstown State Universi-ty. It nearly lost the city last year, but the city postponed the move to another energy

provider.Youngstown Mayor John

A. McNally spoke with PUCO on Tuesday about Youngstown Thermal.

“We have been gener-ally keeping an eye on Youngstow n Thermal,” McNally said. “We do have our concerns moving for-ward, but we are watching. We decided to just let some things play out. I think we are starting to watch things play out.”

Barb Ewing, chief ex-ecutive of the incubator, stressed the importance for the main incubator build-ing to have a viable, cost-effective source for heating and cooling.

“The cost associated with replacing both the heat-ing and air conditioning is exorbitant,” Ewing said. “I can’t stress how important it is to keep the system vi-able.”

advisory.“I was freed a long time

ago,” she said. “I don’t have a dictator. I don’t have a ‘massa.’ I am a free African American elected board member of this Youngstown city school board, and I will not be dictated to by any-body who thinks he has the authority to tell us when we can eat, sleep a nd jump.”

The CEO was not in attendance. He had his denial de-livered by Stephen Stohla, the school district’s interim superintendent.

“The actions of the board are advisory unless the CEO has delegated spe-cifi c powers to the board,” Stohla read from Mohip’s address.

“As to ‘operational is-sues’ of the district, as you are aware, he has not done so yet. ... Mr. Mohip is not yet certain that he will al-low the school district or its employees to support the board’s request to ei-ther fund or accept funding

from this organization if the goal is to fi ght the CEO turnaround plan.”

The address also stated if the board’s desire to par-ticipate in the OSBA Legal Assistance Fund is not for fi ghting the turnaround, to let him know and he would take it into consideration.

After Stohla delivered the address, the board mem-bers expressed discontent. Corrine Sanderson said Mohip is trying to dictate board business, “which he has no right.”

“I do not acknowledge, constitutionally, [Mohip’s] position, and he does not dictate what the board says or what it does,” she said. “If a payment needs to be made, I’ll make it.”

Michael Murphy, board vice president, agreed.

“Compared to within a year, [Mohip] spent more than a million [dollars], I think $250 is chump change,” he said. “We can afford that every day of the week.”

Still, board President Brenda Kimble said each member of the board is now willing to meet for a retreat the CEO offered – as long as all board members participate – and all that she needs is a date.

to get down here as much as we can.”

T h e p a r t n e r s h i p , Youngstown CityScape and Mahoning Valley Histori-cal Society joined forces to throw the party for the city on the day John Young came to the area for the fi rst time in 1796.

The party was made to be both fun and informative.

Phil Kidd, associate direc-tor of CityScape, and Bill Lawson, executive director of the historical society, each took a group of partygoers out on a walking tour of downtown to show off some of the history and talk about the future of several struc-tures.

The groups were led to Central Square where they learned about the Civil War Soldiers’ Memorial in the

center of the square. The memorial was initiated in 1870 by Ohio Gov. David Tod, who was from Youngstown’s Brier Hill area. The soldier at the top of the statue is not the one placed there in 1870. In 1951, the original soldier was knocked down by acci-dent and had to be replaced.

Kidd also pointed out the restored copper statues re-turned to the top of the Ma-honing County Courthouse on Tuesday.

The courthouse opened in 1910 at a cost of $1.9 mil-lion – $50 million in today’s dollars.

In the earliest photos of Central Square, the Tod Hotel often is shown. The hotel existed from 1869 to 1969, and in that time be-came an important piece of Youngstown history. Sev-eral presidents stayed at the hotel, and in 1960 President John F. Kennedy gave a cam-paign speech to thousands

gathered in the square.“Sadly, we lost the hotel,”

Kidd said.Today, the hotel building

is International Towers, a federally subsidized housing facility for the elderly and disabled. It’s undergoing a $6.2 million renovation.

Also under renovation is the Stambaugh Building, dating to 1907. The building will reopen in December as a DoubleTree hotel.

“We have a great crowd down here,” Youngstown Mayor John A. McNally said at the birthday event. “If they haven’t been to downtown Youngstown for a while, they are going to see construc-tion going on. They are go-ing to see downtown restau-rants. They are going to see [Youngstown State Univer-sity] up the hill. For a lot of these folks, they are going to see something a lot cleaner and a lot nicer.”

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

A5 - 06/28/17

ROBERT K. YOSAY | THE VINDICATOR

Mahoning County Commissioners Carol Rimedio-Righetti and David Ditzler, left, and Anthony Trafi canti, right, recognize Vindicator reporter Peter H. Milliken, who will retire Friday after 36 years with the newspaper.

STATUESContinued from A1

JAILContinued from A1

CHARGEDContinued from A1

THERMALContinued from A1

SCHOOLSContinued from A1

Adair

BIRTHDAYContinued from A1

An enthusiastic crowd takes photos

as a 2,200-pound cluster of three

restored original copper statues with the same structure

as the Statue of Liberty is hoisted

back to the roof of the Mahoning

County Courthouse on Tuesday.

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CYAN BLACKYELLOWMAGENTA A06- 06/28/2017

MORE TRIBUTE(S) ON PAGE A7

BBAANNKKSS,, Rev. Keith Jackie, 71, of Farrell, Pa.; calling hours Saturday from 10 to 11 a.m. at Greater Pen-tacostal House of Prayer; J.E. Washington Funeral Services Inc. in Farrell.

BBEELLLLOOTTOO,, Mary Therese (Garch-ar), 85, of Columbiana; no calling hours; Kirila Funeral Home Inc. in Struthers.

BBIISSHH,, Robert D., 76, of Youngs-town; Kinnick Funeral Home in Youngstown.

BBRRAADDLLEEYY,, Corey L., 39, of War-ren, formerly of Youngstown; call-ing hours Friday from 10 to 11 a.m. at Warren Baptist Temple; Staton-Borowski Funeral Home.

BBRROOZZMMAANN,, Genevieve L., 92, of Youngstown; calling hours Thurs-day from 11 to 11:30 a.m. at Kinnick Funeral Home in Youngstown.

CCOOOOKKEE,, Robert W., 69, of Youngstown; calling hours Satur-day from 10 to 11 a.m. at J.E. Wash-ington Funeral Services Inc.

CCRRAAMMEERR,, Judith A. “Judy,” 76, of Youngstown; no calling hours; Davidson-Becker Funeral Home in Struthers.

DDEELL BBEENNEE,, Patsy S., 88, of Youngstown; calling hours Thurs-day from 4 to 7 p.m. and Friday from 9 to 9:45 a.m. at Schiavone Funeral Home.

DDOOLLWWIICCKK,, George “Skip” Jr., 66, of Stockton, Calif., formerly of Youngstown; calling hours Friday from 10 to 11 a.m. at St. Christine Church in Youngstown; Higgins-Reardon Funeral Homes, Austin-town Chapel.

DDOOWWNNIIEE,, Evelyn Innes “Evie,” 88, of Stevensville, formerly of Youngstown; calling hours Satur-day from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. at Da-vis-Becker Funeral Home in Board-man.

GGRROOVVEE,, Robert W., 78, of War-ren; visitation Thursday from 4 to 7 p.m. at Lane Family Funeral Homes, Madasz Chapel in Brook-field.

HHAARRRRIISS,, Georgia, 96, of Youngs-town; L.E. Black, Phillips & Holden Funeral Home.

LLAAHHAANNIISS,, Gust, 90, of Warren; calling hours today from 5 to 7 p.m. and Thursday from 10 to 10:30 a.m. at Peter Rossi & Son Me-morial Chapel in Warren.

MMccBBRRIIDDEE, Mary, 83, of Youngs-town; L.E. Black, Phillips & Holden Funeral Home.

MMOOSSLLEEYY,, William T., 53, of Campbell; L.E. Black, Phillips & Hol-den Funeral Home in Youngstown.

MMUUNNSSOONN,, Rose N. Norton, 95, of Champion Township, formerly of Bristolville; calling hours Thursday from 10 to 11 a.m. at Lane Family Funeral Homes, Roberts-Clark Chapel in Warren.

NNEEEELLYY,, Sarah Louise Holmes, 91, of Austintown; calling hours Fri-day from 10 to 11 a.m. at Mt.Calvary Pentecostal Church; L.E.Black, Phillips & Holden FuneralHome.

RRIICCHHAARRDDSS,, Ruth E. “Peggy,” 96, of Hubbard; Stewart-Kyle Funeral Home.

SSAAAADDEEYY,, Anthony J., 69, of Can-field; calling hours Friday from noon to 3 p.m. at St. Maron Church in Youngstown; Wasko Funeral Home in Campbell.

TTOODDDD,, Tracey, 55, of Warren; Staton-Borowski Funeral Home.

WWIILLLLIIAAMMSS,, Lizzie B., 90, of War-ren; calling hours Friday from 10 to 11 a.m. at Progressive Baptist Church; Staton-Borowski Funeral Home.

AUSTINTOWN - Mary Jane Dora-zio, 95, passed away Sunday after-noon, June 11, 2017, at Briarfield Manor.

Mary Jane, who was known to all simply as “Jane,” was born May 5, 1922, in Youngstown, a daughter of the late Ralph and Jenny Belmont Masto, and was a lifelong area resident.

Jane did secretarial work for several local companies, and was of the Catholic faith.

She enjoyed bingo, watching “Judge Judy,” and spending time with her sisters.

Jane leaves many nieces, neph-ews, and extended family mem-bers.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Silvio J. Dorazio, an

intelligence officer in the U.S. Air Force, whom she married July 7, 1969, and who passed away in March of 1975; two sisters, Lynn Mocker and Evelyn Klinko; and two brothers, Ralph and Louis Masto.

Private funeral services were held on June 20.

Arrangements were entrusted to Kinnick Funeral Home, 477 N. Meridian Road, Youngstown.

Please visit kinnickfuneral-home.com to view and share this obituary, and to send condolences online to Jane’s family.

06-28-17

YOUNGSTOWN - Judith A. “Ju-dy” Cramer, 76, died Sunday, June 25, 2017, at Select Specialty Hospi-tal in Youngstown.

Judith, affectionately known as “Judy,” was born Nov. 2, 1940, in Youngstown, a daughter of Wil-liam and Dorothy Miller Williams.

Judy was raised in Boardman and later moved to Austintown when she was in high school. She graduated from Austintown Fitch High School in 1958, and attended Youngstown State University, where she took business classes.

She met her husband, John “Bob,” while in high school and they were married on May 21, 1960. They moved to Poland in 1973, and later to Youngstown in 1991.

Judy first worked as a recep-tionist for General Fireproofing and then for Findley Welding. She later worked as a bookkeeper for her friend’s floral shop, Petals Plus 3 in Poland.

In her free time, Judy enjoyed watching the Cleveland sports teams and Ohio State football, do-ing puzzles and crafts, and play-ing games on the computer. While her children were young, she was very involved in the Poland Base-ball Association, helping with the concessions.

Judy found joy in spending time with her family and always looked forward to family vaca-tions in Hilton Head.

Her husband, Bob, preceded her in death on April 30, 2015.

Judy is survived by her three children, Bobbi Cramer of Youngs-town, Brian (Lisa) Cramer of Mar-ietta, Ga., and Amy (Richard II) Pe-duzzi of Poland; one grandchild, Domnise Muldrow of Marietta; her sister-in-law, Elaine (Ron) Mihalick of Austintown; and her compan-ion, Brinkly, the Springer Spaniel.

There will be no calling hours or services.

Arrangements are being han-dled by the Davidson-Becker Fu-neral Home in Struthers.

Memorial tributes may take the form of contributions to Hospice of the Valley, 5190 Market St., Boardman, OH 44512, or to Leave No Paws Behind by going to www.leavenopawsbehind.org.

Visit www.beckerobits.com to send condolences.

06-28-17

YOUNGSTOWN – Memorial serv-ices will be at noon on Saturday, July 1, 2017, at the Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 827 Wilson Ave. for Mr. Charles Dennis McCreary Jr., 54, who departed this life Wednesday, June 21, 2017, at The Cleveland Clinic.

Mr. McCreary was born Aug. 6, 1962, in Youngstown, a son of Charles D. Sr. and H. Claytees Co-peland McCreary.

He was a 1980 graduate of The Rayen School. Charles loved car detailing and was an avid Cleve-land Browns and Cleveland Cava-liers fan. He also collected antique model cars.

He leaves to cherish his be-loved memory, three sisters, Sybil Daniels of Clayton, N.C., Valerie (Tony) Berman of Waldorf, Md., and JoAnne McCreary of Cleve-land; and a host of nieces, neph-ews; and other family and friends.

He was preceded in death by

his parents; a brother, Tyrone McCreary; and grandparents Eu-gene and Marie McCreary, Patsy Gardner and Curley Copeland.

The family will receive friends from 11:30 a.m. to noon at the church.

06-28-17

CANFIELD - A memorial service celebrating the life of James Luke Dixon will be held at 11 a.m. on Sat-urday, July 1, 2017, at the West-minster Presbyterian Church. “Jim” passed away Saturday, June 24, 2017, at St. Elizabeth Boardman Health Center at the age of 85.

Jim was born on April 30, 1932, in Bellaire, the son of James A. and Nell (Luke) Dixon.

He graduated from Bellaire High School in 1950, then contin-ued with a Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy from Ohio Northern University. He was employed by Gray Drug, then joined in partner-ship with several other independ-ent drug stores. He was best known as the neighborhood phar-macist at Boardman Drugs.

Jim was a member of the West-minster Presbyterian Church and the Ohio Pharmaceutical Associa-tion.

He was married to Marylou Thomas in 1955, and they were married for 62 years.

His second love was spending time with his horses at “Far Away Farms” on Herbert Road.

Besides his wife, Jim leaves be-hind three wise and witty children (one of course whom wrote this), James T. (Brenda) Dixon of Can-field, Melinda L. Dixon of Colum-bus, and Jodi D. (Emil) Dzuray of Columbia, Md.; four grandchildren, Tyler and Kyle Dixon, Hadley and Hope Dzuray; two sisters, Lynne (Robert) Hess of Seneca Lake and

Diane (John) Pience of Springfield, Ohio; as well as his horses, S.O.B., Bobby Sox, Dusty, Chris, Star and Veda.

Jim was preceded in death by his parents and a grandson, Jona-than Dzuray.

Friends may call from 10 to 11 a.m. on Saturday at the West-minster Presbyterian Church, where a memorial service will be-gin at 11 a.m.

Friends and family may visit www.lanefuneralhomes.com to view this obituary and give their condolences.

06-28-17

STEVENSVILLE, MD. – EvelynInnes “Evie” Downie, 88, died Sat-urday, June 24, 2017, at her home surrounded by her loving family.

She was born Sept. 11, 1928, in Youngstown, a daughter of the late James and Sarah (Wilson) Downie.

Evie graduated from Boardman High School and then attended Youngstown State University, where she received her teaching degree. She taught for 35 years at Austintown Middle School.

Evie retired from teaching at 57 years old.

Evie is survived by her two sis-ters, Marguerite “Peg” Cannon and Sarah “Salle” Wallace; extend-ed loving family; and her dog, Scooby.

She was preceded in death by her brothers, William Downie and James Downie.

Evie lived in Stevensville with her two sisters, Peg and Salle and her dog, Scooby. They were known as the Golden Girls! Evie moved to Maryland in 1996 to live with her sister, Peg after Peg’s husband, James Cannon passed away.

Evie enjoyed world-wide travel-ing, happy hour in the hanger with the Kentmorr neighbors and friends, reading, vacationing with family and spending time with family and friends.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to SPCA

Anne Arundel County, 1815 Bay Ridge Ave., Annapolis, MD 21403 or by going to www.aacspca.org.

Family and friends will be re-ceived from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, July 1, 2017, at the Da-vis-Becker Funeral Home, 8536 Market St. in Boardman. A grave-side service will follow the visita-tion at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Boardman. Following the grave-side service, the family invites guests back to the Davis-Becker Family Center to share a meal and fellowship.

There will be a celebration of her life in Stevensville at a later date.

Visit www.beckerobits.com to send condolences.

06-28-17

CANFIELD - Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. on Thursday, June 29, at Lane Family Funeral Homes, Canfield Chapel for Karen Jane Meech Harnish, 71, who died early Monday morning at St. Elizabeth Health Center in Youngstown.

Karen was born Dec. 19, 1945, in Youngstown, a daughter of the later Harold C. and Marion (Boyer) Meech, and was a lifelong area resident.

Karen had worked at J.C. Pen-ney and also as a receptionist in the blood lab at Northside Medical Center. She was a member of the Greenford Christian Church and was a former member of the Can-field Presbyterian Church, where she sang in the choir.

Karen leaves a daughter, Trisha (Jason) Makara of Canfield; a son, William (Cheryl) Harnish of Mana-ssas, Va.; and six grandchildren.

Besides her parents, Karen was preceded in death by a sister, Su-zanne Meech.

Friends may call on Thursday from 10 a.m. until the time of the service at 11 a.m., at the funeral home.

Family and friends may visit www.lanefuneralhomes.com to view this obituary and send con-dolences.

06-28-17

AUSTINTOWN – Services will be at 11 a.m. on Friday, June 30, 2017, at the Mt. Calvary Pentecostal Church for Mrs. Sarah Louise Holmes Neely, 91, who transi-tioned from this life to eternal rest on Friday, June 23, 2017, at her home, surrounded by her lov-ing family.

Mrs. Neely was born May 1, 1926, in Brooksville, Miss., a daughter of Golda and Martha Holmes.

She was a graduate of Brooks-ville High School in Mississippi, and moved to the Youngstown area in the late 1940s.

She had been married to the late Wardell Neely Sr.

A devoted homemaker, Sarah loved to garden and shared many of her garden vegetables with her church family. She was a faithful member of the Mt. Calvary Pente-costal Church since its locations on Chicago Avenue and through its journey to Oakhill Avenue. She was a praying, committed warrior for Christ. She was a member of the senior choir and worked dili-gently in the kitchen for the church’s vacation Bible study pro-gram for many years. She loved to send cards and was committed to the bereavement and birthday card ministry.

She leaves to mourn her pass-ing, but to rejoice in her peace, six daughters, Louise (William) Ja-cobs, Patricia (Jessie) Palmer, Glo-ria Neely Tucker, Evelyn Neely Snipes, and Wanda Neely, all of Youngstown; her adopted grand-daughter, Gail Leflore, with whom she made her home; a son, James

Neely of Farrell, Pa.; 15 grandchil-dren; 10 great-grandchildren; sev-en great-great-grandchildren; a beloved nephew, Corensa Brooks of Maryland; a brother, John “Son-ny” Brooks of Illinois; and a host of other family, church family; and friends.

She was loved dearly by all of her family and friends, and will be greatly missed.

She was preceded in death by her parents; two children, Ruth Ann Wilson and Bobby Neely; a granddaughter, Tarina Neely; a great-grandson, Da’Jhon Neely; and a sister, Emma Lee McClurin.

“I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith.” II Timothy 4:7.

Friends may call Friday from 10 to 11 a.m. at the church.

Arrangements entrusted to the L.E. Black, Phillips & Holden Funer-al Home.

06-28-17

HUBBARD – There will be pri-vate services at 2 p.m. on Friday, June 30, 2017, at Hubbard Union Cemetery Chapel for Ruth E. “Peg-gy” Richards, 96, who passed away Sunday, June 25, 2017, at Humility House in Austintown.

Peggy was born March 13, 1921, in Youngstown, a daughter of Wil-liam Rosser and Grace Violet Os-born Richards. She had lived in many different cities including Greeneville, Tenn., Madeira Beach, Fla., and Waxhaw, N.C. before re-turning back to Hubbard.

She was a 1939 graduate of The Rayen School in Youngstown and attended Youngstown College. She also studied under Mr. Singer at the Butler Art Institute.

Peggy was a photographer’s colorist and was an accomplished artist, having some of her art work displayed in Washington, D.C. at the AFL-CIO-IUE Building.

Peggy was an artist and mis-sionary for Wycliffe Bible Transla-tors at JAARS (Jungle Air and Avi-ation Radio Service) of Waxhaw for over 30 years.

She was a member of the Trini-ty Presbyterian Church in South Carolina.

Her husband Jack Chester Ri-chards, whom she married Aug. 1, 1941, passed away July 14, 1980.

Peggy will be sadly missed by her children, Peggy Ann (Francis)

Fluent of Hubbard, Jack C. Ri-chards of Bluffton, S.C., and Jean (Aaron) Richards Smith of Char-lotte, N.C.; eight grandchildren; 13 great-grandchildren; and a great-great-grandchild. She also leaves her sister, Rosann Adams of Sebr-ing.

Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her hus-band.

Funeral arrangements are en-trusted to the care of the Stewart-Kyle Funeral Home.

Family and friends are invited to visit the funeral home’s web-site at www.stewart-kyle.com to share memories and condolences.

06-28-17

RUTH E. “PEGGY” RICHARDS, 96 CHARLES DENNIS MCCREARY JR., 54

COLUMBIANA – A Mass of Chris-tian Burial was held on Tuesday, June 27, at 10 a.m. at the Christ our Savior Parish, Holy Trinity Church for Mary Therese (Garch-ar) Belloto, 85, who died on Thurs-day, June 22, 2017.

Mary was born in Struthers on Oct. 18, 1931, the daughter of the late George M. and Mary (Bendzal-la) Garchar.

In November of 1949, she mar-ried her high school sweetheart, Robert J. Belloto. They spent the first three years of their marriage in Clarksville, Tenn., close to Fort Campbell, Ky., where Bob was sta-tioned. They returned to Ohio in 1952. They enjoyed 60 years of marriage until Robert passed away on Oct. 24, 2010.

Mary was a 1949 graduate of Struthers High School, and a Fi-delis Club and National Honor So-ciety member.

Before their marriage, she worked for her husband at his ac-counting practice and subse-quently worked at Youngstown State University for 20 years, where she earned an Associate Degree with honors and a Bache-lor’s Degree, cum laude, retiring in January of 1996.

She was a member of the Holy Trinity Church, the Infant Jesus of Prague Guild, FCSLA, Youngstown State University Retirees Associa-tion, an active participant with YSU Women Retirees, and a life-time member of Ohio PERI and a member of the local PERI. She al-so had been a 10-year member of the International Association of Administrative Professionals.

She very much enjoyed the longtime friendships she had with the dinner/card group friends and colleagues at YSU. She enjoyed holiday gatherings in the winter and the summer cookouts on Me-morial Day, Independence Day and Labor Day. She loved planning for and traveling with her husband.

Mary leaves five daughters, Ka-thy Jean-Ronci of Boardman, Terri

(Frank) Whitney of Ravenna, Marie Belloto (Randy McConnell) of Po-land, Linda Belloto of Cary, Ill., and Carol Vargo of Akron; five sons, Dr. Robert J. Belloto Jr. of Beaver-creek, Mark Belloto of Atlanta, Timothy Belloto of Akron, Walter Belloto of Struthers, and James Belloto of Leetonia.

She leaves 10 grandchildren, Todd (Jill) Ronci and Krista (Dr. Joseph) Dombroski, Ann and Christina Whitney, Michael and Phillip (Chelsea) Vargo, Taylor and Maggie Smith and Katie and Emily McConnell. She also leaves great-grandchildren, Max and Olivia and their sister, Ashley. She also leaves one brother, Stephen Garchar of Struthers and numer-ous nieces and nephews.

In addition to her parents and husband, Mary was preceded in death by six brothers, John, Ste-phen A., Michael, George, Andrew and Joseph Garchar; and a sister, Agnes Marie Koval.

As per Mary’s request, there were no calling hours.

Arrangements are by the Kirila Funeral Home Inc. in Struthers.

06-28-17

EVELYN INNES “EVIE” DOWNIE, 88

KAREN JANE MEECH HARNISH, 71 MARY JANE DORAZIO, 95

JUDITH A. “JUDY” CRAMER, 76

JAMES LUKE DIXON, 85

MARY THERESE (GARCHAR) BELLOTO, 85

SARAH LOUISE HOLMES NEELY, 91

“Together Again”

EMAIL: [email protected] TRIBUTES & LOCAL THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 A7

BLACK

AUSTINTOWN - Iola R. “Ollie” Cook, 69, passed away peacefully Sunday morning, June 25, 2017, at her home.

Iola was born Aug. 12, 1947, in Youngstown, a daughter of the late Sam and Virginia Swoger, and was a lifelong area resident.

She was a 1966 graduate of Chaney High School and worked as a crossing guard at Woodside Elementary School and at the Golden Rule Nursery in Austin-town. Ollie also cared for children in her home and became so close to Chelsea, Alex, and Ian Kotch, that they affectionately consid-ered her their “grandma.”

Ollie was a member of the Aus-tintown Democratic Womens’ Club and served as chaplain of Ameri-can Legion Post No. 301 in Austin-town, where she belonged to the Ladies Auxiliary.

Iola leaves her husband of al-most 50 years, William M. Cook, whom she married July 29, 1967; her son, Chris (Tammy) Cook of Boardman; her grandchildren, Corey and Christa Cook; her brothers, William (Maria) Griffith of South Dakota, David (Dorothy) Griffith of Painsville, Samuel (Becky) Swoger of Austintown, and Harold (Joyce) Swoger of Austintown; and many nieces and nephews.

A sister, Vietta Duponty, pre-

ceded her in death.Family and friends may call

from 4 to 7 p.m., Thursday, June 29, and from 10 to 11 a.m., Friday, June 30, at Kinnick Funeral Home, 477 N. Meridian Road, Youngs-town, where a funeral service will take place at 11 a.m.

Interment will follow at Brun-stetter Cemetery in Austintown.

Ollie’s family suggests that anyone wishing to make a memo-rial contribution, do so by donat-ing to the American Cancer Soci-ety in her name.

Please visit kinnickfuneral-home.com to view and share this obituary, and to send condolences online to Ollie’s family.

06-28-17

YOUNGSTOWN - Robert D. Bish, 76, passed away late Monday eve-ning, June 26, 2017, with his family by his side.

Robert was born Nov. 8, 1940, in Jefferson County, Pa., a son of the late Jeff and Pearl Hines Bish, and came to this area in 1966.

He leaves his wife of 55 years, Betty Condron Bish; two daugh-ters, Sharon (Joseph) Frease and Peggy Bish; six grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; a son-in-law, Greg Leberfinger; and four sisters, Bonnie, Shirl, Marge, and Carol.

A daughter, Karen Leberfinger, and a brother, Blaine are de-ceased.

A memorial service will be held at a later date.

Arrangements have been en-trusted to Kinnick Funeral Home.

Please visit kinnickfuneral-home.com to view and share this obituary, and to send condolences online to Bob’s family.

06-28-17

YOUNGSTOWN – Genevieve L. Brozman, 92, of the city’s west side, passed away peacefully Mon-day morning, June 26, 2017, at Shepherd of the Valley in Board-man.

Genevieve, who was known to all as “Jenny,” was born Dec. 16, 1924, in Youngstown, a daughter of the late Vincent and Katherine Ribic Bozich, and was a lifelong area resident, living in the same house since 1936.

Jenny attended Chaney High School and was a homemaker who dedicated her adult life to raising and caring for her family.

Mrs. Brozman was a member of St. Brendan Church in Youngs-town, and of its Altar & Rosary So-ciety. She was also a member of St. George Croatian Lodge No. 66, and she enjoyed traveling and dancing with her husband.

She leaves two sons, John V. (Joy) Brozman of Green Township and Jeffrey Brozman at home; two grandsons, Joshua and Jason Brozman; and two great-grand-children, Gabby and Noah.

Jenny’s beloved husband, John Brozman, whom she married Oct. 22, 1955, passed away July 5, 2015. Beside her husband, a grandson, John D. Brozman; three brothers, John, George, and Andrew Bozich;

and two sisters, Ann Maslowski and Mary Veres, are deceased.

Family and friends may call from 11 to 11:30 a.m., Thursday, June 29, at Kinnick Funeral Home, 477 North Meridian Road, Youngs-town, where funeral services will take place at 11:30 a.m.

Committal services will follow at Calvary Cemetery in Youngs-town, where Jenny will be laid to rest with her husband.

Please visit kinnickfuneral-home.com to view this obituary and to send condolences online to Jenny’s family.

06-28-17

STOCKTON, CALIF. – A Mass of Christian Burial will be held Friday at 11 a.m. at St. Christine Church in Youngstown, for George “Skip” Dolwick Jr., 66, who died May 25, 2017, at home.

George was born Sept. 9, 1950, in Youngstown, the son of George and Ellen (Duby) Dolwick Sr.

He was a 1968 graduate of Ur-suline High School and received his Bachelor of Science in Busi-ness Administration from Youngs-town State University.

George worked as an opera-tions manager for Western Tool and Supply in Oakland until retir-ing in 2010.

He is survived by his brother, Joseph Dolwick of Reynoldsburg.

George was preceded in death by his parents; sister Ellen Dol-wick; and brother Dominic Dol-wick.

Family and friends may call Fri-

day from 10 to 11 a.m. at the church.

Professional arrangements are being handled by the Higgins-Reardon Funeral Homes, Austin-town Chapel.

06-28-17

AUSTINTOWN – Mary B. Grubbs, 81, passed away peacefully Sun-day evening, June 25, 2017, at Vis-ta Center at The Ridge in Mineral Ridge, with family by her side.

Mary was born July 24, 1935, in Detroit, a daughter of the late Clyde and Alice Noland Cole, and came to the Youngstown area in 1969.

Mrs. Grubbs was a homemaker who also worked for the Tamarkin Company for 14 years, retiring in the mid-1980s.

Mary was a member of the Red Hat Society and of the Saxon Club.

She enjoyed arts and crafts, and she especially loved crochet-ing.

Mary liked fishing and in her younger years, was a garage sale enthusiast.

Her husband, Hubert Grubbs, whom she married in 1950, passed away April 6, 2008.

Mary leaves three children, Candice (Robert) Brown of Che-boygan, Mich., Wendy (Jacob) Hale of Conroe, Texas, and Daniel (Claudia) Grubbs of Austintown; five grandchildren, Richard Law-rence, Dylan (Hayley) Grubbs, Brent (Terri) Donaldson, Amy Pat-ton, and Lee Hale; nine great-grandchildren, Brandon, Jaden, Lincoln, Brooke, Ava, Jada, Ciara, Bentley, and Jordan; a sister, Claudia (Bobby) Vancil of Mineral Ridge; and a brother, James

(Cheryl) Bursey of Millersburg, Mich.

Besides her husband, Mary was preceded in death by two broth-ers, David R. Cole and Richard Cole.

Family and friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m., Thursday, June 29, at Kinnick Funeral Home, 477 N. Meridian Road, Youngstown, where funeral services will take place on Friday, June 30, at 9 a.m. Interment will follow at Brunstet-ter Cemetery in Austintown, where Mary will be laid to rest next to her husband.

Please visit kinnickfuneral-home.com to view and share this obituary, and to send condolences online to Mary’s family.

06-28-17

POLAND - A Mass of Christian Burial will be held Friday at 11 a.m. at the Holy Family Church, for Ri-chard “Dick” Mershimer, 81, who died Sunday evening at Sunrise Nursing Home, surrounded by his family.

Richard was born April 18, 1936, in West Sunbury, Pa., the son of Ford and Edith (Hall) Mershimer.

He was a 1954 graduate of Springfield Local High School and attended Youngstown State Uni-versity.

Richard was a carpenter by trade and owned his own con-struction company, R.g.M. Con-struction, for 20 years before be-coming the maintenance manager for Simco Management Corp. He retired from Simco in 2005.

Richard was a member of the Holy Family Church and past pres-ident for the Home Builders Asso-ciation.

In his spare time, Richard en-joyed hunting and attending his grandchildren’s sporting events.

Richard is survived by his wife, the former Helen Diba, whom he married Oct. 22, 1960; three daughters, Suzanne (Victor) Maras of Lyndhurst, Lisa Mershimer of Youngstown, and Stacey (Rich) Deemer of Poland; two sons, Rick (Betsy) Mershimer of New Middle-town and Gregg (Alisza) Mershi-mer of Austintown; sister Nancy (George) Tablack of New Middle-town; two brothers, Jim (Pat) Mer-shimer of Bessemer, Pa. and Gary (Shirley) Mershimer of Poland; and six grandchildren, Samantha and Adam Maras, Taylor and Ally Dee-

mer, Melissa Mershimer, and Chloe Mershimer.

He was preceded in death by his parents; granddaughter Paige Anne Mershimer; and sister Norma Bechtel.

Family and friends may call Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Higgins-Reardon Funeral Homes, Poland Chapel, and Friday from 10:30 to 11 a.m. at the church.

Richard’s family would like to thank Maplecrest, Sunrise of Po-land, and SouthernCare Hospice Services for the wonderful care and patience they showed him.

In lieu of flowers, material trib-utes take the form of donations to the Holy Family Church, 2729 Cen-ter Road, Poland, OH 44514; or Ak-ron Children’s Hospital, 6505 Mar-ket St., Boardman, OH 44512.

Visit www.higgins-reardon.comto send condolences to the family.

06-28-17

CHAMPION TOWNSHIP - Rose N. Norton Munson, 95, formerly of Bristolville, died Monday morning, June 26, 2017.

She was born Dec. 8, 1921, in North Bristol, the daughter of the late Francis and Rhea Hayward Norton. She was a lifetime area resident except for 18 years from 1982 until 2000, when she and her husband, Charlie, lived in Seneca, S.C.

Rose was a 1939 graduate of Bristol High School and attended Warren Business College. She worked for 35 years in the book-keeping department of Second National Bank and as an assistant manager at the Champion branch, retiring in 1982.

Rose was a member of the North Bristol Christian Church, where she sang in the choir and had served as treasurer.

She was a member of the Bris-tol Springs Country Club and was an avid golfer, accomplishing a hole in one at a course in Warren, Pa. She enjoyed playing cards and Bridge, shopping, dancing and traveling with her husband.

Rose is survived by one daugh-ter, Barbara J. (Dennis) Beach of Bristolville; one son, Thomas N. Munson of Cortland; seven grand-children, Amy (Gerald) Weil of Ka-ty, Texas, Kevin (Aimee) Munson of Southington, Douglas Beach of Chestnut Hill, Mass., David (De-nise) Beach of Brecksville, Allison (William) Laine of Greenboro, N.C., Curtis (Alicia Natale) Munson of Warren and Kyle (Samantha) Mun-son of Howland; 13 great-grand-children, Stephanie, Colin, Jack, Connor, Luke, Charlie, Egan, Eli, El-la, Nora, Ryan, Daylin and Edison; and one great-great-grandson, Anthony.

Her husband of nearly 64 years, Charlie W. Munson, whom she married June 8, 1943, preced-ed her in death on April 13, 2007. One sister and brother-in-law,

Dorothe and Earl Green, also have preceded in death.

The funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, June 29, 2017, at the Lane Family Funeral Homes, Roberts-Clark Chapel in Warren, where the family will re-ceive friends from 10 until the 11 a.m. service time. Pastor Jody Baker will officiate.

Burial will be at Sager Memorial Cemetery in Bristolville.

The family would like to ex-press their thanks to her primary caregivers, Kim Smith and Peggy Bruce for the loving and compas-sionate care shown to Rose.

Memorial contributions may be made to Hospice of the Valley, 5190 Market St., Youngstown, OH 44512, or to the donor’s favorite charity.

Please visit www.robertsclark-chapel.com where obituary may be viewed and online condolences given to the family.

06-28-17

AUSTINTOWN - Prayers will be said at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday at the Fox Funeral Home, followed by a Mass of Christian Burial cele-brated by the Rev. Peter Totle-bem, O.P., at 10 a.m. at St. Domin-ic’s Church for William “Bill” Gray Prest Sr., 73, who passed away peacefully Tuesday morning at his residence.

Bill was born June 15, 1944, in Youngstown, a son of Stanley and Katherine McGarry Prest.

He was a 1962 graduate of Car-dinal Mooney High School, and owned and operated Bill Prest Home Improvement before retir-ing in 2001.

Bill was a member of St. Domin-ic’s Church, where he was also cubmaster of their Pack 24.

He was an avid collector of Lio-nel trains and Gene Autry memo-rabilia.

Bill leaves to cherish his mem-ory, his children, William “Billy” Prest Jr. of Boardman, Kelly Koval and her husband, Sean, of Austin-town, with whom he made his home, and Brett Prest of Austin-town; his brothers, Sean McGarry of Youngstown, Edward (Nonnie) McGarry of New Middletown, Ken-neth (Terry) McGarry of Poland, Kevin (Kathy) McGarry of Cleve-land, Jonathon (Dana) McGarry of Pittsburgh, John and Steven Prest of Youngstown; his sisters, Mary Kay (Jerry) Wymer of Lisbon, Ruth Ann Libert of Hanoverton, Brigid McGarry of Pulaski, Pa., Maureen (Marty) Capito of Akron, and Erin (Ricky) Blume of Poland; grand-

daughter Kallie Koval, whom he loved to watch show horses; as well as many special in-laws, nie-ces and nephews.

Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, the former Katherine D. Smith, whom he married on Aug. 1, 1964, and who passed away June 21, 2013; and his grandson, Julian Gray Prest.

Material tributes can be made in Bill’s name to the Alzheimer’s Association, P.O. Box 96011, Wash-ington, D.C. 20090-6011.

Friends and family may call from 5 to 7 p.m. on Friday, at the Fox Funeral Home, 4700 Market St. in Boardman.

Family and friends may visit www.foxfuneralhome.org to view this obituary and send condolen-ces.

06-28-17

GENEVIEVE L. BROZMAN, 92

GEORGE “SKIP” DOLWICK JR., 66

MARY B. GRUBBS, 81

ROBERT D. BISH, 76

RICHARD “DICK” MERSHIMER, 81

ROSE N. NORTON MUNSON, 95

IOLA R. “OLLIE” COOK, 69

WILLIAM “BILL” GRAY PREST SR., 73

WARREN - Robert W. Grove, 78, passed away at his home on June 24, 2017.

“Bob” was born in Rittman on Jan. 5, 1939, to James and Lillie (Buchwalter) Grove Sr.

He went to Smithville schools, graduating in 1957. He graduated from Valparaiso Technical Insti-tute in 1962. Bob was in the U.S. Army from 1963 to 1964, stationed at Redstone arsenal in Huntsville, Ala. and spent one year in Baum-holder, Germany. He worked many years at Taylor Winfield Corp. as a test and service engineer on in-duction heaters and welders. He retired in 2005.

He was an avid hunter and fish-erman belonging to several clubs including 3 Rivers Muskies Inc. and was a life member of the NRA. He also belonged to American Le-gion Howland Post 700.

He was preceded in death by his parents; his brothers, “Jim” Jr. and Dick Grove; and his sisters Leora Kamp and Jean Boreman.

Bob is survived by his special friend, Marlene DeNiro Dzurina; his daughter, Christine Grove (De-nis) McLaughlin; Marlene’s son, John (Marianne) Dzurina; his grandchildren, Colin and Caitlin McLaughlin; and he was “Pop Pop” to J.T. and Breanne Dzurina. He’s also survived by his sisters, Beu-lah Olinger, Margaret Dickerson and Sandy Keeler; many nieces and nephews; as well as his Bich-on-Poo, Daisy.

Visitation will be held on Thurs-day, June 29, from 4 to 7 p.m., with a memorial service at 7 p.m. at the Lane Family Funeral Homes,

Madasz Chapel, 6923 Warren-Shar-on Road in Brookfield.

Military services at Ohio West-ern Reserve National Cemetery in Rittman will be held on Thursday, July 6, at 1:30 p.m.

Bob was thankful for Dr. Koon and the wonderful staff at Univer-sity Hospitals for the great care they gave to Bob during his battle with cancer.

Please visit www.lanefuneral-homes.com to leave condolences for the family.

In lieu of flowers, please make memorial donations to Hospice of the Valley, 5000 E. Market St., Suite 19, Warren, OH 44484.

06-28-17

ROBERT W. GROVE, 78

“Together Again”

“Together Again”

Staff report

BROOKFIELDTwo injection wells pro-

posed for land near the Wyngate Manor manufac-tured home community off of state Route 7 have been granted a permit allowing construction of the wells.

It lists 18 conditions that have to be met before com-mercial injection can begin.

The Ohio Department of Natural Resources con-fi rmed that the permits had been issued late Tuesday af-ter Teresa Mills, executive director of the Buckeye En-vironmental Network, pro-vided The Vindicator with a copy.

Mills, of the Columbus area, said the news that ODNR has agreed to allow the wells to be drilled is es-pecially disappointing be-cause of their proximity to homes.

“When I saw how close these were to the [mobile home] park, I was just fl ab-bergasted,” she said. “Why would you put it there?”

Jane Spies of Hubbard, a member of Frackfree Ameri-ca, who has organized rallies opposing the wells, said she

felt approving them is “irre-sponsible,” especially “in an area of known seismicity.”

Spies was referring to the Northstar injection well in Youngstown that caused a 4.0-magnitude earthquake Dec. 31, 2011, and smaller quakes that shut down the American Water Man-agement injection well in Weathersfield Township in 2014.

The permit references a concern the Brookfield Township trustees raised in a letter to the ODNR: aban-doned coal mines.

The permits acknowledge the proposed wells are in “an abandoned mine area,” so “a mine string may be neces-sary.” A mine string appears to be a reference to multiple strings of steel casing.

Highland Field Services must monitor for seismicity in at least three locations for at least 60 days before com-mercial injection begins, the permit says.

Rob Boulware, Highland spokesman, said the com-pany “will continue our out-reach to help the trustees and residents understand this project.”

BROOKFIELD TOWNSHIP

State OKs permit to build 2 injection wells

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

A7 - 06/28/17

A8 THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 TRIBUTES & LOCAL WWW.VINDY.COM

By ED [email protected]

WARRENThe Trumbull County

commissioners are ex-pected to approve the re-tirement and rehiring of Ernie Cook as county 911 director at their meeting today .

The commissioners’ agenda for Wednesday includes a resolut ion that would authorize the rehiring. Commissioners Frank Fuda and Mauro Cantalamessa, who were asked about it Tuesday, said they planned to vote in favor.

Cook was part-t ime county 911 director for several years, after the death in 2010 of the previ-ous 911 director, Michael Dolhancryk. Cook be-came full-time director in May 2016.

He earns $80,816 annu-ally and gets six weeks of paid vacation.

If his rehiring is ap-proved, his pay will drop $7,220 to $73,596 annu-ally, and he will give up four weeks of vacation worth $6,145, said Rich-ard Jackson, county hu-man resources director.

The county commis-sioners had a public hear-ing June 14, as required by law, to take comments from the public regarding Cook retiring and being rehired.

I n ot her bu si ne s s , the commissioners had a long d isc u ssion at Tuesday’s work session about possibly revers-ing an earlier decision to transfer rides for cli-ents of t he Tr umbu l l County Department of Job and Family Services to the county’s public transportation provider, Trumbull Transit.

Fuda said the way in which the rides are pro-vided – through contracts with various transpor-tation companies – has

w o r k e d efficiently, so he sees no reason to switch to some-thing that appears to b e m or e expensive.

The rides have cost about $20 each under the old system but are likely to rise to about $45 per ride under Trumbull Tran-sit, which provides rides through Community Bus Service of Youngstown, Fuda said.

W h e n t h e c o u n t y switched from providing rides for senior citizens through the Offi ce of El-derly Affairs to Trumbull Transit several years ago, the satisfaction level of the riders dropped, Fuda said.

He fears the same thing may happen if the rides for JFS are transferred to Trumbull Transit, Fuda said. He also fears that switching could lead to legal action being filed against the county com-missioners, he said.

Cantalamessa said he also believes the issue needs to be researched further. Fuda said he would like to schedule an additional public meet-ing involving the county commissioners and JFS to discuss it.

Michael Verich, mobil-ity manager for the tran-sit board, said the change from rides by Office of Elderly Affairs has saved the county a great deal of money.

He said the full transit board also approved the JFS change to the tran-sit board at a meeting in May, despite Fuda’s oppo-sition.

As for cost, Verich said it won’t necessarily cost $45 per ride. It will be up to the transit board and the companies bidding on the rides to agree on a price.

TRUMBULL COUNTY

Offi cials expectedto OK retire/rehire of 911 director Cook

COURTSMAHONING COUNTY

DOCKETJ. Bowers Construction Co. Inc. v.

Legal Arts Properties LLC, order of magistrate.

Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. v. Eric Knight et al, order of magistrate.

Anasha West v. WalMart Stores Inc. et al, order of magistrate.

Carrie Gray v. Michelle Ihlenfeld, order of magistrate.

Gladys M. Bell v. David Dubos, order of magistrate.

Gladys M. Bell v. Christopher L. Du-bos, order of magistrate.

State v. Kyle J. Patrick, sentenced.State v. Anthony Griffi n, dismissed.State v. Kendall Jones, sentenced.State v. Willie Daniel, pleads guilty.State v. Lisa M. Griffi n, sentenced.State v. Melanie J. Beacham, pleads

guilty.State v. Allen Lee, sentenced.State v. Steven L. Mango, pleads guilty.State v. Devon L. Culver, pleads guilty;

sentenced.State v. Jazmin Wilkins, pleads guilty.State v. Oneil Dean, pleads guilty.State v. Lynn Handschin, sentenced.State v. Daquan Henderson, pleads

guilty.State v. Joseph DiGicomo, pleads

guilty; sentenced.Firstmerit Bank NA et al v. Mary M.

Miller, order of magistrate.Domenico P. Sciaretta v. Refractory Spe-

cialists Inc. et al, summary judgment.Norman F. Dunlap Jr. et al v. Sebastian

Rucci et al, order of magistrate.Anthony J. Amatore v. US Petroleum

Exploration LLP et al, order of mag-istrate.

Thomas M. Bacha v. Sam Pitzulo Homes and Remodeling LLC et al, summary judgment.

Ditech Financial LLC v. Bill R. Wine et al, order of magistrate.

VL Funding LLC v. Erica S. Bowie et al, order of magistrate.

Brian R. Hubler v. Sarah D. Morrison et al, order of magistrate.

Elizabeth Ritchie v. Kenneth T. Bey et al, order of magistrate.

James E. Witt v. South Leasing Co. LLC et al, order of magistrate.

Auburn Hills Condominium Unit Own-ers Association Inc. v. Ronaldo A. Rossi et al, settled and dismissed.

Ditech Financial LLC v. Patricia A. John-son et al, order of magistrate; confi rma-tion of sale and ordering distribution.

Daniel R. Yemma v. James L. Hopson Jr. et al, order of magistrate.

Daniel R. Yemma v. Johnny V. Nardelli et al, foreclosure.

Essex Healthcare Corp. v. Darla Martin et al, order of magistrate.

Brianna Wall v. Mark E. Gossman et al, order of magistrate.

Farmers National Bank v. Leonard J. Williams, default judgment.

Daniel R. Yemma v. Thomas D. Taylor et al, foreclosure.

Daniel R. Yemma v. John W. Hecka-thorn II et al, foreclosure.

Michael R. Pearson v. Nichole Collins et al, order of magistrate.

Daniel R. Yemma v. Chelsea A. Fin-cham et al, foreclosure.

Midland Funding LLC v. Rebeca San-tiago, default judgment.

Salvatore Sorice et al v. Catalina A. Currier et al, order of magistrate.

Gina Castranova v. Osiris Therapeutics Inc. et al, order of magistrate.

Sabrena Grantling v. CR Properties 2015 LLC et al, order of magistrate.

Daniel R. Yemma v. B and J Improve-ment Co., foreclosure.

Adrienne A. Sardich v. Director of Ohio Department of Job and Family Ser-vices et al, order of magistrate.

Daniel R. Yemma v. Brian Robinson et al, foreclosure.

Meek Wright v. Sandra Calderon et al, order of magistrate.

Margarita Encarnacion v. Caleb S. Eas-thon et al, order of magistrate.

Norma J. Hempstead v. Mercy Health Youngstown LLC, order of magistrate.

Daniel R. Yemma v. Rick A. Bates et al, order of magistrate.

Howard C. Hargate v. Nicole Pachol, judgment in favor of plaintiff.

Gabriel McRoberts v. Janie Shanks, order of magistrate.

State v. Spiro Frangos, sentenced.State v. Emanuel Valentin, pleads guilty.State v. David Shaffer Jr., sentenced.State v. Victoria Gregory, pleads guilty.State v. Gary Booth, sentenced.State v. Dajaun Perry, sentenced.State v. Frank Little, sentenced.State v. Dwaylen Sellers, dismissed.State v. James K. Thomas, pleads guilty.State v. Christopher Council, pleads

guilty.Ohio State of Department of Job and

Family Services v. State Link Plumb-ing and Heating Inc. et al, order of

magistrate.Jean McCammon v. Youngstown Sports

Grille et al, settled and dismissed.National Collegiate Student Loan Trust

2003-1 v. Kathy Laughlin, satisfi ed.Estebania Morales et al v. Michael R.

Pascolini DO et al, count 2 dismissed.Donna Rousher v. Christopher C. Giv-

ens et al, dismissed.Russell F. Roberts v. Superior Roofi ng and

Siding LLC et al, order of magistrate.Daniel S. Mazzei et al v. Megan N.

Quimby et al, dismissed.Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. v.

Thomas E. Simpson et al, confi rma-tion of sale and ordering distribution of proceeds.

ABL Wholesale Distributors Inc. v. CLR Corp. et al, summary judgment.

US Bank National Association v. Al-bert M. Buttry Jr. et al, confi rmation of sale and distribution of proceeds.

Estate of Henry P. Nemenz v. Robun E. Agee et al, settled and dismissed.

Javad D. Manshadi MD et al v. Albert Bleggi MD et al, order of magistrate.

US Bank Trust NA v. Laura A. Wake-ford et al, confi rmation of sale and ordering distribution of proceeds.

JPMorgan Chase Bank NA v. John J. Plunkett et al, property from sher-iff’s sale withdrawn.

Nicholas Dominic v. Stone Appeal Inc., dismissed.

Kent State University v. Jessica M. Miller, dismissed.

Betty P. Willard v. Camelot Arms Care Center et al, order of magistrate.

Thomas C. March v. WIS International et al, settled and dismissed.

Terry C. Ball Jr. v. Bessemer Concrete LLC et al, settled and dismissed.

Clyde G. Higgins v. Sarah Morrison et al, settled and dismissed.

Elizabeth Ritchie v. Kenneth E. Bey et al, order of magistrate.

Melissa A. Greenwalt v. Michelle Oli-ver et al, order of magistrate.

Ditech Financial LLC v. Andrea J. Pryjma et al, sale withdrawn.

US Bank Trust NA v. Sharon E. Yambar et al, confi rmation of sale, ordering deed and distribution.

Rebecca Whalen et al v. Thomas W. Riebe et al, dismissed.

New Beginnings Residential Treat-ment Center LLC et al v. Steel Town LLC et al, order of magistrate.

Robert N. Farinacci v. First Energy Corp. et al, order of magistrtae.

Home S&L Co. of Youngstown Ohio v. John T. McCarthy et al, confi rmation of sale and ordering distribution.

CTW Development Corp. v. Rubino Sign Co. LLC et al, order of magistrate.

Nancy Walter v. Gerald Morrsion Jr. et al, order of magistrate.

Bayview Loan Servicing LLC v. James H. Crawley et al, sale withdrawn.

JPMorgan Chase Bank National As-sociation v. Matthias S. Loyer et al, foreclosure.

Wells Fargo Bank NA v. Jeffrey Stanovcak et al, order of magistrate.

Homebridge Financial Services Inc. v. An-drea L. Kerr et al, order of magistrate.

Daniel R. Yemma v. Thomas M. Kovac-ich et al, foreclosure.

Jerry Martinelli v. Don Perkins, order of magistrate.

Melissa S. Manypenny et al v. Domin-ique E. Goodin, order of magistrate.

Franchising Unlimited LLC v. Patrick Howlett et al, settled and dismissed.

Wilmington Trust National Associa-tion v. Heather L. English et al, order of magistrate.

Home S&L Co. of Youngstown Ohio et al v. Stephanie L. Abu-Qaduorah et al, judgment entered.

Richard Warren v. Kessler Marketing Group Inc. et al, order of magistrate.

Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. v. Rochelle L. Turpin et al, dismissed.

Farmers National bank v. Robert T. Porter IV, default judgment.

Progressive Specialty Insurance Co. v. Kalen L. Cross et al, judgment in favor of plaintiff.

Creative Sport Concepts Inc. v. Sabre Technologies LLC et al, order of magistrate.

Emily R. Kreusler v. Alfa Vision Insur-ance Corp., order of magistrate.

Charles Hudak et al v. Rural Metro of Northern Ohio Inc., order of magistrate.

Warrior Imports LLC v. HSBC Bank USA NA, dismissed.

Grange Mutual Casualty Co. v. Jason Webb, judgment in favor of plaintiff.

Nellie Fernandez v. Humility of Mary Health Partners et al, order of mag-istrate.

Wells Fargo Bank NA v. John D. Bader et al, dismissed.

Elaine Rosensteel v. James Hribar, decision of magistrate.

Anita Smith v. Lisa Cappitti, dismissed.Megan Wiley v. Joan Consiglio, order

of magistrate.Heather Atkinson v. Zackary Eubank,

order of magistrate.Wells Fargo Bank NA v. Geraldo Muniz

et al, confi rmation of sale and distri-

bution of proceeds.Joseph Battista v. Laurence M. Kilbert

et al, order of magistrate.Briarfi eld Manor LLC v. Gwenda L.

Riehl et al order of magistrate.Daniel R. Yemma v. Michael J. Thompson

et al, property withdrawn from sale.Patricia Fusillo v. Steve Buehrer et al,

order of magistrate.Wayne Gerber et al v. Nationwide

Insurance Co. et al, order of magis-trate.

OCWEN Loan Servicing LLC v. Najee N. Muhammed et al, confi rmation of sale and ordering distribution of proceeds.

Alfonso Byrd et al v. Boston Williams et al, judgment in favor of plaintiff.

Jimmyann B. Bates v. Marcus Belton, dismissed.

Huntington National Bank v. Melissa J. White et al, foreclosure.

Phillip Iannucci v. Thomas B. Dolly et al, order of magistrate.

Charles Mines v. Schwebel Baking Co. et al, settled and dismissed.

Citifi nancial Servicing LLC et al v. Walter C. Woods et al, order of magistrate.

Midfi rst Bank v. Christy M. Durham et al, confi rmation of sale and distribu-tion of proceeds.

Daniel R. Yemma v. John D. Justice et al, settled and dismissed.

HSBC Bank USA NA v. William J. Ad-ams et al, order of magistrate.

OPRS Communities v. Charles J. Mitchell Sr., order of magistrate.

Edward T. Saadi v. American Family In-surance Co. et al, default judgment.

Daniel R. Yemma v. Donald P. Jones et al, property withdrawn from sale.

Samantha M. Custer v. Edward M. Householder et al, dismissed.

Wells Fargo Bank NA v. James N. Fal-cone et al, foreclosure.

Citimortgage Inc. v. Osvaldo O. Figueroa Jr. et al, foreclosure.

Huntington National Bank v. Gerald Johnson et al, default judgment in favor of plaintiff.

Tabitha M. Schewirey v. Walmart Stores Inc. et al, order of magistrate.

Daniel R. Yemma v. Mark R. King et al, foreclosure.

Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. v. Mar-va Wesson et al, order of magistrate.

Daniel R. Yemma et al v. William Mun-tean et al, foreclosure.

Clorrissia M. Perry et al v. Rite Aid Pharmacy et al, order of magistrate.

US Bank NA v. Gina L. Dunn et al, foreclosure.

Huntington National Bank v. Alfred O. Bischoff et al, foreclosure.

Alan R. Kretzer et al v. Mahoning Law Library Association et al, order of magistrate.

Southwestern Run Professionals v. State Auto Mutual Insurance Co., order of magistrate.

Daniel R. Yemma v. Nick Cooper et al, foreclosure.

Robert D. Latimer v. Darrell K. Nelson et al, order of magistrate.

State Farm Mutual Automobile Insur-ance Co. v. Nicholas S. Huncherick et al, order of magistrate.

WDP Investments LLC v. Steve Pylipiw, order of magistrate.

Wells Fargo Bank NA v. Milan M. Pav-lich et al, dismissed.

Showmen Supplies Inc. v. John A. Richardson et al, order of magistrate.

Sherman J. Miles v. Edward C. Prusak, magistrate’s decision.

Amanda Guterba v. Frank Elling, order of magistrate.

State v. Zoltan J. Kozic, sentenced.State v. Jacob Graham, sentenced.State v. Lance Hundley, judgment

entered.State v. Joseph L. Rutherford, sen-

tenced.State v. Jolleen Boggs, sentenced.State v. David M. Schmitz, sentenced.State v. Raymon Autry, pleads guilty;

sentenced.State v. Felicia A. Ward, pleads guilty.State v. Joseph Croom, pleads guilty;

sentenced.State v. Kevin A. Michaels, dismissed.State v. Fred Lewis III, pleads guilty.State v. Jerel Cutlip, pleads guilty;

sentenced.State v. Jawan Johnson, pleads guilty;

sentenced.State v. Randy Woods, sentenced.State v. Charles Wilson, pleads guilty.State v. Michael Ghiates, pleads guilty.State v. Donald Dunlap III, pleads

guilty.Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. v.

William P. Baldelli Jr. et al, dismissed.PNC Mortgage v. Frank J. Krynick et

al, order of magistrate.Terry W. Foor et al v. Sterling Mining

Corp., order of magistrate.JPMorgan Chase Bank NA v. John J.

Plunkett et al, property withdrawn from sheriff’s sale.

Anthony J. Sava v. Clean Textile Sys-tem Inc. et al, order of magistrate.

US Bank Trust NA v. Shirley M. Bur-gess et al, confi rmation of sale and distribution of proceeds.

West Hampton Homeowners Associa-tion v. Daniel J. Welsh et al, order of magistrate.

Salvatore Sorice et al v. Catalina A. Currier et al, order of magistrate.

James Merino v. Patricia A. Berto-lette, order of magistrate.

Kerri A. Gries v. Lindsay M. Tomc-sanyi, order of magistrate.

Reuben L. Chamberlain v. PAM Trans-port Inc. et al, order of magistrate.

Bruce Hefl in Jr. v. California Palms Hotel Inc. et al, order of magistrate.

Federal National Mortgage Associa-tion Fannie Mae v. Estate of Despe-na Dickson, order of magistrate.

AMC Custom Carpentry LLC v. William Gartland et al, order of magistrate.

Luke O’Lesky v. Youngstown State University, order of magistrate.

Ruth A. Raymond v. James Platt, dismissed.

Jessica Carnahan v. Brandy Gallager, dismissed.

Jessica Carnahan v. Kobe Hayden, dismissed.

Staff report

WARRENDerwin R. Norman Jr., 21, of Au-

tumn Drive Northwest, was sen-tenced to 28 months in prison Tues-day for compelling an Ashtabula County girl to work as a prostitute and other crimes.

The case attracted attention after the Youngstown Police Department issued

a notice March 8 about the girl, 15, of Geneva being a missing and endan-gered teen after walking away from a Youngstown group home.

She had been spotted at locations on Youngstown’s South Side, includ-ing homes in the Hillman Street/West Lucius area, Youngstown police said.

She was later found at a home on

Wade Street in Niles with Norman. Investiga-tors learned he had been driving the girl around to facilitate prostitu-tion.

Norman also pleaded guilty to illegal use of a minor in nudity-orient-ed material or perfor-mance related to photos of the girl.

Warren man sentenced to prison in prostitution case

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NIKOS FRAZIER | THE VINDICATOR

City pool opens: It’s time to dive in for funYoungstown’s only public swimming pool is fi nally open and, from left, Zoe Santana, 11, Jaime Santana, 13, Jamier Hum-phreys, 11, and Tae’von Crop, 11, test the water. The Northside Pool on Belmont Avenue was supposed to open June 12, but couldn’t because of a lack of lifeguards. The pool is open from 1 to 7 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays with Aug. 11 being the last day. The cost to swim is $1 for those age 17 and younger and $2 for age 18 and older. Children under age 12 must be accompanied by an adult.

Norman

Cook

Courtesy of

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EDITORIAL WEDNESDAYJUNE 28, 2017VINDY.COM | A9

William F. Maag Sr., February 28, 1850–April 10, 1924William F. Maag Jr., July 26, 1883–February 29, 1968

William J. Brown, June 14, 1913–August 14, 1981

Past Publishers

Betty H. Brown Jagnow, President & PublisherMark A. Brown, General Manager

Published Daily | Youngstown, Ohio

T H E P E O P L E ’ S PA P E R � Founded June 1869

MORE THAN 6½ YEARS AGO, the Mahoning County Court-house lost its trademark Justice,

Law, and Strength and Authority. In Oc-tober 2010, crews removed those three grandiose statues that reigned supreme atop the award-winning century-old ar-chitectural gem of Mahoning County government.

Fears over the potential collapse of the cracking support structure upon which the 14-foot-tall and 17-foot-wide statues rested forced their removal and construc-tion of a temporary roof as part of a large-scale $6.8 million renovation and restora-tion project to protect public safety and to restore the historic building’s aesthetic allure.

That ambitious project was ceremoni-ously capped Tuesday with the hoisting of the imposing copper statutes back high atop their home on the restored roof of the 106-year-old structure, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places for its architectural and engineering sig-nifi cance.

By all accounts, those handling the res-toration of the 2,200-pound trademark of the courthouse performed impeccable work. The statues were restored to their robust green exterior color that had black-ened from decades of soot and acid rain from the city’s once pollution-belching steel mills. The McKay Lodge Fine Arts Conservatory Laboratory Inc. in Oberlin, nationally recognized for the quality of its craftsmanship, did commendable work.

Based on early reviews and fi rst impres-sions, the same can be said for the overall courthouse renovation work under the direction of Murphy Contracting Co., the project’s general contractor. Some tasks remain, but the project is almost at its fi n-ish line at long last.

Though behind schedule and some-what over its $6 million cost estimate, the extra time and expense appear to have been well worth the fi nal results.

As Doug Martinec, construction su-perintendent with Murphy Contracting, put it, “It says a lot about our tax dollars at work.”

Mahoning County Commissioner An-thony Trafi canti was effusive in his enthu-siasm. “This is a beautiful building, over 100 years old. The statues on the top of the building are the crown jewel,” he said, adding their return represents a highlight of his career.

SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS But amid the oohs and awws of the out-

ward visual improvements to the court-house, one must not lose sight of the broader and more important mission of this invest-ment: enhancing public health and safety.

Structural engineers had cited signifi -cant dangers posed by neglect, including rusted carbon steel anchorages that once secured the rooftop cornice and balus-trade. We also well remember the plight of one county common pleas court judge who endured water leaks through the ceiling and into her fourth-floor cham-bers. That’s hardly a snapshot judicial decorum on display.

With the restoration project in the home stretch, those dangers and embarrass-ments are becoming problems of the past. Given the painstaking attention to the project’s many details, we’re confi dent that county leaders and project contrac-tors have succeeded in restoring maxi-mum integrity – as well as Justice, Law, and Strength and Authority – high atop and throughout the county landmark for decades to come.

The Record (Hackensack, N.J.):Unlike previous years, the U.S. Supreme Court is not ending its term this week with landmark rulings, but instead, setting the stage for what will surely be a new term marked by life-changing decisions. At the end of June, all eyes are focused on the fi rst Monday in October, when that term begins.

The most signifi cant court announce-ments this week centered on two cases it will hear in the fall: one on religious liberty, as it applies to same-sex mar-riage, and the second on President Don-ald Trump’s controversial travel ban.

While two federal appeals courts have ruled against the implementation of the ban, the high court Monday lifted parts of that stay pending its hearing argu-ments in the new term.

The religious liberty case comes from Colorado, where a baker refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple, claiming that it would violate his First Amendment protections. A ruling for the baker would embolden states that have tried to enact so-called “religious liberty” laws

By SAM PIZZIGATIOtherWords

Jeff Immelt, CEO of GeneralE l e c t r i c s i n c e 2 0 01, i s retiring. The 61-year-old will be making a well-compensated exit.

Fortune maga zi ne est i-mates that Immelt will walk off with nearly $211 million, on top of his regular annual pay. Immelt’s annual pay hasn’t been too shabby either. He pulled down $21.3 million last year, after $37.25 million in 2014.

But Immelt’s millions don’t come close to matching the haul that his predecessor Jack Welch collected. Welch’s annual compensation topped $144 mil-lion in 2000. He stepped down the next year with a retirement package valued at $417 million.

What did Immelt and Welch actually do to merit their super-sized rewards? What did they add to a GE hall of fame that a l re ad y i nclude d bre a k-throughs like the first high-altitude jet engine (1949) and the fi rst laser lights (1962)?

In simple truth, not much at all.

“We bring good things to life,” the GE ad slogan used to proud-ly pronounce. Not lately.

And not surprisingly either. Mature business enterpris-es, we’ve learned over recent decades, either make break-throughs for consumers or grand fortunes for their top execs. They don’t do both.

W hy not? Making break-throughs, for starters, takes t ime. Enterprises have to invest in research, training, and

nurturing high-performance teams.

Years can go by before any of these investments bear fruit. By that time, the executives who made the original investments might not even be around.

Grand fortunes, by contrast, can come quick. CEOs can downsize here, cut a merger there, then sit back and watch short-term quarterly earnings – and the value of their stock options – soar.

If those don’t do the trick, CEOs can always just slash worker pensions or R&D and put the resulting “savings” into divi-dends and “buybacks,” two slick corporate maneuvers that jack up company share prices and in-fl ate executive paychecks.

SLICKNESS SCALEOn any CEO slickness scale,

Jack Welch would have to rank right near the top. In 1981, his fi rst year as the GE chief, Welch quickly realized he was never going to get fabulously rich making toasters and irons.

So Welch started selling off GE’s manufacturing assets. In his fi rst two years, analyst Jeff Madrick notes, Welch “gutted or sold” businesses that employed 20 percent of GE’s workforce.

By 2000, Welch was making about 3,500 times the income of a typical American family.

By contrast, in 1975, Welch’s predecessor took home mere-ly 36 times that year’s typical American family.

As Welch’s successor, Jeffrey Immelt would give an apolo-gy of sorts in a 2009 address at

West Point. Corporate America, he told the corps of cadets, had wrongfully “tilted toward the quicker profi ts of fi nancial servic-es” at the expense of manufactur-ing and R&D, leaving America’s poorest 25 percent “poorer than they were 25 years ago.”

“Rewards became perverted,” Immelt went on. “The richest people made the most mistakes with the least accountability.”

Unfortunately, and sadly, Immelt never took his own analysis to heart. As a rich CEO in his own right, he continued to make mistakes and suffer no particular consequences.

One example: After the Great Recession, Immelt froze the GE worker pension system and offered workers a riskier, less generous 401(k). Within five years, notes the Institute for Policy Studies, the GE pen-sion deficit widened from $18 billion to $23 billion – even as Immelt’s personal GE retire-ment assets were nearly dou-bling to $92 million.

“If we want to slow – or bet-ter yet, reverse – accelerating income inequality,” the Har-vard business historian Nancy Koehn noted a few years ago, “the most powerful lever we have to pull is that of outrageous executive compensation.”

How many more outrageouslycompensated executives will retire off into lush sunsets, the Jeff Immelt story virtually begs us to ask, before we start yank-ing that lever?Sam Pizzigati, an Institute for Policy Studies as-sociate fellow, co-edits Inequality.org. His latest book is The Rich Don’t Always Win. Distributed by OtherWords.org.

By MARK DAVISThe Dallas Morning News

Republicans and Demo-crats are clinging to the sup-posed lessons of the Karen Handel victory over Jon Os-soff in Georgia’s 6th Con-gressional District. The fi rst thing both sides should real-ize is we are in a season when lessons have short lives.

So if it is wise to know what we do not know, let’s measure the burst of reac-tion to this election against some broader possibilities.

First, Republicans are sud-denly happy to say the vote was indeed a referendum on Donald Trump, a prospect they would have rejected if Handel had lost. But it is a large leap to conclude that her 52 percent vote total equals a 52 percent approval for Trump districtwide. It’s probably also true that more than half of voters did not wish to send a Democrat to Congress who would have joined the quixotic Nancy Pelosi quest to cobble together an impeachment effort.

And in many districts in the 2018, that may be all Trump needs – voters who might not love his policies or style, but are suffi ciently tolerant of him to fend off the dog-and-pony show that would surely begin if Demo-crats regained the majority.

Make no mistake, today’s Democrat power structure is not driven to merely op-pose Trump on immigra-tion, taxes, national security and climate policies; it lives to destroy him, presidentially and personally. The Ameri-can left wants regime change, and it doesn’t want to wait for the 2021 inauguration.

STRATEGY: HATE TRUMPIs that seething hatred for

Trump a winning strategy for winning seats in Con-gress? The Ossoff case of-fers no clue. As Democrats go, he was uncommonly re-strained in his criticism of the president, offering poli-cy positions that suggested a moderate stance designed to win over affl uent, educat-ed suburban voters.

It didn’t work. Democrat strategists are wondering if they might have had better success with a sharper at-tack on Trump and a more liberal candidate, creating sharper lines of distinction.

They might have. The buzz is that one of Ossoff’s big obstacles was his failure to be sufficiently compel-ling. The centrist vote tends to lean Republican in Re-publican districts, especial-ly the ones that have handed out GOP victories since the Jimmy Carter era.

Atlanta Journal-Consti-tution political writer Greg Bluestein thinks Ossoff will challenge the incumbent Handel in a campaign that would have to gear up very soon for primaries less than a year away.

Don’t bet on it. If he couldn’t crack an open seat, it is unlikely he will bring the skill set to defeat an in-cumbent. He may even face skepticism among Demo-crats, who will apply the eternally unforgiving test question: What happened in your last race? Bitter memo-ries will be fresh.

Democrats have a larger problem. If Handel’s win was a referendum on Trump, Os-soff’s loss was surely a refer-endum on House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. Han-del supporters deftly placed Pelosi around Ossoff’s neck in a barrage of ads designed to stain him with her strato-spheric negatives among Republicans.

So yes, the Georgia vote was a dodged bullet for Re-publicans and a gut-punch for Democrats. But many news cycles lie between this week’s instant analysis and the mid-terms. By then, will Trump free himself from the annoying and present-ly empty Russia scandals, perhaps even putting some points on the board in leg-islative accomplishments? Or will the Russia fantasies sprout actual evidence, par-alyzing his entire agenda?

That question will matter far more next year than any microanalysis of the Geor-gia result.Mark Davis is a radio host in north Texas and a columnist for The Dallas Morning News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

SCRIPTURESAll Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profi table for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.

2 Timothy 3:16

GUEST EDITORIAL

Companies keep enriching CEOs

Senate health care billis reverse Robin Hood

TH E Y S A Y T H A T figures lie and liars fig-ure. I’m sure there will

be a number of economists, health care lobbyists and other “experts” to bombard us with self-serving facts and data to support their position on the Senate proposal to repeal Obamacare.

For me, it is not that com-plicated – it amounts to Robin Hood in reverse.

Very simply, this Republican plan takes money, tax credits and other valuable benefi ts and advantages from the old, sick, poor, disabled and women and transfers them in the amount of $880 billion to the very rich.

That would be mean-spirited, cruel, bad economics and has-ten the inequality in America. Tax cuts for the rich – is that all Republicans work for?

Atty. Dick McLaughlin, Liberty Township

Ohio needs high-speed rail

AS A RESIDENT OF THEgreat state of Ohio, I and ma ny Oh ioa ns t r u ly

want our state to prosper, ad-vance and grow, and contin-ue to become an economic and industrial power creating new jobs, attracting and growing populations, as well as continu-ing to advance academically, technologically and progressive-ly in the 21st century.

I and many Ohioans believe

that Ohio and all of our elect-ed leadership of both politi-cal parties from around the state must now invest in, cre-ate and develop a 21st century high-speed rail transporta-tion transit system connecting city to city: Cleveland, Akron, Youngstown, Canton, Colum-bus, Cincinnati, Dayton, To-ledo, as well as, many college towns across Ohio.

Ohio should do this just as President Abraham Lincoln did when he signed into law in 1862 the railroad act creating the transcontinental railroad.

So I and many Ohioans be-lieve that now is the time in this the 21st century for our state to advance, grow and move for-ward by creating a high speed rail transportation transit sys-tem across our state. That would make all state residents proud to call Ohio home.

Willie James Richards,Youngstown

US becomes an oligarchy

WH E N B A R A C KObama was elected president in 2008, the

Republicans vowed to make him a one-term president. After his re-election, they tried to re-peal the Affordable Care Act (61 times) and used a record num-ber of filibusters to halt all of his progressive issues. When all this failed, they claimed he was taking our government to socialism. When Bernie Sanders was campaigning in 2016, Republicans said he was definitely a Socialist because he wanted free college for our children and affordable single-payer health care for all.

You have to ask yourself: Do the American people really want an educated, healthy, working society? Apparently, the Repub-licans do not.

Oligarchy is a word derived from Greek words that mean “few to rule”: a government with a small group exercising control for corrupt and selfi sh purposes.

Thanks to our Supreme Court with its Citizens United deci-sion, it has given billionaires, the Trump administration and the like the power to buy our elections and change our coun-try to fi t their personal agendas.

The only way to “make our country great again” is to take it back from “the few to rule.” We all need to get more involved and stand united.

David P. Gaibis, New Castle, Pa.

Ga. racehard to

interpret

Letters must be signed, must carry the writers’ addresses and daytime telephone numbers. The editorial page editor reserves the right to reject, edit and condense letters (300-word maximum). Publication

does not constitute an endorsement of the views, opinions and statements of fact expressed. Unused letters will not be acknowledged or returned. Poetry, letters to third parties, thank-you letter and photocopies are not accepted. �Mail to: Letters to the Editor, The Vindicator, P.O. Box 780, Youngs town, Ohio 44501. �E-mail to: [email protected] Please do not send e-mail attachments.

OPINION LETTERS

Restoration strengthenssafety, allure of courthouse

Supreme Court fall preview

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Ex-Trump campaign chairman registers as foreign agent

WASHINGTONPresident Donald Trump’s

former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, has regis-tered with the Justice De-partment as a foreign agent for political consulting work he did for a Ukrainian politi-cal party, acknowledging he coached party members on how to interact with U.S. government offi cials.

Manafort says in the fi ling posted online by The Wash-ington Post that his fi rm re-ceived more than $17 million from the Party of Regions, the former pro-Russian ruling party in Ukraine, for consulting work from 2012 through 2014.

EPA chief met with Dow before deciding on pesticide ban

WASHINGTON Records show the Trump

administration’s top en-vironmental offi cial met privately with the chief executive of Dow Chemi-cal shortly before reversing his agency’s push to ban a widely-used pesticide after health studies showed it can harm children’s brains.

Environmental Protec-tion Agency chief Scott Pruitt’s schedule shows he meet with Dow CEO Andrew Liveris for about a half hour March 9 during a conference held a Houston hotel.

Twenty days later Pruitt announced his decision to deny a petition to ban Dow’s chlorpyrifos pesti-cide from being sprayed on food, despite a review by his agency’s scientists that concluded ingesting even minuscule amounts of the chemical can interfere with the brain development of fetuses and infants.

FDA looks to boost generic competition, limit prices

WASHINGTON The Food and Drug Ad-

ministration is making moves to boost the num-ber of generic prescription drugs on sale.

The goal is to make medi-cines more aff ordable and prevent price gouging. The FDA will give priority reviews to new generic drugs until there at least three on the market.

High court term ended much different than it began

WASHINGTON The Supreme Court

began its term nine months ago with Merrick Garland nominated to the bench, Hil-lary Clinton favored to be the next president and the court poised to be controlled by Democratic appointees for the fi rst time in 50 years.

Things looked very dif-ferent when the justices wrapped up their work this week.

The court’s fi nal decisions and orders were almost emphatic declarations, if there had been any doubt, that this is once again a con-servative-leaning court that may only move more to the right in the years to come.

The justices gave Presi-dent Donald Trump the go-ahead to start enforcing at least part of his travel ban, showed that the wall between church and state is perhaps not as high as it once was and invigorated a baker’s religion-based refus-al to create a wedding cake for a same-sex couple.

Associated Press

Selected local stocksSTOCK, DIVIDEND . . . . .CLOSE CHANGEAlcoa Inc., .12 . . . . . . . 31.66 0.48Aqua America, .71 . . . 33.53 -0.16Avalon Holdings,. . . . . . 2.44 -0.01Chemical Bank, .27 . . . .47.03 0.77 Community Health Sys. 9.58 0.23Cortland Bancorp, .28. 18.25 0.05Farmers Nat., .16 . . . . 14.25 0.00First Energy, 1.44 . . . .29.70 -0.39Fifth/Third, .52. . . . . . 25.12 0.30FirstMerit Corp., . . . . . . . . . - -First Niles Financial, .12 10.00 -1.15FNB Corp., .48 . . . . . . . 13.82 0.06General Motors, 1.52 . 34.19 -0.33General Electric, .92 . . .27.20 -0.41Huntington Bank, .28 12.91 0.12iHeartMedia Inc., . . . . . 1.55 -0.05JP Morgan Chase, 1.92 88.06 0.82Key Corp, .34 . . . . . . . . 18.20 0.08LaFarge, .34. . . . . . . . . . . . . - -Macy’s, 1.51 . . . . . . . . 23.08 0.61Parker Hannifi n, 2.52 156.31 -0.76PNC, 2.20. . . . . . . . . . 121.12 0.74Simon Prop. Grp., 6.60 162.46 2.01Stoneridge . . . . . . . . 14.97 -0.26United Comm. Fin., .12 .7.95 -0.01Selected prices from Tuesday’s 4 p.m. close.

WORLDdigest

WEDNESDAYJUNE 28, 2017

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Associated Press

NEW YORK For a president seem-

ingly at perpetual war with “fake news,” the resignation of three CNN journalists over a retracted story about a Donald Trump Russian connection is a gift from the political gods when the struggling effort to pass a health bill dominates the headlines.

The White House quick-ly took advantage Tuesday with blistering presidential tweets and a media scolding at the afternoon press brief-ing. Conservative provoca-teur James O’Keefe piled on by releasing a video with a CNN producer caught on camera talking about the network’s Russia coverage being ratings-driven.

CNN late Monday ac-cepted the resignations of journalists Thomas Frank, Eric Lichtblau and Lex Haris over last week’s web story about Trump aide Anthony Scaramucci’s pre-inaugural meeting with the head of a Russian investment fund. The network retracted the story Friday and apologized to Scaramucci.

Trump has been unhap-

py with CNN since he was a candidate, and has been particularly annoyed by its reporting on connections with Russia. The misstep on a relatively minor story – it was never mentioned on any of CNN’s television networks – left some White House staff members ju-bilant, believing it handed them a new talking point.

That happened quickly Tuesday when Sarah Hucka-bee Sanders called on a Bre-itbart News reporter for the first question of the White House briefi ng. It was about CNN.

She said the “constant barrage of fake news” at the president has frustrated Trump. She called stories about Russia and Trump “a hoax” that is distract-ing from other news. Sand-ers urged all Americans to watch a video posted by O’Keefe’s Project Veritas fea-turing CNN producer John Bonifield – even though she couldn’t vouch for its accuracy.

After Sanders left the stage, she was criticized on Fox News Channel, where Trump-friendly views usu-ally dominate.

Associated Press

WASHINGTON The Trump administra-

tion expects to launch a limited version of its travel ban on six mostly Muslim countries Thursday, but has yet to say how it will be implemented or what it will do to avoid the chaos that accompanied the initial ban.

Government law yers were working on guidelines Tuesday, one day after the Supreme Court partially reinstated the ban ahead of hearing arguments in Oc-tober. The court said the

administration can block travelers from Syria, Sudan, Somalia, Libya, Iran and Yemen unless they can prove a “bona fi de relation-ship” with a person or en-tity in the United States.

The court offered only broad guidelines about what would constitute such a relationship – suggest-ing it would include a close relative, a job offer or an in-vitation to lecture.

The court ordered simi-lar limitations on President Donald Trump’s plan to temporarily halt all refugee admissions. But that may

have minimal effect for now. Of the 50,000 refugees the government planned to accept in the current bud-get year, more than 48,900 have been allowed to enter the U.S.

The State Department has said that the few re-maining refugees to be admitted this year will not have to prove a “bona fi de relationship.”

A new cap won’t be in place until the start of the budget year in October, around the time that the Supreme Court considers the case.

Associated Press

BRUSSELS After a seven-year legal

battle, European authori-ties came down hard on Google on Tuesday for tak-ing advantage of its domi-nance in online searches to direct customers to its own businesses, fining the tech giant a record $2.72 billion and raising the prospect of more.

A yearslong analysis of Google’s online search re-sults showed that the com-pany lists links to its own online shopping services above those of rivals, Eu-ropean regulators said. On average, Google lists search results to its biggest rivals in online shopping only on page 4 – and smaller rivals

even lower. That’s a huge advantage for Google when 90 percent of use-clicks are on page one.

The ruling that Google is taking advantage of its mar-ket dominance in online searches paves the way for a broader crackdown by the EU, which is investigating several other Google busi-nesses, such as its online im-ages and travel businesses.

To avoid more pain in Eu-rope, Google will have to change the way it does busi-ness in the region. It has 90 days to stop favoring its own links to online shopping or face more fines of up to 5 percent of the average daily worldwide revenue of par-ent company Alphabet.

Associated Press

WASHINGTON The Pentagon said Tues-

day it has detected “active preparations” by Syria for a chemical weapons attack, giving weight to a White House threat that the Syrian government would “pay a heavy price” if it carried out such an attack.

The U.S. accusation and ominous warning marked a further escalation of ten-

sions in a country where the U.S. is using Syrian Arab and Kurdish proxy sol-diers to combat the Islamic State group in its remain-ing strongholds, even as Russia and Iran work to support President Bashar Assad, who has gained the upper hand in a long civil war.

A Pentagon spokesman, Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, said the U.S. had seen “activity”

at Shayrat airfi eld that “in-dicated active preparations for chemical weapons use.”

That is the same base from which the Syrian air force launched an attack in April that the U.S. and others said used lethal chemicals to kill civilians. Syria denied the charge.

Nikki Haley, the U.S. am-bassador to the United Na-tions, said the White House warning was meant for a

wider audience.“The goal is at this point

not just to send Assad a mes-sage, but to send Russia and Iran a message,” Haley told a House panel. “That if this happens again, we are put-ting you on notice. My hope is that the president’s warn-ing will certainly get Iran and Russia to take a second look, and I hope that it will caution Assad.”

Assad’s government and

Russia dismissed the White House allegation. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that “such threats to Syria’s legitimate leaders are unacceptable.”

Russia is Assad’s key back-er and sided with him when he denied responsibility for a chemical weapons attack that killed dozens of people in Idlib province April 4.

Associated Press

Technology stocks led a broad slide in U.S. stocks Tuesday after a day of most-ly choppy trading.

Phone and utilities com-panies were among the big decliners after a sell-off in bonds sent yields sharply higher. Banks bucked the broader market decline amid heightened expecta-tions of rising interest rates. Oil prices rose for the fourth-straight day.

Late-afternoon devel-opments in Washington helped put investors in a selling mood.

Republican leaders in the Senate decided to delay a vote on a health care over-haul bill until after the July 4 recess.

“The delay of the health care vote added to a little bit of the uneasiness going into the quarter end here,” said Sean Lynch, co-head of global equity strategy at the Wells Fargo Investment In-stitute. “It’s just worries that some of this political noise can complicate the chance of possible ta x reform, health care reform and other policy measures that could boost the economy.”

Pentagon: ‘Active preparations’ for Syrian chemical attack

Retracted CNN story a boon for president at war with media

Technology companies fall sharply, leading indexes lower

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Travelers walk near a sign for international arrivals at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on Monday in Seattle.

Few answers on travel ban as launch deadline looms

ASSOCIATED PRESS

European Union Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager speaks during a media conference at EU headquarters in Brussels on Tuesday.

Google hit with record fi ne by EU, told to change its ways

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@VINDYSPORTS VINDYSPORTSWEDNESDAYJUNE 28, 2017

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• SCOREBOARD, B2 • MLB, B3 • NASCAR, B5• CLASSIFIEDS, B5

Akron Beacon Journal (TNS)

Carmelo Anthony’s insis-tence on remaining in New York despite Knicks president Phil Jackson’s belief he should fi nish his career elsewhere is rooted in Anthony’s desire to remain close to his 10-year-old son Kiyan.

That’s what his estranged wife, La La Anthony said Tues-day on “The Wendy Williams Show.”

Asked if they were divorc-ing, La La Anthony, who has

k n o w n h e r husband since he was 19 and been married for seven years, said, “Not right now,” and add-ed of Carmelo, “We’re the best of friends.”

She said she will continue to live in New York.

T her e h a s been specula-tion that An-thony, 33 and a 10-time All-

Star, would be a top target of the Cavaliers if the Knicks de-cide to buy out his contract, which has a no-trade clause. ESPN’s Ian Begley said at this point the Knicks would prefer to trade Anthony.

“Every day I see a different team, that’s for sure,” La La Anthony told Williams. “The most important thing with that is to stay close to Kiyan. That’s my priority. That’s his priority. So wherever he ends up, of course we want him to be happy.”

Sources told Begley that Anthony was leaning towards leaving the Knicks when the regular season ended, but his family situation has changed his thinking.

Chicago’s Dwyane Wade, another candidate for the Cavs in a buyout scenario, would have to return part of the $23.8 million player option he opt-ed in on last week for that to happen, Bulls executive vice president John Paxson said in a press conference Tuesday.

Wade, 35, said in January he didn’t want to be part of a rebuild and Paxson sent the Bulls in that direction Thurs-day when he traded three-time All-Star Jimmy Butler to the Minnesota Timberwolves.

“I know (general manager) Gar (Forman) has spoken to Leon Rose, Dwyane’s agent,” Paxson said, according to ESPN.com. “As far as a buy-out, it has not been broached. I will say this, that in this type of scenario, it would have to ben-efi t us. It would absolutely have to benefit us. Dwyane was a great pro last year, and he’s been around a lot of different situations. He was in Miami when they had a couple re-building years as well. So right now we’re operating under the assumption that he’ll be here. But like I said, if that subject is ever broached by them, then it would have to be advanta-geous for us.”

Wade was a teammate of Cavs star LeBron James for four years with the Miami Heat and both Wade and An-thony remain close friends with James. All three were chosen in the top fi ve picks in the 2003 draft.

Associated Press

WASHINGTONThe Supreme Court agreed

Tuesday to take up New Jer-sey’s bid to allow sports bet-ting at its casinos and race-tracks, a case that could lead other states to seek a share of the lucrative market.

The justices will review a lower court ruling against the state, which is hoping to capture some of the estimated $150 billion that is illegally wa-gered on sports each year.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Chris-tie and supporters in the state Legislature have tried for yea rs to le-galize sports gambling to b ol st er t he state’s casino and horse rac-ing industries. T he c a si no industry, af-ter a period of job losses and closings, has lately been do-ing better.

C h r i s t i e said Tuesday in Trenton at an unrelated event that he was encour-aged by the court’s decision to take the case up.

“We’re not declaring victory but at least we’re in the game and that’s where we want to be,” Christie said.

New Jersey state Sen. Ray-mond Lesniak, a Democrat who has led the state’s effort to legalize sports gambling, said a win for the state would give an additional boost to ca-sinos.

“Atlantic City is going to be packed when we win this case,” said Lesniak, who fi rst introduced legislation to over-turn the ban in 2009. “Sports betting will lead to people staying for several days, not just playing a few hours and going home. During football season, the NCAA tourna-ment, the World Cup, people will be fl ocking to Atlantic City to bet on them.”

The case will be argued in the fall. Daniel Wallach, an attorney in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and an expert in sports law, said the case could lead to a nationwide repeal of the fed-eral sports betting ban.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals struck down the New Jersey law last year, ruling that the law violated the fed-eral Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992 that forbids state-authorized sports gambling.

“This is the day that New Jer-sey has been waiting for for years,” said Wallach, who has been closely following New Jersey’s legal efforts to over-turn the ban.

The court jumped into the case even after the Trump ad-ministration urged the justices not to get involved, putting the governor and the president he campaigned for on oppo-site sides of the issue. Presi-dent Donald Trump also once owned the Trump Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City. It closed last October under the owner-ship of fellow billionaire Carl Icahn, who sold it in March

By CHARLES [email protected]

You won’t be seeing dou-ble at Valley Christian foot-ball games this year. There will be not one, but two head coaches patrolling the side-lines this fall for the Eagles.

Jeff Hether, last year’s of-fensive coordinator, and Jomont Ware, last year’s as-

sociate head coach, will try to turn around the program that went 2-7 a year ago un-der Albert Jennings.

“[Athletic director Dolph] Carroll approached us about it and we said ‘Sure. Why not?’” Ware said. “Me and [Hether] are good friends. We’re kind of like brothers.”

Hether will oversee the of-

fense while Wa r e w i l l oversee the d e f e n s e , a long w it h their respec-tive coordi-nators. The two believe the partnership will fl ourish in part because of their simi-

lar styles.“ We a r e

exactly the same,” Het-her said. “We probably talk 4-5 times a day too and see each oth-

er three times a week. We’ll be like, ‘What do you think

about this?’ It’s good that we’re that close. We’ll both be on the same page.”

Ware laughed off the idea that confl icts will arise just because two coaches are in charge.

“We put ourselves in situ-ations where we ask, ‘What’s going to happen in this situ-ation?’” Ware said. “We’re

not different in terms of de-meanor and our styles are the same. I don’t think he’s going to mind if I say we need a timeout or we should think about running this play.

“My wife is always asking, ‘Who are you talking to?’

Two head coaches better than one for Eagles

Anthony wants to be in NY,wife saysSpeculation tied NBA star to Cavs

SupremeCourt to reviewbettingNew Jersey seekslegalized gambling

Associated Press

CLEVELANDAdrian Beltre had an extra reason to cel-

ebrate moving up the all-time home run list. This latest shot also won a game.

Beltre hit his 450th career homer, a solo drive in the ninth inning off Cody Allen that sent the Texas Rangers over the Cleveland Indians 2-1.

“Obviously it’s a good mile-stone, but I don’t want to get caught up on thinking about that right now,” he said. “Hopefully I can accumulate some more.”

Beltre drove the fi rst pitch from Allen (0-4) into the left fi eld bleach-ers, and moved into sole possession of 39th place on the career chart.

“That’s just another piece of the legend of Adrian Beltre, really, and just what he’s able to do, especially late in the game,” Rangers manager Jeff Banister.

Beltre has been limited to 24 games be-cause of a right calf injury, but has 13 RBIs in his last nine games, including a three-run homer Monday.

“He got me,” Allen said. “He was ready for

— MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL —

Double defeats

Beltre lifts Rangers over Tribe

Associated Press

PITTSBURGHDavid Freese was thinking

about throwing the ball before it was in his glove. He never got the chance to wing it.

Freese mis-played a ground-ba l l at t h i rd base, allowing Steven Souza Jr. to score in the 10th inning and

giving the Tampa Bay Rays a 4-2 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday night.

With Souza at fi rst base and no outs, Wilson Ramos hit a hard grounder off Felipe Rivero (3-2) that Freese missed while trying a backhand stab. Adeiny Hechavarria added a sacrifi ce

fly in the inning, giving him two RBIs in his fi rst game since being traded from the Miami Marlins on Monday.

Freese was anticipating his throw to second base when the ball skipped right by him.

“I just booted the ball,” he said. “It was good (hop). I just chose to backhand it, think-ing it would give me a stronger throw wherever it was going. I just botched it.”

The Pirates were no-hit through six innings by starter Alex Cobb, but Andrew Mc-Cutchen forced extra innings with a two-run double down the left fi eld line in the ninth.

Tommy Hunter pitched the

Freese’s error in 10th hands Rays victory

See INDIANS, B3

See PIRATES, B3 See BETTING, B2

See EAGLES, B4

Wade

Hether

RANGERS 2 INDIANS 1

Next: Texas at Cleveland, today, 7:10 p.m.

RAYS 4 PIRATES 2

Next: Pittsburgh vs. Tampa Bay, today, 7:05 p.m.

Ware

ATLANTIC CITY IS

GOING TO BE PACKED WHEN WE WIN THIS

CASE.Raymond

Lesniak,New Jersey

state senator

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Texas Rangers’ Adrian Beltre watches the ball after hitting a solo home run off Cleveland Indians relief pitcher Cody Allen in the ninth inning of a game Tuesday in Cleveland.

Cleveland Indians starting pitcher Mike Clevinger delivers a pitch in the fi rst inning of a game against the Texas Rangers on Tuesday in Cleveland.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Tampa Bay Rays’ Adeiny Hechavarria drives in a run with a sacrifi ce fl y off Pittsburgh Pirates relief pitcher Felipe Rivero during the 10th inning of a game Tuesday in Pittsburgh.

Anthony

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

B2 - 06/28/17

B2 THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 SCOREBOARD WWW.VINDY.COM

SPORTSdigest

Salem man competes in Senior Olympics

WESTERVILLERandy Strader of Salem took

second place in the shot put and third place in the discus in his age category (70-75) on June 24 at the Ohio State Senior Olympics at Otterbein University.

Strader has been a member of the United States Masters Track and Field Team since 1984 and was inducted into the Ohio Senior Olympics Hall of Fame in 2013.

Elliott signs extension with Hendrick

CHARLOTTE, N.C.Chase Elliott has signed a

four-year contract extension to drive for Hendrick Motorsports through 2022.

The current contract ran through 2018 for Elliott, driver of the iconic No. 24 Chevrolet.

Elliott originally signed with Hendrick Motorsports as a de-velopment driver in February 2011 as a 15-year-old high school freshman. He replaced Jeff Gor-don last year in the Cup Series and was the top rookie. Elliott qualifi ed for the playoff s and had 10 top-fi ve fi nishes and 17 top-10s. He also won two poles, including the season-opening Daytona 500.

He is currently sixth in the Cup standings, but still seeking his fi rst series victory.

Elliott is the son of NASCAR Hall of Famer Bill Elliott.

New Indiana coach to make $24M

INDIANAPOLIS New Indiana coach Archie Mill-

er will make $24 million under his seven-year deal — and potentially even more in bonuses.

Miller accepted the job in March, but the athletic depart-ment didn’t announce details of the contract until Tuesday.

He will receive a base salary of $550,000 per year and $1 million in deferred income each season. Miller also will receive an additional $1.85 million in out-side marketing and promotional income — and will get a $50,000 per year raise each year through March 2024.

Miller can earn a $250,000 bonus for winning a national championship. He can earn an additional $125,000 for a Big Ten regular-season title, reaching the Final Four and producing mul-tiyear Academic Progress Rate scores over 950.

Cubs making informal visit to White House

WASHINGTONManager Joe Maddon and

some of the Chicago Cubs will visit the White House on Wednes-day, though it’s not an offi cial visit with President Donald Trump.

Maddon said Tuesday that he was going out of respect for the Ricketts family, which owns the Cubs and donated to Trump’s campaign. Maddon said it was voluntary for players and not an offi cial trip.

The Cubs are in Washington to play the Nationals.

The White House visit is so un-offi cial that Maddon said it’s only “a possibility” that he and the Cubs will see Trump. The team visited President Barack Obama at the White House as World Se-ries champions in January before the end of his term.

Amid questions about whether the NBA champion Golden State Warriors will visit Trump, Maddon said he isn’t making a political statement by going.

World Cup report says no major corruption

SOCHI, RUSSIAFIFA has published investigator

Michael Garcia’s report into bid-ding for the soccer World Cups of 2018 and 2022 won by Russia and Qatar, ending 2-1⁄2 years of speculation about its contents.

FIFA released the 430-page dossier which confi rms that sev-eral countries bidding to host the tournament tested the rules with vote-trading talks, but no major corruption was proven.

Publication followed less than 24 hours after Germany’s biggest-selling daily Bild began reporting extracts of the report.

World football’s governing body says “for the sake of trans-parency” it welcomes the report being published.

Garcia’s team found “no evidence” Russia’s bid team or Vladimir Putin, then prime minister, unduly infl uenced FIFA voters.

Staff /Wire reports

TV & RADIOTODAY

2 p.m. (FS1) Soccer: FIFA Confederations Cup Russia semifi nal.

7 p.m. (MLBN) MLB: Cubs at Nationals.

7 p.m. (Root) (WNIO-AM 1390) (WLLF-FM 96.7) MLB: Rays at Pirates.

7 p.m. (STO) (WKBN-AM 570) MLB: Rangers at Indians.

7 p.m. (WBBW-AM 1240) Baseball: Scrappers at Black Bears.

8 p.m. (ESPN) College baseball: World Series Finals Game 3.

11 p.m. (MLBN) MLB: Dodgers at Angels.

THURSDAY8 a.m. (GC) European Tour HNA

Open de France.Noon (STO) (WKBN-AM 570) MLB:

Rangers at Indians.12:30 p.m. (GC) Women’s golf:

LPGA Tour KPMG Women’s PGA Championship.

2 p.m. (FS1) Golf: Champions Tour U.S. Senior Open Championship.

2 p.m. (NBCSN) Auto racing: NASCAR Xfi nity Series practice.

3 p.m (NBCSN) Auto racing: NASCAR Monster Energy Cup practice.

3:30 p.m. (GC) Golf: PGA Tour Quicken Loans National.

4 p.m. (MLBN) MLB: Cubs at Nationals or Cardinals at Diamondbacks.

4 p.m. (NBCSN) Auto racing: NASCAR Xfi nity Series practice.

5 p.m (NBCSN) Auto racing: NASCAR Monster Energy Cup practice.

6 p.m. (UHD) Swimming: U.S. National Championships.

7 p.m. (ESPN) MLB: Twins at Red Sox.

7 p.m. (Root) (WNIO-AM 1390) (WLLF-FM 96.7) MLB: Rays at Pirates.

7 p.m. (WBBW-AM 1240) Baseball: Scrappers at Black Bears.

7:30 p.m. (GC) Women’s golf: LPGA Tour KPMG Women’s PGA Championship (recorded).

8 p.m. (ESPN2) WNBA: Seattle at Connecticut.

10 p.m. (ESPN) Arm wrestling.10 p.m. (MLBN) MLB: Dodgers at

Angels or Braves at Padres.FRIDAY

8 a.m. (GC) European Tour HNA Open de France.

12:30 p.m. (GC) Women’s golf: LPGA Tour KPMG Women’s PGA Championship.

2 p.m. (FS1) Golf: Champions Tour U.S. Senior Open Championship.

2 p.m. (NBCSN) Auto racing: NASCAR Xfi nity qualifying.

2:30 p.m. (ESPNU) UEFA Euro Under-21 championship match.

3:30 p.m. (GC) Golf: PGA Tour Quicken Loans National.

4 p.m. (NBCSN) Auto racing: NASCAR Monster Energy Cup qualifying.

6 p.m. (UHD) Swimming: U.S. National Championships.

7 p.m. (ESPN2) CFL: BC at Toronto.7 p.m. (Root) (WNIO-AM 1390)

(WLLF-FM 96.7) MLB: Giants at Pirates.

7 p.m. (STO) (WKBN-AM 570) MLB: Indians at Tigers.

7 p.m. (WBBW-AM 1240) Baseball: Scrappers at Black Bears.

7:30 p.m. (GC) Women’s golf: LPGA Tour KPMG Women’s PGA Championship (recorded).

7:30 p.m. (NBCSN) Auto rac-ing: NASCAR Xfi nity Subway Firecracker 250.

8 p.m. (MLBN) MLB: Yankees at Astros or Nationals at Cardinals.

9:30 p.m. (ESPN) Soccer: Real Salt Lake vs. Orlando City SC, MLS.

10 p.m. (ESPN2) Boxing: Negrete-Frias (super bantamweights).

10:30 p.m. (NBCSN) MMA: Fitch-Foster, Professional Fighters League.

11 p.m. (MLBN) MLB: Dodgers at Padres or Braves at Athletics.

LATEST LINEMLB

National LeagueFavorite Odds (O/U) UnderdogColorado Even-6 (8.5) SAN FRANWASHINGTON 7 1⁄2-8 1⁄2 (8.5) Chi CubsNY Mets Even-6 (9) MIAMIMilwaukee Even-6 (9) CINCINNATIARIZONA 5 1⁄2-6 1⁄2 (9.5) St. LouisSAN DIEGO Even-6 (8.5) Atlanta

American LeagueFavorite Odds (O/U) UnderdogTORONTO 8-9 (9.5) BaltimoreDETROIT 5 1⁄2-6 1⁄2 (9.5) Kansas CityBOSTON 7-8 (10.5) MinnesotaCLEVELAND Even-6 (9) TexasHOUSTON 7 1⁄2-8 1⁄2 (9.5) OaklandNY Yankees Even-6 (9.5) CHI W SOX

InterleagueFavorite Odds (O/U) UnderdogSEATTLE 8-9 (9) PhiladelphiaPITTSBURGH 5 1⁄2-6 1⁄2 (8.5) Tampa BayLA Dodgers Even-6 (9) LA ANGELS

WNBAFavorite Points (O/U) UnderdogIndiana 1 1⁄2 (164) CHICAGO

CFLThursdayWeek 2

Favorite Points (O/U) UnderdogCALGARY 8 (55.5) Ottawa

FridayFavorite Points (O/U) UnderdogTORONTO 1 (51) B.C. LionsEDMONTON 8 1⁄2 (48.5) Montreal

SaturdayFavorite Points (O/U) UnderdogWinnipeg 1 (49) SASKATCH

Home Team in CAPS

Career home runs for Adrian Beltre. No. 450 came in the top of the ninth inning Tuesday night and gave the Texas Rangers a 2-1 win over the Indians.

“I’d see a quarterback and be like, ‘Dude is garbage, and I’m over here in the kitchen cooking turkey necks!?’ ”

SPORTS BY THE NUMBERS

450Source: Associated Press

QUOTABLE

VINCE YOUNG, former NFL QB, on watching some players still in the league:

NOTICESBASEBALL

Tod Park in Girard — is where tourna-ments will be for 8U, 10U and 12U all-star teams from July 5-9. Cost is $225 per team with a three-game minimum. No travel teams. For more information, con-tact Rick Plant at 330-219-1610 or Ray Carpenter at 330-509-4797.Brookfi eld Youth Baseball — will host 9-10 and 11-12 tournaments from July 13-16. These will be all-star tournaments. No travel teams. For more information, con-tact Ken Forsythe at 330-502-0750.Boardman Community Baseball — will hold a 8U coach-pitch and 9U and 10U tournaments from July 20-23 at Fields of Dreams. For information, contact Tom Sullivan at 330-719-3222 or visit www.boardmanbaseball.com. Eastwood Field in Niles — will be where former Youngstown State assistant coach Craig Antush will conduct a baseball camp from Aug. 2-4 from 9 a.m.-noon. Camp is for boys and girls ages 6-14. Cost is $100 rain or shine. Campers should bring drinks and snacks. For more information or to register, contact at Antush at 304-633-8150 or email him at [email protected].

BASKETBALLMahoning Valley Basketball Offi cials Association — is looking for athletes ages 14 and up interested in becoming high school basketball offi cials. Those interest-ed should contact Don Dobrindt at [email protected] for more information.

COACHINGCardinal Mooney High School — is seek-ing head coaches for its varsity girls bas-ketball, boys golf and boys and girls tennis teams. Interested candidates should send resumes to Athletic Director Don Bucci, Cardinal Mooney High School, 2545 Erie St., Youngstown, Ohio 44507 or email them to [email protected] eld Local High School — is seeking

a head varsity boys basketball coach for the 2017-18 season. Interested applicants should submit a letter of interest, resume and references to Mark Carden, Athletic Director, at mcarden@springfi eldlocal.us.Valley Christian School — is seeking a ju-nior high girls head volleyball coach. Those interested should send a resume to [email protected] Range High School — is seeking a high school and middle school wres-tling coaches. Send cover letters and re-sumes to Don Feren, South Range High School, 11300 Columbiana Canfi eld Road, Canfi eld, Ohio 44406.Penn-Ohio Club Blue Storm — is looking for boys and girls AAU Basketball head coach and assistant coaches. For details, contact Justin Magestro at 724-813-7210.

FOOTBALL14th annual Ursuline Football Youth Camp — will be July 10-11 at the Tom Carey practice fi eld. Cost is $65 and each camp-er will receive an Under Armour sackpack, Camp t-shirt and pizza on the last day. For more information, contact Coach Larry Kempe at 330-744-4563.

SOCCERMahoning Valley Soccer Offi cials Association — is looking for people inter-ested in becoming high school soccer ref-erees. Those interested should contact Thom Sutcliffe at [email protected].

SOFTBALLBrookfi eld Youth Softball — will host 10-U and 12-U tournaments July 6-9. These will be all-star tournaments. No travel teams. Contact Ken Forsythe 330-502-0750.Tod Park in Girard — will be where tourna-ments for 8U coach pitch, 10U and 12U all-star teams from July 11-16. Cost is $225 per team with a three-game minimum. No travel teams. For more information, con-tact Rick Plant at 330-219-1610 or Bill Durkin at 330-307-5813.

To submit a notice, or if you see a notice that should no longer run, email sports@

vindy.com or fax 330-747-6712.

TRANSACTIONSBASEBALL

COMMISSIONER’S OFFICE — Suspended Boston manager John Farrell one game for his actions during an argument with um-pire Bill Miller during Saturday’s game against the L.A. Angels.

American LeagueBALTIMORE ORIOLES — Sent LHP Zach Britton to Bowie (EL) for a rehab assignment.CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Optioned RHP Gregory Infante to Charlotte (IL). Recalled RHP Juan Minaya from Charlotte. Agreed to terms with INF Alex Maloney on a minor league contract.CLEVELAND INDIANS — Placed OF Austin Jackson on the 10-day DL. Recalled RHP Shawn Armstrong from Columbus (IL).HOUSTON ASTROS — Optioned RHP Jordan Jankowski to Fresno (PCL).KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Optioned LHP Brian Flynn to Omaha (PCL).LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Optioned 3B Kaleb Cowart to Salt Lake (PCL). Recalled 1B Jefry Marte from Salt Lake.MINNESOTA TWINS — Sent RHP Justin Haley to the GCL Twins for a rehab assignment.NEW YORK YANKEES — Placed 2B Starlin Castro on the 10-day DL. Optioned OF Mason Williams and LHP Tyler Webb to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Recalled INF Tyler Wade from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Agreed to terms with SS Ricky Surum, OF Canaan Smith, 1B Steven Sensley, LHP Dalton Lehnen and RHPs Austin Gardner, Aaron McGarity, Harold Cortijo and Ron Marinaccio on minor league contracts.TAMPA BAY RAYS — Released C Derek Norris. Transferred RHP Diego Moreno to the 60-day DL. Sent RHP Brad Boxberger to Charlotte (FSL) for a rehab assignment.TEXAS RANGERS — Activated LHP Cole Hamels from the 10-day DL. Optioned OF Drew Robinson to Round Rock (PCL).TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Sent OF Ezequiel Carrera to Buffalo (IL) for a rehab assignment.

National LeagueCINCINNATI REDS — Optioned RHP Lisalverto Bonilla to Louisville (IL). Reinstated LHP Brandon Finnegan from the 60-day DL. Transferred RHP Bronson Arroyo to the 60-day DL.COLORADO ROCKIES — Selected the contract of OF Mike Tauchman from Albuquerque (PCL). Optioned RHP Jairo Dmaz to Albuquerque. Transferred OF David Dahl to the 60-day DL.LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Placed RHP Brandon McCarthy on the 10-day DL. Optioned RHP Ross Stripling to Oklahoma City (PCL). Recalled OF Trayce Thompson and RHP Brock Stewart from Oklahoma City. Sent LHP Scott Kazmir to Rancho Cucamonga (Cal) for a rehab assignment.MIAMI MARLINS — Assigned 2B Christian Colon outright to New Orleans (PCL). Agreed to terms with RHP Josh Roberson on a minor league contract.MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Optioned OF Lewis Brinson and C Jett Bandy to Colorado Springs (PCL). Designated INF/OF Nick Franklin for assignment.

Reinstated OF Ryan Braun and 2B Jonathan Villar from the 10-day DL.NEW YORK METS — Agreed to terms with RHP Yadiel Flores and SS Mark Vientos on minor league contracts.PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Optioned RHP Edubray Ramos to Lehigh Valley (IL). Recalled RHP Ricardo Pinto from Lehigh Valley.PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Optioned C Jacob Stallings to Indianapolis (IL).ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Agreed to terms with RHP Alex Gallegos on a minor league contract.SAN DIEGO PADRES — Placed INF Chase d’Arnaud on paternity leave. Reinstated OF Manuel Margot from the 10-day DL. Sent RHP Trevor Cahill to El Paso (PCL) for a rehab assignment.SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Assigned RHP Bryan Morris outright to Sacramento (PCL).

FOOTBALLCanadian Football League

EDMONTON ESKIMOS — Signed LB Alex Hoffman-Ellis.

HOCKEYNational Hockey League

CAROLINA HURRICANES — Agreed to terms with D Jake Chelios on a one-year, two-way contract.CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Agreed to terms with D Ville Pokka on a one-year contract.DALLAS STARS — Bought out fi nal year of G Antti Niemi’s contract.DETROIT RED WINGS — Signed C Ben Street to a one-year contract extension.MINNESOTA WILD — Re-signed C Pat Cannone to a one-year, two-way contract.

American Hockey LeagueSYRACUSE CRUNCH — Named Andrea Marino senior manager of corporate acti-vation and marketing, Megan Cahill senior manager of public relations and digital media and Kristen Denick senior manag-er of retention.

SOCCERNational Woman Soccer League

WASHINGTON SPIRIT — Signed F Yanara Aedo.

COLLEGEOLD DOMINION ATHLETIC CONFERENCE — Announced Ferrum will become a full-time member for the 2018-19 academ-ic year.AUBURN — Announced junior men’s bas-ketball G Samir Doughty is transferring from VCU.DUKE — Named Laura Valentino assistant softball coach.EAST CAROLINA — Agreed to terms with director of athletics Jeff Compher on a fi ve-year contract extension to April, 2023.EASTERN MICHIGAN — Named Scott Wetherbee athletic director.HAMILTON — Named Sarah Cartmill as-sistant women’s basketball coach.OAKLAND — Signed athletic director Jeff Konya to a fi ve-year contract.TULANE — Named Maria Brito women’s tennis coach.

MINOR LEAGUESNEW YORK-PENN LEAGUE

McNamara Division W L Pct. GBStaten Island (Yankees) 6 1 .857 —Hudson Valley (Rays) 5 2 .714 1Aberdeen (Orioles) 2 5 .286 4Brooklyn (Mets) 2 5 .286 4

Pinckney Division W L Pct. GBBatavia (Marlins) 5 3 .625 —West Virginia (Pirates) 5 3 .625 —Mahoning Valley (Indians) 5 3 .625 —State College (Cardinals) 4 4 .500 1Auburn (Nationals) 3 5 .375 2Williamsport (Phillies) 2 6 .250 3

Stedler Division W L Pct. GBConnecticut (Tigers) 5 2 .714 —Vermont (Athletics) 4 4 .500 1 1⁄2Tri-City (Astros) 3 4 .429 2Lowell (Red Sox) 2 6 .250 3 1⁄2

Tuesday’s ScoresNo games scheduled

Today’s GamesTri-City at Connecticut, TBDTri-City at Connecticut, 6:05 p.m.Staten Island at Vermont, 7:05 p.m.Auburn at State College, 7:05 p.m.Batavia at Williamsport, 7:05 p.m.Brooklyn at Aberdeen, 7:05 p.m.Lowell at Hudson Valley, 7:05 p.m.Mahoning Valley at West Virginia, 7:05 p.m.

EASTERN LEAGUEEastern Division

W L Pct. GBTrenton (Yankees) 49 27 .645 —Reading (Phillies) 43 30 .589 4 1⁄2Binghamton (Mets) 39 32 .549 7 1⁄2Portland (Red Sox) 34 38 .472 13Hartford (Rockies) 33 41 .446 15New Hampshire (Jays) 31 45 .408 18

Western Division W L Pct. GBAltoona (Pirates) 40 34 .541 —Akron (Indians) 37 35 .514 2

Bowie (Orioles) 38 39 .494 3 1⁄2Erie (Tigers) 37 39 .487 4Harrisburg (Nationals) 33 42 .440 7 1⁄2Richmond (Giants) 32 44 .421 9

Tuesday’s ScoresHarrisburg 4, Reading 3Portland 2, New Hampshire 1Trenton 10, Richmond 4Bowie 9, Altoona 0Binghamton at Hartford, lateAkron 10, Erie 4Reading at Harrisburg, late

Today’s GamesReading at Harrisburg, 12 p.m.New Hampshire at Portland, 7 p.m.Richmond at Trenton, 7 p.m.Altoona at Bowie, 7:05 p.m.Binghamton at Hartford, 7:05 p.m.Erie at Akron, 7:05 p.m.

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUENorth Division

W L Pct. GBLehigh Valley (Phillies) 49 28 .636 —Scranton/W-B (Yankees) 46 30 .605 2 1⁄2Rochester (Twins) 40 34 .541 7 1⁄2Pawtucket (Red Sox) 36 38 .486 11 1⁄2Buffalo (Blue Jays) 35 42 .455 14Syracuse (Nationals) 27 47 .365 20 1⁄2South Division W L Pct. GBDurham (Rays) 48 29 .623 —Gwinnett (Braves) 39 36 .520 8Norfolk (Orioles) 33 44 .429 15Charlotte (White Sox) 32 44 .421 15 1⁄2West Division W L Pct. GBIndianapolis (Pirates) 42 35 .545 —Columbus (Indians) 41 35 .539 1⁄2Toledo (Tigers) 32 42 .432 8 1⁄2Louisville (Reds) 30 46 .395 11 1⁄2

Tuesday’s GamesScranton/Wilkes-Barre at Syracuse, lateColumbus 5, Charlotte 0Durham 8, Indianapolis 0Toledo 5, Gwinnett 1Louisville at Norfolk, latePawtucket at Lehigh Valley, lateRochester at Buffalo, late

Today’s GamesGwinnett at Toledo, 12:05 p.m.Durham at Indianapolis, 1:35 p.m.Scranton/Wilkes-Barre at Syracuse, 6:35 p.m.Columbus at Charlotte, 7:05 p.m.Louisville at Norfolk, 7:05 p.m.Pawtucket at Lehigh Valley, 7:05 p.m.Rochester at Buffalo, 7:05 p.m.

MIDWEST LEAGUEEastern Division

W L Pct. GBWest Michigan (Tigers) 5 0 1.000 —Lake County (Indians) 5 1 .833 1⁄2Fort Wayne (Padres) 4 1 .800 1Great Lakes (Dodgers) 3 3 .500 2 1⁄2Lansing (Blue Jays) 2 4 .333 3 1⁄2Dayton (Reds) 1 4 .200 4South Bend (Cubs) 1 4 .200 4Bowling Green (Rays) 1 5 .167 4 1⁄2

Western Division W L Pct. GBPeoria (Cardinals) 5 1 .833 —Quad Cities (Astros) 4 2 .667 1Beloit (Athletics) 4 2 .667 1Kane County (D’backs) 3 2 .600 1 1⁄2Cedar Rapids (Twins) 2 3 .400 2 1⁄2Wisconsin (Brewers) 2 4 .333 3Burlington (Angels) 1 4 .200 3 1⁄2Clinton (Mariners) 1 4 .200 3 1⁄2

Tuesday’s ScoresPeoria 10, Beloit 8Quad Cities 6, Wisconsin 5Dayton at West Michigan, lateLake County 4, Great Lakes 3Lansing 4, Bowling Green 2South Bend at Fort Wayne, lateClinton at Kane County, lateBurlington at Cedar Rapids, late

Today’s GamesGreat Lakes at Lake County, 11 a.m.Clinton at Kane County, 1 p.m.Burlington at Cedar Rapids, 1:05 p.m.Dayton at West Michigan, 7 p.m.Bowling Green at Lansing, 7:05 p.m.South Bend at Fort Wayne, 7:05 p.m.Beloit at Peoria, 8 p.m.Quad Cities at Wisconsin, 8:05 p.m.

9 a.m.Jenna Jacobson, Mill Creek Golf Course Gillian Cerimele, Flying B Golf Course

9:10 a.m.Taylor Ross, Salem Hills Golf and Country Club Hannah Keffl er, Flying B Golf CourseAlexandia Patrone, Mill Creek Golf Course

9:20 a.m.Emily Marcavish, Avalon at Squaw Creek Gianna Myers, Mill Creek Golf Course Madison Horvath, Bedford Trails

9:30 a.m.Carmel Cerimele, Flying B Golf Course Gabrielle Dicesare, Mill Creek Golf Course Britney Jonda, Mill Creek Golf Course

9:40 a.m.Elena Cammack, Mill Creek Golf Course Emily Jackson, Mill Creek Golf Course Olivia Taylor, Avalon at Squaw Creek

9:50 a.m,Carly Ungaro, Mill Creek Golf Course Leah Benson, Tam O’Shanter McKenzie Gustas, Tam O’Shanter

10 a.m.Bobby Smallwood, Tippecanoe Country Club

Alex Rapp, The Lake Club David Dull III, Pine Lakes Golf Club

10:10 a.m.Jacob Snyder, The Lake Club Dante Flak, Mill Creek Golf Course Kyle Koziel, Mill Creek Golf Course

10:20 a.m.Keegan Butler, Mill Creek MetroParks Golf Course Jimmy Graham, Avalon Lakes Golf Course Joey Vitali, Kennsington Golf Club & Grille

10:30 a.m.Rebell Strollo, Youngstown Coun-try Club Sean Devine, Mill Creek Golf Course Andrew Murphy, Henry Stam-baugh Golf Course

10:40 a.m.Branson Brownfi eld, Turkana Farms Golf Course Luke Nord, The Lake Club Dean Austalosh, Oak Tree Coun-try Club

10:50 a.m.Zavier Bokan, Mahoning Country Club John Popa. Flying B Golf Course R.J. Pozzuto, Avalon at Squaw Creek

11 a.m.Brandon Cioffi , Hickory VFW Golf Course Anthony Clark, Riverview Golf Course Carl Desiato, Mill Creek Golf Course

11:10 a.m.Seth Flower, Mill Creek Golf Course Bobby Jonda, Mill Creek Golf Course Colin Faloon, Mill Creek Golf Course

11:20 a.m.Matthew Kinkela, Rolling Hills Golf Course Parker Flower, Mill Creek Golf Course Jason Paris, Mill Creek Golf Course

11:30 a.m.Zach Linert, Tippecanoe Country Club Jonathan Hiner, Yankee Run Golf Course

11:40 a.m.Pasquale Lorelli, Mill Creek Golf Course Andy Murphy, The Lake Club

11:50 a.m.Dominic Kapics, Duck Creek Golf Course Michael Porter, Mahoning Coun-try Club Benjamin Martin, Kennsington Golf Club & Grille

NoonNathan Cene, Duck Creek Golf Course Caleb Domitrovich, Mahoning Country Club Patrick Howlett Jr., The Lake Club

12:10 p.m.Ryan Sam, The Lake Club Jacob Sylak, Avalon at Squaw Creek Gavin Pahanish, Beaver Creek Meadows Golf Course

GREATEST GOLFER OF THE VALLEY | Today’s tee times at Mill Creek

SANDLOT RESULTSDISTRICT 2 OHIO LITTLE LEAGUE

SOFTBALLTuesday’s results

8-10Poland 11, Canfi eld 9

11-12Canfi eld 4, Poland 0

Tonight’s games8-10

Canfi eld vs. Boardman, 6 p.m. (elimina-

tion game)11-12

Poland vs. Boardman, 6 p.m. (elimina-tion game)

Thursday’s games8-10

Poland vs. Canfi eld-Boardman winner, 6 p.m. (district championship)

11-12Canfi eld vs. Poland-Boardman winner, 6 p.m. (district championship)

Associated Press

NASHVILLE, TENN.Two Vanderbilt football

players were shot in what police are calling an “ill-conceived plan” to recover a teammate’s stolen cell-phone.

Tae Daley, 18, suffered a noncritical gunshot wound to his leg, and Frank Coppet, 18, received noncritical bird-shot wounds to his arms, Nashville police said Tues-day in a statement. Detec-tives were working to iden-tify and arrest the shooters.

Accord i ng to pol ice, 19-year-old Donaven Ten-nyson had offered his phone for sale on an internet site and met with a prospective buyer at a Chili’s parking lot at 5 p.m. Monday. Tennyson told police his phone was

stolen during the meeting and later that night was of-fered for sale on the same internet site.

Tennyson said he ar-ranged a meeting with the seller in a Target parking lot and arrived with Daley and Coppet. Police said the three players brought a pellet pis-tol, which one of them said was “to help get the phone back.”

Police said Coppet got out of Daley’s Toyota with the pellet pistol in his hand when a man who pulled up next to them in a Buick got out and shot at the three players with an actual pis-tol. Police said another man in the Buick fi red a shotgun at them.

Police said one gunman fled in the Buick and an-other left in the Toyota after

the shots were fired. They did not say if or when Daley and Tennyson got out of the Toyota.

Daley is a freshman from Warner Robins, Georgia. Coppet is a redshirt fresh-man from Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Both are defensive backs.

Tennyson, a sophomore receiver from Richmond, Virginia, played eight games last season. He didn’t catch a pass but had four carries for 28 yards.

“Our foremost concern is the well-being of our stu-dents, but it appears their injuries are not life-threat-ening,” Vanderbilt said in a statement. “The university is monitoring the situation and will determine if any action on the part of the university is appropriate.”

Vanderbilt players shottrying to recover phone

to Hard Rock International. The company plans to re-open the casino under its own brand next year.

Speaking on a sports radio show this month, Christie criticized the federal govern-ment for restricting sports betting while simultaneous-ly allowing states to legalize recreational marijuana even though it’s illegal under fed-eral law.

The case has lasted nearly as long as Christie has been in offi ce. New Jersey voters passed a non-binding refer-endum to allow sports bet-ting in 2011.

The four major pro sports

leagues and the NCAA sued the state in 2012, after Chris-tie signed a sports betting law.

Legal sports gambling is allowed in Nevada and three other states that already had approved some form of wa-gering before the federal law went into effect. Nevada is the only state to allow single-game wagering.

Congress gave New Jersey a one-time opportunity to become the fi fth state before the ban was enacted, but the state failed to pass a sports betting law in the required time window.

Arizona, Louisiana, Mis-sissippi, West Virginia and Wisconsin had joined New Jersey’s effort to have the case heard by the Supreme

Court.This month, the Ameri-

can Gaming Association announced the creation of a coalition involving organi-zations of attorneys general and police, policymakers and others to advocate for the repeal of the ban that the industry says has fueled the illegal sports betting mar-ket.

The groups cited research t hat showed lega l izing sports betting in the U.S. could support more than 150,000 jobs.

“The Professional and Am-ateur Sports Protection Act of 1992 has failed to protect sports and fans,” the group said in a statement after the court’s action Tuesday.

BETTINGContinued from B1

EMAIL: [email protected] SPORTS THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 B3

STANDINGSAMERICAN LEAGUE

East Division W L Pct GBBoston 42 34 .553 —New York 41 34 .547 1⁄2Tampa Bay 41 38 .519 2 1⁄2Baltimore 38 38 .500 4Toronto 36 40 .474 6

Central Division W L Pct GBMinnesota 39 35 .527 —Cleveland 40 36 .526 —Kansas City 37 38 .493 2 1⁄2Detroit 34 42 .447 6Chicago 33 43 .434 7

West Division W L Pct GBHouston 52 26 .667 —Los Angeles 41 39 .513 12Texas 39 38 .506 12 1⁄2Seattle 39 39 .500 13Oakland 35 42 .455 16 1⁄2

Monday’s ScoresBoston 4, Minnesota 1Cleveland 15, Texas 9N.Y. Yankees 6, Chicago White Sox 5L.A. Angels 4, L.A. Dodgers 0

Tuesday’s ScoresTampa Bay 4, Pittsburgh 2, 10 inningsBaltimore 3, Toronto 1Detroit 5, Kansas City 3Texas 2, Cleveland 1Chicago White Sox 4, N.Y. Yankees 3Oakland 6, Houston 4Minnesota at Boston, lateL.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers, latePhiladelphia at Seattle, late

Today’s GamesPhiladelphia (Leiter Jr. 1-0) at Seattle (Hernandez 3-2), 3:40 p.m.Tampa Bay (Snell 0-4) at Pittsburgh (Nova 7-5), 7:05 p.m.Baltimore (Miley 3-5) at Toronto (Stroman 7-4), 7:07 p.m.Kansas City (Kennedy 1-6) at Detroit (Norris 4-5), 7:10 p.m.Minnesota (Mejia 2-3) at Boston (Porcello 4-9), 7:10 p.m.Texas (Darvish 6-5) at Cleveland (Bauer 6-6), 7:10 p.m.N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 5-7) at Chicago White Sox (Rodon 0-0), 8:10 p.m.Oakland (Hahn 3-5) at Houston (Paulino 2-0), 8:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 3-6) at L.A. Angels (Meyer 3-4), 10:07 p.m.

Thursday’s GamesTexas at Cleveland, 12:10 p.m.Kansas City at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.Oakland at Houston, 2:10 p.m.Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.Baltimore at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.Minnesota at Boston, 7:10 p.m.N.Y. Yankees at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 10:07 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUEEast Division

W L Pct GBWashington 46 31 .597 —Atlanta 36 39 .480 9Miami 35 40 .467 10New York 34 42 .447 11 1⁄2Philadelphia 24 51 .320 21

Central Division W L Pct GBMilwaukee 41 38 .519 —Chicago 39 38 .506 1St. Louis 35 40 .467 4Pittsburgh 35 42 .455 5Cincinnati 32 44 .421 7 1⁄2

West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 51 27 .654 —Arizona 49 28 .636 1 1⁄2Colorado 47 32 .595 4 1⁄2San Diego 31 45 .408 19San Francisco 28 51 .354 23 1⁄2

Monday’s ScoresArizona 6, Philadelphia 1St. Louis 8, Cincinnati 2Chicago Cubs 5, Washington 4San Francisco 9, Colorado 2L.A. Angels 4, L.A. Dodgers 0

Tuesday’s ScoresTampa Bay 4, Pittsburgh 2, 10 inningsWashington 6, Chicago Cubs 1Cincinnati 8, Milwaukee 6Miami 6, N.Y. Mets 3St. Louis at Arizona, lateAtlanta at San Diego, lateL.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers, latePhiladelphia at Seattle, lateColorado at San Francisco, late

Today’s GamesPhiladelphia (Leiter Jr. 1-0) at Seattle (Hernandez 3-2), 3:40 p.m.Colorado (Freeland 8-5) at San Francisco (Blach 4-5), 3:45 p.m.Chicago Cubs (Lackey 5-8) at Washington (Strasburg 8-2), 7:05 p.m.Tampa Bay (Snell 0-4) at Pittsburgh (Nova 7-5), 7:05 p.m.Milwaukee (Anderson 6-2) at Cincinnati (Castillo 0-0), 7:10 p.m.N.Y. Mets (Matz 1-1) at Miami (Locke 0-3), 7:10 p.m.St. Louis (Wainwright 7-5) at Arizona (Godley 3-1), 9:40 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 3-6) at L.A. Angels (Meyer 3-4), 10:07 p.m.Atlanta (Garcia 2-5) at San Diego (Perdomo 2-4), 10:10 p.m.

Thursday’s GamesSt. Louis at Arizona, 3:40 p.m.Chicago Cubs at Washington, 4:05 p.m.Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Miami, 7:10 p.m.Atlanta at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 10:07 p.m.

BOX SCORESAMERICAN LEAGUE

RANGERS 2, INDIANS 1Texas Cleveland ab r h bi ab r h biDShelds cf 4 0 0 0 Kipnis 2b 4 0 1 0Choo rf 4 0 0 0 Lindor ss 4 0 0 0Andrus ss 4 0 0 0 Brntley lf 4 0 1 0Beltre 3b 4 1 2 1 Encrnco dh 4 0 0 0Mazara lf 3 0 0 0 Jose.Rm 3b 3 1 0 0Napoli dh 3 0 0 0 Chsnhll rf 3 0 1 1Odor 2b 3 0 0 0 C.Sntna 1b 2 0 0 0Chrinos c 2 1 1 1 B.Zmmer cf 3 0 0 0Gallo 1b 2 0 0 0 Gomes c 2 0 0 0Totals 29 2 3 2 Totals 29 1 3 1

Texas 000 010 001 — 2Cleveland 010 000 000 — 1DP—Texas 1, Cleveland 1. LOB—Texas 3, Cleveland 4. HR—Beltre (5), Chirinos (11). SB—Jose.Ramirez (9), C.Santana (3). CS—DeShields (4). IP H R ER BB SO TexasRoss 6 2 1 1 2 5Leclerc 1 0 0 0 0 2Kela W,4-1 1 0 0 0 0 1Bush S,10-14 1 1 0 0 0 0 ClevelandClevinger 6 2 1 1 2 9Shaw 1 0 0 0 0 2Miller 1 0 0 0 1 3Allen L,0-4 1 1 1 1 0 2Leclerc pitched to 1 batter in the 8thHBP—by Leclerc (Santana).Umpires—Home, Gerry Davis; First, Tony Randazzo; Second, Rob Drake; Third, Pat Hoberg.T—2:52. A—19,348 (35,051).

ORIOLES 3, BLUE JAYS 1 Baltimore Toronto ab r h bi ab r h biS.Smith rf 4 0 0 0 J.Btsta rf 4 0 2 0Gentry rf 1 0 1 0 R.Mrtin c 3 0 1 0M.Mchdo 3b 4 0 0 0 Dnldson 3b 4 0 0 0Schoop 2b 4 2 2 0 Smoak 1b 2 0 0 0A.Jones cf 3 1 1 1 Morales dh 4 0 1 0Trumbo dh 4 0 2 2 Tlwtzki ss 4 1 1 1Mancini 1b 4 0 1 0 Pearce lf 2 0 1 0W.Cstll c 4 0 0 0 Carrera ph-lf 2 0 0 0Kim lf 1 0 0 0 Pillar cf 3 0 0 0Rickard pr-lf 1 0 0 0 Barney 2b 2 0 0 0Janish ss 3 0 0 0 Goins ph-2b 1 0 0 0Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 31 1 6 1

Baltimore 201 000 000 — 3Toronto 000 000 001 — 1DP—Baltimore 2, Toronto 1. LOB—Baltimore 8, Toronto 6. 2B—Schoop (23), Trumbo 2 (14). HR—Tulowitzki (4). CS—Smoak (1). IP H R ER BB SOBaltimoreGusman W,4-7 5 1-3 4 0 0 2 4Givens H,13 1 2-3 0 0 0 1 2O’Day H,10 1 1 0 0 0 1Brach S,14-17 1 1 1 1 0 2TorontoBiagini L,2-7 5 1-3 5 3 3 4 3Leone 1 2-3 0 0 0 1 2Tepera 1 1 0 0 0 1Smith 1 1 0 0 0 0WP—Biagini, Givens. Umpires—Home, Angel Hernandez First, Quinn Wolcott Second, Chad Whitson Third, Ted Barrett. T—3:00. A—40,606 (49,282).

TIGERS 5, ROYALS 3 Kansas City Detroit ab r h bi ab r h biMrrfeld 2b 5 1 1 0 Kinsler 2b 4 0 1 1Bnfacio rf 5 1 2 1 Mahtook cf 4 1 2 0L.Cain cf 4 1 2 0 Upton lf 4 0 0 0Hosmer 1b 3 0 2 0 Mi.Cbrr 1b 4 1 1 3S.Perez c 4 0 1 2 J.Mrtin rf 3 1 2 1Mstakas 3b 4 0 1 0 Cstllns 3b 4 1 1 0Moss dh 4 0 0 0 An.Rmne 3b 0 0 0 0A.Escbr ss 4 0 2 0 J.Hicks dh 3 0 0 0A.Grdon lf 4 0 0 0 Avila ph-dh 1 0 0 0 J.McCnn c 3 0 1 0 J.Iglss ss 4 1 1 0Totals 37 3 11 3 Totals 34 5 9 5

Kansas City 300 000 000 — 3Detroit 013 100 00x — 5E—L.Cain (4). DP—Detroit 1. LOB—Kansas City 8, Detroit 7. 2B—Merrifi eld (11). 3B—J.Martinez (2). HR—Mi.Cabrera (9), J.Martinez (13). IP H R ER BB SOKansas CityStrahm L,2-5 3 2-3 6 5 5 0 4Moylan 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 1Alexander 2 2 0 0 0 3Feliz 1 0 0 0 0 0DetroitVerlander W,5-4 7 9 3 3 1 6Stumpf 0 1 0 0 0 0Rondon H,1 1 1 0 0 0 2Wilson S,7-8 1 0 0 0 0 2Stumpf pitched to 1 batter in the 8th HBP—by Strahm (McCann). WP—Moylan, Alexander. Umpires—Home, Dan Bellino First, Nic Lentz Second, Dan Iassogna Third, Brian Gorman. T—3:14. A—29,488 (41,681).

WHITE SOX 4, YANKEES 3New York Chicago ab r h bi ab r h biEllsbry cf 4 1 1 0 Y.Sanch 2b 3 0 2 0Headley 3b 5 0 0 0 Me.Cbrr lf 4 0 0 0Judge rf 3 1 2 1 Abreu 1b 5 0 2 3G.Sanch c 3 0 1 2 A.Grcia rf 4 0 0 0Grgrius ss 4 0 2 0 T.Frzer 3b 3 0 1 1Austin dh 2 0 0 0 Dvidson dh 4 0 0 0Gnr pr-dh-lf 1 0 0 0 Ti.Andr ss 4 0 0 0Trreyes 2b 3 0 0 0 K.Smith c 3 1 2 0Au.Rmne 1b 4 0 1 0 W.Grcia pr 0 1 0 0Rfsnydr lf 2 0 0 0 Engel cf 1 0 0 0Wade ph-lf 1 1 0 0 Hanson ph-cf 0 2 0 0Btances p 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 3 7 3 Totals 31 4 7 4

New York 000 000 030 — 3Chicago 001 000 012 — 4E—K.Smith (1). DP—Chicago 2. LOB—New York 8, Chicago 9. 2B—Judge (12), G.Sanchez (6), Y.Sanchez (10), Abreu (19). CS—T.Frazier (3). S—Engel (2). IP H R ER BB SO New YorkSeverino 7 6 1 1 0 12German 0 0 1 1 2 0Clippard H,7 1 0 0 0 2 2Btncs L,3-2 BS,2 2-3 1 2 2 2 0 ChicagoQuintana 6 1-3 2 0 0 4 6Swarzak H,7 2-3 0 0 0 0 0Kahnle BS,3 2-3 4 3 3 1 1Jennings W,3-1 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2German pitched to 2 batters in the 8thHBP—by Betances (Sanchez). WP—Quintana, Clippard.Umpires—Home, Joe West; First, Hunter Wendelstedt; Second, John Libka; Third, Alan Porter.T—3:25. A—18,023 (40,615).

ATHLETICS 6, ASTROS 4Oakland Houston ab r h bi ab r h biJoyce lf 5 1 1 0 Sprnger rf 4 2 2 3Olson rf 5 0 0 0 Altuve 2b 5 0 3 0Lowrie 2b 5 2 2 0 Correa ss 3 0 1 0K.Davis dh 3 1 1 1 Gattis dh 4 0 1 0

Alonso 1b 3 1 0 0 Reddick ph-dh 1 0 0 0Healy 3b 4 1 1 4 B.McCnn c 5 0 0 0Maxwell c 4 0 3 1 Y.Grrel 1b 4 0 1 0Barreto ss 3 0 0 0 Ma.Gnza lf 4 0 1 0Brugman cf 3 0 1 0 Bregman 3b 4 1 2 0R.Dvis ph-cf 1 0 0 0 Mrsnick cf 4 1 3 0Totals 36 6 9 6 Totals 38 4 14 3

Oakland 010 004 010 — 6Houston 000 010 003 — 4E—Correa (6). DP—Oakland 2, Houston 1. LOB—Oakland 6, Houston 10. 2B—Lowrie (25), K.Davis (14), Maxwell (2), Gattis (12), Marisnick (3). HR—Healy (18), Springer (23). SB—K.Davis (4). CS—Altuve (3). IP H R ER BB SO OaklandManaea W,7-4 5 2-3 9 1 1 3 3Madson H,13 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 3Doolittle 1 0 0 0 0 0Hendriks 0 3 3 3 0 0Casilla S,14-17 1 2 0 0 0 0 HoustonFiers L,5-3 5 2-3 4 4 4 1 7Hoyt 1 1-3 2 1 1 0 1Guduan 1 3 1 1 1 0Sipp 1 0 0 0 0 2Hendriks pitched to 3 batters in the 9thHBP—by Fiers (Davis). WP—Fiers.Umpires—Home, Adrian Johnson; First, Eric Cooper; Second, Gary Cederstrom; Third, Gabe Morales.T—3:30. A—28,312 (42,060).

NATIONAL LEAGUEREDS 8, BREWERS 6

Milwaukee Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h biSogard 2b 4 1 1 0 Hmilton cf 5 1 2 1Thames 1b 4 0 0 0 Gennett 2b 3 2 1 0Braun lf 5 1 1 0 Votto 1b 4 1 1 2T.Shaw 3b 3 1 1 3 Duvall lf 4 2 2 2Do.Sntn rf 4 0 0 0 Suarez 3b 2 2 1 1Pina c 3 1 2 1 Schbler rf 3 0 1 0Broxton cf 3 1 1 0 Msoraco c 3 0 1 2Arcia ss 4 1 3 2 Peraza ss 4 0 1 0Ju.Grra p 2 0 0 0 Adleman p 2 0 0 0C.Trres p 0 0 0 0 Brnhart ph 1 0 0 0Villar ph 1 0 0 0 Storen p 0 0 0 0Drake p 0 0 0 0 Cngrani p 0 0 0 0J.Hghes p 0 0 0 0 Lrenzen p 0 0 0 0Vogt ph 1 0 0 0 Kvlehan ph 1 0 0 0Suter p 0 0 0 0 R.Iglss p 0 0 0 0Totals 34 6 9 6 Totals 32 8 10 8

Milwaukee 023 001 000 — 6Cincinnati 401 030 00x — 8DP—Cincinnati 2. LOB—Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 5. 2B—Braun (7), Duvall (20). HR—T.Shaw (16), Pina (5), Arcia (6), Hamilton (2), Votto (21), Duvall (17), Suarez (12). SB—Broxton (14). SF—Mesoraco (1). IP H R ER BB SO MilwaukeeGuerra L,1-2 4 8 8 8 3 2Torres 1 2 0 0 0 1Drake 1 0 0 0 0 1Hughes 1 0 0 0 0 1Suter 1 0 0 0 0 2 CincinnatiAdleman W,5-4 5 5 5 5 3 7Storen H,4 1 2 1 1 0 0Cingrani H,3 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0Lorenzen H,8 2-3 2 0 0 1 1Iglesias S,13-14 1 0 0 0 0 0Ju.Guerra pitched to 4 batters in the 5thHBP—by Guerra (Schebler), by Adleman (Sogard).Umpires—Home, Manny Gonzalez; First, Chris Segal; Second, Gary Cederstrom; Third, Gabe Morales.T—2:55. A—18,577 (42,319).

MARLINS 6, METS 3New York Miami ab r h bi ab r h biGrndrsn cf 5 1 1 1 D.Grdon 2b 4 0 1 0A.Cbrra 2b 4 0 1 0 Stanton rf 3 1 0 0Cespdes lf 4 0 0 0 Yelich cf 4 1 3 2Bruce rf 3 0 0 0 Ozuna lf 4 0 0 0Duda 1b 3 1 1 0 Bour 1b 4 1 2 2Flores 3b 4 0 0 0 A.Ramos p 0 0 0 0J.Reyes ss 3 0 1 0 Prado 3b 4 0 1 1T.d’Arn c 4 1 2 2 Ralmuto c 3 1 0 0Gsllman p 2 0 1 0 Riddle ss 3 1 2 0Sewald p 0 0 0 0 Straily p 2 0 0 0Nimmo ph 0 0 0 0 J.Grcia p 0 0 0 0Ne.Rmrz p 0 0 0 0 Wttgren p 0 0 0 0Blevins p 0 0 0 0 Brrclgh p 0 0 0 0Goeddel p 0 0 0 0 I.Szuki ph 1 1 1 1T.Rvera ph 1 0 0 0 Phelps p 0 0 0 0 Moore ph-1b 1 0 0 0Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 33 6 10 6

New York 100 100 100 — 3Miami 300 000 30x — 6DP—New York 1, Miami 1. LOB—New York 7, Miami 6. 2B—A.Cabrera (10), Duda (16), Yelich (12), Prado (4), Riddle (10). HR—Granderson (11), T.d’Arnaud (9). IP H R ER BB SO New YorkGsellman 3 5 3 3 0 4Sewald 3 2 0 0 0 3Ramirez L,0-1 0 1 2 2 1 0Blevins 1-3 2 1 1 1 0Goeddel 1 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 MiamiStraily 5 5 2 2 1 4Garcia H,9 1-3 0 0 0 1 0Wittgren H,5 2-3 0 0 0 0 1Bracgh W,4-1 BS,1 1 1 1 1 1 0Phelps H,14 1 0 0 0 1 1Ramos S,13-14 1 1 0 0 0 0Ne.Ramirez pitched to 2 batters in the 7thWP—Ramos.Umpires—Home, Marty Foster; First, Mike Muchlinski; Second, Ryan Blakney; Third, Mark Wegner.T—3:03. A—20,804 (36,742).

NATIONALS 6, CUBS 1Chicago Washington ab r h bi ab r h biRizzo 1b 3 1 0 0 T.Trner ss 4 2 2 0L Stlla 2b 3 0 1 0 Goodwin lf 3 0 1 1Almora ph 1 0 0 0 Harper rf 4 0 0 0I.Happ cf 4 0 0 0 Zmmrman 1b 3 0 0 0Bryant rf 3 0 1 1 D.Mrphy 2b 3 1 1 0M.Mntro c 2 0 0 0 Rendon 3b 3 2 1 0Cntrras ph-c 0 0 0 0 Wieters c 4 0 0 0Jay lf 3 0 0 0 M.Tylor cf 4 1 2 2J.Baez ss 3 0 0 0 Schrzer p 3 0 2 1Arrieta p 2 0 0 0 E.Rmero p 0 0 0 0Pena p 0 0 0 0 Difo ph 1 0 0 0Russell ph 1 0 0 0 Treinen p 0 0 0 0Rondon p 0 0 0 0 O.Perez p 0 0 0 0Cndlrio 3b 3 0 0 0 Albers p 0 0 0 0Totals 28 1 2 1 Totals 32 6 9 4

Chicago 100 000 000 — 1Washington 101 220 00x — 6E—La Stella (1), M.Montero (2). DP—Chicago 1, Washington 1. LOB—Chicago 2, Washington 9. 2B—La Stella (4), M.Taylor (16). 3B—Bryant (2). SB—T.Turner 4 (32), Rendon (4), M.Taylor 2 (9). IP H R ER BB SO ChicagoArrieta L,7-6 4 6 6 5 6 4Pena 3 2 0 0 1 1Rondon 1 1 0 0 0 1 WashingtonScherzer W,9-5 6 2 1 1 0 6Romero 1 0 0 0 1 0Treinen 1 0 0 0 0 1Perez 1-3 0 0 0 0 0Albers 2-3 0 0 0 0 0Arrieta pitched to 2 batters in the 5thHBP—by Scherzer (Rizzo). WP—Arrieta.Umpires—Home, Larry Vanover; First, Alfonso Marquez; Second, Chad Fairchild; Third, Dave Rackley.T—3:09. A—31,202 (41,418).

LATE MONDAYGIANTS 9, ROCKIES 2

Colorado San Francisco ab r h bi ab r h biBlckmon cf 4 0 1 0 Span cf 4 2 2 1LMahieu 2b 4 0 1 0 Panik 2b 4 2 2 2Arenado 3b 4 0 0 0 Pence rf 5 2 3 0Mar.Ryn 1b 4 1 2 0 Posey c 4 0 3 3Tapia rf 4 1 1 0 Belt 1b 3 0 1 1Desmond lf 4 0 1 0 Crwford ss 4 0 1 1Story ss 4 0 1 1 R.Jones 3b 4 0 0 0Wolters c 4 0 2 1 G.Hrnan lf 4 2 1 0Marquez p 1 0 0 0 Smrdzja p 2 0 0 0Freland ph 1 0 0 0 Strckln p 0 0 0 0Snztela p 0 0 0 0 S.Dyson p 0 0 0 0Valaika ph 1 0 0 0 Tmlnson ph 1 1 1 1Qualls p 0 0 0 0 Crick p 0 0 0 0Dunn p 0 0 0 0 Ja.Diaz p 0 0 0 0 Amrista ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 2 9 2 Totals 35 9 14 9

Colorado 000 000 200 — 2San Francisco 102 200 13x — 9E—Desmond (2). LOB—Colorado 8, San Francisco 9. 2B—Posey (15), Tomlinson (1). 3B—Span (4), Belt (3). SB—Tomlinson (4). CS—Span (3). SF—Panik (6), Posey (3). S—Samardzija (2). IP H R ER BB SO ColoradoMarquez L,5-4 4 7 5 5 2 2Senzatela 2 0 0 0 1 2Qualls 1-3 2 1 1 0 0Dunn 2-3 1 0 0 0 1Diaz 1 4 3 2 0 2 San FranciscoSmrdzija W,3-9 6 1-3 6 2 2 0 5Strickland H,7 2-3 1 0 0 1 1Dyson 1 1 0 0 0 3Crick 1 1 0 0 0 1HBP—by Marquez (Crawford). WP—Strickland.Umpires—Home, Doug Eddings; First, Bill Welke; Second, Stu Scheuwater; Third, Cory Blaser.T—3:22. A—41,388 (41,915).

INTERLEAGUERAYS 4, PIRATES 2, 10 INNINGS

Tampa Bay Pittsburgh ab r h bi ab r h biSmith cf-lf 5 0 0 0 A.Frzer lf 5 0 0 0Dckrson lf 4 1 2 0 Hrrison 2b 3 1 2 0Bourjos cf 0 0 0 0 McCtchn cf 4 0 2 2Lngoria 3b 4 0 1 0 J.Bell 1b 3 0 0 0Mrrison 1b 4 0 1 0 F.Rvero p 0 0 0 0Sza Jr. rf 4 1 1 1 Freese 3b 4 0 0 0W.Ramos c 3 1 0 0 G.Plnco rf 3 0 0 0Beckham 2b 3 1 1 0 Mercer ss 4 0 0 0Hchvrra ss 3 0 1 2 C.Stwrt c 3 0 0 0Cobb p 3 0 0 0 E.Diaz ph 1 0 0 0Colome p 0 0 0 0 Tr.Wllm p 2 0 0 0Plouffe ph 1 0 0 0 Nicasio p 0 0 0 0Hunter p 0 0 0 0 Hudson p 0 0 0 0 Jaso ph-1b 1 1 0 0Totals 34 4 7 3 Totals 33 2 4 2

Tampa Bay 000 100 010 2 — 4Pittsburgh 000 000 002 0 — 2E—Freese (7), C.Stewart (2), Tr.Williams (2). DP—Tampa Bay 1, Pittsburgh 2. LOB—Tampa Bay 3, Pittsburgh 5. 2B—Beckham (5), Harrison (16), McCutchen (13). CS—M.Smith (4). SF—Hechavarria (1). IP H R ER BB SO Tampa BayCobb 8 2 0 0 1 4Clome W,2-3 BS,4 1 2 2 2 2 0Hunter S,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 1 PittsburghWilliams 7 6 2 2 0 7Nicasio 1 0 0 0 0 0Hudson 1 0 0 0 0 2Rivero L,3-2 1 1 2 1 1 1Tr.Williams pitched to 2 batters in the 8thHBP—by Colome (Jaso). WP—Rivero.Umpires—Home, Ramon De Jesus; First, John Tumpane; Second, Paul Emmel; Third, Brian O’Nora.T—3:05. A—20,424 (38,362).

LATE MONDAYANGELS 4, DODGERS 0

Los Angeles (A) Los Angeles (N) ab r h bi ab r h biMaybin cf 5 1 1 0 Utley 2b 4 0 1 0Calhoun rf 3 1 1 0 C.Tylor lf 4 0 1 0Pujols 1b 4 0 1 0 Ju.Trnr 3b 4 0 0 0Y.Escbr 3b 4 0 2 2 Bllnger 1b 3 0 0 0Simmons ss 4 1 1 0 Grandal c 3 0 0 0Mldnado c 4 1 1 1 Pderson cf 3 0 0 0Espnosa 2b 2 0 1 1 Puig rf 4 0 2 0Yng Jr. lf 4 0 0 0 K.Hrnan ss 3 0 1 0Nolasco p 2 0 0 0 Hill p 2 0 0 0Bdrsian p 0 0 0 0 M.Frman ph 1 0 0 0Mddlton p 0 0 0 0 Avilan p 0 0 0 0Vlbuena ph 0 0 0 0 Romo p 0 0 0 0D.Hrnnd p 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 4 8 4 Totals 31 0 5 0

Los Angeles (A) 002 100 001 — 4Los Angeles (N) 000 000 000 — 0DP—Los Angeles (A) 1. LOB—Los Angeles (A) 6, Los Angeles (N) 7. 2B—Utley (9), C.Taylor (14), K.Hernandez (18). 3B—Simmons (1). HR—Maldonado (8). SB—Maybin (24), Calhoun 2 (4). CS—Y.Escobar (4). SF—Espinosa (2). IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles (A)Nolasco W,3-9 6 1-3 5 0 0 2 5Bedrosian H,3 2-3 0 0 0 0 2Middleton H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1Hernandez 1 0 0 0 1 0 Los Angeles (N)Hill L,4-4 7 4 3 3 2 7Avilan 1 2 0 0 0 1Romo 1 2 1 1 1 1HBP—by Hill (Espinosa).

Umpires—Home, Jerry Layne; First, Mike Estabrook; Second, Marvin Hudson; Third, Tom Woodring.T—2:53. A—43,126 (56,000).

LEADERSAMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING—Dickerson, Tampa Bay, .332; Judge, New York, .330; Garcia, Chicago, .325; Ramirez, Cleveland, .323; Altuve, Houston, .319; Bogaerts, Boston, .316; Castro, New York, .313; Hosmer, Kansas City, .306; Correa, Houston, .303; Smoak, Toronto, .302; 1 tied at .298.RUNS—Judge, New York, 67; Dickerson, Tampa Bay, 57; Springer, Houston, 57; Castro, New York, 52; Correa, Houston, 52; Ramirez, Cleveland, 52; Altuve, Houston, 49; Gardner, New York, 49; 3 tied at 48.RBI—Judge, New York, 59; Cruz, Seattle, 58; Morrison, Tampa Bay, 54; Sano, Minnesota, 52; Cano, Seattle, 51; Garcia, Chicago, 51; Pujols, Los Angeles, 51; Davis, Oakland, 49; Souza Jr., Tampa Bay, 49; Upton, Detroit, 49; 4 tied at 48.HITS—Dickerson, Tampa Bay, 101; Altuve, Houston, 92; Castro, New York, 92; Garcia, Chicago, 92; Ramirez, Cleveland, 92; Bogaerts, Boston, 90; Andrus, Texas, 89; Abreu, Chicago, 88; Hosmer, Kansas City, 87; Judge, New York, 86; 1 tied at 84.DOUBLES—Betts, Boston, 25; Lowrie, Oakland, 24; Ramirez, Cleveland, 24; Schoop, Baltimore, 23; Altuve, Houston, 21; Lindor, Cleveland, 21; Bogaerts, Boston, 20; Dickerson, Tampa Bay, 20; Pillar, Toronto, 19; 9 tied at 18.TRIPLES—Bogaerts, Boston, 4; Castellanos, Detroit, 4; Ramirez, Cleveland, 4; Sanchez, Chicago, 4; 7 tied at 3.HOME RUNS—Judge, New York, 26; Morrison, Tampa Bay, 22; Springer, Houston, 22; Gallo, Texas, 20; Smoak, Toronto, 20; Davis, Oakland, 19; Moustakas, Kansas City, 19; Sano, Minnesota, 18; 5 tied at 17.STOLEN BASES—Maybin, Los Angeles, 24; Andrus, Texas, 18; DeShields, Texas, 18; Dyson, Seattle, 18; Cain, Kansas City, 14; Buxton, Minnesota, 13; Simmons, Los Angeles, 13; Altuve, Houston, 12; Betts, Boston, 12; Pillar, Toronto, 11; 4 tied at 10.PITCHING—Vargas, Kansas City, 11-3; Sale, Boston, 10-3; Santana, Minnesota, 10-4; Keuchel, Houston, 9-0; Bundy, Baltimore, 8-6; Carrasco, Cleveland, 8-3; 6 tied at 7.ERA—Vargas, Kansas City, 2.29; McCullers, Houston, 2.54; Sale, Boston, 2.77; Santana, Minnesota, 2.80; Darvish, Texas, 3.12; Fulmer, Detroit, 3.29; Severino, New York, 3.30; Sabathia, New York, 3.47; Montgomery, New York, 3.53; Carrasco, Cleveland, 3.67; 1 tied at 3.69.STRIKEOUTS—Sale, Boston, 155; Archer, Tampa Bay, 126; Darvish, Texas, 109; Estrada, Toronto, 102; McCullers, Houston, 97; Carrasco, Cleveland, 96; Severino, New York, 95; Bauer, Cleveland, 93; Kluber, Cleveland, 93; Porcello, Boston, 93; 1 tied at 92.

NATIONAL LEAGUEBATTING—Posey, San Francisco, .347; Zimmerman, Washington, .344; Murphy, Washington, .340; Goldschmidt, Arizona, .332; Peralta, Arizona, .325; Harper, Washington, .321; Kemp, Atlanta, .320; Blackmon, Colorado, .320; Cozart, Cincinnati, .320; Ozuna, Miami, .319; 1 tied at .309. RUNS—Goldschmidt, Arizona, 68; Blackmon, Colorado, 62; Harper, Washington, 57; Seager, Los Angeles, 56; Votto, Cincinnati, 54; Murphy, Washington, 50; Thames, Milwaukee, 50; Zimmerman, Washington, 50; 4 tied at 49. RBI—Goldschmidt, Arizona, 65; Lamb, Arizona, 62; Arenado, Colorado, 59; Zimmerman, Washington, 59; Reynolds, Colorado, 57; Blackmon, Colorado, 56; Harper, Washington, 56; Bellinger, Los Angeles, 55; Murphy, Washington, 54; Ozuna, Miami, 54; 2 tied at 53. HITS—Blackmon, Colorado, 101; Inciarte, Atlanta, 99; LeMahieu, Colorado, 96; Murphy, Washington, 96; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 91; Ozuna, Miami, 91; Arenado, Colorado, 90; Zimmerman, Washington, 89; Gordon, Miami, 85; Harper, Washington, 84; 3 tied at 83. DOUBLES—Arenado, Colorado, 27; Herrera, Philadelphia, 25; Murphy, Washington, 23; Zimmerman, Washington, 21; Kemp, Atlanta, 20; Shaw, Milwaukee, 20; 5 tied at 19. TRIPLES—Blackmon, Colorado, 10; Cozart, Cincinnati, 5; Hamilton, Cincinnati, 5; 8 tied at 4. HOME RUNS—Bellinger, Los Angeles, 24; Bruce, New York, 20; Ozuna, Miami, 20; Schebler, Cincinnati, 20; Stanton, Miami, 20; Thames, Milwaukee, 20; Votto, Cincinnati, 20; Zimmerman, Washington, 19; 4 tied at 18. STOLEN BASES—Hamilton, Cincinnati, 31; Gordon, Miami, 29; Turner, Washington, 28; Nunez, San Francisco, 17; Peraza, Cincinnati, 15; Villar, Milwaukee, 14; Broxton, Milwaukee, 13; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 13; Pollock, Arizona, 11; 4 tied at 10. PITCHING—Kershaw, Los Angeles, 11-2; Greinke, Arizona, 9-4; Senzatela, Colorado, 9-3; Davies, Milwaukee, 8-4; Freeland, Colorado, 8-5; Ray, Arizona, 8-3; Scherzer, Washington, 8-5; Strasburg, Washington, 8-2; Wood, Los Angeles, 8-0; 5 tied at 7. ERA—Scherzer, Washington, 2.09; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 2.47; Gonzalez, Washington, 2.87; Martinez, St. Louis, 2.87; Ray, Arizona, 2.87; Anderson, Milwaukee, 2.92; Nova, Pittsburgh, 3.06; Greinke, Arizona, 3.08; Leake, St. Louis, 3.12; Straily, Miami, 3.43; 1 tied at 3.50. STRIKEOUTS—Scherzer, Washington, 145; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 123; Ray, Arizona, 119; Samardzija, San Francisco, 117; Greinke, Arizona, 116; deGrom, New York, 113; Martinez, St. Louis, 111; Strasburg, Washington, 109; Lester, Chicago, 97; Gonzalez, Washington, 95; 2 tied at 93.

AMERICAN LEAGUEOrioles 3, Blue Jays 1

TORONTO Kevin Gausman won for the fi rst time in four starts, Mark Trumbo hit an RBI double and the Baltimore Orioles beat the Toronto Blue Jays. Gausman (4-7) allowed four hits in 5 1⁄3 innings to win for the fi rst time since May 31 against the Yankees. The right-hander came in 0-3 with a 9.20 ERA over his previous three starts. Michael Givens pitched 1 2⁄3 in-nings and Darren O’Day worked the eighth. Brad Brach gave up a two-out homer to Troy Tulowitzki in the ninth but held on for his 14th save. Tigers 5, Royals 3

DETROIT J.D. Martinez and Miguel Ca-brera homered for Detroit, and Justin Verlander pitched seven strong innings. Verlander (5-4) was down 3-0 before getting an out, but didn’t allow another run as the Tigers won their second straight after an eight-game losing streak. He gave up nine hits, struck out six and walked one. Justin Wilson pitched the ninth for his seventh save. Matt Strahm (2-5) gave up fi ve runs and six hits in 3 2⁄3 innings for the Royals. Athletics 6, Astros 4

HOUSTON Ryon Healy’s fi rst career grand slam broke a tie in the sixth in-ning and the Oakland Athletics held on for a victory over the Houston Astros. The score was 1-1 when Matt Joyce singled to start the sixth. Jed Lowrie singled with one out before Yonder Alonso drew a walk with two outs to load the bases and chase Mike Fiers (5-3). He was replaced by James Hoyt, who was greeted with Healy’s 18th homer — a full-count shot which landed in the second row of the seats in right fi eld to put the Athletics up 5-1. Sean Manaea (7-4) allowed a season-high nine hits, but just one run in 5 2⁄3 innings for his fi rst win over the Astros in seven starts. White Sox 4, Yankees 3

CHICAGOJose Abreu hit a game-ending, two-run single off Dellin Betances, and the Chicago White Sox stopped a four-game losing streak with a victory over the New York Yankees. Kevan Smith sparked the winning rally with a one-out walk. Betances (3-2) then walked Alen Hanson and hit Yolmer Sanchez, loading the bases. After Melky Cabrera fouled out, Abreu hit a grounder into left fi eld. Brett Gardner’s throw to the plate was high, and Hanson scored easily.

NATIONAL LEAGUEReds 8, Brewers 6

CINCINNATI Joey Votto hit a tiebreaking two-run homer in the fi fth in-ning, helping the last-place Cin-cinnati Reds top the Milwaukee Brewers. Billy Hamilton, Adam Duvall and Eugenio Suarez also connected for Cincinnati, which scored its most runs in 19 games since Scooter Gennett hit four homers in its 13-1 win over St. Louis on June 6. Milwaukee slugger Ryan Braun returned after missing 31 games with a strained left calf, but the NL Central-leading Brewers lost for the third time in four games. Nationals 6, Cubs 1

WASHINGTON Max Scherzer allowed one run and two hits as the Washington Nationals knocked Chicago Cubs starter Jake Arrieta out in the fi fth inning on the way to a victory in a showdown of the past two NL Cy Young Award winners. Scherzer (9-5) was dominant in his six innings of work, striking out six with no walks and retiring 16 of the fi nal 17 batters he faced. The right-hander allowed an earned run in the fi rst inning for the fi rst time since April and his streak of 10-plus strikeout games ended at six, but he was in control almost all night. Ar-rieta (7-6), on the other hand, struggled with his control as he issued a season-high six walks and allowed fi ve earned runs, getting the hook two batters into the fi fth inning. The 2014 Cy Young winner hadn’t walked more than three batters in a game this season. Marlins 6, Mets 3

MIAMI Ichiro Suzuki had a pinch-hit RBI single in the seventh inning to put Miami ahead, Christian Yelich had three hits and the Marlins beat the New York Mets. Suzuki poked a pitch to the opposite fi eld against Jerry Blevins for a 4-3 lead. The 43-year-old Suzuki leads the majors with 12 pinch-hits. Yelich added a two-run single in the seventh, his third hit. Dan Straily allowed two runs in fi ve innings, and A.J. Ramos pitched around a leadoff single in the ninth for his 13th save.

Associated Press

MLB AT A GLANCE

MLB ROUNDUPTuesday’s

other gamesit. Didn’t miss it. He’s done it quite a few times.”

Keone Kela (4-1) strand-ed a runner in the eighth. Matt Bush allowed Michael Brantley’s one-out single in the ninth while getting his 10th save.

Indians manager Terry Francona missed the game after his second trip to the hospital this month. He left Monday night’s game be-cause he wasn’t feeling well and spent several hours at Cleveland Clinic undergo-ing tests. Bench coach Brad Mills fi lled in for Francona, who is expected to return Wednesday.

Both teams managed to get only three hits. The pitcher’s duel came one night after the Indians ral-lied from a 9-2 deficit for a 15-9 win Monday. The Rangers hit four home runs while the Indians scored a season high in runs. A night after striking out 17 times, Texas hitters fanned 16 times in the win.

“We weren’t happy with the way we lost the game yesterday,” Beltre said. “We were up by seven runs and found a way to lose. We put our minds to winning the series. The fi rst step was to win today.”

Allen also gave up a go-ahead home run to Min-nesota’s Brian Dozier in the eighth inning Saturday in another non-save situa-tion.

“I’m out there to get three outs, help the team try to win a ballgame,” Allen said.

“I just fl at-out got beat.”Robinson Chirinos hit a

solo home run in the Texas fi fth to make it 1-all. He has hit 11 home runs this sea-son and connected in six of his last nine games.

Lonnie Chisenhall’s RBI single in the second gave Cleveland the lead.

Mike Clevinger held the Rangers to one run and two hits, striking out a career-high nine in six innings.

Tyson Ross, making his third start of the season for Texas, also gave up one run and two hits in six innings. He retired his last 12 hit-ters.

Ross is coming from Tho-racic Outlet Syndrome Sur-gery in October. He made only one start for San Diego on opening day last sea-son because of a sore right shoulder.

HE’S BACKBrantley, playing for the

fi rst time since June 14, was 1 for 4 with a strikeout. He was placed on the pater-nity list June 16 and moved to the 10-day disabled list three days later because of a sprained left ankle.

BLANKEDElvis Andrus was hitless

in four at-bats, marking only the second time in 33 career games at Progressive Field that he hasn’t gotten a hit. The Rangers short-stop is still batting .409 (52 for 127) in Cleveland’s ball-park.

Indians: OF Austin Jack-son (strained left quad) was placed on the 10-day dis-abled list and is expected to miss three to four weeks.

INDIANSContinued from B1

10th for his fi rst save of the season.

Cobb allowed two hits with four strikeouts over eight scoreless innings. He lost his no-hitter when Josh Harrison led off the seventh with a single. Harrison also had a walk in the fourth.

“It all starts with Alex Cobb,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “Just an outstand-ing performance by his part and he was dominating. That’s probably the best way to put it. A lot of soft contact. He made big pitches.”

With the Rays leading 1-0, McCutchen followed Har-rison’s hit with a single to

right, which gave the Pirates runners on fi rst and second with no outs. Pittsburgh failed to take advantage, as Josh Bell hit into a double play and Freese grounded out to third.

“I guess people do get locked in and don’t realize (they have a no-hitter going), but you know when you gave up your fi rst hit of the game,” Cobb said. “I was aware of it, but I didn’t really think I had the stuff tonight to re-ally maintain it.”

The Rays extended their lead when Hechavarria drove in Tim Beckham in the eighth.

Pirates right-hander Trev-or Williams also impressed, outside of a rough fourth in-ning.

After getting through the first three innings on 27 pitches, Williams struggled with his command in the fourth, leading to the Rays’ opening run. Corey Dicker-son singled to right and later scored on Souza’s ground-out.

Williams allowed two runs and six hits with seven strikeouts in seven innings. He struck out the side in the fi fth and forced Evan Long-oria into an inning-ending double play in the sixth.

“There’s a lot to like (about Williams’ outing),” Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said. “The pitchability factor. That he pitched into the eighth inning. It was a really good night for him on the mound.”

PIRATESContinued from B1

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

B3 - 06/28/17

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitcher Trevor Williams delivers a pitch during the fi rst inning of a game Tuesday against the Tampa Bay Rays in Pittsburgh.

B4 THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 SPORTS WWW.VINDY.COM

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE

DATE: JUNE (2) 2017

17-23A RESOLUTION

SUPPORTING THE FILING OF A LOAN APPLICATION TO THE US DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) FOR A SECTION 108 LOAN.

17-24A RESOLUTION

OPPOSING THE REPEAL OF THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT.

17-245AN ORDINANCE

AMENDING SUB-SECTION 546.13 (d), FORECLOSURE BOND REGISTRY, OF SECTION 546.13, VACANT PROPERTYREGISTRY OF THE CODIFIED ORDINANCES OF THE CITY OF YOUNGSTOWN. THEAMENDMENT BEING: AN ADMINISTRA-TIVE FEE OF $100.00 PER QUARTER WILL BE DEDUCTED FROM THE BOND BY THE CITY FOR ADMINISTRATION EXPENSES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE PROCESSING, ACCOUNTING AND OTHER RELATED FUNCTIONS INHERENT IN THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE FORECLOSURE BOND.

17-246AN ORDINANCE

AUTHORIZING THE CITY OF YOUNGSTOWN TO ACCEPT THE DEDICATION OF A STRIP OF LAND, A 240 FOOT X 25 FOOT RECTANGULAR STRIP OF LAND, 0.1326 ACRES ALONG PROPOSED CITY LOT NUMBER 63078, FOR VOLNEY ROAD, AS CURRENTLY LAID OUT.

17-257AN ORDINANCE

DECLARING A VACANT PARCEL OF REAL PROPERTY, UNDER SECTION 3, ARTICLE XVIII OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION AND SECTION 1 AND SECTION 2 OF THE CITY CHARTER, KNOWN AS CITY LOT NO. 62589, IS NO LONGER NECESSARY FOR MUNICIPAL PURPOSES..

PASSED IN COUNCIL THIS 21ST DAY OF JUNE, 2017

CHARLES P. SAMMARONEPRESIDENT OF COUNCIL

ATTEST: VALENCIA MARROWCITY CLERK

APPROVED: THIS 22ND DAY OF JUNE, 2017

JOHN A. McNALLY IV MAYOR

THE COMPLETE TEXT OF THE LEGISLA-TION LISTED ABOVE MAY BE VIEWED AND/OR OBTAINED AT THE OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK.

LEGAL NOTICE

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS

Sealed proposals will be received by the Board of Poland Township Trustees until 4:00 P.M. Wednesday, July 19, 2017 at the Poland Township Government Center, 3339 Dobbins Road, Poland, Ohio 44514.BID OPENING DATE: Wednesday, July 19, 2017 opened and read at 6:00 P.M. at the Poland Township Trustees meeting located at Poland Township Government Center, 3339 Dobbins Road, Poland, Ohio, 44514.

2017 RESURFACING OF VARIOUS ROADSOPWC GRANT

A copy of the specifications along with proposal pages may be obtained at the Poland Township Government Center, 3339 Dobbins Road, Poland, Ohio 44514.

For all bids in excess of $25,000.00, a certi-fied check representing TEN percent (10%) of the proposal, drawn on a solvent bank, and payable to the Poland Township, or a bid bond in the sum of TEN percent (10%) of the proposal in lieu thereof must accom-pany each and every proposal as a guaran-tee that if the bid is accepted, a contract will be entered into with the Board of Poland Township Trustees, in the manner provided by law.

A performance bond in the amount of 100% of the contract price will be required after the award of the contract. However, if the item bid is available for immediate delivery and specified as such in the bid, a perform-ance bond will not then be required.

Bids of Corporations not chartered in Ohio MUST be accompanied by proper cer-tifica-tions that such Corporation is licensed to do business in Ohio.

Attention of the Bidder is directed to the requirements that each proposal must be accompanied by a non-collusion affidavit, properly executed by the Bidder. Further, the successful Bidder will be required to execute an af-fidavit required by Sec. 5719.042 of the Ohio Revised Code. Nopayment shall be made on any Contract for which no such affidavit has been submit-ted.

The Board of Poland Township Trusteesreserves the right to reject any or all bids

and to waive informalities. In addition, the Board of Poland Township Trustees reserves the right to participate in state contracts which the Department of Administrative Services, Office of State Purchasing has entered into for the pur-chase of supplies, services, equipment and certain materials pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Section 125.04. No bids may be with-drawn for at least sixty (60) days after the opening thereof.

All contractors and subcontractors involved with the project will, to the extent practi-cable, use Ohio products, materials, serv-ices, and labor in the implementation of their project. Additionally, contractor com-pliance with the equal employment oppor-tunity requirements of Ohio Administrative Code Chapter 123, the Governor’s Executive Order of 1972 and Governor’s Executive Order 84-9 shall be required.

Bidders shall comply with the prevailing wage rates on public improvements in Poland Township as determined by the Ohio Department of Industrial Relations.

CLEARLY INDICATE THE ITEM BEING BID, AS WELL AS THE NAME AND ADDRESS OF THE PERSON OR BUSINESS SUBMIT-TING THE BID, ON THE OUTSIDE OF THE SEALED ENVELOPE CONTAINING THE BID.

POLAND TOWNSHIP BOARD OF TRUSTEESPaul J. Canter, Fiscal Officer

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE

BRUNGARD ROAD UPGRADES -PHASE 1SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP, OHIO

OHIO PUBLIC WORKS COMMISSION#DFU06

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

The Board of Trustees of Springfield Town-ship will receive sealed bids for the above-mentioned project until 2 PM on Wednes-day, July 12, 2017 at the Springfield Town-ship Administration Building, 3475 E. South Range Road, New Springfield, Ohio 44443. Please note that the Springfield Township Administration Building office hours are8 AM to 2:30 PM Monday through Friday. Bids will be publicly opened and read aloud at 7 PM on Wednesday, July 12, 2017 at the newly constructed SpringfieldTownship Fire Station, 3989 E. Middletown Road, New Middletown, OH 44442.

Plans, specifications and bidding forms can be obtained only from Thomas Fok &Associates, Inc. at 3896 Mahoning Avenue, Youngstown, Ohio 44515, (330) 799-1501, for a fee of Fifty Dollars ($50.00) plus post-age and handling, if applicable, for each set of Contract Documents and Drawings, which is non-refundable. Checks are to be made payable to Thomas Fok & Associates, Inc.

Scope of work includes installing 6” under-drain to remove road base water. Brungard Road currently is a chip seal driving sur-face. Four inches of asphalt pavement with compacted aggregate shoulder will be applied. Project is located on south end of Brungard Road, 0’ to 800’ north of South Range Road/Brungard Road intersection.

Domestic Steel use requirements as speci-fied in Section 153.001 of the Revised Code apply to this project. Copies of Section 153.001 of the Revised Code can be ob-tained from any of the offices of theDepartment of Administrative Services.

Each bidder shall be required to complete and file with his bid the enclosed Proposal Guaranty and Performance/Payment Bond Form (Section 153.571 of the Ohio Revised Code) with a Surety Company executing the Bond, which is listed on the Treasury Department's most current list (Circular 570 as amended) and authorized to trans-act business in the State where the project is based.

If the bid is accepted, the successful bidder shall enter into a contract and the Proposal Guaranty and Performance/Payment Bond shall provide the conditions in said bond, and as listed below:

(A) A Contract Performance Bond in an amount equal to 100% of the estimated cost of the work conditioned, among other things that the Contractor will perform the work upon the terms proposed, within the time prescribed, in accordance with the plans and specifications.

(B) A Payment Bond in an amount equal to 100% of the estimated cost of the work conditioned for the payment by the Con-tractor and all Sub-contractors for labor performed and materials furnished in con-nection with the project involved.

Springfield Township reserves the right to reject any or all bids and waive any infor-malities in bidding.

Bids of Corporations not chartered in Ohio must be accompanied by proper certifica-tion that such corporation is authorized to do business in Ohio.

The successful bidder will be required to pay at least minimum wage rates pre-determined by the Secretary of Labor for the project work as required. The Schedule of Approved Wage Rates, as pre-deter-mined by the Secretary of Labor is incorpo-rated in the Contract Documents.

This Contract is subject to the provisions of Executive Order 11246 of September 24, 1965, as pertains to an Affirmative Action Plan, and Governor Executive Order ofJanuary 27, 1972.

A bidder/contractor will be deemed com-mitted to the goals of Springfield Township Plan Bid Conditions by submitting a proper-ly signed bid. All bidders must fill in all blanks of the proposal in ink or typewrit-ten. Entire Contract Book must be submit-ted intact with the bid.

The successful low bidder will be required to comply with all Contract Requirements for Equal Employment Opportunities.

Each bidder must insure that all employees and applicants for employment are not dis-criminated against because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin.

No bids may be withdrawn after the sched-uled closing time for the receipt of bids for at least sixty (60) days.

Engineer’s Construction Cost Estimate: $ 84,008.00

BY ORDER OF THE SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP, OHIO

PATTI GIBSONTOWNSHIP FISCAL OFFICER

LEGAL NOTICE

Canfield Township Board of Trustees will meet at 21 S. Broad St, Canfield (Township Hall) on Thursday, June 29 at 9:30am to meet in special regular session to finalize financial requirements for Starr Centre Phase I - OPWC grant project. The Board may or may not act. The public is welcome to attend.

NOTICE ERRORSAdvertisers are requested

to check the firstappearance of ads for

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Associated Press

OMAHA, NEB.It has been a busy College

World Series for Dr. Jerry Poche’, the father of star LSU

pitcher Jared Poche’.

A fa m i ly doctor who has been in private prac-t ice for 25 years, Poche’ has tended to four peo-

ple during this year’s CWS: A 6-year-old boy who was hit in the forehead by a foul ball, a fan with a bug in his ear, a man who passed out from apparent dehydration and, in a dramatic scene Monday night, reviving an 87-year-old fan who had ap-

parently suffered a heart at-tack and was found at the stadium with no pulse.

“I’m just watching the game, and someone comes up and says, ‘Hey, man, we need you again,”’ Poche’ said a day later with a laugh. “Whatever. I do what I got to do.”

Poche’ was in Section 117 when he was summoned by Kellie Freeman, mother of LSU second baseman Cole Freeman, in the sixth in-ning of Game 1 against Flor-ida on Monday night. The elderly man was slumped on the TD Ameritrade Park concourse.

“I see an older gentleman being held up by his fam-ily, and they said he’s weak,” Poche’ said Tuesday. “He

wasn’t weak. He didn’t have a pulse, and he had [labor-ing] respirations. He was dying.”

Poche’ said he began doing chest compressions, and Jimmy Roy, a fi refi ght-er who is the father of LSU strength and conditioning coach Travis Roy, performed mouth-to-mouth resuscita-tion for five to seven min-utes until medics arrived.

“He started breathing on his own a little and his pulse came back, and we were for-tunate we were able to re-vive him,” Poche’ said.

L SU spokesma n Bi l l Franques said the man was a Florida fan who had an ap-parent heart attack.

Nebraska Medical Cen-ter spokesman Taylor Wil-

son said the man, who was not identified, was in good condition. He did not want to speak with the media, Wilson said, but his fam-ily was very appreciative of the effort to help save him. The Advocate news-paper of Baton Rouge, La., first reported the medical emergency.

Jared Poche’ was tabbed as the starting pitcher Tues-day night as the Tigers tried to even the best-of-three CWS fi nals at a game apiece. Dr. Poche’, who is from of Lutcher, La., was hoping for a quiet night on the medical front so he can focus on the game.

“That’s the plan, right?” he said.

Associated Press

OMAHA, NEB.Florida scored four runs

in the eighth inning to pull away from LSU, and the Ga-tors beat their Southeastern Conference rival 6-1 Tues-day night to complete a two-game sweep in the College World Series fi nals for their first national title in base-ball.

The Gators (52-19) posted the eighth sweep in the 15 years of the best-of-three

f i n a l s f or-mat, and fi rst since 2013. LSU (52-20)

lost for the fi rst time in seven appearances in a champion-ship game.

Freshman Tyler Dyson (4-0) limited the Tigers to three hits in six innings in only his second start, and the Gators capitalized on LSU errors in the first and second innings to go up 2-0 against Jared Poche (12-4).

Things got interesting af-ter Michael Byrne relieved Dyson in the seventh. LSU pulled to 2-1 and would have tied it if not for Jake Slaughter being called for runner interference at sec-ond base for sliding into shortstop Dalton Guth-rie’s leg as he was throw-ing to fi rst to turn a double play. Josh Smith, who had run home, was sent back to third, and Beau Jordan fl ew out to end the inning.

K r a m e r R o b e r t s o n punched a single into right fi eld leading off the eighth and took second on a wild pitch. The Tigers had run-ners on the corners when Cole Freeman beat Byrne’s throw to first for a bunt single. After Byrne struck

out A ntoine Duplantis, Jackson Kowar, who would have been Florida’s starter in Game 3, came on to face Greg Deichmann.

Deichmann grounded Kowar’s fi rst pitch to fi rst, and JJ Schwarz threw out Robertson at the plate on a play that stood after a vid-eo review. Zach Watson, the Tigers’ hottest hitter in the CWS, then fl ew out to end the inning.

The Gators scored four t imes in t he bottom of the eighth. LSU reliever Zack Hess hit a batter with the bases loaded, Liput hit a two-run single and Schwarz had a sacrifi ce fl y.

Kowar pitched around a single in the top of the

ninth, with the champion-ship locked up when Beau Jordan grounded out to second, prompting the Ga-tors to empty their dugout and start dogpiling.

Florida was in the CWS for the 11th time and pre-viously had made it to the f inals in 2005 and 2011, getting swept each time.

Kev in O’Sul l ivan, the Gators’ 10th-year coach, had brought the Gators to six of the last eight College World Series. Last year was supposed to be his best chance to win it all. The Gators were the No. 1 na-tional seed for the NCAA Tournament, and they had eight players who were taken in the fi rst 10 rounds

of the 2016 Major League Baseball draft. They went two games and out.

Florida this year brought back one of the nation’s top weekend rotations in CWS Most Outstanding Player Alex Faedo, Brady Singer and Kowar and a reliever in Byrne who led the coun-try with a school-record 19 saves. Complementing the pitching was a defense that ranked in the top 10 in the country.

All that was missing was consistent offense. The Ga-tors came into this game with no everyday player hitting .300, and they were ranked 227th out of 300 teams with a .258 batting average.

— COLLEGE WORLD SERIES —

Father of LSU star revives man

Huge eighth inning helpsFlorida fi nish sweep of LSU

and I always say, ‘I’m talk-ing to Jeff.”

While the Eagles took their lumps and bruises in a season that saw the team lose their final six games, nine starters from each side of the ball will return.

“That will help a lot,” Hether said. “All of our skill players are back on offense and our offensive line is big with four of the five over 250 pounds.”

And while many smaller schools are run heavy on offense, Hether believes with his skill returning, the Eagles can be quite dy-

namic.“I want the offense to be

the same as last year — at-tack and get the ball up the fi eld quick,” Hether said. “I want to pass the ball in a spread and be fast-paced.

“I’m going to be adding some twists with some things people in this area haven’t seen before.”

Ware hopes that the product the duo puts on the fi eld will show critics a two-headed approach is a possibility in football.

“People ask ‘How can you do that? There’s no way,’ ” Ware said. “But if you’ve got people like me and [Jeff] with respect for each other then you’re going to do it.”

EAGLESContinued from B1

Class B: 18-UCreekside Fitness 6, Knightline 4Dom Pecchia had two hits including a double, an RBI and scored once and Eric Sapp had two hits including a double and an RBI and scored twice for Creekside. Eric Sapp earned the win for Creekside giving up nine hits and four runs while striking out seven. Zach Campbell had two hits and scored once and Anthony had two hits and two RBIs for Knightline.Astro Falcons 2, Dura Edge 0Craig Palidar had two hits and scored once and Jack Ander-son had a double and an RBI and scored once for Astro. Aaron Eriamas threw a complete game giving up six hits and no earned runs for the win. Kyle

Shingledecker had two hits and Trey Adams had a double for DuraEdge.

Warren AA LeagueMetro Ice 8, Marlins 0Nick Charnas pitched a three-hitter and struck out eight as Metro Ice defeated the Marlins. Charnas was aided by good defense all evening, including a 9-6-3 triple play in the fi fth inning with the Ice holding onto a 2-0 lead. Metro Ice took the lead on a Larry Goist single in the fi rst inning. Metro Ice added four runs in the sixth inning. A walk by Joe Micco and a error sparked the uprising. Blaine Lang took the loss for Marlins. He worked six innings, surren-dering six hits and eight runs. He struck out four.

Staff report

SANDLOT ROUNDUP | Tuesday’s games

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

B4 - 06/28/17

FLORIDA 6 LSU 1

Poche’

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Florida celebrates after Jonathan India (6) scores against LSU during the eighth inning in Game 2 of the NCAA College World Series base-ball fi nals in Omaha, Neb., on Tuesday.

Florida shortstop Dalton Guthrie, top, falls after being hit by LSU’s Jake Slaughter at second base on a double play hit by Michael Papierski during the seventh inning in Game 2 of the NCAA College World Series baseball fi nals Tuesday in Omaha, Neb. Papierski was out at fi rst.

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. had just completed a satisfying sixth-place fi nish at Sonoma Raceway when he was stopped by the Fox Sports cameras in what might have been his fi nal post-race in-terview with the network.

It was 17 years ago that Fox made its debut as NASCAR’s newest broad-cast partner, and that Daytona 500 will always be remembered for the fatal last-lap accident that killed Dale Earnhardt Sr. His son rushed from the track in his fi resuit to the hospital hoping for the best, but his father was gone.

He was practically a kid back then, doing his inter-views with a baseball hat on backward before jumping in his race car as a respite from the chaos around him.

Now 42 years old and married, Fox stopped him Sunday after what might have been his fi nal race on the picturesque road course in Napa Valley wine coun-try. He was asked, “When you look back to the past 17 years, what will stand out the most? What will you be most proud of?”

“I think the wins and everything, are great. I enjoyed celebrating those,” Earnhardt began. “But, long after your career — guys come along and win races and some of your accom-plishments on the track sort of get forgotten. But, who you are as a person never gets forgotten. People never forget who you were.

“I hope people just thought I was good and honest and represented the sport well. I hope people that work with me enjoyed working with me, whether it was in the late model ranks or whatever; and I hope the guys I raced against enjoyed racing with me. That’s really all that will matter. And, what people I think will remember, is always you’re alive and beyond. Hopefully I left a good impression. I’ve had a lot of fun.”

With that, it was off to prepare for Saturday night’s race at Daytona Internation-al Speedway. It’s the second half of the season, and every stop Earnhardt makes from here until November will effectively be “his last race at that track.”

As his farewell tour began in Sonoma — the track “gift-ed” him the sponsorship of three Labrador retriever puppies that will be raised and trained to help children with disabilities through Paws as Loving Support As-sistance Dogs — Earnhardt is becoming more refl ective with each passing race.

That should make this week’s stop in Daytona a tough one for NASCAR’s most popular driver.

He comes from a time when the “Firecracker 400” was actually held on the morning of July 4, then all the drivers would take their families to Daytona Beach after the race. He’s always been nostalgic for the simpler days in NASCAR, when he was just a little boy in awe of his father and his racing heroes.

Daytona, with all its grit and biker bars, gentleman’s clubs and chain restaurants, is still paradise to Earn-hardt.

With his countdown to retirement underway, Earn-hardt himself seems to be recognizing the end is near. And it sounds very much like he has mixed emotions.

“I am just retiring from full-time racing. I am going to run some Xfi nity races next year. I don’t know that I won’t ever run the Daytona 500 again,” he said. “I want to continue to be part of the sport. I don’t know how it’s going to affect me, really. It’s hard for me to put that into words because I don’t know what that is going to feel like.

“It will be pretty weird I think to come back to the 500, I’m going to go to the 500 whether I’ve got any work to do or not. It will be pretty weird to be there and not race.”Jenna Fryer covers auto racing for The Associated Press.

JennaFryer

Farewell,but not

goodbye

Associated Press

INDIANAPOLIS Katie Ledeck y keeps

makes winning look easy. Nathan Adrian continues to prove experience mat-ters when things get close.

Either way, the result was the same Tuesday night in Indianapolis: The two Olympic gold medal-ists qualified for another American world champi-onship team.

Ledecky, as usual, domi-nated the women’s 800-me-ter freestyle, winning by nearly 9 seconds. Adrian, meanwhile, rallied in the closing meters of the men’s 100 free and outtouched Caeleb Dressel by 0.01 sec-onds to win the men’s 100 free at the U.S. National Championships.

“That’s kind of what we’ve built into my nervous system,” Adrian said. “I’ve always tried to go out and bring it back in the back half. Now maybe we can fi gure out what to do in the front half.”

Adrian doesn’t have much time for fi ne-tuning before heading to Buda-pest, Hungary. The meet is scheduled for July 23-30.

But after taking Olympic gold in the 100 free in 2012 and picking up a bronze in the same event last sum-mer in Rio de Janeiro, Adri-an returned to Indianapolis this year under completely different circumstances.

At age 28, he was eas-

ily the oldest competitor in the fi nal, almost 6 1/2 years older than the oldest com-petitor, Ryan Held.

And with the retired Michael Phelps and sus-pended Ryan Lochte not around, Adrian has accept-ed his role as Team USA’s elder spokesman.

The good news is that he appears to be as strong as ever.

After qualifying fourth in the morning prelims, Adri-an charged back from the No. 6 spot at the turn and sprinted past fi ve younger competitors to reclaim a title he first won in 2009, also in Indy. He won in 47.96 seconds. Dressel was next at 47.97.

“I didn’t know where they were and if I had looked, I probably would have lost it,” Adrian said after pump-ing his fist and taking a deep breath following the race.

The winners of each event qualify for the world

championships. Runner-ups are also likely to join the team through a selec-tion process.

Ledecky, as usual, pro-vided no drama in an event she has owned for years.

The 20-year-old Stanford star took the lead in the fi rst 50 meters and extended it by between 0.31 and 0.83 seconds on each ensuing lap through the first 600 meters. At one point, the Washington native was even swimming under her own world record pace.

She eventually finished in 8:11.50, beating Leah Smith to the wall by 8.96 seconds.

Ledecky did all that de-spite having only about 25 minutes between her sixth-place fi nish in the 100 free and the start of the 800 and without the benefi t of changing her workouts be-fore nationals.

“I didn’t rest too much for this. I’d say maybe com-pared to other trials/selec-tion meets, this is probably the least tapered I’ve been,” she said. “I felt in control but by the time I got to about 400 or 50, I couldn’t pick it up any more.”

By winning, Ledecky has already given herself the option to compete in the 1,500 free at Budapest without having to swim the event Saturday.

She will still plans to swim the 200 free today and the 400 free on Friday.

Gold medalists stealshow on Day 1 at Indy

Associated Press

For years, USA Gym-nastics felt it aggressively safeguarded hundreds of thousands of athletes from sexual abuse. Yet the pro-tocols designed to show gymnasts, coaches, staff and parents how to report abuse were muddled, con-fusing and not well en-forced.

The fallout, according to a former federal prosecu-tor hired to independently review the organization’s handling of abuse cases, was “inadvertent suppres-sion” and a culture that emphasized performance over protection.

A culture in desperate need of change.

“There needs to be a clear articulation that the culture is athlete safety fi rst, not just success on the fi eld,” Deborah Daniels said Tuesday after releasing her lengthy report. “It needs to start with the board (of di-rectors) and needs to per-meate through the entire organization.”

Daniels laid out 70 rec-om mendat ion s — a l l unanimously adopted by the board Monday night — aimed at giving USA Gymnastics more power to monitor the safety of 200,000-plus athletes affi li-ated with member gyms.

“We want to prevent abuse,” Daniels said. “We know there will still be abuse occurring, (but we) want to make sure report-ing and handling of report

is done as well as possible.”USA Gy mnast ics or-

dered the review last fall following a series of civil lawsuits filed against the organization and a former team doctor by a pair of gymnasts who claim the physician sexually abused them during their time on the U.S. national team. USA Gymnastics has de-nied wrongdoing. The or-ganization stated it went to authorities quickly in the summer of 2015 after hear-ing claims of abuse against Dr. Larry Nassar but later amended the timeline fol-lowing a Wall Street Journal report, saying it conducted a fi ve-week internal review before going to the FBI.

“A delay is impermissi-ble,” Daniels said.

A Michigan judge on Friday separately ordered Nassar to stand trial on charges of sexually as-

saulting six young gym-nasts who said he molested them while they sought treatment for injuries. It is one of four criminal cases against Nassar in the state. The longtime Michigan State University doctor is a defendant or co-defendant in numerous civil suits.

John Manly, a Califor-nia-based attorney whose firm is representing more than 100 alleged victims of abuse by Nassar, called the report “a public relations facade.”

“The report calls for a change in culture but those who created the toxic cul-ture remain in charge of the organization,” Manly said in a statement. “The lack of any real investigation, facts or accountability for those who failed thousands of boys and girls victimized by Nassar and others in the report is disturbing.”

Report: USA Gymnastics’policies muddled on abuse

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

B5 - 06/28/17

AP FILE PHOTO, MAY 26

Defense attorney Shannon Smith talks to her client, Dr. Larry Nassar, during the second portion of his preliminary hearing on sexual assault at the 55th District Court in Mason, Mich.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Katie Ledecky swims on her way to winning the women’s 800-meter freestyle Tuesday at the U.S. swimming championships in Indianapolis.

I’VE ALWAYS TRIED TO GO OUT AND

BRING IT BACK IN THE BACK HALF. NOW MAYBE WE CAN FIGURE OUT WHAT TO DO IN THE FRONT HALF.”Nathan Adrian, Olympic

gold medalist swimmer

CLASSIFIEDSB6 THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 WWW.VINDY.COM

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

BRIDGENeither vulnerable, South

deals NORTH �Void �7 2 �A K J 10 8 4 3 �Q 9 7 2WEST EAST�A Q J 8 5 3 �10 7 4 2�9 6 �K 10 8 5 4 3�2 �9�J 10 5 4 �K 8 SOUTH �K 9 6 �A Q J �Q 7 6 5 �A 6 3The bidding:SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST1� 2� 6� All passOpening lead: Nine of �

Today’s deal was played by the late Lidia Beech, one of Aus-tralia’s leading players for many years. She and her partner were using an opening no trump range of 12-14, hence the one diamond opening bid. North’s leap to slam was a brave gamble. Brave is what we call it when it works. We call it something else when it doesn’t.

Beech won the opening heart

lead with the queen when East refused to part with his king. The contract seemed to depend on finding the king of clubs in the West hand, but Beech showed that there was an additional chance. She ruffed a spade in dummy at trick two and then led the eight of diamonds to her queen. Another spade was ruff ed in dummy, this time with the ace, and Beech returned to her hand with a low trump to the seven. She ruffed her last spade, then led a heart back to her ace and ruffed the queen of hearts in dummy.

At this point, all of the spades and the hearts had been elimi-nated from both the North and South hands. Beech f inally turned her attention to clubs. She led a club to the ace and a low club back to the queen. This lost to East’s king. Sadly for the defense, this was East’s last club and, thanks to Beech’s careful play, East was forced to yield a ruff-sluff and declarer’s second club loser went away. Brave bid-ding by North and well played by South!

©Tribune Content Agency

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Ianazone’s ContractingPower washing available

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Sales Contractors Needed Throughout our Distribution Area

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Top sales reps are earning $600 per week doing this, you can too.

For More information, please call:330-747-1471 Ext. 1518

General Help General Help

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MACHINISTSButech Bliss is a company that sets itself apart from its competitors by offering the most innovative de-sign, manufacturing and service in our industry. This is accomplished by building and nurturing a workforce of exceptional employees. We recruit the top talent by offering an exceptional employment package and fostering a supportive culture with a pleasant work-ing environment.

Our company is looking for experienced machinists to run CNC machining centers, horizontal boring mills, and lathes. Candidates must be able to read blue-prints, make set-ups, work to close tolerances, and be willing to work overtime as needed. Preference is for night shift ($1.50 per hour shift differential). We also look favorably on candidates who have received NIMS credentials for machining or who have achieved jour-neyworker status through a machinist apprenticeship program.

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Interested persons should submit a cover letterwith salary requirements and application to:

Butech Bliss550 South Ellsworth Ave., Salem, OH 44460

Attn: HR ManagerVisit www.butechbliss.comto download an application.

Information may also be sent to: [email protected] Bliss

Equal Opportunity Employer

Skills/Trades Skills/Trades

•Studio Apartments All Utilities Included•Large One Bedrooms •Intercom Entrances •Junior One Bedrooms •Tennis Courts•Two Bedroom Apartments •Beautiful Park-Like Setting

WESTCHESTER EXECUTIVE - Corporate Suites Available

•Private entrance & patios •Spacious living areas •Washer & dryer hookups•Wooded setting

WESTCHESTER COMMONS •Live in your own 2 bedroom home •Heat and Water included in rent •Senior Activities Day •Washer/Dryer hookups in each unit

330-799-5758

A Senior Citizen Independent Living Complex

WESTCHESTERSQUARE APARTMENTS

SENIORDISCOUNT

Mon-Sat 10-5 Sun 12-5

•Central Air•Appliances•Patio-Carport •And Much More!

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$450Prices Start at

Per Month

ApartmentsUnfurnished

ApartmentsUnfurnished

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ApartmentsUnfurnished

330-746-6565Option 2p

CLASSIFIEDS @

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Automobiles Automobiles

Apartments Furnished

AustintownFurnished Studio

Spacious studio apt., large closets, balcony/patio, pool & gym, starting at $455/ mo. + elec. 330-792-0792

cpwapartments.com

ApartmentsUnfurnished

Austintown Pembrook Place

Studio - $400Large 1 Bdrm. - $450

2 Bdrm. - $565Water/Sewer & Trash Paid

4150 Pembrook Dr.330-793-5022

Austintown - 4198 Pem-brook, lg. fam. & din. rm. 2 bdrm., start at $600 + elec.

Call 330-506-9956

Austintown - Springwood Apts. 1 bdrm., $519. 1 story living. Call 330-792-7517

AustintownApartments

Spacious 1 & 2 bdrm. apts. available. 1-Bdrms. starting at $525/mo. + elec. 2-Bdrms. starting at $600/ mo. + elec. Call today for details! 330-792-0792

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AustintownGreenbriar Village

Studio - 1-Bdrm.2/3 Bdrm. Townhouse

330-423-0115Pet friendly community.

Austintown Pembrook apts. Now leasing studios-$395,1 bdrm., $495 .$300 securi-ty deposit. 330-793-5022

AustintownSummer Specials

LeChateau, 1 & 2 bdrms. available. Select units Pet Friendly. Large closets, heat & water, fitness cen-ter & pool. Starting at $525 + elec. Call today for our current special!

330-792-0792cpwapartments.com

Boardman

Hitchcock Apts.Studio, 1-Bdrm.

and 2-Bdrm.330-758-6729

Ask for Specials!

Boardman - Senior Apts.2 Bdrm., heat & water incl.$525/mo., first mo. free.

Call 330-718-5585

Boardman - 1-bdrm., $380 + elec. & gas, walking dis-tance to mall. 330-314-4345

Boardman - 2 bdrm., 1st flr. Enclosed garage, very quiet, $525/mo. Call 330-506-5072

Boardman - Near Mall1 Bdrm. @ $4502 Bdrm. @ $550

Nicely Remodeled.7544 Market St.

330-629-7544

Boardman2 Bdrm., 1 BathStarting at $500

Heat & Water PaidCall 330-788-2202

Newport Glen - ElevatorService 4071 Glenwood

BoardmanMillcreek Village

330-333-72422-Bedroom - $780-$965

Heat & Water PaidYour small

dog & cat welcome.

BOARDMAN/POLAND330-565-0590 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm

apts. & townhouses.1st Months rent, $99.

Boardman/PolandApts., lofts, townhouses.Pets welcome. Sr. Disc.

Call 330-758-5916

Boardman: Excellent, x-lg. 2-bedrooms, carports, no pets, heat pd. 330-799-3375

Canfield1 bedroom starting $5002 bedroom starting $575

CANFIELD SCHOOLSHEAT & WATER PAID

Sr. Discounts330-533-5454 - Carriage Hill

386 Fairground

CornersburgBRANDYWINE APTS.All utilities included

LARGE 1 Bdrm., $5252 Bdrm., $625330-799-0611

GIRARD - Highland Ave.1 & 2 Bdrm., starting at

$425/mo. Call 330-506-9956

GirardLiberty Park

HEAT & WATER PAID1 Bedroom, starting $475

2 Bedroom starting at $550Call 330-545-3975

210 Elruth Ct.- Sr Discounts

Girard- Shannon Terrace1 Bdrm., starting $4752 Bdrm., starting $545

Heat & water paid500 Park Ave.

Pet friendly with conditions330-716-1578

Howland - Senior Apts., 1 or 2 bedroom, all utilities incl., starting at $550, 1st mo. free. Call 330-530-8606

Hubbard - 2 Bdrm., 2 story townhouse, garage, $525 + gas & elec. 330-759-7708.

Liberty: 1 bed, $505; 2 bed from $525, heat/water pd. Tim-

ber Ridge, 330-759-8811

ApartmentsUnfurnished

HubbardSHADOW RUNSAVINGS AVAILABLE!

Studio - $480All Utilities Paid330-423-4820

Cats are welcome.

LIBERTY - 1 & 2 Bdrm., starting $525/mo.; 2, 3 & 4 bdrm. townhomes, $700-$825/mo. Various floor plans! $99 MOVE IN SPE-CIAL! Monticello Apts. in-cluding Logan Gate & Logan Way. Call 330-759-9478.

LIBERTY - 2 Bdrm., no appl., from $495/mo. + elec. No pets. Call 330-759-7708

MINERAL RIDGERIDGEWOOD APTS. - SR 461 & 2 Bdrm. units, heat & water pd. + sec. system, carports, pool, onsite mgr. 330-652-6008/330-545-6630

Poland - 2075 Wolosyn2 bdrm., appl., $535/mo.

Call 330-369-2071

STRUTHERS 330-565-05902 Bedroom duplex.

1st Months rent, $99.

Yo. East: ESA Park accept-ing applications for 2 bed-room, regular rents only.

Call 330-747-7400

Yo. North - 3-Bdrm., 1-bath, $425/mo., $199 move in. Avail. today. 330-747-9649.

Yo. NorthCrandall Park Apts.

1707 5th Ave.Very spacious 2 bdrm., nice-ly remodeled w/new kitch-en, must see. $550-$700.

330-742-0198

Houses For Rent

Yo. East, South & WestNewly renovated homes available. Accepting Sec-tion 8. Call 330-742-7580.

Yo. South - 361 Marmion, 3 bdrm., garage, $600; 3416

Lenox Ave. 3 bdrm., garage, $675 + util.; 344 W. Judson, 3 bdrm., $550; 610 Mabel, 3 bdrm., $550. 330-369-2071.

Yo. South - 4-Bdrm., garage$625 + utilities

Call 330-518-7588

Rooms For Rent

Daily/wkly. Rates. May Mo-tel, 330-538-2211 or Board-man Inn, 330-758-2315.

4000REAL ESTATE

Houses For Sale

Boardman - 4 bdrm.,2.5 bath, 2670 sq. ft., many updates, asking $209,900.

Call 330-881-9956

Investment Property

Yo. South - Duplex, remod-eled, new roof, new kit., off Market St., between Erie.

Call 330-707-7038

6000STUFF

Antiques/Collectibles

COCA-COLA items,glasses, cans, misc.Call 330-728-3347

Appliances

Appliance SaleRefrigerator/washers, $248Stoves, $198, Dryers, $158All with 90 Day WarrantyEconomy Furniture

2828 Market, Yo. 782-0331

Farmers Market

Cider, Apples, Strawberries. Huffman Fruit Farm, 13080 Lisbon Rd., Salem, 9-5, Mon.-Sat. 330-533-5700.

Our own homegrown sweet & sour cherries; also rasp-berries. You pick Strawber-ries - call for picking times.

Gasper’s Garden330-533-7221

RED RASPBERRIESEllsworth Berry Farm

Call 330-538-3861

Strawberries & peas - you pick. Call for picking times.

Catalpa Grove FarmsColumbiana, 330-482-4064

Closed Sunday

Furniture

Bed - queen w/mattress & box springs, like new, or-nate 6’ high headboard, $500/offer. 330-758-2045.

Mattress SaleQueen set $98/Full set $88Economy Furniture

2828 Market, Yo. 782-0331

GF desks, chairs &cabinets. 330-360-3711

Sleepy Hollow OutletAny size starting at $78

330-782-5555 4931 Market

Lawn/GardenEquipment

Mower - riding - Honda, 38” cut, 10 hp, auto. w/rear bagging system, excellent shape, $850. 330-770-5790.

Wood chipper - Troy-Bilt, shredder, vacuum, 8 hp., elec. start,. self propelled, used twice, $750/offer. 330-945-4777/330-622-8198

Machinery/Tools

Radial Arm Saw - Crafts-man, 10” $175/best offer. 330-945-4777/330-622-8198

Table saw, Craftsman, 10”, belt drive, cast iron table, $150. Call 330-945-4777.

Miscellaneous

Ladder - 30’ wooden exten-sion ladder, $100.

Call Dan, 330-533-3615

TRAILERS & HITCHESbennetttrailer.com

330-533-4455

Musical Instruments

ORGAN - C3/B3 with 122 Leslie. Delivery available.

Call 724-877-3288

Piano - Story & Clark, with Ivory keys, excellent condi-tion, original owner, $800/ best offer. 330-533-3514.

Sporting/ExerciseEquipment

Gun - 357 Black Hawk Rug-er with holster, stainless steel, $450; another 357 Gun, $275. 234-855-0883

Gun - Mitchell Gold Series, 1911, 45 cal., mint in box, $2200/offer. 330-799-4282.

Swimming Pools/Accessories

Pump - Pentair OptiFlo, 1 hp, 24’ solar cover, sand fil-ter, all $140. 330-792-8041.

Swimming Pool - 15’ round, 54” high, Great Escape, like new, used 2 yrs., extras, asking $700. 330-707-0518

7000PETS, ANIMALS

Pets Found

Pitbull - Small male, very friendly, grey mix, south-side area. 330-623-5200.

Birds

I will take free birds & canaries into my loving care

any time. 330-965-0194

Dogs

Yorkies, $899; MaltiPoo, $899; Yorkpoo, $899; Mork-ie $899; Parti-Yorkie, $799; Jack Russell, $599; Maltese $899; E. Bea-Bulls, Cava-chons $399 & $899; Shiht-zu, $899, Morkie, $899; Elk-hounds $599, Chihuahua, $699. CC, cash or easy fi-nancing on our webwww.ohiopuppy.com Some

puppies, 10% off with cash pay. 1560 E. Liberty St., Girard, OH (Youngstown) exit 229 off Belmont Ave. by Dennys. 330-259-1286

Free Pets

Kittens- free to good home, 10 wks. old, good with chil-dren. 330-506-2874.

NOTICE: Screenrespondents carefully when

giving away animals.

8000AUTOMOTIVE

Antique/Classic Cars

Cadillac Eldorado Conv. - 1976, good shape, $10,500 or best offer. 330-718-8730.

Antique/Classic Cars

DODGE DART - 1965Hard top 2 dr., V-8, orig.

owner, 21,000 mi., all orig., excellent condition,

$12,000. Call 330-702-1634

Ford Mustang Convertible 1965, 289, show quality, $12,500; Mercedes 450SL 1979, excellent, $10,500.

Reply to: P.O.Box 14181Poland, OH 44514

FORD MODEL A - 1931Excellent condition,

original, $19,500.Call 330-792-2524

ATVs

Kawasaki T-Rex 750 - 2009side by side, 4x4, with dump bed, low, low mi., like new, $8000/best offer, con-sider trades. 330-457-0685

Boats

Glastron 279 - 2004. Trailer, every mfg., option, very low hrs., stored inside in win-ter, $27,500/offer. Ashtab-ula, OH. Call 440-964-2304

Sea-Ray Seville - 1983, 19’ bowrider, 120 hp, 4 cyl., Mercruiser I/O, 1 owner, ex-cellent condition, asking $4000/offer. 330-565-1137.

Campers/RVs

Forest River Wildwood X-Lite - 2016, 25’, elec. hitch, excellent condition, $15,000 or best offer. 724-683-6636

Forest River Sierra - 20145 slides, washer/dryer, cus-tom shed, wooded lot, Can-field Park, seasonal rent paid, $40,000. 330-550-0302

Motorcycles/Mopeds

Harley-Davidson DynaSuperglide Custom - 2010

12,000 mi. New tires, bat-ter, extras, black & chrome. $7995 or best offer.

Call 330-793-1216

Harley-Davidson Electra Glide Classic - 2010, red hot Sunglow, 2013 Street Glide wheels, detachable tour pkg., sissy bar, 32,600 mi., $11,500. Jim 330-881-0876.

Harley-Davidson Heritage Softail Classic 2007, 8500 orig. mi., like new condition, $9500. Call 330-501-0436

Harley-Davidson Fatboy FLSTF - 2006. Only 2,000 mi., excellent condition, r. $7800. Call 330-921-1282.

Harley-Davidson - 2004FLSTCI Heritage Softail Classic, black, 8972 mi., leather saddle bags, back rest, passenger foot rests, detachable windshield, ex-cellent condition, asking $9500. Don, 330-540-6181

Harley-Davidson Ultra Clas-sic - 1998, 1 owner, ma-roon/black, 18,000 mi., lots of extras, $8000 firm.

Call 330-360-0365

Harley-Davidson FLH - 1978 factory paint, runs, as is, $5200 or best offer.

Call 330-610-6791

Honda Goldwing - 2008, 38,000 mi., silver, ABS + too many extras to list $12,500. 330-792-8041.

Honda Shadow - 200713,000 mi., $4000 or best offer, may accept guns on trade. Call 724-924-9158

Honda Goldwing - 2007 31,000 mi., ABS brakes, nav., heated seat & grips, new tires, pin striped, $11,000. 330-519-9204.

Suzuki Blvd. M109R 2007. 6200 mi., Great condition, $6100. Call 724-333-7277

Suzuki Intruder V5 800 2000. Saddlebags, wind-shield, just tuned up with new battery, low mi. Nice bike, asking $2000/offer.

330-759-7928, ask for Joe

Suzuki Bandit 1200S - 199910,923 mi., all stock, runs

great, $2000/offer.Call 330-550-1651

Swift - 2004 custom chop-per, real show stopper! Runs great, 113S&S side-winder engine 9800 mi., $8600/offer. 330-610-6791.

Yamaha V Star 1100 Classic - 2003, V&H pipes, Mustang seats, 2 tone, 7121 mi., clean, $3400. 330-385-8155.

Yamaha 180 Scooter - 19837542 mi., $700

Call 330-549-3768

Motorcycles/Mopeds

Texas Sidecar - taken off Harley softtail, mounts available for most Harley’s and Metrics, asking $3300 or best offer. 330-610-6791

Automobiles

Cadillac DTS - 2006, luxury pkg., 148,000 mi., very good condition, black ext., leath-er, $4600. S - O - L - D !

Cadillac Sedan DeVille 1995Green, beige rag top, 4.9, 84,000 mi., 18” rims & Vo-gues, $4600. 330-360-7682

Cadillac Brougham - 1991RWD, last of the big ones! Very good shape, 140,000 mi., maroon with maroon vinyl top, leather int., CD player. All the buttons & whistles, $1800.

Call 330-559-7819

Chevrolet Cruz LT - 2016, assume lease payment, $319/mo. for 30 months, 5000 mi., 330-272-1660.

Chevrolet Caprice Classic 1991, 51,000 mi., V-8, sun-roof, 1 owner, always ga-raged, looks & runs great, $3800/offer. 330-980-3230

Dodge Challenger - 2010, V-6, great shape, 82,000 mi., ideal for student, $19,000. 330-207-5922.

Ford Taurus SEL - 2007newer brakes & tires, trans. & coolant fluids recently changed, cold a/c, remote start, some rust, good work car, 131,000 mi., $2250/of-fer. S - O - L - D !

Ford Mustang - 2004, red conv., 40th Anniversary, 46,000 mi., leather. Serious offers only, 330-442-1893.

Nissan Altima 2.5 SL 2007. Loaded, 67,000 mi., Dark beige ext., beige leather int., $5600. S - O - L - D !

Volvo S40 2007. Manual 5 spd., 195,000 mi., loaded, well maintained, includes bonus snow tires, $2200/of-fer. S - O - L - D !

Automobiles

�BRITTAIN Chevrolet. 57 E. Martin St., E. Palestine, OH. Local 1-800-589-7970

SUVs

BMW X3 SUV - 200686,000 mi., black on black, new tires, loaded, $7900.

Call 330-774-6226

GMC Envoy SLT - 2007loaded, remote start, Rtitle, heated seats, 6 cyl., 96,890 mi., $6595. 330-385-8155

GMC Envoy - 2003, 140,000 mi., 3rd. row seat, 4WD, good condition, $3200.

Call 330-429-3965

Toyota 4Runner - 19994WD, moonroof, 97,000 mi., 4 dr., SUV, auto., V-6, 3.4L DOHC, $2150. 513-512-5783

Trucks

Chevrolet Sierra Z71 4x4 - 2016, assume lease pay-ment of $379/mo., for 30 mo. 330-540-8162.

Chevrolet Avalanche - 2005fully loaded, very good con-dition, 98,000 mi., asking $12,500. Call 330-534-9759.

Vans

Oldsmobile Silhouette 2004$1100 or best offer.Call 330-519-9555

Wanted To Buy

A best price $325 & up formost. Call 330-759-7807 or after 6pm, 330-534-2634.

YOUNGSTOWN AUTO WRECKING. Top dollar for any vehicle. 330-743-1492.

ZZ TOP PRICES PAID$350-$550. 330-782-7925

IF YOU’RE LOOKINGFOR A NEW JOB,

YOU’RE LOOKING INTHE RIGHT PLACE.

EMPLOYERS, NEED TOPLACE A HELPWANTED AD?CALL TODAY.330-746-6565

WISH THAT SPECIAL SOMEONE A “HAPPY BIRTHDAY”IN OUR NOTICES AND PERSONALS COLUMN.

CALL THE VINDICATOR CLASSIFIED DEPT 746-6565

____________________________Clean up and sell those stowed

away articles for cash! Hundredsof people can use those thingsstored in your attic collecting

dust. An ad in The Vindicator willbring you cash for them in a

hurry. Call 330-746-6565.TTTThhhheeee VVVViiiinnnnddddiiii ccccaaaattttoooorrrr CCCCllllaaaassssssss iiii ffff iiiieeeeddddssss.

Monaco B Plus - 200919,500 mi., 30ft., Chevy chassis, gas, top line model, queen sleep num-ber bed, 2 TVs, newer Mi-chelin tires, 1500 mi., $63,500. 330-358-2109

or 330-472-2896

NOTICE ERRORSAdvertisers are requested to

check the first appearance of adsfor accuracy. This newspaper will

be responsible for only oneincorrect insertion, the first one.

ANY ERROR SHOULD BEREPORTED IMMEDIATELY.

Austintown - Capital Es-tates. New gazebo, Step 2 rollercoaster, lawn, house-hold, jewelry, toys, misc.

Wed., 9-4. 284 Paris Dr.

Austintown - Estate Sale. Thurs., Fri., Sat., June 29, 30 & July 1; 9-4. Antiques, toys, plus sz. designer clothes, shoes & purses, Coach, Ruby Road, Peter Nygard, & much much more

1268 Cavalcade Dr.

Austintown

Items StockedDaily!

Furniture, Clothing andHousehold Items

WEDGEWOOD PLAZATHRIFT STORE

1733 S. Raccoon Rd.Austintown

Mon.-Fri., 10-6, Sat., 10-4.

Boardman - Estate Sale. 128 Runnemede Dr, Wed., 3-8; Thurs., 12-6; Fri., 9-5; Sat., 8-12. All must go! Freezers, grill, furniture, coffee, end & sofa table set household, tools, snow-blower, & more.

Boardman - Moving Sale!121 Centervale, off Market St. Thurs., 8:30-4 & Fri., 8:30-3. Queen size bed, sewing machine, household items & lg. womens clothes

CAMPBELL356 Penhale Ave.

July 1 & 2, 10am-4pm

Canfield - 501 W. Regency Circle. Fri., 8am-2pm.

Priced to Sell!Everything Must Go!

Cornersburg - 2 Families2606 BrunswickThurs., 10-4 p.m.

All offers accepted.

Cornersburg - 2277 Oran Dr., off S. Schenley. Thurs., Fri., 8-4; Sat., 9-1. Multi family. Collectibles, toys, appliances, household, girls clothing, TVs & lots more!

POLANDAnnual Multi Family Sale!

8463 Van Dr.Thurs., Fri., Sat., 8am-4pm

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

C1 - 06/28/17

Each week, this column off ers recipes from Valley cookbooks. If your organization would like to have its cookbook showcased, please contact our features edi-tor Barb Shaff er at 330-747-1471, ext. 1282, or email her at [email protected].

MAHONING VALLEY HISTORICAL SOCIETY’S

“RECIPES OF YOUNGSTOWN-VOLUME 2”

MIKE’S VEGETARIAN CHILIby SHARI CREED MCCONNELL

2 tablespoons cooking oil 2 cups chopped celery 2 cups chopped green pep-

per (two) 2 cups chopped onion

(three medium) 3 cloves garlic, minced (jar

kind) 2 28-ounce cans diced to-

matoes, not drained 2 16-ounce cans red kid-

ney beans, rinsed and drained

1⁄4 cup red wine vinegar 1 tablespoon chili powder 2 teaspoons dry parsley 2 teaspoons salt 1 1⁄2 teaspoons dried basil,

crushed 1 1⁄2 teaspoons dried oregano,

crushed 1 1⁄2 teaspoons ground cumin 1 teaspoon ground allspice 1⁄4 teaspoon black pepper 1⁄2 teaspoon bottled hot

pepper sauce (Frank’s) 1 bay leaf 1 12-ounce can beer (1 1⁄2

cups) 3⁄4 cup raw cashew nuts

Heat oil in dutch oven. Add celery, green pepper, onion and garlic. Cook, covered, until vegetables are tender but not brown. Stir in undrained toma-toes, drained beans, vinegar, chili powder, parsley, salt, basil, oregano, cumin, allspice, pep-per, black pepper, hot sauce and bay leaf. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer covered for at least one and one-half hours. Stir in beer and cashews. Return to boiling and simmer uncovered 30 minutes more, or until chili is desired consistency. Remove bay leaf. Makes six or more large servings. Serve as is or over rice.

PEANUT CREAM DRESSINGby DARLENE MOUNTS

1 cup light cream 1⁄2 cup creamy-style peanut

butter 1 tablespoon honey 1⁄2 teaspoon salt

In a small bowl gradually blend cream into peanut butter, stir-ring until smooth. Add honey and salt; mix well. Delicious with fruit salad. Suggested fruits: banan-as, cantaloupe, kiwi, nectarines and strawberries.

HOW TO OBTAIN THE BOOK

To obtain as many copies as you wish, send $23.75 plus $7.50 for shipping and handling per book to Mahoning Valley His-torical Society, 648 Wick Ave., Youngstown, OH 44502.

INSIDE C � VALLEY LIFE, C3 • SOCIETY, C4 • ET CETERA, C5 • COMICS, C6

WEDNESDAYJUNE 28, 2017

THE VINDICATOR | C1

— CONNECT WITH THESE FOOD FEATURES AT VINDY.COM/NEWS/VALLEYFOOD —

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@vindicator@valley24

STAY IN THE KNOW

Vintage Estate

A world-class beer retailer (right in our back yard)

SPECIAL TO THE VINDICATOR

Jason Jugenheimer, David Anderson, Joe Sanfi lippo, Roger Gillespie, Vintage Estate Owner Jeff McDevitt, Jim Cyphert and Dave Shively.

When you’ve been named the best beer retailer in the entire world, others want to emulate you.

Mahoning Valley residents sometimes take for granted that we have one of the best craft-beer retailers in the universe right here in Vintage Estate Wine & Beer, af-fectionately known as VE.

Owner Jeff McDevitt and Ad-vanced cicerone James Sforza are on a mission to enhance the Boardman shop’s already impres-

sive status.Two hours of

chatting and sam-pling with Jeff and

James solidifi ed the Mahoning Va l ley F l ig ht Crew’s under-standing of just how fortunate we are to have this gem right here.

Phill and Sandy Reda, owners of Magic Tree Pub & Eatery, founded VE in 2008. Jeff was a regular for years. In 2015, he purchased VE after 15 years of selling insurance.

“Beer is 1,000 times more fun than insurance — no, make that 1,400 times more fun,” said Jeff, referring to VE’s selection of 1,400 bottled beers. “I’ve visited some of the world’s best craft-beer loca-tions. I’ve learned things to do, and a few things we shouldn’t do.”

Evidently, VE is doing many things right. In January, it was named best bottle shop in Ohio and one of the best places for beer in the U.S. by ratebeer.com. In 2010, VE was named best beer re-tailer in the world, a spot above its second-place 2009 fi nish.

James is one of only 40 advanced cicerones in the world. The cer-tifi cation requires a solid under-standing and distinctive expertise of beer. He’s working on unique beer and food pairings for special events in the coming months.

One of VE’s biggest events of the year will take place July 28 to 30, the Admiration Collabora-

When you’re the

b e s t b ot t l e

shop in t he

state, eyebrows raise. When

you’re one of the best plac-

es for a beer in the country,

people do a double-take.

tion, when VE will host Jackie O’s, Athens, which was voted the best brewpub in Ohio earlier this year.

The Flight Crew asks a lot of questions, and we put our listening ears on when we’re around craft-beer experts. When we asked Jeff and James, “What do you recom-mend?” They didn’t disappoint.

Here are our favorites from the 34 craft beers VE had on tap:FAT HEAD’S/MADTREE GENERA L SHER-MAN RYE PALE ALE (6.4% ABV, 64 IBU)

Dave Shively: � “This is what you get when two of the best craft breweries in Ohio collaborate on a unique rye pale ale. This small-batch creation was in-troduced in mid-May. I had the good fortune of experienc-ing this copper-colored, unfil-tered pale ale, which ended up being my favorite! It had a dis-tinct hop profi le and was crisp and refreshing. The name is de-rived from the General Sher-

man Tree, the world’s largest and fattest tree. Some of the greatest craft beers aren’t creat-ed by the largest breweries with the fattest wallets.”

FOUNDERS SUMATRA MOUNTAINBROWN (9% ABV, 40 IBU)

Roger Gillespie: � “Choosing six beers for my f light was diffi-cult. Choosing my favorite was easy. This is an Imperial brown ale with an ABV of 9 percent. I was drawn by its deep, dark color and thick, dense foam. While it has the aroma of choc-olate, the addition of rich Suma-tra coffee takes this fi ne brown ale to another level. Highly recommended!”

DARK HORSE TOONILLA COFFEE VANIL-LA CREAM STOUT (7.5% ABV)

Jim Cyphert: � “I ask craft beer experts what they like. So, when choosing six beers for my fl ight, I turned to Jeff. This was

one of his favorites, so I went for it. Boy, was I glad I did! Deep and rich in color, this beer’s fl a-vor matched its look. It had a nice coffee fl avor, fi nished by a touch of vanilla. Creamy and smooth is the best way to de-scribe it. Delicious!”

See BEER, C2

IF YOU GOEstablishment: � Vintage Estate

Wine & BeerAddress: � 7317 South Ave.,

BoardmanWebsite: � www.vewinebeer.comHours: � Mon.-Weds.: 11 a.m.-

11 p.m.; Thurs. & Fri.: 11 a.m.-midnight; Sat.: 10 a.m.-midnight; Sun.: 11 a.m.-10 p.m.

Available for Purchase: � Flights, pints, growlers, merchandise, food, pick-a-six packs

SPECIAL TO THE VINDICATOR

Vintage Estate features 34 constantly changing craft beers on tap at two bars at all times.

MAHONINGVALLEY

FLIGHT CREW Jim Cyphert

Station Square Ristorante [email protected]

4250 Belmont Ave. • YoungstownPhone: 330-759-8802 Like Us On

Facebook

All Entrees are Served A la Carte. Ask your Server about Today’s

Side Dish Options

Premium Cut Ribeye Steak Grilled To Your Liking12oz • 16oz

Delmonico Steak FeaturesCERTIFIED ANGUS BEEF is the fi nest beef you can buy. Less than 8% of all beef passes the 10 stringent quality specifi cations to qualify for the brand.

Its superior marbling makes it exceptionally tender, fl avorful and juicy.

SteakEnhancers

ClassicoTraditionally Seasoned withOlive Oil, Garlic & Rosemary

A la OscarTopped with Lump Crabmeat, Asparagus Points and Creamy

Béarnaise Sauce

Espresso CrustedSeasoned with a Light Espresso Crust

3-Mushroom DemiTopped with Mushrooms Cooked in Wine

and a Flavorful Demi Glaze

A la Olio TartufoGrilled to Your Liking. Truffl e Oil Drizzle

Black n BleuDusted with Cajun Seasonings and Topped with Crumbled Smoked Moody Bleu Cheese

A la MarsalaTopped with Peppers and Mushrooms

Sautéed in a Marsala Wine Sauce

Blackened orChar Seasoned

Your Choice of our Signature Seasonings

Surf-n-TurfAdd a 10 oz Broiled Lobster TailAdd 3 Jumbo Broiled Scallops

Add 4 Scampi Style ShrimpAdd Sautéed Peppers, Onions or

Mushrooms $1 each

Summer Specials Featuring: Colossal Tiger ShrimpChoose your Method of Preparation

Shrimp Cocktail5 Colossal Shrimp Chilled and Served

with Traditional Accompaniments

Shrimp Scampi4 Colossal Shrimp Sautéed with Garlic

and White Wine Tossed with Linguine Pasta

Blackened Shrimp5 Colossal Shrimp Cooked with Cajun Seasoningand Served Over Our House-Made Italian Greens

Greek Style5 Colossal Shrimp Sautéed with Diced Tomatoes, Black Olives

and Basil in a Chardonnay Wine Sauce

Mediterranean StyleSautéed with Fresh cut Tomatoes, Garlic and Fresh Basil

in a Chardonnay Wine Broth

Shrimp Diana5 Colossal Shrimp with Sautéed Onions and Mushroom

in a Sherry Wine Cream Sauce

Cajun ParmesanSautéed in a Cajun Parmesan Cream Sauce

MarsalaSautéed with Peppers and Mushrooms

in a Marsala Wine Sauce

PiccataSautéed in Lemon Butter with

Mushrooms & Sherry Wine

A La OscarTopped with Steamed Asparagus, Jumbo Lump Crab Meat

and our Creamy Béarnaise Sauce

Add a ShrimpAdd One Colossal Shrimp

to Any Menu Entrée

C2 THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 VALLEY FOOD WWW.VINDY.COM

STONE RUINATION DOUBLE IPA 2.0 (8.5% ABV, 100+ IBU)

Joe Sanfilippo: � “This one’s a refreshing IPA from Stone Brewing Co. It’s a good one for all the hop lovers out there. It pours with a golden color, and is brewed with Cen-tennial hops and Azac-ca, which gives this beer a tropical fruit, citrus, pine and melon taste. This one checks in at 8.5

percent ABV and over 100 IBU.”

FOUNDERS BLUSHING MONK (9.2% ABV)

David Anderson: � “It was a nice surprise to see this on the board. I’d wanted to try it for a long time, but it had always elud-ed me. It was worth the wait. It had a ruby-red color. Raspberries dom-inated the aroma and taste. Even with the ABV at 9.2 percent, this was a crisp, refreshing beer that was very easy to

drink. This is great to pair with cheese or des-serts. Do yourself a favor and sample this tough-to-fi nd beer while it’s in the area!”

SHORT’S SLURM NEW ENGLAND-STYLE IPA (6.5% ABV, 75 IBU)

Jason Jugenheimer: � “Fans of ‘Futurama’ will rec-ognize Slurm as an “It’s Highly Addictive” drink with minor side effects such as glowing, green radioactive skin. Short’s Slurm doesn’t produce any side effects that se-vere. The brewery does,

however, produce a juicy unfi ltered IPA that pours hazy, almost matching its head. Tropical fl avors of mango and pineapple come through in the hop profi le. As far as New Eng-land IPAs are concerned, “It’s Highly Addictive!”The Mahoning Valley

Flight Crew recommends scheduling a visit to VE, one of the best craft-beer re-tailers in the state … in the country … in the world! You never know, you just might see us there.

BEERContinued from C1

SPECIAL TO THE VINDICATOR

Vintage Estate boasts 1,400 diff erent bottled beers, which helped it rank as the number one bottle shop in Ohio earlier this year.

Family Features

As temperatures climb and summer sets in, a slight change in diet can help maintain energy without overfi lling on hot days.

Vegan and vegetar-ian diets are becoming a popular trend, but many people are also opting to be semi-vegetarians, also known as the f lexitar-ian diet. A fl exitarian diet means you don’t have to eliminate meat from your diet but can still reap the health benefi ts associated with plant-based diets.

Plant-based proteins like beans, peas, nuts, seeds, soy and lentils are chock-full of nutritional benefits from disease-fighting phytonutrients to cholesterol-lowering fi ber. They’re also an ex-cellent way to add low-so-dium and low-cholesterol protein to your diet that

can leave you feeling sat-isfi ed but not stuffed.

Light finger foods and dips are ideal summer snacks. Hummus, made from chickpeas and ta-hini (ground sesame seeds), makes for a quick and easy treat by itself or paired with health-con-scious options such as air-popped chips, whole-grain crackers or veggie sticks. You can also create simple summer snacks using hummus as an ingredient.

These vegan Cucum-ber Cups are the perfect refreshing pick-me-up on a hot afternoon, and they’re stylish enough to serve to guests at an up-scale cookout. For a cool and creamy summer ap-petizer, try these vegetar-ian Southwestern Snack Bites made with hum-mus, guacamole and Greek yogurt.

SOUTHWESTERN HUMMUS BITESYield: 30 pieces 1 package (7 ounc-

es) whole-grain bagel chips

1 container (10 ounces) Sabra Hummus

2 cups pico de gallo 1 cup guacamole 1 cup plain, low-fat

Greek yogurt 4 green onions,

sliced (optional)

Top each bagel chip with 1 tablespoon hum-mus, small spoonful of pico de gallo, guaca-mole and small dollop of yogurt.

Garnish with slices of green onion, if desired.

Maintain energy with simple and healthy summer snacking

CUCUMBER CUPSYield: 16 pieces 2 English

cucumbers 1 container (10

ounces) Sabra Hummus

1 teaspoon paprika 1 bunch parsley,

fi nely chopped

Peel cucumbers and slice lengthwise into 1 1⁄4-

inch pieces. Using melon baller, carve out seeds to create vessel, making sure to leave bottom intact.

Using piping bag or small spoon, fi ll each cucumber with hum-mus (about 1 teaspoon each). Sprinkle with pa-prika and fi nely chopped parsley.

Cucumber Cups

Family Features

Italian cuisine has influ-enced food culture around the world, and is often viewed as an art form that includes the freshest, most authentic ingredients prepared with passion and served with love to family and friends. Meal-time is a celebration, cap-tured by the classic Italian proverb, “You never grow old at the table.”

Americans have celebrated

Italian food for decades. Clas-sic Italian dishes have been joined by refreshing, modern twists on tradition that help keep the love affair alive and well with this simple, color-ful, fl avorful, healthy cuisine.

Born in Lucca, Italy, in 1867, Filippo Berio Olive Oil celebrates 150 years of cu-linary passion and artistry by combining traditional in-gredients in contemporary, unexpected recipes that can

help you savor the moment. As part of its 150th anniver-

sary celebration this summer, a Filippo Berio Food Truck will make a culinary journey from coast to coast. Guests at the truck can sample deli-cious olive oils, and consum-ers nationwide are invited to enter a sweepstakes to win a week-long culinary expe-rience at Toscana Saporita, a premier Italian cooking school in Tuscany, Italy.

Southwestern Hummus Bites

Timeless Italian meals

CAST-IRON SKILLET PIZZARecipe courtesy of Chef Mary Ann EspositoPrep time: 10 minutesCook time: 20 minutesMakes: Two 9- to 10-inch pizzas 1 pound store-bought pizza dough, at

room temperature 1 ripe tomato, thinly sliced 1⁄4 pound fresh mozzarella cheese, diced coarse sea salt 2 tablespoons Filippo Berio Extra Virgin

Olive Oil 1⁄2 cup shredded fresh basil

Heat well-oiled cast-iron or nonstick 10- or 12-

inch frying pan over medium heat 5 minutes.

Divide dough in half; roll one half into round 1 inch smaller than diameter of pan. Cook dough in hot pan until dough begins to rise and bottom starts to brown. Using metal spatula, turn care-fully. Layer half the tomato slices over dough; scatter half the mozzarella over top. Lower heat to medium-low; cook until mozzarella melts.

Using metal spatula, transfer pizza to cutting board. Sprinkle with salt; drizzle with half the olive oil. Cut into wedges; sprinkle half the basil over top.

Repeat with remaining ingredients.

Cast-Iron Skillet Pizza

Hit a home run with es-sential nutrients for active kids

Family Features

With summer in full force, kids are busy with physical activities and whether it’s little league baseball games, swim team or summer camp, they’re more active than ever. Moms, nutritionists and pediatricians alike know active kids and developing bones and muscles need essential nutrients to grow strong, but The Dietary Guidelines for Americans say most Americans, in-cluding children, actually aren’t getting enough fi ber, calcium, vitamin D and potassium in their diets.

Moms can keep up by making sure kids fuel their bodies with proper nutri-tion and stay hydrated at the same time. As a drink kids already love the taste of, milk is a great choice when moms want to serve delicious and natural, high-quality protein for kids before sending them off on summer adventures.

Many are also surprised to learn that milk can help hydrate after exercise due to its natural electrolytes and fl uids.

Milk plays an important role for kids’ meals and snacks, providing three of the four nutrients most Americans, including kids, aren’t getting enough of (calcium, vitamin D and potassium), and it’s the top food source of these nutri-ents, to boot. Plus, with 8

grams of protein per every 8-ounce glass, the farm-fresh beverage is a great way to help the whole fam-ily kick-start the day.

One way to hit a home run for your kids is by step-ping up to the breakfast plate with delicious base-ball pancakes. Served with an 8-ounce glass of milk, this breakfast is the per-fect combo to help kids fuel up with protein in the morning.

Summer nutrition for kids

HOME RUN PANCAKES

Servings: 4 1 cup all-purpose fl our 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon sugar 1⁄4 teaspoon salt 1 large egg 1 cup fat-free milk 1⁄4 teaspoon vanilla extract nonstick cooking spray 8 strips low-sodium turkey bacon

(optional) 2-3 tablespoons raspberry or

strawberry syrup (optional)

Whisk together fl our, baking powder, sugar and salt. Mix egg, milk and vanilla separately. Add wet ingredients to dry ingredients and whisk gently until just combined.

Heat griddle or skillet to medium heat and grease lightly with cooking spray.

Using 1⁄3-cup measuring cup for each pancake, pour batter onto pan. Cook until bubbles form and edges start to look dry then fl ip and cook another 30-45 seconds.

Cook bacon on griddle 3-4 minutes on each side, if desired, until desired crispiness is achieved.

Place cooked bacon next to pancakes for “baseball bats.” If desired, drizzle syrup onto pancakes to make baseball stitching.

Pair each serving with 8-ounce glass of milk.

Nutritional information per serving: 240 calories; 1.5 g fat; 55 mg cholesterol; 15 g protein; 40 g carbohydrates; 1 g fi ber; 420 mg sodium; 454 mg calcium (45% of daily value). Nutrition fi gures based on using fat free milk, and include an 8-ounce glass of milk.

Home Run Pancakes

Family Features

From barbecues and birthdays to con-certs and cookouts, summertime is the per-fect time of year to bring everyone together. However, nice weather and outdoor events are also coupled with summer heat waves and high temperatures.

Water – whether plain or sparkling – is a great way to help you stay hydrated all sum-mer long without the calories and added sugar of other summer favorites like lem-onade or punch. Healthy hydration in the summertime starts when you rethink your drink so you can beat the heat.

To get started, these tips from Sarah Ladden, M.S., R.D., nutrition, health and wellness director at Nestlé Waters North America, can help keep you hydrated all summer long.

Pack for � the heat. The summer heat can mean an increase in water loss, which can put you at a higher risk for dehydration es-pecially if you’re outside for long periods of time. Make sure to pack water for all your summer outings and hydrate before, dur-ing and after all outdoor activities.

Add your � own flavor. While bottled, fil-tered or tap water are all good choices for healthy hydration, some people simply pre-

fer flavored beverages. The good news: it’s easy to customize water just the way you like it. This summer, wow your friends with a DIY sparkling water bar. Set out your fa-vorite sparkling waters – include flavored waters for added fun – alongside an assort-ment of seasonal berries, sliced fruit and fresh herbs, and let guests create their per-sonalized refreshments.

Make water � fun. Jazz up a glass of your fa-vorite water with a simple addition - dec-orative ice. Before filling your ice tray, add a few berries or cubed melon, fresh herbs like mint or rosemary then top with water and freeze. Add a few cubes to a refreshing

glass of water and enjoy just a hint of sub-tle flavor.

Keep water � close. It’s important to keep your body well-hydrated throughout the day, but it is easy to get busy and simply for-get to drink. Keep water in convenient loca-tions throughout your home, office or even in the car for a visual reminder to keep sip-ping. Stocking water at the front of your fridge is another good habit so it’s the first choice kids or other family members see.

This summer, rethink your drink with these tips to help make smart beverage choices. To learn more about healthy hy-dration, visit nestle-watersna.com.

Stay hydrated all summer long with rethinking what you drink

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

C2 - 06/28/17

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

C3 - 06/28/17

Top fi ve albums on iTunes offi cial music chart for the week ending June 22:

� “Melodrama”: Lorde

� “Pretty Girls Like Trap Music”:

2 Chainz

� “The Nashville Sound”: Jason Isbell

and the 400 Unit

� “DAMN.,”: Kendrick Lamar

� “Vol. 2 Guardians of the Galaxy”: various

artists

“YOUNGER” (10 P.M., �

TV LAND): As “Younger” returns for its fourth sea-son, Liza’s (Sutton Foster) love life is in disarray as she reels from her breakup with boyfriend Josh (Nico Tortorella), who was going to propose … until – oops – he discovered her kissing her boss, Charles (Peter Hermann).

“BROADCHURCH” �

(10 P.M., BBC AMERICA): Detectives Alec Hardy and Ellie Miller (David Tennant and Olivia Colman) return for the fi nal chapter of the riveting British crime se-ries, “Broadchurch.” This time, the story focuses on a sexual assault that shocks the sleepy seaside town to its core.

TV LISTINGS, C3 �

ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

Special weekendat Cedar Point

SANDUSKYCedar Point’s Light Up

the Point celebration kicks off Saturday and continues through July 4 with a multi-tude of special events, meal deals, free admission for members of the military and a fi reworks display. In addi-tion, the park is open until midnight all weekend.

The highlight will be the fi reworks on Tuesday, which will be choreographed to a patriotic soundtrack. For a nominal fee, limited VIP seating will be available on the beach that includes an all-you-can-eat meal, 3-D glasses for an enhanced fi re-works experience and a glow souvenir. VIP seats must be purchased online.

Active, retired and honor-ably discharged members of the military will receive free admission to Cedar Point and Cedar Point Shores Water-park all weekend. Guests can redeem these free admission tickets at park admission windows and must present photo ID, along with a valid form of military ID (Active Duty ID, Retired Personnel ID, VA ID or a copy of DD-214 discharge papers).

A special Light Up the Point 4-pack of tickets is available online only. It in-cludes Cedar Point admis-sion tickets for $39.99 each when four or more are pur-chased. Go to cedarpoint.com/events.

Celebrate Americaat Kennywood

WEST MIFFLIN, PA.Kennywood Park’s annual

Independence Day event, Celebrate America, will take place Thursday through the Fourth of July with free admission for military, nightly fi reworks displays and a wide variety of themed entertainment.

Active duty military, vet-erans and retired service members will be admitted free with a valid military ID, and they can purchase up to six tickets for fam-ily or friends for $22, more than half off regular park admission.

The hot dog eating con-test will be Thursday at the Kennyville Stage at 2 p.m. The 12th annual Weiner 100 dachshund races will be Sunday. Nonmilitary guests can receive up to $15 off reg-ular admission price when purchasing tickets online during Celebrate America.

For a full schedule, go to Kennywood.com or call 412-461-0500.

TOMORROW IN VALLEY 24A schedule of fi reworksdisplays in the Valley.

THE55 VALLEY LIFE WEDNESDAYJUNE 28, 2017

THE VINDICATOR | C3

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Athletes of the YearAs summer gets underway, look back at The Vindicator’s Athletes of the Year.

Arrests made in West Side homicideDashonti Baker and Barraya Hickson were arraigned in the death of Rae’venna Faircloth-Thomas.

Tommy Mealy @TommyMealy Priceless Father’s Day gift from @jmeals3 to play in the Stoops-Pelini bocce ball tournament in Youngstown, OH. Thank you Jess #BoomerSooner

Chase Laff erty@ChaseLaff ertyYoungstown, Ohio is the “Bohemian Grove” of college football. Congrats on your initiation. @PFTCommenter @BarstoolBigCat

Aubrey Stupp @aubreystuppWhat an amazing experience at Youngstown State University

3,816217,108SOCIAL STATS

Big Cat@BarstoolBigCat

#FootballGuys

Katie Exline @katex_13What an honor it was to meet & listen to @JimTressel5 today! So glad he kicked off @The_iBELIEVE Workshop at Youngstown State! #iBELIEVE2017

@stonefruit_coff ee

GO SCRAPPERS!!!!!

Ed Puskas @EdPuskas_VindyGuy pulls out of a church parking

lot in front of me even though I have a green light. I beep the horn and he fl ips me the bird.

joe gorman @stormingor-man67Today’s arraign-ments are a cor-

nucopia of #CourtSpeaks

Mark Sweetwood @sobeditorFirst #AdamWest and now #Tom-myCastillo. June

has been the cruelest month. #rip

STAFF social

Facebook, Microsoft, Twit-ter and YouTube announced plans Monday to team up to combat terrorism.

Their plans include the creation of a Global Internet Forum that has one primary mission: make Facebook, Twitter and other web-based services we use every day hostile for terrorists and violent extremists.

Fighting online fire with fire is certainly not an in-novative concept. It’s also not the fi rst time one of the l e a d i n g technology p l a t f or m s announced p l a n s t o fight terror-ism. But it’s clea r t hat some com-panies are stepping up the fi ght.

On June 18, Google an-nounced four steps. It’s worth noting that Google owns YouTube, a member in the aforementioned Forum. Google’s four steps include:

1. Using technology to identify extremist and ter-rorism-related videos.

2. Hiring more expert rev iewers in YouTube’s Trusted Flagger program. Rather than relying on ma-chines and algorithms, this increases the human ele-ment in identifying terrorist content.

3. Taking a tougher stance on videos that do not clear-ly violate Google’s posting policies, but that contain inflammatory religious or supremacist content.

4. Expanding its role in cou nter-rad ic a l i z at ion efforts.

To that last step, Kent Waller, general counsel at Google, said, “Building on our successful Creators for Change program promot-ing YouTube voices against hate and radicalization, we are working with Jigsaw to implement the ‘Redirect Method’ more broadly.”

Jigsaw, formerly known as Google Ideas, is Google’s think tank.

What Waller is referring to is targeted online advertis-ing to reach potential ter-rorist organization recruits. Recruits are redirected to anti-terrorist videos.

“In previous deployments of this system, potential re-cruits have clicked through on the ads at an unusu-ally high rate,” Waller said. “[They] watched over half a million minutes of video content that debunks ter-rorist recruiting messages.”

Google’s steps are impres-sive, but the level of coop-eration among Facebook, Microsoft, Twitter and You-Tube in the creation of the Forum is laudable. Think of it as the CIA, FBI and the NSA actually sharing infor-mation with each other.

In the joint statement released Monday, Forum members identified their mission, and suggested that their scope will evolve as terrorists evolve.

Similar to Google’s steps, the Forum plans to focus on three primary areas:

1. Technological solu-tions. The group plans to create a shared database to exchange information, best practices, and implement new content detection to find terrorist-recruitment and radicalization content.

2. Research. To guide fu-ture technical and policy decisions, the group plans to conduct counter-speech research.

3. Knowledge-sharing. Similar to the “shared da-tabase,” the group plans to “work with counter-ter-rorism experts including governments ... to engage in shared learning about terrorism.” Adam Earnheardt chairs the department of communication at Youngstown State University. Follow him on Twitter at @adamearn.

AdamEarnheardt

Got a hot link or video for us? Email [email protected]

CONNECTED

SONY/TRISTAR

Lily James and Ansel Elgort in a scene from the fi lm “Baby Driver.”

By LINDSEY BAHRAP Film Writer

There’s nothing like an epic get-away chase to kick a movie into high gear, and the fi rst fi ve minutes of “Baby Driver “ are pure movie magic.

A driver named Baby (Ansel El-gort) sits coolly in a car – black Ray-Ban style shades on his face, earbud headphones in place and a jacket that’s, fittingly, somewhere between Ferris Bueller and Han Solo. His tough-looking passengers (Jon Hamm, Eiza Gonzalez and Jon Bernthal) exit with comical menace, assault weapons in hand. Baby sits back, cranks up “Bellbottoms” by the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion and air guitars his way through the se-quence while the others rob a bank and exit in a hurry. That’s when things really get going as Baby steps on the gas and maneuvers away from the cops with heart-pounding, exhilarating polish. It’s a car chase for the ages.

It should be no surprise then that what comes after doesn’t quite live up to that initial jolt of adrenaline. Nor should it, really – it would be

brutal to sustain something like that for the duration of a fi lm (and we al-ready have “Mad Max: Fury Road”).

Director and writer Edgar Wright crafts a slick, stylish and wholly original action epic with “Baby Driv-er,” which is both as good as any-thing you’re bound to see in theaters this summer and a bit of a drop-off from the incredibly high bar that Wright has proven himself capable of hitting.

It’s about an outlaw kid with a good heart who’s at a crossroads. Some youthful indiscretions in At-lanta put Baby in debt to a big-time criminal orchestrator, Doc, played by an over-the-top Kevin Spacey. Baby’s been doing the dirty work of driving Doc’s baddies ever since.

We meet Baby two jobs away from being in the clear. To outsiders, he’s an odd duck. He doesn’t say much, ever, and he always has a pair of headphones in his ears.

The only people he engages with are his guardian, Joseph (CJ Jones), and the waitress of Baby’s dreams, Debora (Lily James).

With freedom in sight, his cool is cracking, and things really go side-

ways when he gets paired up with Bats (a manic Jamie Foxx), on a few runs.

“Baby Driver” is a swerve into se-riousness for Wright, who has given us some of the most gleefully witty genre send-ups of this century, and it is missing some of that crackling Simon Pegg humor. Also, James, a terrifi c actress, is reduced to a car-toonish approximation of “the girl” who’s only there to give our hero something to care about. Or perhaps that’s the bigger point of “Baby Driv-er.” In this underground world, no one is “real” – they’re all slick coats of paint and simulated cool, right down to the carefully calculated soundtrack. But what more do you want from an action pic?

‘Baby Driver’ is a toe-tapping, engine-revving jolt

High gear in a hurry‘BABY DRIVER’

Grade: � 3 stars (out of 4)Credits: � Directed by Edgar Wright;

cast includes Jamie Foxx, Ansel Elgort, John Hamm and Jon Bernthal

Running time: � 1:53Rating: � PG-13

Platformsteam upto fi ght

terrorism

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

C4 - 06/28/17

DEAR ANNIEAdvice from Annie Laneevery day in Society.

Heloise

WEDNESDAYJUNE 28, 2017 THE VINDICATOR | C4 SOCIETY NEWSDear

Annie

Dear Annie: Maybe I am overly sensitive, but there are so many com-mercials with children doing things that they re-ally should not be doing, and it makes me wonder about the younger adults who fi nd this cute.

Currently, there is an ad for a travel company featuring a teacher who is ready for vacation. The kids in the classroom are tearing up the place. One kid is in the fish tank. Others are beating the furniture with bats and sticks. I have seen a com-mercial in which two girls are kicking in the sides of an air conditioner be-cause it broke down.

There is a commercial in which two young boys who are being baby-sat by their uncle destroy the house. They jump on all the furniture, tear up feather pillows. Grandma calls and asks, “Are we having fun yet?”

What kind of message does this send to our children? Destruction of property is OK! What kind of values are we teaching our young?

I grew up in the 1950s. If I had done something like that, I would have received a spanking. Spanking is now consid-ered child abuse.

Parents need to use some alternative and stick with it.

If I see a child who is well-behaved in pub-lic and near me, I try to compliment the parent. I’m curious about your thoughts on this.

Watching in Disbe-lief

Dear Watching in Dis-belief: I grew up in the ‘90s, and I still don’t think that children should be allowed to act destructively or dis-respectfully. I’m especially concerned when I turn on the TV and see children be-ing rude to teachers – who have one of the most im-portant jobs in the world. Why advertisements fea-ture such behavior as if it were cute is beyond me. But I think your practice of complimenting the parents of well-behaved children is a kind and upbeat step in the opposite direction, and I encourage all my readers to start doing the same.

Dear Annie: I’d like to add to your response to the grandmother of the 7-year-old who wanted to invite only her new “bes-ties” to her birthday par-ty, leaving some of her old friends out.

You said to invite all of the friends anyway because k ids change their minds all the time and they might be best friends again by the next week. You were right.

Leaving children out, pushing them to the side-lines, is a bad habit to get into.

When we do, we are often creating bullying and other dysfunctional behaviors that can turn truly dangerous. And it’s never too early to begin teaching children to be kind and considerate of others’ feelings.

Beth in Oregon

Dear Beth: A million times yes. Empathy is a trait that can and should be nurtured in children early on. Thank you for your letter.

Email your questions for Annie Lane to [email protected], or write to: Dear Annie, c/o Creators Syndi-cate, 737 3rd St., Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

© 2017 Creators Syndicate

Dear Heloise: You had a recipe for something called “Angel Biscuits,” which my mother used to make. Since my future in-laws are com-ing for dinner, I wanted to impress them with my cooking skills. Could you reprint that recipe ?

Rosemary H., Tuscaloosa, Ala.

Rosemary, of course! These have always been a big hit with my readers. You’ll need:

1 package dry yeast1⁄4 cup warm water2 1⁄2 cups fl our 1⁄2 teaspoon baking soda1 teaspoon baking powder1 teaspoon salt2 tablespoons sugar1⁄2 cup shortening1 cup buttermilk

Dissolve the yeast in the warm water; set aside. Mix the dry ingredients in the order given, cutting in the shortening as you normally do for biscuits or pie dough. Stir in the but-termilk and yeast mixture, and mix thoroughly. The dough is ready to refrigerate.

When it’s time to make the biscuits, turn the dough out onto a fl oured board and knead lightly. Roll out and cut with a biscuit cutter, placing them in a greased pan. Let the dough rise slightly before baking in a 400-degree oven for about 12 to 15 minutes.

Heloise

Dear Readers:Strawberries were culti- �

vated in ancient Rome.They are not really a fruit �

or a berry but the en-larged receptacle of the fl ower.Strawberries are a mem- �

ber of the rose family.They’re high in Vita- �

min C, potassium and antioxidants.

Heloise

Dear Readers: I’ve been asked how to clean microfi -ber cleaning cloths, so here are the instructions:

First, separate the mi- �

crofi ber cloths from the rest of your laundry .Pre-t reat t hem w it h �

whatever you use to pre-treat your regular laundry.Use your regular laun- �

dr y soap, but do not use a fabric softener on microfi ber.You can use your dry- �

er to dry the microfi ber, but use medium heat, or better yet, dry on a line outside, weather permitting.

Heloise

Dear Heloise: Here is an easy and quick one-pot dinner using leftovers that tastes delicious and can serve 4 to 6 adults. You’ll need: 4-5 average-size white

potatoes 1 large yellow or white

onion, sliced 6-8 mushrooms, sliced Salt and pepper to

taste Optional: leftover

chicken, pork or beef, peas, carrots, zucchi-ni. The meat should be cooked, but the vege-tables needn’t be.

Boil the potatoes with the skins on until done. Let them cool completely. Then cut potatoes into medium-size pieces, keeping their skins on, and put into a large skillet with about 3 tablespoons of butter. Add the onion slices and mush-room slices to the potatoes over a medium heat, and cook for about 12 to 15 minutes. Add any leftovers you’d like to, and cook until everything is heated thoroughly, or just serve the potato-onion-mushroom mix-ture as a side dish. Add the salt and pepper, and serve.

Shauna M., Tustin, Calif.

Send a money-saving or timesaving hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795000, San Antonio, TX 78279-5000, fax it to 210-HELOISE or email it to [email protected].

© 2017 King Features Syndicate

Are weteachingkids oftodaygood

values?

‘AngelBiscuits’

a hit

THURSDAYPoland United � Method-

ist Church, 1940 Board-man-Poland Road, will have homemade dinners to go from 3:30 p.m. until sold out. The menu includes baked, stuff ed chicken breast, mashed potatoes and green beans. Drive up to front doors to order, and food will be delivered to your car. The cost is $7. For information, call Connie at

330-757-1553.

VFW Col. � Louis J. Campbell Post 3538, 157 Lowellville Road, Struthers, will serve spaghetti din-ners from 4 to 7 p.m. Meals include meatballs, salad, bread and butter, and cof-fee. The cost is $7.50 for adults and $4 for children under 8. Carryout orders are $8 and will be available only until 6 p.m. Containers will be provided. Jim 330-

755-3313.

FRIDAYHoly Trinity � Serbian

Orthodox Church, 53 Laird Ave., Youngstown, will serve fi sh dinners from 3:30 to 7 p.m. at the church hall. The menu will consist of baked or fried Icelandic cod or fried haddock; sides of Spanish rice, haluski, macaroni and cheese, french fries or

string beans (choose two); coleslaw or applesauce; bread and butter; and coff ee or tea. The cost is $11 for adults and $6 for children. Dessert will be an additional $1.75. Contain-ers will be provided for takeouts. Orders will be accepted from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at 330-792-1005.

UPCOMINGWestern Reserve �

United Methodist Church, 4580 Canfi eld Road, Canfi eld, will host a drive-through chicken dinner from 4 to 6 p.m. until sold out Aug. 3. Cost is $8. A stuff ed chicken breast comes with mashed pota-toes, gravy, green beans and a brownie.A listing of food sales and dinners is published Wednesday. Please submit information for takeout and sit-down dinners to the Society De-partment before noon Monday.

FOOD SALES AND DINNERS

SPECIAL TO THE VINDICATOR

Damascus School’s Right to Read week deemed a successDamascus Elementary School participated in Right to Read week in May with many activities such as read-ing 20 minutes per evening, hosting a trash bash re-cycled fashion show and a spelling bee for third and fourth grade. Above, left are James Mincks dressed as a knight made of recycled material and Caden Zion who explained to the audience about the costume. To the right is Boston Mulinix, second-place winner of spelling bee and Elena Mackall, winner.

SPECIAL TO THE VINDICATOR

Area Scout volunteers receive highest awardBoy Scout Councils of Mahoning and Trumbull Counties recently awarded four adult volunteers the Silver Beaver Award at the annu-al meeting held at St. Thomas Eastern Orthodox Church in Fairlawn, Ohio. The Silver Beaver Award is the highest award a Boy Scout Council may present to volunteers. The awards were presented to the volunteers by their sons, who are also members of the Boy Scouts. Volunteers above from left are John Barkett, Kurt Hilderbrand, Robert Guesman and David Chauvin.

Krotky to give guided tour of Lisbon

LISBONLepper Library, 303 E. Lincoln

Way, will host Gene Krotky from the Lisbon Historical Society at 1 p.m., Saturday. Krotky will give a guided tour through downtown Lisbon. Local history and archi-tecture will be discussed. In case of inclement weather event will be held indoors. Call the library at 330-424-3117 for more informa-tion or to register.

Preparation assistancefor ACT, SAT essays

SALEMSalem Public Library will off er

students an informational ses-sion to help develop specifi c strategies for writing the ACT or SAT essay. Session will take place

from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. July 8 in the Quaker Room of the li-brary, 821 E. State St.

Valerie Weingart will be the in-structor and will cover pre-writing strategies, suggestions for essay structure, developing a strong thesis statement and more. Registration is required and may be done online by visiting www.salem.lib.oh.us or by calling the library at 330-332-0042.

Five fi ne art internships available

The Fine Arts Council of Trum-bull County is launching its new internship program with fi ve students.

The application deadline is Saturday for this summer. In-terns will help out at FACT events, assist in council offi ce duties and work with local artists and coun-cil partners to plan and execute various programs as identifi ed by the internship coordinator.

Contact internship coordinator Eric S. Kildow at eskildow@gmail.

com and [email protected] for more information; email inqui-ries only. The internship applica-tion can be downloaded at FACT’s website: [email protected].

Underground Railroadtour is July 8 in Salem

SALEMThe Salem Historical Society

off ers its next Underground Railroad tour on the Quakertown Trolley at noon on Saturday,

The docent, dressed as a Salem Quaker, will take pas-sengers back in time to the year 1856. After sharing many stories, the travelers will return to the 21st century with a better under-standing of the plight of slaves, the working of the Underground Railroad and the abolitionist movement that fl ourished in Salem prior to the Civil War.

Since the homes are private and entrance not possible, fl ashed on a screen inside the trolley will be more than 100

slides to show pictures of the insides of the homes, Under-ground Railroad hiding places and several abolitionists who lived in or visited them. The slides will also help clarify the historical information presented during the program.

The tour will last approximately 75 minutes, and boarding is at 239 South Lundy at the Shaff er Library building. Cost is $15 a person and a minimum of 15 are necessary to conduct the tour.

Call the reservation number, 330-337-6733 to schedule your tour. Your call will be returned. The tour is subject to cancellation if the minimum is not reached.

Trumbull Art Gallery60th Anniversary

WARRENTrumbull Art Gallery has had

an enduring presence in the local community for 60 years and to mark this milestone, TAG will hold a day-long celebration July 22 from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.

SOCIETYdigest

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

C5 - 06/28/17

YESTERDAY’S ANSWER

Happy Birthday! In The Next Year: It may seem like the consequenc-es of one direction or the other will alter life drastically. Don’t let this paralyze you. The reality is that you’ll come out smiling either way. Lighten up and choose. Com-panionship is rich, though Sep-tember calls for a solo mission. Professional breakthroughs hap-pen in January and June. Gemini and Scorpio adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 9, 20, 4, 44 and 15.CELEBRITY PROFILES: John Cu-sack is said to be fiercely protec-tive of his personal life -- probably because he wants a personal life. Symbolized by hard-shelled crea-tures, Cancer and Scorpio are the best at protecting and defend-ing their right to privacy. Look for Cusack in the upcoming thriller ‘’Blood Money,’’ a modern take on the classic ‘’Treasure of the Sier-ra Madre.’’

ARIES (March 21-April 19). This week features the cosmic equiva-lent of an invitation to a fancy din-ner in which you’ll be around new people you’d be keen to impress. Your choice of attire will be equal-ly important to the topics you pull out of your conversational hat.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). It’s hard to ‘’hate the sin and love the sinner,’’ when both the ‘’sin’’ and the ‘’sinner’’ happen to be for-warding your interests. Take a look at what you might be com-plicit in by simply wanting what you want.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). The reckoning your soul longs for may be with someone from long ago. That moment has passed, and it will be impossible to get back to it, but there’s still a way to make things right going forward.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). While the welfare of others is a worthy investment, don’t give your resources out of a sense of guilt or obligation.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). It may feel as though you are toning down something about yourself to avoid challenging, upsetting or offending people around you. It’s true that what you really want will cause waves, but it’s nothing you can’t handle.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). The universe will be persistent with you. What starts out as a sugges-tion, if not taken, will later be pre-sented to you as a challenge. If you still do not take on the idea, it will present as more of a demand.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). If your leisure time doesn’t provide the stress release you need and your work keeps ramping up the tension, perhaps both need a se-rious look. Don’t passively live out the default version of your life. Go for the juice.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). The words that help you reason your way through a problem will mean nothing to your emotion-al brain, which speaks a differ-ent language. To get your whole mind on board, engage through your senses.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). People will often go to great-er lengths to avoid boredom than they will to avoid pain.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). It will take more than hard work to win at this game. Momentum will help. It’s a matter of reduc-ing friction and aligning yourself with maximum congruence; get all the elements aligned in the same direction.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). More than any other time in histo-ry, people have come to expect to be entertained at every juncture. Finding reasons to be engaged (in-stead of waiting for the obvious captivation cues) is a sign of spe-cial intelligence.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). In those times when your life feels completely filled up and yet oddly unfulfilling, identify the activities that are the equivalent of eating junk food -- i.e., quantity rich and nutrient poor.ASTROLOGICAL QUESTION: ‘’I’ll soon be interviewing for a proj-ect-management job that I real-ly want. This is the break I have been waiting for. The pay is great, the benefits are super, and the position is a rank above the one I have. I’m a sensitive Cancer and sometimes I get overly nervous when the pressure is on. I’m afraid I’ll blow the interview. How can I make sure that I don’t?’’ Prepara-tion is the way, dear Cancer. Start by asking yourself the standard interview questions you are like-ly to get, like: ‘’Why do you want to work here?’’ ‘’What do you know about our company?’’ ‘’Why should we hire you?’’ Focus all your answers on the benefit you can provide the company and the value you would add, not on what you would gain (pay, benefits, po-sition, etc.). Rehearse what you’re going to say in a mirror, or better yet, record a video of yourself so you can analyze and refine your responses.On the day of the inter-view, clear your schedule except for the interview. Leave yourself plenty of time to get ready and travel. Arrive early, and breathe. Remember, you are not interview-ing to save your life. Tell yourself, ‘’It’s just a job,’’ and then do your best.

TODAY’S HOROSCOPE

(Answers tomorrow)KNACK GUARD CACTUS MINGLEYesterday’s Jumbles:

Answer: The tennis player couldn’t find his equipmentin the closet and was — MAKING A RACKET

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles,one letter to each square,to form four ordinary words.

TUYPT

SUDEO

GOCCAN

BNILEM

©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLCAll Rights Reserved.

Che

ck o

ut t

he n

ew,

free

JU

ST

JUM

BLE

app

JUMBLE AND CROSSWORD

SUDOKU

How to play:Each row must contain the numbers 1 to 9; each column must contain the numbers 1 to 9; and each set of 3-by-3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 to 9.

ACROSS1 Collar an ox5 U.K. network8 Lost traction12 Triangle tip13 Shad's eggs14 Cigar producer15 Paper source16 Remote18 Make ripples20 Game-show name21 Noah's boat22 California fort23 Bandleader Count --26 Arizona city29 Home-products brand30 Roman Empire invader31 Clumsy one33 Solstice mo.34 Watches35 Buzz36 Slalom contenders38 Physicist Nikola --39 -- -Magnon man40 Large green parrot41 Munro's pen name43 -- over (fainted)46 Paid (2 wds.)48 Alder or oak50 One-liner51 Mr. Onassis52 Rise53 Galaxy unit54 Alps, for short55 Bellow

DOWN1 Bark2 Musical work3 Seaweed4 Say why5 Invigorating6 Claptrap7 Mgmt. biggie8 Burns with steam9 Guitar kin10 Alpine goat11 Father17 Coniferous tree19 "-- you for real?"22 Excuses23 Dog-scolding word24 Roman greetings25 Punch26 Bunion sites27 Appreciative murmurs28 Workbench item30 Pita treat32 Monk's title34 Hair-raising35 In the money37 More yucky38 Rock concert souvenir40 French Legion headgear

41 Carbon deposit42 "My Way" composer43 Rock's Cobain44 Great Lakes port45 Hollow46 Bedwear, briefly47 Beaver structure49 Annex

Visit Holiday Mathis online at www.creators.com.

© 2017 Creators Syndicate Inc.

06/28/17

06/28

EMAIL: [email protected] ET CETERA THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2017 C5

ODDLY ENOUGHCops say woman with history of thefts steals hair highlights

BETHLEHEM, PA. A Pennsylvania woman with a his-

tory of stealing meals and services has purportedly struck again, this time at a hair salon.

Bethlehem township police say 46-year-old Tia Hassler went to the Intrigued Salon on June 18 and had more than $100 worth of highlights put in her hair, only to claim she had no money once the work was done.

Salon workers told police Has-sler knew the price before they did the work and gave no indication she couldn’t pay.

Hassler remained in the Northamp-ton County jail without an attorney listed in online court records.

Those records show numerous

theft of services cases against her dating to 2009.

Empty NYC transit bus rolls down street, hits church, cars

NEW YORK An empty New York City transit bus

rolled backward down a hilly Brooklyn block and smashed into a church and parked vehicles during a crash caught on video .

One person on the street re-ceived minor injuries when the bus got loose June 21 in the Bushwick neighborhood.

Metropolitan Transportation Au-thority spokeswoman Amanda Kwan says the brake was not engaged.

Bennie Garcia told the Daily News that he was in bed when he heard a “massive bang” and the driver yelling for help. He saw his neighbor who’d been doing a car repair lying on his back and bleeding from his nose.

The union that represents transit workers said it was the driver’s third day on the job, and she was very upset.

511 California surfers paddle out to set record

HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIF. Southern California surfers are

stoked after setting a Guinness World Record for largest surf paddle-out.

The record became offi cial June 20 after 511 surfers formed a circle and held hands for one minute while fl oat-ing off Huntington Beach.

The Orange County Register says the group contended with morning fog, strong currents and large waves.

The paddle-out was conceived as a way to celebrate surfi ng making it into the Olympic summer games for the fi rst time in 2020.

Associated Press

TVTONIGHT For complete TV & movie listings, see TV Week in Saturday’s Vindicator

6/28/17 6:30 7 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

21-WFMJ-NBCNBC Nightly News - Holt

Inside Edition (N)

Family Feud Little Big Shots: Forever Young (N)

The Carmi-chael Show

The Carmi-chael Show

This Is Us Kevin gets the script for the play.

21 News 11PM (N)

Tonight Show

21.2-WBCB-CW(:00) TMZ Live (N)

Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Arrow Oliver turns to an old friend for help.

DC’s Legends of Tomorrow “Compromised”

Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Dish Nation (N)

TMZ (N)

27-WKBN-CBSCBS Evening News (N)

Wheel of Fortune

Jeopardy! (N) Big Brother (Season Premiere) Houseguests encounter enticing offers. (N) (Part 1 of 2)

Criminal Minds Home inva-sions involving casualties.

First News at 11p (N)

Late Show-Colbert

33-WYTV-ABCABC World News

Entertainment Tonight (N)

The Insider (N)

The Gold-bergs

Speechless Modern Family

American Housewife

To Tell the Truth Wanya Morris; Cheryl Burke. (N)

News Chan-nel 33 at 11

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

33.2-MyTVRules of En-gagement

Rules of En-gagement

The King of Queens

Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Law & Order: Criminal In-tent “The Unblinking Eye”

The Cleveland Show

King of the Hill

45-WNEO-PBSFringe Ben-efits

PBS NewsHour (N) Big Pacific “Violent” Ocean creatures deal with violence.

Great Yellowstone Thaw Spring thaw. (N)

NOVA Life and the land-scape in North America.

NHK News-line

Nightly Busi-ness Report

19-WYFX-FOXThe Big Bang Theory

Modern Family

The Big Bang Theory

MasterChef The Top 18 face a mystery box challenge. (N)

The F Word With Gordon Ramsay “Episode Five” (N)

First News on Fox (N) Seinfeld “Pilot”

Seinfeld “The Visa”

A&E Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars

AMC(5:00) “Juras-sic Park III”

“Jurassic Park” (1993, Adventure) Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum. Cloned dino-saurs run amok at an island-jungle theme park.

“The Lost World: Jurassic Park” (1997) Jeff Goldblum. An expedition returns to monitor dinosaurs’ progress.

BET (5:30) “Coach Carter” (2005, Drama) Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Ri’chard. “Toni Braxton: Unbreak My Heart” (2016) Lex Scott Davis, Debbi Morgan. Martin

BRAVO Housewives Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Watch What Housewives

COM Futurama Futurama South Park South Park South Park Hood South Park South Park South Park Daily Show At Midnight

DIS (:20) “The Smurfs” (2011) Hank Azaria. Transylvania Andi Mack Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. K.C. Under. K.C. Under. Transylvania Jessie

DISC Alaskan Bush Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush: Off Grid Alaskan Bush People (N) (:02) Homestead Rescue (N) (:03) Alaskan Bush People

ESPN SportsCenter SportsCenter (N) (Live) College Baseball NCAA CWS Finals -- Florida vs LSU. Game 3. (If necessary). (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)

ESPN2 Interruption Drone Racing Drone Racing 30 for 30 (Part 3 of 3) Drone Racing

FOOD Iron Chef Iron Chef America Cutthroat Kitchen (N) Cutthroat Kitchen (N) Cooks vs. Cons Cooks vs. Cons

FREE “Harry Potter” “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” (2010, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint. The 700 Club

FS1 NASCAR Hub UFC Tonight (N) FIFA Tonight The Ultimate Fighter The Ultimate Fighter (N) TUF Talk (N) MLB

FSO Focused CBR BIG3 Basketball From the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y. (N) World Poker

FX (:00) “The Croods” (2013) Emma Stone “Despicable Me 2” (2013) Voices of Steve Carell. (:15) “Despicable Me 2” (2013) Voices of Steve Carell.

HALLLast Man Standing

Last Man Standing

Last Man Standing

Last Man Standing

Last Man Standing

The Middle “Christmas”

The Middle “The Jeans”

The Middle The Middle The Golden Girls

The Golden Girls

HBO(5:40) “The Legend of Tar-zan” (2016) Christoph Waltz

VICE News Tonight (N)

“Rush Hour 3” (2007) Jackie Chan. Carter and Lee battle Chinese gangsters in Paris.

(:35) Silicon Valley

Fight Game (:35) “Speed” (1994, Action) Keanu Reeves, Dennis Hopper, Sandra Bullock.

HGTV Property Bro Property Brothers Property Brothers Brother vs. Brother (N) Hunters Hunters Int’l Saving Galveston

HIST Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers (N) (:03) American Pickers (:03) American Pickers

LIFE Grey’s Anat. Little Women: LA Little Women: LA (N) Little Women: LA (N) Monie Gets Married Monie Gets Married

NICK Henry Danger Henry Danger The Thundermans Nicky, Ricky Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends

ROOT Pregame MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at Pittsburgh Pirates. From PNC Park in Pittsburgh. (N) Pirates Post. Inside Pirates The Dan Patrick Show (N)

SHOW(:00) “Grosse Pointe Blank” (1997, Ro-mance-Comedy) John Cusack, Minnie Driver.

“A Bronx Tale” (1993) Robert De Niro, Chazz Palminteri. A youth favors a flashy mobster over his hard-working dad.

(:05) Twin Peaks: The Re-turn “Part 8” Gotta light?

(:05) “Enemy at the Gates” (2001, War) Joseph Fiennes.

SPIKE “Fast Five” (2011) Vin Diesel. Dom Toretto and company ramp up the action in Brazil. Lip Sync Lip Sync Lip Sync “Fast Five” (2011, Action)

STO Indians Live MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Cleveland Indians. From Progressive Field in Cleveland. Indians Live Tribe Report Swing Clinic Jimmy Hanlin

SYFY Inception “Armageddon” (1998) Bruce Willis, Liv Tyler. A hero tries to save Earth from an asteroid. Blood Drive (N) (10:58) “The Wolfman”

TBS Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Full Frontal Conan

TCM(:15) “Lord of the Flies” (1963, Drama) James Aubrey, Tom Chapin, Hugh Edwards.

“The Big Country” (1958, Western) Gregory Peck, Jean Simmons, Carroll Baker. Texas ranchers involve an Easterner in a water rights feud.

“How the West Was Won” (1962) Carroll Baker.

TLC I Am Jazz I Am Jazz: Countdown I Am Jazz: More Jazz I Am Jazz “Double Trouble” (:02) Hair Goddess (:04) I Am Jazz

TNT “Talladega Nights: Ricky Bobby” “Rush Hour” (1998, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker. Claws Virginia’s lies deepen. (:03) American Race

TRVL Bizarre Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown (N) Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown

TVLAND M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Younger Raymond King King

USA “The Proposal” (2009, Romance-Comedy) Sandra Bullock, Ryan Reynolds. Big Star Little Star (N) Big Star Little Star “The Proposal” (2009)

VH1 Ink: Chicago Black Ink Crew: Chicago Black Ink Crew: Chicago “Space Jam” (1996) Michael Jordan, Wayne Knight. “White Men Can’t Jump”

Movies YEARS AGOToday is Wednesday, June 28, the 179th day of 2017. There are 186 days left in the year.

ASSOCIATED PRESSOn this date in:

1836: � The fourth president of the United States, James Madison, dies in Montpelier, Va.1838: � Britain’s Queen Victoria is crowned in Westminster Abbey.1914: � Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife, Sophie, are shot to death in Sarajevo by Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip – an act that sparked World War I. 1919: � The Treaty of Versailles is signed in France, ending the First World War.1939: � Pan American Airways begins regular trans-Atlantic air service with a fl ight that de-parts New York for Marseilles, France.1944: � The Republican National Convention in Chicago nominates New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewey for president and Ohio Gov. John W. Bricker for vice president. 1978: � The Supreme Court orders the University of California-Davis Medical School to admit Al-lan Bakke, a white man who argued he’d been a victim of reverse racial discrimination.1989: � About 1 million Serbs gather to mark the 600th anniversary of the Battle of Kosovo in 1389.2007: � President George W. Bush’s immigration plan to legalize as many as 12 million immi-grants while fortifying the border collapses in the Senate. The American bald eagle was re-moved from the endangered species list. 2012: � The Affordable Care Act narrowly sur-vives, 5-4, an election-year battle at the U.S. Su-preme Court with the improbable help of con-servative Chief Justice John Roberts.

VINDICATOR FILES1992: � Dr. Neil D. Humphrey, who is retiring af-ter eight years as president of Youngstown State University, is joined by incoming president Leslie Cochran at YSU’s spring quarter com-mencement ceremonies.Emanuel N. Catsoules � , retiring superinten-dent of Youngstown public schools, says the students were the roses and politics the thorns during his 28-year career.The East Palestine � and New Waterford police departments install video cameras in their po-lice cruisers to document traffic stops, espe-cially those for drunken drivers.1977: � A 7-year-old boy, Mike Hazel, and his grandmother, Frances Perrocco, 62, die in a fi re at their century-old farmhouse in North Lima. The boy’s father, Richard, was blown from the porch roof while trying to reach his son through a window. The 1977 � Trumbull County Fair opens its sev-en-day run under rainy skies.The drive � to raise $3 million for the Youngstown State University Sports Complex reaches its goal, says campaign chairman Frank C. Watson.1967: � The Youngstown City School District is without a director of adult education and two other supervisors after a motion to reappoint them fails to pass a Board of Education vote.Elaine Brown � of Salem is in New York City to begin a month’s European tour with the School Band of America.Bricklayers Local Union 8 � agrees with the Builders Association of Mahoning Valley on a $2.70 per hour raise over fi ve years.1942: � A collection is planned of tin cans to bol-ster the nation’s supply of scrap.Merchants whose � shelves become more bare by the day are going to add savings stamps and bonds to their merchandise. Merchants will ask customers to take their change in defense stamps.Women interested � in defense work in indus-try are invited by Youngstown College to take an engineering drawing course taught by Wil-bur Nichol.

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

C6 THE VINDICATOR | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2017 COMICS WWW.VINDY.COM

C6 - 06/28/17

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