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By ED RUNYAN [email protected] FOWLER Officials with the Na- tional Weather Service say they have confirmed at least one tornado touchdown oc- curred Thursday night in Trumbull County. But it’s in Fowler Township along state Route 193 and not several miles east along state Route 7 where they initially had indicated. The NWS said the tornado moved through from 7:11 to 7:21 p.m. and was to the north-northwest of Routes 193 and 305. It knocked down at least 100 trees, up- rooted at a residence just west of Route 193 north of Fowler Center; and caused some damage to a mobile home. The tornado had maxi- mum wind speeds of 90 miles per hour and was classified as an EF-1, the second-lowest number on the Enhanced-Fugita Scale. The highest is EF-5. It had a path length of 1.25 miles and a maximum width of 250 yards. On Thursday night, the NWS had believed that a weak tornado touched down at 7:18 along Route 7. Capt. Mike Hagood, who Weather officials adjust site of tornado touchdown By AMANDA TONOLI and JUSTIN WIER [email protected] YOUNGSTOWN There’s a 95 percent chance that Youngstown State University’s faculty will strike, a source told The Vindicator . An Ohio Education Association union meet- ing Tuesday will reveal updates on negotiations, and there will be a voice vote to give the union the power to authorize a strike. A strike authorization vote, however, doesn’t mean there will be a strike. The authorization gives the union the option to call for a 10-day strike notice. Union members would dis- cuss and vote on a strike at a subsequent meeting. A source told The Vindica- tor that the union is unlikely to make concessions for the third-consecutive contract. The administration’s proposed contract did not include increases in mini- mum salaries and included a 1 percent increase each year, according to an email sent by the union crisis and communications commit- tees and addressed to union members. The union asked for minimum salaries to be increased by $2,800 with a raise of the rate of inflation plus 2 percent in the first year and the rate of inflation plus 2.5 percent in the fol- lowing two years. YSU has the lowest-paid faculty at a public univer- sity in Ohio, according to the Chronicle of Higher Educa- tion. The average salary of an assistant professor at a public university in Ohio is $70,000, and YSU’s average By KALEA HALL [email protected] YOUNGSTOWN Leaders of the St. Vincent de Paul Society are hopeful the new dining hall will serve regular clients and bring in new clients. The new dining hall at 252 E. Wood St. in the fellowship hall of St. Cyril and Methodius Church will open Monday with a potluck lunch. Lunch will be served from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The doors of the dining hall will open one hour before lunch is served. An official grand-opening ceremony will take place Sept. 27, the feast day of St. Vin- cent de Paul. The new location is up Watt Street, which Associated Press WASHINGTON Steve Bannon, the blunt-spoken and divi- sive strategist who rose from Donald Trump’s conservative campaign to a top White House post, was pushed out by the president Friday, capping a turbulent seven months marked by the departure of much of Trump’s original senior staff. A favorite in the farther- right portions of the Repub- lican Party, Bannon had pushed Trump to follow through on some of his most contentious campaign prom- ises, including his travel ban for some foreigners and his decision to pull out of the Paris climate change agree- ment. He returned Friday to Breitbart News, which he led before joining Trump’s cam- paign, as executive chairman and chaired its evening edi- torial meeting, the news site announced. By ED RUNYAN [email protected] MINERAL RIDGE The Mahoning Valley Sanitary District has written a 26-page response to a memo and order from two common pleas court judges regarding the proposed refund of $5 million to Youngstown, Niles and McDonald. The MVSD response is in anticipation of an Aug. 29 hearing on the matter in the Trum- bull County Courthouse before Judges Lou D’Apolito of Mahoning County and Ronald Rice of Trumbull County. The filing apparently doesn’t provide some of the information the judges sought but gives a point-by-point response to other is- sues. But by today, the MVSD was to provide the judges with the names of each city, munici- Twister uprooted trees, damaged mobile home in Fowler Source: YSU’s faculty likely to strike YOUNGSTOWN New St. Vincent dining hall to open Monday MINERAL RIDGE MVSD responds to judges’ queries about $5M refund By BILLY LUDT [email protected] AUSTINTOWN T HE PERRYS PULLED INTO GREEN Haven Memorial Gardens on Friday in proper family fashion, astride motorcycles. The trip is a tradition that precedes a decades-spanning celebration of the life of father, grandfather and renowned motor- cycle mechanic, Fred Perry. Friday, the family paid its respects and rode from Green Haven on a predetermined route that hundreds of others on motorcycles will do Sunday. The 27th – and final – annual Fred Perry Motorcycle Benefit Run begins Sunday at 1 p.m. at Austintown Plaza, 6000 Mahoning Ave. Registration for the run is $15 per driver, $10 for a passenger, and begins at 10 a.m. and goes to noon. Preregistration is available at O’Donold’s Irish Pub, 6000 Mahoning Ave., today from 10 a.m. to noon. Final Fred Perry Motorcycle Benefit Run set for Sunday ONE LAST RIDE WHITE HOUSE Bannon out as Trump’s top adviser PLEASE RECYCLE INDEX Business . . . . . . . A10 Classifieds . . . . B4-6 Comics . . . . . . . . . C4 Crossword . . . . . . C3 Daily Briefing . . . A2 Editorial . . . . . . . . A9 Legal ads . . . . . . . . A7 Lotteries . . . . . . . . A2 Society . . . . . . . . . . C1 Sports. . . . . . . . . .B1-4 Tributes . . . . . . . . . A6 TV Week . . . . . D1-12 Valley Life . . . . . . . C2 Weather. . . . . . . . . A2 TODAY’S ISSUE » OPEN HOUSES, A4 • TRIBUTES, A6 • OUTDOORS, B7 • RELIGION, B8 • CLASSIFIEDS, B4 • TV WEEK, D1 GROUNDBREAKING Dirt turned for housing at YSU BUSINESS | A10 MARVEL-OUS SHOW ‘Defenders’ available on Netflix VALLEY LIFE | C2 LOOKING TO DEFEND HIS TITLE Pluchinsky gets off to a great start SPORTS | B1 LOCALLY OWNED SINCE 1869 FOR DAILY & BREAKING NEWS 75¢ SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 Pluc h Pl u u Pl u MORE THAN 14,000 VALLEY GOLFERS SERVED 8 Pat Arnal, Fowler Township road superintendent, stands with two of his grandchildren, Colton and Kenley Kish, along his driveway off state Route 193 in Fowler Township, where 11 of his trees came down in the storms that passed through Thursday night in Trumbull County. ED RUNYAN THE VINDICATOR NIKOS FRAZIER | THE VINDICATOR Volunteer Diane Guarnieri looks through storage shelves at St. Vincent de Paul Society’s dining hall at its new location on East Wood Street in Youngstown. See MVSD, A3 See TORNADO, A3 See YSU, A3 See HALL, A4 Bannon INSIDE: For the mother of the woman killed at the Virginia rally, the president can offer no healing words. A8 See TRUMP, A7 ROBERT K. YOSAY | THE VINDICATOR The Perry family visits their familial mausoleum as an annual tradition. From left are Troy Perry, Candy Estok, Pam Lewis, Dale Perry and Nancy Martucci. Kathy Ensign and Dale Perry hug as family members gather at Green Haven Memorial Gardens cemetery. See PERRYS, A3 “DROP OFF and TAKE” 20% OFF Rug Washing and Repair 141 Niles-Cortland Rd. SE (Route. 46) Howland, OH 44484 234-806-3631 Mon., Tues., & Sat. 11am-5pm • Sun. Noon-5pm Closed Wed., urs. & Fri. ALL RUGS HAND WASHED WITH ORGANIC SOAP Retail, Wash, Repair, Appraisal & Restoration Since 1993 “Google it” www.hudsonorientalrugs.com
Transcript

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

A1 - 08/19/17

By ED [email protected]

FOWLEROfficials with the Na-

tional Weather Service say they have confi rmed at least one tornado touchdown oc-curred Thursday night in Trumbull County.

But it’s in Fowler Township along state Route 193 and not several miles east along state Route 7 where they initially had indicated.

The NWS said the tornado moved through from 7:11 to 7:21 p.m. and was to the north-northwest of Routes 193 and 305. It knocked down at least 100 trees, up-rooted at a residence just west of Route 193 north of Fowler Center; and caused some damage to a mobile home.

The tornado had maxi-mum wind speeds of 90 miles per hour and was

classified as an EF-1, the second-lowest number on the Enhanced-Fugita Scale. The highest is EF-5. It had a path length of 1.25 miles and a maximum width of 250 yards.

On Thursday night, the NWS had believed that a weak tornado touched down at 7:18 along Route 7.

Capt. Mike Hagood, who

Weather offi cials adjust site of tornado touchdown

By AMANDA TONOLIand JUSTIN [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNT here’s a 95 percent

chance that Youngstown State University’s faculty will strike, a source told The Vindicator.

A n O h i o E d u c a t i o n Association union meet-ing Tuesday w i l l revea l

updates on negotiations, and there will be a voice vote to give the union the power to authorize a strike.

A strike authorization vote, however, doesn’t mean there will be a strike.

The authorization gives the union the option to call for a 10-day strike notice. Union members would dis-cuss and vote on a strike at a subsequent meeting.

A source told The Vindica-tor that the union is unlikely to make concessions for the third-consecutive contract.

T he ad m i n ist rat ion’s proposed contract did not include increases in mini-mum salaries and included a 1 percent increase each year, according to an email sent by the union crisis and communications commit-tees and addressed to union members.

T he u n ion asked for minimum salaries to be increased by $2,800 with a raise of the rate of infl ation plus 2 percent in the first year and the rate of infl ation plus 2.5 percent in the fol-lowing two years.

YSU has the lowest-paid faculty at a public univer-sity in Ohio, according to the Chronicle of Higher Educa-tion.

The average salar y of an assistant professor at a public university in Ohio is $70,000, and YSU’s average

By KALEA [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNLeaders of the St. Vincent de Paul Society

are hopeful the new dining hall will serve regular clients and bring in new clients.

The new dining hall at 252 E. Wood St. in the fellowship hall of St. Cyril and Methodius Church will open Monday with a potluck lunch.

Lunch will be served from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The doors of the dining hall will open one hour before lunch is served.

An offi cial grand-opening ceremony will take place Sept. 27, the feast day of St. Vin-cent de Paul.

The new location is up Watt Street, which

Associated Press

WASHINGTONSteve Bannon, the blunt-spoken and divi-

sive strategist who rose from Donald Trump’s conservative campaign to a top White House post, was pushed out by the president Friday, capping a turbulent seven months marked by the departure of much of Trump’s original senior staff.

A favorite in the farther-right portions of the Repub-lican Party, Bannon had pushed Trump to follow through on some of his most contentious campaign prom-ises, including his travel ban for some foreigners and his decision to pull out of the Paris climate change agree-ment.

He returned Friday to Breitbart News, which he led before joining Trump’s cam-paign, as executive chairman and chaired its evening edi-torial meeting, the news site announced.

By ED [email protected]

MINERAL RIDGEThe Mahoning Valley Sanitary District has

written a 26-page response to a memo and order from two common pleas court judges regarding the proposed refund of $5 million to Youngstown, Niles and McDonald.

The MVSD response is in anticipation of an Aug. 29 hearing on the matter in the Trum-bull County Courthouse before Judges Lou D’Apolito of Mahoning County and Ronald Rice of Trumbull County.

The fi ling apparently doesn’t provide some of the information the judges sought but gives a point-by-point response to other is-sues.

But by today, the MVSD was to provide the judges with the names of each city, munici-

Twister uprooted trees, damaged mobile home in Fowler

Source:YSU’sfacultylikelyto strike

YOUNGSTOWN

New St. Vincent dining hall to open Monday

MINERAL RIDGE

MVSD respondsto judges’ queriesabout $5M refund

By BILLY [email protected]

AUSTINTOWN

THE PERRYS PULLED INTO GREENHaven Memorial Gardens on Friday in proper family fashion, astride motorcycles.

The trip is a tradition that precedes a decades-spanning celebration of the life of father, grandfather and renowned motor-cycle mechanic, Fred Perry.

Friday, the family paid its respects and rode from Green Haven on a predetermined route that hundreds of others on motorcycles will do Sunday.

The 27th – and fi nal – annual Fred Perry Motorcycle Benefit Run begins Sunday at 1 p.m. at Austintown Plaza, 6000 Mahoning Ave. Registration for the run is $15 per driver, $10 for a passenger, and begins at 10 a.m. and goes to noon. Preregistration is available at O’Donold’s Irish Pub, 6000 Mahoning Ave., today from 10 a.m. to noon.

Final Fred Perry Motorcycle Benefi t Run set for Sunday

ONE LAST RIDEWHITE HOUSE

Bannon outas Trump’stop adviser

PLEASE RECYCLE

INDEXBusiness . . . . . . . A10Classifi eds . . . . B4-6Comics . . . . . . . . . C4Crossword . . . . . . C3Daily Briefi ng . . . A2Editorial . . . . . . . . A9Legal ads. . . . . . . . A7Lotteries . . . . . . . . A2Society. . . . . . . . . . C1Sports. . . . . . . . . .B1-4Tributes. . . . . . . . . A6TV Week . . . . . D1-12Valley Life. . . . . . . C2Weather. . . . . . . . . A2

TODAY’S ISSUE » � OPEN HOUSES, A4 • TRIBUTES, A6 • OUTDOORS, B7 • RELIGION, B8 • CLASSIFIEDS, B4 • TV WEEK, D1

GROUNDBREAKINGDirt turned for housing at YSU

BUSINESS | A10

MARVEL-OUS SHOW‘Defenders’ available on Netfl ix

VALLEY LIFE | C2

LOOKING TO DEFEND HIS TITLEPluchinsky gets off to a great start

SPORTS | B1

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 ¢SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017

PluchPluuPlu

MORE THAN 14,000 VALLEY GOLFERS SERVED

88

Pat Arnal, Fowler Township road superintendent, stands with two of his grandchildren, Colton and Kenley Kish, along his driveway off state Route 193 in Fowler Township, where 11 of his trees came down in the storms that passed through Thursday night in Trumbull County.ED RUNYANTHE VINDICATOR

NIKOS FRAZIER | THE VINDICATOR

Volunteer Diane Guarnieri looks through storage shelves at St. Vincent de Paul Society’s dining hall at its new location on East Wood Street in Youngstown.

See MVSD, A3

See TORNADO, A3

See YSU, A3

See HALL, A4

Bannon

INSIDE: �

For the mother of the woman killed at the Virginia rally, the president can off er no healing words. A8

See TRUMP, A7

ROBERT K. YOSAY | THE VINDICATOR

The Perry family visits their familial mausoleum as an annual tradition. From left are Troy Perry, Candy Estok, Pam Lewis, Dale Perry and Nancy Martucci.

Kathy Ensign and Dale Perry hug as family members gather at Green Haven Memorial Gardens cemetery. See PERRYS, A3

“DROP OFF and TAKE”

20% OFFRug Washing and Repair

141 Niles-Cortland Rd. SE(Route. 46)

Howland, OH 44484234-806-3631Mon., Tues., & Sat. 11am-5pm • Sun. Noon-5pm

Closed Wed., Th urs. & Fri.

ALL RUGS HAND WASHEDWITH ORGANIC SOAP

Retail, Wash, Repair, Appraisal &Restoration Since 1993

“Google it” www.hudsonorientalrugs.com

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

A3 - 08/19/17

pality, township, village or other entity to whom the MVSD and its member cit-ies Youngstown and Niles and member village Mc-Donald sell water.

The M VSD response does not list the commu-nities, instead saying only that the MVSD sells water to Youngstown, Niles and McDonald. Those commu-nities in turn sell water to other communities.

The judges also ordered that each community that buys MVSD water, “wheth-er through MVSD directly or through its members,” receive notification of the hearing date. The MVSD re-sponse apparently doesn’t address that order. In vari-ous places in the response, however, the MVSD says it does not know the custom-ers to whom Youngstown, Niles and McDonald sell water.

Matt Blair, MVSD direc-tor, said Friday he doesn’t know if the names of those other water users were pro-vided, and doesn’t know if any of those communities were notified of the hear-ing.

When the judges first raised questions with the MVSD about its intent to refund $3.7 million to Youngstown, $1.2 million to Niles and $100,000 to Mc-Donald and inquired why money was not being re-funded to all of the custom-ers who buy MVSD water, such as Poland and Austin-town, Blair told The Vindi-cator the MVSD’s only cus-tomers are “member cities” Youngstown and Niles and member village McDonald.

When the judges asked Blair why the MVSD doesn’t ensure that the refund is shared with the communi-

ties that Youngstown, Niles and McDonald serve, he said the MVSD cannot or-der Youngstown, Niles and McDonald to share the re-fund with its customers.

Youngstown and Niles sell water to dozens of cit-ies, villages and townships in Mahoning and Trum-bull counties. McDonald sells water to Weathersfi eld Township and Girard.

The MVSD’s response did explain why the MVSD de-cided to refund $5 million in “excess” funds instead of retaining the money for upcoming capital improve-ments or lowering water rates.

The MVSD said its fi nan-cial adviser, PFM Inc., did an analysis that showed the MVSD had a reserve balance above the recom-mended reserve levels.

Ohio law governing wa-ter-distribution systems such as MVSD says surplus funds can be used to retire debt, reduce water rates, or for accomplishing any other of the legitimate objectives of the district.

The fi ling says the MVSD told the judges in a July 11 phone hearing that it at-tempted to get a legal opin-ion from the Ohio Auditor’s Offi ce, Ohio Attorney Gen-eral’s Office and prosecu-tor’s offices in Mahoning and Trumbull counties as to whether the refund was legal, but none of those en-tities could provide such an opinion.

The MVSD fi ling also ad-dresses whether there is any confl ict of interest involved w ith any M VSD board member voting to provide a refund to Youngstown, Niles and McDonald. The MVSD board consists of represen-tatives from Youngstown, Niles and McDonald.

“Given the oath taken by the board members and the clear and unambigu-

ous language of [Ohio law], there is no confl ict with any board member returning the identifi ed available fund balance, the surplus, to the members,” the MVSD fi ling says.

There has never been a previous rate reduction in the MVSD’s history, the fi l-ing says, answering another question from the judges.

The district did waive a levy payment in 2015 of $1.3 million from Youngstown and $400,000 from Niles, however.

As to why the MVSD doesn’t ensure that the communities that buy wa-ter from Youngstown, Niles and McDonald get a part of the refund, the MVSD re-sponse says the MVSD “has no legal means by statute or court order to reduce the rates to any of the members’ consumers.”

As to whether the MVSD is overcharging for water, the district replied that it has agreed to keep its cur-rent rate in effect until at least 2020.

“Beyond [2020], the dis-trict does not know if an in-crease in rates charged for the purchase of water will be necessary,” the MVSD said.

As for why the MVSD doesn’t pay off its debt early instead of giving a refund, the MVSD said it has an Ohio Water Development Authority loan, but it can-not be paid off early, and the MVSD does not have any other debt.

It has bonds issued in 2010 that mature in 2018. Bonds can’t be repaid early, and the money for them is set aside, Blair said Friday.

For Niles, there are a lot of infrastructure needs, and the state auditors will make sure the city uses the refund only for water infrastruc-ture needs, Blair said.

is $60,800. The average sal-ary of a full professor at a public university in Ohio is $107,900, and YSU’s average is $88,200.

There’s been a 13 percent decline in infl ation-adjust-ed take-home pay since 2011, the email states.

In that time, faculty mem-bers received raises totaling 5 percent, but infl ation in-creased by 9 percent.

Faculty members also have increased their contri-butions to health care and received cuts in compen-sation for summer classes, which reduce take-home pay.

The email continued: “Unfortunately, both sides are very far apart on key is-sues,” and claimed the ad-ministration proposed:

Decreased take-home �

pay.Removing course-load �

l i m it s , w h ich c ou ld s ig n i f ic a nt l y a f fe c t

workload.Faculty dismissal with- �

out due process.The fact-fi nding process

is completed, and a report should be issued about Sept. 4.

If one or both of the par-ties reject the report in the two weeks after it is issued, negotiations can continue and the union is allowed to strike.

Faculty contract negotia-tions call for a media black-out, YSU offi cials have said in refusing to comment.

is full time with the Brook-field Fire Department and part time with the Vienna Fire Department, said he fol-lowed all three storms that passed through the county starting around 7 p.m., stay-ing a half mile from them. He finally stopped chasing storms about 10:30. At the end, he was in Pennsylva-nia.

Hagood said the most seri-ous damage he saw was in the area the National Weath-er Service mentioned, north of Route 305 along Route 193 in Fowler Township.

Hagood said the ominous appearance of the dark, low-hanging and swirling cloud formations made him believe that a tornado was likely. It’s one reason he fol-lowed the storms so long.

“I’ve never seen a storm that had that potential” for a tornado, he said. “It looked like at any moment, it would send something down.”

It appeared that way to a lot of other people, too. Rob Oliver, an employee at Youngstown-Warren Re-gional Airport, used his phone to video record sev-eral segments of storms and post them on his Facebook page.

“It is literally right above our head and spinning,” he said, showing a storm com-ing toward the airport from the southwest. The sound of the wind in the video be-came very loud.

Shortly thereafter, he and co-workers drove quickly from the airfield to seek safety.

His videos showed mas-sive, dark clouds close to the ground with parts that ap-peared to swirl and reach down toward the ground. It is believed the workers’ ob-

servations were reported to the NWS, which mentioned them in a news release.

One of the hardest-hit lo-cations for damage was the home of Pat and Linda Ar-nal, who live at the end of a long driveway east off Route 193 in Fowler. Their home is just north of Route 305.

When the warning si-rens went off and the winds kicked up Thursday night, Linda and Pat gathered up the three grandchildren they were watching and took them to the basement.

“We could just hear a lot of noise. I was just trying to re-assure them so they wouldn’t be so scared,” Linda said of the grandchildren.

A short time later, the power went out.

W hen t he storm had passed a little later, the Ar-nals discovered that 11 of the trees along their driveway had been toppled, several of them across the driveway.

Pat, who is the Fowler Township road superinten-dent, used a tractor to pull trees off of the driveway and started cutting with a chain saw.

Linda later found flower pots from the front porch in the backyard, with the fl ow-ers still on the front porch. Numerous pieces of patio furniture had been tossed around the property.

On the other side of Route 193, trees fell on two proper-ties, one of which knocked down a power line. A huge tree fell in the backyard of a home just across the street from the Arnal property.

One tree north of Yankee Lake in Hartford fell across state Route 7, but Hartford Township offi cials said they were not aware of any other damage in Hartford. Coun-ty offi cials also say they are not aware of any damage to homes or injuries resulting from the storm.

Paying drivers and riders at The Fred Perry Run are given a food voucher and a door-prize ticket, and the first 750 registered receive a pin commemorating the year.

The run’s 70-plus-mile route is given to drivers the day of the event.

The Fred Perry Run wasn’t exactly a collective motorcy-cle trip to start. The fi rst year it was an appreciation day put on by friends for Fred, who was living with cancer at the time.

His friends worked to raise money for medical treat-ments, but Fred never ac-cepted the money.

“He never had any medi-cal insurance or anything,” said Dale Perry, Fred’s son. “He always insisted on giv-ing the money to the kids instead.”

Fred made it to the first celebration, but by the next year he wasn’t able to. He died July 15, 1991, at 67.

The event turned into a motorcycle run that gained traction and became revered among regional, out-of-state and a few international mo-torcycle riders, honoring the late mechanic.

“We’ve got people that come to every run there’s ever been,” said Neil Perry, Fred’s grandson.

From age 16, Fred was rid-ing motorcycles – and mo-torcycles only, his family said.

While attending Wood-row Wilson High, Fred was

the only person who rode a motorcycle to school every day. When he and his wife, Dorothy, were married, she wasn’t aware that Fred didn’t own a car.

Fred’s dedication to his work as a mechanic at Har-ley-Davidson of Youngstown and Warren quickly gave him a hig h reputat ion among area motorcycle en-thusiasts.

“He would help people every day or any part of the night to fi x a problem with their motorcycle,” his daugh-ter-in-law Linda Perry said.

Fred’s tenacity for driving in frigid weather earned him the Polar Bear Patch from the Pirate Motorcycle Club, a group of motorcycle riders from the Youngstown area in the 1930s.

All benefi ts from the run go to critically ill children from the Mahoning Valley. The run has raised proceeds anywhere between $5,000 to $10,000 consistently every year.

The family made the deci-sion to make this year’s run the last about two months ago.

“It’s just kind of run its course,” Linda said. “The family is getting smaller, and the people who help us every year – well, they’re as old as we are.”

“It’s a lot of work,” Dale added.

The one-day event is a year-round effort for the Perry family and supporting crew of friends.

“We’re all sad about it,” Linda said. “We don’t want to see it end.”

Pride Center picnicYOUNGSTOWN

There will be a free pic-nic at The Pride Center, 1523 Poland Ave., at 5 p.m. today. Food and drink will be provided by the center. Attendees will be encour-aged to join or renew their membership, but all are wel-come. Some lawn furniture is available.

Prepping for schoolWARREN

Second Baptist Church “A House of Hope” at 1510 Main Ave. SW will host “Back to School Sunday” at 10:15 a.m. Sunday. Students, par-ents, teachers, coaches and administrators from Warren City Schools and other local school districts are invited to join in a service of worship in preparation for the 2017-18 school year. The Youth Ministry of Second Baptist will be leading worship, and a special message will be shared by the Rev. Todd Johnson.

120-day sentenceCHARDON

Maridee Constanzo, a former Warren attorney who spent eight years in prison for trying to hire a hit man to kill her estranged husband, began serving a 120-day jail sentence in the Geauga County jail Thursday.

Costanzo, 59, of Genesee Avenue Northeast in War-ren, was sentenced to the 120 days Thursday after pleading guilty last week in a Geauga County theft ring.

Costanzo pleaded guilty in Geauga County Common Pleas Court last week to re-ceiving stolen property. She could have gotten up to a year in prison.

In addition to her jail term, Costanzo will serve two years’ probation and must complete a jail treat-ment program for substance abuse.

Costanzo was among four people arrested in connec-tion with the theft of more than $100,000 in antiques and historic artifacts from a Geauga County home.

Warren man’s trialCLEVELAND

A Warren man accused of stealing $82,000 in govern-ment funds has a trial date of Sept. 18.

Dean Nikolaides, 63, of Shadowood Lane was indict-ed by a federal grand jury in June on charges of taking about $82,000 in pension benefi ts from the Pension Benefi t Guaranty Corp., an independent agency of the U.S. government. The off enses occurred over 14 years from June 2003 to June 2017, according to the indictment.

Judge Donald C. Nugent of the U.S. District Court in the Northern District of Ohio, Eastern Division, will hear the case in Cleveland.

Spitting chargeSTRUTHERS

Another preliminary hear-ing is set for Aug. 30 in the case of a woman accused of spitting on police dur-ing a call for mental-health assistance.

Jykeera Jones, 20, of Akron appeared Friday in Struthers Municipal Court on charges of disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor, resisting arrest, a misde-meanor, and harassment by forcing an offi cer to come into contact with a bodily substance, a felony.

A judge continued her $4,500 bond.

Struthers police respond-ed Aug. 4 to a home on East Midlothian Boulevard for an apparent suicide attempt by Jones, who tried to run away when police and rescue per-sonnel arrived. Offi cers re-ported they tried to restrain her by strapping her down onto a cot when she spat at two police offi cers. Jones pleaded not guilty to the misdemeanor charges dur-ing her arraignment Aug. 11.

OVI checkpointsCANFIELD

The Mahoning County OVI Task Force said two sobriety checkpoints will take place in Mahoning County today and Sunday. Specifi c details will be announced at a later time.

METROdigest

EMAIL: [email protected] LOCAL & STATE THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 A3

MVSDContinued from A1

YSUContinued from A1

TORNADOContinued from A1

PERRYSContinued from A1

ROBERT K. YOSAY | THE VINDICATOR

The Perry family arrives at the Green Haven Memorial Gardens cemetery in a procession of motorcycles to honor their father, famed motorcycle mechanic Fred Perry.

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A4 THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 LOCAL & STATE WWW.VINDY.COM

is off East Rayen Avenue.Monday’s lunch is the

fi rst St. Vincent has served since its former location on Front Street was closed in early July after the Ma-honing County Building Inspection Department found it to be unsafe.

An employee complaint prompted a safety-hazard inspection June 23, and that inspection reportedly found a collapsed ceiling above a second-f loor of-fice, rotting f loor under compartment sinks on the fi rst fl oor and rotting fl oor-joist tails in the basement.

The building, at 208 W. Front St., is now for sale. It’s valued at $79,000.

The expense involved with fixing the hazards a nd t he recurrence of those hazards led the St. Vincent de Paul Society’s board of directors to fi nd a new location.

“It’s a new fresh start for

us,” said Jessica Robinson, executive director of St. Vincent de Paul’s Mahon-ing County District.

The new location had to be updated with a new storage area, plumbing and electricity.

“Just getting our equip-ment in here took some time,” Robinson said.

Robinson believes the new location is still acces-sible to the people who of-ten visited the Front Street location, but she also sees the dining hall getting in new clients.

Across the street is the St. Vincent pantry.

“I think [those clients] will come over here,” she said.

The Front Street location served 200 meals a day, and the same is expected at the new location.

“It’s like a breath of fresh air,” said Wayne Murray, kitchen manager at the dining hall. “You just see the potential growth here. We will be seeing a new clientele. Our numbers

will grow in this area.”Some clients of St. Vin-

cent de Paul wished to see the dining hall stay in a more central location downtown.

“I got to walk up the hill and back down,” said George Westmoreland of Youngstown.

“These soup kitchens mean a lot to the commu-nity,” said Matthew Smith of Warren. “Without them, we wouldn’t have anything to eat. It’s not a good loca-tion like it was downtown, but we need these soup kitchens.”

St. Vincent is in need of food donations of any k i nd. T he d i n i ng ha l l asks for donations to be dropped off during hours of service: 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Monday through Fri-day and 10 to 11 a.m. Sat-urday.

“We are asking for new volunteer groups to come in,” Robinson said. “We would like people to come in and serve with us.”

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

A4 - 08/19/17

HALLContinued from A1

NIKOS FRAZIER | THE VINDICATOR

The new St. Vincent de Paul Society dining hall will open Monday. Lunch will be a potluck.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 PRICE BED/BATH/STYLE HOURS REALTOR MLS#

HUBBARD825 E Liberty St $145,000 2/1 Ranch 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3924644

LEETONIA39477 Miller Rd $130,000 3/1 Ranch 1:00-2:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3886860

LISBON405 W Lincoln Way $218,500 4/3 Colonial 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3920953

NORTH LIMA1017 W South Range Rd $69,900 4/1 Conventional 1:00-3:00 RE/MAX Valley Real Estate 3922819

POLAND2249 Edgewater Dr $104,900 3/2 Cape Cod 12:00-2:00 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3931068

SEBRING540 Hillsdale St $200,000 5/3 Conventional 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3894126

WARREN9383 Firestone Dr SE $249,500 4/3 Colonial 11:00-1:00 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3929079

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20AUSTINTOWN5923 Herons Blvd $209,900 2/2 Villa 1:00-3:00 Klacik Real Estate 3920782

6817 Winter Ridge Ct $180,000 3/4 Conventional 1:00-2:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3929024

6871 Kirk Rd $167,900 4/3 Colonial 1:00-3:00 RE/MAX Valley Real Estate 3922408

525 Wilcox Rd #A $110,000 2/2 Ranch 1:00-2:30 RE/MAX Valley Real Estate 3926315

4685 New Rd $108,000 3/2 Ranch 2:00-4:00 Northwood Realty Services 3918876

4787 Pine Trace $94,900 3/2 Ranch 2:00-4:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3889907

251 Idlewood Rd $65,900 4/1 Cape Cod 12:00-2:00 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3921638

139 Carnegie Ave $44,000 4/1 Cape Cod 3:00-4:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3907020

BOARDMAN580 Berklee Dr $338,925 5/3 Colonial 12:00-2:00 Mayo & Associates, Inc. 3872321

608 Chestnut Ln $225,000 3/3 Colonial 1:00-3:00 Klacik Real Estate 3927730

7383 E Huntington Dr $215,000 3/3 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3911461

207 Mayfl ower Dr $189,500 4/3 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Burgan Real Estate 3925000

130 Overhill Rd $168,000 4/3 Colonial 3:00-4:30 Burgan Real Estate 3897053

4871 Brookwood $159,900 3/3 Colonial 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3919252

7694 E Parkside Dr $154,900 3/3 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Burgan Real Estate 3910544

491 Garden Valley Ct $139,900 3/2 Split Level 12:00-2:00 Mayo & Associates, Inc. 3931412

449 Garver Dr $129,900 3/2 Ranch 1:00-2:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3920811

3209 Straley Ln $105,000 3/2 Ranch 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3911439

4646 Canterbury Ln $104,900 4/3 Cape Cod 1:00-3:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3903268

7358 Ranier Trl $100,000 3/1 Ranch 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3926976

6445 West Blvd $100,000 2/2 Ranch 1:00-2:30 Burgan Real Estate 3932154

428 Orlo Ln $69,900 3/3 Ranch 1:30-3:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3929537

905 Donmar Ln $63,900 3/1 Ranch 1:00-3:00 Mayo & Associates, Inc. 3931913

CAMPBELL651 Matawan Dr $89,900 3/3 Split Level 3:00-4:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3930957

CANFIELD5391 Muirfi eld Dr $779,900 5/7 Conventional 3:30-5:00 RE/MAX Valley Real Estate 3810747

7515 Orchard Park $432,900 4/3 Colonial 1:00-3:00 Herron & Associates 3911148

8044 Grayson Dr $385,000 4/4 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Northwood Realty Services 3893288

4324 Fairfax $330,000 3/3 Ranch 1:00-3:00 Herron & Associates 3863131

6714 Langston Run $300,000 4/3 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3923129

51 Barnstone Dr $281,500 3/2 Ranch 12:00-1:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3926227

4290 Adeer Dr $199,000 4/4 Colonial 3:00-4:30 Burgan Real Estate 3912840

4950 Tippecanoe Rd $179,900 3/3 Colonial 12:00-2:00 Klacik Real Estate 3931253

130 Sleepy Hollow Dr $159,900 5/2 Ranch 1:00-3:00 RE/MAX Valley Real Estate 3900607

2851 Grandview Blvd $159,900 3/2 Ranch 12:00-1:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3880052

4495 Plumbrook Dr $109,000 3/2 Ranch 1:00-3:00 RE/MAX Valley Real Estate 3924776

CORTLAND2886 Timber Creek Dr N $294,500 4/5 Conventional 11:30-3:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3931502

445 Greenbriar Dr $209,900 3/3 Colonial 1:00-3:00 RE/MAX Valley Real Estate 3930809

186 Maple Ave $180,000 4/3 Conventional 12:00-2:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3931546

121 Market St $58,500 3/1 Conventional 12:00-2:00 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3874828

GIRARD80 Cheyenne Dr $190,000 3/2 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3930785

560 Joan Ave $124,900 3/2 Split Level 12:00-2:00 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3921539

327 E Broadway Ave $89,900 3/2 Colonial 2:00-4:00 S. T. Bozin & Company 3927673

HUBBARD738 Ava Ct $239,900 3/2 Ranch 1:00-4:00 Meander Homes 3856095

PRICE BED/BATH/STYLE HOURS REALTOR MLS#

KENSINGTON10019 Berry Rd NE $165,000 3/2 Bi-Level 3:30-5:00 Northwood Realty Services 3928942

LEETONIA50 Elm St $58,990 3/2 Cape Cod 2:30-4:00 Real Living Volpini Realty Group 3845959

LIBERTY5198 Sampson Dr $209,900 5/3 Cape Cod 1:00-3:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3924413

1120 Timbercrest St $124,900 4/3 Split Level 1:00-2:30 Real Living Volpini Realty Group 3907235

MINERAL RIDGE3817 Meander Dr $257,500 4/3 Colonial 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3915608

1371 Ohltown McDonald $152,000 3/2 Ranch 3:00-4:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3922880

NEW MIDDLETOWN10375 Carrousel Woods Dr $249,900 3/3 Cape Cod 12:30-2:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3920373

4440 Sandy Ct $199,900 3/3 Conventional 12:30-2:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3908953

94 Foster Ave $148,000 3/2 Ranch 11:00-12:30 Burgan Real Estate 3870479

NILES100 S Cleveland Ave $139,000 3/2 Ranch 2:30-4:00 RE/MAX Valley Real Estate 3925246

620 Hartzell Ave $99,500 3/2 Split Level 12:30-2:00 RE/MAX Valley Real Estate 3930760

813 Sullivan $71,000 3/2 Ranch 12:00-2:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3919314

NORTH JACKSON3119 Lipkey S $93,000 3/2 Modular 12:00-1:30 Real Living Volpini Realty Group 3924826

NORTH LIMA658 Thornberry Trl $274,500 4/3 Conventional 1:00-2:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3870837

2500 Lynn Rd $225,000 4/2 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3880586

11186 Woodworth Rd $135,000 3/2 Conventional 1:00-2:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3903062

POLAND

4021 Via Cassia $449,900 4/5 Colonial 12:30-2:00 Real Living Volpini Realty Group 3904902

8526 Twin Oaks Ct $425,000 5/5 Colonial 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3879383

7882 Tuscany Dr $349,900 4/5 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3879674

29 Cedars Pl $305,000 5/3 Contemporary 12:00-2:00 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3881542

2978 Olde Winter Trl $289,900 4/4 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3916404

1090 Preserve Blvd $279,900 3/2 Ranch 2:30-4:00 Altobelli Real Estate 3751922

7039 Bishop Rd $275,000 4/3 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3909976

22 Cedars Rd $275,000 4/3 Colonial 12:00-2:00 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3838545

1805 E Western Reserve #11 $259,900 3/4 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Northwood Realty Services 3904996

1805 E Western Reserve #55 $249,900 3/3 Villa 1:00-3:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3901002

3025 Olde Winter Trl $239,900 3/3 Contemporary 1:00-2:30 Burgan Real Estate 3879375

1805 E Western Reserve #40 $230,000 2/2 Villa 1:00-3:00 Northwood Realty Services 3914445

9264 Sharrott Rd $219,900 2/2 Ranch 3:00-4:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3924514

9 Ravine Pl $209,500 3/2 Ranch 1:00-2:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3871185

1805 E Western Reserve #63 $209,000 2/2 Ranch 1:00-2:30 Burgan Real Estate 3924427

18 Centennial Dr $160,000 3/2 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3925452

2902 Palmarie Dr $149,900 3/2 Conventional 1:00-2:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3912569

8311 Morningside Dr $145,000 3/2 Colonial 1:00-2:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3909730

1753 Lemont Dr $125,000 3/2 Bi-Level 3:00-4:30 Northwood Realty Services 3918104

2465 W Manor Ave $100,000 3/2 Cape Cod 12:00-1:30 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3921293

45 Edgewater Dr $100,000 3/2 Cape Cod 2:00-3:30 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3908220

7606 North Lima Rd $75,000 2/1 Ranch 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3909877

1934 Wingate Rd $67,200 4/3 Cape Cod 1:00-2:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3867051

1669 Lynn Ave $54,500 4/2 Cape Cod 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3929006

SALEM

1810 Countryside Dr $190,000 3/3 Colonial 2:00-4:00 Northwood Realty Services 3893832

33851 Burtview Pl $129,900 3/3 Split Level 2:00-4:00 Northwood Realty Services 3918559

783 Summit St $84,500 3/2 Colonial 2:00-4:00 Northwood Realty Services 3922873

STRUTHERS232 Overlook Blvd $74,900 3/2 Ranch 1:00-2:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3929783

WARREN

7658 Venice Heights Dr NE $145,000 3/1 Bi-Level 12:00-1:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3929650

758 Meadowbrook Ave SE $69,900 3/1 Cape Cod 12:00-2:00 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3928364

818 Meadowbrook Ave SE $52,500 3/1 Cape Cod 12:00-2:00 Real Living Brokers Realty Group 3922922

YOUNGSTOWN1962 McCollum Rd $99,900 3/2 Colonial 11:00-12:30 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3921759

3154 Neosho Dr $89,000 4/3 Colonial 1:00-3:00 Howard Hanna Real Estate Services 3919402

2535 Nadyne Dr $69,900 3/1 Cape Cod 1:00-2:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3915589

1318 Inverness Ave $62,500 3/1 Ranch 1:00-2:30 RE/MAX Valley Real Estate 3930313

2906 S Schenley Ave $62,500 3/1 Colonial 11:00-12:30 Keller Williams Chervenic Realty 3891863

THIS WEEKEND’S REALTOR® OPEN HOUSES

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visit www.vindyhomes.combrowse for thousands of local properties

EMAIL: [email protected] LOCAL & STATE THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 A5

Boardman police make 2 drug-related arrestsStaff report

BOARDMANA township woman faces nu-

merous criminal charges after po-lice were called to Afton Avenue on Thursday in reference to her “go-ing door-to-door asking for a ride,” according to a police report.

Offi cers were dispatched shortly after noon. They located Tina Mc-Mahon, 37, of Wildwood Drive on an Afton Avenue porch. McMahon told police that her boyfriend had “left her at a drug house,” accord-

ing to the report.While speaking with McMahon,

police discovered that she had an active warrant out of Youngstown for failing to appear in court on a child-endangering charge, ac-cording to the report.

When McMahon’s boyfriend and son arrived at the scene, police said she began to yell and attempt to get out of the police cruiser, causing a plastic partition in the vehicle to break.

Police then searched her purse, in which they reported finding

pills, two metal pipes, a small bag of a “brown gum-like substance,” and a loose substance folded into a piece of paper that McMahon told them was hashish.

Police said McMahon put up a struggle when they attempted to put her in handcuffs and secure her in the cruiser, leading her to break the interior door handle. Police also reported that she un-buckled herself while en route to the jail, struck her head against the plastic partition and yelled racial

slurs at people in another vehicle.The incident led to charges of

possession of dangerous drugs (two counts), possession of drugs, vandalism to property owned by a government entity and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Also Thursday, township police took into custody Jennifer Kozic, 40, of South Avenue in Boardman on warrants related to an overdose, according to a police report.

Police were dispatched to Koz-ic’s apartment the night of July 17.

The township fi re department and an ambulance crew were already there.

A man told police that he found Kozic unresponsive in the apart-ment building’s laundry room. He attempted to perform CPR, then called 911, he said.

Police sometimes charge people with inducing panic after respond-ing to overdoses. Kozic was sup-posed to be watching her toddler at the time, Kozic’s boyfriend told police.

Federal judge delays sentencing manwho plotted to kill US military members

By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS Associated Press

COLUMBUSA federal judge Friday de-

layed a sentencing hearing for a man who plotted to kill military members in the U.S., with the judge saying he needed more informa-tion, including the man’s current state of mind.

It’s not uncommon for judges to ask for extra details about a defendant and a case before a hearing. Less com-mon is for those requests to come during a scheduled sentencing, which Friday was attended by several members of defendant Ab-dirahman Sheik Mohamud’s family, prosecutors, defense attorneys and FBI agents.

Judge James Graham said the case presented trou-bling issues, including the fact that Mohamud went to Syria two months after be-ing sworn in as a U.S. citizen in Columbus.

The government alleges Mohamud became a citizen to obtain a U.S. passport. Mohamud bought a ticket to Greece with a stop in Tur-key, where he disembarked before going to Syria, pros-ecutors have said in court documents. They say Moha-mud never intended to go to Greece.

Mohamud, who was born in Somalia but came to the U.S. as a child, was arrested in 2015 and pleaded guilty to plotting those attacks af-ter becoming radicalized in Syria. The attacks were never carried out.

Prosecutors said Moha-mud wanted to travel to Texas and capture three or four soldiers and execute them. But Mohamud and his lawyer, in asking for leni-ency this week, said he had

realized “the immoral and illegal nature of terrorist ideology” and had rejected “radical notions” and “aban-doned any plans to engage in terrorism.”

Mohamud’s attorney Sam Shamansky said he didn’t know what the sentencing delay meant for his client but said he was heartened by the judge’s deliberate approach.

“The judge has really asked for some critically im-portant information that I’m hopeful we’re able to pro-vide,” Shamansky said.

The judge said he need-ed to know more about the Somali community in Co-

lumbus and what efforts prosecutors and city leaders have made to reach out to that community.

He also wants to know whether any federal prisons have programs to rehabili-tate inmates who have been radicalized and if there are any similar programs for such inmates after their re-lease.

“I’m also concerned about Mr. Mohamud’s current state of mind, whether he’s abandoned these beliefs and motives,” the judge said.

Prosecutors are seeking a 23-year sentence. They say Mohamud, who’s 25 years

old, was trained in Syria and tried to cover up dangerous terrorist activity.

U.S. Attorney Benjamin Glassman said the govern-ment won’t change its sen-tence request as a result of the delay.

He also said his offi ce and the FBI are in constant com-munication with the area’s Somali community, the sec-ond biggest in the U.S. after the Twin Cities in Minne-sota.

“From the perspective of the United States, the Somali community is a valued part-ner in our law-enforcement efforts,” Glassman said.

By JOE [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNHis mother and pastor

testifi ed Friday that Brian Hunter has strong family ties and helps his family and his church, but they did not see a video played in federal court that Hunt-er made last June where he went on a profanity-laced rant against a woman he thought was accusing him of being an informant.

The video, played before Magistrate Judge George Limbert in a detention hearing for Hunter, who is facing drug and conspiracy charges, was so unsettling that at several points even he had his head down on the defense table in shame, and he squirmed in his cuffs as well. Several fam-ily members also seemed shocked, too.

Hunter, 44, one of 19 de-fendants who were round-ed up last week in two separate drug cases, was the only defendant who had his hearing. W hen it was over, Limbert de-clared that he would not grant Hunter bond not be-cause he feared Hunter is a fl ight risk, but because he is a danger to the com-munity.

Limbert said the video was the deciding factor in his decision.

Hunter, along with an-other person he was in-dicted with, Aaron Rogers, 47, were once members of a gang called the Ready Rock Boys, 10 of whom ser ved lengthy federal prison sentences in the 1990s for bringing cocaine into Youngstown. Hunter served an 87-month pris-on sentence in that case.

Don Belosic, a member of the Mahoning County Sheriff’s Offi ce who is as-signed to the Youngstown federal Drug Enforcement Administration, testified that Hunter is on several

w iretaps invest igators used in the case talking about drugs.

The video was made af-ter a search warrant was ser ved in June 2016 at Hunter’s home where task-force members found two .40-caliber handguns and more than $2,800 in cash.

In t he v ideo, wh ich Hunter posted to Facebook a day after the warrant was served at his home and was taken down shortly af-ter, Hunter swears repeat-edly and says he is going over to the woman’s house and he will not let her walk all over him. Belosic said under cross-examination from Hunter’s lawyer, Da-vid Betras, that he and an-other task-force member went to the woman’s house to make sure nothing hap-pened.

Betras argued that his client deserved bail or at least house arrest. He had Hunter’s mother and pas-tor testify as character wit-nesses.

They were not in court when the video was played, because witnesses are sep-arated during testimony, so they did not hear the re-cording .

Bet ras st ressed t hat Hunter never hurt the woman he was ranting against and that all the evi-dence the government had against him is from wire-taps. But Limbert said the video shows that Hunter has a temper.

“I wouldn’t want to test him to see if he would turn violent or not,” Limbert said.

Limbert said the wire-taps make it clear that Hunter was speaking to other people about drugs, and the fact he served a sentence of 87 months in prison and was around people selling drugs did not work in his favor, ei-ther.

After video is played,judge refuses to grantbond to defendant

Staff report

YOUNGSTOWNA joint partnership of

Huntington Bank and The United Way has produced more than 1,000 book bags for students in need throughout Mahoning, Trumbull, Columbiana and Mercer counties.

Schools that identify stu-dents in need will receive the book bags for the 2017-18 school year.

Roxann Sebest , United Way marketing and com-munications director, said the best part of the give-away is seeing the students receive the book bags.“They’re just so excited

and ready to get back to school, and it’s nice that they don’t have to worry,” she said.

Huntington Bank Re-gional President William C. Shivers said he likes being part of a community effort to give back.

“We are just meeting a need,” he said. “Unfortu-nately this is a kind of need, but it’s nice to get everyone in the same playing field. The students have enough pressure starting school.”

Other partners include Great Clips, Cocca’s Pizza and 21 WFMJ-TV, The Vin-dicator’s broadcast part-ner.

Huntington Bank,United Way team upfor book-bag giveaway

By SARAH [email protected]

CAMPBELLBond was set at $200,000 Friday for a

Campbell man facing child-pornogra-phy charges.

Joshua Baird, 39, appeared for his arraignment in Campbell Municipal Court on 10 felony counts of pander-ing sexually-oriented matter involving a child.

Agents with the Ohio Bureau of In-vestigation executed a search warrant at Baird’s house at 600 Devitt Ave. on Wednesday and seized electronic de-vices.

Jill Del Greco, a spokeswoman for

the Ohio Attorney Gen-eral’s Offi ce, said Baird is alleged to have made and disseminated por-nography involving a juvenile girl. BCI is a division of the attorney general’s offi ce.

D e l G r e c o s a i d Wednesday it is un-known if there were other victims, and the investigation is ongoing.

Anyone with information can con-tact the Ohio BCI tip line at 855-BCI-OHIO.

Baird is listed in the Mahoning County Sheriff’s Offi ce database as a registered sex offender.

In 2003, he pleaded guilty to rap-ing and molesting a 4-year-old girl in Columbiana County. In 2004, he pleaded guilty in a separate case to raping a 2-year-old girl in Mahoning County.

As part of Baird’s plea agreement, a Mahoning County judge sentenced Baird to 10 years in prison to be served concurrently with the 11 years Baird received for the Columbiana County case.

Baird will appear Aug. 25 in Camp-bell Municipal Court for a prelimi-nary hearing. Atty. Anthony Meranto, who was appointed Friday by the court to represent Baird, declined to com-ment.

Campbell man arraigned on child-porn charges

Staff report

COLUMBUSOhio’s unemployment rate

was 5.2 percent in July 2017, up from 5 percent in June 2017. Ohio’s nonagricultural wage and salary employment in-creased 1,600 over the month, from a revised 5,536,500 in June to 5,538,100 in July 2017.

Local county unemploy-ment figures will be released Tuesday.

The number of workers un-employed in Ohio in July was 300,000, up 9,000 from 291,000 in June. The number of unem-ployed has increased by 19,000 in the past 12 months from 281,000. The July unemploy-ment rate for Ohio increased from 4.9 percent in July 2016.

Employment in goods-pro-ducing industries decreased 2,700 with losses of 1,700 in construction and 1,100 in manufacturing, which ex-

ceeded gains of 100 in mining and logging.

The private sector added 200 jobs during the month, and there were also employment gains of 5,200 in leisure and hospitality, 1,200 in financial activities and 100 in informa-tion. Other services lost 2,600 jobs, professional and business services lost 2,400 and 1,300 were lost in educational and health services.

Employment in trade, trans-portation and utilities did not change over the month.

Government employment increased 4,100 with 3,900 in local government and 200 in federal government. State un-employment did not change over the month.

The U.S. unemployment rate for July was 4.3 percent, down from 4.4 percent in June and down from 4.9 percent in July 2016.

July sees an increase in unemployment in Ohio

Associated Press

COLUMBUSA judge says an ex-

treasure hunter should remain jailed on con-tempt-of-court charges.

Federa l Judge A l-genon Marbley has held To m m y T h o m p s o n in contempt since De-cember 2015 for violat-ing terms of a plea deal by refusing to respond to questions about the location of 500 missing gold coins.

Thompson’s attor-ne y a r g ue s fe der a l law prohibits holding someone under such conditions for longer than 18 months.

Investors in the trea-sure hunt t r y ing to recoup t heir money

disagree.J u d g e

Marbley d e n i e d t h e r e -quest Fri-day after a s hor t hearing, s a y i n g

Thompson is still refus-ing to follow his plea deal.

Thompson’s attorney said he’ll appeal Judge Marbley’s order.

The coins are valued at up to $4 million and were minted from gold taken from the S.S. Cen-tral America. It sank in an 1857 hurricane.

Thompson has hinted the coins were turned over to a trust in Belize.

Judge: Ex-treasure hunter should remainjailed for contempt

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

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A5 - 08/19/17

Baird

Thompson

AP FILE PHOTO, FEB. 25, 2015

Abdirahman Sheik Mohamud, front left, speaks with his attorney Sam Shamansky, right, during a hear-ing to set bond in Columbus. Mohamud pleaded guilty to terrorism charges in 2015 and asked for leni-ency at his scheduled sentencing Friday, saying he abandoned his plan to kill military members in the U.S., Shamansky said in a Monday court fi ling. Judge James Graham delayed sentencing Friday.

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A6 THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 TRIBUTES & LOCAL WWW.VINDY.COM

BLACK

GEMMA, Dr.Richard Donald, D.O., 76, of Columbus; calling hours Sunday from 3 to 6 p.m. at Ruther-ford-Cobin Funeral Home in Wor-thington and Monday from 10 to 11 a.m. at Our Lady of Victory.

LUGGIE, Jeffrey Alan, 58, of Middlefield, formerly of Board-man; Cunningham-Becker Funeral Home. Poland Chapel.

MONTGOMERY, Mildred B., 70, of Austintown; no calling hours; Lane Family Funeral Homes, Austintown Chapel.

MURRAY, John H., 74, of Leav-ittsburg; calling hours Monday from 5 to 8 p.m. at Lane Family Funeral Homes, Roberts-Clark Chapel in Warren.

PAPPA, Fred J. Sr., 84, of Pom-pano Beach, Fla., formerly of Hub-bard.

SIMMS, Rena, 55, of Youngs-town; no calling hours; Conley & Vanden Berg Funeral Home

BALTIMORE - Bernard Michael Brosko, 91, a beloved husband of 59 years to Mary Jane, passed away Wednesday evening, Aug. 16 2017, in the hospital, where he was fighting complications from dia-betes.

“Bernie” was born March 20, 1926, in Campbell, the eldest son to the late Veronica and Michael Brosko, and was preceded in death by his sisters, Margaret “Mitch” Bobeck and Agnes Escaja, and son John Michael.

He leaves behind his younger brother, Lawrence; his daughter, Kathryn and son-in-law John; and three grandchildren, Mary, John J. “Bud”, and Marion.

Bernie was a proud World War II U.S. Navy veteran, where he served on the USS Renate, a troop ship, in the South Pacific. After being honorably discharged from the Navy, he continued his educa-tion at Youngstown State Univer-sity and worked as a draftsman for Wean United for 32 years dur-ing the steel mill heyday where he drew numerous engineer draw-ings and plans for the mills.

He was a member and usher of Saint Paul the Apostle Church in New Middletown and a member of the local Slovak association.

In his spare, time he loved golf-ing, fishing, spending time with his friends and family and heading annually to the Canfield fair.

“We will always cherish all of

the fish stories of the one that got away and the ones he threw back.”

Family and friends are invited to gather for a viewing on Sunday, Aug. 20, from 1 from 3 p.m. and again from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Was-ko Funeral Home, 216 Coitsville Road in Campbell, where a vigil service will be held at 7 p.m., offi-ciated by Fr. Larry Frient.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations be made in memory of Bernard to, Saint Paul the Apostle, 10143 Main St., P.O. Box 515, New Middletown, OH 44442.

Visit www.waskofamily.com to view this obituary and send Ber-nard’s family condolences.

08-19-17

COLUMBUS - Dr. Richard Donald Gemma, D.O., 76, passed away on Wednesday, Aug. 16, 2017, at home with his wife and children.

He was born July 9, 1941, to the late Charles Leo Gemma and Doro-thy (Fajack) Gemma of Youngs-town; also preceded in death by his brother, Dr. Charles (Carlette) Gemma of Solon.

In addition to his wife of over 48 years, Esther (Farrell) Gemma, of Springfield, he is survived by his three children, Jennifer (Andy Foote) Gemma, Richard (Mariah) Gemma and Meredith (Tom) Som-mer; grandchildren Katherine, El-la, Maxwell and Oliver; sisters Don-na (Donald) Nolfi and Jacquelyn (Greg) Crandall; brother Dr. Tho-mas (Cindy) Gemma; and many nieces and nephews.

Richard was dedicated to life-long learning, putting himself through school at Marquette by working summers in the steel mills in Youngstown, and graduat-ing from medical school to be-come a Doctor of Osteopathy (D.O.). He was drafted and served as a Captain in the Vietnam War, was an assistant professor at The

Ohio State University and was an anesthesiologist at both Mount Carmel and Grant Hospitals in Co-lumbus.

Dr. Richard D. Gemma was re-cently awarded as a 50-year physician by the Ohio State Medi-cal Association.

Visitation will be held at the Rutherford-Corbin Funeral Home, 515 High St. in Worthington, on Sunday, Aug. 20, from 3 to 6 p.m., and at the church on Monday at 10 a.m.

The funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. at Our Lady of Victory, 1559 Roxbury Road in Columbus, on Monday, Aug. 21, 2017.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to OhioHealth Hos-pice (https://foundation.ohio-health.com/programs/hospice-giving); Veterans Affairs (www.va.gov/ogc/giftsova.asp <http://www.va.gov/ogc/giftsova.asp> ); and the National Parkinson’s Foundation (www.parkinson.org <http://www.parkinson.org/> ).

Please visit www.rutherfordfu-neralhome.com to send condolen-ces.

08-19-17

MIDDLEFIELD – Jeffrey Alan Luggie, 58, formerly of Boardman, died Aug. 16, 2017, at Geauga Medi-cal Center.

Jeff was born Sept. 3, 1958, in Youngstown, a son of Anthony and Ann Van Dyke Luggie.

He was a Woodrow Wilson High School graduate. He was a certi-fied machinist for Riise Engineer-ing in North Lima and most re-cently at Alliance Steel Equipment Specialist Inc. His greatest pas-sion was his 1970 Oldsmobile 442, which he showed and placed in many competitions, a shared in-terest with his brother and close friends. Jeff also collected and built model muscle cars, spent many years with family at Slip-pery Rock Campground, and was an avid Cleveland Browns fan.

He is survived by one sister-in-

law, Laretta Luggie of Columbiana; one niece, Brenda Luggie of Knox-ville, Tenn.; one nephew, Michael Luggie of San Diego; and several extended family.

Besides his parents, Jeff was preceded in death by one brother, Louis Luggie; and many beloved pets.

Private services will be held at the Cunningham-Becker Funeral Home, Poland Chapel.

Contributions may be made in Jeff ‘s name to the American Kid-ney Foundation,www.kidneyfund.org.

Visit www.beckerobits.comwhere condolences may be sent.

08-19-17

POMPANO BEACH, FLA. – Fred J. Pappa Sr., 84, passed away peace-fully on Monday, Aug. 14, 2017.

Fred was born Dec. 15, 1932, in Hubbard, son of Vincent James and Mary Sperko Pappa.

He worked for the Hubbard Po-lice Department, and for many years he worked with his brother, Jack, owner of J&J Development, before moving to the Fort Lauder-dale, Fla. area 34 years ago, where he retired as a driver for McMillan Blodell.

He enjoyed golfing, being at the ocean, traveling with his wife, Alice, and spending time with his family.

“Big Fred” is being profoundly missed by his wife, Alice Yates Pappa of Pompano Beach; two sons, Fred Jr. (Randi) and Richard (Edna); and one grandson, Rick Jr.; as well as a great-grandson.

He also leaves his sister, Betty

Lou DiPiero of Girard; his brother, James (Linda) of Hubbard; as well as nieces, nephews, and many dear friends from Ohio to Florida.

He was preceded in death by his parents; his brother, Jack; sis-ter-in-law Frances Pappa; and brother-in-law Hank DiPiero.

A memorial service for Fred will be observed at a future date.

08-19-17

CAMPBELL - Funeral services will be held Sunday, at 2 p.m., at the Wasko Funeral Home with Fr. Gus Valentasis officiating for Mark Anthony Valva, 58, who passed away Thursday evening.

Mark was born, Jan. 17, 1959, in Youngstown, the son of Anthony and Vera Soroka Valva.

He was a graduate of Campbell Memorial High School and was employed at WCI Steel for 30 years.

Mark was a loving father and will be deeply missed his children, Maria Valva, Anthony Valva and Kristin (Billy) Katsourakis. He also leaves to cherish his memory, his siblings, Anne Skoufatos, Renee (Paul) Wilson and Janet Baskey-field; his life partner, Joy Del-signore; and their dog, Sophie.

He was preceded in death by his parents and his brother-in-law, Tom Baskeyfield.

The Valva family has entrusted

their loved one to the care of the Wasko Funeral Home and will re-ceive family and friends on Sun-day from 1 to 2 p.m.

Visit www.waskofamily.com to view this obituary and send Mark’s family condolences.

08-19-17

MCDONALD – John R. Zagger, 79, passed away Wednesday at St. Joseph Hospital in Warren.

John was born March 9, 1938, in Sharon, Pa., the son of John and Matilda (Gerzetich) Zagger.

Prior to retiring in 2001, John was an electrician for General Mo-tors. He was a member of the Sal-isbury Sportsman Club and the Slovene National Benefit Society. He enjoyed fishing, cooking, hunt-ing, and a good glass of wine.

He leaves to cherish his memo-ry, his wife, Dominga “Daisy” (Cor-puz) Zagger, whom he married June 12, 1986; his children, Michael (Mary) Zagger of Austin, Texas, Mark (Gina) Zagger of Cazenovia, N.Y., and Monette Canon (Kevin Taylor) of Charlotte, N.C.; his sis-ter, Louise Burnett of Cortland; his brother, Glenn Zagger of Cleve-land; his grandchildren, Megan (Bill) Mrazek, Emily (Trevor) Mur-ray, and Andrew Canon; and his beloved dogs, Jojo and Zoey.

Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his sister, Norma Webb.

Funeral services will be held on Monday, Aug. 21, at 5 p.m. at the Blackstone Funeral Home in Gir-ard. The family will receive rela-tives and friends from 3 p.m. until the time of the service.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be sent in the name of John R. Zagger to the Slovene National Benefit Society in support of their cabin renova-tion project. Please note John R.

Zagger with your donation and mail to Slovene National Benefit Society, 247 W. Allegheny Road, Imperial, PA 15126-9774.

Visit www.blackstonefuneral-home.com to view this obituary and to send any condolences to the Zagger family.

08-19-17

BERNARD MICHAEL BROSKO, 91

JOHN R. ZAGGER, 79

FRED J. PAPPA SR., 84

DR. RICHARD DONALD GEMMA, D.O., 76

MARK ANTHONY VALVA, 58

JEFFREY ALAN LUGGIE, 58

By AMANDA [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNEast and Chaney high

schools will be providing double math and read-ing periods in school to set up ninth-graders for success.

This “blocking” is pro-viding students the oppor-tunity for built-in enrich-ment and intervention, said East High principal Sonya Gordon.

“This is just going to help us close our [achievement] gap,” she said.

The school year will start with students taking an en-try assessment to evaluate what they need, interven-tion or enrichment.

“This is truly meeting students where they’re at,” said Chaney High principal Bob Klinar.

From there, Gordon said it’s about growth.

“No one is going to be stagnant, each student will be moving forward in some way,” Gordon said.

Freshman blocking sets up students for success by starting first-year high-school students off with a solid foundation, Klinar said.

“It really factors into our focus on our ninth-grade academy,” Klinar said. “It’s truly about helping our students who are in transi-tion.”

School district CEO Krish Mohip explained the ninth-grade academies are pro-grams put in place to help foster better freshman stu-dent experiences.

The focus on ninth-graders comes from what Gordon said is one of the

biggest predictors of what graduation rates will be.

“We want 100 percent of our ninth-graders to start out and be on track to grad-uate,” Gordon said. “And if they’re not, we will take the appropriate steps to get them there.”

Gordon added that it is the hope of herself and Klinar to incorporate the blocking practice into other high-school grade levels on an as-needed basis.

Gordon said if double math and reading class periods become an option for upper grade levels it will allow students to move through math quicker with two periods of Algebra II for one semester, then two periods of Pre-Calculus for the other.

Gordon said students aren’t losing out on time with electives.

“We aren’t taking them out of a music or an art class, but just asking them to use more time, maybe a study hall period, on those two areas,” she said. “We just needed a little more time to help us close that achievement gap, so we found time within the school schedule.”

Focusing on math and reading skills gives students the solid foundation they need, Gordon continued.

“Our goal is not to pre-pare students only for where they are, but for where they’re going,” she said.

East, Chaney highschools double upon math, reading

By MARK GILLISPIE AND DAKE KANG

Associated Press

CLEVELANDA dashcam video of a traf-

fi c stop that led to a white police offi cer with a history of disciplinary issues re-peatedly punching a black man and hitting his head on pavement appears to show a different sequence of events than police had originally described.

The initial statement from police in the Cleve-land suburb of Euclid said 25-year-old Richard Hub-bard III – pulled over on suspicion of having a sus-pended driver’s license – had refused Offi cer Michael Amiott’s orders to “face away” after getting out of his car Aug. 12 and then began resisting. But the video obtained this week in a public-records request appears to show Amiott not giving Hubbard a chance to comply.

“Your own two eyes and common sense can lead to only one reasonable con-clusion as to the propriety of the level of force used for a basic traffi c stop and whether or not my client had a chance to comply,” Hubbard’s attorney, Chris-topher McNeal, said Friday.

The dashcam video shows Amiott opening the car door and Hubbard getting out. Within a second of Ami-ott’s ordering him to “face away,” the video shows the offi cer grabbing Hubbard’s arms and wrestling him to the ground in the middle of a street as Hubbard’s girl-friend jumps out of the car and rushes over.

The video shows Amiott bashing Hubbard’s head against the pavement sever-al times and then punching him in the head more than a dozen times as Hubbard tries to defend himself.

“Babe, stop,” his girl-friend implores, kneeling on the road and screaming as Amiott punches Hub-bard repeatedly.

Some of the punches were thrown after Hubbard spread his arms out and ap-

peared not to be resisting. Increasingly frantic, Hub-bard’s girlfriend yells at of-ficers that Hubbard is not armed.

Hubbard is fi nally hand-cuffed with the help of an-other officer and taken to jail, where police say he was examined and released af-ter being charged with re-sisting arrest and driving with a suspended license.

Amiott has been placed on administrative leave pending a review, Euclid police spokesman Lt. Mitch Houser said Friday.

The police union that represents Amiott issued a statement to WJW-TV that says: “We stand with Of-ficer Amiott and we hope that people will not rush to judgment, but rather will understand the literally-split-second decision and response required of our police and will let the ad-ministrative review process play out.”

Cellphone video that fi rst drew attention to the arrest was taken from a nearby business. It shows Hubbard being struck but doesn’t show the traffi c stop or the fi rst part of the arrest when Hubbard is taken to the ground. The video has been viewed more than 7 million times on Facebook.

Amiott was hired by the Euclid Police Department in September 2014. He has been reprimanded for hit-ting a driver with a hand-gun, mishandling evidence, losing his temper in front of his commanding offi cer and being involved in two crashes in police vehicles, according to personnel fi les released Friday.

Before Euclid, Amiott was an offi cer in Mentor, east of Cleveland. Amiott resigned in April 2014 after an inter-nal investigation concluded he had lied to other offi cers when explaining why he stopped a man for a sus-pended driver’s license.

Police Chief Scott Meyer apologized Wednesday for not having responded publicly in “a more timely fashion.”

Dashcam video showswhite cop punchingblack man during stop

COURTSMAHONING COUNTY

MARRIAGE LICENSESSteven Chester, 27, of 4649 Barrington

Ave., Austintown, and Anne McClain, 29, of 497 21st Ave. Place NE, Hickory, N.C.

Casey M. Gordon, 35, of 423 W. Wal-nut St., Lowellville, and Lindsey M. Paulin, 31, of same.

DIVORCES ASKEDMelina Fusillo, of 55 Elizabeth Place,

Canfi eld, v. Joseph A. Fusillo, of same.Elizabeth Trent-Holden, of 331 Oak

St., Canfi eld, v. John R. Holden, of 6183 West Blvd., Youngstown.

John R. Holden, of 6183 West Blvd., Youngstown, v. Elizabeth T. Holden, of 6972 Barrington Drive, Canfi eld.

Robert L. Martin Jr., of 6847 Lock-wood Blvd. Apt. 193, Boardman, v. Nicole A. Martin, of 10465 Carosel Woods Drive, New Middletown.

Virginia Snyder, of 10 Ross Drive, North Jackson, v. Earl Snyder, of 39 Allen St., New Castle, Pa.

Tammy M. Senvisky, of 2276 Sprucewood, Austintown, v. Brian S. Senvisky, of 6785 Meander Run Road, Austintown.

Daniel Wilson, of 76 Lisbon St., Leeto-nia, v. Jennye Jenkins, of 32 Closter Dock Road, Closter, N.J.

William D. Lewis Jr., of 1543 Victor Ave., Youngstown, v. LaToya Ingram, of 1479 Collins Ave., Marysville.

DISSOLUTIONS ASKEDMichaella A. Moore, of 70 Placid Blvd.,

Austintown, and Michael J. Moore, of 2725 Poplar Ave., Girard.

Joseph W. Taormina, of 4810 Heritage Drive, Canfi eld, and Brianna D. Taormina, of 4557 Woodhurst Apt. 10, Austintown.

NEW COMPLAINTSKirit Shah v. Brilliant Properties Main-

tenance et al, foreclosure.Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. v.

Mary L. Sedmak et al, foreclosure.John M. Bulick v. Raymond G. Snyder,

money.Bayview Loan Servicing LLC v. Shelly

Rauschenbach et al, foreclosure.Joanne Haas v. Cardinal Health Inc. et

al, notice of appeal.Laurel S. Whitman v. Bates Bros.

Amusement Co. et al, personal injury.Huntington National Bank v. First Sec-

ond Properties LLC et al, money.American Family Insurance Co. v. Marc

R. Sullivan et al, money.721 Building Associates v. Terri Nobbs

et al, money.Frank C. Filisky et al v. Ricottilli Con-

struction Co. Inc. et al, jury demand.Robert Johnson v. C and S Services

Inc. et al, notice of appeal.Daniel R. Yemma v. Casey Conover et

al, money.Daniel R. Yemma v. Emanuel Williams

Jr. et al, money.Cerni Leasing LLC v. Gary L. Brunck-

horst Sr., money.Christina M. Stroup v. Rochelle A.

Hudson et al, personal injuries.Nicoletta Robinson v. Surgical Hospital

at Southwoods, breach of confi dence.Ohio Living Communities v. Stephen

Wallace et al, complaint.Andrew S. Bolyard et al v. Sandra L.

Evans et al, other torts.Cerni Leasing LLC v. Tipper Services

Inc., money.Mary Coyne Investments LLC v. Mark

Hanni et al, jury demand.Kenneth Pahon et al v. Brian Richen-

dollar, foreclosure.Jamie Bell v. Schultz Towing and Re-

covery LLC et al, other civil.US Bank National Association v. An-

drea Bicanovsky et al, foreclosure.Progressive Specialty Insurance Co. v.

Duke C. Duhon, money.Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Elizabeth

A. Jasnoch et al, foreclosure.Grange Property and Casualty Co. et al

v. Jaron D. Martin, money.Elizabeth Kirin v. Mahoning County et

al, notice of appeal.Advanced Recycling Systems Inc. v.

National Trailer Services et al, breach of contract.

Caliber Home Loans Inc. v. Jonathan M. Mamrich et al, money.

Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. v. Barbara J. Dutton et al, foreclosure.

PNC Bank National Association v. George Pincham Jr. et al, foreclosure.

Petros Giallousis v. Julie A. Rodriguez et al, complaint.

Sandra Shellito et al v. John P. Aey MD et al, jury demand.

Petros Giallousis v. Julie A. Rodriguez et al, complaint.

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

A6 - 08/19/17

COMING SUNDAY: � Back- to-school previews for Valley districts

EMAIL: [email protected] LOCAL & STATE THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 A7

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby given to all persons pos-sessing a legal or equitable interest in the City of Youngstown Lot(s) and Owners(s) listed below, with their last known ad-dress. Whereas, all dwellings and buildings situated upon said lot(s) will be razed after final notice as appears herein:

Lot #40089 aka 1650 BancroftOwner James A PruittAddress 411 Alameda, Youngstown, Ohio 44504

Lot #25546 aka 3407 BeldenOwner Gilberto CooteAddress 1341 Valencia, San Francisco, CA 94110

Lot #15211 aka 109 BenitaOwner Della M GreerAddress 364 Truesdale, Youngstown, Ohio 44506

Lot #15233 aka 164 BenitaOwner Jas & Josephine KennedyAddress 3009 Canfield Rd., Youngstown, Ohio 44511

Lot #56504 aka 1502 BenningtonOwner Joe T Vukson Jr.Address 635 Powersdale, Youngstown, Ohio 44502

Lot #36878 aka 444 CatalinaOwner James Lee HopsonAddress PO Box 5834, Youngstown, Ohio 44504

Lot #33380 aka 207 ClarencedaleOwner Altamese FlemingAddress 319 Alastair St., Upper Marlboro, MD 20774

Lot #1424 aka 734 CohassetOwner Archie L Kelly Jr. & Sharon N PayteAddress 18601 Green Valley Ranch, Denver, CO 80249

Lot #18993 aka 429 CrandallOwner Tina MendezAddress 1420 1/2 Maple, Santa Monica, CA 90405

Lot #32060 aka 2413 ElmOwner Sheena L ClarkeAddress 198 Second St., Englewood, NJ 07631

Lot #18845 aka 635 FairgreenOwner TM Property Solutins LLCAddress 2600 S Shore Blvd., League City, TX 77573

Lot #27671 aka 107 HalleckOwner Steven A BartosicAddress 269 Country Club, Carlisle, PA 17015

Lot #27660 aka 161 HalleckOwner Sharon L SimpsonAddress 161 Halleck St., Youngstown, Ohio 44505

Lot #27633 aka 168 HalleckOwner Hector A ContrerasAddress 36 Outer Cir., Davis, CA 95618

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE

OH Exchange Facilities Networks, LLC has constructed a 43-foot overall height pole near the intersection of West Scott Street & Wick Avenue, Youngstown, Mahoning County, Ohio. OH Exchange Facilities Networks, LLC invites comments from any interested party on the impact the pole may have on any Historic Properties.Comments may be addressed to: Public Notice Coordinator, 1375 Union Hill Industrial Court, Suite A, Alpharetta, Georgia 30004. Comments must be received within 30 days. For questionsplease call 770-667-2040x111.9OHB002832-B / S2452

LEGAL NOTICE

Solicitation (General Contracting /Electronic Bid)

State of Ohio Standard Requirements for Public Facility Construction

Electronic bids will be received by:The Ohio Department of Natural Resources

https://bidexpress.com

Until Monday, September 11, 2017 at1:00 pm ET and opened thereafter for fur-nishing the materials and performing the labor for the execution and construction of:

Lake Milton State ParkSluice Gate Rehabilitation Project

Mahoning CountyProject No. DNR-170108

In accordance with the ContractDocuments prepared by:

Arcadis U.S., Inc.100 E Campus View Blvd., Ste. 200Columbus, Ohio 43235P: (614) 985-9208F: (614) 985-9170Matt [email protected] www.arcadis.com

In compliance with Section 153.08 of the Ohio Revised Code and Section 153:1-8-01 of the Ohio Administrative Code, Bids for this Project are being received, opened, and published through electronic means using the State’s electronic bidding service. To access this Project through the electronic bidding service, you must first register at https://bidexpress.com by clicking on the “REGISTER FOR FREE” button and follow-ing the instructions. In order to bid, you must create and enable a digital ID within the service. This process requires the sub-mission of notarized paperwork and may take up to five business days to complete. There are no fees to register, create and enable a digital ID, or to download bid docu-ments. There is a small expense on a monthly or per bid basis to submit a bid. The electronic bidding service offers cus-tomer support that may be reached at 888.352.2439 or via email [email protected].

Prevailing Wage rates and Equal Employ-ment Opportunity requirements are appli-cable to this Project. Each bid must be ac-companied by a BID GUARANTY meeting the requirements of Section 153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code.

This Project is subject to the State of Ohio’s Encouraging Diversity, Growth, and Equity (“EDGE”) Business Development Program. A Bidder is required to submit with its Bid and with its Bidder’s Qualifica-tions form, certain information about the certified EDGE Business Enterprise(s) par-ticipating on the Project with the Bidder. Refer to Part 26 of the Instructions toBidders and Section 00500 of the Bidding and Contract Requirements. The EDGE Par-ticipation Goal for the Project is 5.0 per-cent. The percentage is determined by the contracted value of goods, services, materi-als, and labor that are provided by EDGE certified business(es). The participation is calculated on the total amount of each awarded contract. For more information about EDGE, contact the State of Ohio EDGE Certification Office athttp://das.ohio.gov/eod, or at its physical location: 4200 Surface Road, Columbus, Ohio 43228-1395; or by telephone at(614) 466-8380.

The Bidder may be subject to a Pre-Award Affirmative Action Compliance Review in accordance with Section 123:2-5-01 of the Ohio Administrative Code including areview of the Bidder’s employment records and an on-site review.

The Bidder must indicate on the electronic Bid Form, the locations where its services will be performed in the spaces provided or by attachment in accordance with the re-quirements of Executive Order 2011-12K related to providing services only within the United States. Failure to do so may cause the Bid to be rejected as non-respon-sive.

DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN OHIO REVISED CODE SECTION 153.011APPLY TO THISPROJECT. COPIES OF OHIO REVISED CODE SECTION 153.011 CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THEDEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVESERVCES.

Bidders are encouraged to be enrolled in and to be in good standing in a Drug-Free Safety Program (“DFSP”) approved by the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation (“OBWC”) prior to submitting a Bid and provide, on the Electronic Bid Form with its Bid, certain information relative to their enrollment in such a program.

Electronic bids will be received for:

CONTRACT ESTIMATED COSTGeneral Construction $ 845,031.00Alternate A-1 $ 126,177.00Alternate A-2 $ 57,222.00

until Monday, September 11, 2017, at1:00 p.m. ET, when all Bids will be electron-ically opened. Bid tabulations will be post-ed no later than 5:00 p.m. ET on the day Bids are opened.

All Bidders are strongly encouraged to at-tend the Pre-Bid Meeting on Wednesday, August 30, 2017, at 1:00 p.m. local time at the following location:

Milton Township Fire Hall, 15992 Milton Avenue, Lake Milton, OH 44429

The Contractor is responsible for schedul-ing the Project, coordinating the Subcon-tractors, and providing other services iden-tified in the Contract Documents.

The Contract Documents may be download-ed as electronic PDF files from the State’s electronic bidding service athttps://bidexpress.com at no charge.

No bidder may withdraw his bid other than is permitted by O.R.C. Section 153.54 with-in sixty (60) days after the actual date of the opening of bids thereof.

The Director of Natural Resources reserves the right to reject any or all Bids, or to ac-cept the Bids which embrace such combina-tion of individual, combined, or alternate bids as may promote the best interest of the State of Ohio.

LEGAL NOTICE

THE POLAND TOWNSHIP BOARD OFZONING APPEALS WILL HOLD A PUBLIC HEARING AT THE POLAND TOWNSHIPGOVERNMENT CENTER, 3339 DOBBINSROAD, POLAND, OHIO, ON THURSDAY,AUGUST 31, 2017 AT 7:00 P.M. TO HEAR THE FOLLOWING CASE:

CASE # ZA-07-17: IS A VARIANCEREQUEST BY COSMO IAMURRI TO OB-TAIN RELIEF FROM FENCE REGULATIONS FOR HEIGHT OF FENCE BETWEEN THE STREET RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE AND THE MINIMUM BUILDING SETBACK LINE, AND ALSO FOR LOCATION (DISTANCE) FROM THE STREET RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE. THE PROPERTY IS KNOWN AS 5800 CLINGAN ROAD, KNOWN AS PARCEL # 35-009-0-001.01-0, LOT 1. THISREQUEST IS ALSO FOR THE ABUTTING TWO PROPERTIES THAT THE APPLICANT OWNS, WHICH ARE EMPTY LOTS,KNOWN AS PARCEL NUMBERS39-009-0-001.02-0 AND 39-009-0-001.03-0, BOTH ARE ALSO KNOWN AS LOT 1. AP-PLICANT REQUESTS THIS ACCESSORY USE ON THE TWO ADDITIONAL EMPTY LOTS, AND WOULD ALSO SEEK THE SAME HEIGHT AND SETBACK RELEIF. ALL THREE LOTS ARE LOCATED INPOLAND TOWNSHIP, POLAND, OHIO, IN AN (E) ESTATE ZONED DISRICT.

FURTHER INFORMATION MAY BEOBTAINED FROM THE ZONING OFFICELOCATED IN THE POLAND TOWNSHIP GOVERNMENT CENTER, 3339 DOBBINS ROAD, POLAND, OHIO, BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 8:30 A.M. AND 3:30 P.M.,MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY.

BY ORDER OF POLAND TOWNSHIPBOARD OF ZONING APPEALS

JIM BURGHAM, CHAIRPERSON

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE

Youngstown Academy of Excellence1408 Rigby Street

Youngstown Ohio 44506Phone: 330-746-3970

Fax: 330-746-3965

2017-2018 Youngstown Academyof Excellence

Board of Trustees Meeting ScheduleAll Meetings will be held at the

Youngstown Academy of Excellence

Tuesday July 25, 2017 12:00 PMTuesday August 22, 2017 12:00 PMTuesday September 26, 2017 12:00 PMTuesday October 24, 2017 12:00 PMTuesday November 21, 2017 12:00 PMTuesday January 23, 2018 12:00 PMTuesday February 27, 2018 12:00 PMTuesday March 27, 2018 12:00 PMTuesday April 24, 2018 12:00 PMTuesday May 22, 2018 12:00 PMTuesday June 26, 2018 12:00 PM

Lot #34362 aka 212 S Hazelwood Owner SKW Prep LLCAddress 751 E Quality Dr., American Fork, UT 84003

Lot #44377 aka 232 S HazelwoodOwner John HaastrupAddress 791 Meadows Ln., Wheelersburg, Ohio 45694

Lot #26881 aka 3635 IrmaOwner Home Opportunity LLCAddress 700 Central Expressway South, Allen, TX 75013

Lot #35956 aka 537 E JudsonOwner Mark Cadioli, Trustee & Susan CadioliAddress PO Box 14145, Youngstown, Ohio 44514

Lot #27613 aka 143 LauderdaleOwner Arthur L & Lazinis R AltmanAddress 480 Alameda Ave., Youngstown, Ohio 44504

Lot #27587 aka 148 LauderdaleOwner Donald BankstonAddress PO Box 6223, Youngstown, Ohio 44501

Lot #27585 aka 160 LauderdaleOwner Denise & Andrew WisemanAddress 405 Killion, Gaffney, SC 29340

Lot #31450 aka 307 E LuciusOwner RP Properties & RenovationsAddress 928 Meadow Downs Trail, Galloway, Ohio 43119

Lot #31376 aka 356 E LuciusOwner Tina MendezAddress 4120 Maple, Santa Monica, CA 90405

Lot #35462 aka 555 E LuciusOwner David Ray-Anthony BlancoAddress 1519 Hwy, Midway, AR 72651

Lot #35473 aka 715 E LuciusOwner Mark Cadioli Trustee & Susan CadioliAddress PO Box 14145, Youngstown, Ohio 44514

Lot #1633 aka 3605 McGuffeyOwner Alan Joseph GlassAddress 3605 McGuffey Rd., Youngstown, Ohio 44505

Lot #36292 aka 114 E MidlothianOwner Anthony GanoAddress 3740 Logan, Youngstown, Ohio 44505

Lot #20939 aka 10-16 MillettOwner Nahum GrahamAddress 2324 Logan Ave., Youngstown, Ohio 44505

Lot #20981 aka 165 MilletOwner Home Opportunity LLCAddress 700 Central Expressway South, Allen, TX 75013

Lot #20973 aka 166 MilletOwner General BuildersAddress 5978 Youngstown Warren, Niles, Ohio 44446

Lot #20978 aka 179 MilletOwner Alva D Beckley Jr.Address 181 Millet St., Youngstown, Ohio 44509

Lot #26310 aka 3636 NeilsonOwner Net Relations Inc.Address PO Box 1074, Elmhurst, IL 60126

Lot #14832 aka 1649-1651 OhioOwner Ian C ShireyAddress 246 Melbourne, Youngstown, Ohio 44512

Lot #34946 aka 267 E PhiladelphiaOwner Nicusor Adrian ChircaAddress 267 E Philadelphia Ave., Youngstown, Ohio 44507

Lot #33499 aka 336 E PhiladelphiaOwner Frederick E Catron Sr.Address 336 E Philadelphia Ave., Youngstown, Ohio 44507

Lot #41220 aka 369 E PhiladelphiaOwner Detroit Property Holdings LLCAddress 50 W Canyon Crest Rd., Alpine, UT 84004

Lot #35117 aka 581 E PhiladelphiaOwner Angela D WilliamsAddress 581 E Philadelphia, Youngstown, Ohio 44502

Lot #21122 aka 52 N RichviewOwner W Glenn DaleyAddress 2689 Sierra Dr., Youngstown, Ohio 44511

Lot #43277 aka 139 RoslynOwner Joseph D GaffneyAddress 109 Park, Columbiana, Ohio 44408

Lot #43275 aka 145 RoslynOwner Roberta D ThomasAddress 767 Park Ave., Apt. 303, Youngstown, Ohio 44510

Lot #43274 aka 149 RoslynOwner Metro Valley PropertiesAddress 268 Outlook, Youngstown, Ohio 44504

Lot #35811 aka 554 RoxburyOwner Esko P InkinenAddress 554 Roxbury, Youngstown, Ohio 44502

Lot #35822 aka 716 RoxburyOwner Robert L Randall Sr.Address 716 Roxbury, Youngstown, Ohio 44502

Lot #35885 aka 807 Roxbury Owner Brilliant Property Maintenance LPAddress 79 Vale, Markham, Canada L34R9

Lot #30486 aka 2822 RushOwner John SkaradaAddress 2822 Rush, Youngstown, Ohio 44502

Lot #34945 aka 3006 RushOwner Keith L AdamsAddress 3006 Rush, Youngstown, Ohio 44507

Lot #33545 aka 3504 SouthOwner Christian Martial Arts Center LLCAddress 3504 South, Youngstown, Ohio 44502

Lot #27730 aka 2315 TrussitOwner June HamerikAddress 2315 Trussit, Youngstown, Ohio 44505

(continued in next column)

(continued from previous column)

POLICE CALLSA summary of recent criminal activity in Boardman and Poland townships:

BOARDMANAug. 12Arrest: David Johnson, 19, of Tyrell

Street, Youngstown, faces a breaking-and-entering charge after someone had kicked open a door to a South Avenue apartment last March, then removed a 60-inch TV.

Citation: While handling an accident near U.S. Route 224 and Tippeca-noe Road, offi cers charged Sean P. Page, 44, of Spring Lake Lane, Canfi eld, with operating a vehicle impaired.

Domestic violence: Adam D. Cubilette of Aravesta Avenue, Boardman, surrendered on a domestic-violence charge after his girlfriend alleged that during an argument Aug. 10 about their relationship, Cubilette, 32, had grabbed both of her wrists, pushed the accuser onto a bed and tried to hit her arm and chest with an 8-inch wooden device.

Identity theft: After one woman each reported fraudulent activity to her checking account and debit card, police charged Jeremy J. Stewart, 40, of Market Street, Boardman, with identity theft and receiving stolen property. One of the victims found out her personal information had been used without consent to buy a $360 vacuum cleaner that was shipped to Stewart’s address, a report showed.

Aug. 13Arrest: Authorities received informa-

tion about a possibly intoxicated driver near Route 224 and Apple-wood Boulevard, then took into custody Ashley R. Dothard, 28, of Woodcrest Drive, Youngstown, who was wanted on warrants charging criminal damaging and telecommunications harassment. Also, Robert F. Reda, 38, of East Delason Avenue, Youngstown, was handed two minor-misdemeanor citations charging possession of drug paraphernalia and a controlled substance.

Domestic violence: Offi cers in Youngstown picked up Shawn M. Georgiadis Sr., 30, of South Port-

land Avenue, Youngstown, who was wanted on charges of domestic violence and inducing panic, related to a July 29 situation in which his sister alleged Georgiadis beat her up as she slept.

Theft: A woman reported a $199 out-door patio furniture set was stolen from her Sylvia Lane residence.

Drugs: While responding to a pos-sible robbery in the 300 block of Mathews Road, police arrested a 17-year-old Boardman boy on a drug-abuse charge. Found in his car was a bag that contained three pills determined to be Alprazolam, an over-the-counter controlled substance commonly used to treat anxiety and panic disorders, of-fi cers alleged.

Arrest: A traffi c stop on East West-ern Reserve Road resulted in the arrest of Bryan V. Carder of East Garfi eld Road, Petersburg, who was charged with operating a vehicle impaired. Carder, 25, registered a 0.088 blood-alcohol content, which is slightly more than Ohio’s 0.08 le-gal intoxication limit, a report said.

Aggravated menacing: Police re-sponded to a possible confronta-tion between two motorists in the 4000 block of Market Street before charging Ramsey Esmail, 34, of Overhill Road, Boardman, with aggravated menacing. The other driver alleged Esmail pointed a handgun at him after he had honked at Esmail, who was talking on a cellphone without moving and forcing other drivers to go around him, a report showed.

Theft: Micah S. Davidson, 22, of Kenmore Avenue, Youngstown; Jujuan L. Pinkard, 23, of Shadyside Drive, Boardman; and Danere A. Bennett, 27, of Catalina Avenue, Youngstown, were charged with stealing $7,349 worth of merchan-dise, including women’s clothing, from Walmart, 1300 Doral Drive.

Theft: Justin A. Redmond, 26, of Smith Street, and Bryan M. Dotson, 33, of Stanton Avenue, faced theft charges. The two Niles men were accused of taking two cellphones valued at $998 from Walmart.

Theft: A Struthers man reported a $550 fi rearm missing from his for-mer girlfriend’s Oles Avenue home.

Aug. 14Attempted theft: A Prestwick Drive

couple reported two people went through their vehicles, though ap-parently nothing was taken.

Criminal damaging: A South Avenue woman discovered damage to her vehicle’s fenders, rear quarter panels and a window that totaled about $600.

Theft: A woman in her 30s report-edly stole $90 worth of cleaning products and other items from Dol-lar General, 8573 Market St.

Identity theft: A Wildwood Drive man told offi cers he received an email notifi cation stating his ad-dress had been changed without his consent. The man also discovered a $43 unauthorized charge that origi-nated in Florida.

Auto theft: A 2011 Dodge Caliber was stolen in the 80 block of Ger-trude Avenue.

Stolen property: Police in downtown Youngstown picked up Daniel P. Riggs, 38, of South Bailey Road, North Jackson, who was wanted on a misdemeanor warrant charg-ing receiving stolen property. The charge stems from a July 13 situ-ation in which someone stole $70 worth of merchandise from Wal-mart, then returned to exchange the items for gift cards.

Theft: A district manager with Dollar General, 8573 Market St., report-edly discovered on six occasions that the previous day’s deposits of an undisclosed amount of money had not been properly deposited into the business’s account.

Aug. 15Arrest: Police arrested a 15-year-old

boy at his township residence on a charge of being an unruly juvenile. The teen was released to the cus-tody of his mother.

Arrests: While answering a shoplift-ing call in which about $359 worth of merchandise was stolen from Walmart, authorities charged a

17-year-old township boy with theft, a 16-year-old Youngstown boy with complicity to theft and a 17-year-old Columbus girl with complicity and obstructing of-fi cial business. Also taken into custody was Savon E. Young, 24, of Park Avenue, Youngstown, who was charged with contributing to the unruliness or delinquency of minors.

Theft: A Girard man noticed his wallet missing while he was at a Boardman-Poland Road store.

Robbery: A Campbell woman told police a male pushed two juveniles, including a family member, and stole 30 fl iers they were distribut-ing on behalf of the Salvation Army outside of a Boardman-Poland Road restaurant.

Theft: A South Cadillac Drive man re-ported a $500 laptop computer was missing from his vehicle.

Theft by deception: A Boardman woman discovered her credit/debit card was declined as she tried to use it on the Ohio Turnpike before she learned it had been used to make a $171 unauthorized transac-tion at a Doral Drive grocery store.

Arrest: While responding to a fi ght at an East Western Reserve Road fast-food restaurant, authorities took Darius D. Beasley, 25, into cus-tody. Beasley, of Burlington Street, Youngstown, was wanted on a Liberty Township warrant accusing him of violating a court order.

Theft: A man reportedly stole about $1,000 worth of merchandise that included children’s clothing from Gabe’s, 850 Boardman-Poland Road.

Arrest: Police took Jack W. Dean, 27, into custody on four warrants charging him with two counts each of possession of drug-abuse instru-ments and drug paraphernalia after authorities, acting on a search war-rant of his Oregon Trail residence, alleged having found two digital scales, two hypodermic needles, a spoon with burn marks common in drug use and other suspected drug paraphernalia. The Boardman man also faced a felony charge of receiv-ing stolen property.

Breaking and entering: Someone smashed a front-door window and broke into Y Not Wireless, 703 E. Midlothian Blvd. The owner esti-

mated that 66 cellphones had been removed from a display case and boxes, for a loss of about $25,692.

Robbery: Christine L. Smith, 35, of Market Street, Boardman, faced a robbery charge after $888 worth of property was stolen from Macy’s in Southern Park Mall. Smith also struggled and fought with a loss-prevention offi cial who tried to de-tain her, a police report showed.

Theft: A hand-operated pallet jack valued at about $400 was taken from behind Gabe’s.

Aug. 16Attempted theft: Video surveillance

reportedly showed a heavyset man trying to enter a Jeep Wrangler while at a business in the 6100 block of Market Street.

Domestic violence: Joshua M. Mar-shall, 30, of South Schenley Av-enue, Boardman, was charged with the crime after his mother alleged Marshall threatened to kill her after having become upset about an upcoming birthday party. He also tossed a baby bottle out a window at her but missed, a report said.

Attempted theft: A Southern Boule-vard man said he saw a man age 18 to 20 open a door to the accuser’s Jeep and, when confronted, the man fl ed.

Theft: Brandie Y. Bell, 23, of Park Av-enue, New Castle, Pa., was charged in the theft of a $164 pair of wom-en’s jeans from Buckle, a clothing store in Southern Park Mall.

Theft: A man and a woman report-edly took candy and razors from Family Dollar, 4030 Market St.

Unauthorized use of a vehicle: A manager with Enterprise Rent-a-Car, 7880 Market St., told police a woman rented but has failed to return a 2015 Chrysler 200 vehicle.

Theft: A $150 iPhone was removed from a locker at Boardman Glen-wood Junior High School on Glen-wood Avenue.

Identity theft: A Griswold Drive man learned that someone, ap-parently in Austell, Ga., without authorization had tried to open a bank account with his personal information.

Criminal mischief: A Robin Hood Drive woman alleged a boy age 13 or 14 had tried to kick in her front door.

Drugs: After pulling him over hear

Erie Street, police charged Robert D. Dragelevich, 42, of Academy Drive, Youngstown, with one felony drug-abuse count after alleging he had a bindle that contained a small quantity of suspected heroin in a wrapper. The heroin tested positive for fentanyl, a report showed.

Identity theft: A Hopkins Road wom-an discovered the last four digits of her Social Security number were associated with a delinquent cable account with a $1,269 outstanding balance.

Theft: A woman noticed an $800 cellphone missing from her Paxton Road home.

Bad check: A Poland woman reported an acquaintance had written her a $1,000 check, supposedly to help her, then tried to get her to cash it at a Doral Drive bank. The check later was verifi ed as fraudulent, however.

Aug. 17Drugs: While responding to a distur-

bance at a Market Street motel, offi cers charged Claude R. Westfall of Market, Boardman, with posses-sion of drug paraphernalia, resist-ing arrest and disorderly conduct while intoxicated after alleging he admitted having a suspected crack-cocaine pipe. Westfall, 50, also became combative with police and refused several times to cooperate, they further alleged.

False alarm: Offi cers responded to a burglary call in the 4000 block of Hillman Way before a man report-edly changed his story several times and the complaint was deter-mined to be unfounded.

POLANDAug. 12Misuse of a credit card: A New Middle-

town woman reported her credit-card information had been used to make $354 worth of fraudulent purchases at a Center Road grocery store.

Aug. 15Criminal damaging: A vehicle in the

6600 block of Struthers Road was found with a damaged rear window.

Aug. 16Identity fraud: A Catarina Place man

discovered his personal information had been used last month without consent to buy $472 worth of airline tickets online.

By JOHN FLESHERAP Environmental Writer

TRAVERSE CITY, MICH.An adult Asian carp found

in a Chicago waterway near Lake Michigan this sum-mer began its life far down-stream and apparently got around a series of electric barriers intended to keep the invasive species out of the Great Lakes, officials said Friday.

Necropsy results and a scientific analysis showed the silver carp, which was caught June 22, was a 4-year-old male that originated in the Illinois/Middle Missis-sippi watershed, according to the Asian Carp Regional Coordinating Committee, a coalition of government agencies.

It could have hatched anywhere along a roughly 200-mile stretch of the Il-linois River before migrat-ing northwest, said Charlie Wooley, the Midwest deputy regional director for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. It

spent time in the Des Plaines River before fi nding its way to the Little Calumet River just 9 miles from the lake, where a fisherman landed it.

The only way the carp could have gotten there was to evade three barriers in the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal some 37 miles from Lake Michigan, Wool-ey said. But it’s unclear how that happened.

The barriers emit power-ful electric pulses designed to repel carp that get too close or knock them out and possibly kill them if they don’t turn back.

An earlier study raised the possibility that small fish could be pulled through the electric fi eld in the wake of passing barges and survive.

Yet scientists who con-ducted a chemical analysis of the carp’s inner ear bones to determine which waters it had been in concluded the fi sh had spent no more than a few weeks to a few

months in the stretch of riv-er where it was found. It was fully grown, measuring 28 inches long and weighing 8 pounds.

“We’re pretty darn con-fident a fish of this size would be incapacitated go-ing through” the barriers, Wooley said, adding, “We’re baffled, and we just don’t know how it got there.”

Aside from the carp swim-ming through, another pos-sibility is someone moved it past the barriers – intention-ally or otherwise, said Kevin Irons, aquatic nuisance spe-cies program manager for the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. The fi sh might have jumped onto a boat and been carried past the barriers, then thrown out by an occupant who didn’t realize what type it was, he said.

The analysis was conduct-ed by experts with Southern Illinois University, the Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Geological Survey.

Asian carp found near LakeMichigan got past barriers

Barely more than a half-year in, Trump has forced out his hardline national security adviser, his chief of staff, his press secretary (whose last day will be Aug. 31) and two communica-tions directors – in addition to the FBI director he inher-ited from Barack Obama.

Bannon’s departure is especially signifi cant since he was viewed by many as Trump’s connection to his base of most-committed voters and the protector of the disruptive, conservative agenda that propelled the celebrity businessman to the White House.

“It’s a tough pill to swal-low if Steve is gone because you have a Republican West Wing that’s fi lled with gen-erals and Democrats,” said former campaign strategist Sam Nunberg, shortly before the news of Bannon’s depar-ture broke. “It would feel like the twilight zone.”

From Breitbart, there was a dramatic one-word warn-ing. “#WAR,” tweeted Joel B. Pollak, a senior editor at large at the news site.

Indeed, Bannon’s nation-alistic, outsider conserva-tism served as a guiding force for Trump’s rise to office. He injected a dark populism into the campaign and sharpened its attacks on Democrat Hillary Clin-ton, encouraging Trump’s

instinct to fi ght and counter-punch at every turn.

ICAHN LEAVES, TOOTrump has lost another

informal adviser from the business world: billionaire investor Carl Icahn, who gave the White House guidance on its deregulation efforts.

Icahn said in a letter to Trump released Friday that he is stepping down to pre-vent “partisan bickering” about his unofficial role that Democrats suggested could benefit him finan-cially. Trump lost a pair of business advisory councils Wednesday over his in-ability to condemn the role white supremacists played in violence last weekend in Charlottesville, Va.

BIRTHSST. JOSEPH WARREN HOSPITALRobin Holt and Michael Cun-

ningham, Williamsfi eld, boy, Aug. 17.

John and Marianne Weaver, Orwell, boy, Aug. 18.

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

A7 - 08/19/17

TRUMPContinued from A1

AP FILE PHOTO, JUNE 22

This photo provided by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources shows a silver carp that was caught in the Illinois Waterway below T.J. O’Brien Lock and Dam, approximately 9 miles away from Lake Michigan. The Asian Carp Regional Coordinating Committee says a necropsy shows the 4-year-old male silver carp originated in the Illinois/Middle Mississippi watershed. That would suggest the carp some-how evaded three electric barriers 37 miles from the lake.

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

A8 - 08/19/17

SATURDAYAUGUST 19, 2017

THE VINDICATOR | A8

Police: Teen dies after fall in temple

ROBBINSVILLE, N.J.Federal offi cials are inves-

tigating after a 15-year-old Pennsylvania boy fell about 45 feet and died while vol-unteering on a construction project inside a New Jersey Hindu temple.

NJ.com reports that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration is looking into the fall that killed the Hatfi eld boy at the BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir campus in Robbins-ville on Thursday night.

The teen was taken to Robert Wood Johnson Uni-versity Hospital at Hamilton, where he died an hour later.

Robbinsville Police Lt. Mi-chael Polaski says the fall ap-pears to be an accident, but it is still under investigation.

Subway tiles that look like Confederate fl ags to be altered

NEW YORKTransit offi cials have de-

cided to alter subway station tiles that have a cross-like design similar to that of the Confederate fl ag.

The Metropolitan Trans-portation Authority is modi-fying the tiles at the 40th Street entrance to the Times Square subway stop to avoid any confusion about their meaning, MTA spokesman Kevin Ortiz said.

“These are not confeder-ate fl ags,” Ortiz said. The red, white and blue tiles installed decades ago are “based on geometric forms that repre-sent the ‘Crossroads of the World,”’ he added.

The decision comes in the wake of the deadly rally over a Robert E. Lee statue in Charlottesville, Va., which has caused communities across the nation to remove Confed-erate memorials and symbols.

Expert: Arkansas may have reliable source of drug

LITTLE ROCK, ARK.A death penalty expert

says Arkansas’ recent pur-chase of a lethal injection drug – in a small amount and at a cheap price – suggests the state has found a reliable supplier to help it move 30 inmates from death row to the execution chamber.

The state that put four men to death in April says it has enough drugs to ex-ecute two more inmates. Jen Moreno of the Death Penalty Clinic at the University of California Law School said Friday the small amount and cheap price suggest Arkan-sas can now buy drugs on an as-needed basis.

In 2015, the state spent $24,226 for large stockpiles of midazolam, vecuronium bromide and potassium chloride. Last week, Ar-kansas spent $250 for 40 vials of midazolam, which is enough for two executions.

US: Iraqi forces are ready for next battle against IS extremists

BAGHDADSenior U.S. military lead-

ers said Friday that Iraqi forces are largely set for their next major campaign against Islamic State extremists after closing out the wrench-ing nine-month battle to re-take the city of Mosul.

Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, said he sees the Iraqi assault on the IS-held area of Tal Afar “unfolding relatively soon.” The upcoming fi ght follows weeks of Iraq regrouping troops and repairing equip-ment and weapons after re-capturing Mosul in July.

Neo-Nazis allowed to march in Germany

BERLINPolice in Berlin have given

neo-Nazis permission to have a 500-person strong rally commemorating the death of Adolf Hitler’s dep-uty Rudolf Hess in the city’s western district of Spandau.

But there’s a catch.Police have told organiz-

ers they can march, but they’re not allowed to glorify Hess, who died at Spandau prison 30 years ago. The neo-Nazis are allowed to bring banners: but only one for every 50 participants. And military music is strictly forbidden, unless a court overturns that rule before today’s march.

Associated Press

BREAKING NEWSGo to vindy.com for regional, national and world news, 24/7.WORLD NEWSWORLD

digest

Police shoot man who stabs 8 in Finland; 2 dead Associated Press

HELSINKIA man stabbed eight people Friday in

Finland’s western city of Turku, killing two of them, before police shot him in the thigh and detained him, police said. Authorities were looking for more potential suspects in the attack.

A suspect – who police said was “a young-ish man with a foreign background” – was being treated in the city’s main hospital but was in police custody. Security was being stepped up across the Nordic country, Inte-rior Minister Paula Risikko told reporters at a news conference.

The man’s identity and nationality were being investigated. Police said he is likely to have acted alone though it was not possible to completely rule out that other people were involved.

Police did not give any information on the two people killed or the conditions of those wounded in downtown Turku, 106

miles west of Helsinki, the capital.Finland’s top police chief, Seppo Kole-

hmainen, said it was too early to link the attack to international terrorism.

“Nothing is known about the motives ... or what precisely has happened in Turku,” he said.

It was also not known if Friday’s attack was linked to a decision in June by Finland’s security agency to raise its threat assess-ment to the second level of a four-step scale. The Finnish Security Intelligence Service says the country’s “stronger profi le within the radical Islamist propaganda” led to the change. It said the Nordic country is now considered part of the coalition against the Islamic State group.

Finland’s government was closely moni-toring the police investigation into the at-tack, Prime Minister Juha Sipila said.

Finnish President Sauli Niinisto arrived at Turku later Friday and condemned the attack as “a shocking and cowardly act.”

Associated Press

BARCELONA, SPAINA cell of at least nine ex-

tremists meticulously plot-ted to combine vehicles and explosives in a direct hit on tourists, and managed to carry off most of their deadly plan, killing 14 peo-ple, authorities said Friday. Police in Spain and France pressed a manhunt for any remaining members of the group, which Islamic State claimed as its own.

Only flawed bomb con-struction avoided a more devastating attack, authori-ties said after taking a closer look at a blast Wednesday evening in the town of Alca-nar that was fi rst written off as a household gas explo-sion. At least one person was killed and several injured in the home where police said the deadly plan took shape.

Eighteen hours later, a rented van veered into Bar-celona’s crowded Las Ram-blas promenade, swerving along the walkway Thurs-day and killing 13 people. A surveillance video from inside a museum, which captured images of the van, showed it speeding down the promenade, barely miss-ing a person with a stroller

while others scattered.Armed with an ax, knives

and false explosives belts, at-tackers then drove a second vehicle to the boardwalk in the resort town of Cambrils early Friday, fatally injuring one person. Five of those at-tackers were shot to death, among them 17-year-old Moussa Oukabir, according to a Spanish police union offi cial, confi rming Spanish news reports.

Oukabir’s name was fi rst on a document listing four suspects sought in the at-tacks, said the off icial, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the investigation. The Barce-lona-based La Vanguardia newspaper, Spanish na-tional broadcaster RTVE and other outlets cited po-lice sources as saying he was the driver of the van in Barcelona.

The arrest order was is-sued throughout Spain and into France, according to the Spanish official and a French police official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the document. They did not say what became of the other three men listed, who ranged in age from 18 to 24.

All had roots in Morocco; only Moussa Oukabir was born in Spain, according to the document.

Earlier in the day, Cata-lan regional president Car-les Puigdemont said at least one “terrorist is still on out there. We do not have infor-mation regarding the ca-pacity to do more harm.”

Authorities said the two attacks were related and the work of a large terrorist cell that had been plotting for a long time from s house in Alcanar, 124 miles down the coast from Barcelona. The house was destroyed by a butane gas explosion Wednesday night that killed one person. One of those in-jured in the blast was taken into custody.

Senior police offi cial Josep Lluis Trapero said police be-lieved the apparently acci-dental explosion prevented the suspects from carrying out a far deadlier attack.

Police said they arrested two people Friday, after the two arrests a day earlier. In custody are three Moroc-cans and one Spaniard, none with terrorism-related records.

Spanish plan for carnage started with botched blast

Associated Press

A roundup of some of the most popular, but com-pletely untrue, headlines of the week. None of these sto-ries are legit, even though they were shared widely on social media. The Associat-ed Press checked these out; here are the real facts:

NOT REAL:� Charlottes-ville Killer Was Hillary Sup-porter, Funded By Soros

THE FACTS:� James Fields, who’s charged with mur-der after police say he drove his car into a Charlottes-ville, Virginia, crowd last weekend, supported Pres-ident Donald Trump dur-ing the 2016 campaign, his former teacher told the AP. GoFundMe confirmed that it removed “multiple cam-paigns” to raise money for Fields; none were started by billionaire George Soros, who has been a frequent tar-get of hoax sites. The stories shared by YourNewsWire

and other sites claim Fields’ arrest is part of a “false flag” aimed at sparking a civil war.

NOT R E A L :� President Trump Fires All 14 Muslim Federal Judges

THE FACTS:� There aren’t any Muslims on the feder-al bench and the president has no authority to fire fed-eral judges. Abid Qureshi, a Washington, D.C., attorney, was nominated last year by former President Barack Obama to be the first Mus-lim federal judge, but he wasn’t confirmed by the Senate. The hoax story by a site named As American As Apple Pie and shared by others also claimed Trump used the “evacuation clause” to remove the judges. There is no such clause that is part of federal law.

NOT REAL: � Mysterious Nazi Submarine From WWII Discovered In Great Lakes

THE FACTS:� Divers didn’t

find a German U-boat at the bottom of the Lake Ontar-io despite a story posted last year by admitted hoax out-let World Daily News Report, shared recently by other sites. The story suggests the ship may have sunk dur-ing the non-existent Battle of Niagara Falls. The pho-tos included with the arti-cle show in reality a rusted Soviet submarine and two divers from a 2010 expedi-

tion to the North Pole by a French team.

NOT REAL :� British PM Theresa May: Pedophiles Should be Allowed to Adopt Children, Too

THE FACTS :� The stor y by Neon Nettle is based on a 2010 article by a British law professor that called for May, who was the U.K.’s home secretary at the time, to relax rules banning sex offenders from caring from

children. May had previous-ly ordered a review of vet-ting procedures for adults coming into regular contact with children other than their own, but May’s spokes-man said at the time that her office wouldn’t consid-er allowing pedophiles to adopt.

NOT REAL:� What Adam Sandler is Saying About Mormons

THE FACTS:� The come-dian didn’t come to the defense of Mormons on a re-cent podcast, despite a slew of identical articles on web-sites designed to look like local news outlets. The story claims Sandler stepped into say Mormons were “decent people” when an unnamed interviewer began to dis-parage them. All of the sites include a disclaimer saying the stories on them aren’t real.This weekly fi xture is part of The Associ-ated Press’ ongoing eff orts to fact-check claims in suspected false news stories.

Not real news: a look at what didn’t happen this week

Associated Press

WASHINGTONFor Susan Bro, mother of

the woman killed at a rally organized by white su-premacists, the president of the United States can offer no healing words.

She says the White House repeatedly tried to reach out to her Wednesday, the day of Heather Heyer’s funeral. But she’s since watched President Donald Trump lay blame for the Charlottesville violence on “both sides.”

“You can’t wash this one away by shaking my hand and saying ‘I’m sorry,”’ she said in a television inter-view Friday.

In moments like this, of national crisis or tragedy, presidents typically shed their political skin, at least briefl y. They use the broad appeal of the presidency to unite and soothe, urging citizens to remember their humanity, their common bonds as Americans.

Like no other president in recent history, Trump has struggled with this part of

his duties.He talks

about poli-tics at odd moments – reminding Boy Scouts and Coast G u a r d g raduates

alike that he won the elec-tion and the media are out to get him – and has con-tinued speaking to his core supporters with less effort to appeal to the rest of the country. The harsh lan-guage that turned off those who voted against him last year hasn’t abated during his seven months in the White House.

Trump’s words on Char-lottesville “caused racists to rejoice, minorities to weep, and the vast heart of Amer-ica to mourn,” the 2012 GOP presidential nomi-nee Mitt Romney wrote on Facebook on Friday.

Trump has expressed no regrets about his Tues-day news conference that enraged many Americans and prompted Bro’s com-ments Friday.

Soothe the nation?Trump struggles

Associated Press

WASHINGTONPresident Donald Trump

has approved a long-de-layed Pentagon plan to create an independent and more aggressive cyber command in order to beef up cyberwar operations against the Islamic State group and other foes.

The White House an-nouncement Friday means U.S. Cyber Command may eventually be split off from the intelligence-focused National Security Agency.

For now, Trump has agreed to raise the stature of Cyber Command with-in the military and give it more autonomy.

“This new Unifi ed Com-batant Command w il l strengthen our cyberspace operations and create more opportunities to improve

our nation’s d e f e n s e ,” T r u m p said. “The e l e v a t i o n of Un ited States Cyber Command d e m o n -strates our increased resolve against cyberspace threats and will help reassure our allies and partners and deter our adversaries.”

Making cyber an inde-pendent military com-mand will put the fi ght in digital space on the same footing as more traditional realms of battle on land, in the air, at sea and in space. The move reflects the es-calating threat of cyberat-tacks and intrusions from other nation states, terror-ist groups and hackers..

Trump OKs plan to create independent cyber command

Bro

Trump

ASSOCIATED PRESS

A woman places a memorial candle in the Market Square for the victims of Friday’s stabbings in Turku, Finland, on Friday evening. Several people were stabbed in the Market Square, and two died.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

A woman and a man cry in front of a memorial tribute to the victims of the terrorist attack in Barcelona, Spain, on Friday. Police on Friday shot and killed fi ve people carrying bomb belts who were connectedto the Barcelona van attack, as the manhunt intensifi ed for the perpetrators of Europe’s latest rampageclaimed by the Islamic State group. At least one American was killed in the van attack, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson confi rmed Friday.

James Alex Fields Jr. stands on the sidewalk looking at the proces-sion of the clergy as they gathered at McGaff ey park, ahead of a rally in Charlottesville, Va. Fields is accused of ramming his car into a crowd of coun-terprotesters last Saturday in Charlottesville, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring more than a dozen others.

AP FILE PHOTO, AUG. 12

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EDITORIAL SATURDAYAUGUST 19, 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

LONG-TIME U.S. SENATOR AND pioneer astronaut John H. Glenn left no shortage of legacies. Now he

has another one.Like so much that happened during

Glenn’s 95-year life, the timing is per-fect.

Glenn was born in 1921, six years before Charles Lindbergh’s solo flight across the Atlantic. His college years were interrupted by World War II and he was a fi ghter pilot in that war and the Korean War. He was a test pilot in the early days of the jet age, setting a supersonic record for transcontinental flight. He became one of the original Mercury Seven astronauts and the fi rst American to orbit the Earth.

Because he would be 50 or so when the fi rst American could hope to land on the moon, NASA deemed Glenn too old to be considered for the Apollo pro-gram.

So, he embarked on a new career of community service, one that saw him serve four terms in the U.S. Senate and then spend nearly two decades sup-porting the political ambitions of oth-ers, He helped found what evolved into the John Glenn College of Public Affairs at The Ohio State University, and the senator remained active until shortly before his death in December 2016.

That school will now be home to the State of Ohio Leadership Institute, a creation of the Ohio Legislature that will help private citizens make the tran-sition to elected public service.

Dr. Trevor Brown, dean of the Glenn School, says Sen. Glenn was involved in the new effort from the beginning because its mission was informed by his personal experience.

Brown says Glenn, “was a learned man, but he found that he didn’t know instinctively how to be a legislator.” Someone entering politics fi nds that it is a complex system. The institute will provide a place for novices to get a bet-ter grasp of their new responsibilities.

RANK OF COLONELBeing an elected official was an

important part of John Glenn’s life, but it spanned only 24 of his 95 years. He held the title of senator, but he also had the rank of colonel, earned during an earlier 24 years in the Navy and Marine Corps.

His fi nal 18 years were spent as a role model and mentor to others in public service, both elected and unelected.

Ohio lawmakers included $5 million in the budget bill for the institute, which will provide “leadership training and education for current and future elect-ed officials and senior staff and local government,” according to an analysis by the state’s Legislative Service Com-mission.

House Speaker Cliff Rosenberger, R-Clarksville, told the Columbus Dispatch, “You’ve got businessmen and women, you have moms and dads, you’ve got police and firefighters, all these folks are coming together ... to step up and say ‘Hey, I’ll put my name on the ballot, I’ll run.’”

Ohio State’s Brown told the Dispatch, “We need a place that cultivates com-promise. We envision some portion of the programming being specifi cally di-rected at civility, at how to achieve com-promise, how to negotiate in a civil way, how to conduct yourself in a way that is respectful of your responsibility as both a citizen and an elected offi cial.”

He told The Vindicator that the institute will also focus on the need for transparency in government and on the state’s open meetings and public records laws.

Brown says the college is pursuing additional funding outside that pro-vided by the legislature and is working to put together its fi rst program by next summer, aimed at the Ohio Legisla-ture that is elected in 2018 and will take offi ce in 2019.

The initial efforts will be “academy-like” for those incoming offi cials, but eventu-ally courses carrying undergraduate or graduate credit could be developed.

There are models for the college to follow, including the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard and the Carl Vinson Institute of Govern-ment at the University of Georgia.

As we noted earlier, Glenn’s timing was exceptional, and the timing for the establishment of the institute couldn’t be better. Those involved note that the groundwork was laid before the caustic political events of 2016 and 2017. None-theless, there couldn’t be a better time to provide an environment where those chosen by the people to lead can learn to work together, regardless of political affi liation or preconceptions.

By CRAIG FORMANSpecial to McClatchy

“Enemy of the American people,” DishonestMedia, “gar-bage journalism,” FakeNews.

These are some of the insults hurled at journalists in recent months in efforts to discredit the work of news organizations around the country.

This week marks the start of our colleague Austin Tice’s sixth year of captivity in Syria. We at McClatchy want to tell you about him and other jour-nalists who have risked and sometimes given their lives to bring us stories that would not otherwise be told.

Some have been tortured. Several have been imprisoned. At least three were murdered – simply for doing their jobs – in the past several years alone.

Daniel Pearl, Jean-Paul Kauffmann, Michel Seurat, Jason Rezaian, James Foley, Steven Sotloff and, of course, Austin Tice. Each dedicated themselves to reporting from the most dangerous parts of the world. At a time when the media is regularly scorned, it’s worth remembering their sac-rifi ces.

Kauffmann, a French jour-nalist, was abducted along with a colleague, Michel Seur-at, while covering the long-running Lebanese civil war in Beirut in 1985. Kauffmann was held for 1,078 days; Seurat died in captivity.

AL-QAIDA PROBEDanny Pearl, a foreign cor-

respondent for The Wall Street Journal, went to Pakistan shortly after the Sept. 11 at-tacks. He was investigating the alleged link between al-Qaida and British citizen Richard Reid, commonly referred to as the failed shoe bomber.

On Jan. 23, 2002, on his way to what he thought was an interview, Danny – a former Journal colleague of mine – was kidnapped. Nine days later, he was beheaded. A gruesome video was released on the in-ternet in February of that year. He left a wife and a child born four months after his death.

Jason Rezaian, an Irani-an-American journalist who worked in the Tehran bureau of The Washington Post, was taken into custody by Iranian security forces on July 22, 2014. He was indicted for espionage and propaganda, convicted in a sham of a trial in 2015, but then released on Jan. 16, 2016.

James Foley, a freelance reporter and videographer who worked for GlobalPost and other news organizations, was abducted on Nov. 22, 2012, in northwestern Syria. Two years later, the Islamic State

videotaped his beheading and posted it on YouTube.

Steven Sotloff, an American-Israeli journalist who worked for Time magazine, CNN, Fox News and others, was cap-tured near the Syria border on Aug. 14, 2013. On Sept. 2, 2014, two weeks after Foley’s execu-tion, the Islamic State released a video showing the murder of Sotloff.

And then there is Austin, whose ordeal continues to this day. A Marine Corps veteran and a freelance correspondent for McClatchy, The Washington Post and others, Austin traveled to the Mideast, found media organizations to publish his work and made his way across the border into Syria. He focused largely on what the war meant for everyday citi-zens there.

His reporting led to his kid-napping on Aug. 14, 2012. Vid-eo emerged fi ve weeks after his disappearance, showing him surrounded by armed men. No one has claimed responsibility for his capture. Indications are he’s being held by a branch of the Syrian government, which has denied any involvement.

HEARTWRENCHINGThe impact on his life, and

that of his family (including his devoted parents Debra and Marc and his six younger brothers and sisters) has been heart-wrenching: Austin has spent much of his fourth de-cade (he turned 36 last Friday) as a captive. His parents, who say they recently received new evidence that he’s alive, have spent every day of these five years working for his release.

These journalists come from different walks of life, but they have one thing in common. They believe in a free press and the power of journalism. Their dedication took them to parts of the world where freedoms we enjoy do not exist, where governments and terrorist organizations will do anything to subvert the truth.

In this country, freedom of expression has been a tenet since the beginning. The ben-efi ts of a strong, independent press were addressed in the founding documents of our land. More than two centu-ries ago, our Founding Fathers recognized that a successful republican democracy can-not succeed without a strong press to hold “governmental offi cials to republican values, the strengthening of commu-nity and a check upon self-aggrandizing politicians.”

And journalism’s contribu-tions are not a recent phe-nomenon, either. Consider Lee Miller, Robert Capa, George

Stevens, John Hershey, Michael Herr and Tim Hetherington, to name just a few. They are the people who captured the images seared in our global memory of Auschwitz and other Nazi death camps, Hi-roshima, Omaha Beach, Hue and Afghanistan.

That is why it is dishearten-ing to see the press under at-tack from some of our leaders who are waging an ongoing campaign against the media, going so far as to call us the enemy of the people.

We at McClatchy believe that when we make mistakes, it is part of our job to acknowledge errors and to uphold the trust of our audiences and neigh-bors. We are mindful of that trust and try to earn and keep it every day.

But Austin? He made no such mistakes. His sole focus was to pursue truth on behalf of us all – in one of the most dangerous war zones on Earth. And that has cost him his freedom for the start of a sixth year.

We can all be encouraged by the strong stance the Trump administration has taken to protect Americans abroad. The president’s acting special envoy for hostage affairs said that Austin’s case is a top prior-ity. According to the New York Times, the Central Intelligence Agency has made entreaties with Syrian counterparts on Austin’s behalf. Let us hope this might be the beginning of negotiations for his release.

And we hope that Austin’s sacrifices resonate with all Americans. The work he has done, and the price he has paid, should be a reminder that even in a time of division and confl ict, and perhaps particu-larly now, we rely on dedicated reporters such as Austin Tice to keep us informed.

Austin went to Syria to tell stories of real people in impos-sible situations. He has taught us all what it means to risk your life for liberty. It is time for his country to do what it takes to end his long ordeal and bring him home.

WHAT YOU CAN DOThere are several ways you

can support efforts to secure Austin Tice’s freedom from detention in Syria.

First and foremost, visit the family’s website, www.austin-ticefamily.com

Consider calling, emailing or writing our federal leadership. Let them know you support efforts to secure Austin’s release.Craig Forman is president and CEO of the McClatchy Co. He is a former foreign cor-respondent and bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal. Distributed by Tribune Con-tent Agency, LLC.

By MARK DAVISThe Dallas Morning News

I believe the appropriate maxim is, “Better late than never.”

President Donald Trump applied multiple layers of criticism to precisely the right targets in comments Monday morning after a weekend of being slammed for not doing it Saturday.

“Racism is evil,” he said in addressing the bleak events in Charlottesville, Va., “and those who cause violence in its name are criminals and thugs, including the KKK, neo-Nazis, white suprema-cists and other hate groups that are repugnant to every-thing we hold dear as Ameri-cans.”

There, that should do it. In some alternate universe.

In the one where we live, the goal posts moved immediately. I heard Repub-lican critics of Trump call the expanded comments forced and unconvincing, while liberal voices lunged for familiar index cards. He may have said the right things at last, said some, but his administration is still rife with racists and he still seeks the approval of white supremacists.

Right. That’s why Da-vid Duke blasted him for “attacking” his buddies with the Saturday remarks that spoke out against hate and bigotry broadly. This would be the David Duke whom many Democrats want you to recognize as Trump’s 2020 campaign manager.

Conservatives should not have to spend long hours rebutting charges of rac-ism. But we do, and we must, because sadly, there are plenty of reckless people spreading such charges, and plenty of inattentive people who will believe them.

APPROPRIATE REMARKSBy the way, that is precise-

ly the reason Trump should have called out specifi c hate groups Saturday. His gener-alized remarks were appro-priate, but incomplete, cre-ating an open door for the attacks of enemies and an-other unnecessary explana-tory burden for supporters.

So list me among those who wish his Monday words had been his Saturday words. Why the delay? Was it because Trump shares views with the racist thug-gery on display in Charlot-tesville? Is it because he seeks to curry favor with them as a valuable part of his base?

Those are the fantasies of his haters. The real reason, though, creates some heavy lifting for supporters: He toyed with us for a couple of days because he knew his critics would go nuts, and they did. He put a 48-hour time delay on striking the right tone so that his pos-turing Republican critics would take predictable pot-shots while Democrats wove delusions of a White House infested by Klansmen.

So as California Congress-woman Maxine Waters was coining her latest gem – that the White House is now the “White Supremacists’ House” – Trump was bid-ing his time, preparing to disarm his shrillest detrac-tors with exactly the words needed to achieve levels of proper revulsion.

So the word games are over, or they should be. The Trump administration is bringing every investiga-tive lens to focus on exactly what happened to create the tragedy of Charlottesville. Virulent racism is obviously part of the fuel. So are coun-ter-protesters who showed up willing to exude violent intent before the car ever plowed into the crowd.

The investigative wheels will now properly turn, surely accompanied by the soundtrack of craven oppor-tunism from Trump critics who will seek to festoon his presidency with the imagery of white hoods and swasti-kas.

It is a valid opinion that the president took too long to say the right thing. But the claim that this is a sign of kinship with hate groups is unhinged slander.Mark Davis is a radio host and frequent columnist for The Dallas Morning News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency.

SCRIPTURES QUOTE OF THE DAY“We don’t have to be afraid. And we aren’t afraid because that’s what they want, the Islamic State, they want to scare us so that we stay at home. That is last thing we’re going to do.”

Enrique Camprubi, a city resident for 40 years

who walks down Las Ramblas nearly every day. Tourists and Barcelona residents tentatively returned to Las Ramblas on Friday morning

for a subdued stroll down the leafy boulevard, a day after a terrorist attack fi lled it with fear and

bloodshed.

Then Jesus stood up again and said to the woman, “Where are your accusers? Didn’t even one of them condemn you?” “No, Lord,” she said. And Jesus said, “Neither do I. Go and sin no more.”

John 8:10-11 NLT

Real journalists risk their livesin order to bring you real news

Trump’scritics unfair

Institute for public servantsis good fi t at Glenn College

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Realty site utilizes drone photography

YOUNGSTOWNByceREALTY, a division

of ByceAUCTION Ltd., has a new mobile-friendly website and bidding platform that adds drone photography. Visitors with mobile devices will experience an optimized site making bidding easier.

Drone photography al-lows clients to see things such as the condition of the roof and the surrounding neighborhood.

MCCTC program receives grant

CANFIELDThe Advanced Manu-

facturing Program at the Mahoning County Career & Technical Center was presented a grant check of $10,000 from the Gene Haas Foundation at the Ma-honing Valley Manufacturers Coalition meeting last week.

The grant is given to schools to support schol-arships and NIMS creden-tialing for manufacturing programs. The funds are to be given to students cur-rently enrolled or who will be enrolling at MCCTC in a machining-based training and/or engineering program at the postsecondary level. It also may be used toward the cost of attending CNC machining classes at a sec-ondary-level career center.

The Gene Haas Founda-tion was founded in 1999 by Gene Haas. Haas is the owner of Haas Automation Inc., America’s leading build-er of CNC machine tools, which was started in 1983 and grown into a billion-dol-lar company.

Burgan teams up with YSU athletics

CANFIELDBurgan Real Estate’s

brand presence will grow larger in the Mahoning Val-ley with a newly formed marketing partnership with Youngstown State Univer-sity Athletics.

The multichannel pro-gram includes numerous branding elements, includ-ing signage at Stambaugh Stadium during home foot-ball games and Beeghly Center during men’s and women’s home basketball games, radio advertising, video advertising and digital marketing as well as com-munity outreach focused on home buying and selling needs.

Burgan is the fi rst com-pany to have this title with the athletic department with this partnership.

Ex-Detroit auto executive charged

DETROIT A former union offi cial in

Detroit has been charged with making more than $40,000 in purchases for herself and others with money from Fiat Chrysler.

Virdell King is the fourth person charged in the case. The government says Al Iacobelli, a Fiat Chrysler labor executive, gave credit cards to some offi cials at the United Auto Workers. Bills were paid with money from a company-sponsored training center.

The conspiracy charge against King was fi led as a criminal information, which means a guilty plea is likely.

King retired in 2016 after working in the UAW’s Chrysler department. A message seeking comment was left for her attorney Friday.

Staff /wire reports

BUSINESSdigest

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ALBANY, N.Y. In a decision held up as an affir-

mation of the right of states to reject major oil and gas infrastructure, a federal court ruled Friday that New York acted properly when it blocked plans for a 124-mile natural gas pipe-line from Pennsylvania’s shale fi elds.

The U.S. Court of Appeals rejected the Constitution Pipeline company’s argument that the state Department of Environmental Conservation was “arbitrary and capricious” in deny-ing a water quality permit last year. The ruling said federal law entitled the department to conduct its own review of the pipeline’s likely impact on water bodies.

“We hope this sends a loud mes-sage that New York will not rubber stamp any project that fails to protect public health and our environment,” said commissioner Basil Seggos.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved the pipeline intended to carry cheap, natural gas from Pennsylvania to eastern New York in 2014, conditioned on state permits. Pennsylvania approved all permits needed in its section of the project, and tree-clearing began in preparation for construction.

But New York regulators stopped the project in its tracks when they determined it failed to meet stan-dards to protect streams, wetlands and other water resources.

The pipeline company, Tulsa, Okla.-based Williams Cos., said Friday it remains committed to the project.

New Yorkers for Affordable Energy, a coalition of labor and business groups, urged DEC to work with the Constitu-tion team to resolve water quality is-sues and move the project forward.

“New York must not throw up road blocks to building the infrastructure necessary to ensure all of our state’s energy consumers are able to access our nation’s abundant natural gas resources,” the coalition said.

Environmental groups said the ruling confirms the authority of states to protect their water bod-ies from threats posed by pipelines crossing critical watersheds.

Associated Press

HAMILTON, ONTARIO A Canadian man accused

in a massive hack of Yahoo emails agreed Friday to forgo his extradition hear-ing and go face the charges in the United States.

Karim Baratov was ar-rested in Hamilton, Ontario, in March under the Extradi-tion Act after U.S. authorities indicted him and three oth-ers, including two alleged officers of Russia’s Federal Security Service, or SFB. They are accused of com-puter hacking, economic es-pionage and other crimes.

An extradition hearing for Baratov, 22, had been sched-uled for early September, but he signed documents before a Canadian judge Fri-day agreeing to waive it. His lawyer, Amedeo DiCarlo, said that does not amount to an admission of guilt.

DiCarlo said the move will accelerate the legal pro-cess and was the best way to speed up discussions with

the U.S. prosecutor. U.S. marshals will soon be sent to fetch Baratov and take him to California, he added.

U.S. law enforcement offi -cials call Baratov a “hacker-for-hire” paid by membersof the FSB, which is considered the successor to the KGB of the former Soviet Union. He has Kazakh origins, arrived in Canada in 2007 and be-came a citizen in 2011.

Alexsey Belan, another suspect, is on the FBI’s list of most wanted cybercrimi-nals and has been indicted multiple times in the United States. It’s not clear whether he or the other two defen-dants, Dmitry Dokuchaev and Igor Sushchin, will ever step foot in an American courtroom because the U.S. does not have an extradition treaty with Russia.

The indictment identifi es Dokuchaev and Sushchin as offi cers of the FSB. Belan and Baratov were allegedly directed by the FSB to hack into the accounts.

Associated Press

NEW YORK “These are the times that

try men’s souls,” was writ-ten more than two centuries ago. But given this week’s events, they could have popped up in any blog or tweet in recent days.

Then what better time for a little Chicken Soup for the Soul?

On Friday, the provider of positive vibes became a publicly traded company, Chicken Soup for the Soul En-tertainment Inc., offering 2.5 million shares for $12 each.

Chicken Soup produces television programs and online videos, but is best known for books sold under

the same name, with more than 250 published titles in 40 languages.

The company was found-ed in 1993 by motivational speakers Jack Canfi eld and Mark Victor Hansen, who sold what was essentially still a company focused on books in 2008.

Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment CEO Wil-liam Rouhana described it as a Netflix for Chicken Soup fans.

Chicken Soup had a “mini initial public offering,” which gives smaller investors and individuals the ability to buy shares. Startups, through a mini IPO, can raise up to $50 million. Chicken Soup is raising $30 million.

By KALEA [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNThe decision to build a

student-housing complex at Youngstown State Uni-versity wasn’t just about business. It was personal.

“There’s a lot of per-sonal feelings that come to mind having been a student here,” said Frank Licata, president of Ak-ron-based LRC Realty, the development company behind The Enclave proj-ect at YSU.

Licata, a Youngstown native and 1999 YSU graduate, broke ground on The Enclave with YSU President Jim Tressel, Youngstown Mayor John A. McNally and other com-munity leaders Friday.

“Frank [Licata] was talk-ing with that look in his

eye that, yes, this is a part of business – but this real-ly was a part of his heart,” Tressel said of the project.

The $13 million com-plex brings 65 student apartments to YSU’s cam-pus at the corner of Wick and Lincoln avenues.

“It’s an honor to create a project here that we think is going to really transform our campus,” Licata said.

The Enclave brings 194 beds in 105,511 square feet and 11,020 square feet of leasable retail space to the YSU campus.

The Enclave construc-tion will be finished in time for the fall 2018 se-mester.

With the opening of The Enclave, 2018 will be the third year in a row for new student housing at YSU.

The Edge, another new student-housing complex near Fifth Avenue, opened in two phases: fi rst in 2016 and then this year.

Construction of The En-clave started about a month ago. The foundation is up, and the goal is to get a roof on by Thanksgiving.

Licata said with all of the activity around YSU a nd development i n Youngstown, the compa-ny took interest.

“They are ta k ing a risk on good things hap-pening,” Tressel said. “The more activity we get on campus, it will spill over [throughout Youngstown].”

The Western Reserve Port Authority board ap-proved a capital-lease program for the project. The port authority will

issue up to $14 million in bonds to fi nance con-struction.

Yo u n g s t o w n C i t y C o u n c i l a p p r o v e d $500,000 in water funds to be used for the proj-ect and a $4 million loan with a 12-month term.

City council also is to consider a 75 percent, 10-year tax abatement for the commercial space at The Enclave.

Once the project is completed, the city will consider an abatement for the residential space at the complex.

“Like anything great that happens, there’s a whole bunch of people who are a part of it,” Tres-sel said. “You are going to have to have collaboration of government and busi-ness to be successful.”

Court: NY can deny key pipeline permit

CANADA

Alleged Yahoo hacker agrees to extradition to US

Hot stock tip: Chicken Soup for the Soul

Ground broken for The EnclaveFrom left, Youngstown State University President Jim Tressel, President of LRC Realty Frank Licata and Youngstown Mayor John A. McNally break ground on The Enclave, a new student-housing and retail complex under con-struction at YSU that will open in time for the fall 2018 semester.

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• SCORES & PREPS, B2 • GOLF, B2-3• MLB, B4 • CLASSIFIEDS, B4-B6• OUTDOORS, B7 • RELIGION, B8

By GREG [email protected]

BOARDMAN

SCOTTY JONES HASN’T played much golf lately, and his front nine Friday at the

Farmers National Bank Greatest Golfer of the Valley showed it.

Then came No. 9. A bad bounce tossed the East Palestine na-tive’s approach shot 60 yards past the north course green and under pull carts. His only hope for a chance at par – once the carts were moved – was to punch into a mound guarding the green and get a lucky bounce.

He did just that, and then dropped a15-foot putt for par.

“I was 1-over after salvaging par on No. 9 and after I birdied 10, that kind of got things going for me,” said Jones, who came home from Denison to play in the Men’s Open Division. “I birdied four of the last fi ve holes

and that helped me fi nish really strong for the day.

“I hadn’t played much heading into today. You might say that I didn’t have high expectations so I am really pleased with my day,” said Jones, who carded a 2-under 68.

He and 300 other Valley golfers continue their quest for Greatest titles today as play continues at four Valley courses before concluding Sunday at The Lake Club for the top 96 golfers.

The only other golfer to fi nish under par is a familiar name.

Brandon Pluchinsky’s 2016 title march started with a 66 at Mill Creek, and he duplicated that effort

Friday to lead the Men’s Open divi-sion.

In Senior Open action, Frank Santisi and Robert Gintert each carded 71 to share the lead. Santisi, whose home course is Kennsing-ton, missed the cut the only other time that he played (2014).

He added his nervous energy subsided once he teed off.

“I was pleased with my round be-cause I putted really well,” he said. “I made some long ones, but the key was keeping the ball in play and out of trouble. From tee-to-green, I’d say it was a very comfortable round.”

A native of Newton Falls, Gintert’s family owns Riverview Golf Course. Friday was the fi rst time he played Mill Creek.

Today also will be the fi rst time he tees off at Tippecanoe Country Club.

“The greens here at Mill Creek matched up really well with the greens at Riverview,” Gintert said. “I hit the ball well, but if I had to single out one area then it would be that

By ALEXIS [email protected]

BEAVER TOWNSHIPFriday night was filled

with firsts during Cardi-nal Mooney and South Range’s girls soccer sea-son opener.

The lights shined for the fi rst time at the newly opened Rominger Sports Complex, where the Raid-ers hosted their fi rst game of the season against the Cardinals.

Thomas Beck began his fi rst season as Cardi-nal Mooney’s head coach with a win.

“I’m very, very fortu-nate. I inherited a great team, a great group of girls,” Beck said. “It’s nice to have that as a coach.”

Cardinal Mooney de-feated South Range with a score of 4-0. The Car-dinals took an early lead and made it stand with a shutout.

“He’s pushed us very hard — he’s been a great coach,” Mooney’s Bre Ev-ans said.

Freshman Anna Wollet scored the fi rst goal of the game with less than 20 minutes to go in the fi rst half. Within one minute, Gia Dorio scored the Car-dinals’ second goal of the night. Both goals gave the girls the momentum they needed to continue play-ing hard throughout the game.

“I felt that we moved the ball very well and we worked as a team,” Evans said.

Beck said he thought the Cardinals came out a little slower than he would’ve liked, but was happy with how the girls responded after getting over the fi rst-

By BRIAN DZENIS

[email protected]

Former Youngstown State defensive end Derek Rivers will likely miss his rookie season with the New England Patriots. ESPN reports he tore his ACL and sprained the LCL in his left knee.

R i v e r s went down d u r i n g a k ickof f d r i l l o n We d n e s -day i n a joint prac-tice with the Houston Texans at The Greenbrier in White Sul-phur Springs, W.Va. The Patriots play the Texans in Houston on Saturday. ESPN reported that Rivers will get a second opinion to determine whether surgery is needed.

Rivers declined to com-ment when reached Fri-

day night.Rivers was a third round

pick — 83rd overall — in the 2017 NFL Draft. He is the Penguins’ all-time leader in sacks with 41 during his YSU career. In his f inal season in Youngstown last year, he had a school-record nine 19 sacks as the Pen-guins made the Football Championship Subdivi-sion championship game, losing to James Madison, 28-14.

He was YSU’s fi rst draft pick since Harry Deli-gianis in 1998 and the sec-ond-highest pick in school history behind Ron Jawor-ski at 37th overall.

TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE

ROUND 2TODAY

Tippecanoe �

Country Club: 10 a.m.

Avalon Lakes � , 10:40 a.m.

Youngstown �

Country Club: 11 a.m.

Oak Tree Country �

Club: 2 p.m.

FINALSUNDAY

The Lake Club � : 9 a.m.

MOREComplete fi rst- �

round scores, B3Photo gallery �

online at Vindy.com

Fortunatebounce

has Jonescontending

MORE THAN 14,000 VALLEY GOLFERS SERVED

88

HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER

FOOTBALL

Ex-YSU starlikely to miss 2017 season

Mooney’s Wolletscores two goalsvs. South Range

See SOCCER, B2

See GREATEST, B3

OFF OFF TO A TO A

GREAT GREAT STARTSTART

MOONEY 4 SOUTH RANGE 0

Next: Cardinal Mooney at Carrollton, Aug. 26, 11 a.m.

Next: South Range vs. Southeast, Monday, 5 p.m.

Rivers

INSIDE�YSU will have its last scrim-mage today to work on fi lling remaining starting positions before the season begins. B2

� Katie Rogner, top, tees off onNo. 11 at Mill Creek North Course dur-ing Friday’s fi rst round of the Farmers National Bank Greatest Golfer of the Valley tournament. Rogner, playing in the Women’s Open Division, is tied for fi rst place, and also in fi rst place is Pete Mollica Men’s Open partici-pant Brandon Pluchinsky, seen above reading the No. 6 green before mak-ing his putt.

Super Seniors Age 70 Division participant Chuck Troll, right, chips onto the green �from the short rough on No. 7 of the Mill Creek South Course on Day 1 of the Greatest Golfer of the Valley Tournament. Round 2 of play is today at four sites, with the fi nals set for Sunday at The Lake Club in Poland.

ROBERT K. YOSAY | THE VINDICATOR

Cardinal Mooney’s Carolyn Kay (10) drives around Lillian Kimpel of South Range during the fi rst half of their match Friday in Beaver Township. The Cardinals shut out the Raiders, 4-0, in the season opener.

See gallery for this story

at vindy.com

ONLINEPHOTO

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

B2-08/19/17

B2 THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 SCOREBOARD WWW.VINDY.COM

SPORTSdigest

Six-run third fuels Scrappers victory

BATAVIA, N.Y.Nolan Jones hit three doubles

as the Mahoning Valley Scrap-pers shelled the Batavia Muck-dogs, 8-2.

Jones knocked home three runs off his three-extra base hits. Will Benson added a two run home run. The Scrappers scored six runs in the third inning while building a 7-0 lead. The Muck-dogs got on the scoreboard with two runs in the ninth inning.

Gregori Vasquez struck out four and walked one to pick up a win for the Scrappers.

Nadal, Pliskova win doubleheaders

MASONRafael Nadal and Karolina Plisk-

ova got a doubleheader day start-ed with victories at the Western & Southern Open on Friday. The tournament’s top seeds then had only a few hours to eat, rest and prepare for quarterfi nals matches.

Nadal spent only an hour and 37 minutes on court while beat-ing fellow Spaniard Albert Ramos-Vinolas 7-6 (1), 6-2 in a match that never got started Thursday night because of rain. He was scheduled back on court fi ve hours later to face Nick Kyrgios.

“And now another very, very diffi cult match,” Nadal said as he left the court.

Nadal took time to mention the attack in Barcelona the previ-ous day that left 13 people dead, which was weighing on his mind during the busy day.

“Everyone is very, very sad,” Nadal said. “I don’t have words to say. ... All my support to Barce-lona, and especially to the people that are suff ering a lot, for all the families of the victims.”

Kyle Busch wins19th NASCAR race

BRISTOL, TENN.Kyle Busch

continued his domination at Bristol Motor Speedway with a victory Friday night in the Xfi nity Series race. The win was the 19th national series victory at Bristol for Busch, who also won the Truck Series race Wednesday night. And just like that win, Busch had to overcome a speeding penalty on pit road to get to Victory Lane.

Busch won the fi rst stage of the race and was then popped for speeding. He drove from 29th in line to the lead in 58 laps after the penalty, and won the second stage. Busch then drove away to an easy 91st career win in the Xfi nity Series.

He had one brief challenge, on a restart with nine laps remain-ing, but easily got by Daniel Su-arez and wasn’t challenged.

Rookie Erik Jones wins fi rst Cup Series pole

BRISTOL, TENN.Erik Jones has won the fi rst

Cup Series pole of his career with a quick run at Bristol Motor Speedway. Jones turned a lap at 128.082 mph around the high-banked bullring to take the top starting spot for Saturday night’s race. Jones, a rookie who drives for Furniture Row Racing, bumped Kyle Larson from the pole.

Larson qualifi ed second at 128.057 to continue his hot streak. He won Sunday at Michi-gan, where he beat Furniture Row teammates Jones and Martin Truex Jr. on the fi nal restart for his third victory of the year.

Kasey Kahne qualifi ed third and was followed by Hendrick Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott. Matt Kenseth was fi fth, followed by Truex and Denny Hamlin as Toyota drivers took four of the top seven spots.

PSU coach Franklin inks new contract

STATE COLLEGE, PA. Penn State

football coach James Franklin has signed a con-tract extension that guarantees him $34.7 million through 2022.

According to terms released by Penn State on Friday, the deal is worth an average of $5.78 million annually and contains up to $1 million in incentive bonuses each year. The extension modifi es the initial six-year contract Frank-lin signed when he was hired in 2014. That contract was to pay him $4.6 million this year.

After back-to-back 7-6 seasons in Franklin’s fi rst two years in Happy Valley, the Nittany Lions won the Big Ten last year.

Staff /wire report

TV & RADIOTODAY

7:25 a.m. (NBCSN) Soccer: Swansea vs. Manchester United, Premier League.

8 a.m. (GC) Women’s golf: LPGA Tour Solheim Cup.

9:30 a.m. (FS1) Soccer: Wolfsburg vs. Borussia Dortmund, Bundesliga.

9:55 a.m. (NBCSN) Soccer: Premier League.

Noon (19) Golf: U.S. Amateur.Noon (ESPN2) Tennis: Western &

Southern Open.12:30 p.m. (21) Soccer: Stoke City

vs. Arsenal, Premier League.12:30 p.m. (FS1) Soccer: Schalke 04

vs. Leipzig, Bundesliga.1 p.m. (27) CrossFit Games (record-

ed).1 p.m. (ESPN) Baseball: Little League World Series international elimination game.

1 p.m. (Mav) Motocross.1 p.m. (NBCSN) Auto racing: IRL

qualifying.1 p.m. (TNN) Tennis: Cincinnati.2 p.m. (MLBN) MLB: Blue Jays at

Cubs.3 p.m. (27) Golf: PGA Tour

Wyndham Championship.3 p.m. (33) Baseball: Little League

World Series U.S. elimination game.

3 p.m. (NFLN) NFL preseason: Panthers at Titans.

4 p.m. (ATT) (WLLF-FM 96.7) MLB: Cardinals at Pirates.

4 p.m. (ESPN) Soccer: MLS.4 p.m. (FSN Ohio) Horse racing:

Alabama Stakes.4 p.m. (FS1) MLB: Dodgers at

Tigers.4 p.m. (GC) Golf: Champions Tour

Dick’s Sporting Goods Open.6 p.m. (ESPN) Baseball: Little

League World Series international elimination game.

7 p.m. (21) (WBBG-GM 106.1) Auto racing: NASCAR Monster Energy Cup.

7 p.m. (CBSSN) Lacrosse: MLL championship.

7 p.m. (ESPN2) Tennis: Western & Southern Open.

7 p.m. (ESPNU) High school basketball.

7 p.m. (MLBN) MLB: Yankees at Red Sox.

7 p.m. (NFLN) NFL: Colts at Cowboys.

7 p.m. (STO) (WKBN-AM 570) MLB: Indians at Royals.

7 p.m. (WBBW-AM 1240) Baseball: Scrappers at West Virginia Black Bears.

7:30 p.m. (ATT) MLB: “Inside Pirates Baseball.”

8 p.m. (ESPN) Baseball: Little League World Series U.S. elimina-tion game.

9 p.m. (NBCSN) Women’s gymnas-tics: P&G Championships.

10 p.m. (ESPN) Boxing: Crawford vs. Indongo.

10 p.m. (MLBN) MLB: Nationals at Padres or Brewers at Rockies.

10 p.m. (NFLN) NFL preseason: Broncos at 49ers.

SUNDAY 7 a.m. (GC) Golf: European Tour Paul

Lawrie Match Play.8:25 a.m. (NBCSN) Soccer:

Huddersfi eld vs. Newcastle United, Premier League.

9:30 a.m. (FS1) Soccer: Freiburg vs. Eintracht Frankfurt, Bundesliga.

10 a.m. (ESPN2) Baseball: Little League World Series international double elimination game.

10:55 a.m. (NBCSN) Soccer: Tottenham vs. Chelsea, Premier League.

11 a.m. (ESPN) Baseball: Little League World Series U.S. double elimination game.

Noon (ESPN2) Baseball: Junior League World Series fi nal.

Noon (FS1) Soccer: Borussia Mönchengladbach vs. Cologne, Bundesliga.

Noon (GC) Women’s golf: LPGA Tour Solheim Cup.

Noon (TNN) Tennis: Cincinnati.1 p.m. (21) Women’s gymnastics:

P&G Championships (recorded). 1 p.m. (27) Bull riding: PBR

(recorded).1 p.m. (33) Baseball: Little League

World Series international double elimination game.

1 p.m. (SECN) College women’s soccer.

1:30 p.m. (TBS) MLB: Yankees at Red Sox.

2 p.m. (ESPN) Baseball: Little League World Series U.S. double elimination game.

2 p.m. (ESPN2) Tennis: Western & Southern Open.

2 p.m. (FS1) Drag racing: NHRA.2 p.m. (STO) (WKBN-AM 570) MLB:

Indians at Royals.2:30 p.m. (21) Beach volleyball: AVP

Manhattan Beach.2:30 p.m. (Mav) Auto racing: ARCA

Herr’s Potato Chips 100.2:30 p.m. (NBCSN) Auto racing: IRL

ABC Supply 500.3 p.m. (27) Golf: PGA Tour

Wyndham Championship.4 p.m. (ESPN2) Tennis: Western &

Southern Open.4 p.m. (GC) Golf: Champions Tour

Dick’s Sporting Goods Open.4 p.m. (MyYTV) (NFLN) (WNIO-AM

1390) NFL preseason: Falcons at Steelers.

4 p.m. (WBBW-AM 1240) Baseball: Scrappers at West Virginia Black Bears.

4:30 p.m. (19) Golf: U.S. Amateur.6:30 p.m. (FS1) Soccer: Minnesota

United at Seattle Sounders, MLS.7 p.m. (ESPN) (WLLF-FM 96.7)

MLB: Cardinals vs. Pirates at Williamsport.

8 p.m. (NFLN) NFL preseason: Saints at Chargers.

PRO GOLF RESULTSPGA-WYNDHAM CHAMPIONSHIP

FridayAt Sedgefi eld Country Club

Greensboro, N.C.Purse: $5.8 million

Yardage: 7,130; Par: 70Second Round

Ryan Armour 66-61 — 127Webb Simpson 63-64 — 127Henrik Stenson 62-66 — 128Vaughn Taylor 63-66 — 129Ollie Schniederjans 66-63 — 129Hunter Mahan 65-65 — 130Kevin Na 67-63 — 130Davis Love III 64-66 — 130Johnson Wagner 67-64 — 131Harold Varner III 63-68 — 131Sam Saunders 63-68 — 131Shane Lowry 67-64 — 131Anirban Lahiri 65-66 — 131Sxren Kjeldsen 69-63 — 132Russell Knox 66-66 — 132Cameron Smith 63-69 — 132Ryan Moore 67-65 — 132Rick Lamb 64-68 — 132Ben Crane 69-64 — 133Brad Fritsch 67-66 — 133Steven Alker 68-65 — 133Richy Werenski 67-66 — 133Jason Dufner 67-66 — 133Matt Every 61-72 — 133Rory Sabbatini 65-68 — 133Tim Wilkinson 63-70 — 133Martin Flores 64-70 — 134Padraig Harrington 66-68 — 134Mark Hubbard 67-67 — 134Julian Etulain 68-66 — 134Lucas Glover 65-69 — 134Steven Bowditch 68-66 — 134Chad Campbell 67-67 — 134Mark Wilson 65-69 — 134Bobby Wyatt 66-68 — 134Dru Love 67-67 — 134Harris English 68-67 — 135K.J. Choi 68-67 — 135Bud Cauley 67-68 — 135Joel Dahmen 67-68 — 135David Hearn 67-68 — 135D.A. Points 69-66 — 135John Huh 68-67 — 135Jonathan Byrd 68-68 — 136Morgan Hoffmann 66-70 — 136Dicky Pride 66-70 — 136Tag Ridings 66-70 — 136Keegan Bradley 68-68 — 136Geoff Ogilvy 70-66 — 136Robert Streb 66-70 — 136Brian Gay 71-65 — 136Kevin Kisner 69-67 — 136Camilo Villegas 68-68 — 136Jonathan Randolph 66-70 — 136Andres Gonzales 70-66 — 136Ricky Barnes 69-67 — 136Chez Reavie 66-70 — 136J.J. Henry 66-70 — 136Nick Taylor 68-68 — 136Peter Malnati 71-65 — 136Stuart Appleby 68-68 — 136Spencer Levin 68-68 — 136Blayne Barber 69-67 — 136Brett Stegmaier 70-66 — 136J.T. Poston 67-69 — 136Tyrone Van Aswegen 71-66 — 137Kevin Streelman 68-69 — 137Aaron Baddeley 69-68 — 137Troy Merritt 67-70 — 137Bill Haas 73-64 — 137Jason Kokrak 68-69 — 137C.T. Pan 67-70 — 137J.J. Spaun 71-66 — 137Zac Blair 69-68 — 137Miguel Angel Carballo 68-69 — 137Michael Kim 66-71 — 137Ryo Ishikawa 66-71 — 137Patton Kizzire 67-70 — 137Retief Goosen 72-65 — 137Billy Horschel 67-70 — 137Gonzalo Fdez-Castano 69-68 — 137Ken Duke 68-69 — 137Roberto Castro 69-68 — 137Seamus Power 67-70 — 137Ryan Brehm 68-69 — 137

Failed to make the cutScott Brown 71-67 — 138Jonas Blixt 68-70 — 138Grayson Murray 70-68 — 138Brett Drewitt 68-70 — 138Kevin Tway 72-66 — 138Billy Hurley III 70-68 — 138Kyle Stanley 70-68 — 138Brian Campbell 63-75 — 138Seung-Yul Noh 69-70 — 139Tommy Gainey 68-71 — 139Andres Romero 68-71 — 139Chris Stroud 71-68 — 139Cameron Tringale 71-68 — 139Tyler Aldridge 68-71 — 139Trey Mullinax 68-71 — 139Luke Donald 69-70 — 139Graeme McDowell 71-68 — 139Ted Purdy 67-72 — 139Matt Jones 72-68 — 140Nick Watney 70-70 — 140Smylie Kaufman 71-69 — 140Tim Herron 68-72 — 140Daniel Summerhays 67-73 — 140Hao Tong Li 73-67 — 140Brandon Hagy 70-70 — 140Mark Anderson 67-73 — 140Greg Owen 68-72 — 140Brendon de Jonge 70-70 — 140Cameron Percy 75-65 — 140Bob Estes 69-71 — 140Scott Stallings 72-69 — 141Emiliano Grillo 68-73 — 141Danny Lee 70-71 — 141Alex Cejka 70-71 — 141Greg Chalmers 71-70 — 141Arjun Atwal 69-72 — 141Sebastian Muqoz 71-70 — 141Brad Miller 71-70 — 141Jason Widener 73-68 — 141Chesson Hadley 67-74 — 141Brian Stuard 72-69 — 141William McGirt 68-73 — 141Shane Bertsch 75-66 — 141Tom Hoge 69-72 — 141Chad Collins 72-70 — 142Andrew Loupe 66-76 — 142Shawn Stefani 74-68 — 142Savio Nazareth 70-72 — 142Ryan Blaum 72-70 — 142Ryan Palmer 72-71 — 143Y.E. Yang 70-73 — 143James Hahn 69-74 — 143Nicholas Lindheim 71-72 — 143Hiroshi Iwata 70-74 — 144Byeong Hun An 71-73 — 144Whee Kim 72-72 — 144Willy Wilcox 71-73 — 144Cody Gribble 74-71 — 145Brian Davis 72-73 — 145Jason Bohn 68-77 — 145Carl Pettersson 72-73 — 145

Sam Horsfi eld 76-69 — 145Kyle Reifers 70-77 — 147Troy Kelly 75-74 — 149Ryan Ruffels 77-72 — 149Max Homa 75-79 — 154

DICK’S SPORTING GOODS OPEN Friday

At En-Joie GCEndicott, N.Y.

Purse: $2 millionYardage: 6,974; Par: 72 (37-35)

First RoundKevin Sutherland 33-32 — 65Wes Short, Jr. 34-31 — 65Mark Brooks 32-34 — 66Russ Cochran 37-29 — 66Corey Pavin 34-32 — 66Colin Montgomerie 35-31 — 66Fran Quinn 34-33 — 67Joey Sindelar 33-34 — 67Woody Austin 34-33 — 67Billy Andrade 32-35 — 67Jerry Smith 35-32 — 67John Daly 36-32 — 68Mark Calcavecchia 34-34 — 68Scott Parel 37-32 — 69Tom Byrum 34-35 — 69Billy Mayfair 34-35 — 69Larry Mize 34-35 — 69Steve Pate 35-34 — 69Bart Bryant 35-34 — 69Paul Goydos 35-34 — 69Kenny Perry 37-32 — 69Bernhard Langer 35-34 — 69Tommy Tolles 37-33 — 70Paul McGinley 35-35 — 70Peter Jacobsen 36-34 — 70Jay Don Blake 36-34 — 70Tim Petrovic 37-33 — 70Gary Hallberg 36-34 — 70Glen Day 36-34 — 70Jesper Parnevik 35-35 — 70Paul Broadhurst 34-36 — 70Stephen Ames 38-32 — 70Doug Garwood 35-35 — 70Jay Haas 34-36 — 70Phillip Price 35-36 — 71James Kingston 35-36 — 71Michael Bradley 36-35 — 71Rod Spittle 36-35 — 71Dan Forsman 36-35 — 71Jim Carter 38-33 — 71John Huston 34-37 — 71Brad Bryant 38-33 — 71Mike Goodes 37-34 — 71Fred Funk 34-37 — 71Jose Maria Olazabal 37-34 — 71Duffy Waldorf 37-34 — 71Scott McCarron 35-36 — 71Gene Sauers 35-36 — 71David Frost 36-35 — 71Bobby Gage 37-35 — 72Skip Kendall 37-35 — 72Steve Flesch 36-36 — 72Todd Hamilton 37-35 — 72Tommy Armour III 37-35 — 72Loren Roberts 38-34 — 72Willie Wood 38-34 — 72Jeff Sluman 37-35 — 72Marco Dawson 36-36 — 72Esteban Toledo 36-36 — 72Ian Woosnam 36-36 — 72Olin Browne 38-34 — 72Miguel Angel Jimenez 36-36 — 72Scott Dunlap 36-36 — 72Brandt Jobe 37-36 — 73Jeff Maggert 38-35 — 73Joe Durant 36-37 — 73Miguel Angel Martin 37-37 — 74Eric Egloff 37-37 — 74Craig Parry 39-35 — 74Blaine McCallister 40-34 — 74Tom Pernice Jr. 38-36 — 74Bob Friend 36-39 — 75Bob Gilder 37-38 — 75Mark O’Meara 37-38 — 75Craig Stadler 40-36 — 76Steve Lowery 41-36 — 77Tom Kite 39-38 — 77Michael Allen 40-37 — 77

FIJI INTERNATIONALFriday

At Natadola Bay GCNatadola Bay, FijiPurse: $1.2 million

Yardage: 7,191; Par: 72Second Round

Gavin Green, Malaysia 68-69 — 137Scott Hend, Australia 71-66 — 137Jason Norris, Australia 69-68 — 137Daniel Pearce, N. Zealand 66-71 — 137Peter Wilson, Australia 68-71 — 139David McKenzie, Australia 68-71 — 139Adam Bland, Australia 68-71 — 139Stephen Leaney, Australia 71-69 — 140Harry Bateman, N.Zealand 74-66 — 140Chris Gaunt, Australia 70-70 — 140Wade Ormsby, Australia 69-71 — 140Angel Cabrera, Argentina 72-69 — 141Michael Sim, Australia 69-72 — 141Damien Jordan, Australia 72-69 — 141Rahil Gangjee, India 69-72 — 141Scott Vincent, Zimbabwe 73-68 — 141James Marchesani, Astrlia 71-70 — 141Jason Scrivener, Australia 70-71 — 141

AlsoVijay Singh, Fiji 71-72 — 143Casey O’Toole, US 76-70 — 146

Missed cutSam Chien, US 74-74 — 148Johannes Veerman, US 78-77 — 155

SOLHEIM CUPFriday

At Des Moines Golf & Country ClubWest Des Moines, IowaYardage: 6,894; Par: 73

UNITED STATES 5 1⁄2, EUROPE 2 1⁄2Foursomes (Morning)

Europe 2 1⁄2, United States 1 1⁄2Mel Reid and Charley Hull, Europe, vs. Cristie Kerr and Lexi Thompson, United States, halved.Danielle Kang and Lizette Salas, United States, def. Carlota Ciganda and Caroline Masson, Europe, 1 upAnna Nordqvist and Georgia Hall, Europe, def. Paula Creamer and Austin Ernst, United States, 3 and 1Karine Icher and Catriona Matthew, Europe, def. Stacy Lewis and Gerina Piller, United States, 1 upFourball (Afternoon)

United States 4, Europe 0Michelle Wie and Danielle Kang, United States, def. Madelene Sagstrom and Jodi Ewart Shadoff, Europe, 3 and 1Angel Yin and Lizette Salas, United States, def. Carlota Ciganda and Emily Pedersen, Europe, 6 and 5Brittany Lincicome and Brittany Lang, United States, def. Florentyna Parker and Caroline Masson, Europe, 3 and 2Stacy Lewis and Gerina Piller, United States, def. Charley Hull and Georgia Hall, Europe, 2 and 1

By DAN [email protected]

YOUNGSTOWNThe Youngstown State

football team has one more scrimmage scheduled before the start of the upcoming se-mester. Today at 10 a.m., the Penguins will compete in a scrimmage to help fi ll in the available starting positions before the season begins.

Players from both sides of the ball said the scrimmage will have one main goal — work on the finer points and essential skills for each posi-tion.

Linebacker Armand Dello-vade said the defensive play-ers need to specifi cally work on tackling because it’s the only time the defense can hit without worrying about injuring a teammate.

“I think the main thing is tackling,” Dellovade said. “During training camp, there are times where you don’t know if you want to lighten off and not tackle or if you want to tackle and risk people getting hurt. But tomorrow the big emphasis is going to be on tackling and getting people running around.”

The offense has struggled during the past couple days of camp. But the offense and defense were more evenly matched Friday—especial-ly on the offensive and de-fensive lines. The offensive

line opened holes in the run game, while the defensive line created pressure on passing plays.

Running back Joe Alessi said the offense needs to work on the basics during the scrimmage. He said the offense is starting to come together but the group will continue to progress during the rest of camp.

“[We’re trying to work on] executing, cutting down on mental and physical errors,” Alessi said. “Right now we’re in a bit of a rut. We need to get up and get going, but I think we’ll be fi ne. We just need to cut down on our errors.”

Alessi said the offense will be OK because players are starting to understand their roles and what is required more and more every day.

YSU head coach Bo Pelini said the team will focus on the little details for the rest of camp. He said the little things can always be im-proved and become more consistent.

“It’s no different from what we’ve been doing. I want to see guys, individuals as a group, communication getting bet-ter,” Pelini said. “I want to see the effi ciency getting better, less missed assignments and guys taking their coaching to the practice field. If they do that and guys keep making progress, that’s all you can ask for at this point.”

Alessi said the scrimmage provides a chance to younger players to process the game in a practice situation. He said scrimmages allow players to understand their reads and

assignments in a “game-like” environment before contrib-uting in real games.

Dellovade said the scrim-mage is important for the play-ers competing for any unde-cided positions because the team will start planning for its season opener against Pitt dur-ing the start of the semester.

He said Saturday provides an important opportunity for young players, especially since underclassmen could potentially contribute as kickoff and punt returners.

“Tomorrow’s a huge day because we’ll probably be starting practice for Pitt soon,” Dellovade said. “It’s kinda one of the last days for everyone to secure their spot. Tomorrow is defi nitely a big day for some of the new guys around here.”

HIGH SCHOOLSBOYS GOLF

MCDONALD 170, MINERAL RIDGE 197MAHONING COUNTRY CLUB (FRONT 9,

PAR 35)MCDONALD — Zavier Bokan 39, Tanner Matig 42, Ethan Domitrovich 43, Josh Werle 46.MINERAL RIDGE – Jake Sylak 37, Mark Christoff 49, Dylan Mazzupappa 52, Antonio LaMonica 59.

BROOKFIELD 160, LABRAE 212RIVERVIEW FRONT NINE

BROOKFIELD (5-0) — Conner Stevens 38, Nate Smoot 40, Justin Atkinson 38, Jonathon Hiner 44.LABRAE (3-3) — Zack Morris 44, Logan Kiser 46, Dane Sprague 58, Malakai Roberts 64.

GIRLS GOLFBOARDMAN 173, CARDINAL MOONEY 205BOARDMAN — Jenna Vivo 36, Britney Jonda 39, Emily Jackson 46, Tyler Boggs 52. MOONEY — Sophia 44, Kristen 46, Kate 52, Kelsey 63.

BOYS SOCCERGirard 8, Warren JFK 2

GIRARDSeven diff erent players scored for Girard, led by Stephen Gamble with two goals. Brennan Kuzman and Antonio Valdez notched a goal and an assist each for the In-dians. JFK’s lone goal was scored by John Michael Dianna. LaBrae 3, Brookfi eld 0Details of this game were not reported.

GIRLS SOCCERNiles 3, West Branch 0

NILESBethany Rasile had a hat trick for Niles (1-0). She got two assists from Carli Cera and one from Bella Reigle. Carolyn Thomas made fi ve saves for the Red Drag-ons. Sam Plocher made seven saves for West Branch (0-1).

GIRLS TENNISLAKEVIEW 5, AUSTINTOWN FITCH 0

Singles — Anna Garvin (L) def. Rebecca Walker (A) 6-0, 6-0; Mara Wilson (L) def. Tianna Amann (A) 6-0 , 6-0; Athena Anastasiadis (L) def. Emoni Davis (A) 6-0, 6-1.Doubles — Kaitlyn Bobeczko/Allison Bennet (L) def. Faith Land/Ashleigh Warmouth (A) 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (Tiebreaker 8-6); Makaila Hunter/Lauren Laws (L) def. Christa Schall/Kaylee Aliberti (A) 2-6, 6-2, 6-2.Record — Lakeview 2-0.

EDGEWOOD 3, NILES 2Singles — Emily Swift (N) def. Lauren massaro (E) 6-0, 6-0; Jordan Zee (L) def. Emily Ellwood (N) 6-2, 6-0; Edgewood via forfeit. Doubles — Sara Howard/Lindsey

Obermiyer (E) def. Ravyn Mehle/Jackie Wilder (N) 7-5, 6-1; Joey Gioiello/Tiffany Lewis (N) def. Alissa Bertolasio/Kora Painter (E) 7-5, 3-6, 13-11 super tiebreak.Records — Edgewood 1-2, Niles 2-2.

WEST BRANCH 4, UNITED 1Singles — Grace Maroscher (U) def. Marina Egli 6-0, 6-1; Lauren New (WB) def. Frankie Hefeinger 6-2, 6-2; Macie Schrecengost (WB) def. Lauren Hippley 6-0, 6-0. Doubles — Allison Slutz/Morgan Hovorka (WB) def. Olivia Hippley/Hannah Baker 6-0, 6-0; Ashlyn Pinkerton/Hayley Krahling (WB) def. Julia Bricker/Erica Gudat 6-0, 6-0.

SCHEDULEMONDAY

BOYS GOLFBoardman vs. Canfi eld, Tippecanoe Country Club, 8 a.m.Ursuline vs. Canfi eld, Tippecanoe Country Club, 8 a.m.Girard vs. Canfi eld, Tippecanoe Counrty Club, 8 a.m.Howland vs. Canfi eld, Tippecanoe Country Club, 8 a.m.Warren Harding vs Howland, Trumbull Country Club 4 p.m.Lowellville vs. Waterloo, Paradise Lake CC, 10 a.m.

GIRLS GOLFCanfi eld vs. Walsh Jesuit, Country Club of Hudson, 1 p.m.Champion vs. Warren Harding, Walnut Run, 4 p.m.Howland vs. Austintown Fitch, Deer Creek, 5 p.m.

GIRLS SOCCERUrsuline at Hubbard, 7 p.m. Canfi eld at West Branch, 7 p.m. Girard at Springfi eld, 7 p.m. Southeast at South Range, 5 p.m. Struthers at Columbiana, 5 p.m. Sandy Valley at Salem, 7 p.m. United at Warren JFK, 5 p.m.

VOLLEYBALLLowellville at Liberty, 5:30 p.m.

TUESDAYBOYS GOLF

Austintown Fitch vs Howland, Tamer Win, 1 p.m.Brookfi eld vs. Campbell, Yankee Run, 1:05 p.m.Girard vs Liberty, Avalon South, 3:30 p.m.Poland vs. Warren Harding, Trumbull Country Club, 4 p.m.

GIRLS GOLFColumbiana vs Howland, Tamer Win, 1 p.m.

BOYS SOCCERPoland at South Range, 7 p.m.

VOLLEYBALLSouth Range at West Branch, 5 p.m.

WEDNESDAYBOYS GOLF

Cardinal Mooney vs Austintown Fitch, Mill Creek, 4 p.m.

GIRLS GOLFCardinal Mooney vs Lakeview, Mill Creek Course, 4 p.m.Warren Harding vs Struthers, Walnut Run, 4 p.m.

GIRLS SOCCERCrestview at Ursuline, 6 p.m. Boardman at GlenOak, 7 p.m. Hubbard at Girard, 7 p.m. Salem at Niles, 7 p.m. Springfi eld at Leetonia, 5 p.m. Marlington at South Range, 7 p.m.

SPORTS BY THE NUMBERS

$176MSource: Associated Press

Bundesliga club Borus-sia Dortmund’s asking price for forward Ous-mane Dembele.

“I think the source was what, Happy Gilmore or something? C’mon, let’s use a little bit of common sense.”

QUOTABLE

JAMES HARRISON, Steelers LB, on a false story stating he would harm players pro-testing the national anthem:

Critical scrimmage for Penguins today

game jitters. “There’s a lot that we need

to work on,” Beck said. “With that being said, I have high expectations [for the sea-son].”

“I was nervous at fi rst be-cause it was all brand new,” Wollet said. ”But I’m a lot more comfortable now and I love all my teammates.”

With the Cardinals lead-ing 2-0 at the half, the Raid-ers ran onto the field with more aggression and the ea-gerness to make a comeback and win in the second half.

“They’ve got to be more aggressive. More aggressive to the ball, win the ball, ag-gressive on offense and ag-gressive on defense,” South Range head coach Paul Lindstrom said.

Lindstrom said his biggest challenge this season is get-

ting all of the girls playing time. The Raiders have 14 new players and a roster that has grown to 30.

Less than seven minutes in the second half, Wollet scored her second goal of the game with an assist from Evans.

“My teammates defi nitely helped me, Bre and I work well together,” Wollet said. “I couldn’t have gotten the goals without my team-mates.”

Evans scored the last goal of the game with less than 20 minutes left in the second half.

South Range goalie Eliza-beth Veneskey fi nished with nine saves.

“I’m looking forward to a good year — I see it playing out well,” Lindstrom said. “We have great girls with great attitudes with athletic ability.”

SOCCERContinued from B1

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EMAIL: [email protected] GOLF THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 B3

my ball striking was really good today.”

In Women’s Open play, Angela Molaskey, a teacher in the East Palestine School System, is tied with Katie Rogner for the top spot after both carded 79s.

“This is my fi rst time playing in the Greatest and except for a few drives, was happy with my play,” she said. “I left a few shots on the course and had a couple double bogeys I wished I didn’t have, but my putting really saved me.”

Her second round takes place today at Oak Tree Country Club.

In other action, Don Ferko III (Tippecanoe Country Club) and Jonathan Sliwin-ski (Tamer Win Golf and Country Club) each carded 75 to sit atop the leader board in Men’s 5-8 while Peter Margiotta (Knoll Run Golf Course) shot 76 to sit atop the Men’s 9-12 division.

The big number of the day was Pluchinsky’s. And it was almost bigger.

“I fi nished bogey-bogey and to me, the ninth hole (his last of the day) is the toughest on the course,” he said. “It’s a hole that he says commands a golfer’s full attention. I just didn’t fi nish like I had hoped.

“Shooting 64 on any course is a great round, but today it just wasn’t meant to be.”

Pluchinsky is looking forward to his second round today at Oak Tree Country Club.

Former Greatest champ Jonah Karzmer sits just behind Jones at 70.

A total of 306 golfers entered this year’s 10 divi-sions — the second largest fi eld ever.

With Mill Creek Golf Course serving as their home course, Joe Bellino’s 74 places him at the top of

the Men’s Seniors 10+ divi-sion while George Kelly’s 72 helped him forge a tie with fellow Mill Creek golfer Bob Leonard for the top spot in the Super Seniors division.

“I couldn’t believe it, but I hit every fairway,” Kelly said. “I also hit 13 greens in regulation and when you do that, you’re going to score well. Add in a couple bird-ies and it was a good, solid round for me.”

In the Ladies 9-plus division, Toni Notaro’s 77 placed her seven strokes ahead of Abby Cook (Pine Lakes Golf Course). No-taro plays out of Salem Golf Course.

Corey Susany (Reserve Run Golf Course) registered a 79 to pace those in the Men’s 13-16 division while an 80 by Paul Marovich (Rolling Hills Golf Course) has him the leader by a stroke in the Men-17 divi-sion.

Brian Tolnar, Mill Creek PGA director of golf, added that this year’s fi eld is once again very competitive.

“It’s always awesome to host the event because it’s one of the very best, not just locally but in the entire country. Other communi-ties need to take note of the fi rst-class operation that this has become,” Tolnar

said. “Mill Creek is happy to be

a part of it and for what it does for amateur golf in the Mahoning Valley.”

The 54-hole competi-tion continues today with second-round play slated for Avalon Golf and Country Club, Oak Tree Country Club, Youngtown Coun-try Club and Tippecanoe Country Club serving as host sites.

The fi eld will then be pared to 96 for Sunday’s championship round at The Lake Club.

All locations are free for the public to come watch.

MILL CREEK NORTH COURSEMEN 17 HANDICAP

Paul Marovich, Rolling Hills Golf Course 80Ryan Collins, Mahoning Country Club 81David Magura Jr., Salem Hills Golf and Country Club 82Jay Moore, Avalon at Squaw Creek 82Andrew Smyczynski, Mill Creek Golf Course 82Tim Weaver, Reserve Run Golf Course 84Jason Barnot, Mahoning Country Club 85Brian Cross, Tippecanoe Country Club 85John Elias, Tippecanoe Country Club 87Dean Harris, Mill Creek Golf Course 88Scott Carpenter, Flying B Golf Course 89Garrett Mcintyre, Flying B Golf Course 90Chuck Briel, The Links at Firestone Farms 91Ron Merrell, Oak Tree Country Club 91Ron Voytko 91AJ Balog, Mill Creek Golf Course 93James Gorman, Reserve Run Golf Course 93Corey Keller, Mill Creek Golf Course 93Christopher Burke, Tamer Win Golf and Country Club 94Brian Houser, Yankee Run Golf Course 94Tom Leenheer, Squaw Creek Country Club 95Lance Price Youngstown CC 95Mike Case, Mill Creek Golf Course 97Bradley Bietsch The Links at Firestone Farms 97Dave Novak, Reserve Run Golf Course 97Tom Miokovic, Knoll Run Golf Course 102Stephen Zubyk, Yankee Run Golf Course 107

MEN 9-12 HANDICAPPeter Margiotta, Knoll Run Golf Course 76Paul Harris, Mahoning Country Club 78Matt Diloreto, Mill Creek Golf Course 79James La Polla, Trumbull Country Club 79Matt May, The Links at Firestone Farms 79Alex Waggoner, Salem Hills Golf Course 79Andy Zabel, Lake Club 80John Lewis, Tamer Win Golf and Country Club 81Mark Standohar, Yankee Run Golf Course 81Michael Maiella, Oak Tree Country Club 82Carmine Petrillo, Mill Creek Golf Course 82Ray Polombi, Vagabond 82Dante Spurio, Mill Creek Golf Course 82William Stanton, Reserve Run Golf Course 82Phil Eubank, Mill Creek Golf Course 83William Heid, Mill Creek Golf Course 83Bradley Koch, Mill Creek Golf Course 83John Poultney, Tippecanoe Country Club 83Ron Snyder, Lake Club 83Kevin Soltis, Lake Club 83Thom Begeot, Deer Creek Golf Course 84Mark Billy, Tippecanoe Country Club 84Joe Costantini 84Matt Dobos, Avalon at Squaw Creek 84Lawson Dripps, Tippecanoe Country Club 84Scott Jones Sr., The Links at Firestone Farms 84Jason Lenzi, Mill Creek Golf Course 84Robert Serich, Mill Creek Golf Course 84Stephen Sofocleous, Lake Club 84Ben Basista, Mill Creek Golf Course 85Samuel Bellino, Pine Lakes Golf Course 85Larry J. Gessner, Tippecanoe Country Club 85Gregory Iaderosa, Tippecanoe Country Club 85Michael Pfund, Vagabond 85Bob Tinney, Kennsington Golf Club & Grille 85Vincent Dipasqua, Mill Creek Golf Course 86Dominic Fabiilli, Kennsington Golf Club & Grille 86Bob Fronius, Mill Creek Golf Course 86Hank Morris, Mill Creek Golf Course 86Dave Tabak Sr., Knoll Run Golf Course 86Joe Alfano Jr., Bedford Trails Public Golf Course 87Jason Collins, Mahoning Country Club 87Joseph Didomenico, Tippecanoe Country Club 87Kyle Frazier, Vagabond 87Eugene Hazy 87Jim Kinney 87Daniel Martin, Mill Creek Golf Course 87Mason Morell, Knoll Run Golf Course 87Jason Schafer, Flying B Golf Course 87Raymond Beach, Mill Creek Golf Course 88Dyland Portolese, Salem Hills Golf Course 88Joey Ragazzine, Mahoning Country Club 88Michael Sawayda, Candywood Golf Course 88Mike Howe, Mill Creek Golf Course 89Ed Nappi, Lake Club 89Donald Newell, Oak Tree Country Club 89Justin Staub, Pine Lakes Golf Course 89George Wrataric, Pine Lakes Golf Course 89Joseph Alfano, Bedford Trails Public Golf Course 90James Carpenter, Yankee Run Golf Course 90Daniel Diloreto, Lake Club 90Dennis Schiraldi, Lake Club 90Gene Skelley, Reserve Run Golf Course 91Bill Vrontos, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 91Jamie Palumbo, Oak Tree Country Club 92Jerry Ferrell Sr., Mill Creek Golf Course 93Anthony Petrillo, Mill Creek Golf Course 97Matt Mowery, Salem Hills Golf and Country Club 98Ben Habuda, Knoll Run Golf Course 99George Millich, Avalon at Squaw Creek 101Patrick Sanders, Parto’s Driving Range 107

PETE MOLLICA MEN’S OPEN DIVISIONBrandon Pluchinsky, Mill Creek Golf Course 66Scotty Jones, East Palestine Country Club 68Jonah Karzmer, Lake Club 70Joe Dimuccio, Sylvan Heights 72Ken Keller, Mill Creek Golf Courser-South 72Joey Cilone, Lake Club 72Trevor Jones, Yankee Run Golf Course 72Brian Newell, Oak Tree Country Club 72Joshua Zarlenga, Youngstown Country Club 72Bryan Horne, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 74Nolan Snyder, Salem Hills Golf Course 74Richard Marlowe, Tippecanoe Country Club 75John Doughton III, Doughton Golf Course 75Joshua Latore, Sylvan Heights Golf Course 75Michael Porter, Tippecanoe Country Club 75Pete Bernat, Mill Creek Golf Course 76Taylor Hall, Copeland Hills Golf Club 78Vince Goleno 79Lake Janci, Valley Golf 79Scott Porter, Tippecanoe Country Club 79Gregg Rossi, Youngstown Country Club 79John Hazy, Mill Creek Golf Course 80Bob Tinkey, Mill Creek Golf Course 81Joe Shushok, Mill Creek Golf Course 81Weston Wagner, Reserve Run Golf Course 81Victor Daprile, Mill Creek Golf Course 82Zach Jacobson, Mill Creek Golf Course 82Steve Smoot, Yankee Run Golf Course 82

William Wyant, East Palestine Country Club 82Will Klucinec, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 83Dave Howard, Rolling Hills Golf Course 83Jason Murdock, Mill Creek Golf Course 83Jeff Wilkins, Tippecanoe Country Club 83John Perry, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 84David Kilgore, Salem Golf Club 86Ethan Thomas, Mill Creek Golf Course 88Jasoh Dankovich, Flying B Golf Course 89Kyle Gruszecki , Valley Golf Club 91Todd Tresino, Old Dutch Golf Course 100

WOMEN 9 HANDICAPToni Notaro, Salem Golf Club 77Abby Cook, Pine Lakes Golf Course 84Joan Ash, Mill Creek Golf Course 85Marilyn Woods, Yankee Run Golf Course 90Pamela Porter, Lake Club 91

WOMEN OPEN-8 HANDICAPAngela Molaskey, Knoll Run 79Katie Rogner, Yankee Run Golf Course 79

MILL CREEK SOUTH COURSEMEN 13-16 HANDICAP

Corey Susany, Reserve Run Golf Course 79Paul Parteleno, Parto’s Driving Range 81Bob Brown, Yankee Run Golf Course 84Raymond Duffett, Tippecanoe Country Club 84Robert Vrabel Jr., Mill Creek Golf Course 84Jeff Rust, The Links at Firestone Farms 85Hunter Todd, Mill Creek Golf Course 85William Klim, Lake Club 86Drew Skelley, Reserve Run Golf Course 86John Mayo, Tippecanoe Country Club 86John Rudolph, Bedford Trails Golf Course 86Jeffrey Blaze, Reserve Run Golf Course 87Dan Horacek, Lakeside Golf Course 87Cody Vocature, Mill Creek Golf Course 87Joe Ducay, Mill Creek Golf Course 88Dave Popovec, Mill Creek Golf Course 88Tony Amendola, Lake Club 88Gregory Zinni, Tippecanoe Country Club 88Domenic Carano, Mill Creek Golf Course 89Robert Donadee, Mill Creek Golf Course 90Brian Sterling, Mill Creek Golf Course 90Wayne Craig, Mill Creek Golf Course 90Bill Shovlin, Oak Tree Country Club 91Michael Missik, Deer Creek Golf Course 91Robert Kapalko, Pine Lakes Golf Course 91Dane Stilgenbauer, Mill Creek Golf Course 91Brad Bahler, Pine Lakes Golf Course 92Josh Marsh, Pine Lakes Golf Course 92Vince Palmer, Pine Lakes Golf Course 92Michael Ramun, Mill Creek Golf Course 92Michael Skelly, Kennsington Golf Club & Grille 92Sean Tisone, Tippecanoe Country Club 93Joe Fanto, Lake Club 93Joey Romito, Reserve Run Golf Course 93Kenneth Wilson, Mill Creek Golf Course 94Paul Harris, Mahoning Country Club 94Mark Isaacson, Reserve Run Golf Course 94James Putko 95Jackson Monda, Tippecanoe Country Club 95Mark Frankovich 97Michael Haggerty, Tippecanoe Country Club 98Rance Garrett, Reserve Run Golf Course 99

MEN 5-8 HANDICAPDon Ferko III, Tippecanoe Country Club 75Jonathan Sliwinski, Tamer Win Golf and Country Club 75Gary Goodrick, Pine Lakes Golf Course 76Anthony Mastrangelo 76Dylan Todd, Kennsington Golf Club & Grille 76Mike Moore, Turkana Farms Golf Course 77Ryan Rygiel 77Brian Myers, Lake Club 78Vinny Gala, Old Dutch Golf Course 78Nick Landis 78Ken Sympson, Mill Creek Golf Course 78Paul Keller, The Links at Firestone Farms 79James Nolen, Walnut Run Golf Course 79Dan Ramun, Mill Creek Golf Course 79Rob Venrose, Valley Golf Club 79Jason Trolio, The Links at Firestone Farms 80Ryan Homer, Sharon Country Club 80Jordan Rogers, Mill Creek Golf Course 80Joe St. George, Mill Creek Golf Course 80Daniel Kinney, Avalon at Squaw Creek 81Ron Polinsky, Yankee Run Golf Course 81Carl Ross, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 81Jim Gaca, Kennsington Golf Club & Grille 82Brian Velasquez, Lake Club 82Joe Beeson, Pine Lakes Golf Course 83Lee Bronson, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 83Tony Sandy, Pine Lakes Golf Course 83Wendell Wagnon 84Steve Milano, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 84Dan Stanton, Salem Hills Golf and Country Club 84David Dees, Salem Hills Golf and Country Club 85Vince Gentile, Mahoning Country Club 85Bob Hall, Valley Golf Club 86Dakota Jones, Riverview Golf Course 86Leland Musguire, Mill Creek Golf Course 86Frank Popio, Lakeside Golf Course 86Keith Schubert , Yankee Run Golf Course 86Larry Serb, Hickory VFW Golf Course 86Rob Dietl, Avalon South Golf Course 87Jason Rivello, Knoll Run Golf Course 87Stephen Zubyk II, Pine Lakes Golf Course 87Marc Jakubovic, Lake Club 88Michael Guerrieri, Tippecanoe Country Club 88Mark Lapikas, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 88Monte Duncan, Mahoning Country Club 89Tony Perry, Valley Golf Club 90Eric Theodore, East Palestine Country Club 93Tim Barnes, Salem Hills Golf Course 94

SENIORS 60 10 HANDICAPJoe Bellino, Mill Creek Golf Course 74Donald Ferko Jr., Salem Hills Golf Course 75John Banyots, Lakeside Golf Course 79Roderick Cook, Yankee Run Golf Course 80John Dunn, Lake Club 80Daral Brett, Bedford Trails Public Golf Course 81Mike Headland, Mill Creek Golf Course 81Rick Istnick, Salem Hills Golf Course 81Reid Lamport, Pine Lakes Golf Course 81Leonard Schneider, Reserve Run Golf Course 81Timothy Ryan, Windmill Lakes Golf Course 82Fred Fisher, Lake Club 82Lennie Gessler, Vagabond 82

Jim St. George, Mill Creek Golf Course 82Leonard Bruno, Kennsington Golf Club & Grille 83Joe Metzinger, Mill Creek Golf Course 83Bob Chenet, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 84Gary Rouzer, Walnut Run Golf Course 84John Beard, Reserve Run Golf Course 85Joe Meyers , Mill Creek Golf Course 88Howard Chabassol, Hickory VFW Golf Course 88Rick Haldi, Mill Creek Golf Course-South 90Albert Pacella, Bedford Trails Golf Course 91Philip Regano, The Links at Firestone Farms 91Frank Davidson, Salem Golf Club 93

SENIORS 60 OPEN-9 HANDICAPRobert Gintert, Riverview Golf Course 71Frank Santisi , Kennsington Golf Club & Grille 71Thomas Shuster, Riverview Golf Course 74Gene Bellatto, Lake Club 75Chuck Montgomery, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 75Tim Porter, Tippecanoe Country Club 75David Cooper, Yankee Run Golf Course 76Bob Perry, Valley Golf Club 77Ed Seeco, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 77Glenn Milton, Avalon Inn and Resort 78Raymond Vershum, Mill Creek Golf Course-North 78Skip Watt, Tippecanoe Country Club 78Jim Cogar, Salem Hills Golf Course 80Mike Watson, Mill Creek Golf Course 81Ralph Macali, Trumbull Country Club 81Tim King, Salem Hills Golf Course 82Rick Kurth, Mill Creek Golf Course 82Edward Caggiano, Oak Tree Country Club 83Barry Piper, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 86Pete Bennett, Tippecanoe Country Club 88

SUPER SENIORS AGE 70George Kelly, Mill Creek Golf Course 72Bob Leonard, Mill Creek Golf Course-North 72Tom Syrianoudis, Old Dutch Golf Course 76Daniel Balint, Salem Hills Golf and Country Club 77Bill Bucey, The Links at Firestone Farms 78Don Sicafuse, Vagabond 78Kurt Beler, Reserve Run Golf Course 80James V. Zarlenga, Mill Creek Golf-North 80Joe Karkafi , Mill Creek Golf Course 81James Crowe, Old Dutch Golf Course 82Dominic Vechiarelli, Mill Creek Golf Course 82Gary Woods, Mill Creek Golf Course 82Patrick Cannon, Mill Creek Golf Course 83James Houp, Valley Golf Club 84Pierre Angelilli, Mill Creek Golf Course 87Vic Dechristofaro, Avalon Lakes Golf Course 87Chuck Troll, Valley Golf Club 88Bill Deal, Mill Creek Golf Course-North 100

ON THE LINKSFriday’s Results

WYNDHAM CHAMPIONSHIPGREENSBORO, N.C.

Ryan Armour shot a career-best 9-under 61 on Friday for a share of the lead with Webb Simpson after two rounds at the Wyndham Championship. Armour and Simpson were at 13-under 127 halfway through the PGA Tour’s fi nal event of the regular season. Simpson shot a 64. Henrik Stenson was a stroke behind them after a 66. Ollie Schniederjans and Vaughn Taylor and were 11. Schnieder-jans shot 63, Taylor had a 66. First-round leader Matt Every followed his 61 with a 72 to slip six strokes off the lead.

SOLHEIM CUPWEST DES MOINES, IOWA

Europe took a 2 1⁄2 — 1 1⁄2 lead over the U.S. on Friday after foursome play at the Solheim Cup. European star Anna Nor-dqvist and England’s Georgia Hall won their match by three holes. Karine Icher teamed with Catriona Matthew to beat their American counterparts by a hole. Solheim rookie Danielle Kang of the U.S. sunk a birdie putt on No. 18 to give her duo a one-hole victory. The American tandem of Lexi Thompson and Cristie Kerr birdied their fi nal two holes to halve their match with Mel Reid and Charley Hull. Opening day play will wrap up with four four-ball matchups at Des Moines Golf and Country Club.

DICK’S SPORTING GOODS OPEN

ENDICOTT, N.Y. Kevin Sutherland shot a 7-un-der 65 for a share of the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open lead Friday, three years scorching the En-Joie course for the only 59 in PGA Tour Champions history. Sutherland had eight birdies and a bogey to join Wes Short Jr. atop the fi rst-round leaderboard. Winless on the 50-and-older tour, Sutherland hit 17 of 18 greens in regula-tion on the course softened by morning rain. Short also had eight birdies and bogey. He was coming off a 62 in the fi nal round of the 3M Cham-pionship two weeks ago in Minnesota. Colin Montgomerie was a stroke back along with Mark Brooks, Russ Cochran and Corey Pavin. Montgomerie holed out from 80 yards for eagle on the par-4 10th. Joey Sindelar, from nearby Horseh-eads, had a 67. He won the PGA Tour’s B.C. Open in 1985 and 1987 at En-Joie.

FIJI INTERNATIONALNATADOLA BAY, FIJI

Scott Hend shot a 6-under 66 Friday to move into a four-way share of the lead after the second round of the Fiji International. The 44-year-old Australian was level with fi rst-round leader Daniel Pearce of New Zealand, who shot 71, and Australia’s Jason Norris and Malaysia’s Gavin Green (69 each), all with 7-under par totals of 137 on the ocean-side Natadola Bay course. The leading group had a two-stroke advantage over Australians Adam Bland, David McKenzie and Peter Wilson, who shot 71s. Three former U.S. Masters champions easily made the cut. Angel Cabrera had 69 and was at 3 under, four strokes behind. Mike Weir (71) and hometown favorite Vijay Singh (72) were at 1 under in the tournament sanctioned by the PGA Tour of Australasia, European and Asian tours.

Associated Press

INSIDE THE ROPES WITH …

Jason Kokrak

Friday: The Warren JFK graduate shot a 69 and is currently tied for 66th place after the second round of the Wyndham Championship. He made the cut by one stroke. He made two birdies and bogeyed once. Today: Kokrak tees off 8:15 a.m. His playing partner is C.T. Pan.TV: CBS coverage begins at 3 p.m.Follow Kokrak: Online at www.vindy.com/kokrak.

Associated Press/Staff report

THE GREATEST GOLFER OF THE VALLEY TOURNAMENT: DAY 1 SCORES

GREATESTContinued from B1

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

B3-08/19/17

Michael Porter misses a putt on No. 6 of the Mill Creek North Course dur-ing Friday’s fi rst round of Farmers National Bank Greatest Golfer of the Valley Tournament. Porter fi n-ished the day with a 75 and in a four-way tie for sixth in the Pete Mollica Men’s Open Division. Play contin-ues today at four Valley courses, with the champi-onship set for Sunday at The Lake Club in Poland.

DAVID DERMER THE VINDICATOR

DAVID DERMER | THE VINDICATOR

Joan Ash reacts after missing a short putt on No. 18 at Mill Creek South Course during Friday’s fi rst round of the Greatest Golfer of the Valley Tournament. Ash shot an 85 and is in third in the Women 9 Handicap Division.

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CLASSIFIEDSCORRECTIONS AND CANCELLATIONS Minor corrections and can-cellations taken until 4:30 p.m. the day before publi-cation, 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday, and 11:30 a.m. Satur-day for Monday. ALL NEW ADS MUST RUN ONE TIME BEFORE THEY CAN BE CANCELLED OR CORRECTED. Be sure to check your ad as The Vindicator will be re-sponsible for only those in-sertions where the above decisions preclude correc-tion. When cancelling an ad always ask for the “kill” num-ber. No allowance made with-out one.

The Vindicator reserves the right to not accept an adver-tiser’s order and reserves the discretion to edit, change, re-vise, or classify an ad, or can-cel a scheduled publication of an ad, even after a prior publication and regardless of whether the ad is part of a multiple insertion.

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITYWe are pledged to the letter and spirit of United States policy for the achievement of equal housing opportunity through-out the Nation. We encourage and support an affi rmative advertising and marketing program in which there are no barri-ers to obtaining housing because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin. The Vindicator will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate that violates federal or local fair housing laws.

NOTICES JOBS 1000 RENTALS

REAL ESTATE STUFF PETS AUTOS

0000

4000 6000 7000 8000

3000

Circulation Assistant/DriverPart-Time

•25 to 30 hours per week•$8.51 per hour

•Early mornings and days•Reliable vehicle

•Customer friendly personality

To apply, please call330-747-1471, ext. 1294

General Help General Help

��������Vindy Opportunities�Manage Your Own Business�

Become anIndependent Contractor Carrier

� Early morning delivery, done by 6:30 a.m. dailyand 9:00 a.m. weekends

� Must be 18 years of age� Must have reliable transportation and

proof of car insurance� Heated warehouse and table provided to

prepare product for delivery� Meet new people� Many tax advantages in operating your own business� Most newspaper routes can be completed

in 1.5-2.5 hours per day

The following route is available:Boardman area, Newport, Millcreek, Oak Knoll - Rt. 798057 - 1.5 Hours daily - 7 Miles daily - 90 Customers

$600 Estimated Monthly Income

To apply, please call330-747-1471, ext. 1294

or email:[email protected]

E.O.E. M/F/D/V

��������

General Help General Help

0000NOTICES

Special Notices

Need prayer, or a revival,or just a pastor to fill in.

Call 330-788-7588

Cemetery Lots

GREEN HAVEN MEMORI-AL GARDENS - 2 spaces available in sought after Veterans Section with FLAG and CROSS. Value $1600, will SACRIFICE for $1000. Please contactMichele @ 330-974-8218

Lost & Found

LOST - RING, gold nugget, St. Matthias Slovak festi-val, 8/13/17. Sentimental.

330-540-9980. Reward.

1000JOBS

General Help

Dancers WantedCall The Palace330-536-9266

H&R Block Open HouseRt. 224, Shops atBoardman Park

August 22nd5:00pm - 8:00pmHiring Seasonal

Tax Professionals & Office ManagersOpportunities at all

YoungstownLocations

For info call:330-550-8349

Must successfullycomplete tax course

Looking for licensed con-tractor to do 1400-1500 sq. ft. synthetic stucco job & 285-300 sq. ft. partial cul-ture stone siding, stone in-cluded. Private residence.Call 330-651-1441 or email

[email protected]

Drivers

CDL CLASS A or BDRIVERS

For residential waste and recycling collection routes. Repetitive heavy lifting. Competitive pay; Full bene-fit pkg.; Home every night.

APPLY ONLINE AT:OHIOVALLEYWASTE.COMOR IN PERSON MON.-FRI.,

9 A.M. - 3 P.M.Ohio Valley Waste

1025 Bundy Ave.Youngstown, OH

EOENO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

DRIVERS - CLASS A-CDLIndividual Drivers or teams for team op hub-hub, 1 yr. exp. or 6 mo. with approved school in last 3 yr. or 5 yr. exp. in the last 10 yrs. FedEx Ground contractor.

330-233-0483

Drivers

DRIVERSNo Tarp

OTR Class A CDL. Conesto-ga Trailer. Home weekends, 2 yrs. exp. required. Medical benefits, life insurance, paid holidays and vacation, $2000 sign on bonus.

Ravenna - 330-673-3455

Dump Drivers$2400 Sign-on Bonus

Class A CDLHome every night, newer equipment with EZ-Pass, non-Hazmat, manual shift truck. Weekly pay, direct deposit available, hospitali-zation and paid vacation.

Must have 1 year exp.Call 330-638-9936

Regional Class A Flatbed Drivers

Competitive pay, 100% com-pany paid healthcare, $2000 sign on bonus plus $3000 for experienced steel haul-ers. Earn $55,000 to $65,000 per year. Many oth-er benefits included.

Call 866-809-2194Or apply online at:ronaldgrossinc.com

Want to be your own boss?

Dream about owningyour own truck?

Want more home time?Lease to purchase a truck with no down payment.

Call Front Street Trucking330-544-9180, ext. 6

Health Care

ELCHNew Grad RN

Retention BonusEast Liverpool City Hospital is pleased top offer New Grad RNs, who have gradu-ated within the past 6 months, with a retention bonus in the amount of $4000.00 at the end of your first calendar year of em-ployment, $4000.00 at the end of your second calendar year of employment, and $4000.00 at the end of your third calendar year of em-ployment. You must remain actively employed in a full-time Registered Nurse posi-tion as of each payout date in order to receive your Re-tention Bonus payment.

Please apply online at:www.elch.org

Dental

Dental ReceptionistFull time with vacation &

401K. Experience preferred. Fax resume: 330757-2331

Skills/Trades

Diesel MechanicCompetitive paid, full bene-fits completely paid for by company. Guaranteed Christmas Bonus.

Please apply at TC Redi-Mix of New Castle

203 W. Washington St.New Castle, Pa 16101or call 724-652-7878

Skills/Trades

Jenkins Sign Company1400 Mahoning Ave.

Looking for metal fabricator able to weld aluminum/steel. Should have knowl-edge of basic hand tools/tape measure. Must have 2 yrs. exp. Must work inside shop/outside installing signs. Electrical knowledge is a plus. Will train to run CNC. Applications taken 8am-3pm, Mon.-Wed.

3000RENTALS

Apartments Furnished

Great Danes - AKC. Fawn, M & F, 12 wks., shots, $1200 & up. 814-964-7632

ApartmentsUnfurnished

Austintown Pembrook Place

Studio - $400Large 1 Bdrm. - $450

2 Bdrm. - $565Water/Sewer & Trash Paid

4150 Pembrook Dr.330-793-5022

Austintown - 4200 Pem-brook, lg. fam. & din. rm. 2 bdrm., start at $600 + elec.

Call 330-506-9956Austintown - Phoenix House Apts., 1 bdrm., 55 & Up. $700 mo.. Util. cable & Wifi included. Free lunch program available.

330-792-1913, Ext. 1Austintown Efficiency

Senior & disabled, 30% of in-come. Free lunch program

Phoenix House330-792-1913,Mon.-Fri. 9-3

Hillbrook Apartments478 S. Raccoon

330-538-8804Deer Creek Apartments

4415 Deer Creek Court330-797-9100

Four Seasons Apartments4222 New Rd.

330-333-7243Kerrybrook Apartments

1837 S. Raccoon Rd. 330-793-8084Fox Run Apartments

70 N. Raccoon Rd.330-792-9974

BRINGS GREAT SAVINGS!

Call Today

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 - 2 Bdrm., $500 + electric, Poland Schools.

Call 330-758-5599

Boardman - Oregon Trail1-Bdrm, $430/mo. + util. Carport, c/a. 330-770-9136

Boardman2 Bdrm., 1 BathStarting at $500

Heat & Water PaidCall 330-788-2202

Newport Glen - ElevatorService 4071 Glenwood

BOARDMAN/POLAND330-565-0590 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm

apts. & townhouses.1st Months rent, $99.

Boardman/PolandApts., lofts, townhouses.Pets welcome. Sr. Disc.

Call 330-758-5916Boardman: Excellent, x-lg. 2-bedrooms, carports, no pets, heat pd. 330-799-3375Canfield - St. Andrews Apt.2 bdrm., paid heat, carport.

Call 330-533-7100Canfield

1 bedroom starting $5002 bedroom starting $575

CANFIELD SCHOOLSHEAT & WATER PAID

Sr. Discounts330-533-5454 - Carriage Hill

386 FairgroundCornersburg

BRANDYWINE APTS.All utilities included

FeaturingLARGE 1 Bdrm., $525

330-799-0611Girard - Shannon Terrace1 Bdrm., starting $4752 Bdrm., starting $545

Heat & water paid500 Park Ave.

Pet friendly with conditions330-716-1578

GirardLiberty Park

HEAT & WATER PAID1 Bedroom, starting $475

2 Bedroom starting at $550Call 330-545-3975

210 Elruth Ct.- Sr DiscountsHowland - 1st mo. free. Se-nior Apts., 1 or 2 bedroom, all utilities incl., starting at $550. Call 330-530-8606

NOTICE ERRORSAdvertisers are requested to check the

first appearance of ads for accuracy. Thisnewspaper will be responsible for onlyone incorrect insertion, the first one.ANY ERROR SHOULD BE REPORTED

IMMEDIATELY.

You have waitedlong enough. Getyour hands on anew job today

using The Vindicator’s

Classifieds.

MLB STATISTICSSTANDINGS

AMERICAN LEAGUEEast Division

W L Pct GBBoston 70 51 .579 —New York 65 56 .537 5Baltimore 60 62 .492 10 1⁄2Tampa Bay 60 64 .484 11 1⁄2Toronto 59 63 .484 11 1⁄2

Central Division W L Pct GBCleveland 67 53 .558 —Minnesota 61 59 .508 6Kansas City 61 60 .504 6 1⁄2Detroit 53 68 .438 14 1⁄2Chicago 46 73 .387 20 1⁄2

West Division W L Pct GBHouston 75 47 .615 —Los Angeles 62 60 .508 13Seattle 62 61 .504 13 1⁄2Texas 60 61 .496 14 1⁄2Oakland 53 69 .434 22

Thursday’s ScoresCleveland 9, Minnesota 3, 1st gameArizona 4, Houston 0Toronto 5, Tampa Bay 3Minnesota 4, Cleveland 2, 2nd gameN.Y. Yankees 7, N.Y. Mets 5Texas 9, Chicago White Sox 8

Friday’s ScoresChicago Cubs 7, Toronto 4Baltimore 9, L.A. Angels 7Boston 9, N.Y. Yankees 6L.A. Dodgers 8, Detroit 5Seattle 7, Tampa Bay 1Chicago White Sox 4, Texas 3Minnesota 10, Arizona 3Houston 3, Oakland 1Cleveland 10, Kansas City 1

Today’s GamesToronto (Tepesch 1-2) at Chicago Cubs (Quintana 7-10), 2:20 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 4-6) at Detroit (Fulmer 10-10), 4:05 p.m.Seattle (Miranda 7-6) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 6-6), 6:10 p.m.L.A. Angels (Ramirez 10-10) at Baltimore (Gausman 9-8), 7:05 p.m.Arizona (Greinke 14-5) at Minnesota (Berrios 10-5), 7:10 p.m.N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 9-5) at Boston (Sale 14-4), 7:10 p.m.Oakland (Graveman 3-3) at Houston (McHugh 0-2), 7:10 p.m.Cleveland (Bauer 11-8) at Kansas City (Vargas 14-6), 7:15 p.m.Chicago White Sox (Holland 6-12) at Texas (Perez 7-10), 8:05 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesL.A. Dodgers at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.Seattle at Tampa Bay, 1:10 p.m.N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 1:30 p.m.L.A. Angels at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.Arizona at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m.Oakland at Houston, 2:10 p.m.Cleveland at Kansas City, 2:15 p.m.Toronto at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.Chicago White Sox at Texas, 3:05 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUEEast Division

W L Pct GBWashington 72 47 .605 —Miami 58 61 .487 14Atlanta 54 66 .450 18 1⁄2New York 53 66 .445 19Philadelphia 43 76 .361 29

Central Division W L Pct GBChicago 64 57 .529 —St. Louis 63 59 .516 1 1⁄2Milwaukee 63 60 .512 2Pittsburgh 58 64 .475 6 1⁄2Cincinnati 52 71 .423 13

West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 86 34 .717 —Colorado 68 54 .557 19Arizona 67 55 .549 20San Diego 54 67 .446 32 1⁄2San Francisco 49 74 .398 38 1⁄2

Thursday’s ScoresArizona 4, Houston 0Cincinnati 13, Chicago Cubs 10Atlanta 10, Colorado 4St. Louis 11, Pittsburgh 7N.Y. Yankees 7, N.Y. Mets 5Washington 2, San Diego 1San Francisco 5, Philadelphia 4

Friday’s ScoresChicago Cubs 7, Toronto 4St. Louis 11, Pittsburgh 10L.A. Dodgers 8, Detroit 5Cincinnati 5, Atlanta 3Minnesota 10, Arizona 3Colorado 8, Milwaukee 4Miami at N.Y. Mets, lateWashington at San Diego, latePhiladelphia at San Francisco, late

Today’s GamesToronto (Tepesch 1-2) at Chicago Cubs (Quintana 7-10), 2:20 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 4-6) at Detroit (Fulmer 10-10), 4:05 p.m.St. Louis (Wacha 9-5) at Pittsburgh (Kuhl 5-8), 4:05 p.m.Arizona (Greinke 14-5) at Minnesota (Berrios 10-5), 7:10 p.m.Cincinnati (Stephenson 0-4) at Atlanta (Teheran 7-10), 7:10 p.m.Miami (Worley 2-2) at N.Y. Mets (Montero 1-8), 7:10 p.m.Milwaukee (Woodruff 1-1) at Colorado (Bettis 0-0), 8:10 p.m.Washington (Strasburg 10-3) at San Diego (Wood 2-4), 8:40 p.m.Philadelphia (Eickhoff 3-7) at San Francisco (Stratton 1-2), 9:05 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesL.A. Dodgers at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.Miami at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.Cincinnati at Atlanta, 1:35 p.m.Arizona at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m.Toronto at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.Milwaukee at Colorado, 3:10 p.m.Philadelphia at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.Washington at San Diego, 4:40 p.m.St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 7:00 p.m.

BOXSCORESAMERICAN LEAGUE

INDIANS 10, ROYALS 1Cleveland Kansas City ab r h bi ab r h biLindor ss 5 0 1 1 Mrrfeld 2b 5 0 0 0Kipnis 2b 4 2 1 1 L.Cain cf 4 0 1 0A.Jcksn lf 3 2 1 0 Hosmer 1b 3 0 1 0Guyer lf 1 0 0 0 Me.Cbrr rf 4 0 3 0Encrnco dh 5 2 2 1 Mstakas 3b 4 0 1 0Bruce rf 5 3 3 5 Cthbert 3b 0 0 0 0C.Sntna 1b 3 1 1 0 Moss dh 3 1 1 1Gomes c 5 0 1 2 A.Escbr ss 4 0 1 0B.Zmmer cf 5 0 2 0 A.Grdon lf 4 0 1 0Urshela 3b 4 0 1 0 Butera c 4 0 0 0Totals 40 10 13 10 Totals 35 1 9 1

Cleveland 302 001 301 — 10Kansas City 010 000 000 — 1LOB—Cleveland 7, Kansas City 9. 2B—Moustakas (18). HR—Kipnis (11), Encarnacion (28), Bruce 2 (32), Moss (16). IP H R ER BB SO ClevelandKluber W,12-3 5 1-3 6 1 1 1 4Miller 2-3 0 0 0 1 1Smith 1 0 0 0 0 0Olson 1 2 0 0 0 2Goody 1 1 0 0 0 1 Kansas CityKennedy L,4-9 2 2-3 6 5 5 2 1Alexander 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2Junis 2 1-3 5 4 4 1 3McCarthy 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 1Buchter 1 1 1 1 1 0Umpires—Home, Ron Kulpa; First, Marvin Hudson; Second, Brian Knight; Third, Chris Conroy.T—2:58. A—35,974 (37,903).

MARINERS 7, RAYS 1Seattle Tampa Bay ab r h bi ab r h biSegura ss 5 0 1 0 Krmaier cf 4 1 1 0Alonso 1b 4 1 1 0 Lngoria 3b 4 0 0 0Cano 2b 5 1 1 0 Duda 1b 2 0 0 1Cruz dh 5 3 3 2 Plouffe ph 0 0 0 0K.Sager 3b 5 0 1 1 Sza Jr. rf 4 0 0 0Vlencia rf 4 0 2 1 Dckrson lf 2 0 0 0Martin rf 1 0 0 0 Bourjos ph 1 0 0 0Gamel lf 3 1 2 1 W.Ramos c 4 0 3 0Heredia cf 4 1 1 0 B.Mller dh 3 0 0 0Zunino c 3 0 2 2 Hchvrra ss 3 0 0 0 Dan.Rbr 2b 3 0 0 0Totals 39 7 14 7 Totals 30 1 4 1Seattle 300 210 001 — 7Tampa Bay 000 001 000 — 1DP—Tampa Bay 2. LOB—Seattle 8, Tampa Bay 6. 2B—Cruz 2 (24), Gamel (21), Heredia (14), Zunino 2 (17), Kiermaier (11), W.Ramos (4). HR—Cruz (30). SF—Duda (2). IP H R ER BB SO SeattleRamirez W,5-4 6 2 1 1 2 4Pazos 2 1-3 1 0 0 1 5Pagan 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Tampa BayPruitt L,6-4 7 11 6 6 2 2Whitley 1 1 0 0 0 1Boxberger 1 2 1 1 0 2HBP—by Pruitt (Zunino).Umpires—Home, Carlos Torres; First, Chris Guccione; Second, Dana DeMuth; Third, Paul Nauert.T—2:53. A—11,501 (31,042).

ASTROS 3, ATHLETICS 1Oakland Houston ab r h bi ab r h biRa.Dvis cf 3 0 0 0 Sprnger rf 4 0 0 0Olson ph-rf 1 0 0 0 Bregman 3b 4 1 1 1Semien ss 4 0 0 0 Altuve 2b 4 1 2 1Lowrie 2b 4 0 0 0 Y.Grrel 1b 4 1 2 0K.Davis dh 4 0 0 0 Ma.Gnza ss 4 0 0 0Healy 1b 3 0 1 0 Reddick lf 3 0 2 1Pinder rf-cf 3 0 0 0 Beltran dh 2 0 0 0M.Chpmn 3b 3 0 1 0 M.Stssi c 3 0 0 0Joyce lf 2 1 2 1 Mrsnick cf 3 0 0 0Garneau c 2 0 0 0 Maxwell ph-c 1 0 1 0 Totals 30 1 5 1 Totals 31 3 7 3

Oakland 000 000 010 — 1Houston 002 001 00x — 3E—Semien (7). DP—Houston 2. LOB—Oakland 3, Houston 5. 2B—M.Chapman (14). HR—Joyce (18), Bregman (14), Altuve (19). SB—Altuve (27). CS—Springer (7). IP H R ER BB SO OaklandManaea L,8-8 6 6 3 3 1 2Hatcher 2 1 0 0 0 0 HoustonKeuchel W,11-2 7 3 0 0 1 3Devenski H,19 1-3 2 1 1 0 0Giles S,24-27 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 3WP—Manaea.Umpires—Home, Jerry Layne; First, Ryan Additon; Second, Dan Bellino; Third, Mike

Estabrook.T—2:47. A—30,908 (42,060).

ORIOLES 9, ANGELS 7Los Angeles Baltimore ab r h bi ab r h biRevere lf 5 2 3 0 Beckham ss 5 2 2 0Trout cf 4 1 1 2 M.Mchdo 3b 5 3 3 7Pujols dh 4 1 1 2 Schoop 2b 4 0 0 0Calhoun rf 4 1 2 1 A.Jones cf 4 0 2 0Simmons ss 4 0 0 0 Mancini 1b 4 0 0 0Vlbuena 3b 3 0 0 0 Trumbo dh 4 1 1 1Pnngtn pr-2b 0 0 0 0 Sntnder rf 4 1 1 0Cron 1b 4 1 2 1 C.Jseph c 4 1 1 1Mldnado c 4 0 0 0 Gentry lf 3 0 1 0Cowart 2-3b 4 1 2 1 S.Smith ph 0 0 0 0 Flherty pr 0 1 0 0Totals 36 7 11 7 Totals 37 9 11 9

Los Angeles 320 020 000 — 7Baltimore 013 010 004 — 9E—Schoop (11), Valbuena (3). DP—Baltimore 1. LOB—Los Angeles 4, Baltimore 4. 2B—Revere 2 (11). HR—Trout (24), Pujols (18), Calhoun (15), Cron (10), Cowart (2), M.Machado 3 (26), Trumbo (19), C.Joseph (8). CS—Trout (3), Cowart (2). IP H R ER BB SO Los AngelesHeaney 5 7 5 5 0 5Bedrosian H,7 1 0 0 0 0 1Parker H,14 1 0 0 0 0 0Petit H,9 1 1-3 2 2 2 1 1Middleton L,4-1 BS,1 0 2 2 2 0 0 BaltimoreHellickson 4 2-3 8 7 7 0 2Castro 2 1-3 1 0 0 0 1Bleier 2-3 0 0 0 1 0O’Day W,2-3 1 1-3 2 0 0 0 1HBP—by O’Day (Trout).Umpires—Home, Mark Ripperger; First, Tom Hallion; Second, Chad Whitson; Third, Vic Carapazza.T—3:13. A—26,185 (45,971).

RED SOX 9, YANKEES 6New York Boston ab r h bi ab r h biGardner lf 5 0 3 0 E.Nunez 2b 5 1 1 0A.Hicks cf 4 0 0 1 Betts rf 3 0 0 1Judge rf 4 0 1 0 Bnntndi lf 5 1 1 1G.Sanch dh 5 1 1 1 H.Rmirz 1b 3 0 0 0Grgrius ss 4 1 0 0 Kimbrel p 0 0 0 0Headley 1b 4 2 3 0 Young dh 1 0 0 0T.Frzer 3b 3 2 2 2 Mrelnd dh-1b 1 0 1 2Trreyes 2b 5 0 1 2 Bgaerts ss 4 1 1 0Au.Rmne c 5 0 1 0 Devers 3b 4 2 2 2 Vazquez c 3 3 3 1 Brdly J cf 3 1 1 2Totals 39 6 12 6 Totals 32 9 10 9

New York 000 002 400 — 6Boston 020 010 42x — 9E—A.Hicks (1). DP—New York 1. LOB—New York 14, Boston 6. 2B—Headley (28), Bogaerts (25). HR—G.Sanchez (23), T.Frazier (20), Devers (7), Vazquez (3). SB—Devers (2), Vazquez (6). SF—Betts (5). IP H R ER BB SO New YorkMontgomery 5 4 3 3 2 3Green 1 1-3 1 2 2 2 1Kahnle L,2-4 BS,6 2-3 3 2 2 1 0Chapman 1 2 2 2 1 1 BostonPomeranz 3 1-3 4 0 0 1 4Workman 1 2-3 1 0 0 1 1Barnes H,21 2-3 4 2 2 0 1Kelly BS,4 1-3 2 3 3 1 0Hembree 1-3 1 1 1 1 1Scott 0 0 0 0 1 0Reed W,2-3 1 2-3 0 0 0 1 3Kimbrel S,29-33 1 0 0 0 0 3J.Kelly pitched to 3 batters in the 7thScott pitched to 2 batters in the 7thHBP—by Kelly (Hicks), by Scott (Hicks).Umpires—Home, Dan Iassogna; First, Tripp Gibson; Second, Lance Barksdale; Third, Eric Cooper.T—4:09. A—36,784 (37,499).

WHITE SOX 4, RANGERS 3Chicago Texas ab r h bi ab r h biL.Grcia lf 5 1 1 0 DShelds cf 3 0 1 1Moncada 2b 4 0 0 0 Choo dh 3 0 1 0Abreu 1b 5 1 2 0 Andrus ss 4 0 0 0Dlmnico dh 3 2 2 3 Beltre 3b 4 0 1 0Y.Sanch 3b 3 0 0 0 Mazara rf 2 1 1 0Narvaez c 3 0 1 0 Gallo lf 3 0 0 0T.Andrs ss 4 0 3 0 Napoli 1b 3 2 1 2Hanson rf 2 0 0 0 Odor 2b 4 0 0 0Engel cf 4 0 0 0 Chrinos c 4 0 1 0Totals 33 4 9 3 Totals 30 3 6 3Chicago 100 002 010 — 4Texas 000 200 100 — 3E—Odor (15). DP—Chicago 2, Texas 3. LOB—Chicago 8, Texas 6. 2B—DeShields (11), Chirinos (8). HR—Delmonico 2 (5), Napoli (25). S—Hanson (1), Choo (3). IP H R ER BB SO ChicagoShields 5 1-3 5 2 2 3 6Bummer H,2 1 0 1 1 1 1Pelfrey 0 1 0 0 0 0Infante W,1-1 BS,1 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 1Minaya S,1-1 1 0 0 0 1 1 TexasCashner 5 2-3 6 3 2 4 2Barnette 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1Rodriguez L,0-1 1 3 1 1 0 0Leclerc 1 0 0 0 0 1Pelfrey pitched to 1 batter in the 7thHBP—by Cashner (Hanson). WP—Shields.Umpires—Home, Will Little; First, Tim Timmons; Second, James Hoye; Third, Mark Wegner.T—3:25. A—23,402 (48,114).

NATIONAL LEAGUECARDINALS 11, PIRATES 10

St. Louis Pittsburgh ab r h bi ab r h biCrpnter 1b 3 1 1 3 S.Marte lf 4 2 2 1Voit 1b 1 0 0 0 Hrrison 2b 3 1 1 1Pham lf-cf 4 2 1 2 Moroff 2b 1 2 1 2DeJong ss 5 2 3 2 McCtchn cf 3 0 0 0Fowler cf 3 0 1 1 S.Rdrig cf 0 1 0 0Mrtinez lf 1 0 1 1 J.Bell 1b 4 1 1 2Y.Mlina c 5 1 1 0 Freese 3b 4 1 1 2Mayers p 0 0 0 0 A.Frzer rf 4 1 1 0Cecil p 0 0 0 0 E.Diaz c 5 0 1 2Bowman p 0 0 0 0 Mercer ss 3 1 2 0Duke p 0 0 0 0 Tr.Wllm p 1 0 0 0Oh p 0 0 0 0 Brault p 1 0 0 0Gyorko 3b 5 0 0 0 Jaso ph 1 0 0 0Grichuk rf 4 2 2 0 Hudson p 0 0 0 0G.Grcia 2b 5 2 2 1 Schugel p 0 0 0 0C.Mrtin p 2 1 1 1 J.Osuna ph 1 0 0 0C.Kelly ph-c 1 0 0 0

Totals 39 11 13 11 Totals 35 10 10 10

St. Louis 141 202 010 — 11Pittsburgh 110 010 052 — 10E—Martinez (2). DP—St. Louis 1, Pittsburgh 1. LOB—St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 6. 2B—Fowler (17), Y.Molina (19), C.Martinez (3), J.Bell (22), E.Diaz (7). 3B—S.Marte (1). HR—Carpenter (16), Pham (16), DeJong (19), Harrison (14), Moroff (2), Freese (9). SF—Freese (4). S—C.Martinez (5). IP H R ER BB SO St. LouisMartinez W,10-9 7 6 3 3 1 4Mayers 2-3 4 5 4 1 1Cecil H,13 1-3 0 0 0 0 0Bowman H,21 1-3 0 2 2 2 0Duke 0 0 0 0 1 0Oh S,19-22 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 PittsburghWilliams L,5-6 3 7 8 8 2 3Brault 4 4 2 2 1 1Hudson 1 2 1 1 1 1Schugel 1 0 0 0 0 0Tr.Williams pitched to 2 batters in the 4thDuke pitched to 1 batter in the 9thHBP—by Bowman (Rodriguez).Umpires—Home, Pat Hoberg; First, Tony Randazzo; Second, Gerry Davis; Third, Rob Drake.T—3:23. A—29,906 (38,362).

REDS 5, BRAVES 3Cincinnati Atlanta ab r h bi ab r h biHmilton cf 5 1 2 0 Incarte cf 5 1 2 0Cozart ss 3 0 1 0 Bra.Phl 3b 5 1 2 0Peraza ss 1 0 0 0 F.Frman 1b 4 0 1 0Votto 1b 4 1 1 0 Mrkakis rf 4 0 0 1Duvall lf 5 1 1 2 Flowers c 4 0 1 1Gennett 2b 4 0 1 0 M.Adams lf 3 1 1 1Suarez 3b 2 1 1 1 L.Adams pr-lf 0 0 0 0Winker rf 4 1 2 1 Albies 2b 4 0 0 0Brnhart c 3 0 0 0 Swanson ss 2 0 0 0Romano p 3 0 0 0 Dickey p 2 0 1 0Schbler ph 0 0 0 0 Brthers p 0 0 0 0Shcklfr p 0 0 0 0 M.Jhnsn ph 1 0 0 0B.Wood p 0 0 0 0 L.Jcksn p 0 0 0 0R.Iglss p 0 0 0 0 Vzcaino p 0 0 0 0 J.Ptrsn ph 0 0 0 0Totals 34 5 9 4 Totals 34 3 8 3

Cincinnati 000 004 100 — 5Atlanta 010 000 020 — 3DP—Cincinnati 1, Atlanta 1. LOB—Cincinnati 8, Atlanta 8. 2B—Hamilton (14), F.Freeman (21), Flowers (14). HR—Duvall (29), Suarez (21), Winker (3), M.Adams (17). SB—Hamilton (51). IP H R ER BB SO CincinnatiRomano W,3-5 7 5 1 1 2 3Shackelford 2-3 3 2 2 1 0Wood H,3 1-3 0 0 0 0 0Iglesias S,23-24 1 0 0 0 1 2 AtlantaDickey L,8-8 6 8 4 4 1 9Brothers 1 1 1 1 1 1Jackson 1 0 0 0 2 0Vizcaino 1 0 0 0 0 1HBP—by Brothers (Cozart), by Jackson (Schebler).Umpires—Home, Dave Rackley; First, Jim Reynolds; Second, Anthony Johnson; Third, Lance Barrett.T—3:09. A—31,174 (41,500).

ROCKIES 8, BREWERS 4Milwaukee Colorado ab r h bi ab r h biThames 1b 5 1 2 0 Blckmon cf 3 2 2 1N.Wlker 2b 5 0 2 1 LMahieu 2b 4 0 1 0Braun lf 4 0 0 0 Arenado 3b 3 1 1 2T.Shaw 3b 4 0 0 0 Parra lf 4 1 2 2Do.Sntn rf 4 1 1 1 Mar.Ryn 1b 3 1 0 0Pina c 3 0 0 0 C.Gnzal rf 4 2 2 2Vogt ph-c 1 0 1 0 Lucroy c 3 0 0 0Broxton cf 4 1 2 1 Story ss 4 0 0 0Arcia ss 3 1 1 1 Marquez p 1 1 1 0Garza p 2 0 0 0 Dunn p 0 0 0 0Jffress p 0 0 0 0 Tuchman ph 0 0 0 0Villar ph 1 0 0 0 McGee p 0 0 0 0C.Trres p 0 0 0 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0Sogard ph 0 0 0 0 Valaika ph 1 0 0 0 G.Hllnd p 0 0 0 0Totals 36 4 9 4 Totals 30 8 9 7

Milwaukee 011 002 000 — 4Colorado 103 130 00x — 8E—Story (8), T.Shaw (8). DP—Milwaukee 3, Colorado 1. LOB—Milwaukee 7, Colorado 4. 2B—Thames (20), Vogt (9), Marquez (2). 3B—Thames (2), Arenado (7). HR—Do.Santana (20), Broxton (20), Arcia (12), Blackmon (29), Parra (10), C.Gonzalez (8). CS—Tauchman (1). S—Marquez (5). IP H R ER BB SO MilwaukeeGarza L,6-7 4 1-3 9 8 7 2 2Jeffress 2-3 0 0 0 0 0Torres 3 0 0 0 3 3 ColoradoMarquez W,10-5 5 2-3 7 4 4 1 6Dunn 1-3 0 0 0 0 0McGee 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2Neshek 2-3 1 0 0 0 1Holland 1 0 0 0 1 2WP—Garza.Umpires—Home, Jim Wolf; First, D.J. Reyburn; Second, Sam Holbrook; Third, Nic Lentz.T—2:55. A—32,385 (50,398).

LATE THURSDAYNATIONALS 2, PADRES 1

Washington San Diego ab r h bi ab r h biKndrick rf-lf 3 1 1 0 Margot cf 4 1 2 0Difo ss 2 0 0 0 Asuaje 2b 4 0 1 0D.Mrphy 2b 3 0 0 0 Pirela lf 4 0 2 1Zmmrmn 1b 3 1 1 1 Solarte ss 4 0 1 0Lind lf 2 0 0 1 Myers 1b 3 0 2 0Stvnson rf 0 0 0 0 Spngnbr 3b 4 0 0 0Rendon 3b 2 0 1 0 Renfroe rf 4 0 0 0Wieters c 4 0 0 0 Hedges c 4 0 0 0M.Tylor cf 4 0 1 0 Chacin p 2 0 0 0E.Jcksn p 3 0 0 0 Stammen p 0 0 0 0Kntzler p 0 0 0 0 Cordoba ph 0 0 0 0Sanchez ph 1 0 0 0 Yates p 0 0 0 0Dlittle p 0 0 0 0 Maton p 0 0 0 0 H.Sanch ph 1 0 0 0Totals 27 2 4 2 Totals 34 1 8 1

Washington 001 000 010 — 2San Diego 001 000 000 — 1DP—Washington 1, San Diego 2. LOB—Washington 7, San Diego 8. 2B—Kendrick (12), Margot (14), Pirela (21), Myers (21). HR—Zimmerman (29). SB—Cordoba (2). SF—Lind (4). S—Difo (4).

IP H R ER BB SO WashingtonJackson W,4-2 7 8 1 1 1 4Kintzler H,4 1 0 0 0 0 1Doolittle S,13-14 1 0 0 0 0 2 San DiegoChacin 5 3 1 1 4 6Stammen 2 0 0 0 0 2Yates L,2-4 1 1 1 1 0 3Maton 1 0 0 0 1 2Chacin pitched to 1 batter in the 6thHBP—by Chacin (Murphy), by Chacin (Rendon), by Kintzler (Myers).Umpires—Home, Roberto Ortiz; First, Mike Winters; Second, Marty Foster; Third, Mike Muchlinski.T—3:01. A—22,097 (42,302).

GIANTS 5, PHILLIES 4Philadelphia San Francisco ab r h bi ab r h biC.Hrnan 2b 5 0 1 0 Span cf 5 1 1 0Galvis ss 4 0 2 0 Pence rf 2 2 1 1N.Wllms cf 4 1 1 1 J.Prker lf 3 1 2 2Hoskins lf 3 1 2 0 Posey c 3 0 2 1Franco 3b 4 1 1 0 Sndoval 3b 4 0 0 0Kim rf 4 0 1 1 Crwford ss 4 0 1 1E.Ramos p 0 0 0 0 R.Jones 1b 3 0 0 0T.Jseph 1b 3 0 0 0 Tmlnson 2b 4 1 2 0Pinto p 0 0 0 0 Smrdzja p 2 0 0 0Milner p 0 0 0 0 G.Hrnan ph 0 0 0 0Flrimon rf 1 0 0 0 Mlancon p 0 0 0 0Rupp c 4 1 1 1 Strckln p 0 0 0 0Aa.Nola p 2 0 0 0 Mncrief ph 1 0 0 0A.Blnco 1b 1 0 0 0 S.Dyson p 0 0 0 0Totals 35 4 9 3 Totals 31 5 9 5

Philadelphia 000 013 000 — 4San Francisco 002 030 00x — 5DP—San Francisco 1. LOB—Philadelphia 6, San Francisco 8. 2B—Galvis (25), Franco (22), J.Parker 2 (7), Tomlinson (2). 3B—Galvis (6). HR—N.Williams (6), Rupp (11). SB—C.Hernandez (13), Span (8). S—G.Hernandez (2). IP H R ER BB SO PhiladelphiaNola L,9-8 5 7 5 5 3 3Pinto 1-3 1 0 0 1 0Milner 1 2-3 1 0 0 1 0Ramos 1 0 0 0 0 2 San FranciscoSamardzija W,8-12 6 8 4 4 1 6Melancon H,2 1 1 0 0 0 0Strickland H,15 1 0 0 0 0 2Dyson S,10-15 1 0 0 0 1 1Umpires—Home, Stu Scheuwater; First, Gary Cederstrom; Second, Gabe Morales; Third, Adrian Johnson.T—2:47. A—41,279 (41,915).

INTERLEAGUECUBS 7, BLUE JAYS 4

Toronto Chicago ab r h bi ab r h biBtsta rf-3b 5 0 1 0 Almora cf 5 1 2 1Dnldsn 3b/ss 4 0 0 0 Bryant 3b 5 1 1 0Smoak 1b 4 1 2 0 Rizzo 1b 4 0 2 2Pearce lf 4 1 2 1 Zobrist lf 3 1 1 0M.Mntro c 4 1 2 0 I.Happ 2b 4 0 0 0Pillar cf 4 1 2 1 Cratini c 3 1 3 0Goins ss-2b 4 0 1 2 Heyward rf 4 2 1 1Barney 2b 2 0 0 0 J.Baez ss 4 1 2 3Carrera ph-rf 1 0 0 0 Arrieta p 3 0 1 0Tepera p 0 0 0 0 Edwards p 0 0 0 0J.Happ p 2 0 0 0 Strop p 0 0 0 0Loup p 0 0 0 0 Jay ph 0 0 0 0Morales ph 1 0 0 0 W.Davis p 0 0 0 0Mayza p 0 0 0 0 Aoki rf 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 4 10 4 Totals 35 7 13 7

Toronto 100 000 030 — 4Chicago 030 020 02x — 7DP—Chicago 1. LOB—Toronto 7, Chicago 7. 2B—Smoak (20), Pillar 2 (30), Bryant (26), Zobrist (13), Caratini (3). HR—J.Baez (20). SB—Rizzo (8). CS—J.Bautista (3), Zobrist (1). IP H R ER BB SO TorontoHapp L,6-9 5 9 5 5 2 8Loup 1 1 0 0 0 1Mayza 1 1-3 3 2 2 1 2Tepera 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 ChicagoArrieta W,13-8 6 1-3 6 1 1 2 6Edwards H,18 2-3 0 0 0 0 1Strop 1 4 3 3 0 0Davis S,25-25 1 0 0 0 0 1Umpires—Home, Ben May; First, Joe West; Second, Andy Fletcher; Third, Hunter Wendelstedt.T—3:02. A—41,814 (41,072).

TWINS 10, DIAMONDBACKS 3Arizona Minnesota ab r h bi ab r h biD.Prlta rf 4 2 3 1 B.Dzier 2b 4 1 1 1Pollock cf 4 0 1 0 Kepler rf 5 1 2 1Lamb 3b 4 1 1 1 Mauer 1b 5 1 2 0Gldschm 1b 4 0 2 1 Sano 3b 4 2 3 3Dscalso 2b 3 0 0 0 E.Rsrio lf 5 1 3 0Innetta c 3 0 0 0 E.Escbr dh 4 1 1 2Drury dh 4 0 0 0 Buxton cf 4 3 3 1K.Marte ss 4 0 0 0 J.Plnco ss 3 0 2 2G.Blnco lf 3 0 0 0 J.Cstro c 4 0 0 0Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 38 10 17 10

Arizona 210 000 000 — 3Minnesota 011 101 42x — 10E—Buxton (5). DP—Arizona 2, Minnesota 1. LOB—Arizona 6, Minnesota 7. 2B—E.Rosario 2 (27), Buxton (9), J.Polanco (20). 3B—Buxton (2). HR—D.Peralta (13), B.Dozier (24), Kepler (16), Sano 2 (28), E.Escobar (11), Buxton (8). SB—J.Polanco (8). IP H R ER BB SO ArizonaGodley L,5-6 5 1-3 9 4 4 2 10De La Rosa 2-3 2 1 1 1 0Hernandez 1 3 3 3 0 1Bracho 1 3 2 2 0 0 MinnesotaSantana W,13-7 6 7 3 3 3 6Hildenberger H,3 2-3 0 0 0 0 0Rogers H,28 1 0 0 0 0 1Duffey 2-3 0 0 0 0 0Turley 2-3 0 0 0 0 0Er.Santana pitched to 2 batters in the 7thJ.De La Rosa pitched to 1 batter in the 7thWP—De La Rosa.Umpires—Home, Ted Barrett; First, Angel Hernandez; Second, John Tumpane; Third, Sean Barber.T—3:06. A—25,830 (39,021).

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

B4-08/19/17

AMERICAN LEAGUEIndians 10, Royals 1

KANSAS CITYCorey Kluber put together anoth-er Cy Young-worthy performance before leaving with a sprained right ankle Friday night, and Jay Bruce homered twice to help Cleveland rout Kansas City. Klu-ber (12-3) was cruising along until there was one out in the sixth inning, and Eric Hosmer sent a grounder to the right side of the infi eld. Kluber winced coming off the mound to cover the bag.Mariners 7, Rays 1

ST. PETERSBURGNelson Cruz hit two doubles and his 30th home run Friday night and Erasmo Ramirez won his fi rst game for Seattle since April 1, 2014, a victory over Tampa Bay. Ramirez (5-4) gave up one run and two hits in six innings in the fi rst game of the Mariners’ 12-game trip. Astros 3, Athletics 1

HOUSTON Dallas Keuchel threw seven shutout innings, Alex Bregman and Jose Altuve homered and Houston beat Oakland. Keuchel (11-2) allowed three hits, walked one and struck out three in a dominant performance. Breg-man and Altuve hit back-to-back home runs in the third to give Houston a 2-0 lead.Orioles 9, Angels 7

BALTIMORE Manny Machado capped a three-homer night with a grand slam in the bottom of the ninth inning, and Baltimore rallied past Los Angeles in a game that featured 10 home runs. Machado hit his seventh career slam off Keynan Middleton (4-1), who entered with two on and one out in the ninth. Machado also hit a two-run homer in the third and a solo shot in the fi fth to fi nish with seven RBIs. Red Sox 9, Yankees 6

BOSTON Pinch-hitter Mitch Moreland hit a two-run single in Boston’s four-run seventh inning and the Red Sox rallied to beat New York.

Craig Kimbrel pitched the ninth for his 29th save. The Red Sox opened a 3-0 lead on homers from Rafael Devers and Christian Vazquez. But Todd Frazier hit a two-run homer in the sixth, then New York scored four in the sev-enth to take a 6-3 lead. Boston loaded the bases in the bottom of the seventh against Tommy Kahnle (2-4). Mookie Betts had a sacrifi ce fl y and Andrew Benin-tendi an RBI single.White Sox 4, Rangers 3

ARLINGTONNicky Delmonico lined an inside-the-park home run in the eighth inning, his second go-ahead homer of the game, and Chicago stopped a fi ve-game losing streak with a victory over Texas. Delmonico’s fi fth homer eluded a leaping Nomar Mazara, bounc-ing off the wall as the Texas right fi elder crumpled on the warning track clutching his left knee. Second baseman Rougned Odor sprinted to retrieve the long carom, but Delmonico beat the throw with a head-fi rst slide.

NATIONAL LEAGUECardinals 11, Pirates 10

PITTSBURGH Matt Carpenter homered in the second inning to send St. Louis on to victory over the Pittsburgh. With the Cardinals leading 2-1 and two outs in the second inning, Carpenter homered over the center fi eld wall to extend the lead to 5-1. It was the second of three St. Louis home runs in the fi rst three innings. Reds 5, Braves 3

ATLANTA Cincinnati hit three home runs in the sixth, including a two-run shot by Adam Duvall, Sal Romano threw seven strong innings and the Reds beat R.A. Dickey and Atlanta. Matt Adams’ homer in the second inning gave Atlanta a 1-0 lead that Dickey held until the four-run sixth. Duvall’s homer drove in Joey Votto, who hit a leadoff single, to give the Reds the lead. Eugenio Suarez and Jesse Winker added back-to-back homers with one out for Cincinnati’s fi rst three-

homer inning of the season. Rockies 8, Brewers 4

DENVER Charlie Blackmon hit his sixth leadoff home run of the season, German Marquez won for the fi rst time in seven weeks and the Colorado Rockies beat the Milwaukee Brewers 8-4 on Friday night. Gerardo Parra and Carlos Gonzalez also homered and each drove in two runs. Marquez (10-5) allowed four runs – including three solo shots – in 5 2⁄3 innings. He struck out six and walked one while getting his fi rst win since July 29.

INTERLEAGUECubs 7, Blue Jays 4

CHICAGO Jake Arrieta pitched into the seventh inning and allowed a run, Javier Baez homered and drove in three runs, and Chicago beat Toronto in a rare interleague matchup. Anthony Rizzo went 2 for 4 with two RBIs, Victor Caratini went 3 for 3, and Jason Heyward and Albert Almora Jr. each had an RBI single for Chi-cago. Arrieta (13-8) allowed one run and six hits in 6 1⁄3 innings to win his third straight start. Dodgers 8, Tigers 5

DETROIT Chris Taylor had four hits including a pair of doubles, and Los Angeles welcomed Adrian Gonzalez back from the disabled list with another victory, beating Detroit. Gonzalez doubled in his fi rst plate appearance since June 11, one of six two-base hits on the night for Los Angeles.Twins 10, Diamondbacks 3

MINNEAPOLIS Miguel Sano hit two of the Twins’ season high-tying six home runs, including an inside-the-park dash by Byron Buxton, and Minnesota powered past the Arizona Diamondbacks. Eduardo Escobar, Max Kepler and Brian Dozier also went deep for Min-nesota. Buxton fi nished a single shy of the cycle. Escobar added a two-run shot two batters later for an 8-3 lead.

Associated Press

FRIDAY’S MLB GAMES

CLASSIFIEDS THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 B5WWW.VINDY.COM

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

BRIDGEQ. Neither vulnerable, as South, you hold:�A 8 5 �A K 9 3 �A 4 �10 9 6 5

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Right-hand opponent opens one heart. What call would you make?

Look for answers on Monday.©Tribune Content Agency

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Garage Sales

Austintown - 1369 Victory Hill Lane, Sat., Aug. 19,9 am - 3 p.m. Household items, furniture & misc.

Austintown - 2 house sale. Antiques, housewares, fur-niture, truck camper, com-puters, lap top & desk tops.

Sat., 8-4; Sun., 9-4 pm3838 & 3840 New Rd.

Austintown - 58 Crabwood Ct. Sat. & Sun., 9-4. Toys, clothes, household items, small appliances, tools.

Austintown - 86 N. Turner Rd. Fri.-Sat., 10-5. Hallow-een, jewelry, teapots, wom-ens clothes sz. 8-12, cookie jars, cookbooks, paintball.

Austintown - 95 N. NavarreFri. & Sat., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Household items, glass-ware, games, lots of misc.

Austintown - CDs & DVDs, stuffed animals, Barbies, trading cards, clothes, kitchenware.

2892 Spring Meadow Cir.Starting at 10am, Aug. 19

Austintown - Estate Sale. 914 Kirwin Dr. Fri. thru

Sun., 9am-3pm - A Variety of Household Items!

Austintown - Fri. & Sat.Aug. 18 & 19; 9-4 p.m.

2182 Birch Trace Dr., men’s & girls bikes, lots of misc.

Austintown - Garage Sale!119 S. Beverly, 9 am-4 pmFri., Sat. & Sun. Furniture, tools & much more!

Austintown - Garage Sale! 3819 Huntmere. Fri.-Sun., 9-4. Crib, baby & kids items, knick knacks, Pokemon, etc.

Austintown - Moving Sale 4040 Kirk Rd. Sat., Aug. 19, 9-5 & Sun., Aug. 20, 9-3. Household, furniture, baby, toys, tools. No Early Birds!

Austintown - Victory Hill Lane. Fri. & Sat., 9am-4pm

Girls clothes, bikes,household, country decor.

Berlin Center - 3 Family! 15883 Berlin Station Rd., off 534. Fri.-Sat., 9-5. Vari-ety of nice items, come see!

Boardman - 2 Family Sale! 903 & 913 Indianola Rd. Fri. & Sat., 9-4. Antiques, furni-ture, etc. HUGE SAVINGS!

Garage Sales

Boardman - 3 Sales! 281 & 265 S. Cadillac & 6147 Glenwood. All within very short walking distance. This End Up oak bunk bed, recliners, pictures, home decor, clothes, Vic-toria Secret, purses & tons of misc.

Fri. & Sat., 9-5

Boardman - 936 Augusta Dr. Park Harbour. 3 Fami-ly/Estate. Dog crates, tools, mens, womens, household, clothes, lawn, electronics, & much more.

Thurs., Fri., Sat., 9-4 pm

Boardman - HUGEMulti family garage sale.

700 block Canterbury LaneSat. & Sun., 10-5.

Boardman - HUGE! 775 Truesdale Rd. Fri.-Sat., 9-4. Designer purses & clothing, Coach, MK, Vera, Express, Tiffany, jewelry. Crystal, glassware, 2 new wedding gowns - SM., Wii, oak farm table, household & more.

Boardman - Moving Sale:8536 Reserve Ct. Lawn & garden, power & hand tools, sporting goods, home ac-cess., furniture & much more. Garage Sale: 8565 Reserve Dr. Toys, games & misc. household items.Fri., Sat., Aug. 18 & 19, 9-4

Boardman - multi-family. 698 Oakridge Dr., Fri., Sat., Aug. 18 & 19, 9 am-3 pm NO EARLY BIRDS Furniture for use & repur-posing, lamps, household goods, electronics, Coach & Vera purses, woman’s clothes & shoes, boys clothes & more!

PRICED TO MOVE!

Boardman - neighborhood sale. Baby items, antiques, furniture, books, collecti-bles, household, clothes, etc. Mayfield Dr., Fairfield Dr., Greenfield Dr. & West-field Dr. Fri., Aug. 18th, 8-8 & Sat., Aug. 19th, 8-2.

Boardman - yard sale. Household, Christmas, fur-niture, plus sz. clothing, girls & boys, Sat., 9 am - 3 pm. 172 Argyle Ave.

Garage Sales

Campbell - 641 Matawan,(off Struthers-Liberty Rd.) Sat.-Mon., Aug. 19-21, 10-6 pm. Clothes, home decor, gaming, toys, DVDs, baby, plus “free item” table.

Canfield - 2nd Time Around! Lots & lots of new items

added! Fri.-Sun., 9am-5pm- 446 Fairview Ave. -

Canfield - 3 Family Sale! Sat.-Sun., Aug. 19-20, 8-4. 51 Oakview Crossing. Furni-ture, appliances, baby items

Canfield - 473 Janet Dr. Fri. & Sat., Aug. 18 & 19, 9-4. Household, seasonal, collec-tibles, tools, vintage toys.

Canfield - Estate Sale. Fri. & Sat., Aug. 18 & 19; 9-3 pm. 8514 Tippecanoe Rd., Everything must go!

Canfield - Huge Moving Sale! 106 Neff Dr. Lots of childrens toys, clothes, 2 cribs like new, treadmill, corner hutch, dishes, tools, chainsaw, lawn equip., furniture & much more! One Day Only!Sat., Aug. 19th, 9am-7pm

Canfield - Huge Moving Sale! Everything MUST go! Furniture, home decor, tools, housewares, etc.

7057 Berry Blossom Dr.Aug. 18 & 19, 9am-4pm

Canfield - MOVING SALE! Name your price! Sat., Aug. 19th, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. 3315 Meanderwood Dr. (44406)Husqvarna riding mower, snowblower, many TOOLS, LG fridge, furniture & more!

CANFIELD101 Dartmouth Dr.

Saturday, 9am-5pm

Cornersburg - 3470 King-ston Lane. Thurs.-Sat., 10-6; Preview Wed. Eve. Mens med. designer sweaters & shirts, suits, sz. 42 short, 2 twin sz. flowered comfort-ers, sewing machine, cherry triple dresser. 330-519-5135

Cornersburg - 3822 Timothy Lane. Sat., 10-5. A man’s dream - lots of tools! Sew-ing, housewares & misc.

ELLSWORTH TWP.Neighborhood Sale! West of Rt. 45 on Leffingwell Rd. Fri. & Sat., 9-5. Furniture, tools, new misc. items.

Garage Sales

Girard - Carpenter Tool Sale909 Tibbetts Wick Rd., Pas-lode, Rigid, Porter Cable, and DeWalt, many hand tools, & specialty tools. New Anderson windows, many Halloween & Christ-mas items. Selling all props from haunted house. Much more.Fri. & Sat. Aug. 18 & 19; 8 a.m.-7 p.m.

Girard - Tag Sale. Sat., Aug. 19, 9-4. 512 N. State St. Books, bikes, pet supplies, household & kitchen items, sports equip., clothes, shoes, furniture, toys.

Hubbard - Garage & Estate Sale. Aug. 18 & 19, 9-4 p.m.

Everything must go!646 Jerry Dr.

LIBERTY TWP.1605 Shannon Rd.

Aug. 17-19, 10am-5pmNO EARLY BIRDS!!! TOOLS, refrigerator, gas stove, bed-room furniture, COLLECTI-BLES, small appliances, wooden dinette table, porch glider & so much more!

McDonald - 750 Connecti-cut, Sat. & Sun., 9-4. Tools, furniture, much misc.

Everything must go!

McDonald - 924 Iowa Ave. Fri.-Sat., 9-4. Tools, furni-ture, Olympic weight sys-tem, high chair, stroller.

MINERAL RIDGESat. & Sun., 9am-4pm.

5124 Cranberry Dr.N. JACKSON

Multi Family Garage SaleFri. & Sat., 9-5; Sun., 1-5

2061 N Bailey Rd.

N. Lima - 11526 South Ave., Sat., 9-5:30, Sun.; 12-5.Clothes, toys, collectibles, antiques, Ltd. Ed. art, misc.

New Middletown - Fri. & Sat., 9-6. 4206 W. Candy Apple Ct., Clothes, shoes, boots, some brand new! Outdoor & indoor furniture, video consoles & more.

New Middletown - Sat. & Sun., 8-4. 10505 Struthers Rd. Records, Power Rang-ers, furniture, gas fireplace

NEW MIDDLETOWNSat. & Sun., 8am-4pm

4680 E. Calla Rd.Furniture, household goods

Garage Sales

Niles - Moving Sale!Thurs.-Sat., Aug., 17-19, 9am-5pm. 158 North Rd. Primitive decor, furniture, exercise equip., womens clothing, hanging heater.

Poland - 3 Family Sale! Tools, lawn mower, pres-sure washer, furniture. Fri.-Sat, 8-4. 2380 Bel-Aire Ln.

Poland - DOWNSIZING!1958 Wendy Ln. Sat., 9-2.Dishes, furniture, frames,

wine glasses & more!

Poland - Moving Sale!8552 Reserve Dr. Sat. Only! 9am-? Infant & toddler fur-niture, strollers, books, toys, household, furniture.

Poland - Multi Family!2756 Coblentz Dr. Fri., Aug. 18, 8-4 & Sat., Aug. 19, 8-1.

Kids & adult shoes & clothes, toys, dryer,

entertainment center, sofa, tapestry, silk flowers,

vases, kitchenware, lamps, crib mattress.

Poland - Sat. & Sun., 10-4. 3388 Swallow Hollow Dr. Baby girl & kids clothes, toys & household items.

Struthers - 176 Poland Ave. Sat.-Mon., 9am-6pm. Tools, asst. household, some small furniture, lots of misc

Struthers - Moving Sale!360 Edison St. Fri. & Sat., 8-4. Toys, collectibles, cook-books, kitchen, household, sports memorabilia.

Struthers - Moving Sale! 509 Sexton St.

Fri., 1-5, Sat. & Sun., 7-5Fashion, all name brand clothing BB, Black & White Store & Alfred Dunner, womens sz. 8 shoes, appli-ances, home decor & misc.

Vienna - Garage Sale480 Niles-Vienna Rd.

Aug. 18 & 19, 8am-4pm

Yo. South - Garage/Moving Sale! 1087 Shady Run

Fri. thru Sun., 8am-Noon.330-301-9080

Yo. West - S. Schenley to Hillgate to 2166 Cranbrook Dr. Thurs., Fri., Sat., 10am-4pm. PRICED TO SELL!

Yo. West - Sat. & Sun., 10-4. Kit. items, some catering items, holiday, clothes & misc. 1921 Highlawn Ave.

Asphalt Paving

PANTALONE PAVING INC.Over 65 yrs. exp. Drives, Parking Lots. 330-652-9108

W.R. CADE PAVINGInsured ~ Free Estimates.

800-275-4581 or330-270-5830 - PA6516

Cement & Masonry

All Types Concrete, Roofing & Siding. 40 Years Exp. Free Est. Larry, 330-219-8174

Electrical Work

A Better Free EstimatesNew breaker boxes, rewire, lic., insured. 330-758-7074

Kirkner Electric New Break-er Boxes & Rewiring. City lic./bonded. 330-747-5055.

Garbage Collection

SEREDAY DUMPSTERSRoll-Off Rental

Call 330-448-4000

Gutter Cleaning& Installation

A Seamless Gutter Co.Made at your home to fit your home! 330-793-5646.

Hauling

A&A&A Hauling & MovingFree Est. 330-974-4191

- Senior Discounts -

AARDVARK Hauling. $0 & up. Basement/cleanouts.

References. 330-518-5342.

ABC Hauling & MovingAnything • Anytime • BBB Accredited. 330-788-0579

J & J HaulingBig or small, we haul it all!

Call 330-540-0640

STAN’s Junk RemovalResidential or CommercialCall us first! 330-207-6504

Home Improvement

ROOFING & SIDINGFully Ins. - Free Est.

Amish Crew.Joseph Byler Construction

Call 724-923-8402

Landscapers

Tree Trimming, spring clean up & Flower Bed Cleanup. 330-209-1379/330-356-1564

Roofing

5-Star Roofingand ConstructionHail & Wind Specialist.

Dump available. Free Est. 330-651-4418

Chimney & Slate, roof & spouting repair specialist.

Mike, 330-750-1591

�ROB PHIBBS’ ROOFING�House cleanouts, hauling, demo (windows, decks, gut-ters, tree cutting). You got it, we haul it! Dump Trailer Rentals! We buy junk cars.

Call or text 330-550-9211

Siding

SHAWN’S Vinyl Siding andRepairs. Don’t Delay, Call

Today! 330-746-8158

Tree Service

A AND A Tree & Stump Removal-Shrubs, trimming. Insured. 330-792-4925.

Clean Cut Tree Service - tree removal - preservation. We bring beauty back to your trees. 330-787-2955.* J & L Tree Service LLC *

Free Est.- Certified ArboristFully ins. (330) 614-8578

John’s Tree Removal Trees, stumps, brush, firewood. Ins. free est. 330-542-3051

KLAR TREE SERVICETree removal, prunning,

firewood. Call 330-651-1716

ApartmentsUnfurnished

LIBERTY - 1 & 2 Bdrm., starting $525/mo.; 2, 3 & 4 bdrm. townhomes, $700-$825/mo. Various floor plans! HALF OFF MOVE IN SPECIAL! Monticello Apts. including Logan Gate & Lo-gan Way. Call 330-759-9478

Liberty1 & 2 Bdrm.

starting from $505INCLUDES:

• Heat & Water• Carpeting• Air Conditioning• Secured Entrances• Seniors & Retirees

Welcome

TIMBERRIDGE APTS.

330-759-8811Directly off Liberty St.

N. Lima - Efficiency. Private deck, carport, laundry rm., all util. & trash incl., $425/mo. 330-540-9114.

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. NorthCrandall Park Apts.

1707 5th Ave.Very spacious 2 bdrm., nice-ly remodeled w/new kitch-en, must see. $550.

330-742-0198

Yo. West - 3 bdrm., large kit., din. rm., liv. rm., pri-vate parking, $585/mo. Inc. gas & water. 1st., last + sec. dep. Call 330-301-2987.

Houses For Rent

Austintown - 3 bdrm., 1.5 bath, 1872 sq. ft., 1 car ga-rage, $900/mo.

Call 330-559-6461.

Austintown - early Sept., 3 bdrm., 2 bath ranch with full basement, new furnace & a/c, 2 car attached garage w/enclosed breezeway, washer/dryer hookups. 12 Mo. lease with 1st. mo. rent of $1100 + sec. dep. $1200. You pay util., lawn maint. & snow removal.NO PETS. Please Contact:

330-720-4120/330-720-2379

Austintown - RENT TO OWN. 3-Bdrm. ranch, 2.5-car garage, corner lot, new-ly repainted inside & out, incl. fridge, stove & dish-washer, shed, asking $800 + deposit. 330-719-2519

Boardman - 3 bdrm. with garage, c/a, $750/mo. ten-ant pays all util., 1st, last & sec. required. 330-301-2987

Boardman - 3 Bdrm., c/a, 2 car garage, $800/mo. + util.

Call 330-398-1800

Boardman - Ranch duplex, 3 bdrm., 1st floor laundry, nice front porch, $650 + util. Call 330-518-7978.

Girard - 2-Bdrm., applian-ces, $600/mo. + util. Move in ready! Call 330-240-9006

McDonald - 1.5 Story, 3 bdrm., 2 bath, eat-in kit., din. rm., 2 car garage, lg. corner lot, McDonald School District, $700/mo., 1st, last & sec., references required. Available immediately. By appt. only. 508-932-0002

Condos For Rent

Poland - 3-bdrm., 2.5-bath, air, private backyard in

residential neighborhood, attached 2-car garage,

$1400/mo. 330-702-8006

Rooms For Rent

FREE RENT - Looking for couple who is able to pro-vide care for terminally ill woman in exchange for effi-ciency apt., furnished or un-furnished. Details can be obtained by calling. Private room with bath & access to kitchen & laundry room. Preferably someone with caregiving exp. Must clear criminal background check. 724-510-5841/724-698-7204

Wanted to Rent

Wanted: small 2 bdrm. house, w/fenced in yard, for elderly couple. Boardman, Struthers, Austintown.330-787-7875/330-787-7969

Commercial/IndustrialFor Rent

Newton Falls - 3600 sq. ft. for lease in busy commer-cial plaza, ample parking, no CAM. Call 330-246-0845

4000REAL ESTATE

Houses For Sale

Boardman - by owner, 3 bdrm. 2 bath, den, liv./din. rm. combo, cathedral ceil-ings, newer roof, new car-pet, basement, 1,344 sq. ft., good neighborhood.

4226 Mill Trace Rd.$79,900. Call 330-207-3173

Boardman - Open HouseSun., 8/20 - 1 pm-3 pm

3905 Hopkins Rd.3 bdrm. Cape Cod, move in condition, 2 car detached garage, corner lot, Board-man schools. By owner, $81,500. (Only $3000 down)

Boardman Schools - 3 bdrm. slab ranch. Completely re-modeled on double lot. Move in ready. Woodworth area. $93,900. 330-720-0093

Liberty - New Listing!2-Story, 4 bdrm., 2.5 bath, new roof, updated elec., sun rm. & walk out deck. Many updates & features. Move in condition! $129,500.Call 330-759-0314 for appt.

N. LimaOPEN SAT., 1:00-3:00

1017 W. South Range Rd.4-Bdrm. Century Home.

Newer roof, siding, win-dows & more. South Range Schools, $69,900.

Barbara George330-941-9212

Struthers - Open HouseSun., Aug. 20th, 1pm-3pm

363 W. Wilson St. 4 bdrm., 2.5 bath, brick & vinyl sided ext., 3 car garage, $74,000.

Yo. North - Historical Fifth Ave. 6 bdrm., 3.5 bath, sau-na, french doors, 2 firepla-ces, hardwood floors, din. rm., fam. rm. & library, $125,000. Call 330-397-5823

Condos For Sale

AustintownThe Villas at Spring Lake

Units starting at $179,900125 Fitch Blvd.

Meander Homes330-501-5317

Poland Twp. - ClinganCrossing, Ranch Condo

2 Bdrm, 2.5 bath, den/3rd bdrm. Move in ready, 1740 sq. ft., $174,900.5645 Clingan Rd., Unit #9C

Call 330-423-9040

Acreage

BRUNER LAND CO., INC.330-423-9285

www.brunerland.comMAHONING CO.

Milton Twp., 8 acres, for-mer golf course, $52,900.Milton Twp., 22 acres, $55,900. County Line Rd.Springfield Twp., 8 acres, utilities, $48,900.

TRUMBULL CO.Champion Twp., 43 wooded acres, utilities, $114,900.Mespo Twp., Reduced! 20 acres, river frontage, $33,900. S.R. 87.

6000STUFF

Antiques/Collectibles

Music - Music - Large selec-tion of sheet piano music. Early 1900s. Call 330-726-4573, leave msg.

Appliances

Appliance SaleRefrigerator/washers, $248Stoves, $198, Dryers, $158All with 90 Day WarrantyEconomy Furniture

2828 Market, Yo. 782-0331

Freezer - 22 cu. ft., very good condition, running, $50. Call 330-503-3512

Refrigerator - cold, $80.Call 330-502-4367

Baby Items

Port-a-crib with mattress, infant car seat & rocking chair. Reasonable.

Call 330-783-0572

Computers/Software

Computer Monitor - 20” HP, used only 2 mo., $75 or best offer. 330-792-1820.

Farmers Market

Peaches, Cider, Lodi Apples, Huffman Fruit Farm, 13080 Lisbon Rd., Salem, 9-5, Mon.-Sat. 330-533-5700.

Farmers Market

Red Haven Peaches, Sweet Corn, Peppers, Beans, Nec-tarines, Canning Tomatoes, Plums, Melons, Blackber-ries. 330-533-7221

Gasper’s Garden

You pick peppers. Call to or-der for pickles, beets & green beans.

Catalpa Grove FarmsColumbiana, 330-482-4064

Closed Sunday

Furniture

DESK - large oak, $40, very good condition.

Call 330-503-3512

MATTRESS KING - $99, any size set & up. 6534 Market.

Call 330-758-3217

Mattress SaleQueen set $98/Full set $88Economy Furniture

2828 Market, Yo. 782-0331

Sofa Sleeper - very good condition, light beige, $100.

Call 330-503-3512

Trundle bed, dressers, love-seat, chairs, tables, appli-ances, $25-$75 each. Free housewares. 330-503-1939

Sleepy Hollow OutletAny size starting at $78

330-782-5555 4931 Market

Medical Equipment

SCOOTER LIFT - Metal, fits all vehicles, remote control, $500. Call 330-755-1211.

Lawn/GardenEquipment

Golf Cart - EZ-GO Terrain 250, gas engine, dump bed, purchased new 7/9/16, ask-ing $4900 cash only.

Cortland - 330-442-1277

Tractor - Gravely with plow, needs a little work, $300,

Call 330-599-6709.

Miscellaneous

Air Conditioner - Window GE, remote, new, 8000 BTUs, $150. 330-758-0358

Furnace - Goodman, gas, 150,000 BTU, formally used in 5 bdrm./2.5 story home, 80% fuel efficient, nearly new, $500. 330-399-2516

Sewing machine - portable, incl. carrying case & attach-ments, good condition, $30. 330-726-4573, leave msg.

Steam Whistles - 3 Luke-nheimer. (1) 6” & (2) 3.5”, $550 for all. S - O - L - D !

Tires - 4 almost newHankook on 18” expensivemags, $1200. 330-799-4282

TRAILER - 8’ truck bed, with cap, good shape, $285 or best offer. S - O - L - D !

TRAILERS & HITCHESbennetttrailer.com

330-533-4455

5 Gal. glass water jugs, $20 each. Call 330-399-2516. If no answer, leave msg.

Office Equipment

Office copier, small, $10; Fax machine, never used,

$15. Call 330-799-2207

Sporting/ExerciseEquipment

Canoe, 16ft. fiberglass, $250; 26” boys bike & girls bikes, $25 ea. 330-448-4596

Exercise machine,weights, etc., cost over

$3000, asking $800.330-503-1985/330-533-1985

Gun - Mitchell Gold Series, 1911, 45 cal., mint in box, $1600/offer. 330-799-4282.

Pistol - Glock G24, Gen 3, 40 cal. S& W with aim shot laser sight, $650.

330-729-1203.

TREADMILL - NordicTrack. Model T6.3, barely used, folds up for easy storage, $500. Call 330-793-9496

Swimming Pools/Accessories

Pool, heater & more.You take down, $500.

Call 330-793-7369

Wanted to Buy

$$$ Cash for old Toys $$$Trains, guns, antiques,

estates, comics, Star Wars, etc. 330-856-6833

WANTED: Collections of LP’s, 45 rpm Records. Cash

paid. Call 330-518-6576

7000PETS, ANIMALS

Pets Lost

Cat - Black, male with CURLED TAIL in Canfield or surrounding shopping areas, friendly.

CALL 330-610-5454

Birds

I will take free birds & into my loving care any time.

Call 330-965-0194

Cats

KITTENS & CATS330-502-5352

Free cats & kittens, litter trained, some long & some short hair. 330-792-0192

www.angelsforanimals.org330-549-1111

*Low cost spay/neuters*

Dogs

German Shepherd Pups - Gorgeous! Males - females.

330-360-3527

King Corso puppies - shots, tails, dews, wormed, ICCF registered. 330-747-3007 or 330-774-8846/330-951-8814

Pekingese Puppies$300. 330-207-6807

ADOPT A PETAnimal Welfare has agreat selection of alltypes of cats & dogs.Adoption fee required

Open Tues.-Sat., 12-6 pm812 Yo.-Kingsville Rd. SEVienna, 330-539-5300

Adorable PuppiesHuskies, Dox-Shih, Shih Tzu, Maltese, Dorkie, Ted-dys, Yorkie-Poos, Yorkies, Maltipoos, Shihtzu-Poo, Golden Retrievers. Financ-ing. 1560 E. Liberty St.off Belmont/330-259-1286

www.ohiopuppy.com

www.angelsforanimals.org330-549-1111

*Low cost spay/neuters*

Exotic Pets

BUNNIES � Fancy breeds, pedigree, breeding & show. 330-872-3707/330-872-7088

Free Pets

NOTICE: Screenrespondents carefully when

giving away animals.

8000AUTOMOTIVE

Antique/Classic Cars

Chevrolet Monte Carlo - 1986 LS, white, landau roof, beige custom int., rally wheels, 30,000 mi., all origi-nal, showroom mint condi-tion, $9800. 330-539-1030.

Chevrolet Corvette - 197727,000 mi., 350 cu. in., au-to., leather interior, T-tops, $4000. Call 330-501-7226

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 GT 1993. True Texas barn find. Fox body, 5.0, 5 spd., Edelbrock fuel injection, BBK headers, many new parts. Needs mo-tor work, $6000 firm.For details - 330-502-0553

FORD MODEL A - 1931Excellent condition,

original, $19,500.Call 330-792-2524

Oldsmobile Delta 88 - 1985, low mi., runs good, $1500/ offer. 330-599-2476.

Oldsmobile 98 Regency 1983. 86,000 mi., excellent condition, factory leather int., $8500. 330-750-0417

Pontiac GTO - 1967, factory air, auto., excellent condi-tion, PHS documentation, Protect-o-plate. Serious in-quiries only, $35,000.

Call 330-540-6411

TRIUMPH TR6 - 1972, Brit-tish Racing Green, excellent condition, $10,500. Located Girard, OH. 701-446-6740.

ATVs

Yamaha Raptor 350 - 2005Excellent condition, $2800 firm. Serious inquiries only

Call 724-456-2751

AutomobileParts/Service

Doors, hood, trunk, all body parts from 2000 Toyota Corolla, $250. 330-599-6709

Boats

1988 - 14’ Fiberglass tri-hull, 30 hp, elec. bow motor, trailer, $1400/offer.

Call 330-793-2107

FISHER - 200222ft., 175hp engine

(needs repair), seats 12, $6000. Call 330-559-6938

Campers/RVs

Coachmen 31’ RV Class C Ford V-10 - 2004. 1 Slide, generator, jacks, 32” TV,

queen, convection, satellite, air ride, 1 owner,

$21,900/offer 330-406-0978

Campers/RVs

Coachmen travel trailer - 2003, 25’, awning, newer tires, jacks, air, queen, mi-crowave, fridge, freezer, oven, bath, sleeps 4, excel-lent condition, 1 owner, blue book $4600. Asking $4000. S - O - L - D !

Class C motorhome - 199132’, fully loaded with rear bed, $6995 or best offer.

Call 330-240-5726

Motorcycles/Mopeds

Harley-Davidson Nightster - 2011, excellent condition, like new, many extras, 10,500 mi., original owner, $6200 330-423-3829

Harley-Davidson V-Rod Night Rod - 2006, 6000 mi., $7500 or best offer, may accept guns on trade.

Call 724-924-9158

Harley-Davidson - 2003Anniversary Fatboy

Collector’s Edition, 7980 mi.Stage 1 kit, V&H pipes, & chromed everything. New tires & service @ 7333 mi. PA inspected. $9000/offer.

Call 724-658-0352

Harley-Davidson FLSTCI - 2003, 100th Anniversary, too much to list. Must see!

$10,000 or best offer.Call 330-314-0637

Harley-Davidson V-Rod - 2003. Anniversary Edition, silver & black, 4000 mi., $5000. Call 330-537-3941.

Honda Goldwing 2010 - ti-tled new 2012, pearl yellow, 8400 mi., all factory options except air bag, many ex-tras, $18,000. 330-506-4084

Honda Shadow - 200713,000 mi., $3500 or best offer, may accept guns on trade. Call 724-924-9158

Honda Magna 700 - 19849800 mi., 5 yr. storage, car-buretor needs cleaned, $900. S - O - L - D !

Motorcycles/Mopeds

Kawasaki Ninja 650 - 2012Super nice condition, black,

5000 mi., $4800.Call or text 330-509-2620

Suzuki Blvd. S50 - 2006Windshield, factory

saddle bags & pipes, KBB $2910,asking $2800.Call 330-519-8779

Suzuki Boulevard C90 - 2005, 1600cc, 11,000 mi., $3500. Call 330-501-3702

Suzuki SV650 - 1999V-Twin, 8000 mi., almost perfect, lots of extras, $2000. Call 330-759-7381.

Triumph Bonneville - 2002790cc, 6295 mi., $3400.

Call 330-755-5201

Vespa LXV150 - 2009, olive green, 873 mi., mint condi-tion, $2850. 330-367-7247

Automobiles

Cadillac DTS - 2008Pearl white, loaded includ-ing moonroof, only 47,200 mi., perfect condition, not a scratch inside or out. Driv-en by a 75 yr. old widow. Book $9700, sacrifice $8950/offer. S - O - L - D !

Chevrolet Malibu - 20124 cyl., leather heated seats, 50,000 mi., $7900 firm. Rti-tle. Call 330-534-4188Chevrolet Cobalt LT - 2009

2dr., auto., power, very good condition, 84,000 mi., $3000. Call 330-717-4214

Chevrolet Aveo LT Hatch-back 2009. Auto., p.w., p.l., PA inspected, 57,000 mi. $5200/offer. 724-877-5135

Chevrolet Impala - 2008157,000 mi., $3200 or best offer. Call 234-201-2369

Chevrolet Cavalier - 2000Convertible Z24, 160,000 mi., no rust., no rust, $1900 firm. Call 330-534-4188.

Chrysler LeBaron - 1995126,000 mi., $1750 or best

offer. Call 330-533-7469

Hyundai Elantra - 2010, 49,000 mi., new tires, moon roof, $6000. 330-951-9929.

Lexus ES350 2007. Very clean, smooth, quiet ride, MPG: 21 city, 31 highway, Premium Pkg., silver, gray leather int., 139,685 mi., $6700. Call 724-448-5112Lincoln Towncar - 1994, 151,000 road mi., blue, new battery & many new parts, $900/offer. 330-509-8467

Mercury Milan - 2007. Gray, 2-tone black interior, excel-lent condition, 94,000 mi., $5850. Call 330-774-5289

Mercury Sable GS - 2004Loaded, 4dr., burgundy, 110,762 highway mi., good tires & brakes, good condi-tion. Non-smoker, $2500/ offer. Call 330-856-5315

Mercury Grand Marquis 2000. 67,857 mi., $3300.

Call 330-507-1893Nissan Juke - 2013

Loaded, AWD, mint condi-tion, only 35,000 mi., sun-roof, auto., 4 cyl., 1.6 turbo charged, $14,000/offer.330-782-6806/330-718-6806

Pontiac Grand Prix - 20084 dr., grey, super clean, low mi., 107,000 mi., $6850.

Call 330-774-5289

Automobiles

Pontiac Bonneville SLE 2004. Wife’s car, well maintained, black, gray leather int., well equip-ped including moonroof, 61,000 mi., $5500.

Call 330-402-5537

Toyota Camry XLE - 2007 - 101,300 mi., V6, good condi-tion, heated leather seats, 4 dr., $7000. 330-965-9992.

�BRITTAIN Chevrolet. 57 E. Martin St., E. Palestine, OH. Local 1-800-589-7970

SUVs

Cadillac Escalade - 20054WD, brand new a/c com-pressor, all new front end suspension parts, excellent condition inside & out, runs terrific, all available op-tions, black, premium wheels, 170,000 mi., $7500 or best offer. 330-506-0683

Dodge Durango - 20034WD, great condition, great tires, cold air, good heat, needs brakelines, $1450 or best offer. 330-519-2445

Ford Escape XLT - 2009Good condition, new tires, $8995. Call 724-652-9139

Honda CR-V EX-L - 200959,000 mi., fully loaded,

like new, $10,800.Call 330-716-4761

Jeep Grand Cherokee - 2004- 120,000 mi., 4x4, black, new tires, clean, $2900/offer. 330-623-1775.

Subaru Forester - 20092.5L, 57,000 mi.,

well maintained, $12,000.Call 330-853-6703

Trucks

Chevrolet Silverado Z71 - 2013, low mi., loaded, $26,300/offer 330-797-0091

Chevrolet S10 - 19954 cyl., 5 spd., $1100.Call 330-707-4376

Dodge Ram 1/2 ton - 20124x4, quad cab, 5.7 Hemi, 40,000 mi., bedliner, cap, black, very clean, $23,000/ best offer. 330-720-4279

Ford Ranger Sport - 19994WD, very dependable

truck, $2500 or best offerCall 330-502-0109 after 5

FORD F-150 - 19934.9L, 6 cyl., manual trans., 176,000 mi., good transpor-tation, runs good, body poor, $650. 330-718-5585

GMC Sierra 1500 - 2001Reg. cab, long bed, V-8, 73,000 mi., good condition, $2900/offer. S - O - L - D !

Vans

Chevrolet Astro (pass.) - 2002, loaded, rear heater & rear a/c, 136,400 mi., ask-ing $2900. S - O - L - D !

Dodge Caravan Wheelchair Van 1997. Runs & drives,

great, $4000/offer.Call 559-860-9266

Ford Windstar - 2000Handicap van, white, 54,000 mi., ramp, 4 new tires, ask-ing $8000. S - O - L - D !

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

CLASSIFIEDSB6 THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 WWW.VINDY.COM

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

B7 - 08/19/17

My daughter Nora and her husband recently re-turned from a trip to Col-orado. Within a day, she emailed me a photo of a blue bird she wanted to identify.

“It reminds me of a blue jay, but it doesn’t have a crest. Can you tell me what it is?” she asked.

Before I saw the photo, I expected it to be a Steller’s jay, which is a bold, loud, common jay of the moun-tain west, but it has a crest like our blue jay. The top half of its body is dark, al-most black, and the lower half is dark blue. Steller’s jays are western ecologi-cal equivalents of blue jays. When you pull into a camp ground out west, Steller’s jays often greet you at the picnic table.

Nora’s bird was blue, but its back was distinctly gray. It was a western scrub-jay.

W it hout t he photo, (which was adequate but not great), I could not have

identifi ed the bird with cer-tainty. The gray back, how-ever, was diagnostic, but it might have easily been missed in a verbal descrip-tion.

A long w it h magpies, crows, and ravens, jays are classifi ed in the family Corvidae. The U.S. is home to 19 species of corvids. All are bold and highly intelli-gent birds, but only the jays are colorful.

Since this column’s read-ers live east of the Missis-sippi River, I’ll shine the spotlight on the blue jay. Eleven inches long, from the tip of the bill to the tip of the tail, blue jays are one of the largest birds that visit bird feeders. Males and fe-males are identical – bright blue body, crested head and a black necklace sepa-rates the white throat and belly. The blue wings and tail are marked with white spots and black bars.

Blue jays need not be seen to be recognized. “Jay!” is

their most recognizable call, but their repertoire of sounds is impressive. They can expertly mimic the screams of hawks and the calls of many other song-birds. My favorite blue jay sound is a horn-like “Quee-dle! Queedle!”

In just a few weeks, blue jays will begin roaming in small f locks (maybe “gangs” would be a better term). Unwilling to com-pete with large brash jays, smaller birds disappear into the woods, and the jays feed in peace.

On the rare occasion that another bird lingers near the feeder, one jay in the f lock may mimic the cry of a red-shouldered hawk. Standing up to a blue jay is one thing; tempting a bird-eating hawk is quite

another. The jay’s ruse usu-ally succeeds, and the fl ock dines in peace.

If you love blue jays (and it seems most people either love them or hate them), offer whole, in-shell pea-nuts. As long as peanuts are available, jays keep com-ing. They cram them into expandable throat pouch-es, much like a chipmunk fi lls its cheek pouches. And like chipmunks, blue jays cache their prizes for later use. Only when the peanut feeder is empty does the jay parade end.

In May and June, blue jay aggression takes a darker turn. When most other backyard and woodland birds are incubating eggs or brooding chicks, blue jays rob nests. Like crows, blue jays eat both eggs and nestlings of smaller birds.

On the other hand, blue jays also provide a valuable service to their smaller feathered neighbors. Owls eat birds, so smaller birds

like to keep track of the whereabouts of local owls. Jays mob owls they find roosting peacefully in the woods. Their alarm calls alert other birds such as tit-mice, chickadees and nut-hatches, which then join in mobbing the owl.

The message mobbing behavior sends to an owl is, “We see you. You can’t sur-prise us, so go away, and leave us alone.” Even an owl can take only so much abuse, and eventually it departs in search of a more secluded perch.

It seems strange that some a n i ma ls ca n be friend and foe, protector and bully, depending on the circumstances. But in our own backyards, blue jays are one such bird.Dr. Shalaway can be heard on Birds& Nature from 3 to 4 p.m. Sunday after-noons on 620 KHB Radio (Pittsburgh)or live online at www.khbradio.com.Visit his website, www.drshalawaycom, or contact him directly at [email protected] or 2222 Fish Ridge Road, Cameron, WV 26033.

SATURDAYAUGUST 19, 2017THE VINDICATOR | B7

OUTDOORS PHOTOSGot an outdoors photo you would like to share with other Vindicator readers? Email it with names and description of the activity as well as a contact number to [email protected].

HUNTER, TRAPPER EDUCATIONINFORMATION — Ohio: Call

800-WILDLIFEPennsylvania: 814-432-3187.SPECIAL EVENTS, SEASONS, ETC.Information on boat safety courses

(mandatory if born after Jan. 1, 1982): 614-265-6480.

CLUB & ACTIVITY NEWSBEAVER CREEK SPORTSMAN CLUB:

3-D archery shoots, second Sunday of every month, registration from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., call 330-719-3964. 14480 Washingtonville Road, Washingtonville, Ohio. 330-337-8308. www.beavercreeksc.com.

BROOKFIELD TRI-DISTRICT CON-SERVATION CLUB: Cornhole, 7 p.m., second Saturday of the month. Turkey shoots, 7 p.m. Tuesdays, call 330-876-9611 for information. Muzzleloading black powder turkey shoots third Sunday monthly, noon. Muzzleloading meat shoots, third Sunday at noon. Con-tact Shenango Joe at 330-782-0958 or Dakota Bert at 724-306-1134. 1953 Sharon-Hogue Road, Masury. 330-448-8855.

BURNT RIDGE BOW & GUN CLUB: Cowansville, Pa., 724-545-2552.

CHESTER NEWELL SPORTSMEN’S CLUB: Trap Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays; turkey shoots Sun-days at noon. 330-424-3659.

COLUMBIANA COUNTY FISH & GAME: Indoor offhand .22 rifl e shoots, 6 p.m. Tuesdays. Indoor pistol shoots, 7 p.m. Fridays. Trap shooting, 6 p.m. Wednesdays and 11 a.m. Sundays. 45716 Middle Beaver Road, Lisbon.

CONSERVATION LEAGUE (MOS-QUITO BOWMEN): 2535 McCleary Jacoby Road, Rte. 305 or Route 46, Cortland 44410. 330-565-1123.

EAST PALESTINE SPORTSMEN’S CLUB: Indoor .22 rifl e and pistol shoots, Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. in the club house. The club grounds are located at the end of Failer Street, off North Pleasant Road, East Palestine. Call Ralph at 330-757-8397 or visit www.epsports-mensclub.com.

EASTERN OHIO CONSERVATION CLUB: Trap every Wednesday at 6 p.m. Skeet every Sunday at 10 a.m. Club is on West Calla Road be-tween state Routes 62 and 45.

FISH & GAME CLUB OF VIENNA: Doubles, singles trap Wednesdays and Sundays, 9 a.m. 330-534-2929 to register. Indoor archery, Mondays, Wednesdays, 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. Free for members; $3 for nonmembers. Ear, eye protection necessary. Any caliber (if shoot-ing magnum, you need reduced loads). The trap fi eld is in use every Sunday and Wednesday starting around 9 a.m.; welcoming seasoned veterans and beginners alike. Any-time all four trap fi elds are in use, all ranges will be closed except the archery fi eld range. Indoor pistol

range open to public Thursdays, 4 to 10 p.m. Call George Palo at 330-856-9949 or Ed Placek at 330-637-0485.

FURFINFEATHER SPORTSMAN’S ASSOCIATION: For information, call 724-528-1111 or 724-528-2492. Club is on Romain Road south on Route 18 in West Middlesex, Pa.

GREENVILLE SPORTSMEN’S CLUB: Skeet and trap, Wednesdays, Sat-urdays and Sundays, 10 a.m., open to public. Registered skeet Sundays 10 a.m., $20 registration. Rifl e and pistol shoots (members only), 10 a.m. to dusk every day. 1039 Ver-non Road (Route 538) Greenville, Pa. 724-558-9994. www.green-villesportsmen.com.

HIDDEN VALLEY SPORTSMEN’S CLUB: .22 shoots on the second Sunday of each month through Dec. 10, consisting of a woods walk course, pistol golf course, money bell and pistol poker, which is a 50/50 challenge. Traditional trap and fi ve man tower, 6 p.m. Tuesdays, 10 a.m. Sundays (call for Sunday dates), $3 per round, 724-528-2700. 268 Gilkey Road, West Middlesex. 724-528-2700 or visit https://hiddenvalleysc.wordpress.com.

HUBBARD CONSERVATION CLUB: Club meetings second Wednesday of the month at 7 p.m. 1760 Wick Campbell Road, Hubbard. 330-501-7650.

KINSMAN CONSERVATION CLUB: Turkey shoots every Wednesday at 7 p.m.

KNOX TOWNSHIP SPORTSMANS CLUB: North Georgetown, Ohio.

LAKE MILTON FISH & GAME: 3-D shoots: Aug. 26 and 27, Sept. 16 and 17, $10 for adults and $5 for children. Visit Facebook page or www.lakemiltonfi shandgameclub.com for a complete schedule of events. 4374 Bedell Road, Berlin Center.

LEETONIA SPORTSMEN’S CLUB: Youth Hunter Education Challenge shoots, fourth Sunday monthly, YHEC practices Sundays. Trap shoots, Tuesdays, 7 p.m. 330-533-2573, 330-222-6901.

LOWELLVILLE ROD AND GUN CLUB: Ladies Pistol League, 6:30 p.m. on the second and fourth Monday of every month, 330-782-0944. Trap shooting practice, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mondays and 6 p.m. Thursdays, call 330-536-8143 or 724-964-8420.. Indoor pistol practice/league, 7 p.m. Tuesdays. Trap league, 6 to 10 p.m. Thursdays. www.lowellville-rod-gun.com.

MAHONING COUNTY COONHUNT-ERS: U.S. 224, west of Canfi eld.

MAHONING VALLEY KNIFE COLLEC-TORS ASSOCIATION: Meetings at 7 p.m. last Wednesday of the month. Denny’s in Boardman. Email [email protected] to join or for more information.

MAHONING SPORTSMEN’SASSOCIATION: Meat shoots, third Sunday of each month. Trap shoots, Sundays at 5 p.m., public invited. All money shoots. 1.5 miles south of U.S. Route 224 at State Line Marker (Main Street) in Hillsville, Pa. 724-667-8555.

NEW MIDDLETOWN FARMERS AND SPORTSMAN CLUB: Trap practice, 5:30 to 10 p.m. Tuesdays, public welcome. Calla Road. 330-542-2382.

MOSQUITO BOWMEN, CONSERVA-TION LEAGUE INC.: 2535 McCleary Jacoby Road, Cortland. 330-759-8619. www.mosquitobowmen.com.

OHIO VALLEY BASS ANGLERS: Seeking new members. Visit www.ohiovalleybassanglers. com. Meet-ings: First, third Thursdays, legion hall, Columbiana. Call 330-549-

5173, 330-536-8031.ORWELL GUN CLUB: Turkey shoots

Fridays, 7 p.m. 330-683-4738.PORTAGE SUMMIT FIELD &

STREAM: Trap shoots every Tues-day, 5 to 8 p.m. 50-yard shooting range open to public each Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m. Visit www.psfs-club.com for complete calendar of events. For more information, call Lew Weygandt at 330-688-6507. 8405 state Route 224, one mile west of Deerfi eld, Ohio 44411.

POSSUM HOLLOW SPORTSMEN’S CLUB: Possum Hollow Road, Wam-pum, Pa.; 724-535-4985. www.pos-sumhollowsportsmansclub.com.

ROCHESTER SPORTSMANS CLUB: 181 Sportsman Lane, Rochester, Pa. www.rochestersportsmenclub.com.

THE SALEM HUNTING CLUB: Just off state Route 62 in Salem. The club is accepting new members. It offers rifl e, trap and pistol ranges. Cowboy Action Shoots, third Sun-day of each month. Black-powder/muzzle loader shoots, third Sunday of each month. All-you-can-eat breakfast served on fi rst Saturday of every month. 330-332-9847; www.salemhuntingclub.com.

TRUMBULL COUNTY ROD & GUN CLUB: Hunter Education Course, 5-9 p.m. For more information, call 330-372-7630 or 330-372-6944. Phillips-Rice Road, Mecca.

WESTERN RESERVE FISH AND GAME CLUB: Junior CMP rifl e shoots, Mondays 6-9 p.m. Indoor handgun, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m. Wednesdays, 5-9 p.m. Thursdays, $2 members, $4 non-members. Indoor archery, 6-8 p.m. Tuesdays. 1058 W. Third St., Niles. 330-544-3993.

WESTVILLE LAKE COUNTRY CLUB: Indoor archery, 6:30 to 9 p.m. Tuesdays, 1 to 4 p.m. Sundays. 858 Case Road, Westville, Ohio. 330-537-4042.

YELLOW CREEK LONG RIFLES: Trail walks second Sunday monthly, open metallic sights, black-powder, patched round ball only. Informa-tion: 330-738-6002, 330-332-8376. State Route 39 west of Salineville, follow signs.

YOUNGSTOWN RIFLE & PISTOL CLUB: Ladies night, fi rst and third Thursday of every month, 6 p.m., cost is $10, bring hand gun and ammunition, call Steve at 330-207-6651. Youth program, fourth Thursday of every month, free and includes fi rearms and ammunition, 6 p.m., call John at 330-519-6891. Trap shoots, 6 p.m. Tuesdays, $3 per round, call Mike at 330-550-3930. Concealed-carry classes, Saturdays and Sundays. Preregis-tration required, call 330-270-9416. Trap, Tuesdays, 6 p.m., $3 per round (includes single, doubles and wobble available), open to the public, call 330-855-2804. PPC, Mondays 6-9 p.m. 8900 Shaffer Road, North Jackson.

Handgun safetyLOWELLVILLE

The Lowellville Rod and Gun Club, 6225 Quarry Road, will have a basic handgun-safety course today from 1 to 5:30 p.m.

The course is free. For more information, call Fred Cannell at 330-398-7347.

Ox roastPOLAND

The New Middletown Farm-ers and Sportsmen’s Club, 3341 E. Calla Road, will have a Men’s Night Out ox roast from 3 to 10 p.m. Sept. 9.

Admission is $22. Gate opens at 3 p.m., and dinner will be served at 6. For more infor-mation, call 330-542-2382.

YSU anglers fi nishfourth in competition

YOUNGSTOWNYoungstown State Univer-

sity Bass Fishing Club mem-bers Mike Soots and Jonathan Creed earned fourth place in a regional college fi shing competition and now qualify to compete in the YETI Fish-ing League Worldwide College Fishing National Champion-ship, to be scheduled in spring 2018.

At the regional contest, the YETI FLW Northern Confer-ence at Lake Chautauqua, N.Y., on July 27, Soots and Creed caught fi ve largemouth bass with a total weight of just over 14 pounds, winning a $500 prize for their club. The top 10 teams qualifi ed for the national competition.

Youth shootingNILES

The coaches for the Western Reserve Fish & Game Associa-tion’s Junior Marksmanship Program announced the fall Shooting and Safety Program for students age 10 to 18.

The cost for the program is $10 per week. Classes will take place at the club’s facility, 1058 W. Third Street. The fi rst class is set for Sept. 11 at 5:30 p.m.

The program is an eight-week course that covers rifl e safety, proper gun handling, basic marksmanship, gun maintenance and Ohio wildlife rules.

Participants will work four weeks with competition-level air rifl es and four weeks with competition-level small-bore .22 rifl es.

All equipment will be pro-vided, including eye and ear protection, shooting jackets, ammunition and more. Par-ents or guardians must ac-company participants to the fi rst session. Candidates with an interest in competitive Olympic-style target shoot-ing may be invited to join the Western Reserve Eagles Jr. Rifl e Team.

For more information, call Coach Stevens at 330-442-2514, Coach Calladine at 330-646-8761 or Coach Nudo at 330-980-8289.

Staff reports

OUTDOORSdigest

Who knew a green thumb would come in handy for a fi sherman?

Many varieties of terrestrial wildlife live in and around veg-etation. Few animals fl ourish in locations with scant plant life.

The same is true in the fi sh world. Many species are at-tracted to aquatic plants. And just as on the land, there are a few species such as white bass and trout that prefer the wide-open waters like a pronghorn antelope prefers the treeless prairie.

Anglers succeed with regu-larity in and near vegetation. It pays, therefore, to under-stand the plants that grow in and up through water. What does their location say about the surrounding lake bottom and what is their potential for holding fi sh?

If you have ever walked along a mowed clearing where it meets the woods or a farm field where it butts up to a fence line, you have noticed that’s where you’ll see more rabbits. The same locations are where deer linger until they feel secure about wandering out to graze on fresh grass or farmers’ corn and soybeans.

That’s the deal, too, with fi sh.

Bass, crappies, perch, sun-fish, northern pike, musk-ies, walleyes and a plethora of baitfi sh live in and next to plants. They especially like to hang around the edges, where they can hide when resting or under threat and then easily swim out to grab a bite to eat.

It’s advisable for anglers to focus their fi shing time on the edges where the underwater grasses provide quick shelter and happy hunting.

Coontail is a common plant in lakes around Youngstown. It’s particularly well estab-lished in Mosquito and West Branch, and periodically sprouts at Milton and Pyma-tuning.

When you find coontail, you’ll likely fi nd fi sh. Interest-ingly, it’s rootless and can form dense colonies that top out to create canopies. As you might guess, fi sh that like overhead cover love coontail. They can swim under the canopy and feel secure from birds of prey such as ospreys, eagles and cormorants, and enjoy the coolness of the shade.

While coontail is native to our region, Eurasian milfoil is considered an invasive spe-cies. It has taken hold in sev-eral of our area waterways. It can spread easily by boats transported from lake to lake. Fish like it, but as habitat it is not as effective as coontail.

Hydrilla is another invasive plant species that has become established in Northeast Ohio. Like coontail, it forms dense mats, which, while good as fi sh cover, can choke waterways to the point where boating is diffi cult.

Milfoil and hydrilla are eas-ily transported and compete aggressively with native spe-cies, so Ohio officials have advised boaters to clean their boats and trailers of the green-ery before towing out to an-other lake.

American elodea is one of the good species. It provides a variety of fi sh-attracting ad-vantages, and it actually be-longs in our local waterways.

Also native are water lilies. They root in bottom sediment and form large areas of shade and shelter for fish, amphib-ians, insects and even small mammals.

Anglers who learn how to pinpoint the location of bass and other fi sh in aquatic veg-etation quickly up their suc-cess rates.

Study the plants in your fa-vorite lake and you’ll almost certainly discover your green thumb comes in mighty handy in putting fi sh on your hooks.

[email protected]

ScottShalaway

JackWollitz

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

Annette McCarthy of Austintown took this photo of a male cardinal feeding a female cardinal in her backyard.

OUT & ABOUT | CLUB CALENDAR

Shining a spotlight on blue jaysKnowing vegetation

benefi ts anglers

MAHONING VALLEY TRAPLeague standings

COLUMBIANAPhil Girard 50Larry McLaughlin 48Randy McGaffi ck 48Lee McMillan 47Ernie Parrish 47Jeff Adams 46Rich Whited 46Kevin Winnett 46Al Cochran 46Jerry Adkins 45Bob Clutter 45Bill McGuire 45Morris Daniel 45Gary Tolson 45LOWELLVILLEFlip Jendre 49Rick Boyarko 47Gary Heitzenrator 47Don Murcko 47Bob Stockunas 47Chris Bryson 45Larry Yaeger 45Frank Augustine 44Robyn Bird 44Doug Worrell 44Harry Blackburn 43Mark Hoff man 43MAHONING SPORTSMANDon Bara 48Frank Pascoe 48Ron Dohar 47Gerry Bertin 46Gary Ehasalu 45Jim Payne 45Billy Yardas 45Bob Ryhal 44George Bissett 43Chelsey Santucci 43Steve Seifert 43Donnie Tanner 42

Rusty Tanner 42NEW MIDDLETOWNGrant Winck 49Wally Buckner 47Tim Heitzenrator 47Bill Geidner 46John Rice 46Joe Boland 45Bob Davis 45Nick Pacura 44Richard Reesh 44Jim Stacy 44Tony Arquilla 41Jim Arkwright 40Boomer Hicken 40E.O.C.C.Gene Snively 50Ambrose Kalasky 47Dave Sine I 46Howard Levine 45Dave Sine II 45John Donges 45FRank Levak 44Dave Grantonic 43Bob Grinnen 43Mike Madej 43Joe Vandeventer 43Blaise Karlovic 42VIENNAJeff Wells 48Ron Baum 47Cliff Craig 47Skip Henry 47Dennis Day 44Matt Karlovic 44Bill Powell 44Jason Baum 43Alisa Richter 43Jim Schill 43Nick Phillips 42Tom Bukofchan 41Larry Herrmann 41

MONDAY, AUG. 14, 2017COLUMBIANA FISH & GAME 559 – 3319 �

LOWELLVILLE ROD & GUN CLUB 545 – 3285 �

MAHONING SPORTSMAN CLUB 539 – 3277 �

NEW MIDDLETOWN FARMERS 538 – 3251 �

EASTERN OHIO CONSERV. CLUB 536 – 3235 �

FISH & GAME CLUB OF VIENNA 533 – 3228 �

Next Shoot: Monday, Aug. 21, Lowellville

B8 THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 RELIGION WWW.VINDY.COM

Local pastor will celebrate 40 years

AUSTINTOWNImmaculate Heart of Mary in

Austintown recently celebrated the 40th anniversary of The Rev. Kenneth Miller with a Ruby Jubilee.

He will be retiring the end of August but recalls “the en-thusiasm and idealism” with which he began his ministry at St. Brendan’s Church in 1977, which was just two miles down the road.

He says on one hand, it seems like a long time ago but on the other, it seems like only yesterday.

More than 700 parish mem-bers fi lled the parish center to celebrate with Father Miller. Pope Francis presented Father Miller with an award of Papal recognition. All in attendance wished him grace and blessings in his further endeavors.

Dramatic recitationplanned in Boardman

BOARDMANBoardman United Method-

ist Church, 6809 Market St., will host Allan R. Mosher as he presents a 20-minute, dramatic recitation in the King James

Version of the Holy Bible of The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Ephesians.

The presentation will take place at 6:30 p.m. Sept. 5. A discussion will follow. This event is free, and all are invited to attend.

Luncheon seriespresents speaker

BOARDMANThe First Friday Club Speak-

er’s Luncheon Series presents Rev. Dr. Robin Woodberry at 11:30 a.m. Sept. 7 at The Georgetown, 5945 South Ave.

Rev. Woodberry will speak on “Together We Serve, Together We Celebrate.” The cost to at-tend is $16.

Reservations are limited and can be made by calling 330-720-4498 or visiting www.fi rstfridayclubofgreater-youngstown.org.

Staff reports

‘The Hand Pointing to Heaven’is back atop Mississippi church

Associated Press

PORT GIBSON, MISS.A Mississippi church

steeple once again has a golden hand pointing to-ward heaven.

A crew used cranes last week to hoist a large fi gure of a hand back to the top of First Presbyterian Church in Port Gibson.

“The Hand Pointing To Heaven” is 10 feet, 4 inches tall with its index fi nger ex-tended skyward.

It has been a landmark

for more than a century in the small town near the Mississippi River, and it’s a popular stop for tourists on their way to Natchez, Miss.

The hand was removed in June and sent to Virginia to get a fresh layer of gold leaf.

A b o u t 10 0 p e o p l e watched as it was put back in place.

The hand was last taken down for repairs in 1989 and returned in 1990.

RELIGIONdigest

SUNDAY AREACHURCH SCHEDULE

ScheduleContact:

Phone:(330) 747-1471

ext. 1374

Mail:c/o The Vindicator,

P.O. Box 780 Youngstown, Ohio

44501

CHURCH CHURCH SPONSOREDSPONSORED

8-19-20178-19-2017

Metro Assembly of God 2530 South Ave. Youngstown, OH 44502

330-782-2070 • Web: metroassembly.orgRev. Al Yanno, Jr.

Service Time: Sunday School 9 a.m.Worship time: 10 a.m. • Sunday AM nursery,

Kids Church Wednesday Nights @ 7 p.m Nursery, Toddlers, Kid’s Church,

Jr. High Ministry, Youth Ministry, and Adult Bible Study

ASSEMBLIES OF GOD

BAPTIST GENERAL CONFERENCE

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

Spanish Evangelical Church369 Keystone Ave., Youngstown, OH 44505330-743-2836 • www.spanishevangelical.org

[email protected] Service 10:00 a.m. Worship

Wednesday Service 7:00 p.m. Small GroupsSenior Pastor: Rev. Rolando Rojas

Lead Pastors Daniel & Patti Houck Invite

You To Join Us.Service Times: Sundays

10:00 a.m.Family Night - Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m.

River Services First Friday of Month at 7:00 p.m.Central Campus located 3 miles east of Youngstown3899 McCartney Rd. Coitsville, OH 44436

Offi ce Phone: 330-536-21278 Campuses in the Greater Youngstown Area.

Log onto our website to fi nd a location near you.www.theresaplaceforyou.com

First Church of Christ, Scientist1515 S. Meridian Road, • Youngstown, OH 44511www.christianscienceyoungstown.com

Sunday Service - 10:30 a.m.Wednesday Testimony Meeting

2nd & 4th - 6:30 p.m.

Old North Church7105 Herbert Rd.,

Canfi eld, OH 44406330-533-6848

Sunday Worship9:15 a.m. & 11:00 a.m.

www.oldnorthchurch.org

3000 South Raccoon Rd.Youngstown, OH 44515

(330) 792-3000www.highwayfamily.com

Sunday9:00 a.m. - Adult & Kids Sunday School10:00 a.m. - Sunday Morning Worship

and PowerKids ChurchWednesday

6:30 p.m. - Family Night

ROMAN CATHOLIC

St. Columba CathedralCorner of Wood & Elm St.Masses Daily: 12:10 p.m.

Sat. Vigil: 4:30 p.m.; Sun.: 10:30 a.m., & 4 p.m. Sacrament of Reconciliation:

Tues. & Thurs. from 1:00 - 1:30 p.m.Sat. from 9:00 - 9:30 a.m.

Msgr. Peter M. Polando, Rector

Saint Anthony Church1125 Turin Avenue, YoungstownSaturday Evening Mass 4:00 p.m.

Sunday Mass 10:30 a.m.

Our Lady of Mount Carmel Basilica343 Via Mt Carmel, YoungstownDaily Mass: Mon-Sat 12:00 Noon

Sat. Evening Mass 5:00 p.m.Sun 8:00 & 10:00 a.m & 12 Noon

Sacrament of Reconciliation Sat. 11 a.m.Very Rev. Msgr. Michael J. Cariglio, Pastor

St. Christine Parish3165 S. Schenley Ave., Youngstown330-792-3829 • www.stchristine.org

Daily Masses: M-F 8:30 a.m. & Wed. 5:30 p.m.Saturday Masses: 4 p.m.; Sunday 7, 9, 10:30 & 12Confession: Sat. 11 & 3

ANGLICANSt. Francis Anglican Church

211 Redondo RoadSuite 111

Youngstown, Ohio 44504Sunday Worship & Eucharist 10:30 AM

Wednesday evening bible study 6:30 PMFr. John Harris, Vicar

330-333-2809

St. Rose Church48 East Main Street, Girard, OH

330-545-4351M. W. F. 8:30 a.m. • Tu. Th. 7:00 a.m.

SaturdayVigil Mass 4 p.m.

Sunday7:30 a.m., 9:30 a.m. ,11:30 a.m., 5:30 p.m.

St. Michael Church300 N. Broad St., Canfi eldSat. Vigil Mass at 4:30 p.m.

Sun. Mass at 9:00 and 11:00 a.m.Pastor Rev. Terrence Hazel

www.stmichaelcanfi eld.org

St. Edward Parish240 Tod Lane, Youngstown

330-743-2308Masses: Weekday, 8:30 a.m.;

Weekend, Sat. 4:00 p.m.; Sun. 9:00 a.m. &11:30 a.m.; Holy Days 8:30 a.m. & 5:30 p.m.

Pastor: Msgr. Robert J. Siffrin

St. Patrick Parish367 N. Main St • Hubbard, OH 44425

330-534-1928Masses and Communion Service Daily 8:30 a.m.

Saturday Vigil Mass 4:00 p.m.Sunday 8:30 a.m. 11:00 a.m.Pastor: Rev. Michael Swierz

St. Dominic’s Church

77 E. Lucius Ave.Youngstown

Sunday MassesVigil Mass 5:00 pm

8:00 am, 10:30 am, 1:00pm

www.saintdominic.org330-783-1900

BYZANTINE CATHOLICInfant Jesus of Prague Byzantine Catholic Church

7754 South Ave. Ext. Boardman330-758-6019 • www.infantjesusofpraguebyz.org

Divine Liturgy:Saturday 6:00 p.m. / Confession 5:30 p.m.Sunday 9:00 a.m. / Week Days 8:30 a.m.Father Mykhaylo (Michael) Farynets, Pastor

ROMAN CATHOLIC

Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish

4490 Norquest Blvd.Austintown, Ohio 44515

330-793-9988 www.-IHM-parish.com

Daily Mass at 8 a.m.Saturday Mass at 5 p.m.

Sundays at 8:30 and 11 a.m.

St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church220 N. Walnut St.

Morning Matins 9:30Divine Liturgy 10:30

Fr. Joseph Z. DiStefano

St. John the Baptist Orthodox Church301 Struthers-Liberty Road,

Campbell, OH 44405Saturday Great Vespers/ (Confession) 6:00 p.m.

Sunday Divine Liturgy 10:00a.m.,Church School 9:15 am

Eve of Feast Day: Vigil and Confessions 6:00 p.m.Feast Day Divine Liturgy 9 a.m.Pastor Fr. Andrew D. Neiko

www.stjohnthebaptist-campbell.org

St. John Greek Orthodox Church4955 Glenwood Avenue

Orthros 9:00 a.m.

Divine Liturgy 10:00 a.m.

Pastor - Fr. Thomas Constantine

EASTERN ORTHODOX

Church of Christ5775 Poland Struthers Rd. (Rt. 616), Poland, OH

330-757-4137Bible Study 9:30 a.m.

Worship Service 10:30 a.m.Worship (Evening) 6:30 p.m., Bible Study Wed. Night 7 pm.

EASTERN ORTHODOXArchangel Michael Greek Orthodox Church

401 12th Street, CampbellSunday School 9:00 a.m.;

Orthos 8:30 a.m.Divine Liturgy 10:00 a.m.

Weekday Divine Liturgy 9:00 a.m.Rev. Fr. Steve Denas, Pastor

Holy Trinity Serbian Orthodox Church39 Laird Ave.Divine Liturgy

10:00 a.m.Sunday School

11:30 a.m.Rev. Bosko Stojanovic

NON DENOMINATIONAL

EVANGELICAL COVENANTAustintown Community Church

242 S. Canfi eld-Niles Rd. (Rt. 46) Austintown

330-799-4214www.yourACC.orgWorship service:

10:30 a.m. Pastor Mark Nelson

Western Reserve United Methodist Church4580 Canfi eld Rd. (Rt. 62).

(330) 792-5805 • 330-797-8666Sunday morning 8:30 a.m. WorshipSunday - 9:15 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.

Adult & Children’s Sunday School at 9:30 a.m.Nursery Available, Accessible.

Children’s Academy of Ohio Daycare andPreschool Monday-Friday.

Rev. Russ Adams

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (USA)

First Presbyterian Church201 Wick Ave., Youngstown

330-744-4307 • www.fpcyo.orgPublic Worship 10:00 a.m.

Handicap AccessibleBecky Kahnt, Pastor

Boardman Westminster 119 Stadium Dr., Boardman • 330-758-4513

Worship 9:30amSerendipity Pre-School

M-F; Children ages 3-5 yearsRev. Dr. Don Aull

www.westminsterboardman.com

Canfi eld Presbyterian Church140 W. Main St, Canfi eldSunday School 8:45 a.m.

Worship 10 a.m.Nursery Care Provided

PastorRev. Larry Bowald

Trinity United Methodist ChurchFront and Phelps Sts.

www.trinityyoungstown.org9:15 a.m. Sunday School

11:00 a.m. Worship ServiceChildcare AvailablePastor Kelsey Orosan

(330) 744 - 5032

Lockwood United Methodist Church4570 Lockwood Blvd.

782-0573Adult Sunday School 9:30

Junior Church 11:15Worship 11:00 a.m.Childcare Provided

Pastor Rev. Greg CalkoBarrier Free

LUTHERAN

UNITED METHODIST

Zion Lutheran Church (ELCA)3300 Canfi eld Rd.

Youngstown, Ohio 44511Ph: 330-792-4046 • Fax: 330-792-8012

www.zionohio.orgBlended Worship

Saturday 5:00 p.m.Holy Communion

Traditional WorshipSunday 9:30 a.m.Holy CommunionNo Sunday School

The Rev. Duane A. Jesse, Senior Pastor

Martin Luther Lutheran Church (ELCA)420 Clearmount Drive, Youngstown

330-788-8707Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Rev. David KamphuisA multi-cultural congregation.

www.martinlutherlutheranchurch.org

Boardman United Methodist Church6809 Market St., Boardman, Ohio 44512

330-758-4527 • www.boardmanmethodist.org10:00 a.m. Sunday School

10:00 a.m. WorshipRev. Jerry Krueger, Pastor

Childcare Available • Handicap Accessible

Good Hope Lutheran (NALC)www.goodhopeboardman.org98 Homestead Dr. - Boardman

330-782-8109Worship:

Traditional - 8 & 11Contemporary - 9:30

SS: adults at 9:30 & 10:45all ages at 10:45

Handicap Accessible - Nursery at 9:30 & 11

UNITED METHODIST

Poland United Methodist Church1940 Boardman Poland Rd.

Poland, OH 44514330-757-1553

Praise Service 9 a.m.Traditional Service 11 a.m.Chinese Service 11 a.m.

Sunday School for all ages 10 a.m.

RAYMOND BONNERMUSICAL APPRECIATION

AUGUST 19TH AT 6PM

PHILLIPS CHAPEL CHURCH

OF GOD IN CHRIST3903 JACOBS RD.

HUBBARD, OH 44425

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CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

Simon Road Church donates $5,000 to Rescue MissionSimon Road Church of God Boardman donated a $5,000 check Aug. 6 to the Rescue Mission of the Mahoning Valley to help #MoveOurMission. Above, Chrystal Eckman, center, Rescue Mission ambassador, receives the donation from Pastor Eddy Howard and his wife, Patty.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Michael Herrin, pastor of First Presbyterian Church, poses near “The Hand Pointing to Heaven,” a gilded fi gure that sits on top of the church’s steeple in Port Gibson, Miss.. The hand is a popular stop for tourists.

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C1 - 08/19/17

SENIOR CITIZENS NEWSEvery Sunday in Society and on vindy.com.

Heloise

SATURDAYAUGUST 19, 2017 THE VINDICATOR | C1 SOCIETY NEWSDear

Annie

Money issues

in later years

Dear Annie: My hus-band and I are in our mid-80s. During our life together, we’ve rarely discussed money. But it seems that my husband has taken on a different view since we moved to a senior residence. He does not ever consider that see-ing as we both share the expenses of living here, some money that comes to him should be shared with me. It is impossible to talk to him about it, as he gets very upset and de-fensive. I only want what I am entitled to. I am not a money grabber, but this is the mood that has taken over our daily lives. Some-thing has to be done about his attitude and posses-siveness in order for us to live peacefully in our late years. Please help.

Sally

Dear Sally: The fact that this was never an issue until now makes me think it has to do with your move to the senior residence. Perhaps after leaving your former home, your husband feels as if he gave up some con-trol and controlling money is his way of coping – but that’s just speculation. The only way to know for sure why he’s acting this way is to ask. Using a gentle tone, ask why this is important to him. Explain where you’re coming from and why this has been hurtful to you. Discuss any concerns that have been on both your minds about adjusting to the new living situation. Emphasize that you want to spend these years enjoy-ing each other’s company.

You’ve shared a wonder-ful life together so far. I truly believe this is nothing you two can’t solve using love and communication.

Dear Annie: This is in regard to “Future Bene-factor in North Carolina,” who wanted to divide her estate unevenly in accor-dance with each child’s financial state. I would like to share how that can actually work well.

My husband has three siblings. One of the sib-lings had not managed to achieve fi nancial stability. All of the money left over after funeral expenses went to the sibling with less, although it was not a large estate. The other sib-lings were fine with this. Depending on how the two wealthy children of “Future Benefactor” feel, this could work.

On my side, one of my brothers was cut out be-cause Mom was unhappy with him and he had cost my parents some money in a financial deal. My brother never fought it. As the years have gone by since Mom’s death, he has struggled fi nancially. I would have felt better if everything had been di-vided equally, even if he didn’t manage his inheri-tance well. It would have felt fairer.

When my mother-in-law’s estate was spilt un-evenly to provide for the one with less, it worked for us. On my side, when it was divided unevenly to “get even,” it was sad. It all depends on motives and how the other par-ties feel about it. Our own children do not get along well. For this reason, our estate will be split evenly to prevent confl ict.

Both a Benefi ciary and a Benefactor

Dear Both a Benefi ciary and a Benefactor: It’s en-couraging to hear about family members work-ing together and helping one another out rather than tearing one another apart over an inheritance. Though I maintain that a good rule is to split the es-tate evenly among all your children, every family is different. Do what’s right for you and your children.

Email your questions for Annie Lane to [email protected], or write to: Dear Annie, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd St., Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

© 2017 Creators Syndicate

Organize for the coming school year

Dear Heloise: Back-to-school time is here, and with my busy family, we are in need of organiza-tion!

I decided that a good place to start for us was the mudroom. Before, it was a cluttered mess, with three kids and a husband dropping books, bags and boots back there.

Here is how I got every-one’s stuff together:

Hanging hooks gets �

book bags and back-packs off the fl oor. Also, hooks are a good spot for seldom-used rain-coats and umbrellas, hooded sweatshirts and winter coats. I hang some hooks lower for my young kids so they can reach.Cleaning off the bench- �

es and donating old shoes and coats that don’t fi t is a good way to make new space.Each member of the �

family gets a basket that hangs over a tray, so icky items can drip-dry.When we are organized,

the household runs more smoothly!

Jamie T. in Oklahoma

Dear Readers: Tomye T. in Boston sent a picture of her hilarious 7-year-old purebred Persian tabby, Persephone (named from Greek mythology). Perse-phone is making a funny face – she just saw a fl ock of birds outside!

To see Persephone and our other Pet Pals, visit w w w.Heloise.com and click on “Pet of the Week.” Do you have a funny-faced, furry friend? Send a picture to: [email protected].

HeloiseDear Readers: Below

are places to avoid wear-ing “jangly” jewelry, i.e., bracelets:

Church. �

A wedding. �

A memorial service. �

The classroom. �

If you want to make a statement with your jew-elry, a bold earring or ring would be a better choice.

HeloiseD e a r He l o i s e : M y

weight-loss efforts had hit a plateau for a long time, but I finally had success with the hints below, and I thought I would share them with your readers:

I drink water in place of other beverages. It is fill-ing, and there is no sugar or calories to worry about.

I use vinaigrette dress-ing instead of creamy dressings on my salad.

Adding one hour of ex-ercise weekly to my pres-ent workout schedule burns extra calories.

I eat one serving of fi sh (not fried or breaded) fi ve times a week.

I hope this helps others!

Gloria P., via email

Dear Readers : Cos-metic counters in the de-partment store have dis-posable mascara wands for sample applications. When you are there, ask if you can take one.

The brushes are won-derful for cleaning lots of tight spaces: around the faucets on the sink, the keyboard on your com-puter and the feeding holes on bird feeders!

HeloiseDear Heloise: Just a re-

minder for your readers: Leave the door open on your front-loading washer to air it out, but then close it. I’ve found my cat nap-ping in there!

Julie M. in Oregon

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

AUSTINTOWNRichard and Kathleen

Heavener of Austintown cel-ebrated their 65th wedding anniversary July 26.

They have four children, Richard (Liz) Heavener, Ber-lin Center; Jerry (Deborah) Heavener, Austintown; Bren-da Rollison, Amherst, NY.; and Diane (John) Hendrix, Overgard, Ariz. The couple also have 10 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren.

Mr. Heavener and the for-mer Kathleen Gingrich were married July 26, 1952, at Highway Tabernacle Church in Austintown, where the couple remain members.

Mrs. Heavener retired in 2003 from her position as a

cook with the Austintown Board of Education.

Mr. Heavener is also re-tired. He worked for Brown-ing and Ferris as a truck driver. Mr. Heavener is a U.S. Army veteran of World War II.

The Heavenerscelebrate their65th anniversary

MR. AND MRS.RICHARD HEAVENER

BOARDMANWill iam and Dorothy

Skebo celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary May 21 at a surprise party host-ed by their children at St. George Croatian Center in Youngstown.

The Skebos have three children, David (Michele) Skebo of Hubbard, Cathy Sue (Brian) Finnerty of Poland and Patricia (Har-ry) Johnson of Lakewood. The couple also have eight grandchildren, Allison and Emily Skebo; Sean, Lauren, Thomas and Leah Finner-ty; and Erika and Matthew Johnson.

The family celebrated the anniversary further during a Mass June 11 at St. Stephen of Hungary Church followed by a reception in their honor.

Mr. and Mrs. Skebo are members of Holy Apostles Parish – St. Stephen of Hun-

gary Church.Mr. Skebo and the former

Dorothy Magda were mar-ried June 8, 1957, at Holy Name of Jesus Church in Youngstown.

Mrs. Skebo is ret ired from Beneficial Corp. after 25 years of service, and her husband retired after 42 years from the Stambaugh-Thompson warehouse. He served in the U.S. Navy Re-serves for eight years.

Skebos mark60th year of marriage June 8

MR. AND MRS.WILLIAM SKEBO

AUSTINTOWNJohn and Alice Senzarino

of Austintown celebrated their 50th wedding anniver-sary with a party and dinner at the MVR in Youngstown. The golden wedding celebra-tion was attended by their family and friends.

The Senzarinos have two daughters, Kelly (Alec) Kulik and Amy (Robert) DeCenso, and three grandchildren, Vincent DeCenso, Gia De-Censo and Samuel Kulik. All are from North Canton.

Mr. Senzarino and the former Alice Beaudis were

married June 10, 1967, at St. Christine’s Church in Youngstown.

The Senzarinoscelebrate their 50th anniversary

MR. AND MRS.JOHN SENZARINO

NORTH JACKSONWilliam E. and Deanna

L. Wilson celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary recently on a family trip to Pigeon Forge, Tenn.

The vacation was hosted by their children, Frederick Wilson and Susan (Kemper) Ansel, all of Hilliard; Rebec-ca Lanham of Lake Milton; and William (April) Wilson of Cuyahoga Falls. All eight of their grandchildren were also on the trip.

Mr. Wilson and the former Deanna James were married on July 28, 1967, at First Bap-tist Church of Youngstown. T he y a re member s of Zion Lutheran Church of Youngstown.

Mrs. Wilson began teach-ing fourth grade in 1962 with Youngstown City Schools

and finished her teaching career at Akiva Academy in Youngstown. She retired in 2002.

Mr. Wilson retired in 2001 after 33 years as a coordina-tor at General Motors Lord-stown. He also served in the U.S. Air Force from 1963 to 1967.

The Wilsons celebrate 50th on family vacation

MR. AND MRS.WILLIAM WILSON

BOARDMANThe engagement of Kate-

lyn Hughes of Boardman and Steven Yacovone of Mineral Ridge is being an-nounced by their parents, Lisa Hughes of Boardman and Steve and Renee Yaco-vone of Mineral Ridge. Miss Hughes is also the daughter of the late Patrick Hughes.

The couple plan to wed at 2 p.m. Sept. 16 at St. Domi-nic Church in Youngstown. Invitations will be extended for the wedding and recep-tion, which will take place that evening at Mr. An-thony’s Banquet Center in Boardman.

The bride-elect is a grad-uate of Youngstown State University with a bachelor’s degree in applied science. She is employed as a recep-

tionist at the office of Dr. Vincent J. Malkovits, D.O., in Austintown.

The prospective groom graduated from the Univer-sity of Akron School of Law with a juris doctor degree. He is an assistant county prosecutor with the Ma-honing County Prosecu-tor’s Offi ce.

Katelyn Hughes,Steven Yacovoneto wed Sept. 16

KATELYN HUGHESSTEVEN YACOVONE

LIBERTYMaryAnn Parry of Liberty

is announcing the engage-ment of her son, Breen Par-ry of Charlotte, N.C., to Amy Reder, also of Charlotte. The prospective groom is also a son of the late Rich-ard Parry. The bride-elect’s parents are David and An-nette Reder of Charlotte.

The ceremony will take place at 1 p.m. Oct. 7 at St. Mathews Catholic Church in Charlotte with a recep-tion following at 6 p.m. at The Club at Longview, also in Charlotte. Invita-tions will be issued for both events.

Miss Reder graduated from Miami University with a bachelor’s degree in education. She works for Union County Public

Schools in Matthews, N.C., as second-grade teacher.

Mr. Parry also graduated from M.U. with a bachelor’s degree in accountancy and a juris doctorate and mas-ter’s degree in business ad-ministration. He works for Xoom Energy LLC, Hunt-ersville N.C., as a tax ac-countant.

Amy Reder andBreen Parry willmarry this fall

BREEN PARRYAMY REDER

AUSTINTOWNRachael Suszcz y nsk i

and Geno Lucente, both of Austintown, are an-nouncing their engage-ment . Pa rent s of t he bride-elect are Thaddeus and Christine Suszczyn-ski of Youngstown. The future groom is the son of Brenda Uick and Donald Lucente, both of Austin-town.

The couple will exchange vows at 4 p.m. today at The Gathering Place at Darling-ton Lake in Darlington, Pa., where a reception will fol-low.

Miss Suszczynski is a graduate of Kent State Uni-

versity with a bachelor’s degree in nursing. She is employed as a registered nurse.

Mr. Lucente is the man-ager at Cornersburg Pizza in Austintown.

Suszczynski,Lucente weddingset for today

GENO LUCENTERACHAEL SUSZCZYNSKI

BOARDMANRoger and Judy Cope are

announcing the engage-ment of their daughter, Sheri Cope, and Ryan Hig-gins. He is the son of Steve and Fran Higgins. All are from Boardman.

The couple will exchange vows at 1:30 p.m. Oct. 21 at Boardman United Meth-odist Church. Invitations will be extended for the wedding and for a recep-tion to take place at St. Mi-chael Family Life Center in Canfi eld.

The bride-elect gradu-ated from Youngstown State University with a bachelor’s degree in inte-grated mathematics. She is a mathematics and engi-

neering teacher at Chaney High School.

Mr. Higgins graduated from New Castle School of Trades and is employed as a welder and technician with Simmer’s Crane in Sa-lem.

Cope-Higgins wedding planned for mid-autumn

RYAN HIGGINSSHERI COPE

Name: � TimInfo: � He is

a 2-year-old brown tabby looking for his forever home. He is aff ection and likes attention.

UP FOR ADOPTIONName: � Kitty

YamsInfo: � He is

a 2-year-old diluted orange tabby. He is a lap cat and needs a quiet home to make his own.

Hours: 2 to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Closed Sunday and Monday.Info: Both cats have been neutered and are up-to-date on their shots. They tested negative for feline AIDS and leukemia. They have been fl ea-treated and dewormed and are ready to go home. All cats are now micro-chipped. For more information, visit www.WestSideCats.org.

How to adopt: Call West Side Cats at 330-792-4228. Visit them at the shelter at 2217 Mahoning Ave., Youngstown.

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C2 - 08/19/17

Today’s entertainment picks:

� Brier Hill Italian Fest, noon to mid-

night: The Rocco Mona-co Band and several others will entertain in the pavilion at 9 p.m. The festival is at Calvin and Victoria streets, in the Brier Hill section of Youngstown’s North Side.

� WaterFire, 1 p.m. to 11 p.m.: Arts and cul-

ture is at the core of this unique festival in down-town Sharon, Pa. The fes-tival’s high point comes at dusk with the lighting of wood-fi red braziers an-chored to the surface of the Mahoning River. Among the musical acts, Angela Perley and the Howlin’ Moons will play at 6 p.m.; waterfi re-sharonpa.org.

� Draw the Line, 5:30 p.m.: Opening the

show for this Aerosmith tribute band ($8) will be Back Traxx. It’s at the War-ren Community Amphithe-ater; riverrockattheamp.com.

� “August: Osage County, 7:30 p.m.:

The Tony Award-win-ning play ($15) on stage at Youngstown Play-house, Glenwood Avenue, Youngstown; 330-788-8739.

� “Death of a Show-girl,” 8 p.m.: An

original and bawdy show ($15) about a burlesque troupe, intertwined with a murder-mystery plot. It’s presented by Rust Belt Theater at Calvin Cen-ter, 755 Mahoning Ave., Youngstown; 330-507-2358.

“HALT AND CATCH �

FIRE”(9 P.M., AMC): The drama about the birth of the tech industry returns for its fourth and fi nal season with a two-hour premiere.

FOR COMPLETE LIST- �

INGS, SEE TV WEEK MAG-AZINE, INCLUDED WITH TODAY’S PAPER.

LOCAL TOPICS ON TV“Community Connec-

tion” (Sunday at 6:30 a.m. on 21 WFMJ-TV and 11 a.m. on WBCB-TV): Local barber/stylist Kieonna Mar-shall will join host Madonna Chism Pinkard. Marshall will attend the Bonner Brothers Hair Show in Atlanta.

“A Conversation with Dee” (Sunday at 7:30 a.m. on WYTV-TV): Host Dee Crawford will talk with rep-resentatives from the United Way of Youngstown and the Mahoning Valley and the American Red Cross about their upcoming events.

“Senior Focus” (today and Sunday at 9:30 a.m. on Armstrong Cable chan-nels 20 and 100): Host Bill Adams will interview Liberty Township administrator Pat Ungaro.

ENTERTAINMENT DIGEST

Tie-dye fun runat Westminster

NEW WILMINGTON, PA.Westminster College’s

Student Alumni Asso-ciation’s inaugural Titan Tie Dye Run, a one-mile run around the campus, will take place Sept. 30, starting at the Memorial Field House.

Check-in and same day registration will begin at 9:45 a.m. and the run will start at 10:30 a.m. Registra-tion is $5 per runner/walker. Throughout the route, run-ners will be “powdered” with washable dye. The event is appropriate for children and adults. Awards will be given for the top three fi nishers, and Best Dressed.

To register, go to west-minster.edu. Payment can be made the day of the event or sent to the Wiley Alumni House, 319 S. Market St., New Wilmington, PA 16172. Make checks payable to Westminster College. Res-ervations due Sept. 22. For information, contact Kelsey Phillips, at [email protected].

TOMORROW IN BESTNew book takes a look at in-teresting part of Youngstown history.

THE55 VALLEY LIFE SATURDAYAUGUST 19, 2017

THE VINDICATOR | C2

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By MARCIA DUNNAP Aerospace Writer

CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA.Forty years after blasting

off, Earth’s most distant am-bassadors – the twin Voy-ager spacecraft – are carry-ing sounds and music of our planet ever deeper into the cosmos.

Think of them as messages in bottles meant for anyone – or anything – out there.

This Sunday marks the 40th anniversary of NASA’s launch of Voyager 2, now al-most 11 billion miles distant. It departed from Cape Ca-naveral on Aug. 20, 1977 to explore Jupiter and Saturn.

Voyager 1 followed a few weeks later and is ahead of

Voyager 2. It’s humanity’s far-thest spacecraft at 13 billion miles away and is the world’s only craft to reach interstellar space, the vast mostly empti-ness between star systems. Voyager 2 is expected to cross that boundary during the next few years.

Each carries a 12-inch, gold-plated copper phono-graph record (there were no CDs or MP3s back then) con-taining messages from Earth: Beethoven’s Fifth, chirping crickets, a baby’s cry, a kiss, wind and rain, a thunderous moon rocket launch, Afri-can pygmy songs, Solomon Island panpipes, a Peruvian wedding song and greetings in dozens of languages. There

are also more than 100 elec-tronic images on each record showing 20th-century life, traffi c jams and all.

NASA is marking the an-niversary of its back-to-back Voyager launches with tweets, reminiscences and still captivating photos of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune taken by the Voy-agers from 1979 through the 1980s.

Public television is also paying tribute with a docu-mentary, “The Farthest - Voyager in Space,” airing Wednesday on PBS at 9 p.m. The two-hour documentary describes the tense and dra-matic behind-the-scenes ef-fort that culminated in the wildly successful missions to our solar system’s outer plan-ets and beyond. There’s origi-nal TV footage throughout, including a lookback at the late astronomer Carl Sagan of the 1980 PBS series “Cos-mos.”

It was Sagan who, in large part, got a record aboard each Voyager. NASA was reluctant and did not want the records eclipsing the scientifi c goals. Sagan finally prevailed, but

he and his fellow record pro-moters had less than two months to rustle everything up.

The music production fell to science writer Timothy Ferris, a friend of Sagan liv-ing then in New York. For the musical selections, Ferris and Sagan recruited friends along with a few professional musi-cians. How to choose from an infi nite number of melodies representing all of Earth?

Beethoven, Bach and Mo-zart were easy picks. Louis Armstrong and His Hot Seven represented jazz, Blind Willie Johnson gospel blues.

For the rock ‘n’ roll single, the group selected Chuck Berry’s 1958 hit “Johnny B. Goode.”

By FRAZIER MOOREAP Television Writer

NEW YORKMaybe you know them as Iron Fist

and Daredevil. But now Finn Jones and Charlie Cox, who star as these Marvel superheroes on the Netflix series “Iron Fist” and “Daredevil,” have joined forces with Mike Col-ter (”Luke Cage”) and Krysten Ritter (”Jessica Jones”) for a much-awaited miniseries hybrid.

“The Defenders,” which fi nds this Fab Four uniting to fi ght a fearsome conspiracy mounted against New York City, is now available on Netfl ix.

Jones continues as Danny Rand, co-CEO of Rand Enterprises who, now a Buddhist monk and martial arts master, has the ability to call upon the mystical power of the Iron Fist as his alter ego. The fi rst season of “Iron First” was released earlier this year on Netflix. Cox is Matt Murdock, a blind lawyer whose remaining sens-es are dramatically enhanced and who, for two seasons of his Netflix series, has wrestled with his lawless dark side, the vigilante Daredevil. Both series are continuing.

But this week Jones and Cox joined forces to talk about “The Defenders” and being part of this eight-episode joint venture.

COX: “I’m not sure this has been done before, where you’ve got four individual series, four characters who have their own shows, teaming up for a miniseries. It’s a process we had known about for a long time, so it felt like a celebration. We were ready

for it and excited to see how it would turn out.”

JONES: “When we started to play off each other it really felt natural, because all the prep work had been in place for a number of years. All of us had a background in having to lead one of these shows by ourself, so there was a level of support. We were like soldiers in the trenches, which was cool.”

The two actors were asked if a grounding in the four “solo” series is a prerequisite for viewers to sign on for “The Defenders.”

COX: “I do think it’s made primar-ily for the fans of the other shows. A lot of the enjoyment is going to be had by a fan base that appreciates the other shows and gets to enjoy what it’s like to witness the charac-ters’ dynamics and relationships. But hopefully it can be enjoyed by anyone.”

As for newcomers who want to sample the “Defenders”’ predeces-sors, be advised: Each of the four has its own distinct personality.

COX: “Marvel has a variety of

shows which all have the superhero element. But they’re all completely different genres. ‘Jessica Jones’ is a psychological thriller. ‘Daredevil’ is a crime drama. The superhero ele-ment is something sprinkled on top as kind of a garnish.”

Asked their level of involvement with the comic book world and the Marvel Cinematic Universe before stepping into their respective Netfl ix series, both stars replied in unison:

COX: “Zero.”JONES: “Zero.”COX: “When you come to this hav-

ing not had any real experience with these characters or these comics, you have to look at it from a slight-ly different angle: Maybe bringing fresh eyes to it will be benefi cial. I felt a little bit detached from the history of it, and I could look at the comics and the scripts and fi nd a character that was specifi c rather than trying to please everyone.”

JONES : “First and foremost, they’re human beings, and second to that, they’re people with pow-ers. When I took on this character, I wasn’t like, ‘What’s his powers?’ I was like, ‘What are his struggles? What are his vulnerabilities?’ That’s what makes the character.”

COX: “But these characters have been read and beloved for years, and it’s important to a lot of people that we get it right. So I feel a great level of responsibility. When it does work out, and when the fan base appre-ciates the work, that’s a gratifying experience.”

NETFLIX

Mike Colter, Charlie Cox, Krysten Ritter and Finn Jones in The Defenders.

Charlie Cox, Finn Jones on playing superheroes in ‘Defenders’

Marvel-ous roles

SHELBY LYNNE AND ALLISON MOORER

Album: � “Not Dark Yet” (Silver Cross/Thirty Tigers)

Grade: � AIt’s been said that something

mystical distinguishes the har-monies forged by siblings from those of ordinary mortals, and nothing Shelby Lynne and Al-lison Moorer have sung together would prove otherwise.

Both critically acclaimed singer-songwriters in their own right, the two sisters with Ala-bama roots have been blending their voices to angelic eff ect for as long as they can remember. They just haven’t put out an album together.

Until now.

Their new release, “Not Dark Yet,” is a fi ne collection of care-fully curated songs, each cho-sen to celebrate the seamless melding of two beautiful voices. Produced by Teddy Thompson, the album showcases the talent of sisters who fi gured out long ago how to complement each other musically.

The song choices, pitch-perfect for the most part, range from the title cut, Bob Dylan’s somber and understated refl ec-tion on aging, to an elegant version of Nick Cave’s “Into My Arms.” The only unfortunate choice is a leaden cover of Nir-vana’s “Lithium,” which feels conspicuously misplaced.

Lynne and Moorer’s musical careers emerged from tragedy.

Their father shot and killed their mother and then himself when they were teenagers. That’s not something the sisters dwell on publicly, and they won’t let it dominate their legacy.

But their tragic past helps ex-plain the power of their voices in harmony. There’s an unspoken message of trust, a bond that transcends the songs them-selves and hints at the deeper things that bind them together.

—Scott Stroud, Associated Press

KACY & CLAYTONAlbum: � “The Siren’s Song”

(New West)Grade: � AFrom the opening bars of

“The Siren’s Song,” the combi-nation of a stark soprano and

twangy guitar suggests country music.

But what country? Second cousins Kacy Anderson and Clayton Linthicum hail from rural Saskatchewan and re-corded their new album with producer Jeff Tweedy at Wilco’s studio in Chicago. And their songs seem older than sheet music, with roots in British folk.

Almost all the material is actually co-written by the young duo, and it’s terrifi c. Anderson sings of heartbreak, cheating, suicide and the wrath of God, and the prairie chanteuse fi nds beauty amid sadness.

Linthicum has a distinctive style on both the electric and acoustic guitar, bending low

strings as a contrast to his cous-in’s steely high end. Tweedy’s touch is evident in arrange-ments that include bass, drums and plenty of space.

There’s room for humor, too, as on the opening verse of “A Lifeboat”: “If envy was tequila, and jealousy strong beer, we could throw a party that would last throughout the year.”

Other highlights include “Cannery Yard,” which benefi ts from Anderson’s fi ddle, and the title cut, where her sturdy delivery makes her a convincing sailor. Those tunes help “The Siren’s Song” become the front-runner as the year’s best album in the Canadian-British-Ameri-cana country-folk category.

—Steven Wine, Associated Press

RECORD REVIEWS

PBS marks 40 years since Voyager launch

By MARK KENNEDYAP Entertainment Writer

NEW YORKThings may look bleak

for Democrats these days, but Michael Moore thinks he knows how they can get back on top.

“Humor is the non-violent weapon by which we’re go-ing to help turn this around,” said the Academy Award-winning director of “Bowl-ing for Columbine” who is currently starring in his one-man Broadway show.

“If you use your sense of humor and your wit to go against what’s going on, it can be devastating and it can reach a lot of people.”

Moore has been doing his part in the anti-Donald Trump movement by ridi-culing the president, part of what he calls “an unoffi cial army of comedy out there that is working to bring him down.”

He cites comedians like Amy Schumer, Chris Rock, Alec Baldwin and Stephen Colbert and notes that Me-lissa McCarthy, in her “Sat-urday Night Live” sketches, played a role in the step-ping down of Sean Spicer, Trump’s oft-beleaguered press secretary. “I knew Spicer was gone the second after that first sketch was over,” he said Thursday.

Moore has been taking his unhappiness to the streets and promises more. Earlier this week, he led the audi-ence of his show “The Terms of My Surrender” in a protest to Trump’s reaction to the deadly violence in Charlot-tesville, Virginia. Hundreds rallied outside Trump Tower, including celebrities Mark Ruffalo, Olivia Wilde, Tom Sturridge and Zoe Kazan.

While Moore’s nightly 90-minute onstage tirade puts his disdain for the pres-ident front and center, he also tackles other hot-button topics, such as the Flint wa-ter crisis and race relations. Moore tweaks each perfor-mance to address the head-lines of the day and plans a dozen upcoming stunts with the audience.

Moore: humor will save Dems

AT A GLANCEWhat: � “The Farthest —

Voyager in Space”When: � 9 p.m. WednesdayWhere: � PBS

“I’M NOT SURE THIS HAS BEEN DONE BE-FORE, WHERE YOU’VE

GOT FOUR INDIVIDUAL SERIES, FOUR CHARACTERS WHO HAVE THEIR OWN SHOWS.”

Charlie Cox, Actor, known as Daredevil

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

C3 - 08/19/17

YESTERDAY’S ANSWER

Happy Birthday! In The Next Year: A lifestyle that allows you to do what you enjoy when you want it will allow for all kinds of good for-tune. That’s why it’ll be wise for you to make flexibility a vital factor in any life decision. People much younger or older than you add fun, love and unexpected opportuni-ties. There’s a positive financial turn in October. Scorpio and Cap-ricorn adore you. Your lucky num-bers are: 4, 28, 13, 37 and 41.CELEBRITY PROFILES: Leo Chris-tina Perri swept the pop charts with her emotional ballad ‘’Jar of Hearts,’’ which gained popularity after being featured on the tele-vision show ‘’So You Think You Can Dance.’’ Perry was born under an imaginative Aquarius moon. A harmonious trine of Mercury (the planet of communication) and Sat-urn (the planet of hard times) sug-gests that heartbreak songs bring out her best.

ARIES (March 21-April 19). There’s a difference between vol-untary distractions and involuntary distractions. Television, refrigera-tor, social media -- these are volun-tary. People are involuntary ones. Go where people are not, or you’ll get very little accomplished.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You know what you want to do but have no idea how you’re going to do it. The library and the inter-net are excellent first stops. Also, start telling people. Everyone will want to help you today.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’re up to the challenge and ready for the responsibilities that go with it, but there’s only so much you can do alone. As you reach out for help, use your intuitive powers, but don’t forget to check creden-tials as well.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). Your productivity will be impressive today as you follow this single sug-gestion: High-energy times are for creative and challenging work; low-energy times are for busy work.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Your good intentions are there. Your goals are sound. And your desire is strong. It’s still not going to work, though, unless you can back it up with a system.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). There’s quite a lot you’re not max-imizing. You could be cashing in! You need to restructure. What makes it hard is that you haven’t put the correct value on what you have, what you know and who you are. Get outsider help.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Some call it passion, but that’s too mys-tical a term for the simple cause and effect that’s really happen-ing here. You find something to do that you seem to be winning at, and your desire to do it increases. Success is an energizer.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). If you want to better yourself (and who doesn’t?), there’s only about 7 billion hours’ worth of materi-al available to you on the topic. You’ve a super talent for filtering the strategies that will work from the noise of general life.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). A funny dichotomy: On the one hand you’d like to feel very at-tractive. On the other hand, you don’t want people to actually be attracted to you, as that comes with its own set of problems.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). The world is full of great ideas that aren’t worthy of your time. Why? Because they aren’t viable for you. It’s not about finding the best idea; it’s about working on what you can execute well.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Look for areas in which you might have a natural advantage. When you can apply your talent to a task or a relationship, you’ll get the suc-cess bump that leads to high ener-gy and more winning.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Tim-ing plays the starring role. People tend to think of timing as being re-lated to luck, but it’s often more of an experience and skill thing.ECLIPSE MYTHOLOGY: In breath-less, bespectacled anticipation, those on the path of totality await the great American eclipse of 2017. Total solar eclipses weren’t always so predicted; nor were they easi-ly accepted by the unfortunate an-cient humans who were surprised and terrified by the sudden dis-appearance of their sun. In an at-tempt to try and understand this cosmic phenomenon, the ancients did the same thing we still do: They speculated. Oh, the stories they came up with in their attempts to answer the question, ‘’Where’d the sun go?’’ Much of the ancient mythology centers around the idea that someone ate it. There’s a Viking legend that the sun was eaten by sky wolves, which makes a lot of sense if you’ve ever seen a dog go after a ball. There’s a Vietnamese theory that the glut-tonous culprit is a frog or a toad. Those also seem plausible, as both creatures are anatomically gift-ed when it comes to opening their mouths and throats really wide. The Greeks blamed the disappear-ance on angry gods. Some Africans suggested the sun and the moon were in a fight. Then there were the dragon-blamers, the wizard theorists and the more abstract school that believed the sun to be sucked in by the mouth of heaven itself. Why let the ancients have all the fun? Your own story could be just as colorful, whimsical and personal, should you choose to an-swer the prompt.

TODAY’S HOROSCOPE

(Answers Monday)

OMEGA PHOTO INNING SPRUCEYesterday’s Jumbles:Answer: The designers of the single-person blimps

were experiencing — ONE-UPMANSHIP

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.

AROCG

SEVOH

TOCONT

RRIMPE

©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLCAll Rights Reserved.

Che

ck o

ut t

he n

ew,

free

JU

ST

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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 Give a high-five5 Boom times8 Dull clang12 Robust13 Janitor's need14 Helm position15 Perched on16 Face painting?18 Gaggle members20 Berlin article21 Gulf st.22 Hints at25 Add- -- (extras)28 Outward appearance29 Peace Prize city33 Spinach enthusiast35 Solitude enjoyer36 Mouse catchers37 Get by38 Glut39 Violent conflicts41 Sticky stuff42 Uplifted45 Mantra chants48 Pointy-shoe wearer49 Facetious tribute53 Drove off56 Gizzard57 The chills58 Here, to Henri59 Fuzzy fruit60 Limp, as hair61 Depot info62 Warbled

DOWN1 Layered haircut2 Overdue3 -- vera4 Soft drink choice5 Ref6 Curly-haired pooch7 Ankle injury8 Cakelike cookie9 Viking name10 Simon or Armstrong11 -- -- grip!17 Half a dangerous fly19 Tube trophies23 Chart shape24 In a jiffy25 -- out (withdraws)26 Ephron of "You've Got Mail"27 Gaiter30 Hitch31 Construction toy32 Sandwich cookie34 Rapier35 Surgical beam37 Med. scan39 Mays or Nelson40 Influence

43 First U.S. state44 Wharves45 Type of exam46 Large prefix47 Wheeled around50 Diva's melody51 Like planks52 Stick54 Cartoon shriek55 Width of a cir.

Visit Holiday Mathis online at www.creators.com.

© 2017 Creators Syndicate Inc.

08/19/17

08/19

EMAIL: [email protected] ET CETERA THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 C3

ODDLY ENOUGH Dangerously cheesy? Cheetos pop-up restaurant opens in NYC

NEW YORKA three-day pop-up restaurant

devoted to Cheetos, yes Cheetos, opened in Manhattan on Tuesday, with every table already booked with diners ready to pay between $8 and $22 for such creations as Cheetos meatballs, Cheetos crusted fried pickles, Cheetos tacos, Mac n’ Chee-tos and even Cheetos cheesecake.

“I worked hard to incorporate Cheetos into every dish and not just say, ‘Oh here’s a dish with a sprinkle of Cheetos on top,’” said spiky-haired celebrity chef Anne Burrell, who was given the task of coming up with the menu for The Spotted Cheetah.

Roadside egg poacher caught on tape, and cops are on the hunt

HEREFORD TOWNSHIP, PA. Authorities are trying to crack the

case of an egg thief who’s been steal-ing from a roadside stand in rural Pennsylvania.

Stand-owner Denise Timer said Aug. 9 that she set up a security cam-era after about 100 eggs and small amounts of cash were stolen from her Hereford Township property over the last month and a half.

Police have linked the thefts to a man who was caught on camera rum-maging through the egg cooler the same day that a dozen eggs and $6 in change were taken.

Timer says she now only puts out a dozen eggs at a time, but they were also recently stolen.

It’s not delivery, it’s DiGiorno ... spilled on I-30

LITTLE ROCK, ARK. Arkansas highway offi cials shut

down westbound lanes of a cross-country interstate for four hours so crews could pick up pizza.

An 18-wheeler containing Di-Giorno and Tombstone frozen pizzas scraped a bridge support and sliced open its trailer Aug. 9, spilling the pies across Interstate 30 in front of the Arkansas Department of Trans-portation offi ce just south of Little Rock.

Agency spokesman Danny Straessle said the bridge suff ered only cosmetic damage. He says “there were some people shaken up” but that no one was hurt.

Associated Press

1. In addition to Carrie, Sa-mantha, Miranda and Char-lotte, New York was a major character in what Emmy-win-ning comedy series?

2. What was the name of the aspiring young New York ac-tress played by Marlo Thomas in the ABC sitcom “That Girl”?

3. Who was hosting NBC’s “Tonight Show” when the se-ries relocated from New York to Burbank, Calif.?

4. What gruff future Academy Award-winning actor starred as social worker Neil Brock in the gritty 1963-64 CBS drama “East Side/West Side”?

5. What did title character Doug Heffernan do for a living in the long-running CBS sitcom “The King of Queens”?

6. What police procedural/courtroom series set in New York was the longest-running crime drama on American tele-vision?

7. In what New York borough was the fi ctional James Buch-anan High School of “Welcome Back, Kotter” located?

8. On the New York-based po-lice drama “Cagney & Lacey,” which of these two female po-lice detectives was a wife and mother?

9. What Bronx-born actor won two Emmys playing New York cabbie Alex Reiger in the sitcom “Taxi”?

10. What two very famous married sitcom characters lived at 623 E. 68th Street (a nonexis-tent address, by the way)?

YEARS AGOToday is Saturday, Aug. 19, the 231st day of 2017. There are 134 days left in the year.

ASSOCIATED PRESSOn this date in:

1812: � The USS Constitution defeats the Brit-ish frigate HMS Guerriere off Nova Scotia dur-ing the War of 1812, earning the nickname “Old Ironsides.” 1934: � A plebiscite in Germany approves the vesting of sole executive power in Adolf Hitler. 1942: � During World War II, about 6,000 Cana-dian and British soldiers launch a disastrous raid against the Germans at Dieppe, France, suffering more than 50-percent casualties. 1964: � The Beatles open their fi rst full-fl edged U.S. tour as they perform at San Francisco’s Cow Palace.1976: � President Gerald R. Ford wins the Repub-lican presidential nomination at the party’s convention in Kansas City.2012: � Missouri Congressman Todd Akin, the conservative Republican U.S. Senate candi-date, says in an interview in St. Louis that it is “really rare” for women to become pregnant when they are raped.

VINDICATOR FILES1992: � Niles and Newton Falls have been named sites for diesel generators that are central to a proposed $17 million electrical power project being weighed by a statewide consortium.General Motors Corp. � announces it will build midsize vans at a plant in Doraville, Ga., be-ginning in 1995, sparing the factory from shutdown. Phar-Mor files � a malpractice lawsuit against Coopers & Lybrand of Pittsburgh, claiming that Phar-Mor was losing money while Michael Monus and the company were opening hun-dreds of new stores and reporting net profi ts. 1977: � Taylor Winfield Corp. agrees to pay $607,000 as an out-of-court settlement in a $5 million stock-fraud suit fi led by a group of Texas shareholders. Robbers armed � with a sawed-off shotgun hold up the Union National Bank branch in the Logan Way Plaza, escaping with less than $2,000.The Youngstown � Society for the Blind has its annual outing at Idora Park with more than 150 members and friends of the society enjoying a day of fun. 1967: � Dr. J.H. Wannamaker, former superin-tendent of Youngstown schools, joins Edinboro State College in Pennsylvania as a professor in education.University President � Albert Pugsley presents the fi nal diploma issued by Youngstown Uni-versity to Peter J. Yakob of New Castle, Pa., who was among 441 graduates receiving diplomas at the summer commencement exercise. More than � 30 couples from the Youngstown Diocese attend the 15th biennial international convention of the Christian Family Movement at Notre Dame University. Twenty-two members � of the Antique Study Club of Columbiana visit the Old Stone House, the Lisbon Historical Society’s museum. 1942: � Mahoning County is selected from Ohio’s 88 counties as “The War Bond County of the Month” for July. Frank Sherman, � 67, a Russian immigrant who went into business with one horse and wagon 48 years ago and built one of the largest scrap companies in Youngstown, dies at his home af-ter a fi ve-month illness. Stephen Ritz, � former Youngstowner, gradu-ates sixth in the class of 100 from Army Air Corps aerial photography technical school. He also played with and managed the Lowry Field baseball team, which won the squadron championship. Five sons � of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Simmons of Girard have enlisted: Edward and Emil in the Navy and Joseph, Michael and Thomas in the Army.

TRIVIA QUIZ

I (heart) New York

Leah Remini and Kevin James starred in the CBS series “The King of Queens” from 1998 to 2007.

1. “Sex and the City”2. Ann Marie3. Johnny Carson4. George C. Scott5. He was a courier who drove

for the fi ctional IPS delivery ser-vice

6. “Law & Order”7. Brooklyn8. Mary Beth Lacey, played by

Tyne Daly9. Judd Hirsch10. Lucy and Ricky Ricardo of

“I Love Lucy”

ANSWERS

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

C4-08/19/17

C4 THE VINDICATOR | SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 2017 COMICS WWW.VINDY.COM

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

CRANKSHAFT

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

DILBERT

THE MIDDLETONS

GARFIELD

WIZARD OF ID

PICKLES

PEANUTS

BLONDIE

JUDGE PARKER

B.C.

ZITS

REX MORGAN, M.D.

MARK TRAIL

MARY WORTH

BEETLE BAILEY

FAMILY CIRCUS ZIGGY DENNIS THE MENACE MARMADUKE

WEEKLY GUIDEAUGUST 19 - AUGUST 25, 2017

THE VINDICATOR | D1

SECTION D � TV Q&A • WEB LINKS • TV INDEPTH • CROSSWORD • HIGHLIGHTS • SOAP SYNOPSISSECTION D � TV Q&A WEB LINKS TV INDEPTH CROSSWORD CCRRCCRO

INSIDETV Q & AMore directing may

be Kyra Sedgwick’s

direction

D2

D3D3

Adam BaldwinAdam Baldwinis a star ofis a star of

‘The Last Ship’‘The Last Ship’returningreturning

Sunday on TNTSunday on TNT

page 2 The VindicatorTV Pipeline

More directing may be Kyra Sedgwick’s direction

By Jay Bobbin© Zap2it

Q: I saw that Kyra Sedg-wick directed “Story of

a Girl.” Does she plan to direct more things? — Carol McKenna, via e-mail

A: She certainly gave us that impression when

we spoke with her about the re-cent Lifetime movie, but she also noted the connection she felt to that specific material, since she had nurtured it as a producer for a decade. She said she only hopes she can find another di-recting project that speaks to her that strongly.

For now, it’s back to acting for the Emmy-winning former star of “The Closer” and wife of Kevin Bacon, who was in her “Story of a Girl” cast. Sedgwick plays a television producer whose daughter disappears in the ABC series “Ten Days in the Valley,” premiering Oct. 1.

Q: I heard “Underground” was canceled or sus-

pended due to budget problems. What’s the deal? — Larry Eng-lish, Hoffman Estates, Ill.

A: The “deal” is that the new owners of the dra-

ma series’ outlet, WGN America, made the decision not to con-tinue the critically acclaimed show — reasoning that its rat-ings didn’t justify the cost of pro-ducing it. “It no longer fits with our new direction” was part of the rationale given, and though originating studio Sony Pictures Television was trying to find a new home for it, that hadn’t hap-pened by the time of this writing. OWN and BET, which were cited as two possibilities, ultimately declined to pick it up because of the price tag ... with OWN chief Oprah Winfrey saying she “can’t afford” it.

Q: Please settle a dispute. I say Fred Grandy left

“The Love Boat” before it ended to start his political career. A friend says he stayed with the show until the end. Who’s right? — Jim Porter, Grove City, Ohio

A: He made it almost all the way. As the ABC se-

ries was wrapping up in the mid-1980s, he made his first of four successful runs for a congres-

sional seat from Iowa. However, Grandy’s political ties preceded his popular stint as Gopher; he was best man at the wedding of his schoolmate David Eisen-hower to Julie Nixon.

Though he lost a bid for the governorship of Iowa in 1994, Grandy continued to pursue his interest in politics as a National Public Radio commentator, and then as a talk-radio host in Washington, D.C.

Q: Every now and then on “Good Bones,” they’ll

show a logo that says “Two Chicks and a Hammer.” What is that? — Linda Bryan, Leesburg, Fla.

A: That’s the name of the Indianapolis-based

renovation business run by the HGTV show‘s stars, mother and daughter Karen Laine and Mina Starsiak. It’s been going for about a decade now, and their television exposure certainly hasn’t hurt ... and that will con-tinue, since the women recently got the news that their series has been renewed for a third season.

Q: Was there ever a tele-vision series about

Inspector Clouseau? — Michael Bruce, Decatur, Ala.

A: Only if you count the cartoons about the

character that were shown as part of “The Pink Panther Show” on NBC and then on ABC during the 1970s. The irony there is that Clouseau more or less began as a cartoon, in the animated open-ing sequences of director Blake Edwards’ popular movie com-edies about the clumsy French sleuth who always managed to get the job done despite himself.

Many of the “Inspector” cartoons also were shown in theaters as short subjects, and even if the likeness wasn’t ex-actly a copy of Peter Sellers as the live-action incarnation, there never was a doubt of whom the animated Inspector was pat-terned after.

Send questions of general in-terest via email to [email protected]. Writers must include their names, cities and states. Personal replies can-not be sent.

ODRXRCADIYEDDRV

W O C O R E D A H E Q I A RI S P E N S A R Y D U R N KB A T L D D B C P A I J G AE R C D A F E D A B B Y E VA D A L W M L W S N K W L KN N D A B A L I R I N Z E DK A R C L U B S A U D A S ER E A M S A D O D B T W A BS X S A N G K T N Y B H N LO M I N I M P H E B O I D AD L A P B M T U H N W P A SA C N F A P E T E D D I N JR L E U T C A M L T D E K UO Z E G E Z B A Q U A D R PA H P A S A B L G A V O L S

“Disjointed” on Netflix(Words in parentheses not in puzzle)

Ruth Pete Dabby Dank Carter

(Kathy) Bates(Dougie) Baldwin(Betsy) Sodaro(Chris) Redd(Tone) Bell

Cannabis Dispensary Budtenders (Los) Angeles Dreams

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SYFY

Kyra Sedgwick

Milano Youngstown Memorials 6536 South Avenue, Boardman

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Cover StoryThe voyage of ‘The Last Ship’ continues in TNT’s Season 4 premiere

By Jay Bobbin© Zap2it

If it seemed that the mission of “The Last Ship” was nearing its end, the crew is still very much on duty.

In fact, not only does the TNT drama series based on William Brinkley’s novel have a fourth sea-son that begins Sunday, Aug. 20 — with two back-to-back episodes — production is well under way on a Season 5 that presumably will be shown next year. Honored with a Navy Distinguished Public Service Award last year for “getting the Navy right,” the saga resumes as the virus fought by those aboard the destroyer USS Nathan James takes a new form, affecting global food crops and threatening a world-wide famine that could decimate mankind.

While Capt. Mike Slattery (played by Adam Baldwin) and his allies travel the Mediterranean in what one character terms a “last chance to save the human race,” former captain Tom Chandler (Eric Dane) is seeking a quieter life in Greece ... in a plot purposely meant as a modern parallel to Homer’s Odys-sey. However, as one can expect from the show that includes ac-tion-movie specialist Michael Bay (“Transformers”) among its execu-tive producers, Chandler’s tranquil-ity doesn’t last long.

“It’s a miracle to get even a pilot episode produced, let alone aired, so to get into Season 4 while shoot-ing Season 5 is quite amazing,” Baldwin reflects. “It’s a testament to the faith that the network has in our show, to the audience’s reaction, and to our writers’ diligence in sto-rytelling. In and around this apoca-lyptic action-adventure, they’re able to come up with fresh characters and fresh ideas for the current char-acters. And wonderful guest actors come in and push our buttons.”

As other cast members includ-ing Bridget Regan and Travis Van

Winkle return as well, Baldwin also credits the series’ directing team led by an executive producer of “The Last Ship,” Paul Holahan. “Pe-ter Weller has come in and directed several episodes for us,” Baldwin notes of the “RoboCop” star. “He’s a great actor, and a great mentor for all the actors involved here. You

can always go to him and ask him, ‘How would I play this?’ And he generally says, ‘Just drive a truck through it!’ ”

In various other projects including legendary filmmaker Stanley Ku-brick’s war movie “Full Metal Jack-et,” the sci-fi classic “Independence

Adam Baldwin is a star of “The Last Ship,” returning Sunday on TNT.

The Vindicator page 3

Day” and the former NBC spy satire “Chuck,” Baldwin also has played authority figures. “I think it’s just because I’m tall,” he muses. “When I came of age, I got (the movie) ‘My Bodyguard’ and we were in relative peacetime, so the opportunity to join just didn’t present itself to me.

“Over time, having played these characters, I’ve come into

contact with so many people in the Armed Forces, and they’re just such great people,” adds Baldwin, whose father was in the U.S. Navy Air Corps. “They’re straight shooters and upstand-ing citizens with such leader-ship qualities, I just pretend to emulate what they actually do in real life.”Web Links

Oscar winner Kathy Bates (“Misery”) stars as the owner of a Los Angeles marijuana dispensary in “Disjointed,” which begins streaming Friday on Netflix. Check it out at www.netflix.com/ti-tle/80117694

The dual unmanned mis-sions to the solar system’s outer planets are recalled in the documentary “The Farthest: Voyager in Space,” premiering Wednesday on PBS (check local listings). Find out more at www.pbs.org/the-farthest/home/

Much angst awaits Matt, Beverly, Sean and the rest when the fifth and final sea-son of “Episodes” gets going Sunday on Showtime. Find full episodes, clips, outtakes and more at www.sho.com/episodes

page 4 The Vindicator SAT. 8/19/17 7am 7:30am 8am 8:30am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am Noon 12:30pm (21) WFMJ Today Rossen Reports. (N) WFMJ Weekend Today (N) Heart-Champ The Voyager Wilderness Vet Journey-Dreyer Naturally, Seo Give EPL Soccer (27) WKBN (6:00) First News This Morning CBS This Morning: Saturday (N) Lucky Dog Dr. Chris-Vet Hidden Heroes The Open Road Sports Gone Wild (33) WYTV Kids News Real Life 101 Good Morning America (N) Jack Hanna Ocean Treks Sea Rescue Wildlife Docs Rock the Park Outback Adv To Be Announced (19) WYFX Ocean Mys. Expedition Wild Brain Games Dog Town, USA Recipe Rehab Hatched LifeLock Paid Program Paid Program Copper Chef Golf 2017 U.S. Amateur, Semifi (21.2) WBCB Calling Dr. Pol Calling Dr. Pol Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Save-Shelter Vaca-Creation Save to Win Animal Friends Hometime Perfect Yard (36) My TV Real Green Outdoorsman This Old House Biz Kid$ Sports Stars Great Big World Real Green Hollywood H’wood News Paid Program Tummy Tuck Paid Program (45) WNEO (6:30) Visions of Europe The This Old House Hour The Healing Mind With Martin Rossman, M.D. Age Reversed With Miranda This Old House Dr. Perlmutter’s Whole Life Plan

A&E Flipping Vegas Flipping Vegas Flipping Vegas Zombie House Flipping Zombie House Flipping Live PD: RewindAMC The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The RiflemanATTSP King of the Never Fear Paid Program No Aging Paid Program Endless Golf Perfect Yard Paid Program WVU Coaches Show with Dana BIG3 BasketballBET Paid Program Joyce Meyer House of Payne House of Payne House of Payne Tyler Perry’s House of Payne House of Payne (10:50) Martin (:22) Martin (11:54) Martin (:26) MartinBRAVO Watch What Happens Live Night w/My Ex Night w/My Ex Night w/My Ex Night w/My Ex Night w/My Ex Odd Mom Out Girlfriends’ Guide to Divorce Real Housewives of AucklandCOM Scrubs Scrubs That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show (:45) That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s ShowDIS The Lion Guard Puppy Dog Pals RoadsterRacers Puppy Dog Pals Pat the Dog Transylvania Tangled: The Raven’s Home Bizaardvark M How to Build a Better Boy (2014, Comedy) ‘NR’DISC Street Outlaws The Age of Aerospace Dirty Jobs “Medical Waste” Dirty Jobs “Fish Squeezer” Dirty Jobs Dirty JobsESPN SportsCenter SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)ESPN2 30 for 30 World Beaters Battle of the Network Stars Battle of the Network Stars TennisFOOD The Kitchen “Kitchen Academy” Giada at Home B’foot Contessa B’foot Contessa Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Trisha’s Sou. The Kitchen “Kids’ Eats” (N) Valerie Home Tiffani’sFREE M ›› Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) Macaulay Culkin, Joe Pesci. (:40) M ››› Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971) Gene Wilder. (:10) M ›››› WALL-E (2008)FS1 (6:00) BIG3 Basketball Match Day Bundesliga Soccer VfL Wolfsburg vs Borussia Dortmund. (N) (Live) Bundesliga Match Day (N) (Live) SoccerFSO UEFA Champ. League Soccer Star of The Hit TV Reality Show Paid Program Paid Program Real Estate Paid Program Worx Hydroshot Reality Show Cavs HQ ’16-’17FX M ›› Think Like a Man Too (2014) Adam Brody, Michael Ealy. Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men M ›› The Equalizer (2014, Action) Denzel Washington, Marton Csokas.HALL I Love Lucy I Love Lucy The Middle The Middle M Love by Chance (2016, Romance) Ben Ayers, Beau Garrett. M Love in Paradise (2016) Luke Perry, Emmanuelle Vaugier.HBO M 101Dalm M ›› Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas (2003) Sesame Street Sesame Street M ›› Monsters vs. Aliens (2009) Hugh Laurie (:35) M Batman v Superman: Dawn of JusticeHGTV House Hunters Renovation House Hunters Renovation House Hunters Renovation House Hunters Renovation House Family House Family House Family House FamilyHIST Ice Road Truckers Ice Road Truckers Ice Road Truckers “Outdoors: Breakdown” The drivers contend with a short season. (N) American Pickers “Motor City”LIFE Thin You Now PiYo Workout! Paid Program LifeLock Love Your Hair! Paid Program LifeLock Paid Program M 16 and Missing (2015, Suspense) Ashley Scott. M Sugar DadNICK PAW Patrol PAW Patrol SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Welcome to Loud House Loud House Ninja Steel Loud HouseSHOW M Diary of Mad (:45) M ››› Risk (2016, Documentary) Julian Assange. M › Max Steel (2016) Ben Winchell, Maria Bello. (:15) M ›› The Nanny Diaries (2007, Comedy) Scarlett Johansson.SPIKE Paid Program Facelift! Paid Program LifeLock M ››› Rush Hour (1998, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker, Tom Wilkinson. M ››› Hitch (2005) Will Smith, Eva Mendes.STO MLB Baseball Cleveland Indians at Kansas City Royals. From Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. Outdoor Option Boxing 30 World Poker World PokerSYFY Paid Program Paid Program Twilight Zone M Apocalypse L.A. (2014, Horror) Justin Ray, Ali Williams. M ››› Source Code (2011) Jake Gyllenhaal, Michelle Monaghan. M Robin HoodTBS (6:30) M ››› Twins (1988) Danny DeVito (:45) M ››› Junior (1994) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Danny DeVito. Premiere. M ›› Bedtime Stories (2008) Adam Sandler. M CinderellaTCM (6:00) M ›› If Winter Comes M ›› The Hoodlum Saint (1946) William Powell, Esther Williams. M ››› All Fall Down (1962) Warren Beatty, Eva Marie Saint. M The World of Henry OrientTLC Lottery Changed My Life Lottery Changed My Life Lottery Changed My Life Suddenly Rich “Going Viral” Suddenly Rich Suddenly RichTNT Law & Order “Agony” Law & Order “Scrambled” Law & Order “Venom” Law & Order “Punk” Law & Order “True North” Law & Order “Hate”TRVL Wild Things With Dominic Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Delicious DeliciousTVLAND (:12) Roseanne (7:48) Roseanne (:24) Roseanne Roseanne (:36) Roseanne (:12) Roseanne Roseanne (:24) Roseanne Roseanne RoseanneUSA Paid Program PiYo Workout! PiYo Workout! PiYo Workout! Queen of the South The Sinner “Part III” NCIS “Cloak” NCIS “Dagger”VH1 Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters M ›››› Forrest Gump (1994) Tom Hanks.

SAT. 8/19/17 1pm 1:30pm 2pm 2:30pm 3pm 3:30pm 4pm 4:30pm 5pm 5:30pm 6pm 6:30pm(21) WFMJ English Premier League Soccer Goal Zone Motorcycle Race 2017 Solheim Cup Day 2. (N) (Live) 21 News 6PM Nightly News(27) WKBN CrossFit Games Toughest Mudder Northeast PGA Tour Golf Wyndham Championship, Third Round. (N) (Live) First News-6p Weekend News(33) WYTV To Be Announced World of X Games (N) 2017 Little League World Series Elimination, Game 10: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) TBA News World News(19) WYFX Golf 2017 U.S. Amateur, Semifinal Matches. (N) (Live) Tim McCarver HouseSmarts M ›› I’m Gonna Git You Sucka (1988) Keenen Ivory Wayans. Big Bang Big Bang(21.2) WBCB Football Saturdays Entertainers: With Byron Allen The Hard Truth PiYo Workout! P. Allen Smith Homeowner Last-Standing Last-Standing TMZ (N)(36) My TV Movie Movie Our World, Ent. Matter of Fact(45) WNEO Dr. Perlmutter’s Whole Life Plan On the Psychiatrist’s Couch-Daniel Amen He Touched Me: Gospel Music of Elvis Presley Magic Moments: The Best of 50s Pop Musicians perform.

A&E Live PD: Rewind Live PD “Live PD -- 06.09.17” Riding along with law enforcement. Live PD “Live PD -- 08.11.17” Riding along with law enforcement.AMC The Rifleman M ››› Total Recall (1990) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Rachel Ticotin. M ››› Men in Black (1997) Tommy Lee Jones, Will Smith. M ››› Independence DayATTSP BIG3 Basketball Inside Pirates Pirate Pregame MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Pittsburgh Pirates. From PNC Park in Pittsburgh. (N) (Live)BET Martin M ››› Hustle & Flow (2005, Drama) Terrence Howard, Anthony Anderson, Taryn Manning. M ››› Ray (2004, Biography) Jamie Foxx, Kerry Washington, Regina King.BRAVO Flipping Out Housewives/NYC Watch What Happens Live Housewives/OC The Real Housewives of Dallas Shahs of SunsetCOM That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show M ›› Life (1999, Comedy-Drama) Eddie Murphy, Martin Lawrence. South Park “Grey Dawn” South Park “HumancentiPad”DIS Raven’s Home K.C. Under. K.C. Under. Bizaardvark L&M:Cali Style Jessie Stuck/Middle Andi Mack Bunk’d L&M:Cali Style Jessie Stuck/MiddleDISC Dirty Jobs Dirty Jobs “Toilet Crusher” Dirty Jobs “Locomotive Builder” Dirty Jobs Dirty Jobs Dirty Jobs “Sponge Diver”ESPN 2017 Little League World Series Elimination, Game 9: Teams TBA. Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) MLS Soccer Teams TBA. (N) (Live) 2017 Little League World SeriesESPN2 ATP Tennis Western & Southern Open, Semifinals. From Cincinnati. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Guy’s Family I Hart FoodFREE M ›››› WALL-E (2008) Voice of Ben Burtt. M ››› A Bug’s Life (1998) Voices of Dave Foley, Kevin Spacey. M ››› Monsters, Inc. (2001) Voices of John Goodman. M MonstersFS1 Bundesliga Soccer FC Schalke 04 vs RB Leipzig. MLB’s Best MLB on FS1 Pregame (N) (Live) MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Detroit Tigers. From Comerica Park in Detroit. (N) (Live)FSO CBR Bull Riding Championship. Bundesliga Soccer FC Bayern Munich vs Bayer 04 Leverkusen. Saratoga Live (N) (Live) In the SpotlightFX M Equalizer M ››› Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014, Action) Chris Evans, Scarlett Johansson, Samuel L. Jackson. M ››› Furious 7 (2015, Action) Vin Diesel, Paul Walker.HALL M Summer in the City (2016) Julianna Guill, Marc Bendavid. M Campfire Kiss (2017) Danica McKellar, Paul Greene. M Stranded in Paradise (2014) Vanessa Marcil, James Denton.HBO M Batman v Superman: Dawn The Defiant Ones “Part 1” M Brillo Box (3 Cents Off) (2016) M ››› Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2016) M ›› The Legend of TarzanHGTV Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer UpperHIST American Pickers Pawn Stars Restoration Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars The Cars That Made AmericaLIFE M Sugar Daddies (2014) M Evil Nanny (2017, Suspense) Lindsay Elston. NWSL Soccer Washington Spirit at North Carolina Courage. (N) (Live) M Stalked by My NeighborNICK Loud House Loud House SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud HouseSHOW M ›› Free State of Jones (2016, Historical Drama) Matthew McConaughey. ‘R’ All Access I’m Dying up Here Twin Peaks: The Return Ray Donovan “Las Vegas”SPIKE M ››› Hitch (2005) Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops “Atlanta” Cops CopsSTO Then and Now Swing Clinic Swing Clinic Swing Clinic Running Build/Browns Bensinger Frank Robinson Tribute 2017 Addie Joss: Indians LiveSYFY M ›› Robin Hood (2010, Adventure) Russell Crowe, Cate Blanchett, William Hurt. M ›› G.I. Joe: Retaliation (2013, Action) Dwayne Johnson, Bruce Willis. M ››› Salt (2010, Action)TBS M ››› Cinderella (2015, Children’s) Cate Blanchett, Lily James. Friends Friends Friends Friends 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Seinfeld SeinfeldTCM M The World of Henry Orient M ›› Kind Lady (1951) Ethel Barrymore. M ››› State of the Union (1948) Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn. M ››› The Harvey GirlsTLC 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Say Yes to the DressTNT The Last Ship “In the Dark” The Last Ship “Sea Change” The Last Ship “Paradise” The Last Ship “Scuttle” The Last Ship “Legacy” The Last Ship “Resistance”TRVL Man v. Food Man v. Food Ginormous Ginormous Food Paradise Food Paradise Food Paradise Ghost AdventuresTVLAND Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Golden Girls Golden Girls The Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden GirlsUSA NCIS “Enemies Foreign” NCIS “Enemies Domestic” NCIS “Engaged, Part 1” NCIS “Engaged, Part 2” NCIS “Up in Smoke” NCIS “Till Death Do Us Part”VH1 M ›››› Forrest Gump (1994) Tom Hanks, Robin Wright. M › Cop Out (2010, Comedy) Bruce Willis, Tracy Morgan, Adam Brody. M Drumline: A New Beat (2014) Alexandra Shipp.

(N) = New; (M) = Movie

The Vindicator page 5SAT. 8/19/17 7pm 7:30pm 8pm 8:30pm 9pm 9:30pm 10pm 10:30pm 11pm 11:30pm Midnight 12:30am (21) WFMJ NASCAR Racing Monster Energy Cup Series: Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race. From Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tenn. (N) 21 News 11PM (:29) Saturday Night Live (27) WKBN Wheel Fortune Jeopardy! 48 Hours Princess Diana: Her Life -- Her Death -- The Truth First News-11p (:35) CSI: Miami (:35) CSI: Miami (33) WYTV Big Bang Big Bang Amer. Funniest Home Videos The $100,000 Pyramid 20/20: In an Instant News Chan. Outdoorsman (12:05) Elementary (19) WYFX Modern Family Modern Family Lucifer “Homewrecker” Love Connection “Evan ’n Hell” News Two/Half Men American Grit Two/Half Men Anger Manage. (21.2) WBCB Mike & Molly Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls American Ninja Warrior Comedy.TV What Went What Went Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (36) My TV Name Game Name Game Scandal “I’m Just a Bill” Elementary “The Marchioness” Castle “Private Eye Caramba!” Blue Bloods “Insult to Injury” Castle “Private Eye Caramba!” (45) WNEO Lawrence Welk: Precious Memories Hymns, inspiration, gospel. Roy Orbison: Black & White Night 30 70s Soul Superstars (My Music) Motown, R&B, soul and disco artists.

A&E (5:00) Live PD Live PD: Rewind (N) Live PD “Live PD -- 08.19.17” Riding along with law enforcement. (N) (Live) Live PD “Live PD -- 08.19.17”AMC (6:00) M ››› Independence Day (1996) Will Smith, Bill Pullman. Halt and Catch Fire Gordon celebrates a milestone. (:06) Halt and Catch Fire Gordon celebrates a milestone.ATTSP Pirates Post. Inside Pirates Focused In the Spotlight MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Pittsburgh Pirates. From PNC Park in Pittsburgh. UFABET (4:28) M ››› Ray (2004) M ››› What’s Love Got to Do With It (1993, Biography) Angela Bassett, Laurence Fishburne. (:02) M ››› Hustle & Flow (2005, Drama) Terrence Howard.BRAVO M ››› The Social Network (2010, Drama) Jesse Eisenberg. Premiere. ‘PG-13’ M ››› The Social Network (2010, Drama) Jesse Eisenberg. ‘PG-13’ M ›› Draft Day (2014) ‘PG-13’COM South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park M ››› Superbad (2007, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Michael Cera.DIS Andi Mack Bunk’d M Disney’s Descendants 2 (2017, Children’s) Dove Cameron. ‘NR’ K.C. Under. K.C. Under. Bizaardvark Bizaardvark Stuck/Middle Bunk’dDISC Dirty Jobs “Asphalt Paver” Dirty Jobs “Rum Distiller” Dirty Jobs “Bug Detective” Dirty Jobs (:01) Deadliest Catch (12:01) Deadliest CatchESPN 2017 Little League World Series 2017 Little League World Series Boxing Terrence Crawford vs. Julius Indongo. (N) (Live) SportsCenterESPN2 ATP Tennis Western & Southern Open, Men’s Second Semifinal. E:60 Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter BoxingFOOD Worst Cooks in America Worst Cooks in America Worst Cooks in America Worst Cooks in America Worst Cooks in America Worst Cooks in AmericaFREE (6:40) M ››› Monsters University (2013) Voices of Billy Crystal. (:10) M ››› Big Hero 6 (2014, Children’s) Voices of Ryan Potter, Scott Adsit. (:25) M ›› Cars 2 (2011) Larry the Cable GuyFS1 NHRA Drag Racing Lucas Oil Nationals, Qualifying. (N) Monster Jam BIG3 Basketball Three-on-three basketball featuring former NBA greats and players.FSO CBR Bull Riding Championship. World Poker BIG3 Basketball Three-on-three basketball featuring former NBA greats and players. Drag RacingFX (5:00) M ››› Furious 7 (2015) M ››› Kingsman: The Secret Service (2014, Action) Colin Firth, Michael Caine, Taron Egerton. Snowfall “Cracking” Better Things Better ThingsHALL M Summer in the Vineyard (2017) Rachael Leigh Cook. M Eat, Play, Love (2017) Jen Lilley, Jason Cermak. Premiere. Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden GirlsHBO (6:05) M The Legend of Tarzan M ››› Nocturnal Animals (2016) Amy Adams. Premiere. Game of Thrones “Eastwatch” Ballers Insecure (12:05) M Nocturnal AnimalsHGTV Fixer Upper Beachfront Bargain Renovation Beachfront Bargain Renovation House Hunters Renovation (N) House Hunters House Hunters Beachfront Bargain RenovationHIST (6:00) The Cars That Made America Young visionaries wage battle. (N) The Cars That Made AmericaLIFE M Stalked by My Neighbor M Stalked by My Doctor (2015) Eric Roberts, Brianna Chomer. (:02) M Stalked by My Doctor: The Return (2016) Eric Roberts. (12:02) M Stalked by My DoctorNICK The Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger “Hour of Power” Full House Full House Friends Friends Friends (:33) FriendsSHOW Episodes Episodes Episodes Episodes Episodes Episodes Episodes Episodes Episodes Dice “Alimony” Dice DiceSPIKE Cops Cops Cops “Beyond the Bust” (N) Gone: The Forgotten Women (:02) Cops (:32) M ››› Rush Hour (1998, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker, Tom Wilkinson.STO MLB Baseball Cleveland Indians at Kansas City Royals. From Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. Indians Live Cruise In Football MLB Baseball: Indians at RoyalsSYFY (6:00) M ››› Salt (2010) M ›››› Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton. M ››› Joy Ride (2001, Suspense) Steve Zahn, Paul Walker.TBS Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Full Frontal Wrecked People of Earth Guest BookTCM (6:00) M The Harvey Girls (1946) M ››› The Manchurian Candidate (1962) Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey. M ››› Gaslight (1944) Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman. M PrivateTLC Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATLTNT The Last Ship M ›› Eagle Eye (2008, Action) Shia LaBeouf, Michelle Monaghan. (:31) M ›› 3 Days to Kill (2014, Action) Kevin Costner, Amber Heard.TRVL Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures: Artifacts (N) The Dead Files (N) The Dead Files Ghost Adventures: ArtifactsTVLAND Golden Girls Golden Girls (:12) Everybody Loves Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of QueensUSA NCIS “Shell Shock, Part I” NCIS “Shell Shock, Part II” NCIS Ziva’s father visits. NCIS “Shiva” M ›› Shooter (2007, Suspense) Mark Wahlberg, Michael Peña.VH1 (5:30) M Drumline: A New Beat M ››› Drumline (2002, Comedy-Drama) Nick Cannon, Zoe Saldana. M ›› Roll Bounce (2005) Bow Wow. A roller-skater prepares for a big showdown.

SUN. 8/20/17 7am 7:30am 8am 8:30am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am Noon 12:30pm (21) WFMJ WFMJ Weekend Today (N) Sunday Today With Willie Geist WFMJ Weekend Today (N) Meet the Press (N) Pastor Joe Give Heart-Champ (27) WKBN Innovation Nat First News This Morning (N) CBS News Sunday Morning (N) Face the Nation (N) The Inspectors GSL: Producer’s Scrapbook II (33) WYTV Wild America A Conversation Good Morning America (N) This Week With George ... Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program World Beaters (19) WYFX Animal Adv Animal Rescue Coolest Places Crossing Paths Fox News Sunday The Hard Truth King of the The Hard Truth Copper Chef Modern Family Modern Family (21.2) WBCB Casey Malone Traveler Am. Heartland Exploration Never Fear DragonFlyTV Come Alive Paid Program Community On the Money The Hard Truth Tai Cheng (36) My TV Women-Power Designing Wild Animals Into the Wild Think Big Hollywood Sports Stars Great Big World Weird but True Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program (45) WNEO Sesame Street Daniel Tiger DragonFlyTV SciGirls Dr. Perlmutter’s Whole Life Plan Holistic lifestyle program. Suze Orman’s Financial Solutions for You

A&E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds “P911” Criminal Minds Criminal Minds “Psychodrama” Criminal Minds Critical decision.AMC M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H M*A*S*H The Walking Dead Rick emerges from a coma. The Walking Dead “Guts” The Walking Dead Walking DeadATTSP Paid Program Get Energy Paid Program Paid Program Never Fear Paid Program Never Fear Paid Program Friends Wild Pl Charlie Moore Softball 360 Destination Pol.BET Derek Grier Ron Carpenter Paid Program Abundant Life Meet, Browns Meet, Browns Meet, Browns Meet, Browns Meet, Browns Meet, Browns Meet, Browns M What’s LoveBRAVO Girlfriends’ Guide to Divorce Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Watch What Happens Live Flipping Out The Real Housewives of DallasCOM Scrubs Scrubs That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show (:45) That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s ShowDIS The Lion Guard Puppy Dog Pals RoadsterRacers Puppy Dog Pals Raven’s Home Bizaardvark K.C. Under. Raven’s Home Andi Mack Austin & Ally M Invisible Sister (2015) ‘NR’DISC Bering Sea Gold “Big Cold Gold” Bering Sea Gold “Cold War” Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid “Washed Out” Naked and Afraid “Bad Blood”ESPN SportsCenter SportsCenter (N) (Live) E:60 (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) 2017 Little League World SeriesESPN2 Bassmasters Bassmasters (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) 2017 Little League World Series BaseballFOOD Heaton Parties Trisha’s Sou. Southern Heart Farmhouse Guy’s Big Bite Valerie Home Tia Mowry Giada in Italy B’foot Contessa Pioneer Wo. Trisha’s Sou. Giada Enter.FREE M ››› Winnie the Pooh (:15) M ›› Cars 2 (2011, Children’s) Voices of Owen Wilson, Larry the Cable Guy. (:45) M ››› A Bug’s Life (1998, Children’s) Voices of Dave Foley, Kevin Spacey.FS1 Bundesliga Soccer FC Bayern Munich vs Bayer 04 Leverkusen. Match Day Bundesliga Soccer SC Freiburg vs Eintracht Frankfurt. (N) (Live) Match Day Bundesliga SoccerFSO Bundesliga Soccer Paid Program Reality Show Paid Program Reality Show Paid Program Paid Program Focused Destination Pol. Bundesliga SoccerFX Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met M ›› Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (2014, Action) Chris Pine.HALL I Love Lucy I Love Lucy The Middle The Middle M I Married Who? (2012) Kellie Martin, Ethan Erickson. M Love Blossoms (2017) Shantel VanSanten, Victor Webster.HBO (6:50) M ›› Be Cool (2005) John Travolta, Uma Thurman. M Brillo Box 3 (:35) M ›› Collateral Beauty (2016) Will Smith. Hard Knocks: Training Camp (:15) M Catch Me if You CanHGTV Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer UpperHIST Top Gear “Fully Charged” Top Gear “Desert Trailblazers” Counting Cars “Drive: Psychedelic Cycle” Custom psychedelic bike. (N) The Rise and Fall of El ChapoLIFE In Touch W/Charles Stanley Amazing Facts David Jeremiah Joel Osteen Paid Program M Watch Your Back (2015) AnnaLynne McCord, Mark Ghanimé. M Lost Boy (2015) Mark ValleyNICK PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Ninja Steel SpongeBob Ninja Turtles Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House SpongeBob SpongeBobSHOW M › Mother’s Day (2016) Jennifer Aniston, Kate Hudson. M ›› Secret in Their Eyes (2015) Chiwetel Ejiofor, Nicole Kidman. M ›› Transporter 3 (2008) Jason Statham. M SnowdenSPIKE LifeLock Facelift! Paid Program Paid Program Xtreme Off Engine Power Truck Tech (N) Detroit Muscle Bar Rescue “Vulgar Vixens” Bar RescueSTO MLB Baseball Cleveland Indians at Kansas City Royals. From Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. Bensinger Build/Browns Facing Waves Facing Waves Sports UnlimitedSYFY Paid Program Paid Program Twilight Zone Twilight Zone M Joy Ride 3: Roadkill (2014) Kirsten Prout, Dean Armstrong. M › Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead (2008) Nicki Aycox, Laura Jordan.TBS Married ... With Married ... With (:15) Friends (:45) Friends (:15) Friends (:45) Friends (:15) Friends (:45) Friends (:15) M ››› Cinderella (2015) Cate Blanchett, Lily James.TCM (6:00) M ››› Penny Serenade (:15) M ››› In Name Only (1939) Carole Lombard, Cary Grant. M ››› None but the Lonely Heart (1944, Drama) Cary Grant. M ››› Mr. Lucky (1943)TLC Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the DressTNT Law & Order “Disciple” Law & Order “Harm” Law & Order “Shield” Law & Order “Juvenile” Law & Order “Tabula Rasa” M ›› The Expendables 2TRVL Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Waterparks Waterparks Waterparks WaterparksTVLAND New Adventures of Old Christine Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls (:12) The Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden GirlsUSA PiYo Workout! David Jeremiah In Touch Joel Osteen Suits “Home to Roost” Shooter “The Man Called Noon” Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVUVH1 Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Cheaters Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood (:35) Baller Wives (:40) Signed

(N) = New; (M) = Movie

page 6 The Vindicator SUN. 8/20/17 1pm 1:30pm 2pm 2:30pm 3pm 3:30pm 4pm 4:30pm 5pm 5:30pm 6pm 6:30pm(21) WFMJ Gymnastics P&G Championships: Men’s Events. Beach Volleyball AVP Manhattan Beach Open. 2017 Solheim Cup Day 3. (N) (Live) 21 News 6PM Nightly News(27) WKBN Bull Riding PGA Tour 2017: A Sporting Life PGA Tour Golf Wyndham Championship, Final Round. (N) (Live) First News-6p Weekend News(33) WYTV 2017 Little League World Series Double Elimination, Game 15: Teams TBA. (N) To Be Announced TBA News World News(19) WYFX M ››› Seabiscuit (2003) Tobey Maguire. Three men lead a racehorse to glory in the 1930s. Raceline Golf 2017 U.S. Amateur, Championship Match. (N) (Live)(21.2) WBCB M ›› Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem (2007) Steven Pasquale. Coffee With The Hard Truth Friends Friends Open House Homes/Estates 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls(36) My TV Movie Sounds of Su Summer Movie The Middle How I Met(45) WNEO PBS Previews: Vietnam War Eat Fat, Get Thin With Dr. Mark Hyman Johnny Mathis -- Wonderful! Wonderful! (My Music Presents) Mannheim Steamroller

A&E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds The Murder of Laci Peterson Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage WarsAMC Walking Dead The Walking Dead “Wildfire” The Walking Dead “TS-19” The Walking Dead “What Lies Ahead” The Walking Dead The Walking DeadATTSP Golf Life 18 Holes Bundesliga Soccer FC Bayern Munich vs Bayer 04 Leverkusen. Bundesliga Soccer VfL Wolfsburg vs Borussia Dortmund. Bundesliga SoccerBET M ››› What’s Love Got to Do With It (1993, Biography) Angela Bassett. The New Edition Story Legendary R&B group New Edition. The New Edition Story “Part Two”BRAVO Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Shahs of Sunset Shahs of SunsetCOM That ’70s Show That ’70s Show M ››› Knocked Up (2007, Romance-Comedy) Seth Rogen, Katherine Heigl. M ››› Superbad (2007, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Michael Cera.DIS M Invisible K.C. Under. Raven’s Home Bizaardvark Bizaardvark Jessie Bunk’d Stuck/Middle L&M:Cali Style Andi Mack Raven’s Home M Brave (2012)DISC Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid “Unhinged” Naked and Afraid “Rise Above” Naked and Afraid “Lost at Sea” Naked and AfraidESPN Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) 2017 Little League World Series Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) World Beaters Sunday Night CountdownESPN2 Baseball ATP Tennis Western & Southern Open, Women’s Final. (N) (Live) ATP Tennis Western & Southern Open, Men’s Final. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)FOOD The Kitchen I Hart Food Diners, Drive The Great Food Truck Race The Great Food Truck Race Food Network Star ChoppedFREE M ››› Despicable Me (2010, Children’s) Voices of Steve Carell. M ››› Monsters, Inc. (2001) Voices of John Goodman. M ››› Monsters University (2013) Voices of Billy Crystal.FS1 Bundesliga Soccer NHRA Drag Racing Lucas Oil Nationals. From Brainerd International Raceway in Brainerd, Minn. (N) Monster Jam (N) UFC Flashback UFC FlashbackFSO Bundesliga Soccer UFC Unleashed UFC Main Event UFC Knockouts Focused 18 Holes Cavs Review CBR Bull Riding Championship.FX M ››› Furious 7 (2015) Vin Diesel. A dead man’s brother seeks revenge on the Toretto gang. M ››› Kingsman: The Secret Service (2014, Action) Colin Firth, Michael Caine, Taron Egerton.HALL M Summer Villa (2016, Romance) Victor Webster, Hilarie Burton. M Summer in the Vineyard (2017) Rachael Leigh Cook. M Summer of Dreams (2016) Debbie Gibson, Robert Gant.HBO M ››› Catch Me if You Can (2002) ‘PG-13’ Real Time With Bill Maher VICE M ›› The Accountant (2016, Suspense) Ben Affleck, Anna Kendrick. ‘R’ M Dark KnightHGTV Fixer Upper Sweet Home House Hunters Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Property BrothersHIST The Rise and Fall of El Chapo Navy SEALs: America’s Secret Warriors Navy SEALs: America’s Secret Warriors Forged in Fire “The Moro Kris”LIFE M Lost Boy (2015) Mark Valley M Caught (2015, Suspense) Anna Camp, Sam Page. M Under the Bed (2017) Hannah New, Beverly D’Angelo. M Nanny Nightmare (2017)NICK SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBobSHOW M ›› Snowden (2016, Drama) Joseph Gordon-Levitt. ‘R’ M › Mother’s Day (2016) Jennifer Aniston, Kate Hudson. ‘PG-13’ I’m Dying up Here Twin Peaks: The ReturnSPIKE Bar Rescue Bar Rescue A western bar. Bar Rescue “Meat Sauna” Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue “Antisocial Media”STO Swing Clinic Indians Live MLB Baseball Cleveland Indians at Kansas City Royals. From Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. Indians Live Cup of Coffee Cruise In (N) BensingerSYFY M ››› Joy Ride (2001, Suspense) Steve Zahn, Paul Walker. M ››› Salt (2010, Action) Angelina Jolie, Liev Schreiber. M ›››› Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) Linda HamiltonTBS M Cinderella MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox. From Fenway Park in Boston. (N) (Live) Friends M ››› Batman Begins (2005) Christian Bale, Michael Caine.TCM M ››› Mr. Lucky (1943) M ››› Suspicion (1941, Suspense) Cary Grant, Joan Fontaine. M ››› I Was a Male War Bride (1949, Comedy) Cary Grant. M The Philadelphia Story (1940)TLC Rattled Rattled “Return of the Quads” Rattled “Secret DNA Test” Rattled Rattled RattledTNT M ›› The Expendables 2 M ›› Olympus Has Fallen (2013) Gerard Butler, Aaron Eckhart. M ›› Red (2010, Action) Bruce Willis, Morgan Freeman, John Malkovich. M ›› Red 2TRVL Waterparks Waterparks Delicious Delicious Brew & ’Que Brew & ’Que Food Paradise Food Paradise “Extra Cheesy” Food ParadiseTVLAND Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Reba Reba Reba Reba Reba RebaUSA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVUVH1 Signed Black Ink Crew: Chicago Ryan hires a new artist. M ›› Roll Bounce (2005) Bow Wow. A roller-skater prepares for a big showdown. M ››› Drumline (2002) Nick Cannon.

SUN. 8/20/17 7pm 7:30pm 8pm 8:30pm 9pm 9:30pm 10pm 10:30pm 11pm 11:30pm Midnight 12:30am (21) WFMJ Gymnastics P&G Championships: Women’s Events. (N) (Live) American Ninja Warrior Contestants face Giant Cubes. 21 News 11PM Inside Edition Paid Program Paid Program (27) WKBN 60 Minutes (N) Big Brother (N) (:02) Candy Crush (N) NCIS: Los Angeles First News-11p (:35) Blue Bloods (:35) Scandal (33) WYTV Amer. Funniest Home Videos Celebrity Family Feud Steve Harvey’s FUNDERDOME The $100,000 Pyramid (N) News Chan. (:35) Castle “Resurrection” Major Crimes (19) WYFX Golf 2017 U.S. Bob’s Burgers The Simpsons Family Guy The Simpsons Family Guy News Seinfeld Seinfeld Engagement Engagement How I Met (21.2) WBCB Mike & Molly Mike & Molly First Family Mr. Box Office Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Leverage “The Stork Job” Access Hollywood (N) Paid Program MyDestination (36) My TV King of Queens King of Queens Person of Interest “The Fix” Person of Interest “Witness” Rookie Blue “A Good Shoot” Rizzoli & Isles Rizzoli & Isles (45) WNEO Mannheim St The Highwaymen Live at Nassau Coliseum Endeavour on Masterpiece “Game” Independent Lens In Her Boots Robin Williams Remembered

A&E Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars: Biggest Scores “Bold Bets & Winning Wagers” (Series Premiere) Dave takes a gamble and buys in bulk. (N) Storage Wars: Biggest ScoresAMC The Walking Dead The Walking Dead The Walking Dead “Secrets” The Walking Dead Talking With Chris Hardwick (N) Preacher “Puzzle Piece”ATTSP Bundesliga Soccer CBR Bull Riding Championship. Bensinger Poker Night Heartland Poker Tour (N) World Poker World PokerBET (5:38) The New Edition Story (7:58) The New Edition Story “Part Three” (9:57) Martin Martin Martin Martin Paid Program Paid ProgramBRAVO Shahs of Sunset Shahs of Sunset (N) Housewives/NYC Shahs of Sunset Watch What Shahs of Sunset HousewivesCOM M Superbad (:20) South Park “The Black Friday Trilogy” South Park South Park South Park Kevin Hart: Grown Little Man Legends-Cham. Kevin Hart: Grown Little ManDIS (6:20) M ››› Brave (2012) Transylvania Tangled: The Raven’s Home K.C. Under. Bizaardvark Bizaardvark Transylvania Tangled: The Stuck/Middle Andi MackDISC Naked and Afraid “The Hunted” Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid: Uncensored Naked and Afraid (N) (:01) Naked and Afraid (12:01) Naked and AfraidESPN MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals vs Pittsburgh Pirates. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenterESPN2 Championship Drive (N) Baltimore Boys Morningside 5 30 for 30 ESPN FC (N)FOOD Guy’s Grocery Games Guy’s Grocery Games (N) The Great Food Truck Race Guy’s Family Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives The Great Food Truck RaceFREE M Monsters (:40) M ››› Big Hero 6 (2014, Children’s) Voices of Ryan Potter, Scott Adsit. (9:55) M ››› Despicable Me (2010) Voices of Steve Carell. M ›› Gnomeo & Juliet (2011)FS1 UFC Flashback UFC Reloaded MLS Soccer Minnesota United FC at Seattle Sounders FC. (N) (Live) BIG3 BasketballFSO World Poker The Golf Zone Cavs HQ ’16-’17 World Poker World Poker CBR Bull Riding Championship.FX M ››› X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014, Action) Hugh Jackman, James McAvoy. The Strain “Tainted Love” (N) (:01) The Strain “Tainted Love” (12:02) Snowfall “Cracking”HALL M Eat, Play, Love (2017, Romance) Jen Lilley, Jason Cermak. Chesapeake Shores (N) M At Home in Mitford (2017, Drama) Andie MacDowell. Premiere. Golden Girls Golden GirlsHBO (6:20) M ›››› The Dark Knight (2008, Action) Christian Bale. Game of Thrones “Episode 66” (:15) Ballers (N) (:45) Insecure Last Week To. (:45) Game of Thrones “Episode 66”HGTV Property Brothers Beach Bargain Beach Bargain Caribbean Life Caribbean Life Island Hunters Island Hunters House Hunters Hunters Int’l Caribbean Life Caribbean LifeHIST Forged in Fire Forged in Fire: Cutting Deeper The New Age of Terror United States faces a new kind of enemy. (:03) Forged in Fire Forged in Fire: Cutting DeeperLIFE (6:00) M Nanny Nightmare M The Psycho She Met Online (2017, Suspense) Charity Shea. (:02) M Sleepwalking in Suburbia (2017, Suspense) Lucie Guest. M The Psycho She Met OnlineNICK The Thundermans “Super Secret Saga” Max must make a choice. Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends Friends (:33) FriendsSHOW Ray Donovan “Las Vegas” Twin Peaks: The Return (N) Ray Donovan “Dogwalker” (N) Episodes Dice Ray Donovan “Dogwalker” Twin Peaks: The ReturnSPIKE Bar Rescue “I Smell a Rat” Bar Rescue Bar Rescue “Daddy Dearest” Bar Rescue (N) Bar Rescue “Drunk on Punk” Bar Rescue “Boss Lady Blues”STO Beer Money Beer Money Then and Now Football Bensinger Build/Browns Cruise In Cruise In MLB Baseball: Indians at RoyalsSYFY M Terminator 2: Judgment Day M ››› Mad Max: Fury Road (2015, Action) Tom Hardy, Charlize Theron. M ››› Hellboy (2004, Fantasy) Ron Perlman, John Hurt, Selma Blair.TBS (5:00) M ››› Batman Begins M ››› Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Chris Hemsworth. M ››› Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015) Robert Downey Jr.TCM (6:00) M The Philadelphia Story M ››› Holiday (1938) Katharine Hepburn. (:45) M ››› An Affair to Remember (1957, Romance) Cary Grant, Deborah Kerr. M Bachelor and Bobby-SoxerTLC 90 Day Fiancé: More to Love (N) 90 Day Fiancé (N) 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 (:04) The Spouse House (N) (:09) 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90TNT (6:30) M ›› Red 2 (2013, Action) Bruce Willis, John Malkovich. The Last Ship “In Media Res” The Last Ship (N) The Last Ship “In Media Res” The Last ShipTRVL Food Paradise “Food On Fire” Food Paradise “Worth the Wait” Waterparks Waterparks Pirate Treasure Pirate Treasure Waterparks Waterparks Waterparks WaterparksTVLAND Reba Reba Reba Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of QueensUSA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern FamilyVH1 (5:30) M ››› Drumline (2002) Baller Wives Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Basketball Wives “Reunion” Baller Wives

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The Vindicator page 7WEEKDAY 7am 7:30am 8am 8:30am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am Noon 12:30pm (21) WFMJ Today Live with Kelly and Ryan Today’s Take Today 21 News Mid-Day Report (27) WKBN CBS This Morning The Doctors Let’s Make a Deal The Price Is Right News Young/Restless (33) WYTV Good Morning America Rachael Ray RightThisMinute RightThisMinute The View Access Hollywood Live (19) WYFX First News at 7am The People’s Court The People’s Court Divorce Court Divorce Court Judge Alex Judge Alex (21.2) WBCB Corrupt Crimes Paid Program WFMJ Today Judge Faith Judge Faith Judge Mathis The Wendy Williams Show Judge Ross Be a Millionaire (36) My TV NewsChannel 33 Daybreak Paternity Court Paternity Court Maury The Steve Wilkos Show Jerry Springer (45) WNEO Ready Jet Go! Wild Kratts Nature Cat Curious George Curious George Daniel Tiger Daniel Tiger Splash-Bubbles Splash-Bubbles Sesame Street Sesame Street Super Why!

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page 8 The Vindicator MON. 8/21/17 7pm 7:30pm 8pm 8:30pm 9pm 9:30pm 10pm 10:30pm 11pm 11:30pm Midnight 12:30am (21) WFMJ Inside Edition Family Feud American Ninja Warrior Competitors from Kansas City, Mo. (N) Midnight, Texas “Unearthed” 21 News 11PM Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyers (27) WKBN Wheel Fortune Jeopardy! Kevin Can Wait Superior Dnts Mom Life in Pieces CBSN: On Assignment (N) First News-11p Late Show-Colbert James Corden (33) WYTV Ent. Tonight The Insider (N) Bachelor in Paradise (N) (:01) To Tell the Truth (N) News Chan. (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:37) Nightline (19) WYFX Modern Family Big Bang So You Think You Can Dance The top nine performers compete. First News on Fox (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Two/Half Men Anger Manage. (21.2) WBCB Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Supergirl “Star-Crossed” Hooten & the Lady “Rome” Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Dish Nation (N) TMZ (N) Ac. Hollywood Be a Millionaire (36) My TV Engagement King of Queens Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: Criminal Intent Cleveland King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad (45) WNEO PBS NewsHour (N) Antiques Roadshow “Cincinnati” NOVA History of eclipse science. The Italian Americans NHK Newsline Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (N)

A&E Intervention “Justin; Kayne” Intervention (N) Leah Remini Intervention “Shiann G.” (N) Escaping Polygamy (N) The Murder of Laci Peterson Intervention Leah ReminiAMC (5:30) M ›› Armageddon (1998) Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton. Preacher “Dirty Little Secret” (N) (:02) Loaded “The Red List” (N) (:02) Preacher (12:04) Loaded “The Red List”ATTSP MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh Pirates. From PNC Park in Pittsburgh. (N) (Live) Pirates Post. Inside Pirates The Dan Patrick Show (N) MLB BaseballBET Madea’s Big Happy Family To Be Announced Martin Martin Martin MartinBRAVO Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC The Real Housewives of Dallas Watch What Housewives/OC Real House.COM (6:50) Futurama South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park The Daily Show The Daily Show South Park South ParkDIS K.C. Under. Bizaardvark Raven’s Home Bunk’d Bizaardvark Andi Mack Transylvania Tangled: The Bunk’d Jessie Stuck/Middle Andi MackDISC Street Outlaws: New Orleans Street Outlaws: New Orleans Street Outlaws: New Orleans (N) (:01) Carspotting (N) (:02) Street Outlaws (12:03) Street OutlawsESPN Monday Night Countdown (N) NFL Football New York Giants at Cleveland Browns. From FirstEnergy Stadium in Cleveland. (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)ESPN2 2017 Little League World Series 2017 Little League World Series Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) World Beaters E:60FOOD Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives I Hart Food (N) Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and DivesFREE (6:00) M ››› Dirty Dancing (1987, Romance) M ››› Dirty Dancing (1987, Romance) Jennifer Grey, Patrick Swayze. The 700 Club M ›› She’s All That (1999)FS1 Best of World Tour BIG3 Basketball Playoff 3-on-3 basketball featuring former NBA players. (N) MLB Whiparound (N) (Live) Speak for YourselfFSO Cavs HQ ’16-’17 Cavs Review Blue Jackets Top Plays ’16-’17 Destination Pol. 18 Holes Focused World Poker Cavs HQ ’16-’17FX M X-Men: Days of Future Past M ›› The Hangover Part III (2013) Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms. M ›› The Hangover Part III (2013) Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms. M ››› Ted (2012) Mila KunisHALL Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden GirlsHBO Last Week To. VICE News M ›› Watchmen (2009, Action) Billy Crudup, Malin Akerman, Jackie Earle Haley. (:45) The Defiant Ones “Part 1” (:45) Insecure (12:15) Game of ThronesHGTV Love It or List It Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House House Hunters Hunters Int’l Tiny Luxury Tiny Luxury Tiny House Tiny HouseHIST (6:00) American Pickers The New Age of Terror The New Age of Terror Lone wolves strike in the United States. (N) (12:03) The New Age of TerrorLIFE (6:00) M ›› Gone (2012) M ››› Taken (2008, Action) Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace. (:02) M ›› The Stepfather (2009) Dylan Walsh, Sela Ward. (12:02) M ››› Taken (2008)NICK Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends Friends (:33) FriendsSHOW Twin Peaks: The Return Episodes Dice Shameless “Ouroboros” Ray Donovan “Dogwalker” Naked SNCTM Ray Donovan “Dogwalker” Tiffany HaddishSPIKE Cops Cops “Atlanta” Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops CopsSTO MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Cleveland Indians. From Progressive Field in Cleveland. (N) (Live) Indians Live Swing Clinic SportsMoney Bensinger MLB BaseballSYFY (6:30) M ››› Hellboy (2004, Fantasy) Ron Perlman, John Hurt. M ›› XXX (2002) Vin Diesel. A spy tries to stop an anarchist with weapons. M ›› Paul (2011) Simon Pegg, Nick Frost.TBS Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy American Dad People of Earth Conan (N) People of Earth ConanTCM M It Happened on 5th Avenue M ›› Biography of a Bachelor Girl (1935) M ››› The Animal Kingdom (1932, Drama) (:15) M ›› When Ladies Meet (1933) Ann Harding, Myrna Loy.TLC Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress 90 Day Fiancé: Extended (N) 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 90 Day Fiancé: Extended 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90TNT M Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest M ›› Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief (2010, Children’s) Will “Your Houses” (N) Will “Your Houses”TRVL Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Delicious Delicious Man v. Food Man v. Food Delicious Delicious Delicious Delicious Man v. Food Man v. FoodTVLAND M*A*S*H (:36) M*A*S*H (:12) M*A*S*H Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of QueensUSA NCIS “Gut Check” WWE Monday Night RAW (N) (Live) Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern FamilyVH1 Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood (N) Baller Wives (N) Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Baller Wives Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood

TUE. 8/22/17 7pm 7:30pm 8pm 8:30pm 9pm 9:30pm 10pm 10:30pm 11pm 11:30pm Midnight 12:30am (21) WFMJ Inside Edition Family Feud America’s Got Talent “Live Show 2” Twelve acts perform live. (N) Hollywood Game Night (N) 21 News 11PM Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyers (27) WKBN Wheel Fortune Jeopardy! NCIS “Willoughby” Bull “Teacher’s Pet” NCIS: New Orleans First News-11p Late Show-Colbert James Corden (33) WYTV Ent. Tonight The Insider (N) Bachelor in Paradise (N) (:01) Somewhere Between (N) News Chan. (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:37) Nightline (19) WYFX Modern Family Big Bang Lethal Weapon “Homebodies” The Mick Brooklyn Nine First News on Fox (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Two/Half Men Anger Manage. (21.2) WBCB Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls The Flash “Duet” DC’s Legends of Tomorrow Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Dish Nation (N) TMZ (N) Ac. Hollywood Be a Millionaire (36) My TV Engagement King of Queens The X-Files The X-Files Law & Order: Criminal Intent Cleveland King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad (45) WNEO PBS NewsHour (N) Diana -- Her Story (N) Prince Philip: The Plot to Make Frontline NHK Newsline Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (N)

A&E Leah Remini: Scientology Leah Remini: Scientology Leah Remini: Scientology The Murder of Laci Peterson (N) Leah Remini: Scientology Leah Remini: ScientologyAMC (6:00) M ›› Rambo (2008) M ›› Clash of the Titans (2010, Fantasy) Sam Worthington, Liam Neeson. M ›› Pompeii (2014, Adventure) Kit Harington, Carrie-Anne Moss.ATTSP MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh Pirates. From PNC Park in Pittsburgh. (N) (Live) Pirates Post. Pirates The Dan Patrick Show (N) MLB BaseballBET To Be Announced Black Girls Rock! The successes of black women. (N) Being Mary Jane (N) To Be AnnouncedBRAVO Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Night w/My Ex Housewives/NJ Watch What Housewives/NJ Housewives/OCCOM (6:50) Futurama South Park South Park South Park Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Jim Jefferies The Daily Show The Daily Show South Park South ParkDIS K.C. Under. Bizaardvark Stuck/Middle Bunk’d Bizaardvark Andi Mack K.C. Under. K.C. Under. Bunk’d Jessie Stuck/Middle Andi MackDISC Deadliest Catch “Man Down” Deadliest Catch: On Deck (N) Deadliest Catch “Episode 18” (:01) Manhunt: Unabomber (N) (:03) Manhunt: Unabomber (12:05) Deadliest CatchESPN SportsCenter 2017 Little League World Series Baseball Ton. MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. (N) (Live)ESPN2 NFL’s Greatest NFL Live Championship Drive Championship Drive E:60 SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)FOOD Chopped “Swai Not?” Chopped “Whiskey and Wings” Chopped Chopped (N) Chopped “Mac and Cheese” ChoppedFREE (6:00) M ›› She’s All That The Fosters (N) (:01) The Bold Type (N) (:02) The Fosters The 700 Club M ››› 13 Going on 30 (2004)FS1 MLB’s Best (N) UFC Knockouts UFC Knockouts UFC Top Ten Boxing Premier Boxing Champions. (N) (Live) MLB Whiparound (N) (Live) Speak for YourselfFSO UFC Main Event Bundesliga Soccer Borussia Mönchengladbach vs FC Koln. CBR Bull Riding Championship. World Poker UEFA Champ. League SoccerFX (5:30) M ›› The Maze Runner M ›› Battleship (2012) Taylor Kitsch. Earth comes under attack from a superior alien force. M ›› Battleship (2012) Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgard.HALL Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden GirlsHBO Real Time, Bill VICE News M ››› The Incredible Hulk (2008) Edward Norton, Liv Tyler. Hard Knocks: Training Camp REAL Sports Bryant Gumbel Insecure BallersHGTV Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Good Bones (N) House Hunters House Hunters Fixer UpperHIST Forged in Fire “The Haladie” Forged in Fire: Cutting Deeper Forged in Fire “The Kampilan” (:03) American Ripper (N) (:03) Forged in Fire Forged in Fire: Cutting DeeperLIFE Dance Moms Dance Moms (N) Dance Moms (N) (:02) So Sharp “So Sick” (N) (:12) Dance Moms (12:02) Dance MomsNICK Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends Friends (:33) FriendsSHOW (:05) M ›› The Recruit (2003, Suspense) Al Pacino, Colin Farrell. Ray Donovan “Dogwalker” Dice Episodes All Access Twin Peaks: The Return Naked SNCTMSPIKE Ink Master Ink Master Ink Master “Drill Baby, Drill” Ink Master “Grim Inker” (N) Ink Master Tattoo Night. Tattoo Night. Tattoo Night.STO MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Cleveland Indians. From Progressive Field in Cleveland. (N) (Live) Indians Live Tribe Report Build/Browns Tribe Report MLB BaseballSYFY (6:30) M ›› XXX (2002, Action) Vin Diesel, Asia Argento. Face Off (Season Finale) (N) Face Off: Game Face Face Off Face Off: Game FaceTBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Wrecked (:01) Conan “Jim Lauderdale” Wrecked (:32) ConanTCM (6:00) M ››› Ransom (1956) M ››› Experiment in Terror (1962) Glenn Ford, Lee Remick. (:15) M ›› The Violent Men (1955, Western) Glenn Ford. M ››› Gilda (1946)TLC Outdaughtered Outdaughtered: Life With Quints Outdaughtered (N) (:03) Rattled “Pump & Dump” (:06) Outdaughtered (12:06) Rattled “Pump & Dump”TNT (6:30) M ›› Now You See Me (2013) Jesse Eisenberg. Animal Kingdom (N) (:01) Animal Kingdom (:02) The Last Ship (12:02) The Last ShipTRVL Bizarre Foods America Delicious Delicious Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Bizarre Foods/ZimmernTVLAND M*A*S*H (:36) M*A*S*H (:12) M*A*S*H “Major Topper” Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of QueensUSA Modern Family Modern Family WWE SmackDown! (N) (Live) Shooter (N) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVUVH1 Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Black Ink Crew: Chicago Black Ink Crew: Chicago Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Baller Wives

(N) = New; (M) = Movie

The Vindicator page 9WED. 8/23/17 7pm 7:30pm 8pm 8:30pm 9pm 9:30pm 10pm 10:30pm 11pm 11:30pm Midnight 12:30am (21) WFMJ Inside Edition Family Feud America’s Got Talent (N) (Live) Marlon (N) Marlon (N) Law & Order: SVU 21 News 11PM Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyers (27) WKBN Wheel Fortune Jeopardy! Big Brother (N) Salvation “Patriot Games” (N) Criminal Minds First News-11p Late Show-Colbert James Corden (33) WYTV Ent. Tonight The Insider (N) The Goldbergs Speechless Modern Family Am Housewife Modern Family The Goldbergs News Chan. (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:37) Nightline (19) WYFX Modern Family Big Bang MasterChef Cooks make crawfish, and chicken dishes. (N) First News on Fox (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Two/Half Men Anger Manage. (21.2) WBCB Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Arrow “Dangerous Liaisons” Supernatural “The Future” Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Dish Nation (N) TMZ (N) Ac. Hollywood Be a Millionaire (36) My TV Engagement 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 Intent Cleveland King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad (45) WNEO PBS NewsHour (N) NOVA History of eclipse science. The Farthest -- Voyager in Space NASA’s Voyager missions. (N) NHK Newsline Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (N)

A&E Leah Remini: Scientology Leah Remini: Scientology Wahlburgers Wahlburgers The Lowe Files The Lowe Files Leah Remini: Scientology Leah Remini: ScientologyAMC (5:30) M ›››› The Godfather (1972, Drama) Marlon Brando, Al Pacino. M ›››› The Godfather, Part II (1974) Al Pacino. Michael Corleone moves his father’s crime family to Las Vegas.ATTSP MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh Pirates. From PNC Park in Pittsburgh. (N) (Live) Pirates Post. Inside Pirates The Dan Patrick Show (N) MLB BaseballBET To Be Announced M ›› The Wedding Ringer (2015, Comedy) Kevin Hart, Josh Gad, Affion Crockett. Martin Martin MartinBRAVO Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Jax & Brittany Odd Mom Out Housewives/NYC Watch What Jax & Brittany Housewives/NYCCOM (6:50) Futurama South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park Broad City The Daily Show The Daily Show South Park South ParkDIS K.C. Under. Bizaardvark Stuck/Middle Bunk’d Raven’s Home Andi Mack K.C. Under. K.C. Under. Bunk’d Jessie Stuck/Middle Andi MackDISC Alaskan Bush: Off Grid Alaskan Bush People (N) (:01) Alaskan Bush People (N) (:02) Alaskan Bush People (N) (:03) Alaskan Bush People (12:04) Alaskan Bush PeopleESPN SportsCenter 2017 Little League World Series Baseball Ton. MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. (N) (Live)ESPN2 NFL Live Fantasy Show College Football Studio (N) 30 for 30 SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)FOOD Worst Cooks in America Worst Cooks in America (N) Worst Cooks in America Cooks vs. Cons (N) Cooks vs. Cons Worst Cooks in AmericaFREE (6:10) M ›› Uncle Buck (1989) John Candy. (:20) M ››› Grease (1978, Musical) John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John. The 700 Club M ›› The Wedding DateFS1 UFC Unleashed UFC Flashback UFC Flashback UFC Reloaded MLB Whiparound (N) (Live) Speak for YourselfFSO CBR Bull Riding Championship. BIG3 Basketball Playoff 3-on-3 basketball featuring former NBA players. (N) World Poker UEFA Champ. League SoccerFX M Lone Surv M ›› Taken 3 (2014, Action) Liam Neeson, Forest Whitaker, Maggie Grace. Snowfall “Baby Teeth” (N) Snowfall “Baby Teeth” The Strain “Tainted Love”HALL Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden GirlsHBO M Dark Knight VICE News M ››› Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2016) (:15) Game of Thrones (:15) Game of Thrones “Episode 66” Hard KnocksHGTV Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers: Buying House Hunters Hunters Int’l Listed Sisters (N) Property Brothers: BuyingHIST American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers (N) (:10) American Pickers (:09) American Pickers (12:03) American PickersLIFE Little Women: LA Little Women: LA (N) Little Women: LA (N) (:02) Growing Up Supermodel Project Runway Growing Up (12:02) Little Women: LANICK Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends Friends (:33) FriendsSHOW (6:15) M › Max Steel (2016) M ››› Hell or High Water (2016) Jeff Bridges. (:45) M ››› The Bank Job (2008, Crime Drama) Jason Statham. (:45) M › Punisher: War Zone (2008, Action)SPIKE Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops “Arizona”STO MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Cleveland Indians. From Progressive Field in Cleveland. (N) (Live) Indians Live Beer Money Tribe Report Cruise In MLB BaseballSYFY (6:00) M Lake Placid 2 (2007) M ›› Faster (2010) Dwayne Johnson, Billy Bob Thornton. Blood Drive (N) (10:57) M Lake Placid 2 (2007) John Schneider, Sam McMurray.TBS Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Full Frontal Conan Chef Aquiles Chavez. (N) Seinfeld ConanTCM (5:30) M Sunrise at Campobello M ››› Madame Curie (1943) Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon. (:15) M ››› Blossoms in the Dust (1941) Greer Garson. (12:15) M Pride and PrejudiceTLC Little and Looking for Love Tiny at 20 Tallest Teens My Kid’s Obsession Little and Looking for Love Tiny at 20TNT (5:00) M ›› The Island (2005) M ›› The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (2012, Fantasy) Ian McKellen, Martin Freeman, Richard Armitage. (:31) M ›› The Green Hornet (2011) Premiere.TRVL Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown (N) Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition UnknownTVLAND M*A*S*H “Lil” M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Younger (N) Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of QueensUSA (6:30) M ›› Fifty Shades of Grey (2015) Dakota Johnson. Suits “Full Disclosure” (N) (:01) The Sinner “Part IV” (N) Law & Order: SVU (12:02) Suits “Full Disclosure”VH1 Black Ink Crew: Chicago Black Ink Crew: Chicago (N) Signed “Earn It” (N) Black Ink Crew: Chicago Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Black Ink Crew: Chicago

THU. 8/24/17 7pm 7:30pm 8pm 8:30pm 9pm 9:30pm 10pm 10:30pm 11pm 11:30pm Midnight 12:30am (21) WFMJ Inside Edition Family Feud The Wall “Sheriese and Kieara” Sat. Night Live Great News The Night Shift (N) 21 News 11PM Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyers (27) WKBN Wheel Fortune Jeopardy! Big Bang Kevin Can Wait Big Brother (N) (Live) Zoo “The Black Forest” (N) First News-11p Late Show-Colbert James Corden (33) WYTV Ent. Tonight The Insider (N) Boy Band “Top 5 Revealed!” Battle of the Network Stars (N) The Gong Show News Chan. (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:37) Nightline (19) WYFX Modern Family Big Bang Beat Shazam “Episode Twelve” Love Connection (N) First News on Fox (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Two/Half Men Anger Manage. (21.2) WBCB Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Penn & Teller: Fool Us (N) Whose Line Whose Line Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Dish Nation (N) TMZ (N) Ac. Hollywood Be a Millionaire (36) My TV Engagement King of Queens Bones “The Male in the Mail” Bones Law & Order: Criminal Intent Cleveland King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad (45) WNEO PBS NewsHour (N) Father Brown Midsomer Murders New Tricks NHK Newsline Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (N)

A&E The First 48 “Killer Contact” The First 48 “A Man’s Game” The First 48: Killer Confessions The Murder of Laci Peterson (:03) The First 48 (12:03) The First 48AMC (:15) M ›› National Lampoon’s European Vacation (1985) (:15) M › Vegas Vacation (1997) Chevy Chase, Beverly D’Angelo. (:15) M ››› National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (1989)ATTSP Pirates Post. Inside Pirates The Dan Patrick Show (N) MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh Pirates. From PNC Park in Pittsburgh. UFC ReloadedBET (5:00) M The Wedding Ringer M ›› This Christmas (2007) Delroy Lindo, Idris Elba. A reunion at the holidays tests family ties. Martin Martin Martin MartinBRAVO Flipping Out “The End Is Nigh” Flipping Out Flipping Out (N) Girlfriends’ Guide to Divorce (N) Watch What Housewives/NYC Flipping OutCOM (6:50) Futurama South Park South Park South Park Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 The Daily Show President Show South Park South ParkDIS K.C. Under. Bizaardvark Stuck/Middle Bunk’d Bizaardvark Andi Mack K.C. Under. K.C. Under. Bunk’d Jessie Stuck/Middle Andi MackDISC Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier First in Human “Prognosis” Patients meet with their doctors. (:02) First in Human “Prognosis” Patients meet with their doctors.ESPN Baseball Ton. 2017 Little League World Series 30 for 30 (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)ESPN2 Championship Drive (N) First Take (N) (Live) WNBA Basketball Los Angeles Sparks at Phoenix Mercury. (N) E:60 Nación ESPN (N)FOOD Chopped Chopped Chopped “Taco Time!” Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Chopped “Taco Time!”FREE M Harry Potter (:45) M ››› Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (2011, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint. The 700 Club M ››› Dirty Dancing (1987)FS1 UFC Flashback UFC Flashback UFC Reloaded (N) Mayweather vs. McGregor MLB Whiparound (N) (Live) Speak for YourselfFSO UFC Reloaded Daniel Cormier defends his light heavyweight title against Alexander Gustafsson. Fantasy Football Hour ’17 World Poker BIG3 BasketballFX (5:30) M ›› Taken 3 (2014) M ››› Lucy (2014) Scarlett Johansson, Morgan Freeman. M ››› Lucy (2014) Scarlett Johansson, Morgan Freeman. The Strain “Tainted Love”HALL Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden GirlsHBO M Account VICE News M ›› Almost Christmas (2016) Danny Glover, Gabrielle Union. Ballers Room 104 M ›› The Ring (2002, Horror) Naomi Watts, Martin Henderson.HGTV House Hunters House Hunters Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop At Flip or Flop House Hunters Hunters Int’l Desert Flippers Desert Flippers Flip or Flop At Flip or FlopHIST Mountain Men “Birthright” Mountain Men: Fully Loaded (N) Mountain Men (N) (:03) Ice Road Truckers (:03) Mountain Men Mountain Men: Fully LoadedLIFE Project Runway (N) Project Runway (N) (:32) Date Night Live Cameras follow couples on dates. (N) (Live) (12:02) Project RunwayNICK Henry Danger Henry Danger M › Yogi Bear (2010) Voice of Dan Aykroyd. Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends Friends (:33) FriendsSHOW (6:15) M ›› Jenny’s Wedding Twin Peaks: The Return Episodes Dice Ray Donovan “Dogwalker” Naked SNCTM Naked SNCTM Ray Donovan “Dogwalker”SPIKE M End Wtch M ›› Four Brothers (2005, Crime Drama) Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gibson. The Mist “The Tenth Meal” M ›› Man on Fire (2004) Denzel Washington, Dakota Fanning.STO MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Cleveland Indians. From Progressive Field in Cleveland. (N) (Live) Indians Live Beer Money Beer Money TakeDown MLB BaseballSYFY (6:00) M ›› Faster (2010) M ›› Shooter (2007, Suspense) Mark Wahlberg, Michael Peña, Danny Glover. M ›› Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters (2013) Logan Lerman.TBS Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Guest Book Conan (N) Guest Book ConanTCM M Two Guys From Milwaukee M The Desert Song (1943) Dennis Morgan, Irene Manning. M ››› The Hard Way (1942) Ida Lupino, Dennis Morgan. M ›› My Wild Irish RoseTLC My 600-Lb. Life My 600-Lb. Life My 600-Lb. Life “Joe’s Story” My 600-Lb. Life “Marla’s Story” (:01) My 600-Lb. Life (12:01) My 600-Lb. LifeTNT Bones A Halloween killer. M ››› The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (2013, Fantasy) Ian McKellen, Martin Freeman, Richard Armitage. (:31) M ››› The Lincoln Lawyer (2011)TRVL Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum (N) Mys.- Outdoors Mys.- Outdoors Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the MuseumTVLAND M*A*S*H (:36) M*A*S*H (:12) M*A*S*H Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of QueensUSA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Queen of the South (N) The Sinner “Part IV” ShooterVH1 Baller Wives M › Blended (2014, Romance-Comedy) Adam Sandler, Drew Barrymore. M ››› Friends With Benefits (2011) Justin Timberlake, Mila Kunis. Premiere.

(N) = New; (M) = Movie

page 10 The Vindicator FRI. 8/25/17 7pm 7:30pm 8pm 8:30pm 9pm 9:30pm 10pm 10:30pm 11pm 11:30pm Midnight 12:30am (21) WFMJ Inside Edition Family Feud America’s Got Talent “Live Show 2” Twelve acts perform live. Dateline NBC (N) 21 News 11PM Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyers (27) WKBN Wheel Fortune Jeopardy! NFL Football Kansas City Chiefs at Seattle Seahawks. From CenturyLink Field in Seattle. (N) (Live) First News-11p Late Show-Colbert James Corden (33) WYTV Ent. Tonight The Insider (N) Shark Tank (:01) What Would You Do? 20/20 News Chan. (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:37) Nightline (19) WYFX Modern Family Big Bang MasterChef Cooks make crawfish, and chicken dishes. First News on Fox (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Two/Half Men Anger Manage. (21.2) WBCB Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Masters of Masters of Penn & Teller: Fool Us Mike & Molly 2 Broke Girls Dish Nation (N) TMZ (N) Ac. Hollywood Be a Millionaire (36) My TV Engagement King of Queens American Ninja Warrior American Ninja Warrior Law & Order: Criminal Intent Cleveland King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad (45) WNEO PBS NewsHour (N) Washington Wk Charlie Rose TBA Around Robin Williams Remembered NHK Newsline Business Rpt. Charlie Rose (N)

A&E (5:00) Live PD Live PD: Patrol Live PD: Patrol Live PD: Patrol Live PD: Patrol Live PD: Patrol Live PD: Patrol Live PD: Patrol Live PD: Patrol Live PD: Patrol Live PD: PatrolAMC (6:00) M ›› The Outsiders M ››› Ghostbusters (1984, Comedy) Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis. M ›› Ghostbusters II (1989, Comedy) Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd.ATTSP MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Cincinnati Reds. From Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. (N) Pirates Post. Inside Pirates The Dan Patrick Show (N) MLB Baseball: Pirates at RedsBET Being Mary Jane To Be Announced M › Blue Streak (1999, Comedy) Martin Lawrence, Luke Wilson, Peter Greene.BRAVO Housewives/OC M ›› Sex and the City 2 (2010, Romance-Comedy) Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall. ‘R’ M ›› Sex and the City 2 (2010) Sarah Jessica Parker. ‘R’COM (6:50) Futurama South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Daniel Tosh: Happy Thoughts Daniel Tosh: People PleaserDIS Andi Mack Raven’s Home Raven’s Home K.C. Under. Bizaardvark (N) Andi Mack Stuck/Middle Raven’s Home K.C. Under. Bizaardvark Stuck/Middle Andi MackDISC Bering Sea Gold Bering Sea Gold “Cold War” Bering Sea Gold (N) Man Eating Python of Sulawesi (:02) Bering Sea Gold (12:03) Alaskan Bush PeopleESPN MLS Soccer New York City FC at New York Red Bulls. (N) (Live) High School Football DeMatha (Md.) at Bishop Gorman (Nev.). (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)ESPN2 WTA Tennis Connecticut Open, Second Semifinal. (N) (Live) ATP Tennis Winston-Salem Open, Second Semifinal. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Heisman Hse Fantasy ShowFOOD Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Guy’s Family Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Guy’s Family Diners, DriveFREE M Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (:25) M ››› Dirty Dancing (1987, Romance) Jennifer Grey, Patrick Swayze. The 700 Club M › Not Another Teen MovieFS1 To Be Announced Boxing Premier Boxing Champions: Derevyanchenko vs. Johnson. MLB Whiparound (N) (Live) Speak for YourselfFSO NHRA Drag Racing Lucas Oil Nationals. From Brainerd International Raceway in Brainerd, Minn. In the Spotlight Inside Bearcats CBR Bull Riding Championship. Fantasy Football Hour ’17FX (6:00) M › Wild Hogs (2007) M › Grown Ups 2 (2013, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock. M › Grown Ups 2 (2013, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock.HALL Last-Standing Last-Standing Chesapeake Shores The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden GirlsHBO M Bat v Sup VICE (N) M ››› Nocturnal Animals (2016) Amy Adams, Jake Gyllenhaal. Real Time With Bill Maher (N) VICE Room 104 (N) Real Time With Bill MaherHGTV Lakefront Brgn Lakefront Brgn Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home House Hunters House Hunters Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Dream Home Dream HomeHIST Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens: Declassified (N) Ancient Aliens: DeclassifiedLIFE (5:00) M ›› For Colored Girls M › Tyler Perry’s Temptation (2013, Drama) Jurnee Smollett-Bell. (:02) M ›› Girl in Progress (2012) Eva Mendes. Premiere. M › Tyler Perry’s TemptationNICK Henry Danger Henry Danger Henry Danger Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends Friends (:33) FriendsSHOW M › Mother’s Day (2016) Jennifer Aniston, Kate Hudson. M Whitney: Can I Be Me (2017) Narrated by Nick Broomfield. M Whitney: Can I Be Me (2017, Documentary) Ray DonovanSPIKE (6:00) M ›› Fast Five (2011, Action) Vin Diesel, Paul Walker. Bellator MMA Live (N) (Live) (:15) Cops Cops Cops CopsSTO MLB Baseball Kansas City Royals at Cleveland Indians. From Progressive Field in Cleveland. (N) Indians Live Swing Clinic Bensinger Beer Money MLB Baseball: Royals at IndiansSYFY (5:00) M ›› Shooter (2007) Killjoys “Reckoning Ball” (N) Dark Matter “Nowhere to Go” Wynonna Earp M › Legion (2010, Horror) Paul Bettany, Lucas Black.TBS Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang ELeague: Road to Dota 2 M ››› Back to the Future (1985, Comedy) Michael J. Fox.TCM (6:00) M ››› Term of Trial M ››› Room at the Top (1959, Drama) Laurence Harvey. (:15) M ›››› Diabolique (1955, Suspense) Simone Signoret, Vera Clouzot. M ConfessionTLC Long Lost Family Long Lost Family Long Lost Family Long Lost Family Long Lost Family Long Lost FamilyTNT Bones “Player Under Pressure” M ›› The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies (2014, Fantasy) Ian McKellen, Martin Freeman. (:01) M ››› Enemy of the State (1998, Suspense) Will Smith.TRVL Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Josh Gates’ Destination Truth Josh Gates’ Destination Truth Josh Gates’ Destination Truth Josh Gates’ Destination TruthTVLAND M*A*S*H (:36) M*A*S*H (:12) M*A*S*H “B.J. Papa San” Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of QueensUSA Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern FamilyVH1 (6:30) M ››› Friends With Benefits (2011) Justin Timberlake. M ››› Hitch (2005) Will Smith. A smooth-talker helps a shy accountant woo an heiress. M ›› Liar Liar (1997, Comedy)

Sports Highlights

AUTO RACINGSaturday

7:00 p.m. (21) (3) Monster Energy Cup Series: Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race. (N) (Live) (240m.)

Sunday

2:00 p.m. (FS1) Lucas Oil Nationals. (N) (Live) (180m.)

BASEBALLSaturday

1:00 p.m. (ESPN) Elimination, Game 9. (N) (Live) (120m.) 3:00 p.m. (33) (5) Elimination, Game 10. (N) (Live) (150m.) 4:00 p.m. (ATTSP) St. Louis Cardinals at Pitts-burgh Pirates. (N) (Live) (180m.)(FS1) Los Angeles Dodgers at Detroit Tigers. (N) (Live) (180m.) 6:00 p.m. (ESPN) Elimination, Game 11. (N) (Live) (120m.) 7:00 p.m. (STO) Cleveland Indians at Kansas City Royals. (N) (Live) (180m.) 8:00 p.m. (ESPN) Elimination, Game 12. (N) (Live) (120m.)

Sunday

11:00 a.m. (ESPN) Double Elimination, Game 14. (N) (Live) (120m.)12:00 p.m. (ESPN2) Junior League World Series, Final. (N) (Live) (120m.) 1:00 p.m. (33) (5) Double Elimination, Game 15. (N) (Live) (150m.) 1:30 p.m. (TBS) New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox. (N) (Live) (180m.) 2:00 p.m. (ESPN) Double Elimination, Game 15. (N) (Live) (120m.)(STO) Cleveland Indians at Kansas City Royals. (N) (Live) (180m.) 7:00 p.m. (ESPN) St. Louis Cardinals vs Pittsburgh Pirates. (N) (Live) (180m.)

Monday

3:00 p.m. (ESPN) Elimination, Game 18. (N) (Live) (120m.) 6:00 p.m. (ESPN2) Elimination, Game 19. (N) (Live) (120m.) 7:00 p.m. (ATTSP) Los Angeles Dodgers at Pitts-burgh Pirates. (N) (Live) (180m.)(STO) Boston Red Sox at Cleveland Indians. (N) (Live) (180m.) 8:00 p.m. (ESPN2) Elimination, Game 20. (N) (Live) (120m.)

Tuesday

3:00 p.m. (ESPN) Elimination, Game 21. (N) (Live) (120m.) 7:00 p.m. (ATTSP) Los Angeles Dodgers at Pitts-burgh Pirates. (N) (Live) (180m.)(STO) Boston Red Sox at Cleveland Indians. (N) (Live) (180m.) 7:30 p.m. (ESPN) Elimination, Game 22. (N) (Live) (120m.)10:00 p.m. (ESPN) Texas Rangers at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. (N) (Live) (180m.)

Wednesday

3:00 p.m. (ESPN) Double Elimination, Game 23. (N) (Live) (120m.) 7:00 p.m. (ATTSP) Los Angeles Dodgers at Pitts-burgh Pirates. (N) (Live) (180m.)(STO) Boston Red Sox at Cleveland Indians. (N) (Live) (180m.) 7:30 p.m. (ESPN) Double Elimination, Game 24. (N) (Live) (120m.)10:00 p.m. (ESPN) Texas Rangers at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. (N) (Live) (180m.)

Thursday

3:00 p.m. (ESPN) Elimination, Game 25. (N) (Live) (120m.) 4:00 p.m. (ATTSP) Los Angeles Dodgers at Pitts-burgh Pirates. (N) (Live) (180m.) 7:00 p.m. (STO) Boston Red Sox at Cleveland Indi-ans. (N) (Live) (180m.) 7:30 p.m. (ESPN) Elimination, Game 26. (N) (Live) (120m.)

Friday

7:00 p.m. (3) (STO) Kansas City Royals at Cleve-land Indians. (N) (Live) (180m.)(ATTSP) Pittsburgh Pirates at Cincinnati Reds. (N) (Live) (180m.)

BASKETBALLThursday

9:00 p.m. (ESPN2) Los Angeles Sparks at Phoenix Mercury. (N) (Live) (120m.)

BOXINGSaturday

10:00 p.m. (ESPN) Terrence Crawford vs. Julius Indongo. (N) (Live) (150m.)

Tuesday

9:00 p.m. (FS1) Premier Boxing. (N) (Live) (120m.)

Friday

9:00 p.m. (FS1) Premier Boxing Champions: Derevyanchenko vs. Johnson. (N) (Live) (120m.)

FOOTBALLMonday

8:00 p.m. (3) (ESPN) New York Giants at Cleveland Browns. (N) (Live) (180m.)

Friday

8:00 p.m. (27) (19) Kansas City Chiefs at Seattle Seahawks. (N) (Live) (180m.) 9:00 p.m. (ESPN) DeMatha (Md.) at Bishop Gor-man (Nev.). (N) (Live) (180m.)

GOLFSaturday

12:00 p.m. (17/62) (8) 2017 U.S. Amateur, Semifinal Matches. (N) (Live) (180m.)

3:00 p.m. (27) (19) Wyndham Championship, Third Round. (N) (Live) (180m.) 4:00 p.m. (21) (3) Day 2. (N) (Live) (120m.)

Sunday

3:00 p.m. (27) (19) Wyndham Championship, Final Round. (N) (Live) (180m.) 4:00 p.m. (21) (3) Day 3. (N) (Live) (120m.) 4:30 p.m. (17/62) (8) 2017 U.S. Amateur, Champi-onship Match. (N) (Live) (180m.)

SOCCERSaturday

9:30 a.m. (FS1) VfL Wolfsburg vs Borussia Dort-mund. (N) (Live) (120m.)12:30 p.m. (21) (3) Stoke City FC vs Arsenal FC. (N) (Live) (120m.)(FS1) FC Schalke 04 vs RB Leipzig. (N) (Live) (120m.) 3:30 p.m. (LIFE) Washington Spirit at North Caro-lina Courage. (N) (Live) (150m.) 4:00 p.m. (ESPN) Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (120m.)

Sunday

9:30 a.m. (FS1) SC Freiburg vs Eintracht Frank-furt. (N) (Live) (120m.)12:00 p.m. (FS1) Borussia Mönchengladbach vs FC Koln. (N) (Live) (120m.) 9:30 p.m. (FS1) Minnesota United FC at Seattle Sounders FC. (N) (Live) (150m.)

Tuesday

2:30 p.m. (ATTSP) (FSO) NK Maribor vs Hapoel Beer-Sheva FC. (N) (Live) (150m.)(FS1) OGC Nice vs Napoli. (N) (Live) (150m.)

Wednesday

2:30 p.m. (ATTSP) (FSO) FC Copenhagen vs Qa-rabag FK. (N) (Live) (150m.)(FS1) Liverpool FC vs TSG 1899 Hoffenheim. (N) (Live) (150m.)

Friday

7:00 p.m. (ESPN) New York City FC at New York Red Bulls. (N) (Live) (120m.)

(N) = New; (M) = Movie

ACROSS 1. Kevin O’Leary’s

reality series (2) 8. “Non-__”; 2014

Liam Neeson movie 9. __ __ instant; suddenly 10. Actor on

“The Blacklist” (2) 14. “Vanity __”; 2004

Reese Witherspoon film 15. Ames and Sullivan 16. Org. for Lions and Bears 17. K-P connection 18. “__, Dear” 19. “Back in the __”;

song for the Beatles 20. “Krakatoa: East of __”;

Maximilian Schell movie 24. Corp. head 27. “Crossing __ with John Edward”

(1999-2004) 28. Source of quick cash, for short 29. Helium or hydrogen 32. Beget children 33. “The Young and __ __” 36. Actor Richard

37. Mayberry resident 38. “__ __ with Seth Meyers”DOWN 1. Laundry problems 2. “The Rocky __ Picture Show”;

Tim Curry/Susan Sarandon film 3. Calendar abbr. 4. “Family __” (1982-89) 5. Curry or Cusack 6. “The __”;

series for Fran Drescher 7. “Mack the __”; Bobby Darin hit 8. Pillow covers 11. “My Son, My Son, What Have __

Done”; Willem Dafoe movie 12. Initials for news anchor Dobbs 13. Extra large T-shirts, for short 14. Reason to call in sick 20. JFK’s father 21. “__ __ from St. Nicholas”;

most famous Christmas poem 22. Stanza 23. “Who Do You Think You __?” 24. Felix or Morris 25. Role on “I Love Lucy”

26. “The __ Man”; 1971 Charlton Heston movie

29. Wilder, for one 30. “__ the World Turns” 31. “__. Elsewhere” 34. “__ Race”; 2001

Whoopi Goldberg film 35. Journal

The Vindicator page 11Soap Synopses

By John CrookZap2it(This column is for print use ONLY.)

(This column represents on air summaries for the week of Aug. 14-18, 2017.)

The Bold and the BeautifulStricken with guilt, Caroline told Bill she wanted to come clean with Thomas. Eric called Sheila with an update on his marriage and advised her about her future in Los Angeles. Sheila ran into a testy Quinn when she went to the Forrester mansion to return a misplaced item, and an epic argument between the two women ensued. When Eric found Sheila unconscious, he freaked out, but after Sheila came around, Quinn accused her of exaggerat-ing her injury. Justin tried to talk Dollar Bill out of his plan to acquire the Spectra building. Bill made an extremely lucrative offer to CJ. Sally and Shirley were convinced Bill is out to destroy them. After he inter-rupted a moment between Brooke and Bill, Liam realized she didn’t know how obsessed Bill was with securing the Spectra building. Sally tried to persuade CJ to give Spectra another chance. Much to Quinn’s horror, Sheila moved into the For-rester guest house. Bill sent Liam

Crossword Puzzle

Mary Beth Evans as Kayla Brady Johnson on “Days of Our Lives” weekdays on NBC.

to interview Sally, but expected the story to reflect his biased opinion of her. Liam tried to charm Sally by confessing that his father didn’t ap-prove of him.

Days of Our LivesMarlena finally connected with John and begged for his help, while Brady made a surprising discovery while ransacking Eric’s room. Eric, meanwhile, wasn’t sure what to make of things when he interrupted Bonnie and Hattie’s party. Sonny recalled an important memory from the night Deimos was murdered. Kayla was shocked when Tripp of-fered her an apology for everything he has done. Steve and Roman discussed Joey’s apparent need to somehow atone for killing Ava. Hope, Rafe and Raines were in-credibly frustrated that they couldn’t identify Dario’s partner. Abe con-fronted Theo about his willingness to break the law for the DiMeras. Hope and Rafe made a startling ar-rest, while Claire saw an upsetting image on her tablet. Kayla pleaded with Joey not to turn himself in for Ava’s murder. Chloe had some strong words with Brady about his boozing. Bonnie was attracted to Lucas. Adrienne frantically tried to convince everyone at the prison that she wasn’t Bonnie. Hattie posed as Marlena in a bid to win

over Roman. Nicole had an intense confrontation with Brady. The fate of Chad and Sonny was decided.

General HospitalFinn received some absolutely hor-rible news, while Sonny was lost in his own thoughts. Dante couldn’t shake the strong sense that he had been duped. Monica’s day went from bad to worse, but Julian felt pretty good about his own situation. While Dante put some questions to Nelle, Jason took matters into his own hands. Carly’s suspicions be-gan to mount. Joss had a date with Oscar, while Griffin surprised Ava, who was fantasizing about what life would be like without her scars. Dr. Obrecht became consumed by curi-osity, and Liz virtually put her life on hold. Finn expressed his gratitude to Curtis, while Kristina took some time out to reminisce. Dr. Obrecht came to rue her own gloating when it backfired spectacularly on her. Finn lucked out and got the help he needed. Nathan brought Amy up to date on the “Man Landers” situa-tion. Felicia’s curiosity was piqued by something. Ava got lost in her fantasy world, while Kiki had some advice to offer someone.

The Young and the RestlessNikki told Victor she had left the Newman ranch and moved into a

local hotel. An argument ensued, with Victor telling Nikki she and Nick would regret crossing him. After she left, Victor admitted to Abby that he and Nikki officially had separated. As Dina prepared for her first day at Jabot, Graham tried to convince her not to take the job, but her mind was made up. At work, Dina tried to move into Jack’s office, but he insisted he needed privacy, so they couldn’t share a space. Dina’s mood didn’t improve when Nikki

arrived and Jack admitted that the two of them had taken things to the next level. At the athletic club, Billy ran into Benjamin Hochman and accused him of dating Victoria as a way to get his hands on Brash & Sassy, but Benjamin shot back a nasty crack about Phyllis. When Cane came home later, he caught Reed and Mattie making out, so he threw Reed out. Lily accused Hilary of stealing her commercial and ruin-ing her marriage.

Kirila Funeral Home, Inc.Kirila Funeral Home, Inc.258 Poland Ave. Struthers, Oh 4447330-750-1321330-750-1321Family Owned and ManagedFamily Owned and Managed

Committed to the community for over 100 years combinedBoth locations accessible to your needs

At Need / Prearrangement / Monuments / Personal Service

Vaschak-Kirila Funeral Home, Inc.Vaschak-Kirila Funeral Home, Inc.3100 Canfi eld Rd. Youngstown, Oh. 44511

330-792-2357330-792-2357

Michael J. Kirila Jr., OwnerMichael J. Kirila Jr., Owner

www.vaschak-kirila.comwww.vaschak-kirila.com www.kirilafh.comwww.kirilafh.com

Anthony J. Quahliero, ManagerAnthony J. Quahliero, Manager

page 12 The Vindicator

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