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http://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e3845e34b50884fa8b5b1f822fc1c12d.pdf
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PDF Text
Text
Marcum:
Thrill of
letting go
T-storm,
High 83,
Low 64
Bobcats
knock off
Kansas
EDITORIAL s 4
WEATHER s 5
SPORTS s 6
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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com
Issue 149, Volume 71
Meigs County man
arrested on drug
charge in Mason
Tuesday, September 19, 2017 s 50¢
Crowds flock to Mothman Festival
By Mindy Kearns
phetamines
were found after
Mason County
Sheriff’s Deputy
MASON — A
Justin Veith
Long Bottom,
and the K-9
Ohio man was
unit were called
arrested on a
to the scene.
felony drug
Smith
The arresting
charge Saturday
officer, Mason
afternoon by the
Sgt. Colton McKinney,
Mason Police Departtransported Smith to
ment.
Paul Larry Smith, Jr., the Western Regional
Jail. Also assisting
46, was charged with
were Chief Gilkey and
possession with intent
Mason Officer Sierra
to deliver after the
Carmichael.
vehicle he was driving
Bond for Smith was
was stopped for defective equipment, accord- set at $50,000 by Maging to Police Chief Rich istrate Gail Roush.
Gilkey.
Mindy Kearns is a freelance
The chief said nine
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing,
small bags of alleged
email her at mindykearns1@
heroin and methamhotmail.com.
Special to OVP
When and where
to vote for Nov.
general election
follows: Bedford —
Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly CampPOMEROY — It’s
grounds, 39560 RockGeneral Election time
springs Road, Pomeroy;
with voters being
reminded of registration East/West Chester —
Chester United Methoddeadlines, early voting
ist Church, 26580 State
dates, precinct locaRoute 248, Chester;
tions, as well as ballot
Columbia — Columbia
items, positions and
Township Fire Departissues to be decided.
ment, 29466 State
The last day to regRoute 143, Albany;
ister to vote for the
Lebanon — Portland
2017 General Election
Community Center,
is Oct. 10, by 9 p.m.
56896 State Route
Early/Absentee voting
124, Portland; Letart
will begin on Oct. 11,
— East Letart United
at 8 a.m. at the Meigs
Methodist Church
County Board of ElecBuilding, 49018 East
tions located at 113 E.
Memorial Dr., Suite A, Letart Road, Racine;
North Olive and Orange
Pomeroy.
Precincts — Tuppers
The Meigs County
Board of Elections will Plains St. Paul United
Methodist Church,
be open for voting the
42216 State Route 7,
following dates and
Tuppers Plains; South
times: Oct. 11-13 from
Olive — Long Bottom
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Oct.
Community Building,
16-20 from 8 a.m. to 5
36709 Township Road
p.m.; Oct. 23-27 from
275, Long Bottom; Rut8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Oct.
30-Nov. 3 from 8 a.m. to land Village, East Rutland and West Rutland
7 p.m.; Saturday, Nov.
4 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Precincts — Rutland
Church of the Nazarene
Sunday, Nov. 5 from
Fellowship Hall, 460
1 p.m. to 5 p.m.; and
Monday, Nov. 6 from 8 Main Street, Rutland;
Salem — Salem Center
a.m. to 2 p.m.
Voting precincts and
their locations are as
See ELECTION | 5
Staff Report
Photos by Beth Sergent | Register
Crowds pack Main Street on Saturday during the 16th annual Mothman Festival.
Harris remembered with memorial
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
POINT PLEASANT
— As anyone trying to
get into Point Pleasant
on Saturday can confirm,
the Mothman Festival
drew a crowd.
The festival made a
break with tradition
and moved the annual
“Mayor’s Welcome” from
in front of the Mothman
Statue, to Riverfront
Park near a memorial
for the late Carolin Harris, a co-founder of the
festival.
Prior to the memorial
being unveiled, several
gathered, including Harris’ family and extended
family, to hear Mayor
Brian Billings and festival co-founder Jeff
Wamsley honor Harris.
“This year’s Mothman Festival 2017 will
be dedicated to Carolin
Harris,” Wamsley said.
“I hope I can make it
through this. Carolin
and I…”
Wamsley paused,
unable to continue for
the moment and asked
Billings to continue with
the welcome part of the
ceremony.
“Ladies and gentleman, welcome to our
historic city of Point
Pleasant,” Billings said.
See MOTHMAN | 3
Entertainment at the Farm Festival
By Morgan McKinniss
mmckinniss@aimmediamidwest.com
RIO GRANDE — The entertainment lineup is set for the
47th annual Bob Evans Farm
Festival in Rio Grande. The
festival will take place Oct.
13-15 on the farm and will host
a variety of bands, vendors,
foods, and activities for the
whole family.
Starting Friday at 11:30
a.m., Mad River Railroad will
kick off the entertainment.
According to the band’s website, they are a bluegrass and
country band out of Dayton,
Ohio and play shows regularly
across the state.
Following Mad River Railroad is the group the Rarely
File photo Herd at 1:30 p.m. The Rarely
The Bob Evans Farm Festival has long been regarded Herd is an internationally
as a southeast Ohio cultural event. The entertainment known band, and is considlineup has been released for the festival.
ered to be one of the premier
bluegrass bands in the world.
According to their website,
they have been nominated and
awarded over 120 different
times, and have a long list of
accolades to their credit. The
band formed in 1992 in Albany, Ohio and toured globally.
Flatt Lonesome will take the
stage at 3:30 p.m. Flatt Lonesome debuted in 2011 and saw
rapid success as a bluegrass
band with a fresh and energetic take on the genre, according
to their biography. The band
formed from three siblings that
grew into what the group is
today. They are from Callahan,
Fla.
Saturday at 11:30 a.m. the
Julie Reeves Band will start
playing. Reeves is from Ashland, Ky. and has several songs
in the Billboard Hot Country
See FESTIVAL | 5
Drones topic of SWCD meeting and election
INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Staff Report
JOIN THE
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thoughts.
POMEROY — Drones, more
formerly known as unmanned
aerial vehicles, and their everyday
applications, including agriculture,
will be the topic of this year’s
annual Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District’s annual meeting
and election to be held Oct. 3, 7
p.m. at Meigs High School.
John Bentz, a civil engineer
employed with Pickering Associates, will be the guest speaker
and give a presentation entitled
“The View from Above, the Use
of Unmanned Aircraft Systems in
Everyday Life.”
Drones, while controversial and
oftentimes viewed in a negative
light, have the potential to change
our way of life, according to Bentz.
From simple and cost-effective,
high-definition aerial photography to scanning open pastures to
determine crop health and soil
conditions, to structural inspections, Bentz says the applications
are endless.
As recent natural disasters have
illustrated, the emergence of drone
technology is being used in conjunction with thermal imaging to
assist in search and rescue operations, he added.
In this discussion, Bentz will
provide a brief background on the
development of drones, some regulations currently in place, as well
as their currently implemented
safety features. The majority of
the presentation, however, will
focus on interesting case studies
and research regarding the use of
drones in various fields of study
(including agricultural). Along
with the applications mentioned, a
brief explanation and demonstration of the 3D mapping capability
of these systems will be presented.
Bentz is a 2006 graduate
of Southern High School and
received a Bachelor of Science
in Civil Engineering from Ohio
University in 2011. His efforts
focus on the design and delivery of
projects within the Energy/Oil and
Gas Industry, as well as Commercial Site Development sector. He
also serves on a Multi-discipline
team within Pickering Associates
See DRONES | 5
�OBITUARIES/NEWS
2 Tuesday, September 19, 2017
OBITUARIES
JUDY LEE HAWLEY
POMEROY — Judy
Lee Hawley, 48, of Pomeroy, Ohio, passed away
on Sept. 17, 2017. She
was was born on March
10, 1969, daughter of the
late Melvin Freeman and
Linda Freeman Mills.
She is survived by her
husband, Ronnie Hawley; daughter, Miranda
Hawley (Cody); sons,
Chris Tyree (Tony) and
Cory (Suzanne) Grueser;
brother, Joe (Rhea) Freeman; sisters, Jeanette
Freeman Lunsford (Jim)
and Shari Eblin; motherin-law, Bertha Hawley;
grandchildren, Adalyn,
Lorelei, Tucker, Charlie,
Atticus and Ryleigh;
brother and sister-in-law,
Bryan and Angie Hawley
and Troy and Sherry
Brooks; and numerous
nieces, nephews, cousins
and friends.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her step mother,
Jeanette Freeman;
grandmother, Newaza
Smith; brothers, Donnie and Doug Freeman;
nephew, Chad Freeman;
and father-in-law, John
Hawley.
Funeral services will be
held on Thursday, Sept.
21, 2017 at noon with
Pastor James Keesee
officiating at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Burial will
follow at Letart Falls
Cemetery. Visiting hours
will be on Thursday from
10 a.m. to noon at the
funeral home.
In lieu of flowers,
donations in memory of
Judy may be made to the
funeral home.
Daily Sentinel
JOHNSON
WHITEHEAD
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. — John “Bill” Johnson, 88,
of Parkersburg, W.Va., formerly of Gallipolis, passed
away on Sunday, September 17, 2017. Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Thursday, September
21, 2017 at Lambert-Tatman Funeral Home, 2333
Pike St., South Parkersburg with Pastor Bob Riffle
and Pastor Garry Murray officiating. Visitation will
be from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.— Lorraine J. Whitehead, 91, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Saturday
morning, September 16, 2017.
Funeral services will be held at the Holiness Weslyan Church in Point Pleasant, Tuesday, September 19,
2017, at 1 p.m., with Pastor Dan Brown officiating.
Friends may visit the family at the church from 11:30
a.m. - 1 p.m. prior to the service. Burial will be on
Wednesday, September 20, 2017, at the Maplegrove
Cemetery in Fairmont, W.Va. upon arrival.
HASSEMAN
SANDERS
GALLIPOLIS — Gary W. Hasseman, 76, Gallipolis, Ohio, passed away Monday, September 18, 2017
in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis. In accordance
with his wishers, there will be no services. Cremation
services are under the direction of the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis.
DURST
EVANS, W.Va. — Charles “Chucky” Ervin Robert
Durst, 54, of Evans, W.Va., died Thursday, September
14, 2017, in Camden Clark Medical Center, Parkerburg, W.Va.
Service will be 6 p.m. Monday, September 18, 2017
at Casto Funeral Home, Evans. Burial will follow in
the Longview Cemetery, Evans. Visitation will be
from 4 p.m. until 6 p.m. Monday, at the funeral home.
BURGER
SPENCER
ONA, W.Va. — Paul Eugene “Pete” Burger, 88, of
Ona, passed away September 16, 2017, at the Village
at Riverview.
Visitation will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday at Wallace Funeral Home, Milton. Funeral services will be
conducted at 10 a.m. Tuesday, September 19, 2017,
at Wallace Funeral Home, Milton. Burial will be in
Ridgelawn Memorial Park, Huntington, W.Va.
GALLIPOLIS — Joy M. Spencer, 81, of Gallipolis,
died on Sunday, September 17, 2017 at her residence.
Friends may call at the Willis Funeral Home on Friday,
September 22, 2017 from 5–6 p.m. There will be a
graveside service 11 a.m., Saturday, September 23,
2017 at Providence Cemetery with Rev. Jim Chapman
officiating. A full obituary will be in Wednesday’s Tribune.
TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST
3
(WSAZ)
4
(WTAP)
6
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7
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8
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10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE
6
PM
6:30
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19
7
PM
7:30
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
Newshour. A summary of
the day's national and
international news. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm(N)
News (N)
ent Tonight
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
Fortune
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV
News (N)
Theory
Theory
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
Business
depth analysis of current
America
Report (N)
events. (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition
WSAZ News
3 (N)
WTAP News
at Six (N)
ABC 6 News
at 6pm (N)
Arthur
6
PM
NBC Nightly
News (N)
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News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Newswatch
(N)
6:30
7
PM
7:30
8
PM
8:30
9
PM
9:30
America's Got Talent "Live Show Finale" The top 10 acts
compete for the very last time. (N)
America's Got Talent "Live Show Finale" The top 10 acts
compete for the very last time. (N)
The Middle Fresh Off the Black-ish
Black-ish
Boat
"Manternity" "Sprinkles"
The Vietnam War "The River Styx (January 1964December 1965)" Hardliners in Hanoi seize the initiative
and send combat troops to the south. (N)
The Middle Fresh Off the Black-ish
Black-ish
Boat
"Manternity" "Sprinkles"
NCIS "Rendezvous"
Bull "Benevolent
Deception"
Lethal Weapon
The Mick
Brooklyn
"Commencement"
Nine-Nine
The Vietnam War "The River Styx (January 1964December 1965)" Hardliners in Hanoi seize the initiative
and send combat troops to the south. (N)
NCIS "Rendezvous"
Bull "Benevolent
Deception"
8
PM
8:30
9
PM
9:30
10
PM
10:30
Will and Grace A look back
at 'Will & Grace.' (N)
Will and Grace A look back
at 'Will & Grace.' (N)
Somewhere Between "One
Must Die" (SF) (N)
The Vietnam War "The
River Styx (January 1964December 1965)"
Somewhere Between "One
Must Die" (SF) (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "Poetic
Justice"
Eyewitness News at 10
p.m. (N)
The Vietnam War "The
River Styx (January 1964December 1965)"
NCIS: New Orleans "Poetic
Justice"
10
PM
10:30
M*A*S*H
18 (WGN) M*A*S*H
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39
(AMC)
40 (DISC)
42
(A&E)
52 (ANPL)
57
(OXY)
58
60
61
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
MLB Baseball Milwaukee Brewers at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park (L)
Postgame
Pirates (N)
MLB Baseball (L)
MLB Baseball Cle./L.A. A. (L)
WNBA Basketball Playoffs (L)
WNBA Basketball Playoffs (L)
Dance Moms "Ashlee's Big DanceMom (N) /(:15) So
Grey's Anatomy "Six Days" Dance Moms "Stamina,
Dance Chat (:50) Chloe
Stamina, Stamina"
(N)
Does It (N) Decision: Part 2" (N)
Sharp (N)
(4:45)
Forrest Gump (1994, Comedy/Drama) Sally
Twilight (2008, Drama) Robert Pattinson, Billy Burke, Kristen Stewart. A teenager
Field, Gary Sinise, Tom Hanks. TV14
yearning for belonging unexpectedly falls in love with a vampire. TV14
Ink Master "Grim Inker"
Ink Master "Pit Fall"
Ink Master "Sell Out"
Ink Master "Casting the
Ink Master "Marathon to
First Stone"
the Finale" (N)
Loud House H.Danger
H.Danger
I Am Frankie The Thundermans
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
WWE Super Smackdown
Chrisley (N) Chrisley (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
(5:30)
The A-Team ('10, Act) Liam Neeson. TV14
Olympus Has Fallen ('13, Act) Gerard Butler. TV14 (:15) Django Unchained
From Dusk Till Dawn (1995, Horror) Quentin
Con Air ('97, Act) John Cusack, Nicolas Cage. A parolee must stop Predator
Tarantino, Salma Hayek, George Clooney. TVMA
a group of violent convicts who have taken over a transport plane. TVMA TVMA
(Almost) Got Away
(:55) Son of Sam: Terror in the Night (N)
Street Justice:Bronx (N)
Drew Peterson Pt. 1 of 2
L. Remini "The Ultimate
Remini: Scientology "The Remini Scientology "The
Leah Remini: Scientology Murder/Laci Peterson
Failure of Scientology"
'Perfect' Scientology Family" Rise of David Miscavige" (N) and the Aftermath (N)
"Reasonable Doubt?" (N)
Woods Law "Distress Call" North Woods Law
NWL: New Hampshire
NWL: N.Hamp. "Manhunt" Blood Ivory
NCIS: LA "Matryoshka - Part NCIS: Los Angeles
NCIS: Los Angeles
NCIS: Los Angeles "The
NCIS: Los Angeles
Two" Pt. 2 of 2
"Revenge Deferred"
"Exchange Rate"
Seventh Child"
"Matryoshka - Part One" 1/2
Law & Order "Homesick"
Law & Order "Aftershock" Law&Order "Causa Mortis" Law & Order "I.D."
Law & Order "Good Girl"
Kardash "Non-Bon Voyage" E! News (N)
Monster-in-Law ('05, Com) Jennifer Lopez. TVPG
Bellas "Marital Mayhem"
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
(:35) MASH
(:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Loves Ray "The Plan" Mom
Mom
Bomb Squad NYC "Line of The State "Part One"
The State "Part Two"
The State "Part Three"
The State "Part Four" Jalal
Fire"
and Shakira risk their lives.
On a Mission:Atlanta
AAA Baseball National Championship Site: PNC Field -- Scranton, Pa. (L)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
NFL Films (N) Pre-game
FIFA Soccer International Friendly New Zea./USA (L)
Boxing Premier Champions
Forged in Fire "Ngombe
Forged in Fire "Viking
Forged in Fire: Cutting Deeper "Sword Breaker Redemption Night" Four former
Ngulu"
Sword"
contestants compete to prove their skills by making a Sword Breaker. (N)
Watch What Happens Live BelowD. "The 1 Percenters" Below Deck
BelowD. "Jesus Saves" (N) Vander (N) A Night (N)
(4:00) Love and Basketball
Diary of a Mad Black Woman ('05, Dra) Steve Harris, Kimberly Elise. TV14
Being "Feeling Tested" (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:30)
The Green Hornet ('11, Act) Seth Rogen. A young man teams up
Game Face "Mutants Wear
xXx ('02, Act) Samuel L.
Makeup Too" (N)
Legion TVMA with his late father's assistant to become a crime fighting duo. TVPG
Jackson, Vin Diesel. TV14
6
400 (HBO)
450 (MAX)
500 (SHOW)
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MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR
Wednesday, Sept. 20
POMEROY — A movie night will be held at 6
p.m. at Common Ground Mission on East Main
Street in Pomeroy. Refreshments will be available.
The movie is Son of God.
Sunday, Oct. 1
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grove Christian Church invites you to celebrate its annual
Homecoming. The 10 a.m. morning worship service will feature guest speaker and former minister
Hal Doster and a presentation by Donna Paulsen.
A potluck meal and fellowship will be enjoyed
beginning at 12:30 p.m. followed by an afternoon
concert by Chosen Road starting at 2 p.m.
Special Services
RUTLAND — Revival, Sept. 18-22, 7 p.m.
nightly. Corey Carroll Evangelist preaching,
Jimmy Howson gospel singer attending nightly.
Pastor Ed Barney invites the public to join us.
MIDDLEPORT — Ash Street Church, 398 Ash
Street, Middleport, Ohio, will be hosting speaker,
Dr. David Rahamut, for services Wednesday, Sept.
27 through Sunday, Oct. 1 at 6:30 p.m. Dr. Rahamut is a born-again Christian who was born into a
Muslim home in a Muslim country. Special singing
schedule: Wednesday and Saturday — Ash Street
Church, Thursday — Aubree Lyons, Friday — Val
Rahamut, and Sunday — Forever Blessed.
STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) - 72.27
Akzo Nobel - 31.34
Big Lots, Inc. - 49.05
Bob Evans Farms 72.93
BorgWarner (NYSE) 49.17
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 19.26
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 66.20
Collins (NYSE) - 130.56
DuPont (NYSE) - 83.93
US Bank (NYSE) 52.38
Gen Electric (NYSE) 24.46
Harley-Davidson
(NYSE) - 48.56
JP Morgan (NYSE) 92.92
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.44
Ltd Brands (NYSE) 39.98
Norfolk So (NYSE) -
127.35
OVBC (NASDAQ) 32.70
BBT (NYSE) - 44.24
Peoples (NASDAQ) 32.02
Pepsico (NYSE) 114.99
Premier (NASDAQ) 19.76
Rockwell (NYSE) 175.16
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 13.60
Royal Dutch Shell 57.46
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 7.52
Wal-Mart (NYSE) 80.00
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 15.59
WesBanco (NYSE) 37.95
Worthington (NYSE) 51.92
10:30
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
(:50) Vice Principals "Tiger Ballers
Sex and the
Arthur escapes from Earth seconds before it is Town" Gamby returns to a "Crackback"
City TVMA
destroyed to make way for a space highway. changed North Jackson High.
(5:40)
Aliens ('86, Sci-Fi) Michael Biehn, Sigourney
Friday Ice Cube. Two friends must (:35)
Next Friday A streetwise man
Weaver. A hive of aliens attack an army unit that has been come up with $200, to pay drug dealer Big visits his cousin and his uncle, who have
sent to find missing colonists. TVMA
Worm for marijuana they smoked. TV14
recently won the lottery. TVMA
(4:35)
Open Range
Dice "The
Episodes
Ray Donovan "Shelley
Inside the NFL "2017 Week NavyFootball A Season
('03, West) Kevin Costner,
Twelve"
Duvall"
2" (N)
"Episode 3" With Navy
(N)
"Episode 3"
Robert Duvall. TV14
(4:00)
NEOLA, Iowa — Larry Dean Sanders, formerly of
Gallipolis, Ohio, died at his home in Neola, Iowa, on
Sunday, August 20, 2017, at the age of 60.
There will be a private ceremony for Larry where
family members and personal friends will join in a
special gathering for his Celebration of Life.
Real Time With Bill Maher Vice News
Tonight (N)
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Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, September 19, 2017 3
MEIGS BRIEFS
MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event information that is open to the public and will be printed
on a space-available basis.
Editor’s Note: The
Daily Sentinel appreciates your input to the
community calendar.
To make sure items can
receive proper attention, all information
should be received by
Community Shred and
Medication Disposal Day
MIDDLEPORT — A Community Shred and Medication Disposal Day will be held in back of the former
Middleport High School on Sept. 19 from 11 a.m. - 3
p.m. This is an opportunity to dispose of personal
records that you don’t want to put out in the trash for
anyone to find. The Meigs County Sheriff’s Office will
accept old/outdated medications that you no longer
need during the same time period. For more information call 740-992-2161.
Drive Through Flu Shot Clinic
ROCKSPRINGS — The Meigs County Health
Department will host a drive through flu shot clinic
on Saturday, Oct. 7 at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
The clinic will be held from 9 a.m. to noon. Those
attending should bring Medicare, Medicaid or commercial insurance cards. Self pay costs are $37 for
ages 6 months to 64 years and $61 for age 65 and up.
Cash, check, and credit cards will be accepted. Those
attending are asked to wear short sleeve shirts if possible for convenience.
Health Screenings Sept. 27
RACINE — Heritage College Community Health
Programs will be offering a women’s cancer screening
clinic with same-day mammography on Wednesday,
Sept. 27 at the First Baptist Church on 5th Street
in Racine, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Appointments are
required. Patients should call 740-593-2432 or 1-800844-2654 to schedule an appointment.
Sternwheel Regatta luncheon
POMEROY — Trinity Congregational Church, corner of Second and Lynn Streets, will be serving lunch
during the Sternwheel Regatta on Thursday, Sept. 21
(take-out only), and Friday, Sept. 22 (take-out and
dine in) from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. Menu: homemade
chicken and noodles, sloppy joes, hot dogs, selection
of sides and homemade desserts.
Art in the Village Oct. 27
MIDDLEPORT — Entry forms and guidelines
for the annual Art in the Village on Oct.7 sponsored
by the Riverbend Arts Council are now available at
Farmers Bank, Pomeroy and Riverbend Arts Council’s
Facebook page. Entries must be in by Sept.27. Call
Rhojean at 740-992-3842 for more information.
Craft Show Vendors Wanted
RACINE — Southern High School is looking for
crafters and vendors for its upcoming Craft Show on
Saturday, Oct. 21, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Applications
may be downloaded from southernlocalmeigs.org by
clicking on forms or by calling Alan Crisp at 740-4443309. The deadline to register is Oct. 2.
US 33 Pavement Restoration
RACINE — A concrete pavement restoration project began on Sept. 5, on US 33 in Meigs County. The
project is taking place between Bashan Road (County
Road 28) and Sandy Desert Road (Township Road
371). A 14 foot width restriction will be in place in
this area from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., Monday through Friday. The estimated completion date is Oct. 15.
State Route 124 Slip Repair
REEDSVILLE — State Route 124 in Meigs County
will be closed for a slip repair project beginning Sept.
11, 2017. The closure is taking place 0.5 miles north
of Township Road 402 (Barr Hollow). The estimated
completion date is Oct. 31, 2017. The posted detour
is State Route 681 to State Route 7 N to State Route
144 S to State Route 124.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/
legal guardian. A $15.00 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however, no one will
be denied services because of an inability to pay an
administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax (shingles);
pneumonia vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or visit our website
at www.meigs-health.com to see a list of accepted
commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.
the newspaper at least
five business days prior
to an event. All coming
events print on a spaceavailable basis and in
chronological order.
Events can be emailed
to: TDSnews@civitas-
media.com.
Tuesday,
Sept. 19
MIDDLEPORT —
Brooks-Grant Camp
No.7 of the Sons of
Union Veterans of the
Civil War will meet at
7:15 p.m. at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
The public may attend
and refreshments will be
served.
Mothman
city workers and the
Mason County Emergency Services team.
From page 1
We have a few growing pains to improve
on but that’s always
“I know many of you
expected. The Point
have traveled many
Pleasant city crew got
miles to get here,
us through this festimany of us this mornval. I heard all kinds of
ing were parking cars
great comments from
out at Krodel Park and
both vendors and visiwhat a sight to see…
tors on how smoothly
Georgia, Tennessee,
Pennsylvania, Maryland, and promptly any
problems were dealt
Virginia and a lot of
This memorial to Carolin Harris was unveiled at Riverfront Park to
Ohio. Sixteen years ago, with and taken care
open the Mothman Festival, dedicated to her memory.
this festival began with of - from the trash, to
breakers kicking. They
Jeff and Carolin putfunds for Holdyn Keefer
at Krodel Park. The
ting this thing together were on the ball.
of Point Pleasant, who
parking at Krodel Park
On Monday, Billings
with a couple of tents
included shuttle service has been battling leukesaid of the festival:
and a table and people
mia. Raising funds for
“What a great weekend but a fee of $10 was
were talking about
children’s charities is
Mothman. And over the for our city. Everything charged. However, this
equated to a fundraiser the primary goal of the
went as planned on
years it just grew and
group, as well as the
because all that money
our (city) part and our
grew and with social
Ghostbusters who were
goes back into a fund
media and the internet, staff did a tremendous
to build a splash pad at also in attendance.
things began to develop, job. You know when
Jay Parsons, of MinKrodel Park.
you bring people from
people started hearing
eral Wells, a member of
“Those that parked
about the Mothman and as far away as Canada
the 501st, said of the
with us were told what
and from states across
they understand what
we were doing (the fun- festival: “I’m amazed…
Mothman was. We love this great land you’re
draiser) and I would say the town and county
to see visitors (to Point doing something right.
99 percent of those who should be behind this
Pleasant), so please, do On behalf of our city
200 percent. It’s amazused our designated
clerk, council members
me a favor, come back
ing because these
parking were from out
and myself, we salute
and enjoy our great
people come from all
of town. We offered a
Jeff Wamsley and his
city.”
over the world. I’ve seen
committee for a job well shuttle service to take
Wamsley then
people from Germany
them to and from the
done.”
explained the plaque
and England.”
festival at no extra
Though free parking
placed on the memoWamsley said he’d
charge along with parkwas available where
rial for Harris was
received an email from
ing. Overall those that
it could be found in
temporary, though was
a festival attendee
parked with us were
downtown Point Pleasa reproduction of what
who said they would
ant, the city, along with very pleased with our
will appear when the
definitely be back and
efforts and what we
permanent, bronze one assistance from the
said the festival was “a
Mason County Division were doing to enhance
arrives at Riverfront
fun paranormal family
the Krodel Park area
of Homeland Security
Park.
reunion each year and
with a splash pad.”
and Emergency Man“I’m just not good
I’m so happy to have
Also attending the
agement, including
at this,” Marcella
met lots of great new
festival was the 501st
DeWeese, Harris’ sister CERT Team members
Legion, a group of Star people this year to add
said when being passed and the Point Pleasant
to the family.”
Wars fans from across
Fire Department, were
the microphone. “Now
the state of West Virginassisting with parking
Carolin was, she could
ia. The “garrison” raised Beth Sergent is editor of Ohio
elsewhere, including
talk for an hour. But,
Valley Publishing.
Carolin started this
thing and she worked
on it from one year to
the next, and when
one was over she
would work on the
next one and loved it.
I’d like to see it keep
going after she’s gone
because there’s a lot
of things that she
did that people don’t
realize, I don’t think,
until right about now.
I thank you all for
coming and we love
you and she did too,
and I know she’s up
there looking down
at us.”
The plaque,
financed by a fundraiser from The
Meeting House, and
orchestrated by the
Downtown Merchants, was unveiled.
Afterwards, Wamsley told the Point
Pleasant Register
of Harris: “Carolin
Harris is what Point
Pleasant is all about
- welcoming, friendly,
and a heart for making visitors feel at
home. Her memory
will live on as long
as we can host the
Mothman Festival. I
know she was watching over all the fun
and festivities this
year…I could feel it.”
As for how the
rest of the festival
went, Wamsley said:
“I was very pleased
with all the teamwork
between festival staff,
Christopher E. Tenoglia
Attorney at Law
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4 Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Daily Sentinel
THEIR VIEW
Strangers in strange
land give new view of
humanity’s ugly side
This summer, I had eight eyes.
Two were my own, and six belonged to three
young men from Haiti, who were raised at an
orphanage I operate there and were
making their first trip ever to anothMitch
er country — America — to work as
Albom
Contributing camp counselors.
Siem, the oldest, is stocky and
columnist
always laughing. Moise, who just
graduated high school, is a tall, thin
jokester. Emmanuel, the youngest, is shy and gentle. I cannot explain the joy on their faces, or their
sense of wonder at the smallest things. Every day
with them was like seeing this nation anew.
The night they landed at the Detroit airport, we
drove up the interstate, and they were dead quiet.
Just staring out the windows.
The next day, when I asked what impressed
them so far, all three responded, “The roads! They
are so straight and smooth!”
I laughed. But when I thought about the snarled
and tangled traffic of Port Au Prince, dirt streets,
gaping pavement, no highways, just a free-for-all,
I realized, by comparison, our roads are a work of
art.
It was like that all summer. Their first shopping If we try and see
mall. Their first gym.
things through
Everything was astound- other sets of
ing. I took them to a
movie theater with plush eyes, perhaps we
can understand
leather seats that recline
with a button. They lifted the ugly side of
back and forth like kids
humanity in this
on a ride. We didn’t even
country, and still
need a movie.
focus on the good.
Wherever we went,
people gushed over these
humble young men,
helped them out, did them favors. At a Tigers
game, complete strangers brought them food from
their luxury suite once they learned where they
were from. At a concert, the same thing happened,
strangers offering to share better seats. Doctors
made time to see them. Salespeople engaged in
long conversations.
These were mostly white people, and coming
from Haiti, where whites or mixed race are a mere
5 percent of the population, the sudden demographic switch must have seemed strange.
I was quietly pleased at how well this part of
their journey was going.
Until one day, it didn’t.
It happened, in, of all places, Disneyland. With
their camp work finished, my wife and I wanted to
show Siem, Moise and Emmanuel another part of
our country before they went home. We took them
to California, which, true to the pattern, left their
mouths agape. They loved the beach. The food.
And Disneyland was a complete mindblower.
At one point, I left them on their own for a couple of hours. When I returned, they were sitting at
a table, noticeably quiet. I asked what was up, and
finally, Moise, the tall one, said, “Well, Mr. Mitch,
something not so good happened.”
What happened was this. The young men, trying to read a park map, got a little lost. Moise
approached a stranger and asked directions to a
ride.
“Why don’t you ask somebody who looks like
you?” the man snapped.
Moise walked away, stunned.
When I heard this, I nearly cried. I have been
operating the orphanage for seven years, and the
kids there are as close to my own as I will ever
have. My protective parent urge wanted to rip this
jerk in half.
Instead, I did what I needed to do, and
explained that things like this can happen anywhere, the man was a fool, not to let his words
sting, not to judge others by his mistake, nor hate
as he apparently hates.
“I know, Mr. Mitch,” Moise said, nodding. And
he did. They all did. Because they are loving and
forgiving. And have been raised that way.
Still, it felt like a smudge on a painting. Such a
glorious summer shadowed by this encounter.
I thought about that incident in light of recent
racism-related headlines and the angry vitriol that
follows. Our three young men are not AfricanAmerican. They have no history with police here,
no experience with systemic prejudice, never
heard the phrase “white privilege,” don’t know
about the Confederate flag.
They simply have darker skin.
And that prompted an ignorant, nasty comment
from a stranger in a country that, to that point,
had seemed like the Land of Oz.
So what do their eyes tell them? What do they
think? Is America the kind and glorious wonders?
Or the ugly jerk?
The answer is we are both. One can’t destroy
the other.
But if we try and see things through other sets
of eyes, perhaps we can understand the ugly side
of humanity in this country, and still focus on the
good.
Mitch Albom is a columnist for the Detroit Free Press. Readers may
write to him at: Detroit Free Press, 600 West Fort Street, Detroit, Mich.
48226, or via email at malbom@freepress.com.
THEIR VIEW
Thrill of letting go
My harness strapped
around my torso, I
leaned back onto my
heels, gripped the
handle above my head
and looked across the
horizon of New River
Gorge to the tiny landing spot tucked 3,100
feet away between the
trees. I couldn’t believe
I was going to trust this
contraption to hold me
securely, but I swung
myself forward and
stepped off the ledge
… and I was off, flying
above the trees.
I laid back and
whipped through the
air, breeze brushing my
face. I felt surprisingly
relaxed given that at any
moment the chain could
break and send me plummeting to my death. The
landscape zipped by blurry, yet a majestic view
was clear. I felt as if the
wind was blowing the
dust out of the corners of
be amazing, so
my brain—cleaning
freeing and gloriout residual negaously unbounded.
tivity and replacing
My feet were
it with limitless
on solid ground
positive receptors.
sooner than I
Flying above was
wanted. As the
sublime, regal. I
Michele Z. guide unclipped
spread my arms
me from the zipwide, almost touch- Marcum
ing the blue sky on Contributing line, I high-fived
my friend, ready
either side. A crow columnist
to fly again. The
to my right raced
endorphin surge
along beside me.
was no doubt, part of
Nothing on the ground
the intense happy I was
mattered from my new
feeling, but I knew I’d
viewpoint.
just released more than
“Let go,” I thought,
a chemical reaction in
knowing I needed to
my body. I’d released my
purge like this more
need to control my moveoften. As I surrendered
ments. I’d surrendered
to faith in the device
holding me, the struggles my safety to the universe
and not only survived,
thick and cumbersome
but felt exhilarated in
in the density of earthdoing so.
bound life seemed to
I can’t zipline every
disappear like fluttering
day, but I can recapture
ashes vanish from a fire.
I was hooked—hooked the sense of freedom
any time I choose … and
on the line and hooked
then there’s the swing
on the thrill. To fly like
set at the edge of the
a bird all the time would
path where I walk in the
woods. When my hike’s
complete, I can reward
my inner child with a
swing session, blowing
the worry from my brow.
I’ll lean back, holding tight to the link of
chain suspending me.
I’ll kick my feet high
above my head while
my thoughts remain on
the ground, knowing I’m
building trust in Divine
providence with each
sway—knowing that I’m
connected to all the support I need.
Each moment I trust
my instincts and lay back
and enjoy the ride, my
journey becomes more
incredible and my faith is
strengthened like a chain
is formed, one link at a
time.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native
of Meigs County, author of “Rain
No Evil” and host of Life Speaks
on AIR radio. Access more at
soundcloud.comlifespeaks.
TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday,
Sept. 19, the 262nd day
of 2017. There are 103
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On September 19,
1777, the first Battle of
Saratoga was fought during the Revolutionary
War; although British
forces succeeded in driving out the American
troops, the Americans
prevailed in a second battle the following month.
On this date:
In 1796, President
George Washington’s
farewell address was
published. In it, America’s first chief executive
advised, “Observe good
faith and justice toward
all nations. Cultivate
peace and harmony with
all.”
In 1881, the 20th
president of the United
States, James A. Garfield, died 2½ months
after being shot by
Charles Guiteau; Chester Alan Arthur became
president.
In 1915, vaudeville
performer W.C. Fields
made his movie debut
as “Pool Sharks,” a onereel silent comedy, was
released.
In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann was arrested in
New York and charged
with the kidnap-murder
of Charles A. Lindbergh
Jr.
In 1945, Nazi radio
propagandist William
Joyce, known as “Lord
Haw-Haw,” was convicted of treason and
sentenced to death by a
British court.
In 1957, the United
States conducted its first
contained underground
nuclear test, codenamed “Rainier,” in the
Nevada desert.
In 1959, Soviet leader
Nikita Khrushchev, in
Los Angeles as part of
his U.S. tour, reacted
angrily upon being told
that, for security reasons, he wouldn’t get to
visit Disneyland.
In 1960, Cuban leader
Fidel Castro, in New
York to visit the United
Nations, angrily checked
out of the Shelburne
Hotel in a dispute with
the management; Castro
ended up staying at the
Hotel Theresa in Harlem.
In 1970, the “Mary
Tyler Moore” show
debuted on CBS-TV.
In 1982, the smiley
emoticon was invented
by Carnegie Mellon
THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“If you are losing your leisure, look out; you
may be losing your soul.”
— Logan Pearsall Smith,
Anglo-American author (1865-1946)
University professor
Scott E. Fahlman, who
suggested punctuating
humorously intended
computer messages with
a colon followed by a
hyphen and a parenthesis as a horizontal “smiley face.” :-)
In 1985, the Mexico
City area was struck by
a devastating earthquake
that killed at least 9,500
people.
In 1997, in his first
public comments since
the death of Princess
Diana, Prince Charles
told the British people
he would always feel the
loss of his former wife,
and thanked them for
their support. Six people
were killed when an
express passenger train
and a freight train collided in west London. The
crime drama “L.A. Confidential” was released
by Warner Bros.
Ten years ago: The
Senate blocked legislation that would have
regulated the amount
of time troops spent in
combat, a blow for Democrats struggling to challenge President George
W. Bush’s Iraq policies.
A powerful bomb killed
anti-Syria lawmaker
Antoine Ghanem and six
others in Beirut, Lebanon.
Five years ago:
Members of Congress
presented the Congressional Gold Medal to
Myanmar democracy
leader Aung San Suu Kyi
(ahng sahn soo chee) in
a ceremony in the Capitol Rotunda. The Justice
Department’s internal
watchdog found fault
with the agency’s handling of a gun-trafficking
probe in Arizona that
resulted in hundreds of
weapons turning up at
crime scenes in the U.S.
and Mexico; the inspector general’s report
referred more than a
dozen people for possible disciplinary action
for their roles in Operation Fast and Furious.
�NEWS/WEATHER
Daily Sentinel
Drones
IN BRIEF
8 AM
WEATHER
2 PM
64°
Honda invests
in Ohio plant
MARYSVILLE, Ohio
(AP) — Honda says it
79°
SUN & MOON
Today
7:14 a.m.
7:30 p.m.
6:25 a.m.
7:29 p.m.
75°
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset
First
Sep 20 Sep 27
Full
Oct 5
Last
Oct 12
SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for fish and game.
Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Major
11:33a
12:21p
12:47a
1:37a
2:28a
3:19a
4:09a
Minor
5:21a
6:09a
6:58a
7:48a
8:39a
9:30a
10:21a
POLLEN & MOLD
Major
11:58p
12:45p
1:10p
2:00p
2:50p
3:42p
4:33p
Minor
5:45p
6:33p
7:21p
8:11p
9:02p
9:53p
10:44p
WEATHER HISTORY
Honolulu, Hawaii, has never been
hotter than the 95 degrees reached
on Sept. 19, 1994. Many believe that
areas known for tropical climates
must have extreme heat.
87°
62°
A t-storm in spots in
the afternoon
Mostly sunny, warm
and humid
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Low
Moderate
High
Moderate
High
Very High
AIR QUALITY
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.
Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services
OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday
Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam
Level
12.91
15.63
21.35
12.65
12.95
25.04
13.14
25.75
34.64
13.23
15.50
34.10
14.20
Portsmouth
82/64
500
Primary pollutant: Particulates
Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51
following questions or
issues: State Issues —
Issue 1 and Issue 2, Local
Tax Levies — Proposed
Bond Issue and Tax
Levy, Rio Grande Community College Taxing
District, Meigs County
District Public Library,
Meigs County Council
on Aging, Chester Township, Columbia Township,
Alexander Local School
District (Columbia Precinct) (Athens, Meigs
and Vinton Counties),
Olive Township, Pomeroy Village (two levies),
Proposed Local Liquor
Option (Pomeroy 1st),
Rutland Township, Sutton Township, Syracuse
Village (two levies) and
Syracuse Village Electric
Aggregation.
24-hr.
Chg.
+0.71
-0.24
-0.33
-0.35
+0.10
-0.32
-0.05
-0.02
+0.07
+0.02
+0.10
none
+0.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
88°
61°
Very warm with
partial sunshine
Mostly sunny and
warm
Belpre
83/63
Athens
81/62
84°
69°
Remaining warm with
plenty of sunshine
Humid; cloudy, then
some sun
St. Marys
83/63
Parkersburg
82/63
Coolville
82/63
Elizabeth
84/62
Spencer
83/63
Buffalo
83/64
Milton
83/64
St. Albans
84/64
Huntington
82/63
NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
59/50
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
73/61
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
77/65
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front
MONDAY
88°
62°
Marietta
83/63
Murray City
81/62
Ironton
83/65
Ashland
83/65
Grayson
82/64
Information submitted by the
Meigs County Board of Elections.
SUNDAY
87°
60°
Wilkesville
81/62
POMEROY
Jackson
83/63
82/63
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
84/64
82/64
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
79/64
GALLIPOLIS
83/64
84/64
82/64
South Shore Greenup
83/64
82/63
67
300
2019), Letart Township
Trustee, Olive Township
Trustee, Orange Township Trustee, Rutland
Township Trustee, Salem
Township Trustee, Salem
Township Trustee (UTE
2019), Salisbury Township Trustee, Scipio
Township Trustee, Sutton
Township Trustee, Member of Governing Board
of Educational Service
Center At Large, Member of Governing Board
of Educational Service
Center Southern Local,
Alexander Local School
District Member of Education, Eastern Local
School Board Member of
Education, Meigs Local
School Board Member of
Education and Southern
Local School Board Member of Education.
And determining the
NATIONAL CITIES
McArthur
81/62
Lucasville
83/63
Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services
0 50 100 150 200
Chillicothe
81/62
Very High
Primary: ragweed/grass/othere
Mold: 2332
Logan
81/60
Adelphi
81/61
Waverly
81/62
Pollen: 49
Low
MOON PHASES
New
0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme
THURSDAY
86°
64°
3
Primary: cladosporium, unk.
Wed.
7:14 a.m.
7:29 p.m.
7:29 a.m.
8:02 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
A couple of showers and a thunderstorm today.
Patchy clouds tonight. High 83° / Low 64°
The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.
0.00
2.72
1.74
36.13
31.99
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8 PM
Temperature
24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
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Gill and Dolly Parton.
They are currently working on their debut project.
Closing out the entertainment at the Farm
Fest is Russell Moore and
the IIIrd Tyme Out at
3:30 p.m. Russell Moore
has been the International Bluegrass Music
Association’s Male Vocalist of the Year five times,
as well as several other
awards. The band has
been playing for over 25
years and features a bluegrass sound with a strong
vocal presence, according
to their Facebook Page.
They are from Cumming,
Ga.
Precinct — Racine Baptist Church Christian
Outreach Center, 406
From page 1
5th Street, Racine; and
Syracuse Village and Minersville Precincts — SyraFire Department, 28854
SR 124, Langsville; Mid- cuse Village Community
dleport 2nd, 3rd and 4th Building, 2244 7th Street,
— Church of Christ Life Syracuse.
Items and positions
Center, 437 Main Street,
to be voted on include
Middleport; Pomeroy
1st, 2nd and 3rd — Mul- (according to a proclamaberry Community Center, tion from the Board of
Elections):
260 Mulberry Avenue,
Mayor of Pomeroy
Pomeroy; Bradbury
(UTE 2019), Middleport
— Bradford Church of
Christ Activity Building, Village Council, Pomeroy
Village Council, Rutland
39105 Bradbury Road,
Pomeroy; Laurel Cliff and Village Council, Racine
Village Council, Syracuse
Rocksprings — Meigs
Village Council, Bedford
Local Administrative
Township Trustee, ChesOffice, 41765 Pomeroy
ter Township Trustee,
Pike, Pomeroy; Scipio
Columbia Township
— Scipio Township Fire
Department, 35575 Fire- Trustee, Lebanon Township Trustee, Lebanon
house Road, Pomeroy;
Racine Village and Racine Township Trustee (UTE
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™
(in inches)
Johnny Staats & the
Delivery Boys. Staats is
a world renowned fiddle
player, according to the
group’s Facebook page.
The band was formed in
2000. Staats is from West
Virginia and began playing bluegrass with his
family growing up. He
learned to play mandolin
by ear while listening to
old records and 8-tracks.
At 2 p.m. will bring the
Church Sisters, originally
from Dickinson County,
W.Va. According to their
website, the duo blends
gospel music and bluegrass and have worked
on several major projects
with names such as Vince
Election
HEALTH TODAY
Precipitation
ufacturing plant in Marysville and $47 million at
Honda’s nearby engine
plant in Anna for production of the Accord’s new
turbocharged engines.
the country rock band
McGuffey Lane will take
the stage. Formed in
1972 from Athens, Ohio
From page 1
the trio has seen success
Top 40. Reeves currently in the years since; playing with Charlie Daniels
hosts a live morning
Band, The Judds, and the
show in 93.7 the Dawg
Allman Brothers Band.
and lives in Ashland.
Sunday will see several
At 1:30 p.m. the Joseph
groups playing on the
Sisters will take to the
stage bringing their clas- Homestead Stage when
sic country sound. They at 9:15 a.m. local artists
are from Wheeling, W.Va. Aaron and Clark Walker
will lead congregational
and have played major
worship music. Both have
events including Jamplayed for several years
boree in the Hills. They
in churches. A message
describe their sound as
“blending classic country will be delivered by Bob
Powell following the worwith a modern appeal
ship music.
and style.”
At 12:30 p.m. will be
Then, at 3:30 p.m.,
Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday
83°
58°
78°
56°
95° in 1953
38° in 1903
Honda of America
Mfg. Inc. said in a release
Monday that the investment includes $220 million for new technologies
and processes at its man-
Festival
ALMANAC
High
Low
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Normal low
Record high
Record low
has invested $267 million and will add 300
jobs in central Ohio to
support production of its
revamped Honda Accord
sedan for 2018.
Clendenin
83/63
Charleston
83/62
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
70/51
Billings
54/40
Toronto
79/61
Detroit
Chicago 78/63
80/66
Minneapolis
79/67
Montreal
81/62
New York
72/67
JOSE
Denver
85/47
Kansas City
86/72
Washington
81/68
Today
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EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
Atlanta
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Low
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94/70
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86/62
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St. Louis
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Seattle
Washington, DC
99° in McAllen, TX
21° in Hohnholz Ranch, CO
Global
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Low -15° in Summit Station, Greenland
Houston
92/76
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95/73
Miami
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Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
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RACINE
SYRACUSE
promise to make you feel right at home.
740-949-2210
740-992-6333
60701680
Environmental Quality
Incentives Program.
As a teenager Hunter
worked on the Wayne
From page 1
Roush Farm and develas the Civil Engineering oped a love for farming
BIM (Building Informa- and the outdoors. She is
tion System) Specialist. a member of the Racine
Area Community OrgaHe is the son of Keith
nization, serves as the
and Becky Bentz of
minority advisor on the
Racine.
FSA County Committee, and helps with the
Election of Supervisors
teenage youth group
Also that night eliand Sunday School
gible voters will select
two of three candidates classes at Racine First
Baptist Church. In
for the Meigs SWCD
addition to farming she
Board of Supervisors.
enjoys sports, gardenThe candidates are as
ing, hunting, and spendfollows:
ing time with her family.
Keith Bentz
Michael Warner
Bentz is currently a
Warner is an insurfull-time mechanic for
ance agent and partKarr Contracting, and
time farmer. He and
he and his wife, Becky
his wife, Sheila, reside
Lee Bentz, operate
in the Forest Run comthe Lee Farm located
munity in Sutton Townon Bashan Road near
ship.
Racine. The Lee Farm
Residents or landownhas been in the same
ers, firms, and corporafamily since settletions that own land or
ment times. The farm
occupy land in Meigs
is used in the producCounty and are 18 years
tion of beef, hay and
small grains. Bentz has of age or older may
vote for supervisor. A
participated in U.S.
non-resident landowner,
Department of Natufirm, or corporation
ral Resources-Natural
must provide an affidaResources Conservavit of eligibility, which
tion Service programs
includes designation of
including the Environa voting representative,
mental Quality Incentives Program and stew- prior to casting a ballot.
There are three ways
ardship programs. He is
an eligible voter can
a former Outstanding
cast a ballot: at the
Cooperator of the Year
annual meeting, at
for the Meigs SWCD.
the SWCD office until
Tonja Hunter
3 p.m. on Oct. 3, or
Hunter was raised in
via absentee ballot by
Meigs County around
the Racine area and has requesting an absentee
ballot from the SWCD
been associated with
farming all her life. She office at 113 E. Memorial Dr. Suite D, Pomeroy,
is a 1983 graduate of
OH 45769.
Southern High School,
Absentee ballots can
and is the daughter
be requested until Sept.
of Ronald and Janice
25 by calling or stopSalser of Racine and is
married to Dr. Douglas ping in the office.
Supervisors serve
Hunter. They reside on
staggered three year
a 180-acre hay farm on
terms. The winner will
Bashan Road. She has
participated in the Con- be announced the evening of the annual meetservation Reserve Proing and banquet.
gram and the Forestry
TODAY
Tuesday, September 19, 2017 5
�Sports
6 s Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Daily Sentinel
Herd blanks Kent State, 21-0
By Bryan Walters
MU, conversely, produced a
season-high 158 rushing yards
en route to 381 total yards of
offense — which included the
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. —
hosts’ first two rushing touchThere were a handful of flashdowns of the year late in the
es, but they were more green
fourth quarter.
than golden.
Clinging to a narrow 7-0
Marshall recorded its first
lead through three periods, the
shutout in just under two
Herd strung together a 9-play,
years while mustering enough
offense to secure a 21-0 victory 62-yard drive that was capped
over visiting Kent State on Sat- by a Chase Litton 14-yard
urday night in a non-conference touchdown run. Litton’s diving lunge at the goal line gave
football contest at Joan C.
Marshall some breathing room
Edwards Stadium.
with a 14-0 edge with 7:03 left
The Thundering Herd (2-1)
in regulation.
put together a defensive gem
The Flashes’ ensuing drive
that included limiting the Goldstalled with 4:47 remaining
en Flashes (1-2) to just 259
yards of total offense. KSU also at the MU 40 due to a loss of
downs, then the hosts respondmustered only 14 first downs
and went 4-of-15 on third down ed with the proverbial nail in
the coffin.
conversions.
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
Marshall defenders Brandon Drayton (8), Ryan Bee (91) and Frankie Hernandez
(35) combine to take down Kent State quarterback George Bollas (2) during the
first half of Saturday night’s non-conference football contest at Joan C. Edwards
Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.
The Herd covered 60 yards
in seven plays, with Tyler King
delivering the knockout blow
with a 29-yard TD run — giving the hosts a 21-point lead
with 1:08 remaining. King also
carried the ball on all seven
plays of Marshall’s final possession.
The Green and White held
KSU without a single passing yard in the first half, then
churned out 121 rushing yards
after the break while clinging
to a slim 7-0 lead.
King produced all but one
of his 101 rushing yards in the
fourth quarter, becoming the
first MU running back to reach
the century mark since current
teammate Anthony Anderson
See HERD | 7
Lady Defenders
top Calvary for
fifth straight win
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
See DEFENDERS | 7
OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Sept. 19
Volleyball
Buffalo at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Nitro at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Wahama at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 7 p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 7 p.m.
River Valley at Alexander, 7 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 7 p.m.
Boys Golf
Buffalo at Wahama, 4 p.m.
Girls Golf
Meigs at Wellston, 4 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 20
Cross Country
Meigs, RVHS, SGHS at Federal Hocking, 4:30
Volleyball
Miller at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Boys Golf
Point Pleasant at Buffalo, 4 p.m.
Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
Ohio’s Brendan Cope catches a pass in front of Kansas’ Hasan Defense (13) during the Bobcats’ 42-30 win on Saturday in Athens, Ohio.
Bobcats knock off Kansas, 42-30
By Alex Hawley
Ohio went ahead 18-0
seven seconds into the
second quarter, when
Rouke found Troy ManATHENS, Ohio —
Back at home and back in gen for a 10-yard scoring
pass and Zervos hit the
the win column.
extra-point, his first of
Coming off of a disapfour on the day.
pointing road loss, the
With 9:11 left in the
Ohio University football
first half, the Jayhawks
team bounced back in
(1-2) ended the shut out
a big way on Saturday
afternoon at Peden Stadi- with a 56-yard Khalil
um, defeating the Big 12 Herbert touchdown run.
Conference’s Kansas Jay- Gabriel Rui made the
point-after kick, his first
hawks by a 42-30 count.
of three, and Ohio’s lead
The Bobcats (2-1)
was trimmed to 18-7.
took an 11-0 lead in the
Less than three minfirst quarter, combining
utes later, OU answered
a Louie Zervos 41-yard
the score with a nine-yard
field goal with a threetouchdown pass from
yard Nathan Rourke
Quinton Maxwell to Mantouchdown run and a
two-point conversion pass gen, which capped off an
from punter Michael Far- impressive 91-yard drive.
kas to long snapper Jake
Ohio tight end Troy Mangen (82) hauls in a touchdown pass during
See BOBCATS | 7 the Bobcats’ win over Kansas on Saturday in Athens, Ohio.
Hale.
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com
Anderson www.andersonmcdaniel.com Meigs
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60734704
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — A high five.
The Ohio Valley Christian volleyball team picked
up its fifth straight victory of the season Friday
night following a 25-20, 25-20, 25-16 decision over
visiting Calvary in a non-conference match in the
Old French City.
The Lady Defenders (5-1) never trailed by more
than two points at any point in the first two games
and were never down by more than five points
throughout the match as the hosts went on to
claim a straight-game sweep in their 2017 home
opener.
OVCS trailed 1-0, 3-2, 5-3 and 10-9 in Game 1,
but the Blue and Gold responded with four consecutive points en route to a 13-10 edge. Calvary
rallied to tie the game at 13, but the hosts reeled
off five straight points for an 18-13 lead — then
scored half of the final 14 points while securing a
five-point win and a 1-0 match advantage.
The Lady Defenders led wire-to-wire in Game
2 after surging out to an 8-0 lead, but the guests
responded with seven straight points before finding themselves down 11-9 midway in.
60734706
�SPORTS
Daily Sentinel
Herd
From page 6
put up 109 yards on 16
carries during a 42-17
win last year against
Middle Tennessee.
The Herd posted a
62-0 victory over Morgan State — a Football
Championship Subdivision program — in the
2016 season opener,
but Saturday night
marked Marshall’s first
shutout of a Football
Bowl Division school
since thrashing Florida
International by a 52-0
margin back on Nov. 14,
2015.
MU coach Doc Holliday was pleased with
the way his troops gutted out an important
victory. He also noted
that it makes going into
a bye week a little easier while preparing for
their next contest at historic Nippert Stadium
against the Cincinnati
Bearcats on Sept. 30.
“Sometimes you have
to grind a game out and
find a way to win it,”
Holliday said. “They
are a well-coached team
and they are a tough
team. I was proud of
the way the defense prepared and played this
week. Anytime you shut
somebody out, you’re
happy with that.
“There were some
good things and it is
always great to go into
an open date with a
win. We will get some
guys back healthy this
week and we will get
ready to go see Cincinnati.”
After a scoreless first,
Kent State lost starting
quarterback Nick Holley to an injury early
in the second quarter
— putting pressure on
backup George Bollas
to keep the Blue and
Gold’s triple-option
offense moving.
That, however, didn’t
happen as the Golden
Flashes were just 1-of-8
on third down plays in
the first half. The guests
punted three times,
missed a field goal and
also turned the ball over
on downs all before
halftime.
Marshall received its
final punt before half
with 2:15 remaining,
then marched 71 yards
in 13 plays to break the
scoreless tie after Litton
found Marcel Williams
on a 5-yard TD pass
with just six seconds
remaining.
Both teams committed a turnover and each
program was flagged
for eight penalties.
The Herd claimed a
23-14 advantage in first
downs and had 75 yards
in penalties, while the
guests surrendered 80
yards in penalties.
The Herd produced
158 rushing yards on
33 attempts, an average
of 4.8 yards per carry.
Keion Davis followed
King with 26 yards on
nine carries, while Litton added 25 yards on
three scrambles.
Litton was 23-of-43
passing for 223 yards,
throwing one touchdown and one interception. Williams led the
MU wideouts with 79
yards on eight catches,
while Tyre Brady hauled
in five grabs for 71
yards. Ryan Yurachek
also had four catches for
24 yards.
The Herd recorded
seven sacks in the triumph, with Damien
Dozier leading the
way with three sacks
and Ryan Bee had two
sacks. Nazeeh Johnson
and Davon Durant also
recorded a sack apiece
for the hosts.
Chase Hancock led
the Herd defense with
11 tackles, while Bee
had 10 stops — including two for loss. Chris
Jackson picked off a
KSU pass on the opening drive of the second
half.
Justin Rankin led the
Golden Flashes with
44 rushing yards on
six carries, followed by
Holley with 35 yards on
four first half carries.
Bollas was 4-of-12
passing for 55 yards and
threw a pick. Dustin
Crum was also 3-of-5
in the air for 62 yards.
Kent State had five
receivers catch a pass,
but only Mike Carrigan
hauled in more than
one after producing 35
yards on three grabs.
Jamal Parker led KSU
with 12 tackles, while
Jim Jones and Mandela Lawrence-Burke
both added 11 stops
apiece. The guests did
not record a sack and
Demetrius Monday had
a late first quarter interception.
Marshall now owns
a 19-18 lead in the
all-time series with
the Golden Flashes,
including a dozen consecutive wins in the
series since 1980. MU
also improved to 2-0
at home this fall while
going unbeaten against
Mid-American Conference opponents.
Marshall honored
2017 Athletic Hall of
Fame inductees Ahmad
Bradshaw, Bob Gray,
Eric Ihnat, Bill James,
Katie Stein Mason,
Amanda Williams Paz,
Keith Veney, David
Wade and Rusty Wamsley before the game.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
Ravens pick off Browns, 24-10
BALTIMORE (AP) —
The Baltimore Ravens
continue to play smart
and aggressively on
defense, a trait that probably won’t change anytime soon.
Despite forcing 10
turnovers in two games,
including five in 24-10
win over Cleveland on
Sunday, the unit isn’t
satisfied.
“We’ve got a good thing
going,” said newcomer
Brandon Carr, who has
two interceptions, “and
we’re going to try to get
better every day.”
The offense, however,
is going to have to make
quite an adjustment without six-time Pro Bowl
guard Marshal Yanda,
who broke his ankle in
the third quarter and is
lost for the season.
“It’s definitely going to
hurt,” tight end Benjamin
Watson said. “The train
IT PAYS!
Nick Wass | AP
Cleveland Browns tight end David Njoku (85) pulls in a touchdown
pass under pressure from Baltimore Ravens strong safety Tony
Jefferson (23) during the first half of an NFL football game in
Baltimore Sunday.
Cleveland (0-2) is
trying to work its way
toward respectability behind quarterback
DeShone Kizer, a rookie
out of Notre Dame who’s
had mixed success in his
first two outings.
After playing well in
defeat at home against
Pittsburgh, he went
15 for 31 with three
interceptions and a lost
fumble in his first NFL
road game.
Not only that, but Kizer
missed four series with a
migraine headache.
“Kizer does have a history of migraines,” coach
Hue Jackson explained.
“He was fine, he was
totally cleared. That’s
why I put him back in.”
Cleveland scored all
its points while backup
Kevin Hogan was in the
game, but the Browns are
committed to Kizer as
they move forward.
never stops, but emotionally, when a guy like that
goes down, it’s tough to
move forward. But the
reality is, we have games
we’re going to play.”
Fortunately for the
Ravens, the defense is
doing just fine. Coming
off a season-opening shutout of Cincinnati, Balti-
more became only the
third team since the 1970
NFL merger with at least
four interceptions in each
of its first two games.
Next up for Baltimore
(2-0) is a trip to London
to face Jacksonville. The
Browns, meanwhile, hope
to get their first win in
Indianapolis.
guys, they bounced back
off of a difficult game,”
OU head coach Frank
Solich said. “I am pleased
From page 6
with what they got done
today. There are certainly
However, Kansas
things we need to get betresponded with an
18-play, 6:02 drive, result- ter at though, but it was a
ing in a nine-yard scoring good win for us.”
The Jayhawks outpass from Peyton Blender
gained the Bobcats 451to Chase Harrell. The
to-450 in total offense,
Bobcats were left with
just eight seconds on the but OU held a 196-to-108
edge on the ground. Both
first half clock, took a
teams committed one
knee, and went into the
locker room ahead 25-14. turnover and seven penalOhio stretched its lead ties, with flags sending
the Bobcats back 61 yards
back to 18 points with
9:53 left in the third peri- and KU in reverse 50
od, as redshirt junior A.J. yards.
Kansas punted four
Ouellette scored on an
times, pining Ohio inside
eight-yard run. With 18
its own 20 twice. Both of
seconds left in the third,
the Farkas’ punts gave the
OU extended its lead to
KU offense 80-or-more
a game-high 25 points
as Rourke found Andrew yards in front of it. The
Bobcats also held a 5:16
Meyer for a nine-yard
touchdown pass, capping advantage in time of possession.
off a 12-play, 84-yard
“Certainly we will look
drive.
at the big and explosive
The Jayhawks scored
plays that we gave up
31 seconds later, when
and see how we can get
Blender connected with
that under control,” said
Jeremiah Booker for a
one-yard touchdown pass. Solich. “Overall our team
battled. Offensively we
Rui then trimmed the
played well, our receiving
Bobcat lead to 15 points
core did a good job, quarwith a 34-yard field goal
terbacks did a good job,
at the 5:35 mark of the
running backs did a good
fourth quarter.
Ohio’s final score came job and so did the offenwith 2:13 left, when Zer- sive line. I thought it was
a complete game from the
vos made a 46-yard field
offensively standpoint.
goal. As time expired,
Herbert ran in a two-yard We also got things done
on the special teams
touchdown for the Jaystand point, so all-in-all it
hawks, making the final
was a good day.”
margin 42-30 in favor of
On the ground, Ohio
OU.
“It’s a good win for our was led by A.J. Ouel-
lette with 102 yards
and one score on 10
carries. Dorian Brown
rushed for 68 yards on 12
tries, while Julian Ross
added 32 yards on seven
attempts.
Brendan Cope led Ohio
with 104 yards on five
receptions, Meyer added
86 yards and a touchdown on five catches of
his own, while Mangen
hauled in three passes for
35 yards and two scores.
Prior to leaving with an
injury, Papi White hauled
in a 17-yard pass, while
D.L. Knock and Cameron
Odom had a reception
apiece for seven and five
yards, respectively.
In his first start at quarterback for the Bobcats,
Rourke completed 11-of16 passes for 152 yards
and two scores, while
rushing for a touchdown
as well. Also seeing time
behind center, Quinton
Maxwell completed 5-of-6
passes for 102 yards and
a touchdown, with one
interception.
“I think we have two
quarterbacks that can
play and win for us and
we have gotten both of
them a lot of snaps,” said
Solich. “How we will
work it from here on out,
we will see. They are
both capable of getting
snaps in a game and winning for you, but in saying that, you have to see
how the game goes. We
will take it week-by-week.
They are both tremendous competitors, they
are going to continue
to improve and practice
well. If they are both playing at a high level, we will
use both guys. If only one
is playing at a high level,
he is the guy.”
Herbert led the Jayhawks on the ground
with 137 yards and two
scores on 19 attempts, to
go with 18 yards on two
receptions. Steven Sims
Jr. and Quan Hampton
both hauled in six passes
to lead KU receivers,
gaining 60 and 39 yards
respectively. Evan Fairs
had a team-best 77 yards
on three receptions.
Bender was 30-of-47
passing for 343 yards and
two touchdowns, with
one interception thrown
to Bobcat Jalen Fox. The
Green and White defense
came up with five sacks
on the KU quarterback,
led by Trent Smart and
Cleon Aloese with a 1.5
sacks apiece.
Quentin Poling led OU
with nine tackles, followed by Fox and Javon
Hagan with eight each.
This is Ohio’s fifth win
over a Power Five school
in Solich’s 13-year tenure
in Athens. OU is now
3-0 against KU all-time,
with Solich holding a 8-0
record over the Jayhawks.
The Bobcats are on the
road to begin Mid-American Conference play next,
visiting Eastern Michigan
on Saturday at 2 p.m.
Defenders
points, followed by Emily
Childers with 13 points
and a team-high six aces.
Cori Hutchison and
Marcie Kessinger were
next with nine points
apiece, while Katie Westfall and Chasity Deckard
respectively added two
points and one point.
Hutchison also chipped
in four service aces and
Westfall added a pair of
aces for the hosts.
Westfall led the OVCS
net attack with 11 kills
and a block, followed by
Childers with seven kills
and two blocks. Hutchison added four kills to
the winning cause, while
Deckard also had one kill.
The Lady Defenders
host Cross Lanes Christian on Tuesday at 6 p.m.
Bobcats
From page 6
ADVERTISE
Tuesday, September 19, 2017 7
Ohio Valley Christian
responded with seven
straight points while
doubling the lead to
18-9, and Calvary never
came closer than 24-20
before OVCS scored the
final point to secure a 2-0
match lead with another
five-point decision.
Calvary led 3-0, 6-2 and
8-3 in the finale, but the
Lady Defenders broke
away from a 10-all tie
by scoring six straight
points and 15 of the final
21 points while wrapping
up the nine-point win
and the straight-game
triumph.
Makala Sizemore led
the Ohio Valley Christian
service attack with 14
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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS
Milkweed seed pod collection
continues for Monarch butterflies
still green, they
POMEROY,
should be dry,
Ohio – Soil and
gray or brown,
Water Conservaand pop open
tion Districts
with gentle presthroughout Ohio
sure. Place the
are once again colpods in paper
lecting milkweed
seed pods in an
In The bags; plastic
bags collect
effort to help the
Open
moisture.
Monarch butterJim
Why milkweed
flies.
Freeman
in particular?
Last year,
Milkweed is the
Ohioans colonly host plant for the
lected approximately
200 pounds of common Monarch butterfly for
egg laying and caterpilmilkweed seed, which
lar-rearing, and it also
amounts to more than
serves as a food source
19 million individual
for Monarchs and many
milkweed seeds. The
other pollinator specollected pods were
cies. According to the
defluffed, stratified
OPHI, disappearance
(frozen and thawed to
stimulate germination) of milkweed across the
U.S. has contributed to
and used for planting
projects throughout the an 80 percent decline
of the eastern Monarch
state.
butterfly species over
Some of the seeds
were distributed to Soil the last 20 years.
I have noticed two
and Water Conservation
Districts to redistribute. things this year: First,
a lot of people seem to
In Meigs County, we
gave out packets of com- be confused between
mon milkweed seeds to Common Milkweed
interested people at the and Hemp Dogbane,
they look similar when
fair, or to people who
younger, and both ooze
stopped by the office
a milky fluid when their
requesting them.
leaves are broken, but
The Milkweed Seed
they are not the same,
Pod Collection started
two years ago as a pilot and Monarch caterpillars cannot eat Hemp
project in seven counties, and last year went Dogbane. Hemp Dogstatewide with a variety bane also has a tendenof partners helping out cy to be a little invasive.
Second, this has been a
with what became the
Ohio Pollinator Habitat great year for growing
Common Milkweed – so
Initiative (OPHI).
all most people have to
Although the coldo is not mow it down
lection period started
Sept. 1, milkweed seed until late October.
To help make collecpods in our area are not
tion efforts this year
ready to be collected.
Don’t collect pods while even better than last
Wanted
Job opening for full-time general maintenance worker for
Village of Rio Grande. Main duties include, but are not limited
to, Water Meter Reading, Grass Mowing, and General
Maintenance in Village. Hours will be day shift, 40 hrs. a week,
with no beginning benefits. Should have desire to obtain water
and waste water certification. May pick up and return
applications until October 3, 2017 at the Rio Grande Municipal
Building at 174 East College Street, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
Notices
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that on Friday, September 22, 2017
at 10:00 a.m., a public sale will be held at 640 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769. The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
is selling for cash in hand or certified check the following
collateral:
2006 FORD F250 VIN#1FTSW21P26ED93302
2001 FORD EXPLORER VIN#1FMZV77E11UB91178
2003 CHEVROLET PICKUP VIN#3GNEK13T53G149148
2002 FORD F150 SUPERCREW VIN# 1FTRW08L22KA65881
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio,
reserves the right to bid at this sale, and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale. Further, The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company reserves the right to reject any or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”, with
no expressed or implied warranty given.
For further information, or for an appointment to inspect collateral, prior to sale date contract Kristi Mainville at 740-992-4048.
Daily Sentinel
Truex opens playoffs with win
home. As the closing
laps ticked off a week
later, Truex said he
refused to think another
potential win would roll
off the rails.
“I don’t really care a
whole lot about statements. I’m just having
fun,” Truex said. “It’s
important to come here
and not let the pressure
get to you, and I think
we did a good job with
that.”
Truex’s longtime girlfriend, Sherry Pollex ,
was by his side in victory
lane, even as she battles
a recurrence of ovarian
cancer .
“I’m a lot better driver
these days because of
her and what she’s been
through,” he said. “We’ve
learned a lot about life
together. We continue to
face every challenge head
on and not scared.”
Pollex was smart
enough to step aside
from the slime. The Furniture Row Racing crew
was bathed in the ooze
and champagne during
a raucous victory lane
celebration.
Truex entered the
playoffs at the No. 1 seed
with four wins, 18 stage
wins and he totaled
a whopping 53 bonus
points that he can keep
through the first three
playoff rounds.
Truex leads the standings by 27 points over
Larson.
JOLIET, Ill. (AP)
— Martin Truex Jr.
stretched his arms to
his side and waited for
a shower of green slime
, the colored goop traditionally poured over
the heads of game-show
contestants and A-list
celebrities.
Add NASCAR race
winner to the list.
“It’s a lot funner to
watch people get slimed
than it is to get slimed,”
a smiling and sticky
Truex said. “But it’s definitely worth it to get that
after the race.”
Truex might have left
the rest of the field green
with envy that he was
again the driver celebrating in victory lane.
Truex backed up his
regular-season dominance with a victory Sunday in NASCAR’s playoff
opener at Chicagoland
Speedway that solidified
himself as the driver to
beat over the final nine
races as he chases his
first Cup championship.
He raced to his fifth
victory of the season
and earned an automatic
berth in the second
round of the playoffs,
piling on more points in
his bid to compete for
the title in the finale at
Homestead.
A driver with three
Cup wins in his first 10
seasons, Truex has nine
over the last two years
for Furniture Row Racing.
“I think we all realize
it’s just a unique time
in history, in all our
lives, that this has come
together,” team owner
Barney Visser said.
Truex was in cruise
control over the final 55
laps and built a nearly
7-second lead over Chase
Elliott to win at Chicagoland for the second
straight season. Truex’s
car flunked inspection
following the win last
season and the No. 78
Toyota ran into more
issues Sunday — the
car needed four tries
through pre-race inspection before it was cleared
and Truex later overcame an early pit-road
penalty. By the end,
there was no doubt the
path to the NASCAR
championship goes
through the 37-year-old
Truex.
Elliott was second, followed by playoff drivers
Kevin Harvick, Denny
Hamlin and Kyle Larson.
Truex again seemed
right at home on the 1.5mile track. Truex had
wins this season on 1.5mile tracks at Las Vegas
Motor Speedway, Kansas
Speedway and Kentucky
Speedway.
Truex had a win
snatched from him
last week at Richmond
because of a late caution
and he ended up crashing. He and his team
looked downright miserable accepting the regular season title trophy.
“After last week, he
was like, I want to go to
Chicago and lap the field
twice,” crew chief Cole
Pearn said. “I think he
was pretty motivated this
whole weekend.”
Truex insisted he forgot about the debacle at
Richmond the moment
he boarded the plane
Notices
Money To Lend
Apartments/Townhouses
Rentals
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$425 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-5276
or 740-988-6130
$600 FREE RENT
Ellm View Apts.
Rent: $425 & Up
Includes: AC, W/D hook up
& much more.
Landlords pays Water,
Trash, Sewage
304-88-3017
Equal Housing Opportunity
year, the OPHI offers
the following simple
tips:
Make sure that before
you collect seed, you
become familiar with
the common milkweed
to avoid harvesting
pods from similar plants
such as hemp dogbane
and swamp milkweed.
It is best to collect the
pods when they are dry,
grey, or brown. If the
center seam pops with
gentle pressure, they
can be harvested.
Store the pods in
paper bags; plastic bags
collect unwanted moisture.
Put the date and
county collected on the
bag when you turn them
in.
Keep the pods in a
cool, dry area until you
can deliver them to the
nearest collection site.
In Meigs and Gallia
counties, your local
SWCD office is the collection site, or you can
find the nearest collection site at http://www.
agri.ohio.gov/divs/SWC/
searchlocalSWCD.aspx
Collection goes until
Oct. 30.
If you have questions
regarding milkweed
collection, please contact Marci Lininger at
marci_lininger@fws.
gov or Lori Stevenson
at Lori_Stevenson@
fws.gov.
Jim Freeman is the wildlife
specialist for the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District.
He can be contacted weekdays
at 740-992-4282 or at jim.
freeman@oh.nacdnet.mil
Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Wanted
B&E Shoe Service
a division of River city Leather
is seeking a part-time helper,
flexable daytime hours,
full time possible.
Retirees and Former Military
welcome. Bring or send
resume to
314 2nd Ave
Gallipolis, Oh or email
info@rivercityleather.com
740-446-4172
Receptionist/ Dental Assistant
for part time position at
Dental Office,
we will train.
Mail resume to:
703 22nd St
Point Pleasant, WV 25550.
Apartments/Townhouses
New 2 bedroom
1 bath on US 35
$600.00 month
740-645-1286
Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications for
2, 3, & 4 Bedroom HUD
Subsidized Apartments.
Applications are taken
Monday through Wednesday
9:00 am-11:30 am. Office is
located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806.
Houses For Rent
House For Rent
1-Bath 1 Bedroom
call Gary Palmer
740-367-7412
deposit $150.00
$30.00 daily
$150.00 weekly
Rentals
SEEKING TENANTS
For 55+ Community
2 and 3 bedrooms.
Water and trash paid.
In city limits; walking
distance to stores and
restaurants.
Rents starting at
$425 per month!
Safe and quiet!
HUD friendly!
Well maintained!
Great neighbors!
No application fees!
Call (740) 578-4177
Extension #1
Busch’s run
Kyle Busch led 85 laps
from the pole and won
the first stage as he positioned the No. 18 Toyota
as the car to beat.
SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Troyers Greenhouse
Fall Decorations
MUMS variety of six colors
Quantity Discounts
Pumpkins, Gourds,
Indian corn
No sunday Sales
Troyer’s Green House
37770 Dye Road
Rutland OH 45775
60733232
8 Tuesday, September 19, 2017
�COMICS
Daily Sentinel
BLONDIE
Tuesday, September 19, 2017 9
By Dean Young and John Marshall
BEETLE BAILEY
By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer
RETAIL
By Norm Feuti
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
HI AND LOIS
By Chris Browne
Written By Brian & Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne
THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE
By John Hambrock
BABY BLUES
ZITS
By Jerry Scott & Rick Kirkman
By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee
CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green
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RHYMES WITH ORANGE
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Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!
�SPORTS
10 Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Boston
New York
Tampa Bay
Baltimore
Toronto
W
85
82
73
73
70
L
64
67
77
77
80
x-Cleveland
Minnesota
Kansas City
Detroit
Chicago
W
93
78
73
62
60
L
57
71
76
87
89
x-Houston
Los Angeles
Seattle
Texas
Oakland
W
91
76
74
73
66
L
58
73
76
76
83
x-Washington
Miami
Atlanta
New York
Philadelphia
W
90
69
67
65
58
L
59
80
81
84
91
Chicago
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
W
83
79
77
68
66
L
66
70
72
82
84
W
z-Los Angeles
96
Arizona
87
Colorado
82
San Diego
66
San Francisco
58
z-clinched playoff berth
x-clinched division
L
53
63
68
83
93
All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB
.570 —
—
.550 3
—
.487 12½
5½
.487 12½
5½
.467 15½
8½
Central Division
Pct GB WCGB
.620 —
—
.523 14½
—
.490 19½
5
.416 30½
16
.403 32½
18
West Division
Pct GB WCGB
.611 —
—
.510 15
2
.493 17½
4½
.490 18
5
.443 25
12
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB
.604 —
—
.463 21
12½
.453 22½
14
.436 25
16½
.389 32
23½
Central Division
Pct GB WCGB
.557 —
—
.530 4
2½
.517
6
4½
.453 15½
14
.440 17½
16
West Division
Pct GB WCGB
.644 —
—
.580 9½
—
.547 14½
—
.443 30
15½
.384 39
24½
L10
7-3
7-3
3-7
2-8
6-4
Str
L-1
L-1
W-1
W-1
L-1
Home
46-28
43-28
38-38
44-30
39-36
Away
39-36
39-39
35-39
29-47
31-44
L10
9-1
6-4
4-6
3-7
6-4
Str
W-2
W-1
L-2
W-1
L-1
Home
45-30
39-39
39-36
34-40
34-40
Away
48-27
39-32
34-40
28-47
26-49
L10
5-5
4-6
5-5
3-7
7-3
Str
W-4
L-1
L-3
W-1
W-1
Home
44-31
41-34
39-36
39-35
42-33
Away
47-27
35-39
35-40
34-41
24-50
L10
5-5
2-8
6-4
5-5
5-5
Str Home
W-1 45-32
L-1 37-37
L-2 34-41
W-2 33-41
L-1 32-39
Away
45-27
32-43
33-40
32-43
26-52
L10
7-3
7-3
5-5
1-9
5-5
Str
W-6
W-1
L-3
L-5
W-3
Home
46-32
41-33
42-32
39-34
39-36
Away
37-34
38-37
35-40
29-48
27-48
L10
4-6
5-5
7-3
4-6
4-6
Str
L-1
L-1
L-1
W-1
W-1
Home
52-23
48-27
43-32
39-35
34-42
Away
44-30
39-36
39-36
27-48
24-51
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Baltimore 6, N.Y. Yankees 4
Cleveland 3, Kansas City 2
Detroit 12, Chicago White Sox 0
Tampa Bay 3, Boston 2
Oakland 6, Philadelphia 3
Houston 7, Seattle 1
Minnesota 13, Toronto 7
Texas 4, L.A. Angels 2
Monday’s Games
Boston at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Oakland at Detroit, 7:10 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Boston (Pomeranz 16-5) at Baltimore
(Gausman 11-10), 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Berrios 12-7) at N.Y. Yankees
(Sabathia 11-5), 7:05 p.m.
Kansas City (Kennedy 4-11) at Toronto
(Stroman 11-8), 7:07 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Lester 11-7) at Tampa Bay
(Snell 3-6), 7:10 p.m.
Oakland (Gossett 4-9) at Detroit (Bell
0-3), 7:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Giolito 2-2) at Houston (McCullers 7-3), 8:10 p.m.
Cleveland (Clevinger 10-5) at L.A. Angels
(Skaggs 2-5), 10:07 p.m.
Texas (Perez 12-11) at Seattle (Leake 1012), 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.
Oakland at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.
Boston at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
Kansas City at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Cleveland at L.A. Angels, 10:07 p.m.
Texas at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh 2
N.Y. Mets 5, Atlanta 1
Oakland 6, Philadelphia 3
Milwaukee 10, Miami 3
Chicago Cubs 4, St. Louis 3
San Diego 4, Colorado 3
San Francisco 7, Arizona 2
Washington 7, L.A. Dodgers 1
Monday’s Games
L.A. Dodgers at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
Arizona at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
L.A. Dodgers (Darvish 9-12) at Philadelphia (Nola 11-10), 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Anderson 10-3) at Pittsburgh
(Williams 6-8), 7:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Lester 11-7) at Tampa Bay
(Snell 3-6), 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Lugo 6-5) at Miami (Despaigne
0-3), 7:10 p.m.
St. Louis (Wainwright 12-5) at Cincinnati
(Stephens 2-0), 7:10 p.m.
Washington (Gonzalez 14-7) at Atlanta
(Gohara 1-1), 7:35 p.m.
Arizona (Godley 8-7) at San Diego (Lamet
7-7), 10:10 p.m.
Colorado (Marquez 10-7) at San Francisco
(Cueto 7-8), 10:15 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
N.Y. Mets at Miami, 1:10 p.m.
Colorado at San Francisco, 3:45 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
St. Louis at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Washington at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m.
Arizona at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.
MLB Calendar
Oct. 3-4 — Wild-card games.
Oct. 5 — Division Series start.
Oct. 13 — League Championship Series start.
Oct. 24 — World Series starts.
November TBA — Deadline for teams to make qualifying offers to their eligible
former players who became free agents, fifth day after World Series.
November TBA — Deadline for free agents to accept qualifying offers, 15th day
after World Series.
Nov. 13-16 — General managers’ meetings, Orlando, Fla.
Nov. 15-16 — Owners’ meetings, Orlando, Fla.
Point Pleasant hammers Huskies
By Bryan Walters
fumble on the opening
play from scrimmage,
then Smith rumbled 19
yards to paydirt to give
CLENDENIN, W.Va.
the Red and Black a 7-0
— Another solid alladvantage just 12 secaround effort.
onds into regulation.
The Point Pleasant
After forcing a punt,
football team scored a
Point followed with
defensive touchdown,
a scoring drive that
went perfect in the
resulted in a 7-yard run
kicking game and also
by Tucker Mayes. Jacob
churned out 435 yards
of total offense Friday en Bryant added the second
of his five successful
route to a wire-to-wire
PAT kicks at the 8:08
35-14 victory over host
mark, allowing the Big
Herbert Hoover in a
Blacks to increase their
Week 4 non-conference
lead to 14-0.
contest in Kanawha
Cason Payne gave the
County.
guests a 21-0 cushion
The Big Blacks (3-1)
with 3:40 left in the
notched their 23rd
opening canto following
consecutive regular
a 3-yard run, then Payne
season road victory in
found Smith on a 12-yard
convincing fashion as
scoring pass with 26 secthe guests stormed out
to a 21-0 advantage after onds remaining before
halftime to take a 28-0
one quarter and owned
a 28-point cushion at the lead into the break.
Stover trimmed the
intermission.
deficit down to 28-7
The Huskies (1-3)
received a pair of touch- following a 10-yard run
down scores from Justin at the 6:13 mark of the
third, but Payne counStover in the second
tered with a 4-yard run
half, but the hosts ultimately never came clos- at the 6:56 mark of the
er than the final 21-point fourth — again giving
Point Pleasant a 28-point
outcome.
cushion at 35-7.
The PPHS defense
Stover completed the
wasted little time in getscoring after hauling in
ting the night started
a 5-yard pass from Rhett
on a good note as Alec
Smith recovered a Husky White with 3:10 left in
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
regulation.
The Big Blacks outgained the hosts by a
sizable 435-243 overall
margin in total yards of
offense, which included
a hefty 331-108 advantage in rushing yards.
Both teams committed one turnover in the
game and PPHS claimed
a slim 17-15 edge in
first downs while being
flagged eight times for
65 yards. The Huskies,
conversely, were penalized seven times for 35
yards.
PPHS — which produced 331 yards on 34
rushes, an average of 9.7
yards per carry — was
led by Justin Brumfield
with 160 yards on 12
carries, followed by
Payne with 126 yards on
17 totes. Nick Parsons
also chipped in 33 yards
on three attempts.
Payne finished the
night 14-of-17 passing
for 104 yards, throwing one touchdown and
zero interceptions. Josh
Wamsley led the wideouts with six catches for
47 yards, followed by
Mayes with 32 yards on
three grabs.
After dropping a 36-34
decision to Mingo Central on a last second Hail
Mary in Week 1, the Big
Blacks have responded
by winning three
straight road games by a
109-35 margin.
Point Pleasant last lost
a regular season road
contest during Week 7 of
the 2012 campaign following a 34-14 setback
at Oak Hill.
White led the Huskies
with 40 rushing yards
on 17 attempts, followed
by Stover with 37 yards
on three carries and Ben
Kee added 31 yards on
14 tries.
White was 10-of-19
passing for 104 yards,
throwing one touchdown
and zero interceptions.
Jonathan Bradley led
the wideouts with three
catches for 19 yards.
The Point Pleasant
victory was the 500th in
the program’s history,
which dates back to
1921. The Big Blacks are
now 500-443-26 all-time.
After a perfect threegame road trip, Point
returns to Ohio Valley
Bank Track and Field
on Friday in search of
its first home win of the
season when it hosts
Mount View at 7:30 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
Lady Eagles take 2nd at Colt Carnival
By Alex Hawley
Lady Eagles placing in
the top-25 overall.
Tri-Valley won the
BYESVILLE, Ohio — girls team competition
with a score of 57, while
One spot up from last
Eastern’s five scores
year.
were compiled for a 69.
In the 2017 Colt Carnival hosted by Meadow- Led by race-winner Ella
Pumneo with a time of
brook High School, the
Eastern girls cross coun- 19:27.6, Fairless finished
third with a total of 87.
try team — which was
The girls’ race featured
third in the event last
year — earned a second 161 competitors and 25
place finish on Saturday, schools, 15 of which had
the five runners required
with the five fastest
for a team score.
Eastern junior Ally
Durst had the second
fastest time in the event
at 20:25.1, while EHS
senior Jessica Cook
placed third with a time
of 20:35.9. The third
Lady Eagle to cross the
finish line was Rhiannon
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com
Morris with a time of
22:10.8, good enough for
18th place.
Kaitlyn Hawk placed
22nd with a time of
22:36.4 for Eastern’s
fourth score, while Whitney Durst capped off the
group total with a time
of 22:39.9 for a 24th
place finish.
Eastern’s potential
tiebreaking runners were
Lexa Hayes (23:55.7)
and Haylie Blankenship
(27:12.0), who finished
39th and 74th respectively.
Tri-Valley’s boys’
squad — led by Caden
Sauerbrey (16:07.0),
the fastest runner of
195-entrant race —
posted a five-man score
of 59. Caldwell scored 99
to finish second, while
Marietta’s score of 114
placed the Tigers and
third out of 27 teams,
18 of which had enough
runners for a team score.
Eastern had just two
boys in competition,
senior Owen Arix and
sophomore Colton Reynolds, who finished 13th
and 14th respectively.
Just .02 seconds separated the two Eagles,
as Arix had a time of
17:44.28 and Reynolds
came in with a time of
17:44.30.
Eastern is scheduled
to compete again on Saturday at Rio Grande.
Visit www.baumspage.
com for complete results
of the 2017 Colt Carnival.
Buckeyes march past Army, 38-7
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@limanews.com
60734752
MLB
Daily Sentinel
COLUMBUS, Ohio –
J.T. Barrett doesn’t like to
lose to anyone.
Losing to someone
twice? That’s even worse,
least of all if that someone
isn’t even in the stadium.
After Ohio State’s 38-7
win over Army on Saturday, Barrett said one of
the things that drove him
after last week’s defeat at
the hands of Oklahoma
was not letting that disappointment carry over to
this week.
“We don’t lose a lot
of games here. I wasn’t
happy with the way I
played. But you have to
move on otherwise if
you keep on holding on
to a loss you’ll let Oklahoma beat you twice,” the
senior quarterback said.
Barrett and No. 9 Ohio
State (2-1) found some
redemption in their win
over an over-matched
Army team.
He completed 25 of 33
passes for 270 yards and
two touchdowns on a day
when the Buckeyes produced some big plays on
the ground and in the air.
Freshman running back
J.K. Dobbins rushed for
172 yards on 13 carries
and had a touchdown run
of 52 yards and another
36-yard run. K.J. Hill had
8 catches for 74 yards.
And Barrett went into the
Big Ten record books by
passing Drew Brees for
the most touchdowns produced, passing and run,
with 107 in his career.
The record breaker
came on a 9-yard touchdown pass to Austin
Mack in the fourth quarter.
Barrett had been the
focus of much of the criticism OSU faced after its
31-16 loss to Oklahoma,
but he shrugged it off and
didn’t let it affect his performance.
“Being the quarterback
you get a lot of praise
when you win and then
when you lose you get all
the blame. I’m OK with
it,” he said.
Ohio State coach Urban
Meyer said, “Of all the
great players that have
played here, to say you’re
the No. 1 touchdown
maker in the history of
the Big Ten Conference,
that’s awesome. That’s
going to be a hard one to
break. He’s got a lot of
games left.
“He has the heart of a
lion. And he has toughness. He’s one of the
toughest players I’ve
every been around. Those
are pretty good characteristics to have with a guy
touching the ball every
snap,” he said.
Ohio State scored the
first two times it had the
ball on drives of 75 yards
in eight plays and 94
yards in 13 play.
The big play in the
Buckeyes’ first drive was
a 36-yard run by Dobbins
and the touchdown came
on a 5-yard run by Barrett
with 12:23 left in the first
quarter.
During the second
drive, Barrett connected
with Hill on pass plays of
17 yards and 15 yards and
found Austin Mack for
an 18-yard completion. A
two-yard touchdown run
by Dobbins gave Ohio
State a 14-0 at 4:11 of the
first quarter.
Army responded with a
99-yard drive that started
with 1:03 left in the first
quarter and took up the
first 8:34 of the second
quarter.
Darnell Woolfolk’s
three-yard run at the end
of the drive cut the lead
to 14-7. Sean Nuernberger’s 33-yard field goal
increased OSU’s lead to
17-7 at halftime.
Dobbins’ 52-yard touchdown run on Ohio State’s
first possession of the second half made it 24-7. A
20-yard Barrett to Terry
McLaurin touchdown
pass pushed the lead to
31-7 after three quarters.
OSU’s final score,
which came on Barrett’s
record-breaking pass,
made it a 38-7 game.
Ohio State had 586
yards total offense – 316
yards passing and 270
yards rushing. Army
(2-1) had 278 yards total
offense, all but 19 of it
rushing.
�
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burger
durst
freeman
hasseman
hawley
johnson
sanders
spencer
whitehead