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A little rain this afternoon. Rainy times
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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com
Issue 172, Volume 73
Treats on the Trail
Pomeroy man
pleads guilty to
bank robbery
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
POMEROY — A
Pomeroy man who was
charged with the June
2019 robbery of the
Farmers Bank branch
in Tuppers Plains has
pleaded guilty to the
robbery.
Jeffrey A. Coon,
48, pleaded guilty to
the single count of
robbery, a felony of
the second degree, as
indicted in July.
According to
previous Sentinel
reports, on Saturday, June 15, a man
entered the bank,
allegedly demanded
money and then fled
on foot toward State
Route 681. The man,
identified as Coon,
was alleged to have
approached the teller,
demanding money and
threatening to blow up
the bank if he did not
receive the money.
In court on Tuesday,
Coon alleged that his
co-defendant David
McMurray had told
him what to write on
the note, drove him
to Tuppers Plains and
dropped him off at the
Cool Spot to walk to
the bank. The allegations against McMurray are still pending
in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
McMurrary is charged
with one count of
complicity to robbery,
a felony of the second
degree.
In addition to
pleading guilty to the
charge, Coon agreed
to testify truthfully
against McMurray
should his case proceed to trial.
Judge Linda Warner
accepted Coon’s guilty
plea and sentenced
him to an indefinite
term of 5 to 7 1/2
years in prison, in
accordance to the
recommendation of
Prosecutor James K.
Stanley and defense
attorney Britt Wiseman.
Coon’s prison sentence will not begin
until he has completed
Julie Spaun | Courtesy photo
Eastern Elementary teachers and staff joined in the Halloween fun last week, dressing as a box of Crayola Crayons for the school’s
Treats on the Trail event. Each of the teachers dressed as a different color crayon, coming together to form the box of crayons. Photos
from Trick or Treat and Halloween activities from around the county appear inside today’s edition, as well as upcoming editions, and
online at mydailysentinel.com. Trick or Treat photos may be submitted on The Daily Sentinel Facebook page or by email to tdsnews@
aimmediamidwest.com
Holiday open house event set for Monday
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
See ROBBERY | 5
Agricultural
Society election
set for Monday
ROCKSPRINGS — The annual election for the
Meigs County Agricultural Society Board of of
Directors will be held on Nov. 4 from 5-9 p.m.
The election and the regular meeting (to be held
at 7 p.m.) will be in the Rutland Bottle Gas Building.
The Society will be electing six directors for a
three year term beginning December 1, 2019 and
ending November 30, 2022.
Those up for re-election are Sam Evans, Wes
Karr, Tom Pullins, Tara Rose Roberts, C. Brent
Rose and Adam Smith.
New candidates are Jason Ervin, Elizabeth Lawrence and Shawn M. Seth.
In order to vote you must have purchase a membership ticket prior to Oct. 28. You can vote for up
to six candidates.
Candidates previously filed a petition with 10
verified signatures of individuals holding a membership ticket with the secretary of the Meigs
County Agricultural Society.
Those with questions may contact the secretary,
Debbie Watson or any fair board director.
INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Local: 4
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Comics: 8
Classifieds: 9
Weather: 10
Wednesday, October 30, 2019 s 50¢
POMEROY — The
spooky Halloween
decorations which lined
the store fronts for last
week’s always popular
Treat Street are being
replaced with the greens
and reds of Christmas
time as Pomeroy prepares for the holiday
season.
The annual Pomeroy
Merchant’s Association
Christmas Open House
event will take place on
Monday, the unofficial
kick-off to the Christmas
shopping season.
Shops in the downtown area have been
busy preparing for
the annual Christmas
Open House shopping
day which will include
extended shopping
hours on Monday, Nov.
4. Greenery and a large
wreath were placed on
the Meigs County Courthouse this week, while
other wreaths and decorations have been going
up around town in preparation for the event.
Shops like Weaving Stitches, Hartwell
House, Front Paige Outfitters, and Clark’s Jewelry, will have extended
File photo
Shoppers will return to Pomeroy on Monday for the annual Christmas open house shopping day at
the downtown merchants.
hours on Nov. 4, some
open from 9 a.m. to 9
p.m., with others open
from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Shoppers from around
the county, and many
from out of town, make
their way to Pomeroy
each year to be part of
the event, picking up
gifts and decor for the
holiday season.
Whether you are looking for that perfect gift
for the hard to please
person, the item to complete your Christmas
display or those earrings
to match your outfit for
the holiday parties, there
is no need to look any
further than downtown
Pomeroy with shops to
meet all your holiday
needs.
There will be giveaways, special promotions and refreshments
throughout the day at
the various shops.
While the open house
event is the kick-off to
the season, local small
businesses like those
in downtown Pomeroy
will also be taking part
in Small Business Saturday, which takes place
the Saturday following
Thanksgiving.
For additional details
on the Open House
shopping event at the
local merchants see
their ads inside the print
editions of The Daily
Sentinel this week, as
well as the Saturday
Point Pleasant Register
and the Sunday TimesSentinel.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
Middleport Council discusses upcoming projects
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Village Council awarded a
solid waste bid during their meeting on Monday evening.
Council awarded the solid waste
bid to Rumpke for $30.50 per ton
of waste. At the beginning of the
year, Middleport will be handling
their own refuse throughout the
village. Village Administrator Joe
Woodall said the only other bid
he received was verbally from the
Meigs County Transfer Station for
$46 per ton, however, the transfer
station cannot handle the daily
demand of Middleport.
Council discussed the planning and design of the waterline
project. Council was to award the
bid during Monday’s meeting, but
they tabled the discussion. Woodall received two bids for the planning and design contract. One bid
was from Burgess and Niple, the
same engineering firm overseeing
the Middleport Hill slip. Burgess
and Niple’s bid was for $555,000,
which includes a full-time engineer
to be onsite during the complete
project. The second bid was from
Choice One Engineering, the engineer overseeing the current sewer
project. Choice One’s bid was
$240,000 and does not include a
full-time engineer for the project.
Woodall told council he believes
the full-time representative is
essential to the project’s success.
Craig Richards with Burgess and
Niple said council could sign the
agreement but not authorize the
work, meaning they could choose
not to authorize the full-time engineer. That option would save the
village $218,000. Fiscal Officer
Sue Baker and Woodall are hopeful
that the project will qualify with
funding through grants and loan
forgiveness, due to the health and
See COUNCIL | 5
�OBITUARIES/NEWS
2 Wednesday, October 30, 2019
OBITUARIES
MARVIN CLARENCE MILLIRON
MIDDLEPORT —
Marvin Clarence Milliron,
91, of Middleport, Ohio,
passed away peacefully at
home on Oct. 28, 2019.
He was born in Cheshire,
Ohio, on June 13, 1928,
son of the late Henry and
Marie Milliron.
He was Baptized into
the Baptist Church in
Cheshire, Ohio. He was a
36 year employee of Rutland Bottle Gas where he
retired in 1995. He was a
United States Army veteran stationed in California
and honorably discharged
as a corporal in 1950.
Family meant everything
to him. He enjoyed spending time with them and
watching them grow. He
was a gifted steel guitar
player and played in a
band during his younger
years. He loved country
music and enjoyed watching the wildlife around
his home.
He is survived by his
wife Eva Rife, who he
married on Aug. 22,
1949; his sister, Alice
(Ronald) Jacobs; sister-inlaw, Bonnie Rife; daughters, Thiry Diane Milliron
and Tammy (David)
Blake; grandsons, Luke
(Carrie) Milliron, Matthew (Tammy) Milliron,
Jacob (Kristi) Blake and
Philip (Lauren) Blake;
granddaughter, Elizabeth
(Dillon) Skees; great
grandchildren, Gabriel,
Samuel, Abram, Luci,
Jacob, Lucas, Seth and
Kayla; and numerous
nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by his son, James
Milliron; daughter,
Melanie Fawn; brothers,
Orville, Norman, Delbert
and Melvin; and sister,
Belvie.
Graveside funeral
services will be held on
Thursday, Oct. 31, 2019,
at 1 p.m. at Bradford
Cemetery. Visiting hours
will be on Thursday from
11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Middleport.
In lieu of flowers,
please consider making
a donation in memory
of Marvin Milliron to
the Wounded Warrior
Project at support.woundedwarriorproject.org/
Donate.
FISHER
GALLIPOLIS — Kermit Fisher, 92, of Gallipolis
passed away on Tuesday, October 29, 2019 at Abbyshire Place in Bidwell.
The funeral service for Kermit will be held at noon
on Friday, November 1, 2019 at Willis Funeral Home
with Pastor Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be
at 2 p.m. on Friday, November 1, 2019 in the Letart
Falls Cemetery, Racine. Military honors will be given
at the graveside by the Gallia County Funeral Detail.
Friends may call prior to the funeral service from 11
a.m.-noon on Friday at the funeral home.
SAUNDERS
GLENWOOD, W.Va. — Rose Marie Jakubisin Saunders, 82, of Glenwood, W.Va. died on Oct. 27, 2019 in
her home.
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, W.Va., Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2019 at
11 a.m. with Pastor Don Reynolds officiating. Burial
will follow in the Saunders Cemetery in Glenwood.
Friends were invited to visit the family at the funeral
home, Tuesday evening, Oct. 29, 2019 from 6-8 p.m.
Daily Sentinel
UK lawmakers back December 12 election
By Jill Lawless
and Danica Kirka
Associated Press
LONDON — Britons
will be heading out to
vote in the dark days
of December after the
House of Commons
on Tuesday backed an
early national vote that
could break the country’s
political impasse over
Brexit — or turn out to
be merely a temporary
distraction.
Prime Minister Boris
Johnson hopes electing
a new crop of lawmakers
will give his Conservative Party a majority
and break the stalemate
that blocked his plan to
take Britain out of the
European Union this
month. This week the EU
granted Britain a threemonth Brexit extension
until Jan. 31.
But after three years
of inconclusive political
wrangling over Brexit,
British voters are weary
and the results of an election are hard to predict.
The House of Commons voted 438-20
— with dozens of lawmakers abstaining — for
a bill authorizing an
election on Dec. 12. It
will become law once it
is approved Wednesday
by the unelected House
of Lords, which does not
have the power to overrule the elected Commons.
Even before the result
was announced, the
political parties were in
campaign mode.
Johnson — who has
had to abandon his vow
to lead Britain out of the
EU on Oct. 31 “do or die”
— accused his opponents
of seeking to frustrate
voters’ decision to leave
the EU and prolong the
Brexit process “until the
12th of never.”
“There is only one way
to get Brexit done in the
face of this unrelenting
Kirsty Wigglesworth | AP
A pedestrian walks past pro-Brexit demonstrators outside Parliament in London on Tuesday. The
leader of the U.K.’s opposition Labour Party told fellow lawmakers Tuesday that he’ll back an
early election for Britain now that the prospect of crashing out of the European Union without a
deal has been taken off the table. The move by Jeremy Corbyn set the country up for an election
December 12, its first December election since 1923.
parliamentary obstructionism, this endless,
willful, fingers crossed,
‘not me guv’ refusal to
deliver on the mandate of
the people — and that is
to refresh this Parliament
and give the people a
choice,” Johnson said.
The road to polling
day opened up when the
main opposition Labour
Party, which had opposed
three previous attempts
by Johnson to trigger
an election, changed its
position.
Now that Brexit has
been delayed, Labour
leader Jeremy Corbyn
said his party would vote
in favor of an early election because the prospect
that Britain could crash
out of the EU without
a divorce deal had been
taken off the table.
Brexit will form the
unavoidable backdrop to
the election, but the leftof-center Labour Party
is calculating that voters
will want to talk about
issues such as health
care, education and social
welfare — all of which
saw years of funding
cuts by Conservative
governments — more
than about Brexit. The
party’s position on the
EU is convoluted, with a
split between those who
want to go through with
Brexit and those who
want a new referendum
on whether to remain in
the bloc.
The strongly pro-EU
Liberal Demcorats have
been eating away at
Labour support in Britain’s big cities.
“The choice at this
election could not be
clearer,” Corbyn said
in a statement that did
not mention Brexit. “A
Labour government will
be on your side, while
Boris Johnson’s Conservatives — who think
they’re born to rule —
will only look after the
privileged few.”
The looming vote
comes two and a half
years before the next
scheduled election, due
in 2022, and will be the
country’s first December
election since 1923.
Lawmakers rejected an
attempt by the Labour
Party to hold the election on Dec. 9. The party
argued the earlier date
would mean more students could vote because
universities would not
have begun their Christmas holidays.
Cabinet Office Minister Oliver Dowden said
Dec. 12 was preferable
because it gave lawmakers a few more days to
finish up parliamentary
business, and retained
Britain’s tradition of
holding elections on
Thursdays.
Earlier, a last-minute
hitch to the government’s plans emerged
when opposition parties
announced plans to try
to amend the terms of an
early election to lower
the voting age from 18 to
16 and expand the voting base to include citizens of the 27 other EU
nations who are living in
Britain.
The government said it
would abandon the bill if
that plan succeeded. The
amendments were not
chosen for a vote by parliamentary authorities,
who judged that they
would have fundamentally altered the legislation.
MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The
Daily Sentinel appreciates your input to the
community calendar.
To make sure items can
receive proper attention,
all information should be
received by the newspaper
at least five business days
prior to an event. All
coming events print on a
space-available basis and
in chronological order.
Events can be emailed
to: TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.
Thursday,
Oct. 31
MIDDLEPORT —
Inclusions, located at 126
S. Fourth Ave. in Middleport, will host a Haunted
House from 7-11 p.m.
Admission is $2.
MIDDLEPORT —
Hope Baptist Church,
570 Grant Street, Middleport, Ohio, will host a
refreshment station on
the church parking lot
from 5:30-7:30 p.m. Free
hotdogs, candies, and
beverages will be offered
to those who stop by
while making the local
trick-or-treat rounds. Pastor Ron Branch invites all
to let the Hope Baptist
congregation extend a
ministry in the name of
Jesus Christ.
Friday,
Nov. 1
REEDSVILLE — A
community Tailgate party
will be held at Eastern
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC
(USPS 436-840)
High School, hosted by
the Class of 2021. The
event will include chicken
noodle dinner, bash-a-car
event, prizes for No. 1
fan and best tailgater, a
pep rally, cornhole and
more. The event is from
6-9 p.m.
MARIETTA — The
Buckeye Hills Regional
Council Executive Committee, which also serves
as the RTPO Policy Committee, will meet at 11:30
a.m. located at 1400 Pike
Street, Marietta, Ohio. If
you have any questions
regarding this meeting,
please contact Jenny Simmons at 740-376-1026.
HEMLOCK GROVE —
Meigs County Pomona
Grange will meet at Hemlock Grange Hall with
officers conference at 6
p.m. followed by meeting
at 7 p.m. All members are
urged to attend.
Saturday,
Nov. 2
POMEROY — A 100th
birthday celebration
for May Roach of West
Columbia will be held
from 2-6 p.m. in the fellowship hall of Hillside
Baptist Church, 39724
State Route 143, Pomeroy. The family asks that
no gifts be brought. Come
celebrate many years and
memories.
BURLINGHAM —
Burlingham Cemetery
Association public meeting at 10 a.m. at the Burlingham Church.
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878
will meet with potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting at 7:30
p.m. All members are
urged to attend.
ORANGE TWP. —
The next meeting of the
Orange Township Trustees will be at 8 a.m. at
the Tuppers Plains Fire
Department
Sunday,
Nov. 3
POMEROY — Hemlock Grove Christian
Church will host its
Thanksgiving Outreach
beginning at 10 a.m. at
38387 Hemlock Grove
Road in Pomeroy. Everyone is welcome. Guest
speaker will be Keith
Wasserman, Founder and
Executive Director of
Good Works in Athens,
Ohio. A chili cook-off will
follow with a $50 cash
prize being awarded to
the maker of the winning
chili. A special presentation by Boy Scout Troop
of America #299 also
will take place. For more
information about the
Thanksgiving Outreach,
contact Pastor Diana
Kinder at 740-591-5960.
POMEROY — The
Pomeroy Firemen’s Association will be hosting a
chicken BBQ, with serving to begin at 11 a.m.
The BBQ will be held at
the Pomeroy Fire Depart-
ment, located at 125
Butternut Avenue. Meals
cost $9 and include chicken half, baked potato,
baked beans, and dinner
roll. Delivery is available
to locations where 5 or
more dinners are purchased. To order on the
day of the BBQ, call the
fire station at 740-9922663, beginning at 9 a.m.
Monday,
Nov. 4
RUTLAND TWP. —
Rutland Township Trustees will meet at 7:30 a.m.
at the Township Garage.
LETART TWP. — The
regular meeting of the
Letart Township Trustees will be held at 5 p.m.
at the Letart Township
Building.
ROCKSPRINGS —
The next regular meeting
of the Meigs County Agricultural Society will be
at 7 p.m. in the Rutland
Bottle Gas Building.
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
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Prices are subject to change at any time.
CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
MEIGS BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will
only list event information that
is open to the public and will be
printed on a space-available basis.
SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
Trick or Treat times
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
Oct. 31 — Chester, 6-7 p.m.;
Middleport 6-7 p.m.; Racine 6-7
p.m. with party at the firehouse
after; Syracuse 6-7:30 p.m.
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.
Coin exhibition
POMEROY — OH-Kan Coin
Club will be having their Coin Exhibition on Nov. 1 from 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
in the Farmers Bank Lobby, 640 E.
Main St., Pomeroy. There will be
local coin, currency, postcards, and
photos. Meigs County tokens from
Pomeroy National & Citizens from
the 1800’s will be on display. Come
by and see a part of Meigs County
history (not for sale). Free evaluations will be offered if you have old
coins. There will also be an actual
Lazy Duce ($2 bill from the Pomeroy National Bank) on display.
Revival
POMEROY — Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel, 39589 State Route 143,
Pomeroy, will host a revival Nov.
1-3 with Evangelist Rev. Richard
Midkiff from Mount Hope, W.Va.
Services are at 7 p.m. on Friday and
Saturday and 6:30 p.m. on Sunday.
For more information contact Pas-
tor Mark Nix at 740-992-2952.
Bitanga’s Breakathon
MIDDLEPORT — The annual
Bitanga’s Breakathon will take
place on Nov. 8 and 9 at the
Middleport Church of Christ Family Life Center. Friday will include
a concert by Jake Dunn & The
Blackbirds at 6 p.m. and a craft
show beginning at 4 p.m. Tickets
for the concert are $10. On Saturday, events will begin at 10 a.m.
with the Breakathon, craft show
and musical performances by the
local high school bands. Admission
on Saturday is free. All proceeds
benefit the Southern, Meigs and
Wahama marching bands.
�NEWS
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, October 30, 2019 3
Colonel testifies he raised concerns about Ukraine, Trump
By Lisa Mascaro,
Mary Clare Jalonick
and Colleen Long
Associated Press
WASHINGTON —
Defying White House
orders, an Army officer
serving with President
Donald Trump’s National
Security Council testified
to impeachment investigators Tuesday that he
twice raised concerns
over Trump’s push to
have Ukraine investigate
Democrats and Joe Biden.
Alexander Vindman, a
lieutenant colonel who
served in Iraq and later
as a diplomat, told House
investigators behind
closed doors that he listened to Trump’s July 25
call with new Ukrainian
President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy and reported
his concerns to the NSC’s
lead counsel, according to
his prepared testimony.
His arrival in military
blue, with medals, created a striking image as
he entered the Capitol
and made his way to the
secure briefing room.
“I was concerned by
the call,” Vindman said,
according to his testimony obtained by The
Associated Press. “I did
not think it was proper
to demand that a foreign
government investigate
a U.S. citizen, and I
was worried about the
implications for the U.S.
government’s support of
Ukraine.”
Vindman, a 20-year military officer, was the first
official who listened in on
the phone call to testify as
the impeachment inquiry
reaches deeper into the
Trump administration
and Democrats prepare
for the next, public phase
of the probe. He was also
the first current White
House official to appear
before the impeachment
panels. With the administration directing staff not
to appear, he was issued a
subpoena to testify.
The inquiry is looking into Trump’s call, in
which he asked Zelenskiy
for a “favor” — to investigate Democrats — that
the Democrats say was
a quid pro quo for military aid and could be an
impeachable offense.
Trump took to Twitter Tuesday to denounce
the probe as a “sham,”
adding: “Why are people
that I never even heard of
testifying about the call.
Just READ THE CALL
TRANSCRIPT AND
THE IMPEACHMENT
HOAX IS OVER!”
Vindman, who arrived
in the United States as a
3-year-old from the former Soviet Union, wrote
that it was his “sacred
duty” to defend the United States.
Some Trump allies,
looking for ways to
discredit Vindman, questioned the colonel’s loyalties because he was born
in the region. But the line
of attack was rejected by
some Republicans, including Rep. Liz Cheney, who
said it was “shameful” to
criticize his patriotism.
His appearance came a
day after Speaker Nancy
Pelosi announced the
House will vote on a
resolution to affirm the
impeachment investigation, set rules for public
hearings and outline the
potential process for writing articles of impeachment against Trump.
The 8-page resolution
released Tuesday calls
for open hearings and
requires the House intelligence committee to
submit a report outlining
Manuel Balce Ceneta | AP
Army Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vindman, who served on
the National Security Council, center, arrives on Capitol Hill in
Washington on Tuesday to appear before a House Committee on
Foreign Affairs, Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, and
Committee on Oversight and Reform joint interview. Vindman
testified that he listened to President Donald Trump’s July 25 call
with new Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and reported
his concerns to the NSC’s lead counsel.
its findings and recommendations. The Judiciary Committee would
review the evidence and
potentially report articles
of impeachment.
House Rules Committee Chairman James
McGovern of Massachusetts said the resolution
will “provide a clear path
forward” as the House
begins a public phase of
the impeachment inquiry.
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell said
he and other GOP lawmakers will review the
House language to see if
it passes a “smell test” of
fairness to Trump.
The House is expected
to vote on the resolution
on Thursday.
Vindman said that in
spring of this year he
became aware of “outside
influencers” promoting
what he called a “false
narrative of Ukraine” that
undermined U.S. efforts.
Ukraine, in trying to
become a vibrant democracy integrated with the
West, is a bulwark against
overt Russian aggression,
he said in his opening
statement.
Other officials have testified that Ukraine policy
was increasingly being
handled by the president’s
personal attorney, Rudy
Giuliani, and others in the
administration outside
regular policy-making
channels. One diplomat
testified it was “highly
irregular.”
Vindman testified
that he first reported his
concerns after an earlier
meeting July 10 in which
U.S. Ambassador to the
European Union Gordon
Sondland stressed the
importance of having
Ukraine investigate the
2016 election as well
as Burisma, a company
linked to the family of
Biden, a 2020 Democratic
presidential candidate.
Vindman says he told
Sondland that “his statements were inappropriate, that the request to
investigate Biden and his
son had nothing to do
with national security,
and that such investigations were not something
the NSC was going to get
involved in or push.”
That differs from the
account of Sondland, a
17th Annual
Christmas Open House
Weaving Stitches
Gift Shop
Experience The Magic!
Monday November 4th
9 am-9 pm
106 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-1702
OH-70155404
OH-70155672
Door Prizes
Drawn Hourly
wealthy businessman
who donated $1 million
to Trump inauguration
and testified before the
impeachment investigators that no one from
the NSC “ever expressed
any concerns.” He also
testified that he did not
realize any connection
between Biden and Burisma. Sondland was dubbed
one of “the three amigos,”
along with Energy Secretary Rick Perry and
special envoy Kurt Volker,
working on Ukraine outside normal channels.
For the call between
Trump and Zelenskiy,
Vindman said he listened
in the Situation Room
with colleagues from the
NSC and Vice President
Mike Pence’s office and
was concerned. He said
he again reported his concerns to the NSC’s lead
counsel.
He wrote, “I realized
that if Ukraine pursued
an investigation into the
Bidens and Burisma, it
would likely be interpreted as a partisan play
which would undoubtedly
result in Ukraine losing
the bipartisan support it
has thus far maintained.
This would all undermine
U.S. national security.”
Vindman served in
various military and
diplomatic posts before
joining the NSC. He was
the director for European
affairs and a Ukraine
expert under Fiona Hill,
a former official who
testified earlier in the
impeachment probe.
Hill worked for former
national security adviser
John Bolton.
Vindman attended
Zelenskiy’s inauguration
with a delegation led by
Energy Secretary Perry,
and he and Hill were both
part of a Ukraine brief-
ing with Sondland that
others have testified irritated Bolton at the White
House.
He said he is not
the whistleblower, the
still unnamed government official who filed
the initial complaint
over Trump’s conversation with the Ukraine
president that sparked
the House impeachment
inquiry. He said he does
not know who the whistleblower is.
“I am a patriot, and it is
my sacred duty and honor
to advance and defend
OUR country, irrespective of party or politics,”
wrote Vindman, who
was wounded in Iraq and
awarded a Purple Heart.
“For over twenty years
as an active duty United
States military officer and
diplomat, I have served
this country in a nonpartisan manner, and have
done so with the utmost
respect and professionalism for both Republican
and Democratic administrations,” he wrote.
Thursday’s expected
formal House vote
would be the first on the
impeachment inquiry and
aims to nullify complaints
from Trump and his allies
that the process is illegitimate and unfair.
Democrats insist they
aren’t yielding to Republican pressure. Pelosi
dismissed the Republican
argument that impeachment can’t begin without
formal approval from the
House and brushed off
their complaints about
the closed-door process.
“I do not care. I do not
care. This is a false thing
with them,” Pelosi said.
“Understand, it has nothing to do with them. It
has to do with how we
proceed.”
�4 Wednesday, October 30, 2019
LOCAL
Daily Sentinel
Trick or Treat 2019
Alexa Cook, age 7, and Rhyland Eddy, age 6, attend Pomeroy’s Treat
Street.
Ashlyn Bradford, Ava Richardson, Zeke Richardson, and Sawyer Bradford are ready for Trick or Treat.
Courtesy photos
Little unicorn Calli Cook, age 1, is ready for Trick or Treat.
Braylee, age 3, RaeAnn, age 6, and Gatlin, age 3, at Forked Run
Halloween Camp.
Kale Butler and Addie Burris had matching costumes for Trick or
Treat.
Cianna and Zoey Kinder are dressed for Trick or Treat.
Aubree Eddy, age 3, is ready for trick-or-treating.
Spencer King and Brooklyn Keaton trick-or-treat in Tuppers Plains.
Rylie Wolfe wore this scary costume to Pomeroy’s Treat Street.
Carter Hysell, age 2, was dressed as Blippi for Trick or Treat in Graecyn Eskew, age 5, was Blake, age 5, attended Treat
dressed as The Spider Queen.
Street in Pomeroy.
Rutland.
�NEWS
Daily Sentinel
Robbery
From page 1
his current prison term
for violating his community control. Coon
had been granted judicial release a few weeks
before the robbery in
June, and was sent back
to prison following his
arrest, a violation of the
terms of his community
control. He will also be
subject to three years of
mandatory post release
control following his
release from prison.
Representatives from
Farmers Bank were in
attendance for the hearing on Tuesday and had
submitted written victim
impact statements to the
court.
Victim Assistance
Director Theda Petrasko
read two of the statements in court, including one from the teller
who was approached
by Coon that day in the
bank. The statements
spoke to the psychological impact of the robbery on them and how it
has impacted their lives
since that day.
This is not the first
time the bank, and many
of the employees, have
been through a robbery.
The Farmers Bank in
Tuppers Plains was previously robbed in 2009,
2013 and 2015.
According to previously published Daily
Sentinel reports, Sean
Bradford Mitchell, formerly of Athens, robbed
the bank in September
2009 before fleeing to
Mississippi. He then
reportedly robbed a
bank there in what he
says was an attempt to
be shot by authorities.
He was apprehended by
law enforcement following a standoff in November 2009.
Under questioning,
Mitchell reportedly told
Wednesday, October 30, 2019 5
law enforcement that he
had robbed the Farmers
Bank in Tuppers Plains.
He is currently serving
eight years in a Mississippi prison for that
crime. He was sentenced
to 15 years, with the
final seven years as postrelease control. He is
scheduled to be released
in 2022, according to
the Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction.
Another robbery
occurred in May 2013
when Chad R. Rennicker, then 25, entered
the bank with a gun and
demanded money. He
and an accomplice were
arrested June 1, 2013, in
Ripley, W.Va.
Rennicker was charged
in that incident with
six counts of kidnapping and one count of
aggravated robbery, all
of which merge for sentencing purposes. On
Sept. 30, 2013, Judge
Mike Ward sentenced
Rennicker to eight years
in prison to run consecutive to the time he
is currently serving in
another unrelated case
from Belmont County.
He is scheduled for
release in 2023.
His accomplice was
not charged, according to
previous reports.
In June 2015, Amanda
Sawyer, then 31, entered
the bank with a nylon
stocking over her head
and sunglasses to cover
her eyes. She was apprehended more than six
weeks later while reportedly planning to rob the
TNT Pit Stop in Chester.
Sawyer was sentenced
to nine years in prison
for her crimes and was
ordered to pay back the
money she stole from
the bank. She remains
incarcerated with an
estimated release date in
2024.
THEIR VIEW
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
I am not a Communist — a T-shirt I need to buy
Council
From page 1
safety concerns with the current waterline system.
Council President Brian Conde said he needed
more time to process the information. Council
member Ben Reed agreed that the topic needed to
be examined in further detail. Mayor Sandy Iannarelli set a special meeting for Monday, November
4 at 6:30 p.m. to discuss and award the planning
and design of the waterline project.
In his report to council, Woodall said,
-The bricks have been replaced on Lincoln Street
and the intersection of South 4th Avenue and Main
Street.
-He submitted the policy for refuse to council
for their review. The rates for the refuse service
are currently set by an ordinance, which will need
amended for dumpsters. The brush pick-up has also
been made more specific by saying that grass and
weeds need to be bagged.
-The Ohio Department of Transportation
(ODOT) plans to install signs on the highway to
give directions for “Historical Downtown Middleport.” The signs should be installed during summer
2020.
-One property owner on Brownell Avenue has
agreed to sell the property to repair the Middleport
Hill slip. There is no word on the other property at
this time. After both houses are acquired, they will
need to be tested for asbestos and other safety concerns before demolition begins. After the houses
are removed, the boring equipment will move in to
test the material and condition of the hill.
Woodall and Iannarelli announced that the
Themed Christmas Tree Display will be in the
lot adjacent to Dave Diles Park again this year.
Schools, churches, organizations, memorials,
causes and individuals are invited to decorate a tree
to display for the season. Registration forms will be
at the water office on Pearl Street and need to be
completed by Wednesday, Nov. 20. The decorating
and set up will be on Saturday, Nov. 23.
Iannarelli will announce on Wednesday if the
Trick-or-Treat events will be rescheduled. The
weather forecast is predicting rain all day and evening on Thursday.
Conde asked council to send a letter to Suddenlink in response to removing the Columbus stations
form the television listings. Village Solicitor recommended sending the letter to the Federal Communications Commission and to Suddenlink.
Council canceled the meeting scheduled for Nov.
11 due to Veterans Day. The next, regularly scheduled, Middleport Village Council meeting will be
held Monday, Nov. 25 at 7 p.m. at the Village Hall
on Pearl Street.
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance writer for The Daily Sentinel.
Bits and pieces for your consideration
Do you find yourself
paying closer attention
to the obituaries now
than you did in earlier
years? Are your white
shirt and tie or your
“Sunday go to meeting”
dresses getting frequent
wear as you pay your
respects to high school
friends and relatives who
have departed this earth?
Have you awakened
one day and realized that
you are the patriarch or
matriarch of your family
or that you are the most
senior member of a team
at work?
Recently, one of my
exemplary students
at Edison State Leah
Pistone presented an
outstanding informative speech on bone
collecting. Bones
always remind us that
underneath it all, we are
skeletons and our time
on earth is temporary.
During the speech,
Pistone referred to cultures where end-of-life
issues are expected and
accepted as part of the
natural order. She spoke
of the Day of the Dead
(Dia de Muertos, Oct. 31
through Nov. 2, 2019),
celebrated in Mexico and
in some Mexican-American communities. Sugar
skulls and parades with
performers representing
the deceased with many
skeletons abound as do
altars displaying drinks,
foods, photographs and
candles where the dead
are invited to join the living to celebrate. I’ve traveled extensively in Mexico and have been tutored
from Walden, first
by Professor
published in 1954, in
Angelina Veyna
the chapter entitled
and Dr. Mary
“Where I Lived and
Castellano, so
What I Lived For.”
I am aware of
In explaining why he
many Mexican
had spent two years
customs, which
of his life in a small
show love and Vivian
cabin at Walden
respect for fam- Blevins
ily and friends Contributing Pond, Thoreau
wrote, “I went to
as the past
columnist
the woods because I
merges with
wished to live delibthe present.
erately, to front only the
As I reflect on the
essential facts of life, and
issue of mortality and
see if I could not learn
Mexican traditions,
what it had to teach, and
I remember teaching
not, when I came to die,
American playwright
Thornton Wilder’s “Our discover that I had not
Town” decades ago. The lived.” On my first trip
to Walden Pond in the
plot of this play, first
produced in 1938, is that early seventies, I went
to the site where that
Emily Webb has died in
cabin had once stood,
child birth but wants to
return to spend just one dug deep into the earth
day in her town, Grover’s and retrieved a rock. I
keep that rock on my
Corners. She selects
mantle as a reminder of
her twelfth birthday as
Thoreau’s message to
the day to return. By
me and to the thousands
the final act of the play
she asks the Stage Man- who have embraced his
teachings.
ager, “Do any human
And for those of you
beings ever realize life
while they live it? Every, who have watched Morevery minute?” And she gan Freeman and Jack
Nicholson explore their
proclaims, “Oh, earth,
you’re too wonderful for lives in the 2007 movie
anybody to realize you.” “The Bucket List,”
perhaps you have been
In June of 2005 Steve
Jobs addressed the Stan- moved to think of your
ford University graduat- past and to create your
ing class and told them, own list of what you
want to do before the
“Your time is limited,
Grim Reaper knocks at
so don’t waste it living
your door.
someone else’s life.” In
It’s time to stop makspite of his wealth and
ing excuses: I don’t
intellect, Jobs died six
have the time. I don’t
years later at age 56.
As a long-time student have the talent. What
if I try and fail? Where
of American literature,
will I locate the resourcI have for decades used
es? What if my family
as my mantra Henry
disapproves?
David Thoreau’s lines
Have you always
wanted to write a collection of poems or
short stories, take a pottery class, volunteer to
teach reluctant readers,
travel to Ireland, patent
an invention, learn to
play the guitar? Remember, this is your list, not
mine or anyone else’s.
As fall arrives, maybe
it’s time to rethink what
you value, reflect on
your future choices,
and map out a strategy
to change even a small
part of your life. For me
it’s all about family, my
students, and my writing as I seek to explore
subjects that might have
meaning to my readers.
If you have suggestions for topics I might
wish to explore, just
send me an email. As
usual, I plan to interview a Veteran for
the week in which we
celebrate this important group, and I have
recently been interviewing female drug addicts
who are in recovery.
No, I do not write about
flowers and babbling
brooks — although I
will write about the
near extinction of certain types of flora and
polluted rivers.
Vivian B. Blevins. Ph.D., served as
a community college president
for 15 years in Kentucky, Texas,
California, and Missouri before
returning to Ohio to teach
telecommunication employees
from around the country
and students at Edison State
Community College and to work
with veterans. Reach her at
937-778-3815 or vbblevins@woh.
rr.com.
THEIR VIEW
Like most red-blooded
Americans, I own way
too many T-shirts. I
probably have over
40 T-shirts in every
conceivable color (but
mostly gray), with every
conceivable saying (but
mostly I heart beer), in
every conceivable size
(but mostly too tight).
The wife does not
understand my penchant for T-shirts and
thinks I should get rid
of most of them.
“You have all those
T-shirts and yet you
only wear the same
four T-shirts over and
over. Why do you keep
so many?” she said as I
tried to close my T-shirt
drawer.
“Because they all have
sentimental meanings
for me. Like this one the
granddaughters gave
me. It says, ‘Papa—the
man, the myth, the
legend.’ I can’t get rid
of it because it’s just so
true.”
Rolling her eyes 360
degrees (which always
kind of freaks me out)
she said, “Well what
about your ‘I am a col-
bold statement
umnist’ shirt.
on your T-shirt.
You don’t need
Seriously, are you
that one because
really a commueveryone knows
nist? That’s super
you’re a columsubversive, dude.”
nist.”
“It says I’m a
“But that’s my
columnist. A COLfavorite one. It’s Raul
so soft and fits
Ascunce UMNIST. I am a
me perfectly,
Contributing person who writes
columns for a
accentuating my columnist
newspaper,” I said
six-pack abs.”
defensively.
“You mean
“Oh. My bad,” the
your one-keg ab?” she
young man said. “I miscorrected.
“Ouch! That was cold. read your shirt. I must
say, it fits you perfectly
Just for that I will be
wearing my ‘I am a col- … nice ab.”
Entering the coffee
umnist’ T-shirt today.”
shop, I got in the line
So I very gracefully
to order, all the while
pulled my ‘columnist’
T-shirt over my singular feeling a little selfconscious about my
ab and headed out the
shirt. “This is silly,”
door to prove to the
world that I am a colum- I thought. “Lots of
nist. Equipped with my people have T-shirts
professing their careers
leather messenger bag
full of writer’s accoutre- and interests, like firefighters, police officers,
ments, I headed to a
nurses and teachers.
coffee shop to do some
Why shouldn’t I have a
not-so-serious writing.
shirt that professes my
As I approached the
front door, a young man love of writing?”
When it was my turn
sitting at a patio table
to order, the barista,
looked up with a very
disapproving expression without looking up,
asked, “What can I get
and said to me, “Whoa
you?” Then she looked
man! That’s a pretty
up and saw my shirt
and said, “Oh my! This
is awkward. Are you
really a communist?
I’ve never served a communist before. What do
they drink? Decaf, I’m
guessing?”
“I am not a Communist. I am a columnist,”
I said creating a scene.
“I write a newspaper
column, for crying out
loud. And yes, I would
like a decaf caramel
macchiato.”
When I got home I
marched into the family
room and told the wife
what had happened to
me.
“Oh, honey,” the wife
sympathized. “I’m so
sorry you had to go
through that. Maybe
you should get rid of
that shirt.”
“But I love this shirt,”
I said sadly.
“I know, dear,” she
said affectionately. “It
really does show off
your ab…”
Raul Ascunce is a freelance
columnist for the SentinelTribune, an AIM Media Midwest
publication. He may be contacted
at relativelyraul@yahoo.com
TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press
row Wilson.)
Today is Wednesday,
On this date
Oct. 30, the 303rd day of
In 1735 (New Style
2019. There are 62 days calendar), the second
left in the year.
president of the United
States, John Adams, was
Today’s Highlight in History born in Braintree, Massachusetts.
On Oct. 30, 1912,
In 1961, the Soviet
Vice President James S.
Union tested a hydroSherman, running for
gen bomb, the “Tsar
a second term of office
Bomba,” with a force
with President William
estimated at about
Howard Taft, died six
days before Election Day. 50 megatons. The
Soviet Party Congress
(Sherman was replaced
unanimously approved a
with Nicholas Murray
resolution ordering the
Butler, but Taft, the
removal of Josef Stalin’s
Republican candidate,
body from Lenin’s tomb.
ended up losing in an
In 1972, 45 people
Electoral College landslide to Democrat Wood- were killed when an Illi-
nois Central Gulf commuter train was struck
from behind by another
train on Chicago’s South
Side.
In 1974, Muhammad
Ali knocked out George
Foreman in the eighth
round of a 15-round bout
in Kinshasa, Zaire (zahEER’), known as the
“Rumble in the Jungle,”
to regain his world
heavyweight title.
In 1975, the New
York Daily News ran the
headline “Ford to City:
Drop Dead” a day after
President Gerald R. Ford
said he would veto any
proposed federal bailout
of New York City.
In 1979, President
Carter announced his
choice of federal appeals
judge Shirley Hufstedler
to head the newly created Department of Education.
In 1985, schoolteacher-astronaut Christa
McAuliffe witnessed
the launch of the space
shuttle Challenger, the
same craft that would
carry her and six other
crew members to their
deaths in Jan. 1986.
In 1995, by a razorthin vote of 50.6 percent
to 49.4 percent, Federalists prevailed over
separatists in a Quebec
secession referendum.
�Sports
6 Wednesday, October 30, 2019
Daily Sentinel
Rio posts Senior Day sweep of Celtics
By Randy Payton
Carlow dropped to 6-15 overall
and 0-11 in the RSC.
The Celtics led 7-6 in a see-saw
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Tradi- start to the opening set before
Rio took control with a 10-2 run.
tionally, the home team tends to
The exact same scenario
prosper on Senior Day.
cropped up in set two, with a 10-2
For the University of Rio
RedStorm run - capped by three
Grande volleyball team, that’s
exactly how Saturday afternoon’s straight service aces from sophomore Ashley Taylor (Chillicothe,
game against Carlow University
OH) - turning a 7-6 deficit into a
at the Newt Oliver Arena played
commanding 16-9 lead.
out.
Set three saw Carlow again
The RedStorm spotted the Celtics an early lead in every set, but grab a 7-6 lead, but a 4-0 Rio scoring spurt put the RedStorm in
roared back to post a 3-0 (25-19,
front to stay for good.
25-14, 25-17) victory in River
Senior Katie Hemsley (Jackson,
States Conference action.
OH) had a match-best 22 digs and
Rio Grande, which honored
five service aces - among the 12
a trio of seniors, two departing
that Rio tallied as a team - to lead
juniors and its student assistant
the winning effort, while junior
coach in pre-game ceremonies,
improved to 16-10 overall and 4-7 Macy Roell (Farmersville, OH)
had a match-high 32 assists to go
in conference play with the win.
For Ohio Valley Publishing
Courtesy photo
Rio Grande’s Macy Roell had 32 assists and 18 digs to help the
RedStorm post a 25-19, 25-14, 25-17 Senior Day win over Carlow
University on Saturday afternoon at Newt Oliver Arena.
along with 18 digs of her own.
Sophomore Jess Youse (Pettisville, OH) had eight kills to lead
the RedStorm’s balanced attack
at the net, while also recording
one solo block and a pair of block
assists.
Carlow had just seven attack
errors in the loss, but also finished with just 24 kills as a team.
Ellie Cook had seven kills, 13
digs and the Celtics’ lone block,
while Katie Tarasovich also had
seven kills and Sabrina Skukalek
contributed 21 assists.
Rio Grande returns to action on
Tuesday night when it hosts Ohio
Dominican University in a nonconference tilt.
First serve is slated for 7 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.
RedStorm men
roll past Point
Park, 10-2
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — After a quick recognition of its four seniors in pre-game ceremonies,
the University of Rio Grande men’s soccer team
went about the task of making quick work of rival
Point Park University.
The RedStorm bolted to a 4-1 halftime lead
before adding six more markers over the final 45
minutes, cruising to a 10-2 rout of the Pioneers,
Monday night, in River States Conference play at
Evan E. Davis Field.
Rio Grande improved to 13-3 overall and 7-1 in
league play with the win, its 10th in as many alltime meetings with PPU.
The Pioneers dropped to 13-3 overall and 5-2
inside the RSC as a result of the loss.
Rio’s 10 goals were its most against Point Park
since a 10-0 win over the Pioneers in the first-ever
meeting between the two programs on Oct. 5,
2008. The figure also represented a single-game
high for the most goals allowed by PPU this season.
The RedStorm dominated from the outset,
outshooting their guests, 30-8, overall and 21-6
in shots on goal. Rio also had 10 of the 13 corner
kick chances in the match.
Freshman Sebastian Borquez (Santiago, Chile)
was a one-man wrecking crew for head coach
Scott Morrissey’s squad, scoring four goals and
assisting on three others. His 15-point night represented the most by a Rio player in a single game
since Richard Isberner’s school record 20-point
outing (5 goals, 5 assists) in a 14-0 rout of St.
Catherine College on Nov. 5, 2011.
Sophomore Michael Garcia (London, England)
added two goals and two assists of his own in the
win, while junior Samuel Pedersen (Aldershot,
England) and sophomore Nicolas Cam Orellana
(Santiago, Chile) added one goal and one assist
each.
Borquez got the scoring underway with 17:08
remaining in the first half when he booted in a
thru-ball header by Cam Orellana from the top of
the 18-yard box.
Point Park tied the match just over 3-1/2 minutes later on a breakaway marker by Mitchell
Roell, but Rio Grande took the lead for good a
little less than two minutes later when Cam Orellana took a crossing pass from Pedersen and fired
a shot past PPU net-minder Jesse Haak and into
the back of the net.
Pedersen scored an unassisted marker of his
own just 90 seconds later and junior Callum Malanaphy (Stourbridge, England) headed in a free
kick by Borquez with 5:34 left before halftime to
make it 4-1 at the intermission.
Senior Omar Walcott (Kingston, Jamaica)
See REDSTORM | 7
OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, Oct. 31
Football
Alexander at Meigs, 7:30
Volleyball
Point Pleasant at
Ravenswood, 6 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 1
Football
Mount View at Hannan,
7 p.m.
Gallia Academy at South
Point, 7 p.m.
South Gallia at River
Valley, 7:30
Ripley at Point Pleasant,
7:30
Trimble at Wahama, 7:30
Saturday, Nov. 2
College Football
Marshall at Rice, 3:30
Football
Eastern at Southern, 7
p.m.
Cross Country
OHSAA State
championships, 10 a.m.
Photos by Sarah Hawley | OVP Sports
Eastern junior Alysa Howard hits full stride during the varsity girls race at the 2019 Patty Forgey Invitational held in Rio Grande, Ohio.
Twyman, Watts advance to state
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
PICKERINGTON, Ohio
— Two out of three ain’t
bad.
Given the circumstances, two out of 17 isn’t too
shabby either.
River Valley sophomore
Lauren Twyman and Gallia Academy junior Sarah
Watts both secured state
berths on Saturday at
the 2019 Regional Cross
Country championships
held at Pickerington High
School North in Fairfield
County.
Both Twyman and
Watts are first-time
state qualifiers for a pair
of girls programs that
haven’t competed at
the state meet since the
beginning of the decade,
and each will be competing in the same Division
II final in Hebron.
Twyman earned an
at-large spot by finishing
22nd out of 171 competitors with a time of
19:45.3, while Watts was
28th overall with a mark
of 19:57.1.
Granville won the Division II girls title with 50
points, while Buckeye
Valley was second out of
21 teams with 117 points.
The Lady Raiders were
21st overall with a final
tally of 503.
Savannah Reese followed Twyman for RVHS
by placing 119th with a
time of 22:34.8. Kate Nutter (24:40.2) and Emma
Lucas (24:44.0) were next
with respective efforts of
tor field with a time of
19:02.7.
Erica Durst paced EHS
with a 22nd place time
of 20:31.1, followed by
Whitney Durst (21:33.1)
and Ashton Guthrie
(21:47.2) with respective
finishes of 54th and 64th.
Alysa Howard
(23:14.1) and Lexa Hayes
(23:51.2) completed the
team tally by placing 94th
and 102nd overall.
Mount Gilead also won
the Division III boys title
with 54 points, with Fredericktown placing second
out of 15 teams with 104
points. Derek Amicon
of Grandview Heights
defeated the 125-competitor field with a time of
15:50.2.
Brayden O’Brien
paced the Eagles by placing 29th overall with a
mark of 17:21.8. Colton
Eastern senior Colton Reynolds stays ahead of South Gallia junior Reynolds was also 64th
Garrett Frazee during the varsity boys race at the 2019 Patty
for EHS with a time of
Forgey Invitational held in Rio Grande, Ohio.
18:08.6.
Garrett Frazee was
the 169-competitor field
151st and 153rd, while
33rd overall for South
with a time of 15:46.2.
Ruth Rickett (25:16.3)
Gallia with a mark of
River Valley had a
completed the team score
17:33.3.
single entrant in the D-2
by finishing 158th.
The 2019 OHSAA
Sydney Blouir (26:46.4) boys race as Dylan Fulks
placed 121st overall with Cross Country chamand Nakeisha Sanders
pionships will be held
a time of 18:29.2.
(26:48.7) also placed
Saturday at National
The Lady Eagles were
165th and 166th overall
Trail Raceway in Hebron,
unable to advance out
for the Lady Raiders.
Ohio.
Reilly Zink of Granville of the Division III girls
Visit baumspage.com
event, neither collectively
was the D-2 girls indinor individually. Eastern for complete results of
vidual champion with a
winning mark of 18:25.2. ended up ninth out of 16 the 2019 Region 7 and
Region 11 CC championteams with 230 points.
Unioto won the DiviMount Gilead won the ships held at Pickerington
sion II boys championship
High School North on
D-3 team title with 57
with a final tally of 65
Saturday.
points, followed by Cenpoints, while Heath was
runner-up out of 21 teams terburg with 87 points.
Allison Johnson of MGHS Bryan Walters can be reached at
with 99 points. Xavier
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
defeated the 134-competiFoehl of Heath defeated
�SPORTS
Daily Sentinel
Pioneers spoil
Senior Day for
Rio women
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— With a three-game
winning streak in hand
and the excitement of
Senior Day ceremonies
in the air, a forecast for
success seemed to be
an easy call for the University of Rio Grande
women’s soccer team.
Visiting Point Park
University apparently
thought otherwise.
The Pioneers grabbed
momentum with an
early goal, built confidence with two more
first half markers and
went on to post a 3-1
win over the RedStorm,
Monday afternoon, in
River States Conference
play at Evan E. Davis
Field.
Point Park upped its
record to 5-10-1 overall
and 3-4-1 in the RSC
with the road victory.
Rio Grande cost itself
an opportunity to move
within one point of
West Virginia University-Tech for fourth place
in the league standings,
falling to 4-12 overall
and 4-4 against conference foes.
The RedStorm finished with a 22-21 edge
in overall shots and a
3-1 advantage in corner
kick opportunities, but
it was the Pioneers who
dictated the pace of the
contest - particularly in
the first half when Rio’s
play appeared less than
enthusiastic.
Tia Horew gave PPU
the early edge, scoring
just 9:18 into the contest when she picked off
Trio to be inducted into Rio HOF
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— A trio of former University of Rio Grande
athletic standouts are
joining the school’s Athletic Hall of Fame.
P.J. Rase, Ann (Barnitz) Snell and Scott
Peterman comprise the
Class of 2019 announced
by school officials.
The group will receive
their formal induction
as part of the school’s
annual Hall of Fame banquet on Saturday, Nov.
9, at 6 p.m., in the Rio
Alumni Heritage Room
of Davis University Center. The banquet follows
the conclusion of the
Bevo Francis Invitational
Tournament, scheduled
for Friday and Saturday,
Nov. 8-9, at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
The Class of 2019
- and all other Hall of
Fame members in attendance - will be recognized prior to the tournament’s final game in
the Newt Oliver Arena at
approximately 4 p.m. on
the 9th.
Rase was a member of
the RedStorm men’s basketball program for three
seasons (2007-10) and
is remembered as one
of the top three-point
shooters in program history.
The Wheelersburg,
Ohio native closed his
Rio career with 1,188
points, while connecting
on a single-season school
record 95 trifectas during his senior campaign
in 2009-10. His 233
career three-point goals
rank as a school record.
Rase set the school’s
single-game record for
three-pointers with 10
against Virginia Intermont College on Nov.
27, 2009 and, during
that same season, led
all divisions of college
basketball by shooting
95.2% from the free
throw line.
Rase was also an All-
a loose ball in front of
the goal and fired into
an empty net.
But it was the Pioneers’ final two markers - scored less than
two minutes apart later
in the period - which
essentially buried the
RedStorm.
Nola McGuire navigated her way past a
pair of Rio defenders
along the endline,
dribbled into the box
and eventually poked a
shot by Rio freshman
keeper Jayla Brown
(Chillicothe, OH) for a
2-0 lead with 16:03 left
before the intermission.
Taylor Goldstrohm
made it 3-0 just 1:48
later, playing a ricochet
of a save by Brown into
the net.
Rio Grande avoided
a shutout when senior
Ambar Torres (Guyaquil, Ecuador) scored
on a penalty kick with
1:52 remaining in the
contest.
Brown recorded nine
saves in a losing cause
for the RedStorm.
Ashtyn Webb stopped
seven shots in goal
for Point Park, which
defeated Rio for the
sixth straight time after
dropping the first three
meetings in the all-time
series.
Rio Grande returns
to action on Thursday
night when it travels
to Indiana University
East for a 5 p.m. kickoff at Centerville High
School.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.
Miller represents
Rio at Asbury
Invitational
By Randy Payton
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of Rio
Grande.
BROADCAST
3
(WSAZ)
4
(WTAP)
6
(WSYX)
7
(WOUB)
8
(WCHS)
10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
From page 6
extended the lead with an unassisted marker just over
nine minutes into the second half, but the Pioneers
got the goal back when Alan Pinho headed in a free
kick by Daan Stormink with 21:19 left to make it 5-2.
Rio turned things into a blowout, though, with five
goals in a span of just under 13 minutes to set the
final score. Borquez had three of the scores - two off
assists by Garcia and the other via a pass from sophomore Macrae Smith (South Bend, IN) - while Garcia
had the other two markers off assists from Borquez.
Senior goal keeper Richard Dearle (Castle Donington, England) recorded four saves in the win for Rio.
Haak had 10 stops in a losing cause for Point Park.
Rio Grande returns to action in its regular season
finale on Thursday at Indiana University East. Kickoff
is set for 7:30 p.m. at Centerville High School.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of Rio
Grande.
Mid-South Conference
selection in 2010, while
also earning selections to
the All-America Mideast
Conference and All-MidSouth Conference academic teams. He earned
national recognition for
his work in the classroom
by being named as an
Academic All-American,
an NAIA Scholar-Athlete
and the NABC Honors
Court in both 2008-09
and 2009-10.
Rase, who is now the
General Manager at
Infra-Metals in New Boston, Ohio, still resides
in Wheelersburg with
his wife, Sarah, a Rio
Grande Hall of Famer
herself, and their four
children.
Snell spent four
seasons (1989-92) as
a member of the Rio
Grande women’s basketball program where
she earned All-Mid-Ohio
Conference honors,
including the league’s
Player of the Year Award
for the 1990-91 campaign
when the then-Redwomen captured a conference
championship.
Snell currently ranks
seventh on the school’s
all-time scoring list with
1,571 points, is 12th in
total rebounds (600)
and second in blocked
shots (120). She led
Rio in either scoring or
rebounding in each of
her four seasons and was
named a WBCA Kodak
All-American honorable
mention selection as a
senior.
Snell also excelled
in the classroom and
received the school’s
Outstanding Marketing
Student Award in both
1991 and 1992.
Snell currently teaches
college business classes.
She is married with a
pair of teenage sons and
her husband, Steve, is
an assistant men’s basketball coach at Ohio
University.
Peterman was a threetime letter-winner in
baseball at Rio Grande,
where he earned a pair
of NAIA All-American
selections, was a twotime NAIA All-Region
honoree, a two-time first
team All-Conference pick
and a two-time NAIA
Champions of Character
representative.
Peterman, a 2006 Rio
graduate, appeared in
152 games during his
Rio Grande career, batting .378 with 11 home
runs and 113 runs batted in. He also clubbed
37 doubles and stole 67
bases, while becoming
the first player in program history to record
more than 50 hits, score
more than 50 runs and
drive in more than 50
runs in the same season.
Peterman, who was
also known for his
defensive prowess in
center field, helped the
then-Redmen reach the
regional tournament in
CABLE
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6:30
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30
7 PM
7:30
Jeopardy!
(N)
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events. (N)
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6 PM
each of his three seasons
and went on to play professionally in Italy and
Australia for eight years.
Currently employed
as a Home Lending
Advisor with JP Morgan
Chase for the past three
years, Peterman resides
in his hometown of
Westerville, Ohio with
his family.
Tickets for the banquet, which are $15
each, can be purchased
online at https://info.rio.
edu/ahof/ or through the
Alumni Relations office
at 740-245-7431. Athletic
Hall of Fame members
and one guest will be
admitted free.
The University of Rio
Grande takes great pride
in awarding outstanding alumni, athletes and
former faculty members
with various recognition
awards. Nominations
from alumni and former
faculty and staff are
encouraged.
Nomination forms for
alumni awards, Athletic
Hall of Fame and Educators Hall of Fame are
available through the
resources link on the
Alumni Relations webpage at rio.edu/alumni.
Nominations are due
by Feb. 1 of each year.
For more information, or
questions, please e-mail
alumni@rio.edu
Wheel of
Fortune (N)
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Fortune (N)
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7 PM
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It Up Buttercup" (N)
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MLB Baseball World Series Washington Nationals at Houston Astros Game 7 Site:
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39
RedStorm
Courtesy photo
WEDNESDAY EVENING
For Ohio Valley Publishing
WILMORE, Ky. — Senior Kelsey Miller ran to a
40th place finish as the University of Rio Grande’s
lone representative in the women’s division of
Saturday’s Asbury University Cross Country Invitational.
Miller, a native of Georgetown, Ohio, finished the
2.75-mile course in a time of 21:06.
Zoe Trausch of St. Mary of the Woods College
won the individual crown in a time of 17:40.
St. Mary of the Woods also won the team title
with 16 points, thanks to each of the top four finishers and six of the top eight scorers.
Georgetown (Ky.) College had 76 points and
edged Midway University for runner-up honors by
one point in the seven-team competition.
Rio Grande will close out its 2019 schedule on
Nov. 9 at the River States Conference Championships in Pittsburgh, Pa.
Wednesday, October 30, 2019 7
(AMC)
40 (DISC)
42
(A&E)
52 (ANPL)
57
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58
60
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(WE)
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400 (HBO)
450 (MAX)
500 (SHOW)
Bounty Hunt. Bounty Hunt. Dog's Most Wanted
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Dog's Most Wanted
Immortal (N) Shortlist (N) Inside Pirates Baseball
The Chief: Art Rooney
Stephen
NBA Basketball Milwaukee Bucks at Boston Celtics Site: TD Garden (L)
NBA Basket. L.A. C./Utah (L)
Baseball T. NFL Live
E:60 (N)
Boxing Classics
A Christmas Kiss (2018, Romance) Laura Breckenridge,
My Christmas Prince (2017, Romance) Calum Alexander, (:05) The Christmas Pact
Brendan Fehr, Elisabeth Rohm. TVPG
Parker Stevenson, Alexis Knapp. TVPG
(‘18, Rom) Kyla Pratt. TVPG
(4:40)
(:45)
Hotel Transylvania (2012, Animated) Kevin
(:50)
Hocus Pocus Bette Midler. Three 17th century witches are
Addams F... James, Andy Samberg, Adam Sandler. TVPG
accidentally conjured into the 20th century on Halloween. TVPG
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Dawn of the Dead (2004, Horror) Ving Rhames, Jake (:15)
Abraham Lincoln:
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Loud House Casagrandes SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob
The Parent Trap (‘98, Fam) Lindsay Lohan. TVPG
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Family Guy MiseryIndex MiseryIndex MiseryIndex The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Frontal (N)
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Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
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Ant-Man (‘15, Act) Paul Rudd. TV14
All Elite Wrestling: Dynamite (N)
The Longest Yard TV14
(5:30)
Halloween (1978, Horror) Jamie Lee Curtis,
Halloween: Resurrection (2002, Horror) Brad Loree,
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P.J. Soles, Donald Pleasence. TV14
Busta Rhymes, Jamie Lee Curtis. TVMA
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Expedition Unknown:E
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Building Off the Grid (N)
Ghost Hunters "Blood on
Ghost Hunters "Waverly
World's Biggest Ghost Hunt: Pennhurst Asylum
Ghost Hunters "Hospital
the Bayou"
Hills Sanatorium" (N)
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Extinct or Alive
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Extinct or Alive (N)
Giants (N)
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Dahmer on Dahmer: A Serial Killer Speaks America's
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"Behind Closed Doors"
most notorious serial killer, Jeffrey Dahmer.
Criminal Mind "Aftermath" C.Minds "The Boogeyman" C.Minds "North Mammon" C.Minds "Empty Planet"
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NFLTP (N)
Forged in Fire "Bagh Nakh Forged in Fire "The Grim
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7:30
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8:30
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10:30
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�COMICS
8 Wednesday, October 30, 2019
BLONDIE
Daily Sentinel
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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jobmatchohio.com
�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, October 30, 2019 9
Truex rout creates chaos in NASCAR’s playoff field
Sunday on NASCAR’s
shortest track.
Martin Truex Jr. led
464 of the 500 laps to
collect his series-best
seventh win of the season. This one locked
him into the final four
and the right to race for
the championship next
month, something Truex
fully believed possible
when he and crew chief
Cole Pearn needed a new
home after Furniture
Row Racing closed after
last year’s season finale.
The move inside Joe
Gibbs Racing has been
tremendously successful,
even if Truex and the No.
(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008
XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Notices
Morgan Township
Accepting sealed bids for
1990 1/2 ton Chevy 4-wheel
drive truck Deadline for bids
6:30 am November 16, 2019
when bids will be opened
and read aloud
Jeff 740-645-4144
John 740-645-2650
P.O. Box 64
Bidwell, OH 45614
Check
out our
&ODVVLÀ�HGV�
for
bargains!
19 team have been overshadowed by everything,
specifically teammates
Busch and Hamlin.
“I wouldn’t have went
(to JGR) if I didn’t think
I could win a championship,” Truex said. “I
would have retired.”
Give Truex and Pearn
some credit for the clinic
they put on at Martinsville, where the combination of NASCAR’s new
rules package and the
Goodyear tire selection
resulted in lousy racing
in which one car can
run away with the race.
There were three total
lead changes and a clear
difficulty for drivers to
pass, which sapped any
on-track excitement from
the opening race of the
round of eight. But the
frustration was boiling
through the field for
500 laps and it exploded
with a postrace, pit road
fracas in which Hamlin
was hurled to the ground
by a member of Logano’s
crew.
Logano was upset that
Hamlin had squeezed
him into the wall during
the third stage of the
race and the incident
led to a cut tire that contributed to the reigning
champion’s eighth-place
(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157
XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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AUCTIONS
Auto Auction
The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, November 01,
2019 at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
VIN: 1FAHP3436YW366760
2000 Ford Focus
VIN: 4A3AA46G61E166120
2001 Mitsubishi Galant
1LFH � EHGURRP DSDUWPHQW
FRQYHQLHQWO\ ORFDWHG� QHZ
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MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy
OH-70004516
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under an agreement with
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Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
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FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
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or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
AN APPLICATION:
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or
510 Main St. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
or 109 West 2nd St. Pomeroy, Oh 45679
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Gallipolis , Oh 45631
740-446-2342
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OH-70152802
OH-70154609
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
day later, NASCAR suspended Dave Nichols Jr.,
the tire technician who
knocked down Hamlin,
for this weekend’s race at
Texas.
Martinsville’s half-mile
layout makes it a tight
little track and the fans
were close enough to see
all this unfold right in
front of them. Hamlin, a
Virginia native and fivetime Martinsville winner,
played to the fans when
he mocked Logano with
an impersonation during
his postrace interview
shown on the big screen
that brought the crowd
to its feet.
(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234
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finish. Logano won at
Martinsville last year to
spark his upset championship victory three
weeks later.
Admittedly unsatisfied
with Hamlin’s response,
Logano smacked Hamlin on the shoulder and
turned to walk away.
Hamlin took exception
and chased after Logano,
who was aggressively
shielded by everyone
at Team Penske ranging from his crew chief
to his publicist and an
overzealous crew member who horse-collared
Hamlin to the ground in
a brief, chaotic scrum. A
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REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
OH-70149531
MARTINSVILLE, Va.
(AP) — Kyle Busch is
slowly coughing away his
championship chances
and Denny Hamlin and
Joey Logano are fighting
— again.
Chase Elliott has fast
cars but awful luck, while
Kevin Harvick has barely
made a whisper in the
playoffs. Ryan Blaney
continues to rise on
NASCAR’s biggest stage
and Kyle Larson escaped
Martinsville Speedway,
his worst track in this
third round of the playoffs, as best he could.
It was a lot of drama
despite a snoozer of a
CALL TODAY!
�SPORTS
10 Wednesday, October 30, 2019
Daily Sentinel
Steelers overcome slow start,
drop winless Dolphins 27-14
PITTSBURGH (AP) —
Mason Rudolph heard the
boos. They were impossible to miss as the minutes
passed, the mistakes piled
up and the Pittsburgh
Steelers found themselves
down two scores on Monday night to arguably the
worst team in the NFL.
Turnovers. Dropped
passes. Penalties. Missed
opportunities. For the
better part of 30 minutes,
it was hard to tell if the
Steelers or the Miami
Dolphins were the team
in the midst of a massive
rebuild.
“I would have booed
that performance too,”
Rudolph said. “Coming
out slow and it’s the Pittsburgh Steelers. There’s
a standard here and we
weren’t meeting it at the
time.”
Eventually, however,
Rudolph found his footing. Eventually, the
Dolphins morphed back
into the team playing for
a shot at the top pick in
the draft. And eventually
the Steelers avoided an
embarrassing loss that
would have effectively
ended the competitive
portion of their season
by rallying for a 27-14
victory.
Rudolph threw for 251
yards and two touchdowns in his first start
after getting knocked
unconscious earlier this
month against Baltimore,
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Time To Create That Wish List!!
Monday November 4 th 10-9
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OH-70155964
Support Local Businesses
8 AM
WEATHER
2 PM
Bengals bench Andy
Dalton, turn to rookie
50°
65°
64°
HEALTH TODAY
Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™
Temperature
The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.
69°
48°
64°
42°
82° in 1945
23° in 1909
(in inches)
24 hours ending 3 p.m. Tue.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date
0.00
4.69
2.61
39.16
35.64
Today
7:53 a.m.
6:31 p.m.
10:33 a.m.
8:38 p.m.
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset
Thu.
7:54 a.m.
6:30 p.m.
11:39 a.m.
9:26 p.m.
MOON PHASES
First
Nov 4
Full
Last
New
Nov 12 Nov 19 Nov 26
SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for fish and game.
Major
Today 1:46a
Thu. 2:48a
Fri.
3:49a
Sat.
4:48a
Sun. 5:44a
Mon. 5:35a
Tue. 6:21a
Minor
8:00a
9:01a
10:03a
11:02a
11:57a
12:22a
12:11a
Major
2:14p
3:15p
4:16p
5:15p
6:09p
5:59p
6:44p
AccuWeather.com Cold Index™
The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.
1
0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme
WEATHER TRIVIA™
Minor
8:28p
9:29p
10:30p
11:28p
---11:47a
12:33p
WEATHER HISTORY
On October 30, 1866, a whirlwind cut
through New York City in a column
150 feet high by 60 feet in diameter,
picking up dirt, turf, sticks and stones
to a depth of 8 inches and “hissing
like a steamboat”.
49°
29°
Colder with
decreasing clouds
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Chillicothe
65/60
Lucasville
67/63
Portsmouth
68/63
53°
30°
AIR QUALITY
Cool with more sun
than clouds
0 50 100 150 200
300
500
Primary pollutant: Particulates
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.
Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services
OHIO RIVER
Belpre
73/62
St. Marys
74/62
Parkersburg
72/60
Coolville
71/61
Elizabeth
74/62
Spencer
73/62
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. Tue.
Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam
Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51
Level
13.59
16.39
21.59
12.83
12.42
25.18
12.98
25.90
34.61
12.84
17.30
34.20
15.90
24-hr.
Chg.
+1.19
-0.18
-0.21
-0.34
-0.53
-0.25
-0.36
+0.33
+0.20
+0.01
+1.50
+0.10
+1.30
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019
Buffalo
72/62
Milton
73/64
Clendenin
74/62
St. Albans
74/64
Huntington
70/62
NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
51/33
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
70/48
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
74/49
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front
Plenty of sunshine
Marietta
72/61
Athens
69/61
Ironton
71/64
Ashland
71/64
Grayson
69/64
TUESDAY
57°
37°
Cold with times of
clouds and sun
Wilkesville
69/61
POMEROY
Jackson
72/61
68/61
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
73/61
71/61
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
61/56
GALLIPOLIS
72/61
73/62
71/61
South Shore Greenup
70/64
66/61
53
MONDAY
48°
28°
Murray City
67/60
McArthur
68/60
Waverly
65/61
SUNDAY
64°
35°
Mostly sunny
NATIONAL CITIES
Logan
66/59
Adelphi
65/60
1
Q: When did the last ice age end?
SUN & MOON
Cloudy, showers and
a heavier t-storm
SATURDAY
A: About 10,000 years ago
Precipitation
FRIDAY
69°
37°
ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low
THURSDAY
A little rain this afternoon. Rainy times tonight.
High 72° / Low 61°
developing rookie Ryan Finley as his
potential long-term replacement.
The move came two days after a
24-10 loss to the Rams in London left
Cincinnati 0-8 for the first time in 11
years. It’s the first significant roster
change under first-year coach Zac Taylor.
CINCINNATI (AP) — The winless
Bengals benched Andy Dalton heading
into their bye week, ending his nineseason run as starter so they can start
EXTENDED FORECAST
8 PM
and a 26-yard strike to
JuJu Smith-Schuster in
the third quarter that
put the Steelers firmly in
control.
“We needed to get him
going early on because
all it takes is that one big
play for him,” Pittsburgh
wide receiver James Washington said. “His mind is
going. He’s got that adrenaline going and (once) we
started moving the ball
down the field running
and passing, we were on.”
And the Dolphins (0-7)
were not.
Ryan Fitzpatrick passed
for 190 yards with two
touchdowns and two
picks, both to Steelers
safety Minkah Fitzpatrick, who orchestrated a
trade from Miami to Pittsburgh last month. But
a rare hot start couldn’t
prevent Miami from staying winless through seven
games for the first time
since 2011. The Dolphins
have dropped 10 straight
dating to last season.
“We just have to continue to keep fighting,” Ryan
Fitzpatrick said. “That’s
just kind of the place that
we’re at right now. Just
continue to keep fighting,
continue to keep going to
practice and trying to get
better every single day.”
The Steelers host Indianapolis (5-2) next Sunday. Pittsburgh has won
each of its last five meetings with the Colts.
AP SPORTS BRIEFS
113 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2054
TODAY
and James Conner added
145 yards and a touchdown on the ground as
Pittsburgh (3-4) won
consecutive games for the
first time since ripping off
six straight in the middle
of last season.
“You dig a big of a
whole there in the first
half and I was proud of
the way we responded,”
Rudolph said.
Rudolph stressed he
wasn’t worried about
the long-term effects of
a frightening concussion
he suffered against Baltimore on Oct. 6, when
he was knocked cold on
a helmet-to-helmet hit
by Ravens safety Earl
Thomas. Still, he looked
shaky at best during an
ugly opening quarter that
saw the Dolphins grab
their first two-touchdown
lead over any opponent in
more than a year.
Pittsburgh’s first possession ended with
Rudolph throwing a pick
to Xavien Howard —
back in the lineup after
missing two games with a
knee injury — and its second ended with Rudolph
misfiring badly on fourth
down. Yet he remained
upbeat amid the growing pains and eventually
things started to click.
Rudolph completed 20
of 36 passes, including
a 45-yard touchdown to
rookie Diontae Johnson
late in the second quarter
Charleston
73/63
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
31/19
Billings
30/20
Denver
20/5
Montreal
58/47
Toronto
51/43
Minneapolis
39/22
Detroit
49/45
New York
65/62
Chicago
42/35
Washington
72/63
Kansas City
33/23
Today
Thu.
Hi/Lo/W
42/19/pc
53/40/sh
72/68/c
68/62/c
69/60/c
30/20/s
41/19/s
63/61/r
73/63/r
70/67/sh
20/8/c
42/35/r
64/58/r
62/57/r
65/59/r
52/31/r
20/5/sn
34/23/sn
49/45/r
87/73/t
76/43/t
53/43/r
33/23/sn
56/35/s
60/36/r
74/49/s
65/55/r
89/79/pc
39/22/pc
71/57/r
81/63/t
65/62/r
39/20/r
91/74/pc
68/61/c
70/44/s
69/58/c
62/55/r
70/63/sh
71/63/r
44/33/r
32/16/s
70/48/s
51/33/s
72/63/c
Hi/Lo/W
50/25/s
44/39/sh
72/36/t
71/53/r
76/48/r
40/25/c
46/22/pc
69/62/r
71/34/r
79/40/r
41/23/s
39/22/sn
58/28/r
64/37/r
64/30/r
51/32/s
43/21/s
39/22/sn
50/33/r
87/73/t
56/36/c
48/23/r
40/25/pc
61/41/s
48/28/pc
77/49/s
55/29/r
89/78/s
40/29/c
58/31/t
65/43/t
71/55/r
46/25/s
91/74/pc
74/51/r
76/47/s
67/34/r
64/58/r
80/47/r
79/47/r
39/26/sf
41/22/s
71/47/s
52/36/pc
75/46/r
EXTREMES TUESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
Atlanta
72/68
El Paso
60/31
City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC
High
Low
93° in McAllen, TX
-12° in Huntley, MT
Global
Chihuahua
77/39
Houston
76/43
Monterrey
89/51
High
114° in Tete, Mozambique
Low -40° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
89/79
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
OH-70107872
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.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
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Racine,
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Middleport
�
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
10. October
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
newspaper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
October 30, 2019
fisher
milliron
saunders